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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>Generally fair today. High In SO*. Low tonight near SO mountain* near 70.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>BJofn Borg captured Id* mam atralght Wlinbledan title yeater day. Detail* n Page B-1</p>
        <p>96th Year NO. 157TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVIILE, N.C.  SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1977</p>
        <p>94 PAGES  ^ SECTIONS PRICE 30 CENTS</p>
        <p>A Mixed Record For The</p>
        <p>1977 General Assembly</p>
        <p>One of the pleasures</p>
        <p>ENJOYING THE SURF  Loti Owen, 18, from Louisville, Kentucky, rdaxes in the surf at Miami B^ch, Fla. Lori also eqjoys</p>
        <p>of the summer months .  .</p>
        <p>dancing, gymnastics and softball. (AP Wirqihoto)</p>
        <p>k</p>
        <p>AVIDR.</p>
        <p>Things Hunt Wanted, He Succeeded in Getting</p>
        <p>By DAVID R. NELSEN Associatd Press Writer RALEIGH (AP) - Gov. Jim Hunt had it his way with be 1977 Gffljeral Assembly, suc,-ceeding in having virtually everything he wanted enacted into law.</p>
        <p>It passed my program with the exeeptidn of one bill," he said in an interview in his office. "To get that much is quite an accomplishment. Legislative leaders agree with that assessment.</p>
        <p>I think it got exceptionally good treatment, House Speaker Carl Stewart said of Hunts program. With some amendments, the legislature enacfed Hunts entire program, he said.</p>
        <p>Hunt managed to get approval for bills ranging from restructuring the state Utilities Commission staff to reading and testing programs for the public schools, including le^s-lative support for succession and a purge of Republicans from major regulatory boards.</p>
        <p>His only failure was his proposal for uniform sentencing of criminals. Also, ERA failed even thou^ he supported it.</p>
        <p>That's simply left for the agenda ahead, Hunt said, promising to work for that in the 1979 General Assembly. He will also have new pn^josals by then as well as what he calls</p>
        <p>fine tuning for the programs already enacted.</p>
        <p>While some critics have said Hunt paid a heavy toll in appointments and other favors for his success, he, Stewart and several other leaders say it came through good planning and hard work.</p>
        <p>It started last year in the campaign whi Hunt made it clear he would se^ legislation on major issues such as education and utilities. We laid it out clearly what we intended to do, Hunt said. Even his TV commercials delivered the message.</p>
        <p>That raised public interest and led to strong public support. "We had an awful lot of support from back home and I dont apologize for that, Hunt said.</p>
        <p>Then, he and his staff worked closely with individual legislators. Hunt met in his office with many of them and spent hours on the telephone with lawmakers. Hunt said he and his legislative liaison, Charles Winberry, then paid close at-tention to detail and didnt</p>
        <p>will win voter approval.</p>
        <p>The traditional lame duck session is not going to be traditional, said Rep. Jim Ezzell, D-Nash. Youre not going to see any dwindling in his influence.</p>
        <p>The succe^ion issue is considered Hunts most significant</p>
        <p>accomplishment. The people will vote on it this fall. Each governor for the last 30 years or so has sought succession in the legislature but none has come close.</p>
        <p>Here briefly are issues pushed by Hunt, including those (CoathuiedoapageA-8)</p>
        <p>CP&amp;amp;L</p>
        <p>Rate</p>
        <p>Files For Increase</p>
        <p>By BARBARA MATHEWS Reflecto-Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Carolina Power and Ll^t Company fUed Wednesday with the Federal Power Commission a request fona 7.49 per cent increase in wholesale electric rates.</p>
        <p>CP&amp;amp;L has requested the increase become effective July 29. Local wholesale customers affected by the proposed rate increase are the municipal of Farraville and</p>
        <p>,1  .*1,!    iiiookerton  and  the  Pitt  and</p>
        <p>up or take anything for grant-  Membership</p>
        <p>ed</p>
        <p>Traditionally, a governor has lost influence in the second session of his term. Legislators say that is not likely in 1979 because they predict succession</p>
        <p>Todays Reading</p>
        <p>Abby........</p>
        <p>........C-2</p>
        <p>Classified......</p>
        <p>D-4,9</p>
        <p>Arts........</p>
        <p>A-11</p>
        <p>Crossword.....</p>
        <p>C-5</p>
        <p>Bridge......</p>
        <p>........C-5</p>
        <p>Editorial........</p>
        <p>A4</p>
        <p>Building ....</p>
        <p>.......D-2</p>
        <p>Entertainment.</p>
        <p>...A-10</p>
        <p>Business ...</p>
        <p>B-10,11</p>
        <p>Opinion.........</p>
        <p>A-5</p>
        <p>Corporation.</p>
        <p>Patrick Thomas, Farmville town administrator, said Elec-  tricities will oppose the Increase.</p>
        <p>We are rq&amp;gt;resented by Electricities and Electricities will oppose the rate increase, he said.</p>
        <p>If we must have the increase, we are seeking a maximum suspension time (five months) before it goes into effect, wlf the FTC does grant them the minimum suspension time, which is one day, we will have little time to reprogram our billing procedures and inform the public.</p>
        <p>Were going to uniformly oppose it as a consumer.</p>
        <p>Gbert Whiey of the Pitt and Greene Electic Membership Corporation said its representative organization, the North Carolina Electric Membership Corpwation, will also fight the increase.</p>
        <p>I hate to see any rate increases, Whitley said.</p>
        <p>So were going to ask the FTC to defer the time of enactment if we must have the increase.</p>
        <p>We hate to see the cost of electricity going up, but it seems like thats the way the trend is going.</p>
        <p>nie rate adjustment was requested because of inflation in operating costs and addition of the 9323 million second Brunswick nuclear generating unit.</p>
        <p>By NOEL YANCEY Associated Pres* Writo</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The 1977 General AssemUy restored the death penalty, rejected ERA, cut the powers of Insurance Conunissioner John Ingram, inflated the powers of Gov. Jim Hunt and witnessed a power struggle between Hunt and Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green.</p>
        <p>It postponed a final decision on liquor by the drink, adopted a record $8 billion budget, lashed out at pornography, submitted to the people the issue of a governor succeeding himself and turned down the governors bid for veto power.</p>
        <p>It approved a vote next fall on $300 million in road bonds and $230 million in clean water bonds, reorganized state government as requested by the governor, changed the basis for utility rate making, rejected twin trailers, and refused to alter the roles of the state board of education and the superintendent of public instruction.</p>
        <p>It put off a decision on whether to phase out the manufacturers inventory tax, agreed to set up a new state agency to administer sunset legislation which will require a host of state licensing and regulatory agencies to prove their right to exist, lightened the punishment (or possessing an ounce or less of pot and enacted right to die iegisiation.</p>
        <p>Here is a capsule review of major 1977 legislative action: GREEN-HUNT Contention between Gov. Jim Hunt and Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green over Greens desire to continue as chairman of the state Board of Education resulted in a bill to make the lieutenant govenor ex officio chairman of the board. It ^lit the legislature between backers of Green and the governor, who wanted his nominee. Dr. David Bruton of Southern Pines, to be chairman. The bill easily passed the Senate where Greoi presides, but was killed by the House education committee. Green later gave iq&amp;gt; the battle and Bruton was elected chairman. Green also unsuccessfully opposed the governors bid to succeed himself.</p>
        <p>GOVERNORS POWER Hunt forces pushed through reorganizations of more than a dozen key state departments, agencies and boards and passed legislation giving the Hunt administration authority to fire any employe hired since 1972, when Republican Gov. Jim Holshousr took office. Many of the reorganizations abolished positions hrid by Re</p>
        <p>publicans before their terms expired, including posts on the tran^rtation, paroles and law-and-order boar^.</p>
        <p>DEATH PENALTY</p>
        <p>The lejglslature voted overwhelmingly to enact a bill restoring the death penalty for first degree murder after it was carefully drafted to meet constitutional tests of the U:S. Supreme Ctourt. The new law became effective June 1. It provides the hdding of a second hbaring before a jury that has convicted a defendant of a capital offense to determine whether the penalty will be life imprisonment or death in the gas chamber.</p>
        <p>^A proposal to make rape a capital offense stalled when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a person could not be executed for that offense.</p>
        <p>ERA</p>
        <p>Despite the intervention of President Carter and Mrs. Car-' ter, the 1977 legislature refused to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.</p>
        <p>The issue was the first important one tackled by the lawmakers, and backers of ERA were heartened when the ratification measure was approved by the House. However, their hopes wre dashed a few days later when the Senate said, No. </p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>Probably the hardest-fought issue of the 1977 General Assembly was insurance, and it resulted in a bill that will restrict the power of Insurance Commissioner John Ingram to block rate increases.</p>
        <p>Under the bill, Insurance companies will be permitted to put rate Increases on automobile, homeowner and other types of insurance into effect 90 days after filing the rate with the insurance department, whether Ingram approves or not. The state Siqireme Court, on appeal from Ingram, could overturn the Increases. The legislation was roundly denounced by Ingram.</p>
        <p>BUDGET</p>
        <p>The General Assembly enacted a record $8 billion budget to operate state government during the next two fiscal years. It will bring a 6t4 per emit pay boost plus fringe benefits for teachers and state employes. It also calls for a reading program in elementary grades advocated by Gov. Jim Hunt that will cost $15 million the\first year and $30 million the second. Another $29 million was allocated for prison construction. In addition, the lawmakers voted to submit to a vote of the people this fall the issuance of $300 million for highway construction and $230</p>
        <p>million for clean water facilities.</p>
        <p>REORGANIZAnON</p>
        <p>The states industrial development agencies were removed from the Department Economic and Natural Resomx^es and set up as an independent agency the Department M Comntow. The states crime fighting agencies, except the SBl plus the nathmal guard were placed in a new Department of Crime CMitrol and Public Si^ The Board of Transportad was revamped and the Secondary Roads Council was abolished, and the Wildlife Resources Commission was oilarged to give the Democrats a majority.</p>
        <p>UQU( BY IINK</p>
        <p>Representatives of urban and resort counties were aWe to push through the Senate a bill that would permit counties having ABC liquor stores to vote on legalizing liquor by the drink in restaurants and social clubs.</p>
        <p>However, when the showdown came in the House, the mixed drink forces found they did not have enough votes. Rather than face certain defeat, they moved to have further consideration of the issue put off until a 1978 session. They hope to mount a public relations campaign to win more House support.</p>
        <p>(Coatittual OB page AS)</p>
        <p>WNCT-TV Manager Dies</p>
        <p>Mr. Marlon Bernard (Hank) victim o(an aw&amp;gt;arent heart at-Tribley, executive vice presi- tack.</p>
        <p>dent and general manager of WNCT - Television Station, Greenville, was found dead at his home Friday morning, the</p>
        <p>M3.(Hank)TrBiley</p>
        <p>Mr. TriBley, 61, was discovered hy members of the television station who went to check on him after he did not 1 come to work and had not ^responded to phone calls. His wife had gone for the week to their summer cottage wi the Neuse River.</p>
        <p>Medical Examiner Dr. Jack Koonce said the results of an autopsy made establishes the cause of death as an apparent heart attack, and placed the time of death at sometime Wednesday night. He had last beai seen in his yard Wednesday afternoon.</p>
        <p>Funeral seiwices wiU be conducted at 3 p.m. today at the Immanuel Baptist Church by his pastor. Hie Rev. Irby Jackson. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. The body will be taken from the Wilkerson Funeral Home to the church one hour prior to the time of services.</p>
        <p>Mr. Tribley, a native qf</p>
        <p>Phillipston, Pennsylvania, had been associated with WNCT-TV since it went on the air in 1953. He had previously been associated with WGTC Radio, now WNCT Radio since 1941 when he was employed as chief engineer. From 1953 to 1955 he served as chief engineer with WNCT-TV and later was named (^rations manager.</p>
        <p>In 1962 be assumed additkmai duties as assistant manager and in 1964 he was named executive vice-president and general manager. For many years he was a licensed amateur radio operator. He was a nmmber of the Immanuel Baptist (%urch.</p>
        <p>He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Teeny Tribley; one daughter. Dr. Nancy Tribley Butts of Durham; two grandchildren; three brothers. Bill Tribley of Chicora, Pa., Milton Tribley, Phillft)ston, Pa., and Robert Tribley of Greenville, Pa., and two sisters, Mrs. Alfred Campbell and Mrs. Richard Horam, both of East Brady, Pa.</p>
        <p>Bluegrass And Clogging Today</p>
        <p>Beautiful</p>
        <p>Flowers</p>
        <p>Two weil-known entertainment groups, one from Greenville, the other from Virginia, are the featured performers in todays Sunday in the Park beginning at 7 p.m. on the sl(^ east of Reade Street.</p>
        <p>gers to provide listeners a program of ^irited dance and old fashioned Bluegrass music.</p>
        <p>The Plank Road String Band has performed before in Greenville. They were on hand for the</p>
        <p>also veteran performers, having to their credlta performances thrdyghout the state and in other southern states. In 1976 they were invited to participate in a major bicentennial event, the</p>
        <p>events ^Mmsored by the Greenville Recreation and Park* Department and financed by the City of Greenville.</p>
        <p>New Principal Named</p>
        <p>ByJERRYRAYNOR Reflector Sunday Editor</p>
        <p>. Veteran educator and Greenville City Council member aarence Gray has been elected principal of Eastern Elementary School for the school year 1977-78.</p>
        <p>Unanimous approval of Gray a* principal was made 'Thursday night at a ^ial call meeting of the city school board.</p>
        <p>A native of Simpson, Gray has been an assistant principal at Rose High School for the past seven years. Prior to that, he taught elementary and junior high level grades at the former Eppes School in GreenvUle. His teaching career began in Henderson.</p>
        <p>Gray has been a member of the Greenville City CouncU since 1970. He is active in civic work, and serves on the Board of Directors of the East Carolina Shdtered Workshop, and was formerly precinct chairman for Precinct No. 1, GreenviUe.</p>
        <p>A graduate of G. R. Whitfield School in Grimesland, Gray</p>
        <p>received the AB degree and the Master of Divinity Degree from Shaw University, Ralei^. He holds the MA degree from N.C. Central University, Durham.</p>
        <p>He is married to the former</p>
        <p>Gwendolyn Crandol of Pactolus, and they have two children, Jac-quette, 10, andQarence, Jr., 5.</p>
        <p>Commenting on this first prin-cipalship for him. Gray said: Im looking forward to working in my new position at Eastern Elementary, and hope to place a great deal of emphasis on the students.</p>
        <p>To me the main thrust of education is the Individual student. At Eastern, we will work bard to see that the contributing factors that will achieve the objectives of good education in the Greaivllle City Schools are carried out.</p>
        <p>GREENBURGH, N.Y. (AP)  Neighborhood kids gave a 69-year-old woman 15 plants several weeks ago, teUing her they would grow beautiful flowers.</p>
        <p>The flowers never came, but police say the fruit of the womans labor was a thriving marijuana garden, with the plants two feet high.</p>
        <p>She had no idea they were marijuana plants, Lt. Michael Gangemi said Friday. She planted them right in front of her house. She thoi#t they were real pretty.</p>
        <p>The police renaoved the crop.</p>
        <p>The Plank Road String Band from Lexington, Virginia will join the local Green Glass Oog-</p>
        <p>1976 Fourth of July criebration.... Philadelphia Folk Festival.</p>
        <p>The group has appeared in many  The public is invited to attend,</p>
        <p>southern states and in There is no admission charge. Washington, D. C.  This  is the fifth of a series of</p>
        <p>The Green Grass Cloggers are eight Stmday in the Park</p>
        <p>Those attending are reminded to bring items to make sitting (m the grass mme comfmtable. In the event of rain, there is no rain date sehedided for the two' grotqw.</p>
        <p>Death</p>
        <p>Toll</p>
        <p>United Press Internatkmal cmt at 8 p.m. Saturday showed at least lOl persons had beai killed in highway accidoits.</p>
        <p>Clarence Gray</p>
        <p>Waltar Dowjlng</p>
        <p>Dit At 72</p>
        <p>SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) -Walter C. Dowling, 72, former U.S. ambassador to West Germany, who attracted worldwide attention w*en he defied the Russians by traveling throu^ communist-held East Berlin in 1960, died Friday.</p>
        <p>The breakdown: Traffic: 101; Drownings: 5; for a total of 106.</p>
        <p>California led the natio^ in highway carnage with 13 traffic deaths. South Carolina roads were the scene of at least nine fatalities, whUe Ohio and Kentucky reported eight each. Illinois reported five motor vrtiicle fatalities.</p>
        <p>THE GREEN GRASS OiOGGERS - In a photografih takn during an Indow performance, members M the Green Grass Cloggers are siiown in actkw. The doggers, and The Plank Road String Band</p>
        <p>from T^rington, Va. are the tin attractkm* featmd hi Mag's Simday in tfaePark begtaming at 7p.m. on the oaaqr ahpeaaMol</p>
        <p>ReadeStieet.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0002" />
        <p>rr</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Sunday, Jul;r 3, urn</p>
        <p>Obituary Column</p>
        <p>Bryant</p>
        <p>BETHEL - Mrs. Sadie PhUpott Bryant, 89, died Friday aftemwMi. Funeral services will be held at 3:30 p.m. today at the Bethel United Methodist Church, with Bev, Richard Rundeil presiding.</p>
        <p>She is survived by two dau^ters, Mrs. Mildred Briley, of Hassell, and Mrs. Lucille Rhiver, of Indianapolis, Indiana; three sons, Burlie Bryant, of Richmond, Virginia, Clarence Bryant, of Ta^ro, and Ernest Bryant, of Fort Lauderdale, Florida; one sister, Mrs. Martha Moore, of Burlington; 15 grandchildren, and 21 great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Carson</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lela Jones Carson, 85, died at her home, 310 East Tenth Street, Saturday morning. Funeral services will be conducted at 3:00 p.m. Monday at the First Pratecostal Holiness Church by the Rev. Doner Lee, Superintendent of the North Candna Conference, and the Rev. Frank Gentry, pastor of the church. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. The body will be taken from the Wilkerson Funeral Home to the church one hour prior to the time of service.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Carson, a native of Pitt County, was reared in the Bethel conununity and was married to Vernon Clyde Carson, who died in 1947. A resident of Greenville for the past 50 years, she was a member of the First Pentecastal Holiness Church and active in the church. She served as Superintendent and Sunday School teacher, and as president of the Missionary Society for ten years. A church, Carson Memorial, located near Greenville, was established and named in honor of its founder. Mrs. Carson was president of the local Womans Christian Temperance Union for twenty-one years.</p>
        <p>She is survived by two dau^ters: Mrs. Hazel Rouse, of Greenville, and Mrs. Burley Highsmith, of Winston-Salem; a sister, Mrs. Lucy J. Holton, of Raleigh; four grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will be at the home of Mrs. Rouse, 600 E. 11th St.</p>
        <p>Daniels</p>
        <p>AYDEN  Rev. Theodore Daniels died Friday morning at his home, 305 McCray St. Funeral arrangements, being handled by Flanagan and Hardee Funeral Home, are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Graham</p>
        <p>LA GRANGE - Albert Graham, 206 E. Washington St., died Saturday morning at Lenoir Memorial Hospital, Kinston. Funeral arrangements, being handled by Mitchells Funeral Home, are incomplete.</p>
        <p>KTONAP SlKPECr - mibred Artbir Bannister, diarged with the MHnap ol 15-year-old Charlotte Grosse from her tent in a Venice, Fla. state park earlier this wedc, is ied from the courtroom in Sarasota liter he appeared tboe briefly this nxHning for a pre-trial bwd hearing. No specific arraignment date was set. (APWirephoto)</p>
        <p>Four Dead In Wreck</p>
        <p>Edwards</p>
        <p>SIMPSON - Mr. H. Lindy Edwards, 40, died Friday niit at his home. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. at the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by his pastor, the Rev. James Lupton. Burial will be in PlJ^ood Memorial Park. Masonic rites will be accorded at the grave.</p>
        <p>Mr. Edwards, a native of Pitt county, spent ail his life in Simpson and attended East Carolina University and North Carolina State University at Raleigh. He was a member of Salem United Methodist Church, a member of the Church board and was a Sunday School teacher. He was a member of the Grimesland Masonic Lodge No. 475, A.F. &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>A.M., the Grimesland Chapter 350 Order of the Eastern Star, New Bern Scottish Rites Bodies, and the Sudan Temple. He was also a member of the Simpson Ruritan Club and the Shawnee Tribe 62, Improved Order of Red Men. He was a farmer and owned and operated Edwards Hardware and Fertilizer Co. in Simpson.</p>
        <p>He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Emily Warren Edwards; one son, Lindley Warren Edwards of the home; one dau^ter, Gigi Edwards of the home; his mother, Mrs. Velma</p>
        <p>B. Edwards of Simpson; three brofliers: Fred Edwards, Jr. of Simpson, Hubert N. Edwards of Greenville, and Jimmy Edwards of Jacksonville, Fla.; and four sisters: Mrs. Lucille Sumereil of Simpson, Mrs. Tull McArthur of Winston-Salem, Mrs. James Paige of Greiville, and Mrs. Richard Anthony of Richmond, Virginia.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 Svmday night.</p>
        <p>BRIDGETON, N.C. (UPI) -Four Washington, D C. residents were killed early Saturday in a fiery hit-and-run auto accident on U.S. 17 about a mile north of here.</p>
        <p>Highway patrolman M.N. Kiu said Victoria Galluez, 42; Mafia Elena Uribe, 10; and Claudia Numez, 61, were all dead on arrival at Cravm County Hospital following the 3:30 a.m. accident. Felicia Sandig, 40, died at the hospital Saturday afternoon.</p>
        <p>King said witnesses told him the victims car was struck from behind, hit a tree and exploded into flames. The driver, Arturo Baierio, 20, was treated and released.</p>
        <p>The driver of the other car, Leo Lewis, 20, of Vanceboro was charged with leaving the scene of an accident after he allegedly fled from the scene on foot and later got a bicycle. He was stopped by police about a mile from the accident.</p>
        <p>He wasnt going very far</p>
        <p>with all that blood on him, said Bridgeton Police ChiOf Tony Hamilton, who made the arrest.</p>
        <p>Lewis was freed on $5,000 bond. Magistrate Paul Stevens said manslaughter charges were pending.</p>
        <p>King said Lewis was allegedly driving at a high speed when the accident occurred. He said both cars ran off the left side of the road before Balerios vehicle struck a tree and caught fire.</p>
        <p>LA^'T IN FRLEPOM</p>
        <p>More Workers Idle</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM, N.C, ^UPI)  The Bahnson Co. has laid off 37 more plant workers and temporarily cut the salaries of all office employes working at the companys two Winston-Saiem plants.</p>
        <p>Union officials said Friday a total of 103 workers have been laid off in the last two weeks.</p>
        <p>Company spokesman Dale B. McMiliin said ttie pay cut was an alternative to laying off more employes. He would not say when the salary reduction might be lifted, nor would he</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>confirm reports that pay being cut by 10 per cet.</p>
        <p>Reading from a statement, McMiliin said the actions were necessary because of a weakening in the markets served by the company, which specializes in sophisticated air conditioning and humidifying equipment used by the tobacco and textile industries.</p>
        <p>A high-ranking company official said Bahnson is still financially sound, but refused to comment on whether a depressed textile industry was</p>
        <p>Transco Seeks Hike</p>
        <p>Gorham</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Claude Albert Gorham, 509 S. Barrett St., died Thursday in Morehead City. Funeral arrangements, being handled by Hemby Funeral Home in Fountain, are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Mr. Gorham is survived by his wife. May Ellis Gorham, of the home.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Federal Power Commission has been asked to approve a 7 per cent wholesale rate hike that would mean a $50.8 million-a-year revenue increase for the Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp. (Transco), North Carolinas only natural gas supplier.</p>
        <p>Company president W.J. Bowen said the rate hike is being sought because of increased costs,The company hopes to put the hike into effect Jan 1.</p>
        <p>Raymond J. Nery, head of the gas section of the state Utilities Commission, said the hike would probably mean an increase of eight to nine cents per thousand cubic feet of gas for retail customers.</p>
        <p>However, he said, it is impossible to predict whether gas will cost more next winter than it did last year because of all the factors affecting the</p>
        <p>retail price of gas.</p>
        <p>During last winters fuel shortage, Transco had to ship North Carolina Jess than 40 per cent of the amount adled for in contracts with the stafc Oiree main distributors.</p>
        <p>Nery said Transco indicated that "slightly less gas will be available this winter.</p>
        <p>Criticizes</p>
        <p>Program</p>
        <p>Prayer</p>
        <p>The obituary of Mrs. Mariah Rogers Fh'ayer, appearing in Fridays paper, had incorrect information on addresses of two sons. The correct information is  William Prayer of Wilson, and James Prayer, of Rt. 1, Fountain.</p>
        <p>Women's Group</p>
        <p>SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) - The president of the 13 million-member Southern Baptist Convention criticized a proposed new television series Saturday and predicted the show would be a major target for moralists.</p>
        <p>The fact that the show is well (kme and sophisticated does not cover the fact that it is based on twisted sexual attitudes, said Dr. Jimmy R. Allen, pastor of the First Baptist Church of San Antonio.</p>
        <p>Allen criticized a proposed new program entitled SOAP, which he said portrayed a family whose members are involved in adultery, murder, homosexuality and organized crime.</p>
        <p>I am not going to mount a campaign (against the series). When the people see this, the campaign will mount itself, Allen said.</p>
        <p>To Meet</p>
        <p>Family Reunion</p>
        <p>The International Womens Year delegation will meet Friday, July 8 in the Cjvlc Room of Planters Bank at Third and Washington Streets.</p>
        <p>The group will gather at 6:30 p.m. to share events of the state meeting held in June and to plan further activities.</p>
        <p>The meeting is open to the public, and is being coordinated by Mrs. J. W. Maye and Mrs. Lucille Jones.</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Meeting</p>
        <p>Place</p>
        <p>MASONIC NOTICE</p>
        <p>SUNDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Eastern Gay Alliance meets. For location call 752-4043</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 a.m.  Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a.m.  KIwanis Golden K Club meets at Holiday inn 8:00 p.m. - Withla Council. Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m.  Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous meets at AA BIdg. on FarmvllleHwy.</p>
        <p>-  jW</p>
        <p>^ Registering Now.</p>
        <p>Kindergarten</p>
        <p>Elementary High School</p>
        <p>* state Approved Complete Testing</p>
        <p>Featuring:</p>
        <p>High Scliool Division</p>
        <p>All Classroom Instruction)</p>
        <p> Certified Teachers</p>
        <p> Varsity Athletic Program</p>
        <p> New Gymnasium NotAX.E.</p>
        <p> Not Correspondence</p>
        <p>^REENVILLE</p>
        <p>C(6\HRISTIAN</p>
        <p>AXcademy</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>Dr. Barry N. Ba^pyelL President _^v. J.M. Bragg, Headmaster</p>
        <p>756-0939</p>
        <p>or</p>
        <p>756-2822</p>
        <p>2001W. Greenville Blvd. (Next to Red Oak Subd.)</p>
        <p>affecting Bahnson's business.</p>
        <p>We serve the textile industry, he said. You draw whatever conclusion you want to.</p>
        <p>But Donald R, Hackett, a union official at the plant. Indirectly cited the textile companies for the layoffs and pay cuts.</p>
        <p>We do a lot of work for textiles and thevre up and down, he said. "When it affects them, it affects us.</p>
        <p>Hackett said Fridays layoffs came without warning.</p>
        <p>Normally, they try to give us a weeks notice, but it came</p>
        <p>!</p>
        <p>MARCH FOR THE WILMINGTON 10 -Members of the synod of the United Church of Christ march in sunxHt of the Wilmingtoi 10 during a protest in front of tbe White House Friday.</p>
        <p>Fdlowing Uk march, the members held a prayer vigil as part of their demonstration. (AP ] Wirepboto)</p>
        <p>Two Collisions</p>
        <p>up right quick this time for some reason, he said. We just dont have the work at this time. Theres really not much (the union) can do until the work load comes back.</p>
        <p>McMiliin said the company employs about 1,300 persons at both Winston-Salem locations and field offices.</p>
        <p>The first 66 workers were laid off the middle of last month. A company official said those layoffs came about because were taking a long, hard look at the company and weve compressed some areas.</p>
        <p>Masonic Notice Grimesland Masonic Lodge No. 475 A.F. &amp;amp; A.M. will have an emergency communication Monday, July 4, 12:30 p.m., for the purpose of paying last respects to Brother H. Lindy Edwards. Ail Master Masons are invited.</p>
        <p>JidmJ. Payne, HI, Master James E.Mauray, ^  Secreta^</p>
        <p>Two accidents resulting in damans but no injuries occurred on the streets of Greenville Friday.</p>
        <p>Marion Gorham Wilkes, 50, of 1108 W. 5th St. was charged with a safe movement violation after the car he was driving collided with another/'vehicle - oil Memorial Drive at Stantonsburg Road.</p>
        <p>Mary Vainwright McLawhoro, 42, of 2301 Rouse Road said she had stopped for a traffic light when the Wilkes vehicle struck her car from the rear.</p>
        <p>Damages were estimated at $180 to the Wilkes car and $80 to the McLawhom vehicle.</p>
        <p>Rena C3iarlotte Horne, 20, of 108 N. Elm St. was charged with following too close after her car skidded 30 feet and struck a vehicle being driven by Aris Zoe Galloway, 21, of 1200-A W. 5th St.</p>
        <p>Galloway had stopped his car for a traffic light on E. 5th St. when the Horne vehicle collided with it.</p>
        <p>Damages were estimated at $300 to the Horne car and $100 to the Galloway vehicle.</p>
        <p>Mixed Record . . .</p>
        <p>(CmOnuedtivmpageA-If MARIJUANA  ney  generals</p>
        <p>In order to avoid sending the boy in the next block to prison with hardened criminals, the General Assembly enacted a law to eliminate a prison term for a first offense of possessing an ounce or less of marijuana.</p>
        <p>The new law makes a first offense punishable by a fine of up to $100 and a second offense by a sentence of up to six months and a fine of up to $500. Under the old law, a first offense carried up to six months in prison and a fine of $500, and a second offense up to two years and a fine of $2,000.</p>
        <p>PORNCXJRPHY By overwhelming margins, the legislature voted to crack down on pornography. It enacted a new law to permit district attorneys and the attor-</p>
        <p>office to seek court orders closing adult book stores and x-rated movie houses as public nuisances. Another new law would forbid sale of more than one line of obscene material under one roof. Another would forbid the display of sexually explicit material in view of minors and nonconsenting adults.</p>
        <p>RIGHT TO DIE As a result of the Karen Quinlan case in New Jersey, the legislature enacted a new law that defines death as the absence of brain action and permits doctors to withhold life-sustaining devices in certain, carefully described conditions.</p>
        <p>Tide Table</p>
        <p>Atlantic Beach Monday</p>
        <p>High Tide</p>
        <p>NAME ADDED</p>
        <p>The name of James Westervelt Elliott, of Ayden, was omitted from the ECU Spring Quarter Honor Student List on page 16 of the July 1 edition of The Daily Reflector.</p>
        <p>AM</p>
        <p>10:33</p>
        <p>PM</p>
        <p>10:53</p>
        <p>Low Tide AM PM</p>
        <p>4:20  4:39</p>
        <p>Mood: Full Adjustments for tide</p>
        <p>Beaufort Cape Lookout Bogue Inlet New River Inlet</p>
        <p>at:</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>+ 1:T  +1:17</p>
        <p>-:02  -:10</p>
        <p>+ :29  +:26</p>
        <p>+ :31  +:32</p>
        <p>Notice</p>
        <p>JohnT.</p>
        <p>Stevenson</p>
        <p>is no longer associated with</p>
        <p>The Carolina Bargain Trader</p>
        <p>BEAT'THE'HEAT</p>
        <p>The family of Charlie and Velma L. Mills of Route 1, Grimesland, will host a family reunion Monday at 1 p.m. at Pitt Technical Institutes picnic area.</p>
        <p>All relatives are invited to attend. For further information contact Mrs. Velma E. Mills Yarrell at 758-4985.</p>
        <p>Graduate</p>
        <p>.. Miss Brenda S. MUls is a re-et)i graduate of St. Augustines College in Raleigh. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Mills of Route 1, Grimesland.</p>
        <p>BUY NOW</p>
        <p>SAVE UP 10^60</p>
        <p>Greenville Lodge No. 284 A.F. &amp;amp; A.M. will hold a stated com munication Monday at 7:30 p.m. All Master Masons are invited.</p>
        <p>C.S.Harrisim Master H.R. Phillips, Secy.</p>
        <p>During Greenville TV &amp;amp; Appliance's sale, you'll find great savings on a selection of high quality room air conditioners to do almost any home cooling job.</p>
        <p>Lightweight Portable By Carrier</p>
        <p>It's a 5,(X)0 BTU model, perfect for smaller living areas. It installs easily in minutes, and gives you a choice of two cooling speeds  one for quiet nighttime operation. The name is Carrier, so the construction is rugged. Buy now and save.</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>95</p>
        <p>Model 51KW0051</p>
        <p>Save on Carrier's big capacity unit if you take advantage of this limited time offer on a 21,100 BTU room air conditioner that's perfect for multi-room cooling jobs. You get a choice of two cooling speeds and a special exhaust feature to get rid of stale air.</p>
        <p>*399</p>
        <p>95</p>
        <p>/Model FJ2313A</p>
        <p>FREE NORMAL INSULLATION-TERMS ARRANGED</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE TV &amp;amp; APPLIANCE</p>
        <p>200 GREENVILLE BLVD. ,V\ALCOLW\ C. WILLIAMS, JR., VICE PRES.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0003" />
        <p>At Least 39 Injured</p>
        <p>The Dlly ReOector, Greenvllle, N.C.-^Swidey. July S, H77-A4Speeding Car Driven info Plains KKK Meeting</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM E. SCHULZ Anodated Press Writer</p>
        <p>PLAINS, Ga. (AP) - At least 39 persons were injured Saturday night when a white man drove a speeding car into the speakers platform at a Ku Klux Klan rally in President Carters home town.</p>
        <p>The small, gray foreign-made car cut a swath through a crowd of about 250 persons and crashed into the grandstand, toppling speakers from the platform. People attending the rally began leaving immediately.</p>
        <p>There were 39 total injured, mostly fractures and lacerations, said Mike Ramirez of the Sumter County ambulance service. We took anywhere from 17 to 25 to the ho^ital. One lady, who was about months pregnant, went into labor.</p>
        <p>The injured were taken to the Americus &amp;amp; Sumter County</p>
        <p>Hospital in nearby Americus, about 10 miles away.</p>
        <p>Sumter County Sheriff Randy Howard said the driver of the car was treated for minor injuries and taken to jail. His name was not released.</p>
        <p>People were standing about 15 deq) in a semicircle around the grandstand when the car crashed. Several persons rushed the car after It st&amp;lt;^&amp;gt;ped and yelled White nigger and "KUI him as police took him away.</p>
        <p>One gunshot was heard at the time of the crash.</p>
        <p>Hie rally, sponsored by the Invisible Empire of the Ku K1X Han, had been called to demand the resignation of U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young and to protest Carters cancellation of the B1 bomber program and potential resumption of trade with Cuba.</p>
        <p>About 30 membm of the Han were wearing white robes when the rally began shortly</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>News Briefs</p>
        <p>Charged In Abduction</p>
        <p>SARASOTA, Fla. (UPI) - Wilfred Arthur Rusty Bannister, haggard and his long hair riiri^iled, stood with bowed head Saturday while a judge ordered him held without bond in the abduction of a 15-year-old girl from a Girl Scout camp.</p>
        <p>The 3$.yearK)ld Bannister, who lives alone in a $61,000 home on fashionable Siesta Key, answered with a monotone Yes when Sarasota County Judge Edwin Cummer asked him whether he understood the charges against him.</p>
        <p>Cummer then ordered him held without bond on charges of involuntary sexual battery and kidnaping pending arraignn-ment, tentatively set at 9:30 a.m. July 11. Police explained the sexj^ battery charge involved fondling.</p>
        <p>Alerted By Drug Ad</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP)  An advertisement for a drug containing illegal laetriie which was mailed to a chiropractor here has Merted custom officials that North Carolina may be on the laetriie smuggling circuit.</p>
        <p>John M. Dolan, special agent in charge of U.S. Customs in North Carolina, said the letter to local chiropractor Paul Meadows is the first indication of possible laetriie traffic in the state. But he said the agency has been investigating smuggling of the sutetance from Mexico and West Germany.</p>
        <p>Plans Postal Rates Increase</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The Postal Srie still plans to raise rates next year, even thou^ its in its best financial shape ever.</p>
        <p>Next week, the Postal Service board of governors is expected to propose increasing the firstclass letter rate from 13 cents to 15 or 16 cents early in 1978.</p>
        <p>The agency, while making real progress, still lost $50 million in the last 12 months, says Postmaster General Benjamin Bailar.</p>
        <p>[Bailar said Friday that the operating loss was drastically loVer than the previous years record $1.2 billion and below thie Postal Services $500 million average annual deficit.</p>
        <p>Considering Adoption Subsidy</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  The Carter Administration is considering a plan that would give subsidies to people who adopt hard-to-place children.</p>
        <p>The plan has gained added attention within the administration -.v.smcfe-tbe Supreme Court this week gave the government approval to halt the use of Medjcaid money for abortions.</p>
        <p>A spokeswoman for the Department of Health, Education and Welfare said the department has not yet developed adoption subsidy legislation, but that HEW Secretary Joseph Califano Jr. has ordered the issue thoroughly explored.</p>
        <p>Uncovers Boxes Of Cash</p>
        <p>PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - FBI agents have unearthed two cardboard boxes with $1,673,460 in cash believed to have been stolen in the robbery-slajdng of an Indianapolis widow who may</p>
        <p>have had ^to$llmiHon in her home.  ____</p>
        <p>"LeonGaskUi, ^ialagentin-chargof the Phoenix FBI office, said Friday that the cash is thought to have belonged to Mariorie V. Jackson, 67, who was found slain in her bumipg inyiA May 7. Mrs. Jackson was heiress to an Indiana supermarket chain fortune.  j  ,</p>
        <p>Five million doars was found in her residence. Authorities believe aiibther $6 million was stolen at the time of the slaying,</p>
        <p>and about $3.5 mUlion of that has been recovered.</p>
        <p>/  Mid-Ocean Rendezvous</p>
        <p>\ ' PONTA DELGADA, Azores (AP)  A Portuguese tugboat V carrying emergency fuel sailed toward a mid-ocean rendezvous ^Vly Saturday with American speedboater Bob Magoon, haihpered in his TransaUantic dash by a busted fuel tank.</p>
        <p>tf^gaid Magoon, a Miami eye surgeon, planned to continue ' his voyat after r^lacing the fuel tank at Ponta Delgada, 1,500 miles offthe Portuguese coast and 2,000 miles from his destinatioaDL^ewport, R.I.</p>
        <p>after 8 p.m., EDT.</p>
        <p>The groups Imperial Wizard, BUI WUkinson, said: "I was on the ^kers stand speaking whi I heard someone shout. 1 heard U car engine roar..accelerating very rapidly</p>
        <p>The next thing I knew, I was laying on the ground, be added. People were converging on the car, of course, and about this time, my security people hustled me away. One witness, Travis Camber, said the driver of the car was using filthy black language and refused the Hans request to leave the rented eight-acre field near downtown Plains where the rally was being held.</p>
        <p>But when the youth saw a police officer approaching. Camber said, he drove off and came by me and said, You want to see a number?...You know the rest.</p>
        <p>Plains Police Chief Billy McClung said he was standing behind the crowd as itfaced the platform.</p>
        <p>The whole thing just sort of shot up into the air, he said. The car came out into the crowd and people were rolling everywhere. At first I thought it was an explosion.</p>
        <p>The Han went ahead with Its scheduled cross-burning. The orange flames of the burlap-wrapped cross cast an eerie glow in the dusk as it clariled with the flashing blue and red lights of police cars and ambulances.</p>
        <p>Small knots of people gathered around the injured and talked quietly.</p>
        <p>Wilkinson said Plains was chosen for the rally because we want to help these people keep blacks out of their church.</p>
        <p>The Plains Baptist CJiurch was the center of controversy last fall when its membership voted to reject the membership application of Clennon King, a black minister from Albany, Ga.</p>
        <p>McClung said his police force was beefed up with some state troopers for the gathering, but he said he hadnt anticipated any trouble.</p>
        <p>However, he said the Han obtained the rally permit by pulling a fast one on the Plains city council. He said their application only listed "a music show, patriotic display and'bctivities.</p>
        <p>Wufcinson denied that deception wbs involved. I applied as an individual, but they knew who I w^ lie said.</p>
        <p>Asks 1 Disaster Status For</p>
        <p>ri</p>
        <p>;? . IIIIMI</p>
        <p>GOING OUT - The liners Doric, left, and Rotterdam, ri^t, are guided out from midtown New York City piers Saturday ^ tugs. They took up positkms in channd of the HUraaii River and 'then-proceded in a parade of six ocean liners down the river, into lower</p>
        <p>New York Harbor, and to sea. Procession was one in a series of events sciieduled for New Yoi^ watowrays ova- the Hoilday weekend. (APWirqtoto)</p>
        <p>'wcvf--</p>
        <p>Amin In Gabon</p>
        <p>By RAYMOND WILKINSON</p>
        <p>LIBREVILLE, Gabon (UPI)  Ugandas unpredictable President Idi Amin, a pistol strapped to his hip, made an unexpected appearance Saturday at the start of an OAU summit meeting and, grinning broadly, strode around the hall to cheers.</p>
        <p>Amin strolled into the $23 million copper-domed Conference Palace minutes before the start of the 49-nation summit of the Organization of African Unity. The burly Ugandan dictator smiled broadly and circled the auditorium to the applause of delegates before the ppemng speeches bogaa</p>
        <p>Amiii, resplendent in blue Air Force uniform with an array of medals emblazoned on his chest, was the only head of state to receive an ovation as</p>
        <p>he walked into the. meeting hall.</p>
        <p>It was yet another of Amins famous surprises, this time played on his fellow African leaders. For the past several days Radio Uganda had insisted Amin would not attend the annual OAU summit.</p>
        <p>Last month, Amin first teased the Irish, then the British Commonwealth, and finally the world with an international hide-and-seek in which he said he was flying to Ireland to take a boat to Britain to attend the Commonwealth Conference.</p>
        <p>He later disappeared for several days and Radio Uganda dropped all mention of _him, prompting qiciilatlon*'as" to whether he had been assassinated, overthrown in a eoup or had flown to some unknown destination.</p>
        <p>Convinced Racism Now More Sophistijcated</p>
        <p>Concern Over Low</p>
        <p>pitf County Scoring Teachers</p>
        <p>RALEIGH.- Gov. Jim Hunt has ask^ U. S. Secretary of Agricuitpre Robert S. Bergland to decjare Pitt County an agriculniral disaster area as a result of heavy rains May 24-26.</p>
        <p>If the declaration is issued, disaster relief loans will be availably to farmers in the county- J</p>
        <p>In a.Tetter to Bergland Hunt said, /An excessive rain during tlfe p|n-iod May 24-26 caused considerable damage to the entire county. There are 2,400 farmers in this county, and all of them were affected to some degree by the damage caused during this period.</p>
        <p>He added, This has caused a critical situation for these farmers which will make it necessary for them to have access to emergency credit for financing a continuing farming effort in the immediate future. Your attention to the matter will be appreciated.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) -State school superintendents, alarmed by the perSfentage of 'working teachers who flunked the National Teacher Examination, will receive the names and scores of teachers in their systems who have failed the test.</p>
        <p>Alan T. Hill, director of the division of management information systems in the Department of Public Instruction, said Friday the scores will be mailed to superintendents or given to them at a conference in Asheville next week.</p>
        <p>I think thres enough interest out there that every superintendent should. have (that) information. said Hill.</p>
        <p>He noted that at least ei^t superintendents have contacted the department after reading reports about the number of teachers who have failed the test but are still employed in</p>
        <p>the state.</p>
        <p>rheyre expressing surprise in many cases that they have a number of teachers in Uieir unit who have not passed the NTE, Hill said. They wanted to verify the figures. They wanted to know exactly who had not passed the exam and whether the percentages were exact and correct and so on.</p>
        <p>The Educational Testing Service, which administers the NTE, will not report an &amp;gt; applicants socre to an individual school unit.</p>
        <p>Officials said superintendents can get the test results from the Department of Public Instruction, but noted that most rely on whatever an applicant tells them.</p>
        <p>The state now requires teaching candidates to score at least 950 on the N-T-E before they can be issued a regular teaching certificate.</p>
        <p>ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Members of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, who completed their annual convention Friday, are ^ convinced racism has become ' more sophisticated in recent years.</p>
        <p>Members of the nations oldest and largest civil rights organization were reminded frequently during their five-day gathering of the problems they must face.</p>
        <p>Racism has gone from overt to covert, said NAACP board Chairman Margaret Bush WUson.</p>
        <p>The blatant discrimination of the past has given way to subtle devices that deny equal rights to blacks just the same, she said.</p>
        <p>Ironically, she added, opponents of the gains already made in civil rl^ts are using the same methods the NAACP employed to achieve those advances, tie primary tools are legal challenges and legislative lobbying.</p>
        <p>Benjamin L. Hooks, incoming NAACP executive director, said many white Americans mistakenly believe blacks have won all the battles that need to be won.</p>
        <p>Even some blacks, now in</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>the middle class and living in the  suburbs, have turned</p>
        <p>apathetic toward civil rights, Hooks said.</p>
        <p>Even such traditional allies as liberal politicians and organized labor at times appear to be turning against the NAACP. The organization was shocked by an antibusing measure sponsored by Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, E&amp;gt;-Mo., who has a* voting record strongly favorable to civil rights. A June 1 Supreme Court decision that weakened the</p>
        <p>abUity of the NAACP to challenge allegedly discriminatory seniority rules had t|je support of the AFlrCIO.</p>
        <p>Were finding out who our real friends are, Mrs. Wilson said.</p>
        <p>Hooks, who will resign later this month as a member of the Federal Communications Commission, said the NAACP overestimated the help the civil ri^ts movement could expect from a Democratic Congress and a Democratic president.</p>
        <p>Sniper Kills Chief</p>
        <p>FAYETTEVILLE, Pa., (UPI)  A former Marine suspected of being the sniper who shot and killed a police chief and a Fayetteville man near a burning cabin Saturday was captured hours later in a heavily wooded area.</p>
        <p>Police said the suspect, 22-year-old Gary Rock, was wounded and taken to nearby Chambersburg Ho^ital. He was tracked down by 30 law officers, using dogs and a helicopter in this heavily wooded area in south central Pennsylvania..</p>
        <p>. State Police Lt. Herman Faiola said Fire Chief James C. Cutchall, 33, and Wilbur Broo-kens, about SO, were cut down by the sniper firing from ambush near the burning cabin in rural Fayetteville. Faiola said Rock owned the cabin.</p>
        <p>Fireman Scott Scott Reichen-bach, 18, was shot in the arm and was in guarded condition at Chambersburg Hostal.</p>
        <p>Faiola said the incident began about 12:45 p.m. wboi Brookens, visiting a friend, heard an explosion in a cabin about 100 yards away.</p>
        <p>Kin^ Domiiiion.The mask touch to every Vii^inia vacation.</p>
        <p>snUPPED PLANTS - Tobacco leaves were</p>
        <p>battered to the ground by heavy winds and haU</p>
        <p>that  thunderstorm  which</p>
        <p>swept thnHb New Bern FrWay. This 15 acre field, owned by local farmer Leroy Shacklefwd, wasdestiqyettintbeshMrm. (APWlrephoto)</p>
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        <p>Here youll find a world of breathtaking rides, dazzling live shows, wildanimols onda cast of happy cartoon characters brought to life byHonna-Borbera.ln fact, there's somethingforeveryone-from our new musical revue "Hooray For Hollywood. to a monorail ride through</p>
        <p>Lion Country, to our South Seas Dol -phin Show. And this year, weve got Q new ride that will throw yo fora loopthe mighty King Kobral \Afere located just 90 minutes from both the .mountoins and the beach-right in the heart of Virgin- ia's most popular, historical at-tractions. So you can enjoy a great side trip with us, without go -ing out of your way.</p>
        <p>For a day, 0 weekend.or an en -tire trip, let Kings Dominion put a touch of magic into your Virginia vacation.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0004" />
        <p>*</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>ilMistakes Appeared Too Late</p>
        <p>The way to avoid mistakes in a community is to start criticizing before a given project is carried out.</p>
        <p>We try to do that, but some times we fail and things get done that, we feel turn out to be mistakes. No doubt most citizens feet that they should have spoken out on a given issue at the ap-pri^riate time so that mistakes could have been avoided.</p>
        <p>Looking back we wish we had said something sooner on several local projects. Perhaps it would have prompted modifications.</p>
        <p>Here are some:</p>
        <p> Greenville Boulevard. Over 20 years ago when^ this important artery was planned as a bypas;^a 200-foot right-of-way could have easily been obtained. Such rights-of-way were not unheard of then, and if it had been obtained a king-sized traffic problem could have been alleviated today .</p>
        <p>O Downtown Mall. We were for it when it was planned and we still are, but we wish that it had been planned with lower walls, planters and trees. The height of these thih^. has  a fendancy to separate the two business sides of the mall area. One only has to look at the Raleigh downtown mall</p>
        <p>to see what keeping everything lower could have done  and Raleigh was working in a much wider street right-of-way.</p>
        <p> Ficklen Stadium. Fortunately the planners looked to the future so that the stadium can now be expanded. Unfortunately the stadium could have been far more usable and also more attractive if the playing surface had been lowered by excavation so that the entrances to the seating areas had been at about ground level. It would have saved a lot of climbing for patrons.</p>
        <p> Courthouse Radio Tower. This stark steel tower looms over the stately old courthouse and is ^t a weieotnp art jitipp (&amp;gt; tjie dowr.town Greenville</p>
        <p>'skyline. Surely some other arrangement could have been made.</p>
        <p>O Greenvilles Bike Routes. Considerable money was spent to erect signs designating certain streets as bike routes and yellow lines were painted along the sides of some of the streets. It was all useless since it is of no help whatsoever to bicyclists or motorists.  useless if</p>
        <p>any gullible bicyclist feels that the bike route signs offer any protection. They dont, gncl the money designating the routes was wasted; '</p>
        <p>Largely To Expanded City Services</p>
        <p>The City Council has approved the city and Greenville Utilities budgets for the fiscal year 1977-78.</p>
        <p>The budget provides for some capital improvements, but largely it is an expansion-of-services budget for a rapidly Rowing city.</p>
        <p>Thankfully the budget holds the tax rate at last</p>
        <p>THIS AFTERNOON</p>
        <p>Auto Taxes</p>
        <p>years 64 cents per $100 valuation. New sources of revenues such as revenue sharing and community development funds have helped the city hold the property tax rate.</p>
        <p>We think the city can conrnnie to move forward with the approved budget.</p>
        <p>Hey, good buddies... y'all sure youve got this thing hooked up right... huh... gM&amp;gt;d buddies... ?</p>
        <p>By ALVIN TAYLOR</p>
        <p>Sunday Morning Notes</p>
        <p>ByBnXNOBUTT</p>
        <p>RAraiSH  Surely one of the mosy''studied subjects in Noru Carolina is that of paym^t of local property taxes of motor vehicles.</p>
        <p>Now, another study wiil be made with a report to the 1978 session of the General Assembly.</p>
        <p>As far back as 1972, legislative studies were showing a lot of tax cheaters were not listing motor vehicles in he county where taxes are due. Somewhere between 15 and 20 per cent of all motor vehicles in the state simply arent listed for tax purposes. That represents about $10 million for local governments across the state.</p>
        <p>The escape mechanism is simple: statewide registration is conducted in Raleigh, while listing for local taxes is done in ie counties. Some counties get master lists from Raleigh and cross check to catch the cheaters; soine dont. The process is time consuming and right expensive.</p>
        <p>THE INSIDE REPORT</p>
        <p>NoCheck</p>
        <p>A number of counties just dont bother, and experts say those counties are recorded as home base for an awful lot of vehiclestruck fleets; lease car fleets; individual owners seeking to evade taxes.</p>
        <p>One study commission proposed a statewide excise tax with dollars rebated to local governments. Officials at the state Division of Motor Vehicles resisted; local governments figured they wouldnt get a fair split; and local property tax rates are so disparate that no system could be divised.</p>
        <p>So how about a slip of paper from the tax office before auto license plates could be bought? That would be awkward and cause' people to make two trips and stand in line.</p>
        <p>Move the auto license sales to the tax office? That created problems in determining values, and besides, local tax officials arent license salesmen.</p>
        <p>Other ideas were plentiful, but still nothing has been done.</p>
        <p>Now, State Rep. Robert A. Jones, D-Rutherford, who has been either a member of, or chairman of, the previous study groups, is setting up ahother exploration of alter-</p>
        <p>BILL</p>
        <p>NOBLITT</p>
        <p>natives, with a report due next May.</p>
        <p>Exertion Noted</p>
        <p>A recent column here suggested three ills in education which demand attention: equal pay for all teachers, training and certification, and teacher tenure.</p>
        <p>John W. PHillips (among others) of Henderson takes exception, pointing out the problems in those areas and noting that while they are important, he finds two others which are much more germane to the problems plaguing the public schools of</p>
        <p>North Carolina...</p>
        <p>Social promotion has done more to hurt educational standards in the state than everything else combined,.. we have children advancing all the way through high school who cannot read on the third or fourth grade level.,. teachers have been told (by the administrators) to promote children according to certain guidelines whether the children were academically ready or not, writes Phillips.</p>
        <p>The other problemsprimary teachers have been told not to require children to memorfee things like the alphabet or multiplication tables. They are supposed to learn these from working witht them. The result: many children never learned them at all or never learned them well enough to use them efficiently ... Memorization was supposed to be harmful psychologically to children ..</p>
        <p>. that the lack was disastrous educationally did not seem to matter.</p>
        <p>A science camp for ' youngsters at ECU was studying packaging. The experiments included the -i^dhildren packaging eggs and dropping them off a roof to see how they fared, to finally dropping packaged eggs from an airplane at an altitude of about a thousand feet.</p>
        <p>The eggs, we are told, came through the air drop rather well, but there were some wise cracks from adults watching the experiment.</p>
        <p>If they really want to test it, they ought to send them through the mails, one bystander said.</p>
        <p>If they didnt break, they would spoil, said another.</p>
        <p>Now, now. Where would we be without the U. S. Postal Service?</p>
        <p>Connection Unmentioned</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Gas pipeline executive John G. McMUIian left Rep. James D. Santini of Nevada last Wednesday (June 22) uncertain whether his hard sell against the gas deregulation bUI had made a conversion, but that was before Santini knew of McMUlians connection with the vast natural gas resources on the North Slope of Alaska.</p>
        <p>Whether that was intentional concealment of a vested interest in helping President Carter  who controls what happens to North Slope gas  or an innocent oversight, McMillians failure to explain that his in</p>
        <p>terests go far beyond the price of natural gas in San-tinis state of Nevada has not helped the Presidents fight against deregulation.</p>
        <p>McMillian, the head of Northwest Pipeline, never did mention the North Sl&amp;lt;^ connection to Santini. His message was oddly seductive: Listen to me, because I am the only pipeline executive in the country who is against deregulation of natural gas prices and for President Carters severely limited decontrol bill.</p>
        <p>The reason McMillian gave was that Canadian gas, which provides about half the natural gas his company pumps and sells in the Northwest  supplying 70 per</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209 Cotanche Street, Greenville, N.C. 27834 Established 1882 Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARDDAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at GreenvUle, N. C.</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIP'nON RATES Payable in Advance</p>
        <p>Home Delivery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly $3.00</p>
        <p>By Mail One Year  $38.00</p>
        <p>Six 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 dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publications of special dispatches here are also</p>
        <p>UNITED PRE86 INTERNA-nONAL</p>
        <p>Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request. Member Audit Bureau of Cli^atlfli^.'^r#;'</p>
        <p>cent of natural gas for San-tini's Nevada  would rise to astronomical prices as deregulation sent American prices soaring. That, said McMillian, would cost San-tinis constituents more than they could afford, because not even total deregulation of gas prices would increase supplies. So, vote against the deregulation bill (authored by Rep. Robert Krueger, a Texas Democrat).</p>
        <p>Experts wanting deregulation and backing the Krueger bill acknowledge that Northwest Pipeline does have special problems arising out of its heavy reliance on Canadian gas. But they completely disagree with McMillians warning to Santini that price decontrol will not or cannot lead to to important new discov^es of nd^al gas reserves.</p>
        <p>Rather. McMillians lobbying of Santini and the two or three remaining fence-sitters (HI the House Commerce Committee, with the obvious encouragement of Federal Energy administrator John F OLeary and other energy officials, is perceived by pro</p>
        <p>deregulators as a unique case of political ingratiation with Jimmy Cartqjj^^hich, in the case of Santini, boomerang-ed. McMillian not only was a major $5,000 contributor to Mr. Carters presidential campaign last fall, but has donated another $5,000 to the Democratic National Committee this year. He also contributed $9()0 last year to the Democratic Finance Committee to help with convention costs.</p>
        <p>What bothers politicians, however  and particularly bothered Santini when we informed him  is not that political connection but the fact that McMillian is a major competitor to bring Alaska's North Slope gas within reach of his pipeline network in the Northwestern part of the U.S.</p>
        <p>There are three bidders for the right to market North Slope natural gas: El Paso Natural Gas, which wants to process the gas in semiliquefied form somewhere in Alaska and ship it by tanker to the continental U.S.; the Arctic group, whi^ is (CoathmdmpageA-t&amp;gt;)</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>GOD IS IN CONTROL Anno Domini 1977 (m the year of our Lord, 1977).</p>
        <p>Do we really believe it? Is this really the year of our Lord? If we say yes, then we acknowledge that time is in our Lords hands. He is in control. But it is useless to say that we believe this if every day we deny the affirmation by our actions.</p>
        <p>If time is on our Lords hands, then there is nothing that men can do to injure us permanently. We may face poverty, temptation, sorrow.</p>
        <p>disappointment, with the full realization that we will ultimately survive. We can even face death, for if time is in our Lords hands, that infinite extension of time called eternity is in his hands also. Whether we live, therefore, or die, we are the Lords.</p>
        <p>So let us be confident. If God be for us, who can be against us? He that spared not His own son, but delivered him up for us all. how shall He not also with Him freely give us all things?</p>
        <p>By Elisha Douglass</p>
        <p>nel newsletter Spotlight pointed with pride to the Utilities safety record for the month of May. There were no on-the-job injuries reported for the month.</p>
        <p>The record wasnt quite perfect, however. It seems</p>
        <p>Such are the hazards of soft ball.</p>
        <p>Greenville Utilities person-</p>
        <p>the Utilities softball team had the injuries.</p>
        <p>One empioyee injuried his knee while running bases.</p>
        <p>Another suffered a neck sprain when attempting to catch a fly ball.</p>
        <p>Other Editors Say Bonds Also Lost</p>
        <p>Goldsboro News-Argus)</p>
        <p>The public is understandably concerned when some 70 cases, including charges of drunken driving, are dropped from the court calendar because they are more than 90 days old.</p>
        <p>It is not at all difficult for an attoilwy to get postponement of a trial. And there have been a number of instances in which witnesses have complained they were not advised of trlM dates and trials, for that reason, had to be delayed or compromed.</p>
        <p>In short, a simple way to beat the rap might be to get a case postponed or to simply get lost for three months.</p>
        <p>The argument miit well be advanced, however, that only cases which cannot reasonably be expected ever to be tried are dropped. This could be cases against people who hmight be serving time on other charges..</p>
        <p>But that brings up this pertinent question: If many of these people cannot be brou^t back for trial or simply have disappeared, what about their bonds?</p>
        <p>There has been reason to suspect that over the years the public school and consequently the taxpayershave been beaten out of thousands of dollars that should have come in throu^ forfeited bonds.</p>
        <p>* And if judges have been consistently forgiving payment of bonds, then which judges, for whomand for what reasons?</p>
        <p>The newspaper suggested in the past that it might be well for the County Commissioners or the Boards of Education to get an accounting of what has happened to bonds which have been</p>
        <p>Someone called The Daily Reflector news room recently to ask about the status of a public law he had read about in Family Weekly magazine.</p>
        <p>Staffer Barbara Mathews told the caller that we had no additional information beyond what was in the magazine.</p>
        <p>Well cant you go in your library and push a button on your computer? the caller asked.</p>
        <p>Barbara surveyed the library and found, an assortment of old ECU yearbooks. World Almanacs, old city directories and other unidentifiable reference books . . . but no computer button.</p>
        <p>When the new state ferry which will ply between Swan Quarter and Okracoke was dedicated last week, a system of rope and pulleys was rigged up to break the traditional bottle of champagne.</p>
        <p>Supposedly when the ferry moved the champagne was to be pulled up and then dropped on its deck.</p>
        <p>The bottle was lifted all right. Unfortunately it missed flie deck and broke on the launching platform. (Continued on page AS)</p>
        <p>Averell Sharp As Ever</p>
        <p>By CLAY F. RICHARDS</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (UPl) - Age has slowed his step and made him hard of hearing, but at 84, W. Averell Harriman still advises presidents, testifies before Congress and gets his share of the society pages.</p>
        <p>He is Washingtons senior elder statesman. And now the Democrats ate back in charge of the White House, Harriman is more popular than ever.</p>
        <p>The former New York State governor and ambassador to Russia, added a new cause to his interests  making sure senior citizens arent put out to pasture just because they are past the age of retirement.</p>
        <p>It was this concern that took Harriman to Capital Hill last month to join ^1. Hartan Sanders, 86, of fried chicken fame, actress Ruth Gordon, 80, and Thomas (Tommy the Cork) Corcoran, 76, who helped write the New Deal, to testify before the House Select Committee on Aging.</p>
        <p>Above all, a man or woman should not be forced out of work at a given age unless they are unable to continue further, Harriman said in support of legislation to abolish compulsory retirement.</p>
        <p>40 Years Ago Today</p>
        <p>In nearby Lenoir County, which is in the same judicial district with Wayne, it was found that a considerable amount of money which should have gone to the schools had been lost because persons standing the bonds had not been reipilred to pay them.</p>
        <p>Citizenk of a community invest a great deal of money in each case thatHs docketed for trial. Their taxes provide for the in-vestigatiiHi, clerical and administrative efforts that go into preparation of each case.</p>
        <p>It is bad enough when persons charged with cmes never have to face those charges. It adds to frustration of the system and to taxpayer costs when eveh the money posted or pledged for bonds also is lost.</p>
        <p>July 3,1937</p>
        <p>Distress signals signed with the call letters of Amelia Earharts monoplane flashed over the pacific today in the midst of a feverish sea and sky hunt for the famed aviatrlx, missing in equatorial waters surrounding tiny Howland Island.</p>
        <p>Radio operators in Los Angeles heard repeated calls of SOS-KHAQQ shortly before 1:30 a.m. Pacific time (4:30 a.m. EST). This was more than 14 hours after the flier said her gas supply would last about 30 minutes on her flight from distant New Guinea.</p>
        <p>The amateurs, Walter McMenamy and Carl Pierson, said the signals were so wedk they could hear them through dense static and once they caught the letters lat</p>
        <p>for latitude, the signals were blotted out by interference.</p>
        <p>A C.I.O. purge began today as the union axe fell on Gus Hall and two other strike chieftans in the Mahoning Valley steel sector. * John Owens, general C..O. trike director in Ohio announced without comment the removal of Hall, now in jail under charges of leading a^dynamite ring as strike-captain in the Warren area. A joint leadership of Haity Wines and John Gracier replaced them.</p>
        <p>Now showing at the Pitt Theater is Parnell, starring Clark Gable and Myma Loy. In this romantic thriller, Gable portrays a leader of men who dares to love like the man he is.</p>
        <p>Rail Shipping Slowly Improves</p>
        <p>ByJOHNCUNNIFF AP Business Analyst</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Its been a tedious battle  in the courts, fongress, the regulatory agencies, the public mind  to modernize rail shipping. But it is getting done, slowly.</p>
        <p>Today we have Conrall (a consolidation of bankrupt Northeast and Midwest lines) and unit trains (one origin, one destination, one shipper) and through trains (one engine hauls the cars despite traveling on various rail systems).</p>
        <p>And less well known, we have a new regulation that permits some packages to be flipped long distances by rail Without various parties handling it, sometimes at the expense of the consignee and consigner.</p>
        <p>This is the story. Which incidentally takes a somewhat unusual turn.</p>
        <p>Businesses with shipments of less than a' full carload</p>
        <p>have only one source of rail transportation, now that the railroads themselves are out of the business. They can have a freight forwarder handle the job.</p>
        <p>The forwarder gathers many small shipments at its terminals and combines them Into full carloads, which the railroads then accept for shipment.</p>
        <p>However, the freight forwarder in recent years had been running into an increasing amount of troubles because of certain limitations set by the_ Interstate Commerce Commission, which has the unenviable job of trying to maintain order where chaos tends to advance like a jungle.</p>
        <p>The chief liihitation was to restrict the forwarder in the radius within which he could pick up and deliver, because it was felt that the trucking industry had claims to that area. The radius mi^t be only flve miles.</p>
        <p>Beyond that area, the freight forwarder often had to contact a trucker to pick up the shipment and deliver it to his terminal. At the otjier end, he might also have to pay a trucker to deliver the shipment.</p>
        <p>TTiese restrictions were set up in the mld-1940s, and in those days, you mi^t recall, business was more geographically concentrated. Since then, industry has crept out along major highways, and sometimes leaped far into the suburbs.</p>
        <p>The new rules take into consideration the demographic and ecbnomic diffusion that has taken place in the past 30 years. In effect the so-called terminal areas have been expanded about 50 per cent on average, in a formula tied to population.</p>
        <p>Lawrence Berman, vice president of Transway International Corp., the nation's biggest freight</p>
        <p>forwarder, cited the significant expansion of terminal area authority in the San Francisco Bay area as an example.</p>
        <p>Since the papulation of San Francisco is between 500,000 apd 1 mUlkm/ Berman said, the terminal area is expanded from the flve-mile radius established in 1946 to 15 miles.</p>
        <p>Now the unexpected twist;</p>
        <p>While Transway, among many others, has the authority to pick up in expanded areas around its terminals  more than 200 in every state  it probably wont do so. Instead, it will rely on the trucking industry it sometimes criticized.</p>
        <p>We IM^ instead, said G. Russell Moir, chairman, that since we now have tl% ability to do it oursdves, if need be, we can prevail on the existing carriers to give us the kind of service we need and at a cost we can afford.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0005" />
        <p>Observations From Editorial Columns</p>
        <p>Misapprhntion</p>
        <p>Somehow we have been laboring under a dieat misapprehension for a long while now. We have heretofore thought that under our North Carolina constitution that our legislature was required to come up with a balanced state bud^t.</p>
        <p>Now we learn that it is not a constitutional requirement but only a state law. And If the lei^lature should become bogged down at anytime on the budget balancing, all it would have to do is to change ^ state law and then come with deficit spending and an unbalanced budget.</p>
        <p>There is a vast difference between a simple state law and the guarantees of our state constitution. It is relatively simple to nullify or change a state law. But only the people can change the constitution.</p>
        <p>It is our hope that when voters which would establish balanced bud^ts as part of our state constitution.</p>
        <p>With money problems haunting every legislative session, it is weli past time to make balanced state budgets a part of our North Carolina constitution.</p>
        <p>The Wadiii^ton Daily News Sanators Hold Out Against Specifics</p>
        <p>The highest vanity is the love of fame, a philosopher noted one time, and we guess hes right.</p>
        <p>According to an amusing story from Raleigh, the state was all set to make those special license plates ttie legislators display a little more specific. They have simply read House and Senate in the past.</p>
        <p>The proposal to make them read State House and State Senate seemed to have originated with a representative who was addressed as Mr. House by a gas attendant who had glanced at the Ug.</p>
        <p>The state house members seem willing, perhaps because they really dont want to be confused with U.S. House members these days,, and we cant exactly blame them.</p>
        <p>But the state senators werent having any of that. In view of some of the state senate performances this year, they probably fe^ its Just as well to leave the matter in a state of genteel confusion with the U.S. Senate.</p>
        <p>Besides, they may nurse the secret hope that someone may mistake them for Saitor Sam. Thats highly unlikely but there is more than a litUe Walter Mitty in politicians.</p>
        <p>-The Salisbury Post</p>
        <p>Today In History</p>
        <p>A Conservative View</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July J, W77-A-*</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press Today is Sunday, July 3, the 184th day of 1977. There are 181 days left in the year.</p>
        <p>Todays highlight in history:</p>
        <p>On this date in 1982, Algeria became independent after 132 years of Frraich rule. Onthisdate:  ,</p>
        <p>In 1775, George Washington took command of the Continental Army at Cambridge, Massachusetts.</p>
        <p>In 1863, the CivU War Battle of Gettj^urg ended after Confederate General George Picketts troops suffered severe losses in his famous charge.</p>
        <p>In 1890, Idaho became the 43rd state.</p>
        <p>In 1898, the U.S. Navy</p>
        <p>defeated a Spanish fleet in the harbor at Santiago, Cuba, during the Spanish-American War.</p>
        <p>In 1950, U.S. and North Korean troops clashed for the first time in the Korean War.</p>
        <p>In 1969, the United Nations Security Council voted unanimously to censure Israel for steps taken to alter the status of Jerusalem.</p>
        <p>Ten years ago; North VietnamM^ troops were attacklni^-ah American Marine base jlist^helow the Demilitarized Zone in Vietnam, and U.S. casualties were listed as about 200.</p>
        <p>Five years ago: North Vietnamese troops were shelling the South Vietnamese city of Hue,</p>
        <p>Evans Novak...</p>
        <p>(ContimKdtnm pageA-4)</p>
        <p>seven U.S. transmission companies including some of the nations giants and wants to bring it., by pipeline to the Upper Midwest; and Alcan Pipeline Co., a wholly-owned subsidiary of McMillians Northwest Pipeline, which with three Canadian companies would pipe it into the Northwest.</p>
        <p>The Federal Power Commission (FPC) deadlocked at 2-2 in a vote last spring on which of these three bidders to favor. The decision is now up to President Carter, with a multi-billion-dollar ruling mandatory by Dec . 1.</p>
        <p>No one expects Jimmy Carter to make any snap decisions on how to market at least 40 trillion cubic ^601 of</p>
        <p>Taylor Col...</p>
        <p>(CoaOoued iron page A-4) May be the first launching platform ever christened.</p>
        <p>At any rate the Gov. Edward Hyde pulled off on a successful maiden voyage just as if it had been doused with chanq&amp;gt;agne.</p>
        <p>To The Government: Buy Me A Printing Press</p>
        <p>By JAMES J. KILPATRICK</p>
        <p>The uproar continues over the Supreme Court's opinions of June 20 in the matter of abortion. To listen to the clamor of the proabortion crowd, you might suppose the Court to be composed of six monsters and three angels of light, liie denunciations are getting out of hand. They are wholly undeserved.</p>
        <p>This is what the Court held, and all that It held: (1) No woman has a constitutional right to an abortion at public expense. (2) Federal law allows the states, but does no require the states, to provide elective abortions under their Medicaid plans.</p>
        <p>These common-sense holdings are clearly in accord with both the federal statute and the United States Cmistitution. The statute (Title XIX of the Social Security Act) scarcely requires construction. The law plainly leaves it to each state, in fashioning Its medicaid plan, to deter mine the extent of medical assistance that be covered. The statute does not require th: every state fund every medical procedure known to medical science.</p>
        <p>The constitutional principles are equally self-evident. It is simply bizarre to argue, as the complainants argued in these cases, that because the government agrees to pay for poor Janes delivery, the government denies ecpial protection when it refuses to pay for poor Susan's abortion. The framersV the Fourteenth Amendment, if they could hear of this nonsense, would roll over in their graves.</p>
        <p>The six-man majority sought to distinguish between the existence of a right, and the sub-</p>
        <p>lA</p>
        <p>iterrjimub] win|% I tha^Tlav</p>
        <p>sldtzed exercise of that right. Is that so hard to comprehend? During the first trimester of pregnancy, women have a right to obtain an abortion; the state may not make it a crinm to perform such abortions. But there is no accompanying right to elective abortion at publjc expottse.</p>
        <p>A dozen analogies ^ring to mind. I have a right of free press. Does this mean the government must buy me a newspaper? Every citizen has a right of free q&amp;gt;eech. MiKt the taxpayers hire him a hall? We have a right to the free exercise of religion. It is not contended that the Treasury must finance churches and synagogues so the ri^t may conveniently be exercised. There Is a right to keep and bear arms. Do we have a ri^t to free rifles?</p>
        <p>Let us move closer to the status of those on ilic welfare. Every indigent person has a right travel. Such a person may want to visit iwaii; indeed, he may need to visit Hawaii; but for want of money it may be difficult or impossible for him to pay his own way. It is fatuous to argue that the taxpayers, because they may provide free urban bus fares for the elderly, therefore must buy the indigent a round-trip ticket to Honolulu. Yet In principle, this is exactly what the petitioning pr^ant women have demanded in the abortion cases.</p>
        <p>Such reasoning was lost on the Ckmrts three-man minority. Justices Brennan, Marshall and Blackmun variously denounced the majority's view as alarming, appalling, brutal, disingenuous, distressing, disturbing, in</p>
        <p>estimated natural gas reserves on the North Slope. Certainly, no politician suspects that if McMillian had succeeded in converting Santini  or simply showed a good faith effort to help his President in a major legislative battle  the North Slope gas would flow toward him.</p>
        <p>But as Santini told us, McMillian's pitch was disturbing because he was the only pipeline official to take President Carters side in the bitter struggle over deregulation.</p>
        <p>That mystified me completely, Santini toldjK. In candor, this (th^ortlvSl(^ Carter connection) dnould have been revealed.</p>
        <p>Santini might well have voted for Kruegers gas deregulation bill anyway, but now he is virtually certain to. Indeed, if Mr. Carter loses this key vote in the House Commerce Committee, now in the final mark-up stage of the bill, overkill by lobbyists on the anti-deregulation side may get part of the blame in the most hotly-lobbied legislation in the Carter administration.</p>
        <p>HURDLE MILLS, N.C.-Virglnia Ruddier lives far from the garrets of New York City. Seen from the windows of her small brick house, one mile from the Bushy Fork intersection, are the fields her family has farmed for five generations, yielding tobacco, com, and always a bountiful garden. Her parents live across the road. A stand of pine trees marks the beginning of unspoiled forest that gently rolls toward north. Inside, the walls ^)eak of a mixture of family care and personal passion: a miniature macrame hanging is found next to a drawing in rainbow colors by year-old Shawn, and the face of Edgar Allen Poe. Scattered around her living roon and crowded on her shelves are an assortment of her favorite books. At 35, she moves about her house with quick confidence, her red hair bobbing at the shoulders.</p>
        <p>Besides farming, Virginia writes poetry. She didnt exactly turn poet overnight, however. Like many who begin writing or painting only for themselve she kq)t her poems in the closet until four years ago. Really it was always take me out and horsewhip me but dont show those poems to anybody. It finally got to the point that I had to put up or shut up because there just wasnt any more rooft for cardboard boxes in the closet. Encouragement from a longtime friend and teacher, plus a few others who recognized</p>
        <p>I SHARE YOUR I</p>
        <p>good health I</p>
        <p>BE A BLOOD DONOR</p>
        <p>their hown feelings in her words, meant a lot to her blossoming talents. Eventually she began to send poetry to publications mainly within North Carolina, but the list also includes California poetry anthologies. Acceptances followed. In 1975, she won the N.C. Poetry Council contest.</p>
        <p>During that period Virginia worked by day at the Rox-boro, N.C. CkNirier Times, writing anything from obituaries to descriptions of the latest bridal gowns. I didnt get much sleep in those days. I worked all day at the paper and wrote poems at night. The trouble was that something always in-fered. The phone rings and lose the thought  like throwing a rock in the middle of a pond . . . you may remember some of the waves but not what started them. We lose a lot that way.</p>
        <p>Now able to write full time Virginia makes a living for herself and two sons, Michael and Shawn. She continues to write a column for the Courio'-rimes and teaches a creative writing course at Piedmont Technical Institute. Her love of the printed and spoken work dates back: I was always writing something and keeping notebooks. She remains tough-minded about learning through one's own experiences and putting that knowledge to use. To me, an education that can be applied is worth all the PhDs in the world. Following her own advice, Virgima, who has studied Spanish, is now collaborating through the mails with a California Chicano poet she has yet to meet. They plan to create a bilingual volume of poetifT\ Always appaiMt in her writing is the lam^e knew kicking throu^ tl^ woods</p>
        <p>after school. Frogs and whippoorwills, summer revivals, Southern belles of a new sort, daily sconcesall appear in hw poems. And one idea which started out as a poem became the novel Virginia has worked on for over two years. Its about the poet Byron, whos a favorite of mine, and his half-sister Augusta. Written from her point of view. In order to write the story, Virginia read over 200 books about Byron, many obtained throu^ the local library. I think Augusta would like it. Thats whats important.</p>
        <p>The lot of a practicing poet these days can be one of hard work, often unrecognized. You cant have your bridge games and soap operas, sometimes you cant even have men, Virginia says. Writing. . .well, its like another person speaking. If the feelings there, its going to come out some kind of way, and poetry is one way. If the feeling is real, it just cant be prettied up. Some people think that since poetry is a personal kind of thing, anything goes. But thats not true. You have to learn all the rules first to write well. 1 rewrite all the time. According to Virginia, poetry is important because it speaks to people. Poetrys not a matter of supply and demand; its communication. It can be very therapeutic to read a poem and realize youre not the only one whos felt that way. To me, poetry is a natural resource in everybody. Its a question of whether they use it.</p>
        <p>-SUSAN ANGELL Institute for Southern Studies Chapel HUI, N.C. FACING S0U];H welcomes readers comments and writers contributions. Write P.O. Box 230. Chapel HUl, N.C.27514</p>
        <p>sensitive, punitive, sad, specious, tragic, unacceptable, vicious, ethically bankrupt and plainly erroneous. The effect said Justice Marshall, win be to relegate mUlions of people to lives of poverty and despair.</p>
        <p>For what it may be worth, I myself agree with Justice Marshalls pathetic exposition of the realities. In my own view, the states should include dective abortions in their Medicaid programs. Unless poor women can obtain hospital abortions throu^ Medicaid, they will resort to the brutal services of back-alley butchers, or they will go at themselves with coat hangers and button hooks. Otherwise, they will</p>
        <p>carry their infants to full term, be delivered at public expense, and dump their progeny on the taxpayers for life. In both human and economic terms, state prohibitions against Medicaid abortions are tragic and costly.</p>
        <p>Neverthdess, as Mr. Justice Powell sou^t vainly to emphasize, federal judges must not Impose their own notions of wisdom and social desirability upon the law. When It comes to such sensitive policy choices as the subsidizing of elective abortions, the appropriate forum for their resolution in a democracy is the legislature. That is sound jurisprudence; It ought to be p!^ised, not condemn^.</p>
        <p>OH, YES...NOW ABOUT A SALT AGREEMENT.</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>Proud To Be A Southern Belle, Country Style</p>
        <p>By GAIL MICHAELS</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <p>Art Of Communicating Unveiled Unhealthy Tot</p>
        <p>When Meg was younger, Phillip and I would hover over her during her illnesses and look forward to the day when she could tell us where it hurt. Well, shes talking now, and she can tell us where It hurts all right  her knee, her arm, her hair, her navel... you name it, and she ^ hurts there.</p>
        <p>The first real indication.she gave of her amazingly poor health was over Easter vacation, at a family dinner. I knocked her knee against the tray when I was putting her in her hi^chair, and approximately every five minutes (or whenever her grandfathers attention wandered for more than ten seconds), she would announce in a loud, plaintive voice, Knee hur-r-r-rrts!</p>
        <p>From that time forward her health grew progressively worse. One afternoon she stpbbed her toe. I thought I had healed it sufficiently with a Band-Aid and an ice cream cone, but two hours later, when her father arrived home, her injury suddenly flared up again.</p>
        <p>Stubby toe! she screamed from behind a prodigious flow of tears the moment her father stepped from the car.</p>
        <p>Stubby toe! she moaned three hours later when he</p>
        <p>reprimanded her for drowning my thesis notes in the toilet</p>
        <p>Stubby toe! she whined two weeks later when I told h' that it was time to take a nap.</p>
        <p>Not long afterwards her poor health began to get expensive. Ear hurls! she told me one morning. She repeated this throughout the</p>
        <p>day, and although justifiably suspicious, 1 took her to the pediatrician to have her checked. SHE was okay, but I wasnt. The kid who sat next to me in the waiting room gave me the flu.</p>
        <p>Since then she has made copious additions to her list of ailments.</p>
        <p>Help me pick up your-toys, I told her the other day.</p>
        <p>She collapsed in the middle of the floor. Oh-h-h-h, stubby toe! she wailed, iHgding her foot to her chest.</p>
        <p>Meg Michaels, you havent stubbed your toe in</p>
        <p>four mcmths. Help me pick up these toys.</p>
        <p>She picked up a book and calmly closed it on her finger. PINCH-A FING! she screamed.</p>
        <p>Im so sorry, I said. Let me kiss It, and thi you can put the toys in the toybox. She began to walk toward me but stopped suddenly and grabbed both her knees. "SCRAPE KNEE! she cried.</p>
        <p>Just then Phillip got home from work. Whats wrong! he asked sympathetically as she limped over to him.</p>
        <p>Dont ask her whats wrong; ask ME whats wrong, I moaned. "Its not easy living with a 19-month-old hypochondriac. Ive kissed her old bruises so many times today that my lips are swollen!</p>
        <p>Lips hur-r-rt! Meg sighed, pursing hers at her daddy.</p>
        <p>Ive been listening to that all day! Shes giving me a f headache, I wailed, throwing my arm to my forhead. Honestly, I dont know where she gets all this from. She clutched her head with both hands.</p>
        <p>Whats the matter? Phillip asked.</p>
        <p>She grinned for a second, thi sighed. beavUy. Head ache.</p>
        <p>One In Five Admitits To Driving 'Intoxicated*</p>
        <p>Richards Col</p>
        <p>(Coatioijed bom page A-4)</p>
        <p>When Harriman recently attended a garden party to raise funds for the new Washington Journalism Review, a catty society ariumnist reported his wife had to tell him three times where he was and why.</p>
        <p>But those close to him say that Harriman is far from senile and his mind is as sharp as ever. A severe hearing loss it appear he is friej' KisnotW^ry</p>
        <p>as he once was.</p>
        <p>More often than not news reports about Harriman show up on the society page  often in connection with donaUons or loans of his fabulous collection 0 classical and modem paintings.</p>
        <p>Harriman is also the eldw statesnan of the Democratic Party. He attended the Democratic National Convmtion in New Yorii aty last June and called a news confereice to pledge his imqualified sipport for Jimmy Carter.</p>
        <p>makes sometimes said, and at 841</p>
        <p>Carter didnt waste any time in putting Harriman to work. In S^tembw Harriman was sent to Russia to explain to Soviet Party boss Leonid Brezhnev what the American political process was all about.</p>
        <p>Brezhnev was concerned about the anti-detente statements teing hurled around by the candidates and Harriman explained to him that "campaigns are meant to attract the American voter and less throught is given to reaction abroad.</p>
        <p>Tm not sure I was able to persuade him that everything that was said was of no importance, Harriman said.</p>
        <p>He said the Russian leader had a lingering admiration for Richard Nixon and did not understand why he had been forced to resign from the presidency.</p>
        <p>Once Carter was elected, Harriman was back at his side again, flying to Plains to help the transition team form the new government.</p>
        <p>By GEORGE GAIJLUP</p>
        <p>PRINCETON, N.J.  As the nations drivers head home tomorrow from the Fourth-of-July weekend, they would do weU to keep these survey findings in mind; one person in three say they occasionally drive after drinking aloAolic beverages and as many as one in five admit to having driven when they had too much to drink to drive safely.</p>
        <p>The National Safety Council predicts there will be between 500 and 600 deaths this weekend, with many highway deaths related to the use of alcohol.</p>
        <p>WhUe one in five (19 per cent) in the current survey say they have driven when theyve had one too many, the percentage is even higher among men alone (26 per cent) and young adults (18 to 29 yearsJ anumg whom the figure is 26 per cent.</p>
        <p>Favor Tou^ier Laws</p>
        <p>Public (pinion, as recorded in the survey, is overwhelmingly in favor of stricter laws regarding drinking and driving. Eight in 10 want tougher legislation than presently on the books, including large majorities of persons who say they sometimes drive after drinking and those who say they have driven after having overimbibed.</p>
        <p>One of tl^ who favors stricter laws is a 34-year-old female lunch room worker from Bay St. Louis, Miss., who said: Weve got to keep the drunks out of cars  my own son was hit by a drunk driving a car. Hes lucky to be alive! </p>
        <p>While favoring tougher laws in general, the American pidtlic is dosely divided in their views on random or ^ checks by pblicSfe'administer a breath alcohol or coordination test.</p>
        <p>Although many Americans mix alcohol and driving, they have a realistic idea of how lethal this combination can be. When asked to estimate the percentage of highway deaths each year that are alcohol-related, at least half of the total sample say 50 per cent or more. The National Safety Council has ^parently done a. good job of informing the U.S. public.- the Council estimates</p>
        <p>that approximately half of all highway fatalities are alcohol-related.</p>
        <p>International Comparisons</p>
        <p>The problem of drinking and driving is not limited to the U.S. In Great Britain as in the U.S., for example, one driver in five also say they have driven when they have had too much to drink. This finding is based on a parallel suryey conducted by the Gallup-affiliated organization in that country.</p>
        <p>In addition, the British are also fairly evenly divided on the question of random or spot checks by the police.</p>
        <p>All persons in the U.S. survey who drive (82 per cent in the survey) were asked:</p>
        <p>Do you ever drive after drinking alcoholic beverages </p>
        <p>Ever Drive After Drinkkg?</p>
        <p>Men</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Women</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>18-24 years</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>25-29 years</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>30-49 years</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>50 and over</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>College background</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>High school</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>Grade school</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>This question was then asked:</p>
        <p>Do you think there should or should not be stricter laws</p>
        <p>regarding drinking and driving?</p>
        <p>Strictar Laws</p>
        <p>Dont</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; (views of total sample)</p>
        <p>Yes</p>
        <p>No</p>
        <p>Drink</p>
        <p>Should</p>
        <p>Stoy</p>
        <p>No</p>
        <p>NATIONAL</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>Shnl</p>
        <p>Net</p>
        <p>SameOpiHoa</p>
        <p>Men</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>NATIONAL</p>
        <p>82%</p>
        <p>7%</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>3%</p>
        <p>Women</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>58</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>Men</p>
        <p>76</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>18-24 years</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>Women</p>
        <p>87</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>25-29 years</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>18-24 years</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>30-49 years</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>25-29 years</p>
        <p>75</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>50 and over</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>52</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>30-49 years</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>College background</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>50 and over</p>
        <p>84</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>High school</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p> 50</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>Coll^ background</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Grade school</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>High school</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Drivers were also asked:</p>
        <p>Grade sclKxd</p>
        <p>90</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Have you ever driven when you thought you had too much to</p>
        <p>Those who have driven</p>
        <p>drink to drive safely?"</p>
        <p>after drinking</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Those who have not</p>
        <p>84</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Ever Drive After Drinking Too Mudi?</p>
        <p>TTiose who have driven</p>
        <p>Dont</p>
        <p>whoi having had too</p>
        <p>Yes</p>
        <p>No</p>
        <p>Drink</p>
        <p>muchtodrink</p>
        <p>74</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>NATIONAL</p>
        <p>19%</p>
        <p>66%</p>
        <p>15%</p>
        <p>Those who have not</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0006" />
        <p>r-TI Daiy Roltector, Grgcnvte. N.C.-SuPay, My S, 1977</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>* ,</p>
        <p>I -i</p>
        <p>lWell bebpen Monday from 10a.m. ti</p>
        <p>Womens</p>
        <p>Summer Fashion Sale!</p>
        <p>Save 30% to 50%.</p>
        <p>Entire summer stock.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;37</p>
        <p>Dress and</p>
        <p>sportswear</p>
        <p>sale.</p>
        <p>P/</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p> Womens summer and spring dresses in fashion cotors. Now 50% off. *</p>
        <p>Womens summer coordinates. Now 30% off.</p>
        <p>Limited Quantities" are avaiiabie oniy wtiile our quantities iast, on a first come, first served basis.</p>
        <p>Entire stock of womens swimwear. Now 30% to 50% off.</p>
        <p>Womens summer sportswear. Includes: slacks, shorts and tops. Now 30% to 50% o|i^Limited quantities......................</p>
        <p>ChildrenSi</p>
        <p>Save3C</p>
        <p>Entire su</p>
        <p> Girls coordinate group specjal. Pants, tops and gauchos. Sizes 7-14.</p>
        <p>Reg. to $7  Now  1.99</p>
        <p>I Girls swimwear. Now 30% To 5Q</p>
        <p>Entire stock of summer , hats.</p>
        <p>66*</p>
        <p>Limited quantities.</p>
        <p>JCPenney 750W styler/dryer Special</p>
        <p>7.88</p>
        <p>Limited quantities.</p>
        <p>Rider Mower 5HP</p>
        <p>Reg. *549.</p>
        <p>Now $449</p>
        <p>Limited quantities.</p>
        <p>Freshwater</p>
        <p>spinning</p>
        <p>combo.</p>
        <p>Now 8.88</p>
        <p>Reg. 10.99. Freshwater spinning combo has Diawa 401 reel, m light action rod.</p>
        <p>Alligli</p>
        <p>Charge It at JCPenney, PHt Plaza, Qreenvllla,</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0007" />
        <p>Tbe Dally Rgflactor, Qreanvflte, N.C.-5wdny. July 3,1I77-A-7</p>
        <p>OfJuly Saletil 6 p.m. Shop early for best buys.</p>
        <p>summer sale.</p>
        <p>3)% to 50%.</p>
        <p>sujnmer stock.</p>
        <p>S'   Boys woven shirts.</p>
        <p>Reg. 3.66  Now  3  for  ^5.</p>
        <p> Match Factory clearance. Summer 509obff styles and colors.</p>
        <p>Up to 509i)Off.</p>
        <p>' Infant 99 Summer Limited quantities. Clorance. Assorted items.</p>
        <p>Toi s/shorts, pants.</p>
        <p>United quantities.</p>
        <p>ni</p>
        <p>Summer handbags</p>
        <p>ieautsale. 50% at</p>
        <p>Limited quantities.</p>
        <p>Orton acrylic yarn</p>
        <p>00^*^ Per skein Limited quantities.</p>
        <p>o'coolers</p>
        <p>JCPenney 3HP Push mower.</p>
        <p>Reg. *79.</p>
        <p>Now 69.88</p>
        <p>Limited Quantities</p>
        <p>Diawa</p>
        <p>spinning</p>
        <p>combo.</p>
        <p>Now 12.88</p>
        <p>Rg. 17.99. Diawa spinning combo features 403 reel,</p>
        <p>6'/4 rod.vllle, Monday Thru Saturday From 10 A.M. Til 9:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>Summer sale, formen.</p>
        <p>Save 30% to 50%.</p>
        <p>Entire summer stock..</p>
        <p> Men's three-piece polyester suits in green, navy, brown and blue. Sizes 36R, 46R.</p>
        <p>Now 39.88</p>
        <p>&amp;gt; Ali Men's swimwear in stock. Now 30% off. White summer eans. Now 30% off.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p> "Cracked ice" and "Burlana styles." Sport coats hj solids and plaids. Now  Off</p>
        <p> A^n^elsurejackets 30^^ Off.</p>
        <p> Spring and summer dress slacks in light ^</p>
        <p>30% off.</p>
        <p> Sport shirts in stripes. Knits' and wovens.</p>
        <p>"*30% off.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0008" />
        <p>A-^-TlMtMly Bcawrtar.ancnvllte, N.C.-Siaiday, JutyS, un</p>
        <p>f'</p>
        <p>^ Varied Events Mark Holiday</p>
        <p>CHBRMCEB INDIANS OPEN INDIAN AGENCY  The Cbeokee Indians of Georgia opened an Indian Agency in Cdumixis Ga. that is the only agency operating in the state. The objective of the agency is to gaierate programs which will preserve the culture and the heritage of the In-</p>
        <p>dia as weO as to locate and Identify people with Indian ancestry. Hoe Chiefs Red Eagle Cortex, White Cloud Reynolds, and Big Oak Lemry stand at the doors to the new agency welcoming visitors. (AP Wlrephoto)</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>In addition to the traditional weekend at the beach or the picnic in the mountains, the July 4th weekend in North Carolina will include a variety of observances, shows and gatherings.</p>
        <p>In Murphy, the sixth, annual Smoky Mountain Arts and Crafts Show which began Friday and will run through Monday, will feature fine art and folk art by the residents of the Great Smoky Mountains.</p>
        <p>Carrboro's July Fourth celebration at the town hall also began Friday and will run through Monday. It wil^eature a fair, bazaars and live entertainment.</p>
        <p>The seventh annual Denton Fly-In and Threshers Reunion got under way at Denton Airport Saturday for a three-day run. The gathering features airplane rides, wheat threshing, com meal grinding, steam engines, antique farm machinery, entertainment, reconstructed log bam, cabin com crib, gasoline engines, combining, arts, crafts, an old time sawmill, straw baler^d country vittles.</p>
        <p>The Fourth of July celebration at Belhaven today and</p>
        <p>Monday will Include boat races, tt-actOT pulls, a parade, a beauty coitest, band concerts, a water ski show, an art show, fish fry, firewoiks and a street dance.</p>
        <p>A q&amp;gt;ecial Foiuth of July celebration will be hdd by the Tweetsie Railroad Monday at Blowing Rock. Special entertainment, fireworks and crafts wfll be featured.</p>
        <p>Kill Cary Man</p>
        <p>MORRKVILLE, N.C. (AP) -Wake Sheriffs deputies, staking out a house near here during a break-in Friday, shot and killed a C^ry man when he began firing at officers, a Sheriffs office spokesman said.</p>
        <p>Deputy Melvin W. Munn, chief of the sheriffs investigation division, identified the dead man as WUliam Otis BU-ly Trotter, 33, of Cary. Two other men were arrested.</p>
        <p>The Sheriffs Department has asked the State Bureau of Investigation to probe the shooting. Munn said none of the deputies at the scene had been suspected, pending the outcome of the investigation.</p>
        <p>__</p>
        <p>\r</p>
        <p>News Briefs I Arrested Into The Army</p>
        <p>Battle Over Bomb To Continue</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  The Senate battle over the neutron bomb will continue after the Juiy 4th recess, but backers of the weapon, which would kill people but leave buildings standing, are confident of victory.</p>
        <p>After a secret session that lasted almost three hours. Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., predicted Friday that the Senate will approve money for the bomb but will give Congress veto power over any presidential decisionaQhu it.</p>
        <p>That was the compromisewfws and his allies are fitting for.</p>
        <p>Supporters of the bomb won two key votes by narrow margins, but decided in the face of a threatened filibuster that they would not press for final action.</p>
        <p>New Leader In Salvador</p>
        <p>SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - Gen. Carlos Humberto Romero tookover the reins of this (Central American nation tom by guerrilla violence and a church-state conflict and called for citizens to put aside all hostility.</p>
        <p>But in 1^ inaugural address Friday the general also pledged to take whatever measures necessanr to preserve, protect and maintain the peace and harmony of ntjzens.</p>
        <p>Romero, 53, th latest in a line of military presidents that have ruled El Salvador nearly continuously since 1932, was Sworn in during a four-hour ceremony guarded by heavily armed troops and police.</p>
        <p>Will Not Seek Nomination</p>
        <p>MORGANTON, N.C. (AP) - Discouraged by the prospects of a long heated campaign, Sam Ervin III has announced that he will not seek the Democratic nomination to the U.S. Senate seat now occupied by Republican Jesse Helms.</p>
        <p>Here we are, starting out a year before the primary and a year and a half before the general election. I felt like it would require a full-time campaign stint, and it was Just a personal conclusion that I did not want to go through what would have been necessary to get the nomination and election, Ervin, son of former Sen. Sap Ervin Jr., said Friday.</p>
        <p>Hunt Wanted .</p>
        <p>(Ckmtbiued titan pageA-I) pn^Msed by the administration and those pn^osed by others and backed by the governor:</p>
        <p>A $300 million road bond issue that will be voted on this fall.</p>
        <p>A $230 million bond issue to give local governments matching funds for upgrading their water and sewer systems and sewage treatment facilities, also to be voted on this fall.</p>
        <p>Capital punishment for first degree murder.</p>
        <p>Emergency appropriation of $5.3 million for prison construction to ease overcrowding.</p>
        <p>-Allowing persons sentenced to six months or less to be kept in county jails rather than prisons.</p>
        <p>Major governmental reoga-nization with many state agencies shifted. Also, some boards such as the Paroles Board and Ports Authority were reorg^ized to get rid of the Republican majority that had been appointed by Gov.</p>
        <p>Look!</p>
        <p>* AAod^l Trains  *  Plastic  AAodels</p>
        <p>* Race'Car Sets    Flying  AAodels</p>
        <p>* CgYn &amp;amp; Stamp Collecting Supplies .  *  Picture  Frames</p>
        <p>.K</p>
        <p>Hungate's</p>
        <p> liOttBIES - CRAFTS - ARTS . A.' Pin Plaza</p>
        <p>bat Utn - God H Lom, t Mm 4:1</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -For 40 days, Lester Adgers was Private Adgers, U.S. Army, doing guard duty and maintenance chores.</p>
        <p>When the Army realized it had erred in having the| 28-year-old man arrested and held as a deserter, it rushed him home with a $2,000 cash settlement.</p>
        <p>Everting changed to Mr. Adgers instead of Private Adgers. And from then on they couldnt get me away fast enough, said Adgers, who was_ declared 4-F (unfit for, service) eight years</p>
        <p>The Army said Adgers was arrested because someone identifying himself as Lester Adgers joined ig) two years ap, but failed to report for active duty two months later. Adgers said the person must have used identification from a wallet he lost two years ago.</p>
        <p>.After checking records and comparing Adgers fingerprints with those of the man who enlisted, the Army concluded Adgers was the victim of forgery by some unknown person. Why anyone would forge an enlistment is beyond Adgers and the Army.</p>
        <p>Two FBI agents met Adgers in his yard as he left for work last March 18.</p>
        <p>They asked if I was Lester Adgers and I said yes. Then they asked if Id ever been in the Army. I told them no, but they said: According to what we have here, youre a deserter. Youll have to come with us.</p>
        <p>Handcuffed, he was taken to the city jail, then put aboard a helicopter with military police and flown to Ft. Bragg near Fayetteville.</p>
        <p>is mother got w(onied when idnt come^ome for break-</p>
        <p>0 call her until Bragg. That was</p>
        <p>he fast.</p>
        <p>I/didnt get I g^t to</p>
        <p>oclock. She didnt know what happened to me, he said.</p>
        <p>Adgers said he showed investigators his 4-F draft card and insisted there had been a mistake.</p>
        <p>He was issued a uniform, told to act like a soldier and put to work. During his 40-day stay at Ft. Bragg, Army officials kept assuring him they were trying to verify his story and complimented him on his patience, he said.</p>
        <p>All the records we had available at the time indicated this was the guy we were seeking, said an Army ^kesman. The Army has assigned a special unit to look into the snafu.</p>
        <p>Adgers said he got a letter about two years ago telling him to report for Army duty. He thought he had cleared up the mistake after talking wih a recruiting sergeant, he said.</p>
        <p>Neither Adgers nor his parents remembered why he was classified Unfit for service. An Army recruiter in Charlotte said records were not clear on the reason.</p>
        <p>Another Army spokesman attributed the two-year interval between the enlistment and Adgers arrest to Army policies that sometimes give reluctant recruits time to change their minds before arrest papers are fUed.</p>
        <p>Adgers was released on April 26 after his employer had asked U.S. Rep. James Martin to look into the mix-up. Adgers said he signed for a $2,000 cash settlement rather than sue after talking with a base legal officer who told him a suit would take a long time.</p>
        <p>Jim Holshouser.</p>
        <p>Requirement for ^leedy trials with those charged with crime being (reed if the trial is not held in sufficient time.</p>
        <p>Creation of a Division of Aging in the Department of Human Resources.</p>
        <p>Reorganization of ,the state Utilities Commission staff to set up a staff to represent the pe&amp;lt;ple in matters before the commission.</p>
        <p>Require annual testing of pupils in certain grades in the public schools.</p>
        <p>Require high school pupils to pass a competency test before graduating.</p>
        <p>A reading program for the first three grades was funded.</p>
        <p>Allowing use of public schools for community purposes.</p>
        <p>A sunset provision that automatically abolishes licensing boards unless the legislature renews them.</p>
        <p>A landlord-tenant act, the states first.</p>
        <p>MOVING</p>
        <p>SALE!</p>
        <p>The Music Shop At 207 E. Fifth Street Is Moving Soon To Greenville Square Shopping Center, Next To K-Mart. Prior</p>
        <p>To Moving You Have The Opportunity To Purchase Anything I n Stock At A Great Savings! Come In Soon!</p>
        <p>ALL MERCHANDISE IN STOCK!</p>
        <p>UP</p>
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        <p>INCLUDING PIANOS &amp;amp; ORGANS BY WURLITZER  CONN  SOHMER</p>
        <p>AMPLIFIERS &amp;amp; GUITARS BY FENDER  GIBSON  MARTIN  AMPEG</p>
        <p>DRUMS BY LUDWIG  RODGERS</p>
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        <p>207 E. FIFTH ST.  SHOP</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE PHONE 752-51T0</p>
        <p>Mondays festival at Hot Springs will be hi^ighted by a raft race on the French Broad River. .</p>
        <p>The Raleigh July Fourth celebration will be held at the state fairgrounds Monday.</p>
        <p>Rides, a parade, fireworks, food, dancing, music, a horse show and contests will be part of the celebration at Faith Monday.</p>
        <p>The Independence Day Picnic program at West Point on the Eno near Durham will feature rock-skipping and ge-plunking contests.</p>
        <p>Winston-Salem will again present the traditional Fourth of July Observance In Old Salem Monday. The Home Moravian Church will hold outdoor services at 8:30 a.m., followed by the traditional Moravian lovefeast at 2 p.m. in the church. The service vrill Include the Psalm of Joy which was sung on July 4, 1783, the first year of peace after the American Revolution.</p>
        <p>At 9 p.m., the torchlight procession which was held on July 4,1783, will be reenacted.</p>
        <p>Fontana will host its own Fourth of July celebration, and Banner Elk will hold its fifth annual roasting of the hog at Beech Mountain, a cmnmunity event, both &amp;lt; Monday.</p>
        <p>Morgantfflis Monday cdebra-tion will include a parade and water show, while West Jefferson will hold tiie Ashe Saddle Club Horse Show on Monday.</p>
        <p>At aemmons, there will be a</p>
        <p>fireworks show Monday at Tan-glewood Park. The July Fourth celebration at Wake Forest Monday will feature parades, games, a pig picking and ilre-works.</p>
        <p>Buxton will offer an olrt-fash-loned picnic and fish fry at the Cape Hatteras Ll^thouse Monday. And at Cary, an Ole Fashioned Fourth of July celebration wfll take place at Franklin Field with jgames, rides, booths, entertainment, fireworks and food the same day.</p>
        <p>Symptoms Of</p>
        <p>DEPRESSION</p>
        <p>Sleepless Nights LossOf Weight irritabillty</p>
        <p>other Severe Changes In Your Life Could Be Signs Of Depression. If You Or A Member Of Your Family Has These Symptoms See Your Physician Or Call Us At Your</p>
        <p>Pitt County Mental Health Center</p>
        <p>CALL 752-7151 (ANYTIME, DAY OR NIGHT)</p>
        <p>IpNGS</p>
        <p>\^lLVFAMbuS BRANDS t rM</p>
        <p>Greenville Blvd.</p>
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        <p>Timely Savings on Warm Weather Needs!</p>
        <p>Vaeation Sal&amp;lt;^!</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0009" />
        <p>STAYING COUNTRY - BUI Anderson says hes staying country even though, like Dolly Parton, hes changed bands. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Bill Anderson 'Just Starting'</p>
        <p>By JOE EDWARDS AnocUted Press Writer</p>
        <p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -After 3S albums, 50 singles and a barrage of awafds, Bill Anderson says; Im just getting started.</p>
        <p>Anderson is approaching his 20th year as a country music star, making him one of the most enduring in the business, even at 39. When he got his start by writing City Lights for Ray Price in 1958, Loretta Lynn was using a washboard, co(Aing on a wood stove and dreaming of a career. Waylon Jennings was a disc jockey in Lubbock, Tex.</p>
        <p>Ive had people ask, me about doing a book, Anderson said in an interview at his office against a background of framed awards. I tell them to wait until I do something. What Im going to do is still to be dmie. Im just getting started.</p>
        <p>Some thought Anderson, like Dolly Parton, might be reaching for the pop market when bis recOTd company issued this recfflit statement;</p>
        <p>I dont like fences  fences keep some things in, and at the same time, keep other things out. I never liked it when people looked at Bill Anderson and saw him inside a little box  all clearly defined, neatly categorized and labeled. I like to be free  in my thinking, my writing my music.</p>
        <p>Country music is freer to be itself today than its ever been because country is everything today from John Denver and Olivia Newton-John to Willie Ndsin and Waylon Jennings -</p>
        <p>from Bill Monroe to Bill Anderson.</p>
        <p>Uke Miss Parton, Anderson al^ has changed bands, hiring a young group whose oldest member is 27. But his mteic remains country and he plans to keep it that way.</p>
        <p>Im trying to stay up-to-date within a country music framework, he explained. We had a basic sound for 13 years, and I wanted to have a different approach. So 1 hired a young group and&amp;lt;,n:hanged the instrumentation. But we can do the old songs the same way.</p>
        <p>Regardless of his sound, hes at the forefront in the amount of unprecedented television exposure given to country music singers.</p>
        <p>Hes appeared on the daytime game shows "Match Game and Tattletales and has cohosted a pilot for ABC, The Better Sex," a battle of the sexes in trivia.</p>
        <p>I had no idea of the number 6f people who watched game shows who are the same people .who are country music fans, he said. Ill go out to perform after doing a game show, and the number of people who say they saw me on television is unbelievable.</p>
        <p>Fifteen years ago, such exposure wasnt available to country performers.</p>
        <p>Glen Campbell and Johnny Cash, whove had network exposure, have shown people were not a bunch of hicks, Anderson said. Id like more television exposure  game shows, talk shows. It allows people to see another side of me.</p>
        <p>Elders Memories Are Tape-Recorded</p>
        <p>^ JUDY BOCKLAGE Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>CONWAY, Ark. (AP) - Dr. Roy Edwin Thomas says it is ino^rtant that young people growing up in the backwoods areas of America know their heritage.</p>
        <p>So Thomas has started what he hopes wlU become a new academic field - the social study of mountain people.</p>
        <p>Few people can have pride in themselves untU they understand where they came from, he said.</p>
        <p>UntU a year ago, Thomas taught at Appalachian University in northwest North Carolina. He said he quit because there was something else that eeded to be done.</p>
        <p>He has talked to people in ^nearly every county in Ar-isas. Southern Missouri and Appalachian states. Thomas ently completed his l,000th interview.</p>
        <p>Thomas said be locUied in nursing homes, country stores and courthouses for persons diver the age of 80 who were big talkers and good recollectors to help him record the heritage of the mountain people.</p>
        <p>He believes the mountain dialect, which is stOl spoken in mountainous areas, holds youngsters back from making a success in the worid.</p>
        <p>Thomas says he is an ex-anqile. He grew up near Bee Branch in Van Buren County, Ark., and attended a one-room scbod in the Seed 'Dck School District. When he went away ftur higher education, he made D-mlraises in English and blames bis dialect.</p>
        <p>Thomas said schools do not know how to teach modem English to youngsters with a strong mountain dialect. Thats why he hopes one of the results of his work will be a supplementary textbook, or maybe a new series of mountain studies, simUar to the black studies that became pq&amp;gt;ular in the 1960s.</p>
        <p>No college has ever made any real effort to help such students with their dialect problems, he said.</p>
        <p>Thomas says be regrets that mountain culture is dying, and blames outside influence. The telephone, radio and television, paved roads and travel have brouglit the outside world to the mountains, he said.</p>
        <p>The mountain culture is about to vanish, but the dialect will continue almost mdefiniteiy as a millstone around the mountain youth, be said.</p>
        <p>Idling Motor Is Energy Hog</p>
        <p>LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) - The average American car uses one ciq) of gas every six minutes the motor idles, Less gas is needed to restart, says Janet WUson of the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources at the University of Nriiraska-Lincoin.</p>
        <p>Air conditioning can also cut fuel economy by as much as two and me half miles per gallon, she said. If you cant ride without it, she recommends using a moderate temperature to reduce gas usage a little bit.</p>
        <p>JCPenney</p>
        <p>l-th of July Sale</p>
        <p>Well be open Monday from 10 A.M. Til 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Last day!!</p>
        <p>Vs off  our best steel belted radial tires.</p>
        <p>JCPenney Steel Belted Redial. Our beet eteel belted radial tire. Faaturee two ateel belts and two polyester radial piles. Whitewall only.</p>
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        <p>FR78-14</p>
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        <p>$62</p>
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        <p>47.33</p>
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        <p>25.33</p>
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        <p>LR78-15</p>
        <p>28.00</p>
        <p>$84</p>
        <p>56.00</p>
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        <p>Special Sale! One day only!</p>
        <p>QUAKER STATE</p>
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        <p>STP Oil Treatment</p>
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        <p>Keystone dark centered wheels.</p>
        <p>All 6 sizes 4/^139 All 7 sizes 4/*149</p>
        <p>One day only.</p>
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        <p>Scat trac 60 blem tires.</p>
        <p>Slight cosmetic blemish</p>
        <p>Raised white letters</p>
        <p>Features a construction of 2 polyester-plies and 2 fiberglass belts. In the wide 60 series. No trade-in required.</p>
        <p>4/S109</p>
        <p>All 13 sizes</p>
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        <p>sizes</p>
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        <p>'Limitad Quantmat" are available only whila our quantitloo last, on a first coma, first strvod basis.</p>
        <p>JCPenney</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0010" />
        <p>A-i^Ttm Dally Reflector, Greenvflle, N.C.-'Swday, July Z, lf77</p>
        <p>UU^  MW, , W/ W, af   ^</p>
        <p>The Old State Library Is Being Refurbished</p>
        <p>ByraOGYHOWE</p>
        <p>N.C.Deptirf Cultural Remffces Wanted: one threadbare rug, a framed map of Ralei^ ca. I873, grates for fireplace and coal boxes.</p>
        <p>are some of the items to furnish the old State Roofn in the restored . Capitol.</p>
        <p>laury York, a candidate for masters degrees in library science and in history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has been employed by the Department of Cultural Resources to research the (rfd State Library Room and after</p>
        <p>several weeks on the job has several interesting observations.</p>
        <p>Working under a four-month grant from the N.C. Bicentennial Foundation, York is researching session laws, annual reports of the state treasurer and state librarian, manuscript files and governors papers. "And, he added, "Ill be^searcblng some in the papersof the secretary of state.</p>
        <p>One of the most interesting revelations so far has been the discovery of the evolution of the State Library from a collection for state officials to a functioning public library. It appears,</p>
        <p>York stated, "that begimting sometime around the middle of the 19th centry the state library embraced most of the functions associated with public libraries of the day.</p>
        <p>tXhls is evident from the types of materials purchased, he said, such as volumes of poetry and literature and even the Audubon elephant folio, instead of just government documents as before. Many of the books were</p>
        <p>in ftwk</p>
        <p>and Europe 1^ Josqih Cowell, under the directkm of Gov. William Alexander Graham and Gov. John M. Morehead. By</p>
        <p>1888, due to excessive losses, circulation had to be restricted though the public continued to use the materials for reference purposes.</p>
        <p>Also interesting is the fact that the post of state librarian has not always been a fulltime position, York kentioned. At first, it was a part-time duty of the secretary of state. And there is evidence to suggest that the job was performed from time to time by other government employes as well.</p>
        <p>' ^ .7!;: rtMM#^nanafl tbhold the position on a fulltime basis was James F. Taylor beginning in 1843.</p>
        <p>Contrary to what was first believed, it has now been determined that the east room on the third floor of the Capitol, rather than the  the ^te</p>
        <p>LMaiy.''R^hfdnd Beck, a graduate of the masters program at the Unlveristy -d North Carolina at Greensboro, and a volunteer in the west room (which is the Cabinet of Minerals Room), last week up-covered conclusive evlde-ice indicating that the library was in the east room. He said a thorough search of the Revised Statutes, of 1855 and 1873 definitely identified the rooms.</p>
        <p>The change is especially pleasing to the committee appointed last fall, udilch, in cooperation with the division of archives and faistoiy will restore and refurnish the room. Lloyd Childers, committee chairman, said original shelving is still in place under the stairs and reproduction shelving is in the room itself, ^.We^it Javg-,,to</p>
        <p>Also window shades with tassels, ca., 1870; school map of North Carolina, Wunted by Collier Cobb of Chapel HUI, 1880 or before; a book rest, ca. 1870; a desk; and at least two tables with two drawers each.</p>
        <p>The sute Library has many botUcs that were on the shelves during the 1870s, and hopes that an appeal may bring in others. Yorks research is expected to reveal titles of most of the collection. So far, his studies have indicated 5,110 volumes and 290 pamphlets on the first floor and 4,745 volumes and 1,372 pana-phlets in the gallery in 1879.</p>
        <p>After the disastrous fire in 1831 which destroyed the Capitol and with it the original library, President James Madison sent a copy of Lawsons History of IJorth Carolina (1714) from his private collection. The book is stUl in the possession of the State Library &amp;lt;d-amij)e displayed along with other exhibits in the restored State Library Room.</p>
        <p>Libraries and other North Carolinians have been asked to help locate some of the needed items to re-create the State Library as it once was when our grandfathers and greatgrandfathers used it in the N.C. Capitol.</p>
        <p>MAKES (X0&amp;gt;ARI9(m..Maui7 YoriL mm-cher working on the restoration of the old State Library collection, conqiares two volumes of Boswells Life Of Johnson against the 1842</p>
        <p>manuscript list. The shelves original, and will be left intact. N.C, Museum of Histoy)</p>
        <p>shown here are</p>
        <p>(Pboijo Courtesy</p>
        <p>Soviet Artist Defies Authorities,</p>
        <p>AN ANIE-BELLUM HOME - Ihe Zeinlon Latimer Kmse, built in 1852, is one of the magniflcant buildings included in the walking tours at Wilmington each day, Tuesday through Saturdays, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The historic</p>
        <p>iMff covers g sevenhlock dowMown area. Tickets are M ter adoHs and.$2.50 for diildten (free to those under six), and can be purchased aUThalianHail.</p>
        <p>Theater Notes</p>
        <p>Fiays Set For Parkway</p>
        <p>BURNSVILLE - Five plays are scheduled for performance at the Parkway Playhouse in the scenic western North Carolina town of Burnsville this summer. The season (q)ens July 6 and ends August 13.</p>
        <p>The plays and dates of performances are;</p>
        <p> Man of La Mancha, July 6-9 10,12-16.</p>
        <p> Cactus Flower, July 20-23.</p>
        <p> Royal Family, July 27-30.</p>
        <p> Tei Uttle Indians, August 3-6, and</p>
        <p> How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, August 10-13.</p>
        <p>Tickets to the plays can be ordered by writing to the box office in BumsviUe, N.C., 28714, or by telephone (704) 682-6151.</p>
        <p>Three Plays At Snow Camp</p>
        <p>SNOWiCAMP - Three plays are being offered for the 1977 summer season at Snow Camp. Under the general festival title, The Sword of Peace Summer Celebration, the Outdoor Repertory Theater will open July 6 and run through September 3.</p>
        <p>Plays to be presented are: William Hardys The Sword of</p>
        <p>Peace; the companys production of Cane Creek Calamaties and Other Tall Tales; and Shakespeares A Midsummer Nights Dream.</p>
        <p>Additional information on program can be had by writi to P. 0. Box 535, Snow Camp,</p>
        <p>C. 27349, or by telephone, 376-6948.</p>
        <p>Piedmont Reptertory Season</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM - The 1977  -  The  Tavwn,  June  28-July  9;</p>
        <p>season of Qie Piedmont Repertory Theater Company featured a production of Vanities as its opening play in June; Director William Gould has announced six more plays for the summer season.</p>
        <p>the</p>
        <p>-Bus Stop, July 12-23;</p>
        <p> Round and Round Garden, July 26-August 6;</p>
        <p> Dial M For Murd, August 9-20; and</p>
        <p> The Lover and The Dumb Waiter.</p>
        <p>The Top Ten</p>
        <p>1. Theme From Rocky, BUI Conti</p>
        <p>2. Undwcover Angel, Alan ODay</p>
        <p>3. Lonely Boy, Andr Gold</p>
        <p>4. Got To Give It Up (Part D, Marvin Gaye</p>
        <p>5. Feels Like the First Time, Foreigner</p>
        <p>6. Jet Airliner, Steve MU-ler Band</p>
        <p>7. Angel in Your Arms, HOT</p>
        <p>8. Dreams, Fleetwood Mac</p>
        <p>9. Da Do Ron Ron, Shaun Cassidy</p>
        <p>10. Heard It In a Love Song, The Marshall Tucker Band</p>
        <p>Top Country</p>
        <p>1. Luckenbach, Texas, I Jennings</p>
        <p>I But Not to Each ra Mandrel! ^Was Yesterday,</p>
        <p>Donna Fi</p>
        <p>4. If Wei^ Not Back in Love by Monday, Merle Haggard</p>
        <p>5. Your Man Loves You, Honey, Tom T. Hall</p>
        <p>6. I Cant Hdp Myself, Eddie Rabbltt</p>
        <p>7. Its a Ckiwboy Lovin Night, Tanya Tucker</p>
        <p>8. Burning Memories, Mel TlUis</p>
        <p>9. Dont Go City Girl on Me, Tommy Overstreet</p>
        <p>I 10. Ill Do It All Over Again, Crystal Gayle</p>
        <p>P(TRAIT OF A WORKING MAN - CoBStructloo worker Staolqr Jones, T-shirt over his Nxsdder, was photographed at the end of a day's work in the sun. (Reflector photo by Jerry R^nor)</p>
        <p>jj^^DOWKTOWW PL</p>
        <p>The one and only real live Evd Knievel in Ns first dnmatk movie role.</p>
        <p>VBVA KHBtEVEL</p>
        <p>MATINEE TODAY!</p>
        <p>1:353:305:25'7:aM:1S</p>
        <p>KIDOiCMATINCE</p>
        <p>TUES.mfMWSO.MA^.</p>
        <p>TMtmeh</p>
        <p>CLAIEICE eiOSSEYEfl HON</p>
        <p>DocnS' S ''sotr*as we them, she said.</p>
        <p>Also in place are reproduction gaslights from about 1866.</p>
        <p>York mentioned that by the 1870s the small room had become a glorified attic with thousands of books spUling from the shelves into the main gaUery floors. Furnishings were ^arse, probably hand-me-downs and probably included only two tables a few chairs and a desk for the librarian. Many of the books were virtually inaccessible, a situatkm definitely not conducive to serious study, York observed.</p>
        <p>. York mentioned that in the 1860s and 1870s alcoves had been constructed to relieve the overcrowded conditions but even these were soon fUled.</p>
        <p>Ms. ChUders pointed out that alterations had been made in the room to accommodate the overflow of books and records. Signs are visible on the floor where columns have been removed to allow more space for books, she explained.</p>
        <p>The State Library Room Com-jjiittee, which includes Capitol htetorian John Sanders of Chapel HUl, hopes to furnish the room in the style of the 1870s. Other items needed, in addition to the threadbare rug which cost $6.50 when new, are such things as a letter press; six alcoves dating 1860-1870 nine chairs, ca. 1866; and a wall clock made) prior to 1869.</p>
        <p>Blackbeard Tickets Sale</p>
        <p>Tickets for the forthcoming outdoor drama, Baths Blackbeard; Knii^t of the Black Flag are now on sale in Greenville at Steinbecks at both locations  427 S. Evans Street and at Pitt Plaza.</p>
        <p>The outdoor drama opens Friday, July 8 and will play weekends from then throu^ August 14 at the nw amphitheater at Bath.</p>
        <p>264 PLAYHOUSE</p>
        <p>INDOOR</p>
        <p>(F*RMVH.LeWV.I SHOWING ONLY THE FINEST IN ADULT ENTERTAINMENT</p>
        <p>By PE(MIY POUC MOSCOW (UPI) - Ilya Glazunov, one of Russias most widely-known painters, sent his controversial masterpiece to exhibition hall Saturday in V L, au^rities who reprisals if he Mes to show the work publicly.</p>
        <p>In a test of vrills witti the powerful Ministry of Cultuft^ and Union of Artists, Glazunov said he would cancel a show of 300 of his paintings scheduled to open Monday if it did not include the canvas titled, The Mystery of the 20th Century.</p>
        <p>Glazunov, 47, calls the huge painting, which measures abont 20 feet long by 10 feetjilgb,' a work of pbUesopfiical realism:*'-</p>
        <p>The crod^ canvas traces 20th centutyjhistory from the Russian Revolution through Worid War U to the ^ce age. On it, among scores of others, are the forbidden figures of the murdered Leon Trotsky, dictator Josef Stalin embalmed. Czar Nicholas II holding the slain Czarevich and exiled writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn as well as Pope John XXIII and Jesus.</p>
        <p>Five Lighthouses</p>
        <p>In a 250 mile strip of eastern shoreline in North Carolina, and Virginia, summer travelers can visit five noted lighthouses.</p>
        <p>The sturdy structures designed to warn sailing men of the dangerous shoals have been in use for from 100 to 150 years.</p>
        <p>Now, with better roads to the lighthouses and the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel to connect and shorten the visit, the five can easily be visited in a couple of days of travel.</p>
        <p>The southernmost of the five is the Ocracoke Light Station in the village of Ocracoke. Further up the Outer Banks is Cape Halteras Lighthouse, at 208 feet the tallest brick lighthouse in the world.</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>SHOWING</p>
        <p>AtYourAdol</p>
        <p>Entm-talnment Canter</p>
        <p>^ A WORK OF ART</p>
        <p>Penihouse</p>
        <p>iHRoram</p>
        <p>TICE</p>
        <p>DRIVE-IN *AYDEN HIGHWAY</p>
        <p>nONITE ONLY!</p>
        <p>Festival of HORROR!&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Dusk To Down Special</p>
        <p>lb Di]liaiKo^</p>
        <p>KYHOI</p>
        <p>ExoRgsn</p>
        <p>Mk "WOOD</p>
        <p>AiS</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>do you dare spend a night with Vtoiceiit Price</p>
        <p>mE:</p>
        <p>'The Vampire Beast Craves Blood'</p>
        <p>Meadowbrook</p>
        <p>DRIVE-IN OPPOSITE AIRPORT</p>
        <p>ENDSTONITE 3.00 Prcnoed</p>
        <p>OOOASOPEN</p>
        <p>S:45</p>
        <p>BAMBOO HOUSE OF DOLLS</p>
        <p>Lso  "Dolemlte" wm Rimy nay Steore</p>
        <p>I have been 10 years giving birth to this painting, Glazunov said in an interview. If I cant show my masterpiece, I say no to the exhibition. ^</p>
        <p>Glazunov, who last year painted an official 70th birthday portrait of Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev, said he was smnmoned to the Ministry of Culture Thursday and told he could not exhibit the work and three others.</p>
        <p>Hie painter said one official told him that if he persisted in trying to show the works, You will be very sorry because your life will change.</p>
        <p>The implication, he said, was</p>
        <p>that he mi^t be e; ected from the Unltm of Artists, thus losing his large apartment and ^udk&amp;gt; and the ri^t to tf ivel abroad , to paint the prnteiife that have won IHm an international reputation.  !</p>
        <p>The painter said |e expected the showdown to j come late Monday when the exhibition is scheduled to open under the sponsOTship of the Ministry of Culture.</p>
        <p>Continuing north into Virginia, the third lighthouse on the tour is the Cape Henry Lighthouse at Cape Henry. The 165 foot structure is the tallest fully enclosed cast iron iighthouse in the U.S.</p>
        <p>At the northern end of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-'Tunnel, the 180 foot high Cape Charles Lighthouse is located on Smith Island.</p>
        <p>The final of the five is the Assateague Island Lighthouse in Virginia, one of the oldest on the East Coast. RebuUt in 1866-67, it is still in service.</p>
        <p>For additional details on lighthouses and for a map of the area, interested persons are to write to: Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel, HJ, Cape Charles, Va., 23310.</p>
        <p>^uccaneep MOVIES 1 * 2</p>
        <p>G'eonvillo Square Shuppi'ri; C&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Theyre in love, o getting famo getting e^</p>
        <p>tnSIHMIHH-MlI Mdki</p>
        <p>PETER FONDA WNSAINTi iODTUWI BLUES/</p>
        <p>ErttrN M aim - JB euijyuw - ana lan EMMnrt mmnHNINIlKUB-MnllimKWI wbi.Li*n - Mkri</p>
        <p>NOW SHOWING! Dally 2KHM:30-7;009:30</p>
        <p>IT'SFOURYEARSLATLR... WHAT DOES SHE REMEMBER?</p>
        <p>buccaneer</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>EXORCIST I</p>
        <p>THE HERETIC</p>
        <p>LINDA BLAIR  RICHARD BURTON LOUISE FLETCHER MAX VON SVDOW  </p>
        <p>NOW SHOWING!</p>
        <p>At 2;154^45-7;15-9^45</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0011" />
        <p>/</p>
        <p>Pitt Arts Program A Success</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflactor, GreenvlUa, N.C.Sunday, July 3, lt77A&amp;gt;11</p>
        <p>By BARBARA MATHEWS Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>The 1976-77 school year was the first of full funding for a cultural arts program in the Pitt County Schools, and it was a ^ery successful (me, according to Mrs. Myriam C. Harris, cultural arts supervisor.</p>
        <p>"We were t^ng to offer the studoits as many meaningful experiences in art and music as would be erjoyable, said Mrs. Harris.</p>
        <p>We tried to bring in outside artists and q;mnsor field trips to enhance regular learning and expand student interest in the arts.</p>
        <p>We had students participating in as many things as possible so interest was generated.</p>
        <p>We are very pleased with our first year, and hope that in the fall we'll have even more students involved.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Harris said several theater companies visited the county schools during the year.</p>
        <p>We brought in a theater company from New Jersey which had been commissioned by the state of North Carolina to write a Special musical dealing with North Carolina history, she said.</p>
        <p>The program was called Tar Heel.</p>
        <p>We were also able to bring in</p>
        <p>YAO YOUNGSTER - An intricatdy decorated cig&amp;gt; conqAete with silver ornaments identifies Oris youngster as a member of the Yao tribe. The tribe, once found only in China, now lives in the rugged mountains of in many countries of Southeast Asia. H)i8 boy was {rimtogri^bed recently in Ban Kwal, a village in northern Thailand. (AP Wlrqihoto)</p>
        <p>-.y</p>
        <p>Greenville Artists Well Represented</p>
        <p>a theater company to perform a musical called Harlem Heyday' to acqjuaint our students with the jazz era and big-hand sounds.</p>
        <p>One group came to do singing plays. Scripts were sent in advance so students could learn the lines and music so they would have the opportunity to see how opera is put together. Students later were given the opportunity to ask questions of the performers so they could really explore the field"</p>
        <p>Mrs. Harris said the students were also shown the art of puppet-making so they could see the type of manipulation and art work involved in the process.</p>
        <p>She said the music programs in the schools were also very successful this year.</p>
        <p>We went all out to celebrate music in our schools, she said.</p>
        <p>We had a special week called Harmony: Music and the Arts during which students had art exhibited at the Greenville Art Center and musk programs were presented.</p>
        <p>llie Gardner-Webb College Chorus performed contemporary, religious, classical and popular music for the students.</p>
        <p>The Winston-Salem State University symphonic band performed at various schools for three days. Students were exposed to instruments they were not familiar with and got to handle them to see how they worked.</p>
        <p>We had a tW(Hlay band clinic at Ayden-Grifton Hi^ School conducted by Caleb Moore of Hillsborough for first-year band students, and a concert was given by the Scotland County Band.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Harris noted one county band, the Farmville Central High School Band, received a rating of excellent at the district band festival. The Farmville Central and D. H. Conley bands performed at the Capitol Square Arts Festival in Ralei^ in May.</p>
        <p>She said,the Farmville Central band has been invited to participate at the Mardi Gras in New Orleans next February.</p>
        <p>High school chorus groups gave concerts and attended choral group activities at ECU. Three schools participated in a junior high choral day at the university.</p>
        <p>According to Mrs. Harris, Pitt County art students participated in art shows throu^out the year.</p>
        <p>There were art shows at all the schools,  she said.</p>
        <p>Our superintendents choice art work was put on display at</p>
        <p>the Capitol Arts Center , and students were able to participate in the Earth Week art contest. Mrs. Harris said she was proud of her program.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - A Greenville artist won Best in Show at the 13th Annual Summer Festival Arts Show of Beaufort County, and Greenville and Pitt County artists received a substantial number of the awards given at the big summer show held In Washington.</p>
        <p>Herbert Parker received the Best in Show award for an aluminum sculpture. The show was judged by Moussa Domit, director of the N.C. Museum Of Art, Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Other local artists receiving awards are:</p>
        <p> Professional oil, first place, Deborah Cofer; Professional watercolor, second place, Roxanne Reep; Professional graphks, first place, David Strider and second place, Deborah Cofer.</p>
        <p> Professional sculpture, first place, Art Shlrer; Professional open category. Matt Smartt; Professional craft soft, Harriet Lieberman; Professional craft, hard, Homer King; Professional craft, mixed, first place, GaU Spence.</p>
        <p> Amateur oil, first place, Paula Blumenfield and second place, Vickie Champion'. Amateur watercolor, first place, Fred Baumann; Amateur graphics, first place, Ed Midjett.</p>
        <p> Professional photography, black and white abstract, David Strider.</p>
        <p>In addition to the awards listed above, four Greenville or Pitt County artists received honorable mentions in professional class awards.</p>
        <p>Walk-Marathon For Washington-Belhaven</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>A Walk-Marathon between Washington and Belhaven is scheduled to take place on Mon-d^^ ,My 4. The event is being beaded by W. Joe Davis, an exercise novke now living in Raleigh who says he intends to walk the 26 mile route between the two towns.</p>
        <p>Davis is inviting any hearty souls who think they can withstand the hot, sweltering, humid July fourth heat to join me m the walk.</p>
        <p>The event will begin at Shady Banks, a settlement off River Road seven miles east of Washington. From there the walk route will be down River Road to the Y-Grocery, then two miles acns to Highway 308 and 264 intersections east of Washington. The route will then follow Hi^way^ 264 throu^ YeatsvlMe and Paniego and will officially end at the st(q&amp;gt;li^t at the 264 by-pass in Belhaven.</p>
        <p>^ Sports World</p>
        <p>offers free skate rental to The Sunday Afternoon Session If You Present This Coupon</p>
        <p>Sessions 1-5:30 P.M. 4:30-10:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>For Information, Call 754-4000 104 Red Banka Rd., Behind Shoney'i Open 7 Days a Weak</p>
        <p>Myriam Harris</p>
        <p>For a first-yepr program, we feel we had 9 lot of interest shown in the arts, especially in beginning band classes. she said.</p>
        <p>"This year we placed primary emphasis on the middle school children. Next year we hope to cover grades K-12.</p>
        <p>We hope to offer arts instruc-ti(M) in every classroom, if possible a minimum of twice a week.</p>
        <p>Hopefully next year we can bring in additional programs from professional performers, such as the U. S. Army Field Band which performed this year. In this way we can provide students with as many cultural experiences as possible.</p>
        <p>We have asked for additional personnel and funding so we can further upgrade the program.</p>
        <p>But we do owe special thanks to the Board of Education, the County Commissioners and the parents for their support which has helped make our program so successful,</p>
        <p>Ghost Fleet Gallery Opened By Glenn Eure</p>
        <p>FROM SHEPPARD MEMORIAL LIBRARY</p>
        <p>By JOE STINES</p>
        <p>Set in Mississippi at the height of the Depression, ROLL OF THUNDER, HEAR MY CRY is the story of one familys struggle to maintain its integrity, pride and independence. Mildred Taylor has captured and carefully examined the human spirit within this moving novel which received the 1977 John Newberry Award. The story unfolds through the eyes and thoughts of Cassie Logan, an Independent girl raised by a family determined not relinquish its humanity simply because the family is Black. Cassie has grown up protected, grown up strong, and so far grown up unaware that any white person could consider her inferior and treat her accordingly, </p>
        <p>On one turbulent year, Cassie awakens to an adult world where fairness depends upon color and wealth. She grows to understand why Logan land meant so much, why having a place of their own where they answered to no one permitted the Logans the luxuries of pride and courage their sharecropper neighbors couldnt afford and their white neighbors couldnt allow,</p>
        <p>ROLL OF THUNDER, HEAR MY CRY is rich in characterization. The Logans story is at times warm and humorous, at times terrifying. Ms. Taylor has successfully combined a bit of history, a pinch of storytelling, and lot of human feeling resulting in an unforgettable novel.</p>
        <p>THE GORILLA IN THE HALL by Alice Schertle is a new addition which has proven effective with pre-schoolers. On his fifth birthday, Jack confronts the gorilla who has been hiding in the hallway for years. A warm and humorous story that Will appeal to everyone who has ever overcome a fear of the unknown. Paul Galdones image of a gorilla is lightly cute but none-the-less meaningful.</p>
        <p>Maurice Sendak who gave children the unforgettable Max from WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE (1964) has just published SEVEN LITTLE MONSTERS, a picture book requiring no more one minute of reading time. Unfortunately the monsters arent scary but the text and Illustrations are sure to please the young child.</p>
        <p>GHOST FLEET GALLERY...A new eastern North Caitriina gallery, the Ghost Fleet Gallwy, is (qiening today at Kill DevU Hills. ECU art graduate Glenn Eure is owner-operator of the</p>
        <p>galloT. Here the artist Is rimm with a woodMock print of his grandfather reminiscing about heros and heroines of the Civil War.</p>
        <p>KILL DEVIL HILLS -Eastern North Carolina has a new art gallery with the formal opening today of Ghost Fleet Gallery, owned and operated by Glenn Eure.</p>
        <p>Eure, a retired Army major, is a 1975 graduate of the School of Art, East Carolina University. Born in Hawaii to parents who were natives of eastern North Carolina, Eure returned to the area of his family roots to live alter retirement from the Army in 1970. He served in many overseas posts, iilcluding tours of duty in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>Eure specializes in prints, drawings and paintings of the coastal and Outer Banks areas, as well as sandcasting and Ice sculpture.</p>
        <p>Many of his large woodblock prints deal vrith Civil War events, picturing peoples and places involved in that strife.</p>
        <p>At the Ghost Fleet Gallery, one of the unusual touches is that the artist invites visitors' to watch and to talk to him as he works on wood blocks and pulls prints from the finished cut.</p>
        <p>One of his major paintings, of Blackbeard the Pirate now</p>
        <p>hangs in the National Park Service Information Center in Ocracoke, and postcards have been printed of the painting and are being sold in souvenir shops along the coast.</p>
        <p>The public is invited to attend the opening today of Eures gallery and to meet the artist.</p>
        <p>Rmmbr?</p>
        <p>TOP TUNES 35 YEARS AGO Your Htt Parade July 4,1942</p>
        <p>1. Oik Dozen Roses</p>
        <p>2. Sleepy Lagoon</p>
        <p>3. Johnny Doughboy</p>
        <p>4. Jersey Bounce</p>
        <p>5. Jingle, Jangle, Jingle</p>
        <p>6. Dont Sit Under Hie Apple Tree 7. Three Little Sisters</p>
        <p>8. Here You Are</p>
        <p>9. Who Wouldnt Love You</p>
        <p>10. Skylark</p>
        <p>(Courtesy This Was Your Hit Parade By John R. Williams)</p>
        <p>FAMILYRETURNSOn a family outing are mom and dad Canadian geese and six goelingt. The pair is raising its famOy on a pond owned by Walter Beutlm- in the</p>
        <p>FainrievTarea of Port Angeles, Wash. Beutler believes the two adults are the same geese which raised their young on bis pond last year. (APWirepboto)</p>
        <p>British novelist Joseph Conrad was bom Josef Teodor Konrad Nalecz Korzeniowskl In the Ukraine. Both his parents were Polish.</p>
        <p>The Battle of Marathon was fought in 490 B.C. between the Pwsians and the Athenians.</p>
        <p>Our WadMdajr SpacW:</p>
        <p>B*kcr'&amp;gt;Bak'IXino</p>
        <p>Doughnuts</p>
        <p>ilbrttiePrmofUAt</p>
        <p>Jeirys Sweet SlK^</p>
        <p>Those wanting to take part are to meet in front of the old Jesse B. Ross house at Shady Banks at 4 a.m. on July 4. Take off time will be at 4:30 a.in., with finish time jpstimated between 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m., depending on the speed and endurance of the individual walker.'</p>
        <p>Davis recommends a hat, sunglasses, shorts or light, long pants and a light backpack containing insect repellant, sunscreen lotion, food, and drink for the hike.</p>
        <p>Valdese Drama</p>
        <p>VALDESE - From This My Forward is now open for its tenth season. The outdoor drama cqiened Saturday night, July 2, with performances scheduled througi August 20-. Ticket information may be obtained by writing Old Colony Players, P.O. Box 112, Valdese, N.C., 28690, or by teleione (704) 874-0176.</p>
        <p>PLaza wwhTP*</p>
        <p>Cinema 1  ^</p>
        <p>M IK</p>
        <p>PITT-PIAZA CSNTER  754-00B8</p>
        <p>m wm sms WiHH</p>
        <p>PLaza</p>
        <p>Cinema 2</p>
        <p> SIATS </p>
        <p>*185]</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;r.</p>
        <p>WUTnSNEY</p>
        <p>PROOUaiONS-</p>
        <p>COES TO MONTE afUO</p>
        <p>r OSffiJONES DonKNOTTS</p>
        <p>*  TKHMCOIOR*</p>
        <p>SHOWS DAILY 1-3-5-7-9</p>
        <p>MY IH SUM WMS"</p>
        <p>BASED ON THE BEST SELLER BY SIDNEY SHELDON!</p>
        <p>THE ROMANCE OF PASSION AND POWER</p>
        <p>The d Other Side</p>
        <p>Midnight</p>
        <p>A FRWtKYABUSS PRESENTO*</p>
        <p>A HARON RANSOHOff-fRAI YABtANSPROOUCTON "-M OTHER SlOE Of MIWGHT A CHARLES JARROn FILM. si, HARIE-FRANH PISIER  JOHN BECK  SUSAN SARANDON RAF WtlONE  FRANKYABlANS-bMfMIMWWOW KOCH. JR</p>
        <p>t&amp;gt; CHARLES JARROn   &amp;gt;,  HERMAN  RAUCHER  QANCi  lARAOASH</p>
        <p>iMkM.,SHEY SHRDON. teulKHa LEGRANO FnlMwBMnrm_J &amp;gt;.4.s-)0HN DeOJK</p>
        <p>tiwmiu 011 MDffltm gmgrr</p>
        <p>Shows Daily 2:00-5:00-8:00 SORRY NO PASSES ACCEPTED</p>
        <p>ADMISSION ALL TIMES - ADULTS 2.50 - CHILD 1.25</p>
        <p>(PG)</p>
        <p>NEXT&amp;lt; ISUND Of DR. MOREAU</p>
        <p>7&amp;gt;t;:i;^Empire of the Ants Amanean MwntfeDAWcium I JOAN COLLINS ROBERT LANSM6 JOHN DAVID CARSON|</p>
        <p>MtaTmf EOWMtrOWCR ALKRTMUa-MCOUfLMEICm PMaXt</p>
        <p>sssTzSK. sa?, ssm. lv.</p>
        <p>, SHOWS DAILY 3-S-7-9 PM.</p>
        <p>REXT! omar^</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0012" />
        <p>Tomorrow Can't Match July 4, 1976 Otpouring</p>
        <p>EDITORS NOTE -TiMrnnri Fourth will be 100 pita one. But nice u that may be. It wont compare with last years Btcenteonial outpouring. A reporter remembers what tt was like on that rare weekend, and reflects on its enduring legacy.</p>
        <p>By JOHN BARBOUR</p>
        <p>APNewsfeatures Writer</p>
        <p>The drums seem muffled this year, the trumpets muted. The Tali Ships are scattered to the ports of the world.</p>
        <p>Only in memory now is that touch of glory, that rare sense of family, the thrill, the pride, the surprise at finding us one again.</p>
        <p>To be sure, this July Fourth the church bells will peal, the colors unfurl, the bands parade, ih^lam-fires kindle as America\celebrates the first bteday^, its third century.'</p>
        <p>But not with the glitter, the rapture, the pure unabashed Joy of 215 million voices singing one grand song.</p>
        <p>Same time next year? We should have known it wouldnt be. Times like those are rare, and rightly so.</p>
        <p>Remember New York, where parades thundered up and down the granite avenues, where the tall ships fluttered sail and glided along the Hudson River with eye-watering majesty, where the warships of 22 nations, all flying the Ameriehn flag, stood by at salute, where petle Jammed the waterfronts and riverview apartments and carpeted the feet of the Lady of the Harbor?</p>
        <p>Well, this Fourth of July, only the Shriners will march in parade. Seven ocean liners will make a brief foray into the Hudson, and a fleet of small sailboats will race around Long Island.</p>
        <p>Remember "Washington, where a mammoth fireworks display lit the night sky, where 9,000 gjecial Bicentennial flags fluttered from spires and rooftops, where the National Archives stayed open around the clock so that thousands who lined up cou see the nations birth certificate?</p>
        <p>This year the archives are back (HI a normal summer schedule and the firepower of the fireworks is back to normal, too. The flags were unfurled on Flag Day in June, and the Folk Festival that added spice to last July Fourth is scheduled for September this year.</p>
        <p>Remember San Francisco,</p>
        <p>where last year one big happy parade celebrated the disrate causes of modem American life  Puerto Ricans, Palestinians, Latinos, women, blacks? This year the city will dedicate a statue of Francis Scott Key in G(dden Gate Park and plant a 100-year time capsule at his feet.</p>
        <p>Remember Philadelphia? Independence Hall, where they rang the Liberty Bell and President Ford said, The world knows where w stand... The world may or may not follow, but we lead because our whole history says we must... we still show^ the way.</p>
        <p>This year President Carter wUI spend the Fourth (juietly at Camp David. Attendance at the Independence National Historical Park, which reached seven million in 1976, may hit four million in 1977.</p>
        <p>Remember Boston, uhere 400,000 wild and cheering, dancing Americans heard Arthur Fielder lead the Boston Pops in a thrilling American medley capped by The Stars and Stripes Forever? Well, this year some 200,000 are expected on the banks of the Charles River to hear him conduct the Pops in Tchaikovskys "1812 Overture.</p>
        <p>In Miramar, Fla., last year, Betty Kapchuk and her chilcLren festooned their home in red, white and Mue bunting. This year she has no special plans.  *</p>
        <p>In Lake City, Pa., they stored the red-white-and-blue park benches Indoors for the winter so the paint would still be bright this year. The landing pad for unidentified flying objects ringed in star-spangled lights is still operational, but we havent had any activity there yet. The American Legion this year will stage the worlds largest fireworks extravaganza over Chicago. In the Mojave Desert of California, Bob Older will raise again the 52-by-lOO foot flag over his Ore Grande ranch for all udio want to see.</p>
        <p>There were many things we didnt get t see last July Fourth. We didnt see Vernon Moens hog farm where he plowed up ten acres of oats to plant ten acres of petunias in a red, white and blue r^lica of the Betsy Ross flag. We .j^idnt see the Bicentennial ' kite flown from Mt. Kilimanjaro, the largest pancake  76 Inches in diameter  cooked up by Glenwood Springs, Colo., the worlds largest ice cream social in Minneapolis, the</p>
        <p>worlds largest birthday cake  69,000 pounds  served n&amp;gt; in Baltimore. We didnt get to meet Christopher Columbus XVm, a Spanish sailor given leave to man the hrim of the replica hf the Santa Maria, one of the Tall Ships. Nor did we get to taste the 60square-foot cherry pie in George, Wash.</p>
        <p>But we wont forget them anyway.</p>
        <p>The. Bicentennial Commission officially went out of business last Thursday and most of the state commissions disbanded by today or sooner. But under their guidance, at least 12,566 communities had gone through formal Bicentennial activities, as thg^om-missions five-volumeBpm to Congress shows. There were than 66,000 separate functions, and thats only the tip of the Iceberg, the ones we know about, says Jean McKee, who was the acting director.</p>
        <p>I sometimes wish we had the resources to continue the Bicentennial celebration into 1977, says Jean McClatchy, who headed the San Francisco commission. That was such a special time, the whole city getting involved. I have very warm memories of that year.</p>
        <p>It made a lot of people st(9 and think, said a Kansas bicentainlal official. I think theyll remember what they thou^t about. But many more things, tangible things, were bom of the Bicentennial. Long Beach, Calif., has a new city ball. There are countless</p>
        <p>parks from Lake City, Pa., east and west with 200th Birthday inscriptions. Maybe the Battle of Blue Licks, in Kentucky, the last skirmish of the Revolution, has been fought for the last time this century.</p>
        <p>But in Los Angeles a thousand cherry trees.</p>
        <p>bestowed by the people of Japan, survive and promise bloom. Kansas City, Mo., has its Bicentennial Mall. The fertile American topsoil guards no-one-knows-how many time capsules for todays childrens childrens children, 99 years hence. San Pedro, Calif., has its own</p>
        <p>Liberty Bell, courtesy Korea.</p>
        <p>Ham, Bacon, or Sou^</p>
        <p>2 Eggij Qria, Toatt.</p>
        <p>75c 60c</p>
        <p>CAROU|^|Ajgm^</p>
        <p>Ham, Bacon, or Samaga and Em Sandwich----</p>
        <p>THIS PLACE 15 FOR THE BIRDS - Hie middle of a hot, humid, decaying cypress swamp might not be everyones cup of tea; but fm' a large number of birds who choose such areas for rookeries, the swamps are ideal places to take up</p>
        <p>residence. Shown here are three young egrets near Ft. Gaines, Ga., who are eagerly awaiting return of their mom....hopefuIy with chow. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
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        <pb facs="00093416_0013" />
        <p>Tired Bjorn Borg Defeats Connors In Five Tough Sets</p>
        <p>By GEOFFREY IflLUER AP l^)orU Writer</p>
        <p>WIMBLEDON, England (AP)  BJom Borg of Sweden urged on hia weary limbs to edge Jimmy Cmuiors ft-2,6-1, 5-7, M In a tense 'and ferociously-fought match Saturday and retained his Wimbledon tennis tiUe.</p>
        <p>Im the tiredest Ive ever been, the 21-year-old Swede admitted after the seesaw battle that kept the center court crowd excited for 3 hours, 10 minutes.</p>
        <p>The final set was one of the most dramatic ever seen in a Wimbledon mens final.</p>
        <p>Borg led 4-0, but Connors, a left-hander from Belleville, III, suddenly produced a spell of super/Tjpmis .and rushed throum^dur games to even it</p>
        <p>But the tornado blew itself</p>
        <p>out, and the Atiterican cracked. With a doubie fault and other errors, he handed Borg the last two vital games.</p>
        <p>If I had started the final set a little tighter and won a game, it might have all been different, Connors said.</p>
        <p>It was the first time two Eu-opeans had won the singles title in the same year since 1934. Virginia Wade of Britain took the womens crown Friday, beating Betty Stove of The Netherlands 4-6, 6-3, 6-1.</p>
        <p>Borg also became the first man since Australias John Newcombe (1970-71) to win successive men's singles titles.</p>
        <p>Some of the 15,000 fans had slept on the sidewalks for two ni^ts to get standing room.</p>
        <p>They got their moneys worth. The match veered this way and that, with rival groups of young supporters screaming</p>
        <p>for the two players.</p>
        <p>Connors was in complete command in the first set. But from 2-2 in the second, the picture dramatically changed and Borg won eight games in a row.  f'-.j  </p>
        <p>The Swede toar 2-1 lead In sets. But Connors came fighting back and Inxrice through on the final shot of the fourth set with a lob that must have had eyes, evening the match at two sets each.</p>
        <p>Then came the final actand Borg looked ready to drop as he raked in (he last points. He was bending over and panting between points.</p>
        <p>If I hadnt won the second set I would certainly have lost the match, Borg said. I was so tired, mentally and physically.</p>
        <p>The gruelling grass courts tournament, uddcfa calls for</p>
        <p>Two Fistod Play</p>
        <p>Jimmy Connors uses both bands to return a volley at his Wimbledon opponent Bjom Borg of Sweden during the</p>
        <p>Bonnett Speeds Way To Firecracker Pole</p>
        <p>By JERRY GARRETT AP Moton^Mrts Writ' DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - NeU Bonnett, driving a Dodge for a team that was nearly dissolved last month, upstaged Grand National racings stars Saturday and won the pole position for Mondays Firecracker 400 stock car race.</p>
        <p>Bonnett, 30, in his sophomore year on the demanding Grand</p>
        <p>we can put a car on the track thats equal to his abUity.</p>
        <p>New owner Jim Stacy, a North Carolina coal mine operator, said he was extremely pleased to be starting up front in his first race.</p>
        <p>Weve got a winning team, a winning chief mechanic and an owner we know is going to go all out for us, Bonnett said. Now Ive got to prove that</p>
        <p>National tour, averaged 187.191 Nell Bonnett is a winner, too, miles per hour in his white on Monday.</p>
        <p>Charger, surpassing natibnal champion Cale Yarboroughs previous best of 186.181 by .265 seconds.</p>
        <p>NeU is one of the finest young drivers youU ever see come along, said chief mechanic Harry Hyde, who ^ in the process of selling on the teams equipment last month after the previous owner threw in the towel. Im pleased that</p>
        <p>Yarborough, last years Firecracker winner, appeared to have the top spot locked in with bis run, which was a mUe an hour faster than the next man, Benny Parsons, at 185.658. Both were in 3ievrolets.</p>
        <p>Of the three women drivers entered here, only Janet Guthrie, at 181.755 in a Chevrolet, was fast enou0i to earn one of the 20 positions up for grabs</p>
        <p>susUined effort for two weeks, saps the energies of evi the strongest. Borg confessed he was drained after his classic five-set victory over Vitas Gerulaitis in the semifinalsa match which critics haOed as one of the greatest In Wimbledons 100-year history.</p>
        <p>All Borgs fierce hitting'^^d make no Impression on the ebullient Connors in the first set. The Swede fired a salvo of top-spin forehands, and the faster the ball came over, the harder Connors hit it back.</p>
        <p>Borg gained the initiative by slowing the pace. He hit slow looping returns and guided his shots carefully into the back corners, aiyl Connors faltered as he tried to make his own pace.^e netted a stream of frehands.</p>
        <p>All those forehand volleys I missed were probably the most decisive factor In the match, Connors said.</p>
        <p>Connors began the tournament in disgrace. He was booed by the crowd and censured for discourtesy by the All-England Club for missing a parade of Wimbledon champions on the &amp;lt;g&amp;gt;ening day of the centenary event.</p>
        <p>But the Duke of Kent, president of the club, was all smUes as he handed Cknmors his runners-up medal.</p>
        <p>Me and the duke got along like this out there, Connors said and held iq) crossed fingers.</p>
        <p>Borg is the first European</p>
        <p>since Fred Perry in the 30s to win the title two years running. Since World War II, the feat has been accomplished only by AustraliansLew Hoad, R()d Laver (twice), Roy Emersto and Newcombe. Only 15 have won successive WimMe-d(Hi singes titles in the tourna-ment's long history.</p>
        <p>Borg Ux* revenge on Connors for his defeat V) last years nai at the U.S. Open in Forest Hills. But this was the first time the two men had met on grass.</p>
        <p>Connors won Wimbledon in 1974. Now, twice in three years, he has fallen in the final after being the favorite and the top seed. Arthur Ashe t&amp;lt;q&amp;gt;pled him in the final in 1975.</p>
        <p>Ive nothing to worry about, Connors said. Ive won Wimbledon, Forest Hills, the Australian title, and Ive been a finalist at Wimbledon twice more. Thats not bad for a beginner.</p>
        <p>Joanne Russell, 22, Of Naples, Fla., teamed widi Helen Gour-lay Cawley of Australia to win the womens doubles. Unseeded, they fought through to beat Betty Stove of the Netherlands and Czech defector Martina Navratilova of Dallas 6-3, 6-3 in the final.</p>
        <p>The crowd appeal of Wimbledon continued to the last day. Attendance during the two weeks totaled 336,207nearly 2,000 more than last year and only 2,000 less than the all-time record.</p>
        <p>Bjorn</p>
        <p>finals of me mat's singles competition Saturday. Connors, the top seed, was beaten three sets to two by the defending champion. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Saturday. The remaining 20 spots will be contested Sunday.</p>
        <p>Italian Leila Lombardi just missed with a q&amp;gt;eed of 180.115 in a Chevrolet, while Christine Beckers of Belgium was further down the list at 176.218 in a Ford.</p>
        <p>Ford &amp;lt; products generally seemed to be at a disadvantage on the 2V4-mile q&amp;gt;eedway. Buddy Baker hit 179.730 and Beckers teammate Dick Brooks was at 179.967, both in Fords.</p>
        <p>David Pearson, in a Mercury, averaged 183.049.</p>
        <p>Thats about as good as we thought wed run, Pearson conceded. It seems like the Dodge and Chevrolet cars have about three-four mile an hour on us here. I think well be a little better off on race day. If youre at all close to the leaders in speed you can draft right along with them.</p>
        <p>A Kiss From Tho Champion</p>
        <p>Bjorn Borg of Sweden kisses his tn^hy on the center court at Wlmbledcm Saturday after downing ttqi-seeded</p>
        <p>Jimmy C(uiors of the United States, to retain his title as the nnens singes champion. Borg is the fifteoith man to win the title twice in succession. (AP Wir^hoto)</p>
        <p>No. One 'For The Moment'</p>
        <p>ByWlLLGRIMSLEY AP Special Correspoodeit</p>
        <p>WIMBLEDON, England (AP)  A beaming Bjorn Borg, admitting its the tiredest Ive ever been, savored his second straight Wimbledon tennis championships Saturday and exulted:</p>
        <p>I think I am No. 1 for the moment.</p>
        <p>I wanted to beat him badly, the 21-year-old Swedish phenom said after a gruelling five-set victory over Jimmy Connors on the famed center court.</p>
        <p>He had beaten me so many times and I had lost to him in the finals at Forest Hills last year. To win this year makes me happier.</p>
        <p>The match, full of ups and downs but repl^ with brilliant ihofanaldiig on IxAh sides, lasted 3 hours, 10 minutes. The f nal score was 3-6,6-2,6-1,5-7,6-4.</p>
        <p>Twice the fighting Connors, winner here In 1974, appeared skidding toward ignominious defeat, but each time he rallied to make it one of the historic finals in the tournaments lOOyear history.</p>
        <p>.At one stage in the second and third sets, Connors dropped eight games in a row and 10 in the space of 11. In the fifth set, after knotting the match at two sets each, he fell behind 0-4 but fought back to tie it at 4-4 before dropping service and finally the match.</p>
        <p>I got younger out there, Connors said of his strong fifthset comeback. I had momentum going for me. Of course, I thought I would take it.</p>
        <p>Then I played like a dud. After winning the first point, I served the god-awfullest double fault you ever saw and made two bad shots. That got him on Ipp.</p>
        <p>I play my best tennis when I am down. Behind 0-4 in the last set, it looked like I was finished on grass. I hit some shots that made me very proud.</p>
        <p>Borg said he felt both mentally and physically drained after his five-set victory over Vitas Gerulaitis in the semifinal, a match which the London Times labeled the hours of summer lightning.</p>
        <p>Even in the second and third sets I never felt so tired' before, Borg said. I was tired. He was eager for every polni^'</p>
        <p>Despite his weariness, Borg brought his game to a very high level and hung on to outlast the man who had been rated the best in the world.</p>
        <p>If I had lostjthe second set, I dont think I could have won, the strappng young Swede insisted. When Jimmy tied the fifth set after I had gone 4-0,1 thought the match might slip away. Reminded that a couple of years ago he was charged with a tendency to collapse in tight, tough situations, Borg said; I always have to be mentally tough to play Jimmy. I never was scared of him. Now I know I can come back. I have confidence I can win.</p>
        <p>Before Saturdays match, Connors held a 7-2 head-to-head edge over Borg. This was their first meeting on grass.</p>
        <p>I thought I played fine tennis in the first set but I didnt move enough in the second or third, Connors said. No, I wasnt tired. I could have played five more sets.</p>
        <p>I am not disappointed in the tournament. I had some tou^ matches. I fought my guts out out there.</p>
        <p>Fergus Seeking First Tour Win At Milwaukee</p>
        <p>By MKE OBRIEN APSpmUWrita</p>
        <p>MRWAUKEE (AP) - Keith Fergus, a sandy-haired Texan bidding to become the first rookie to win on the Professional Golfers Association tour this year, fired a five-under-par 67 Saturday lor a three-stroke lead after two rounds of the Greater Milwaukee Open.</p>
        <p>Fergus, 1975 U.S. Amateur runneng) from Sugarland, Tex., who has made the cut in 15 of the 20 tour events he has entered, was eight under par at 136 going into Sundays scheduled 36-hoie windup at the 7,010-yard Tuckaway Country Qub course.</p>
        <p>You have to come on the tour thinking you can do well or you wont. I had been making some dumb mistakes but my first round gave me confidence and Ive got It going now, said Fergus, 23, whose second round included three birdies, an eagle, no bogeys and only one missed green.</p>
        <p>Fergus withstood a late charge by Dave Eichelberger, 1971 winner here, who birdied his Uth tbrou^ 13th holes to dip to six under for the tournament. However, Eichelberger bogeyed No. 15 and finished with a second-round 68 for a second-place tie at 139 with Frank Beard, Mike Morley,</p>
        <p>Barney TTiompson and Gary McCord.</p>
        <p>Fergus had shared the lead after Fridays first round, delayed a day because of rain, with Morley, McCord and Fuzzy Zoeller at 69.</p>
        <p>Wayne Levi, who joined the tour only last month, and Ed Sabo were four strokes back at 140. Levi, Morris Hatalsky and Leonard Thompson each shot second-round 66s in near perfect conditions. Winds gusting up to 37 m.p.h. bad hampered first-day scoring.</p>
        <p>Fergus, 91st on the current earnings list with $15,575, didnt predict he would be the first rookie champion since Jerry Pate won the U.S. Opoi last year. However, he said his strong round In the wind here Friday has buoyed his confidence.</p>
        <p>I think all the rookies here are capable of winning a tournament, but it takes getting used to playing in front of big crowds and with big names, he said. Your mind tends to wander.</p>
        <p>But Ive been on the tour six months now, and it doesnt bother me like it used to, he said. I hope it wont bother me like it used to, be said. I hope it wont bother me tomorrow. I guess Ill find out.</p>
        <p>Eichelberger bogeyed his</p>
        <p>first hole, then birdied six of his next 12 before be missed an ei^t-foot-putt and bo^yed No. 15.</p>
        <p>I felt really gunned up until that bogey, but its still anybodys ball game because people have shot 63 on this course, said Eichelberger, who closed with a 63 here last year to tie for third. Somebody two under afta- today could do it. There are 20 guys who really still have a chance.</p>
        <p>Beard, 38, thinks be has as good a chance as any, although the last of his 11 tour victories came in 1971. Beard, the tours top money winner In 1960, earned just $12,654 last year but said his long slump may be nearing an end.</p>
        <p>I think I can win this golf tournament, Beard said. It would be easier for me than for some of these young fellows who havent won before, even thou^ I havoit won in so IcHig. Ive made the cut the last six or seven weeks, which may not sound like much, but I could have shot 62 or 63 today. I threw away six or eight shots.</p>
        <p>Id give the $26,000 (first prize) to anybody, if I could just win this tournament, be said. Its not that I couldnt use the money, but it would give me confidence to start a re-career.</p>
        <p>Louisville's Crum Is Offered UCLA Position</p>
        <p>By MANUEL SCHIFFRES AssocUted Press Writer</p>
        <p>LOUISV LLE, Ky. (AP) - Denny Crum, coach of the Uni-ifersify of Louisville basketball team, Saturday confirmed that he has been offered the head coaching position at UCLA and said he will decide by Tuesday whether to take the job.</p>
        <p>Crum, a native Californian, a UCLA graduate and an assistant to former Bruin Coach John</p>
        <p>'Future Is Now</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE Reflector ^lorts Edita</p>
        <p>If for no other reason, CMiver Mack has given East Carolinas new basketball coach reason to feel that his first recruiting season was a good one.</p>
        <p>Larry Gillman landed Mack, rated by some at the top juplor coU^ player in America, and a bona-fide All-America candidate, as his first recruit.</p>
        <p>Since then, he has added Walter Moseley, Bernard Hill, R(^r Carr and Danny Roberts.</p>
        <p>Anytime you get a kid like Mack, youve had a good recruiting year, Gillman said. There might be 25 kids across the country in his category, but how many coUe^ are there after him?</p>
        <p>GUlman added that Mack is a winner, and has been on a winning team every where hes been.</p>
        <p>The new coach admits that the toughest job hell have is to Wend the five newcomers with the eight players he has returning from last years squad. Those eight include Wade Henkel, who missed last year with an injury; Herb Gray,</p>
        <p>Greg Cornelius, Kyle Powers, Herb Krusen, Jim Ramsey, Dcm Whitaker, and Dean Hartley. Only the latter two are seniors.</p>
        <p>Hie five new players will be ready to play my type of iMisketball, GUlman said. When you recruit for yourself, you pick the players who can play your brand of basketball. But this is not to say that the others cant play it. It will take an adjustment, but I think that the players will have a lot of fun before Its overand so will the fans. The opening of the Pirate schedule is just as tou^ as it has been in the pa^. The first game is on the road against former National Champkm Indiana, whUe other early games include N.C. State and Maryland.</p>
        <p>If I had my way. Id rather'not open like this, GUlman said. But there are stUl some thii^ to be said for it. The whWe program benefits from the challenge. Well be ready to play them, and Im really looking forward to meeting ACC competition.  </p>
        <p>GUlman looks to Mack to be the pivot around which he buUds the team. Hell play as long as hes capable of playing.  </p>
        <p>As to the other recruits, GUlman looks to</p>
        <p>') </p>
        <p>I Gillman Seeks Blend Of Old, New Players For Victory Recipe</p>
        <p>Moseley to handle the guard position a lot of the time, along with Ramsey. Moseley is a very mature floor leader. He has tremendous quickness, vision and intelligence.</p>
        <p>The coach also added that at times, the Pirates would go with a three-guard offense, playing Ramsey, Mosley, and Mack all at one time. Ramsey has too much experience and abUity to keep wi the bench, he added.</p>
        <p>Cornelius, Henkle and Gray appear to be the leading candidates for the front court positions, but GUlman notes that the Pirates wUl be flexible.</p>
        <p>We have a lot of people who havent played both the guard and forward posts. But it would not surprise me to have Gray playing sometimes as a guard, and Mack as a forward to get certain mismatches. Henkle can be a tremendous post player, even though Cornelius would normally be in there.</p>
        <p>GUlman added that Krusen and Powers also are flexible and could move from front to back court. Both of them are gym-rats, in that they are filters and scrapers.</p>
        <p>Roberts, HUI and Carr, all prolific scorers in</p>
        <p>high school,-probably wUI not see as much playing time as the others, but GUlman looks fpr one of them, I dont know which one now, he add-pd, to mature earlier than the others, and get into the games much more. Our team needs a scoring punch and quickness, and all of our recruits have this abUity .</p>
        <p>Turning to the other end of the court, GUlman noted that former coach Dave Patton had the team playing good defense.'The problem was scoring. So weve tried to find people who can score for us. We know Mack can do it all, offensively and defwisively. Moseley is also a good defensive player, and the other three are good enough players to get the job done. </p>
        <p>GUlmans goals are to get jhe team shooting above SO per cent, playing good defoise and making few turnovers.</p>
        <p>I think we are capable of playing witjh anyone. I have to make the team bc6ieve that.</p>
        <p>For us, the future is now, GUlman said. Our goal is to win as many games as it takes to get us into a post-season tournament. Thats what we want, and I think thats what the fans want too.</p>
        <p>Wooden, said be had been offered the post by'UCLA Athletic Director J.D. Morgan during a trip to Los Angeles earlier this week.  </p>
        <p>In Los Angeles, Morgan refused to (XRifirm the offer.</p>
        <p>I have talked to Crum in Los Angeles, Morgan said. I have no comment as to my talks with Denny.</p>
        <p>Hes not the only one Ive talked to about the coaching job, be added. Ive talked to several people. I have no cmn-ment as to when a new coach wUI be named.</p>
        <p>Crum, who has guided Louis-vUle to a 139-37 record |n six seasons here, would succeed Gene Bartow, who resigned last month to become basketball coach and athletic director at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.</p>
        <p>LouisvUle Athletic Director Dave Hart hinted that be believes Crum wUl take the U(XA position. '</p>
        <p>I think hes a very logical choice fa them, Hart said. Hes the best alunmus theyve got out in the field and hes got the seccmd best record of any coach In the country.</p>
        <p>Domy is closa to this type of thing now. than hes eva been, he added. Every guy seems to have his eye cocked to his alma mata.</p>
        <p>Unda Crums stewardship, LouisvUle baMiObaU teams have reached the NCAA tournament foa times and the National Invitation Toaan^ twice. Ironically, UCLA knwked LouisvUle out M the</p>
        <p>NCAAs three tintestwice in the semifinals and once, last spring, in the opening round.</p>
        <p>Crum, 40, sa in a telephone interview that he would weigh several factors before deciding wfaetha to accq[&amp;gt;t UCLAs of-fer.</p>
        <p>I Uiink youve got to consider all the factors-posonal, famUy, aU the professional parts of it, he said. The opportunity to be successful is a part of it.</p>
        <p>Crum said he has three years remaining &amp;lt;m a five-yea contract at LouisvUle, Ixit added be would expect no problems in leaving the Metro-7 Conference school.</p>
        <p>Asked if be tliought coaching fa UCLA would mean reaching the pinnacle of the college basketball world. Chum said, They certainly have had more success than any otbr school. But in this case, youre talking about picking between two outstanding schools that have outstanding basketball traditioos.</p>
        <p>Crum said he has been relatively hzqq&amp;gt;y at LouisvUle. Asked to elabaate about any problems he has had here, he said he would have wanted hte Cardinals to practice more ftapiently at Freedom HaU, whoe they play their home</p>
        <p>Crum also said he has thou^t ot the possibility that three of last seasons startos forward Larry WUliams, guard Rick Wilson and eenta Ricky Gallonmay not be ellgiUe next season because of academic problems.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0014" />
        <p>B-^The Dfly Reflactor, GreenviUe, N.C.Sunday, July 3.177</p>
        <p>Britt One-Hits Louisburg For Bucs</p>
        <p>Spencer Leads Sox To Victory</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (AP) - Jim Spencer blasted a pair of homers, including a grand slam, and drove in eight runs to lead the Chicago White Sox to a m victory over the Minnesota Twins.</p>
        <p>Spencers bases-loaded homer came in the fourth inning. He drove in a run with a single in the sixth to break a 5-5 tie and he capped a seven-run eighth with his 11th homer of the season with two men aboard.</p>
        <p>All seven runs in the eighth were unearned. With one out, Ralph Gair reached On n error by pitcher Tom Johnson, 9-3. Jim Essian then singled and Alan Bannister reached when Dan Ford dropped his fly in right to load the bases. Jorge Orta Mowed with a two-run single to give the Sox an 8-7 lead.</p>
        <p>A sacrifice fly by Richie Zisk and singles by Lamar Johnson and Chet Lemon preceded Spencers three-run homer.</p>
        <p>The Twins had taken a 7-6 lead In the top of the eighth on Butch Wynegars bases-loaded single.</p>
        <p>Minnesota scored twice in the second inning before Spencers grand slam wiped out the lead in the fourth for the first and only hit off starter Bill Butler, who had loaded the bases on three walks.</p>
        <p>MINNESOTA  CHICAGO</p>
        <p>abrhbl</p>
        <p>4 12 0 fianistr ss</p>
        <p>5 110 Orta 2b</p>
        <p>2 0 0 0 Zlsk rf</p>
        <p>3 112 LJhnsn dh 5 0 12 Ltmon cf</p>
        <p>4 2 3 0 Spencr 1b 3 10 3 Sdrhim 3b</p>
        <p>5 12 1 Garr If 5 111 Euian c</p>
        <p>Bostck cf Smaley ss Carew lb Wyngar c Hisle If Adams dh Ford rf Cubage 3b Wilfong 2b Total</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Bdltw</p>
        <p>It started out as a double-header, then was changed to a single game. Then, it became a double-header once more, and aided up being a marathon.</p>
        <p>That was what happened Friday night at Harrington Field when Louisburg and East Carolina met for a North Carolina Summer League twin bUl.</p>
        <p>The game had gone one inning before lightning and winds hit the field, forcing the players into the dugout. After some rains, it was decided to continue, but to play only one nine-inning game.</p>
        <p>When that contest reached the t(^ of the seventh, officials again confurred, and decided, no, well playem both after all.</p>
        <p>So when Mickey Britt recorded a 7-0 one-hit shutout of the Hurricanes for East Carolina in</p>
        <p>that game, play began on the second game.</p>
        <p>At 12:30 a.m., when the um-ilres finally stopped it, 12 inn-ngs had been played, and the two teams were tial at 4-4. Thai game will be completed from that point on July 28, when the two teams meet again.</p>
        <p>Britt, who was denied a nohitter dii^ the regular season by a swerttn Inning hit, saw the same toing happen again Friday night. He tossed six noJiit frames, only to see disappointment in the seventh. The lone hit came on a solid blast through the middle by Max Raynor after Brian Little had walked.</p>
        <p>Britt walked three batters, and faced just 24 during the seven-inning contest.</p>
        <p>East Carolina grabbed a 1-0 lead in the first inning before weather conditions stalled the game temporarily. Pete</p>
        <p>li ( II I Total M 13 13 13</p>
        <p>Mlnntsot*  02..  03002 1-1</p>
        <p>Chicago  ooo  4 11 o 7x-i3</p>
        <p>E-Cubbag, ToJohnwn. Ford, DP-MlnneMta 1. LOB-Mlnnsota 10, Chicago 6. 2B HIsle, Bannister, Adams. 3B Lem on. HRSpencer 2 (11). SSoderholm. Bostock. SF~Ford, Zisk.</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BB SO Butler  4  1  4  4  4  2</p>
        <p>Burgmeier  23  4  1  1  0  0</p>
        <p>ToJohnsn</p>
        <p>DJohnson  1  3  3  3  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Kucek  4 V3  4  5  5  3  5</p>
        <p>BJohnson  3 1 3  4  3  2  3  2</p>
        <p>LaGrow (W,4-1)  11-3  11  I  0  1</p>
        <p>WP-ToJohnson, LaGrow. HBP-8y Ku cek (Ford). t-3:00. A-2*,957.</p>
        <p>Prep League Champions</p>
        <p>The Graniteers captured first place in the Prep League this summer. Members of ttie team are, first row, left to rifdit: Crowell Pt^, Scott Galloway, Spencer Mayo, Tony Heath,</p>
        <p>Art Pittman, Robert Still, Jason Galloway; second row, Ckiach Tom Gibbs; Roger Williams, Gur Singh, Bill Bost, Ricky Owens, Jim Whitehurst, Vince Hankins, Coach Mike Baker. (Reflector Photo)</p>
        <p>Graniteers In Title Victory</p>
        <p>Rader's Blast Powers Jays</p>
        <p>NCNB Stops College View For Loop Title</p>
        <p>TORONTO (AP) - Doug Raders three-run homer in the bottom of tbe fifth inning Saturday powered the Toronto Blue Jays to a 10-7 victory over the Texas Rangers Saturday.</p>
        <p>Raders homer, his fourth since coming to Toronto from San Diego in June, gave the Jays a 6-3 lead and chased starter Len Barker, 0-1.</p>
        <p>The Rangers had closed to 6-5 in the eighth, when Bump Wills hit his fourth homer of the season, a two-nm shot, over the right-center field fence.</p>
        <p>However, Toronto came bck with four runs in the bottom of the eighth. After consecutive singles by Doug Ault and John Scott, third baseman Toby Har-rah failed to touch the bag on Alan Ashbys bunt back to reliever Paul Undblad. Bob BaU-</p>
        <p>or then singled in two runs and Steve Staggs beat out a bunt to reload the bases. One out later, Otto Velez singled home two more runs.</p>
        <p>Pete Vuckovich, 4-6, went the distance, giving up 12 hits to pick up the victory.</p>
        <p>TEXAS</p>
        <p>Cmpnrs ss Washtn If Hargve 1b Horton dh DMay rf Harrah 3b Beniquz cf  Wills 2b Sundbg c</p>
        <p>Total</p>
        <p>TORONTO</p>
        <p>brhbi</p>
        <p>4 2 2 0 Bailor ss</p>
        <p>5 0 0 0 Staggs 2b</p>
        <p>4 2 2 2 Fairly dh</p>
        <p>5 0 2 ! Velez rf</p>
        <p>4 13 2 Ewing If</p>
        <p>5 0 0 0 Bowing If 4 0 0 0 Rader 3b 4 112 Ault lb</p>
        <p>3 12 0 JScOtt cf Ashby c 3S 7 12 7 Total</p>
        <p>ab r h bi 5 2 2 2 5 110</p>
        <p>3 2 11 2 0 12</p>
        <p>4 12 2 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>5 113 5 110 4 12 0 2 110</p>
        <p>35 10012 10</p>
        <p>Texas  10020002 2-7</p>
        <p>Toronto  003 030 0 4X-10</p>
        <p>EVuckovich, Harrah. DPTexas 1, Toronto 1. LOB-Texas 8. Toronto 9. 2B-Fairly, DMay. Hargrove. HR-Rader (4), Wills 14), S-Ashby.</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BBSO Barker (L,0-1)  5  4  4  6  5  1</p>
        <p>Lindblad  2  4  3  2  1  3</p>
        <p>Devine  1  i  0  0  1  0</p>
        <p>Vuchvch (W. 4-4)  9  12 7  4  4  8</p>
        <p>WP-Vuckovich. Barker. T-2:53. A-19,176.</p>
        <p>North Carolina National Bank captured a spwial playoff game for the championship of the Babe Ruth League yesterday, downing College View, 12-7.</p>
        <p>The two teams finished the regular season with identical 11-4 records, and the playoff was necessary to decide the cham-pionsbip.</p>
        <p>NCNB started it off in the first inning, scoring two runs. Glenn Moore singled and Mike Campbell reached on a fielders choice. Skip Topping singled in Moore, wWle Campbell scored on a passed ball.</p>
        <p>They added four more runs in the third. Mark Shank reached on an error and stole second. Moore walked and Campbell reached on another miscue, scoring Shank. Will Barrett reached on still another error, and Topping singled to score Moore. Campbell came in on a</p>
        <p>passed ball, and Barrett scored when Mark Sasser grounded out.</p>
        <p>College View finally broke the ice with a run in the fourth. Kenny Barnes singled and stole second. He scored on an error.</p>
        <p>The fifth saw NCNB add a seventh run. Barrett walked and stole second. Topping grounded out, scoring him.</p>
        <p>In the top of the sixth, College View cut three runs off the lead, trimming it to 7-4. Ricky West singled and Barnes walked. Steve Hawkins reached on an error, scoring West, and Pat-WUson grounded out, scoring Barnes. Mark Jones reached on an error, allowing Hawkins to score.</p>
        <p>NCNB picked up what proved to be the difference, scoring five runs in the bottom of the sixth. Steve Hall walked and Shank did too. Moore reached on an error, scoring Hall. Campbell sacrific</p>
        <p>ed in Shank and Barrett singled to score Moore. Topping singed, and stole second. Mike Mills was safe on an error,, scoring Barrett, and a passed hall plated Topping with the final run.</p>
        <p>College View came back to score three more in the top of the seventh, but all in vain.</p>
        <p>Topping led NCNB with three hits, while Moore had two.</p>
        <p>The two teams will resume action on Wednesday in the secdnd round of the post-season double-elmination tournament.</p>
        <p>College View 000 103 3-7 4 7 NCNB  204  015  x-12 6 5</p>
        <p>The Graniteers captured the Prep League championship Saturday afternoon by gaining an 8-1 win over Pitt Plaza, while Auto Specialty was knocking off Cox Realty, 6-4.</p>
        <p>The result left the Graniteers with an 8-4 record, while Cox dropped back to second place at 7-5. The games closed out the season for the league.</p>
        <p>The league will have a postseason tournament, which will get underway Tuesday at 6 p.m. at Jaycee Park. The Graniteers will meet Pitt Plaza at that time, with Auto Specialty and Cox meeting in the second game, at 8 p.m. The tournament is a double elimination affair. *</p>
        <p>The Graniteers pushed over two runs in the first inning. P&amp;lt;^ singled and stole both second and third. He scored when Williams reached on an error. Williams then scored when Bost reached on a fielders choice and Whitehurst singled.</p>
        <p>Stanley's Shot Leads Yankees</p>
        <p>Bab* Ruth Laagua Champions</p>
        <p>Members of the North Canfllna National Bank team, winners of the Rabe Rui League are, first row, left to right: Steve HaU, Mark Shank, Jeff WUson, Mike</p>
        <p>Mills, Edwin Yancey, Allan Hudson, Blaric Sasser, Mike Campbell; second row. Coach C!amm Morton, Coach Henry Hinton, Skip Topping, John Dubber, Robert Welch, Howard Wilkerson, Will Barrett, Glen Moore, Coach Jeff French. (Reflector Photo)</p>
        <p>Soviet Athletes Capture Win In Track Meet With Americans</p>
        <p>By SETHMYDANS</p>
        <p>S(XTn, U.S.S.R. (AP) -Robert Gaines, Bill Collins, Jodi Anderson and the U.S. mens 1,600-meter relay team won gold medals Saturday as the Soviet Union defeated the United States 207-171 in their 15th dual track and fleld meet.</p>
        <p>Gaines o Richnxmd, Calif., won the 110-meter hurdles in 13.69 seconds, Collins of Houston c^tured the 200-meter 4ash in 20.52 and Miss Anderson took the womens long jump with leap of 21-feet, 11 inches.</p>
        <p>The Soviet men wwi by a score of 118-105 and the Soviet women won 89-66. The over-all Soviet victory put the 15-year combined mens-womens score at 12 victories for the Soviets, two for the United States and one tie.</p>
        <p>In Saturdays windiqi of tbe two-day meet, Vladimir Trofi-menko won the pole vault with a leap of 164 for a Soviet national record, and world record bdder Tatyana Kazankina held off Julie Brown of Santa Mmica, Calif., in the womois 800</p>
        <p>run, clocking 2:00.7.</p>
        <p>The Soviets took first and second places in the women's 100-meter hurdles, the womens 3,000-meter run, the high jump and the discus.</p>
        <p>But the relatively inexperienced U.S. team, completing a tliree-week European tour without a number of tbe countrys best athletes, proved itself enable of world-class competition. At the end of the first days competition Friday, the Americans trailed the experienced Soviets by just five points after 19 events, 102-97.</p>
        <p>"These kids may be the Olympians of the future, American coach Tom Tellez said.</p>
        <p>In the two days of competition, American men won eight running events and lost four while the women won six and lost four, a strong performance against the powerful Soviet women.</p>
        <p>The Soviet men and women together won all but one of the six jumping evoits, and all but ime of the seven throwing events.</p>
        <p>In the mens 800 meters Soviet Anatoly Reshetnyak unleashed a strong finishing kick to nip James Robinson of Oakland in 1:46.8.</p>
        <p>In the 3,000-meter steeplechase, George Malley of Glendale, Md., put on his own strong burst at the finish but just failed to catch Soviet Vladimir Filwiov, who won in 8:29.5.</p>
        <p>At a news conference after the meet, Anatdy Yefimenko, head of the track and field department of the Soviet Sports</p>
        <p>Committee, voiced concern over the absence of Americas strongest athletes. He said talks would be held soon between the two nations over the need to send only the best and most optstanding athletes from the United States to cmbete against Soviet athletes.</p>
        <p>Yefimenko said he had talked to American coaches in Sochi about the problem.</p>
        <p>Tellez earlier told a reporter that in practically every event we dont have the ti^ two or thge people.</p>
        <p>By HAL B(K)K AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - In a lineup of expensive sluggers, the last guy the New York Yankees expect to deliver game-winning home runs is little-used,, backup^ortstop Fred Stanley.</p>
        <p>Bufwwas Stanley's ei^ith inning shotonly the fifth homer of his major league career and his first in almost a yearthat gave New York a 64 victory over Detroit Saturday.</p>
        <p>The suddeness of the blow and its source shook up Stanley and his teammates. I got around the bases without lauding, thou^, he said. When I got to the dugout, though, a couple of the guys were lying down.</p>
        <p>When the scoreboard replay screen gave the fans a second look at Stanleys homer, the shortstop couldnt resist peeking for another look at it.</p>
        <p>I just wanted to see how far it went, he explained.</p>
        <p>And how far did it go?</p>
        <p>Oh, about two rows, decided Stanley.</p>
        <p>Stanley, who had only three hits in 13 at bats all season, had gone mto the game in the top half of the inning at shortstop after the Yankees had pinch hit for shortstop Bucky Dent during a two-run tying rally in the seventh.</p>
        <p>His homer followed an eighth-inning single by Graig Nettles and helped the Yankees snap a five-game Tiger ' winning streak.</p>
        <p>I wasnt swinging for a homer, confessed Stanley, who hit his last one Aug: 16 of last season. I just wanted to make contact, and when I did, 1 just wanted it to stay fair. I figured it would be good for a double if it did.</p>
        <p>The ball stayed fair and was good for a homer and tbe game instead.</p>
        <p>llie Yankees had tied the score in the seventh on Roy Whites bases-loaded double against loser John Hiller, 4-9. Paul Blairs leadoff double started the New York rally and after pinch-hitter Jimmy Wynn walked, Willie Randolphs bunt single loaded the bases for White.</p>
        <p>DETROIT</p>
        <p>LeFire cf Fuents 2b Staub dh Kemp If Tmpsn 1b MStnly rf Wckfss c Manski 3b Veryzr ss</p>
        <p>NEW YORK</p>
        <p>Total</p>
        <p>ab r h bl 5 0 10 Rndlph 2b 4 0 10 RWhite If 4 13 1 Munson c 3 0 10 Chmbis lb</p>
        <p>3 10 0 CJbnsn dh</p>
        <p>4 0 0 0 Pinlella rf</p>
        <p>3 110 Nettles 3b</p>
        <p>4 12 2 Blair cf 3 0 11 Dent ss</p>
        <p>Wynn ph FStnly ss 33 4 10 4 Total</p>
        <p>abr h bi</p>
        <p>4 13 0</p>
        <p>5 0 2 2 4 0 11 4 12 1 4 0 0 0 4 0 10 4 110 3 12 0 2 0 0 0 0 10 0 1112</p>
        <p>35 4 13 4</p>
        <p>Detroit  031000000-4</p>
        <p>New York  10000122 x-4</p>
        <p>DP-Detrolt l. New York 1. LOB-De-trolt 6, New York 9. 2B Fuentes, Kemp, Pinielfa, Blair, RWhite. 3BAAankowski. HRstaub (8). Chambliss (7), FStanley (1). S-Kemp, Blair SF-Veryzer.</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BBSO Roberts  4  8  4  4  1  0</p>
        <p>, Hiller (L.4-9)  02  5  2  2  2  1</p>
        <p>Gullett  4  2  3  7  4  4  2  I</p>
        <p>Lyle (W.4 2)  4  13  3  0  0  0  3</p>
        <p>T-2;14. A-20,825.</p>
        <p>Beards A Jinx</p>
        <p>WIMBLEDON, England (AP)  Bjorn Borg may celebrate his second Wimbledon tennis championship by going to the barber shq) and getting a shave.</p>
        <p>MaybeI dont know, the bearded 21-year-old Swede said after beating Jimmy Connors in the five-set mens single final.</p>
        <p>He said he started letting the beard grow three weeks ago because he had worn a beard in winning the title in 1976. It was, he said, his only bow to superstition.</p>
        <p>Pitt Plaza came back with one in the bottom of the first. Douglas singled and moved up on an error. He scored on Porters hit.</p>
        <p>The Graniteers added anther run in the third. Galloway reach* ed pn an error and stole second. Williams tripled him in.</p>
        <p>Three more scored in the sixth. Bost walked and so did Whitehurst. Both advanced on a passed ball, and Bost scored on Heaths sacrifice fly. Norris reached on an error, scoring Whitehurst. Two more passed balls and another error scored Norris.</p>
        <p>The final two came in the sevoith. Galloway walked and Williams singled. Both scored on passed balls.</p>
        <p>Williams led the Graniteer hit-tlngwith two.</p>
        <p>In the second game, Auto Specialty pushed over four runs in the first inning, Hodges singled and McGee reached mi a fielders choice. Pollard singled in Hodges, and a passed ball let McGee score. Jackson walked and Jones reached on a fielders choice, scoring Pollard. Jackson scored on a wild pitch.</p>
        <p>Cox came back with one in the bottom of the first. Brann tripled and scored when Kittrel! reached on an error.</p>
        <p>Auto Specialty added a fifth run in the third. Stancil reached on a fielders choice and moved to third on a passed ball. He scored when Jones reached on an error.</p>
        <p>Cox came back with one in the bottom of the fourth. Walsh was hit by a pitch, stole second and moved to third on a passed ball. He scored on Phillips sacrifice</p>
        <p>fly.</p>
        <p>The fifth saw another Cox run score, while one more came over in the sixth. Auto Specialty added its insurance run in the sixth.</p>
        <p>MacmUlan and Brann each had two hits for Cox.</p>
        <p>First Game Graniteers 201 003 2-8 4 1 Pitt Plaza 100 000 0-1 3 5 Second Game Auto Specialty 401 001 0-6 3 3 Cox Realty 100 111 0-4 6 2</p>
        <p>JPA Standings</p>
        <p>Paradossi led off with a sing and moved up on a passed ball.3 Eddie Gates walked and Raymie j Styons singled, scoring' Paradossi.</p>
        <p>After the interuption, the Pirates got another run in the third frame. That came on a lead-off home run by Tommy Cobb, his first blast of the year.</p>
        <p>The Bucs added another run in the fourth. Robert Brinkley reached on a feilders choice, and moved to second on the play. He scored on Tommy Warricks double.</p>
        <p>The Bucs blew that 3-0 lead out to 7-0 with four sixth inning runs; Macon Moye singled with Mie away and scored on Robert Brinkleys double. Warrick single in Brinkley and Cobb got  hit. A wild pitch scored Warrick; and Paradossi singled. Gates, walked to load them up, and Supel singled, scoring Cobb with the final run.  !</p>
        <p>Paradossi finished the game with three hits, while StyonSf Brinkley, Warrick and Cobb' each had two hits.</p>
        <p>Louisburg jumped out into a 1-0 lead in the first inning of the second game. Rick Furr led off, reaching on an error. Brian Little singled, and Raynor got a hit; scoring Furr.</p>
        <p>East Carolina tied it up in the third. Gates singled and stole sa cond. He scored on Supels single.</p>
        <p>But in the fifth, Louisburg came up with three runs to push out into a 4-1 lead. Little bunted his way on, and Nick Dunn tripled him in. Jeff Thomas doubled to score Dunn, and after Lennie Banks singled him to third, a double steal scored Thomas.</p>
        <p>East Carolina came back with two away in the seventh to rally and tie it up at 4-4. Supel singed and Styons walked, with Jim Gibson running for him. Moye singled in Supel, and Brinkley walked. Warrick singled, driving in both Gibson and Moye to knot the contest at 4-4.</p>
        <p>Both teams had chances after that, with the Bucs leaving the bases loaded 1" the 10th.</p>
        <p>Finally, after 12 innings, the officials decided to call a halt to It, and ordered the game resumed in the top of the 13th when the two meet here again.</p>
        <p>East Carolina resumes action following Mondays All-Star game in'Wilson, on Wednesday, when the Pirates entertain North Carolina in a 7:30 p.m. game at Harrington Field,</p>
        <p>2 0</p>
        <p>L'burg</p>
        <p>FurnOli Little, ss Rnor, rf Dunn, 3b B'cliff, lb T'mas, If G'ley,c T'dalt, 2b Banks, cf L'cas, p Hall, p Totals21 Louisburg East Carolina</p>
        <p>ab r )&amp;gt; rtri ECU 3 0 0 0 P'oasi, 2b</p>
        <p>0 0 Gates, cf</p>
        <p>1 D S'peLss 0 0 S'yons, c 0 0 B'kley, lb 0 0 WTick. 3b 0 0 C'ron,rb 0 0 Cobb, If 0 0 Britt, p 0 0 Totals</p>
        <p>ab r h rbi</p>
        <p>4 13 0 2 0 0 0 4 0 11 3 0 2 1 3 2 2 1 3 12 2 3 0 0 0 3 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 28 7 13 6</p>
        <p>000 000 0-0 101 104 x-t OPEast Carolina; LOB-Louisburg 3, East Carolina 5; 2BStyons, Brinkley, Warrick; HRCobb; SB-Srinkley.</p>
        <p>Pitching : ip</p>
        <p>Lucas (L. 3-2)  5.3  9  5</p>
        <p>Hall  0.7  4  2</p>
        <p>Britt (W, 5-1)  7  1  0</p>
        <p>WP-Britt; PB-Gourley.</p>
        <p>er bb so</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>Miller &amp;amp; Davis M &amp;amp; W Chevrolet Leading scorers:  M&amp;amp;D,</p>
        <p>Sawyer', 6; Robert Sturtevant M&amp;amp;W, Mitchell Wingate 5Vs.</p>
        <p>Standings First State Bank  8 0 0</p>
        <p>Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland  7 1-0</p>
        <p>J.H. Hudson  3-2-1</p>
        <p>Jefferson Standard  3-3-0</p>
        <p>Pepsi-Cbla  3-4-0</p>
        <p>Integon  4-4-0</p>
        <p>Buck's Gulf  3-4-1</p>
        <p>Miller i Davis  3-3 0</p>
        <p>Smlth-Waldrop  1-80</p>
        <p>M &amp;amp; W Chevrolet  0-8-0</p>
        <p>Game Is Postponed</p>
        <p>SNOW HILL - Friday nights opening area American Legion playoff game between Dunn and Snow Hill was postponed because of rain. '</p>
        <p>The series was to get underway Saturday night, and resume the best-of-three play on Sunday at 4 p.m. in Dunn. A-third game, if needed. Will be played Monday night at 8 p.m. at Snow Hill.</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>SlUOS SHOE</p>
        <p>PRQM.pt SERVICE Located at college View Cleaners 113 Grande Avenue</p>
        <p>Hours  Alton.-Erl.  a.m. to 5:30 p.m.Sf.a.m.loJp.m. .</p>
        <p>Please Note...</p>
        <p>Our Service and Parts Dept. WillBeQosed July 4th thru July 10th  For Vacation</p>
        <p>Re-op^ July nth at 7:30 a.m.</p>
        <p>QRflNT</p>
        <p>603 Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>BUICK</p>
        <p>AAAZDA</p>
        <p>Phone 756-1877</p>
        <p>For insurance call</p>
        <p>Bill McDonald</p>
        <p>East 10th Street Extension</p>
        <p>Phone 752-4680 Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES H(DME OFFICES: BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS</p>
        <p>P 77607.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0015" />
        <p>Greenville Wins Series Opener, 10-6</p>
        <p>LOUISBURG - A twoJiase error in the top o the ninth inning allowed Greenville to score two runs and rally to tie Loulsburg, M, in the first game of the best-of-three series in the Area playoffs.</p>
        <p>GreenvHjJUien pudied in four 13th inning rflns to win the game, 10-6.</p>
        <p>Henry Baker claimed the victory, going six innings in relief, and facing just 19 batters. He allowed only two hits, while striking out eight and walking one.</p>
        <p>Greenville was also hdped along by seven Louisburg errors, four of which came in the</p>
        <p>fateful 13th inning.</p>
        <p>Louisburg grabbed the initial lead in the game, scoring a run in the second inning. Thomas Crudtq) opened the inning with a double, and Bennie Franklin singled. Randy Odom reached on a fields choice, lading the bases. Crudup scorff on AI Boltons out.</p>
        <p>Then, In the third, Louisburg added four more runs for a 54 lead. Chip Capps led off with a single and Crudup again doubled. Franklin wiked, loading the bases. Odom singled, driving in Capps. Bolton got a hit, scoring Crudig), and Joe Stepusin doubl</p>
        <p>ed, driving in both Franklin and Odom.</p>
        <p>Greenville got its first run in the sixth inning. Wright Hooks singled and sc(h^ when Kevin Adams doubled.</p>
        <p>Louisburgs final run came in the bottom of the sixth.</p>
        <p>Mike Williamston singled and was sacrificed up. He scored on Crudups third double of the evening.</p>
        <p>Greenville came up with another run in the seventh. Nug-gie Worthington reached on a fielders choice and Ronnie Chapman singled. Mike Shank</p>
        <p>Zisk Trying Teammates</p>
        <p>Give</p>
        <p>To</p>
        <p>A Chance</p>
        <p>A sterling Victory</p>
        <p>Britains Virginia Wade, ri^t, holds iq&amp;gt; the trophy she won for her victory Friday at the Wimbledon Tennis Phnmpfainshlp, after she defeated Hollands Betty Stove in the womens singles competition. Looking on</p>
        <p>at left are Queen Elizabeth n, and the Duke Kent, the president of the Lawn Tennis Association. Wades victory, following an upset of favorite Oiris Evert earlier in the competition, was a fitting eomplement to this years cdebration of the Queens Silver Jubflee. (APWirephoto)</p>
        <p>Virginia Wade Finally Takes Singles Crown At Wimbledon</p>
        <p>By ROBERT JONES AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>WIMBLEDON, n^nd (AP)  After 14 years of trying, and losing to inferior opponents and her own nerves, a new-look Virginia Wade finally has won the Wimbledon singles crown in fnmt of her queen and her own home crowd.</p>
        <p>With a new hairstyle and a new relaxed temperament, she beat Betty Stove of The Netherlands 44, 6-3, 6-1 Friday to add the Wimbledon title to the ones she already has won in the U.S., Italian and Australian (g&amp;gt;ens.</p>
        <p>The Wimbledon crowd has called her Ginny since, as a lithe 17-year-old, her hair in a pony tail, she first appeared at Wimbledon in 1964, the year Maria Bueno won the third of her titles.</p>
        <p>For the past 10 years shes been In the seedings. But only once befmre has she reached the semifinalsnever the finals.</p>
        <p>Mis Wade dispelled any</p>
        <p>doubts in the semifinal, when she beat Chris Evert, the defending champion.</p>
        <p>And in the final against Miss Stove, she fought back tenaciously after losing the first set and standing level 3-3 In the second.</p>
        <p>The match started badly for Miss Wade but weU for Miss Stove, the first girl from The Netherlands ever to reach a. singly final here. Miss Stove, plagued by a series of nine double faults in the match, was picking up points by loping to the net and volleying well.</p>
        <p>It brought her the first set at 6-4 as Miss Wade could not pass her at the net or draw her back with lobs.</p>
        <p>But midway through the second set, the pattern changed. Miss Stove had just cancelled out an earlier Wade service break by breaking back in the fifth game to make it 2-3 and then 3-3. Miss Wade held for 4-3, tJien suddenly got another break, to 15, in the ei^th game, and held service for the set.</p>
        <p>Scenting victory, she streaked off to a 3-0 lead in the final set with a couple of breaks.</p>
        <p>Miss Stove fou^t hard to win the third game, but a tragic double faulther ninthgave it to Miss Wade.</p>
        <p>That game and the next went to deuce. The fifth game looked like it was going Miss Wades way when she reeled off a passing forehand and a cross-court return of service, plus a finely-judged lob, to get within sight of another break. But Miss Stove won the next five points for the game, and trailed 1-4.</p>
        <p>That was the Dutch womans</p>
        <p>last game, and in the final two she picked up only a couple of points.  </p>
        <p>Miss Wade held service to love, with Miss Stove relapsing into some wild volleying, for 5-1. And Miss Stove, serving to save the match, dumped two more volleys in the seventh. The second of those, netted on Miss Wades return and the forecourt empty, gave Miss Wade match point. Miss Stove saved that with a cross-court backhand but once again netted a volley to give Miss Wade the match and the crowd their biggest thrill since Ann Jones last brought the title home in 1969.</p>
        <p>First Federal Claims Crown</p>
        <p>By BARRY WILNER AP SpOTts Writer Richi' Zisk knows what its like to be in the playoffs. And hes trying to teach his teammates how to get there.</p>
        <p>When the Chicago White Sox obtained Zisk from Pittsburg in the off-season, they knew he was a winner after having played on three divisional tl-tlists with the Pirates. Now Zisk is instilling that positive attitude in the White Sox.</p>
        <p>I Uiink our guys are getting ie feeling of what Its like to be in the playoffs, Zisk said Friday after the White Sox moved back into first place in the American League West with a 5-2 triumph over Minnesota. That was real playoff atmosphere out there.</p>
        <p>A crowd of 35,709 turned out and saw Zisk blast two home runs and drive in all five runs for the Sox. The fans chanted, Were No. l throughout the ninth inning.</p>
        <p>If the Sox continue to get pitching like Chris Knapps nine-hitter, they certainly will be in good shape. Knapp, 7-4, got a boost right away vdien Zisk slammed a three-run homer in the first Inning off loser Dave Goltz, 8-5.</p>
        <p>Major league batting leader Rod Carew had a triple and single in five at bats and remained at .411.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere in the American League, Oakland shut out California 2-0 behind Vida Blue, Kansas City bombed Cleveland 12-2, Milwaukee edged Seattle 2-1, Baltimore topped Bostmi 8-2, handing the Red Sox their seventh strai^t defeat, Detroit beat New York 5-1 and Texas outslugged Toronto 11-8.</p>
        <p>As 2, Angels 0 Blue, 6-9, pitched a five-hitter to win his 12th straight game at Anaheim Stadium and the As</p>
        <p>AL Roundup</p>
        <p>seventh in eight games with California this season. Blue hasnt lost in Anaheim since July 20, 1969, his major league debut. He didnt credit his fastball nor his curve nor the excellent fielding of his teammates for the streak.</p>
        <p>Manny Sanguilien had three hits and Tony Armas a solo homer to support Blue.</p>
        <p>Royals 12, Indians 2 Kansas City moved within 21-2 games of first place in the AL West as Joe Zdeb smashed five, hits and had four runs batted in, including a three-run homer in the fifth.</p>
        <p>Marty Pattin, 2-2, replaced starter Paul Spllttorff with none out and Cleveland ahead 2-0 in the first inning. Pattin allowed just three hits the rest of the way.</p>
        <p>Amos Otis and John Mayberry each contributed solo home runs to the 184iit Kansas City attack.</p>
        <p>Brewers 2, Mariners 1 Rookie Moose Haas was glad to see July. Haas, 5-5, was 0-3 with a 7.72 earned run average in June but he pitched a fine four-hitter and struck out eight against the Mariners.</p>
        <p>Sbcto Lezcanos solo home run In the fourth inning won the game for Milwaukee.</p>
        <p>Orkdes 8, Red Sox 2 Doug DeCinces two two-run homers and Jim Palmers seven-hitter carried Baltimore past slumping Boston and within 21-2 games of the first place Red Sox.</p>
        <p>Tigers 5, Yankees 1</p>
        <p>The Tigers grabbed their fifth consecutive triumph as Jason Thompson and Milt May slugged home runs and Dave Rozema earned his first victory in three weeks.</p>
        <p>Rangers 11, Blue Jays 8</p>
        <p>Texas 14-hit attack was led by Willie Hortons three hits and Bert Campaneris fourth homer of the season.</p>
        <p>Horton went 3for-5, scored twice and drove in a run in support of Doyle Alexanders seventh victory in 12 decisions.</p>
        <p>Toronto rookie Steve Staggs homered and singled in his first major league appearance.</p>
        <p>followed with a single, scming WorthlngiOT to cut the lead to 6-2.</p>
        <p>Two more came over in the eighth. Adams walked and Greg Lee cracked out a two-run homer.</p>
        <p>Then, in the ninth, Greenville got the other two runs it needed to tie it up. Shank singed and Ned Craft walked. Hooks singed, and when the ball gM past the outfielder, both Shank and Craft scored, tielng the game.</p>
        <p>It stayed deadlocked at 6-6 until the 13th frame, when Greenville finally pushed over the winning runs. With two away. Chapman singled and Shank reached on an error, scoring Chapman. Craft also reached on an error,</p>
        <p>I then stole second. Hooks walked, loading the bases. Adams was -sare WamnerOTfffS; RWMg all three runners to a Chapman led the Gr hitting with three, while </p>
        <p>Hooks and Adams each 1 Crudiq) paced Louiklmrg wfll three, whOe Dennis Tabrim, Williamston and St^usln each had two.  </p>
        <p>The two team^^to play in Greenville Saturday night, with a third game, itneeded, scheduled for Sunday afternoon at Harrington Field.</p>
        <p>Greenville 000 001 122 000 4-10 11 2 LouidxirgOM 001 000 000 0- 6 14 7 WUIiams, Morris (4), Baker</p>
        <p>(7) and Hooks; Stepusin, Odom</p>
        <p>(8) and Crudup.</p>
        <p>Grgnita^rs, Cax</p>
        <p>Capture Wins</p>
        <p>College Ties For</p>
        <p>A playoff game was set for Satuniay in the Babe Ruth League after College View knocked off NCNB, 6-3, to gain a tie for the Babe Ruth League title Friday night. In the other game, Pepsi-Cola took a 13-7 win over Planters Bank.,</p>
        <p>College View and NCNB both finished the regular season with 11-4 records, tied for first place.</p>
        <p>College View pushed over four runs in the first inning to gain a rpermanent lead. Lindsey 'Winstead singled and stole se- cond. Ricky West followed with -another hit, and Steve Hawkins : got a hit to score Winstead. Patrick Wilson reached on an error, scoring West. Another error allowed Arthur Fletcher to reach, and let both Hawkins and Wilson score.</p>
        <p>NCNB came back with two in</p>
        <p>the third. Steve Hall reached on la flelders choice and stole sC: cond. Glenn Moore singled him to third, and the two worked a  double steal, scoring Hall. Will . Barret fl&amp;gt;en singled in Moore. College View added its other two runs in the fifth Inning. West singled and Barnes tripled him in. Barnes was cau^t in a rundown, however, and put out. Hawkins reached on a fielders choice, and scored on Wilsons double.</p>
        <p>The other NCNB run came m the sixth. Mark Shank sin^ and moved up (m an error. Two</p>
        <p>View</p>
        <p>Title</p>
        <p>Barrett had two hits to lead NCNB, Ariiile Windstead and West each had two for Ctdlege View.</p>
        <p>Pepsi-Cola got all it needed in the first inning, as it scored 11</p>
        <p>big runs. Junior Neal walked and Bob Morehead singled. Billy Dough reached on a fielders choice that naUed Morehead, and Al Shackleford reached on an error, scoring both Neal and Dough. Todd Galloway reached on a fielders choice and Shackleford scored on the play. Chip Davis singled and a double by Mark Douglas brought in both Galloway and Davis. Woody Whichard walked and Neal singled, scoring Douglas. Morehead reached on a fielders choice, and Dou^ walked, scoring Whichard. Both Neal and Morehead stole home, and Shackleford walked. Galloway reached on an error, scoring both Doug and Shackleford with the final runs of the inning.</p>
        <p>Pepsi added two in the second, and one in the sixth.</p>
        <p>Planters got two three in the third, three more in the fourth and onein the fifth.</p>
        <p>Jamie Adams and David Holley each had two hits for Planters, and Morehead and Shackleford each had two for Pepsi. .</p>
        <p>The teams in the league opi a douWe^lmination post-season tournannt on Tuesday. PepsiCola takes on Carolina Dairy at 5 p.m., while Planters Bank meets Home Builders at 7 p.m. Both NCNB and College View gets byes In the  first  round. All</p>
        <p>games will be played at Guy Smith Stadium.</p>
        <p>First Game NCNB  002  001  0-3 6  2</p>
        <p>CoUe^ View  400  020  x-6 9  3</p>
        <p>Second Game Planters  003  310  07 8  4</p>
        <p>Pepsl-Cola (11)20 OOl'x-13 9 4</p>
        <p>First Federal romped to a 13-2 victory over the Lions Friday to capture the City Little League championship.</p>
        <p>The Tar Hpel League champs came back to win the last two games of the best-of-three series after the Lions, winners in the North State League, won the opening contest.</p>
        <p>Mont Carter allowed only two Lion hits in the game as he hurled First Federal into the title.</p>
        <p>First Rederal picked iif the first two runs in the third inning. Mont Brown walked and stole second. He scored on a double by Randy Warren. Warren moved on to third on a wild pitch, and a hit by Marty Radford scored Warren.</p>
        <p>The Lions came back to tie it iq&amp;gt; &amp;gt;vith two in the top of the fourth. Marshall Rand reached on an error and moved up on a wild pitch and an but. He scored when Steve Staton singled. Staton took third on an error on the play, and scored when Marc Gatlin reached on an error.</p>
        <p>First Federal then exploded</p>
        <p>for nine runs in the bottom of the fourth, putting the game away. Horace Barrett doubled to start things off and moved up after Brown walked and Greg Savage reached on an error. Tyrone Barrett walked to force in Horace Barrett. Warren then tripled In all three base-runners, and he scored on an error.</p>
        <p>Radford kept it going with a sin^e and Carter slapped a two-run homer. Keith Stocks walked as did Horace Barrett. An error on a passed ball let Stocks score, and Barrett also came in on the play.</p>
        <p>Hie other two runs came m the fifth. Tyrone Barrett walked and Warren cracked out a home run.</p>
        <p>Warren led the First Federal hitting with three, all extra base hits. Radford and Carter each had two hits. *</p>
        <p>Lions  000 200- 2 2 4</p>
        <p>First Federal  002 92x-13 8 4</p>
        <p>James Accepts Sugar Positi|6n</p>
        <p>NEW ORLEANS (AP)-Duke University Athletic Director Carl James officially accepted his new job Friday, taking on the job of restoring lost prestige to the Sugar Bowl.</p>
        <p>Once second oniy to the Rose Bowl in prestige, the 42-year-old Sugar Bowl had slipped badly in the past several seasons. It was commonly felt that only the 1973 classic matching of Alabama and Notre Dame and last seasons contest be-&amp;gt; tween top-ranked Pittsburgh and Georgia saved the Sugar from an even ste^r skid.</p>
        <p>Carl was officimly named executive director of the Sugar Bowl Friday, but his selection</p>
        <p>was widely known for a week prior to the official acceptance. He replaces retired Navy Capt. Joe Katz, who resigned in January.</p>
        <p>James, 48, will begin his new duties Aug. 1, said Harry M. England, president of the Mid-Winter Sports Association, which sponsors the bowl.</p>
        <p>James earned seven athletic letters as an undergraduate at Duke. He graduated from the Durham, N.C., school in 1951 and joined the athletic staff there in 1954.</p>
        <p>He has been athletic director since 1972.</p>
        <p>Jeanette Cox Realty and the Graniteers remained tied for the Prep League lead as both^ickfri up wins on Friday night. Cox topped Pitt Plaza, 15-7, while the Graniteers took a 4-1 win over Auto Specialty.</p>
        <p>^th teams had games Saturday to wind up the regular season.</p>
        <p>In the opener, Cox pushed over two runs in the first inning McMillan reached on an error and moved up on a passed ball. Kittrell tripled him in, and scored on 'Tuckers single.</p>
        <p>Pitt Plaza came up with four runs in the second. Porter was hit by a pitch and Smith walked. Daughteridge also walked, loading the bases. Allen singled in two runs, and a wild pitch scored Dau^teridge. Allen was picked off, however, and Casey walked. He stole both second and third and scored on Brannigans single.</p>
        <p>In the third, Cox cut the lead to 4-3 with a run, then came up with two in the fifth to regain the lead. Pitt Plaza scored one in the bottom of the frame to tie It again, but in the top of the sixth, Cox came up with five runs to put it away.</p>
        <p>Walsh walked and Phillips was hit by a pitch. Holloman singed and Jones singled in Walsh. MacMillan walked, scoring Phillips, and Kittrell reached on a fielders choice, scoring Holloman. Tucker singled in both Jones and Kittrell.</p>
        <p>Cox added five more in the seventh, while Pifi Plaza got two in the bottom of the sixth.</p>
        <p>Kittrell and Tucker each had three, while Macmillan and Holloman each had two for Ctor., Brannigan had three and Porter, two, for Pitt Plaza.</p>
        <p>In the second game. Auto Specialty scored its lone run in the top of the fourth. Pollard tripled, then stole home.</p>
        <p>The Graniteers came back with two in their half of the fourth. Williams walked and so did Bost. Passed balls allowed both of them to come the rest of the way.</p>
        <p>Die other three came in the fifth. Owens singed and stole second and scored on Galloways triple. Williams reached on an error, scoring Galloway. Williams then stole second and third and scored on a passed ball.</p>
        <p>No one had more than one hit.</p>
        <p>With one game left to play, Mike Pollard of Auto Specialty leads the league in hitting with a .484 mark. Mitchell Brann of Cox is second at 42L lie is followed by Sammy HodgeSh of Auto Specialty at .419.</p>
        <p>Others in the top ten are Ricky Owens, Graniteers, .364; Billy Brannigan, Pitt Plaza, .359 Roger Williams, Graniteers .346; Bill Bost, Graniteers, .333 Mike Tucker, Cox Realty, .314 Scott Galloway, Granlteere, .303; and BUly KittreU, Cox Realty, .300,</p>
        <p>First Game Cox Realty 201 025 5-15 13 2 Pitt Plaza 040 012 0- 7 6 7 Second Game Auto Specialty  000 101 3 3</p>
        <p>Graniteers  000 22-4 3 0</p>
        <p>Softball Standings</p>
        <p>Church Anwrkan Lmouc w 11 9 7 6 S</p>
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        <pb facs="00093416_0016" />
        <p>B4The Da^ Reflector,GreivUIe,N.C.Sunday, July 3,177Cub Bats Losing Their Magic Powers</p>
        <p>By KEN RAPPOPORT AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>Remember those magic wands the Chicago Ctdw were waving earlier this se^n? Well, theyve suddenly turned into ordinary bats.</p>
        <p>The Cubs appear to have lost all their power in recent days and as a result are losing some of their lead in the National League East.</p>
        <p>"Were going throu^ a little spell right now where everything we hit is at somebody, said Chicago pitcher Mike Kni-</p>
        <p>kow after a 3-1 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals Friday night. Its a big series agaihkt St. Louis1 just wish we could play better In this park. </p>
        <p>Not only has Busch SUfdium been a recent frustration for the Cubs, but so has Olympic Stadium in Montreal. They were shut out there prior to two defeats in St. Louis and have scored a total of two runs in their last three losses.</p>
        <p>Chicago Manager Herman Franks isnt taking it too hard, thou^.</p>
        <p>itir-rr' V'</p>
        <p>NL Roundup</p>
        <p>Look, were still 6'/i games in front, said Franks, whose team led by S'/i before the losing streak. This is no funeral, you know. How can 1 be disappointed? We play tomorrow.</p>
        <p>In other National League games, the Philadelphia Phillies edged the Pittsburgh Pirates 7-6 in 14 innings; the Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the San Francisco Giants 10-5; the Cincinnati Reds nipped the San Diego Padres ff-l; .^tte Houston Astros stopped the P lanta Braves 3-1 and the Montreal Expos beat the New York Mets twice, 6-5 and 5-3.</p>
        <p>Tony Scott and Ted Simmons drove In Si.*Lotlii- itmy -nr Tnc-first inning and the Cardinals added a run in the eighth, beating the Cubs behind the combined five-hit pitching of Larry Dierker and Rawly Eastwiek.</p>
        <p>Dierker withstood Boiby Murcers leadoff triple, leamng to the Cubs run in the second inning, and extinguished two serious threats through seven innings. Eastwiek took over in the eighth and blanked the Cubs without a hit in posting his ninth save.</p>
        <p>PhiUles 7, Pirates </p>
        <p>Ted Sizemore capped a three-run, 14th-inning rally with an RBI single that carried Philadelphia over Pittsburgh. The Pirates had gone ahead 6-4 in the top of the 14th on Duffy Dyers RBI double and an error by right fielder Bake McBride that allowed another run to score.</p>
        <p>Gene Garber. .34, ws the winner and Grant Jackson, 0-3, the losCT.</p>
        <p>Dodgers 10, Giants S</p>
        <p>Ron Cfeys 17th home run, the highlight of a five-run fifth inning, sent Los Angeles past San Francisco. Bill Madlock connected for two home runs off the Dodgers Doug Rau, 0-1, Including a three-run drive in the third for the games first runs. Madlocks second homer came in the sixth with the bases empty.</p>
        <p>Reggie Smith had four hits for the Dodgers, while Cey and</p>
        <p>x^iBowling</p>
        <p>Tuesday Handicap</p>
        <p>Automatic Chokes Kemam Pin Busters Smith Foodland S porters Stars  Strikes Red Eyes Your House Soul Rollers</p>
        <p>I</p>
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        <p>to</p>
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        <p>Servomanon Gorham Automotives</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>25 22 18 15^/2 12 20</p>
        <p>Hl9h game, Nancy Tripp, 212; high series. Valoree Mybo. 517.</p>
        <p>Tuesday Night Mixed</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>High game, Van Brock, Marvin ells, 233; high series, Mike Stancil,</p>
        <p>Wells,</p>
        <p>590.</p>
        <p>Tuesday Summereftes</p>
        <p>Strangers  23</p>
        <p>Cinderella Team  21</p>
        <p>Oail Music Co.  20</p>
        <p>Sports World  17</p>
        <p>Angels  16</p>
        <p>Ebonettes  14</p>
        <p>Cargell His.  14</p>
        <p>Screwballs  11</p>
        <p>Les Girls  11</p>
        <p>A Squad  9</p>
        <p>Duff as Gang</p>
        <p>Go-Getters</p>
        <p>Slo-Starters</p>
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        <p>Dynamite Taylor's Body Shop Team Sixteen FMF's The B's</p>
        <p>Pitt Plaza Shell Whiz Kids H.A. White &amp;amp; Sons Sunshine Wonders The Losers Try-Cats</p>
        <p>won</p>
        <p>297*/*</p>
        <p>297</p>
        <p>281</p>
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        <p>262*/*</p>
        <p>261</p>
        <p>249*/*</p>
        <p>247</p>
        <p>243</p>
        <p>234*/i</p>
        <p>227*/*</p>
        <p>227</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>187*/*</p>
        <p>176</p>
        <p>173</p>
        <p>Men's high game and series. Art Whitford, 237, 555; women's " |ame and series, Velma Cannon,</p>
        <p>Steve Yeager each drove In three runs. Yeager, who had a triple and douBlf jjeft the game after being struck by a foul tip in the sixth.</p>
        <p>Reds 1, Padres 1 Fred Norman scattered five hits and George Foster slammed his 2lst home run to lead Cincinnati over San Diego. Norman, improving his record to 9-3, walked two and struck out eight as he completed his fourth game of the year.</p>
        <p>Norman had a shutout until Gene Tenace slammed his ninth homer of the year with two out in the ninth inning. Foster provided Norman with his Avinning margin with a two-run homer in the third inning.</p>
        <p>Astros 3, Braves 1 J.R. Richard and Joe Nlekro combined for a four4iitter, leading Houston over Atlanta. Richard, 7-6, gave up all the</p>
        <p>Sports Calendar</p>
        <p>Today's Sportt Basobsll</p>
        <p>American Legion Dunn at Snow Hill (4 p.m.) (if need-</p>
        <p>Loulsburg at Greenville (If needed)</p>
        <p>Atlanta hits before needing relief in the ninth inning when he allowed the first two batters to reach base. Before that, Houstons starting pitcher never was in trouble, except for the fifth, when a double by Rowland Office drove in Atlantas only tm.</p>
        <p>Expos Mets 5-3 Tony Perez hit a two-run, tie-breaking homer in the sfatth inning to help Montreal beat New York in the first game of their</p>
        <p>twi-ni^t doubleheader.</p>
        <p>'The Expos hung on to win I second game after Andre I son rapped a two-run, breaking homer in the sixth.</p>
        <p>Don (Vw</p>
        <p>INSURAN^o</p>
        <p>Hines Aqe.it y , '</p>
        <p>rg atGrwnviiiedi iagve Field Day</p>
        <p>We Will Be</p>
        <p>CLOSED</p>
        <p>July 4th, 19771</p>
        <p>Re-open Tues., July 5th</p>
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        <p>Nic* Tarpon</p>
        <p>Van Gerkins (1) and J&amp;lt;4in Adams display tbe 66-pound tarpon they cau^t udiile fishing near the mouth of the Neuse River in the Pamlico Sound last Saturday. The two were fishing for gray trout with cut bait vrtioi they hooked the fish on 30-lb. test line. (Reflector photo)</p>
        <p>THATS THE BIGGEST bluefish Ive ever seen, thought Van Gerkins of Greenville last Saturday as the large fish which had just taken his bait made a spectacular jump some distance across the Pamlico Sound.</p>
        <p>Gerkins and John Adams, also of Greenville, had been fishing for blues and gray trout in the sound near the mouth of the Neuse River and had been having some good success. By the end of the day, they had a cooler full of 50 trout.</p>
        <p>But the large fish on the end of Gerkins 30-pound test line was the primary concern. As Gerkins fought it closer to the boat and it jumped again, he realized that it wasnt a blue at all.</p>
        <p>When he finally boated the fish, after a long and tiring battle, Gerkins saw that he had a 66-pound tarpon. The fish is shown elsewhere on this page.</p>
        <p>Rec(HTl Book AvaUaUe</p>
        <p>Gerkins tarpon wont make any record books, but there is  new book of Ashing records on the market, the World Freshwater Fish Records compiled by the National Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame.</p>
        <p>Three years of research went into the book, which includes records of some 148 freshwater fish species. Records for every fish imaginable are included, broken down by line test and tackle type.</p>
        <p>The Hall of Fame charges $1 for the book, plus 50 cents for postage and handling. The address for the National Freshwater Fishing Hall of Fame is Box 33, Hayward, Wise. 54843.</p>
        <p>^rt FistUBg Growing</p>
        <p>Speaking of fishing, a recent report by the Sport Fishing Institute indicates that the sport is increasing in pc^ularity every year.</p>
        <p>Ih 1975, according to the report, there were 34.3 million habitual freshwater fishermen and 12 million habitual saltwater fishermen. Add to that the number of pecqjle who fish only occasionally and the total is over 65 million.</p>
        <p>The Institute estimates that fishings growth is such that by 1985 there will bfe 67 million habitual fishermen.</p>
        <p>These fishermen also ^nd an unbelievable amount of money in the pursuit of their finned prey. In the year 1975, anglers spend somewhere around $8.4 billion dollars. That comes out to about $6.14 per pound of fish ligided spent by the freshwater fisherman and $3.58 per pound by the saltwater angler, on the average.</p>
        <p>The Institute also estimated how much the average angler Spends on a day of fishing. The total came out to $49.66 per day for a day of fishing inland warm waters.</p>
        <p>Fishing apparently is not only very relaxing and enjoyable for the fisherman, it is also very profitable for the equipment-makers and resort operators.</p>
        <p>f</p>
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        <pb facs="00093416_0017" />
        <p>'Hustle' In A Canoe Expedition</p>
        <p>By BRUCE NICHOLS</p>
        <p>HOUSTON (PI) - Since August 1975, Stephen Jenkevice and friends have been living off his announced Intention to canoe around the world within the next decade.</p>
        <p>Although the 36-year-old</p>
        <p>* Montreal native vows, This is ' not a hare4)ralned scheme, we</p>
        <p>* will definitely do it," they have</p>
        <p>* yet to cross an ocean.</p>
        <p>Jf Meanwhile, his Free Spirit ^Expedition has been given Kthousands of dollars worth of equipment, two canoes, a used  bus, clothes, cooking equip- ment, even a portable john. All ; gratis.</p>
        <p> On the road or on water, the I group has lived off freebies j while canolng 8,070 miles in I and around North America.</p>
        <p>The first place we went tor food was McDonalds and the I guy said, Sure, no problem.</p>
        <p>We only had one newspaper article at the time.</p>
        <p>Other restaurants, hotds, motels, equipment companies and small town businesses have been as co(^atlve. For a day, the mprquee at the Ramada Inn downtown read Welcome, FVee Spirit Expwlition. V'Mostly it worts pretty good wQen were actually paddling into town, not driving in (as they were this day in HousUm, on their way to California and what they said would be a canoe trip down the Paciflc Coast, another warmiq&amp;gt; for the big one.)</p>
        <p>The bus drc^ everything off at the water and then goes on to the next town 30 or 40 miles away. The driver tells newspapers and television and sets up rooms for the night, places to eat and, if theres time in the morning, we'll meet the mayor and get the keys to the city.</p>
        <p>They have  keys  from 80</p>
        <p>cities. They  are  honorary</p>
        <p>members of  the  Alabama</p>
        <p>militia, Klmtucky colonels, Iberia Parish deputy sheriffs, police and fire departments.</p>
        <p>Weve chHie a lot of television, a  lot  of good</p>
        <p>morning type shows... We do a lot of radio shows. Weve been in hundreds of newspapers.</p>
        <p>They say they have talked to more than 750,000 people. Including Alabama Gov. (Seorge Wallace and Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. They want to meet President Carter and h(^ to stop off in Cuba in 1979 or so on their way across the Atlantic.</p>
        <p>One of the things they need is a backup boat. Their lone venture away from the continent in March, 1976, ended in near disaster when their first canoe sank on a sh&amp;lt;nt jaunt through the Bahamas.</p>
        <p>Were independently broke. Everything we have is donated to us, Jenkevice said, adding the Internal Revenue Service has cleared his acceptance of gifts as long as the groiq) makes no profit.</p>
        <p>Jenkevice, who has been in promotions most of my life, does not consider bis operation a con or a ripoff  or himself one of the last of the travding medicine men.</p>
        <p>He calls it a nke clean hustle.</p>
        <p>To us the definition of hustle is we get what we need, whether its food or a place to stay or a tank of gas for cmr bus or whatever it may be. The person who gives it to us is getting something, whether it's just talking to us, or lodcing at our book or getting our autograph.</p>
        <p>We take them out of</p>
        <p>World War II Model Fleet To</p>
        <p>humdrum. Just for a while, we take them out of reality and bring them into  a little</p>
        <p>adventure and a dream. Were the new type of adventurer. We look good. We smell good. We're not trying  to hurt</p>
        <p>anyone.</p>
        <p>He recounts one scene reminiscent of Music Man, the Broadway musical  about a</p>
        <p>conman whose |pangl was straightened by the warmth of a small town.</p>
        <p>In Long Beach, Miss., the whole school came out to say goodbye to us. Three busloads of kids. The band was there. And a pom pom girl named Cindy, 11 years old, came out and led cheers. I tell you that I had tears in my eyes.</p>
        <p>Jenkevice  and associates Curt Klnkead and Cliff Price, formerly of Los Angeles, and aiff Price, formerly of Baton Rouge, La. - wUl stop,, they say, when they find a full-service sponsor.</p>
        <p>Believe me were looking for a sponsor, said Jenkevice. We need a sponsor real bad.</p>
        <p>LIVING ON FREEBIES - Since August 1975, Steven Jenkevice (center) and friends have been living off his announoed intention to canoe around the world within the next decade. We wiU definitely do it, he</p>
        <p>says. Meanwhile, his exjpedttkm has bera given thousands of dollars worth of equipment, a used bus, two canoes and other items. They have yet to cross</p>
        <p>an ocean. (UPl Photo)</p>
        <p>Show What It Was</p>
        <p>!adio /hael</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p> I</p>
        <p>BUILDING A FLEET  Wade T. Leary intoids to his own private fleet for the world to see what the World War n U.S. Navy was like. Learys fleet Is</p>
        <p> Wade T. Leary intends to</p>
        <p>scale model warships designed from original Defense Department ^lecifications. (UPI Photo)</p>
        <p>OUR NEWEST, FINEST REALISTIC MONLE</p>
        <p>By MERLE KELLERHALS</p>
        <p>JAMES ISLAND, S.C. (UPI)</p>
        <p>launch his own private fleet for the world to see what the World War II navy was like.</p>
        <p>Once concerned with air pollution levels and disease control, he now devotes himself to ship building and the day when he can anchor his fleet</p>
        <p>Than Containars daughters home.</p>
        <p>Learys fleet of wooden-model</p>
        <p>Bottles More</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - Dan Stat of the University of California at Los Angeles Museum of Cultural History, and Steven Garrett, a UCTA graduate student in physics, have analyzed 73 ancient Peruvian Indian whistling bottles with a battery of modem acoustical equipment and reached the following conclusion;</p>
        <p>The Peruvian Indians used them to alter consciousness, pot, as was believed by many archeologists, as containers for water or some other liquid.</p>
        <p>The two discovered that the bottles could be grouped by their acoustic properties and these groupings correlated with specific Peruvian Indian cultures.</p>
        <p>ships arent just models. He has begun designing seven World War II class vintage warships to scale from orinal Defense Department specifications.</p>
        <p>Leary, a native of Edenton, N.C., who was the Charleston County-area coordinator for the Department of Health and Environmental Control, has been fascinated with model ships since he was a young boy. He recalled his first attempt at building a warship.</p>
        <p>I used a fence slat with the pointed end, he said. Id just stick a nail in the pointed end and pull it around.</p>
        <p>He says his current fleet will include seven warships of marine plywood, four 36 battleships and 446 three aircraft carriers. He said they</p>
        <p>will be anchored in an inlet near his daughters home here for people to see what some of the old battlewagons looked like.</p>
        <p>There is no way that this is a very profession^ model, but its still tedious work, he said.</p>
        <p>Learys wife, Chief, says he converted a spare bedroom into a shipyard so he could work undisturbed. He said he wanted to build a small workshop in the backyard, but Chief wouldnt let him.</p>
        <p>She said she would never be able to get him out of it.</p>
        <p>Leary began working on the scale charts, long before he retired so he could begin construction. He said he was able to get the plans for the four classes of battleshqrs used prior to and during the Second World War.</p>
        <p>He said he also got the plans for the three classes &amp;lt;rf aircraft carriers in use at the same time. He said he fell in love with the USS Saratoga after visiting it once to see his brother-in-law, who was stationed aboard the carrier.</p>
        <p>The carriers of that day were some of the most beautiful ships ever built, he</p>
        <p>said.</p>
        <p>Leary said he is half way through construction of the Saratoga and fias completed one battleship. He has the interior frames and hulls of several ships completed, but he says it takes a while before he can began working i each ship.</p>
        <p>He said every warship of the period looks similar, but a former crewmember from any of the seven class ships can look at each model and pick his without being told.</p>
        <p>Leary constructed a small test tank in his back yard to determine the sea worthiness of each ship. He is beginning final construction of the Saratoga and is checking the ship constantly for a list while he adds the super structure to the flight deck.</p>
        <p>Each ship will not have the extreme detail some modelers use because be does not have the time to complete each ship in detail. He said one modeler he knows has ^nt more than three years designing the ships guns.</p>
        <p>Im 64, he said. I cant wait that long.</p>
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        <p>B4-TlMDil^lkll^,OrfliivlH, N.C-^nday. July 3. Itn</p>
        <p>Hothing Like A Balloon Flight</p>
        <p>EDITORS NOTE - Men have iMradl aloft tBder hot air baHooaa for marly MO years, Iwt the port has oety rcentty tata off hi the United States. It caaibinea the thrills of ^id-faM and ffqnitving with the quiet conununloa with nature of sailini or canoeing.</p>
        <p>^ By C.C. MINICUER Asaociated Pren Writer</p>
        <p>DEL NORTE, Colo. (AP) -There i$ no roar of engines or rush of landscape past the window, no feeling of movement. The earth just seems to dn^ away, softly, silently, and the fields spretd out below.</p>
        <p>There are no seat belts to check, no loud speaker demonstrations of emergency procedures, no gently piped-in music. Pilot Frank Rider, his hands off the controls, chats with his two passengers as the wicker basket lifts up and away beneath a 6S-foot, pink and blue balloon filled with 77,000 cubic feet of heated air.</p>
        <p>The first manned hot air balloon rose from a courtyard south of Paris on Nov. 21,1783. Seven years ago, only 17 balloonists showed iq&amp;gt; for the U.S. natkmal balloon competition in Indianida, just south of Des Moines, Iowa. Last year, ^2 ballooas floated above the cornfields thoe.</p>
        <p>Today there are 1,100 licis-ed hot air balloon pilots in the United States. Ballooning is rapidly becoming a popular sport among those who wish to mix a bit of adventure with the quiet communion with nature offered by such sports as sailing or canoeing.</p>
        <p>While others are trying to go faster, higher, or louder, you</p>
        <p>are doing something different, says Rider, a 3l-year-old professional balloonist. He gave up a successful sign painting business in Tallahassee, Fla., 15 months ago to devote full time to ballooning.</p>
        <p>Rider is chief pUot for the Ballorai Ranch, located in the San Luis Valley midway between Denver and Albuquerque, N.M. The journal of the Balloon Federation of America, Balloaiing, describ the ranch as Americas only ballooning resort.</p>
        <p>Rider has flown a hot air balloon through the Bermuda Triangle. Link Baum, a former Denver Real Estate salesman who founded the ranch, has piloted one across the En^ish Channel. Co-founder David Levin poted a balloon over the snow-covered 14,100 foot summit of Pikes Peak earlier this year.</p>
        <p>Levin, who went to school with Baum in New Jersey, idled the three-piece suits of his Boston law practice for a parka and dark glasses to acquire his commercial ballooning license, which are granted by the F^-eral Aviation Administration.</p>
        <p>Those who pilot gliders experience the stillness and the wind currents, but have less than half the view of the balloonist  and that only fleet-ingly. The sport parachutist has the same view, it is busy with intricate maneuvers in the limited time before he pulls his chute and concentrates on a safe landing.</p>
        <p>You are there, but you dont feel it happening to you, says Scott Hamilton, remembering his first balloon lift-off. A sky-</p>
        <p>Speakii^ of Your Health...</p>
        <p>Lester L Coleman, N.D. New Drug Lowers Cholesterol</p>
        <p>A new drug for the lowering of dMleaterid in ttie blood has been approved ttaf United States Food and Drag Administration.</p>
        <p>ColesUprt Ivdrocidoride has been tried in a major study o more than 2,500 patients, axdestend blood levels feU on an average of 15 to 20 per cent in tboae patients du&amp;gt; were taking tiw drag and were on a fixed dtet</p>
        <p>The new drug is tastdess and odorless and very few side effects have been noted.</p>
        <p>The drug can be taken in water, fruit juices, carbonated drinks or mflL And it may even be added to cereals.</p>
        <p>is anticipeted that the drug, under the trade name of Cdestid, wfll be available for general use shortly, r Cholesterat is still considered a major risk factor in heart</p>
        <p>A Uood-wasblng machine ia being used successfully to reduce the risk of hepatitis after Uood transfusion.</p>
        <p>The machine, bifllt by the International Business Machines Corporation, is being used by a nunfoer of blood banks all over the country.</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>The proposed ban on sac-diarin has been oonsida^ a</p>
        <p>ECU News Bureau</p>
        <p>Dr. Oscar Keeling Moore,</p>
        <p>Childran S</p>
        <p>Amazing Future</p>
        <p>ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) -Future playgrounds will feature automatic sandboxes where the sand will turn dlffoent colors when children touch it, and future neighborhoods will be underwater or suspended in the sky.</p>
        <p>This look into the future is coifftesy of more than 100 students, 6 to 13 years old, who attend St. Pauls Eart Consolidated Elementary School and St. Patricks SdMol.</p>
        <p>The chUdren also predicted that;</p>
        <p>Homes and businesses will be dome^haped and heated by solar energy.</p>
        <p>Folks will get around on moving sidewalks.</p>
        <p>Energy will be no proUem because cars will run on wmder-working gasoline that gets 80 miles to the gallon.</p>
        <p>The highest point in the principality of Monaco 533 feet above sea level.</p>
        <p>diver, Hamilton has tried jumping from balloons. Without the air stream of planes, he says, jumping from a balloon is like going off a 5,000 foot diving board.</p>
        <p>At 14,000 feet above sea level, or about 6,000 feet above the ground, first-time balloonist Mary Jobe of Littlon, Colo., admits that she would feel mq^e comfortable with a parachute, but declines Riders offer to go to a lower level.</p>
        <p>Rider turns off the pilot light of the propane gas burner used to heat the air within the envelope, as the balloon is called, and tells his pa^ngers to listen.</p>
        <p>Except &amp;lt;^r the occasional creaking of the wicker, there is no sound. To the east are the 14,000 toot peaks of the Sangre de Cristo Range. To the west are the snow-capped San Juan mountains, with the Continental Divide, of the Rockies clear perhaps SO miles away.</p>
        <p>More than a mile below, nestled in the foothills of the 8,000 foot high valley, is the balloon ranch, where one can learn to fly a balloon for $800. Thats a bit less than the cost of acquiring a private fixed-wing license in a rented aircraft.</p>
        <p>Baum says the valley, with its docile winds, friendly farmers and wide open spaces is a</p>
        <p>fine "beginners slopO, where a novice may make mistakes. No other sport, Ijje says, offers you the chance to study nature at such leisure from such a grand perspective.</p>
        <p>Rider leaves the burner off and the balloon drops, with no feeling of motion, to within a few feet of the grmind. A few short bursts of the giant blow torch above Uie basket heats the air, stopping the descent within inches of the ground.</p>
        <p>Riding a gentle breeze, the basket moves across the field, lifting over a fence with a tew bursts of heat, settling finally to the pasture soil, and the balloon slowly deflates.</p>
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        <p>Each of these advertised items is required to be raadiiy available for sale at or below the advertised price in each AftP Store, except as specifically noted in this ad.</p>
        <p>Prices effective thru Saturday</p>
        <p>J|ULY 9TH AT AP IN GREENVILLE, N.C. ,</p>
        <p>hardship for diabetic patients.</p>
        <p>It ia for this reason that thoe seons to be some easing of the restrictive use of saccharin for such people.</p>
        <p>Specialists in diabetes and the American Diabetes Association believe that young diabetics are particujprty affected by the proposed ban. Some alteration in the ruling that limits saccharin will undoubtedly be made so that there will not be unreasonable deprivation for those who require a sugar substitute.</p>
        <p>*  </p>
        <p>More and more drugs are coming on the hcHfzon to benefit &amp;lt; those afflicted with rheumatoid arthritis. Althou^ there is no one drug that can be s^ed out as being best for all patients, persistent trials with various &amp;lt;fcmgs seem to bring some relief for many patients.</p>
        <p>Tbore are about 15 new (kugs that have been shown to have beneficial effects. Propionic acid and its derivatives have created interest by specialists in rheumatology.</p>
        <p>These new drugs are being carefully evaluated in order To find the ones noost helpful for dironic rheumatoid arthritis.</p>
        <p>*  *</p>
        <p>DR. COLEMAN wMnmw lt&amp;gt;fn from roodr. PIoom writt to Mm m Gw^of th(t r</p>
        <p>ECU Economist Consulted In Geneva</p>
        <p>professor of economics at East Carolina University, has returned from a tour of Europe, where he did research for a report on world coffee production and pricing to be given to the Atlantic Economic Society in Washington D. C. this fall.</p>
        <p>In Geneva, Switzerland, Dr, Moore consulted with United Nations officials Frederick Clalrmonte and Alexander Bohrisch at the offices of the UN CiHiference on World Trade and Development.</p>
        <p>Dr. Moore was a guest of the University of Geneva for International Studies and addressed a gathering of UN economists on trends in world trade in the Palace of Nations in Geneva.</p>
        <p>He also visited London, where he met with John Loudai, director of the International Coffee Agreement, an organization of major coffee-producing and coffeeKMnsumin consuming natkms..</p>
        <p>Before leaving London, Dr. Moore also cmsulted with Alan Jefferies, director of the L.M. Rothschild Sons Bank, at his office on Threadneedle Street in Londons financial district.</p>
        <p>Moore and Jrtferles discussed causes of the recent iqitrend on the price of gold, the subject of a fidure. Moore repmt now in prq&amp;gt;aratk&amp;gt;n.</p>
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        <pb facs="00093416_0019" />
        <p>Red Chinese Quietly Bid For Europe Trade Credit</p>
        <p>By DAVID DODWELL UPI Financial Hows</p>
        <p>LONDON (UPI) - A delegation of diinese bankers could be harbingers of a new boom in trade between mainland China and the West.</p>
        <p>The delegations movements have been discreet. The bankers arrived in Zurich at the beginning of May and moved on to Frankfurt .and Belgium before coming to Britain.</p>
        <p>Their discussions, in the finest banking tradition, have been veiled in secrecy. Chinas Hsinhua News Agency, simply revealed that talks with West German bankers had been cmicemed with business of interest to both sides.</p>
        <p>But there is good reason to believe that the talks are intended to prepare the way for a rapid growth in Sino-European trade. Since Hua Kuo Feng took power in China from the clutches of the now notorious Gang of Four, the official line on trade with the West has shifted dramatically.*</p>
        <p>Gone are the days of hostility to western imports wdieh total self-sufficiency was the ultimate economic goal.</p>
        <p>Now, after dozens of internationally publicized economic conferences, the Peoples Daily is arguing that China should Import from foreign countries In every sphere -wherever it will benefit the economy.</p>
        <p>Chairman Hua has committed himself to transforming China into an economic power on a par with the United States by the end of the century.</p>
        <p>The Chinese government has a lot of ground to cover in the next 23 years if this objective is to be achieved.</p>
        <p>The basic problem is that the Chinese are acutely short of foreign exchange. Exports to the West have been seriously hindered by internal disn&amp;gt;ption since 1975, so foreign cash has been slow to pour in. And poor harvests in 1976 have forced the Chinese to ^nd a lot of this precious cash on grain imports from Australia, Canada and</p>
        <p>Man Factor In Climate Change</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -Theres a new factor in climate change, reports National Geographic. For the first time, say scientists, man and his activities may be beginning to affect the weather.</p>
        <p>One expert, Dr. Reid A. Bryson of the University of Wisconsin, says man may even be the decisive factor in the climate equation. He calls the oven-all effect of mans activities the human volcano, citing his smoke, tractor dust, jet exhaust and smog.</p>
        <p>Many scientific efforts are under way to assess mans impact on the climate. Whatever the studies show, climatologists agree that man is a new factor in the game of climate change.</p>
        <p>Display Includes Flight-Feelings</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - If you want to fly in an open cockpit biplane, drift in the gondola of a hot air balloon, or land on the moon, visit the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.</p>
        <p>The 118 audio-visual displays at this branch of the Smithsonian Institution spare no effort to give visitors the feeling of flight.</p>
        <p>Spectators look through the narrow triangular windows of an Apollo command module at film shot during the Apollo II lunar landing.</p>
        <p>A huge screen nearly five stories high, multiple projectors and quadn^honic sound provide the backdrop for the balloons open gondola, and a filmed ride In a barnstormers biplane, viewed through the center wingstruts and the flashing disc of the propeUer, provides onlookers with the thrills of flight without ever leaving the building.</p>
        <p>Russian Liner To Visit N.Y.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI) - The Russian cruise liner M-S Kazakhstan will make its inaugural eastbound transatlantic voyage when it sails from New York on Sept. 7 for a 14-day cruise to northern Europe.</p>
        <p>The 16,600-ton liner owned by the Black Sea Shipping Co. made its U.S. debut last December with a series of cruises from New Orleans to Mexico, the Caribbean and South America. It will operate weekly cruises from New York to Bermuda this summer.</p>
        <p>New Zealand.</p>
        <p>Hence the importance of the Chinese banking delegation now touring Europe. Significantly, this delegation is understood to be much more hi^-powered than the last similar driegation in 1974.</p>
        <p>The more money the delegation bags, the more scope the cash starved Chinese will have to- pay for urgently needed importied technology. Said one London banker before the meeting here, Nothing is going to happen for six months, but</p>
        <p>the Chinese must be testing the water, to see whether they are going to be able tor borrow. The Chinese have always been coy about asking tto capitalist West for cash. 'They have refused outright any suggestion of a simple loan, so</p>
        <p>a wide range of complex arrangements have to be devised to disguise the fact. It is these arrangements that concern the visiting Chinese. Once they are successfully tied up, then the stage is set for trade to recommence.</p>
        <p>The Chinese intended to have their latest 10-year plan, which would include a detailed list of import needs, drawn by the end of 1975. But everything was thrown into disarray by the pcgitical iqiheaval that followed the death of Premier Chou-En-</p>
        <p>Lai and then Chairman Mao. Sights now seem to be focused on the end of this year.</p>
        <p>Exports to China  have</p>
        <p>withered in the last three years. Japans exp(nl8 fell by 27 per cent last year, while those from the United States</p>
        <p>were more than halved.</p>
        <p>Once revision of the lO-year plan has been completed, western industrialists can jus-tifUUy expect the Chinese to come slxvping for all the equipment that they cannot manufacture themselves.</p>
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        <p>Ptaatlc serving pitcher with 3-way top - pour, drain or close. 2Vi-quart capacity.</p>
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        <p>Pitt PlazI Shopping Center</p>
        <p>Open Daily 9:30 A,M. Til 9:00 P.M. Prices effective Mon.-Tues.-Wed.</p>
        <p>Quench that thirst with a 64-Oz. drink</p>
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        <p>New! Ajax laundry detergent for the whole wash. Colors and whites seem brighter and smell fresher. Family size box. 10-lb. 11-oz. UMIT1</p>
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        <p>Protesting N.C. Veteran Gets New Medol</p>
        <p>STATESVILLE, N.C. (AP) -A Vietnam veteran, who made headlines recently by nailing his medals to an outhouse and burning them in protest of amnesty for draft evaders, got a new medal Friday.</p>
        <p>Dale Wilson says hes proud of this one  the Silver Star.</p>
        <p>"I don t regret anything Ive done (such as destroying his other medals). I think Ive made my point, said the 27-</p>
        <p>year-old former Marine, who lost both legs and his right arm in combat.</p>
        <p>Wilson received the Silver Star, the nations third highest award for valor, from Marine Lt. Gen. Robert Nichols of Washington. Statesville Mayor Thomas Panjoy proclaimed Friday as Dale Wilson Day, the main streets were lined with flags, and a contingent of Marines from Camp Lejeune stood</p>
        <p>May Have</p>
        <p>Answer</p>
        <p>P(mKER PILLOW - Ledle Porter, H, M Julian, Calif., and her ho(^ Hamlet and Borg take a rest as they wait for the Future</p>
        <p>Fanner of America Uveatock auction at the SouOiem CaUfbmla Ezposith Friday in Del Mar. (APR^rephoto)</p>
        <p>1917 Navy Pin-up Girl</p>
        <p>By DAVID R. NELSEN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina may have found a way other states can use to fight pornography if a law requiring adult bookstores, movie houses, peep shows and massage parlors to be physically separated makes such businesses unprofitable.</p>
        <p>Im not so sure that this wouldnt take care of the sex sh&amp;lt;^s, Prof. Arnold Loewy of the University of North Carolina law school said of the new</p>
        <p>Comments On Changes</p>
        <p>SEQUIM, Wash. (AP) - She was the Navys first pin-up girl, a lass of 20, who in 1917 donned a blue jacket and jaunty sailors c^ to pose for a winsome recruiting poster.</p>
        <p>Gee!! I Wish I Were a Man. Id Join the Navy, read the poster, and thousands of young men responded.</p>
        <p>Ten days after she posed, Bernice Smith joined the Navy herself, k^ing alive the unbroken string of wars  starting with the Revolutionary War  in which members of her famUy bad served. Others have since served through Vietnam.</p>
        <p>Things have changed so much now, said Bernice Tong-ate, now a widow, as she looked forward to Indq&amp;gt;endence Day.</p>
        <p>Things dont mean what</p>
        <p>they used to. 1 think our country is the only one Id like to live in, but we make mistakes. None of us is'perfect.</p>
        <p>If you dont make mistakes, then youre six feet under and pushing up the daisies, she said in an interview Friday.</p>
        <p>But in 1917, her only thoughts were of helping the country defend itself in a foreign war. The historic recruiting poster is her pride.</p>
        <p>I would have liked it better if (the artist) had put that cap on my head in a different manner, said Mrs. Tongate, 80, of the drawing by Howard Chandler Cliristy.</p>
        <p>That certainly was not regulation. I wouldnt have worn it to the office like that, IU tell you.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Tongate was a Los An</p>
        <p>geles office worker riding to work on a streetcar when she read in a newspaper about the Navys recruiting women.</p>
        <p>Shie rushed to the nearest recruiting office. Presenting the newspaper, she demanded enlistment.</p>
        <p>Recruiters went to their commanding officer, paper in hand. Mrs. Tongate followed behind a civilian, cairisty, who was in the office.</p>
        <p>Captain, theres a girl here who wants to join the Navy. If you will get a hat, bloii|e and a pair of pants. Ill m^^ poster that will turn this towh upside down, Christy told the officer.  ...  </p>
        <p>Robersonville To Celebrate</p>
        <p>If I was a man, I would join the Navy, Mrs. Tongate remembers telling the men. This is the first time our family has never been represented in a war, and youve just got to take me.</p>
        <p>Robersonvilles secimd annual Fourth of July Celebration will begin at 2 p.m. Monday at the Robersonville Ball Park.</p>
        <p>Activities for the day will include a chanqiion egg-toss, sack race, greased pole climb, horseshoes, bingo, basketball, a ping-pong tournament, a dunking machine, a jailhouse. Rescue Squad and Fire Department displays and a Boy Scout</p>
        <p>Prizes and trophies will be awarded.</p>
        <p>Handicrafts and refreshments will be on sale. Live entertainment will be provided in the evening.</p>
        <p>I was a nervy little brat, she added.</p>
        <p>A fireworks display will begin at U p.m.</p>
        <p>The Celebration is sponsored by the Robersonville Jaycees and Jaycettes. The public is invited.</p>
        <p>Beef Producers To Vote</p>
        <p>The 3,062 North Carolina beef producers who registered will be eli^ble to vote in the July 5-15 national beef industry assessment referendum.</p>
        <p>Producers who registered will vote at local Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation offices. Voting by mail is possible if those wishing to do so request a mail ballot from the ASCS office.</p>
        <p>At stake in the beef referendum is a plan which calls for an assessment of three-tenths of one per cent of the sales of all</p>
        <p>beef cattle. These funds would be administered by a 6S^member Beef Board made up entirely of cattlemen.</p>
        <p>A two-thirds favorable vote is necessary for adoption. At least half of tlxffie registered must cast a ballot in order for the referendum to be valid.</p>
        <p>Additional information is available from the Pitt County Agricultural Extension Service and the N. C. Cattlemens Association office in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Farmers To</p>
        <p>Science</p>
        <p>List Acroago</p>
        <p>Farm operators who have not</p>
        <p>Program</p>
        <p>At ECU</p>
        <p>. . ECUNewsBureau</p>
        <p>Thirty-one superior high school science students from Niffth Carolina and 11 other other states are participating in a Student Science Training Program in Physics at East Carolina University June-August 2. -</p>
        <p>The program is funded by the National Science Foundation and involves six weeks of concentrated research and study in mathematics, computer science, solid state physics and X-ray fluorescence.</p>
        <p>The student participants are also working with the ECU physics departments tandem Van De Graaff accelerator and observing the night skies through stellar telescopes.</p>
        <p>Participants are housed in can^Nis dormitories and have access to the universitys library and recreational facilities.</p>
        <p>The ECU Student Science Training Program in Physics is directed by Dr. Paul Varlashkln of the ECU Department of Physics. Represited by the 31 participants are public, private and parochial schools in ten Nwth Carolina counties and in Georgia, Idaho, Maryland, New Jersy, Nfew York, Ohio, Pe Pennsyivaoia, Texas, Vermont, Virginia and Waahii^taii, D. C.</p>
        <p>visited the county ASCS office to report their planted acres of peanuts, cotton and feed grains are asked to do so now. 7710 deadline for peanuts and cotton wUlbeJulyl5.</p>
        <p>Farm operators should report their cr(9 acreage by fields.</p>
        <p>HES GOING HOME -*Rep. George Ronald Taylor, D-EUzabethtown, wears a big smile and a pair of bib overalls in the North Carolina House of Representatives at the State Capitd In Raldgh Friday during the final day of the 1977 Gmeral Assembly. (APWirqihoto)</p>
        <p>FIRST tTeWEEK</p>
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        <p>laoi West 5tf) St.  Open 7 to 7 Dally  Phone 752-4808</p>
        <p>appear to be unconstitutional under guarantees of free speech and free press, Loewy said.</p>
        <p>Morgan said the law will not eradicate pornography shops, but it will limit them, be said, by driving down profits.</p>
        <p>at attention.</p>
        <p>Wilsons Silver Star ciUtion praised him for "coiKpicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action on the night of Nov. 17, 1969. As leader of a patrol searching for three Marines lost deep in enemy territory, Wilson led an assault on several other enemy soldiers who were attacking the separated men and was re^)onslble for several additional ^ casualties and freeing the beleaguered Marines unhurt.</p>
        <p>Three months after the incident, Wilson was wounded by a booby trap.</p>
        <p>Retired Capt. Jim WeW&amp;gt;, WU-sons commander in Vietnam and now counsel to the U.S. House Veterans Affairs Committee, said he recommended Wilson for the Silver Star seven</p>
        <p>The bill becomes law after passage by the legislature because the North Carolina constitution does not provide gubernatorial veto powers.</p>
        <p>years ago.</p>
        <p>Webb said he had heard of Wilson burning his other medals.</p>
        <p>There was a lot of strong feeling (about amnesty) and* there stUl is, Webb said. I thought the act just showed how deeply he felt about his country and the Marine Corps. He had the courage to do what he felt was right.</p>
        <p>Quik Car Wash</p>
        <p>1003 South Evans Street , Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Now Offering Complete Car Wash Service</p>
        <p>(Insid* Ciaaning Includad)</p>
        <p>$1.00 Discount on Complete Car Wash. Monday thru Friday with this coupon.</p>
        <p>Coupon Good thru July 26</p>
        <p>law which takes effect Jan. 1.</p>
        <p>If this works. North Carolina could be a model state in dealing with pornography, said Rep. Jim Morgan, D-Guil-ford, who sponsored the bl that won final approval Friday, the last day of the 1977 session of the General Assembly.</p>
        <p>The new law says a sex-oriented business must be a bookstore, a movie house, a peq) show arcade or a massage parlor. It cannot engage in any more than one type of business under one roof. And no such business will be allowed to sell sex novelties. Morgan and Loewy said the approach apparently has never been tried before.</p>
        <p>Itll put us out of business. Theres no question about it, said Peter Eckels, assistant manager of an adult book store in Raleigh that also has a theater and seven peep show booths.</p>
        <p>To make enough money to pay the rent in this kind of business, you just pretty well have to have all of it, he said.</p>
        <p>The new law appears to be within the states power to regulate business and does not</p>
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        <p>West End Shopping Center Mgr. James Williams Store Hours: Mon-Sat. 8:30 a.m. to9 p.m.</p>
        <p>OPEN SUNDAY 1-6 P.M.</p>
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        <p>1414 Charles St.</p>
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        <p>FRESH</p>
        <p>HALF OR WHOLE</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY</p>
        <p>PORK LOIN CHimiMiKS</p>
        <p>10 s, *3</p>
        <p>90</p>
        <p>Kraft</p>
        <p>AAirocle</p>
        <p>Whip</p>
        <p>Smucker's</p>
        <p>Grape Jelly</p>
        <p>Kraft Regular</p>
        <p>Barbecue ' Sauce</p>
        <p>1^1 m/ $70,000.00</p>
        <p>in Cash Prizes! 17,000</p>
        <p>INSTANT WINNERS You could win up to</p>
        <p>$1,000.00</p>
        <p>Odds as of June 18</p>
        <p>18-uz.</p>
        <p>Size</p>
        <p>Piggly WiggI y Heavy Duty</p>
        <p>Aluminum Foil</p>
        <p>18"x25'</p>
        <p>Roil</p>
        <p>Pringle'S</p>
        <p>Chips</p>
        <p>number! QODB for</p>
        <p>1 OAME</p>
        <p>OODS rO  PLUS 10</p>
        <p>3 am  3viB</p>
        <p>(IScheriuled lermtnattnn of (his promoiion This gam* is being played in 42 participaiing '*  however  Cash King</p>
        <p>Piggly Wlggly Stores located in Easiern  oflicially ends when all game tickets a-e</p>
        <p>North Carolina.  distiibuted.</p>
        <p>$1000 WINNERS:  $100 WINNERS;</p>
        <p>Irene Williams - New Bern, N. C.  Ethel Mae Gray - LaGrange, N. C.</p>
        <p>Shirley Prince - Jacksonville, N. C.  Mae Boone  Clinton,  N. C.</p>
        <p>Betty Manning  Grifton, N. C.  Pearl Phelps  Wilson,  N. C.</p>
        <p>9-Oz.</p>
        <p>Size</p>
        <p>PRODUCE</p>
        <p>FRENCH'S</p>
        <p>^^^MUSTARD</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>24-Oz.Jar</p>
        <p>SUMMERTIME</p>
        <p>LEMONS</p>
        <p>DOZ.</p>
        <p>Gal.</p>
        <p>Carolina Dairies</p>
        <p>FRUIT</p>
        <p>DRINKS</p>
        <p>Cal.</p>
        <p>PIGGIY WIGGLY HAMBURGER OR HOT 006</p>
        <p>BUNS 3/M</p>
        <p>UPTON</p>
        <p>TEA BAGS</p>
        <p>ARMOUR</p>
        <p>All Star Ice Cream</p>
        <p>SANOWICHES</p>
        <p>VIENNA</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>3/1</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>BREAD</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY TWO LAYER</p>
        <p>COCONUT</p>
        <p>CAKE</p>
        <p>IZESTA</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>SUGAR</p>
        <p>Coupon Good Thru 7/S/T7 JfyyWlfMMMM MWMBJlAJIJQnOOOO</p>
        <p>[Limit 1 With $7.50 Food Orderl</p>
        <p>Prices In This Ad Effective Wednesday Through Saturday!</p>
        <p>QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED NONE SOI D fO DEALERS I WO CONVFNU NT GREENVILLE LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! ?10S DICK IN SON AvENUEANDUU NOR'^^H GREEN STREET</p>
        <p>TONY'S</p>
        <p> 15-Oz. Sausage</p>
        <p> 14-Oz. Pepperonl</p>
        <p> 15-Oz. HamburgerPIGGLY WIGGLY ON DICKINSON AVE. OPEN SUNDAYS 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0022" />
        <p>#-!The DeUy Reftoctor, uremviue,ouuuay, juiy *, utTt</p>
        <p>Week's Stock Markets</p>
        <p>NKW YORK (AP) ~ Hrm York Stock Exchono* trMlno tor ttio wMk wtoctod</p>
        <p>ACE</p>
        <p>AMF</p>
        <p>ASALto</p>
        <p>AbtrfLftb</p>
        <p>AotrwLf</p>
        <p>AlrPrd</p>
        <p>AVIRCO</p>
        <p>Akiono</p>
        <p>AlconAt</p>
        <p>AltoUi</p>
        <p>AllgPw</p>
        <p>AlWCh</p>
        <p>AltoStr</p>
        <p>AlfioCh</p>
        <p>3Sto-1'A ttVi- W W*+ V UMf H 15 +1Vk 37^- to 34to- to 30to-M u - to J7to~ to ifto-m tito- to</p>
        <p>Jowolcor</p>
        <p>JhnMoA</p>
        <p>JoltoJn</p>
        <p>Jontgn</p>
        <p>JoyMfs</p>
        <p>K mart</p>
        <p>KolvAl</p>
        <p>KortGEI</p>
        <p>KonPLt</p>
        <p>Kotylnd</p>
        <p>KavfBr</p>
        <p>Koltogg</p>
        <p>Konnct</p>
        <p>KarrMc</p>
        <p>KimbCl</p>
        <p>KntgtRd</p>
        <p>Koppors</p>
        <p>Kraft</p>
        <p>KrogM*</p>
        <p>Amax</p>
        <p>AMBAC</p>
        <p>AHW</p>
        <p>AmAir</p>
        <p>ABrttos</p>
        <p>ABdcst</p>
        <p>AmCan</p>
        <p>ACyan</p>
        <p>AElPw</p>
        <p>AFamlly</p>
        <p>3Sto</p>
        <p>tOto</p>
        <p>AmHoip</p>
        <p>ANatR</p>
        <p>AStand</p>
        <p>ATT</p>
        <p>AMPIoc</p>
        <p>Ampox</p>
        <p>AnchrH</p>
        <p>ArchrO</p>
        <p>Armco</p>
        <p>ArmafCk</p>
        <p>Asarco</p>
        <p>AihlOil</p>
        <p>AsdDG</p>
        <p>AMRkb</p>
        <p>AtlatCp</p>
        <p>AvcoCp</p>
        <p>Avnat</p>
        <p>Avon</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>wto to ara- to</p>
        <p>44 -f to 40to+ to ato- to 24to+ to 13to+ to 2ito+ to 24to to</p>
        <p>4to.....</p>
        <p>4to-f- to 34to- to Mto- to -ito 10 4 to 29to- to iTto- to toto- to n Ito</p>
        <p>J0to+ V4 33to- to 2to+ to M -Ito 24to- to 17 - to lto+ to 49 -2to</p>
        <p>LTVCp</p>
        <p>LaarSiag</p>
        <p>Lidimn</p>
        <p>LavlfiF</p>
        <p>LOF</p>
        <p>Llggat</p>
        <p>LlMyEli</p>
        <p>Ltfton</p>
        <p>Uorkhd</p>
        <p>Loews</p>
        <p>LonStar</p>
        <p>LnglftLf</p>
        <p>taLand</p>
        <p>LaPacif</p>
        <p>LockyS</p>
        <p>BabkW</p>
        <p>BallyMf</p>
        <p>BaltGE</p>
        <p>BanKAm</p>
        <p>BauschL</p>
        <p>BaxtTrv</p>
        <p>BeatFds</p>
        <p>Baker</p>
        <p>BellHow</p>
        <p>Bandix</p>
        <p>BanlCp</p>
        <p>BangtB</p>
        <p>BastPd</p>
        <p>BatttStl</p>
        <p>BiackOr</p>
        <p>BlockHR</p>
        <p>Boeing</p>
        <p>Botoac</p>
        <p>Bardan</p>
        <p>BorgW</p>
        <p>BosEd</p>
        <p>Braniff</p>
        <p>BristM</p>
        <p>Brit Pet</p>
        <p>Brnswk</p>
        <p>BucyEr</p>
        <p>BuddCo</p>
        <p>BunkRs</p>
        <p>Buriind</p>
        <p>BurINo</p>
        <p>Burrghs</p>
        <p>Satos</p>
        <p>hds HigO LOW Last Chg.</p>
        <p> AA </p>
        <p>) 3*7 37 3Sto 1.24 597 Itto 19to .BO 453 IBto II</p>
        <p>1.20 1115 44to 44 .10a 4011 ulSto 15to 1.M 3M1 37to 37 .20b x2B3B2Sto 34</p>
        <p>totototo tototo 30to</p>
        <p>1.20 119 Uto 15to M 1911 27to 27</p>
        <p>1.31 324 aOtodlOto 1.41 913 31to 31to 1.M 1150 SOto 49to</p>
        <p>I 14B3 33to 22to 33to- Va</p>
        <p>1.10 X701 31 30to 30to- to 1.BB 3425 S4to 52Vi S3to-1to 1.75 1724 42to d41H 42to- V</p>
        <p>1 334 2to 27to 27to- to .BOb 1734 36to 197* 11 2.92 *31 47V</p>
        <p>1 137 44VS 43</p>
        <p>3.50 52B 40to 99to</p>
        <p>1.50 1049 37to 2*to 3.04 *105 34to 23to</p>
        <p>.40 393 13to 13to</p>
        <p>1.10 2473 3Bto 3Sto J4 1247 35to 24to</p>
        <p>' 3B71 4to d 3to 3.B0 490 47 45to 1.70 957 34to 34W 4.30 7039 43to 43 .40 443 3lto 34to 34to 3993 ulOto 9to</p>
        <p>1.50 B9 39to 39&amp;gt;/&amp;lt;2 .30 B70 17to 17to</p>
        <p>1.B0 5B7 27 d25to 1 914 23tod21to .00 3570 21to 30to 1.90 034 34to 33^/t</p>
        <p>1.50 534 24to 3Sto lAO 5B43M*tto 59to</p>
        <p>275 2Sto 24 3372ullto 16to .70 3111 I9to IBto 2.20 3342 Slto 4Sto - B-B -</p>
        <p>1.50 459 4Sto 43to 43to-1to 2245 23to 21to 21to-lto</p>
        <p>2.14 455 27to 24to 27to- to 2 . 32 24to 23to 23to- to</p>
        <p>1 143 33 31to .30 B59 32to 31to .96 1317 25to 24V*</p>
        <p>427 7to d 6to .04 211 23 20to</p>
        <p>2 410 4lto 39to</p>
        <p>1.40 451 24to 23to .00 X752 Tto 2to</p>
        <p>351 3 to 31to 2 4116 32tod30 .48 1639 17to 16to 1.25 630 33 31to</p>
        <p>1.40 3733 5BH 56to</p>
        <p>1.10 2407 29tod27to 1.56 542 34to 34to 1.60 311 2Btod27to 2.44 4S0u20to 27to</p>
        <p>.30 834 9to 9to</p>
        <p>1.10 x2002u33 31to  _________</p>
        <p>.33e 20839 16to 16 .Uto+,to^ MtFual</p>
        <p>3to4- to 34to- to 49to-2to</p>
        <p>i3to+ to 43to- to</p>
        <p>- J-J -94 3to 3to</p>
        <p>1.40 1173 37to 36to</p>
        <p>1.40 155B 73to ,40b 94 14 I3to 1.50 kB47 43to 43to</p>
        <p>- K-K -.54 4001 39 27to</p>
        <p>1.40 793 37to 36to 1.7* 313 31to 3lto 1.70 283 32to 23to</p>
        <p>356 I 7to .86a 1616 7to 7to 1.10 1030 27to 36to 5M0 30to 2lto VtoAtoi to 1.25 1191 65to 43 *4to+2to 3.20 648 47to 45to 1 xllll 35  34</p>
        <p>.90 132 24 33to 3.33 500 49to 4844 1.44 285 36to 35to</p>
        <p>- L-L -</p>
        <p>fh.</p>
        <p>28to- to 37 - to 21to+ to 32tot- to 7to+ to Tto- to a*to~ to</p>
        <p>Market</p>
        <p>Analysis</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>H;4 !ll? &amp;lt;11;</p>
        <p>-17.05</p>
        <p>ODW lONfS in INDUMRItlS</p>
        <p>' .The Market In Brief</p>
        <p>Wtek ol</p>
        <p>liinr 7 7 liiivi</p>
        <p>47to- to 54to+ to</p>
        <p>24 .....</p>
        <p>49 - to 36 + to</p>
        <p>lOto</p>
        <p>9to</p>
        <p>15to</p>
        <p>lOto</p>
        <p>~4to</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>37to</p>
        <p>I4to</p>
        <p>14to</p>
        <p>29to</p>
        <p>9to- to 16 - to</p>
        <p>Wto- to</p>
        <p>3oto+ to 32to- to 37to-ito 14to- to IS^A- to 39to-ito</p>
        <p>30to 20to~ to</p>
        <p>32to- to 32to--l 34to to 6to to 20to-l 39to-lto 24 -i- to 2Vi- to</p>
        <p>22to.....</p>
        <p>30to-lto Uto- to 22 - to S7to+ to 27to-ito</p>
        <p>34to.....</p>
        <p>27to- to 2ito-fi</p>
        <p>9to.....</p>
        <p>32to+ to</p>
        <p>.60 1582 i4to  '</p>
        <p>1.25a  635  lOto</p>
        <p>OSa  771  4to</p>
        <p>1.10a  379  30to</p>
        <p>2.50 349 33 1.42 1406 39to .lit 2743 ISto</p>
        <p>4472 ISto</p>
        <p>1.30  6S7  31to</p>
        <p>1.10  134  31to</p>
        <p>1.63 Xll47u20tol9to 19to- to 1.20 26*3 28to 27  27to- to</p>
        <p>.40 899 15 14to 14to- to LwckyS .74b 475 15to ISto 15to- to "3sr- Y9i-*^to- *to- to</p>
        <p>.20 2947 14 15to 1599+ to .50  1342  ulOto  Wto  Wto-  to</p>
        <p>1.50  297  36to  35to  35to-l</p>
        <p>.83a  *78  1299  12H  12H.....</p>
        <p>.40  532  1099  lOto  lOto-  H</p>
        <p>1.10  736  44to  44to  45 .....</p>
        <p>3.30 076 53&amp;gt;A S2to 53to+ to .80 1499U14V9 13to .35t  1809  lOto  Wto</p>
        <p>1.50  354  27to  27to</p>
        <p>.40 790 23to 33to 1e 491 30 tP/a</p>
        <p>I.U 6 3399 23to I.SOa  225  33to  31to  3lto-lto</p>
        <p>1.60 23Uu59to 54to 57to+ to .20 1337 47 45to 45to- 99   .50 2063 OPA 34to 25 + to</p>
        <p>1.60 187 29to 29  29 - to .80 1496ul9to Wto 19to + l</p>
        <p>1 733 22V9 21to 21to- to .94 479 24to 23to 23to- to</p>
        <p>1.50 1573 S4to 55  55to- to ' .88 2271 19to 18to 1099- to .40 2549 39to 36to 38to+lto 1r 749 23*A 22to 32to- to</p>
        <p>1.38 2)90 14to Uto l*to- to^ 1.70 1975 SOto 48 48to-lto^ 1.74 145 u32to 23  23to+ to</p>
        <p>3.80  2149 49to 67to 68b38 4 497 5to 5to 5to- to</p>
        <p>.20 333 ul3to 12to 12to~ to 3.10 U7S 71tod49to 49to-lto 2.40  33  38 37to 38 + to</p>
        <p>1.80 X910 27 Uto 26to+ to</p>
        <p>2 1163 SOto 49to SOto+ to</p>
        <p>1 831 U24  2299 24 +1to .84 XX434 41V9 39to 40to- to</p>
        <p>2 140 _46  43^&amp;gt; 43to-lto</p>
        <p>MGIC</p>
        <p>Macmill</p>
        <p>AAacy</p>
        <p>MdsFd</p>
        <p>AAagkCf</p>
        <p>A6APC0</p>
        <p>MaratO</p>
        <p>MarMid</p>
        <p>Marriof</p>
        <p>MartM</p>
        <p>Masco</p>
        <p>MassyF</p>
        <p>MavDS</p>
        <p>Maytg</p>
        <p>AAcOar</p>
        <p>McDnId</p>
        <p>McDonD</p>
        <p>McGEd</p>
        <p>McGrH</p>
        <p>MaadCp</p>
        <p>MalvMla</p>
        <p>Merck</p>
        <p>AAerrLy</p>
        <p>Mesa Pat</p>
        <p>MGM</p>
        <p>MidSUt</p>
        <p>MlnMM</p>
        <p>MinPL</p>
        <p>Mobil</p>
        <p>Monxina</p>
        <p>MonrEq</p>
        <p>Monsan</p>
        <p>AAonDU</p>
        <p>MonPw</p>
        <p>Morgan</p>
        <p>Mot Nor</p>
        <p>Motrola</p>
        <p>If r,r.;.</p>
        <p> 1  l|'.V I (.d'-!</p>
        <p>'.t,   . '</p>
        <p>IIP</p>
        <p>h/4</p>
        <p>vmiiMi</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>;ii iim I m</p>
        <p>sntKis</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>4M</p>
        <p>DOWI*</p>
        <p>bK</p>
        <p>_Cui_</p>
        <p>) 10 - 0 ]</p>
        <p>0(14 Innr', nil 5|,i (ib - 3 t</p>
        <p>)n+ 'A</p>
        <p>H)l- &amp;lt;/2 J7H+ U U+ '*</p>
        <p>19%.....</p>
        <p>23V*- %</p>
        <p>MARKET ANALYSIS  The Dew Jones average ckned at M2.6S Friday, down N.05 from the week priw. (AP Wiraphoto)</p>
        <p>Most Active Stocks For Week</p>
        <p>NEW YORK &amp;lt;AP) Week's twenty most Yearly</p>
        <p>kKHi'</p>
        <p>T|4%</p>
        <p>LOW 4to i3to</p>
        <p>22to^t--' 19to- to 10 + to 24to- to SOtoIto 62 +2</p>
        <p>CBS</p>
        <p>CITFn</p>
        <p>CPC</p>
        <p>CalFinI</p>
        <p>CamSp</p>
        <p>CaroPw</p>
        <p>CarrCp</p>
        <p>CastICk</p>
        <p>CatrpTr</p>
        <p>Caanse</p>
        <p>Can Sow</p>
        <p>Cantrbf</p>
        <p>Crtteed</p>
        <p>CassAir</p>
        <p>Cbmpln</p>
        <p>ChamSp</p>
        <p>ChasM</p>
        <p>Chasste</p>
        <p>ChiPnaT</p>
        <p>ChrisCft</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>Cirkrp</p>
        <p>CItiasSv</p>
        <p>CItylnv</p>
        <p>ClarkE</p>
        <p>ClavEi</p>
        <p>Clorox</p>
        <p>CstStGs</p>
        <p>CocaBtl</p>
        <p>CocaCol</p>
        <p>CotgPal</p>
        <p>Co) Penn</p>
        <p>Col Gas</p>
        <p>CmbEn</p>
        <p>CmwE</p>
        <p>Comsat</p>
        <p>ConEd</p>
        <p>ConFds</p>
        <p>ConNG</p>
        <p>ConsPw</p>
        <p>ContAir</p>
        <p>ContlCp</p>
        <p>ContGp</p>
        <p>Cont Oil</p>
        <p>Contra)</p>
        <p>CtlOata</p>
        <p>Coopin</p>
        <p>ComG</p>
        <p>CrwnCk</p>
        <p>CrwZai</p>
        <p>CuftW </p>
        <p>S8to+ to</p>
        <p>35 .....</p>
        <p>Slto.....</p>
        <p>,9to+ to 38 -1</p>
        <p>26to-lto</p>
        <p>20to- to</p>
        <p>.64 1340 2399 32to</p>
        <p>1.20 344 19to 19to 577 lOto 9to</p>
        <p>1.40 849 24to 33to</p>
        <p>1.40 1506 51H 49H .80 X3314 62H 99to</p>
        <p>- C-C -2 873 5899 58V9</p>
        <p>2.40 921 3Sto 3449</p>
        <p>3.50 719 5144 50 608 u PA 9</p>
        <p>1.48 662 J9H 37to K1930 U25to Xtototo 25 + to .44 1143 1899 17to 17'A-I .eob 336  15  1444  14to-  to</p>
        <p>l.*l 2123 57to 5699 5799+99 2.80 580  4794  46to  46to-  H</p>
        <p>1.26 1551  16to  16  Uto-  to</p>
        <p>1  M2  fTto  2599  2599-1</p>
        <p>.70 253  27  25to  26 -  to</p>
        <p>1.20  237  2794  2694</p>
        <p>1  3460  3)99  3094</p>
        <p>.48 578  lito  1099</p>
        <p>2.20  1608  33V9  3394</p>
        <p>3.33  487  3899  38to</p>
        <p>2  370  27to  2S*A</p>
        <p>1168  594  5to</p>
        <p>1 3172  17  Uto</p>
        <p>1.06 X4323 2799  36&amp;lt;to</p>
        <p>3 704  60to  5194</p>
        <p>.80 X1531 16  15</p>
        <p>1.608 304  3994  3199</p>
        <p>2.64  629  34to  33to  34to+  99</p>
        <p>.60  2801  U13H  1294  13to+  to</p>
        <p>.30  3646  22to  20to  21to-  to</p>
        <p>.40a  2513  9to  894  9to+  to</p>
        <p>1.54  3308  38to  3694  37 -  99</p>
        <p>.88  1308  25  2494  2494-  to</p>
        <p>I  446  3199  30to  31to-  A</p>
        <p>2.24 475  30to  29to  30 +  99</p>
        <p>2.20 655 u63to 61to 6194- 94</p>
        <p>2.40 1859 31to 3094 3099.....</p>
        <p>1 1119 3399 Mto 33to- to</p>
        <p>2 2231 U2499 2394 24to+ 99</p>
        <p>1.40  527  26  25to  2599+  to</p>
        <p>2.50  897  45H  44to  4499-lto</p>
        <p>2.12  1186  2499  2499</p>
        <p>417  799  Tto</p>
        <p>3 963  S8to  5594</p>
        <p>2 1032  3699  36to</p>
        <p>1.40 4536  34V4  33to</p>
        <p>1.1* 817  1799  ITto</p>
        <p>.15 844  3189  2099</p>
        <p>1.08 B14u44to 45*A 1.52a 779</p>
        <p>32to SO 31to 65to tIH 28to ssto 20to 2594 37to 1694 4094 43to</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>23to</p>
        <p>6194</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>1799</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>3089</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>2594</p>
        <p>33to</p>
        <p>Brit Pat PhilltMPat US Steal OccMen Pat AmTT Texas Inti Harcula Inc Exxon Norton Sim AmEI Pw Rockwel Ini Simp Pat K mart Dow Ch OlgitaiEq</p>
        <p>active stocks. Week's Slas ,</p>
        <p>V2...83.900 1.036.200 877.500 732.600 702,900 685.700</p>
        <p>High LOW Uto 16</p>
        <p>625.600</p>
        <p>619.200</p>
        <p>610.900</p>
        <p>605.800 60X200 600.100 599,500</p>
        <p>598.800</p>
        <p>3PA</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>31to</p>
        <p>6389</p>
        <p>lito</p>
        <p>ini/.</p>
        <p>5314</p>
        <p>Wto</p>
        <p>2499</p>
        <p>37to</p>
        <p>1394</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>3694</p>
        <p>2989</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>2899</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>Wto</p>
        <p>Last Chg. I6to+ to 3Dto- 199</p>
        <p>39H- to 2889- 2to 63to- 99 1089 + 99</p>
        <p>J3to+ to 38to+ to 26 -I'A 594+ 99 1694- to 2799+Ito</p>
        <p>5989.....</p>
        <p>1599- to 3999- to</p>
        <p>NCR</p>
        <p>NLInd</p>
        <p>NLT</p>
        <p>Nabisco</p>
        <p>NatAiri</p>
        <p>NatCan</p>
        <p>NatOist</p>
        <p>NatFG</p>
        <p>NatGyp</p>
        <p>Natind</p>
        <p>NtSamic</p>
        <p>NatlStI</p>
        <p>Natom</p>
        <p>NavPw</p>
        <p>NEngEI</p>
        <p>Nawmt</p>
        <p>NiaMP</p>
        <p>NorfWn</p>
        <p>NoAPhI</p>
        <p>NoestUt</p>
        <p>NorNGs</p>
        <p>NoStPw</p>
        <p>Nortrp</p>
        <p>NwfstAirl</p>
        <p>NwtBcp</p>
        <p>Norton</p>
        <p>NorSim</p>
        <p>3694- to 22to- to 2599- to</p>
        <p>5299 53 .....</p>
        <p>llto ..llto-l</p>
        <p>13to 1394.....</p>
        <p>2389- to 2894+ to 1699- 99</p>
        <p>6to.....</p>
        <p>20to- 99 37 -2to + 194 2494 + 94 2389+ H 2394- to 1694+ to 30to- to 3ito- to 1194+ to 45V9 to 2894+ 94</p>
        <p>2394</p>
        <p>2899</p>
        <p>Uto</p>
        <p>6to</p>
        <p>1994</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>39to</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>23to</p>
        <p>OcclPat</p>
        <p>OhioEd</p>
        <p>OkiaGE</p>
        <p>OklaNG</p>
        <p>OlinCp</p>
        <p>Omark</p>
        <p>OwenC</p>
        <p>Owanlil</p>
        <p>Oartind</p>
        <p>OataGan</p>
        <p>Dayco</p>
        <p>DaytPL</p>
        <p>Oaara</p>
        <p>DalMon</p>
        <p>DaltaAir</p>
        <p>Dennys</p>
        <p>DetEd</p>
        <p>OiamS</p>
        <p>OlgitaiEq</p>
        <p>Disney</p>
        <p>OrPappr</p>
        <p>Dow Ch</p>
        <p>Dressr</p>
        <p>duPont</p>
        <p>OukaP</p>
        <p>OuqLig</p>
        <p>I7to+ 3189-lto 46to-l 36to- 94 12 + to 3394 -299 - 99</p>
        <p>East Air</p>
        <p>EastGF</p>
        <p>EsKod</p>
        <p>Eaton</p>
        <p>Echlin</p>
        <p>ElPaw</p>
        <p>EmerEI</p>
        <p>EngMC</p>
        <p>Ensrch</p>
        <p>Esmrk</p>
        <p>Ethyl</p>
        <p>EvansP</p>
        <p>Exxon</p>
        <p>FMC</p>
        <p>FairCm</p>
        <p>Fairind</p>
        <p>Faddars</p>
        <p>FedNMt</p>
        <p>FadDSt</p>
        <p>FIrastn</p>
        <p>FtChrt</p>
        <p>FstChk</p>
        <p>FtlnBn</p>
        <p>FlaetEnt</p>
        <p>FlaPL</p>
        <p>FlaPow</p>
        <p>FliforCp</p>
        <p>FXOFair</p>
        <p>FordMn</p>
        <p>ForAAcK</p>
        <p>FrankM</p>
        <p>FrpMln</p>
        <p>Frwahf</p>
        <p>GAFCp</p>
        <p>Gannett</p>
        <p>GnCabla</p>
        <p>GanOyn</p>
        <p>GanEI</p>
        <p>GnFds</p>
        <p>Gan Inst</p>
        <p>GnMiils</p>
        <p>GnMot</p>
        <p>GPU</p>
        <p>GTalEI</p>
        <p>GTira</p>
        <p>Oanasco</p>
        <p>GaPac</p>
        <p>Getty</p>
        <p>GibrtFn</p>
        <p>Gillette</p>
        <p>Goodrti</p>
        <p>Goodyr</p>
        <p>GouM</p>
        <p>Grace</p>
        <p>GtAtPc</p>
        <p>GtWnFin</p>
        <p>GrGiant</p>
        <p>Greyh</p>
        <p>GIfWstn</p>
        <p>24to...</p>
        <p>Tk.....</p>
        <p>5594 -284 36to- 99 34 + V9 17to- to 21to- to 46to+ 94 68  64to  66to+2to</p>
        <p>2289  22&amp;lt;A  2299+  to</p>
        <p>1.80  1080  37to  3599  3594-lto</p>
        <p>60  442  Wto  19to+  99</p>
        <p>- 0-0 -</p>
        <p>1  1021  3889  37to  38-94</p>
        <p>750 U47&amp;gt;to  4494  46to  to</p>
        <p>,50b  XlU  1789  1694  17 - 94</p>
        <p>1.46  S39u21to  2094  21to+  V</p>
        <p>1.20  3423  2994  2794  28to-199</p>
        <p>1.60  436  28to  2799  2794- to</p>
        <p>.70  734  36to  35to  3594- to</p>
        <p>.40  497  2399  2289  23'A+ 99</p>
        <p>1.45  1472U1799  1689</p>
        <p>1.10  2832 3399d3!to S988 4699 46</p>
        <p>.16b  x2452 3794  ^</p>
        <p>.56  1082  12to  )199</p>
        <p>1.20  5995  3694 d33to</p>
        <p>.80 1652 4694 4599</p>
        <p>5 1011 llTto I1489,n6to-lto</p>
        <p>1.60 2032  2294  22  2299-  to</p>
        <p>1.72 1032  TV/2  1989  20to-  to</p>
        <p>- E-B -</p>
        <p>1273  799  Tto  7to- 99</p>
        <p>.00 1296  24V9  2399  2394+  to</p>
        <p>1.60a 4139  60to  5794  5999-  to</p>
        <p>2 916  4499  43V9  4399-  to</p>
        <p>.60 X613  2489  24V9  2484 +  84</p>
        <p>1.10 3277  u20  19to  1999-  to</p>
        <p>1 673  35  34  3499-  99</p>
        <p>1.20 1430 3094 d2999 3099</p>
        <p>1.80 441  3399  Mto  33 .....</p>
        <p>1.76 1534  35  3094  31to-3to</p>
        <p>1.70  86  4399  42A  42to-  84</p>
        <p>.60 1546  14V4  13&amp;gt;/z  14 +  to</p>
        <p>3 6256  5394  5299  53to + l</p>
        <p>- F-F </p>
        <p>1 644  27to  26to</p>
        <p>.80 1258  2799  2594</p>
        <p>.30 1967U1S1A J399 1010  5to  d 499</p>
        <p>1  3671  17V9  16to</p>
        <p>1.44 XI387 3789 36</p>
        <p>1.10 x1010 20to 19to .15r 1719 17to 17</p>
        <p>.96  804  19to  Wto</p>
        <p>1.20  258  4084  40to  4094+  to</p>
        <p>.46  X769  11';?'  1094  11 +  to</p>
        <p>1.56  2716  27to  2684  27   to</p>
        <p>2.28  1046  34to  3399  3399-  H</p>
        <p>1  770  4199  40  40V*1</p>
        <p>189  *99  6 6to- A</p>
        <p>4578  U47to  4589  4684+  to</p>
        <p>1  906 uWto  1799  18 +  to</p>
        <p>.74  2449  1199  11  1194-  to</p>
        <p>1.60  1150  )4tod2394  24  -  to</p>
        <p>1.80  X329  30to  2999  30to+  to</p>
        <p>- G-G -</p>
        <p>.60  496  llto  W/3</p>
        <p>IJO  674  36to</p>
        <p>.72  412  1399</p>
        <p>WOO 60to</p>
        <p>2.20  4047  5694</p>
        <p>1A4  1714  34</p>
        <p>.36t  850  20to</p>
        <p>.88 X1945 30 6.55e 5690 TOto</p>
        <p>PPG</p>
        <p>PPG wl</p>
        <p>PacGE</p>
        <p>PacLtg</p>
        <p>PacPw</p>
        <p>PacTT</p>
        <p>PanAm</p>
        <p>PanEP</p>
        <p>Penney</p>
        <p>PaPL</p>
        <p>Pennzo)</p>
        <p>PepsiCo</p>
        <p>Parkins</p>
        <p>Pfizer</p>
        <p>PhelpD</p>
        <p>PhiiaEl</p>
        <p>PhilMr</p>
        <p>PhilPat</p>
        <p>PitnayB</p>
        <p>Pittstn</p>
        <p>Pnaumo</p>
        <p>Polaroid</p>
        <p>PortGE</p>
        <p>ProctG</p>
        <p>PSvCol</p>
        <p>PSvEG</p>
        <p>PgSPL</p>
        <p>Pulimn</p>
        <p>Purax</p>
        <p>QuakOat</p>
        <p>QvaKStO</p>
        <p>RCA</p>
        <p>RalsPur</p>
        <p>Ramad</p>
        <p>Rancoln</p>
        <p>Raythn</p>
        <p>RaadBat</p>
        <p>RaichCh</p>
        <p>RepSti</p>
        <p>RasrvOil</p>
        <p>Revlon</p>
        <p>Reynin</p>
        <p>RayMat</p>
        <p>RiteAkj</p>
        <p>Robins</p>
        <p>Rockwi</p>
        <p>Rohrlnd</p>
        <p>Rorar</p>
        <p>RoyCCol</p>
        <p>RoylD</p>
        <p>RyderS</p>
        <p>27 - to 271A + 1 15to+199</p>
        <p>484.....</p>
        <p>Uto- 99 37to- 99 1994- to 17to+ to 19to+ to</p>
        <p>as'to</p>
        <p>1299</p>
        <p>5794</p>
        <p>5589</p>
        <p>Mto</p>
        <p>1999</p>
        <p>29to</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>1099-1 3699+ 94 13A+ to 59to+ 94 56to- to 3399- to 2099+ 99 29to- to 6884-lto</p>
        <p>1.68  X203 ) 2099  1994  1994 -  99</p>
        <p>2  3025 M84  3299  3399-  to</p>
        <p>1.30b  579 29to  2899  2S99-  94</p>
        <p>214  489  494  494-  to</p>
        <p>.80b 4833 Mto 3099 3094-199 2.90a  337 306to 200to  20594 + 294</p>
        <p>530 1099  Wto  )0*to-  to</p>
        <p>IJO 2774 2999</p>
        <p>1.12 1140 37Vi 1.W 3427 3094</p>
        <p>1.12 1974 3199</p>
        <p>1.00 2073 29to .05a X43B llto</p>
        <p>.70 1415 33&amp;gt;A</p>
        <p>1.00 444 02799 1.04a 1447 1494</p>
        <p>4004 1499</p>
        <p>28to-ito 2699- to 20 - 9k 3089- to 29to- 99 1094- 99 2294- to' 2199+2to 1494 + 89 I3to-)to</p>
        <p>SCOCP</p>
        <p>Safawy</p>
        <p>SJoMn</p>
        <p>StLSaF</p>
        <p>StRagP</p>
        <p>Sambos</p>
        <p>SFaInd</p>
        <p>SFeInt</p>
        <p>SchrPk)</p>
        <p>Schlumb</p>
        <p>ScottP</p>
        <p>SaabCL</p>
        <p>SearleG</p>
        <p>Sears</p>
        <p>Sears wi</p>
        <p>ShallOil</p>
        <p>ShaliT</p>
        <p>Shrwin</p>
        <p>Signal</p>
        <p>SImpPat</p>
        <p>Singer</p>
        <p>Skyline</p>
        <p>Smtkin</p>
        <p>SonyCp</p>
        <p>SCrEG</p>
        <p>SoCalE</p>
        <p>SouthCo</p>
        <p>Son Res</p>
        <p>SogPac</p>
        <p>SouRy</p>
        <p>SparryR</p>
        <p>SquarD</p>
        <p>Squibb</p>
        <p>StBrnd</p>
        <p>StOilCI</p>
        <p>StOInd</p>
        <p>StOilOh</p>
        <p>StaufCh</p>
        <p>SterlDg</p>
        <p>Stavanj</p>
        <p>Stuwor</p>
        <p>SunCo</p>
        <p>GIfWstn wt 3133 9-Ud 99 IS M-S-M</p>
        <p>GutfOll</p>
        <p>GNStUt</p>
        <p>GuHUfd</p>
        <p>28 - to</p>
        <p>\3&amp;gt;/2.....</p>
        <p>)3to- 99</p>
        <p>Hatlibrt</p>
        <p>Hercuias</p>
        <p>HauWin</p>
        <p>HewttPk</p>
        <p>Holiday</p>
        <p>HeilyS</p>
        <p>Honwll</p>
        <p>MowshF</p>
        <p>HOMln</p>
        <p>HOUtNG</p>
        <p>HowdJn</p>
        <p>HugbsTI</p>
        <p>46-89 Wto-1 2494-lto 7899-199 14 - to 19 - to 39to + lto 5394-lto 30 - to 3394 to Mto-lto 1089+ to 42 - to</p>
        <p>1.80 4570 MM 1.12 1818 1394 1399 M xSt7 1394 1294</p>
        <p>1 3081 o67A 65to 1 6491 Ittodll 1.M 1850 36to 2499 .40 1305 8189 7799 .44 3802 14to 14 .80 157 W89 1894</p>
        <p>1 7*4 3999 3789 1A0 1732 55 53to 1.30 874 SO'A 1594 1.74 1750 3499 33to</p>
        <p>JO 15U 34to 3199 .M X27511  W99</p>
        <p>JO  727 04394  4199</p>
        <p> I-I -^ 1J2 344 2694 26to INACp ^0 2.38 839 4*to 45 lUtntI  .90  142D Wto 1794</p>
        <p>idahoP 2.U 513 30to 28 IdealBa IJO 325 2194 2199 ImplCp .40 W15 U 15to INCO 1.40a 1270 2*94 2589 2*to- to inaxco JSa .4M3u2n4 2394 28to+299 2J0  1204  7299  49  49to~3to</p>
        <p>2J0 530 4099 03989 40to- to 2.20  210  2399  3199  3299-lto</p>
        <p>W 4*57 31089 341  36199-499</p>
        <p>.40  *05  3199  2099  21to+ to</p>
        <p>1JS  Mtf2  3494  3399  3394- 94</p>
        <p>3J0  407  4799  42  42*A+ to</p>
        <p>2 3921 5799 04594 58&amp;gt;A-2to 1.70  383  24to  3589  35*9- .94</p>
        <p>J8 873u25to 36to 2889+199 IJ8  131  27to  2114  27*to+ to</p>
        <p>IClndS</p>
        <p>36to- 99 4594- to 13to+ to 2B94+ to 2199- to 1599.</p>
        <p>TRW</p>
        <p>TampEi</p>
        <p>TMidy</p>
        <p>Tandycft</p>
        <p>Tachnicr</p>
        <p>Taktmx</p>
        <p>Taladn</p>
        <p>Talprmt</p>
        <p>Talax</p>
        <p>Tennco</p>
        <p>Tesoro</p>
        <p>Texaco</p>
        <p>TaxEsf</p>
        <p>Tex Inst</p>
        <p>Taxint</p>
        <p>TaxOGs</p>
        <p>TxPcLd</p>
        <p>Tax Util</p>
        <p>Taxsgir</p>
        <p>Textron</p>
        <p>Thiokol</p>
        <p>Tigerint</p>
        <p>TimaMir</p>
        <p>Tlmkn</p>
        <p>TWA</p>
        <p>Transam</p>
        <p>Transco</p>
        <p>TravIrs</p>
        <p>Tricon</p>
        <p>TwanCn</p>
        <p>.80  2452 37H  3699</p>
        <p>1.20  5M 2299  2189</p>
        <p>.76  2197 u24  25&amp;gt;A</p>
        <p>2.52 478 53*A .50 187 12to .57 335 1389 IJO 666 24to 2.16 124 2089</p>
        <p>1.05 445 17 .30 M5 699</p>
        <p>1453 2089</p>
        <p>2.50 1407 3599 1.60b 2418 4199</p>
        <p>1.76  88  25V9</p>
        <p>1.94 372 U2389</p>
        <p>1.60 1559 2389 d23to 1.34 993U1694 1699</p>
        <p>1.76 1336 3094 2999</p>
        <p>1.50 208 M99 31to 1.02 1574 1194 llto 2-08 811 45to 443</p>
        <p>2.06 1021 2889 28</p>
        <p>1.20  1313  v24V*  2294  23 + 99</p>
        <p>.50  1284  25to  2499  2489+ to</p>
        <p>579  2494  2399  2494 + 1</p>
        <p>1.80 125 38to 37  37 -1 .60b 6152 Wto ITto 1794- to</p>
        <p> 00 -1.25  7326  u31to  2899  2889-2V9</p>
        <p>1.70  1742  2099  30to  2099+ &amp;gt;A</p>
        <p>1.48 XI306 IPA 1894 1899+ to 2 720 3789 37  37A- to</p>
        <p>1.50 256 47to 40to 4399+199 .72 6 1794 ITto I7to+ to</p>
        <p>1.20 X582 6799 45to 6494 + lto</p>
        <p>1.06 452 25to 2894 2894- to</p>
        <p>- P-Q -</p>
        <p>2.40 508 57to S6to 57to- to</p>
        <p>2 38  38  38 .....</p>
        <p>2 3536 24to 2394 2394.....</p>
        <p>1.68  738 u20to  1994 20to+ 99</p>
        <p>1.80 733 23  2299 2289+ to</p>
        <p>1.40 265 1899 W 1199+ to 2457  594  599  599.....</p>
        <p>2.50 788 U4594 48to 4949 + 49</p>
        <p>1.48 3623 3489 3389 3494+ to 1.92 728 U2499 2399 2499+ 99</p>
        <p>1.80 1091 35  3394 34to- 49 .10 2470 23to 2299 22to- 99 .32 1278 21to 1989 21to+lto .94 1456 2799 2594 26 -I'A</p>
        <p>2.20 1168 3094 29to 30to- 99 1.00 1334 u20to 20  2099+ to 1.65 1815 S6'A 55to 56 + to</p>
        <p>1 10362 U32to 2989 30V9-199 .80 , 619 U2199 2049 2099- 99 1a 1368 2999 28H 29 - to 1 240 W 17V9 Itto- 99 .50 1377 Mto 3094 31 -I'A</p>
        <p>1.70 759 20to 1994 20A+ to</p>
        <p>3.60 1344 8289 7599 80 -299</p>
        <p>1.46 X658 20to 15to 1589+ to</p>
        <p>1.56 796 2489 24to 2494+ V9 386U17V9 1689 17to+ to</p>
        <p>1.M 1101 Mtod31to Mto.....</p>
        <p>1.08 454 1789 ITto 1789 + 99 .92  743  2249  2189  '2189- 89</p>
        <p>.78  443&amp;gt;  Uto  1599  U .....</p>
        <p>- R-R -</p>
        <p>1.20 3462 Mto 31 31V9-lto .40 2487 1599 15  15 - to</p>
        <p>.09a X656 4  394  389+  to</p>
        <p>.80 108 2299 21to 21to- 99 X1205 U3199 d30to 3099- 94 .80 1439 U2399 2299 23*A+ to .74 319 19 19'A 19to 99</p>
        <p>1.60 7M 29tod27to 27to-194 .30 3386 3089 1999 1999- 99</p>
        <p>1 1998 4199 40to 40to+ 'A 3.28 1086 67to 6589 66&amp;gt;A- 89</p>
        <p>1.20 2793 40to 38'A 38to-3to .32 481 Uto 1519 Uto- 99 .M 736 10 d 999  989.....</p>
        <p>2.20 60S8u37'A 3194 MA-3 135  6to  589  6 .....</p>
        <p>.60 1577 1399 1294 13to+ 99 .80 362 16g4 1589 1499- to 4.01a 1847 to Sr/3 SP/2- to .15r 1495 1694 16  1699.....</p>
        <p>- ss </p>
        <p>X461 3499 23to 23V9- 89</p>
        <p>2.20 379 48  4799 4794- to</p>
        <p>1.30 563 3489 34to 34to- to</p>
        <p>2.50 122 4699 44to 4589 + 89 1.64 1850 M89d31to 3lto-lto,</p>
        <p>.48 776 1699 1589 U'A- 'A</p>
        <p>2 1547 41  3594 4099 + 94 .60 1427 56 S4to 55to- 99</p>
        <p>1.12 1746 3694 3594 36 + to .80 2783 6999 67H 6899-1 .76 143$ ITto 1694 17to+ to</p>
        <p>2 654 38to 37to 38 + 94 .52 2115 12 Wto 1299- 'A 1.80a 1873 5989 57to 5789-199 170  3989  2899  39to-  94</p>
        <p>1.60  915 u35to  33to  3499-  94</p>
        <p>.93a 33u40  39to  39to+  94</p>
        <p>2.30 109 3599 3489</p>
        <p>1.10 3120U3499 33to .50 6032 1394 10a 1277 23A M'A .32 350 1399 13</p>
        <p>1.10 928 35to 34to .07a  4786  9V9  .889</p>
        <p>1.56 9Mu20  1994 2 X2601 26to 25</p>
        <p>1.46 2700U1799 1689 US 1030 5899 56*4</p>
        <p>2.40 887 3799 3699</p>
        <p>2.60 588 55to 58</p>
        <p>1.12 X966 3799 3699</p>
        <p>1.20 392 29  2799 .96 1151 2494 2594 2589- &amp;gt;A</p>
        <p>1.28 1359 28to 26  26 -199</p>
        <p>2.40 3974 42** 4194 4189- to</p>
        <p>2.60 2811 5699 5399 54 - 'A 1.36 1055 90 88to 8899-1 1.80 792 4O99d30to 3889-199</p>
        <p>.70 2411 1489 1499 1494 V9</p>
        <p>1.20 X299 1789 ITto 1799+ to l.tf 844 49 4J 4899- 99 2J2 669 46to 43to 44to+2&amp;gt;A</p>
        <p>- T-T -</p>
        <p>1.60 W48 3PA 38  3899-1V9</p>
        <p>1.12 601 30to 1999 1599 - 99 4591  2Vk  27to  2789+  to</p>
        <p>323  1299  1089  T199+  94</p>
        <p>.40 1053 4889 3794 3599+194</p>
        <p>.30 735 3585 3494 3599.....</p>
        <p>!.4ft M83 74to 7M 7Jto+ 94 545  8to  799  789  to</p>
        <p>245  3</p>
        <p>1JI  3122  3499</p>
        <p>1  1222  1394</p>
        <p>2  5783  2599</p>
        <p>US  150 )  44to</p>
        <p>1.M  Xl555 51%</p>
        <p>6857  llto  lOto</p>
        <p>M X1755 M 2999 .3Sa 74 38  38</p>
        <p>1.40 2853 2194 Tito</p>
        <p>1.20 722 2589 2494</p>
        <p>1.40 735 U2589 28to 1 756 2594 23'A</p>
        <p>.50 774 1189 llto JO 1341 U2489 23to</p>
        <p>2.20 536 55to $4 *75  989  599</p>
        <p>J4 x2524Uto 1589 1 W55U2I94 28to</p>
        <p>1.28 1087 35 2.)4a 418 21to</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>6299</p>
        <p>78to</p>
        <p>2594</p>
        <p>48to</p>
        <p>66</p>
        <p>Texaco Inc Un Carbide Gan Motors</p>
        <p>578.300</p>
        <p>577.100</p>
        <p>569,000</p>
        <p>25H 5199 70 VI</p>
        <p>5299</p>
        <p>17to</p>
        <p>2389</p>
        <p>3194</p>
        <p>I3to</p>
        <p>2794</p>
        <p>33to</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>219^''</p>
        <p>2799</p>
        <p>$3to+ I 1794- to 24to+ to 32to- 3 13to- to 28to- 99 3394- 299 46to- I</p>
        <p>25V9- to 789</p>
        <p>USInd</p>
        <p>USStaal</p>
        <p>UnTach</p>
        <p>UniTal</p>
        <p>Upjohn</p>
        <p>USLIFE</p>
        <p>7to.....</p>
        <p>3999- to 40 -1 20to- 99 3394+ to 1794- 94</p>
        <p>Varan</p>
        <p>Veteo</p>
        <p>VaEPw</p>
        <p>1594 - 89 1789-lto 1SA+ to</p>
        <p>Wachov</p>
        <p>WaltJm</p>
        <p>WrnCom</p>
        <p>WariuL</p>
        <p>wshWT</p>
        <p>WnAIrL</p>
        <p>WnBnc</p>
        <p>WUnion</p>
        <p>WastgEI</p>
        <p>Wayorhr</p>
        <p>WhaalF</p>
        <p>Whirlpol</p>
        <p>WhjtaMt</p>
        <p>Whmakr</p>
        <p>WillUms</p>
        <p>wmno</p>
        <p>Winnbgo</p>
        <p>Wolwth</p>
        <p>.40  1759  799  Tto</p>
        <p>2.20 8775 40 d38 1.80 1619 41to 3999 1.28 I3MU1089 20to</p>
        <p>1.20 Xl345 34to 33to .48 1077 1899 1794</p>
        <p>- V-V -.28  407  2099  1999</p>
        <p>.20a  5145  1899  14</p>
        <p>1.24  2683  ISto  15</p>
        <p>- W-W^</p>
        <p>.54  280  1789  17V9</p>
        <p>1.40  369  35  33to</p>
        <p>.80  45  3199  30to</p>
        <p>f.lO  1660  2889  28V9  2899+  19</p>
        <p>1.74  111  23  22to  33  +  to</p>
        <p>.40  1155  894  8to  8*9.....</p>
        <p>, IJO  424  30  2999  29to-</p>
        <p>1.40  53  1899  1794  1?89-  to</p>
        <p>.57  4463  22to  31to</p>
        <p>.80  2460  37  3499</p>
        <p>.72 476 U3189 3099</p>
        <p>1 1072 25to 2394 675  8to  794</p>
        <p>945  594  Sto</p>
        <p>1 2151 2389 2289 1.56 228 43&amp;lt;A 295</p>
        <p>Over The Counter Stocks</p>
        <p>i7to- to 3499 +Ito 3099 - 99</p>
        <p>1.40  1?16  23  :</p>
        <p>-x-r-2-</p>
        <p>UQ  4044  49g3  47A  48to-1to</p>
        <p>.88  356  15  14to  1489+  to</p>
        <p>1  1112  22to  2094  2199+  to</p>
        <p>2199- to 35H-lto 31to+ 89 24A-l 794- to 594+ to 23to- to 43b4 43to+ 94 394  394-  to</p>
        <p>23 + to</p>
        <p>Xerox</p>
        <p>ZaleCp</p>
        <p>ZanlthR</p>
        <p>Copyright by The Associated Press 1577.</p>
        <p>What The Stock Market Did</p>
        <p>Advances Declinas unchanged Total issues New yearly highs New yearly lows</p>
        <p>Two</p>
        <p>This PWr Year Years waakwaakago ago</p>
        <p>910  1340  1106  878</p>
        <p>920  530  705  879</p>
        <p>242  245  255  336</p>
        <p>2052  2115  2066  1993</p>
        <p>302  345  238  36)</p>
        <p>62  46  41  3</p>
        <p>Waakly Numbar of Tradad Issues</p>
        <p>N.Y. Stocks  2052</p>
        <p>N.Y. Bonds  1562</p>
        <p>Amarkan Stocks  1W1</p>
        <p>American Bonds  125</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Standard and Poor's Weakly 500 Stock index:</p>
        <p>High Low Close Chg. 400 IndUSt  111.34  110.25  110.25-1.33</p>
        <p>20 Trans  14J9  14.76  14.83-0.04</p>
        <p>40 Utils  56.27  55.92  56.11-0.12</p>
        <p>40 Financial  11.98  11.93  11.93-0.08</p>
        <p>500 Stocks  100.56  100.10  100.10-1.09</p>
        <p>WEEKLY SALES</p>
        <p>This Wapk This Weak A Year Ago</p>
        <p>NY Stocks............59,110,000  98,798,523</p>
        <p>NY Bonds...........894J90.000  95JM.OOO</p>
        <p>American Stocks 14.120,000 1x.S32.380</p>
        <p>gamarican ...... 85,030.000 4,633,000</p>
        <p>Midwest Stocks.........4J40.000  5.100,000</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Dow Jones range of prices for the week andad 00.</p>
        <p>Indus Trans Utils 65 Stks</p>
        <p>STOCK AVERAGES</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; LOW Cwsa</p>
        <p>Open High Low Cwsa Chg. 524.10 524.10 9)3.65 912.65-17.05</p>
        <p>238.12 238.80 736.61 237.83-0.58 115.77 115.77 114.68 115.06-0.67</p>
        <p>314.12 314.12 311.04 311.41-3.75 BONO AVERAGES</p>
        <p>20 Bonds  92.41  52J5  92.41  52.45+O.W</p>
        <p>Utils  97.81  90.25  97.01  98.12+0.12</p>
        <p>Indus  87.01  87.05  86.83  86.86+0.08</p>
        <p>COMMODITY FUTURES INDEX 365.86 36SJ6 353.93 353.93-14J8</p>
        <p>34to- to 34 + to I3to- to 23to+ to 13 - to 34H- to</p>
        <p>9to.....</p>
        <p>1596.....</p>
        <p>25to- 'A 17to+ to 58 *+1to 37to+ to 5896+ to 36to- to 2896 + lto</p>
        <p>Over The Counter Ups And Downs</p>
        <p>296  296  to</p>
        <p>Mto 34to.....</p>
        <p>I3to I3to+ to 25to- to 45*k-} 85to-ito ioto+ to 30to-ito</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The following list shows the Over - the - Counter vstocks and warrants that have gone up me most and down the most based on percent of change regardless of valuma No securities trading below $2 are included. Net and percemaga changes are the difference between last week's closing price and this week's dosing prke.</p>
        <p>UPS</p>
        <p>name Last Chg PXCT. CocaBtlMldw 24 +1lto Up 16.4 2to 2to 3</p>
        <p>4to 2'A 2Va 4to 596 3to 796 3to</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>BX Devei 4 M6</p>
        <p>VIpontChm  3to</p>
        <p>Audtotronks 5 OafElec  696</p>
        <p>HambpHamit I EnrgyResvGp 2to</p>
        <p>Aerotron Inc American Furniture Atl Pepsi Bti.</p>
        <p>Bankers Trust of S.C. Bassett Furniture BeanxMi Eng.</p>
        <p>Bi-Lo</p>
        <p>Black (nds.</p>
        <p>BrarKh Corp Brenner Inds.</p>
        <p>Bumup B Sims Burris inds.</p>
        <p>Cannon Mills Carmine Foods Carolina Cas. ins.</p>
        <p>Car. P&amp;amp;L 5.10PFD Caro. Steel Corp Caro. Wise Florist Cato Corp Central Caro. Bank Central Vermont Chatham Mfg.</p>
        <p>C&amp;amp;S Corp. of S.C. Coca-Cola Co Const. Cochrane Firm Colonial Life C4.B Comm Bk of Caro Conner Homes Context</p>
        <p>Daniel Internat. Diamondhead Corp Durham Life Ins. Engraph Inc.</p>
        <p>Fidelity Corp. of Va. FNB of Catawba Food' Towm Farmers New World First Union Corp Forsyth Bank &amp;amp; Trust FrarAlin Life Ins.  GnfTan Corp. Herrelson Rubber Heilig Meyers Henredwi Fum.</p>
        <p>Hickory Furn independence Ntl. Bank invt. Life &amp;amp; Trust J. B. Ivey Justin Inds.</p>
        <p>Kenan Transport Lance inc.</p>
        <p>Lane Co.</p>
        <p>Leggett &amp;amp; Platt Little Mint Lowe's Co.</p>
        <p>Mack's Stores Mom &amp;amp; Pop's Multimedia NCNB Corp.</p>
        <p>NC Natural Gas Northwest Fin. Corp. Northwest Fin inv Uts Occidental Life Ins PCA Intl. Inc.</p>
        <p>PRF Corp.</p>
        <p>Pabst Brewihg Co. Peopis B&amp;amp;T Rky Mt Piece Goods Shops Piedmont Aviation Piedmont REIT SBi Pinkerton CLB Pints Ntl Bk Rky Mt Pub Svc of NC Oualijly Mills RMIC Corp. Reid-Provdnt Labs Republic Auto Parts RIngaround Prod Roses Stores Com. Salem Carpet Svc. Merchandise Shoneys inc.</p>
        <p>Sonoco Products SC Natl. Corp.</p>
        <p>Sou. Natl. Corp.</p>
        <p>Super Dollar Stores Telerent Leasing Textiles inc.</p>
        <p>Thalhimer Bros. Triangle Brick Trion Inc Unit) inc</p>
        <p>Un Caro Banchshs Va. international Va. Natl. Bank B. B. Walker Shoes White Shield Co.</p>
        <p>Wlx Corp.</p>
        <p>Wright AAachinery</p>
        <p>2to</p>
        <p>2196</p>
        <p>17.. 17A</p>
        <p>Ito</p>
        <p>33to</p>
        <p>96</p>
        <p>14.. 8to</p>
        <p>4to</p>
        <p>Ito</p>
        <p>16to</p>
        <p>Ito</p>
        <p>4to</p>
        <p>103..</p>
        <p>23..</p>
        <p>500.. 5..</p>
        <p>20.. )5to llto ISV* 12.</p>
        <p>34to</p>
        <p>Ito</p>
        <p>15..</p>
        <p>5to</p>
        <p>4to</p>
        <p>2to-</p>
        <p>ITto</p>
        <p>ito</p>
        <p>5..</p>
        <p>4..</p>
        <p>1096</p>
        <p>lOto</p>
        <p>496</p>
        <p>Ito</p>
        <p>28..</p>
        <p>5..</p>
        <p>27to</p>
        <p>6to</p>
        <p>5to</p>
        <p>21..</p>
        <p>1596</p>
        <p>17A</p>
        <p>16'/*</p>
        <p>1296</p>
        <p>496</p>
        <p>llto</p>
        <p>14..</p>
        <p>1896</p>
        <p>36.. I3to</p>
        <p>19.. 23to</p>
        <p>3to</p>
        <p>5..</p>
        <p>9.. 16V*</p>
        <p>Sto</p>
        <p>24.</p>
        <p>296</p>
        <p>Bto</p>
        <p>21.</p>
        <p>llto</p>
        <p>23to</p>
        <p>17.. 13to</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>3296</p>
        <p>496</p>
        <p>3to</p>
        <p>24to</p>
        <p>11.. 1196 Tto 4'A 3to</p>
        <p>5to</p>
        <p>196</p>
        <p>29to</p>
        <p>9/1</p>
        <p>28V*</p>
        <p>6to</p>
        <p>4to</p>
        <p>15.. 1996</p>
        <p>38.. 1396 20to 23to</p>
        <p>3to</p>
        <p>596</p>
        <p>996</p>
        <p>17.. 596</p>
        <p>25to</p>
        <p>3to</p>
        <p>8to</p>
        <p>2196</p>
        <p>llto</p>
        <p>24..</p>
        <p>IB..</p>
        <p>14V*</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>23to</p>
        <p>5to</p>
        <p>4to</p>
        <p>25to</p>
        <p>llto</p>
        <p>12'A</p>
        <p>7to</p>
        <p>496</p>
        <p>2to</p>
        <p>23to</p>
        <p>28..</p>
        <p>296</p>
        <p>Sto</p>
        <p>4to</p>
        <p>2996</p>
        <p>ISi/</p>
        <p>llto</p>
        <p>496</p>
        <p>1196</p>
        <p>3to</p>
        <p>596</p>
        <p>11.. 2to</p>
        <p>I3to</p>
        <p>1496</p>
        <p>30to</p>
        <p>17.. 9/1</p>
        <p>S..</p>
        <p>4to</p>
        <p>1696</p>
        <p>896</p>
        <p>496</p>
        <p>696</p>
        <p>13.. 29to</p>
        <p>21.. 496 Ito</p>
        <p>14V*</p>
        <p>5V</p>
        <p>......</p>
        <p>Mutual Funds</p>
        <p>WEEKLY INVESTING COMPANIES NEW YORK (AP) - Wwkty Investing</p>
        <p>COMPLETES REQUIREMENTS</p>
        <p>W.M. Scales of Integon Life Insurance Corp. has completed all the requlremenU to be certified as a member of the "T(^ of the Table segment of the 1977 Million Dollar Round Table.</p>
        <p>The MDRT is an lndependit, international association of life insurance agents. The Top of the Table designation Is reserved for MDRT members sold more than $5 million of insurance protection in 1976.</p>
        <p>Among all life insurance representatives in the world tat year, Scales, whose protection volume totaled more tfaaq )8 million, ranked among the upper one tenth of one per cent.</p>
        <p>Convuntos givlng th* high, tow ond last prko* for tht WMk with th* n*f chaog* from fh* pr*vlou* w**k't last ^Tk*. All quof^iont. tuppllod by th* Natlervkt Association of $*curlfl*s Otstors, inc.. r*ft*ct nt asMf valu**. at whkh McurlflM could hav* b**n told.</p>
        <p>High Law Last Chg 6.04  5.56  S.54-  .12</p>
        <p>16.22 U.11 14.22+ .11 5.5*  9.44</p>
        <p>7.44 13.12 5.3</p>
        <p>4.SI 10.17 14.01 5.20</p>
        <p>AGE Fund AcomPd n Advantnv n Aatna Fund Atmalncem Shr</p>
        <p>AfuturaFO Stk</p>
        <p>AllttateSti Alpha Fund AmBirthrght Tr AmEqulty Fd Amarkan Funds: Am Balanca</p>
        <p>7.41</p>
        <p>13.01</p>
        <p>5.24</p>
        <p>4.54</p>
        <p>10.11</p>
        <p>5.97</p>
        <p>5.14</p>
        <p>5.41</p>
        <p>.11 7.43- .03 13.01- .01 5.31+ .03</p>
        <p>4.54- .04 10.83- .47</p>
        <p>5.54- .04 5.14- .04</p>
        <p>HOBIE BUILDERS CONVENTION</p>
        <p>The North Carolina Home Builders Association will hold its 14th annual convention July 6 -10 at the Myrtle^Beach Hilton.</p>
        <p>Attending the cmvention from the Greenville area ^Vill be Mr. and Mrs. Olie Harrington and Mr. Richard McLawhorn.</p>
        <p>Highlights of the 1977 convention will include the annual membership meeting, the Spike Luncheon and the awards banquet. During the banquet, winners of the 1977 Outstanding Design Awards competition will be announced and the Builder of the Year will be presented.</p>
        <p>' Amcap Fund AmMi  </p>
        <p>TOMAwaniTjan</p>
        <p>Vice-President Kenneth Edwards announced the opening of a new Shoe Show store Friday in the Greenville Square shopping center. Store hours will be from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday throu^ Saturday.</p>
        <p>David Nash, 21, of Monroe will manage the store. Nash, a speech graduate from ECU, trained for six months in Raleigh before coming to Greenville.</p>
        <p>Shoe Show Inc. and its affiliates now boast yearly sales in excess of 98 rauiion, with a total of 45 shoe stores and 15 clothing stores.</p>
        <p>HUNGATES OPENS IN RALEIGH</p>
        <p>Hungates Inc.. a local hobby, craft and art supply store, an nounces the opening of its third store in Crabtree Valley.M! ia</p>
        <p>iWutual Fd SondFd Am CapFd Am GrowtbFd Am lncomFd Am InvCoA N*wP*rp Fd WaihMutI Inv Am*r G*n*ral: AG*nC4N&amp;gt; Bd AGnCp Gtb AG*n Incom* AG*n V*ntur* Equity Orth FundOf Am Prpvld*fit Fd AmOrowth Fd Am insBind - .  ^  AmlnvMtor  n</p>
        <p>AhiwMtTElppTi'" ^ AmNat Growth Anchor Group: Oailylncom n y .Qrm^ Pvn -incoma Spactrum Fundm invast WaNiing Nat Audax Fund AXa Houghton: Fund B Incm Fnd Stock Fund BLC OrowthFd BabaooIncom n Babionlnvmt n BoaconHillMt n Baaconlnv n _ Group:</p>
        <p>100 Fund n</p>
        <p>101 Pundn BwicshireCap Bondstock Cp BostFound Fd Calvin Bullock:</p>
        <p>Bullock Fund Canadian Fnd Divtdand Shrs Morrmiy Incm Nation Widas NY Vanture CG Fund CG incomaFd CapPrasvFd n CanturyShr Tr Chailangar Inv ChartarFd Inc Chasa Gr Bos:</p>
        <p>4.14</p>
        <p>5.72</p>
        <p>10.04</p>
        <p>15.01</p>
        <p>4.41</p>
        <p>4J4</p>
        <p>14.41</p>
        <p>14.14</p>
        <p>4.13</p>
        <p>5.44</p>
        <p>5.50</p>
        <p>15.04</p>
        <p>4.37</p>
        <p>4.41</p>
        <p>14.39</p>
        <p>14.57 14.47 4.43  6.74</p>
        <p>1.13- .03 5.72+ .04 .0- .16</p>
        <p>15J6.....</p>
        <p>6.37- .03 4.44+ .03 16.3- .24 14.0 U.13- .01 14J6+C.03</p>
        <p>6.40- .04</p>
        <p>5.16</p>
        <p>4.13</p>
        <p>6.72</p>
        <p>13.41</p>
        <p>6.61</p>
        <p>4.70</p>
        <p>4.04</p>
        <p>5.41</p>
        <p>5.25</p>
        <p>12.77</p>
        <p>2.52</p>
        <p>9.12</p>
        <p>4.10</p>
        <p>4.71</p>
        <p>12.33 4.54 4.44 4.04 5.15 5.20 5J9</p>
        <p>13.34 3.49</p>
        <p>9.14+ .04 4.10- .03</p>
        <p>4.72.....</p>
        <p>12.33.....</p>
        <p>4.57- .04 4.44- .05</p>
        <p>4.04.....</p>
        <p>5.41+ .02 $.22- .02 S.91- .01 12J4- .44 2.53.....</p>
        <p>GnEISSP n</p>
        <p>34.55</p>
        <p>0nSacurlt n</p>
        <p>5.42</p>
        <p>Growthind n</p>
        <p>17.42</p>
        <p>Hamilton:</p>
        <p>Fund HOA</p>
        <p>4.22</p>
        <p>Growth Fund</p>
        <p>4.54</p>
        <p>incom*</p>
        <p>7.50</p>
        <p>HartwaitOrth n</p>
        <p>11.75</p>
        <p>H*rtwimv*f</p>
        <p>4.35</p>
        <p>H*rltag* Fund</p>
        <p>1J3</p>
        <p>HoMlngTrutt n</p>
        <p>IJO</p>
        <p>Hor*c*M*nn Fd</p>
        <p>15.44</p>
        <p>ISI Group:</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>4.42</p>
        <p>Incom*</p>
        <p>3.47</p>
        <p>Trust Shafts</p>
        <p>10.41</p>
        <p>Trust Units</p>
        <p>2.17</p>
        <p>industry Fund</p>
        <p>3.10</p>
        <p>int Invastors</p>
        <p>7.41</p>
        <p>InvastGuli n</p>
        <p>5.21</p>
        <p>InvstlndlcHn</p>
        <p>1.51</p>
        <p>lnvstTr Bos</p>
        <p>9.11</p>
        <p>Inv Courwal:</p>
        <p>Capamarka</p>
        <p>4.40</p>
        <p>CapltShrs inc</p>
        <p>4.25</p>
        <p>invastors Group:</p>
        <p>IDS Bond</p>
        <p>4.00</p>
        <p>IDS Growth</p>
        <p>5J5</p>
        <p>IDS NawDIm</p>
        <p>4.75</p>
        <p>Mutual me</p>
        <p>5.15</p>
        <p>Profpasslv*</p>
        <p>3.15</p>
        <p>TaxExampt</p>
        <p>5J2</p>
        <p>Stock</p>
        <p>19.00</p>
        <p>Salactiv*</p>
        <p>9.57</p>
        <p>u</p>
        <p>:f.ii</p>
        <p>24.30- .U 5J1 .10 17.52- .13</p>
        <p>4.15  4.15-  .80</p>
        <p>4.47  4J7-  .00</p>
        <p>7.40  7.10-  .09</p>
        <p>1.44 11.75.....</p>
        <p>4.29  4.32-  ..04</p>
        <p>/1.42+ .01</p>
        <p>1.00.....</p>
        <p>15.20- .20</p>
        <p>1.99</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>5.34</p>
        <p>4.31</p>
        <p>3J4</p>
        <p>|0J7</p>
        <p>2.44</p>
        <p>3.08</p>
        <p>7.54 ^.1 5.14</p>
        <p>4.41+ -01</p>
        <p>3Ji.....</p>
        <p>10J7- .02</p>
        <p>2J4.....</p>
        <p>3.01- .01 .42+ .12 .14- .03 1J9- .03 9.72- .10</p>
        <p>1.37</p>
        <p>4.24</p>
        <p>4.40+ .03 4.25+ .03</p>
        <p>VariaMa Pay</p>
        <p>invaat RatMrch i*t*lFund Inc IvyFund n JP GrowfhFd JanutFund n John Hancock:</p>
        <p>6J2</p>
        <p>5.45 20.35</p>
        <p>4.13 10 JS</p>
        <p>11.45</p>
        <p>5.55</p>
        <p>.5.47</p>
        <p>U.73</p>
        <p>5.14</p>
        <p>3.11</p>
        <p>4.55</p>
        <p>tOJ2</p>
        <p>'5JS</p>
        <p>14.44</p>
        <p>;5.37</p>
        <p>9.H</p>
        <p>4.07</p>
        <p>tO.S2</p>
        <p>14.27</p>
        <p>5.55.....</p>
        <p>5J4- .01 4.74- .02 5.14- .05 3.11- .05 5.01+ .02</p>
        <p>11.44- .14 5.55- .01</p>
        <p>4.44- .05 5.37- .06</p>
        <p>15.54- .40 4.07- .04 14 J2- .17 14.44+ .13</p>
        <p>1.00 . A53 7.53 4.43 4.45 10.14 4.13</p>
        <p>1.00 1.00.....</p>
        <p>4.44:</p>
        <p>7.51  7J3-  .01</p>
        <p>4.40  4.40-  .04</p>
        <p>4.75  4.75-  .07</p>
        <p>10.02  10.02-  .12</p>
        <p>1.04  4.12-  .03</p>
        <p>4.21</p>
        <p>5.05</p>
        <p>4.00</p>
        <p>10.51</p>
        <p>1.40</p>
        <p>9.33</p>
        <p>4.44</p>
        <p>9.44</p>
        <p>4.04  1.04-  .15</p>
        <p>5.04  5.05+  .0)</p>
        <p>5.93  5.94-  .06</p>
        <p>10.77  10.51+  .11</p>
        <p>1.80 IJO.....</p>
        <p>5.24- .11 8.52- .16 9.35- .09</p>
        <p>5J4</p>
        <p>8J3</p>
        <p>5.34</p>
        <p>7.46</p>
        <p>9.43</p>
        <p>8.02</p>
        <p>4.90</p>
        <p>9.65</p>
        <p>7J4.</p>
        <p>9.40</p>
        <p>7.57'</p>
        <p>4.86</p>
        <p>9.61</p>
        <p>7.46+ .03 9.46-'.</p>
        <p>7.98- .05 4.46- .07 9.61- .03</p>
        <p>13.02</p>
        <p>7.69</p>
        <p>3.06</p>
        <p>14.50</p>
        <p>10.14</p>
        <p>11.44</p>
        <p>9.73</p>
        <p>4.74 1.00</p>
        <p>11.80</p>
        <p>12.98 12.58- .11 7J4  7.49+  .02</p>
        <p>3.05- .03 14.44+ .0) 10.16- .04</p>
        <p>11.45- .07 5.65- .07 4.72- .01 1.00.....</p>
        <p>n.74- .M 10JO- .04</p>
        <p>14.45- .11</p>
        <p>llungate's Was founded m GreenvBtelnfWtr its first store on Cotanche St. In October of that year the PltC Plaza Shopping center. The secona store, openea m i975, is located in the Ltmgleaf Mall in Wilmington.</p>
        <p>The store in Raleigh occupies 3,600 sq. ft. of space. Robert B. Hungate and Scott B. Hungate are president and viceprestdent of the corporation, respectively. All officers of the corporatlop reside in Greenville.</p>
        <p>n .11</p>
        <p>By Tha Aisoclatad Press</p>
        <p>Quotations from the National Association of Securities Dealers are representative interdesler prices as of approximately 3 p.m. daily. Prices do not include retail mark-up, mark-down or commission.</p>
        <p>Bid Askad</p>
        <p>2to 3to 2to 23to 18.. 18..</p>
        <p>FREE ROAD MAPS</p>
        <p>Amoco Oil Co. is bucking the road map trend, and advertising revenue is making it possible.</p>
        <p>While other major oil companies have begun selling maps or have reduced map quantity or detail, road map advertising revenue has helpwl Amoco remain committed to its policy of-distributing free full-size road maps to motorists.</p>
        <p>Amoco, vdiich distributes 20 million free road maps yearly to motorists through its 24,500 service stations, offers travelers 72 titles  the largest number of full-size map titles available free at service stations.</p>
        <p>COMPLETES WORKSHOP Steve Whitt of 260&amp;amp;E. Tenth St. in Greenville has completed a merchandising management training workshop at the J.C. Penny Training Center in Atlanta, Ga. The course emphasizes the role of the merchandiser in the store, merchandising principles and systems and such management processes as objectives- setting, planning, organizing, leading and controlling at the first-level management assignment.</p>
        <p>During the five-day course, Whitt worked with J.C. Penny associates from throu^out the eastern and southern United States. He is currently a management trainee at the Pitt Plaza J.C. Penny store and has been with the company since 1974.</p>
        <p>CTR^kal Fu6d</p>
        <p>7.17</p>
        <p>7.11</p>
        <p>7.11-</p>
        <p>.07</p>
        <p>CNAMgamt Fds:</p>
        <p>Liberty Fund</p>
        <p>4.53</p>
        <p>4.45</p>
        <p>4.45</p>
        <p>.09</p>
        <p>Manhattan Fd</p>
        <p>2.51</p>
        <p>2.4*</p>
        <p>2.48- .03</p>
        <p>Schuster Fd</p>
        <p>7.58</p>
        <p>7.91</p>
        <p>7.54-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>Colonial:</p>
        <p>Convartlbla</p>
        <p>5.03</p>
        <p>4.99</p>
        <p>9.00- .02</p>
        <p>Fund</p>
        <p>9.39</p>
        <p>9.39-</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>Grwth Shr</p>
        <p>4.65</p>
        <p>4.65 .04</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>8.44</p>
        <p>4.82</p>
        <p>8.84+.</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;3ptionlnc</p>
        <p>11.70</p>
        <p>11J5</p>
        <p>11.66-</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>ColumbGrth n</p>
        <p>15.46</p>
        <p>15.5*</p>
        <p>15.59-</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>ComwthTr AAB</p>
        <p>1.03</p>
        <p>1.01</p>
        <p>1.01-</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>ComwithTr C</p>
        <p>1.52</p>
        <p>1.50</p>
        <p>1.50- .02</p>
        <p>Composite B&amp;amp;S</p>
        <p>9.15</p>
        <p>9.10</p>
        <p>9.10-</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>ComiMMlte Fd</p>
        <p>7.59</p>
        <p>7.46</p>
        <p>7.46- .14</p>
        <p>ConcordFd n</p>
        <p>13.14</p>
        <p>13.02</p>
        <p>13.02-</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>Consolldat Inv</p>
        <p>10.25</p>
        <p>10.12</p>
        <p>W.12- .13</p>
        <p>ConstellnGth n</p>
        <p>6.04</p>
        <p>5.99</p>
        <p>5.95-</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>6.34</p>
        <p>6.24</p>
        <p>6.24-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>CountryCap In</p>
        <p>11.77</p>
        <p>11.64</p>
        <p>11.70-</p>
        <p>.09</p>
        <p>DavidgeFund n</p>
        <p>7.91</p>
        <p>7.88</p>
        <p>7.84-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>deVeghtAAut n</p>
        <p>31.26</p>
        <p>31.00</p>
        <p>31.00-</p>
        <p>.34</p>
        <p>Delaware Group;</p>
        <p>Decatur Inc</p>
        <p>12J5</p>
        <p>12.64</p>
        <p>12.67-</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>Delaware Fd</p>
        <p>11.65</p>
        <p>11.49</p>
        <p>11.49-</p>
        <p>.20</p>
        <p>Oelchesfer Bd</p>
        <p>5.3</p>
        <p>9.39</p>
        <p>9.39-</p>
        <p>.21</p>
        <p>Delta Trend</p>
        <p>5.06</p>
        <p>5.02</p>
        <p>5.05..</p>
        <p>Directors Cap</p>
        <p>4.33</p>
        <p>4.24</p>
        <p>4.33+</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>OodgCoxBal n</p>
        <p>22.33</p>
        <p>22.29</p>
        <p>22.33-</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>DodgCxStk n</p>
        <p>16.05</p>
        <p>16.03</p>
        <p>16.05- .10</p>
        <p>DraxIBurnhm n</p>
        <p>5.53</p>
        <p>9J4</p>
        <p>9.90-</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>Dreyfus Grp:</p>
        <p>Dreyfus</p>
        <p>12.21</p>
        <p>12.11</p>
        <p>12.12- .09</p>
        <p>Equity n</p>
        <p>5.70</p>
        <p>5.65</p>
        <p>5.70+</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>Leverage</p>
        <p>16.50</p>
        <p>I6J2</p>
        <p>16.50+ .12</p>
        <p>LlquldAtMt n Sp*cllncom n TaxExempt n Third CJntury EagleGrth Shr El</p>
        <p>10.00</p>
        <p>7.44</p>
        <p>15.91</p>
        <p>13.77</p>
        <p>10.66</p>
        <p>10.00</p>
        <p>7.40</p>
        <p>15.49</p>
        <p>13.42</p>
        <p>10.57</p>
        <p>10.00.....</p>
        <p>7.40- .03 15.91+ .03 13.42- .31 10.65+ .07</p>
        <p>SAVINGS BREAK RECORD</p>
        <p>Savings inflows and lending activity at North Carolina savings and loan associations set new record highs for the month of May. These devel(q)ments are shown by figures reported to the Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta which is the regional reserve bank for savings associations in the Southeast.</p>
        <p>North Carolinas member associations experienced a savings increase of $62.7 million, surpassing the previous May high of $58.4 milliffli posted last year. New savings received by these associations amounted to $231.5 million while withdrawals totaled $168.8 million.</p>
        <p>Mortgage lending activity continued to reflect recent heavy savings inflows and set a new record hi^ for the month. Loan closings amounted to $190.6 million in May, topping by approximately $42.5 million the previous record registered a year ago.</p>
        <p>lOto</p>
        <p>23to</p>
        <p>30.. 3to 6to</p>
        <p>5.. 31to</p>
        <p>17.. 12to</p>
        <p>9Vi</p>
        <p>12to</p>
        <p>4to</p>
        <p>loto</p>
        <p>4to</p>
        <p>12..</p>
        <p>3.. 13to ISto 31 to</p>
        <p>18.. 16V S/i 5..</p>
        <p>ITto</p>
        <p>9to</p>
        <p>5to</p>
        <p>7to</p>
        <p>Tto</p>
        <p>Uto</p>
        <p>aoto</p>
        <p>22..</p>
        <p>5*to~</p>
        <p>Ito</p>
        <p>14to</p>
        <p>iV/i</p>
        <p>J*t AirFreight GatoxyO Tfwt H*rt5vliKl* UnJmtdlnc Mkfwect Corp Tuck*r Drill S*iacom D*lt HelllgMeyvr EchoOii Corp Gri Datocom Archi* Eflttrp Cort</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>+ to + 1 + Ito + to + to + Ij + 2to + 1 + 2to + to + to + I + to + Ito + Ito + Ito to</p>
        <p>27to</p>
        <p>WyomlngNt wt 6 CambrdMem 2to OoakPharmci Graphk Arts AfTikor Inc MrkProdt UnivMtg Rlty</p>
        <p>ing*rR</p>
        <p>InMdStt</p>
        <p>IBM imFiav IntHarv IntMin li</p>
        <p>nrrr</p>
        <p>towaB#</p>
        <p>UALlnc</p>
        <p>UAACInd</p>
        <p>UVind</p>
        <p>UfiCarb</p>
        <p>UnElac</p>
        <p>Unocal</p>
        <p>UFacC</p>
        <p>Unlroyal</p>
        <p>(MBrand</p>
        <p>UnffCp</p>
        <p>UnNucir</p>
        <p>USOypa</p>
        <p>.50 978 23to 21to</p>
        <p>_ u-U -</p>
        <p>J4 2065 20to I5to 1 324vl5to 15 1 252 15to Ifto 2J0 5771 51tod4lto 1.36 &amp;gt;048 14to 15to 2.30 210* 55  995</p>
        <p>1.7D 2320 JIto Sto JO 1142 11 lOto W5 Oto fto J4* 41* lOto WJ IJOt xTIO 4Bto 39 IJO 403 34  23</p>
        <p>2ito- to 24to-1 2lto- to 25/*+ to llto- j 24to+ito 54to- to to- to I5to+ to 2ito+i 39/1 33to-1A 30to 2ito+ to</p>
        <p>22to- to</p>
        <p>15to to 15to- to 18to- to 4*Vi-2to</p>
        <p>14 .....</p>
        <p>55 +lto 57to- to</p>
        <p>11 .....</p>
        <p>Ito- to iOto+ to 39to+ to 23to- to</p>
        <p>Name I UnHDIversifd VanDustnAIr MFYInd P*rollnd EmaranRad GieteLfaAc OnealJonsFW HITach litf FAS intt EMtrBaarm Til Corp WianarCorp Harvaoilnds Quaiinnsint Jaager Macti AtogadataCp Valmonf Ind BaJrdAfomks KindrCar*Ctr IntarcntDima MatiryRandl OpfklClgLb ParaAtodEnt AkFta Sys GatawayTran PopeEvanaR</p>
        <p>+ Ito + to 2V* +</p>
        <p>3to + to 4to + Ito 4  +  to</p>
        <p>2  +  to</p>
        <p>DOWNS Lost Chg 2to - to</p>
        <p>Ito  2to</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>to up up</p>
        <p>53.4</p>
        <p>so.o</p>
        <p>50.0</p>
        <p>47.8</p>
        <p>42.5</p>
        <p>42.5</p>
        <p>40.0</p>
        <p>39.3</p>
        <p>31.1</p>
        <p>37.8 36J</p>
        <p>33.3 32.7</p>
        <p>30.0 29J</p>
        <p>34.4 2iJ 27J</p>
        <p>34.3</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>24.4</p>
        <p>23.1</p>
        <p>23.1</p>
        <p>Dalmatian is the only known Romance language that is now extinct.</p>
        <p>VANDIFORD PROMOTED</p>
        <p>The Board of Directors of Branch Banking and Trust Company meeting in Wilson promoted C. Wayne Vandiford to assistant vice-president of the Williamston office.</p>
        <p>Following graduation from J.H. Rose Hi^ School in Greenville, Vandiford received a degree in business administration from East Carolina University. He has also earned a Standard Certificate from the American Institute of Banking.</p>
        <p>He Is a member of the Dare County Jaycees where he served as president, internal vice-president and publicity chairman. He is currently a local director and is past district director of the North Carolina Jaycees. In addition, Vandiford serves as membership chairman for the ECU Pirates Club.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Vandiford is the former</p>
        <p>Ruth HoweU 9f Rocky Mount. ^</p>
        <p>BXance Fund Foursquare n  GrowRi Fund Income Fund Special Fund Stock Fund EdieSplGth n EtfsonGId n Egret Fund ElfunTrust n Fairfield Fund Federated bfunds: Am Leaders Empire Fd Fourth Err^lr TaxFree n Fidelity Group: Corp Bond Capital Contrafund n Oailylncom n Destiny Equltytncm n Magellan MuniBond n Fidelity Puritan Salem</p>
        <p>ThrlftTrust n Trend Financial Ptog: OynamFd n industFd n IncomeFd n Fst investors: Discovery FundGrowth Income Stock Fund FstMultAm n FstMultDly n 44 WallSt n Found Growth Founders Group: Growth Income A6utual Special Frenklln Groi^: BrownFd DNTC Growth Utilities Income Sfk USGovt Sec Resrch Capit Resrch Equty FranklnLf Eqty FdForMutD n Fundpack Fund Inc Grp: commerce Fd Impact Fund Indust Trend Pilot Fund</p>
        <p>8.42</p>
        <p>8.62</p>
        <p>8.85</p>
        <p>6.24</p>
        <p>6.65</p>
        <p>9.21 16.60</p>
        <p>9.22 10.55</p>
        <p>8.27</p>
        <p>8.51</p>
        <p>8.87</p>
        <p>6.17</p>
        <p>6.57</p>
        <p>9.03</p>
        <p>16.41</p>
        <p>5.12</p>
        <p>10.48</p>
        <p>14.64 14.5* 9J4  9J1</p>
        <p>8.13</p>
        <p>19.06</p>
        <p>17.46</p>
        <p>13.12</p>
        <p>4.t)5</p>
        <p>4.05- .11 14.87 18.87- .20 17.71 17.71- .16 13.09 13.09+ .01</p>
        <p>Balance</p>
        <p>5.06</p>
        <p>Bond</p>
        <p>19.65</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>5.73</p>
        <p>JohnstnMut n</p>
        <p>20.04</p>
        <p>Kemper Funds:</p>
        <p>10.45</p>
        <p>7.44</p>
        <p>MonayMkt n</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>^micpBnd</p>
        <p>10J0</p>
        <p>SumrmtFd</p>
        <p>10.72</p>
        <p>Te^mology</p>
        <p>7J5</p>
        <p>TotRatum</p>
        <p>to.ao</p>
        <p>Keystone Funds:</p>
        <p>Apollo Fund</p>
        <p>4.07</p>
        <p>InvastBd Bl</p>
        <p>14.14</p>
        <p>MadGBd B2</p>
        <p>20.04</p>
        <p>DIscBd B4</p>
        <p>4.55</p>
        <p>ineemFd Ki</p>
        <p>7.45</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;&amp;lt; GrowthFd K2</p>
        <p>5.30</p>
        <p>HIGrCom SI</p>
        <p>17.80</p>
        <p>Growth S-3</p>
        <p>7.84</p>
        <p>LoPrCom S4</p>
        <p>3.5*</p>
        <p>' Potovla-</p>
        <p>3.40</p>
        <p>Laxlngton Grp:</p>
        <p>Corp Laadars</p>
        <p>13.45</p>
        <p>Laxingtn Grth</p>
        <p>9.35</p>
        <p>Laxing Incom</p>
        <p>10.63</p>
        <p>Laxingtn Rsh</p>
        <p>14.57</p>
        <p>Lifains Inv</p>
        <p>7.53</p>
        <p>Lincoln</p>
        <p>SalactAm n</p>
        <p>7.24</p>
        <p>SalactSpac n</p>
        <p>12.66</p>
        <p>Loomis Saytas;</p>
        <p>Capital n</p>
        <p>10 J4</p>
        <p>Mutual n</p>
        <p>13.22</p>
        <p>Lord AbbeH;</p>
        <p>AHIIiatad Fd</p>
        <p>8.28</p>
        <p>Bond Dab</p>
        <p>11.71</p>
        <p>Incoma</p>
        <p>3.60</p>
        <p>Lutheran Bro:</p>
        <p>Fund</p>
        <p>10.59</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>9.44</p>
        <p>Municipal</p>
        <p>10.22</p>
        <p>US^QvtSec</p>
        <p>9.41</p>
        <p>MasSachusatt Co:</p>
        <p>Freedom Fd</p>
        <p>4.25</p>
        <p>independ Fd</p>
        <p>7.4</p>
        <p>Mass Fd</p>
        <p>10.7</p>
        <p>AAass PInancl:</p>
        <p>MIT</p>
        <p>10.57</p>
        <p>MIG</p>
        <p>4.52</p>
        <p>MID</p>
        <p>15.06</p>
        <p>MFD</p>
        <p>12.57</p>
        <p>MCD</p>
        <p>14.10</p>
        <p>MFB</p>
        <p>15.74</p>
        <p>A6MB</p>
        <p>9.67</p>
        <p>ASathersFnd n</p>
        <p>13.57</p>
        <p>Marrllf Lynch:</p>
        <p>BaslcVal unavali</p>
        <p>CapltalFd</p>
        <p>13.26</p>
        <p>RdyAsset n</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>Mid Amqr</p>
        <p>5.27</p>
        <p>MoneyAMcMgtn</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>MONY Fund</p>
        <p>9.30</p>
        <p>MSB Fund n</p>
        <p>14.17</p>
        <p>Mutual Benefit</p>
        <p>9.30</p>
        <p>MIF Fund</p>
        <p>8.51</p>
        <p>MiF Growth</p>
        <p>3.47</p>
        <p>AAutuaiof Omaha:</p>
        <p>America</p>
        <p>11.52</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>4.09</p>
        <p>Incoma</p>
        <p>9.42</p>
        <p>TaxFrea</p>
        <p>15.41</p>
        <p>MutualShrs n</p>
        <p>30.42</p>
        <p>NEA Mutual n</p>
        <p>8.01</p>
        <p>Natllndust n</p>
        <p>11.17</p>
        <p>Nat Sacvr Ser:</p>
        <p>Balanced</p>
        <p>9.68</p>
        <p>Bond</p>
        <p>4.73</p>
        <p>Dividend</p>
        <p>4.23</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>5.65</p>
        <p>Preferred</p>
        <p>7.46</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>5J1</p>
        <p>Stock</p>
        <p>4.31</p>
        <p>NELIfe Fund:</p>
        <p>Equity</p>
        <p>17.60</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>5.19</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>14.24</p>
        <p>Side</p>
        <p>13.57</p>
        <p>Neubergar Barm:</p>
        <p>EiWgy n</p>
        <p>15.40</p>
        <p>GiwrdlanM n</p>
        <p>29.05</p>
        <p>apftnars n</p>
        <p>5.52</p>
        <p>^aowlrthFd n</p>
        <p>4.44</p>
        <p>NawWridFd n</p>
        <p>11.00</p>
        <p>NawtonGwth n</p>
        <p>12.01</p>
        <p>NewtonlncFd n</p>
        <p>10.15</p>
        <p>NicholasFdIn n</p>
        <p>15.27</p>
        <p>NomuraCapFd</p>
        <p>5.74</p>
        <p>Noraastlnv n</p>
        <p>14.95</p>
        <p>NuveanPd</p>
        <p>9.72</p>
        <p>Omega Fund</p>
        <p>10.45</p>
        <p>OnaWililam n</p>
        <p>14.10</p>
        <p>9.02</p>
        <p>\9M</p>
        <p>S.A</p>
        <p>19.43</p>
        <p>9.03- .04 J5J4+ .03 5J6- .07 19.43- .24</p>
        <p>tO.44</p>
        <p>7.35</p>
        <p>10.84.....</p>
        <p>7.35- .05</p>
        <p>1.003 1.00.....</p>
        <p>10.40  10.40+  .01</p>
        <p>10.6*  10,70+  .01</p>
        <p>7,50  7.50-  .04</p>
        <p>10.14  10.14-  .41</p>
        <p>4.03  4.05-  .02</p>
        <p>18.02 11.02- .09</p>
        <p>I9J1 4.53 7.43 5.24 17 J7 7.40 3.49 3.37</p>
        <p>15.61- .31 4.55+ .03 7.85- .01 5JS- .06 17.65- .15 7J1- .05 3J5- .05 3.35- .01</p>
        <p>13.48</p>
        <p>9.31</p>
        <p>W.63</p>
        <p>14J4</p>
        <p>7.50</p>
        <p>13J5- .05 9.33+ .03 10.62- .02 14.84-r .10 7.53+ .04</p>
        <p>7.12</p>
        <p>12.57</p>
        <p>7.12- .12 12.51- .</p>
        <p>W.77 W.79- .01 13.12 13.12- .10</p>
        <p>8.15  1.15-  .11</p>
        <p>11.64 11.71+ .0$ 3.58  3.59-  .03</p>
        <p>0.49</p>
        <p>5.27</p>
        <p>10.20</p>
        <p>9.44</p>
        <p>10.45- .12 5.27- .14 W.22+ .02 5.84+ .01</p>
        <p>8.21</p>
        <p>7.44</p>
        <p>W.75</p>
        <p>8.24- .02 7.45- .03 10.75- .04</p>
        <p>n.34</p>
        <p>8.43</p>
        <p>10.34- .26 8.43- .09 14.75 14.75- .28 12.41 12:41- .17 14.09+ .10</p>
        <p>15.72.....</p>
        <p>9.66.....</p>
        <p>13.57+ .05</p>
        <p>13.97</p>
        <p>15.72</p>
        <p>!9.66</p>
        <p>3.46</p>
        <p>10.13</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>5.24</p>
        <p>.1.00</p>
        <p>5.18</p>
        <p>13.13- .16</p>
        <p>1.00.....</p>
        <p>5.24- .04 1.00.....</p>
        <p>9.18- .12</p>
        <p>14.13- .06</p>
        <p>9.18- .13 8.44- .09 3.86- .03</p>
        <p>11.70</p>
        <p>.99</p>
        <p>'.56</p>
        <p>5.56-</p>
        <p>.15</p>
        <p>1.44</p>
        <p>4.64-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>I.1S</p>
        <p>4.15- .07</p>
        <p>iJO</p>
        <p>5.60- .05</p>
        <p>.40</p>
        <p>7J0-</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>S.55</p>
        <p>5.61...</p>
        <p>1.25</p>
        <p>8.27-</p>
        <p>'.it</p>
        <p>17.44-</p>
        <p>.10</p>
        <p>fi2</p>
        <p>9.13- .05</p>
        <p>1A23+</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>13.44-</p>
        <p>.10</p>
        <p>8.82</p>
        <p>4.41</p>
        <p>10.60</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>10.13</p>
        <p>16.31</p>
        <p>8.81</p>
        <p>8.29</p>
        <p>10.47</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>8.82+ .01 8.29- .06 10.47- .13 1.00.....</p>
        <p>10.04 10.09- .05 16.1* 16.19- .04 24.66 24.44 24J8+ .11 10.59 10.58 10.59+ .02 16.44 16.27 16.28- .09 11.38 11.31 11.31- .04 S.09  5.03  5.04-  .07</p>
        <p>10.4* 10.47 10.47+ .01 22.0 21.77 21.77- .10</p>
        <p>Oppenheinier Fd: Oppenhm Fd OpplncBos MonyBr n TaxFreeBd n AIM n Time OverCount Sec Paramt Mutual Paul Revere PennSquare n PennMutual n Phila Fund PhoenixCap Phoenix Fd</p>
        <p>5.08</p>
        <p>5.04</p>
        <p>5.08+</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>Pilgrim Grp:</p>
        <p>4.53</p>
        <p>4.51</p>
        <p>4.52-</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>Pilgrim Form</p>
        <p>8.17</p>
        <p>7.41</p>
        <p>7.41-</p>
        <p>.76</p>
        <p>Pilgrim Fd MagnaCap n</p>
        <p>^5.24</p>
        <p>5.15</p>
        <p>5.24+</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>A6agna Incom</p>
        <p>6.65</p>
        <p>6J1</p>
        <p>6.62-</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>PinaStreet n</p>
        <p>9.03</p>
        <p>8.97</p>
        <p>8.97+</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>Pioneer Fund:</p>
        <p>8.54</p>
        <p>B.SO</p>
        <p>8.54+ J2</p>
        <p>Fund</p>
        <p>8.15</p>
        <p>6.09</p>
        <p>8.15+</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>10.00</p>
        <p>10.00</p>
        <p>10.00..</p>
        <p>Planned InvMt</p>
        <p>16.78</p>
        <p>16.45</p>
        <p>16.78+</p>
        <p>.19</p>
        <p>Pligrowth Fnd</p>
        <p>3.85</p>
        <p>3.42</p>
        <p>3.83..</p>
        <p>Plitrend Fnd</p>
        <p>Price Funds:</p>
        <p>4.56</p>
        <p>4.52</p>
        <p>4.53-</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>GrowthFd n</p>
        <p>12.48</p>
        <p>12.43</p>
        <p>12.47-</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>Income n</p>
        <p>.8.53</p>
        <p>4.81</p>
        <p>8.83-</p>
        <p>.12</p>
        <p>NewEra n</p>
        <p>9.57</p>
        <p>9.41</p>
        <p>9.57+ .08</p>
        <p>NewHorizn n</p>
        <p>TaxFree n</p>
        <p>3.47</p>
        <p>3.44</p>
        <p>3.45-</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>ProFund n</p>
        <p>6.93</p>
        <p>6.87</p>
        <p>6.93+</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>ProvWor Grth</p>
        <p>5.31</p>
        <p>5.25</p>
        <p>5.25-</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>Pru SIP</p>
        <p>4.91</p>
        <p>4.89</p>
        <p>4.69..</p>
        <p>Putnam Funds:</p>
        <p>11.70- .14 3.95 .04 9.33- .29 15.27- .13 30.40+ .15 7.57 .05</p>
        <p>.14 11.16- .08</p>
        <p>.85</p>
        <p>1.38</p>
        <p>).51</p>
        <p>lil.87</p>
        <p>lfc.4t 15.51- .07 25.05 : 1.87 28.52- .18 9.89- .04 8.43+ .02 10.91- .09 11.87- .16 10.13- .03 15.27+ .18 9.74+ .04 14.93+ .06 9.72+ .03 10J2- .01 14.01- .11</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>1^.13</p>
        <p>-.70</p>
        <p>t.l</p>
        <p>.45</p>
        <p>11.79</p>
        <p>1 L98</p>
        <p>1.77</p>
        <p>5.86</p>
        <p>2.44</p>
        <p>3.46</p>
        <p>8.25</p>
        <p>7.52</p>
        <p>8.49</p>
        <p>1.76</p>
        <p>9.71</p>
        <p>2.39</p>
        <p>3.43</p>
        <p>8.13</p>
        <p>7.46</p>
        <p>4.42</p>
        <p>1.76- .01 9.71- .12 2.43+ .05</p>
        <p>3.46.....</p>
        <p>8.13- .14 7.46- .08 8.49+ .03</p>
        <p>8.93</p>
        <p>8.35</p>
        <p>11.41</p>
        <p>8.76</p>
        <p>8.89</p>
        <p>8.33</p>
        <p>11.31</p>
        <p>8.72</p>
        <p>8.91- .03 8.33- .01 11.31- .14 8.72- .04</p>
        <p>Convert Equit George Growth Income Invest Option TaxExempt Vista Voy^B*</p>
        <p>(CoaOttuedoa</p>
        <p>24.37 24.34 24.37+ .04 10.33 ).20 10.20- .11 12.44 1^53 12.55- .05</p>
        <p>B-Ji/</p>
        <p>C. WAYNE VANWFOIU)</p>
        <p>Improved Two Way System</p>
        <p>Pet. OH 22.7</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Pk</p>
        <p>Uto</p>
        <p>-  to</p>
        <p>-  Ito</p>
        <p>-  2to</p>
        <p>2to  to Off</p>
        <p>2to - to 4to - to 4to - 1 3to - to fto - Ito 2to - to 2to to 2to - to 2to - to</p>
        <p>I3to  Ito OH</p>
        <p> to OH</p>
        <p>5to - Ito OH</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>2to</p>
        <p>-  Ito</p>
        <p>-  to</p>
        <p>1IJ</p>
        <p>lU</p>
        <p>V.7</p>
        <p>17.1 M.2 UJ</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>II*</p>
        <p>13.3</p>
        <p>13.3 IIJ 12J 12J 12* 12.0 IIJ</p>
        <p>II*</p>
        <p>11.2 11.1 11.1 11.1 11.1 IO.S nj NJ</p>
        <p>STOCKTON, Calif. (AP) -Two researchers say they have improved on a system for carrying two conversations on a single Citizens Band channel, making it nrare convenient and cheaper than previous methods.</p>
        <p>A problem today with CB radios is that the crowding of voices on the 40 channels available makes it hard sometimes to uiKlerstaDd the poison you are talking with, said J. Fred Geveland, 27, a former studoit vriM worked on the project with Efr. Richard W. Harris, a professor of dectrical oi^neering at the University of the Pacific.</p>
        <p>There are other ways of doing viiat we are talking about, said Harris, but the coat for nich units approaches</p>
        <p>$7,000. We figure our system can be sold for less than $100.</p>
        <p>The HarrisCleveland system compresses speech as it is transmitted so that it takes half as many units of spectrum space, allowing two conversations on the same band.</p>
        <p>When it is actually being transmitted the speech is not</p>
        <p>understandable, Harris said. The transmission is translated by small boxes develen by the two that are attached to the CB unit.</p>
        <p>Granite is the most abundant rock in the earths crust.</p>
        <p>Fire Proof</p>
        <p>SAFES</p>
        <p>Sggso</p>
        <p>STEEI,</p>
        <p>UPHOLSTERRP</p>
        <p>,STENO CHAIR</p>
        <p>$3950</p>
        <p>Sine* mi mEvansSt. Phona 7SS-114*</p>
        <p>THINKING</p>
        <p>ABOUT BUILDING?</p>
        <p>If you are, you ought to know that Miller &amp;amp; Davis Associates has just bean appointed as a Dealer/Contractor for Armco Building Systems</p>
        <p>And thats good news when youre planhing</p>
        <p>dor</p>
        <p>a new facility for industrial, commercial or institutional use. Why? Because as an Armco Dealer were prepared to handle every; phase of your building project. Its calleid turnkey construction. Your involvementji great or as small as you want it to be. S( 1 it youre thinking about building, give us s</p>
        <p>as</p>
        <p>call.</p>
        <p>Miller &amp;amp; Davis Associates</p>
        <p>200 A EasI First St., Greenville, North Carolina 27834</p>
        <p>919/758-7474</p>
        <p>Dealer/Contractor  Armco Building Systems</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0023" />
        <p>First Half Of Year A Stock Mdrket Disappointment</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Notice To Readers</p>
        <p>Considerable material DormaJly received for the *tock market pa^ did not arrive on tbe wire. Non-receipt of this material is due primarily to cutback on regular services daring the boliday weekend.</p>
        <p>By CHET CURRIER AP Business Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YQRK (AP) - Though It had its share of winners as well as losers, the first half of 1977 turned out to be a big disappointment for most followers of the stock market.</p>
        <p>Six months ago Wall Street was brimming with enthusiasm and hi^ hopes for the coming year.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed New Years Eve at 1,004.65winding up a year above 1,000 for the first time since 1972and market forecasters were almost unanimously bullish. ^</p>
        <p>But in the first session of 1977 it dipped back below 1,000 and startni a steady decline that left it at 916.30 as June ended last Thursday.</p>
        <p>The 88.35-point dn^ recorded by the average from January through June was its poorest performance for a half-year period since the bear maricet of 1974.</p>
        <p>Starting the second half on Friday, the market showed no change of mood. The Dow dropped 3.65 points for the day to 912.65, and closed out the week with a net loss of 17.05.</p>
        <p>Ottier readings for the week were also negative: Standard &amp;amp; Poors 500-stock index gave up 1.09 to 100.10, and the New York Stock Exchange composite index lost .50 to 54.92.</p>
        <p>Big Board volume averaged 19.82 million shares a day, down from 25.71 million the</p>
        <p>week before.</p>
        <p>For the past several months, Wall Streets commentators have stressed the point that the Dow, with its narrow sample of 30 big-name companies, hasnt accurately depicted the trend of many other stocks.</p>
        <p>'They acknowledge that the stocks in the Dow, and many other of the so-called glamor issues lOTg favored by investing institutions, were indeed battered during the first half.</p>
        <p>But they also point out that a wide range of lesser-known stocks gained ground over the same period.</p>
        <p>To support that point, they note that such indicators as Dow Jones transportation and utility averages, the American Stock Exchange market value index and the NASDAQ composite index of over-the&amp;lt;ounter stocks all posted gains in the half.</p>
        <p>On Thursday 102 NYSE-listed stocks hit new highs for the year, while only 19 touched new lows.</p>
        <p>Among the big winners in the first half were a broad range of smaller energy stocks, which got a push from extra-cdd winter weather and the new awareness of the nations energy problems that followed.</p>
        <p>Inexco Oil more than doubled over the six-month period, climbing 15% to 28%. Murphy Oil jumped 14% to 37%. Among drilling companies, Rowan Cos. picked up 12% to 26% and Diamond M Drilling added 9% to</p>
        <p>26%.</p>
        <p>Healthy gains, too, were chalked up by insulation producers like Johns-Manville and Certain-teed.</p>
        <p>Movie stocks also put on a good show, thanks to a barrage of box-office hits in May and JuneTwentieth-Century Fox, with Star Wars and The Other Side of Midni^t, and Columbia Pictures, with The Deep.</p>
        <p>Fox shares more than doubled, from 10% to 22%. Columbia rose 6% to 14%.</p>
        <p>But for all those bright spots, the fact remairifed that the big-name issues vdiich account for the bulk of the total market value of st^ks in this country were suffering badly.</p>
        <p>Eastman Kodak, to cite one conspicuous example, tumbled 26% to 59%. Burroughs fell 29% to 62%. International Business Machines, the No. 1 holding of institutions, dropped 15% to 264.</p>
        <p>Individual earnings disappointments, meanwhile, took</p>
        <p>Ten Belk Suits To Be Tried</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -In an attempt to settle a $17.5 million Belk Department Stores tax dispute, the Internal Revenue Service and Belk officials have decided to take 10 of 374 suits involved to court and then see whether they can settle the rest of the cases on the basis on the 10, the Charlotte Observer reported today.</p>
        <p>The suits, which concern the way Belk sets the value of its inventory, will be tried in federal court in Columbia, S.C., probably this fall, the newspaper said.</p>
        <p>But the family-owned financial empire is fiiting IRSs request for a variety of documents to prepare for trial of the 10 cases, contending that much of the information is irrelevant to the tax cases and disclosure of some of it would hurt the stores business.</p>
        <p>Belks filed the 374 tax cases, each representing a store, in December, 1975, after IRS claimed a series of audits showed Belks system of valu</p>
        <p>ing inventories didnt meet tax requirements and proposed that the stores pay additional taxes for 1963 through 1972.</p>
        <p>Among the items IRS has demanded are:</p>
        <p>The stores entire stockholding history from their original incorporation through 1972, including the amounts of stock originally issued, date of issuance, names and addresses of those to whom it was issued and to whom any stock has been transferred.</p>
        <p>A synopsis of all meetings of Belk board of directors and Belk stockholders from 1965 through 1972.</p>
        <p>The general contents of all Belk books and records from 1965 through 1972.</p>
        <p>The Belk group includes about 385 stores in 18 states and Puerto Rico and a number of connected corporations. Belk stores are concentrated in the southeast with 116 in North Carolina, 69 in South CJarolina, 55 in Georgia, 57 in Virginia and 34 in Florida.</p>
        <p>Mutual Funds</p>
        <p>(CaatbuiedirompageB-IO)</p>
        <p>RainbowFd n ResarveFd n RcvereFund n SafwnoEquIt Fd Safeco Growfh StPaul Cap StFaul GwTh ScodStevClk: CommonSt n - ' Income n IntlFMOd n ManageRes n MMuniBd n Special n SeCiM'ity Funds; Equity invest Ultra Sentinel Group: Apex Fund Balanced Fd Common StR Sentinel Growdh Sentry Fund Shareholders Gp: Comstock Fd Entei^ise Fd Fletcher Fd Harbor Fund Legal List Pace Fund Shew^on Funds: , Appreciation Income Invest SferraGth n ShrmnOean n Sigma Funds: Capital invest Trust Sh Venture Shr SmthBarEqt n SmthBarl&amp;amp;G n SoGen int Southwstn Inv Southwnlnv Gth Soverejgn inv S p e n</p>
        <p>State BondGr: Comnfwn Fd Diversified F Progress Fd StatFermGth n StatFarmBal n StateSt inv Steadman Funds; Amerind n AssoFTrust n Invest n Octanogra n Stein Roe Fds; Balance n CapOpn Stock n Surveyor Fa TempGth Can TemplnvFd n Transam Cap Tranaam Invest Travelers EqFd Tudof^edge n</p>
        <p>2(tthCentGth n 20thCentinc n USAACapGth n USAA tncFd n USGovt Secur UnlfMutual n Union Svc Grp: BroadSt Inv Nat Invest Union Capitol Unionlnc Fd United Fands: Accumultiv Bon* X</p>
        <p>2.12</p>
        <p>2.08</p>
        <p>2.12+</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>Cont Growth</p>
        <p>9.09</p>
        <p>8.99</p>
        <p>8.99-</p>
        <p>.09</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>i;00</p>
        <p>Cofit income</p>
        <p>9.52</p>
        <p>9.47</p>
        <p>9.47-</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>5.71</p>
        <p>5.44</p>
        <p>5.44-</p>
        <p>.08</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>10.23</p>
        <p>10.14</p>
        <p>10.14</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>9.20</p>
        <p>9.11</p>
        <p>9.14-</p>
        <p>.07</p>
        <p>Science</p>
        <p>5.45</p>
        <p>5.59</p>
        <p>5.59-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>9.30</p>
        <p>9.22</p>
        <p>9.24-</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>Vanguard</p>
        <p>5.33</p>
        <p>5.30</p>
        <p>5.32-</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>8.11</p>
        <p>8.03</p>
        <p>8.03- .10</p>
        <p>UnitSvcsFd fl</p>
        <p>1.49</p>
        <p>1.44</p>
        <p>1.47-</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>7.53</p>
        <p>7.47</p>
        <p>7.49- .06</p>
        <p>Value Line +d:</p>
        <p>Value Line</p>
        <p>7.25</p>
        <p>7.18</p>
        <p>7.24</p>
        <p>9.41</p>
        <p>9.52</p>
        <p>9.52-</p>
        <p>.11</p>
        <p>Incoirte</p>
        <p>5.35</p>
        <p>5.31</p>
        <p>5.33-</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>15.02</p>
        <p>14.99</p>
        <p>15.02+ .05</p>
        <p> Levrged Orth</p>
        <p>10.44</p>
        <p>10.34</p>
        <p>10.41 +</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>13.37</p>
        <p>13.31</p>
        <p>13.34+</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>Speci Sit</p>
        <p>4.44</p>
        <p>4.59</p>
        <p>4.64+</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>10.03</p>
        <p>10.03</p>
        <p>10.03...</p>
        <p>Vatxe Sancters:</p>
        <p>10.40</p>
        <p>10.31</p>
        <p>10.40+</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>13.88</p>
        <p>13.40</p>
        <p>13.41-</p>
        <p>.21</p>
        <p>24.30</p>
        <p>24.13</p>
        <p>24.24-</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>invest</p>
        <p>7.43</p>
        <p>7.40</p>
        <p>7.41-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>ComnrKNi</p>
        <p>4.47</p>
        <p>4.45</p>
        <p>4.45- .03</p>
        <p>4.00</p>
        <p>4.04</p>
        <p>4.07-</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>Special</p>
        <p>8.40</p>
        <p>8.35</p>
        <p>8.37+</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>7.49</p>
        <p>7.47</p>
        <p>7.47-</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>VandrbltGth n unavail</p>
        <p>10.45</p>
        <p>10.41</p>
        <p>10.41 +</p>
        <p>.20</p>
        <p>Vandrbitlncm n unavail</p>
        <p>Vanguard Group:</p>
        <p>.22</p>
        <p>XS5</p>
        <p>3.52</p>
        <p>3.53- .03</p>
        <p>ExplorerFnd</p>
        <p>19.29</p>
        <p>19...5</p>
        <p>19.29+</p>
        <p>8.14</p>
        <p>8.12</p>
        <p>8.16</p>
        <p>Fstlndex n</p>
        <p>13.94</p>
        <p>13.71</p>
        <p>13.71-</p>
        <p>.27</p>
        <p>12.5*</p>
        <p>12.47</p>
        <p>12.53- .04</p>
        <p>ivestFund n</p>
        <p>7.94</p>
        <p>7.90</p>
        <p>7.90-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>8.34</p>
        <p>8.25</p>
        <p>8.24-</p>
        <p>.08</p>
        <p>AAorganFnd n</p>
        <p>11.84</p>
        <p>11.78</p>
        <p>11.81-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>12.09</p>
        <p>12.00</p>
        <p>12.05- .07</p>
        <p>TrusteesEq n</p>
        <p>9.22</p>
        <p>9.15</p>
        <p>9.15-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>Wellesley n</p>
        <p>12.44</p>
        <p>12.22</p>
        <p>12.22-</p>
        <p>.24</p>
        <p>6.11</p>
        <p>4.07</p>
        <p>6.09- .01</p>
        <p>Wellington n</p>
        <p>9.89</p>
        <p>9.82</p>
        <p>9.82-</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>5.19</p>
        <p>5.14</p>
        <p>5.17-</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>WestminBd n</p>
        <p>9.79</p>
        <p>9.71</p>
        <p>9.71-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>5.42</p>
        <p>5J2</p>
        <p>5.40+</p>
        <p>.09</p>
        <p>WindsorFnd n</p>
        <p>10.59</p>
        <p>10.52</p>
        <p>10,53- .06</p>
        <p>8.80</p>
        <p>8.78</p>
        <p>8.80+</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>Varied indust</p>
        <p>3.57</p>
        <p>3.50</p>
        <p>3.50- .08</p>
        <p> 6.79</p>
        <p>4.73</p>
        <p>4.73</p>
        <p>.07</p>
        <p>WallSt Growth</p>
        <p>4.40</p>
        <p>4.35</p>
        <p>6.35-</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>10.80</p>
        <p>10.42</p>
        <p>10.80+</p>
        <p>.24</p>
        <p>WeingrtnEq n</p>
        <p>12.28</p>
        <p>12.15</p>
        <p>12.28+</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>WesftleM Grwth</p>
        <p>7.01</p>
        <p>4.95</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p> 17.19</p>
        <p>17.04</p>
        <p>17.04- .22</p>
        <p>Wisconsin Incm</p>
        <p>5.37</p>
        <p>5.34</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>19M</p>
        <p>18 94</p>
        <p>18.98 .08</p>
        <p>nNO load fund.</p>
        <p>10.54</p>
        <p>10.42</p>
        <p>10.42- .14</p>
        <p>Copyright by The Associated Press.</p>
        <p>9.}9</p>
        <p>1t.92</p>
        <p>J0</p>
        <p>10.44</p>
        <p>t.t9</p>
        <p>10.90</p>
        <p>10.15</p>
        <p>13J0</p>
        <p>10.96</p>
        <p>1.03</p>
        <p>4.02</p>
        <p>13.19</p>
        <p>4.30</p>
        <p>3.03</p>
        <p>3.92</p>
        <p>4.05</p>
        <p>9.41</p>
        <p>42.94</p>
        <p>9.10  9.14-  .01</p>
        <p>10.59 18.72- .53</p>
        <p>their t(ril on several smaller companies that had attained considerable popularity on Wall Street.</p>
        <p>Among the halfs biggest percentage losers were Franklin Mint, off 17% at 11%, and Heublein, down 17 at 24%.</p>
        <p>This kind of damage occurred despite the fact that the economy performed well in the first half, except for a pickup in the inflation rate that clearly bothered investors.</p>
        <p>At 1977s halfway mark, the qitimists in the financial community were pinning their hqies on a riackening in the inflation rate. They also argued that by such measures as price-eamings ratios and book valuethe theoretical liquidating worth of a stockthe odds were in favor of investors from here on out.</p>
        <p>Standard 4 Poors Corp. recently calculated that both P-Es and the ratio of stock prices .to book values were at their lowest levds In recent history.</p>
        <p>except for the bottom of the 1974 market.</p>
        <p>Analysts at the leading Wall Street firm of Goldman, Sachs</p>
        <p>A Co. conceded recently that inflation and the prevailing conservative mood of investors represent major obstacles for</p>
        <p>stock prices.</p>
        <p>But the firm argued that the problems are, in our opinion, already In the prices of</p>
        <p>equities, and took the position that the stock mariiet risk is limited and the potential is attractive.</p>
        <p>Reassessing The 1977 Economy</p>
        <p>By KRISTIN GOFF AP Business Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Economists, reassessing 1977 at its midway point, have been issuing a spate of optimistic reports during the past week about the near-teim^ourse of the economy.</p>
        <p>The Carter administration, in its mid-year budget review, said the nations economy would grow at a slightly faster rate than it has projected previously and the unemployment rate, on average, would fall for the year.</p>
        <p>The governments revisions were not dramatic, but they underscored general confidence about the course of 1977 largely because the ecMomy made a stronger recovery In the first half than expected.</p>
        <p>The administration said the average unemployment rate for the year be 7 per cent, an improvement of .2 per cent from its earlier forecast.</p>
        <p>Real Gross Nattonal Product, the GNP adjusted for inflation, will grow at a annual rate of 5.1 per cent this year, up from</p>
        <p>9.02</p>
        <p>10.39</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>10.89</p>
        <p>10.05</p>
        <p>12.84</p>
        <p>10.91</p>
        <p>7.94</p>
        <p>4.80</p>
        <p>12.07</p>
        <p>9.10+ .07 10.40- .05 48.89+ .04 10.98+ .04 10.05- .08 12.15- .04 10.91- .02 8.60- .05</p>
        <p>4.81.....</p>
        <p>12.11- .13 a F 4J8+ .03</p>
        <p>2.43</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>: 17.58 9.04 12.23 8.91 12.37 1.00 7.1#</p>
        <p>9.42 10.32 14.30</p>
        <p>4.42 4.33 7.48</p>
        <p>11.74</p>
        <p>9.84</p>
        <p>8.42</p>
        <p>11.15</p>
        <p>4.40 11.57 12.99</p>
        <p>4.41</p>
        <p>4.24</p>
        <p>5.01 3.88</p>
        <p>4.01 9.38</p>
        <p>42.37</p>
        <p>2.41 1.10</p>
        <p>I.43 4.37</p>
        <p>17.44</p>
        <p>9.00 12.14</p>
        <p>8.84</p>
        <p>12.29</p>
        <p>1.00 f.U 9.40</p>
        <p>10.27</p>
        <p>14.1#</p>
        <p>4.35</p>
        <p>6.22</p>
        <p>7.42</p>
        <p>II.74 9.13 8.53</p>
        <p>4.24- .04 5.01- .03</p>
        <p>3.08- .03 4.04- .02 9.41- .02 42.37- .55</p>
        <p>2.43+ .02</p>
        <p>1.10.....</p>
        <p>1.44.....</p>
        <p>4.38+ .01</p>
        <p>17.44- .13 9.00- .00 12.14- .11 8.87- .05 12^ -04</p>
        <p>1.00.....</p>
        <p>7.14- .03 9.42+ .02 10.27- .04 14.30+ .04 4.42+ .07 4.33+ .08 7A2- .07 11.76+ .03 9.84+ .01 8.53- .10</p>
        <p>11.7# 11.79- .00 4.32  6.32-  .09</p>
        <p>11.50 11.52- .04 12.95 12.99+ .02</p>
        <p>5 SHIRTS V.AUNDERED porM.75</p>
        <p>WOULD HAVE BEEN A GOOD BUY - Defene Secretary Harold Brown pauses during a press conference Friday in which he said that the B1 bomber would have been a good buy if it had been 30 per cent cheaper. Scrapping the plane and developing the cruiae misrile instead will save bllUoBs, he said. (AP Wlrefdioto)</p>
        <p>CLEANIN</p>
        <p>Dilwrsity Ohi Mh. tin Fri. Nr. Cliai Opn Mii. tin Sat.</p>
        <p>OFF</p>
        <p>ASK ABOUT OUR ALTERATIONS</p>
        <p>Offw Good Thru Thurs. July 7th, 1*77</p>
        <p>BYOH NOTICE i</p>
        <p>UIHO rOUK OCDHlASOM</p>
        <p>^4 Mr. Clean 1/4 V4 University 1/4</p>
        <p>DRIVE IN CLEANERS</p>
        <p>1S01 Dickinson Avr-</p>
        <p>ONF HOUR</p>
        <p>OFF cirANtRs OFF</p>
        <p>Corner ot ilh &amp;amp; Gr&amp;lt;-ne</p>
        <p>ALVSKA BOUND--The $32 inillk, 90,000-ton Overseas Chicago sailed Friday from the National Steel ft ShlpbuUdlng Co. yards In San Diego. The flO+-foot vessel will stop briefly at Alameda for a final hi&amp;amp; cleaning before departure July 8 for Valdez, Alaska</p>
        <p>where it will begin taking aboard oil from the trana-Alaeka</p>
        <p>p^tdlne. She is the fint of four San Clemente darn bmken ooo-tracted for in 1973. AU four will be under long-term lease to Standard Oil Ctnnpany of Ohio. (AP Wlnphoto)</p>
        <p>the 4.9 per cent projected in April, the report said.</p>
        <p>GNP, vrtiich represents the total value , of all goods and services produced in the nation, is a broad measure of economic health.</p>
        <p>By comparison, real GNP grew at a rate of 6.1 per cent in a comeback from the recession between 1976 and 1975 but declined 1.8 per cent between 1975 and 1974.</p>
        <p>For 1978, however, the administration reduced its estimate of growth in the GNP from 5.6 to 5.3 per cent, reflecting a widely held belief that there will be a gradual slowdown by then.</p>
        <p>The (^mmerce Departments comppsite index of leading economic indicators, also released this past week, indicated some probable slowdown in growth in the near future. The May composite index showed a .2 per cent decline after three consecutive months of increases.</p>
        <p>Both private and government economists generally have been predicting that the second half of this year will not equal the</p>
        <p>pace of the first six months. But the co^nsus still remains upbeat for the short-range future.</p>
        <p>In .other business developments this past week:</p>
        <p>President Carter, in a surprise decision, announced his opposition to production of the Bl strategic bomber, a program estimated to cost $24.8 billion. He said it represented an unnecessary cost and that the United States Muld depend on other weapons systems.</p>
        <p>The Interstate Commerce Commission rejected tariff rates of $6.04 to $6.44 a barrel sought by the owners of the new trans-Alaska pipeline. The ICC cut the various rates between 19 and 26 per cent but those will be in eflMt on an interim basis pending, an expected challenge to the ruling.</p>
        <p>-The U.S. trade deficit declined to $1.22 billion in May, the smallest gap so far this year. The previous four months had resulted in record deficits, topped by Aprils $2.62 billion deficit. But the Commerce Department took a low-keyed ap</p>
        <p>proach to the decline, cautioning that deficits would probably rise in future months. The department stuck by its estimate of a trade deficit of $20 billion to $25 billion for the year.</p>
        <p>Russia Visitors Hunt Game</p>
        <p>MOSCOW (UPI) - Foreign tourists may hunt red deer, elk, wild boar, mountain goat, chamois, roe deer and bear in Siberia, the Caucasus and other parts of the Soviet Union, according to the Tass news agency.</p>
        <p>The hunting is permitted on large preserves supervised by game managers.</p>
        <p>Vladimir Fyodorov, head of the Game Management Board of the Russian Federation, ^id hunters from Austria, Uen-mark, Italy, Spain, Finland, France and Japan have shot game here.</p>
        <p>'V.I.P.S</p>
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        <p>3M MMd* SI.  711 Winjwr Rd.</p>
        <p>Ortnvm,N.C.  Ort*nm, NX.</p>
        <p>Phon7S-13  PhOM 754-7I57</p>
        <p>Lorane.NwTit</p>
        <p>FMd RprHirtalivt IMS EvtTFfMirDr. 7S*-7S</p>
        <p>These V.I.P.S heve their F.I.C.si.., Freternal Insurance Counselors' ratings. This means a pledge to put your needs first, recommend only insurarKe really necessary.</p>
        <p>Ask about your insurance needs and our extra fraternal and social benefits ... a plus thats  musti</p>
        <p>WOODMEN OF THE WORLD LIFE INSURANCE SOCIETY</p>
        <p>"Tfie FAMILY F raiormty'</p>
        <p>17 lODR nKAHCUX FUTURE LACKS DmfiCHOS</p>
        <p>WEU. SlffifW YOU THE WAY</p>
        <p>It caji happen Overnight. Suddenly youre lost In aflnanclal maze. And It seems lUce theres nowhere to turn.</p>
        <p>Thats when you need someone to point you In the right direction. Tb East Federal. We think youll he Impressed with the ways we can help. Passhook savings and savings certificates are Just two ways.</p>
        <p>We can provide Conventional. VA or FHA single family home financing. In addition, home Improvement losms and multiple family home loans are available.</p>
        <p>Our specialized accounts, KEOGH Retirement Aceoimts for the self-emplpyed.</p>
        <p>IBA (Individual Retirement Aocounts) and RBR (Rea^ Business Reserve) are offering new flexIbUlty to individuals and businesses.</p>
        <p>And were providing more servloes than ever before. Night Deposit. Drtve-Up Windows. Save By Mall. And Thavelers Checks without service charge to account holders.</p>
        <p>Of course, we cant secure your financial fhture overnight. 1 No one can. But we can certainly ^ point you In the right direction.</p>
        <p>LOGKTOTHBBASL</p>
        <p>SwmgiinaUwf</p>
        <p>II Offices Serving Eastern North Carolina  Member F.S.L.I.G.</p>
        <p>4.34</p>
        <p>7J7</p>
        <p>tJ4- .07 7.48+ .01</p>
        <p>Frank M. Lawranca. Vica Prasidant &amp;amp; Monagar Cornar of Evans St. And Arlington Blvd. Graanvilla, North Carolina ToUphono 758*6181</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0024" />
        <p>B-UThe DeUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.Sunday, July 1, H77</p>
        <p>C.B. DeMille Papers Given Brigham Young U.</p>
        <p>PROVO, Utah (AP) - A four-ton collection of filmmaker Cecil B. DeMilles papers has been donated by his dau^ter, CecUla DeMille Harper, to the Brigham Yoimg University Library,</p>
        <p>His scripts, notes and memorabilia paint a picture of the golden era of motion pictures from the beginning of his career in 1913 through the epic</p>
        <p>The Ten Commandments in 19S6, according to BYU Manuscripts Curator Dennis Rowley.</p>
        <p>Rowley says his department in the next year will go through the DeMille files, prepare a detailed index and publish a guide which can be circulated among other libraries throughout the world, particulariy those interested in film research.</p>
        <p>"At some time in the future.</p>
        <p>with concurrence of the DeMille family, we will be willing to share micro/Um copies with other ii^ltufibns, Rowley said. /</p>
        <p>The ado boxes, which temporarily fill the hallways of the library, contain scripts (rough drafts to final shooting copies), still {rtwtographs, letters, production files, financial records, drawings, posters and flyers</p>
        <p>and.'thorough, detailed research on  number of DeMille films.</p>
        <p>Father would be honored to know his papers are going to BYU, said Mrs. Harper, of Los Angeles. "He was always friendly with the Mormon Church and would feel good about having his records in Utafi, where they can be used by students.</p>
        <p>DeMille was a friend of for</p>
        <p>mer Mormon Church president David 0. McKay and in 1957 accompanied the church leader to BYU to receive an honorary doctor of letters degree.</p>
        <p>In his commencement address to the graduating class two years before his death, the producer-director somewhat prophetically told the graduates, The voice that speaks to you tonight will long tw stilled</p>
        <p>before you reach my age and look back upon your handiwork. But the thoughts which I have tried to give you  from this platform and through our production of The Ten Commandments"  will live on, because they are eternal.</p>
        <p>DeMille was an indefatigable researcher. His research records on Union Pacific (1938) contain a fairly complete</p>
        <p>history of the construction of the transcontinental railroad, including costume sketches, what political leaders looked like in 1869, contemporary photographs, and volumes of information be felt he needed to make a film in an authentic setting.</p>
        <p>Father was a young man at the beginning of the motion picture industry," Mrs. Harper said. "He had a great deal to do with its growth in the country and in the world. There might be many things in the</p>
        <p>papers that would be of help to students interested in studying the beginnings and growth of the Industry. My father Certainly had a tremendous influence on world thought and entertainment.</p>
        <p>She said he would have been extremely interested in the innovations of modem motion pictures, but he certainly would not have liked the ero-tlca-and the foul language in so many films today.</p>
        <p>1 DAY ONLY</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>HOURS:</p>
        <p>9 A.M.-6 P.M.</p>
        <p>No Gimmicks! Simply Find The RED Sale Tags On Our Floor And Take 1/2 OFF The Regular Retail Price! This Sale Is So BIG We Can Only Hold It For ONE DAY! HURRY INIAII Items Subject To Prior Sale-1 DAY0NLY-H0URS:9 AJW.-6 PM.</p>
        <p>^ BEDROOM I</p>
        <p>(FURNITURE  |</p>
        <p>No matter what you need...dresser and Ml mirror, chest, nightstand or headboard ...you'll protDably find what you are ^ looking for. You'll find the Price Right too. Now that we've Reduced This ^ Group to...  pRt</p>
        <p>li 1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>SUMMER FURNITURE</p>
        <p>Many One-Of A-Kinds, Umbrella Tables, Chaises, Odds &amp;amp; Ends, and Much, Much More!</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Many One-of a Kinds, Curios, Creclenras, Rlk) Remnants &amp;amp; Much, Much More'</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>LIVING</p>
        <p>ROOM</p>
        <p>FURNITURE</p>
        <p>-:i</p>
        <p>Large Selection of Sofas, Chairs, V! Rocker, Recliner, Loveseats, etc. f Many Styles &amp;amp; Colors! Out They  Go At 1/2 Price Savings! I J</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>LAMPS, PICTURES MIRRORS, PLANTS ACCESSORIES</p>
        <p>OUR ENTIRE ACCESSORY STOCK AT THE UNBELIEVABLE LOW</p>
        <p>OALL OTHERS ;</p>
        <p>ill^FURNITURElii:</p>
        <p>MREDUCED  -  -</p>
        <p>IM AS MUCH AS ^</p>
        <p>i 20% ii</p>
        <p>1/2</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>I _rl</p>
        <p>OR MORE W'  ^</p>
        <p>m'M:.</p>
        <p>LIVING ROOM TABLES ^</p>
        <p>Big Selection of Matched Sets, One of-a-Kinds and Discontinued ItemsMany Styles &amp;amp; Finishes!</p>
        <p>1/2</p>
        <p>F-LJRNITtJFlE</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;(M Greenville Blvd. Greenville N.C. 2783^ Phone 756-3142 Convenient Credit Terms Free Delivery &amp;amp; Set-Up Huge Selection Competitive Prices</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0025" />
        <p>1  MRS. BOBBY CRANDELL</p>
        <p>2  MRS. ROBERT JOHN HILGOE</p>
        <p>3 - MRS. WILLIAM MITCHELL FOSKEY</p>
        <p>1  MRS. CRANDELL.. .is the former Rosslyn Robin Jones, granddaughter of Mrs. Johnnie Mae Jones of Bethel, whose marriage to Mr. Crandell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Shelton Crandell of Robersonville, took place Saturday.</p>
        <p>of Durham and the late James William Lopposay. The wedding will take place Aug. 6.</p>
        <p>2  MRS. HILGOE. . .is the former Ellen Lee Morrison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Morrison of Greenville, whose marriage to Mr. Hilgoe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Hilgoe of Crystal Lake, 111., took place Saturday.</p>
        <p>5  MISS McCLENNY. . .is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Frank McClenny of Pikeville, who announce her engagement to Thomas Jefferson Cobb of Greenville, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Cobb Sr. of Greenville. The wedding will take place Aug. 13.</p>
        <p>3  MRS. FOSKEY. . .is the former Teressa Lynn Burney, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. George Albert Burney of Greenville,. whose marriage to Mr. Foskey, son of Mrs. Tessie Mae Foskey of Greenville, took place Saturday.</p>
        <p>6  MISS ACAL . .is the daughter of Mrs. Betsey Skinner Hart of Littleton, who announces her engagement to Madison Ar-mistead, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Robert Armistead of Kinston. Miss Acai is also the daughter of the late Stephen Andrew Acai. The wedding will take place Aug. 13.</p>
        <p>4  MISS KALE. . .is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Glenn Kale of Durham, who announce her engagement to Jos^h Wade Lopossay of GreenvQle, son of Mrs. James Rogers</p>
        <p>7  MISS VANDIFORD. . .is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Vandiford of Rt. 1, Ayden, who announce her engagement to Phillip Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Johnsgn Sr. of Rt. 1, Ayden. The wedding will take place Oct. I,</p>
        <p>Accent On Living</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, July 3,1977C-l</p>
        <p>4  MISS CYNTHIA LUCILLE KALE</p>
        <p>5 - MISS BARBArX jean McCLENNY</p>
        <p>6 - MISS MARY BLAKE ACAI</p>
        <p>7  MISS CATHY LYNN VANDIFORD 5</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0026" />
        <p>Miss Morrison, Mr. Hilgoe Wed Friday</p>
        <p>Miss ElJen Lee Morrison became the bride of Mr. Robert John Hilgoe in a candldight double ring ceremony solemnized Friday afternoon at 5:00 oclock in Oar Redeemer Lutheran Church.</p>
        <p>Hie Rev. Charies Miilholland and the Rev. Graham Nahouse performed the ceremony.</p>
        <p>Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Morriaoa of Green</p>
        <p>ville, the bride was given In marriage by her father. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Hilgoe of Crystal Lake, Ul.</p>
        <p>The bride was attired In a quiana jm^y gown designed with a sheer v-neckline accented with lace appliques and pearls. The full A-llne skirt continued into a chapel train. Attached to a camelot cap of floral lace and pearls, her fingertip veil was of</p>
        <p> r"" fS</p>
        <p>" L^eoa. -</p>
        <p>Dyn-o-mite Before! Dud Afterwards...</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>C -ni* Chlctgo Trll)un-N.Y.Nw Synd, Inc.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: At the age of 44, Im stumped. All my life Ive wmrlced with the public and thougd&amp;gt;t 1 had seen and heard everjrthing, but my own situation has me completely baffled.</p>
        <p>After 12 3rears as a divorcee, I remarried. My problem is sex. When I dated my husband our sex was great, but as soon as we got married it started to go downhill, until now it is nothing. Six months of nothing, and I am ready to dimb the walls.</p>
        <p>I love my husband, Abby, and he claims he loves me. What ia wrong? I am his fourth wife. Ifis three previous wives told me that sex with him was wonderfuluntil they got married! They all admitted that they had cheated on Idm. (One he caught in bed.)</p>
        <p>I dont want this to happen to us. Or me. When I mention seeing a doctor he flares up and throws a tantrum like a kid.</p>
        <p>He is 60, drives a truck and looks like a stud, but since our marriage he has been a dud. Help me.</p>
        <p>ME IN N.J.</p>
        <p>DEAR ME; Its psychological. Some men are turned on only by illicit aex. But as soon as H becomes legal (and theretee no hmger toUdden), it loses all Its excitement and appeaL In extreme cases, they are unable to perform.</p>
        <p>Psychotherapy could help. If your husband refuses, yon have no choice but to dimb the walls until you reach the topand then go over to jdn hia three former wives.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I have been trying to teach my children, ages 4 and 6, NEVER to accept any kind of gift from a stranger.</p>
        <p>My problem is that many times when we are on a bus, or</p>
        <p>.. j in smne public place, some well-meaning person will admire my children and offer them candy, gum and even moneyl</p>
        <p>I hate to hurt their feelings, but, Abby. it makes it so hard for mothers to train children NOT to accept anything from strangers when strangers keep offering them goodies and money.</p>
        <p>Can you please say something to help our cause?</p>
        <p>ONE MOTHER</p>
        <p>DEAR MOTHEIR: ni try. Perhaps it hasnt occurred to an you generous, weU-meaning people who love children and cant redat offering them goodies or money, that thfai is the tediniqne used by child molesters who hope to gain a cfaUda confidence in order to get him to go for a ride" or not tell after Improper advances have been made.</p>
        <p>So if yon love diflifren, pteaae dont offer them candy, money or gifts of any Idnd.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: One of the girls I work with is constantly talking about her sex life with her husband. (Shes not a young Idd, either.) Some of us are bored and others are embarrassed by her daily morning reports of what went on in her bedroom, but no &amp;lt;me has the nerve to tell her.</p>
        <p>We know she reads jmur column, so if you cant think of a better scdution, how about running this letter?</p>
        <p>THE OFFICE GANG</p>
        <p>DEAR GANG: If no one has the courage to speak up, ymi an deserv to be bored or embarrassed. IM run your letter, not as a solution to your problem, but as a reminder that the meek are destined to put up with a lot.</p>
        <p>By CECILY BROWNSTONE AnodMed Pren Food Editor</p>
        <p>CHINESE SUPPER Chicken Sticks Plum Sauce Pwk and V^etaUes  Rice</p>
        <p>Ginger Ice Cream  Tea</p>
        <p>GINGER ICE CREAM &amp;gt; An utteriy lovdy combination.</p>
        <p>Syrupiireserved ginger 1 pint bt-quality vanilla ice cream Mince enough drained ginger to make cup; a ^de spring-type chopper is excdlent</p>
        <p>for this job. Let the ice cream stand in the refrigerator or at room temperature until softened; remove from the carton; fold in the minced ginger. Pack back into the carton; refreeze. At serving time, scoop the ice cream into sherbet passes and, if you like, spoon a little of the synq&amp;gt; from the ginger jar over each pffltkm. Makes 4 servings. (The best syrup-preserved ginger we have found recently is inqxHted from Canton, China; it is available in specialty food and (Siinatown shops.)</p>
        <p>222 East Fiftti Street ^ Downtown Greenville Mot For Coeds Only"</p>
        <p>Dresses</p>
        <p>Now</p>
        <p>Pants</p>
        <p>Now</p>
        <p>Shorts</p>
        <p>. Vz</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>OH</p>
        <p>W Will B* Closed Monday, July 4th Opon Tuesday Morning 10:00 A.M.</p>
        <p>silk illusion. She carried a nosegay of miniature carnations, daisies, and yellow sweetheart roses tied with satin streamers.</p>
        <p>Miss Laura Morrismi, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. The bridesmaid were Miss Michelle Mealon of Colorado Springs, Colo, and Miss Peggy (^ase of Seaford, Long Island, N.Y.</p>
        <p>Thomas Curtis, brother-in-law of the bridegroom, served as best man. Ushers were James Morrison, twin brother of the bride, and Michael Whaley of WintervUle.</p>
        <p>Dr. Richard Lucht was organist and Robert R. Hiljpe was soloist.</p>
        <p>After a wedding trip to Asheville, the couple will live In Greenville. Mrs. Hilgoe is a matlmmatics teacher at Rose High School here and her husband is a manufacturing engineer at the Vermont American Corporation here.</p>
        <p>A cake cutting was held after the wedding at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Curtis.</p>
        <p>A reception was held Saturday at Pamlico Beach at the cottage of Mr. and Mrs. William Morrison.</p>
        <p>On The</p>
        <p>Local Scene</p>
        <p>by Rosalie Trohnan</p>
        <p>Cooking Is Fun |</p>
        <p>Nell Hungates granddaughters are lucky girls. When they visit Grandmothers house here they have a doilhouse specially built for them.</p>
        <p>It was created in their grandmother and grandfathers workshop. Mrs. Hungate wields a hammer, a handsaw and a needle with equal ease. A huge table in her and her husband, Bobs workshop holds projects at various stages of completion. This doilhouse was made over a period of about six months, she said. She said it is not completed yet, since she stili plans to sew curtains and bedspreads. The girls dont seem to mind, though, she said. They bring their friends in here grandmothers guest bedroom-sewing room combination) and play for hours.,</p>
        <p>Before the house was straightened for the pic-turetaking, it showed signs of pretend games  pots and pans in the sink and certain articles of furniture transferred from one room to another.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Hungates granddaughters for whom IHe^ house was built are Elizabeth Crofton, five, of Atlanta and Becky Huntsbury, seven, of Winchester, Va.</p>
        <p>The house is made of quarter-inch pl^ood. The exterior has a stuccoed look, created by Mrs. Hungates putting plain old beach sand in her blue paint. The roof is made of poster board, notched to look like shingles, then painted black. The red chimney is of balsa wood. Windows are of Shrink Art material.  ;</p>
        <p>Detailed furnishings, / everything from a dressmakers form to a hat rack to a box of oatmeal were either made by Mrs. Hungate or obtained from her familys hobbies and crafts store at Pitt Plaza.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Hungate has also constructed a miniature church and six other doUhouses for friends children.  ~  _</p>
        <p>(Mrs. Carol Tyer is guest colunuiist this week. Mrs. Trotman is on vacation.)</p>
        <p>BEFORE</p>
        <p>AFTER</p>
        <p>-^ TIMELESS DIAMOND</p>
        <p>Diamonds are dated only by tlieir settings. Cleaned and remountd, their ageless beauty finds new life and loveliness.</p>
        <p>You are welcome to come in and have our expert designer give you a free-of-cbarge estimate on how beautifully inexpensive this transformation can be.</p>
        <p>lAUTARES JEWELERS</p>
        <p>DIAMOND SPECIALISTS</p>
        <p>Registered Jewelers  Certified Gemoiogists 414 Evens Street</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>asnion</p>
        <p>earance</p>
        <p>We Will Be Closed Monday, July 4th</p>
        <p>Sale Starts Tuesday, 10 A.M.</p>
        <p>One Group</p>
        <p>Formal Dresses</p>
        <p>Remainins Stock</p>
        <p>Sommer</p>
        <p>Dresses</p>
        <p>/3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>All Swim Suits &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Cover-Ops</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>Remmniug</p>
        <p>Stock</p>
        <p>Ladies</p>
        <p>Summer Robes</p>
        <p>V3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>Large Group</p>
        <p>Sportswear</p>
        <p>/2</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>Mens</p>
        <p>Leisure</p>
        <p>Suits</p>
        <p>Regulars-Longs-Shorts Solids And Ciiecks Fron M7.S0 to *121.00</p>
        <p>/2</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>One Group</p>
        <p>Jonior-Misses-Half Size</p>
        <p>Dresses</p>
        <p>/3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>One Group</p>
        <p>Pantsuits</p>
        <p>/3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>Mens Long Sleeve</p>
        <p>Leisure</p>
        <p>Shirts</p>
        <p>Sizes S-B-L-XL</p>
        <p>Mn's</p>
        <p>Florsheim Shoes</p>
        <p>Discontinuad Styles</p>
        <p>Reduced</p>
        <p>Selected Groups Children's</p>
        <p>Sportswear ^ Bathing Suits</p>
        <p>j</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>Boys</p>
        <p>^Pajamas</p>
        <p>Broken Sizes</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>Children's Department</p>
        <p>Boys Suits</p>
        <p>Girls Shorts</p>
        <p>Toddler thru size 14</p>
        <p>Sportswear &amp;amp; Dresses</p>
        <p>Toddler thru Size 14</p>
        <p>Sportswear &amp;amp; Dresses</p>
        <p>Slzes4to6X&amp;amp;7to14</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>Downtown Mall Shop Daily 10 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>'Home Owned &amp;amp; Operated For Over 56 Years</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0027" />
        <p>Miss Burney Wed</p>
        <p>In Home Ceremony</p>
        <p>Miss Teressa Lynn Burney became the bride of WUliam MIL cbeU Foskey in a doubie ring c^mony officiated by the Rev.</p>
        <p>WUson. Heid in the brides heme, the wedding took place Skturdayat5;00p.m.</p>
        <p>Roger Ingram, organist presented the wedding music for tlie occasion.</p>
        <p>;The brides parents are Mr. aM Mrs. George Albert Burney m Greenville. 'The bridegroom is tlie son of Mrs. Tessie Mae F)keyofGreenviiie.</p>
        <p>The bride, given in marriage by her father, selected a white rainal gown of polyester double kpit fashioned in an open V-neckllne which was accented by seeded pearls. Fastened at the vrist, the long fitted sleeves ^re accented by seeded pearl buttcHis. Extended from an emigre waistline, the full A-line sMrt flowed into a chapel length tniin. Her silk illusion veil was attached to a cap of white streamers appliqued with flowers. She carried a single white and yellow mum accented by yellow satin streamers.</p>
        <p>fMlss Doretha Edwards of Arl</p>
        <p>ington, Vs., sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Designed with a V-neckline, the attendants dress was a light blue polyester knit formal gown. Ruffles enhanced the neckline and cuffs of the long sleeves.</p>
        <p>Best man for the cermnony was Tim Moore of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Mothers of the bride and bridegroom were remembered with white carnation corsages. Mrs. Doretha Garris, grandmother of the bride, and Mrs. Sarah Spell, aunt of the bridegroom, were given single carnation corsages.</p>
        <p>Immediately blowing the ceremony, a receptkm was given by the brides mother in her home. Mrs. Esther Mabry, great auht of the bride served cake and Mrs. Panciel Garris, aunt of the bride, poured punch. Assisting was Miss Sally Thomas.</p>
        <p>After a wedding trip to unannounced points, the couple will reside in Norfolk, Va. The bride and bridegroom are graduates of J. H. Rose High School. The bridegroom is currently serving IptheU.S.Navy.</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>Births</p>
        <p>;  Pritchard</p>
        <p> Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bari Pritchard of Ayden, a daughter, Kiana Antoinette, June 17 in Pitt Memorial Ho^ital.</p>
        <p>Drive, Greenville, a son, Robert Avery, June 18 in Pitt Memorial Ho^ital.</p>
        <p>Weatherington</p>
        <p>Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Johnny James Weatherington of Rt. 1, Winterville, a daughter, Stephanie Anne, June 18 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Harrdson Bora to Mr,-and Mrs. Billy Ray Harrelson of 1106 Forbes Street, Greenville, a daughter, Amy Marie, June 19 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Siarpe</p>
        <p>Bora to Mr. and Mrs. John Hpnry Sharpe of Rt. 4, Greenville, a son, Dairick Lamont, June 18 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Harris</p>
        <p>Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Wayne Harris of Rt. 2, Box 192 Robersonville, a daughter,,. Christina Lynn, June 19 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Taylor</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Richard Taylor Jr. of Rt. 5, Box 262 Greenville, a son, Jonathan Richard, June 18 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Roach</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Roach of Rt. 1, Grimesland, a daughter, Sadon-na Marlene, June 19 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Hall</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith Hall of 220 Cherrywood</p>
        <p>WaU</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. William Earl Wall of Rt. 2, Ayden, a daughter, Dana Gayle, June 19 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Downtown Pitt Plaza</p>
        <p>FINAL</p>
        <p>DAYS</p>
        <p>on our</p>
        <p>SEMI-ANNUAL BRAS and</p>
        <p>GIRDLES</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p> Warners</p>
        <p> Vanity Fair</p>
        <p> Olga</p>
        <p>Also choose from a large selection of discontinued foundations.</p>
        <p>% off</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN Pin PLAZA</p>
        <p>A A</p>
        <p>'y*</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;y'Brodys will be open Monday, July 4th!</p>
        <p>GREAT STOREWIDE</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>iute ijp33^%</p>
        <p>Entire Stock ofMissy Dresses andFormis</p>
        <p>from DAVID CRYSTAL  RONA  HENRY LEE  DE WEESE  SERBIN  and others.Junior Sportswear</p>
        <p>Our entire stock of summer shorts, blouses, skirts, knit tee tops . . . the best selection of summer sportswear ever, sizes 5-13.</p>
        <p>Missy Sportswear</p>
        <p>Designer name separates by JONES  JAMES KENROB  JOHN MEYER  PERSONAL  and others! Choose from jackets, slacks, shorts, tops in sizes 8 to 20. In group E.</p>
        <p>Beachwear</p>
        <p>Designer-name Bathing Suits and cover-ups in Junior &amp;amp; missy sizes.</p>
        <p>Custom-Size</p>
        <p>Fashions</p>
        <p>Choose from over 400 brand new halfsize dresses. Sizes 12Vi to 24Vs. Cool, crisp styles including separates. Blouses, slacks, and jackets.</p>
        <p>Lingerie and Foundations</p>
        <p>You'll find Summer Robes, groups of foundations and special savings on briefs.</p>
        <p>Accessories</p>
        <p>Save on our group of HANDBAGS, JEWELRY, and more.</p>
        <p>t/kue vpto'H0%Ladies Shoes</p>
        <p>Over 3,000 pairs of summer shoe fashions are on sale now! Choose from PALIZZIO, AMALFI, RED CROSS, PAPPAGALLO, JOYCE, and Others.</p>
        <p>LIFE STRIDE, and RED CROSS COBB IES (were to $23)</p>
        <p>Red Cross, Bandolino, Joyce, Pap-pagallo (were to $28)</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>17.90</p>
        <p>Pappagallo, Miramonte, Selby, Red Cross (were to $30)</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>19.90</p>
        <p>Amalfi, Palizzio, Deliso, Johansen (vyere to $45)</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>24.90</p>
        <p>Childrens Shoes</p>
        <p>(PITT PLAZA ONLY) Save on selected shoes!</p>
        <p>J*CbUA UpA</p>
        <p>zs%</p>
        <p>Childrens Wear</p>
        <p>(PITT PLAZA ONLY) Groups of Summer Fashions.</p>
        <p>Jeu/jtS07o</p>
        <p>Coat Fashions</p>
        <p>Group of all-weather coats . . . year 'round fashions. In sizes 8-16.6.99</p>
        <p>Junior and MissyTee Tops</p>
        <p>(Reg. to$12)S.99</p>
        <p>Group of</p>
        <p>Junior Shorts</p>
        <p>(Reg.to$n)</p>
        <p>1/.99</p>
        <p>Group of</p>
        <p>Dusters</p>
        <p>By Model Coats (Reg. $16) Sizes8-20</p>
        <p>*^.99-S.9f</p>
        <p>Group of</p>
        <p>Benauld Sunglasses</p>
        <p>(Reg.$8-$18)</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>Z.99</p>
        <p>Group of</p>
        <p>Terry Scuffs</p>
        <p>(Reg. $4-$4.50) S-M-L-XL</p>
        <p>33ii^</p>
        <p>Groups of</p>
        <p>Bras</p>
        <p>VANITY FAIR, OLGA, and WARNERS.-20%</p>
        <p>Entire Stock ofJovan, Jean Nate; Benandre &amp;amp;Esthetique</p>
        <p>luxury soaps and bath crystals.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0028" />
        <p>C-4Tta Dlly Kaetor. GraenvlUe, N.C.-Gmby, Jujy S, 1*77</p>
        <p>Page-Saunders Wedding Held Saturday</p>
        <p>ROCKY MOUNT - Miss Rosemary Lee Saunders and Willie Glenn Page were united in marriage Saturday at noon at St. Paul United Methodist Church here.</p>
        <p>The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Omeria Franklin Saunders of Rocky Mount. The bridegrooms parents are Mrs. Magolene Page Connor of Lill-IngUm and the late Thomas VadenPage.</p>
        <p>A program of wedding music was presented by Mrs. R. Stevenson Harper, sister of the bride, of Gremville, organist. Vocalist was WUliam Hill of Burgaw.</p>
        <p>The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a formal gown of candlelight silk organza and Imported English net. The empire bodice, appliqued with reembroidered Alencon lace and bridal pearls, featured a wedding band neckline and cap sleeves. A softly gathered skirt, bordered with a band of Venlse lace, had scattered apliques of lace and pearls ending in a chapel train.  .</p>
        <p>The Cathedral veil was of imported silk alusin. The headpiece was graced with lace and pearls and was edged with Venise lace. She carried a formal bouquet of white and coral baby roses interspersed with babys breath.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Judy Wiggs, sister of the bride, of Yaupon Beach was matron of honor. She wore a formal-length coral quiana gown. The empire bodice had spaghetti straps. A chiffon capeletcompleted the outfit. She carried a nosegay of white baby</p>
        <p>roses and baby carnations.</p>
        <p>Bridesmaids were Miss Anne Wiggs, niece of the bride, of YaiqKH) Beach and Miss Janice Frye o{ Winston Salem. They were dressed idoitically to the matron of honor and carried matching nosegays.</p>
        <p>The best man was Ronnie Page of Sanford, brother of the bridegroom.</p>
        <p>Ushers were Jan Roberts of St. Pauls and Randy Godwin of LUl-ington.</p>
        <p>The mother of the bride wore a fmnal-length coral gown &amp;lt;rf peau de soie overlaid wMh chiffon and a matching chiffon capelet. The bridegrooms moth' wore a formal-length gown of pink quiana. Both mothers wore smaU corsages of white baby roses and baby cai^ nations.</p>
        <p>A reception was held following the wedding at the home of the brides parents. Hostesses were Mrs. Lynne T. Powell, Mrs. M. E. English, both of Rocky Mount, Miss Diane Alexandra-and Miss L. K. Woigard, both of Greenville, and Mrs. An^y D. Davis of WOson and Mrs.xSloria Hemmerle of Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>Following a wedding trip to Virginia, the couple will live in Greensboro.</p>
        <p>The bridegroom is a graduate of East Carolina University and is employed by the Colgate-Palmolive Company in Greensboro. 'The bride is a graduate of the ECU School of Nursing. She is employed by the Pitt County Health Department.</p>
        <p>Friday, the bride was honored at a bridesmaids luncheon at a Rocky Mount restaurant.</p>
        <p>Miss Jones, Mr, Crandell Married In Bethel</p>
        <p>MRS. WILLIE GLENN PAGE</p>
        <p>Hostesses were Mrs. Charles Ward and Mrs. Vernon Moody, both of Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>Friday niit after the rehear</p>
        <p>sal, the bridal couple were entertained at a liarty given by Mrs. M. E. Enish at her Rocky Mount home.</p>
        <p>W elcome Wagon Schedule</p>
        <p>The Welcome Wagon schedule for July is as follows: Tuesday, July 5 at 10 a. m. Ladies bridge at First Federal Savings and Loan; Friday, July 8 at 7:45 p. m.  Couplra bridge at First Federal; Wednesday, July 13 at 11:30 a. m.  Luncheon at the GreenvUle Gdf and Country Club, with Addie Gore speaking on home canning and freezing; Tuesday, July 19 at 10 a. m.  Ladies bridge at First Federal;</p>
        <p>Wednesday, July 27 at 10 a. m.  Board meeting at First Federal; and Friday, July 29 at 10 a. m.  coffee at the home of Charlotte Ffanagan, 3008 Ellsworth Drive.</p>
        <p>Wax beans are delicious when they are sauced with a mixture of thin strips of onion (softened in butter) and sour cream.</p>
        <p>At</p>
        <p>Wit's End</p>
        <p>By Erma Bombeck</p>
        <p>I.D. Dawson Co.</p>
        <p>Grnvill</p>
        <p>10 th St.</p>
        <p>752-1600</p>
        <p>-fBWLKri3</p>
        <p>^300 Gift Certificate</p>
        <p>FREE</p>
        <p>With a purchas* of Rumblo Soot or Fancy Props Lino</p>
        <p>Ten years ago 1 didnt know anything about myself. I didnt know who I was, where I was or where I was going.</p>
        <p>1 didnt know how I felt about my plants, my tennis game, breast feeding, nicknames, waxed dental floss or pre-marital sex. I had never analyzed my marriage, my dreams, my hostUities, or my reasons for taking a tape recorder with me to the labor room.</p>
        <p>I crossed my legs at the ankle and slept with my fists closed, but never knew why.,I fantasized about Paul Newman calling me out of a high-level Girl Scout cookie meeting because he was unable to sleep. My marriage was working, but the reason was something I couldnt put my finger on.</p>
        <p>Then came the tide of self-analysis books  one, two, sometimes three and four a month inviting me to dissect my motivations for living and understand myself.</p>
        <p>So, I became my own best friend, went around saying, Im okay, you're okay and opened our marriage at both ends. It has taken ten years of self-analysis, but Ive discovered something I never knew about me before. Im boring.</p>
        <p>I liked me better when I was mysterious and shallow. Even my anxiety attacks arent any</p>
        <p>fun anymore. What good does it do me to get uptight when deep down Inside I know its merely a psychological signal to myself to alert me to future dangers and threats?</p>
        <p>My friend, Mayva, is really into self-analysis and continues to drive me crazy. The other day I  tried to down a vitamin pUl when Mayva said, Are you having trouble swallowing that pUl? Yes.</p>
        <p>What year did your dog die? Two years ago. Whats that got to do with swallowing a pUl?</p>
        <p>Why are you so hostUe about the dogs death? lamnothostUe!</p>
        <p>Have you ever felt you were too assertive and tended to dominate your marriage? Mayva, I am sick to death of analyzing my every move. Youre uptight. Maybe you should meditate for 30 minutes. 1 cant. I forgot my mantra. Her eyebrow raised, Thats rather Freudian, isnt it?</p>
        <p>I call it old age.</p>
        <p>I think youre going through a predictable life crisis. </p>
        <p>Which one?</p>
        <p>I dont know. Ga Sheehy only went through age . 40 in Passages  Youre probably right. We think too much about ourselves.</p>
        <p>Tell me about it, I said, putting my arm over her shoulder.</p>
        <p>Semi-Annual</p>
        <p>CLEARANCE</p>
        <p>July 5 Thru July 19</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>All Merchandl</p>
        <p>Open Wednesday Thursday &amp;amp; Friday Nights Til 9 During This Sale ^</p>
        <p>In Stock</p>
        <p>White Swan / Action</p>
        <p>TiHiny C CUi^iic 24-Hour Duty</p>
        <p>One Group</p>
        <p>Uniforms 1 /  Shoes</p>
        <p>lops /2oA &amp;lt;t^00</p>
        <p>One Rack Large Selection</p>
        <p>*5</p>
        <p>JA's UNIFORAAS</p>
        <p>1203 So. Evans St.</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>752-2426</p>
        <p>Hie marriage of Miss Rosslyn Robin Jones and Bobby Crandell was solemnized at 2 p.m. Saturday at Riddick Baptist Church in Bethel. The Rev. J. L. Farmer of Rocky Mount performed the ceremony.</p>
        <p>The, bride is the daughter of Mrs. Evelyn Knight and the granddaughter of Mrs. Johnnie Mae Jones of Bethel. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Shelton Crandell of Rober-sonville.</p>
        <p>The bride was given in marriage by her uncle, Chester Lee Jones of Washington, D.C. She wore a formal length gown of white sUk organza over peau de soie designed with an open V-neckline outlined in imported reembroidered Chantilly lace beaded with bridal pearls. The matching lace was repeated on the empire bodice and the full bishop sleeves had appliques and cuffs of lace.</p>
        <p>The modified A-line skirt was fashioned with panels of imported lace extending down the front of the gown and at the hemline. The lace edged the chapel length train. SUk covered buttons enhanced the back of the gown from the neckline to the waist. She wore a chapd length mantilla edged in imported chantUly re-embroidered lace held in place by a Cameiot cap overlaid with matching lace beaded with pearls.</p>
        <p>She carried a cascade-shaped bouquet of white carnations and</p>
        <p>Births</p>
        <p>Anderson</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. WUlie Glenn Anderson of 17-9 Smith Street, GreenvUle, a daughter, Lillie Fay, June 19 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>blue babys breath.</p>
        <p>Miss Glendolyn Jones of Chapel HUl. sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Cheryl Knight of Bethel, sister of Uie bride. Miss Valerie Jones of Bethel and Miss Vlcld Grimes of Duriiam, both cousins of the bride. Miss Patricia Crandell of Danbury, Conn., sister of the bridegroom. Miss Marsha Drake of Bet hel, Miss Wanda SmaU of Plymouth, Mrs. Josly W. Allen of Nrawood and Mrs. Deborah A. Hyman of Bethel.</p>
        <p>WUliam Robinson of Fayet-tevUle was best man. Ushers were Henry Knight of Bethel, brother of the bride, Norris Crandell of RobersonvUle and Shdton Cranddl of Danbury, Conn., brothers of the bridegroom, Teddy Hyman of FayettevUle, GHain Brown of Elizabeth City and Von Davis of Danhury, Conn., both cousins of the bridegroom, WUlie WUIiams of RobersonvUle and Louis Person of GreenvUle.</p>
        <p>Miss Shanya Jenkins of Bethl was. flower girl and Brian Best of Bethel, nephew of the bridegroom, was ring bearer. Ms. Velma WOklns of Bethel was soloist and Mrs. Myriam C. Harris of GreenvUle was pianist. Miss AmeUa Chance of Bethel was bridal consultant.</p>
        <p>The recqition was hdd at the</p>
        <p>LodgeHaU in Bethel.</p>
        <p>The bride is a graduate of N. C. Central University. She Is a teacher for the Pitt County schools.</p>
        <p>The brid^room is attending A &amp;amp; T State University and is employed by Flower Industries in Greensboro.</p>
        <p>Fresh Rolls</p>
        <p>Diener's Bakerjf</p>
        <p>815 Dickinson Ave. ^</p>
        <p>CLEARANCE</p>
        <p>Dupree</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. CecU James Dupree of Falkland, a son, Otis ONeal, June 19 in Pitt Memorial Ho^ital.</p>
        <p>Hodges</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. WUliam Herbert Hodges of Branch TraUer Court, Lot 16D, GreenvUle, a son, James WUliam, June 20 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Fisher</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Landis Fisher of 610 Gooden Place, GreenvUle, a dau^ter, Joy ChanteUe, June 20 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>ON ALL TENNIS APPAREL All TENNIS DRESSES '</p>
        <p>SStoSIO off Retail Price All SHORTS and</p>
        <p>TOPS 20% OFF</p>
        <p>All Men . TENNIS CLOTHES 25% OFF</p>
        <p>A Select Group of Men's and Ladies</p>
        <p>TENNIS SHOES 25%OFF</p>
        <p>__m  All Sales Final  Sale Ends Sat. July 9th.</p>
        <p>Tke Name Of Oar Game Is Service"</p>
        <p>ARLINGTON BLVD. OFF 264</p>
        <p>BYPASS BEHIND KINGS-IN GREENVILL&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>OPEN DAILY 10-6 PM-FRIDAY TIL 9 PM-PHONE 756-6001</p>
        <p>Greenville Square</p>
        <p>(NttoK-Mart)</p>
        <p>Now Opeo</p>
        <p>Hours: 10:00 A.AA.-9:00 P.M. Mon.-Sat. T</p>
        <p>Open Jiily 4 a.m.-6 p.ni.</p>
        <p>"WHAAAM The Clown &amp;amp; Balloon Artist</p>
        <p>Will Be At Our Store Friday From 1 P.M. To 9 P.M. FREE Balloons To The Kids</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0029" />
        <p>FORECAST FOR SUNDAY, JULY 3,1977</p>
        <p>GENERAL TENDENCIES' An imuAiftlly intnrostn^ time in which the planetary forces at one moment are benign and favorable and the next in conflict with what ia to your beat interesta. Make it a point to be wary and not argue with others while at the same tinik looking for now ways and means by which to go forward.</p>
        <p>ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Be with good friends but only those who can be trusted and are not greedy. Dont harp about some former error with a friend.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Study how to improve your income and dont scatter your forces in all directions. Forget the social for a bit and concentrate on the practical.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) You have good judgment where'the personal side of life is concerned, so see good friends. Feel more sorry for others than for yourself.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Confide in a friend about a business venture and get a different view-point. Avoid those who are too demanding.  ^</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Contacting good friends wW bring fine benefits your way now. Have a good time but dont take risks with reputation.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Not a good time to think of new ventures, when you have other important ones to wind up first. Cany through with promises and show othdrs you are a loyal person.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Put new ideas to work that will help you become more successful in the future. Dont assume some responsibility that you do not like or you could regret it later.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Keep promises and gain respect thereby. Avoid demanding jMutners and be happy with male, loved one.</p>
        <p>SAGnTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Fine day for talHng over with associates just how you can be mutually more successful in the future. Avoid arguments, get more done.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (Doc. 22 to Jan. 20) You have some work to take care of now, so forget pleasure which could prove to be a fizzle, anyway.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Avoid arguments at home and save the day. Put more music into your Ufa and be happier.</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Use that fine artistic talent you possess to improve your surroundings. Try to be more thoughtful of others as weU as of yourself now.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will require a fins academic education In order to fulfiU the great prmnise here, one which will stress the logic and theory behind aU motivations. Teach early to work trith the hands and not be afraid of honest work.</p>
        <p>"The Stars impel, they do not compel.   What you of your life is largely up to YOU!</p>
        <p>1977 McNau^t Syndicate, Inc.)</p>
        <p>to your way of thinking at this time.</p>
        <p>MOON CHII45REN (June 22 to July 21) Not a good day to be in the company of friends who could be under pressure at this point</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Not a good day to handle public matters since key persons are not very cooperative. Sidestep one who wants to take advantage of you.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Be sure you handle all tasks well since higher-ups are observant of what you do. Be happy with the one you love.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Not a good day to get involved with errant hunches. Use your good judgment instead. Use utmost care in travd.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Avoid making any drastic changes where associates are concerned today or you could get in trouble.</p>
        <p>Some Progress In Sixty Years</p>
        <p>'The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.StmdaK July 3,1977C4</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Good day to discuss mutual ideas with partners and come to right decisions. Be moderate in all things.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (Dec, 22 to Jan. 20) Make sure you keep promises made to congeniis. Don't be too extravagant where pleasure is concerned. Be more practical.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Dont bring up a bothersome family matter now that could diaturb harmony. Show that you are a good sport.</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Fine day for contacting, business experts who can be of assistance to you in the future. Be sure to folfow rules that apply to you.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she should be taught to think properly instead of relying too much on emotions There could be much success here if a good education is provided. There is much artistic and musical talent in this chart.</p>
        <p>"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you malta of your life is largely up to YOUI</p>
        <p>((c) 1977, McNaughtSyndicate, Inc.)</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR MONDAY, JULY 4, 1977</p>
        <p>GOREN BRIDGE</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H.GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>1977byChiclfl0Tribun</p>
        <p>*"0.1As South, vulnerable, ^you hold;</p>
        <p>KJ873  0  K6  AQ7542</p>
        <p>t^The bidding has proceeded;</p>
        <p>South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>*  Pass  1 T  Pass</p>
        <p>-.I o  Pass  2 NT  Pass</p>
        <p>- ,I3   Pass  4   Pass</p>
        <p>0.6As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>85 '792 0AK763 A954 The bidding has proceeded; North  East  Sooth  West</p>
        <p>1 7  Pass  2 0  Pass</p>
        <p>3 7  Pass  4   Pass</p>
        <p>4 7  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>GENERAL TENDENCIES: There are some irritating conditions in effect now, so do nothing of dramatic nature. But you are able to be original and progressive and thus make considerable progress.</p>
        <p>ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Engage in whatever is idealistic and dont be so concerned about making money. Put that artistic ability you possess to work.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Be more practical minded in dealing with others today. Attend a group affair later in the day and gain much pleasure.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Use common sense in handling a private anxiety. You can easily persuade others</p>
        <p>SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (AP)  Leo Rosencrans first effort at writing was so bad a Findlay, Ohio, College professor suggested he tear it up.</p>
        <p>So he decided to write something else, a scenario for a motion picture. That was more than 60 years ago and Rosencrans is now celebrating his 40th year of writing for the motion picture industry.</p>
        <p>Rosencrans recalls that the Findlay professor was so impressed with the first scenario that he suggested an outline be sent to a Hollywood producer. Rosencrans sent it and the producer bought it.</p>
        <p>At age 80, Rosencrans said he</p>
        <p>*What action do you take?</p>
        <p>Q.2As South, both vulnerable and you have 60 on score, you hold:</p>
        <p>652 76 OQ10743 J854 Partner opens the bidding with one heart. What action do you take?</p>
        <p>Q.7As South, vulnerable, you hold;</p>
        <p> AQ982 7AK74 OAQJ ? The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 1  Pass Pass 1 NT Dble. 2  Pass Pass</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>Cleaning Will Combat Allergy</p>
        <p>Q.3Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>72 7KJ9852 0 K6 +954 Partner opens the bidding with two no trump. What do you respond?</p>
        <p>Q.8East-West vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>852 7K94 OAJ1073 A? The bidding has proceeded: North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>1   Pass  1 0  Pass</p>
        <p>1 7  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>Q.4As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p> A1062 785 OKQ73 984</p>
        <p>Partner opens the bidding with one spade. Wha/do you respond?</p>
        <p>Look for answers on Monday.</p>
        <p>,,Q.5Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p> KQ874 OAQJ752 Qe The bidding has proceeded: South West North East</p>
        <p>1 0 Pass 2  Pass</p>
        <p>2  Pass 3 0 Pass ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>Your play to the first trick could decide the fate of the contract! A writer once remarked: Theres no such thing as a blind opening lead, only deaf opening leaders! Learn to find the winning attack with Charles Gorens Opening Leads." For your copy, send $1.50 to Goren-Leads," c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 259, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make checks payable to NEWSPAPERBOOKS.</p>
        <p>A Cheap Way Of Touring</p>
        <p>Jiour ^raaona</p>
        <p>PAINT A DECORATING CENTER</p>
        <p>280* E. 10th St. Phone 752-3881 Bill Turcotts, Manager</p>
        <p>LONDON (UPI) - With European gasoline costs escalating, moped and motorcycle hire can be an inexpensive alternative to renting a car and a good way to tour the continent.</p>
        <p>Rent-a-Scooter Ltd. of London is offering a new package service to summer tourists. It is providing free unlimited mileage, a, free safety helmet and full car club membership  plus complete ferry booking service to France, Holland and Spain  with the rental of a motorcycle or moped.</p>
        <p>DDDDV Jl FABRIC (tfiQIlIbn nqp SIZRERS</p>
        <p>Opn SI Dll, Ikldljr, Ml M</p>
        <p>Calico Prints</p>
        <p>lorful yd.</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>45" wide  Poly 8&amp;lt; cotton  Brite, colorful prints  Great for sundressesi Short lengths  Reg. *2.59 yd.</p>
        <p>July 4th ^ Only e</p>
        <p>Yd.</p>
        <p>2 TABLES</p>
        <p>Gabardine</p>
        <p>*0" wide  Large selection of both summer and fall colors  Reg. *3.99 yd.</p>
        <p>July 4th Only</p>
        <p>2TABLES</p>
        <p>Sportswear By Charter</p>
        <p>hecks -r</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>45" wide  Asstd. plaids - checks -r stripes  solids  For now wear  Reg. to *3.49 yd.</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>Yd.</p>
        <p>July4ftl</p>
        <p>Only</p>
        <p>Eiostic4 yds. for 88* ^A-Singer "Gold Bond" Needles</p>
        <p>July 4th Reg. *1.20 Ea. only</p>
        <p>88*</p>
        <p>SUMMER SEV^QNG FESTIVAL</p>
        <p>Register For Free Sewing Machine</p>
        <p>White Model #954  $399.00 value. Reflister for Drawing to be held Sat. July 16th. Be A Lucky Winnerl No Purchase Necessary. You Do Not Have To Be Present To Win!</p>
        <p>llXtlhiniCAM</p>
        <p>'A^Shop Our Selction Of "Instant Sundress Fabric"</p>
        <p>Jadhion fabric</p>
        <p>333 Arlington Blvd. Phone 756-7833 Mon.-Fri. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. - Sat. 10 A.M. to6 P.M.</p>
        <p>CROSSWORD PUZZLE</p>
        <p>ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI)&amp;gt;-Spring and summer flowers can trigger sneezing, hay fever and allergies. </p>
        <p>But State Health Commissioner Dr. Warren R. Lawson says many allergies start at home.</p>
        <p>To help control allergic reactions, Lawson recommends frequent cleaning of walls, floors and ceilings to remove dust. Stick to soap and water, he says, because many nonsoap cleaning products can cause reactions.</p>
        <p>ACM**</p>
        <p>1. Exploit 4. Who is me 8. Pre-eminenI</p>
        <p>11. HenI of seals</p>
        <p>12. EartP</p>
        <p>13. Capekplay</p>
        <p>14. Mila</p>
        <p>15. Wairanty</p>
        <p>17. Coaise hominy</p>
        <p>19. Node</p>
        <p>20. Bedouin headband</p>
        <p>24. Undeveloped floweis 27. Announcement</p>
        <p>31. Arnold Pabner usas one</p>
        <p>32. Chemed</p>
        <p>33. Memorial 38 ColwlMl</p>
        <p>37. Bondaiy</p>
        <p>38. Press bf payment 40. Sivarm</p>
        <p>44. Qualfied 49. People in leneral</p>
        <p>hqs eiss sissii</p>
        <p>iasi[sis]S]ii[3 mnias ang] anii GQSiBaQi^aEa</p>
        <p>r:3S]g]a gtisQ lasasni^an sqs</p>
        <p>[!;ng]i^</p>
        <p>SQQuassia Bsns BUS</p>
        <p>plans to keep on writing movies as long as they can prop me up in front of a typewriter. He is now in semiretirement and does most of his writing at his home here.</p>
        <p>I go up to the studio only when turning in scripts, casting a picture, or occasionally directing," he said.</p>
        <p>CkHUiting a movie now in production, he lays claim to having written for 370 camera productions.</p>
        <p>Rosencrans was bom and raised In Findlay and holds three degrees from Findlay College. He started selling sce-i narios for silent movies while ^U1 in school there.</p>
        <p>'Following graduation, he went to Hollywood, where he both wrote for and acted in motion pictures. After that he spent a number of years on the old Chautauqua circuit, a forerunner of vaudeville, which brought plays, lectures and gospel singers to the big cities and small towns of America.</p>
        <p>After his Chautauqua travels, Rosencrans wrote and sold radio shows.</p>
        <p>Congratulations to...</p>
        <p>Malcolm S. Trupp</p>
        <p>1202 S. Overlook Dr. Greenville, N.c.</p>
        <p>Malcolm was the winner of Ward Nichols given away during our Grand Opening ... and thanks to everyone who helped make^r Grand Opening a huge success.</p>
        <p> ^SrtsSel  O*  TKtlkOAY'S  FUHII</p>
        <p>52. Distant</p>
        <p>53. Uta</p>
        <p>54. Stye of arctiAactin</p>
        <p>58 Usaastwtlte</p>
        <p>1. PoisoMis tree</p>
        <p>2. Sponpamod</p>
        <p>3. Clieasa</p>
        <p>T-</p>
        <p>iS</p>
        <p>Par time 35 minutes' AP Newsfeatures</p>
        <p>4. Businass lettars</p>
        <p>5. Depamlan 8 Radian</p>
        <p>7. Sbodi 8 Encomium</p>
        <p>9. Disadvantaft</p>
        <p>10. lavar</p>
        <p>18 Perplodly 18 Close friend</p>
        <p>21. Maiteiipieoe</p>
        <p>22. Molecule</p>
        <p>23. Succession</p>
        <p>25. Cub scout pack</p>
        <p>26. Stabilizo</p>
        <p>27. Basamarinr</p>
        <p>28. Indian</p>
        <p>29. Principal</p>
        <p>30. Buff 34. Troops 36. Drugiet</p>
        <p>39. Thalchini palm</p>
        <p>41. RIvar island</p>
        <p>42. Divan</p>
        <p>43. Tasial</p>
        <p>44. Prior to</p>
        <p>45. Barm Slava</p>
        <p>46. Foundation</p>
        <p>47. Pasture 48 Tm</p>
        <p>Weddings by Roselind</p>
        <p>Flowers-Directing-Catering</p>
        <p>Expert professional hejp in planning your wedding simply by c^ling Roselind Causey Johnston 752-33U</p>
        <p>An Added Service Of</p>
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        <p>509 E.i Third St.  Phone 752^1 Pitt Plaza  Phone 750-1100 Oreenvllle* N.C.</p>
        <p>Call For Appointment</p>
        <p>'The Instant Dress'!</p>
        <p>30' per inch buys you a sundress you stitch-up in ust minutes, toss on and go! Bare and breezy.</p>
        <p>Completed Dress for os little as .</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>9</p>
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        <p>Here's o perfect way to help moke your life easier this summer. We hove fabrics for patio dresses, surt-dresses and halter tops that ore easy-to-weor, eosy-t-make and best of all, easy on your budget! Its The Instont Dress! It requires one seom and absolutely no pattern. Buy fabric by the inch ... it's already smocked ot the top . . . and create your own fashion look in just minutesi Here's how you do it! Your bust measurement is the key to the'whole idea! For Example; If your bust measurement is 34", subtract 4"; therefore you buy only 30" and at 30' per inch . .. your dress will cost a mere $9! This terrific low price includes 12" of matching strops to complete the total picture.</p>
        <p>Imagine . . . such a low price for one of the hottest fashion looks this summer! All fabric is 100% polyester heat transfer prints one! a versatile 60" wide!</p>
        <p>Shop Aton. Thru Wed. and Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Thurs. and Fri. 10 a.m.-9 p.m.  Phone 758-2176</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0030" />
        <p>Special Purchase On A Selected Group Of</p>
        <p>All-Weather Coats!!</p>
        <p>12.H) &amp;gt; 15.88</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>Polyester and cotton blended in solid color canvases. Single or double breasted, belted or nonbelted. Some hooded. In sizes 6 to 18. Slight irregulars.   i</p>
        <p>Vs Off Now On A Group Of Junior &amp;amp; Misses Swimsuits!</p>
        <p>H) TO 25.08</p>
        <p>Regular M2 to *38</p>
        <p>2-piece bikinis, 1-piece maillots and 2-piece boy legs in nylons. Solids and prints to brighten up summer. Choose from famous makers. Misses &amp;amp; jr. sizes.</p>
        <p>Now Vs Off A Group</p>
        <p>Of Girl's Dresses</p>
        <p>and Sportswear!</p>
        <p>2.671.2307</p>
        <p>Regular *4 to *36</p>
        <p>Gauchos, skirts, dresses, shorts and tops. In great summer colors of beige, white, green, yellow and light blue. Sizes 4 to 6X, and 7 to 14. .</p>
        <p>Special Purchase On Men's Solids And</p>
        <p>Stripe Knit Shirts!</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>50% polyester/50% cotton blended for comfortable wear. Styled with collar and placket front and short sleeves. Sizes S,M,L,XL. Hurry in now!</p>
        <p>Save 3.12 Now On</p>
        <p>Short Sleeve Jr. Rugby Stripe Shirts!</p>
        <p>608</p>
        <p>Regular *10</p>
        <p>Polyester/cotton blended. Styles with short sleeves and placket front. In red/white, red/navy, blue/green. S,M,L.  </p>
        <p>Special Purchase On Misses Polyester</p>
        <p>Interiock Tops!</p>
        <p>SHOP MONDAY 10</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>4.97</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>Choose from sleeveless square neck or sleeveless with round neck. Red, white, yellow 0 and navv Sizes S.M.L.</p>
        <p>Only 180 ten ounce jars to sell. Limit two per family.</p>
        <p>July Fou</p>
        <p>AAAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT COFFEE</p>
        <p>^2</p>
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        <p>AAAXWELL HOUSE GRUI</p>
        <p>Only 72 one pound cans of regular grin( sell. Limit one per family.</p>
        <p>40% off Select Ladles' Dresses and Pantsuits!</p>
        <p>^  Junior Slacks</p>
        <p>Now At A V3 Savings!</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>Ragular *8 to *55</p>
        <p>spring and summer styles and colors in assorted fabrics. Shop early vyhile the selection Is still good. Hurry in nowl</p>
        <p>$8.14.67</p>
        <p>Regular *12 to *22</p>
        <p>Sale! Save Now On A Group Of Diaper Bags!</p>
        <p>Choose from fly front models and some with chinch waist*. In ^0  polyester gabardine and blends. Sizes 5 to IS.</p>
        <p>J  ..-</p>
        <p>Ladies Dresses And</p>
        <p>9.37</p>
        <p>Regular *9 to *14</p>
        <p>In plaids, solids and prints In red, blue and brown, in three great sizes... small, medium and large. Shop early I</p>
        <p>Pantsuits 20 to 33Vs% off</p>
        <p>12.80 . 36.80</p>
        <p>Regular *16 to *46</p>
        <p>Choose from sleeveless, sunback and jacket styles in solids, * checks and fancies. In sIzesSto 15, atoZO and 14'4i to22vy.</p>
        <p>20% off Selected Junior Sundresses!</p>
        <p>14.40</p>
        <p>Regular *18</p>
        <p>DacronVcotton blends In solids and prints. Hurry . . . they're this season's most popular dress. Sizes 5 to 15.</p>
        <p>Va off Entire Stock Of Family Swimwear I</p>
        <p>2.67.10.67</p>
        <p>Regular *4 to *16</p>
        <p>Just in time for the long hot summer. Choose from style* for Mom, Dad, Boy's and girl's. Shop early for best selectlonsi Hurry on In!</p>
        <p>A/Usses Sportswear Coordinates 25% Off!</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>22.58</p>
        <p>Regular *10 to *30</p>
        <p>Pants, blouses, shorts, knit fops In summer solids and fancies. In easy-care lOOWpolyesfer doubleknit. Size* 8 to IS.</p>
        <p>Special Purchase On A Group of Sunglasses!</p>
        <p>4.88</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>Metal frames, high fashion frames, gradient lenses and Sunsensor*. Hurry in for the selection and special low price.  ,</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0031" />
        <p>A.M. TIL 10 P.M</p>
        <p>downtown greenVille</p>
        <p>Shop Daily 10 a.m. Until 6 p.m.; Excapt Thursday and Friday 10 a.m. Until,9 p.m.; Phona: 758-2176</p>
        <p>IQUHD COFFEE</p>
        <p>rin( coffee to</p>
        <p>*2</p>
        <p>SALE! LADIES STRAW TOTE BAGS</p>
        <p>Three styles to choose from. This is a special value for Monday.</p>
        <p>A Selected Group Of Ladies Gowns And Robes!</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>16.97</p>
        <p>Ragular *9 to *25</p>
        <p>If</p>
        <p>Spring and summer styles In blue, pink, yellow and beige. Also terry cover-upsand jumpsuits. Sizes p,S,M,L.</p>
        <p>Shoes For The Entire Family Now On&amp;lt; So|g!</p>
        <p>. ZM Spring and summer styles for all the famljy.^ sure to Shop early for the best selections and savlngsl ^</p>
        <p>Infant And Toddler Wear Now At A Big Savings!</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>Raguiar *8 to *25</p>
        <p>Choose from sets, bubble suits and dresses In spring and summer colors, fabrics and patterns. Sizes i-lt mos., 2T to4T.</p>
        <p>9 Ladies Summer Hots Now At A Vs Savings!</p>
        <p>S.60. 1B.50</p>
        <p>Regular *10 to *25</p>
        <p>Our entire stock is now reduced. Choose from wide brims and - turbanslnassortedcolorsandfabrlcs. Shopearlyandsavel</p>
        <p>40% off Selected Men's SuHs And Sportcoats!</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>Regular *50 to *145</p>
        <p>Large select group of men's 2 and 3 piece suits and great looking sportcoats. Sizes 38 to 44 longs. Hurry In today I</p>
        <p>Special Purchase On An Aluminum Frame Tennis Racket</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>Aluminum frame strung with top quality monofilament twisted nylon string. Perfect for the beginner or the pro.  ^</p>
        <p>Special Purchase On A Can Of Practice Tennis Balk!</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>Comes 3 balls to a can. In hlflhly visible optk ytllQW. Perfect for games or just practtcing for tbat big game. Hurry I</p>
        <p>Special Purchase On A Durable Fiberglass Skateboard</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>A 18. value now at this unbelievable low price. Roller Derby Skateboard made of durable fiberglass. Hurry In nowl</p>
        <p> \- V</p>
        <p>Special Purchase on</p>
        <p>A 12" Diagonal G.L Black &amp;amp; White T.V.!</p>
        <p>67.1</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>Receives all VHF channels as set forth by the F.C.C. Complete with built-in solid state parts. 12" diagonal measure tube. Shop early for the . selection!   i</p>
        <p>Special Purchase On A Large 4^uart Ice Cream Freezer Now!</p>
        <p>12.88</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>Polyurethane tub with rust-proof stainless well and dasher. Shuts off automatically. All the fun without a 11 that work!</p>
        <p> \ Special Purchase On</p>
        <p>A Large Family-Size</p>
        <p>Outdoor Tripod Orill</p>
        <p>6.66</p>
        <p>Special Purchase</p>
        <p>Folding tripod legs of tubular steel. Outside set up dimensions: 28" high, 31" wide on S" easy roll wheels. In green only. Hurry for savings! ,</p>
        <p>Special Purchase On A 2-Speed Breeze Box Fan! Hurry In Now!</p>
        <p>12.66</p>
        <p>Heavy guage steel and modern plastics for durability, lightweight and long lifb. For those hot days this summer!</p>
        <p>/  </p>
        <p>Special Purchase On</p>
        <p>Aluminum</p>
        <p>Lawn Chairs</p>
        <p>and Chaise Lounges!</p>
        <p>Chair</p>
        <p>Chaise</p>
        <p>3.66 6.66</p>
        <p>Chaise: 6-16 webs, waterfall arms and 7 positions. Chair: 5-4-4 webs with waterfall arms. 23" k 32". Hurry in now!  .</p>
        <p>Special Purchase on Murray Wi^ 2r-Cut Lownmdwers! Hurry In I</p>
        <p>Special</p>
        <p>Purchase!</p>
        <p>72.86</p>
        <p>3.5 HP Briggs and Stratton engine. 4-cycle automatic choke with easy-spin recoil starter. Adjustable wheel height. Hurry in for the selection and savings!</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0032" />
        <p>C-The DUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, July, 177  m t  M</p>
        <p>Some Real Old-Time Favorite Songs For July 4</p>
        <p>________= ran out yourself. You connect</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;=</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>By JERRY BUCK AP Television Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) - They just don't write songs like they used to in the days before the invention of the electric guitar and amplified sound.</p>
        <p>Songs like If You Talk in Your Sleep, Dont Mention My Name, 1 Love My Wife, But Oh You Kid, and Ma, Ma, Wheres Pa?</p>
        <p>These and other old time fa</p>
        <p>vorites that will send you away from the TV set whistling wl be on They Said It With Music: Yankee Doodle to Ragtime, a two-hour Fourth of July misical salute on CBS.</p>
        <p>Few of the songs you would</p>
        <p>Doublehead Toothbrush Is Said Popular</p>
        <p>By DAVE ZIMMERBAN Associated Press Writer PARIS (AP)  A two-headed toothbrush is ringing up sales in four European countries, with the U.S. market nxt in sight. But there are no dazzling smiles from Rene Roy, an ailing Frenchman who claims patent rights to a similar invention and jokingly compares the new one to a science fiction submarine.</p>
        <p>The toothbrush, which deans both sides of the teeth at the same time and represents one of the most radical style changes since the Hindus used twigs 5,000 years ago, is being sold in Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg and France. The firm doing the marketing, Ex-imag of Trier, West Germany, reports brisk sales, but declines to give figures.</p>
        <p>However, Eximag President Walter Schneider, in a telephone conversation with The Associated Press in Paris, said European results have been so good over the last six months that his firm is contemplating a marketing campaign in the United States.</p>
        <p>Schneider said the toothbrush, which is 7.5 inches long</p>
        <p>with two bristle heads set at 45-degree angles, is being manufactured in West Germany but that he did not know who invented it or anything about Roy, who is being treated for skin cancer.</p>
        <p>Samaritaine, a Paris department stwe which sells the toothbrush for three dollars, said it too did not know who invented it. Several Paris dentists said they were impressed with the toothbrush, but that it is too big for childrens mouths.</p>
        <p>Roy, whose name and address surfaced during an afternoons search of photographs of inventions at the French patent office, agreed and quipped that the new toothbrudi resembles the ship in Jules Vernes 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea.</p>
        <p>Its a submarine, a Nautilus, he said as he examined the Eximag toothbrush during an interview in his Paris apartment. Its different from mine but the idea is the same. No doubt about it.</p>
        <p>Asked vidiat he planned to do, Roy said he probably would get in touch with Eximag to see if he could work out some kind of</p>
        <p>arrangement to compensate him for the idea.</p>
        <p>Roy said he obtained patents for his invention, which is smaller and has a slightly different shape than the Eximag toothbrush, in the , United States, England, France, Belgium, Holland and West Germany, and that aU of them date from 1966.</p>
        <p>He said he also exhibited his toothbrush at the 1966 Brussels International Inventors Fair and won a silver medal, udiich he showed to a reporter, along with the toothbrush.</p>
        <p>Asked how he got the idea, Roy, a 55-year-old beauty products researcher for a French pharmaceutical firm, said he had been searching for years to come up with a more functional toothbrush.</p>
        <p>I was on vacation in Spain when one day it came to me, he said! "I saw it in my mind. When I got back to France I made a wooden model, and finally went into production. Roy said about 15,000 of his toothbrushes were sold, but that the idea was too far ahead of its time. There wasnt enough money for publicity and manufacturing.</p>
        <p>recognize, said Bernadette Peters, who stars in the revue with Jason Robards, Jean' Stapleton, Tony Randall and Flip Wilson. One was a suffragette number, If Shes Good Enough to Be Your Babys Mother, Shes Good Enough to Vote With You.</p>
        <p>They were obscure songs, but they were wonderful old songs. We used authentic old clothes for each number. We just put those old clothes on our</p>
        <p>backs. It looks like an old poster singing.</p>
        <p>The special was taped last year for the Bicentennial celebration, but for some reason was not aired then. It will be seen on CBS at 9 p.m. EDT Monday.</p>
        <p>It tells the story of Americas history through the music the nation grew up with, lived with and marched to. It combines live action, grairtiic art, vintage photographs, original historic films and animation.</p>
        <p>The music celebrates Amer icas physical beauty. Its working men and means of transportation, tells of the Revolutionary and Civil Wars, the struggles of the black man  and, of course, romance and sentimaitallty.</p>
        <p>The show was conceived and created by the late Goddard Lleberson. Emmy and Oscar winner Fred Karlin was researcher and musical director and Bob Henry was producer and director.</p>
        <p>Bernadette, on a short break during rehearsals for a Tim Conway special, wore a baseball shirt from a softball match Kenny Rogers had staged in Las Vegas to raise money for mentally handicapped children. Her blonde hair was tucked under a ragamuffin cap.</p>
        <p>Sally Struthers caught a ball</p>
        <p>and I caught a dog that ran out onto the field, she said. I also tore my pants.</p>
        <p>She went to Las Vegas for a three-week appearance with Rich Little in May after finishing "Alls Fair, her^ first series.</p>
        <p>Im sorry it was canceled, Bernadette said. I wish it had been a big hit. 1 think it was a good series. I think it hadnt quite formed yet. And we had some tough movie competition and every time we got up in the ratings wed get preempted for two weeks. It didnt get a fair shake, but still it could have been a better show.</p>
        <p>Im Sad it was on. The exposure for me was incredible. Its helped me in ray ni^t club act.</p>
        <p>"I enjoy doing the night club act, she said. Youre totally</p>
        <p>yourself. You connect with the audience. Its as close as you can get to an audience in the</p>
        <p>A Stores Open Monday, Jidy4th.</p>
        <p>ntoP plop-</p>
        <p>IN SPECIAL  Entertainer Bemadrtte Peters is shown in a scene from her July 4 television special. (APWirephoto)</p>
        <p>Price Goori thru Tueeetay  MeslerCherge or BenkAmerlcerri</p>
        <p>_ , ,  ACROSS FROAA</p>
        <p>264 BY-PASS NICHOLSDISCOUNTCITY Open Mtoih.Thl.^&amp;lt;r^9, FrI. i to 9, Set. 9 to 8</p>
        <p>-What a way to and our 20th Anniversary Salol-</p>
        <p>JEAN CAY I UN MANAGER</p>
        <p>UNITED</p>
        <p>FIGURE</p>
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        <p>SLIM DOWN FOR SUMMER</p>
        <p>756&amp;gt;2820</p>
        <p>RED OAK SHOPPING CENTER NEWWOURSMON.-FRI. 10A.M.'TILi:30P.M.</p>
        <p>TEAMTIMES 10:30 tiOO-COO i; CLOSED SAT.</p>
        <p>THRU AUG. 1</p>
        <p>Closed July 4th 6.5th For The Holiday</p>
        <p>First To Greenville!</p>
        <p>REMOVATRON</p>
        <p>Painless removal of unwanted hair permanently. GLENDA'S BEAUTY SALON</p>
        <p>APFT.CALL  FURTHER  info.</p>
        <p>754-4344</p>
        <p>756-1148</p>
        <p>TAG THAT BAG</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - With airlines carrying more than half a million passengers a day, identification tags for all ^checked baggage has become more important than ever, says the Air Transport Association. Proper identification, it said, helps the airlines trace suitcases gone astray.</p>
        <p>downtown</p>
        <p>greenville</p>
        <p>Hoover 4" of luly Super Sale</p>
        <p>HOOVER UPRIGHT HOOVER CELEBRITY</p>
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        <p> 1.7 Peak H.P. Motor</p>
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        <p> Rides On Cushion Of Air</p>
        <p>Reg. *44.95</p>
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        <p>Shop AAon. Thru Wed. and Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Thurs. and Fri. 10 a.m.-9 p.m.  Phone 758-2176</p>
        <p>^ .</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0033" />
        <p>Home Of Unlucky Last Emperor Comes Alive</p>
        <p>A VIEW OP MISTRA, ancient home of the Byzantine rulers of the Grecian city. Once a year this medieval city overlooking Sparta comes to life for one day lien</p>
        <p>local fidk remember its most famous citizen, the last Emperor of Byzantium. (A (UPI Photo)</p>
        <p>Atlanta Hospital Solely For Abortions In Mid-Pregnancy</p>
        <p>By GAIL WILLIAMS</p>
        <p>ATLANTA (UPI) - The director of a controversial new hospital specializing in performing mid-pregnancy abortions says the need for-abortion in many ways reflects a lack of provide pn^r education for you^g people.</p>
        <p>Abortion may well represent an immediate solution to societys failure, said Dr. Edward M. Portman of the Midtown Hospital.</p>
        <p>There has been a failure in the responsbility of society to provide proper education for our youth in family planning, he said.</p>
        <p>What is needed, he said, is enough facilities that deal with family planning and birth</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;4 </p>
        <p>control and what he called totally acceptable and effective methods of birth control. Portman believes the hospital is unique in that it is dedicated to performing second trimester abortions.</p>
        <p>There was a small demonstration by members of the Georgia Ri^it to Life group when Midtown opened May 10 in the white, two-story former Ponce de Leon Infirmary. Ann Rose, director of patient services, said that was the only incident. Weve gotten no flack from anybody, really. Georgia law requires second trimester abortions (those in the fourth to sixth months of pregnancy) be done in a hospital.</p>
        <p>Greenville Family Doctors PA</p>
        <p>Announces the association of</p>
        <p>Richard S. Vaughn M.D.</p>
        <p>for the practice of Family Medicine</p>
        <p>Phone 752-7133 Located 1001 E. 4th St,</p>
        <p>Jack W.Wilkerson M.D. Jack A. KoonceM.D. Q.A. Mewborn M.D.</p>
        <p>In this area (Georgia), as weil as throughout the Southeast, the second trimester services are just not available, or, if they are available theyre minimal, said Portman. Most hospitals, large or small, are unwilling to open up their operating rooms or beds for second trimester people.</p>
        <p>Midtown will perform abortions throu^ 20 weeks gestation. Portman said the hospital intends to provide a safe, controlled solution to the present problem and to develop better and more appropriate alternatives for the future.</p>
        <p>In 1973, the Supreme Court ruled that abortion in the first trimester was a decision between a woman and her doctor, and the state had no regulatory powers.</p>
        <p>For second trimester abortions, the court said the decision was still primarily between a woman and her doctor, and the state could regulate the procedure only in the best interests of the womans health.</p>
        <p>Miss Rose said patients, who have numbered 30 to 50 a week, span all age, racial and economic groups. But the typical patient is 17 or 18 years old, less educated and from the lower socioeconomic groups.</p>
        <p>About half the patioits so far have been from Georgia, with</p>
        <p>os^s</p>
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        <p>If Youre Looking For More Than Just A Job.-</p>
        <p>We have an immediate opening for</p>
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        <p>ROSES OFFERS YOU: ^</p>
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        <p>APPLY : 10 A.M.-Untl 5 PJVI. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER MALE/FEMALE.</p>
        <p>the remainder from other parts of the Southeast.</p>
        <p>Before Midtown, women In the second trimester desiring abortions had to go to New York, Detroit or Washington. Miss Rose said they were the only cities offering mid-pregnancy abortions in any volume.</p>
        <p>Portman said statistical risks for the procedure used by the hospital are about the same as for normal childbirth.</p>
        <p>Fees vary but usually range from $650 to $700, although die hospital does accqit some charity cases.</p>
        <p>Miss Rose conceded the fee is hi^ for younger, less affluent patients, but said they usually manage to find the funds, either from family, friends or the referring agency.</p>
        <p>The hospital has 24 beds. Portman Is the only full time doctor. There are eight part time doctors, 20 nursing personnel, one full time counselor and part time counselors as needed. To be admitted, women must be referred by another agency, clinic or doctor.</p>
        <p>llK hospital promotes family planning and early detection of pregnancy.</p>
        <p>Education of the patients aiKl their families, said Portman, is an ongoing process from the time a patient comes through the door.</p>
        <p>Hazards In A Souvenir</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - A live souvenir from abroad can be dangerous, warns the Air Tran^rt Association.</p>
        <p>Bringing forbidden plants or animals into the United States .may seem innocuous at the time, but even a coiqile of destructive parasites can multiply to epidemic numbers in a new envinmment that contains none of their natural enemies, said the ATA.</p>
        <p>In 1966, two African snails brought into Florida from Hawaii multiplied into more than 100,000 vegetable and housepaint-eating mollusks that took six years to eradicate. In 1971, a sidi parakeet brought into southern California started an epidemic of Newcastle disease, and resulted in the death of 12 million infected or exposed pet Urds and poultry.</p>
        <p>Even a simple little Bonsai tree might contain destructive insects and grubs or dangerous plant diseases, said the ATA. To find out which plants and animals from abroad may be brou^ into the United States and which not, travelers can write for the boddet Travelers Tips available from the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, D.C.</p>
        <p>ART APPOINTMENTS</p>
        <p>MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) - Graham W. J. Beal and Lisa Lyons have been named curator and assistant curator at Walker Art Crater in Minneapolis. Prior to his appointment, Beal was director of the art gallery of Washingtra University, St. Louis. Miss Lyons was a Rockefelier Foundation Fellow prior to her appointment.</p>
        <p>By KERIN HOPE</p>
        <p>MISTRA, Greece (UPI) -Once a year, this medieval ghost city built against a hillside overlooking Sparta comes to life for one day when local folk remember its most famous citizen: Constantine Paleologus, last emperor of Byzantium.</p>
        <p>Greeks commemorate Constantine every year on May 29, the anniversary of his death in batUe and the fall of the 1,100-year-old Byzantine empire in 1453.</p>
        <p>This year, the anniversary fell on a Sunday and hundreds trekked up the hillside in the heat of late spring for services at St. Dimitrios church where Constantine was crowned emperor in 1448.</p>
        <p>People here still regard Constantine XI as one of their ancestors, said Emilia Giaou-ri, the archeological service officer responsible for Byzantine antiquities in the area.</p>
        <p>Constantine, depicted as handsome and bearded, was Despot of Mistra before he succeeded his brother John as emperor.</p>
        <p>He tried to defend his empire, which had shrunk to the metropolitan area of Constantinople (Istanbul), against the rising Ottoman threat but failed when the Pope and western Eun^ did not come to his aid, said historian Dimitri Nestoros.</p>
        <p>Still he refused to surrender his city to the Turks and died fighting at the head of his few troops when the Ottoman army broke through the city walls and entered Constantinople.</p>
        <p>Constantine became a legendary figure in Greece and Tuesday  the day he died  is still considered the unluckiest day of the week.</p>
        <p>Mistra was founded in the 13th century by William de Villehardouin, a Frankish noble and crusader, as a fortress. But gradually, the local inhabitants moved up from the plain below to live in the shelter of the hilltop castle.</p>
        <p>In its 15 century heyday, Mistra was a thriving city of 40,000 known as the Florence of the East, Ms Giaouri said. It was famous for its cultural life, its rich churches and monasteries.</p>
        <p>Now the only inhabitants are a handful of nuns who live in the restored Pantanassa convent and myself, when I have work in Mistra.</p>
        <p>Lizards scuttle over the ivy-covered ruins of the former family mansions. In spring, the rough meadow grass that covers most of the deserted city is bright with pesies and tourists climb the steep winding paths to visit half a dozen restored churches with some of the finest medieval frescoes in Europe.</p>
        <p>We know that Mistra had a special relationship with the capital of the Byzantine Empire. It was governed by a member of the Imperial family sent from Constantinople. He ruled lor life and was known as the Despot, Ms Giaouri said.</p>
        <p>rhe quality of the church paintings too, suggests that the artists had worked in or came from Cknstantin(^le.</p>
        <p>But little is known about the daily life of Mistras ordinary citizens.</p>
        <p>With a site like this, continuously occupied over such a long period, there is usually very little left to find, Ms Giaouri said.</p>
        <p>We have pottery, and lamps and some metal objects like scissors, but none of the rare icons or rich ecclesiastical furnishings Uiat must have fled the churches,</p>
        <p>Long after the fall of Constantlnq&amp;gt;le, Mistra became a flourishing center of silk production and export by the Venetians and mulberry trees still grow among the ruins.</p>
        <p>Even under the harsh Ottoman occupation, the city kept a measure of Independence and prosperity.</p>
        <p>But after Greece became independent. King Otto of Bavarias planners laid out the modern town of Sparta in 1834 and the walled cty above was slowly abandoned, Ms Giaouri said.</p>
        <p>"There is always work to be done here, simply to prevent the buildings from decaying</p>
        <p>further, and conserving the wan paintings. Hiis year we will be trying out a new plan to defeat damp In the restored churches,and experts are removing a layer of late frescoes in the Paiganassa to expose the 14th century paintings beneath.</p>
        <p>But we Would like to be able to remove all the debris accumulated over the centuries and expooe a Byzantine .Pompeii, she added.</p>
        <p>Aiter-</p>
        <p>UT4</p>
        <p>m.</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>(Specials good July 5 thru July *)</p>
        <p>Permanent Waves. $12.50 Body Waves $15.50</p>
        <p>Call for appolntiTient 756-0194</p>
        <p>*eggy*s Hairstylingi</p>
        <p>216B Arlington Blvd.  ^</p>
        <p>i  Hours:  tues.,Thurs.,Frl.,ea.m.tll5p.nii.^</p>
        <p>wed. 8i Sat.,  a.m. til 1p.m.  ^</p>
        <p>Will Reopen The Altamira Caves</p>
        <p>MADRID (UPI) - The caves of Altamira, which contain some of the finest prehistoric wall paintings, will be reopened to the public July 5 after having been closed since last October, tourism officials have announced.</p>
        <p>They said the number of visitors will be limited to 500 a day, pending the Installation of special equipment to keep the temperature and humidity at a constant level.</p>
        <p>The caves were closed after officials discovered that the changes in temperature and the humidity generated by up to 4,000 visitors a day were causing serious damage.</p>
        <p>The Framing Shop</p>
        <p>Cuftom Framing Dacorator Prints Fin* Art Raproducttons Wildlif* Prints Saascapas Floral Prints Limitad Editions AT</p>
        <p>Ernest &amp;amp; KroH (lass Co.</p>
        <p>  DIcklmon At Clark</p>
        <p>B 752-2133</p>
        <p>FI</p>
        <p>o4^eeOieee^</p>
        <p>Jones Enterprises</p>
        <p>Highway 64 East Bethel, N.C.</p>
        <p>is now a Franchised</p>
        <p>PHILCO DEALER</p>
        <p>Carrying The New Philco</p>
        <p>1978 Model Televisions</p>
        <p>and Stereos.</p>
        <p>Come See The All New</p>
        <p>Philco Color-Rlte System With Electronic Tuning.</p>
        <p>Special Prices In Effect Thru July</p>
        <p>Philco-Made in Smithfield, N.C. by Carolinians</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0034" />
        <p>Problems Of Pollution In Japan Ease</p>
        <p>By TERRY A. ANMSSWi</p>
        <p>TOKYO (AP)  Environmentalists claim Japan is still the most poltuted country in the world. But on the rare occa-slcms when a busy Tokyo dweller stops long enou(^ to look up, he can sometimes catch an encouraging sight - Mt. Fuji looming softly through the hare, 60 miles to the southwest.</p>
        <p>As recently as 1970, with the city usually covered by a thick, yellow-brown blanket of smog, that sight was so rare visitors Joked that Mt. Fuji was just a myth, created to boost the picture postcard business.</p>
        <p>You could see FujHSan then only 10 or 15 days a year," said Kiichi Yabe, director of the Tokyo Bureau of Environmental Control, in an interview in his iTth-floor office in downtown Tokyo. Now we have a fine view 50 or 60 days a year.</p>
        <p>But in 1970, not seeing Mt. Fuji was low on the list of pollution ph)hlems. There was the minamata disease  mercury poisoning from chemical industry wastes  that had killed 46 persons and left at least 120 others crippled or suffering permanent brain damage.</p>
        <p>There was Itai itai (ouch ouch) disease poisoning by cadmium, zinc and lead in mining wastes. More than 100 persons had died since the extremely painful ailment was discovered in 1946. At least 10,-000 others suffered splitting bones, deformation and severe pain.</p>
        <p>Kanemi rice oil disease, first discovered in 1968, had affected another 1,000 persons, causing acne-like eruptions, discharge from the eyes, loss of hair, headache, lumbago and loss of ability to concentrate. It was blamed on PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) used in the processing of rice oil by the Kanemi Soko Co. Millions of doUaTO in lawsuits are still pending.</p>
        <p>Hiere was also air pollution so bad in Tokyo and other cities that one enterprising department store began selling portable oxygen machines. The pollution caused asthma, headaches and eye problems. Water pollution had left many rivers dead and stinking and vast areas of Tokyo Bay, Osaka Bay and the famous Inland Sea neariy useless to fishermen.</p>
        <p>Japan may have performed an economic miracle in the 25 years after World War II, but it was an environmental disaster.</p>
        <p>Public pressure forced the 1970 parliament to put aside its concern with the Gross National Product long enough to pass 14 major antipoUution laws, including the formation of an environmental agency.</p>
        <p>At the present time, Japanese pollution laws are among the strictest in the world, claims Tokuhisa Yoshida of the agencys air pollution division. We are doing our best to clean the air and water, even though the cost is sometimes much higher than we expected. And it is going well.</p>
        <p>That cost amounted to $1.3 billion in 1976 for loans and public ending on pollution control.</p>
        <p>The Japanese government passed a law in 1973 providing compensation to persons who suffered health problems from poUution. Several cities also have passed similar laws.</p>
        <p>By 1976, nearly 48,000 persons bad been officially designated pollution victims, including those affected by the minamata and itai-itai disert.The federal government palid those victims an estima'ted mtal of $147 million in 1976 ''an average of $3,000 each.</p>
        <p>We have made great improvement in the reduction of sulfur dioxide (in Tokyos air), from .06 parts per million in 1965 to around .02 ppm last year, Yoshida said.</p>
        <p>Carbon monoxide levels and s^^tended dust and dirt particles also have decreased drastically, he said.</p>
        <p>The 1978 auto pollution law calls for reducing the emission of nitrogen oxides and carbon monoxide from car exhausts to less than one-tenth the 1975 level. Doichi Aoki, manager of the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Associations technical department, says those standards will be met.</p>
        <p>iWRouodup Is SdMoi Fund4alser</p>
        <p>ROCHESTER, Minn. (UPI)  School children here used to dlect newspapers and aluminum cans to raise money for their favorite projects.</p>
        <p>This year they Elected old tires. An old tire drive at 26 public and private schools brought in 4,000 that will be recycled and bring the schools iDMe than $1,000 for projects in indivkiual sd^s.</p>
        <p>Hie roundup will become an annual event.</p>
        <p>WEWIUBEOPEN ^ SUNDAY, JULY 3RD AND</p>
        <p>MONDAY, JULY 4TH</p>
        <p>REOUIAR STORE HOURS</p>
        <p> PRICES OOOD THRU WED., JULY 6TH  NONE TO DEALERS  WE RESERVE THE RiOHT TO UMIT QUANTITIK</p>
        <p>THMHY MAID @ "</p>
        <p>IPORK&amp;amp; BEANS ^ 4  flOO</p>
        <p>M ^^16-OZ. V ^^^CANS I</p>
        <p>PIXIE HOME ^</p>
        <p>TEA</p>
        <p>BAGS</p>
        <p>ox OF 100</p>
        <p>WITH 17A0 OR MORI ORDBL UMIT 5 CANS</p>
        <p>FRUIT DRINKS</p>
        <p>300</p>
        <p>,  POTATO CHIPS</p>
        <p>MMW</p>
        <p> TRASH CAN UNERS</p>
        <p>ASTOR</p>
        <p>^ SWEET SALAD CUBES</p>
        <p>TOOOIM</p>
        <p>HANDY PANTS</p>
        <p>PRESTIGE</p>
        <p>BREAD SasL$1.00</p>
        <p>HAMBURGER OR HOT DOO ROUS</p>
        <p>;!a$1.00</p>
        <p>PECAN TWIRLS 2 4SlB9g</p>
        <p>the beef people</p>
        <p>AT WINN-DIXIE WE SELL ONLY U.S. CHOICE HEAVY GRAIN-FED MID-WESTERN BEEFI</p>
        <p>MUNO U.S. CHoict tm aoMUtt</p>
        <p>. nuliKTniua au 5 lat. aofim mb  CHUCK STEW</p>
        <p>BRAND UA. CHOICE</p>
        <p>15-LB. BEEF SPECIAL!</p>
        <p>95</p>
        <p>16'</p>
        <p>DAIRY DEPARTMENT</p>
        <p>PILLSBURY BUTTERMILK BISCUITS</p>
        <p>4 ts, 69c</p>
        <p>SUPERBRAND </p>
        <p>YOGURT</p>
        <p>, 2isfai99c</p>
        <p> BRAND</p>
        <p>WHOUHOO</p>
        <p>PORK SAUSAGE $1.99</p>
        <p>HICKORY SMOKED</p>
        <p>HAM PORTIONS</p>
        <p>SHANK .79c  BUn .89c</p>
        <p>DAIRY DEPARTMENT</p>
        <p>SUPOBRA </p>
        <p>MIID CHOCAR CHUNK</p>
        <p>CHEESE h.$1.49</p>
        <p>TOP OR BOnOM ROUND ROASTS .$1.49</p>
        <p> mum u j. CHOwf tm</p>
        <p>BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP ROASTS  .$1.49</p>
        <p> aBANo U.S. CHoici tm</p>
        <p>BONELESS CUBED^TEAKS  . $1.69</p>
        <p>SLICED frH QUARTER</p>
        <p>PORK LOINS</p>
        <p>:i</p>
        <p>TASTE-O-SEA SEAtoOD SALE</p>
        <p> PERCH FILLETS .$1.19 $5.95</p>
        <p> WHITING FISH .49e ^$1.99</p>
        <p> BREAKFAST SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>(MAM noMaw)</p>
        <p>$1.75</p>
        <p> BRAND AMERICAN</p>
        <p>CHEESE</p>
        <p>(MH.&amp;gt; $3.99</p>
        <p>HtOZENFOOK</p>
        <p>LEMONADE</p>
        <p>. FRIED CHICKEN</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>**$2.29 WHIPPED TOPPING *^79c</p>
        <p>ox</p>
        <p>*^ $1.59  CHOTOAtE CAKES *^$1.59</p>
        <p>COZY KITCHHt</p>
        <p> COCONUT CAKES HARVEST FRESH ()</p>
        <p>ffpo/fuee</p>
        <p>HONEYDEWS</p>
        <p>juMao MD an (whou M4m. amj</p>
        <p> WATERMELONS . $1.69</p>
        <p>COZY KITCIE* OIRMAN</p>
        <p>AU PURPOSE</p>
        <p> WHITC POTATOES</p>
        <p>IMS.</p>
        <p>vmr WE</p>
        <p>$1.29</p>
        <p>EACH</p>
        <p>-H</p>
        <p>LEMONS</p>
        <p>DOZ.</p>
        <p>88c</p>
        <p>Located At The Shopper's Mart Now Open 7 A.M. Til 11 P.M. 7 Days A Week</p>
        <p>Manager Wayne McKinney</p>
        <p>Produce Manager Wayne Radcliff</p>
        <p>Market Manager Charles McGrady</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0035" />
        <p>The I)Uy K*flr, Oreenvle, N.C.-flundjr. ttW-0-1</p>
        <p>THE FLAVOR OF SPAlN....Stone and stucco bufldlngs, red tUes, walls with tangled masses of vines, massive arches, paths for promenading, and a profusion of roses, flowering shrubs and tall trees speak of the flavor of Old Spain tran^lanted to the New World.</p>
        <p>LOCAL VISITOR....Although the San Juan Capistrano Mission draws iarge numbers of tourists, residents from local areas also enjoy coming here. Tony Cordova of nearby Southgate sits on the curb of the fountain in the central courtyard.</p>
        <p>THE SWALLOWS OF CAPISTRANO -..The famed swallows of Captstrano, cited in song, stories and legends, come back to San Juan Capistrano each year on St. Josephs Day, March 19. They buUd new nests or repair old ones, and remain at San Juan until late s^mer when they again leave for an unknown desination to the south.  ^</p>
        <p>San Juan Capistrano</p>
        <p>Jewel Of California's Historic Missions</p>
        <p>Mission San Juan Capistrano, ceiebrated in legend and in song, is considered by many to be the jewel of all the California missions.</p>
        <p>Founded on November 1, 1776 by Franciscan Father Junpero Sera, the famed mission has survived vicissitudes of man and nature. In 1812 a major earthquake destroyed the great church which had been completed just six years earlier^ ThrouK)ut the first 75 years of its history, prior to California statehood, the mission was constantly beset by civil and military authorities who sought to channel, to their own benefit the fruits achieved by the hard work of dedicated priests.</p>
        <p>The 21 California missions were established for two main purposes  to convert native Indians to Christianity; and to create communal centers where priests and natives could labor together in efforts to be ^f-sufficient.</p>
        <p>The misstbns were established at intervals from San Diego in the south to Sonoma, about 40 miles north of San Francisco. Most bear the names of Catholic saints.</p>
        <p>Tourist Attraction</p>
        <p>Today, only very small remnants of the Juaneno Indians of the San Juan Capistrano area remain. The role of the mission too has drastically changed. Religious services are still conducted at the mission, but it is as a beloved tourist attraction that San Juan Capistrano Mission is now best known  and with justification.</p>
        <p>San Juan Capistrano combines the appeal of a long illustrious history with an ambience that reflects the best of old Spanish atmosphere.</p>
        <p>Within the beautifully maintained compouiid of landscaped grounds and buildings, visitors are tran^rted far back in time from the modem bustle of Los Angeles, 58 miles to the north.</p>
        <p>Here is the narrow church that is the oldest building in California, a chapel dark and cool. Two original stations, candlesticks, torches, statues and pictures survive from the earliest days of the church.</p>
        <p>Massive ruins of the walls of the great church demolished by earthquake 165 years</p>
        <p>ago still stand, with decorative details softened by years of wind and rain.</p>
        <p>A quartet of bells have hung within ivy-encrusted arches of the campanile since 1813, and are rung on festive celebrations or for memorable occasions.</p>
        <p>Total AmbioKe</p>
        <p>What most visitors love about San Juan Capistrano is the total ambience of architecture, space, trees, flowers, and a way of living provided by the missions plan.</p>
        <p>Shaded arcades flank and join together secular and religious buildings. Fine old brick walks cross and criss</p>
        <p>cross the gardens and courtyards, where flowering vines, trees, and shrubs add brilliant splashes of color accenting the red-orange tile of roofs and the gray of stone marble fountains.</p>
        <p>An old- olive and grain crusher mill is shaded by splendid ancient trees. The old warehouse now houses classrooms and a convent, and a soldiers barracks testify to the austure way of life lived by these rugged individuals.</p>
        <p>Birds Revered</p>
        <p>Birds play an important role at Mission San Juan. Each year on March 19, the feast day of St. Joseph, lively, chattering flocks of swallows</p>
        <p>return to rebuild old nests or to build new nests, many choosing niches in the ruins of the old great church walls. A melodic popular ^ng When The Swallows Ctnne Back Th Capistrano, a big hit in the summer and fall of 1940, has immortalized the annual return of ttie swallows.</p>
        <p> the who Juaii,</p>
        <p>Less known, but more accessible to visitors are they famed white pigeons make their home at San Ju Capistrano. Few art the^v visitors who pass up the opportunity to feed the plump cooing birds who have made the big fountain in the entrance path) their gathering place.</p>
        <p>Text And Photographs By Jerry Raynor</p>
        <p>WHERE PEOPLE AND PIGEONS MEET.. .Almost as famous as the dark swallows are the white pigeons who make San Jtum Capistrano their home. The birds flock around the fountain near the ootrance to the mission and entertain people by eating from their hynriB In the background are walls of the destroyed church.</p>
        <p>t  . 1  '  t</p>
        <p>A RUINED WALL...^M)wn here is one of several walls that have weatheiad In the sun and rain for 165 years. The great stone church, dedicated In 18W after nine years of ctmstruction, was destroyed by a strong earthqMake in 1812. ,</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0036" />
        <p>r</p>
        <p>D4-1te Daily lUflwtor. Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 3,1977</p>
        <p>PLAN YOUR HOME'</p>
        <p>RANCH STYLE GEARED TO OUTDOOR LIVING</p>
        <p>TWO PORCHES, TERRACE EDGE HOME</p>
        <p>ly Jerry Bhfcop</p>
        <p>Porchci at front and side and a roomy terrace at rear makes the Trailview a home design for comfortable indoor /outdoor living.</p>
        <p>A rustic three bedroom ranch plan, the Trailview shows an easy flow of space that extends to the outdoors and carefully defined areas for family living. In its I43S sq. ft. of space, the phm incorporates three large blrooms, one and one half baths, a formal living room and foyer, and a family/ kitchen area.</p>
        <p>Horizontal siding, gable roof, brick, and exposed rafter ends make up the exterior "of the compact plan. For an inviting effect, an entry porch</p>
        <p>and foyer are included.</p>
        <p>Lined by coat closet, the foyer permits entry to the I8-ft. living room, where a comer wood-burning fireplace speaks a warm welcome. The room, with its dead-end arrangement, can be reserved for guests and kept free from cross-traffic.</p>
        <p>For family, the hallway leads to an efficient family-kitchen complex. The family room itself is spacious and opens to the terrace via sliding glass doors. A snack bar fuses family room with kitchen, a 14-ft. area with built-in range, oven, dishwasher, planning desk, and broom closet.</p>
        <p>For relaxing or informal dining, a screened porch ad</p>
        <p>joins the kitchen and opens to the rear yard, also situated within steps of the kitchen is a convenient laundry room, basement stairs, and garage entrance.</p>
        <p>Bedrooms are placed at left of the foyer, and none of the three bedrooms is smaller than 12 by II. Ample closet space is provided, and the front-facing bedroom merits a private half bath. Cornered in the hallway is a full bath and bordering linen closet.</p>
        <p>For storage and utilities, a basement offers another 1360 sq. ft. of space.</p>
        <p>AREA  SQ. FT.</p>
        <p>First floor    1,435</p>
        <p>Basement    1,360</p>
        <p>Garage    545</p>
        <p>r'</p>
        <p>. set(s) of Trailview</p>
        <p>Please send.</p>
        <p>One (1) Complete Set of Construction Plans ........  $13.00</p>
        <p>Each Additional Set of Same Plan .....................$9.00</p>
        <p>Add for Mailing Cosu Pared Post.. .$1.23 First Class.. .$2.23</p>
        <p>Amount Enclosed $_</p>
        <p>Name_</p>
        <p>Address</p>
        <p>JZip</p>
        <p>aty* State_</p>
        <p>Make check or money order (NO CASH) payable to:</p>
        <p>The Associated Newspapers, c/o United Feature Syndicate 200 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017 Dept. QDR</p>
        <p>Be Wary Of The Lightning</p>
        <p>By VIVIAN BROWN AP Newsfeatures</p>
        <p>Being safe In summer should be a prime concern as we become more active than usual and perhs^ less cautious in</p>
        <p>work and play. Accidents in backyards and vacation resorts may be taken in stride, but some dangers are seldom considered.</p>
        <p>For example, increased activ-</p>
        <p>Minicomputer To Serve Home</p>
        <p>By JAMES J. DOYLE</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A microcomputer research project called PEANUTS eventually may mean more than peanut-size savings to homeowners and tenants by regulating energy and water consun^tion in homes to fit weath- conditions.</p>
        <p>The acronym stands for Perstmalized Easy Access Net-worit Users Trnninal System.</p>
        <p>'Magic In His Gadgets</p>
        <p>COLUMBUS, (Milo (AP) -George Kiiitendal] is a magician with machinery.</p>
        <p>Everything be makes works like magic.</p>
        <p>Klrfcendall, 44, of suburban Upper Arlington, manufactures small metal jmecishm devices used by magicians.</p>
        <p>Hes been at it for 12 years and says be grosses about $20,-000 annually from sales to clients wotlciwide. He makes 40 diffwent items that magicians use in performing their tricks. The items sell for |1S to $200.</p>
        <p>Klrfcendall was formerly a sales engineer for Taylor Instruments Co. of Rochester, N.Y., which makes industrial precision instmmeits.</p>
        <p>He says grinding out precision metal equipment for magicians is a vanishing art.</p>
        <p>One of bis trick gadgets is a metallic version of the old shell game. Another is a red that can be conceall and used to wind string attached to items that magicians make vanish w make iqqiear to float through the air.</p>
        <p>Many of the things I malm are never seen by the public," Klrfcendall said.</p>
        <p>I His shq) is in the basemoit of his home and he said business has been getting better in the last four years.</p>
        <p>He also secretary of the Magic Hobby aub of Ohio, whicfa be says has 52 members and is tbe eldest magic dub in the United States.</p>
        <p>KirfcendaD also restores and repairs mitiipie magic devices. For tbe past year be has been restoring a mechanical peacock, made sometime before MOO. It was once used by Robot Houdin, famed French magician who died in 1871. Whoi it wmts, the peacock walks, stops, qneads its tail and walks on.</p>
        <p>feathe^.</p>
        <p>Prof. Bertram Bussell of UCLAs computer science laboratory said home television sets could be used as terminals within a microcomputer network, exchanging information with other computers. Such a network could also be used for home education and planning a familys annual budget.</p>
        <p>A microcomputer is about the size of a pocket calculator, he said. It is similar to microcomputers used in home microwave ovens and some traffic light signals.</p>
        <p>The microcomputer we deal with is pretty much like the digital computer device. It has the same computational capabilities of the big computers made in the 1950s, but the costs are now in the order of hundreds of dollars rather than hundreds of thousands of doUars. '</p>
        <p>Ian range from $500 to but are much when mass produced for ~^a specific purpose, he added.</p>
        <p>Bussell expects electronic hobbyists to eventually popularize microcomputHS as their elders did the radio in earlier decades.</p>
        <p>The micro size is designed to perform only one specific or dedicated function, compared with mini and maxi computers (medium and large) that can perform several chores. But they could match the versatility and power of a maxicomputer if ttey were linked together, Bussell said.</p>
        <p>First off, he said, computers do communicate with other computers today. There are networks of large ones and people can ask It, tbe network, to talk with another large one and even transfer programs back and fffitb.</p>
        <p>PEANUTS is funded by federal Energy Research and Devdopment Administration, wiiich Bussell said is interested in networking its large computers for more efficient use.</p>
        <p>"Also, many scientists want the simpler methods that would come out of PEANUTS, he added.</p>
        <p>In timie, the housdiold computer could be as familiar as the iy set in many homes, he said:a*</p>
        <p>Even now, it is simpler to put together a microcomputer than rham radio.</p>
        <p>Hooked together Into a network, they are also being designed to oversee engineering experiments in laboratories, he said.</p>
        <p>ity and a high frequency of thunderstorms in summer results in a rise in the number of injuries caused by lightning. Awareness is important because nature may even provide a warning that you are about to be struck, the National Weather Bureau has observed. They have suggested a number of precautions that are worth remembering.</p>
        <p>If you feel an electrical charge (your hair seems to stand on end or your skin is tingling) drop to the ground immediately.</p>
        <p>If a person is struck by lightning in your presence, do not be put off from helping to resuscitate for fear of getting an electrical charge. Although burned, such people can be handled safely, the weather experts say. A person who appears to be killed by lightning often can be revived by prompt mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, cardiac massage and prolonged respiration.</p>
        <p>In any group struck by li^t-ning, the apparently dead people should be treated first. Those who show vital signs probably will recover spontaneously, although burns and other injuries will require treatment. Recovery from aich strikes usually is complete, although there might be some impairment or loss of sight or hearing.</p>
        <p>Outdoor buffs should be especially wary during lightning storms. Golfers wearing cleated shoes are particularly good li^tning rods. People in small boats should get out of them ^ soon as possible in such a storm.</p>
        <p>Fishermen using metal rods and golfers with metal rods should seek cover.</p>
        <p>If you are traveling in a lightning storm remember automobiles offer excellent li^t-ning protection. Stay in the car. If you are walking outdoors seek shelter in buildings or a cave, ditch, or canyon.</p>
        <p>When there is no shelter, avoid the highest object in the area, these experts advise. If only isolated trees are nearby, it is best to crouch in the open, keeping twice as far away from isolated trees as the trees are hi^. Avoid hill tops, ^aces, wire fences, metal clotheslines, exposed sheds, and any electrically conductive elevated objects. People working</p>
        <p>outdoors should halt their activity. In particular dont work on fences, telephone or power lines, pipelines or structural steel fabrication. Stop tractor work. Tractors and other implements in metallic contact with the ground often are struck by lightning, the weather service has stated.</p>
        <p>Indoors stay away from open windows and doors, fireplaces, radiators, stoves, metal pipes, sinks, and plug-in electrical appliances even the ones you use on your hair (dryer), teeth (electrical brushes) or face (razor).</p>
        <p>Some people may use the</p>
        <p>stormy interlude indoors to call their friends. Dont. Lightning may strike the telephone lines outside.</p>
        <p>Despite the warnings people are likely to get, from government bureaus and other ' sources, most people are optimistic and are likely to adopt the it cant happen here attitude. It might be a good idea to make it a habit to leave picnic and beach areas when dark storm clouds appear. Lightning often strikes without any warning, and many lightning accidents happen at beaches because people decide to wait and see if it blows over.</p>
        <p>GARDEN</p>
        <p>CLINIC</p>
        <p>N. C. STATES UNIVERSITY ANSWERS TIMELY GARIffi4ING QUESTIONS Q. I have staked my cucumbers to save space in the garden. Should they be pruned too? (H. R., Salisbury)</p>
        <p>A. Yes. Cut off the lateral branches for the first 10 or 12 inches. This will prevent a mass of vines at the bottom of the plant and make disease control easier. Higher branches can be tied up like the main stem. (George Hughes, extension horticulturist)</p>
        <p>Q. I have heard that the milk from the steam of a Jewelweed is an ideal remedy for poison oak. Is this true? (J. E., Lexington)</p>
        <p>A. The juice from the leaves and stems of Jewelweed relieves itching temporarily, but it does not cure the irritation. (J. W-Jardin, NCSU professor of botany)</p>
        <p>Q. My backyard gets little sun and stays wet because of underground drainage pipes. I have tried Kentucky 31 fescue and Red Creeping fescue with no results at all. Any suggestions? (S. D., Garner)</p>
        <p>A. Yes. Under that much shade over 50 per cent), some ground cover other than grass would be better. Liriope spicata or ajuga wil grow under those</p>
        <p>SWIMMING</p>
        <p>POOLS</p>
        <p>Pool Supplios Coll 758-3394</p>
        <p>Wainright Const. Co.</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>QUALITY DECORATING</p>
        <p>PAINTING</p>
        <p>DECORATING</p>
        <p>9AL.</p>
        <p>COVERING</p>
        <p>A,B.Whiey</p>
        <p>13ll West I4th Street, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>/AX.</p>
        <p>D</p>
        <p>DEVOE PAINT</p>
        <p>Since 1754</p>
        <p>Phone</p>
        <p>752-7131</p>
        <p>iiezs'LTCl'naijt.x..</p>
        <p>H</p>
        <p>CXDadgOT^OT A I,e</p>
        <p>ON THE</p>
        <p>HOUSE</p>
        <p>By ANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures</p>
        <p>The large variety of paints on the market is the result of a continuing effort by manufacturers to siqiply the widely divergent demands of the public. People are no more in agreement on the kinds of paints they want than they are on anting dse in life.</p>
        <p>Years ago, kitchen and bathroom walls were finished with a paint that had a hl^ gloss, simply because this type of paint had a high resistance to food stains, grease, finger marks and spots in general. Flat paints were reserved for the other rooms in the house.</p>
        <p>These days, the new acrylic latex satin enamels are getting more and more use in kitchens, bathrooms, laundry and playrooms where good resistance to moisture, stains and hard knocka is needed. These new low gloss finishes have a satiny luster and are easy to clean when soiled. Paint manufacturers use various designations for these finishes, such as eggshell, velvet, satin latex or simply low luster. Seen head-on, these coatings appear to be fl^t with little or no gloss. But when viewed at an angle, they have a definite sparkle without the glare that some people find objectionable in a hli gloss fln-</p>
        <p>Here's the</p>
        <p>By ANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures</p>
        <p>Q.  We have a one-story house with 16 screens. I intend to paint the screens, but not all at one time. I plan to take the screens off, a few at a time, and paint both the wooden frames and the mesh. I anticipate no trouUe with the frames, but remember that some years ago when I painted the mesh, 1 had a problem with the paint clogging the openings. Is some there some way to do this kind of painting without tbe clogging trouMe?</p>
        <p>A.  You should use one of the special applicators for this purpose. Its a piece of material attached to a wooden block. Years ago we used to make our own by tacking a piece of carpeting to such a block. Use a screen enamel in some kind of container suitable for using the applicator. Spread the paint on one side of the mesh. Without dipping the applicator in the paint again, rub it back and forth on the other side of the mesh. As you move along, you will see the clogged areas clear up, but should there be a spot here or there where this doesnt happen, go over it a second time. The screen enamel usually will spread a little easier if you add just a bit of the recommended thinner, never more than five per cent.</p>
        <p>Q.  In making a wooden table, I accidently put a dent into the wood at one point. Is it true that applying water to the dent will cause it to swell and thus hide it?</p>
        <p>A.  Generally, yes, but you must be very careful to apply the water only to the dented area. If any gets on the surrounding surface, it also will swell, nullifying your efforts. For that reason, cabinetmakers years ago applied the water with an eye dropper. Some persons apply the water, place an ink blotter over the spot and run a warm iron over it. There are two important things to remember. One is that many persons with a vague knowledge of this technique ruin a furniture finish because they don't know it should be attempted only on raw wood. The other is that both water and heat can affect a glued joint, so you must be extra careful when working near such a joint.</p>
        <p>(For ither of Andy Langs booklets, jfoo Finishing in the Home-or Saving Money by Insulating, send 35 cents and a long, STAMPED, self-addressed envelope to Know-How, P.O. Box 477, Huntington, N.Y. 11743.)</p>
        <p>ish. They dry quickly, are pr^ tically odor-free during ap cation and are easy to use.  As with finishing materialsjjt all kind, pigmented or cle|p; they are most effective whk time is taken to prepare tSgi surface properly. It is especiar Iy important to wash kitchHi' walls, ceilings and trim w4h detergent and water to remm% the greasy film deposited cooking. Finger marks, mild^' and dirt should also be washi^ off. Traces of detergent mi(st be removed by wiping the sij-face with a damp cloth. m, Once the surface is cleaCi cracks, nail holes and other dentations should be filled a latex crack-filling comp using a putty knife to smo the patch. After the filler h^ dried, sand the surface light^ When a crack or opening  very deep, it may be necessafy to use a second coat of filljjf where shrinkage has takdv place.  S</p>
        <p>When dry, sand the surfafiS smooth and apply a latex pS , raer to all bare areas. The E tex satin enamel then can fcS applied with a roller or brulT If the c(rior selected for the t|fl[ coat is not too different frqpa the original color, a single caat usually will be sufficient. Rollers and brushes must be washed promptly with water after painting, since the acrylic coatings dry quickly to foift tough, water-resistant films. ^ Many paint manufacturers also offer low luster acrylic latex paints for outdoor These coatings can be used A almost any exterior surface, including wood, stucco, concrete and cement asbestos shingle. TThe exterior grades have sheei^ properties similar to the interior coatings. They chalk stowfy so that there is little chalk down to disfigure trim or briclij walls and have good resistanre to peeling, cracking and fading. But remember that the tin^ and attention you give to the primer preparation of the old surface will be reflected in the quality of the result.</p>
        <p>conditions. (Carl Blake extension agronomist)</p>
        <p>Q. We have a hydrangea that has been moved twice tin the last five years, along, with the hope that moving would cause the plant to bloom. The hydrangea makes wonderful foliage but no flowers. (E. W., Fairvlew)</p>
        <p>A. An over abundance of nitrogen in the soil could be the problem. Prune the hydrangea back severely after the time of blooming has passed. Cut back to a few buds to promote new growth. Thin crowded stems as necessary. Feed the hydrangea superplK^ate in a band just of tbe shrub. This should help to bring the hydrangea into bloom next year. Hydrangeas like plenty of moisture and prefer a lot of sun^ine. (Henry J. Smith, extension landscape horticulturist)</p>
        <p>Q.  I would like to make a patio at the rear of our house by placing concrete blocks in a bed of sand. 1 know something about this, but would like your opinion on how it should be done.</p>
        <p>A.  The area should be dug to a d^th equal to the thickness of the blocks plus 2 Inches. Put edging in place, then pour 2 inches of sand into the cavity. Install the ccmcrete blocks, using a level and remembering to provide sufficient slope for drainage. When all tbe blocks are in place, fill the joints with sand, 'iis need not be done too neatly. Just pour in the sand along the joints, ignoring the sand that will spill over the sides. When the pouring is completed, use a broom to push tbe loose sand into any openings that exist. If there is any surplus, it can be swept off the blocks with the broom or hosed off.</p>
        <p>After the U.S. Executive Mansion was burned by the British in 1814, only the walls were left standing. When it was restored in 1818 these walls were painted white to obliterate all traces of the fire and it has been known as the White House ever since.  ^</p>
        <p>(If you do things around the house, you'll find much helpffif information in Andy Langs handbook, Practical Home I^ pairs, available by sending $1.50 to this newspaper at Bifx 5, Teaneck, N.J., 07666.)</p>
        <p>MORGAN</p>
        <p>INSULATION. INC.</p>
        <p>New Insuifltion R( msulrition</p>
        <p>752-009 1</p>
        <p>Greenville, N C.</p>
        <p>AHENTION, MR. HOMEBUILDER:</p>
        <p>Whirlpool APPLIANCES</p>
        <p>NOW AT BUILDERS PRICES</p>
        <p>WE tok* car of delivery ond warranty service for you. People oppreciote WHIRLPOOL applionces.</p>
        <p>Call or write for prices.</p>
        <p>ira</p>
        <p>I .11 1</p>
        <p>LJ</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>BOBS TV</p>
        <p>8 APPLIANCE</p>
        <p>A,d.n</p>
        <p> ..</p>
        <p>But Classified Ads do! Especially this time of the year when people are out moving around more .  .  finding different</p>
        <p>exciting things to do. More people are reading the Classified Ads for particular items that will make their lives more satisfying So If you have articles around your house that are no longer used by your lamily, now's a good time to tell your neighbors about them. There is surety an individual who is looking tor just the Item you have for sale! Take time now and give us a call we'll be glad to help you word yotfr ad tor fast resuUsI</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Phone 752-6166</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0037" />
        <p>Written 5,100 Songs In Lifetime; Never A Hit</p>
        <p>BHX SANDVE, now a night cleric in a Draver botd, scribbles another song. Hes been doing that since he was a</p>
        <p>teoaager and has conqiosed mor than 5,100 tunes. (UPI Photo)</p>
        <p>New Book About Names Complied By An Expert</p>
        <p>By GREGORY JENSEN</p>
        <p>LONDON (UPI) - Susan and David are sexy. Peter and Jane are on the way out. And Jaqueline  despite Mrs. Onassis  is long out of fashion.</p>
        <p>Up and coming are Jennifer and Christopher, Emily and Rebecca, Matthew and Adam. Jirfin and Mary are fading fast.</p>
        <p>Or so says Leslie Alan Dunkling, a balding 42-year-old former teacher who is one of the worlds great experts on names.</p>
        <p>Dunkling is the founder and general secretary of The Names Society, which enrolls^ name addicts like himself in 15 countries. He has written three books about names, one the Guinness Book of people, and has two more in the works.</p>
        <p>:.Jlis latest, just published by J^. Dent, is a fact-brimmed compendium called "First Sames First. It deals exhaus-aVely with almost every Christian name in the English-speaking world.</p>
        <p>It barely scratches the subject, actually, Dunkling said in an interview.</p>
        <p>Its a kind of overview, a surface survey. Ideally it should be used as a starting point for academic research.</p>
        <p>^ Yet First Names First ^cks 285 pages full of facts pbout names. It is a fever chart of the popularity of individual names across a century, an ^ylopedia of personal names ^m Adelaide to Zita.</p>
        <p>Dunkling spent two years compiling it in spare time from his regular job as a producer for the BBC world service. He</p>
        <p>English teacher for own 620-volume research li-</p>
        <p>or.</p>
        <p>was an years.</p>
        <p>I'm primarily Interested in words, he said. But names in themselves are fascinating. They are also, he claims, vitally important.</p>
        <p>Our first names are not merely names, he said. Frequently ^y act as our ambassadors, representing us to the outside world.</p>
        <p>They are a part of our personality as others see it  often as we ourseives see it. For this reason Dunkling pities people whose parents gave them joke names like Cora Apple, Preserved Fish Wava White Flagg Two years of three continents  by himself aid an ai volunteer ^pers  many suci oddities. His has two full pages of n^es like Ann Teak, Charity Booi &amp;gt;i or Ima June Bugg, all bornt^ by real people.</p>
        <p>Dunkling got into the mme game through sheer I he said.</p>
        <p>I was a lecturer teachers college and I prepared a class. It perfectly gorgeous day, so&amp;gt;hit on the brilliant idea of doing a study of hodse names.</p>
        <p>It was just an excuse to stroll about in the sun and ask people about the names of their houses. But the answers were so fascinating, so full of humor and human interest, that Ive never looked back.</p>
        <p>Now one room in a suburban house shared with his wile Nicole  a name of great p&amp;lt;^ularity  and children named St^hen, Catherine and Laurence, Is crammed with his</p>
        <p>Santiago Subway Is Spotless And Silent</p>
        <p>By CHARLES E . PADILLA</p>
        <p>SANTIAGO, ChUe (UPI) -Sleek and spoess trains that run op rubber wheels are transporting thousands of Chileans daily on an ultra modern, earthquake-proof subway system.</p>
        <p>The Santiago Metro, as it is called in ChUe, is a far cry from the noisy and grimy New York system.</p>
        <p>Here the spanking-new, two-tone blue cars, built in France, run swifUy and sUoitly on wide rubber wheels. There are no graffiti scribbled on the walls, the stations are brightly lit and tiled, and danger of mugging is practically nil.</p>
        <p>The system, which will eventuaUy have five lines running 35.4 miles, is being constructed with mas^ve ^ reinforcing to withstand Santiagos frequent earthcpiakes.</p>
        <p>, A new 1.8-mile stretch was inaugurated March 31 by the presidait, Gen. Augusto Pinochet.</p>
        <p>The system currently runs nearly seven miles from the citys western edge to the chic Providuncia sector in the capitals eastern side.</p>
        <p>(fost of the project this far has been estimated at $30 millkm.</p>
        <p>An estimated 54,060 persons are using the system dally but Metro officials said thgy expect the number to jump to 200,000 by October.</p>
        <p>Cost of the ride is 15 cents and Metro officials are experimenting with a double ticket that will allow users to take both the subway and a bus to their final destination.</p>
        <p>Financed mainly by loans from France, the project was started in 1969 during the administration . of Christian Democrat President Eduardo Frel.</p>
        <p>Following the 1970 election of Socialist President Salvador Allende, work on the project dragged and finally gromid to a halt because of frequent strikes, financial difficulties and furious street battles between right and left-wing political factions.</p>
        <p>Work, this time in earnest, continued after the military government toppled Allende in September, 1973. The first stretch of the system was inaugurated two years lajier.</p>
        <p>The French government, which is providing the technical assistance, granted Oiile another $10 million in March to continue work on a secmd line to Santiagos southerns suburbs.</p>
        <p>brary on names.</p>
        <p>For First Names PSTst he collected facts by a variety of methods in the United States, Canada, Britain, Australia and New Zealand, the countries his book covers.</p>
        <p>One of its achievements, never attempted before, is to chart the changing fashion in names, country by country, throu^out the past century.</p>
        <p>Pages of charts list the top 50 names in each country at 25-year intervals. There are lists of t(v womens and mens namsa.^^mong 1975 college raduates in 26 American states, charts of regional name preferences in Canada. He found evidence that Australian names are becoming more Australian.</p>
        <p>The discovery that boys think Susan and Samantha and Carol are sexy, and that David or Stephen or Paul turn girls on, comes from an Informal poll Dunkling conducted in London.</p>
        <p>His names on the way out or climbing fast in popularity are based on research into name useage. This also uncovered some surprises:</p>
        <p> The top rls name in the United States and Canada in 1975 was Jennifer, but Sarah was third in the United States and second in both Canada and England.</p>
        <p> Michael was the No. 1 boys name in the United States and Canada, and Michelle the top girls name tn Australia.</p>
        <p> Adam seems destined to become one of the t&amp;lt;p five names, and Rebecca is on its way to the very top. Mary is declining in ail English-speaking countries, and there are very clear signs that Johns long reign is coming to an end.</p>
        <p>Dunkling says his own first name, Leslie, is pretty awful.</p>
        <p>Objectively speaking, its all wrpng, he said. Its dated. Its bisexual. If I were trying to project a public image I would certainly change it.</p>
        <p>He is all for changing your name if it doesnt fit. His books ilngest chapter is on Assessing a Name, either your own or one youre thinking of for the baby.</p>
        <p>You own name is worth thinking about objectively, Dunkling says. The names of other people can be fascinating. And the names of your children must be chosen with the greatest possible care.</p>
        <p>ByDANCmSZAR</p>
        <p>DENVER (UPI) - The dusty stanzas of love and loneliness never finished in the money for Bill Sandve. Four lines to a verse, four verses to a song, each tune a faded chronicle of a second-rate songwriters past.</p>
        <p>They were composed on a road in North Dakota, behind a canrival booth in Texas, at the table of a Montana saloon and in a forgotten number of cafes, bars and hotels tn other corners of the West.</p>
        <p>One of Sandves favorites, Bus Driver Blues, was written in a shabby hotel on Kansas Citys 13th Street  once known as Nickelpane Street, where the doxies listened for tapping of customer nickels on bawdy house windows.</p>
        <p>It was about an hour before dawn and very warm for September. Sandve, barefooted, slumped in a straight-backed chair near a window and gazed into the dim light down the street of grubby cafes and bars.</p>
        <p>My girlfriend, April, was with me at the time, Sandve recalled. She couldnt sleep either.</p>
        <p>April was a waitress at the bus depot restaurant. She used to go with a bus driver who came in with the Leavenworth bus all the time. She asked me to write a bus driver song, so I picked up a notebook and pencil and wrote Bus Driver Blues.</p>
        <p>The song never sold. Most of Sandves songs dont sell. The 50-year-old songwriter has compered more than 5,100 tunes since he was a teen-ager, an average of more than two songs per week.</p>
        <p>His songs thread through adolescence in North Dakota, carnival work on the road, days of buying whiskey for Montana Indians, years of selling leather goods in Dallas, a bit of time in Kansas City and work as a traveling salesman.</p>
        <p>Circumstance brought Sandve to Denver in 1959. What hes done since then isnt important, except for the songs. Always the songs.</p>
        <p>He is now the night desk clerk at the West Hotel, on the edge of the downtown lights, a down-at-the-heels joint across from the Argonaut Garage.</p>
        <p>The lobby is quiet after 2 a.m. An hour iater, the closing bars empty the drunks back into the street. Some waver down the seven worn marble steps into the vapid air of the hotel, past the clgaret butt smoldering in the water fountain, past the desk  a mumbled word to Sandve at the desk  and into a ancient elevator, clanking up to the fourth floor where it sometimes gets stuck.</p>
        <p>Sandve, alone, reads westerns and scribbles songs. He is disturbed only by an insomniac in room 106, who buzzes the desk every 15 minutes to check the time.</p>
        <p>Its 3:10, Sandve rasped into the house phone. Sandve is</p>
        <p>New System For Aerosol Cons</p>
        <p>YONKERS, N.Y. (UPI) -The inventor of the valve for aerosol containers has just introduced a new dispenser system for pressurized products that works with hydrocarbons instead of fluorocarbons.</p>
        <p>The latter chemical propellants are facing a possible phase-out because they are thought to endanger the atmosphere.</p>
        <p>Inventor Robert H. Ab-planalp, chairman and president of Precision Valve Cfotp. here, said the new pn^ant is a type of gas that has existed in the atmosphere since the advent of man.</p>
        <p>He said it can be mixed in a water base, making the spray non-flammable. It can also be used to devel(^ economical water-based products that until now could not be sprayed efficiently from pressurized containers, Abplanalp added.</p>
        <p>The new system is named AQUASOL.</p>
        <p>not unlike most desk clerks in cheap hotels. Hes not tall, not short, not fat, not skinny, not handsome, not u^y, not anything you can remember. Just there, in his ba^ pants and silence.</p>
        <p>His memory slips. At times he cannot jog song lyrics, written long ago, from the corners of his mind. No matter. He has them all, stacks of them, each song dated, stored away in his room upstairs and at his stepmothers home in North Dakota.</p>
        <p>At 3:15, Sandve leaned on the desk and said there was no great trick to songwriting, none at all.</p>
        <p>Its really kind of simple, nothing to it, just a common ordinary sort of thing. Whatever comes to mind, whatever youre thinking, you just think of a title, then write it down. Thats the best way to write. Thats the way Ive been writing for years now.</p>
        <p>Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?</p>
        <p>.First Call Your Independent Carrier. If You Are Unable To Reach Him Cali The^Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>752-3952</p>
        <p>Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And a 'Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.</p>
        <p>Sandve picked up a pencil and made a few preliminary swirls on a small white pad.</p>
        <p>The first thing you do is put the title down like thlsj&amp;gt;&amp;lt;re. After the title, write something dovra to rhyme with it, like this:</p>
        <p>When youre alone And oh so blue You feel downhearted And your heart aches too.</p>
        <p>I wrote that one in 1951 about my first wife, said Sandve. Four lines to a verse, four verses, sometimes five, but generally four. Most are 16 lines, some are more.</p>
        <p>Once in 1948 I wrote one calfod the Beer Drinking Blues. I wrote it in Montana at the North Side Inn. It came to me during the music. I waited about 15 minutes, then asked the bartender for a paper and</p>
        <p>pencil. It took me 10 minutes to write.</p>
        <p>He mentioned more song titles: "Love Walks a Lonely Street, I Remember ^rll, Saturday Morning Tears, Love Isnt Blind, Love is Like a Lonely Town, Darkness on the DelU, and Fast Talking Stranger.</p>
        <p>Some of the titles are familiar. The songs are not.</p>
        <p>Fast Talking Stranger' is about myself mainly. I wrote it about me. But my two favorite things to write about are love and loneliness.</p>
        <p>Love, mostly. Its just something Im more familiar with. Ive been in love quite a few times. Its better to write about love and Itmeliness than anything else. You see more of those than anything.</p>
        <p>S(DME EATERIES</p>
        <p>GOAU.OUT WHEN IT COMES TO PICKING-A fAHO/ NAME FOR 1HBR JOINT-'-</p>
        <p>A few of Sandves songs have been recorded and performed by second-rate singers with names that sound like hundreds of other second-rate singers. There were no golden records for Sandve.</p>
        <p>Sandves favorite songs were mailed to Al Crocker in Kansas City. For $25, Al set them to music. For another $25, Al would record them with piano</p>
        <p>King Cole died, and Ive written two songs for Frank Sinatra, but I haven't sent them to him yet.</p>
        <p>Most of Sandves stanzas are reflective jottings of his good and bad times. Some, like Bus Driver Blues,' were written as a request.</p>
        <p>Thats how I wrote String of Beads, too, said Sandve. I wrote it for a friend. It's about a grandmc^r who passes away at the supper table with a</p>
        <p>accompaniment. Al Is dead ____^________________</p>
        <p>now, and Sandve is thinking ofVrosary in her hands. My friend mailing his songs to another wrote it first, but it was all</p>
        <p>guy with a piano in Jamaica, N.Y.</p>
        <p>I also write a lot of songs about famous people, Sandve said, leaning on the lobby desk. I wrote two songs about Billy the Kid and one called Gods Mansion of Gold' when Nat</p>
        <p>mixed up and 1 had to write it over again.</p>
        <p>His words didnt rhyme and the way he had it you couldnt set it to music, said the songwriter. It didnt sound right. I wrote four verses fw it. Its a jSvaltz.</p>
        <p>-But ITALWAV6 6EEM6 TO BE THE ONES ^nW THE SHORT NAMES TViAT AREUSUAULV RACKED -</p>
        <p>gMwMu a jtwv 7UiiMeif.Moanm.ie.o&amp;gt;^ctM.-TVK&amp;lt;/gifs  tv/-memoo,hot njf aipnabt -</p>
        <p>You IwOoK Uusr MKft YR ftiSfpOlT PHOTO, Sir--Ape YOU SuRB YotrRi MIU. ENOUGH TO</p>
        <p>TA</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>i.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0038" />
        <p>IMTIm OaUy RoOectar, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, July 3,1^</p>
        <p>The Cowsills' Rose High, Fell Far, Plan Comeback</p>
        <p>By MICHAEL BLUMSTEIN</p>
        <p>WEST WARWICK, R.I. (UPI)  It was the American dream.</p>
        <p>A mother, her five sons and one daughter sang together In their living room, practiced constantly, and ended ig) with three gold records and a slew of television appearances.</p>
        <p>The Cowsills were Americas number one singing family.</p>
        <p>Their first big song - The Rain, the Park and Other Things  hit the top of the charts in 1967. The next two years brought five albums and other hits, including Indian Uke, We Can Fly, and Hair.</p>
        <p>The kids started out in Newport, playing dates in a local hotel in 1965. They lived in neighboring Middletown. Their father, retired from the Navy after a career as an enlisted man, became the manager.</p>
        <p>The Cowsills had their own TV special in 1968 and ma(te</p>
        <p>guest appearances on such shows as Ed Sullivan, Johnny Carson and Dean Martin.</p>
        <p>The money rolled in  and right back out  as the family bought a 23-room mansion in ritzy Newport, as well as land elsewhere in Rhode Island and in California. The family also took an apartment in New York.</p>
        <p>But the bubble burst.</p>
        <p>Since 1970, a fall in the groups popularity has been matched only by a fall in the familys bank account. In the last two years, parents William and Barbara Cowsill have each had to file in court for bankruptcy.</p>
        <p>They sought to rid themselves of an accumulated $445,730 in debts to hotels, recording studios, crdit card companies, lawyers, agents and airlines  among other concerns.</p>
        <p>AH the real estate, of course, has been sold or repossessed.</p>
        <p>Today, Mrs. Cowsill lives in a garden apartment in West Warwick where she works nights in a local nursing home.</p>
        <p>She very calmly insists she's not bitter. It was poor business management. It happens to the best of us. You just have to pick yourself up by your boot straps. ]t was a wonderful thing and I enjoyed it thoroughly.</p>
        <p>She also said disbanding the group was really best for her family. These were children and they needed room to grow.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Cowsill said her husband has gone back to sea. He is home two weeks every month and works the balance of the time on offshore drilling rigs in such faraway places as Egypt and Turkey.</p>
        <p>Of her children, Mrs. Cowsill said, Theyve just been/Busy growing up. The youngest, Susan, is now 18. The oldest.</p>
        <p>THE COWSILLS. at the height of their popularity in the late 1960s. The money rolled in  and rolled out with a fall in</p>
        <p>popularity. They are under new management now, and hope for a comeback. (UPI Photo)</p>
        <p>Bob, is 27 and has Just finished his pre-medical undergraduate education.</p>
        <p>Although the group 1^ not played publicly for some time now, Mrs. Cowsill said America has not heard the last of her children.</p>
        <p>Its all just in the infancy stage now, she said, but youre going to see some big things happening.</p>
        <p>According to the Cowsills new manager, Jonathan Myer, of North Hollywood, Calif., the time is right for a comeback. He said Susan and three brothers  Bob, Paul, 25, and John, 21  have signed on with Elektra-Asylum records and theyll essentially start where they left off.</p>
        <p>Of course, its not in the same context as it was before, he said. Now theyre a contemporary group whose members just all happen to be brothers and sisters.</p>
        <p>But there is always a certain amount of interest in family-oriented groups, he said.</p>
        <p>And, according to Mrs. Cowsill, her children are excited with the prospect of making a comeback. Its more fun for them now. Its not a life-death thing with them. They couldnt appreciate what was happening then.</p>
        <p>Not that they dont remember: "They sang Indian Lake to me on the phone from California this past Mothers Day.</p>
        <p>Cardin Designs Furnishings</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI) - Clothing and accessories designer Pierre Cardin is going into the home furnishings field.</p>
        <p>Come fall, his first lamp, rug and furniture collections will be introduced in retail stores in the United States and Canada.</p>
        <p>The upholstered furniture consists of three groups in a wide variety of fabrics such as velvet, suedecloth, jacquards and a special series of Cardin designs. The furniture includes modular pit seating arram gements, a 90-inch sofa with matching armchairs, a C-shaped chair on a plinth with stainless steel sides and French blue Ultrasuede upholstery and a starkly simple two-door rolling server in brushed aluminum accented with chrome detail.</p>
        <p>The lamps and geometric designs.</p>
        <p>rugs are</p>
        <p>Stay On Top of the News</p>
        <p>Theres something for everyone in every issne of</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Up-to-the-mimite news ^citing pictures Thriliing sports</p>
        <p>Entertaining comics</p>
        <p>Thought provoking editorials Special features Syndicated columns Advertising messages</p>
        <p>Cail 752-6166 for home delivery</p>
        <p>Iji: I; I i: I '-'</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>07 SPECIAL NOTICES</p>
        <p>TO SOMEONE WHO has picked up a wedding dress from A Cleaner World Cleaners in Greenville In the last four months. The Cleaners has given you my wedding dress, if you please, call collect {919) 654-5588.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>09</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. _758-1131_</p>
        <p>GUARANTEED Engine, transmission, body parts. Free parts locating service.</p>
        <p>Crisp Auto Salvage, Inc.</p>
        <p>Phone 752-2572</p>
        <p>N. Greenest.</p>
        <p>HASTINGS FORD has daily rentals at reasonable prices. Call 758-0114.</p>
        <p>STUOEBAKER 1963. Good body, fair engine. $150. 752-1359.  _</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>AMC</p>
        <p>HORNET 1975 Sportabout Wagon. Air, good condition. $3250.756-3278.</p>
        <p>IT</p>
        <p>Buick</p>
        <p>BUICk 1970 Electra Limited. Full power. $900. 756-6587 or 752-2713.</p>
        <p>ELECTRA 1974. 4 door, full power. $2995. Call Atlantic Credit Corporation, 756-5185.</p>
        <p>CENTURY 1974. Automatic, power steering, power brakes, air, 4 door, 350, V-8,17 mites per gallon highway.</p>
        <p>vinyl top. 752-6401.</p>
        <p>Excellent condition.</p>
        <p>BUICK 1972 Electra Limited. 4 door, all power, radial tires, extra clean. 753 4681.</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Cadillac</p>
        <p>CADILLAC 1967 Sedan DeVille. 4 door hardtop. Air, cushion seats, good condition, tires tike new. $800 or best offer. Call 752-3914 from B til 5 or 758-2566 after 5.</p>
        <p>CADILLAC 1968 Sedan DeViile. Good running condition, full power. $750 or trade for pickup of equal value.</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Chevrolet</p>
        <p>CHEVELLE AAALIBU 1974 Estate Wagon. Air conditioning, extra nice. Sale price. $9995. Holt Olds-Oatsun, 756-3115._</p>
        <p>CAPRICE 1976. Blue and white, fully loaded. Assume loan. Call 752-6747 or 946-8930.__</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET 1970 Impala. Power brakes and steering, air. Needs tires. Excellent condition otherwise. 756-4223 afters p.m. '_</p>
        <p>CHEVELLE 1971. Excellent condi tion. $1500 or best offer. Can be seen at Wachovia. Meadowbrook branch. 758-1064.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET 1967 Caprice. Good condition, good tires. $450, Bill Lewis, 758-0114; 756-3843 nights._</p>
        <p>CHEVY 1967 Caprice Wagon. 327 V-8, automatic, air, power steering. $400. 756-6450 after 4.</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>CHRYSLER 1964 Nw Yorker. Full power, excellent condition. Call 756-3517.</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>Dodge</p>
        <p>DODGE 1976 Charger SE. Loaded. 752-6488 days, 756-0563 nights._</p>
        <p>DODGE 1972 Potara. 4 door, air, power steering and brakes. $1200.</p>
        <p>756 3782._</p>
        <p>POLARA 1972. Green over beige. Asking $1300.756-7967 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>TWO-WAY</p>
        <p>APPRECIATION!</p>
        <p>You'll appreciate your own pool every time you want to swim ... but the value o1 your property will also appreciate with a home pool We'ii install the perfect pool for your needs.</p>
        <p>TALLMAN POOLS</p>
        <p>758 6131 758 5581</p>
        <p>SPECIAL PRICE Jo M Filing Cabinet</p>
        <p>$y^50</p>
        <p> , 4 drawer Reg. $113.00</p>
        <p>Taft Office Equipment Co.</p>
        <p>752-2175</p>
        <p>59EvaflSSt.</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>FORD tf7J Ranch Waoon. 47.000 milt*, air conditioning, powar slaar-Ing, radio, frailar hitch. One owner. Vary good condition. $1295. 7M-0419, 752-4IM.</p>
        <p>PINTO 1974 Station Wagon Clean, new tires. Call 756-6553 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>PRO 1971 Maverick. 4 door, automatic. 6 cylinder. Excellent cen-dltipn, clean. $695.758-2633.</p>
        <p>FORD 1974. 4 door, air, power windows, new tires. Extra clean. 753-4681.</p>
        <p>USED TVS and stereoequipmant sell quickly when advertised tor sale in Classified.</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>Lincoln</p>
        <p>MARK IVr 1973. Good dodltlon. One owner. $4500.758 4340or 7M-0138.</p>
        <p>IB</p>
        <p>MBTCury</p>
        <p>MERCURY 1970 Montego Wagon. Good condition. Nc $11^ 756-1377 from 9 til 5.</p>
        <p>. Station lew tires.</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>Oldsmoblld</p>
        <p>CUTLASS SUPREME 1974. Air, AAA/FM stereo. $2995.752-7917.</p>
        <p>REGENCY 1974 White Oldsmobiie. Fully equipped, new tires and set of Cragar wire rims, velvet seats, 63,000 miles. $3800.753-4234 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>CUTLASS SU most warrai</p>
        <p>JkSS SUPREME 1977. Landau, options.'Litw new, 10,500 miles, anty. $5400. 753-3829.</p>
        <p>CUTLASS SUPREME 1977 Brougham. Low mileage. Under warranty. Take over payments. 746-2204 after 5 p.m.  _</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>Plymouth</p>
        <p>MUST SELL 1972 Plymouth Roadrunner. Mags, new tires, air conditioning. Excellent shape. $1150 or best offer. 752-4096.</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>Pontiac</p>
        <p>1 mileage. I. Black In-</p>
        <p>GRANO PRIX 1973. Low mM&amp;lt; black with black vinyl top. Bla terlor. Good condition. 75&amp;lt;r6820.</p>
        <p>GRAND PRIX 1973. Black, fully equipped, sun roof top/ 55,000 miles, new steel belted tires. $2900. 753-4234 after 5;30 p.m._</p>
        <p>GRAND PRIX 1972. Gray with white vinyl top. 756-2376 day, 752-7398 night.</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>Foreign</p>
        <p>JAGUAR XJ-6, 1974. 4 door sedan, automatic transmission, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, new radials, black leather In-teri(M', sabel brown exterior. Local owner. $7698. Can be seen at Tarheel Toyota or call 758-3397 or 752-9565.</p>
        <p>FIAT 1974 Station Wagon. 4 speed. Excellent condition. 756-0796._</p>
        <p>GOLD TOYOTA 1972 Station Wagon. Automatic, new transmission, air, 25+ miles per gallon. Great shape. Moving, must sell. 758-2952.</p>
        <p>FIAT 124 SEDAN 1967. Good gas mileage, new tires. $575.752-1387.</p>
        <p>OPEL RALLYE 1969. Red with black vinyl top and stripes. CB. tape, radio. $795. Call work, 752-7115, ask for extension 29,8 a.m. til 8:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>VW 1964. Rebuilt motor. Good condi-tion. 756-6787._</p>
        <p>1977 HONDA Accord. 7000 miles, excellent condition. Warranty. Must sell. 758-4506 anytime.</p>
        <p>VW 1973. $1450. Cali 758-9549 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>OATSUN 260Z, 1974. Olive green, 4 speed, air, AAA/FM, new radial tires and sun spoke mags. Call 752-0872.</p>
        <p>TOYOTA 1972 Corona Mark 11 Station Wagon. Four speed transmission, 28 mites per gallon, excellent condition. Call 7M-5945.</p>
        <p>MGB 1974 Convertible. 33,000 miles, good condition. One owner. 758-4340 or 756-0138.</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>Boats For Sale</p>
        <p>197$, 15' bass boat, 40 HP Mercury {foot-operated trolling motor), galvanized trailer. Like new. 758 2817._</p>
        <p>14' CAROLINA BOAT, new 1977 model with surgical seats already installed. Will sell at dealer cost. 752-9199 after 6.</p>
        <p>1977 MFG SUPER Bass. 35 HP elec trie start, gal" vanized tilt trailer. $2800. Can be seen at Pitt AAarlne.</p>
        <p>17' THUNDERBIRD, 115 HP</p>
        <p>Evinrude. Fully equipped, excellent condition. $2500.  726-5313</p>
        <p>(Morehead).</p>
        <p>10 HP MERCURY engine, 14' fii&amp;gt;erglass boat for $700. Also 14' Glasspar boat and 40 HP Johnson engine for $850. 758-8919 days, 756-5981 nights.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>"WANfED</p>
        <p>Machanics &amp;lt;Gas or Dtasat). Good fringa banafits *f&amp;gt;d pay scale tar qualiftad and axpariancad machanics. Contact par-tonnal office:</p>
        <p>Long AAanufacturing NX., Inc.</p>
        <p>Tarboro, NX. 27886</p>
        <p>OFFICE OR RETAIL SPACE AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>Adlacent to King t. Queen Restaurant Eastbrook Drive, Parking, Private Entrance  Very Neat. Call 752-1010</p>
        <p>Experienced Sewing AAachine/Mechanic Wanted</p>
        <p>Excellent working conditions and fringe benefits. Salary commensurate with ability. Apply:</p>
        <p>Blue Bell. Inc.</p>
        <p>Bethel, N.C.</p>
        <p>HOLLOMAN'S</p>
        <p>BRICK, BLOCK  CONGKTE SERVICE</p>
        <p>15 Years Experience, All Work Guaranteed</p>
        <p>We Specialize In...</p>
        <p>* Fireplaces * Carports</p>
        <p>* Patios  Porches</p>
        <p>* Stoops 8i Steps</p>
        <p>* Concrete or Brick Walkways</p>
        <p>* House Underpinning House Leveling</p>
        <p>* All Types Masonry Repair Work With Brick, Block or Concrete</p>
        <p>DIAL 753-3503 DAY OR NIGHT</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>PLUSH</p>
        <p>OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS UNLIMITED POTENTIAL CUDDLE PALS PROFIT CENTERS</p>
        <p>'THE TOYS THAT CHILDREN LOVE"</p>
        <p> MtaWww uwt MMttumnt  fwMtr</p>
        <p>saaiLLiON piM</p>
        <p> Part time or tuil time</p>
        <p> Manarwwnan CampttteTraMns</p>
        <p>CampanvMKUTM ProHt Canter lor rw. Storaa handiayoursaia.</p>
        <p>M Profit Cantar</p>
        <p>si movfne, hW preltt. Per free erectwra. nrfte er cad Mr-Merwev. Can TOLL FREE t-674-5SN fA-.ta*FM. DAILY SAT. 9 AM. to I - SUN. W AM. to 4 PM.</p>
        <p>IfdtaanWfNBartttM. JacksanvMa. Florida 33217</p>
        <p>TOYS UNUBflTEDg Inc.</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>Boats For Sala</p>
        <p>1975GRADY WHITE 18' Adventurer. 11$ HP Mercury ^er trim, Cox trailer. $4395. Call 752 9577 after 5.</p>
        <p>15' CROSBY, 33 HP Johntoft fo&amp;lt;rt control trolling motor. Anchor-mate and anchors, swivel fishing chair, built-in gat tank, paddle, Long tilt trailer. $1200.758-4609^ter5p.m.</p>
        <p>rnotor.'w"</p>
        <p>ILASS boat, :all 823-7509.</p>
        <p>100 HP</p>
        <p>1976, 115 HP Evinrude with tilt and trim. Phone 756-5989.</p>
        <p>1976, ir BASS boat, 115 HP Evinrude, flo^-on trailer, trolling motor, depth finder. 756-5989.</p>
        <p>14' TWO-MAN sailboat and trader. 4 years old. $50. 756-0417 weekends and late evenings.</p>
        <p>12* BOAT TRAILER with 13 Inch wheels. $75.752-0830.</p>
        <p>31 Camper$:For Sala</p>
        <p>1974 POP-UP camper. 19W feet, hardtop. Call 756-2061 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>EL CAMINO '74'77 fiberglass camper shell. Tinted glass, white coat finish. 756 0500 after6 p.m.</p>
        <p>?gel</p>
        <p>1971 COX CAMPER. Sleeps 6, good condition. $800.758-3492.</p>
        <p>CAMPING EQUIPMENT. Good con dition. Trailer, tent sleeps 6 8, six cots, Coleman stove, table. $215. 756-7520.</p>
        <p>1970 APACHE pop-up camper. Fiberglass sides and top. Sleeps 6. Excellent condition. 752-2847.</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>1972 YAA8AHA 200 Electric. Sissy bar, excellent condition. $350. Reason for selling, bought a larger bike. Call 752-9696 or 752-6166, extension 54.</p>
        <p>1974 HONDA 550-four. Luggage rack and high rise bars. Exceflenf condi tion. $1150.752-6132 after 5.</p>
        <p>1973 KAWASAKI F-11, 250 CC. $350 or best offer. Call Gary, 758 7733.</p>
        <p>STILL UNDER WARRANTY. Honda CB-125. $375.746 3382 after 5.</p>
        <p>1969 HONDA 450. Very good condi tion. See and ride to appreciate. 746-4745.</p>
        <p>1976 HONDA 550 Supersport. Blue. 756-2149 from 8 a.m. til 6 p.m., 756 3154 after 6.</p>
        <p>1974 HONDA 360. 3400 miles. Call 572-8420.</p>
        <p>1973 YAMAHA RD-350. Excellent condition. Call 758-8270 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>1976 TOYOTA Landcruiser. 4 wheel drive, 12,000 miles. Excellent condition. 752-4862.</p>
        <p>1967 INTERNATIONAL Jeepster. 4 wheel drive, V-6, removable hardtop. $1500.825-0371.</p>
        <p>1957 CHURCH BUS for sale. If in terested, call 758-3363.</p>
        <p>1973 INTERNATIONAL Scout II. V-8, 4 vdieel drive, automatic transmis Sion, air, radio, power steering, new tires, low miles. $3500 firm. Call 758-3375 Or 758-4578.</p>
        <p>1975 FORD IS' flatbed dump truck. 29,000 miles with new extra heavy duty durp. Can be seen at 1205 South Greene Street or call 758-1222.</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>DOGS 8i PETS</p>
        <p>AKC SHOW QUALITY Dobermans. Black and rust. Whelped MaV 3,1977. Dam holds AKC Obedience Title; Sire, best In match and best In breed winner. Certified pedigree included. Contact Hilt Tetterton at 825-9261, Bethel.</p>
        <p>WEIA8ARANER PUPPIES. All shots given. Contact Catherine Smith. 758-.1400.</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Dachshunds. Available July 3. Black and tan. Call 752-7021 days, 756-4052 nights.</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Cocker Spaniel ^u^es. Black and buff. $75. Call</p>
        <p>puppies. AKC champion bloodlines.</p>
        <p>IRISH SETTER</p>
        <p>registered. _______^  -</p>
        <p>Shots, dewormed. 5 mates at $125 each. 746-6483 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>FREE FLUFFY kittens. Two blacks and one tabby. Housebroken. 752-6865._</p>
        <p>BRITTANY SPANIEL pups. Ready to go July 15. Call 756-3397 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WE BLLY'</p>
        <p>Junk Cars &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>$5.00 and up. </p>
        <p>Boto Gouras UsedAutp.Pprts 750-0752.</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>DOGS 8. PETS</p>
        <p>A PACK OF good Beagle lwu(t__ Reasonable. Top gun dogs. 7M 70M.</p>
        <p>PET VILLA, Greenville'S newesSpe* shop. Grooming Special, $10. FuUdiw of pets and pet supplies. Poodles, Pek A Poo's and Manchester .Terriers. Route 1, beside Fast Fare-aod Lake Glenwood Subdivision. 75aH5i.</p>
        <p>AKC BASSET HOUND pupples.Tfl colored, outstanding pedigree. S# to</p>
        <p>appreciate. A38-5345._....</p>
        <p>AKC SMALL white Toy Poodle. Stww quality. 5 months old. 7,4-3730.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>Help Wanted</p>
        <p>MECHANIC. At least 5 yews experience, toll set of tools, contact M. E. Porter, Regional Auto Parts, Inc., 7S4 1100.   </p>
        <p>AUTO MECHANIC needed, ^usl have own tools. HospllalUefion, life insurance and retirement plan. App ly in person, Smith Waldrop MoTjy'o, 2201 Dickinson Avenue._</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED</p>
        <p>WAREHOUSEMAN</p>
        <p>Plumbing, heating and maM^al handling a must. Excellent pay.8hd fringe benefits with excellent  pany. Position available in C vIMe area. Include complete re.. . to P.O. Box 10563, WInston-Salewi, N.C. 27108_</p>
        <p>MEDICAL LABORA TORY Tec^r clan to work on weekends and night calls. Contact the ^administrator at Robersonvllie Township Hospital, RobersonVnib; NC. 795-3575._</p>
        <p>OUTSIDE  SALESPERSON ~ The leading consuriier electronics wholesalerln North and South Caroliru has opening for an outside salesperson in  East^</p>
        <p>N.C. Company offers cellent benefits including paid vacations, holiddiVs, sick leave, life a'rtd medical insurane+. Salary and commissiOT. Car furnished  and ^1</p>
        <p>sales expenses p|'d.-Prefer person  familiar',</p>
        <p>with consumer electronics products and the Eastern N.C. area. S^nd resume to Outside Salesperson, PO Box IW, Greenville, N.C. 27834._</p>
        <p>SECRETARY. North Carolina Cor-poration expanding office in Greenville in 6 to 6 weeks. Permanent fjotl-tion. Requires skilled typist and qvod personality. Send resume to Corp^-tion, P. O. Box 1967, Greenville,</p>
        <p>NEED COMPANION to stay with elderly woman near Bethel. 825-388L</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED PAINTE'fli</p>
        <p>wanted. Call 756-7609 after 6p.m.~</p>
        <p>INSURANCE SALESPERSON for a</p>
        <p>local firm. No experience needed. Will train. Send resume to Insurance, P. O. Box 1967, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY,,,,</p>
        <p>WE REPAIR SCREENS &amp;amp; DOORS</p>
        <p>C.L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>Experienced mobile home service person wanted for one of the oldest and most respected company in the business. Must be knowledgeable of all phases of mobile home repair and setups including electrical plumbing and heating. Apply</p>
        <p>Oakwood Mobile Homos</p>
        <p>624 W. GrMnviita Blvd. botwton 9 &amp;amp; 5.</p>
        <p>TEAM ELECTRONICS, INC.</p>
        <p>Quality  I</p>
        <p>Performance I Checks  ;</p>
        <p>Free</p>
        <p>Industrial, Commercial, Home Entertainment, Two Way Communication.</p>
        <p>JOIN THE TEAM!; 756-1387</p>
        <p>2403S.AMmorial Drive Next to New Fire Station</p>
        <p>SWIMMING</p>
        <p>POOLS</p>
        <p>T a liman Pool Construction of Greenville</p>
        <p>Residential &amp;amp; Commercial Pools</p>
        <p>758-6131</p>
        <p>758-5581</p>
        <p>AUTO SALESPERSON ^</p>
        <p>/   Pitt County's most progressive Buick-Pontiac dealer for 25lL years Is seeking a fop flight person Interested in selling automobiles. Excellent pay and fringe benefits. Training,,, program available. Apply in person at:</p>
        <p>KIT</p>
        <p>Duke Buick-Pontiac, Inc.</p>
        <p>Farmvitle, N.C.</p>
        <p>Serving Pitt County and Eastern N.C. for 25 Years.</p>
        <p>Full Size complete set box spring and mattress (Riviera) retail price 239.95. Sale price $95.00 for set.</p>
        <p>Brand new 3 piece bedroom suit $149.95</p>
        <p>Shop weekday nites from 6 to 9. Go west approximately 3 miles 264 turn left at Frog Level 'A mile.</p>
        <p>JAMIE'S FURNITURE &amp;amp; APPLIANCE</p>
        <p>756-6027  </p>
        <p>CAREER OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>FOR EXPERIENCED TEXTILE PRODUCTS SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>Assist in'starting new division for national chemical company. Heavyweight with contacts to sell textile specialty products. North and South Carolina and Georgia. Salary plus commission, car and excellent fringe benefits. Reply to Career, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.'r</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0039" />
        <p>^ Help Wanted</p>
        <p>erienced mechanic</p>
        <p>id lo vmrk on John Deere In --^al Equipment. Excellent com-PfRNrfienellts. Call 7SB-43 for infer</p>
        <p>OIL COMPANY now accep _ applications for station Ptevlous experience helpful but not essential. Seekino In-Wd'tals of excellenf character and ability who are lookinp for security elii h?tl2r'a"'' 'hown company. Salary *700 monthly plus commls-Sion, All company benefits, in Mrancer yacatfon, ate. Send resume Oil Company, P. 0. Box 994, GaWsboro, NC 27530. An Equal Op-poftunlty Employer.</p>
        <p>E_'X PER IENCED</p>
        <p>Psg-teyag.'gis"</p>
        <p>EKEEPER. Good working Ions. Good pay. Very clean. References. 7M-4347.</p>
        <p>Avon has territory open tngs In the Greenville area.</p>
        <p>. Dpenlngs In \Vest End Circle, Lake Ellsworth, Colonial Heights, Green Spr-, Ings Park and others. We . are looking tor representatives to sell in these established territories.</p>
        <p>.Call 75-S079 for informa ion.</p>
        <p>CPA PIRM needs staff accountant. Send resume to Accountant, P. O. Box 1947, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>RN'S NEEDED for public health nursing programs. B.S. preferred. Contact Edgecombe County Health Department, Tarboro, NC. &amp;gt;23-0113 or 442 2212. An Equal Opportunity Employer._</p>
        <p>LIENSED DENTAL hygienlst posl-tlon. Pull time position available. Competitive salary, fringe beneflfs.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED AUTO parts person needed. Call 758-299 after 4:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>IWMAN WANTS to Keep children In her home for vitorking mothers. 7^6309.  _</p>
        <p>WILL WASH mobile homes at rMSonable rates. Guaranteed work.</p>
        <p>7s;;-;,^82or752 27ai.</p>
        <p>BUSINESS ADMINISTRATOR</p>
        <p>BBA:  in top 20%ln School of</p>
        <p>BoePtess. Managerial experience in personnel, education and retailing. Desires business administration or accounting, white, married man in mid'fbrties. Accustomed to earnings in teens. Reply to P. O. Box 2871, Greenville, NC 27834._</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE to keep children lor werkang mothers. Between ages of 3 and4 years old. 744-2191._</p>
        <p>PAINTING (Inside and out), wallpapering and roof painting. WH^j^40-mile radius of Greenville.</p>
        <p>HOUSE PAINTING or carpentry worK. Charles Cotton, 752-2961.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE to keep a child under 2 years old In my home Monday-Frigay. 75A 7890._</p>
        <p>IT FOR SALE</p>
        <p>4 Farm Equipment_</p>
        <p>PROGNE GAS burners wanted for bams. Telephone 1-939 2940 (Ruffin).</p>
        <p>WAtjlT TO BUY tobacco sticks. Call Harvey Bowen, 744-4475 or 744 3003.</p>
        <p>1(10 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>If you haven't test driven the 1977 Grand Prix . . . you have missed a real pleasure!</p>
        <p> Wade Trask 752-7111</p>
        <p>Brown-Wood, Inc.</p>
        <p>Dickinson Ave. 756-3115</p>
        <p>48_ Farm  Equipment</p>
        <p>POWELL TOBACCO combine, 1975. Sinqie row, extra header, 3 bulk Irailers. Excellent condition. $11,500. Criswell, Route 2, Larmar. South Carolina. Phone (M3) 326-5700 daya, 326 5061 nights.</p>
        <p>50 GrftgeYrd Sle</p>
        <p>THINKING OF HAVING a Yard Sala? Why not reach the most people by selling your Items at Greenville's finest growing Flea Market. Bring your Items to the Tice Theatre Flea Market Saturdays from 8 til 4 p.m. and have a successful day I Call 756 3033.</p>
        <p>FiTT COUNTY Flea Market located</p>
        <p>at fairgrounds, in front of airport. Open all day every Friday and Saturday. Used furniture, glassware,</p>
        <p>household items and antiques. Several loads of new merchandise arriving weekly.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE alt day Friday, July I. 621 College View Apartments._</p>
        <p>SELLING OUT TO the bare . Something for everybody. Kitcnen items, clothes, crafts, glassware, things for the creative mind. Even a sailboat. Plenty of parking. Magnolia Apartmants, 48 West Fifth Street, a.m. till p.m., July 2.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE Saturday, July 2. Starts 9 a.m. 109 Giennwood i^ive. Cot. dining canopy, hedge trimmer, air conditioner (may need compressor), clothes, dishes, records, etc.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE July 2, 10 a.m. until. Rural Road 1400, near Pitt County Wildlife Club. 752-0370. Raindate, July 9.</p>
        <p>BACKYARD SALE Saturday. July 2 from 8 tir 3. 702 Evans Street. Refrigerators, stoves, all household Items and antiques.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE Saturday, July 2 at 9 a.m. 2818 Jackson Drive. Antique radio and phonograph, ceramics, household Items and much more.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE Saturday, July 2, 8:30 til 1. Lot 2, Azalea Street, behind Parker's Chapel Church. Two families. Wide assortment.</p>
        <p>GARAGE SALE. Real Crisis intervention Center, 1117 Evans Street. Saturday, July 2, 9 a.m. tit 2 p.m. 'Bikes, toys, clothes and much more odds and ends.</p>
        <p>TWO-FAMILY Country Yard Sale July 2. Esea Coley, Salvage Yard, Route 3. Ayden. Turn off Highway 11 at Ayden-Grifton High School.</p>
        <p>54</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>HORSEBACK RICHNG, riding equipment. Jarman Stables, 752-5237.</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>FILL DIRT, top soil, rocks and sand for sale. Large loads. Henry Worthington, 746-^1.</p>
        <p>YOU CAN "STEAM" clean carpets, professionally clean with new portable Rinse-N-Vac. R^t at Rental Tool Company atross from Hastings Ford. Now openRental Tool Company.  _</p>
        <p>FILL DIRT, BUILDER sand, top soli, and rock. J.L. McDaniel, 756-2351 after 3:30 p.m._</p>
        <p>WE ARE BEAUTYREST headquartersbedding and hide-a-beds. Home Furniture Company. 701 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>JACKSON MATTRESS Company.</p>
        <p>Quality Products since 1935. Buy direct from factory and save! 1108 West 5th Street, Washington, N.C.</p>
        <p>946-4503.</p>
        <p>STEAM CLEAN your carpet with Rinse 'N' Vac, the newest way to pro^ fesslonaliy clean your carpet at home. Available to rent at International Carpet, Inc., 752-3523 or 752-3524.</p>
        <p>PIANOS. Rent with option to buy. $15 per month. Cha-Rich Music, 200 Arl-mgton Boulevard, 756-1212._</p>
        <p>CARPET BINDING and fringing. Any size from door mat to room size. One.day binding service. Whitehurst Carpets, 756 2747._</p>
        <p>LARGE LOADS of sand, topsoll, fill dirt and rock sold at reasonable</p>
        <p>prices. Lots cleared, grade work and landscaping of yards. Cali 756-4742 for Jim Hudson._</p>
        <p>CENTIPEDE SOD. 752-4994._</p>
        <p>STEAMEX your carpets clean with Steamex method. Tested and proven superior. Gets carpets brighter faster and requires less drying time than Rinse-N-Vac. Cali Larry's Carpetland, 758-2300. 3010 East Tenth Street.</p>
        <p>FISHER'S FURNITURE &amp;amp; Ap</p>
        <p>pliance Company. Limited supply of Fedders air c&amp;lt;mditioners. 24,000 BiU. $399.95; also 20,000 BTU, $389.95. Cash and carry. No ralnchecks.</p>
        <p>OiSCONTINED CARPET samples. 2 X ll/i, 2 X 4 and 2V41 X 3. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East Tenth Street.</p>
        <p>LOWREY CONSOLE plao. ADWt 8 months old. New condition. $600. 756-5733.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ARMY/NAVY</p>
        <p>STORE</p>
        <p>Sloopino flfiqs</p>
        <p>. t'v.ms -&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>lOR SALE BY OWNER</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>^ House and Lot In Cherry Oaks</p>
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>Ranch Style. Setting on IV2 Acres Lot. 4U Lee St. Cherry jgjiks. 3 bedrooms, 2V^ baths, den, living room, beautiful kitchen breakfast room, large utility room, foyer, double garage. &amp;lt;lMrge game room with wet bar. Screened In porch plus front riBrch.</p>
        <p>T'Large fireplaces 1-False fireplace. This house has a lot of extras. Custom made walnut cabinets, raised panels in den. Extra mlllwork throughout house. Molded'vanlty tops, slate foyers. Quary tile porches, intercom system. Central Vacuum System, automatic garage door. Thermo Pane windows (Anderson) 325 pounds roof shingles. 400 amps electric service, 3375 sq. feet, heated 4350 square feet complete house. Fenced In backyard, storage building not adloining house.</p>
        <p>Appraisal of this home would exceed $125,500.00. Asking $105,000.00. Will entertain a Close Offer. If you are not looking for a house of this price range, please do not call. House built by owner. (NO BROKERS OR REALTORS PLEASE)</p>
        <p>To contact Please Call 756-0138 Home or Office at 758-4340.</p>
        <p>STECIAL MTICE!</p>
        <p>Phelps Chevrolet's Service &amp;amp; Parts Department</p>
        <p>Will Be Closed Friday, July 1 at 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>We Will Re-Open Monday, July 11 7:30 a.m.</p>
        <p>PHELPS CHEVMLH</p>
        <p>i^est End Circle</p>
        <p>756-2150</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>OUALIFieO INSTRUCTORS</p>
        <p>available lor private piano; organ, guitar and banlo iMsons. Call Cha-Rlch. Mutic, fS4-1212 (Or appoint</p>
        <p>ment.</p>
        <p>CANNON'S TV Service. Used colot sets. Zenith. RCA and other models. New picture tubes, H month warranty  8  a.m.  til  10 p.m. Call</p>
        <p>ELECTRIC WATCH batteries. For ell makes of watches. $3.50 each. Free battery If w don't have one to fit your watch. Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Greenville on the mall.</p>
        <p>FRESH SWEET corn ready. Ne4r Balvoir. 758-2443 or 758-4448.</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE DESKS and credemas</p>
        <p>In walnut or mahogany. Custom mode by Woodcraft. 417 West Third Street, Greenvflleorcelt 758-4340.</p>
        <p>POKER TABLES. 8 wells. Custom mede by Woodcraft. 417 West Third Greei</p>
        <p>Street,</p>
        <p>nvlle or call 758 4340.</p>
        <p>WALNUT BED and night stand. Custom made by Woodcraft. 417 West Third Street, Greenville or call 751-4340.</p>
        <p>CUSTOM MADE walnut gun case lacks for ten guns. Custom made by Woodcraft. 417 West Third Street, Greenville or call 758 4340.</p>
        <p>ICE MAKER, cash register, dairy casa, 3 drink boxes, adding machine, refrigerator, heater, scaieSw?56-4142.</p>
        <p>SURF BOARD. 6' Bing. $50.756-5190.</p>
        <p>BASE A60BILE CB radio and power mike and hand mike. $150.746 43.</p>
        <p>STOVE WITH DOUBLE oven. Green. 2 years old. 758-5553,946-9714.</p>
        <p>PEACHES. Fresh, riot, non-browning. Excellent pickling, cooking, freezing and eating. Finch Nursery, Baiiey, phone 235-4664. Open 6 days, dawn til dark; closed Sunday. Also 6000 feet of greenhouse foliage plants.</p>
        <p>COMPLETE 10 gallon aquarium. Set up. includes fish, heat and more. $10. 718-5605.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL. Quaker State motor oil (both diesel and gasoline type), $14.95 case; tobacco packers, tobacco twine, succer chemicals and airplane crop spraying. Check our prices. A6anning Supply Company. Bethel, 825-5641.</p>
        <p>COMPLETE AQUARIUM With fish. $15; Bundy sliver piccolo, $20; one Sansul 50 watt speaker. $15; Sanyo dorm-siie refrigerator, $40. Call 758 5516.</p>
        <p>KENMORE SEEING machine, $70, office desk, $90; told-way bed, $45. 758-8470.</p>
        <p>BEDROOM SUITE. Two large dressers, two night stands, one mirror. All wood cane front. $300. 758 6237.</p>
        <p>SILVER QUEEN corn for sale. Other vegetables also. Call Little's Nursery, 756-3626.</p>
        <p>EARTH PA SYSTEM. Fender baseman 100 amplifier and Fender precision bass guitar with case. $800. 752-2484 after 6 p.m.  __</p>
        <p>1971 TOYOTA. $700; Ludwig drums, $1000 new. now $500; large gas heater, $400 new, now $200; no-frost refrigerator. $175; 110 volt air conditioner. $75; gas range, $75; AM/FM tape player for home, $75.752-7267.</p>
        <p>ONE NEW MONROE office calculator. Call 758-5071.</p>
        <p>BAUER 8E professional Super 8 movie camera. Dual metering, much more. $600.752-1387.</p>
        <p>FILL YOUR freezer. Silver queen white sweet corn ready now. Pick your own. 50e per dozen. Come to Edward's Hardware Store in Simpson or call 752-5544 for more information.</p>
        <p>COMFORTABLE SOFA. Suitable for rec room or vacation cottage. $100. 752-5962.</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>MifcelUneous</p>
        <p>LADY'S BICYCLE (like new), $30; console black and white TV (30" high, 28" wider good condition). $55; 9 X 12 rug, $15; nice vanity, $25. 756-4382.</p>
        <p>TWO 10,000 BTU air conditoners for sala. Calf 746 6157.</p>
        <p>STEREO CONSOLE with wall speakers, headphones and other extras, $200; portable crib / playpen, $18; high c^lr, $15; swival roAar, $33/ pump organ In excallent condition, $400; new Coleman Catalytic heater, $20.756-6990._</p>
        <p>DIXIE STOVE. Coppertone, 4 burners, oven and pan drawer. Works perfectly. $50. Cell 758-8270 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN ENGINE. Will consider trade. Also Volkswagen transmission. Call 756-2093 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>16,500 BTU air conditioner. Good con-ditlon. $100.758-5818 efter 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>CORN, 508 a dozen (new field); snaps, $3.50 bushel; squash, 10 pound; okra, beets and pepper. B 8$ B You Pick Garden, across from fire tower, Hassell. 795-4646._</p>
        <p>90 INCH atumlnum awmlng. $25. 758-5392 after5:30p.m._</p>
        <p>ONE 23,000 BTU air conditioner. 752-2726._</p>
        <p>crystals.</p>
        <p>BEARCAT SCANNER with $100.758-4841 or 756-3275.</p>
        <p>IN-DASH AM/FM stereo with 8-track tape player and two speakers. $100 or best offer. 752-0830.</p>
        <p>FOUR KEYSTONE Classic mags. 7" X 15". $200 or with tires, $300.</p>
        <p>752-0830.</p>
        <p>58</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>SASSERS</p>
        <p>CAMPING</p>
        <p>CENTER</p>
        <p>Now Has</p>
        <p>MOTOR HOMES, MINI-HOMES, CONVERTED VANS, PROWLER TRAVEL TRAILERS, COX AND STARCRAFT POPUPS, CABOVER, TRUCK CAMPERS AND TRUCK COVERS, IN STOCK. NEW LARGE PARTS BUILDING.</p>
        <p>N. 117 Business Goldsboro 734-4616</p>
        <p>open Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m. until Dusk. Friday, 9 a.m. until9 p.m.</p>
        <p>60</p>
        <p>INSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>12' X 20' utility building with steel frame. Perfect for office building or construction site. Call 752-8420.</p>
        <p>COPY MACHINE. 3M automatic. Automatic feed. Multiple or single copies. Takes loose leaf and books. Ready to use. Will deliver locally. Best offer. 752-6401.</p>
        <p>TWO AIR CONDITIONERS for sale. $50 each. 756-1255 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW HAYS pressure plate and clutch disc. $140.756-5942.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>LEARN TO SWIM. tnfants-adulH. Raynez Swim School. Call 756-4900 or 756-2667.</p>
        <p>PRIVATE LESSONS for French tutoring. 756-0918 for information.</p>
        <p>IS YOUR CHILD reading up to grade level? Tutoring qualified language arts- reading teacher on summer break. $5 perWir. 758-1198._</p>
        <p>62 LOST AND FOUN D</p>
        <p>LOST SIAMESE Sealpoint cat. Declawed. Lost in Greeneway Apart-ntentsarea. Reward. 756-2768.</p>
        <p>A60BILE HOMES 64 Atoblle Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>2 AND3 BEDROOM trailers with air. Good location. 752 3286 or 825-5391.</p>
        <p>12' WIDE, TWO bedrooms, furnish ed, air conditioning, washer and dryer. Nice corner lot. Married couple preferred. 752-6051 after 5:30.</p>
        <p>TRAILER FOR RENT. Call 752 6930 days from 8 til 6; 795-4811 nights and Sunday.</p>
        <p>MALE DESIRES reliable roommate. Country lot. 758-0727._</p>
        <p>TWO 2 BEDROOM trailers. One with air. Call 752-3849 or 758-9450 before 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>SPACES FOR RENT. 62' X 100', pten-ty of trees, blacktop road and driveways, undw^round service. No pets. Call 758-3644.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FOR LEASE</p>
        <p>Modern Office Space</p>
        <p> DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE SHORE DRIVE PLAZA BUILDING no S. EVANS ST. Available June 1, 1977</p>
        <p>For Details Call 752-1010</p>
        <p>RADIOLOGY CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR</p>
        <p>Full time position available in expanding radiology program for ARRT as clinical instructor. Position as hospital employee working with students In a 2 year associate degree program through local technical Institute. Challenging and rewarding work. Competitive salary and excellent benefit program. Apply at Personnel Office, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, P.O. Box 6028, Greenville, N.C. 27834. Telephone 919-757-4479.</p>
        <p>Equal Opportunity Employlr.  _</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>I I</p>
        <p>I through July 8 For Vocation!</p>
        <p>REGIONAL ^ AUTO PARTS, INC |</p>
        <p>Will Be posed July 4  |</p>
        <p>maintenance Itachnicinn</p>
        <p>CHANCE TO SHOW YOUR INITIATIVE AS ASTRONG SELF-STARTER . . -AND FINISHER</p>
        <p>Varied responsibilities the key to this mterestlng challenge In our expanding Kinston, N.C. facility . . . where youll run a garnet of maintenance and repair tasks Involving equipment, machinery, plant facilities and electric circuitry.</p>
        <p>You've got to be self-motivated. Able and willing to VDork without close supervision. And skillful with power and hand tools  such as lathes, mills, saws, drill press, pyrometers, VTOMS. You'll be using these and other tools of the trade to trooWe-shoot, secure parts for, and repair winders, ovens, vacuum systems, alactrlcal circuits, etc.</p>
        <p>HS diploma or equivalency required, plus 3 years axperlence. Should be free to work overtime, ood starting salary. Complete package of fringe benefits. For interview appointment;</p>
        <p>Call Mr. Ed Broughton at (919) 523-0121</p>
        <p>UTC TRANSFORMERS</p>
        <p>317 N. McLewean Street, Kinston, N.C. 23501</p>
        <p>An  opportunity  emptoyrAA/F_</p>
        <p>64 Mobil* Homgi For Rent</p>
        <p>12 X 60, FURNISHED with air. Ex ctlieht congiflon and location. 746 76.__</p>
        <p>LOCATED NEAR Bogue Insiet pier on Emerald Itle. Sleeps 7 com fortably. Reasonable. 746-4745._</p>
        <p>TRAILER FOR RENT. 2 bedrooms, air conditioning. 756-4248 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>66 Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>1969, 12 X 55 Ritzcraft. Air condition Ing. Good ccxxtltlcm and includes nice utility shed and porch. 756 7163 after 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>s:s'r</p>
        <p>, TOWN 6 COUNTRY 12 X 65. 3 irooms. 756-1254.</p>
        <p>1974, 3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, walt-fo wall carpet, central air. Assume loan. Call 756 5245 days; 756-7531 or</p>
        <p>756-4789 after6p.m.</p>
        <p>P8 X 4Z 2 bedrooms. Solid but needs to be cleaned up. $750 firm. Also camper In excellent condition. Full self-contained. $1000.752-6863.</p>
        <p>12 X 55, 1973 CAROLINA mobile home. 2 bedrooms. Located at The Village Trailer Park, Ayden. Cali 746-4W._</p>
        <p>12 X 70, a BEDROOMS. 2 full baths, fully carpeted, totally electric, underpinned, central air. Will sell furnished for $800 down and assume</p>
        <p>payments or will sell unfurnished with no down payment and assume payments. Call 752-3918._</p>
        <p>12 X 60 AMBASSADOR. 3 bedrooms, carpet, air, furnished. Can be seen at Shady Knoll. 758-5974._</p>
        <p>ASSUME LOAN. 2 bedroom Oakwood mobile home. Totally electric, 2 baths, central air, washer, dryer, icemaker, queen size bed, shag carpet. Like new. Smalt equity. CairsMiJones, 758 5071.</p>
        <p>60</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>TAVERN FOR SALE. Capacity of</p>
        <p>holding 200 people. Very good poten-with proper management. Those interested, call 752-9238 between 8</p>
        <p>and 5.</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>OFFICE SUPPLIES. Staplers, staples, pehclls, pens, markers, fife cards, flies, rubber bands, adding machine paper, gummed papers, labels, letter openers, bookends, desk trays and many other office Items too numerous to mention. Make me an offer. 756-5400 or 756-4X5.</p>
        <p>STORE WITH living quarters. Two rental houses, two trailer hook-ups, 'bll stock and equipment Included. Extra storage and garage. $69,000. Overton &amp;amp; Powers Realty, 758-4585.</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>BROWN'S PAINTING and roofing. Inside, outside and all roof work. 756-2008 anytime.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL CARPET CLEAN ING</p>
        <p>Also wood and tile floors stripped and polished. We clean all types of floors to the satisfaction of the customer. For free estimates, call 756-7X7 bet ween the hours of 10 a.m. and 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>CABINET WORK and small carpentry jobs. Remodeling, finish work. Free estimates. Jack Baker, Route 3, Box 562-C, Greenville. 756-5950, 6 a.m.-9 p.m.</p>
        <p>MUSICAL INSTRUMENT repair Service; refinlshing, adjustments and repair. Electric or acoustic. 756-6450 evenings.</p>
        <p>72</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS in real estate, see or call E.H. Williford, Realtor, 222-B Cotanche Street, 7M-3911. List your property with us.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>72</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>FOR ALL YOUR real estate needs, call Fleming &amp;amp; Associates, 756 6234.</p>
        <p>TWO BUILDINGS, approximately 5000 square feet with dockloading. Situated on one acre enclosed with I foot chain link fence. On railroad In Bethel. Make an offer. 758 0969, 756-199!.</p>
        <p>5 ACRES WOODLAND. $7500. Located on County Road 1764, east of Greenville. 752 7lil.</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>House* For Sele</p>
        <p>COUNTRY HOME near Belvolr. 4 bedrooms. 3*/z baths, central air, electic heat, 2-car garage, 2 acres. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752-2615.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. 4 bedroom, 2W bath home. Many extras. IX's. 752 5799.</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS. Under fifty. By owner. Moving out of state. 4 year old French Provincial home. Kitchen with built ins and large eating area, family room with massive fireplace, formal dining room and living room, 3 large bedrooms, 2 full-size ceramic baths, storm windows and doors, two-car paneled garage. Located on corner lot with garden and fruit frees. Near recreation club with Olympic pool, kiddie pool, lighted tennis courts, saunas, etc. $49,900. 0 percent assumable loan. Call 756 5^. No realt&amp;lt;Ms.</p>
        <p>BROOK VALLEY. Over 3400 square feet heated area, all conveniences. 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, game room, for mal dining room, large breakfast room, large family room with fireplace and bar, 2 porches. Right nexT to pool, tennis courts, golf course and Country Club. Storage room plus garage. Super buy. Low 90'S. 756 2285or 726-025</p>
        <p>KICK THE RENT habit . . . with this affordable 3 bedroom, V/3 bath sparkling new brick home. Located on a large comer lot In North River, this home is fully Insulated with wall-to-wall carpeting, wainscot in kitchen and dining rooms, ceramic tile baths and carport. $34,000. Call 756-5258.</p>
        <p>LARGE WORKSHOP ... will attract Dad to this 3 bedroom brick ranch. Includes children's room with built-in bed and desk. Kitchen with ranch and built-in bar. Carport. Wintervllle. $28,500. Call 756-5258.  _</p>
        <p>NOW IS THE time ... to Investigate this 3 bedroom brick ranch under construction. Buy now and get your choice of decor. If you're iocming for economy plus custom workmanship, check this one out todayl Norris Street. $27,350. Call 756-52X._</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING. Are you looking for a home In the country? Well, here it Isl Large home^ 2000 square feet, located on an aefe w. f=amiiy room with fIreplaCe, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large attic and double garage. Guaranteed for one full year. Buyer's Protection Plan. $41,31)0. Overton 8$ Powers Realty, 758-4585.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>U-STORE-IT</p>
        <p>Mini Warehouse</p>
        <p>Rent Monthly or Yearly</p>
        <p>Your personal  n</p>
        <p>our w  r h ' 11 p Com</p>
        <p> ..... '  -    10' for</p>
        <p>SUV- '  ' j. I-, /Ou iikp</p>
        <p>You  :  -   .  -y to &amp;lt;]&amp;lt;x)r</p>
        <p>Call 756 3790 or 758 0969</p>
        <p>1! IAnnauncing A New Servicalll</p>
        <p>EFFECTIVE TUESDAY JULY 5TH</p>
        <p>AUTO SPECIALTY COMPANY</p>
        <p>"THE ENGINE PEOPLE"</p>
        <p>WILL BE OFFERING COMPLETE MACHINE SERVICES .COMPLETE OVER HAULS ON ALL TYPES OF SMALL ENGINES.</p>
        <p>LAWNMOWERS  CHAIN SAWS  WATER PUMPS  OUT BOARD MOTORS</p>
        <p>(ALL OF OUR WORK IS GUARANTEED)</p>
        <p>HAROLD DAIL</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE CO.</p>
        <p>417 W. Third St.  758-4340</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL BUILDING 417W. THIRD ST.</p>
        <p>5400 Square Feet mavfacturino space. 700 equare feet storaoe, 1300 square feet Office space. Lot 200 x 100. Parking for 20 cars. Replacement cost for mis bulMino would exceed $90,000.00. Rent potential $900.00 per month.</p>
        <p>SALE PRICE: $40,000.00.</p>
        <p>Invite Investors to take a look.</p>
        <p>HDUSE AND LDT Locatwl on Washington St. in AAeadowbfook - Greenville</p>
        <p>2 bedrooms, bath, kitchen, and living room. Porch on back 6 front. Good house. Good rental property, NkelargehH.</p>
        <p>SALE PRICE: $15,000.00</p>
        <p>TD CONTACT PLEASE CALL HDME: 756-0138 OFFICE: 758-4^</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY TOWN HOUSE CONDOMINIUM</p>
        <p>#31-1300 GOLDEN RD.</p>
        <p>$21,500.</p>
        <p>Pay equity &amp;amp; Assume payments.</p>
        <p>L/Ua/itih9boiiougfi</p>
        <p>^utideiis</p>
        <p>CUSTOM BUILDERS-Wecan help you in selection of plans, selection of a lot, and give you a complete turn key bid on the house and lot of your choice.</p>
        <p>CONSULTANTS - We can show you how you can build your own home. You have complete control of how your money is spent during construction.</p>
        <p>HOME IMPROVEMENTS - Free estimates on remodeling or additions.</p>
        <p>GENERAL CONTRACTORS LICENSE NO. 8730</p>
        <p>DONALD E. BRADY</p>
        <p>756-5684</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>The DaUy Rrileirtor. Graenvllte. N.C.-SimdAy, July &amp;gt;. 19T7-D-&amp;amp; 71 HoMM For Sele</p>
        <p>Houtet For Sele</p>
        <p>HARDEE ACKbS. Where elM con you buy a brand naw homa for $31,9X and tha builder will pay tha doting costs and FHA-VA points. Threa . bedrooms, V/2 baths, living room, kit chan, breakfast area, paneled garage. Central air and heat pump.</p>
        <p>FOUR BEDROOMS. An ideal ioca tico on a wooded lot. Fenced yard. Four bedrooms, 2W baths, living room, formal dining room, kitchen with breakfast area, beautiful family room with fireplace. Functional and delightful split foyer type floor plan. Carport, utility room, even a separate workshop. $59,500.</p>
        <p>DUFFUS REALTY, INC.</p>
        <p>755-5W5</p>
        <p>3ACRES 4 BEDROOMS</p>
        <p>Specious, ell brick, custom built, big bedrooms, large kitchen, zr x W' living area with fireplace plus e recrea-tion room, ideal lor large (amlly. 5 miles from Greenville out Evans Street Extension (Route 1, Wlnler-vllle). The price Is right! Call</p>
        <p>Don Dancey Realty</p>
        <p>Anytime 756 1788</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. Williamsburg Colonial brick, 2400 square feet heafed area, 4 bedrooms, 2W baths, dual heating</p>
        <p>and air conditioning. ^ acre shaded lot in Cherry Oaks. Cait 756-0989 for appointment.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING. 10 minutes from Greenville. 3 bedrooms, 1W baths, central air and heat, carpet and garage. Rail fence around large lot. $32,500. Darden Realty, 7$rt9$3, 752 7671.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING. 5 minutes from Greenville. 3 bedrooms, t'/&amp;gt; baths, new carpet and backyard ferKe. Central heat, garage and large wooded lot. One of the few good buys. $31,500. Dardne Realty, 758 1983; nights, weekends. 752 7671.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM, 2 bath brick home on large corner tot. 200 John Avenue. 1600 square feet heated space plus wash room. Central air, storm windows and doors. Ideal for school-age children. 752-1579 nights and weekends.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Data Processing Operations Manager</p>
        <p>Responsible for computer and data operations entry. 3-5 years experience. Eastern N.C. manufacturing concern. Reply to;</p>
        <p>Operations Manager</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 1947 Greenville, N.C. 27834</p>
        <p>AUTO</p>
        <p>MECHANIC</p>
        <p>Are You Earning $11,000 or Atore A Year?</p>
        <p>Our service store in the Greenville area Is in need of mechanics to work on brakes, alignments and tune-ups. Must have complete set of tools.</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT GOODYEAR BENEFITS INCLUDE: Hospitalization * Malor AAedical  Holidays &amp;amp; Pension</p>
        <p>Interviews will be held at (xoodyear Service Store, 729 Dickinson Ave., Greenville, N.C. AAonday thru Friday 9-5 p.m. Ask for Joe Forehand.</p>
        <p>GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE</p>
        <p>729 Dickinson Ave. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>An Equal Opportunity Employer</p>
        <p>tiOODfA</p>
        <p>GRIFTON, Country Club Hills. Lovely four bedroom home on Niblick Roed with epproxfmetefy 1900 square feet of living eree, two beths, living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, two cer carport. Situeted on lergt tot with trees. Estate Realty Company, 752-5058; nights, 756 6652 or 752 3647.</p>
        <p>MOVING OUT OF state. Must sell our beautiful 3 Bedroom house outside Washington. Acre fof. Were ask ing upper fourties but if you're reedy to buy, we're reedy to deal. Cell for details. 946 7561.</p>
        <p>YOU OWE IT to yourself to see this one. Spacious, newly decorated in Tuckehoe. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den, livlng-dlning room, kltchen-dlnette. Priced upper 40's. Cell for an ep pointment. 756-3673.</p>
        <p>NEAR ECU. 2 bedroom house on wooded lot. IV beths, basement, liv</p>
        <p>ing room with fireplace, sunporch, patio. IX,500. 1215 East Rockipring Road. Call 752-0252.</p>
        <p>LOAN ASSUMPTION. 13000 down and assume payments on brick honw In Hardee Acres. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 234 Circle Drive. Sale by estate. Call 752 3X3.</p>
        <p>CLASSY CONTEMPORARY on a</p>
        <p>wooded lot (n Cendlewick Estates. Spectacular cathedral ceiling in 26' X 2T greet room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 beths. laundry room, 2 decks. Featured recently in "Parade f Homes ' Reduced to S49.900. Cell ast Caroline Builders, 752-7194.</p>
        <p>AT BELVOIR Crossroads. 3 bedrooms, kitchen, dining room, tlv-Ing room. House in exceltent condi tion. On acre lot. $19,000. Call 756 7046 or 756^356.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>DATA</p>
        <p>PROCESSING</p>
        <p>All Bilow Fu Paif</p>
        <p>PR0GRAAM4ER</p>
        <p>ANALYST</p>
        <p>ISK. WMt Nonti Nnti CWIAB. cm. m flqulomBnt. exc*int LctNn.</p>
        <p>SENIOR PROGRAAAMER ANALYST</p>
        <p>.Ormmbon.tt.C.loumm. COXOi-STMH</p>
        <p>PROGRAAAMERS</p>
        <p>SMrv Opwt. COftOL. BvrltafMn. N.C. MW, bMi ligm M iwnr</p>
        <p>PROGRAAAMERS</p>
        <p>15K. COBOL. NaW^, N.C.</p>
        <p>PROGRAAAMER/</p>
        <p>ANALYST</p>
        <p>To aoK. CwBral Narih carNMU. COBOL, SB. ExcaUaw Dana, ill, location.</p>
        <p>PROGRAAAMER/</p>
        <p>ANALYST</p>
        <p>PROGRAAAMER/</p>
        <p>ANALYST</p>
        <p>UK. BPOII. ALB VO. piaamont, NaoB Cacalina</p>
        <p>SENIOR</p>
        <p>PROGRAAAMER/</p>
        <p>ANALYST</p>
        <p>ItK. BAL MEO LITE COBOL.</p>
        <p>PROGRAAAMER</p>
        <p>I5K. Eaat Nom Carmina. NaoB AEL LansaoBO.</p>
        <p>PROGRAAAMER</p>
        <p>UK. Virginia. Naa,. IBanKlng.</p>
        <p>ROGRAAAMER/</p>
        <p>ANALYST</p>
        <p>Salary opan. ALP uaing etc* macraa. CXariant laOcaNon.</p>
        <p>SYSTEMS</p>
        <p>PROGRAAAMER</p>
        <p>J3K PC 0SV8I, CtCi. PlaXmoBl. Mrnm Carolina.</p>
        <p>SYSTEMS ANALYST</p>
        <p>1IK. On lin# orSar eit. Keartonca. COeOL. Et Nartti CaroUaa.</p>
        <p>SYSTEMSANALYST</p>
        <p>'If K. COSOL MIC P. MPO. Cat! MarfX CaraHna.</p>
        <p>SYSTEMSANALYST</p>
        <p>me. euUnm apptkatlanft. AAFO, BacMrawnd. Ptadmont, North Carolina.</p>
        <p>BUSINESS SYSTEMS ANALYST</p>
        <p>MFG BooUiaMilng. Virginia.</p>
        <p>SENIOR SYSTEMS ANALYST</p>
        <p>i. 9% travat. ExcaHant</p>
        <p>Burlington (919) SI4-S99I Or S4-1197 GTMfttboro (fit) 274-5126</p>
        <p>PERSONNEL</p>
        <p>PLACEAAENT</p>
        <p>537-DHuf?menMmRoecl Burt Inelon, N.C 2721S Oota Procettine Dapt.</p>
        <p>N Vaarf ComMntd DP. Eaparlawca</p>
        <p>m^Res K</p>
        <p>GReEN LIGHT</p>
        <p>OM</p>
        <p>Swings</p>
        <p>IN THIS GREAT</p>
        <p>NEW CAR</p>
        <p>SALE!</p>
        <p>1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX</p>
        <p>9,0(XI milea, air, landau top, AM-FM, rally whatls, body moldtng, Gran/Grto.</p>
        <p>*5200</p>
        <p>Ptu*</p>
        <p>SalaaTax</p>
        <p>1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX</p>
        <p>)u top* AM FMa relli</p>
        <p>I.</p>
        <p>*5200</p>
        <p>7,000 miles, air, landau top, AM-FAA, rally whaals, body molding, Green/Green.</p>
        <p>PIM</p>
        <p>Salas Tax</p>
        <p>BROWN-WOOD,</p>
        <p>Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>752-7111</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0040" />
        <p>I&amp;gt;4-The DaUy Reflector, GreenviHe, N.C.-^unday, JulyS, 1977</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>$ ROOM BRICK house. 2 baths, garage. 7 miles east of Ayden Highway 102. 746 6664 or 946 53M.</p>
        <p>CONVENIENT TO #11 polntsrAtfrac-five 3 bedrbom home featuring den with fireplace. baths, living and dining rooms. One year Buyer's Pro faction Plan. S45,S00. OvertonB PowersRealty, 750 4565.</p>
        <p>LIVE AMONG the tall pines and cool breezes in this lovely 3 bedroom home. 2 baths, living dinlng room, den. utility, dishwasher, disposal in kitchen, patio, lot 140 X 143. One full year Buyer's Protection Plan. s37,900. Overton &amp;amp; Powers Realty, 758 4565.</p>
        <p>A NICE HOUSE for a imie n&amp;gt;oney. 3 bedrooms, family room, utility, storm windows, new heetiitg system, aluminum siding, nice carpet. One full year warranty BPP. 2l,000. Overton A Powers Realty, 756 4585.</p>
        <p>ONE FULL YEAR warranty BPP. 3 bedrooms, family rqprtf, eat In kit Chen, ceramic tlla&amp;lt;4$ath, attic with storage, mefat storage building in backyard. Additional lot with garden. Yard full of fruit trees. Very attractively decorated on inside. 533,750. Overton &amp;amp; Powers Realty. 758 4585.</p>
        <p>ONE FULL YEAR warranty BPP. 3 bedrooms, kitchen dining combina tion, large sunken den, living room,/workshop, hardwood floors. $33,900. Overton &amp;amp; Powers Realty, 758-4585.</p>
        <p>LOTS OF ROOM and lovely setting on golf course. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living and dining room, den with fireplace, garage Buyer's Pro tection Plan for one full year, $49,900. OvertonA Powers Realty, 758-4585.</p>
        <p>HERE'S THE HOME wiih everything. 4 bedrooms. 3 baths. Ilv Ing room with fireplace, den with fireplace, dining room, double car port, patio, intercom, oentral vacuum. One year guarntee. Buyer's Protection Plan $55,900. Overton &amp;amp; Powers Realty, 758 45B5.</p>
        <p>LIKE NEW, 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on wooded lot. Many extra quality features including heat pump. Mid 40's. Call Aldridge A Southerland Realtors, 756 3500.</p>
        <p>priceAND PRIDE . . . together in this 3 bedroom. 2 bath contemporary ranch. We take pride in offering this home now under construction in our new subdivision. Singletree. Features include den with fireplace and sliding glass doors, wall-to wall carpeting throughout and Kitchen with range, dishwasher and disposal. Available mid-Juiy. Cali 756 5258.</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY TOWNHOUSE Con</p>
        <p>dominium. $21,500. Pay equity and assume payments. Contact Harold Dali. Broker, 758 4340 or 756-0138.</p>
        <p>80</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>LOTS FOR SALE. Build the home of your choice on any of these beautiful lots In one of Pitt County's finest sub divisions. Lake Glenwood. Both wooded and cleared lots available, starting at only $5500. Ail lots approximately /i acre. Better hurry! For more information, contact Bill Thomas at Nelson Wallace, Inc., at 752-5113or 756 6016.</p>
        <p>ACRE CLEARED land in Brook Valley. Perk test approved. Asking price, $13,500. Call 72 6838 between 8 and 5.</p>
        <p>LOTS. 3cleared^ acre lots. Only IV2 miles from Greenville. Ready for building your very own home. $7000 each. Overton A Powers Realty, 758 4585.</p>
        <p>PAMLICO RIVER. Large canal front lot. 3 miles on Whichard's Beach Road. Perfect for mobile home. Com munity water system. River front lot for access close by. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615._</p>
        <p>92 Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>TRAILER. 2 bedrooms, 10' X 50' at Core Point on Pamlico Sound. Completely furnished, air conditioning, waeher. $3300. Waterfront property with beach leased (70' X 250^}. 35 miles from Greenville, NC. 756-5418.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Doit(^</p>
        <p> yoursdf </p>
        <p> and save! ;</p>
        <p> RentSthe pro</p>
        <p>i rrenincx</p>
        <p> carpet cleaner</p>
        <p> a Peavsy company</p>
        <p>Here's $2 00 OFF the  </p>
        <p>rental price  Jj</p>
        <p>ONLY AT  </p>
        <p>LARRYS  </p>
        <p>CARPETLAND  S</p>
        <p>3010 E. 10th St.  S</p>
        <p>Call  </p>
        <p>7502300</p>
        <p>VoKi atiet 09C 31 Otter gooo at participating oeaiws</p>
        <p>S4</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>4 Apartment For Rent</p>
        <p>Ultimate In Apartment Living</p>
        <p>1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer, dryer hook-ups, pool, clubhouse. Only 5 blocks from Eest Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Check everywhere else first,</p>
        <p>Then Call</p>
        <p>TAR RIVER ESTATES</p>
        <p>1401 Willow St.</p>
        <p>752 4225</p>
        <p>THE BEST BARGAINS In town ^ in the Classified Advertising section every dayl When you're looking for a spectal item, make a point of reading the Classified Ads._</p>
        <p>Love Trees?</p>
        <p>Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.</p>
        <p>Ouahty Construction Fireplaces</p>
        <p>Heat Pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable urtrS)</p>
        <p>OishwaShers Washer Dryer Hook ups Wall to Wall Carpet Thermopane Windows Extra Insulation 4 Different Floor Plans</p>
        <p>COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>Cali 756 5067 or 752 7663</p>
        <p>LANGSTON</p>
        <p>PARK</p>
        <p>2 bedroom apartments Washer-dryer hook-ups Dishwasher</p>
        <p>Heat pumps for lower monthly utilities Balcoru'es and patios Excellent location </p>
        <p>For More Information Contact</p>
        <p>MACRO</p>
        <p>BUILDERS</p>
        <p>Nights: 758-5817or 758-3800</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>86 Apgrtmgnu For Rnt</p>
        <p>ONE 3 BEDROOM apartment in</p>
        <p>Ayden, NC. Stove and refrigerator furnished. $100 per month, also deposit required, call Chester Stox, 746-6116 days and 746-3308 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>NEW CONTEMPORARY duplex at Frog Levti. 2 bedrooms, dishwasher, range, refrigerator, washer-dryer hookups, central air. $m. 756-4634 or 7$6$168.</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE. Carpeted, air condi-tlonlng, 3 bedrooms, IVb baths, stove, refrigerator, pool. $310. Year lease plus deposit. 756-5036.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>86 Aprtmnts For Rent</p>
        <p>3 ROOMS. One bedroom apartment Quiet neighborhood. Close to campus. Cali Stuart Buchanan, Buchanan Raal Estate, Inc., 752 3696.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>5 HP 26" Winston</p>
        <p>Tilkrs Chain Driv*</p>
        <p>Hendrlx-Barnhill Co. 752-4122</p>
        <p>TCM31A</p>
        <p>WE CAN CLEAN YOUR HOE CHEMICALLY AT</p>
        <p>AMAZING NEW PROCESS</p>
        <p>We spray on our exclusive chemical and rinse away the dirt with cold water. There Is no abrasive scrubbing, blasting or scraplngl</p>
        <p>CLEAN</p>
        <p>BRICK (All kinds &amp;amp; colors)</p>
        <p>SANDSTONE GRANITE TERRA-COTTA WOOD FIELOSTONE STUCCO LIMESTONE CONCRETE ALUMINUM STEEL</p>
        <p>REMOVES</p>
        <p>RUST STAINS  SOOT</p>
        <p>WEATHERING STAINS INDUSTRIAL POLLUTANTS GREASE &amp;amp; OIL  MOSS</p>
        <p>EXHAUST RESIDUE MigV^_,_,_J5AFFITr</p>
        <p>WE ALSO CLEAN ASPHA_LT - SHINGLE ROOFS</p>
        <p>Call Today For Frae, No Obligatlan Demonstration</p>
        <p>ACME SURFACE CLEANING</p>
        <p>"Keeping The Face Of The Nation dean"</p>
        <p>758-6440 1704 E. 6th Street Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>A Division OF Mistar Paintar</p>
        <p>Phone</p>
        <p>756-3886</p>
        <p>N.C. License No. 76</p>
        <p>Special 2 Day ^Antique Auction</p>
        <p>Sunday, July 3 - Monday, July 4 2.00 P.M. Both Days</p>
        <p>Over 800 items to be sold, including lots of walnut, marble tops, oak, mahogany and wicker furniture.</p>
        <p>Lots of old china such as R.S. Prusia, Nippon, and occupied Japan items. Lots of old pressed pattern and depression glass. A tremendous amount of nice walnut and oak picture frames. Some with signed sketches and paintings. There will be several beautiful sets of oak and walnut chairs. Lots of other items too numerous to mention.</p>
        <p>Everything will be sold to the highest bidder regardless of price.</p>
        <p>Sale will be held in the Community Building located on Hwy. 43 North In Falkland, N.C.</p>
        <p>AUCTIONEER GEORGE T. HAWLEY ^  P.O.  BOX 91</p>
        <p>FALKLAND, N.C. 27827</p>
        <p>.ITT</p>
        <p>1977 RANGER F100</p>
        <p>No. 6023  133WB</p>
        <p> Jade Glow Paint &amp;gt; Tape Stripes  ,00 V-a Engine  Crulse-omatic  Power Steering A Power Brakes * Amp A Oil Gauges  Air  Locking Gas Cover  Tinted Glass  Wheel Covers * Sliding Rear Window  Rear Step Bumper  White Side Wall Tires  AM/FM Radio.</p>
        <p>1651</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p> Plus tax. title A tag transfer</p>
        <p>1977 MUSTANG II</p>
        <p>No.lni&amp;lt;2 + 2Model)</p>
        <p> 2300 cc. engine  Power Rack A Pinion Steering</p>
        <p> Power Disc Brakes  Air  Exterior Accent Group  Tinted Glass Complete  AM/FM Radio</p>
        <p> Silver Metallic Color.</p>
        <p>4717""</p>
        <p>r * Plus fax, title, tag transfer</p>
        <p>Ed Cox  John  Basso</p>
        <p>Brinkley Moore Jimmy Tripp Brownie Tripp Bill Riggans  PeteMcClung</p>
        <p>SalesManager Tommie Dail TruckManager ira Norfolk Finance Manager</p>
        <p>HASTINGS FORD</p>
        <p>E.IOtliSI. YewrUttlePrafliD^'</p>
        <p>'ThiUmiPROftTswes you mote /40ti9oyfhAi3YO(f  fof/</p>
        <p>THE SMALL CARS THAT MEET BIG NEEDS.</p>
        <p>The Toyota Corolla 2- and 4-Door Sedan Customs may look smalj, but theyre big on what you need. Equipped with a standard 5-speed overdrive transmission and lots of no cost extras. Small cars that meet big needsyou got it: Corolla Sedan Customs.</p>
        <p>UP TO 49 MPG</p>
        <p>The Answer</p>
        <p>Standard Features: Welded unitized body construction, MacPherson strut front Sion, transistorized ignition, power front disc brakes, steel-belted radial tires, styf wheels, reclining bucket seats, wall to wall carpeting, and more.</p>
        <p>* F rsigtit. Taxes, prep, tags are exfra.</p>
        <p>TARHEEL TOYOTA</p>
        <p>Home Of The 100,000 Mile Warranty</p>
        <p>|109 Trade St. YOUR AUTHORIZED MERCEDES-BEHZ DEALER  756-3228</p>
        <p>CARS TO GET YOU STARTEO RIGHT</p>
        <p>12 months or 12,000 miles limited warranty</p>
        <p>1976 FORD</p>
        <p>Thunderbird. Carolina blue, blue top, fully loaded. The Last of the big birds.</p>
        <p>*$8998</p>
        <p>Chevrolet. Full power with air. White with red leather interior. T-Top.</p>
        <p>$8998</p>
        <p>1976 LINCOLN</p>
        <p>2 door, full power with air, triple black.</p>
        <p>$8698</p>
        <p>MARK LINCOLN</p>
        <p>Triple red, full power with air. Price $8998. Our price</p>
        <p>$7598</p>
        <p>1975 LINCOLN</p>
        <p>Mark IV. One owner, 31,000 miles, fully loaded, gold, sun and moon roof.</p>
        <p>*$8598</p>
        <p>1959 MERCEDES 190 SL</p>
        <p>Roadster. This Is one that you don't find everyday. Must be seen to be appreciated.</p>
        <p>1974 FORD</p>
        <p>Econollne 200 Camper. ,Beds, stove, refrigerator, air, the works, ready to go.</p>
        <p>$6998</p>
        <p>1974 LINCOLN</p>
        <p>Mark IV. 2 Instock. Your choice.</p>
        <p>*$6298</p>
        <p>1975 CADILLAC</p>
        <p>Coupe De Vllle. Yellow, black vinyl top, fully loaded.</p>
        <p>*$6298 1975 CADILLAC</p>
        <p>sedan Oe Vilie. Blue with blue vinyl t&amp;lt;^, fully loaded.</p>
        <p>*$6298</p>
        <p>1973GHeVROLET</p>
        <p>Corvette, T top. Full power with air. Gold In color.</p>
        <p>*$5998</p>
        <p>1975T BIRO</p>
        <p>Brown metallic, full power, air.</p>
        <p>$5998,</p>
        <p>1977 PONTIAC</p>
        <p>Grand Prix. Full power with ir. Silver in color. Must see.</p>
        <p>$6898</p>
        <p>1975BUICK</p>
        <p>Electra Limited. 4 door. Full power with air.</p>
        <p>*$5898</p>
        <p>(</p>
        <p>1976 PONTIAC</p>
        <p>Grand Prix. Light blue, bucket seats, console, excellent shape, one owner.</p>
        <p>*$5698</p>
        <p>1975 PONTIAC</p>
        <p>Grand Prix. White on white, SJ model, loaded.</p>
        <p>*$5298</p>
        <p>1976 TOYOTA</p>
        <p>Corona E-5 Wagon. 5 speed, air, loaded, green.</p>
        <p>*  $4998</p>
        <p>1974BUICK</p>
        <p>Electra Limited. 4 door. Full power with air. This car is ust brand new.</p>
        <p>*$4898</p>
        <p>1976 PONTIAC</p>
        <p>Catalina.</p>
        <p>*$4298</p>
        <p>1975 OLDS</p>
        <p>Delta 88 Royale. 3 door hardtop. Full power with air.</p>
        <p>*$4298</p>
        <p>1976 TOYOTA</p>
        <p>Hilux Longbed pickup. Stock no. R-3S0S. Demo. White, automatic, AM radio.</p>
        <p>$3998</p>
        <p>1974MERCURY</p>
        <p>Cougar XR 7. Gold' vinyl top. full-loaded.</p>
        <p>*$3998 1976 MERCURY</p>
        <p>Montego MX Brougham. 4 door. Green, white vinyl top, loaded family car.</p>
        <p>*  $3998</p>
        <p>1974 MERCURY COUGAR</p>
        <p>XRT. Full power with air.</p>
        <p>$3998</p>
        <p>1975 PONTIAC</p>
        <p>Firebird. Triple black, full power with air.</p>
        <p>$3998</p>
        <p>1973 VOLVO</p>
        <p>144. New engine. 4door. Yellow.</p>
        <p>$3898</p>
        <p>1974 VOLKSWAGEN</p>
        <p>' Bus. 4 Speed, radio, heater, orange, stock no. 2871 B.</p>
        <p>$3498</p>
        <p>1973 PONTIAC</p>
        <p>Grand Prix. Stock no. 3473 A. Automatic, power steering and brakes, air, vinyl top.</p>
        <p>*  $3178</p>
        <p>1974BUICK</p>
        <p>Century Luxus. Stock no. D 3380-A. White, automatic, power steering, air, vinyl top, radio.</p>
        <p>* $3498</p>
        <p>1974 TOYOTA</p>
        <p>Mark II. Full power with air. 40,0(X&amp;gt; miles.</p>
        <p>*$3298 1974 PLYMOUTH</p>
        <p>Cuda. Full power with air. Green.</p>
        <p>$2998</p>
        <p>1972 OLDS</p>
        <p>Cutlass Supreme.Convertible. One of a kind. Full power. This car won't last long. Just;</p>
        <p>*  $2998 1974 PLYMOUTH</p>
        <p>Satellite Wagon. Automatic, air, one owner.</p>
        <p>*$2998</p>
        <p>1973 0LDSM0BILE</p>
        <p>Cutlass. Loaded, burgundy with white top.</p>
        <p>*$2998</p>
        <p>1972 PONTIAC</p>
        <p>Grand Prix. 26,000 actual miles, silver with black vinyl top. Loaded with air.</p>
        <p>*  $2898</p>
        <p>1971 CHECKMATE</p>
        <p>135 Mercury. Boat, motor and trailer. Top speed 66 miles per hour. Just</p>
        <p>$2598</p>
        <p>1972 FORD</p>
        <p>Mustang Math 1. Green, automatic, radio, heater. Stock no. R-3514.</p>
        <p>*  $1998</p>
        <p>1971 CHEVY IMPALA</p>
        <p>impaia. pull power with air.</p>
        <p>$1998</p>
        <p>1973 FORD</p>
        <p>Pinto Runabout. Green, 4 speed, radio.</p>
        <p>$2298, 1973 PLYMOUTH</p>
        <p>Fury III. Stock No. 3413-A. 4door. Yellow, automatic, air, radio.</p>
        <p>*  $1998,</p>
        <p>1972 MG MIDGET</p>
        <p>stock no. 543-PB, blue,^convertible, radio, heater.</p>
        <p>$1698 I</p>
        <p>1964MERCEOES- BENZ</p>
        <p>stock no. 3653 AA. 190 D.</p>
        <p>I  $1498  I</p>
        <p>1971 BUICK</p>
        <p>4 door. This week's special</p>
        <p>$898</p>
        <p>1973 MG B</p>
        <p>Roadster.</p>
        <p>$3698</p>
        <p>1976 TOYOTA</p>
        <p>HIlux pickup. Stock no. R-3S12, Long bed, 4 speed, radio, heater, red.</p>
        <p>*  $3898</p>
        <p>1974 FORD</p>
        <p>Econollne 200 window van. Automatic, power steering, radto, if you are a hippie, we've got it.</p>
        <p>*  $3898</p>
        <p>1973BUICK</p>
        <p>Lesabre Custom Wagon. Full power with air. Must see to appreciate. Look at This!</p>
        <p>*$2998 1974 VOLKSWAGEN</p>
        <p>Supor Beetle. A pretty yellow with black stripes. Just:</p>
        <p>$2898</p>
        <p>1974 PONTIAC</p>
        <p>Lemans. Green in color, automatic' fuiiy loaded.</p>
        <p>*$2598 1973 CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>Laguna. Stock no. R 363^ Brown, automatic, power steering, air.</p>
        <p>*  $1698 1973 DODGE</p>
        <p>Crestwood Wagon. Automatic, power steering, air, brown.</p>
        <p>*  $2898</p>
        <p>1974 YAMAHA 350</p>
        <p>$898</p>
        <p>Phon^ AAondoy-Friday |</p>
        <p>8-9</p>
        <p>Saturday</p>
        <p>9-5 756-3231</p>
        <p>If Our Price Doesn't Suit You, Make Us An Offer.</p>
        <p>If We Don't Have The Car That You Are Looking For, We Can Get It With A Simple Phone Call!</p>
        <p>109 Trade Street</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Tbiy Viferits Charles Paytoe Carl Sealey, leaierj</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0041" />
        <p>t Apartmwit For Rent</p>
        <p>Kings Row</p>
        <p>On* and two bedroom garden apart menti with dlihwasher, garbage ditposal and drapes. Ottering short term lease tor the summer. Perfect location. Located lust off east Tenth StreetThe Daily Reflector, OreenviUe, N.C.Sunday, July 3, M77D-7</p>
        <p>Call 752 3519</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ROOFING</p>
        <p>' :  vVINI'.,V  ,</p>
        <p>iHKJk-. ^ AWNING'</p>
        <p>Cl IIJPIUN til</p>
        <p>M Apartmntt For Rtnt</p>
        <p>EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS and ataaplng rooms for rant. Olda London Inn. 756-5555._</p>
        <p>MOVE UP TO AN ADDRESSOF PRESTIGE</p>
        <p>*Unequaled location 'Charming landscaping 'Double Insulation 'Washer-Dryer outlets 'Master antenna 'Individual storage bins '4 different floor plans 'Many more modern amenities</p>
        <p>Grctnvillt's Mark of Distinction</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS</p>
        <p>apartment</p>
        <p>1900 5. Charles Blvd; BIdg. 19 Telephone 919'756'4800</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Public Relations Hostess: bright, outgoing personality and attractive appearance. Must be excellent with children. Hours must be flexible, some weekend work. Apply In person at McDonald's, lOth &amp;amp; Cotanche Streets. Tuesday-Friday between the hours of 9 a.m. and 11 p.m. and ask for Deborah Lundy.</p>
        <p>IJMCi</p>
        <p>We do It aU for yon.</p>
        <p>M Apartntents For Rent</p>
        <p>New</p>
        <p>GREEN MILL RUN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>You can't say we didn't say it I We checked, our apartment utility CK BOTTOM</p>
        <p>COSTS ARE ROCK I</p>
        <p>Utility 1. Why&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>We're heavily insulated, sound and fire retardent. Tenants are happy the PRESIDENT will be pleased. We think it's great. Featuring; GE appliances. air conditioning, rich shag carpeting, swimming pool, tennis court. AND MORE. You'll Love It.</p>
        <p>BUILT RIGHT BY</p>
        <p>KEECHANDSUTTON.INC.</p>
        <p>10 a.m. to 4 p.m. dally for appoint ment</p>
        <p>758-2628</p>
        <p>1207 EAST 14th Street. 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, air conditioned, oil heat. 750-1110._</p>
        <p>Cherry Court</p>
        <p>Most luxurious 2 bedroom townhouses and 1 bedroom apartments in Greenville. Chandelier, trash compactor, fully carpeted, drapes, etc., plus vitasher and dryer hook ups, fabulous pool, sauna baths, ten nis court and club room.</p>
        <p>752-1557</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Greenville Home Improvements Co.,Inc.</p>
        <p>storm Windows &amp;amp; Doors, Roofing, Room Additions 7^6 .S404</p>
        <p>M Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>Greeneway</p>
        <p>Apartments</p>
        <p>Beautiful large 2 bedroom garden apartments with wall to wall carpet, draperies, dishwasher and swimming pool, Located off country ClubDrive adiacent to Greenville Golf and Country Club.</p>
        <p>756 6869</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>APARTMENT AND HOUSE for rent, In country. Stove and refrigerator furnished.Cail74a-3284.</p>
        <p>4 BEDROOM HOME available mid-August. Family only. No pets. S400 per month. Jeannette Cox Agency,</p>
        <p>life',</p>
        <p>7S-1322.</p>
        <p>ONE YEAR old, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace In den, tay. 758 571.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOMS. /MMowbrook. Newly painted. S12S. Year lease plus deposit. 754-5034.</p>
        <p>HousasFor Rent</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOMS, 1'/&amp;gt; baths. Colonial Halits. 1250 month. Faneed-ln yard. 752 3519._</p>
        <p>FEA4ALE DESIRES roommate to share house on I4lh Street. $37.50 monthly plus utlHtI*. 752-2447</p>
        <p>BRICK RANCH. 3bedrooms, 2 baths. Naar university. Leas* only. $350. Call 756-5005.</p>
        <p>90</p>
        <p>Lets For Rent</p>
        <p>COLONIAL MOBILE HOME Park. Under new . ownership and new I, attracfl</p>
        <p>management. Large, attractive lots and homes tor rent. Park offers city sewer and watar and all underground utllilias. Also paved streets, swimming pool and children's recreation area. For mtorrnation, call 750-4413 weekdays between $:30 and 5:.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME lot tor rant. 753-2004.</p>
        <p>LAROE MOBILE home lot tor rant. Some shad*. 4 miles south of Pitt Plal*. 754-7471 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Ti Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE. Call Gay Gnagay at Lanco Really. 754 5040._</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE for rent. Call Jo* Bowen, 752-7194.</p>
        <p>91 Office Space For Rant</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE for rent. Suit* or In dividual. In new Ouffus Realty Building on Commerce and Clifton. Call Duttus Realty, Inc., 754 5395.</p>
        <p>9 OFFICE SPACES. Suit* Or in divlduals. Utilities, janltoriel ser-753*290?*'***''* Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>LOCATB AT 3103 South aaemorial Orlva. next to Parker's Barbecue. Answering service, lanllorial services, utilities furnished. 754-2320.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>91 Resort Property For Rent</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH. Clean cottage, ocean view. Call 744-3204 or 734 3104.</p>
        <p>93</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>PRIVATE ROOM for rent Telephone 754 4343.</p>
        <p>94</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>TOP CASH DOLLAR tor your car or truck. 754 4353 or 7520391. _</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DIsiPLAY</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Wanted To.Rent</p>
        <p>COUPLE WITH child desires private lot tor mobile home. Call 752 7401 or 754 7MI.</p>
        <p>QUIET MALE gradala student needs room or efficiency wlthm 10 miles of campus lor over one ytar. Please writ* or celt Phil Tuggle, 5734 Market Street, Wilmington, NC. 791-9417.</p>
        <p>WHAT 00 YOU do with still-eooo Items you no longer need? Advertise them for tale with a low coat ad in Classitiad.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>"GreenvUk '$ Mark of Distinction </p>
        <p>ApiortmenU</p>
        <p>NOT JUST A PLACE TO LIVE BUT A HAPPY WAY OF LIFE...</p>
        <p>A piannad community dnignad for thorn famiMat that insi$t on tha vary batt. iffOSeumawrlMBIvd.</p>
        <p>Orttnvilis, North Csroilna 27834 Talaphont (0191.78fl*48OO</p>
        <p>HOMES</p>
        <p>FROM</p>
        <p>DUFFUS</p>
        <p>LYNNDALE</p>
        <p>Nw FrtKKh FrowkKlaJ and ti tt avar a nica eoai Four badrooma, TV batTMv tmpraiaiva foyar. living room, dining room, pratty kitchan wdtti braakfait araa. family room with gorgaoui firaplact, douMa garaga. Whan you ua thla naw homa on Iti baaLrtlful traa covarad tot, you will ba Imprataad lust as wa hava baan. t7S,J00.</p>
        <p>REO BANKS ROAD An abiolutaly daltghttul and pratty contamporary and practically naw. You will fall in iova with tha living family room with its rkhly panalad vaultad roof and imprasslva fraa standing firaplaca. Thraa badrooms, two baths, dining room, kitchan with braakfast araa, baautlfutiy dacoratad. Thar mopana windows. Cantral air, spacious wood dock, garaga 155,000.</p>
        <p>The REALTOR'S Corner</p>
        <p>WANT TO SELL YOUR HOUSE?</p>
        <p>For Fast Action List With usf</p>
        <p>Hackett-Tripp-Creech, Inc.</p>
        <p>REALTORS__7S6-212S</p>
        <p>For Better Buys In</p>
        <p>RrE'state Call or See E.H. Williku-d</p>
        <p>List Your Property With Us ^ 223-B Cotancha, PLS-3911 Night PL 2-4409</p>
        <p>Service cordiality, and ability. A'place where you can list or buy your home with pride and confidence.</p>
        <p>Ask for J. Diaz, GRI.</p>
        <p>(V REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>'Youf ttatghborhooa 6ror</p>
        <p>1900 s. ChariM St?Bld. 19</p>
        <p>Tele. 9191 756-4800</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. 27834</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>Buying Or Selling, For Best Results Try Our "Personal Service."</p>
        <p>|T| D.G. NICHOLS U9 AGENCY</p>
        <p>REAltOR SfiSneTS*^</p>
        <p>752-4012 anytime</p>
        <p>Call nowl This home will not last long. Three bedrooms, foyer, living room with fireplace, kitchen den combination, 1W baths, basement with Z1 x 17 game room and laundry room. Patio in back to en|oy the wooded lot. Within walking distance to both ECU and Elmhurst Elementary School. Owner has been transferred and Is anxious to sell. Only $40,900.</p>
        <p>yL  </p>
        <p>^ LYNNDALE: New 2 story 4C Wllllainsburg, 4 bedrooms, ^ n Library. Great room, up- -W jS stairs sitting room, large P J airy kitchen, deck.</p>
        <p>Jb $92,500.00.</p>
        <p>J LYNNDALE: Brick ranch.</p>
        <p>Jy 3 bedrooms, large den with</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>^ old brick fireplace, peg  Jy floors, beamed celling, ^ cypress kitchen cabinets.</p>
        <p>' $71,500.00.</p>
        <p>. CLUB PINES: New listing, under construction, 1V4 Villlamsburg, 3 ns, living room, ^ 1 room, den. Dual heat :(ips. $52,500.  ^</p>
        <p>construction  4 bedrooms, ^</p>
        <p>L_____</p>
        <p>^ Story ^il ^ tiaOrpbtM, ^ dinite non ^ purps.852.</p>
        <p>PINES:  Undor</p>
        <p>^ construction - 4 bedrooms, ^ great room, 26' x 14', cMnIng ^ room, taroe deck. SdCrs.</p>
        <p>JEANNETTE COX AGENCY</p>
        <p>REALTOR 756-1322</p>
        <p>1516 Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>IF YOU ARE MOVtNG TO GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>Call 756-1322 or write P.O. Box 667, Greenville, N.C. for your free copy of "Homes For Living", a monthly publication packed with pictures, details and prices of homes and available locally.</p>
        <p>IF YOU ARE MOVING TO ANEW CITY</p>
        <p>Get your free copy of "Homes For Living", in the city you are going to. Know the real estate market before you get there. Your copy is in our office. We can help you buy, sell or trade a home any place In the nation.</p>
        <p>A simply Heopm Cape Cod now undor construction in this vory desirable erea. Woodad lot, three bedrooms, two baths. llvhg -* family room, formal dining room, kitchan with breakfast area, doubla oarage. An exciting and vary functional floor plan. $45,006.</p>
        <p>BROOK VALLEY Enough to drive you happy, that is what this gorgeous four bedroom, bath home will do for you. Foyer, living room, formal dining room, family room with fireplaco, kitchon with breakfast area, double garage. $4S,500.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY STORE AND HOME Have you always wanted a country store and home? This is your opportunity. Grocory and grill in good location within 10 miles of Greenville. Attached ranch home with three bedrooms, 1W baths, itvlng room, family room, kitchen with</p>
        <p>TUCKER ESTATES Only one year old and perfectly beeutiful. On a conter lot with living room, formal dimng room, gorgeous family room with fireplace and sUdlng glass doers to spacious wood dock, three large bedrooms, two baths, kitchen with pretty breek</p>
        <p>ALEXANDER CIRCLE Three bedrooms, m beths m this choice end accessible area. Living room with fireplace, breakfast room, family room, even a larga workshop. Fenced. Neat as e pin. 140,500.</p>
        <p>GREEN FARMS Sh^h out and relax on this axti^meiy large comer lot. 132 x 200. Then add to your pleasure e home whkh Includes three bedrooms, two baths, kitchan, living room, fMnliy room with f Iroplaca and a doubla garage. Asking only 131,300.</p>
        <p>SUMMIT STREET Prefessors, this home Is close to the university. Its Meal, with two bedrooms, two baths, living room with firoplace, family room with firoplace, large dining room, broakfast room. BetMr sae this homa. S3t,000.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA 303 S. Meade Street Only four blocks from ECU and in Wahl-Coates School District; three bedrooms, 1'A baths, livino room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen with range. Workshop or storage building. Recently painted inside and outside. Priced to sell at $30,500.</p>
        <p>2110 Pendleton Drive Three bedrooms, living room, eat-tn kitchen, 1V5 baths, carpeting, air conditioning, large lot with patio. Master bath has been completely remodeled. Let's take a look -priced at $27,900.</p>
        <p>206 S. Sylvan Drive Are you looking for four bedrooms? At an affordable price? Look no longer. This home has tour bedrooms, living room with fireplace, eat-in kitchen, 1% baths, and small workshop area. Situated on wooded lot.</p>
        <p>ES1X1E REAL1Y CO</p>
        <p>ON CALL</p>
        <p>Robert Edwards  752-5058</p>
        <p>756-W52</p>
        <p>RAOLANDACRES Wh*r blM cn you find o much for lo tmis? Brsnd new home with three bedroom*, two beth*. living room, femlly ro^ ^Ithflreplece. kitchen with &amp;gt;reekfe*i eree, ceotrel eir, heat pump, garege. See thlsone. $39,500.</p>
        <p>ha4oeecre" nd with thoee thing* y</p>
        <p>Only two years old and Mth thoee thing* you ere looking for Ml a meiler home, imagine, e paneled living room, three bedrooms, 1W beths, kftchen with breakfast area, hardwood fleors, garage. $29,900,</p>
        <p>OAKDALE</p>
        <p>An omwrtunity to buy e home with 1300 aq. ft. of heated area with three bedrooms, IMi beths, living room, kitchen with breakfast area, family room, petM and storage. Carpeting and drapes. Fence. Only $32,900.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON, NC Commercial property in Washington, NC. Location Is Meal for offices or shop; real astate, insurance, accountants, dress shop, antiques, boutique, ceramics, education, beauty shop, electronic*, efc. if you are interested In a locahon for a business or re-locating your presant Business, Investigete this property. Two large rooms and three smaller rooms plus bath on first floor. Three rooms and bath on second floor. Dual central air and heat. Fully carpeted. Off street parking. $49,500.</p>
        <p>OAKDALE</p>
        <p>A lot of square footage with a living room, family room, kitchan with breakfast area, three bedrooms, tvw&amp;gt; baths, metaf storage building. A home that you should see. $29400.</p>
        <p>room, targe deck. %iV%. BELVEDERE: Very</p>
        <p>at-</p>
        <p>tractive 3 bedroom ranch. ^ Den with fireplace and wail p i to wall carpet, porch, deck. ^ $52,500.  ^</p>
        <p>^ LAKEWOOD PINES; 3 ^ bedroom split level, ^ ^ screened in porch, den with  old brick fireplace, patio. P 2 $54,900.  </p>
        <p>m COLLEGE COURT: New 2 P ^ story Williamsburg. 4  Jr bedrooms, side porch, ^ ^ deck, hardwood floors  downstairs. $54,500.</p>
        <p>J COLLEGE COURT:  At</p>
        <p>tractive 3 bedroom ranch, ^^large lot, den with A^fireplace, carport. $41,500.00.</p>
        <p>^AYDEN: 3 bedroom ranch ^ ^ on Country Club Drive. ^ Double garage, brick patio. ^ $54,900.  ^</p>
        <p>FAIRLANE ROAD; 4 W ^bedrooms, large wooded ^ TIot, garage. $47,900.  ^</p>
        <p>^FAIRLANE ROAD:  3^</p>
        <p>^ bedroom with cedar closet ^ ^In master, garaged ^ workshop, screened porch. ^ 1^$46,500.  r</p>
        <p>FAIRVIEW WA</p>
        <p> listing  3 bedroom ranch,</p>
        <p>5 years old, great room,</p>
        <p> dining room, wail to wall 4 carpet. $49,900. .</p>
        <p>J^PATRICK STREE-. ; 2 Excellent Buy! 3bedrooms, M Jr covered patio with fans P ^overhead.$37,750.90.  ^</p>
        <p>An</p>
        <p>BROOK VALLEY irlly bteutiful xecutlv* horn* In</p>
        <p> very</p>
        <p>deslrebit location in Brook Vailoy. This is your opportunity to taka atfvantags of this prtca raduction. Four badrooms and 2V^ baths. Foyar, living room, spacious dining room for your format antartainlng, alagant and comfortable family room with buiit-ins, kitchan with pratty braakfast area, patio, large doubla garaga.</p>
        <p>_  HARDEE  ACRES</p>
        <p>Where Wa can you find naw homa* for $31,950 with cantral air and heat pump? Living room, kitchen with spacious dining araa, thraa bedrooms, ivy baths, panalad garaga. The builder will pay tha closing costs and FH A-VA points!</p>
        <p>COUNTRY</p>
        <p>A lowar pricad home In the country on an ovarsitad lot. Three bedrooms, Ivy baths, living room, kitchan wfth braakfast ePraa, sint^ garage, woodad comer lot. 127,100.</p>
        <p>xn, ^ tall p</p>
        <p>T:^</p>
        <p>CAMBRIDGE I* 'DEVELOPED BY REALTY INDUSTRIES.' Inc.</p>
        <p>W* have a variety of 3 and 4'</p>
        <p>' bedroom home* now under ^ construction on Sedgefleld^ ^Road. Prices range from L $37,900 to $44.400. Call today ' foranappolnlment.</p>
        <p>Blount &amp;amp; Ball Realty Co. Inc.</p>
        <p>752-6163</p>
        <p>OnCMTMWwUM REAITOP</p>
        <p>if' Jon Day 752 0345 Mary Lib Faser jL 752-4499</p>
        <p>The Evans Company proudly presents</p>
        <p>KICK THE RENT HABIT ----'</p>
        <p>with this affordable 3 bedroom, IVi bath sparkling new briek Iwme. Located on a large corner lot in North River, this homo is fully insulated with wallto wall carpeting, wainscope in kitchan and dining rooms, ceramic tile baths and carport. $34,000</p>
        <p>LARGE WORKSHOP____</p>
        <p>will attract Dad to this 3 bedroom brick ranch. Includes chiMron's room with built-in bid and desk. Kitchon with ranch and built-in bar. Carport. WInttrvillo. $28,500.</p>
        <p>NOW IS THE TIME....</p>
        <p>to invostigata this 3 bedroom brick ranch under construction. Buy nowand gtyour choice of dtcor. If youYo looking for economy plus custom workmanship chock this one out today I Norris Street $27,350</p>
        <p>PRICE S PRIDE . . .</p>
        <p>together in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath contemporary ranch. Wo take pride in offering this homo now undor construction in our now subdivision, SINGLETREE. Features include don with fireplace and sliding glass doors, wall to wall carpeting throughout and kitchon with range, dishwasher and disposal. Available mid July.</p>
        <p>Colt7S!I-1814</p>
        <p>(nMSrB&amp;amp;iEt</p>
        <p>WlaalGlvoiM</p>
        <p>EMiS CB</p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>ans</p>
        <p>Company</p>
        <p>v</p>
        <p>K*nn*4t llHey. Manager Woyn* smglelon. Con.i Supervnor Delpbia Sorrlnglon. Se&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Of Gfeenvie. Inc.</p>
        <p>Builders/Developers/Raaltors</p>
        <p>7lit 14th Btr*,Grvilto</p>
        <p>DUFFUS ra REALTY m INC.</p>
        <p>756-5395</p>
        <p>ON DUTYt LUDIi SMITH 756-7477</p>
        <p>SYLVIA</p>
        <p>SHAVER</p>
        <p>ANNE</p>
        <p>OUFFUS</p>
        <p>BROKER REALTOR 756-5146  756-2666</p>
        <p>ANN  JACK</p>
        <p>O'CONNOR DUFFUS BROKER REALTOR I 756-4984  756-5395</p>
        <p>THEUM</p>
        <p>WHITEHURST</p>
        <p>REALTOR</p>
        <p>756-0070</p>
        <p>KEN</p>
        <p>SMITH</p>
        <p>BROKER</p>
        <p>756-7477</p>
        <p>BULL</p>
        <p>RITTER</p>
        <p>REALTOR</p>
        <p>7564000</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0042" />
        <p>U#The Uay Reflector, UreehvUJe, N.C.Sunday, July S, 177The REALTOR'S Corner</p>
        <p>New Listing In Belvej[p</p>
        <p>AMENITIES YOU WILL LOVE ... Fireplace with glass screen, french doors In living room, dining room, 3 bedrooms, central air, wooded lot with lovely shrubs. Priced right at $43,500.</p>
        <p>OmUtKy.</p>
        <p>HACKETT-TRIPP-CREECH. INC.|</p>
        <p>756-2121  REALTOR'</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>COX</p>
        <p>New listing  University Condominium. Smartly decorated, 2 bedrooms, r/ii baths, $2l,SDO.OO. 90% Financing available. Immediate occupancy. Call today.</p>
        <p>New listing  3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, several extras such as the carpet, window treatments, nicely decorated. $39,500.</p>
        <p>New Listing  Stratford  Large 2 story * bedroom home, fenced yard. Exceptionaiiy large rooms. $58,500.</p>
        <p>New Listing in Ciub Pines. Ranch 3 bedroom home with 2 car garage, fenced yard only $57,500.</p>
        <p>New Listing  ^tonstrous 2 story brick home built out of the finest materials. 5 bedrooms, block from University. $74,900.</p>
        <p>New Listing in Brook Valley. 4 bedrooms, plenty of closets, corner lot, 2 car garage. There's a lot of home here for only $84,900.</p>
        <p>Fantastic square footage in this 5 bedroom brick home close to the University, double detached garage, storm windows. $34,500.</p>
        <p>3 bedroom home with modern kitchen, living room with fireplace, den or formal dining. $33,500.</p>
        <p>3 bedroom remodeled home in Stokes. Property also includes a building currently used as day nursery. Excellent Investment property. $39,500.</p>
        <p>3 bedroom ranch with living room-dining room combination, den with fireplace, quiet residential street. $39,900.</p>
        <p>Cambridge  Over 1550 square feet of well planned space In this 3 bedroom home with all formal rooms plus den with fireplace. $42,300. Excellent loan assumption. Owner Must Sell  Make an offer.</p>
        <p>Eastwood  L-shaped ranch with garage. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, laundry room. $44,900.</p>
        <p>Grimesland  4 bedrooms, 3 bath home with over 2000 square feet. Huge den with fireplace &amp;amp; built-lns, large utility room. Reduced to $45,000.</p>
        <p>Ayden  Live in "The Pines" in this LA.RGE home with every convenience imaginable. All rooms are large. Ooublewooded lot. A "must see."</p>
        <p>Lynndale  The 4 bedroom, 3 bath home that has it all. Mom can entertain the girls in the formal areas of the house. Dad can have his friends in for cards or T.V. in the den, and the children can entertain in the game room ail at the same time. Outstanding decor throughout. Beautiful wooded corner lot. $80's.</p>
        <p>An executive home with the large family In mind. 5 bedrooms, 2'A baths, all formal rooms, large kitchen, den and game room. Close to the pool In Brook Valley. 90's.</p>
        <p>Fairlane Subdivision  This 4 bedroom home on Greenbriar Drive has a lot of living space. Double carport, wooded yard. $47,400.</p>
        <p>Cape Cod under construction on Crestline. Decorate to suit your own tastes. $50's.</p>
        <p>Tucker Estates  soon to be finished. Great floor plan In this home with energy saving heat pump. $58,000.</p>
        <p>Cherry Oaks home with beautiful decor throughout. 3 bedrooms,</p>
        <p>2 baths, large kitchen-den with fireplace. $59,000.</p>
        <p>Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc.</p>
        <p>Jeannette Cox Mike Berry</p>
        <p>754-2521</p>
        <p>754-3554</p>
        <p>Anne Reese Conhally Branch</p>
        <p>758-4713</p>
        <p>754-1549</p>
        <p>If imiare thinking abcHit buying a place at the beach,gc^ ycHir money at Home.</p>
        <p>Call 758-3421. tS</p>
        <p>tWDlON</p>
        <p>On call Anne Reese, 758-4713</p>
        <p>SHOPPING FOR A HOME?</p>
        <p>Now is the time to col us.</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE SPECIAL Words won't do it on this one. You'll have to see this home yourself to believe and appreciate the value that goes with It. This brick home Is only one year old and has the features to compliment a life-style of gracious living. With features undreamed of In the average home you'll appreciate the decorators touch here. 3 bedrooms with large master bedroom boasting walk- in closet, built-in bookcase, dressing area and bath. Large den with fireplace, eat-in kitchen has all built- Ins, formal dining room  plus too many features to describe. But for a first hand Inspection to sie a "Show Home" please dial us Owner transferred and mustsell, IntheSO's.</p>
        <p>$$ DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR S$</p>
        <p>One of the best home values we've had to offer you in many a day. You may have passed by this older home without realizing the exceptional value it offers. 3 bedrooms, bath, four fireplaces, living room, dining room, butlers pantry just off country size kitchen, central air and heat. Upper floor spacious enough for adding more rooms. $30,500.00.</p>
        <p>WORDS WON'T DO ITI Completely renovated and everything's new, from the plastered walls, wiring, and plumbing, to the tastefully selected interior paint, yet the old-fashioned charm and atmosphere still prevails. 3 bedrooms, Texas sized carpeted living- family room combination, formal dining, large kitchen with pantry, and completely carpeted. Extra convenient location. $32,500.00.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>You'll be paying more and more rent, so why not buy your home now. This exceptionally nice 3 bedroom may be just the one. 21 x 10 living room, ceramic bath, dining room, kitchen with pantry, central air and heat. On a corner lot with fenced back yard. Priced at $24,000 and certainly one to act on.</p>
        <p>A LOOK OF QUALITY AOove in immediately In this $38,500 home in Pleasant Ridge. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with fireplace, kitchen with built-in appliances, beautifully designed dinlng-famlly room, large utility area, heat pump, situated on lot with trees and no city taxes. Or else let us build your dream house on a nice wooded lot. Several homes now under construction. Custom built, country living, yet convenient to schools, shopping, churches and town. If you have plans and ideas bring them to us or choose a plan from our vast selection of homes. Several homes now under construction.</p>
        <p>PRETTY AS A PICTURE Make mother happy In this 3 bedroom bungalow. Located on a well landscaped lot. It feafures 3 bedrooms, living room, large eat-in kitchen, bath, outside storage area. Owner adding another bath. Hooker Road in Greenville. $27,500</p>
        <p>READY FOR YOU Close enough In town so you can leave your car at home and go shopping, yet located on a nice big lot. This 2000 square foot home has new wiring, lowered ceilings, insulation, new paint, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1&amp;lt;A baths, and central air and heat. $27,500.</p>
        <p>MAKE USAN OFFER Owner must sell and will consider any reasonable offer. 3 bedrooms, carpeted living room, cozy den wim fireplace, ample closet space, handy eat-in kitchen, large screened In side porch, central heat and air. All on a well landscaped corner lot. $33,500.</p>
        <p>Investment Possibility or a place of your own. Single family. 2 bedroom, bath, living room, dining room, kitchen and enclosed back porch. $7,500.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>A real money maker and with a little work this older two story brick home could rent for more. Live In one and rent the other two apartments. Excellent Investment. $25,000.00.</p>
        <p>ACREAGE</p>
        <p>22.30 acres of land  Cleared aAd wooded acreage. $304)00.00</p>
        <p>PLEASANT I $39,000  features 3 bedrooms, central air and heat.</p>
        <p>$38,500-Heat pump, 31 area.</p>
        <p>$34.500  Den with flr^|||^MP1lrooms, kitchen with dining-family area, 2 baths, heat pump.</p>
        <p>l?(^.ce,</p>
        <p>la kitchpn with at ina</p>
        <p>2 bathsa kitchan, utility</p>
        <p>realtor</p>
        <p>ON DUTY</p>
        <p>Louise AAoseley, Realtor 746-3472</p>
        <p>MOSELEY-MARCUS REALTY</p>
        <p>746-2135</p>
        <p>Marcus McClanahan,. Realtor 746-4574</p>
        <p>$ Our Homus Featursd In Living Color On WNCT-'TV Chonnol 9 Today On The Sunday Movie Matinee Between 1:00 and 4:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>Thanks Alot!</p>
        <p>Jeannette j</p>
        <p>QEAWEnE COX ACENCV, INC.j</p>
        <p>REALTORt</p>
        <p>756-1322</p>
        <p>OnHuK</p>
        <p>Hackett-Tripp-Creech, Inc.</p>
        <p>Every office is independently owned and oiierated</p>
        <p>10.000. LIKE A CHALLENGE? - Renovating this tour apart</p>
        <p>ment. building could reap rich rewards. One unit now rented. Be a winner! Ayden.</p>
        <p>10.500. ROUTE #4, BOX 28 - Mobile home on large lot, 150 x 200. There is a large cinder block bidg. . . . Storage or workshop area Included. Furnished trailer, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room.</p>
        <p>A COOL BUY IN AYDEN - Attractive 4 room house with central air conditioning and heating, located on large lot. 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, and bath. Priced to sell at lust $20,500.</p>
        <p>32.000. WEST OF BETHEL  Just two years old with beautiful</p>
        <p>landscaping. Very clean and neaf. 3 bedrooms, drapes and carpets throughout. Storage building and garage. Dining room, kitchen with eating area. A real bargain at this price. US 44.</p>
        <p>32.000. OF COURSE YOU CAN - be the owner of this home on</p>
        <p>wooded lot, newly carpeted, workshop, and lots of Storage. Your children will love the neighborhood park. Hillsdale</p>
        <p>39.500. THIS ONE YOU WILL LOVE TO OWN - Front porch,</p>
        <p>sun deck, den. Location is quiet yet accessible. Don't let this one pass you by. Call today. Farmvllle.</p>
        <p>39.500. SOURCE OF DELIGHT  In summer  central air; in</p>
        <p>winter  two fireplaces (one is the den, one in the living room). Many extras make this 3 bedrooms, 11/2 bath home a delight to be sold! Hillsdale.</p>
        <p>$44,000 New house being built in beautlfut CancUsnMCK-Estates. 1502 square feet of heated floor space including 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, kitchen, large activity room and terrace leading off dining room; fireplace and chimney In center of house.</p>
        <p>44.900. LOOKING FOR A QUIET SPOT - Make to order. 3 bedrooms, foyer, den. Construction almost completed. Act now. Allen Acres, Farmvllle.</p>
        <p>44.900. THIS HOUSE HAS CHARACTER! - Authentic colonial</p>
        <p>Style, spacious floor plan I Many and large bedrooms, entrance haH, large living room, excellent condition. Well established yard. Gracious living is inevitable in this house. Fountain, N. C.</p>
        <p>44.000. SWIMMING A-GO-GO - Neighborhood pool and tennis</p>
        <p>courts are a summendelight. Desirable location PLUS a new 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with partial paneling in kitchen and den, a fireplace, formal dining room. A home for aji seasons! Candlewick Estates.</p>
        <p>49.900. SUPERB LIVABILITY - Transferred owner states "this is the most enjoyable home I've ever owned." Come see for yourself. Immaculate 3 bedrooms. Conve-nienf' 2'A baths, kitchen-dining area, tastefully decorated. Spacious den with fireplace. Gracious living room. Features energy saving construction. Call today for appointment 754-2121.</p>
        <p>54.500. LOOKING FOR A RANCH STYLE - This Is It - on a quiet cyl-de-sac. Carpet throughout. 4 bedrooms, situated on a large lot. Call now. This won't last long. Lake Glenwood.</p>
        <p>54.500. FREE AND EASY - This home flows, open, spacious with a den you'll have to see to believe. Location secluded yet accessible. Picture your family enjoying this fabulous home. The sun deck Is waiting. Farmvllle.</p>
        <p>CiC^</p>
        <p>Your Housing Dollar lakes a Beating When \buRent!</p>
        <p>LET HI6NITE 8. COMPANY SHOW YOU HOW TO GET YOUR DOLLAR'S WORTH OUT OF HOUSINGIIIIII</p>
        <p>Think Cmd Wutlwrlll Thl&amp;gt; ranch hai two fireplaces and Is locafed on e heavily wooded corner lot in Ayden. 132,000. Good loan assumption too!</p>
        <p>Over 1400 square feel in this rench In a quiet subdivision in Ayden. Payments are like rent. Reduced to 620,500. Three bedroqmsy bath, fenced in yard.</p>
        <p>Almoef new while brick ranch with central air In the country for only 631,000. Located three miles from the new hospital.</p>
        <p>FOR AAORE INFORAAATION ON ANY OF THESE HOMES CALL</p>
        <p>758-6666  Darrell  Hionlte</p>
        <p>xnynn,,  REALTOR</p>
        <p>IL</p>
        <p>r::7TPi</p>
        <p>?;i ^ Memor.il Dr</p>
        <p>Margaret Bertedetto Harold Greet h Benme Easfwood Charlotte Flanagan Linger Mac kett Sue Hensort</p>
        <p>756-2121</p>
        <p>55,000. A BEAUTIFUL PAIR - The perfect location - a fan tastic home. Formal dining room, compartmentized bath, fireplace. All the amenities are here. . .only you are misslngi Tucker Estates.</p>
        <p>74,900. LUXURY LABELED Spacious (2540 square feet), beautifully appointed, formal living room and dining room, den with fireplace, 4 or 5 bedrooms, dual electric-heaf pump system, lovely wooded lot with a large patio. To see Is to believe! Cherry Oaks.</p>
        <p>LOTS AND COMMERCIAL PROPERTY</p>
        <p>2.500. APPROXIMATELY ONE ACRE - On State Road 1477 near Vanceboro.</p>
        <p>2.500. AYDEN  Located on the corner of King and Fleming Streets, 57x100.</p>
        <p>Small residential lot on Thirteenth Street suitable for small dwelling. $2,500.00</p>
        <p>3,800 to 4,500, RESIDENTIAL LOTS, FARMVILLE - Six lots available in Allen Acres. May be bought separately or together.</p>
        <p>4,000. SEASHORE ESTATES, SWANSBORO, REDUCED -Wooded lot for mobile home. Everything you need, boat access to Inland Waterway.</p>
        <p>$4,500 to $8,500. CANDLEWICK ESTATES - Beautiful residential lots. Trees, swimming pool and tennis courts.</p>
        <p>CHESTNUT STREET -1 or 2 lots suitable for small business or warehouse. $4,000 each.</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL lot on west Side of town on good sized corner lot. Road frontage on 2 streets. $8,000.</p>
        <p>RENTAL OR INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Located In downtown Fountain. 1st floor, originally a store, has recently .been renovated into 3 bedroom apartment with living room, kitchen, bath, and workshop. 2nd floor is large 3 bedroom apartment with living room, dining room, kitchen, and bath.</p>
        <p>20.000. LINE AVENUE AND CHESTNUT STREET - Possible package of 3 lots . . . Commercial property. Lots may be purchased separately or as a package. Package, 20,000.</p>
        <p>VACANT LOT  has ISO feet of road frontage next to railroad on Pitt Street, and Is 130 feet deep. Excellent for warehouse!</p>
        <p>(</p>
        <p>80.000. EVANS STREET - Valuable commercial property Includes 10,000 sq. foot building. 300 feet on Evans street and 244 feet railroad frontage. 2 acres, plus.</p>
        <p>CALL US, WE HAVE OTHERS</p>
        <p>Sue Henson 756-3375</p>
        <p>ON CALL</p>
        <p>Joanna Howell 746-3625</p>
        <p>ON CALL</p>
        <p>Joyce McNeill 758-5553</p>
        <p>Mavis Butts 752-7073</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>You must see It to believe 111 Spanish style home tilting on e beautifally landscaped lawn. Mas living room, dining room, den, kitchen with eat-in area, patio and fwo fireplaces. 3000 square feet heated area. Located in RobersonvMle. Don't let this one pass you by.</p>
        <p>43,500.</p>
        <p>29,7</p>
        <p>ASonthly Income of $275. Rental property has seven bedrooms,'! baths, living room, kitchen with eat-in area, sun roof and furnished Make e little money on the side. Call TODAY I</p>
        <p>l^NO</p>
        <p>Located In Meadowbro8l^(ee Bi'JinJ, IlNl room, kitchen, den and central haat and sMWHITLEY AND ASSOCIATES</p>
        <p>"Helping People Find A Home They Love"</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>Summer fun can be yours whsn you buy this home on the water. Features three bedrooms with penellng, 1 bath, carpeted living room, den, double garage end front porch enclosed with heat and air. Also a fresh watar pond behind the home. Summer fun for only 27,SW.</p>
        <p>31.900</p>
        <p>kGreaf loan assumption. Three bedrooms, iVi baths, living room, rcarpetsd den. kitchen with eat-In area and concrete patio. Outside city limits.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>Is modem living your thing? Then here is the home tor you. This contemporary is surrounded with a wooded lot. Features four bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with bar end belceny, dining room or den, breakfast room, kitchen with work island, plenty of closets and 2 wood decks. Master bedroom overlooks living room through louversd window. Be the first to see. 47,900.</p>
        <p>Well landscaped yar^hrf^|tfcm^ths, living room, dining room, breakfast rooinq||i^2  d^ie  carport, scrsenad-ln</p>
        <p>porch, patio and a pid</p>
        <p>45.900</p>
        <p>Good tocation. Ttirae bedrooms, 2 baths, a huge den with an old brick fireplace and bookshelves, kitchen with eat-in area, patio, very well landscaped aixl beautiful.</p>
        <p>45x900</p>
        <p>Good location. Three bedrooms, 2 baths, a huge den with an oW brick fireplace and bookshelves, living room, dining room, and kitchen with eet-ln area.</p>
        <p>752-8888</p>
        <p>42,900</p>
        <p>Out of this world. Three bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den with an old brick fireplace and bookshelves, kitchen with eat-In area, patio, very well landscaped and beautifully decorated inside Brook Valley.</p>
        <p>44,500</p>
        <p>A new home featuring four bedrooms, 3 baths, living room, dining room, breakfast nook with bay window, den with fireplace, study end welting for you. Two-story Williamsburg.</p>
        <p>32,7</p>
        <p>Start out right with this three bedroom home. V/i baths, living room, kitchen with eet-ln area, den or dining room, carport and many little extras.</p>
        <p>NEWLISTING</p>
        <p>Enioy swimming, fishing, selling, playing tennis, horseback riding and hunting in Seven Lakes. It can be youre when you purchase this Mutlful lot on Lake Sequoia. Eaty living, day or night, year round</p>
        <p>for only 20,000.</p>
        <p>45,400</p>
        <p>Play Golf? This Is for you  located Ayden Golf and Country Club. Three bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den with fireplace, kitchen with eet-ln area, single garage and patio. Carpet throughout.</p>
        <p>Neat as a pin andii Three bedrooms, 11 patio, kitchen with &amp;lt; hours.</p>
        <p>35.500</p>
        <p>cated near the University.</p>
        <p>ring room with llrsplece, Ptront porch and sold In 32</p>
        <p>Ann Bass 752-1663</p>
        <p>Dees Whitley 758-0816</p>
        <p>REALTOI5</p>
        <p>NEWLISTING</p>
        <p>ThI beautiful ranch styla home ( nestled behind tall pines that shade the well landscaped yard. Has three bedrooms, 2 baths, carpeted Mvlnp room, den, kitchen with eat ln rea, carport with storape and waiting for you 138,900.</p>
        <p>25.900</p>
        <p>For the older honw lovers. Five bedrooms. 2 baths, living room, dining room, den, garage agd two-stories.  </p>
        <p>29.900</p>
        <p>Millionaires need not call. Three bedrooms, V/ baths, living room, kitchen with eat-in area and single garage. Cute as a button.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0043" />
        <p>The Dally Iteflector, GracovlI]e,N.C.Sunday, July 1, wn'M</p>
        <p>CLARK</p>
        <p>GRUBBS</p>
        <p>OFFICE ON DUTY 756-6336 DON MOVE 758-2440</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK - (um Cool Shad* troM In fho front and bKk add extra charm to this naat two bedroom home. Spachxn kitchen and living room plus metal storage building in back with cement floor and,fenced area for dog.</p>
        <p>437,500 - 61</p>
        <p>e city limits places you at this gracious new</p>
        <p>I . .  .  J---------- ruv  ar  inn  gracious new</p>
        <p>brick country home on an acre of land. Fully carpeted, it has 3 bedrooms, Tft baths, large living room with built-in desk and bookshelves, fireplace, carport and storage room.</p>
        <p>BA YVyoOD  Now Is the time to Invest In your future. Lots 1,2,3,6,5,6, 7,, 9, TO, 12 and 14 of Block A and Lots 1,3,5,6,7,1,9,13, and 15 of Block B are already SOLD. All over an acre i.n size and starting at $7,iOO, call today.</p>
        <p>107 COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE - Summer Is the time - and thu Is the place for the golfer. Four large bedrooms, central air, carpet throughout, den with fireplace, dining room, fully equipped kitchen with breakfast area, living room and 2 baths. Ifs big with nearly 1100 sq. ft. and freshly painted. $47,500.</p>
        <p>AYDEN - 17.29 acres of land. Cleared and wooded acreage. $24,400 Good for farm or subdivision.</p>
        <p>21 SCOTT STREET - Live in the luxury of Windy Ridge. No stairs in this lushly carpeted 2 bedroom flat. It has a complete modem kitchen, 2 baths, central air, completely enclosed (4' fence) patio.</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>SHARON LEWIS 756-3843</p>
        <p>BILL CLARK  BUTCH GRUBBS</p>
        <p>756-0046  756-6074</p>
        <p>CLARK</p>
        <p>GRUBBS</p>
        <p>756-6336</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>REALTOR'S</p>
        <p>Corner</p>
        <p>Feature House of Week</p>
        <p>110 SALEM CIRCLE LAKE GLENWOOD</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;  .*'</p>
        <p>Beautiful brick ranch situatod on super big lot on quiet cul-de-sac. 4 bedrooms, den with fireplace, country style kitchen, paneled garage. Lot has garden space, area has lake for swimming, canoeing and fishing. All of this for $54,500. Let us show you this lovely home today I</p>
        <p>Oniu</p>
        <p>HACKETT-TRIPP-CREECH, INC, 756-2121</p>
        <p>105 W. Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C. 27834 (919)756-5868</p>
        <p>IB</p>
        <p>REALTOR-</p>
        <p>Realty Inc.</p>
        <p>OSCAR EDWARDS. . . . 7S84S4S6</p>
        <p>JIM OSBORN........756-2739</p>
        <p>BETTY BLAND  . 756-6795</p>
        <p>JOHN JACKSON 7564360</p>
        <p>Equal Housing Oppon</p>
        <p>ortunity</p>
        <p>REDUCED TO$71,000 $75,900 &amp;amp; 2 Story traditional with basement I Only 3Vb years old, located on a tremendous wooded lot, it features approx. 3,000 sq. ft., 4 softly carpeted bedrooms, 2&amp;gt;/!z beths, an extra large kitchen with numerous cabinets &amp;amp; built-in features, big den with fireplace, living room with fireplace and paneled basement. See it at 402 Lee Street.</p>
        <p>Plenty of living space inside and out (2200 approx. sq. ft.) when you own this three bedroom house on 1.0 acres. Minutes from Greenville on U.S. 264. Features Include: living room, dining room, 2 baths, sun room and screened-In porch plus an additional room with Vi bath off garage which could be used as 4th bedroom, guest room or party house. All for $48,100.</p>
        <p>106 WILKSHIRE Drive. Situated on huge lot in Eastwood. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carpet over hardwood floors. Fireplace in den. Schools are Eastern Elementary, Aycock and Rose. $44,000. Documented by appraisal.</p>
        <p>Gracious Southern Homeplace. Beautiful 2 story home In a grove of oak trees. Entry hall, 6 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, den with cooking fireplace, 2 car garage and old smokehouse. 7 miles east of city. Located on separate lot of 1.1 acres.</p>
        <p>$68,500. Or packaged with 7.1 acres of land. 3 story packhouse, 208 feet of chicken houses, 2 large equipment sheds, large party house with kitchen, offices and 2 baths, plus tenant house. Total package $96,000.</p>
        <p>i.</p>
        <p>D.C. NICHOLS AGENCY</p>
        <p>IB</p>
        <p>REALTOI</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN OFFICE 752-4012</p>
        <p>BOULEVARD OFFICE 756-2656</p>
        <p>Linda Harkey 756-3437</p>
        <p>Billie Jean Trevathan 756-4485</p>
        <p>David Nichols 752-7666</p>
        <p>Bryant Kittreil 758 5733</p>
        <p>Trlih Byrum 756-7433 ON CALL</p>
        <p>Bet Alford 756^4223</p>
        <p>Wishing You A $afe and Happy 4fh of July</p>
        <p>Reduced To $50,000.00.</p>
        <p>$53,500 - A GARDEN SPOT IN YOUR OWN BACK YARD. Large fenced in back yard with garden and storage building. Beautiful centipede front lawn, tall pines and mature shrubbery. Newly redecorated 3 bedroom home is bright and cheery. Kitchen with new dishwasher, built-in stove and spacious eating area. Formal dining room and living rodm, foyer. Two full ceramic baths. FamilV room with fireplace, built-in desk and book cases. Sliding glass door to a raised patio. Storm windows. Convenient location near Aycock Jr. High School.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING - 11 apartments on Vi acre lot, Evans Street Extension.</p>
        <p>$50,000.00.</p>
        <p>Reduced to $85,000 BRAND NEW IN BROOK VALLEY  CUSTOM BUILT  CUSTOM DECORATED large 2-story house on #1 Fairway. Entrance hall, formal living room, large formal dining room, den with fireplace, large kitchen with built-ins and eating area, utility room, 5 bedrooms (or 4 and study), 2V2 baths, double garage, oodles of storage space. Central air, 2 heating systems, fully carpeted, nice lot. Everything you could want for your family's comfort. Just down from the Clubhouse, Swimming Pool and Tennis Courts. $87;&amp;lt;Q(L</p>
        <p>$43,000 - QUIET RESIDENTIAL AREAIl This could be the perfect home for you and your family. Conveniently located. Lovely landscaped yard, with trees. Brick, 3 bedrooms, 2 full tile baths, living room and large family room with fireplace. Compact kitchen and large eating area. Carport with storage. Needs some painting, so you can choose your own colors to do what rooms you choose. Home has a good plan, easy to live in and enioy. call today to see this well planned and located home.</p>
        <p>$33,(X)0  GOODBYE RENT! A home offers you a way out of the rut of rising rent and a chance to start building a solid future for you and your family. Now you can own a home with central air for the summer and central heat for the winter. Brick, 3 bedrooms, I'A baths, nice size living room and large kitchen with nice breakfast area and pantry. Washer-dryer hookup in utility area. Carport and nice fenced In yard. House Is one that you can brag about - it's imrrtaculately kept and In excellent condition. Exclusive.</p>
        <p>SafcOCC Cornerlot. NEAR E.C.U. Small 3 bedroom home perfect for investment property or a starter home.</p>
        <p>5 DUPLEXES FOR SALE  4 completed and 1 under construction. All are rented and less than 1 year old. Each contains two 2-bedroom units, living area, kitchen with eating area and large utility area. All electric with central air, dishwasher, range, and refrigerator. Fully carpeted. Ideal investment. $212,500.00</p>
        <p>$59,000 - OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS - IN TUCKER ESTATES!! We have just put this beautiful 3 bedroom home on the market! 2 ceramic tile baths, large 16' x 12' living room, dining room, breakfast room, tremendous family room with fireplace and built-in bookcases, 40 sq. ft. utility room, fully insulated, heat pump. All on a gorgeous wooded lot in one of Greenville's most desirable and convenient locations!! This home is only 1 year old and one of the best built homes we've seen! Compare and see! This home offers a lot of value and a lot of living for $59,000. Exclusive</p>
        <p>$28,000 NEW LISTING! - Ideal starter home with a large back yard for the children! This 3 bedroom, 1'A bath home Is almost new and in excellent condition. Living room, with closet, large kitchen-dining area with stove and separate utility area. Storm windows, electric heat, fully carpeted. Located on Arlington Drive.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTINGI!  This brand new listing features 4 bedrooms (or 3:and a study or hobby room), big living room with fireplace and formal dining room. Den with old brick fireplace, kitchen with breakfast area. 2W baths. Enclosed twb-car garage. Located on a wooded lot in one of Greenville's finest neighborhoods. Priced at $67,500.00</p>
        <p>$57,500  1901 FAIRVIEW WAY baths, large living roonu(!&amp;lt;V'tf den with fireplacAi^#lli^b This house has al^e|y^faMnl wooded corner lo/Wouble garage which is heated and cooled could easily 6e converted to a rec. room.</p>
        <p>3 large bedrooms, 2 Iroom, very spacious pn with eating area, is located on a large</p>
        <p>$45,000  NEAR BELVOIR  3 bedrooms, Vh baths, living room, kitchen-eating area-den combination. Carport with storage. Lot is 2.6 acres and includes 4 trailer sites which are rented. Call for an appointment.</p>
        <p>$98,500  COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST!) Large estate with 6 bedrooms, 4 full baths, 2 half baths, large kitchen for the gourmet, master bedroom with fireplace, family room with fireplace, living room, dining room, sitting room, breakfast room. 3.28 acres.</p>
        <p>$69,900 - SPLIT LEVEL ON FOREST HILL CIRCLE. Living room with dining "L", 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, kitchen, breakfast area with bay window all on FIRST FLOOR. DOWNSTAIRS has large den with fireplace, 1 bedroom, full bath, utility room. Central air, carpoiT. Nice wooded sloping lot. Call for an appointment.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING - $20,300 - Large older home In Bethel with lots of possibilities for the handymanl Hardwood oak floors, beautiful brass fireplace, den with contemporary fireplace, kitchen, dining room, large foyer, 2 baths, 4 bedrooms. 2 story with central heat.</p>
        <p>WE ALSO HAVE FARMLAND, ACREAGE, AND COMMERCIAL PROPERTY FOR SALE. WE CAN HELP YOU WITH ANY OF YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS. MEMBERS OF OUR SALES STAFF ARE ON CALL AT ALL TIMES TO ASSIST YOU.</p>
        <p>f NEW LISTINGS</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>bay</p>
        <p>with</p>
        <p> NEAR ECU</p>
        <p>$40,500. Large immaculate home on Harding Street. Step kitchen with bay window foris of cabinet space, formal dining room with indow. Large living room fkeplace, paneled den, fenced yard, plenty ofshade.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY</p>
        <p>$38,000&amp;gt; Like new brick home and on acre of landscaped grounds. 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, den with fireplace. Wood beams, custom kitchen, living room with fireplace.</p>
        <p> GREENBRIER</p>
        <p> TOWNHOUSE</p>
        <p>$29,900  Like new townhouse condominium with 2 bedrooms, V/7 baths, carpeted patio with bar. You must see this tastefully decorated home!</p>
        <p> HARDEE ACRES</p>
        <p>$28,500  Charming brick home just outside the city. 3 bedrooms, V/7 baths, carpeting, garage. Just A years old.</p>
        <p> CORNERLOT</p>
        <p>$33,000  Great price  Almost new home with 4 bedrooms, V/7 baths, large den, kitchen with eating area. Corner lot, single garage.</p>
        <p> LARGE DEN</p>
        <p>$62,500  Almost new home in Cherry Oaks. Big, big den with fireplace, modern kitchen with eating area. Double garage.</p>
        <p> WALK TO SCHOOLS</p>
        <p>$48,500  Great location on East Wright Road. Large brick ranch on wooded lot with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, pine panelled den with French doors and bookcases.</p>
        <p> WOODED LOT</p>
        <p>$52,500  In Belvedere. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, king-size den with fireplace, spacious living and dining rooms. Almost new.</p>
        <p>$28,200 - Doll house in Greenbrier. 3 bedrooms, bath, large kitchen, 'patio, fenced backyard.</p>
        <p>LONGWOOO DRIVE</p>
        <p>$35,000. Great location. Close to Elmhurst School. Large corner lot, 3 bedrooms, large kitchen, single garage a real charmer!</p>
        <p> QUIETCIRCLE</p>
        <p>$35,000  Great location. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room with fireplace, carport, fenced yard. Exclusive listing.</p>
        <p> NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>$35,000  Five room bungalow. Well constructed, excellent condition, corner lot. Many extras  you must see to appreciate the potential of this home.</p>
        <p> POOL</p>
        <p>$45,900  Red Oak. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den with fireplace, swimming pool with deck off back. Almost new.</p>
        <p>AYDEN</p>
        <p>$49,000  Large 3 bedroom home in Ayden. Immaculate inside and out. Formal living room, dining room, all rooms are HUGE. Fenced back yard.</p>
        <p> MAKE AN OFFER</p>
        <p>$67,900  Make us an offer on this great home in Cherry Oaks. 4 bedrooms, T/i baths, beautifully wooded lot, double garage. T astef ul ly decorated.</p>
        <p> CUSTOM HOME</p>
        <p>$58,900 - Belvedere - Custom-built brick home with all the extras. Spacious kitchen with eating area, large utility room. Plush den with grass cloth wallpaper, built-in desk, and fireplace. King-size master bedroom. A quality home that deserves your inspection.</p>
        <p>LYNNOALE</p>
        <p>$76,900  One of Greenville's finest. Located in Lynndale, this 4 bedroom home has everything. Immaculate In every detail, double garage In the back, beautifully landscaped lot.</p>
        <p> 4 BEDROOMS</p>
        <p>$20,500  Four bedroom older home, large kitchen, living room, den, and carport off back.</p>
        <p> ON THE LAKE</p>
        <p>$61,500  Williamsburg style on the lake. Large lot, beautifully landscaped. Nearly 2300 sq. It., garage, and patio.</p>
        <p> QUIETCIRCLE</p>
        <p>$74,900  Built with the large family In mind. 4 bedrooms, recreation room downstairs with fireplace! Sloping, wooded lot. Located In quiet cul-de-sac In Brook Valley.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE</p>
        <p>Cherry Oaks</p>
        <p>rental</p>
        <p>$11,000  Potential for Rental property. 2 bedrooms, bath, paneled den. Concrete block.</p>
        <p> NEAR ECU</p>
        <p>$36,000  4 bedroom brick home, living room with fireplace, formal dining room, den with fireplace, large kitchen, screened porch, and garden plot. A great buy!</p>
        <p>Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland</p>
        <p>a house</p>
        <p>SOlO</p>
        <p>word.</p>
        <p> LARGE MASTER BEDROOM</p>
        <p>$62,900  Cherry Oaks  4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, large kitchen with eating area, formal living and dining rooms. Intercom system, wooded lot.</p>
        <p>103 Terry St. Today 3-5</p>
        <p>2400 sq. ft.  mid sixties</p>
        <p>$64,000  Custom built brick home with all the extras. 2300 sq. ft. of heated area, covered patio, and over an acre of grounds. Central heat and air, modern appliances that alt stay.</p>
        <p> BROOK VALLEY</p>
        <p>$78,000  For the large family Brand new In Brook Valley. 5 bedrooms, playroom, large den with fireplace, double garage. Over 4000 sq.ft.</p>
        <p>Call Or Write F&amp;lt;)r Free Picture Brochure of Our "Preferred Homes"</p>
        <p>HOME &amp;amp; 10 ACRES</p>
        <p>$64,900  Only 3 years-old, thj(s 2,000 sq. ft. brick home is like new. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, central air, fireplace In den, double garage, PLUS 10W acres.</p>
        <p> MINUTES FROM GREENVILLE $84,500  Southern Mansion  Located on over an acre of landscaped grounds. Includes addi tional apartment for guests or rental. Call our office for details.</p>
        <p>homes</p>
        <p>Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland</p>
        <p>226 Commerce Street</p>
        <p>756-3500</p>
        <p> IB</p>
        <p>REALT01</p>
        <p>Duane Williams, 752-5328</p>
        <p>4-</p>
        <p>Dick Evans,' 758-1119</p>
        <p>Louise Hodge, 756-5005</p>
        <p>Don Southerland, 756-5260</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>Mike Aldridge, 756-7871</p>
        <p>Terry 9hank, 756-3108</p>
        <p>Ray Spears, 758-4362</p>
        <p>Frances Garrett Off ice Manager .</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0044" />
        <p>ALL PURPOSE WHITE</p>
        <p>POTATOES</p>
        <p>lOLB. BAG</p>
        <p>$1</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>ALL FLAVORS - FRUIT</p>
        <p>ilrDRINKS &amp;lt;&amp;gt; 79'</p>
        <p>SEALTEST</p>
        <p>LEMONADE ^49'</p>
        <p>LARGE</p>
        <p>RIPE</p>
        <p>BANANAS</p>
        <p>u22*</p>
        <p>SKILLET BRAND</p>
        <p>BACON</p>
        <p>,THIN SUCED ~</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>io&amp;lt; </p>
        <p>SLKB)'"</p>
        <p>$2^9</p>
        <p>OSCAR MAYER</p>
        <p>FULLY COOKED</p>
        <p>WIENERS .0 98*</p>
        <p>1-LB.</p>
        <p>PKO.</p>
        <p>BEEF</p>
        <p>FRANKS</p>
        <p>SLICED-REGULAR OR BEEF</p>
        <p>1-LB. PKG.</p>
        <p>98*</p>
        <p> BOLOGNA- 6 8</p>
        <p>BUY &amp;amp; SAVE! OUR PRIDE</p>
        <p>Sandwich Bread</p>
        <p>"SAVE MORE" WITH</p>
        <p>MOTHER'SMayonnaise</p>
        <p>QUART</p>
        <p>CHEFBOY-AR-DEEPIZZA</p>
        <p>CHEESE  .SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>PEPPERONI .HAMBURGER</p>
        <p>13-Oz. Pkg.</p>
        <p>FARM CHARM</p>
        <p>ALL NATURAL</p>
        <p>OUR PRIDE HOT DOG 8HAAABURGER</p>
        <p>Ice Cream BUNS</p>
        <p>Half Gallon</p>
        <p>Your Choice! 12-Oz. Pkg.</p>
        <p>WIN $1.000  WIN $100</p>
        <p>BACK BY POPULAR DEBNANDI</p>
        <p> ALL NEW GAME!</p>
        <p> ALL NEW PRIZES!</p>
        <p>BINGO MAGIC</p>
        <p>ODDS CHART</p>
        <p>isstt</p>
        <p>iMt NriMs W I*w&amp;gt; TV VaoedMMtnt</p>
        <p>(XOSF(</p>
        <p>SOW</p>
        <p>nCHE"'</p>
        <p>RgiK:L3igar&amp;lt;:jtg^igca</p>
        <p>7| ie|,. B.g|</p>
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        <p>Sw* dmifl * ** Cwd*. Ow Cw 6 Seid. W. NMew K Mm d  MeMM Ed Cm* M CMidM Merfh CMd</p>
        <p>$253,000</p>
        <p>IN CASH PRIZES!</p>
        <p>53,000</p>
        <p>INSTANT WINNERS</p>
        <p>^PUREX LAUNDRY DETERGENT .</p>
        <p>42-Oz. Box</p>
        <p>^PRINGLES POTATO CHIPS_______________________________________________</p>
        <p>............................. ..... 8-Oz. Pko.</p>
        <p> PACKER'S LABEL PAPER PLATES</p>
        <p>TOO-Ct.Pkfl.</p>
        <p>TEXAS PETE HOT DOG CHILI</p>
        <p>............................... lOVi-Oz.Can</p>
        <p>STOKELY TOMATO CATSUP ___________________________</p>
        <p>14-Oz. Bottle</p>
        <p>ASSORTED zisTY DRINKS________________________________</p>
        <p>............. 44-Oz. Bottle</p>
        <p> ICE CREAM SANDWICHES ..................-</p>
        <p>.................. Farm Best 12-Pak</p>
        <p> SPARE TIME POT PIES</p>
        <p>........... 6-Oz. Pko.</p>
        <p> PAT'S POTATO CHIPS</p>
        <p>0-Oz. Pkg.</p>
        <p> CLOROX LIQUID BLEACH</p>
        <p>............ Half Gallon</p>
        <p>VANITY FAIR PAPER TOWELS</p>
        <p>. ._ _______________</p>
        <p>CREAM WHITE SHORTENING.</p>
        <p>f' .</p>
        <p>MJUJQ9IL</p>
        <p>78*</p>
        <p>78*</p>
        <p>78*</p>
        <p>25*</p>
        <p>29*</p>
        <p>58*</p>
        <p>98*</p>
        <p>19*</p>
        <p>58*</p>
        <p>49*</p>
        <p>45*</p>
        <p>98*</p>
        <p>WIN $10  WIN $5  WIN $2  WIN $1EMBERS CHARCOAL r 98</p>
        <p>T'</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0045" />
        <p>Americans Bicentennial Will Be Revisited .Monday Night On CBS</p>
        <p>Highlights of last years daylong Bicentennial July 4 celebration, as covered by CBS News, will be presented in a CBS News Special, Our Happiest Birthday, on Monday, July 4, 8 to 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>Walter Cronkite, who anchored the 16 hmirs of coverage last July 4, will introduce the best moments of that glorious and happy nationwide and international event. As Cronkite says, Were going to bring out ttie family album and look at some of the snapshots of the day.</p>
        <p>Last years Bicentenni; celebration began even Mfore dawns eariy light, as Americans from Maine to Hawaii awoke to start celebrating the biggest proudest birthday party this country has ever seen, says Cronkite. It had a cast of millions parading and dancing and singing in celebration of Americas 2001h birthday.</p>
        <p>Since Operation Sail was the star of the occasion, there will be additional material, not seen last year, of the tall Ships as they turned around under the</p>
        <p>George. Washing Bridge and moved in a statdy maimer dovni the Hudson River. Otliar hi^igbts of the evoit will in-clixle the reenactment of the Battle of Gettysburg, the ntk-wide bell-rln^g, the Williamsburg Muster, the frog race and husband-calling from Polk County, Iowa, jazz from New Orleans, and the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.</p>
        <p>Ernest Leiser is the senior producer of Our Happiest Birthday. Vem Diamond is the producer-director.</p>
        <p>Mason* Premieres On ABC</p>
        <p>Dealing with a child genius has its exasperating as well as rewarding moments for his family and other distrau^t adults in Mason, a special</p>
        <p>half-hour comedy presentation airing Monday, July 4, 8 to 8:30 p.m.,onABC-TV.</p>
        <p>In the program, precociims child actor Mason Reese stars as Mason Bennett, a youngster with a genius IQ and adult mannerisms. Barbara Stuart is Peggy Bennett, Masons concerned mother, and Barry Nelson is Howard Bennett, the eigbt-year-&amp;lt;dd adults bemused fatbor.</p>
        <p>Also featured are Lee Lawson as Masons grown-up sister, Joyce, Keith Charles as Masons newly-acquired friend Line, and Lee Meredith as Lines girlfriend Bernice.</p>
        <p>Having moved recently to New York City, the Bennetts are worried that Mason may have difficulty making friends his own age; after all, how many eight year-olds can discuss aerodynamics or medieval literature? When Mason meets his new friaid Line and announces plans to go camping with him, the Bennetts are ^mtii th^ learn that</p>
        <p>Line is a 42 year-old bachelor.</p>
        <p>When his parits insist he cancel the outing, Mason runs away to live with Line, whose free and easy lifestyle is interrupted by the piecocious chQdS arrival.</p>
        <p>America has been idolizing youth for years, but theres never been a youth like Mason Reese, now 11 year-old. To date, he had won a Clio award for the best performance by a male in a-commerical, co-bosted Tlie Mike Douglas Show, appeared with Dick Cavett, and has won the hearts of millions of viewers as hes persuaded them to buy everything from soap to sneakers.</p>
        <p>The IQ of Mason Reese easily equals that of the child he portrays in the comedy. When be was in the third grade. Mason was already reading hi^ school books and needed just 10 minutes to memorize a 250-word commercial, putting him far ahead of most of the actors vho can cross the street by themselves.</p>
        <p>Penny Fw Your Horse?</p>
        <p>Although Penny Marshall (Lveme and Shirley) is known as Penny, thats not really her first name. Nor is it</p>
        <p>PiecodoH chOd actor Ml drhres hta family to comk stracUon taMaMa,on the ABC Monday Cometh Special, Jidy 4 (M: pjB.) on ABC-TV.</p>
        <p>Pmy was christened Carole; and her middle name is Penny.</p>
        <p>The name came in an unusual manner: Her older sister wanted a horse and was saving her pennies to buy one. But since keeping a horse in their Brooklyn neUhborlKxxl would have been a problem, Mrs. Marshall seized upon the idea of calling her ewbora dau^ter Penny to con-aoie the elder dai^to*.</p>
        <p>Whwed the Carole part of her name come from? It was for Carole Lombard.</p>
        <p>Scenes tram the beat Urtbdn party ever wUl be shown again on the CBS News &amp;amp;iecial, Our H^Pfdest Bhthday, Monday, July 4 on CBSrTV.</p>
        <p>CBS News Cornespoodent Walter CronUte will anchor the program.</p>
        <p>U.S. Songwriters Honored</p>
        <p>The American songwriter, from this nations earliest b^in-nings, has been its unique historian.</p>
        <p>Writers of songs  good and bad, happy and sad, ends and forgettablehave i the story of America and of its people in a way that could not have been done throu^ any other medium.</p>
        <p>It is the nHHiumental contribution of these melodic chroniclers that is saluM in an extraordinary musimu event, "Fbey Said It With Music; Yankee Doodle to Ragtime, a two-hour special program to be broadcasj Monday, July 4, 9 p.m., on CBS-TV. It stars Bernadette Peters, Tony Randall, Jason Robards, Jean Stapleton, Flip Wilson, and a chorus of outstanding singers and dancers.</p>
        <p>The late Goddard Lieberson, who was one of the most distinguished and creative figures in American music and the creator and executive producer of the ^&amp;gt;ecial, said at the time the program was taped in California; Sound is the miss-dimenshm in our historical We learn of our</p>
        <p>heritage through the written word, through paintings and drawings and photc^ai^. But music has a special power and emotional concentration that cannot be equalled by any other frm of conununication </p>
        <p>The story of America from the Revolutkm to World War I is told in the special entirely through the lyrics and melodies of the nations songs. There is no dialogue other than that evdving within the music.</p>
        <p>Music, said Lieberson, is in the American psychewhich is a complicated way of saying there are songs and sounds inside our heads that were not even aware that we know.</p>
        <p>Songwriters have memorialized romance, tranqxtrtation, work, war, home, politics, poveityV and, in so doing, they have ca^t in smig the very essence of the American soul.</p>
        <p>From Come Take A Ride Underground to I Love My Wife But, Oh, You Kid to The Girl I Left Behind to Halldu-jah. Im a Bum to Ill Never Get Drunk Any More to Just Before the Battle, Mother, its all thme. The sp^ Uiat sUll</p>
        <p>echo in the very air of America describe our strenghts and weaknesses, our prejudices, our longings and disaiqwintments, our capacity for joy, our sense of tragedy.</p>
        <p>"They Said It With Music: Yankee Doodle to Ragtime will catch excerpts from some 100 of these songs that make up the rich symphony of our musical history.Letting His Hair Down</p>
        <p>Its a departure, but I kinda like it.</p>
        <p>Departure might be termed the understatement of the year because it came from Ron Howard (Richie in Happy Days) and he was referring to his hair.</p>
        <p>For the first time in his career, Ron has discarded the shinyfaced kid look to let his halr grow. Its iust long enou^ to cover part of my ears, says Ron. Ill leave it long until about a week before we start production on Happy Days, then well break out the ol bowl</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0046" />
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        <p> SOUTH OOTANCHE STRST CREEMVIUe. N.C. 27(34</p>
        <p>Inventor</p>
        <p>Profiled</p>
        <p>The works and accomplishments of Oskar Fischinger inventor, animatOT, palntar and film artist will be examined on Camera Three, Sun^, July ^ 11 to 11:33 ajD., on C^TV.</p>
        <p>FiscUnger, bom in Germany, was one of a handful of post-World War I artists who recognized the possibilities of motion pictures as a statement of pure, visual tom. He was trained as an engineer and was aUe to build qiedal equipment, and design methods irf animation and syncfarpnizatkm between music and images, and develop a color film process.</p>
        <p>With some of his best work already accomplished, Fischinger emigrated to the United ^tes with hopes of using the resources of Hirtlywood. He was disappointed with Hollywood, biR he did develop new techniques and explore new themes untU his death in 1967.</p>
        <p>Fischinger firmly believed that forms in motion could  like music  affect the.emo-tions, and much of his work reflects his efforts to utflize that thewy. He experimented with drawings made of a wax mixture that developed and changed from second to second, and among his innovations b animated actual objects, vrtiich resulted in some of the earliest commercials to be shown in movie houses.</p>
        <p>Discussing Fischingers work will be his widow, Elfriede Fischinger; writer-poet-filmmaker William Moritz, who q^t several.</p>
        <p>Fischingers work; animator and journalist Canemaker.</p>
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        <p>Stars Reflect On Our Bicentennial</p>
        <p>With the rockets red glare promising to paint American skies on Independence Day July 4, several television stars</p>
        <p>Bette Davis On Laugh-b"</p>
        <p>Two-time Oscar winner Bette Davis is a guest star in the first Laugh-In q&amp;gt;ecial to go before the cammas to the 1977-7S season on NBC-TV.</p>
        <p>Do you think last years Hicentennial cdebration will have an adverse or beneficial effect on this year's Independmice Dayobsovations?</p>
        <p>Their answers:</p>
        <p>Rod Taylor, motk picture star starring The Trail  in Sept. on 1</p>
        <p>TV:</p>
        <p>I was very impressed with the Bicratennial cdebratkm last r, and 1 think people are feel-j even more patriotic now I sort of wish our show could have premiered last year, Its a stoy about pionems, I come</p>
        <p>from a land of pioneers (Rods a native of Australia), and I think it would have been appropriate to start the series in 1976. Denver Pyle, Mad Jack in The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams;</p>
        <p>I grew iq&amp;gt; in middle America  on a dry land wheat farm in Colorado  and I consider mysdf a near-zealot whoi it comes to patriotism. I reveled in every celebration of the Bicentennial year, and I havent worn out my patriotism yet. Chuck Woolery, host of Whed of Fortune.</p>
        <p>I dont think all that may peo-</p>
        <p>rr&amp;gt;</p>
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        <p>TV SHOWTIME CHANNELS</p>
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        <p>WUNK</p>
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        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>Program sctwduleo listed in TV Showtime are furnished by the teftviskm networks and stations and arc sub|ect to change without notice.</p>
        <p>Dally Reflector TV Showtime, All Rights Reserved</p>
        <p>Press Features A Advertising and Television Programming Data, Tartan Building, Hopewell, Virginia 23M0</p>
        <p>to me twtworks for ouMfkvK, crinchin or program ficlwt reouMt,.</p>
        <p>ABC IJJO Ave.otme Amorlcoo, MowVork, N.v. Hi7 CBS-SI West smn Stroef, Hew Voik. New York, WOW NBC'30 Rockefeller Ptaia, Hew York, N.v. nOlO</p>
        <p>Bicentennial. And the most noticeable thing about July 4 is the fireworks.</p>
        <p>I love this country.! owe it something. All of us owe it something. I think its time we recognized that fact.</p>
        <p>Noah Beery, Joseph RockfiHTi</p>
        <p>world. Its traditional out our way.</p>
        <p>(Beery lives on a cattle ranch in the Tehachapi Mountains about 100 miles north of Hollywood.)</p>
        <p>Montalban And Meredith Go West</p>
        <p>Ricardo Montalban and Burgess Meredith have been added to the cast of How the West Was Won  the series which will air in 10 two-hour episodes next winter. James Amess stars.</p>
        <p>Montalban will play Chief Satan^ai, the Indian nations leader, and Meredith is cast as mountain man, BQly 'argo.</p>
        <p>in The Rockford 1</p>
        <p>I dont think last years Bicentennial cdrt&amp;gt;ration will have much effect on this years July 4 one way or the omer. I think tbme is a pretty big observation every year. Peopte never get tired of that.</p>
        <p>My family spoids the 4th at Tehachapi park, \rt)ere the fire d^rtment puts on one of the finest fireworks di^lays in the</p>
        <p>good food-anytime</p>
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        <p>Sunday Evening</p>
        <p>t:^JD.(]N)Newi (SW)TVJFocu</p>
        <p>(7)AndyWaila]ii5</p>
        <p>(9;</p>
        <p>(11)_________</p>
        <p>(12)LastanbeWUd (25)N.C.Peoiie 9:30 (3N,9,11) CBS News (3W) Wild World of Animals (S)KidswDiM (C.7)NBCNews (U) The Moppet Show (25)WorldPrws</p>
        <p>7:00 (3N,9,U) Sixty Minliies; tXS News series with Mike WaUaee, Moriey Safer and Dan Rather. (60 min)</p>
        <p>(3W,S,13)Hanly Boys-Nancy Drew Mysteries: Nancy Drew Mysteries - a Haunting We Will GrO Nancy Drew is in for a dramatic surprise while staging a 20-year-old play in which she has a part and all the original actors return to recreate their performance  even though the theater has a reputation for housing phantom, (repeat, 60 min) (S,7)World of Disney: "Mustang Part I. Richardo Montalban is the narrator of this true-to-life nature drama set in the rugged badlands of Mexico and Southwestern United</p>
        <p>r/.</p>
        <p>Cleaning It Yourself</p>
        <p>Color and use determine how soon you should clean carpet. Certainly, periodic cleaning In high traffic areas is a must. So, avow potential wear problems and don't poalpone cleaning.</p>
        <p>Do-it-yourself Weaning may require the use of anything from aerosol foam to portable equipment. Be sure not to over-brush or to overwet, and most of all, fWlow directions.</p>
        <p>Otherwise, call us for a line on a competent, professional cleaner.</p>
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        <p>States about a battle between wild stallkms for the leadership of a herd of mustangs, (repeat, 60 min) (iSiOown Home Cooking 7:30 (25) M.D.: Hypoglycemia</p>
        <p>7:58 (3W,5,12) ABC niie Magazine 1:00 (3NA11) Bhoda: Rhoda delivers an ultimatum to her separated ^use that either he comes home or shell start seeing other men. (repeat)</p>
        <p>(3W,5.12)Slx MillloD Dollar Man;</p>
        <p>"K+2+0 equals Death. Steve Austin becomes a human atomic ' power source as he infiltrates a spy ring which has stolen plans for an $8 billion underwater breathing device. (rq)eat,60min)</p>
        <p>(6,7)NBC Sunday Mystery Movie: Lanigans Rabbi  The Cadaver in the Clulter Art Carney and Bruce Solomon. Chief Lanigan and Rabbi Small try to get the truth from a recluse who has become the focal point of local curiosity when his niece is accused of slaying his equally eccentric brother, (repeat, 90 min)</p>
        <p>(25)Bemsteln-New York PWihar-monlc In London: Leonard Bernstein conducts the New York Philharmonic in an all-Tchaikovsky program. (60 min)</p>
        <p>8:30 (l,9,ll) Phyllis: PhyUis uses all her feminine wiles to transform plain office-buddy Harriet Hastings into a femme fatale, (repeat)</p>
        <p>8:58 (3N,9,11) CBS NewMneak (SWAUlABCNewsbrlef 9:00 (3N,9,11) Switch: Impressionist Jim Bailey takes on the guise of a beautiful banmess, heirs to one of Eurtgies great family fortunes, to trap a ruthless Lothario. Part One of two part story, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(3W,5,12)ABC Sunday NIM Movie:</p>
        <p>Sleuth Sir Laurence Mivler and Michael Caine star in a suqiienseful</p>
        <p>PARENTAL DISCRETION IS ADVISED) (2hrs,55min) (25)Masterpiece Theatre: PoWark As Rosss trial draws near, Demelza learns witnesses are being paid to give evidence</p>
        <p> ^1. (60 min)</p>
        <p>9:37 (6,7) NBCNews Update 9:30 (6,7) Movie M the Week: The Spell Lee Grant stars in the eerie drama as the concerned mother of an obese, embittered Is-year-old with the ability to bring illness  and even death - to those who ridicule her. (repeat, 90 min)</p>
        <p>10:00 (I) Hie Ronnrmooners (9,ll)Delveccliio: Boiling mad over a police captains accusation that he sabotaged a raid on a major numbers-racket workroom because he is on the take, Delvecchio sets out to prove his innocence and busts tbe numbers operation single-handed, (r^ieat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(25)rhe PaOisers: In the final episode, Glencora tries to convince Plantagenet to allow her children to have the one thing she was deprived of  freedom of choice in marriage. (60 min)</p>
        <p>11:00 (3N,9.11) News, Weather, Spiats</p>
        <p>(6)Communique</p>
        <p>(7)GoodNews (2S)SignOfi</p>
        <p>11:15 (9) Late Movie; "Sebastian Dirk Bogarde and Susannah York. Espionage drama with pecgile deciphering codes, dodging double-</p>
        <p>11:30 (3N) Great Detectives (6t7)NBC Late Night Movie: Bye Bye Braverman George Segal and Jack Warden. Come^ on the mores of would-be Jewish intdlec-tualslnNewYorkCi^.</p>
        <p>(ll)Late Movie: Columbo; Double Shock Peter Falk and Martin Landau. When an aging physical fitness buff dies shortly before his wedding to a younger woman, everyone suspects a heart attack. But Ctdumbo suspects the wealthy mans twin nephews, (repeat, 2 hrs)</p>
        <p>11:55 (3W,S,13) News, Weather, Sports</p>
        <p>12:19 (3W) Rev Leonanl Repass 12:25 (3W) Sacred Hearts (5)Wide World of Wrestling (13)Laie Movie:Title to be announced.</p>
        <p>1:31 (11) &amp;gt;1110 Story</p>
        <p>Steve And Eydie Will Star In NBC Specials</p>
        <p>Multi-talented Steve Lawrence and Eydle (Joniie  the Grammy Award-winning husband-and-wUe and threetime winners of the Las Vegas Entertainer of the Year award  will star in two NBC-TV variety specials during the next two years and Lawrence also will star in an NBC-TV dramatic development project.</p>
        <p>Most recently, Steve and Eydie starred in two hl^y acclaimed TV qiecials, including a Cole Porter tribute, Steve and Eydie, From This Moment On, telecast March 10, 1977, and reviewed as ...a wonderfully-</p>
        <p>luminous hour by Moma Mur-</p>
        <p>other special was a tribute to George Gershwin Steve and Eydie, Our Love Is Here To Stay, tfied in London and Paris and presented Thanksgiving Day, 1975. -It was hailed as "...one of the finest musical hours television has bad in a tbne" by Bettelou of TheDetnnt Free</p>
        <p>Our New Location</p>
        <p>Is</p>
        <p>12313 South Memorial Drivel</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>Adjacent to Smith AAotel, Across from West End Shopping Center</p>
        <p>Cox T.V. Center</p>
        <p>RCil</p>
        <p>The Dallas Times described Steve and when it reported they....probably have more feeltags for lyrics and music than any shigle pair around today.</p>
        <p>Steve and Eydie  who have entertained audiences in theaters, concert halls, on stage and television and through records  starred m an NBC-TV special in August, 1973, Steve and Eydie...On Stage, which origbiated from Las Vegas.</p>
        <p>They first merged their talents on nie Tonight Show hosted by Steve Allen, became regulars on the program, and landed their own TV series.</p>
        <p>Skqiper Becoming An Old Hand</p>
        <p>Operation Petticoat will be the third series John Astln has starred bi. The others: Im Dickens, Hes Fenster and Die Addams Family.* . .</p>
        <p>SPECTACULAR STALUON BATTLE for leadership of a wild mustang herd hlghHghta ttu twiHMrt adventure drama, Mu^ang,^airbig</p>
        <p>on The Wonderftd Worid of Disney, Sundays, JulySand 10 (7- p.m.) on NBC-TV.</p>
        <p>Mustangs Story Told On Disney</p>
        <p>Part I of Mustang airs Sunday, July 3, on Tiie Wonderful World of Disney, 7 to 8 p.m., on NBC-TV.</p>
        <p>A wild mustang, later to be called Pechudo (a Mexican name meaning the proud one), roams the deserts and mountains of the Great Southwest and northern Mexico b&amp;gt; a never-endmg struggle for survival.</p>
        <p>The tbne is the 1880s, and dur-big the first three years of bis life the antanal is threatened Iqr natural predators and Indians. After successfully defendbig hbnself from a mountain lions attack, Pechudo gams the self ccmfidence and assurance to head a herd of his own.</p>
        <p>He challenges a rival Medicine Hat Stallion for the right to lead a herd of mares and defeats his adversary bi a fierce battle on the desert lands of New Mexico.</p>
        <p>In an effort to escape man and civilization, Pechudo leads his herd across the plains further south bito New Mexico. Unbothered for a tbne, it is not long before Pechudos band is corralled by Mexican ranchers. The ranchers succeed in capturing the mares but fail in theb- attempt to hold the herds wild leader.</p>
        <p>Throughout the excitement of the chase and capture, a young Mexican boy named Julito (Flavk) Martinez) is awed by the magnificence of the spbited stallion and hopes one day to own the mustang.</p>
        <p>When mustangs were brought to the North American cmtinent by the Spanish conquistadors, they numbered about 40,000. Now the are only a mere 5,000 left. Their name is derived from the Spanish word mestano which means of the range. They are a mixture of Arabian-Barb, Andalusian and Spanish, and are stockier and smaller than a normal-sized horse. These qualities make the mustang ideally suited for the deserts and mountain regions of the Southwest. Besides their sure-footedness, they are able to run with bicredible speed.</p>
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        <p>Police Chief Now Advisor Fot Series</p>
        <p>Former Los Angeles Police Chief Tom Reddbi  28 years on the force, two years at the helm  has been signed as technical advisor for Police Story.</p>
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        <p>After retiring as police chief in 1969, Reddbi served on two Presidential commissions on law enforcement under Jcbinson and Nbron and on two California commissions under Governors Reagan and Brown. He presently heads his own security service company.</p>
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        <p>(9.11)tm,000 Question (UllbTeDtheTnith (2S)HacNeil-Lelirer Report</p>
        <p>8:00 (3N,9,11) Our Haziest Birtb-day; CBS News Correspondent Walter Cronkite, who anchored 16 hours of coverage last July 4, will introduce the best moments of that glorious and happy nationwide and intematiooal event. (60 min)</p>
        <p>(5.12)ABC Monday Comedy Special: Mason Mason Reese and Barbara Stuart. An eight-year-old genius causes exasperating as well as rewarding moments for the aMt around him.</p>
        <p>(6,7)Uttfe House on the Prairie: Fred Lauras new pet, a nasty-tempered billy goat, tests the patience of the Ingalls family and that of ttieir neighbors as well, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(2S)Legacy: The Year of the Bicentennial: The documental? covering events of last years Bicentennial celebration includes parades, fireworks, arts and crafts exhibitions and historical reenactments. (60 min)</p>
        <p>8:28 (3W,S,U) ABC Newsbrief 8:30 (3W,S,12) ABC Monday Night Baseball: Team to be announced.</p>
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        <p>8:87(8,7) NBC News UpdMe 8:58 (SN,9,U) CBS Newsbtwk 9:00 (JN,9,U) Tliey Said H With Music: Yankee Doodle to Ragtime This musical salute tdls the story of Americas history through the music it grew iq&amp;gt; wttb, with gueste Bernadette Peters, Tony Randall, Jason Robards, Jean Stsqiieton and Flip Wilson. (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(8.7)NBC Monday Night Movie: Dark Victory Elizabeth Montgomery stars as a successful television producer who experiences love and a new zest for life only after she learns that she has a fatal brain tumor, (repeat, 2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(2S)Be Glad Then America: The p^ormance documentary traces the evolution of the opera BE GLAD THEN AMERICA by composer John La Montaine and includes excerpts from the premiere performance. (60 min)</p>
        <p>10:00 (S) Austin City Umits: The Dirt Band takes an eclectic approach with the selections Mr. Bo-jangles, Battle of New Orleans and Will the Circle Be Unbroken. Two guitars, several spoons and three vocals add up to Kiwi, a popular Texas group who also perform. (60 min)</p>
        <p>11:00 (3N,SW,5,6.7,9,11) News, Weaffier, Sports</p>
        <p>(12)Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman (2S)SlgnOff</p>
        <p>11:30 (3N,9,11) CBS Presents Ktiiak: Cross Your Heart and Hope to Die A mentally ill young woman is witness to the murder of her aggressive suitor by a demented friend, (repeat, 60 min) (3W,S,12)StreeU of San Francisco: The Twenty-Four Karat Plague A group of poker players decide to play for keeps when they steal a shipment of radio-active gold from a university nuclear research center truck, unleasing its deadly danger on the world. (repeaL 60 min)</p>
        <p>(6.7)Tonight Show: With host Richard Benjamin. And guest Dr. Michael Meyers.</p>
        <p>12:30 (3N,9,11) CBS Ute Show: Vendetta for the Saint Roger Moore. Working with, but not for, the Italian Police, Simon Templar  world traveler and adventurer known as The Saint wag^ a per-sonal vendetta against a murderous mob chief, (repeat, 90 min)</p>
        <p>(3W,S,12)Toma: A Funeral for Max Fabian Toma poses as a stevedore on the East Coast docks to investigate corruption and murder caused by warring factions of a union local, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>ALL SPRING &amp;amp; SUAAAAER</p>
        <p>Ladies Shoes</p>
        <p>'/2</p>
        <p>Montgomery, Hopkins Star In *Dark Victory^ Monday On NBC</p>
        <p>Uncle Sam</p>
        <p>The nickname Uncle Sam originated by accident. It was applied to Samuel Wilson, who handled shipments of government provisions at Troy, N.Y., in the War of 1812. The shipments arrived at Troy with U.S. tm them. The initals obviously meant United States, but when someone asked the meaning of those letters some wag wisecracked that they were meant for Uncle Sam Wilson.</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
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        <p>LOVE IS BLUE-AiRhooy Hopkins and Eababeth Hontgomery star as a couple whose romance Is shadowed by the knofwiedge that a fatal disease will soon daim her life, in Dark Victory, on NBC Monday Night Movie, July 4 (Ml p.m.) ooNBC-TV.</p>
        <p>Elizabeth Montgomery stars as a woman who ftdls in love and begins living life to the fuUest after learning she is terminally ni, in DaA Victory, a Worid Premiere film to be colorcast on NBC Monday Night at the Movies July 4,9 to 11 p.m., on NBC-TV.</p>
        <p>Anthony Hopkins co-stars as Dr. Michael Grant, who diagnoses her illness and falls in love with her.</p>
        <p>Katherine Merrill is a successful, hard-driving morning TV talk show producer who is hdd she has a brain tumor. Debite her glamorous and exciting job, she cannot successfully conceal a personal void in her life. And not until she is told her illness is terminal does she realize bow much has been missing.</p>
        <p>But after meeting Michael, her life takes on a new meaning and she finds real happiness for the first time.</p>
        <p>Ms. Montgomery; who starred in Bewitched for eight years, doubts she will ever do another TV series.</p>
        <p>It was a wonderful series and Im glad it came along udien it did, but how long can you go on playing a witch?, asks Ms. Montgomery, who received a number of Emmy nominations and international recognition</p>
        <p>(its widely qmdicated around the worid) hH'ha-paformance.</p>
        <p>But witches aside, I have no desire to do another series of any kind, she says. It would be very difficult for me to find a second Sries to equal Bewitched.</p>
        <p>And besides, its too taxing. When I do a series, thats all I have time for. Ei^t years of that kind of total involvement are enough. Theres more to life than working constantly.</p>
        <p>Making it a lot easier to pass up series offers is the fact that Liz owned a big chuck on Bewitched with her ex-husband, producer William Asher. And she is much in demand as a dramatic actress, as she has attracted large audiences and received Emmy nominations for her made-for-TV movies (A Case of Rape apd The Legend of Lizzi Bordoi).</p>
        <p>WhMi Bewitched ended I was rdieved to be aMe to go on to something dse, she said. Luckily I can wait for the right property to come along  something like Dark Victory  and do a movie or two a year.</p>
        <p>Fun</p>
        <p>Ragtime Looks At The Battle Of The Sexes</p>
        <p>ABC Spmtscaster Frank Gifford admitted: I have no r^rets I jriayed when I did (19S264), because we had much more fun. There were only 12 teams, 35 to a squad, 420 of us. We got to know each other, and formed some great friendships.</p>
        <p>Between the contemporary popular song I Am Woman and a heart-tugging gem entitled Give the Ballot to Mother - if Shes Good Enou^ to Have Your Baby Shes Good Enough to Vote With You, lie many turbulent years of striving on the part of this country's women.</p>
        <p>In They Said It With Music: Yankee Doodle to Ragtime, there are some long-forgotten melodies from bygone eras that serve as a reminder that the struggle for womens rights is not a phenomenon of the 1970s. There is a section of the program, airing Monday, July 4, 9 to 11 p.m. on CBS-TV, that features the suffrage, movements. Viewers will see original films of suffragettes in action and will head their militant music, as sung by Ber</p>
        <p>nadette Peters and Jean Stapleton.</p>
        <p>Competition between men and women is an ancient ritual that runs through the shifting patterns of American life. Tte battle of the sexes is sometimes light-hearted, sometimes grim. The special touches on both aspects, with songs contemporary to this counhys develop-menL both historical and emotional.</p>
        <p>There is the lace valentine romanticism of Let Me Call You Sweetheart. There is the sly pitch of I Love My Wife But, Oh, You Kid, as sung by Jason Robards; and Jean Stapletons rejoinder in I Trust My Husband Anywhere, But I Like to Stick Around. Sweet Genevieve is serenaded with</p>
        <p>candy-box sweetness, but Flip Wilson puts in a word for the unrequited with If I Dont Get You, IU Get Your Sister. Tony Randall complains, musically, I Can Dance With Everyone But My Wife. The chorus iUts My Sweethearts the Man in the Moon, a ittood that's shattered by Bernadette Peters rendition of You May Be the World to Your Mother, But Youre Only an Oilcan to Me.</p>
        <p>The battle and the beat go on. Men and women have traditionally used music as the weapon of their disdain and the messenger of their devotion. In this program there is a fascinating look at some of the songs and music that have shown us as we were and, therefore, as we are.</p>
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        <p>In honor of your 201^ Birthday, Bonanza is offering one 14-Oz. Mug of draft beer at a ^ial prk% with each steak dinner</p>
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        <p>6:00 (3N,9,11) CBS News ~</p>
        <p>Andy Bowiey Goes To Work Andy Rooney sets out to report on the American worker, (rom apple farmer to trumpet tester. (60 min) (3W,S,12)Hiq)py Days: Joanies Weird Boyfrtaid" Joanie rebels at being treated like a child and accepts a date with a nfotorcycle gang leads', but she loses some of her adventurous spirit when it comes to meeting the initiation re-</p>
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        <p>Small War Pappy is accidentally shot down by one of his own men and parachutes onto a Jhpanese-held island where he encoimters another Allied fugitive who is determined to sit out the war and tries to prevent Pappy from returning to action. (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(25) Offsbore OMhote: An examination of the likely impact of offshme oil and how various communities have dealt (and plan to deal) with social, economic, political and environmental impacts. (60 min)</p>
        <p>6:30 (3W,S,12) Uvenie and Shirley: Lonely at the Middle Shirley causes havoc at the Shots Brewery when she gets promoted and then tries to change everyones work habits, (repeat)</p>
        <p>8:57 (6,7) NBC News Update 8:56 (3N,9,11) CBS Newsbreak 9:00 (SN,9,11) ll*AS*H: A mission at a forward aid station proves potentially disastrous (or Hawkeye when, returning be wrecks Ms jeep, suffers a possible concussh, and finds himself the uninvited guest for a Korean family who cannot understand English, (repeat) (3W,5,12)ABC Summer Movie: FantaOT Island Bill BIxby and Sandra Dee. Three pet^e fly in lot a weekend at a glamourous island paradise, where for $50,000 each, they can live out thetr most com-pdUngf</p>
        <p>; fantasies, (repeat, 2 hrs)</p>
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        <p>VACATION</p>
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        <p>Alan Alda Gives Tour de Force In One-Man Show Tuesday</p>
        <p>(6.7)PoUce Woman: Once a Snitch Disguised as a prostitute. Pepper takes on the dangerous assignment of solving the slaying of a newly appointed police chief who had offended the local underworld chieftain, (repeat, 60 min) (25)Opera Ihreatre: Santa Fe Opera Singer Dtmald Gramm hosts the look at the SanU Fe Opera Company. (90 min)</p>
        <p>9:30 (l,lill) One Day At A Time: Anns dUemma over Julies burst of enthusiasm fw her first Christian project increases when the project means bringing a derelict home as a bouse guest. (Conclusion.) (repeat)</p>
        <p>10:00 (3N,9,11) Kojak: David Selby guest stars as a patrolman who dHK)ts a Hispanic youth in self-defense. (rqieat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(6.7)BestofPidiceSty: The Jar Don Meredith and Christopher Connelly. Two plainciothesmen searching for a homicide suspect accidentally slay an innocent man, then tensely await for the verdict on their mistaken deed, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>10:30 (25) A Portrait of Jamie: Artist Jamie Wyeth is interviewed in a rural Nebraska setting and reveals some of the in^lration, extisive study and detailed preparation behiixl his paintings as well as his personal reflections on his subjects.</p>
        <p>11:00 (3N,3WS,6,7,9,11) News, Weather, Sports</p>
        <p>(12)Haiy Hartman, tiary Hartman</p>
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        <p>11:30 (3N,1,11) CBS Lpte Show: More 'nian a Miracle Sophia Loren and Omar Sharif. A prince falls in love with a peasant girl, and refuses to many any of ie princesses his mother has selected for him. (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(3W,S,12)Tuesday Movie of the Week: Borsalino: Story line to be announced.</p>
        <p>(6.7)Ti0lt 9ww: With Host Rich UtUe.</p>
        <p>ALAN AU)A.ai Hawkeye in theUtG0iin(i]r6erieill*A*S^</p>
        <p> 1 an the Unes in this weeks episode OB Tuesday, Jody 5, on</p>
        <p>An unusual blend of story, format and characterization provides the talent of Alan Alda with a rare showcase on M*A*S*H, to be rebroadcast Tuesday, Juiy 5, 9 to 9:30 p.m., onCBS-TV.</p>
        <p>Aida, as the wisecracking, cynicai surgeon Hawkeye, delivers every line of English dialogue in a virtual one-man show. And the result is an Alda tour deforce.</p>
        <p>This comes about when Hawkeye wrecks his Jeep, returning from a forward aid station. Suffering a concussion, he is rescued by a Korean farm family, which does not speak English. To stay conscious, he launches a non-stop stream of consciousness monologue, one that draws on all his theatrical skills.</p>
        <p>First, hes an abolescent Hawkeye, experiencing the first pjmgs of juvenile piqipy love. Then, hes a collegiate Hawkeye, impersonating Jimmy Cagney in a campus musical. Too, Ik gives a W.C. Fieldsian demonstration of juggling.</p>
        <p>This show was difficult to do but very enjoyable, says Alda, nothing that co-producer Larry Gelbarts direction of the episode, which he co-authored.</p>
        <p>made it easier. The big problem, said Alda, was maintaining interest, and the script cleared that hurdle.</p>
        <p>It could well be that (me day Alan Alda the actor may become more famous as Alan Alda, the producer-dlrector.</p>
        <p>m</p>
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        <p>After-</p>
        <p>Sheep Not Shorn Yet</p>
        <p>The Whipperpoof songs little black sheep arent Uie only ones whove gone astray. NBCs Black Sheep strayed forcefully  from the networks faU lineup. But not for long, thanks to their leader, Bob Conrad, who led them back into the fold.</p>
        <p>When NBC axed Baa Baa Black Sheep, series star Conrad came out fighting. In the past. Ive been in series that were axed and accepted it. But when they cancelled Sheep, I didnt accqit it. Knowing how we were received across the coun-tiy, it just didnt make sense to me, Conrad said, a bit heatedly.</p>
        <p>The actor attended a nmeting of NBC executives in Bel Air, to which he had not been invited, and let out a howl of protest. The howl did not fall on deaf ears.</p>
        <p>either, because the series has now been given the green light for next season.</p>
        <p>Conrad felt the shows ratings were good, considering the fact that it was up against two hits  Happy Days and Laverne and Shirley  and his question to the networks was, What have</p>
        <p>you got to put in there that will give you a better share of the ratings?</p>
        <p>Ive been in this business half my life, and I knew we were in trouble against Happy Days. </p>
        <p>He also stated that the mail the cast member received ran third at the studio, and that it comes fromintelligent adults.</p>
        <p>Saimer Clearance Now</p>
        <p>Tuesday thru Friday Of</p>
        <p>This Week</p>
        <p>Downtown Groenvillo On The Moll</p>
        <p>1^</p>
        <p>We Have Something Hot For Yon!</p>
        <p>There Were These Two Ukranians...</p>
        <p>Stefanie Powers (The Feather and Father Gang) has just returned from her ancestral Piriand which she toured under the sponsorship of the Ossen-tynski Laboratory. Stefanie found her totir of seminars and workshops gratifying, but noted one unusual  folkway.</p>
        <p>Understandably, the entire time I was in the country I didnt hear one Pirilsh joke...however, Ukranian jokes  are very</p>
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        <p>TV-*Ttw Oaliv R*flMor, Graanvllt*. N.CSunday, July 3,1977</p>
        <p>eek s jVIovies</p>
        <p>1.1  .    .  ,  :  '  V  :  &amp;gt;          &amp;gt;   "  '</p>
        <p>McCarthy Wants New Trend</p>
        <p>Smday.JulyS U; p.m. (t&amp;gt; Time Bcdheadt From Se^: Gene Barry (19S3) Rlwbait&amp;gt;:Ray MiUand (1951)</p>
        <p>1:00 (7) Hk Proud and the Damned; Chuck Ckmnors (1973) (IDiaagtKnadi: Van HeBin (1966) 1:30 (6)B^ of the Badmen: Robert Ryan (1948)</p>
        <p>2:30 (SW) King Rat: George Segal (1965)</p>
        <p>3:00 (6) Experiment Perflous: Hedy Lamarr (1944)</p>
        <p>4:30 (5) Bridge to the Sun: CarroU Baker (1961)</p>
        <p>8:00 (6,7) Lanigans Rabbi: The Cadaver in the autter: Art Carney (1977)</p>
        <p>9:00 (3W,S,U) Skkdb; Sir Laurence Olivier, Michael Caine (1973)</p>
        <p>9:30 (6,7) The SpeU; Lee Grant, James Olson (1977)</p>
        <p>11:15 (I) Sebagtian: Dirk Bogarde, Susannah York (1968)</p>
        <p>11:30 (6,7) Bye Bye Braverman: George Segal, Jessica Walter (1968)</p>
        <p>(IDCidumbo: DoiMe Shockr^eter Falk, Martin Landau</p>
        <p>Elizabeth Montgomery, Michde Lee (1976)  r</p>
        <p>12:30 ajn. (i,9.1I).VeBdetta FW a Saint; Roger Moore, Ian Yendrey (1968)</p>
        <p>Monday, July 4 9:00 p.m. (6,7) Dark Victory;</p>
        <p>Sale</p>
        <p>Bonanza</p>
        <p>Still</p>
        <p>In</p>
        <p>Progress</p>
        <p>222EStFiHtt StTMt Downtown Groenvill* "Not For Coeds Omy</p>
        <p>Tues^y.JidyS 9:00 p.m. (3W,5,12) Fantasy Island: Bill Bixby. Sandre Dee (1977)</p>
        <p>11:30 (3N,9,ll) More Than a tfirade:</p>
        <p>Sophia Loren, Omar Sharif (1968) (3W,5,12)Borsalino</p>
        <p>Wednesday, July 6 9:00 pjn. (3N,9,U) The Secret Of Santa Vlttoria: Anthony (}uinn, Anna Magnani (1969)</p>
        <p>(6) Streets of San Francisco: Karl Malden, Michael Douglas (1972)</p>
        <p>(7)Smokey: Fess Parker, Diana Hyland (1966)</p>
        <p>11:30 (3N,9,11) Riot: Jim Brown, Gene Hackman (1969)</p>
        <p>12:30 a.m. (3W,5,12) Song of the Si*:-cutxisdOTS)</p>
        <p>Thursday, July 7 9:00 p.m. (6,7) FareweU to Mao-^ zanar: Yuki Shimoda, Nohu Me-earthy (1976),</p>
        <p>(UlThe Long Sh^is; Richard Wid-mark, Sidney Poitier (1964)</p>
        <p>12:30 a.m. (3N,9,11) The Fiction Makers: Roger Moore, Sylvia Sims (1967)</p>
        <p>Friday, July 8 8:00 p.m: (3N,9,ll) Bij Gregory Peck, Chari (1958)</p>
        <p>(3W,5,12)H1^ Risk: Victor Buono, Ronne Troup (1976)</p>
        <p>9:30 (3W,5,12) The DouWe Coo: Kiel Martin, Mel Stewart (1973)</p>
        <p>12:00 a.m. (9) Generathm: David Janssen, Kim Darby (1969)</p>
        <p>(11)Way Way Out: Jerry Lewis, Connie Steveis (1966)</p>
        <p>(12)Counterflet Killer: Jack Lord, Shiriey Knight (1968)</p>
        <p>12:30 (JW) She Walts: Patty Duke, David McCallum (1972)</p>
        <p>Saturday, July 9 2:30 p.m. (3W) Walk Don't Bun: Cary Grnt(1966)</p>
        <p>9:00 (6,7) Never Give an Inch: Henry Fonda, Paul Newman (1971)</p>
        <p>11:30 (6) Eklge of Darkness: Errol Flyim, Anne Sheridan (1943) (ll)The Blue Max: George Pep-pard, Ursula Andress (1966) (UlThe Executioner: George Pcp-pard,JoanCoUins(1970)</p>
        <p>2:00 a.m. (12) Assignment K: Stephen Boyd, Michael Redgrave (1968)</p>
        <p>Sure Loser</p>
        <p>Animals Animals Animals has had a flop  a frog named ,Lester. While filming a segment for the (diUdrens series, the crew entered the frog in the annual Calaveras County, Calif., jumjHiff. When Lester was  ped on the launch pad he over and played dead. Ho .  ,</p>
        <p>on the tWrd try he did manage a half-hearted hop. To add insult to injury, the series Executive Producer and writer is another Lester... last nameCo&amp;lt;^)'.</p>
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        <p>HOUR f* DISPAIR-4C0 and Mlsa WakatsnU (YnU Shbnoda, 1^ and Nobu McCarthy) sit d^ectedly on the front steps of their CalifiHida home awaiting word on whether they and flieir family wUi be sent to World War n detention camps, in Farewtl to Manzanar, on NBC Thursday Night Movie, July 7 (9-11 p.m.) on NBC-TV.</p>
        <p>His Diets Success</p>
        <p>If you put a paisley shawl over the Matterhorn, its going to look like a paisley shawl over the Matterhorn, says Victor Buono.</p>
        <p>Of course I dont mind talking about my weight. 1 cant very well hide it, adds the actor, who is starring in High Risk, the first attraction on The ABC Friday Night Movie Double Feature July 8. (High Risk airs from 8 to 9:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>The 38-year-old Buono tips the scales at 300 pounds, but has been as high as 350.</p>
        <p>I have physical examinations at regular intervals and my doctors go away mumbling to themselves at how healthy I am, Victor states.</p>
        <p>I can thinlp^ and I can act thin. I supppe rve something in common A1 Hirt, Francis Sullivan and Sebfwian Cabot. Sebbie is a good friend of mine, and quite often Im asked for autographs from people who think Im him. I tdl them there are about two feet and 100 pounds difference.</p>
        <p>VictfflT says his wei^t is neither a hdp nor a hindrance to his career; Why should it be? There are fat everything - good 0iys, cowboys and Indians.</p>
        <p>I do all the talk shows, he says, I have an open-end invitation on The Toni^it Show. I like to keep my face before the public. Its like having a publicity man without paying for one.</p>
        <p>Victor also has two one-man shows with which he visits about 50 colleges a year. He does the shows in the evenings and then stay over a day, holding seminars for the studaits.</p>
        <p>Its actually learning for me under the guise of teaching.</p>
        <p>I have to keq) on the move. If it sit around I might get fat.</p>
        <p>Aussies Food Of Fish</p>
        <p>Abe Vigoda, star of Fish, is now on his first visit to Australia  as an official gi^ of the government. According to the tall, lanky actor whose shows Barney Miller and Fish are smash hits down-under, his Aussie stay will be a one-day-on (promoting the U.S. series), one-clay-off proposition. Hes looking forward to the visit, and is contemplating a side^rip to exotic Bali.</p>
        <p>Nobu McCarthy has nothing against Marlon Brando. She thinks hes a fine actor. But not as an Asian.</p>
        <p>Brando played an Asian in Teahouse of the August Moon. Alec Guinness played an Asian in A Majority of One. And Shirley MacLaine was a Geisha rl in one fUm. Those Chariie Oians in the old movies werent Asian either.</p>
        <p>I have high hopes that the time has now come that Asian actors will play Asian characters, says Nobu, who co-starred with Jerry Lewis (who had the title role) in Geisha Boy some 20 years ago when she first arrived in this country-from her native Japan.</p>
        <p>And I dont just mean Geisha girls and gardeners, she says firmly. Asians are next-door neighbors and secretaries and housewives. Id like to see more  of them d^icted as such in films and on TV.</p>
        <p>Nobu portrays the matriarch of a Japanese-American family in Farewell to Manzanar, an NBC World Premiere movie to be rebroadcast on NBC Thursday Ni^it at the Movies July 7,</p>
        <p>9 to 11 p.m., on NBC-TV.</p>
        <p>As far as I know, never before Manzanar have so many Asian actors been used in an American film, Nobu says. Im just luring its the start of a whole new trend for Asian actors.</p>
        <p>The drama is about the bitterness and sorrow experienced by more than 110,000 Japanese-Americans interned in detention camps at the start of World War II.</p>
        <p>Nobu herself was sent to a camp to northern Japan during the war. They sent the children there to keep them safe, she says. But there was never enough food and we constantly froze. The American camps had</p>
        <p>to have been more pleasant.</p>
        <p>Tlie true story of the Wakat-sukis of Santa Monica, Calif., is told by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, who was 7 years old when she and her family are taken by bus 250 mfles to Camp Manzanar, near the High Sierra.</p>
        <p>Two-thirds of the evacuees were native-born American citizens, but were still ccm-sidered dangerous to the war effort. The film examines the bitter sense of exile, betrayal, and shame felt by thousands.</p>
        <p>John Korty (The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman) produced and directed from a script he wrote with Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston and her husband, James D. Houston, based on a book by the Houstons.</p>
        <p>Janssen Stars In Generation</p>
        <p>David Janssen stars as a father who finds himself up against the generation gap when he discovers his dau^ter and son-in-law are planning to buck the establishment and have their baby in their own way, in Generation, to be rebroadcast as The CBS Late Movie, Friday, July 8, 11:30 p.m., on CBS-TV. Also starring are Kim Darby and Carl Reiner.</p>
        <p>Walter and Doris are married, but establishing a happily-ever-after is a struggle. Doris finds herself facing her fathers frantic objections to the couples intention to deliver the child they are expecting by themselves. Jim Bolton, Doris dad, tries to enlist aid and advice from anyone he feels will convince the young pair that their antiestablishment attitudes in this case are extreme and even dangerous.</p>
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        <p>8:00 (3N,9,U) Good Times: J.J. becomes an instant cdebrity after winning a local art show, but fame proves to be expensive when a shady poiitician wants J.J. to cam-palpi for him. (repeat) (3W,5,12)Best of Donny and Marie: GuesU tonight are Don Knotts, The Osmond Brothers, the Ice Vanities and Michael Landon. (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(6,7)Ufe and Times of Grizzly Adams: Howdy-do, Im Mad Jack Grizzly Adams believes that his friend. Mad Jack, has drowned and in flashbacks  recalls the details of their meeting and their</p>
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        <p>6:57 (8,7) NBC News Update 6:58 (3N,,11) CBS Newtoeak 6:60 (3N,,11) CBS Wednesday Ni^ Movie: The Secret of SanU Vlt-toria Anthony ()uinn and Anna Magnani. Santa Vittorio is a mountain village in Northern Italy where the only thing that really matters is the annual grape harvest and the battllngs of its luscious vino. In the late days of WW n, the town fool   and mayor  learns that the Germans are coming to confiscate Santa Vittorlas most precious possession; its 1,183,611 bottles of wine. (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(3W,5,12)Baretta: Cant Win lor Losin When a discouraged man, troubled by his sons drug addiction, is mistakenly accused of killing a hated pusher, the neighborhood applaudes him, and he decides his new reputation is worth going to prison, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(8)Wednesday Night Movie:</p>
        <p>Streets of San Francisco Karl Malden and Michael Douglas. Detectives Keller and Stone piece together the last days in life of a young woman. (2hrs) (7)Wednesday Night Movie; Smokey Fess Parker and Diana Hyland. Story about a horse named Smokey and the events, both good and bad, which befall the animal. (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(25)Great Performances: Dance in America The Martha Graham</p>
        <p>Dance Company performs a variety of works with &amp;lt;</p>
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        <p>In *Santa Vittoria*</p>
        <p>vided by Ms. Graham. (90 min) W,5D</p>
        <p>9:58 (3W,S12) ABC Newitirief 18:00 (3W,5,12) Chariies Angles:</p>
        <p>The Big Tap Our Sabrina, JUl, KeUy and Bosley puU off a series of cons to trap a clever compulsive gambler wiiose habit is supported by his criminal activities, (repeat, 60 min)  </p>
        <p>10:30 (25) S09 Off</p>
        <p>11:00 (3N,3W,5,8,7,9,11) New*, Weather, Sports</p>
        <p>(U)Mary Hartman, Biary Hartman 11:30 (3N,9,11) CBS Late Slow;</p>
        <p>Riot Jim Brown and Gene Hackmaa During the absence bf the warden of a stale penitentiary, a convict irritates a prison guard and is taken to the isolation block, where he reluctantly becomes involved in a riot, (repeat, 2 hrs) (3W,5,l2)nie Rookies; The Code Five Affair Chris Ovrens falls for a beautiful girl planted by a big time during dealer to ^ther information on the location of a million dollars worth of heroin cj-fiscated by Chris in a narcotics bust, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(6,7)Tonigbt Show: With host Joan Rivers.</p>
        <p>12:30 (3W,5,12) Ifystory of theWeek:</p>
        <p>Song of the Succubus The leader of a rock group is haunted by a musical star who committ^ suicide around the turn of the century, (repeat, 90 min)  h</p>
        <p>early days together, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(25)Nova; The Hot Blooded Dinosaurs The science documentary examines a new theory that dinosaurs may have been warm blooded animals. (60 min)</p>
        <p>6:30 (3NA11) Marilyn HcCoo and Billy Davis, Jr. Show: Story line to be announced.</p>
        <p>He Wont Look Back</p>
        <p>Despite the fact that he has been in four television series. Bill Bixby has not one photograph, newspaper clipping or film to remind him of them.</p>
        <p>Bixby, who stars with Barbara Feldon in The Natural Look on Comedy Time Wednesday, July 6 (9:30 to 10 p.m., on NBC-TV), was either the star or a co-star of four series, The Joey Bishop Show, My Favorite Martian,  The Courtship of Eddies Father" and The Magician. Prior to that he had a recurring role on The Danny Thomas Show as the grocery boy.</p>
        <p>503 E. Third St. 752-3311</p>
        <p>When asked whether his son Christ^her, 3, will be told about his years in television, Bixby answered, I'm not trying to hide the past. I love it. It's just that I dont want to be one of those achHs who looks back and reflects on what hes done to the degree that he lives in the past.</p>
        <p>My son majt see reruns of some of the series and Im sure his grandmother has clippings and photos, but I decided before he was even bom that things were not important to me. I look toward the ftiture and work hard inthepresrat.</p>
        <p>The Natural Look, a comedy about marriage, concerns Reedy Harrison, a very indqien-dent and liberated woman who is an executive with a cosmetic firm. Her work is demanding, but not as demanding as her new husband, pediatrician Bud Harrison.</p>
        <p>At work, her associates are The Countess, owner of Contessa ToUertries, and Edna, her secretary. At home, besides Bud, she must relate to Jane, Buds former girlfriend, and her date, Arthur.</p>
        <p>Ms. Feldon stars as Reedy and Bixby is her husband. Bud. Brenda Forbes plays the Countress, Sandy Sprung is Edna. Caren Kaye and Michael MacRae are cast as Jane and Arthur.</p>
        <p>Anthony Quinn, Anna Magnani and Vimi Lisl star in the televisan premiere of The Secret of Santa Vlcttorla, Stanley Dramers production of Robert Crichtons best-selling novel, on The CBS Wednesday Night Movies, July 6,9 to 11:15 p.m., on CBS-TV. Also starring are Hardy Kruger, Sergio Franchi and Giancario Gianninl.</p>
        <p>Santa Vittoria is a mountain village in northern Italy where the only thing that really matters is the annual grape harvest and the bottling of its luscious, vino. In the late days of World War II, Italo Bombolini (Quinn), the town fool and mayor  learns thatj.the Germans are coming to confiscate Santa Vittorias most precious possession; its 1,184,611 bottles of wine.</p>
        <p>Vittoria, airing fw the first time i teievlsion as The C33S Wednesday Night Movie, July 6 (9-11; 15 p.m.) on CBS-TV.</p>
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        <p>series, Lou Grant, premiere-on CBS-TV, met 175</p>
        <p>ing this fall on members of the fshion press from all over the country in Spring Lake, N.J.</p>
        <p>Lou Grant will be seen Tuesdays, 10 to 11 p.m.</p>
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        <p>The editors met the four-time diet and daily jogging. Emmy Award winner at the *-------  </p>
        <p>Mens Fashion Association Fall-Winter Prss Preview.</p>
        <p>At the preview, the fashion press got a chance to see a slightly new Ed Asner  one who is more than 25 pounds lifter than before, a feat accomplished by a high protein</p>
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        <p>Jim Brown and Gene Hackman star in Riot, a prison film which will be rebroadcast as The CBS Late Show, Wednesday, July 6, at 11:30 p.m., Ml CBS-TV.</p>
        <p>Filmed on location in Arizona State Prison, Riot also stars Mike Kellin, Gerald S. OLoughlin, Ben Carruthers, aifford David and actual inmates of the prison.</p>
        <p>In Riot, 35 of the toughest cons in the prison, led by Red Fletcher (Gene Hackman), take over part of the institution with</p>
        <p>Cully Briston (Jim Brown) becoming part of the riot against his will.</p>
        <p>With eight guards held as hostages  one has been released after suffering a heart attack  the desperate cons^lm an</p>
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        <p>ting as protector of the hostages and helping to draw up a list of the prisoner grievances.</p>
        <p>Fights begin to break out</p>
        <p>Asners new figure was displayed to the press in a slide show featuring the actor in clothes picked out for him by various designers.</p>
        <p>In his new series, Asner continues the character of Lou Grant that was conceived on The Mary Tyjer Moore Show. But instead of being a news director for a television station. Grant now rules the roost as city editor of a Los Ani  newspaper. The City</p>
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        <p>' (3S)HacNeiH,diirRepert 6:66 (SN,I,11) me Wi&amp;amp;ns: Olivia Waltons cousins arrive on Walton's McHBdain saying they have lost their farm in the dust bowl and wish to live wiOi the Walton family untO they can find '  work, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(3W,5,l2)Welcoine Back, Kotter: Whatever Happened to Arnold? On the eve of his acting debut in a school play, Arnold Rorshack disappears, only to reajpear days later with the annoimcement that he is dropping out of school to get a job and sifliport his family, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(6.7)Highlights of the Russian Dance Festival; Orson WeUes is the host for this special featuring many of the leading Soviet dancers, musiciaos, pantomimists and dance groups  170 performers in all - under the artistic direction of the world-renown choreographer Igor Moiseyev. (60 min)</p>
        <p>(2S)FirlogLlBe (60 min)</p>
        <p>8:57 (6,7) NBC News Update *S8 (3N,9,11) CBS Newsbreak 9:00 (3N,9,11) Hawaii Flved: In searching for the unidentified witness to the murder of a police officer, Steve McGarrett is unaware the youth he seeks is not only the brother of a colleague, Honolulu policewoman Sandi WeUes, but an impulsive youngster who, figuratively, is playing tag with a tiger, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(3W,5)Baraey Miller: The Hero Chano becomes depressed after shooting two bank robbers and Barneys wife, Elizabeth, makes a citizen arrest of an eight-year-old. (repeat)</p>
        <p>(6.7)NBC Thursday Night Movie: Farewell to Manzanar Yuki</p>
        <p>Shimoda and Nobu McCarthy. Thie' story of exile, betrayal and shame arising from the uprooting during WW n (d a Japanese-American family fnmi a pleasant life In Santa Monica, Calif., and their subse-ipient internment at Camp Manzanar, a detention center near the Sierras, (rqieat, 3 hrs)</p>
        <p>(UlSuBHMr anema: The Loim Ships Richard WIdmark and Sidney Poitier. Stmy about a brave Viking and his search for a golden bell, opposed lyy villainous Moors. (2hrs)</p>
        <p>(3S)AeofUKertainty: Tbe Mandarin Revoiutioo John Kenneth Galbraith recalls the Great Depression and how John Maynard Keynes new ideas ovei^ turned tbe rules of classical capitalism. (60 min)</p>
        <p>9:36 (SW,5) Flab; The Car" Mike borrows Det. Fishs car for a joyride and ends iqi in jail when Fish insists he be treated like any other law-breaker.</p>
        <p>9:56 (3W,S) ABC Newsbrief 16:00 (3N,9,U) Baruto Jones: Diving lor a rqiorted hiorical And a ^&amp;gt;anisb galleon sunk hundreds of years ago - causes the death of an experienced scuba diver and arouses tbe suspicions of other members of his club, who hire Bar-naby to determine if tbe fatality was accidental, (rqieat, 60 min) (3W,S)We8tsidelieiSeaI; The Mermaid Dr. Phil Parker finds himself embroiled in international politics when he refuses to discharge a seriously injured East Eunqiean swimming star from the hospital at the request of her government. (60 min)</p>
        <p>(35)At the T^: Pianist Oscar Peterson and guitarist Joe Pass team up for an exciting performance of both solo and duo jazz team. (60 min) 11:60 (3N,3W,6,6,7,9,11) News, WeMher, Spurts</p>
        <p>(U)Maty Hartanan, Maiy Hartman (35)Si0iOff</p>
        <p>11:30 (3N,9,11) CBS Presents Kojak:</p>
        <p>A Very Deadly Game Kojak Is determined to nab a narcotics dealer who has killed a policeman but the FBI withholds vital information from him so that they can nab him first, (repeat, 60 min) (3W,5,13)S.W.A.T.: Coven of Killers An escaped mass murderer reunites his followers to plan the execution of all parties responsible for his conviction, including S.W.A.T. team leader Hondo Harrelson. (repeat, 60 min) (6,7)Ton^iit Show: Host and guests to be announced.</p>
        <p>12:30 (3N,9,11) CBS Late Show: Tbe Fiction Makers Roger Moore and Sylvia Sims. A world of fiction</p>
        <p>GIVE THEM A WHIR  Two members of the Ukrainian De OiiiqMiiy are whirled annd by Uidr (Dnmes cliir^ Hi^iU^its (d Uk Russian Dance Eestlval, the qieclal to be cohnast on Thursday, July 7 (M p.m.) on NBC-TV.</p>
        <p>Russian Dance Spotlighted</p>
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        <p>The (piicksilver Sword Dance, knee-stretching kozatshy and graceful Khorovod dance (utilizing colorful shawls) are among the eyeeatcfaing seipiences In (HighliiSits of the Russian ^Dance Festival, Uie special to be presented lliursday, July 7,8 to 9 p.m., mi NBC-TV.</p>
        <p>The program, with Orson Welles as on-camera narrator and hosL was taped in Las Vegas, one of the stops on a na-timiwide tour by the Festival of Music and Dance of the Soviet Union, with noted choreographer Igor Moiseyev as artistic director. The entertainers will be performing together for the first time on U.S. television. The telecast was produced and directed by Emmy Award winner Mike Garguilo.</p>
        <p>comes to life for the Saint when he is mistaken for the author of farfetched thrillers, (repeat, 2hrs) (3W,5,12)nHirsday Nl^t ^tecial: The Columbia Pictures 50th Anniversary Special This show craters on tbe triumphs and stars of Columbia Pictures, (repeat, 90 min)</p>
        <p>Members of the Georgian Dance Company the show with a performance of the Sword Dance (using real swords.) In a quick change of pace, the Joy dance (about a girl dancing for her boyfriend) is offered by one of the artists from the Tadzhik RqNiblic. The Piatnltsky Folk Choir and dancers present a happy number, Timoniya, Mowed by the shawl dance of the Piatnltsky groiq).</p>
        <p>Pantomimists Natalia and Oleg Kiriushkin use only one prop, a balloon, to teU their story. The Ukranian Dance Company offers a Gopak number (which includes the kozatsky dance) and a segment about tipsy Cossacks; the Georgians return for a Wedding Dance. There are also performances by the Komuzisty Chamber Ensemble and Eskimos of the Mengo Ensemble of Northern Peoples.</p>
        <p>Highlights of the Russian Dance Festival is a United Euram Presentation in association with Gosconcert, Moscow, U.S.S.R.</p>
        <p>Its Columbias 50th</p>
        <p>Frank Capra, Ernest Borgnine, Glenn Ford, Sidney Poitier, Rosalind Russell, Phil Silver and Orson Welles are among the motion picture luminaries who will pay tribute to one of Hollywoods major film studios in The (tolumbia Pictures 50th Anniversary Special, the Thfibday Night Special to be rebroadcast July 7, at 12:30 a.m. on ABC-TV.</p>
        <p>Scenes from some 50 outstanding fllms produced by Columbia since its founding will be among tbe highli^ts of the program. The films include Oscar-winning It Happened One Ni^t (1934), You Cant Take It With You (1938), All the Kings Men (1949) and From Ho to Eternity (19S3).</p>
        <p>Excerpts from recent rdeases will include such pictures as Shampoo and Funny Lady.</p>
        <p>Orson Wdles, making an in-freipient television iq)pearance, will open the program, set the</p>
        <p>theme for the studios retrospective, and recall Columbias legendary founder, the late Harry Cohn.</p>
        <p>Other film stars will introduce the various segments of the show and offer personal reminiscences of the studio through tbe years. Portions of the program Were taped at Smithem California areas (mce used as location sites by Columbia.</p>
        <p>It Takes lime</p>
        <p>On a recent segment of The Tonight Show, host'Johnny Carson said; Fifty years ago UiKtt&amp;gt;ergh flew the Atlantic... I think It was about 33 and (e half hours...About the same time it takes to get your hi^ge today.</p>
        <p>Pikes Peeks</p>
        <p>By Charlie Pike, TV Showtime staff writer. HOLLYWOOD  Fred Silverman, the head man at ABC, has reportedly said that he wouldnt allow Farrah Fawcett-Majors back on Charlies Angels if she begged him. Of course, meanwhile, Spelling-Goldberg Productions, producers of the show, are suing Farrah to try to get her back on the series. Thus, it seems that Farrah is going to come out the loser no matter what happens in the weejis and months to come.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, Lee Majors and his wife left Hollywood for Copenhagen, Paris and other parts unknown for what insiders say is a second honeymoon. They dont seem the least bit concerned about the legal ramifications they might face. However, just when it was reported that Lee had agreed to return to The $6 Million Man, Universal Studios announced that its holding screen tests for a new Steve Austin.</p>
        <p>Eric Scott has spent his entire career on The Waltons more or less in the shadow of Richard Thomas. Now, however, with Richards departure from the series, Eric will be more iqpfront in the shows scripts. Away from the camera, Erk is already one of the wisest young businessman youU meet. Five years ago he bot^t a couple of parcels of land in the mountains north of Hollywood  80 miles north to be exact  and his plans are to move into his new home being built on one of th^ parcels before Christmas. Hell commute while working on the . show.</p>
        <p>Shaun Cassidy of The Hardy Boys finds his new record, Doo Ron Ron, in the top 10 record hits througiiout the country. He and his single are so popular, in fact, that the record went from 34th place on Billboard magazines chart to eight in just one week. Wont tbe aforementioned Mr. Silverman take notice of Shauns popularity and move the series to a more favorable timeslot? It is a good show for the market its geared for, so dont be surprised to hear about a time change at least by mid-season.</p>
        <p>Deidre Hall, Marlena Evans of Days of Our Uves, will be joined by her twin sister, Ann, starring this month on the daytime soap. Anns never worked as an actress in her life  shes a school teacher In Florida  but she came across favorably in her screen test and will be portraying Deidres twin sister on the serial, Samantha.</p>
        <p>Drama Encores</p>
        <p>The bitter experiences of one family among more than 110,000 Japanese-Americans interned in detention camps early in World War II is dramatized in the highly acclaimed, award-winning NBC World Premiere drama, Farewell To Manzanar, to be repeated on NBC Thursday Night at the Movies July 7,9 to 11 p.m., on NBC-TV.</p>
        <p>liie drama has been honored with a Christopher Award, a Humanitas Prize, a Gabriel Award and the Gold Hugo of the Chicago International Film Festival.</p>
        <p>Among the critical regxHise: It is both a heartbreaki , and a heartwarming story...toh with honesty and simplicity Arthur Unger, The Christian Science Monitor.</p>
        <p>...A Story that needs to be told, and this NBC drama does a splendid ob of telling it Ann Hodges, Houston Chronicle.</p>
        <p>The true story of the Wakat-</p>
        <p>sukis of Santa Monica, Calif., is told by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston.</p>
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        <p>l:M &amp;lt;3N,9,U) CBS Friday Night Movie: The Big Country Gregory Peck and Chariton Heston. Wiiliam Wjiers action-adventure western revoives around the pampered daughter of a prominent rancher and the genteei Baltimorean who arrives in San Rafael, Texas to marry her. (3 brs, 30min)</p>
        <p>(3W,S,U)ABC Friday Double Feature Movie: Hi^ Risk Victor Buono star in a tale of derring-do of ^ former circus performers in a caper to carry off a priceless artifact from an embassy in Washington, D.C. in broad daylight, (repeat, 90 mln) (6,7)Sm{at&amp;lt;d and Sou: Reverend Sanford Thinking that he can get some tax rdiet, Fred gets himself ordained in the Divine Prophet Church, but when the bishop arrives and tries to collect bis 50 percent, Fred stars his own reli^. (r^t)</p>
        <p>(Smasbfaigh Week in Review 8:30 (1,7) Chico and the Man: In Your Hat When Ed Browns Lucky hat is stolen and he refuses to entw a hospital (or a hernia operation without it, Chico goes to great lengths to get it back, (repeat)</p>
        <p>(35)WaB Street Week 8:S7 (8,7) NBC News Update 8:58 (3N,9,U) CBS Newsbreak</p>
        <p>9:09 (8,7) ()uincy: Snake Eyes The mysterious deaths of several guests at a resort hotel where (}uio-cy is attending a pathologists con-ventioa, involves the m^al examiner in a desperate effort to prevent the story from leaking out and causingpanic. (repeat, 2hrs) (B)Bernstein-New York Fhilhar-monic in Ldodon (repeat, 00 min) 9:38 (3W,S,U) ABC Newbrief 9:30 (3W,S,U) ABC Friday DoUble Feature Movie: The Double Con Kiel Martin and Mel Stewart. The adventure of two amiable con men, Mje Wack, one half-black who looks white. (90 min)</p>
        <p>10:00 (25) Upstairs, Downstairs: Wanted, A Good Home When Virginia's son goes away to boarding school, her dau^ter acquires both a pu^y and a governess, resulting in a major domestic upset. (60 min)</p>
        <p>11:00 (3W,S,8,7) News, Weather, Sports</p>
        <p>Gregory Peck and CSiarlton Heston star, with Jean Simmons, Carroll Baker and Burl Ives, in The Big Country, William Wyler^s action-adventure western, to be broadcast as a aiecial presentation of The CBS Friday Night Movies, July 8,8 to 11:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>James McKay, a Baltimorean, iRaf </p>
        <p>arrives in San Rafael, Texas, to marry Pat Terrill, the pampered daughter of prominent rancher Major Henry TerrUl. With his genteel manner and Eastern clothes, McKay is immediately branded in a long-standing feud betweai Terrill and another rancher, Rufus Hannassey, over water rights. McKays problems are compounded by his bitter</p>
        <p>(l2)Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman iBIack Perspective</p>
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        <p>McMahon</p>
        <p>11:30 (3N,9,ll) News, Weather, Sports</p>
        <p>(3W,5)Baitta: The Big Hands on Trouble Down but not out with a mammoth head cold, Tony tries to help an immigrant who is too honest to accept the fact that he has to pay protection to operate his business, (repeat, 60 min) (0,7)Toni(8it Show: With host DeUa</p>
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        <p>12:00 (3N) Late Ifovie: TiUe to be announced.</p>
        <p>(9)CBS Late Show: Generation David Janssen and Kim Darby, The story tells of a father who most (xmfront the generation gap when his daughter and son-in-law announce theyre going to have thelr baby delivered their own way  at home, (repeat, 2hrs)</p>
        <p>(IDFriday Late Movler Way Way Out Jerry Lewis and Connie Stevens. Plot concerns comedians trip to the moon with sexy astronaut.</p>
        <p>(12) Friday FUck: Counterfeit Killer Jack Lord and Shirley Knight. Story about an undercover agent after counterfiet cash.</p>
        <p>12:30 (3W) Chamid 3W Late Movie: She Waits Patty Duke and David</p>
        <p>Speaks Out</p>
        <p>Being a good second banana is more than just being there. You have to work at it.</p>
        <p>On a show like ours, its important not to step on Johnnys lines or on anyone elses who is</p>
        <p>McCailum. Story about a mother-in-law warning that evil spirits are lurking about the family mansion. (S)nieFBI(OOmin)</p>
        <p>1:00 (7) Midnight Special: Guests tonight art Paul Anka, Barry Manilow, Richard Pryor, Mac Davis, Neil Young, Janis Ian, NeU Sedaka and the Captain and Ten-nille. (90 min)</p>
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        <p>relationship with Steve Leech, Terrills foreman, and his unexpected attraction to Julie Maragon, the towns schoolmarm and owner of a crucial piece of land.</p>
        <p>Gregory Peck stars as James McKay, and (Siariton Heshm is Steve Leech. Jean Simmons stars as Julie Maragon, and Carroll Baker is cast as Pat Terrill. Bull Ives, Rufus Hannassey: Charles Bickford, Major Henry TerrUl; C3iuck Connors, Buck Hannassey, and Alfonso Bedoya is Ramon.</p>
        <p> The Big Country was written by James R. Webb, Sy Bartlett and Robert WUder; pro- --duced by WUliam Wyler and " Peck, and directed by Wyler for 1958 United Artists release.</p>
        <p>Webb was a former magazine fiction writer who turned to scripting for Roy Rogers then later worked on major pictures, including many westerns. He subsequently vron an Oscar for How the West Was Won.</p>
        <p>STAR IN WESTERN WlAMAGregory Peck, as James McKay, and Jean Simmons, as Julie Maragon, are romantically interested in each other, but find the many problems stand In their way, in The Big Country, a western drama to be colorcast on tte CBS Friday Night Movie, July 8 (8-11:30 p.m.) on CBS-TV.</p>
        <p>Holocaust Will</p>
        <p>1 listen. 1 kiww when to say something and when not to. Tim-</p>
        <p> it Is how Ed McMahon</p>
        <p>sums up his job on The Tonight Show Starring J*nny Carson. McMahon, along with Johnny and Doc Severinsen, is in his 15th year on the popular late-night program.</p>
        <p>Show Atrocities</p>
        <p>Holocaust, an original dramatization of one of the most monstrous crimes the world has ever witnessed  the murder of six mUlion Jews by the Nazis  wUl be presoited as an eight-hour dramatic event on NBC-TV during the 1977-78 season.</p>
        <p>The eight hours will be presented in four parts and wUl cover the decade between 1935 and 1945 when the numbing atrocities occurred. Distinguished American novelist Gerald Green has writti the original story and screenplay. It wUl be fUmed entirely on location in Europe and wUl have ISO ^leaking parts.</p>
        <p>Holocaust will be the saga of a gentle and compassionate physician and his family, all of whom are in differrait ways buffeted by the fury/of Nazi bestiality that was unleashed upon the Jews. Paralleling the tragedy of this family is the story of an ambitious young German lawyer w1h&amp;gt;, prodded by his even more ambitious wife, joins the SS and becomes an aide to the chief planner of the annihilation of the Jews.</p>
        <p>There is a curious, tenuous relationship between the two families. Years earlier the lawyer and his parents were patients of the doctor who treated them with the same kindness he bestowed on all his patients. Now, the Nazi technician of</p>
        <p>death finds himself involved in the systematic annlhUation of these innocent people  and six million others.</p>
        <p>The eight hours will cover the years from 1935, just before the enactment of the anti-Semitic Nuremberg laws, to the liberation of Auschwitz in 1945. Crucial events of the Jevridi resistance, as well as the terrible events in various concentration camps, along with scenes of diabolical plotting and conniving by the German architects of mass murders  based on actural records  will be dramatized through the eyes of the leading characters.</p>
        <p>Gerald Green said: We have particularly tried to stress the many inspiring instances of Jewish resistance to the awesome military and political forces that overwhelmed the victims. Not only the Warsaw Ghetto iqirising will be dranaatized, but lesser known incidents, such as the Jewish partisan brigades in Russia.</p>
        <p>It is our iH^ to honor not only the millions of innocent victims, but also the survivors, and those courageous Jews who refused to succomb without a fight.</p>
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        <p>"High Risk and The Double Con will air as The ABC Friday Night Movie Double Feature July 8, on ABC-TV.</p>
        <p>In High Risk (8-9:30 p.m.). six former circus performers attempt to steal a valuable mask from a foreign embassy in Washington, D.C.</p>
        <p>The Double Con (9:30 to 11 p.m.) is a fast-moving adventure tale about an amiable pair of con men and stars Kiel Martin, Md Stewart and Dallas Edward Hayes.</p>
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        <p>(5)Cwtoan Festival (IDl^omner Semester</p>
        <p>7:00 (3N) Petticoat Jimetion (3W)New Adventures &amp;lt;rfGimgao (OHot Fudge (7)A Better Way (O)Tarzan (IDBewltdKd 7:U(U)FIinlstoaes 7:30 (3N) Vision On (SW.SlAnlmals, Animals, Animals</p>
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        <p>(7)Treebouseaub (IDLetsLookAt...</p>
        <p>7:4S(l2)Teie8toiy 8:00 (3N,9,11) SjdvesterandTweety (8W,S,li)T&amp;lt;mi and Jerry-Mumidy Show</p>
        <p>Q. Who is credited with having laid out the first golf course in the United States.</p>
        <p>A. Scotsman, John Reid</p>
        <p>(0,7) Woody Woodpecker 0:90 (3N,9,U) One aid) (3W,S,U)Jald&amp;gt;erjaw</p>
        <p>(6.7)Pink Panther Laugh and One Half Hour and One HaU</p>
        <p>9:00 (3N,9,11) Bugs Bunuy-Road Rimnerlfour</p>
        <p>(SW,5,U)Scooby Doo-Dynomutt Show</p>
        <p>10:00 (3N,9,11) Tanan: Lord of the Jun^</p>
        <p>(5.7)SueedBuflEy</p>
        <p>10:30 (3N,9,lMew Adventures at Batman</p>
        <p>(3W,5,U)1tieKrofftsSupenhow</p>
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        <p>11:00 (3N,9,11) Shazam-lsis Hour</p>
        <p>(6.7)Spaee6hoet-FrankensteinJr. 11:30 (3W,S,U)Supafriends</p>
        <p>(5.7)Big John, John UrOOpju. (3NA11) Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids (3W)Suparman (S.U)OddbanGowde (C,7)LandoftheLost</p>
        <p>12:30 (3N,9,11) Ark n (3W,S,12)Amerlcan Bandstand</p>
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        <p>Help For Umpires</p>
        <p>Theres a little bit of umpire in most baseball fans...how about you?</p>
        <p>Here are a few items vriiich should be of some help to those aspirants of armchair umpiring;</p>
        <p>Its a dark, overcast day in Bostons Fenway Park and a high fly is hit to left cento. It looks like the easiest khxr of a chance until the ball cidlides with an adventuresome sea gull. The lenflelder winds up catching the ball while the centerfielder catches the stunned bird. Whats your decision?</p>
        <p>Chalk iq&amp;gt; one bruised sea gull, but the batter is not out because the ball no longer is l^ally in fli^t, and tberefore not l^ally caught. The ball remains in</p>
        <p>tof tbeoumiitomaiitbsisNBC-TVslfajorLeagDe</p>
        <p>, which airs each Saturday, begbmingat2:lSp.m.</p>
        <p>Miracles Happen</p>
        <p>Borrowing the title from his new book, My America, Your America, as the Uieme for this weeks television program, Lawroice Welk and his musical family present a merry melange of mdodies which musically spell out the maestros great interest in finding talented yixmgsters, and training them for (uvfessional careers in show bushiess.</p>
        <p>Thoee i doubt that miracles can happen will have to agree that one did happen where Wclks lovely Mexican-bom singer Anacani is concerned.</p>
        <p>In November, 1972, she and her mother visited Welks Country Club Village restaurant in Escondido, hi^ful Uiat the maestro of udiom they bad heard so much Just mi^t be visittng there.</p>
        <p>As they entered the restaurant todinner: the miracle.</p>
        <p>Lawrence Wdk was Just leaving the restaurant and their</p>
        <p>: swivelled around to look at Lawrence, and be svrivdled around for another look at the lovely apparition he saw before him.</p>
        <p>PLAZH</p>
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        <p>COIS TO MONTI CARIO</p>
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        <p>-IE ROWNCEOF PASSION AND POWER</p>
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        <p>Shows Dolly 2:W&amp;gt;-5:lia-a:W SORRY NO PASSES ACCEPTED</p>
        <p>ADMISSION ALL TIMOS - ADULTS J. - CHILD I.</p>
        <p>Michele wm TeU</p>
        <p>TO J. CAMPBELL, GREENVILLE, N.C.: Erin and Diane Murphy played the part of Tabatha Stqihens in Bewitched. The twins, recently celebrated their 13th birthday, have both been pursuing their careers since the series quit filming in 1972. Write to them c-o Jack</p>
        <p>Wormser Ajgy., Suite 414, 1717 N. Hi^iland Ave., Los Angeles, Calif90028.</p>
        <p>TO L.P. VERONA, VA.: Versatile Donny Most (Ralfrii Malph in Himpy Days) began his career at the age of 15 sin^g and dancing with a specialty review in Catoill Mt. resorts. His first TV roles came in 1973 via episodes of Room 222 and Emergpiy. A sports enthisiast, he likes wato skiing and swimming. He also eqjciys music and...you guessed it...dating. Write to him c-o Happy Days, ABC-TV, 4151 Prospect Ave Iftdlywood, Calif. 90028.</p>
        <p>TO J. WHITE, MARION, S.C.; Sylvester (Sly) StaUone is a c^ege drw-out who bummed around the world before hitting it big with Rocky, which he also wrote. Send your letter to him (^o Universal Pictures, 100 Universal City PJaza, Univosai City, Calif. 91608.</p>
        <p>TO E. THOBAS, CULPEPER, VA.:The \rtilte German ird seeingeye dog featured in the Lcmgstreet</p>
        <p>i (1971-1972) was named Pax.</p>
        <p>TO L. SUTTON, GOLDSBORO, N.C.: Seven-year-old Natasha Ryan plays Hope on "Days o Our Lives. Among her other  credits are the movies Honor Thy Father and The CM R)ort.</p>
        <p>TO S. HILL, DANVILLE, VA.: Barbara Bain and hubby Martin Landau, both in their early 40s, divided their time between England and California while filming Space; 1999. They have two daughters, Susan Meredith and Juliet Rose.</p>
        <p>(FOR ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT TV SHOWS AND PERSONALITIES, WRITE TO MICHELE, P.O. BOX, HOPEWELL, VA. 23860.)</p>
        <p>is another one...A two-out, bases-loaded drive sails over the rightfielders head and three runs are scored whUe the batter advances to third. En route, however, he (the batter) misses secimd base. Hie shortstop calls for the call, touches second and appeals to the umpire who calls the batter out lor not touching kecond. What is the ruling on runs scored?</p>
        <p>Three runs score. Although the batter is credited with a single instead of a triple, the third out on the appeal did not occur until after the three runners crossed the plate.</p>
        <p>Now, try to figure this one out...The bases are loaded and there is one out when the batter hits what looks like a sure-fire double-play ball to the sbortsh^. But the runner coming from second deliberately sto| and allows the ball to bit him. What is your ruling?</p>
        <p>Hie officii ruling is this; The runner is out for being hit by a batted ball, and because bis interference prevented the fielder from making a play, the umpire should also call the succeeding runner out. Hence, the two outs retire the side with no runs scoring.</p>
        <p>Scripts Getting Better</p>
        <p>For the past five years actress Barbara Parkins has been living in England. Now, however, she is spending most of her time in Hollywood working in TV productions. I left Hollywood because everything in both films and TV was so bad, she admitted. Just recently, though, thore has been a change. I have (kme three TV productions in a row and they have all been ex-celloit. I think the tides turning.</p>
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        <p>DEADLY SUSPENSE</p>
        <p>Outstanding performances by Sir Laurence Olivier and Michael Caine highlight "Sleuth, The ABC Sunday Night Movie of the Week to be aired July 3,9toll;55p.m.</p>
        <p>Also featured are Alec Cawtbome, Margo Channing, John Matthews and Teddy Martin.</p>
        <p>Andrew Wyke (Olivier), (me of the worlds foremost authors of mystery novels, is also a fanatic games player whose home has been ccmverted into a gallery of robots, performing d&amp;amp;s, dart boards, chess sets and mazes.</p>
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        <p>JULY NN</p>
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        <p>Sports Events</p>
        <p>Th Dally Rtfiaclor, Graanvilla, N.C.Sunday, 177Singles Air On Tennis Classic</p>
        <p>SoBdav.JulyS 7:a.m. (iDAnrtSteiits World l:pjn. (SW,S) Soutnam Sportsman 2:N (5) WMd InyfUUnal Tennis CUwric</p>
        <p>(U)lMTravtaoGoU 2:(iTUsWWklnI SiWaDFWiini (WOatdoan 3dl(3N)1tef</p>
        <p>Mmday,Jdy4 S:30 pjn. (JW4.U) ABC Mend^i NitbtBa ' ~</p>
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        <p>(IDTbeRaeen (U)GnalntftetttLeBli 4M (WAU) (^Summer Sports dDPioFsn</p>
        <p>4:3t (SW,il) World InrttaUoud Tennis Oamie iNOISonOMmSportsman I:S jn. (S) Wide WMd or Wrastl-tag</p>
        <p>3:1I(U)</p>
        <p>(umwSaeen</p>
        <p>44l(U)IenytaoGoU  _</p>
        <p>4:31 (WAU) CBS Sports Spee-  handsome</p>
        <p>Bjom Borg and Arthur Ashe will be dross the net from each otter asAthey vie for honors In tte MoiV s^ig^ifoal of the Wmid Ittvitational Tennis Clastic, to air Sund^, July 3, |6iMo4p.m.iABC-TV.</p>
        <p>Midi lias been written about SnMins tennis smsatkm BJcrn Spftt^er the past</p>
        <p>(3WA13)BrttMiOpen</p>
        <p>5:W(7)lWittii|</p>
        <p>7;M(U)Wrea0ing U:3I (t) Ifiil-Aaaattc WrestUiw (TlWorid Tenn Tends Alistar llti-</p>
        <p>dMS</p>
        <p>U;4S (3W) WMe Worldof WreatiliiW</p>
        <p>Ddsome veteran of 90 playing COTmltlvtiy since he was 13, and woo an anmtag mimher of interna-tienai $mior tounamenl, in-dwHw tte junior Wimbiedan in young Monde made his</p>
        <p>Davis Cig) debut in smashing style, winning bott his singles matches against mudi (ddo- opponents from New Zealand. By the time he was Kfcars-old, Boif was niaUng a stunning impression on the tennis worid, and hes been in the sportshradlines ever since.</p>
        <p>Ashe made his inttial trek to tte tennis courts when he was a mere 10-yearsoM Itviuin Ridi-mond, Va. The son of a Rkdi-mond policeman, Adteonly participated in Negro Tottnameiits untt 1957, and be was fimded by his father, friends md ids coach. Dr. R.W. Johnson, ttroufdi 1964,</p>
        <p>Title Bout R ematch Packs A Punch</p>
        <p>Argentinas Carlos Monzon will meet Columbias Rodri^ Valdes in Monte Carlo in a rematch of last years title hout on the CBS Sports Spectacular Saturday, July 9, at 4:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Last years bout was billed as tte richest and most historic middleweight clash ever htid on the continent. Adding to the hype was the World Boxing Councils action of stripping Monzon of its version of the middlewei^t title for allegedly ignoring its dictates and subseqiKntly crowned Valdes. That left Monzon the King of the Worid Boxing Association and Valdes the Monarch of the WBC.</p>
        <p>Week Of July 4th</p>
        <p>We Would Like To Wish Everyone A Safe &amp;amp; Happy July 4th Holiday,</p>
        <p>BOYD'S</p>
        <p>0. Evans St.</p>
        <p>The most unusual factor surrounding this fistic ^lectacular was that it lived iq&amp;gt; to its billing.</p>
        <p>Monzon, 33, had not lost a fi^t in nearly twelve years with an amazing 80 straight victories in all. For Valdes, 29, the reond was 26 consecutive wins over the last six years.</p>
        <p>There was no missing Mon-zons arrival in Monte Cario. When his caravan arrived at the Hermitage Hotel, he spilled oig in a radiant white ensemble with blonde actress Susanna Gimenez, his co-star in the Argentina film La Mary, and with 48 pieces of luggage.</p>
        <p>Over at the new Loews Monte Cario, a kind of seaside Caesars Palace, Valdes strolled the loWqr in his blue sweat suit, jerking slot machines and mixing with guests. He talked of his childhood and how  at 16  after months of boxing bare-knuckled &amp;lt;m the beach, he ac-ctpted a challenge to fight in a carnival for seven pesos.</p>
        <p>Just foiff days prior to the fiit, he received word that his youn^ brother had been killed (a stab wound in the heart) in a fight in Columbia. Grief Rodrigo wept and fra: two days. On tte eve of the ^t, his manager Gil Clancy said: Hes in great shape physically, but psychoiogMybe'sburt.</p>
        <p>As fr Monzcui, his handlers were concerned that he was fed-ing too good. Susanna Gimenez, they sa^ was enough to distract any man.</p>
        <p>Piimer New YsekYiBltoeataBd^wttiwrtitBp,Tony Ktibekpw-viH viewenwittadaaer look at major leagiKbaiMiiil, as one ofNB(&amp;gt;TVsmostastulecdiQmentators.</p>
        <p>Sports Shorts</p>
        <p>PhUadtiphia 76ers Moyd Free was asked whether he was nervous during a National Basketball Association playoff game.</p>
        <p>TMO  ram^OLA MTTUNO COMVANV OF RaeNviu.i. tuc MCKINWN AVONUC. MeeHVILU, NOATH CAKOUMA  AFFOIHIMa</p>
        <p>ms</p>
        <p>Free, a native New Yorker, quipped: Im from New Ych*. Otter than riding those subways at ni^t, do New Yorkers ever get nervous?</p>
        <p>The legendary auto racing champion, Mario Andretti, revealed: I admire versatility more than any single skill in racing. I always wanted to be an all-around driver, a man who can handle any kind of equipment on any surface.</p>
        <p>Tennis pro Vitas Gerulaitis has often heard his name mispronounced. Everyone thinks my name is Jerry Laitis, and th^ call me Mr. Laitis.' What cn you do when you have a name that sounds like a disease?</p>
        <p>Anson Digs Countiy</p>
        <p>Although Anson WiHiams is known for pm and ballad singing he rrlly likes cnmtry music. One of the great thrills of his care-came be invited to ting with tte Gnuld Ole</p>
        <p>opiy   *</p>
        <p>when promoters finally realized his full potential.</p>
        <p>He saUed throi# the 1969 Wimbledon Championships until he came facett-face with Rod Laver in the semi-finals. Then, like so maqy otter fine players before Um, be fdl, and Law beat him in tour s^.</p>
        <p>He subsequently tipied with the WCT BWB in 1970, and became the first American to top $100,000 for a yeiors earnings in 1972.</p>
        <p>Although hes totally rdaxed on the court Ashes vd4&amp;gt;-lash and all-round imression make him an extitng^ym* to watch.</p>
        <p>Kubeks</p>
        <p>Incisive,</p>
        <p>Adept</p>
        <p>As a premiere big league shortstop with the New York Yankees, Tony Kubek estaWish-ed himself as one of Major League Baseballs thinking stars. He has carried that incisiveness into the broadcast booth and has established himself as one of baseballs most adOpt commentators.</p>
        <p>Tony was deli|iited at the opportunity to retain a connection with baseball when be was invited to join the NBC Sports staff of announcers in the ^ring of 1966. He has tince earned the</p>
        <p>at of his audiences and his gues as an articulate, highly intelligent analyst of the game he played so well.</p>
        <p>Kub^ moved into the Yankee lineup in 1%7 Mowing an ap-menticetiiip of three seasmis in the minor leagues. After compiling a .279 average in his inaugural effort, he was voted American Leagues Rookie of the Year. He played assorted , positions before he settled down as the clubs regular sbmrtstop.</p>
        <p>He was named to the American League All-Star squad twice before pressure on his ^inal cord, stemming from a neck Injury, prompted his doctor to advise retirement from baseball foUowIng tte 1965 season.</p>
        <p>Tonys positive and direct ap-proacfa in his commentary on the game is ample evidence of his aggressiveness. It is hard to believe  although Tony insists it is fact  that when he played for the Yankees be was almost never intervlewod in pre or postgame shows because he was too</p>
        <p>His even temperament and flawleas manners have won for him two majw sportsmanshM awards  tte William M. Johnstm (I964).and the Larold Labalr Menxsrial Trophy (196B). Off the oouts be is an exctilent an^er, a tep-notch baseketlMfi player and an outstanding swimmer.</p>
        <p>Conquest</p>
        <p>Norma Fell, tte landhsrd in Threes Ctinpany, has been roaming far from bis series Santa Monica apartmett buildhig during hiatus. Hes formed in Jban Rivers featiire, RaMtft Test, guested on the Tonight show, accompaided Burt R^lds to AUanta, Qa., where he did a Mike Douglas stint, guested on Dinah and is currently filming six TatOe Tale game shows with his wife, Karen.</p>
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        <pb facs="00093416_0056" />
        <p>Saturday K\(ning</p>
        <p>Finney</p>
        <p>6:00 p.m. (SN) News (6,7JNewt, WeaUier, Sports</p>
        <p>(*)Por(erWi (ll)BlMl (S)UnkAtlle 6:30 (3NA11) CBS News (SW^)News (6.7)NBCNews (U)Doay</p>
        <p>(IS)BlaaPenpecUve 7:00 (SNAIDHw Haw (SW)HeeHaw</p>
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        <p>7:30&amp;lt;5)Harambee (6)fnidKiidii</p>
        <p>6:00 (3NA1I) Huy Mer-Hoore</p>
        <p> !, WJM-TVs sta-</p>
        <p>Sbow: Mel Price, tioQ manager, faces a calastropbe wben the bast of an hour-long variety program walks out on the show, (repeat)</p>
        <p>(3W,5,U)Wonder Woman: The Feminum Mystique Part two. Wonder Woman returns to Paradise Island to warn her mother, the Queen, that the Nazis are planning to attack their land of Amazon women, (repeat, 60 min) (6,7)Emergency: The Exam Gage spreads gloom around the station house with his concern over an impending exam, the results of which surprise a lot of people, (repeat, 60 min) t (2S)Lowell Thomas Remembers 6:30 (3N,9,11) Bob Newhart Show: Doctor Hartley runs into marital problems whien he brings his therapy group home (or a wild role-playing encounter. (rq&amp;gt;eat) (2S)Oousteau: Oasis in Space; Vision of Tomorrow Guests Carl Sagan, Buchminister Fuller, Jacques Cousteau and Isaac Asimov discuss the future of the planet Earth.</p>
        <p>8:57 (6,7) NBC News Update 8:58 (3N,,11) CBS Newsbreak **;00 (3N,9,11) AU in the Family: Archie panics when Edith invites an old school chum to dinner, fearing Edith wUl find out too much about  his past, (repeat)</p>
        <p>(3W)Mlss S.C. Beauty Pageant (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(5,12)Starsky and Hutch: The Fix Starsky goes on a frantic search for Hutch who has been abducted, held captive and strung out on herion by a jealous mobster whose ex-girifriend has become romantically involved with Hutch, (repeat, 60 min)</p>
        <p>(6,7)NBC Saturday Night Movie: Never Give an Inch Henry Fonda and Paul Newman. Action film about a close-knit, independent Oregon lumbering family who</p>
        <p>refuse to be intimidated by strikes, sabotage or fierce local opposition and keep their commitments no matter what the odds or the cost. (rMe8t,2hr8)</p>
        <p>(2S)nifl Odit Memorial Coaeert: Folk-singers and musicians including Pete Seeger, Melanie, Oscar Brand, Thm Rush and Peter Yarrow are featured in the concert held as a tribute to the late songwriter and activist Rill (X*s. (90 min)</p>
        <p>:38 (3NAU) Alice: Alice is thrilled whi her youiQ visiting coudn is aiAe to work tempmarily as a waitress at Mels cafe, but wben Mel falls head over heels in love with her, trotdde starts, (r^t) 10:88 (3NAU) The Anihos Tarsets: Marina Angelis thinks she has discovered a man responsible for scores of murders during the Greek Civil War now living in New York City and Mike and Sandi try to track him down, (repeat, 60 min) (5,U)Featber and Father Gang: The Apoky Harry poses as a mob chieftain and FeathCT impersonates the vengeftd daughter of a murder victim in a plot to con a wealthy shipping magnate into admitting his guilt, (repeat, 60 min) (2S)Masterplece Theatre: Poldark As Boss's trail draws near, Demelza learns that witnesses are being paid to give evidence against him. (60 min) 11:00 (3N,3W,5,6,7,9,11) News, Weather, ^poiis 11; 15 (3W) Nashville Music (UlWUlCsRedEye 11:30 (3N) Late Movie: Title to be an-nouneed.</p>
        <p>(5)Mld-AUantic Wrestling</p>
        <p>(6)Saturday Award Movie: Edge of Darkeness Story line to be announced.</p>
        <p>(7) World Team Tennis AU-Star Matches</p>
        <p>(9)11)0 Untouchables (ll)Late aow: The Blue Max George Peppard and Ursula An-</p>
        <p>Is</p>
        <p>Wilma</p>
        <p>Shliiey Jo I^Simey, a professional actr^ who was voted the Desf i^ete during her Juiior high sdiocd track career, will portray Olympic gold medalist Wilma Riidd|d) in the 90-minute NBC World Premiere movie Wilma.</p>
        <p>' Finney, who grew up as an ardent fan of Ife. Rudolph, wUl join Cicely Tyson, previously announced to portray Blanche Rudolph, WUmas mother. Production on the film wUl begin in NashvUle later this numth.</p>
        <p>A native of Southern California, Finney was considered a top track prospect at age 12. She also became interested in acting. As a student at Sacramento State College, she met her chUdhood idol, Wilma Rudolph, who was an instructor at the school. Finney continued her studies at UCLA, where she received a masters degree in fine arts.</p>
        <p>dress. Story of a German pilot who ertobeco</p>
        <p>is eager to become a war ace.</p>
        <p>(12)Late Movie: The Executioner</p>
        <p>! George Peppard and Joan CoUins. Story of an American-trainer British agent who must track down the traitor involved in a massacie at a country estate.</p>
        <p>(25)SlgnOtf</p>
        <p>11:45 (3W) Wide World of Wrestling 12:30 (5) The FBI 1:15 (7) Christopher Close-Up 1:30 (11) CurioosKaleidaBCope 2:00 (12) Late Movie: Assignment-K Stephen Boyd and Michael Redgrave. Story about ^ies and counterspies all over Europe, with an intrepid British ii</p>
        <p>Her television credits include appearances on New Temperatures Rising as well as NBC-TVs Police Story and Police Woman series. She also was featured in the thieatrical release, The River Niger. On stage die appeared nr several Los Angeles area productions including Story Theatre.</p>
        <p>Rudolph, who won her three Olympic gold medals in 1960, recently inducted her mentor, Tennessee State track coach Ed Temple into the Black Hall of Fame.</p>
        <p>Temple, acknowledged as one of the nations most successful womens track coaches, is currently an associate professor of sociology at Tennessee State. He will portray himself in WUma.</p>
        <p>Newman, Fonda Co-Star</p>
        <p>f It does so much for the ego to find yourself on the telling end ' *^rather than the listening end.</p>
        <p>So spoke actor Paul Newman during the filming of Sometimes a Great Notion, an action drama to be rebroadcast under the new title, Never Give An Inch, on NBC Saturday Night at the Movies July 9,9 to 11 p.m., on NBC-TV Henry Fonda, Lee Remick and Michael Sarrazin also star.</p>
        <p>dependent operator who is just stubborn enough to keep his commitments, no matter what the odds.</p>
        <p>When strikers sabotage some of the Stamper equipment.</p>
        <p>Its very hard to take that bo&amp;lt;* and compre it, but (screenwriter John) Gary succeeded.</p>
        <p>of the Stamper equipment. Henry and his familyi "mcluding sons Hank (Newman) and Lee</p>
        <p>(Sarrazin) refuse to turn back.</p>
        <p>They then conceive a plan using the logs to</p>
        <p>Though it was the second film he had directed, the 1971 Universal release marked the first occasion that Newman acted and directed at the same time. The two endeavors are closely related.</p>
        <p>It obviously takes a bit of acting talent to be a director, he pointed out, To make a group of trusting innocents believe you actually know what youre do-</p>
        <p>human labor to get 1 the river and then tie them together, floating them to the mill.</p>
        <p>Henry supervises the cqiera-tion even thoi# his arm is broken. But when a huge log accidentally falls, severing his arm and then pinning another family member, cousin Joe Ben (Richard Jaeckel), in a treacherous riverbed, the (^rations appears to be imperiled.</p>
        <p>Shades Of The Local Bar</p>
        <p>You can now watch Kojaks</p>
        <p>classic Roman profile in nearly</p>
        <p>Newman and Fonda star as &amp;gt; fathm* and a son of an Oregon ^ j family vriw decide to ignore a kxitd strike. Fonda portrays Henry Stamper, a logger who coqsklm'S Wmself an In-</p>
        <p>Filmed on locatHm in Oregon, the drama is based on the popular novel by Ken Kesey.</p>
        <p>The novel is a classic drama of the strengths and weaknesss of the tough, stubborn men who settled our frontier coimtry, Newmansaid, but it is told in a ramUing conversatkmal style.</p>
        <p>nine square feet of glorious viewing right in your living room-via S^vision. The giant projected-screen TV sets that have been in bars for the past few years is now being marketed for home use.</p>
        <p>The largest and most expensive model folds up out of the way when not in use and looks like any other piece of cabinet furniture. Remote control is standard, along with another convenient feature  the time and channel are shown on the screen every time you adjust the volume or change the channel. The least expoisive model is a portable one.</p>
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        <p>Reg. 1.97</p>
        <p>I Choice of colors in I sizes 2-4.</p>
        <p>Girls shorts. Choice of colors. Pull-on style. Sizes 2-4. Save at Kmart</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 1.67</p>
        <p>117</p>
        <p>m Sizes </p>
        <p>T-3</p>
        <p>Ruffly rhumba suit for girls. Polyester/cotton.</p>
        <p>METAL TABUE</p>
        <p>1A88</p>
        <p>Ends Sat</p>
        <p>Big 42"-diameter umbrella table in white metal. 28'high. Our 0.96, All-Umbrella Holder, Fill with Sand oi Water 5.66</p>
        <p>REDWOOD TETE-TETE</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 79.96</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Patio perfect! Seats 2 people with table in-between. Orill^ for umbrella*. Save now.</p>
        <p>* Not included</p>
        <p>716 UMBRELLAkumb,..j</p>
        <p>Fringed-lcaMop^rib umbrella of vinyl. Self-raising crank.</p>
        <p>]2516x37"E 1 Rocker,</p>
        <p>1 9.88</p>
        <p>j2S\6x3r| Chair, 7.88</p>
        <p>|2SV6x74"</p>
        <p>Icitaiaa,</p>
        <p>114.89.</p>
        <p>I Holder, 15.66</p>
        <p>SPRINGY TUBULAR FURNITURE .788 M88</p>
        <p>A Chihr  Chelee</p>
        <p>What a comfortable way to relax in the good old summertime! Vinyl tubing and strapping on sturdy aluminum frame with wide plastic arms and patio legs. Folds for compact and convenient storage. Matching PaHo Rocfcar .................................ggg</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0060" />
        <p>K marts Boast From Coast to Coast, We Save Yo</p>
        <p>K mart* ADVERTISD MERCHANDISE POLICY</p>
        <p>Our firm wtantton ( to Have wn* adirfllwcl Ham in itDcfc on our tPiahra*. H an a^rartitod iMm n not afoHabtf (o' purclma dua m any unloraMan roa-*on. K mart wNI kmm a Ram Chock on raqwoat tor the marctrandna to ba putchaaod at iha ula prwa</p>
        <p>Reg. 4.47 Use inside or out. Waterproof mason^ ry paint. Save.</p>
        <p>Use for most indoor or outdoor surfaces. Save.</p>
        <p>QU</p>
        <p>GLOS</p>
        <p>Our Rag. 3,58,01.</p>
        <p>Good on metal,CORNER OF GREENVILLE BLVD</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0061" />
        <p>T</p>
        <p>Th 0lly Reflectar, Grtnvlll, N.C.Sunday, July |</p>
        <p>GABLE-MOUNTED POWER VENT</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 39.88</p>
        <p>rhermostatically</p>
        <p>1-GAL. RUSTIC ROOF CEMENT JS7</p>
        <p>controlled attic vent. 1300 CFMs.</p>
        <p>Our Reg.</p>
        <p>3.18</p>
        <p>Plastic asbestos cement for roof repairs. Save.</p>
        <p>DEEP SHAD 12 CARPET TILE</p>
        <p>Nylon shag pile, foam rubber self-ding back. Save.</p>
        <p>Safe, convenient system features instant-reverse safety, chain drive. V* H.P. motor. Shop now.</p>
        <p>^^orkooM)</p>
        <p>IT</p>
        <p>9-YEAR LATEX INTERIOR</p>
        <p>It. Or Its.</p>
        <p>gsssijsa</p>
        <p>FLAT  ENAMEL</p>
        <p>"Our best" flat finish or our best low lustre enamel. Fast-drying, washable. White and custom tint colors.</p>
        <p>Our</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>9.88</p>
        <p>QUICK-DRY LOSS ENAHia</p>
        <p>irReg.</p>
        <p>0,01.</p>
        <p>letal. Indoor or outdoor use.</p>
        <p>5 STEP LADDER</p>
        <p>Our Reg.</p>
        <p>19.33</p>
        <p>Aluminum, braced.</p>
        <p>. jntBiioR. ixnMS*</p>
        <p>}NR-Pil||0-POII</p>
        <p>EXTERIOR</p>
        <p>PRIMER</p>
        <p>5^</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 7.97. White latex. Prevents yellowing or staining.</p>
        <p>PUSUTIM SHOWER HEAD</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 15.77</p>
        <p>gaa</p>
        <p>Adjusts; 59" hose. Our 11.88 Pulsating Shower Head, 6.66</p>
        <p>GAL. LATEX ENAMEL PAINT</p>
        <p>g33</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 7.33 Use</p>
        <p>In/outside on concrete. wood, masonry. Save now.</p>
        <p>n -u: RAD OF PRE-HnUOWEn</p>
        <p>Reg. 1.78  #34</p>
        <p>3 Days  #</p>
        <p>Dry mixed, lust add water M-Lb.AAortarMIx  1.34</p>
        <p>* NfKlL</p>
        <p>4x81/8AAELAMINE PANEL</p>
        <p>Oaa</p>
        <p>Sanitary, durable finish hard board beauty for kitchen or powder room. White with gold occent or in colors. Chorge it.</p>
        <p>Reg.9.t8 </p>
        <p>VENT HOSE</p>
        <p>Reg. 9S7 3.94 Av</p>
        <p>8-ft. hose, 2 clamps. Our Reg. 5.98 Dryer Vent Kit--------------3.97</p>
        <p>12x12 DECORATOR MIRROR SQimilES</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 11.88 CasA. of12</p>
        <p>Each</p>
        <p>The perferf Way to decorale and make a room look mere spacious. Antique look or gold-veiit.'ARLINGTON BLVD</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0062" />
        <p>T*m Daily Reflacfor* GrMnviile, N.C.-Sunday, July X W7</p>
        <p>c.</p>
        <p>27 MEN'S 10-SPEED</p>
        <p>martl 881</p>
        <p>GYM SETS</p>
        <p>All pro deluxe bicycle. White color. Save at KmartI</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 89.88</p>
        <p>76</p>
        <p>Our</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>56.88</p>
        <p>Hours of athletic fun for youngsters. Gym set includesfree-standing slide, 2 swings, glide ride and swinging trapeze supported by brightly colored frame of sturdy 2" steel tubing.</p>
        <p>COMPACT ZOOM MOVIE CAMERA</p>
        <p>Has 2 to 1 manual zoom, CDS automatic exposure system, f1,6 lens. Save.</p>
        <p>souno movie</p>
        <p>PROJECTOR</p>
        <p>SOUND MOVIE CAMERA</p>
        <p>*f1.1 13mm lens, optic</p>
        <p>Super 8 proiector has record and playback. Record sound on sound automatic film: threading, 18 and 24 FPS, bright ONE 150-watt lamp. 15-25 mm f1.3 zoom lens.</p>
        <p>ZytaPfl.1 ISmnhlens, optical viewfinder. 25-1W ASA. With undirection^ ^ike . strap.</p>
        <p>OPEN DAILY 9:30-9; Closed Sunday</p>
        <p>MONDAY THRU SATURDAY</p>
        <p>Holiday</p>
        <p>PHOTO RNISHING SPECIAL</p>
        <p>FOCAL OR KODAK* COLOR PRINT FILM</p>
        <p>PRINTS</p>
        <p>PLUS COST OF DEVELOPtNQ</p>
        <p>6 DAYS ONLY NO FOREIGN FILM</p>
        <p>Save bn your color prints at K martl Get beautiful borderless textured prints. At K mart you only pay tor the 'good' prints.</p>
        <p>K MART Goof Proof Policy</p>
        <p>Taa am TMT pM &amp;lt;r K imH r</p>
        <p>POCKET TELEPHO</p>
        <p>Our Regular 23.88Sale Ends Sat.</p>
        <p>Compact camera with built-in telephoto and wide-angle lenses. With drop-in. instant-loading I10filmcartridge,flip-flash.</p>
        <p>DSX-500</p>
        <p>35MM</p>
        <p>f2 lens, dual metering.I-'/h sec. shutter. ASA speeds 25-3200.</p>
        <p>With Case</p>
        <p>KODAK X-15 OUTFIT</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 19.88</p>
        <p>X-lS outfit contains camera with wrist strap, C126/20 film and flip flash. Aim and shoot. No settings. Save at Kmart!</p>
        <p>FOCAL</p>
        <p>135/20</p>
        <p>97</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0063" />
        <p>OPEN DAILY 9:30-9; CLOSED SUNDAYS</p>
        <p>* </p>
        <p>*   * </p>
        <p>HEAVY-PUTY</p>
        <p>MUFFUR</p>
        <p>' IOCS</p>
        <p>RE6.</p>
        <p>SALI</p>
        <p>FalsTa</p>
        <p>ETBrU</p>
        <p>33.88</p>
        <p>4/m</p>
        <p>2.33</p>
        <p>F7BiiU</p>
        <p>35.88</p>
        <p>4/*124</p>
        <p>2.37</p>
        <p>FTixU</p>
        <p>35.88</p>
        <p>4/*128</p>
        <p>2,40</p>
        <p>G7B^4</p>
        <p>37.88</p>
        <p>4/*128</p>
        <p>3.53</p>
        <p>C 078*15</p>
        <p>37.88</p>
        <p>4/*1S2</p>
        <p>2.58</p>
        <p>H&amp;gt;8*U</p>
        <p>H7Br15</p>
        <p>38.88</p>
        <p>4/14D</p>
        <p>i.n</p>
        <p>2.78</p>
        <p>178*15</p>
        <p>41.88</p>
        <p>4/*14|</p>
        <p>3.08</p>
        <p>SAVB 11.52 TO 1^2 ON A SET OF FOUR</p>
        <p>KM 1004-PtY POLYESTER CORDWHITEWiUlS</p>
        <p>Ovr Rag. 28.88 Ea.  878x13</p>
        <p>4rmt04^'^</p>
        <p>All Tim Ptua F.E.T. Ewh</p>
        <p>SPORTS SPECIALS</p>
        <p>iUl</p>
        <p>VOUEYBAU BADMINTON ^</p>
        <p>REaAMROD</p>
        <p>ZRbco US76' reel *&amp;lt;  Our  R^.Q</p>
        <p>MOUNTIIM mCUIDEB ~ NO TRABE-IN REQUIRED</p>
        <p>S.IMMIM</p>
        <p>a.MM _____</p>
        <p>SSr-*^</p>
        <p>DISC/DRUM BRAKE SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Selle Price</p>
        <p>63"</p>
        <p>Work done on most U.S. cars. Savings at K mart.</p>
        <p>FRONT-END</p>
        <p>ALieNMENT</p>
        <p>SafaPriee</p>
        <p>J88</p>
        <p>For most U.S. cars. Foreign can excluded.</p>
        <p>Get Set For Camping..At Big Savings</p>
        <p>has metal gears</p>
        <p>,Spincasting rod.</p>
        <p>saiaPrice^^^uu</p>
        <p>10.96</p>
        <p>rackets, voHaybaH, metal poles, net.</p>
        <p>U.S. CoMt Buard Approved</p>
        <p>UFE PRESERVERS</p>
        <p>3.97</p>
        <p>Sate Pr/ca</p>
        <p>Adult Ufa vest, boat cushion for safety.</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 39.96</p>
        <p>RAWLINGS</p>
        <p>mag glove</p>
        <p>96</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>Each</p>
        <p>Right or left hand gloves... all leather.  </p>
        <p>V3</p>
        <p>WOl&amp;amp;O CLASS PLASTIC r FMSBEE*</p>
        <p>Great lor all agna,. durabla.IFA apixoved.</p>
        <p>Both Compor Tonto Havo</p>
        <p>Colemaiie.</p>
        <p>Out^</p>
        <p>Aluminum Framo</p>
        <p>Tent MmIC treated to bo flame-raelstai^</p>
        <p>ROOMY 9'8"x7r TENT</p>
        <p>ht aacefdanoe with CPAina (19T4L</p>
        <p>CABIN TENT</p>
        <p>JL  Our  Rag.  89.8S</p>
        <p>^9*^ 69?^</p>
        <p>Fire-resistant* tent has 7" center height, 2 zip- Fire-resistant.* Center pgr windows, outside aluminum frame.  ht..6'6".wallht.,4'6".</p>
        <p>6 Day* Only SslePrIc*</p>
        <p>BIG COOLER ^^88</p>
        <p>Sal* Ends Saturday</p>
        <p>Insulated, 17-gal. picnic cooler with tx)ttle openers. Save now.</p>
        <p>Insulated l-6al. Jug... 5.33</p>
        <p>44-QT.COO^R</p>
        <p>Sale Ends</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0064" />
        <p>The Daily Refltdor, Grtanville^ N.C.Sur&amp;gt;day, July 3,1977</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0065" />
        <p>CLARKS</p>
        <p>Sale Ends Saturday, July 9th</p>
        <p>2for$4</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>Can you boliove it? Famous namo Dan Rivor and J^. Stovons shoots at thoso Pficosi Wake up your bed with Don Rivers vibrant orange orvd veBow poppies clover, or a fashionable spring fkxal design or cool basic white. Or select J.P. Stevens Tostemoker* crossworks In a crisp design of blues and browns. AH are petma press.</p>
        <p>Futifiat/fiitod.............3.00M.</p>
        <p>QuMnfkit/fHtvd..........&amp;amp;00*a.</p>
        <p>PHlow catm pkg. of 2......2.25</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0066" />
        <p>Classic degonce at Cl down to earth price</p>
        <p>lASO</p>
        <p>twin</p>
        <p>Our new Rosewood bedroom ensemble</p>
        <p>Encompass your bed in a beautiful array of roses, daisies and more with our striking ciuitted Rosewood spread in blue, brown or green on bone. Easy macNne wash. For a total decorator look complete your room with matching drap&amp;gt;es and towels.</p>
        <p>Full size spread........18.90</p>
        <p>84 drape.............11.50pr</p>
        <p>Matching Towel Ensemble</p>
        <p>Bath towel.............2.50</p>
        <p>Hand towel   1.60 4.</p>
        <p>Wash cloth..............85*  '</p>
        <p>Super soft comforters. Kodel* pxplyester filled pxinted cotton cover for cozy, light-w^ht warmth. Fits twinorfuM.</p>
        <p>Sheet blonlcet</p>
        <p>65%polvester35% cotton in white, blue or yefow. Easy machine wash.</p>
        <p>CrocheMook bedspread. Thermal weave spxeod also doubles as a blanket. In many fasNon colors.</p>
        <p>Full  ....  10.50</p>
        <p>No iron ribbed bedspread. Washable cotton/p&amp;gt;oly easy care fabric in striking fashion shades. Full siz*........9.00</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0067" />
        <p>Soft phjsh bathroom or accent rugs</p>
        <p>ooo</p>
        <p>W 21"x36</p>
        <p>At these low prices, rww is the time to buy our washable nylon rugs. Practical andbeautiful in a v\^de array of fashion shades.</p>
        <p>27^45...............6.50</p>
        <p>Contour rug..........3.00</p>
        <p>Lid cover.............2.25</p>
        <p>5-pc. both ensemble. Includes plush bath mat, contour rug, 2-pc. tank set and lid cover in OuPont Dacron'^ polyester pile.</p>
        <p>Burlington area rugs on serie now!</p>
        <p>Select from vibrant colors and designs to add a welcome change to any room. Durable machine washable polyester makes these rugs an easy care</p>
        <p>___</p>
        <p>34-X54"...............9.90</p>
        <p>4"x68..............16.90</p>
        <p>3^ 20^32" Kitchen slice rugs</p>
        <p>In ass't. colorful patterns. Choose olive, gold, orange or brown.</p>
        <p>20"x4" runner.. 5.50</p>
        <p>Utility rug. Easy wash rug is reversible for longer wecr. Great for heavy traffic areas.</p>
        <p>24"x45"..........1.25</p>
        <p>21-X34" Decorator occent rugs. Select from sharp ass't. colors.</p>
        <p>26"x44"..........3.00</p>
        <p>30x54".........5.00</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0068" />
        <p>jT%</p>
        <p>No iron 130 Mond</p>
        <p>Pwrccdo</p>
        <p>twin flat ortlttMl</p>
        <p>J.PiStevens fashion sheets. Select Summer itasy or Windflower sheets - two origirKal designs that give a totally different look to your bedroom. No iron 130 bterxJ.</p>
        <p>Full flat or fitted..........  2&amp;lt;orlO.OO</p>
        <p>Pkg. of 2 pillow cases..............4.00</p>
        <p>twin flat</p>
        <p>ViQl0</p>
        <p>amwrmtw</p>
        <p>Super^liK for your kids. Brighten your child's bedroom Wrn two juvenile patterris - Sesame St. and Super Hero sheets. Easy care and durable.</p>
        <p>2 pillow cases......................3.^</p>
        <p>These 50/50 poly/cotton no-iron sheets give you a decororor look that requires minimum care. Mix and match these row at fantastic wNte sole prices.</p>
        <p>Sweetheart Rose offers a soft blend of pink or yellow roses on a bone background accented with lace trim.</p>
        <p>Parfait stripe sheet is a stripe pattern of brood and narrow stripes for a different look.</p>
        <p>Pastel co-ordiroting sheets are the perfect sheets to extend your linen supply.</p>
        <p>Full flat or fitted...............2  for  8.00</p>
        <p>Pkg. of 2 pillow cases..............3.00</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0069" />
        <p>Challenger towel by I Cannon . Cannon's / tNrstiest towel ensembte atagreatsavinos. 1 Hand towel Washcloth</p>
        <p>CANNON.</p>
        <p>St. Marys Monaco towel. Luxurious velour look in a wide selection of colors.</p>
        <p>Hand towel.... 2.00 Washcloth .... 1.00</p>
        <p>Burlington Sesame St. towel. The perfect toWel erisemble for your youngster along with a set of matching sheets on the opposite</p>
        <p>a% towel 1.75</p>
        <p>Washcloth 75*</p>
        <p>Santa Cruz towel by Cannon. A vet^r ensemble with a jocquard border. DresT up your bathroom and save money too. Ass't. colors.</p>
        <p>ndtowel ...1.60 ash cloth .... 55*</p>
        <p>CANNON^</p>
        <p>St. Marys Rosewood towel. Features a beautiful design of roses and floral stripes. These coordinate with our new Rosewood bedspread.</p>
        <p>Hand towel ... 1.60 Wash cloth .... 85*</p>
        <p>Suoer Hero towel. At</p>
        <p>lastTa juvenile towel with a boy in mind. A delightful pattern at the right price. Coordinating sheets are also available.</p>
        <p>Harui towel... 1.75 Washcloth... 75*</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0070" />
        <p>^ r^freshfnQ new look for your windows</p>
        <p>750</p>
        <p>m 48"x63''</p>
        <p>Patterned Serape drapes. Sharp open weave drapes of perma press Malimo.</p>
        <p>Assorted colors.</p>
        <p>4e"x84.......................9.00</p>
        <p>......................19.00</p>
        <p>96x84......................21 00</p>
        <p>900</p>
        <p>A 54x63"</p>
        <p>Wedding ring panels. Easy core fabric at a great price.</p>
        <p>54xir......................2.50  '</p>
        <p>eO% Off a</p>
        <p>.  i.</p>
        <p>Decorator drapery rods</p>
        <p>2Sto4S"........8.95</p>
        <p>48 to 84"......14.50</p>
        <p>4" to 155".....20.95</p>
        <p>Curtain rods singlo 28" to 48" .. 75* Singlo 48 to 84. 1.30 Doublo28"to48*U5 Ooublo 48" to 84"2.50940</p>
        <p>68"x2</p>
        <p>x24</p>
        <p>Deiphine curtains. Perma press knitted cloth tiers in ass't. colors.</p>
        <p>68x36.............3.60</p>
        <p>Vaiance...........! zO</p>
        <p>Swag...............4.40|65</p>
        <p> 24</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>Cape Cod curtains. 60" wide per pair in perma press Fortrel Avril blend. Ass't. colors,</p>
        <p>30"................2.10</p>
        <p>36.................2.25</p>
        <p>45.................3.75</p>
        <p>Valance............2.00</p>
        <p>750</p>
        <p>70x9O" knit throws</p>
        <p>Furniture throws. Many patterns and colors.</p>
        <p>Knit throws 70xI20". 10.50 70xl40.. 12.75</p>
        <p>Herculon throws</p>
        <p>70x90.....13.50</p>
        <p>70xl40".... 20.25</p>
        <p>Bright new toss pillows..,^.........2.50|50</p>
        <p>Room darkening shades</p>
        <p>Srowy white vinyl shade measures 37'/4"x6' and can be cut to size. .</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0071" />
        <p>2^100</p>
        <p>Reversible looper place mats</p>
        <p>Machine washable mots measure 13"xT9" and ore avoilable in colors to match every decor.</p>
        <p>'H:.</p>
        <p>Do you bdiekc were selling Icmous DuPont Wintukknitting</p>
        <p>yomforonlK</p>
        <p>701.</p>
        <p>It*s true! Now is^your chance to stock up on Wintuk shrink resistant, mrvolergenic yam in a rainbow of vibrohi^ colors.</p>
        <p>,r/</p>
        <p>400</p>
        <p>Wtwlnllat</p>
        <p>Quilted mattress pads:</p>
        <p>Ttidn fitted or full flat 4.00</p>
        <p>Full fitted.......... 5.00</p>
        <p>Vinyl mottress covers:</p>
        <p>Twin fitted..................75</p>
        <p>Full fitted.................1.00</p>
        <p>Twiniipper  ...........130</p>
        <p>Full zipper................ZOO</p>
        <p>100</p>
        <p> Vouri</p>
        <p>lYourCholce</p>
        <p>Cannon dottu for every purpose </p>
        <p>at one low pricel Choose 2-pack dsh towete, 4pack waffle weave dsh cloths or 4-pack utility ctothSw</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0072" />
        <p>ffllppnimilt tt: Peru oily TritMine Port$moutli Times Sumter Daily Item TItomasviHe Times enterprise Greenville Daily Reflector/SIoppers GuideOARKS</p>
        <p>nunakt Itepldi 0My HraM &amp;amp; Ramlndw BradfDTd Era Gtcna Falls Pott-Star t Times MurtreesOoro Daily News Jcwrnal New Bern Sun Journal</p>
        <p>RAINCHECK</p>
        <p>If we se* out of any advertised specials,* you wi receive a written order, "Raincheck" virhlch entffles you to buy the item at the advertised price when ou stock is replenished.</p>
        <p>(exckjckng deoronce items)</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>632 Upper Glen Street Glens FatsNorth Carolina</p>
        <p>Memorial Drive &amp;amp; Farmvile Hwy West End Shopping Center GreenvUe</p>
        <p>U.S. Highway 158 8i Theatre Ave. Roanoke Rapids ^</p>
        <p>Highway 70 &amp;amp; 17 New BernIndiana</p>
        <p>710 North Broadway PeruPennsylvania</p>
        <p>661 East Main Street BradfordSouth Carolina</p>
        <p>Brood Street-U.S. tkghwoy 76 8t 378 SumterOhio</p>
        <p>Highway 52 8i Moybert Street PortsmouthGeorgia</p>
        <p>207 South Dawson Street ThomasvSeTennessee</p>
        <p>814 Memorial Blvd. Murfreesboro</p>
        <p>Just say CHARGE-IT</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0073" />
        <p>r</p>
        <p>July 3,1977THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>OREBWIll^ N.C</p>
        <p>CELEBRATING THE 4TH WITH A BIG BANG</p>
        <p>YOUR MYSTERIOUS BODY CLOCK; HOW IT AFFECTS YOU</p>
        <p>GREAT RECIPES FROM CALIFORNIA</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0074" />
        <p>Boom!Thridied FlavQr'tc4&amp;gt;ai^ as mgQr fector m tu^piiecedeiited smoker move to bw</p>
        <p>s'</p>
        <p>Since its introduction, MERIT has become one of the most popular new cigarettes in twenty years.</p>
        <p>A popularity largely responsible for a significant growth in low tar smoking.</p>
        <p>The reason: Enriched Flavor tobacco. Tobacco that delivers extra flavor without the usual corresponding increase in tar.</p>
        <p>The kind of flavor smokers can switch toand stick with.</p>
        <p>Here are the taste-test results which show why smokers are switching to MERIT. If you smoke, youll be interested.</p>
        <p>o nOp IXonii Uc. 1977</p>
        <p>IQngt: 8 mgl'tarl'O.S mg. nicotine av. per cigarette, FTC Flepait Dec:76</p>
        <p>IDO'i: 12 mg:'tar;'0.9 mg. nicotine ae. per cigarette by FTC Mhod- '</p>
        <p>Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.</p>
        <p>LOW TAR-'ENRKHED FLAVORIbsts Prove Ikste</p>
        <p>MERIT and MERIT lOOs were both tested against a number of higher tar cigarettes. The results proved conclusively that Enriched Flavor tobacco does boost taste without the usual increase in tar.</p>
        <p>Overall, smokers reported they liked the taste of both MERIT and MERIT 100s as much as the taste of the higher tar cigarettes tested.</p>
        <p>Cigarettes having up to 60% more tar!</p>
        <p>Only one cigarette has Enriched Havor tobacco.</p>
        <p>And you can taste It.MERITKings&amp;amp;lOOk</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0075" />
        <p>FOR GEORGE GALLUP, pollster</p>
        <p>Fm cwioM aboot bow polling originated. Do yoa have datafla of tbe test iccoBded event? -SJL. Cocoa Bench, Fla.</p>
        <p> The Hairidnitg Penn^luania took a 'straw poO on the Presidentiid dection of 1824. Modem poDs, making use of scientific procedures, date from the mid-1930s. In 1934 the Gallup poB first used scientific sampling {s-ocedures to forecast the outcome of the Congresdonal elections of that year.</p>
        <p>FOR KATE SMITH, singer and actres</p>
        <p>When did yoo first experience a feeling of patriotism?</p>
        <p>-C.G., WiMhlBgtaa, D.C.</p>
        <p> In school, at five. My greatest thrill was saluting the flag and learning the Pledge of Allegiance. Never quite understood what ft was all about, but I knew it had to do with the nice things about our countrii Now, whenever I watch the armed forces matdiing, I get goose bumps, a lump in my throat and teais in my eyes (except when they're marching trff to wrai. At die dght of such a spectadc, I thank God Fm an American, living in a free country and going to the church of my chdce.</p>
        <p>F(Ml SEN. S.I. HAYAKAWA (R-Cal.), Preddcnt Emeritus of San Francisco State University</p>
        <p>What tectocs are responsible for tbe new conaersatfsm on campases? G.S., BeUfngham, Wbnh.</p>
        <p> The iq&amp;gt;roru of die 1960s wru a minority phenomenon. San Francisco State. 80 to 85 percent erf the students worked their way through school and were irritated tiiat a small ^oup, not motivated by any strong purpose, was disrupting their education. With TV egging them on, this group made it fashionable to rebel.. With the ending trf the draft and the cessation of the war, the fashion passed.</p>
        <p>FOR ISAAC ASIMOV , science-ficUon writer Do you believe, as do the astrologers, that the movements of planets affect the lives of people on earth? &amp;lt;^.D. Kmit. LaiMing. Mich.</p>
        <p>No. The motion of the planets has given birth to astronomy and astrology. Thats all. To suppose that the motions of the planets have any effect on the character, temperament or experiences of a particular person is mere superstition. Such ideas only afreet astrislogers  who get rich out of it.</p>
        <p>FOR THE ASK THEM YOURSELF EDITOR</p>
        <p>Do yon know what happened to Richard Bartons for-~  arfic. SyMl?-M.D.. Gadsden. Ala.</p>
        <p>The former Sybil Burton is now Mrs. Jordan Christopher and has been since June 1965. After her divorce from Richard in 1963, she opened the encxrmo'usly successful New York discotheque, Arthur; which was the No. 1 in-sptrf from 1965 to 1969. Since do^ng Arthur, Sybil has never set foot in another disco. She tdd FAMtY WEEKLY: Fve no desire to do anytbing except work at being happily married, stay home and tdce care of my three kids.</p>
        <p>;g|&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>t I</p>
        <p>PRO AND CON</p>
        <p>York W.Y. 10022. We'll Py t5 tor piailslwl Qiaaioni. Sorry, m cin't answer otiiefs.____</p>
        <p>FOR JOAN MONDALE, wife of the Vice President</p>
        <p>pan managsJ to kaop in tonch with yonr old</p>
        <p>frlendealnce penthaaband was elected? -N.G., Shel-</p>
        <p>lOMO</p>
        <p> There are a few musts" on my schedule, and one of them involves time with old friends. Every week Fm involved with tennis, a pottery workshop and a vegetable cor^ative  all of whkii predate the election. I just cant give these up, even though at times my schedule becomes terribly hectic. Fd like to spend even more time with friends, but there simply isnt enough time in the day.</p>
        <p>FfMI JIM RYUN, former wmld record holder for the one-mile run</p>
        <p>b the training today any different from what it was</p>
        <p>whan yon atartod?-T.A., Bridgeton. NJ.</p>
        <p> Basically no. There will always be new fads such as pop-pirtg pep pills, altitude-iraining and working out three times a d^ But training still boils down to the individual distance runner building a program best suited to personal physhtal characteristics, which in itself may take an entire career.</p>
        <p>F(Ml FLORENCE HENDERSON, actress I know yon weae poor aa a chfld. What do yoa remember oat abont rimoe dapa?-N.G., Udw Charlea. La.</p>
        <p> The cruelty of other children, ff you have a hole in your shoe, and I had many of them, they dont miss it and take fun in telkng everyone else. Fortunatelv;  had confidence and a sense &amp;lt;rf humor; so I was ahead of thc'*me. 1 never got the one thing I desperately wanted  a bicycle. My job was scrubbing, waxing, cleaning, ironing, washing and taking care of kids. I did it in my own home and also ivorking for other families to get extra cash.</p>
        <p>FOR HOWARD DA SILVA. actor</p>
        <p>As on anthorlty on Bon IfronhHn, what do you think hed</p>
        <p>say obont the IhdtodStateo were he aUve today? -Bob</p>
        <p>Tiemersau, Grand Rapids. Mich.</p>
        <p> Hed be shodted at afl the wastage  money, electricity, food and verbiage. I think the first thing hed want to do is enact a law limiting public breakers to one-hundred words  especially in election years.</p>
        <p>FOR STEPHANIE BUFFINGTON, author of Three on o Dote</p>
        <p>Did yon atari aa a novdiat or did yon have other )oba befte yon began writing? oEA.. Loo Angaloa. Calif.</p>
        <p> Fve been an actress, manager, wtald traveler, associate producer and tightrope walker; At 17,1 was a championsh^ diver, a wife and mcrfher and expelled from high school. After my divorce, I resumed acting. Chudt Barris hired me as contestant coordinator for Dream Girl of67. Then I managed rock groups and went back to Chuck as a Dating Game chaperone. That is what gave me the idea to write the book.</p>
        <p>Should Fitting Inflation Be our Nations No. 1 Economic Priwity?</p>
        <p>CON Sen. Hobcrt H. Hnopkren Democrat of Minnesota</p>
        <p>Arthur F. Burns. Chairman of Board &amp;lt;rf Governors. Federal Reserve System</p>
        <p>One hard lesson of the past dozen years js that a condition of chronic inflation mrrfres the achievement and maintenance of a bw level of unemployment extremely difficult. Todays high unemployment rate is fundamentally the legeuty of an inflation that surely could have been avoided. Too often in the past we have lacked the courage to stay long enough on a monetary and fiscal path that will lead to noninflationary economic growth. We carAot afford to backslide once again. Unless we achieve a less-inflationary environment, there will be little chance of sustaining the expansion now in pro-gress or of significantly reducing the hi^ level of unemployment.</p>
        <p>In recent years inflation has been the result of OPEC pricing policy, poor harvests, under-utilization of machinery and equipment, high interest rates and noncompetitive pricing by big business. Our nation suffers from the twin evils of h^h inflation and high unemployment. Inflatton reduces living standards and places incredible burdens on us. Unemployment destroys family income and personal dignity and is a colossal waste of our nations human resources. Some still hold that to keep inflation under contrd we must not employ more people. But we have seen that as unemployment went up so did prices, and as inflation came down so did unemployment.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;1977 FAMILY WEEKLY, INC. All rights r^wvsd</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0076" />
        <p>AND THATS THE WAY IT IS...</p>
        <p>Walter Cronkite himself doesnt know why he is such a trusted and authoritative figure, but he accepts the responsibility for be^g jlist that.</p>
        <p>The Tall Ships will be featured again on Monday when Walter Cronkite brings us a CBS special recapping the highlights of last years Bicentennial celebration.By Fred Fenretti</p>
        <p>Not long ago the new President of the United States sent an autographed photograph of himself to Walter Cronkite with an inscription frankly acknowledging what most of us have known for some time  that Walter Cronkite. that benign white-mustached uncle of ours whom we believe in each night, is somehow, in some way,</p>
        <p>^ our national Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval. I hope. wrote President Carter. I can meet your standards of performance.</p>
        <p>There is little doubt that the President meant what he wrote. After all. had not Henry Kissinger chosen The CBS Evening News with Waiter Cronkite to tell of his diplomatic successes in Rhodesia even before he let President Ford in on what was happening? Did not Frank Mankiewicz. who ran the McGovern campaign and who has called Cronkite The Great Certifier. put his name on a final list of selectees for the Vice Presidency in 1972? Had not Bobby Kennedy urged Cronkite to run for the Sensite in New York against Jacob Javits? And with whom did Dwight Eisenhower and Lyndon Johnson choose to recollect? Who indeed.</p>
        <p>The Walter Leland'Cronkite Jr. seal of approval  a half-smile that turns up the -i ends of his mustache  once earned, once bestowed, is bankable. His disapproval. conveyed either with a mild scowl or a narrowing of the eyes, tells us immediately who the bad guys are. He made us love our astronauts in the 1950s and love</p>
        <p>Fred Ferretti is a reporter, columnist and critic for The New York Times and has written for several national publications, including Art News and Travel and Leisure. He is the author of The Year the Big Apple Went Bust (Pumarn).</p>
        <p>4  FAMILY WEEKLY, July 3,1977</p>
        <p>our country on its 200th birthday. In 1968 we found out from him that Vietnam might be a bad war. In 1972 he told us that the Soviet grain deals were less than kosher and that something was rotten in Watergate,</p>
        <p>Others told us, but it wasnt quite the same. And its not the same now. John Chancellor looks out at us as if he were a schoolmaster and tells the news deliberately and in language as uncomplicated as possible so that we will be able to understand it. Harry Reasoner has us expecting one-liners after each headline. But Walter Cronkite seems to tell us everything, everything, with authority, and we trust him.</p>
        <p>Why? Ive tried to analyze it. Im not sure what it is, but I believe that its there, he told me in a recent interview, sitting in his office just off the set of the CBS Evening News  which, by the way. is a.work-ing newsroom  surrounded by books, a tiny bust of Winston Churchill, three television monitors, his name in carved wooden letters, two new trophies, a piranha fish and a Jimmy Carter bottle opener. He knows, he says, that people trust him. The i.. letters come in saying, We trust you.. .We love you.. We believe in you.. .but we dont believe you should gO overboard.</p>
        <p>Cronkite grinned. I guess Im the great gray uncle of something, or perhaps its being around so long. Maybe it is simply a case, he says, of Here was this fellow who, when bad news or good news broke, was there. 1 guess theres symbolism of some kind.</p>
        <p>Docs he feel in some way that people regard him as a kind of Moral President of the United States? Im afraid some of that is true. A father fi^e or whatever  I guess its being aroind so long. I appreciate that I must be older than God, but I do have a sense of responsibility.</p>
        <p>And so he is careful about what he says each night on the air. He edits all of the copy he is to read. He is careful about his personal life. As for his professional life: Im no more sensitive about my news responsibility than 1 ever was, he says, Im just lucky that what Im able to do in presentation is acceptable.</p>
        <p>He seems a genuinely modest man who simultaneously puzzles over his broad national appeal yet is quite confident of his abilities as a reporter. For that is what Cronkite perceives himself to be, and he has ample reason for his perception: the Battle of the Bulge for United Press, chief correspondent for U.P. at the Nuremberg war crimes trials, Moscow correspondent.</p>
        <p>Since joining CBS in 1950, he has covered every convention and national election  with the lone exception of the 1964 Democratic National Convention after CBS lost a ratings war to Huntley and Brinkley at the Republican Convention earlier that summer  and since April 16, 1962, has anchored The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite. Now in his 61st year, and with last years rumors of his imminent replacement by either the similarly solid Roger Mudd or the networks resident gunslinger Dan Rather behind him, Cronkite recently renewed his contract with the network and presumably will be with ps until the CBS mandatory retirement age of 65.</p>
        <p>He has given up the on-screen managing editors credit for The Evening News because of widespread aping of the title by other anchormen who were not managing editors. Cronkite, however, still functions as the nightly programs chief planner. He is in his cubby of an office at about 9:30 in the morning and thumbs through The New York Times, The Daily News, The Washington Post, the Christian</p>
        <p>Science Monitor and The Wall Street Journal. Then he riffles through AP and UPI overnight wire stories and fact sheets, listing stories filmed by CBS crews throughout the world. Preliminary meetings follow with the shows producers, and calls are made to various CBS field correspondents.</p>
        <p>By midaftemoon there is a conference call with the Washington Bureau, and the so-caIledOne-Star Lineup forlhe show is outlined. It is refined at about 3:00 with what Cronkite calls a Two-Star Lineup and again at 4:30 with the final Three-Star Lineup. The show is then written. We begin in a relaxed way, then the intensity level increases by the minute, he says, 'Then, just before the show goes on, panic time hits.</p>
        <p>He does not prepare for his broadcasts in any particular way. His delivery is what it always has been, and all he pays attention to is concentrating on what he is to read.</p>
        <p>He maintains that content is more important than presentation. At show time, I &amp;lt; put a jacket on to look respectable when I | go into peoples homes. I also put on a little powder to dampen the highlights. And, occasionally, the makeup person will add a bit of makeup under his bags,</p>
        <p>Cronkite ^s, We used to panic over bad notices in the newspapers, but adds that television news no longer reacts that way. Whats changed is that television news is now respectable in the eyes of news people. Weve built our own traditions, our own staffs. We have a self-confidence we didnt have.at the beginning.</p>
        <p>He finds time for tennis twice a week and, in the summer, for sailing his 35-foot ketch, the Wyntie, around the waters of his Marthas Vineyard home. The Cron-kites  his wife is the former Mary Elizabeth Simmons Maxwell, a one-time columnist for the Kansas City Journal  have two daughters and a son. The family spends its winters in a New York City brownstone where, Cronkite says, Well live till we keel over.</p>
        <p>Between news conferences he sits in his office answering some of the mail that is piled high in front of him in three manilla folders. From the letters he feels the publics pulse, he says. Theyre important because people generally say what they believe when they take the trouble to write me. Those who write tend to be on the more intense fringes. They are on both dcs of issues. They are either very pleased or very anti. Much of his mail begins, he says, Weve never written before, but.. </p>
        <p>His mzul is screened, and what passes to him is a distillation of pros and cons: Whats disturbing them, whats bothering them. He says he docs not answer fan mail because I cant. I regret that. It's too dam bad. It worries me; it concerns me that I cant. I cant even answer those asking something specific. Theres not enough time in the day to do it."</p>
        <p>One note he expects to answer is the one that accompanied President Carters autographed photo. Concerning the gesture, Cronkite grins- and says, Hes a politician. He probably says that to all the anchor people.</p>
        <p>And then the interview was over. The One-Star Lineup conference was about to start, and Walter Cronkite had to begin making the phone calk to his correspondents that would give him the information he would pass on to us that night, which we would accept, on trust.</p>
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        <pb facs="00093416_0078" />
        <p>CHOWGIOLLA ONE YEAR LATER THE SCARS HAVENT HEALEDBy Joseph N. Bell</p>
        <p>Just recently a garbage truck turned around in the driveway of a public-school welding instructor neuned John Brown, who lives near Ghowchilla, Calif., the scene of last years school-bus kidnapping. His wife watched the truck warily through a living-room window, as if was the wrong day for tkie garbage pickup. When the truck returned 10 minutes later and turned around again. Mrs. Brown leaped into her car. chased the truck down the road, then parked across a neighbors driveway, blocking its retreat. She demanded an explanation from the three startled occupants of the truck, who told her they had been summoned from a nearby town to make a special pickup and were lost. A phone call confirmed their story, and Joan Brown went home, shaking.</p>
        <p>The Browns are parents of two of the children  Jennifer and Jeffrey, ages 9 and 11  who were kidnapped in Chow-chllla a year ago this month. Headlines all over the world carried the story. On the afternoon of July 15 a school bus  with a dependable, veteran driver named Ed Ray at the wheel  simply disappeared while delivering 26 students from Dairyland School to their homes. When the bus was found several hours later, abandoned in a dry creek bed. it was empty. For 36 hours, millions of concerned people kept vigil with the 15 sets of parents and the anxious citizens of Chowchilla as they awaited word of the fate of the children Then, wonderfully, the missing children turned up in a stone quarry, 100 miles from home, where they had broken out of an underground prison into which their kidnappers had forced them.</p>
        <p>Several weeks after the dramatic homecoming of the Chowchilla children, three young men were arrested and accused of the kidnapping. They are presently in jail, awaiting a trial that has been put off again and again at the requeS of the defense.</p>
        <p>While the judicial system is carefully safeguarding the legal options available to the accused, the victims needs and difficulties have been given considerably less attention. It has not been an easy year for the, town of Chowchilla, The jitters that sent Joan Brown chasing after a garbage truck is no isolated example. Efforts to "get back to normal"  the earnest desire of virtually everyone With whom I talked in Chowchilla  have been difficult and elusive.</p>
        <p>Consider, for example, Jean Campbell, a bespectacled, matronly woman whose</p>
        <p>Joseph Bell is a free-lance writer and a part-time teacher of loriting at the Univ. of Calif, at Irvine. He regvlarfy contributes to many national publications. including Harper's. Good Housekeeping. McCall's and The National Observer.</p>
        <p>Last July, these students were kidnapped and held in an underground prison for 36 hours. Several months later they posed for this picture at Disneyland. Today, they are still learning to live with their experience.</p>
        <p>husband is a heavy-equipment agricultural worker. The Campbells live in a tiny frame house on the edge of Chowchilla, with a patio cluttered with playing children.</p>
        <p>Jean Campbelis ll year-old son, Jody, is a gentle, easygoing boy who wears thick-lensed glasses that permit him to function in a seeing world. Jody is losing his sight, and one day may lose it altogether; he is being taught both typing and Braille while he still can see to learn them. The kidnappers took an article from each of the children before they were prodded down into their dungeon. From Jody, they took his eyeglasses.</p>
        <p>Jody showed me some of his treasures  an autographed picture from actor Lee Majors, a dy ash tray he was making at school the day he was kidnappted. his typing practice papers, his Braille exercise. He talked about his eyesight without bitterness or rancor, his mother watching silently from the other side of the room. The Campbells had no money to replace Jody's glasses, and until the local Lions Club stepped in to pay for a new pair, he was virtually blind. I wonder, said Jody mildly as 1 stood in the doorway departing, how those kidnappersd like it if they were put down in a hole and couldn't see. -</p>
        <p>Some children have remained troubled. One parent willing to talk about this is Janice Park, She works in the office of the local auto dealer; her husband works a graveyard shift at a nearby industrial plant. Two of their children  Andrea. 9. and Larry, 8  were on the kidnap bus. Larry quickly found his own way of dealing with the experience. As soon as the children returned home, he began talking enthusiastically; since then, he has embellished his story and will happily explain how he vanquished the kidnappers single-handedly. But Andrea h^s withdrawn and will turn away if the subject comes up. The day before 1 talked with Janice Park, she was</p>
        <p>ecstatic because her daughter had been able to say the word kidnap f the first time since she returned home. V</p>
        <p>Carol Marshall also has had a hard time forgetting. Married to a rodeo rider who is gone much of the time, she lives with her two children, Mike. 14, and Marcia, 13, in a tiny frame house with a trailer parked out back in a yard cluttered with machinery, animals and small outbuildings. Mike, the oldest child on the kidnap bus, is a reed of a boy, wiry, darkly handsome, withdrawn.</p>
        <p>A few weeks after the kidnapping, when Carol thought the trauma had worn off, she and Mike took her husband to the airport. Driving home, they were halted at a stoplight behind a van cdmost exactly like the one used in the kidnapping. Mother and son were staring, transfixed, when a man suddenly jumped out of the drivers scat and ran to the rear of the van. We almost had heart failure. recalls Carol. Mike froze in the seat beside me, and I shouted at the guy, 'What do you think youre doing? He was as scared as we were. He was just closing a rattling door, but we must have looked pretty wild-eyed. We shook for a long time afterward.</p>
        <p>The Marshalls are at the center of a controversy that hiis divided Chowchilla deeply, Mike hopes to collaborate with a local reporter on a book that will state that it was Mike and not Ed Ray, the bus driver, who was responsible for digging the children out of their underground prison.</p>
        <p>Carol enlarges, uneasy but determined. Its caused some dissension here. 1 know that. But I think a lot of people are now regretting some things that happened after the kidnapping. The public made a big thing of it all over the world. Then there was this big letdown afterward when all the recognition and credit went to one person. This picture of one adult leading the kids out simply wasnt so, a least from the point of view of many of the kids. Each one of</p>
        <p>the kids thinks he or she played a big part in getting out  even if they didnt do anything physically.</p>
        <p>Ed Ray, a stocky, barrel-chested man with the calloused hands of a manual worker, still drives his Chowchilla school bus daily. Theres some awful far-out stories being told, he said to me. Like in some of those stories, the boys done all the work, and 1 didnt do nothing but lay down there in that hole and pray. I don't think thats fair to me.</p>
        <p>Ray said he had heard from several motion picture producers, and had signed a 90-day option with one. He now doubts anything will ever come of the whole matter, however. Now. Im just back to the same old routine, driving my bus and doing my other work. For a long while I was thinking about it all the time. Now that's pretty well stopped  till somebody brings it up like right now. and then it starts all over again.</p>
        <p>An Ed Ray Retirement Fund and a Scholarship Fund for the children were established to handle contributions that poured into Chowchilla. Many of the parents were angry that the scholarship fund to accommodate 26 children turned out to be smaller than the retirement fund for one adult. One perplexed parent told me: Everybodys making money off this but the children. A lot of people have said to me that we should just be glad because our kids are back. But that begs the question completely.</p>
        <p>There is also anguish in Chowchilla about the equity of justice. A lot of people who never thought about this concept are thinking a great deal about it these days.</p>
        <p>Carol Marshall, for example, told me softly: The worst thing the defendants can get, unless the state can prove bodily harm, is life imprisonment, and that will make them eligible for parole in 10 years. Ifs awful to sit in that courtroom and listen to technicalities that have notWng to do with our kids. Yet, 1 know thats the only way the system can work, that legal lines have to be drawn, that everyone is entitled to a fair trial.</p>
        <p>A victims father sat in the courtroom at the arraignment of the first defendant captured, agonizing over his own quietly violent thoughts. It occurred to me, sitting there, he said pensively, that if I jumped across that railing with a club and beat that man 1 would be dragged off and possibly even killed myself. That was hard for me to understand. Yet, I know thats how it has to be. 1 understand it hasnt been proved they did it.</p>
        <p>In spite of the misunderstandings, the anger and the bitterness in the aftermath of the kidnapping, one message comes through from Chowchilla: Were dealing with our problems, and if there is a lesson for others to learn from the trauma weve suffered this past year, thats it. I</p>
        <p>FAMILY WEEKLY. July 3,1977</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0079" />
        <p>Kings, 15 mg. "tx." 1.0 mg. nicotine; Longs, 18 mg. tar," 1.3 mg. nicotine, av. per cigarene, FTC Repon Dec. 76</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0080" />
        <p>MR. FOURTH OF JULYit'kickirir'kifk'k'kifir'kltltirkiririfkltititif^kirkirk'kirk'k-k^'kifkirk-k^</p>
        <p>  11T II I J.I.  IJ* X X it on the moon, had astronaut Neil ArmstrongTommy Walker is the worlds greatest fireworks p,at the American flag and then returned the man, and his dazzling displays are huge spectacles module to the circling Apoiio spaceaaft.</p>
        <p>J  how  took  Walker  and  his  ace  pyro-</p>
        <p>that can tell a story with animated characters.  technic specialist, Bernard Wells, the better part</p>
        <p>of five months to plan on a story board in Walkers Anaheim offices. Twenty-four'workmen needed three days to install the intricate lattice work sets that covered the entire field. It all went up in 45 minutes at a cost of $100,000, which Walker put up himself.</p>
        <p>His biggest challenge, he says, was the opening of the Kingdome in Seattle in March, 1976. Walker gave them the biggest show he ever had put on: 3,600 musicians, a chorus of 2,000 voices, hundreds of representatives of</p>
        <p>He has even greater plans for future showsiBy Dave Rose</p>
        <p>Tommy Walker, whose fireworks spectacular is featured on our cover, wasnt bom on the Fourth of July, but he should have been. If ever there was a true Yankee Doodle Dandy, that man is Tommy Walker.</p>
        <p>Booming fireworks, massed bands, balloon-filled skies, colorful marching girls, flags, belching cannons and mock battles  thats Walkers world, and no one is better at crediting it. Hes the man behind some of the most breathtaking shows in the world.</p>
        <p>Where big things are happening, chances are the 54-year-old Walker is there, like the opening ceremonies for the 1960 Winter Olympics at Squaw Valley. Transpo 72 in Washington, D.C., the 1974 Worlds Fair in Spokane, Wash., the opening of Seattles Kingdome. He has done so many football half-time shows he cant remember them,all. and he even won an international film festival award for best television commercial.</p>
        <p>But the Fourth of July and fireworks are Walkers first love. Ive had a great interest in fireworks since I can remember. he says. They have a spectacular effect you can't get in any other form of show business, and they add a touch of patriotism. </p>
        <p>Walkers fireworks shows are something special. He more than anyone developed animated fireworks that tell stories in stark and brilliant colors.</p>
        <p>For his Fourth of July Bicentennial sbow^irt-^ Anaheim Stadium last year, a 40-foot signature. of John Hancock was slowly spelled out on the Declaration of Independence. A British armada fired on Ft. McHenry, with shells moving across the night sky and return fire from the fort falling on the British ships. Two locomotives steamed toward each other to meet at Promontory, Utah, linking the nation by rail. There was even the driving of the golden spike by pyrotechnic characters. And, finally. Walker launched Apollo 11, landed the lunar module</p>
        <p>Dave Rose is feature writer for The Register in Orange Countii. Calif.</p>
        <p>$m FAMILY WEEKLY, July 3,1077</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0081" />
        <p>the citys various ethnic groups and two large Baptist choirs  a cast of 7,0W.</p>
        <p>The logistics were horrendous, Walker recalls. "There were all those section rehearsals to coordinate because you obviously cant bring that many people together for daily practice sessions. Then we had to distribute 20,000 pieces of sheet music, plan parking for hundreds of buses, print and distribute thousands of aedentials and, finally, provide 7,000 meals following the dress rehearsal that afternoon.</p>
        <p>The show was a smashing success. More than 58,000 people filled the hew stadium. Two days later. Walker had open heart surgery. He was back in a few months, however, serving as chief consultant for the huge Happy Birthday U.S.A. show in the nations,capital.</p>
        <p>Walkers love for the big, the si ectacular, the colorful goes back to the mid-19)% when his father, dren director of the Mil)waukee American Legion Band, took the conization to Europe, and Tommy went with nim. I was just a</p>
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        <p>kid then, but I fell in love with those big bands, Mhe flags and the colorful uniforms.</p>
        <p>By the time he was in high school, Wallter was organizing half-time shows for the semi-pro football games in Los Angeles. After that, it was an easy jump to the University of South^' em California, where Walker was the teams place kicker and, at half time, the drum mr^or leading the band onto the field. </p>
        <p>At use he was known as Trojan Tommy.</p>
        <p>It was Walker who put the Trojan soldier on the beautiful white horse that is still a big part of use football. He also utilized the well-known bugle call that ends with the equally famous awr hortation, Charge!</p>
        <p>Walker stayed at USC as band director until 1955, when Wrt Disney called to put him in charge of the opening ceremonies at Disneyland. Disney thm hired him as entertainment director, a job he held for 10 years.</p>
        <p>He developed such innovations as nightly fireworks, Tinker Bell, the big bands, night dancing, the New Orleans Square and the Disney chturacters that prance around the park.</p>
        <p>Theyre all taken for granted now, but they were unheard of until I got there, Walker observes. Disney never hesitated in giving the aedit where it belonged. You can that^ Tom-  my Walker for the ideas, Disney liked to iaih -Where does he get his ideas? You look for a story line," Walker says. You ask yourself, what do you want to say* One of his most successful ideas was the show for the 1970 Super Bowl in New Orleans, which featured EDa Fitzgerald, Louts Armstrong A1 Hirt and a Battle of New Orleans with a Mardi Gras flnale.</p>
        <p>There have been some snafus atong the way, too. During his 1812 Overture production climaxing the Battle of New Orleans, a cannoneer lost a few fingers, and earlier a hot-air balloon landed in the stands.</p>
        <p>His most embarrassing moment was at the Cabfomia 500 auto race in Ontario a few years ago. As the inevitable 500 pigeons were released, someone fired a cannon. Its effect on the birds was immediately apparent.</p>
        <p>He says he can see ik&amp;gt; reason why his productions wont be getting bigger and better. He has tome big ideas, Bke a transcontinental hpt;;^. air balloon race, an international firewcm competition and a Christmas TV special frcxn all over the world via satelBte.</p>
        <p>When the day comes tfiat I cant top myself, ro step down, Walkeptays. He then ad^ with a grin, but Fve itffll got some rare great thin^ I want to try  rell</p>
        <p>FAMtt.YWSKLY,July3,rr</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0082" />
        <p>RECIPES FROM ^THE CALIFORNIA HERITAGE COOKBOOK</p>
        <p>This prize-winning book was put together by the Junior League of Pasadena and has recipes from all over the state. Here are some delicious ones weve chosen.</p>
        <p>[Huftratlon by Tom Cavanagh</p>
        <p>^ptreiiarpr PatMt Nt. 3118435. Am! attcr patents paiMling.</p>
        <p>. Ikt U.S. ConniMwit Awtrtt TIm Rm-M</p>
        <p>The Rem-Jet Supercharger is a great new weapon In America's war on high fuel costs  and the sluggish performance you get because of government mandated pollution control devices. It combines the best of automotive and aviation air induction principles. (Yet its so brilliantly simple to install, any 12 year old can do it in 3 minutes)... So do not confuse the RAM-JET with ail the many auto-gimmicks you see advertised that have no patent and serve no reat purpose.</p>
        <p>Nowi In tHhM SDimtiirm 11IRNS POLLUnON</p>
        <p>IHTO fHEE POWER FMYOUR</p>
        <p>(Gives you up to 50 extra miles for every tankfull)!</p>
        <p>TIew Ram-Jet ActuaHy 'Jet Assists Your Car Engine...Makes It Bura Up To 15 GaOons Of Air For Every Gidon Oif Gas...</p>
        <p>And Gives You As Much As 15 More Usable Horsepower! Free!</p>
        <p>1) Ram-Jet air intake vent.</p>
        <p>2) Waste gas from pollution control line enters here.</p>
        <p>3) Mini Computer" valve inside regulates perfect gas/air mixture for every driving situation.</p>
        <p>4) Jet Stream of super vaporized mix improves carburetion - actually results in FREE powerll Adds as much as 15 more usable borsa-power (And it does so with absoluU 100% safety).</p>
        <p>m Ram-Jet Is virtually indestructible - made of a fansUstic DuPont</p>
        <p>M*t.?d*VorrtlLTr0O,0M "</p>
        <p>Its about as easy as screwing in a light but. (And ladies, you can do</p>
        <p>it without oven getting your hands greasy).</p>
        <p>We believe Ram-Jet is the most exerting piece of high-performHiee automotive eguipment since the V-8. Yet it weighs only a few ounces. Installs</p>
        <p>in n ^nsanlm nl miieiifm</p>
        <p> w. .ww am  visr/   tntlfWCu  .  ________</p>
        <p>in a couple of minutes (No tools or training needed. You wont even get your hands greasy). Costs less than a tankful of gas. And saves yea u aiaek gas.</p>
        <p>its like getting every tenth giijM'EE!~</p>
        <p>The brainchild of Ed Almouist, internationally</p>
        <p>famous automotive engineer and tfie Thomas Edt son of high-performance accessories... The Rani-Jet took over 20 years to develop and perfect. And now-onh after proving itself beyond a shadow of a doubt  at Pxano and other stock car races, as well as in a national test of thousands of ordinary cars in normal driving situations... NOW, AT LAST, THE RAM-JET IS READY FOR YOUl READY TO TURN POLLUTION INTO FREE POWERI</p>
        <p>Hew dess it work?</p>
        <p>Just as a Jet engine requires a certain supply of ir to operate... so does the gasoline combustion engine in your car. And ifs the carburetor that mixes this air with fuel to fire the cylinders and make your car go. The problem is that carburetors were invented over 50 years ago when gas was plentiful and cheap and air pollution wasnt even talked about. The carburetor hasn't changed much lince then: Its still a big compromise! It only</p>
        <p>air to op</p>
        <p>W..IS.W t.vvi. I*  kill  ipif  viinso:  v</p>
        <p>works perfectly on those rare occasions when .n driving conditions are perfect. (Which averages only</p>
        <p>NOW WfTH 60VERNMENT INSISTENCE ON POLLUTION CONTROL DEVICES, THE WASTE IN POWER AND GASOLINE IS EVEN GRtTER THAN EVER. BECAUSE THE POLLUTION THAT USED TO BE RELEASED INTO THE AIR IS NOW FED BACK INTO YOUR ENGINE.</p>
        <p>If youve ever wondered why the newer cars seem to have even less power than the older ones, well</p>
        <p>SIO.OOO or 320,000 (or even more) tor a new car and still find it lacks real oomph when you need it, hesitating and even stalling out on you frequently.</p>
        <p>Hew, at last, the Ram-Jat to the ftscael It solves kotk prablaais at oaea.</p>
        <p>It brings your 50-year-old-carburetor design into the Jet Age.</p>
        <p>1) It works like a mini-computer to automatically adjust the alr/gas mixture to your every driving need. It thus steps up gas molecularization ... reducing gas flow befara it becomes wasteful. Just as a Jet engine sucks air into It... the Ram-Jet</p>
        <p>unEi5\!tt thesVevS^^^^^^ WPERCHARBERT we ret loads of</p>
        <p>"I have a Ram-Jat And so do many of my parishioners. We found out that</p>
        <p>automatically and safely Jets air into the gas mixture the very split second your driving conditions require it</p>
        <p>2) It Mptures the polluted air that would ordinarily be fed back into your engine... and re-energizes It into a Jet Stream that is once again ignited into aiafiri elm pawar instead of clogging up your engine and making it hesitate and stall and waste gasoline and power.</p>
        <p>'N automotive HISTORY: THE 100,000 MILE 100% MONEY BACK GUARAN-TH. Anytime within the next 100,000 miles you put on your car, if you dont think the Ram-Jet Supercharger is the best automotive investment youve ever made, simply return It to us for a full money back refund. No questions asked. (And dont forget-with the Ram-Jet turning pollution into free power instead of turning It back into your engine, its no telling how many extra power-gacked milesjiouli be able to log on your engine</p>
        <p>I its ready tor the Junk heap).</p>
        <p>thousands OF SIMILAR DEVICES SOLD IN EURDPE FOR MORE THAN $20 A PIECE. THE RAM-JET SUPER-CHAR^ IS NOW AVAIUBLE TO YOU FOR JUST 312.95. BECAUSE OF A SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT IT COMB TO YOU DIRECT (NO MIDDLEMEN)^IhE ilMOUCT ^ manufacturer HIMSELF, MR. ED</p>
        <p>-------^  pevirsvs. \ansiiKii Va  Ulllf</p>
        <p>a couple of minutes at the most out every driving  eight,</p>
        <p>hour). Your carburetor Just can not efficiently ai  like  it</p>
        <p>Just Itself to your stop-and-go driving, sudden bursts ' of speed; or to put it in technical terms... those many occasions when your engine is operating under 0-10" high-load conditions. When this crucial mixture of sir and gas is not right on the money, the result is a loss of power with a lot more gas being burned than is really necessaryl</p>
        <p>An airline pilot writes: Suddenly my little six cylinder engine seems to have the power of an ci^it. Yet it saves _gas like it wu a four. That little Ram-Jet is amazing!" - Phillip Shade, Plymouth, Connecticut</p>
        <p>I used to get around 21 mpg. in cin driving, and around 26 mpg. cross country. Now I get around 39 mpg. city driving and around 41 mpg. cross countiy. And the pickup is fantastic! That Supercharger you sent me is Marvelous."-JJ&amp;gt;.D.,</p>
        <p>Quebec, Canada</p>
        <p>we average from 2 to 6 more miles per gallon with much more engine pep and acceleratlon."-The Rev. P. Mick Harvey, Illinois</p>
        <p>energy-saving RE-</p>
        <p>, SEARCH raOGRAM. Do your part to help ^rica beat the energy crisis... simply by sending us a brief report of the kind of gas savings and increased power you enjoy once you add the RAM-JET Supercharger to your car. Many thousands of participants are needed for this most worthwhile research. The results of which will be tabulated and released to the engineering departments of major American universifies, automotive companies, the U.S. Government and the general public.</p>
        <p>r* ^  MAIL  THIS  NO-mSK  COUPON  TOOAYI</p>
        <p>A^m^lOT HMUFACTURINO, LTD. DapLFDOS-FW</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>521 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. lOcflT</p>
        <p>miraculous patented RAk4J|T Supercharger that turns pollution into FREE Power! And as a free ^ I will also receive the DOUBLE YOUR GAS MILEAGE report and Miles-Per-Gallon calculator to prove how much gas I save.</p>
        <p>Copyright IU4G Ltd.</p>
        <p>,n'n  Vti  'Nng the next</p>
        <p>100,000 miles I mm return the RAM-JET for a full moneyhack refund. No questions asked.</p>
        <p>Enclosed is cash, check or money order. Or, you may charge my:</p>
        <p> MASTERCHARGE  BANKAMERICARO</p>
        <p>Acct#____</p>
        <p>INTER BANK *  _</p>
        <p>for Expiration date of card.</p>
        <p>-  W..W/  ..wn  iwiifiaqa.  imv  l|U9UUII9  mitfa.</p>
        <p>i^frw'gfits)**'  *''  **'"'*tor</p>
        <p>On thrt basis, here is 312.95 (plus .754 for A handling). Order two for Just 319.95 (complete). You save 37.45.</p>
        <p>NAME:.</p>
        <p>ADDRESS: CITY:.</p>
        <p>Enqufrn About Urrique Ram-Jet AgwTptaam! lafc  ^  ^  ^  jjjj*  t*-  Jj</p>
        <p>By Marilyn Hansen</p>
        <p>After testing and eating some of the foods from the cookbook, we decided to talk to some of the women who developed it.</p>
        <p>. Mrs. Tenaya Custer, the outgoing cookbook chairman, believes that the phenomenal success of the book is due to the fact that every good cook who picks it up flips over it.</p>
        <p>The project originated in 1972 when the League was investigating possible fund raisers. The women knew they had many excellent cooks, and the cookbook idea naturally followed.</p>
        <p>A committee of 36 was formed and all 286 women in the league submitted recipes. After historic research and screening, testing and writing recipes, three chapters were submitted to Doubleday. They were accepted, and the book was on its way. This year The California Heritage Cookbook was first runner-up in the First Cookbook and Regional Cooking categories of the R.T. French Company Tastemaker Awards contest. Proceeds from the sale of the book go to the Leagues many community projects.</p>
        <p>GREEN GODDESS SALAD ~</p>
        <p>1 Vi tablMpoons minead scalllona. Including tops</p>
        <p>2 lablMpaons minced frash parslay 1 tablaapoon minead trash tarragon or Vt taaspoon dried 1 tablespoon snipped fraab chhraa</p>
        <p>1 tablespoon f rash lemon juica</p>
        <p>2 tablespoons tarragon vinagar 2 tabiaspoons heavy ezaam</p>
        <p>5 tabiasiwons chopi&amp;gt;ed anchovy filiate</p>
        <p>1V5 cups mayonnaise 6 to 8 cups bita-slzed places of assorted salad greens: romaina, andiva, escarola and chicory; washed and chiliad 1 dove garlic, split</p>
        <p>1. In a 1-qt. jar place scallions, parsley, tarragon, chives, lemon juice, vinegar, cream and anchovies. Shake vigorously. Stir in mayonnaise. Shake again or blend in blender. Chill.</p>
        <p>2. When ready to serve, rub a large salad bowl with the cut clove of garlic. Place the greens in the bowl and pour the chilled dressing over the greens, tossing briskly. Serve the salad at once from the large bowl onto chilled salad plates. Serves 6 to 8</p>
        <p>CHINESE SKEWERED SHRIMP</p>
        <p>30 largo raw shrimp or prawns cupdryshorry  A</p>
        <p>Vi cup soy sauce /</p>
        <p>Vi cup Oliva or poanut oil Vi teaspoon powdered ginger Vi teaspoon grated lemon peel</p>
        <p>1 clove gartic, crushed</p>
        <p>2 cans (8Vk -oz. alza) water chastnute, drained 30 frash mushrooms, stemmed</p>
        <p>Vi lb. bacon, cut Into 2- x 2-inch squares</p>
        <p>1. Shell and d^vein the shrimp. In a 2- to 3-qt. bovd, combine the sherry, soy sauce, oil, ginger, lemon peel and garlic.</p>
        <p>2. Place the raw shrimp into the bowl and marinate in the mixture, stirring occasionally. This may be done in the refrigerator for 2 hours or at room temperature for 1 hour.</p>
        <p>3. Thread the shrimp on metal skewers (5 per skewer), alternating with water chestnuts, mushroom caps and bacon squares. May be done ahead and refrigerated, covered, for several hours.</p>
        <p>4. Place the skewers over medium coals on the barbecue, turning frequently and basting with the marinade.</p>
        <p>5. Cook for approximately 6 to 8 minutes or until shrimp are pink. Serve hot from the grill over rice pilaf and garnished with fresh or broiled tomatoes.</p>
        <p>Makes 6 servings</p>
        <p>Th* Ctinomlt Hertlaga Cooktcok by Junk* L*agu&amp;lt; of Paisde Inc (DouMecbiy&amp;amp;Co..S9 9S)</p>
        <p>10  FAMILY WEEKLV. July 3,1977</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0083" />
        <p>' f.</p>
        <p>taB</p>
        <p>iTlNfNc,Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.</p>
        <p>LIGHTS: 11 mg. "tar". 0.8 mg. nicotine ev. per agarettE. FTC Haport DEC. 7a LIGHT WO'S: 12 mg. "tar", 0.9 mg. nicatine av. per dgarette by.FTC method</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0084" />
        <p> SPECIAI. OFFER TO OUR READERS</p>
        <p>PRINTED ON DELUXE KODAK PAPER</p>
        <p>Limit two cartridges with coupon from this ad only</p>
        <p>2D EXP.</p>
        <p>NO. 110-126-135 -J2.50 plus 20c posbge per roll.</p>
        <p>NEW BORDERLESS PRINTS Offer ends Dec. 20,1977</p>
        <p>SKRUDLAND PHOTO</p>
        <p>HEBRON ILLINOIS 60034</p>
        <p>^Sood Housakteping'</p>
        <p>PWHISS &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>We use Kodak paper.''^^    sKruolan"phot"  "e"!</p>
        <p> Here is my cartridge of 12-exposure Kodacolor film.</p>
        <p>I am enclosing $1.25 plus 20* postage per roU with this special coupon.</p>
        <p> Here is iny trtridge of 20-exposure Kodacolor film, f am enclosmg $2.50 plus 20&amp;lt;! postage per roll.</p>
        <p>SKRUDLAND PHOTO I understand failures will be credited.</p>
        <p>Hebron,</p>
        <p>Illinois 60034</p>
        <p>MV NAME (PRINT)  ^  ---</p>
        <p>MY ADDRESS</p>
        <p>CITY</p>
        <p>STATE</p>
        <p>ZIP</p>
        <p>Much of our physical and emotional makeup follows measurable rhythms, and what scientists are learning about them could have a profound effect on our lives.</p>
        <p>VIHAT MAKES THE BODY TICK?</p>
        <p>By Vicki Goldberg</p>
        <p>The human body is built of bones, flesh  and time. Just as the sun rises nd sets every 24 hours and the moon waxes and wanes every 30 days, so most functions of the mind and body  sleep and walking, dream and fantasy, heartbeat and temperature  have measurable rhythms. Scientists are intensifying their search for the source 6f biologiceil rhythms, and what they learn may have a profound effect on how we live in the future. Scientists already have discovered that we are composed of time and that our rhythms must be smoothly orchestrated to keep us in health and harmony.</p>
        <p>The most visible pattern is circadian  from the Latin circa dies, about a day  the 24-hour sleep-wake rhythm, for instance. Less visible are other rhythms that pulse through the body every day:</p>
        <p> Body temperature climbs during the day and falls at night.</p>
        <p> Blood pressure hits a maximum level in the late afternoon, a minimum In the early morning when were asleep.</p>
        <p> Mood and efficiency tend to with temperature. One study of college students found them most depressed and least efficient in the early morning, least depressed and most efficient in the late afternoon.</p>
        <p> Perceptual acuity and capacity to perform certain tasks generally peak in mid-morning and late afternoon, hit a low point at 4:00 A.M.</p>
        <p> Evidence exists that beard growth, which is related to hormone production and sexual activity, varies throughout the week and increases on weekends.</p>
        <p> Shorter rhythms punctuate the day. Dreams come in clusters every hour and a half or so; daydreams are appsuently most intense at similar intervals. The stomach contracts approximately every 90 minutes during the day, and consumption of food,</p>
        <p> FAMILY WEEKLY, July 3,1*77</p>
        <p>drink and cigarettes foDows this routine. A study of obese subjects showed, not too surprisingly, that their food intake peaked more frequently than most peoples.</p>
        <p> Hman beings arent naturally 24-hour creatures. Volunteers who live for a while isolated from all time cues, such as sunrise or clocks, almost always set themselves a slightly longer day, about 25 hours on the average. Some people in time-free experiments will stay up as long as 36 hours and sleep the next 13. One Frenchman spent 60 days In a cave but thought it had only been 35 because hed only slept 35 times.</p>
        <p> If our rhythms are disrupted, we pay a price. People who work on rotating shifts suffer a higher Incidence of ulcers. Jet lag leaves the body bewildered and in need of time to recover. It even has been hypothesized that pibts on east-west runs age prematurely. West German scientists set blowflies on a schedule of 12 hours of fight and 12 of darkness, then shifted their fight phase forward six hours once a week, comparable to flying across the Atlantic. The time-shifted flies died younger than the flies on a regular schedule.</p>
        <p> All serious disease probably involves some distortion of body rhythms. For example, anorexia nervosa, a condition in which women in their late teens and early twenties eat very little, grow dangerously thin and stop menstruating, is known to involve a pattern of hormone secretion unlike the adults but similar to that of girls at puberty or earlier. The rhythms of certain tumors differ from the bodys normeil beat, like clocks that have escaped from the rest of the body, as one researcher put it.</p>
        <p> Doctors are beginning to recognize that the bodys sensitivity to drugs and other agents fluctuates throughout the day. Patients needing steroid treatment tend to require lower doses and to suffer fewer side effects if medication is given only in the morning, or even every other morning.</p>
        <p>When more is known about rhythms that can be scientifically meeisured and studied, the impact on our lives could be enormous. For Instance, insects arc most vulnerable to insecticides at specific hours; some day we will spray less often but more effectively. Optimd work hours and periods of concentration will be understood some day; factory days and school schedules may then be rearranged. Time-linked sensitivities to drugs may ultimately figure in all prescriptions. Anaesthesia and operations may be scheduled to synchronize with the bodys changing resiliency, and the disrupted rhythms of severe disease might be restored to harmony by well-timed drugs or diet.</p>
        <p>Vicki Goldberg Is a free-lance writer who has written for many national publications, including Psychology Today. HarpersandSportslBustrated.</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0085" />
        <p>LtamMur^s Good Luck SacntHow to cash in on your built-in luck by using your personal Biorhythm Analysis to discover your multi-high jackpot days</p>
        <p>By Paul Vanderwist</p>
        <p>You are going to experience at least 5 multi-h^h jackpot days in the next two months. Your total will have reached 31 jackpot days by the end of the year.</p>
        <p>But chances are, you won't collect a single one of the jackpots you have coming to you. Why? Because although Mother Nature built these jackpots into you, up until now, she has kept the way to collect them a closely guarded secret</p>
        <p>But a scientific discovery has finally cracked Natures Good Luck Secret. What is the discovery? Scientists call it Biorhythm.</p>
        <p>Biorhythm is currently drawing enormous public attention. As a copywriter, I decided to look into it. My investigations centered around the research being conducted by the Biorhythm Research Institute.</p>
        <p>The Institute has developed a two part theory. First, at birth Mother Nature built good luck into each one of us. She intended for us to enjoy success and happiness in our lovelives. finances, and careers. Second, in order to cash in on your built-in luck, you must simply make the right little decisions on your Biorhythm multi-high jackpot days. But, before I tell you about their research, let me quickly explain what Biorhythm multi-high jackpot days are.</p>
        <p>WHAT IS BIORHYTHM?</p>
        <p>The word Biorhythm is derived from the Greek .words bio* meaning life and rhythmos meaning regulated beats. There is considerable evidence that we all have three Life Beats (Biorhythm Cycles). 1. A 23 day Physical Cycle, governing energy and sexual stimulation. 2. .A 28 day Emotional Cycle, governing love and happiness. 3. .A 33 day Mental Cycle, governing money and career. These three Biorhythm Cycles flow throughout out entire life. They alternate between high and recharge cycles, (see photo at upper right). When at least two Biorhythm cycles ate on high, you experience a multi high jackpot day. When three cycles</p>
        <p>Jackie mat John Kennedy on a mental and emotional Multl-HIgh Jackpot Day.</p>
        <p>Alfred Mayle won SI0,000 by buying a lottery ticket on A MultFHIgh Jackpot Day.</p>
        <p>day of her performance, and peaked the day she won the gold medal on the uneven parallel bars.</p>
        <p>Remember the pet rock craze? The man who conceived the idea was a Californian named Gary Dahl. On .April 19. 1975 his Biorhythm Chart indicated a mental high jackpot day. It ws on this day that Dahl had his pet rock brainstorm. Ultimately, this venture made him a million dollars in less than 90 days.</p>
        <p>Jackie Bouvier Was an unknown reporter from the Washington Times Herald. On .May 8, 1952 her mental and emotional cycles both reached high points. It was on this day that she met and began interviewing lohn^F. Kennedy. They were soon married and later she became the yojms^20th Century. Today, Jabkie is probably the most famous woman alive.  \</p>
        <p>The Institute also studied people who were not famous but had experienced extremely good luck.</p>
        <p>During the week of .August 13th, Pat Carnes, a Canton, Ohio housewife, had an incredible luck streak. Ironically her luck began on Friday the 13th when she won her company's check pool for S69. Friday ni^t,' Pat won 5145 playing Bingo. Saturday, she hit the superfecta at the racetrack for 5850. Sunday, she won 5 times at Bingo and was embarrassed to keep raising her hand. Wednesday, she hit both the trifecta and the perfecta for a total of 5930. l?nknown to Pat, during this week her Biorhythm chart had registered six Multi-High Jackpot Days in a row.</p>
        <p>Omar Watts was a 59 year old nightwatchman struggling to support a wife and five children.</p>
        <p>At the moment of your birth, 3 Biorhythm Cycles begin to flow. They alternate between high cycles and recharge cycles throughout your entire life. Multl-high Jackpot days occur when at least 2 cycles are on high at the same time. Relax days occur when all three cycles are on recharge.</p>
        <p>fits can be yours.  the job and accellerate advancements. Profit-</p>
        <p> Your iuck can instantly improve. Your Anal- able times (intellectual highs) to make career On October 27. 1974 his Biorhythm Analysis ysis Will point out your multi-high jackpot and investment decisions will be pinpointed.</p>
        <p>days. These lucky days ate the best times for you Your analysis wiil notify you when to-be to enter lotteries, drawings, raffles, play bingo, on the lookout for hidden talents which may go to the races, play cards, or try any game of be surfacing. It will then point out the best chance.  times to develop these talents.</p>
        <p> Your Biorhythm Analysis can make you  By knowing the best times to do things.</p>
        <p>indicated a Triple High Jackpot day. It was on this day that Omar chose to quit his job as a nightwatchman. His purchase of a. 50^ ticket had just won Ohios first million dollar lottery.</p>
        <p>As you can see from the above examples.</p>
        <p>Once you have your personal Biorhythm Analysis prepared from your birth date you can begin to enjoy luck, love, wealth, success, and happiness."</p>
        <p>it was the iittle decisions made on multi-high days, which led to luck, love, wealth, success, and</p>
        <p>lucky at love. Youll be told when your Physical (sexual) and Emotional (romantic) high days</p>
        <p>happiness. This proves part two of the Institutes will occur, so you can take full advantage of theory.</p>
        <p>Now the Insrimte is conducting a nation</p>
        <p>wide research project to prove part one of their theory; that everyone, regardless of age or ability, can dramatically improve their luck with the l\elp of their personal Biorhythm Analysis.</p>
        <p>them. When you know' ahead of time youll be at your best, your self-confidence will improve. Members of the opposite sex will sense in on all of the built-in luck. love, wealth, success.</p>
        <p>and when to relax and recharge, youll do everything better than you have before. You can use your Biorhythm Analysis to begin an all around program of self-improvement.</p>
        <p>Biorhythm has been thoroughly tested. Over 5.000 companies worldwide use Biorhythm. .Many american airlines use Biorhythm. Biorhythm has been covered by most major newspapers, magazines, and has recently been featured on To Tell The Truth, and Monday Night Football.</p>
        <p>HOW CAN YOU ORDER YOUR PERSONAL BIORHYTHM ANALYSIS?</p>
        <p>If you are interested in immediately cashing</p>
        <p>this and be attracted to you.</p>
        <p>and happiness you have coming to jou. then sim-</p>
        <p>lYou will reach a new level of self-under- ply do this: standing with Biorhythm. You will follow a  Send the  name, address, month, date, year</p>
        <p>If you send them your birth date they will in- more natural lifestyle and be completely com- and place of birth for each person on a piece of</p>
        <p>hit high on exactly the same day, you experience a Triple High Super Jackpot Day. When all three cycles are on recharge, you have a relax day.</p>
        <p>CELEBRITY RESEARCH With this explanation in mind, let me continu to describe the Institutes research.</p>
        <p>To prove part two of their theory, that extraordinary luck can be achieved by making the right little decisions on Biorhythm multi high days, they studied a group of celebrities. All of the celebrities had one thing in common, they were leading ordinary lives when suddenly they mfn skyrocketed to wealth, success, and fame. Here ate their findings on just three of the many celebrities they studied.</p>
        <p>When the Olympics opened last summer, 14 year old, Nadia Comaneci experienced a Triple High Jackpot Day. Nadia went on to capture the first perfect score in Olympic Gymnastic history, seven perfect scores ovetalL and a total of 3 gold medals. In addition, Nadias physical Biorhydun Cycle was very high every</p>
        <p>dividually prepare yoUr one year - 365 day Biorhythm Analysis. Along with your Analysis, you will receive a research blank which will offer you cash incentives to simply teil the Institute all about the unbelievable luck, love wealth, success and happiness your Biorhythm .Analysis had brought you. Your success story will prove part one of their theory.</p>
        <p>HOW IS AN ANALYSIS PREPARED?</p>
        <p>A Biorhythm Technician will process your birth information. Your keypunched card will be fed into a giant IBM 3'70-145 computet. The computet will then complete the complicated calculations to determine the positions of your Biorhythm CYcles everyday for the coming year. Your Biorhythm Analysis will not be orenrinted. The computet individually prepares each analysis just like a man would. But the computers tremendous speed enables the Institute to prepare reports for the public at low costs.</p>
        <p>WHAT CAN BIORHYTHM DO FOR YOU?</p>
        <p>With your personal 15 page, 3,000 word Biorhythm Analysis, all of the following bcne-</p>
        <p>fortable in your new skin.</p>
        <p>paper along with the 53.65 plus i04 postage and</p>
        <p> Your analysis will help you perform better on handling (cash, check or money order) for each</p>
        <p> one year Biorhythm Analysis (365 days for U a day) If you have Master Gharee or VISA, you /  may charge your purchase by sending the following information:  A.  name of card</p>
        <p>B. credit card number  -  C. card expiration</p>
        <p>date.</p>
        <p>Man your orders to Biorhythm Research Institute, Dept, C-68,  401  Market .Ave. N.,</p>
        <p>Canton, Ohio 44750.</p>
        <p>You take absolutely no risk when you order.</p>
        <p>Your Biorhythm Analysis is coveted by a one ,^4!.</p>
        <p>mi - day - M ,m,gnsY If your luck does not dramatically improve in all areas of your life, simply return your analysis. You will receive every penny of vour money back - no questions asked.</p>
        <p>The Institutes research project may not last much longer. But right this minute you can have your personal one year Biorhythm Analysis in-dividaally prepared for just Id a dayl If you have When your tnrae lerliyttim Cyela* Hit HlgH on any questions, call me, Paul Vanderwist, at  ,</p>
        <p>you experlenee a Triple (216) 455-1390. TU be happy to talk with you.*</p>
        <p>"wH super Jaescpot Day.  oi*7 lorHytnm Resaaren institute</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0086" />
        <p>Advice Far HoUday Weekend Drivers</p>
        <p>The Independence Day and Labor Day weekends are expected to draw more Americans to the highways than previous years. Acccarding to Robert Clayton, president d the Independent Insurance Agents of America, there were 680 motor-vehide deaths over last years July 4th weekend and 540 deaths over the Labor Day weekend, so caution should be on the minds of "SB weekend travelers. Short tempers due to trafic jams and crowded highways are a partictilar hroard, and drivers also should be especially careful about drinking. For Side driving, the eiqrerts suggest;</p>
        <p> Dont start your trip straight from die office at the end of a working day, when you will be tired and traffic will be heaviest.</p>
        <p> Most motorists who are driving three hours past their normal bedtime eventually develop an almost irresistifaie urge to</p>
        <p>xjleep. One study shoAs that die largest single cause of accidents on the road is "driver went to sleep.</p>
        <p> Break up the trip with frequent stops for food, codee or si^-seeing. They should be spaced every hour and a half to two hours, more frequendy at night.</p>
        <p> Have light snrudrs rather than heavy meals, which can make you drowsy.</p>
        <p> Dont take long trips alone. Keep alert and keep bterddng the monotony. Tedldng is helpful, ate word games, rin^ng, humming and whistling.</p>
        <p> Before leaving, make sure the car is in top operating condition by having it checked ^ a qualified mechanic.Test Yonraelf Fw Low BlfMid Sugar</p>
        <p>Do you feel weak, dizzy and tense after long hours at your job? Do you have frequent headaches and feel depressed, confused and unable to sleep? You may well be sufieiing from stress, but your reaction to it may be intensified by low Hood sugw or hypoc^ycemia. The bodys nu^or energy source is sugar (glucose). When the level of ghicose falls too low, the natural ]ocess c carbohydiide metdiolism in the body, with the pancreas secreting insulin to send glucose into Uorage in the fiver, beonnes upset. The result can be hypo^ycemia, whidi usually is caused by an oversecre-don cf insulin. The Hypo^ycemia Foundation advfres you to consult your doctor if jMsaspecl youre hypo^ycemic.T1m&amp;gt; Danger Of Cold Water</p>
        <p>Ever wonder why good swimmers drown? S&amp;lt;nefimes the answer lies in the temperature of the water. A study of 875 droundn^ revealed that almost Vfi died in very d water, and Vt trf these were known to be good swimmers. Cold water drains heat away from the body 20 times as fast as air. If your body is immersed in cold water, itH trJce some 2 minutes for your skin temperature to drop to within 3 degrees of the w^er tempendure. The shoqk could cause a heart attack for those widi a weak heart. It is estimated that an average person immersed in water at 32F. will be unconscious in about 15 minutes; in 40F. water itH take 30 minutes; in 50F. water itTI tdre an hour; in 60F. water he could remain conscious for two hours, if you should faO into cdd water, follow this advice;</p>
        <p>1. Dcmt try to remove dothing.</p>
        <p>2. If the shore te near, try to swim for it  you want to get out cf the w^r quiddy, befcxe losing consciousness. K the water is calm, use a back or breast stroke.</p>
        <p>3. H the shore is far away, rnain sfiU unlll rescued because you cant swim very far in cold water. And the exercise of swimming will result in body heat being lost faster.</p>
        <p>Stonn Ufruming</p>
        <p>Electrical storms, occurring most frequently in July and August, can be terrifying. To protect yourself during a severe storm:</p>
        <p> Donotusetel^honeorTVset.</p>
        <p> Keep away frtxn all metal objects, such as pipes and electrical appliances.</p>
        <p> Keep away fiom wrindows and open doors.</p>
        <p> Dont tun outside to dose car windows m to bring in trikes.</p>
        <p> E)o not take a bath or do the dishes during an electrical storm.</p>
        <p> ffcau^outskte, avoid tone trees. Even if the tree you are under is not struck lightning, a nearby strike rnay follow the trees toots, tfwreby dectrifying a wide ground area.</p>
        <p> If caught on the golf course, sacrifice your equipment for the time being and get as far away as possMe from metal gotf dubs and the spikes in golf dwes and stay low. IF caught in the woods, seek out a small tree among several larger ones.</p>
        <p>Locking Up</p>
        <p>More than 25% erf todays burglaries could be avcrided if homes hiid adequate kx3ts. Maty Tucicer, Kansas State Univ. extension speciaiist in environmental family housing, offers some suggestions on chexising and installing locks.</p>
        <p> Use a (tead-bolt or seK-kxJdng dead lock on all exterior doors. The term "dead-boh means that the bdt can be moved only by turning die knob or key.</p>
        <p> The latdi or bolt either should protrude Vr" out of the lock when the boh or latch is in the locked position or should have inter-loddng bolts and strikes.</p>
        <p> To mount the dead-bolt lock, measure about Vfr (rf the distance from die top of the door rmd install the lock, udng 2*/*' screws.</p>
        <p> For added jxrotection. use a doca diain lodt that has a chain guard and locks with a key. Locate the lock and key on the inside of the door frame, securing the chain that is fastened to the doca. Fasten so that the chain will not allow the door to be opened more than 2'. The chain links should be welded together and made of strong metal.</p>
        <p> One lod( on a door is not really sufficient.Packiiig It In For A Car Trip</p>
        <p>If youre planning a car trip, heres a good list to check before leaving;</p>
        <p>In the Trtink: You should have a jack that works, a good spare tire (inflated), a big lug wrertoh (especially handy for loosening machine-tightened lug nutrf, a hammer; a PhflUps-head screwdriver and a regular screwdriver. You also will need a can (rf air for infiafing a flat, a tire-patch kit, a flashing wroning light and jumper cables (if you dont know how to use them, find out befme you go). Also good; a non-oily rag, a paired work ^oves, window cleaner and ptqiertowds, aUanket.</p>
        <p>In the Glooe Compartrr^at: A first-aid kit, sunglasses, tsues, moistened towelettes, eye drops, small diange for toUs, maps, a flashlight, car re^tration and insurance credentitds.QulckTakes</p>
        <p>A oMdical cxaialiiatlfHi for pfceen-tkN6 parpo i th loading roaoon adiy parqda visit a doctor; a study of 88,OQO patients in Virginia shows. High blood pressure, with or without heart or</p>
        <p>kidney disease, was runner-up____</p>
        <p>SOX of 2-y^&amp;lt;dd ha cavltie. and bp tha age of 4, 90X of aD Anwrican cUldren have dental decay, a report by researchers at Indianas BaD State Univ. reveals. The study also found that less than 4% of the Irigh school pu|rils in the U.S. are free of dental daySaffottt Univ. of-ficials^&amp;gt; senior Charlie Nile*. 82. be the oldest student ever to tVhoh Who in Amtericon Univeralties and Col-legem. Niles, one of 23 seniors nominated by SiffoQc officials, is a speech and communications major. He competes with the university debating team and during the past 2 years has won 6</p>
        <p>trophies in college tournaments____</p>
        <p>Robert OHara, jsofessor of linguistics at die Univ. of South Florida, says that smnaMS conM from the folloaring aovnrces: 5%  national extraction, such as French; 35%  geographic location, such as Hill or Dale; 19%  occupation, such as Smith or Miller; 21%  direct descent such as Johnson or Anderson; 6%  designated pretties or characteristics, such as Brown or Green, Litde or SmaD; and 14% are riti^ly unidentifiable.. ..Near htaai Fwiiace i wHhering the aqrth of. Gallic infallibility in the vt of love. Historians and sexologists argue that the notion of French romanticism, an exported image for centuries, never really reflected reality, and they must be right. To help the French with tj^eir sex problems, the Health Ministry Has set up a tdephone service for referrals on sexual problems; it gets several thousand calls a week.</p>
        <p>BIRTHDAYS (all Cancer): Sandoy  Tom Stoppard 40; Ken Russell 50; Stavros Niachos 68. Woiidnp  Mitch Miller 66; Neil Smon 50; E Marie Saint 53. Toe-dap  Julie Nixon Eisenhower 28. Wed-eadap  Merv Griffin 52; Janet Leigh 50; Delia Reese 45. Thmadap  Ringo Starr 37; Vincent Edwtards 49; Rerre Cte-din 55. Mdap  Ndson Rockefeller 69; Billy Eckstine 63; Steve Lawrence 42; Jerry Vale 46. Satarday-Saul Bellow 62; O. J. Simpson 30; Edward Heath 61; Richard Roundtree 35; Virginia Wade 32.</p>
        <p>BIRTHDAY PEOPLE NHchmilarand JaBeNixoBEiaenlKn</p>
        <p>RINlUrWEEKUr</p>
        <p>TheNeenpapu</p>
        <p>aiine</p>
        <p>Morton Frank IImVP.-PtotekM. Unakay EdHoc Scott DvGarmo</p>
        <p> BriHoc Tim MulHgan; Art _</p>
        <p>Richato 9aWati; SMior EdNora, Roaalyn Jim-vaya, Hal Landon; Food EdHor, Marilyn Haiam; ^ M DiMelar, .EsMle Walpin; Piekn^ Qtofia Br^ Roving EdHoc Paar Owaitiaimer; ConMbate Willais. Shirlw</p>
        <p>Summar, EdH.</p>
        <p>Aaat, William Colaon.</p>
        <p>MamrtaetBrinn: V.P.-I)ir.. Rkriiant Millan; Maiw-up Mgr.. Roberta Collins; Ptodiicon Hgr</p>
        <p>Helena Weltznar,Wannlag,MlchBelMontamurro M Managar, Gerald &amp;amp; Wioe; Aaaoe. Caalam Mgr., Richard K. Carroll; IMnlani Mgr, Joe Frazer, Jt4 Aaaoc^ CMcago Mgr- OeUS Long; Oa-,  IreH Mgr., Lawrence M. Finn; CaW.,PM(lns,St*-</p>
        <p>phene, von dar Ueth and Hayward; MariwNng r. EdH.  stantaw  Itaaenfald;  Martwtlng Mgr.. 1^</p>
        <p>DAllesaandro; Promolton, C.TwinSor; Mda-Maiw-  kigMgr.. Caryl Eller</p>
        <p>Robert.</p>
        <p>Robert D. Camay and Lee Bile; UF. I BotytJ. Chrieiian; Piddlahar RaL Mgr.. Robert K Marriott; Raalnm Mgr, Jamea GTSdier;-</p>
        <p>Phyllis Pillero;</p>
        <p>Robert</p>
        <p>RaL Mgr, Margaret Alexander,</p>
        <p>Shapiro; Cham. Emerttna, Leonard &amp;amp; [^dow</p>
        <p>Co-1</p>
        <p>Headquarters: Ml</p>
        <p>n Lexington N.V. 1(xa2</p>
        <p>Ave., New tork</p>
        <p>t*  RMinurWffltty.JulyAIStt</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0087" />
        <p>TASTE THE GOOD TIMES.</p>
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        <p>UJ</p>
        <p>Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined Thai Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.</p>
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        <pb facs="00093416_0088" />
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        <pb facs="00093416_0089" />
        <p>Tops in NEWS'FEATURES'SPORTS</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N. CBEST IN SUNDAY READING</p>
        <p>SUNDAY jut Y 3, 1977</p>
        <p>I n f in</p>
        <p>in/III I/I I</p>
        <p>THESE ARE ONE'S</p>
        <p>HOWPOWE KNOW THAT THEV'RENOT ELEVEN'S?</p>
        <p>IF THE THIRP, SIXTH ANP NINTH 60TMAPANP LEFT,THEN UIE'P HAVE ELEVEN'S...</p>
        <p>n // // //</p>
        <p>22222222222^222.</p>
        <p>wir</p>
        <p>rV&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>NO, THESE ARE FIVE TUIO'HUNPREP ANP TWENTV-TWOS '</p>
        <p>SO) PONT WNPERSTANP NVM0ERS</p>
        <p>NOU), HOW PO WE KNOW THAT THEV'RE NOT TWO TWO-(WNP ANP TWENTV-TWO'S WITH NINE TWO'S IN THE MIPPLE?</p>
        <p>SECA05E THAT WOULD BE PlSHONESTiONE'S MAV LEAVE, BUT TWO'S ARE NEVER PI5H0NE5TI</p>
        <p>THIS IS WHAT I MEANSVONPERSTANP-INO NUMBER5..WHERE ARE voy 60IN6?</p>
        <p>COME back! I HAvS SOME THIN65 TO SHOW W ABOUT FIVE'S THAT WILL MARE WR HEAP SPIN! rTt.</p>
        <p>by morj walker</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0090" />
        <p>km</p>
        <p>Our Sloru-- ATTWE SK3HT OF HIS THIEVING COUNTRVMEN, GUNTHER S&amp;amp;DLES HIS MOUNT, INPIFFERENT TO THE OPPS AGAINST HIM. NOR POES HE SEE VAL, THE SHEIK, MAFAUP ANP ZARA COMING POWN A SIPE STREET.</p>
        <p>^ GUNTHER IS IN A RAGE AS HE GALLOPS TO THE FINAL  MEETING WITH THE THIEVES. VAL, ZARA, MAFAUP ANP f THE SHEIK FOLLOW CLOSE BEHINP.</p>
        <p>-it</p>
        <p>7-3</p>
        <p>THEY FIGHT IN A NARROW ALLEY. GUNTHER FIGHTS HEROICALLY ANP IN HIS THIRST FOR VENGEANCE, HE POES NOT NOTICE THAT THE PRECIOUS REUCS ARE BEING TRAMPLEP IN THE MIRE.  ^ n  i</p>
        <p>NEXT WEEK-The Reiics Renamed</p>
        <p>5 King Featums Syndicata, Inc., 1977. World r^t* raparvM.</p>
        <p>2/08</p>
        <p>GAS*</p>
        <p>Youve come toirg out</p>
        <p>for the oca(</p>
        <p>-rieam,</p>
        <p>Newton?</p>
        <p>! ?</p>
        <p>'  ,,  r#i</p>
        <p>Ise goodf I plans t' b'come a leqen in our r timef</p>
        <p>by Dick Moores</p>
        <p>:rnr^</p>
        <p>pit chin</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0091" />
        <p>ScyS-THERE'S NOTHINS 1.IK6 A HIKE IM the &amp;lt; ccxjNTRyio KEEP you</p>
        <p>IN SHAPE f AHHH, listen AN ORIOLE iREyOUTAPINS?</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <p>^TOO BAD ABOUT MR^ WEATHERBEE -- SAV, LETS VISIT HIM ano PLAV BACK THE TAPE OF BIRO</p>
        <p>calls-thatll cheer/-;</p>
        <p> HIM UP/A </p>
        <p>W'-ti^ABU LOU^</p>
        <p>9e^_</p>
        <p>t.BARNEYiGOOGUE</p>
        <p>a^tdSf</p>
        <p>ftPssitmu</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>by</p>
        <p>MORTWAim</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>PlKWtOWNS</p>
        <p>bq GoRddN Bfss</p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0092" />
        <p>hkMrfI</p>
        <p>DON TrachteUXAPiiER</p>
        <p>bV AlCSapp</p>
        <p>H' FUST 3 O'MAH 32-YAR COURTSHIP WIF/AUDBELLE WEN7 LIKE A BREEZEr-ah 1DOK TWO 0005^ BUT WHEN HER T BROTHER (5RADUATED FU/M A*,EPICAL ECHOOL r~</p>
        <p>HER MOTHER COME POWN WIF A EMRARRASSIN'OASE O</p>
        <p>PALEHEes rr-</p>
        <p>BEIN' A HOCMAHITARIAN, TfTI yoUNe DOCTOR TOOK OFF TO PERU- TO HELP 7H-'</p>
        <p>NATIVESA</p>
        <p>BUT AH IS PATIENT-'J'-AH TOOK A 3RD (JOB, AM' IN / YAR6 IF''MOTHER WASCUREdT</p>
        <p>T WAS TH'-5DB-'FLASrJZ THAT WASTH'/MOS</p>
        <p>hearts T</p>
        <p>BREAMIN' </p>
        <pb facs="00093416_0093" />
        <p>The t^NANTGM</p>
        <p>Y WHY WERE YtI?ESRAS$INj,.ANP Y !</p>
        <p>MDU 9HOOTIN 7 HUNTING.. NE/THER  I AT Ue? J ALLOWEP. THIS le /</p>
        <p>MV ICELAND /AL</p>
        <p>'^TI?ESRAS$INj,.ANP HUNTIN6-,. NEITHER ALLOWEP. THIS MV l*5LANID</p>
        <p>S'  7</p>
        <p>'W&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>fAA^KBP HCOPLUM ? AL/WO&amp;amp;T HIT /MEi PLU5 HIM, EVAN6^</p>
        <p>Ajnrn'i^fSlM</p>
        <p>^ Vi','I'r V</p>
        <p>.V ,'</p>
        <p>4.</p>
        <p>&amp;amp; &amp;gt;t</p>
        <p>By Lee Falk</p>
        <p>'AMAZINe.-.VOU PIP IT All WITH ONE HANPi 1 WAKNEP THEM NOT</p>
        <p>TO HJVT \-\ZZZ .</p>
        <p>DICK TRACY</p>
        <p>by ChDStDT eovid</p>
        <p>'i  k</p>
        <p>628-Crochet this airy flare dress of a double stand of bedspread cotton with contrast trim.Sizes4,6,8incl.... $1.25LETS</p>
        <p>;  / VWdVaits</p>
        <p>Im 4*-.54*.--</p>
        <p>813Crochet short or long vest of worsted with contrast-coior bands. Easy, jiffy! Misses Sizes 8-18 included..........$1.25</p>
        <p>4996-Step in, pull strings to fit. Misses Sizes &amp;amp;18. Size 12 (bust 34) takes 2^yds. 60-in.</p>
        <p>4996 Printed Pattern.... $1.26</p>
        <p>Nitty Fifty QuUU w</p>
        <p>Send now for this yalue-paoktd book! Get natch patterns, diceo-tions for 50 quts-colonial, Indian-inimired and modem! Choose from flowers, riiells, squares, diamonds, heximons, pmwheels, more. $1.00</p>
        <p>FasMsss ts Sew Ne^icratt CsUtoi Collettisn U7+ Kaft Cretlistiei i WarSrobe Easy Art at Flawar Crachtt  Inanat Msaay look  </p>
        <p>Casqilttt Alihant #14  </p>
        <p>12 Prin Al|lm #12</p>
        <p> $ .75</p>
        <p>  .75</p>
        <p>4607Sleeveless jacket swings easily over culottes with bmd pockets. MissesSizss 8-18.</p>
        <p>4607 Printed Pattern.... $1.25</p>
        <p>laak af II Nffy Rsfi laak af 11 Qaiftt |1 Mstaim QaHt laak #2 IS Isilts far Talay 13 Nitia Fifty aailt last Stilsli VPatek OaiHt</p>
        <p>D</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>.75</p>
        <p>1.25 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00</p>
        <p>.50</p>
        <p>.50</p>
        <p>.50</p>
        <p>.50</p>
        <p>.50</p>
        <p>1.00</p>
        <p>1.25</p>
        <p>1.25</p>
        <p>No. Size Price</p>
        <p>4607</p>
        <p>813</p>
        <p>628</p>
        <p>4996</p>
        <p>$L26</p>
        <p>$1.26</p>
        <p>$1.26</p>
        <p>$1.26</p>
        <p>sPafftiim_</p>
        <p>Adid 3S4 maach Item ontarad for postage and jpeciat handline.</p>
        <p>Seedie.LirSSIW</p>
        <p>* / This NowapaifMar</p>
        <p>aM Isa. OM Cheltae Sta. aaewVeHoN.T.taati</p>
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        <p>Fa</p>
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        <p>JAPllt VMOULD VR, IT WOLP K LESS BWNfUL, IWKOOPIF</p>
        <p>BrmKWMo vm SOPIES</p>
        <p>AMITO5AY? WRFOBW&amp;gt; Arm BASE</p>
        <p>Z.AS If You^syjmiBs.if</p>
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        <p>WAD FALLEN YOU CANT BE mJMmTOP/ A NERO, ITS -ANOWe PILOT FA5CiAMnW&amp;lt;5 W.L THINK you -TOBETHegAP WEREL05TWHILE : SUV.A</p>
        <p>^ O  ^  ^  LEE  MQLLEV</p>
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        <p>WAE fN SUCH AeoopMoop/</p>
        <p>flE ACTUALLY APOLO(^f2P</p>
        <p>tome;.</p>
        <p>FOR ALL THE TIMES HE^ VELLEP AT ME.</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>THAT IM BREAKINeUP ,</p>
        <p>WITH YOU AN P VO WONT 66 HAN&amp;amp;IN ARDUNP THe, OJ&amp;amp;e ANVWOPE /1i-l#%CAR The Horrible</p>
        <p>6/ ViK BR0a/(\^</p>
        <p>rf% so saltY THAT HoTHlMa</p>
        <p>/*anJ Ik] IX</p>
        <p>WoW/tYHAT'S .FOR ME-1 CAH'T</p>
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