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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>warning toalght and qnttacaldttiroii^i Wednesday.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Page Peacetime victim</p>
        <p>PageS-Obituaries</p>
        <p>Page 16Carters prcM|)ect8</p>
        <p>96th Year NO. 308TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 27, 1977</p>
        <p>28 PAGES 3 SECTIONS PRICE 15 CENTS</p>
        <p>COPTER HITS APARTMENT  Parta of a radio statkn traffic helicopter He on the ground beside a burning apartment building in Quincy,</p>
        <p>Maaa. The craft, fitHn Bostons WEEI, crashed into the roof of the building. (APLaaophoto)Copter Strikes Bidg.; Two Die</p>
        <p>QUINCY. Mass. (AP)  A radio station traffic helicopter slammed through the roof of an apartment building today and exploded, killing two persons and injuring four others, witnesses said.</p>
        <p>Two bodies burned beyond recognition were found near the wreckage of the helicopter, which came to rest on the second floor of the two-story, 23unlt red brick building and started a fire there.</p>
        <p>One would assume they are from the helicopter," a medical examiner said of the bodies.</p>
        <p>Qccipants of the helicopter were identified as Chip Whitmore, a reporter for station WEEI, and pilot Red Banks</p>
        <p>Persons in the building who were hurt in the crash were identified as Julia Verga, 62; Ronald Michelson. 28, and his wife. Lvnn. and a 10-</p>
        <p>weekold baby.</p>
        <p>All four were taken to hospitals. Their conditions were not immediately known.</p>
        <p>Ned Foster, a helicopter traffic reporter for station WBZ, witnessed the crash.</p>
        <p>It went into a dive and crashed through the roof of the apartment building." Foster said. Then it expoded on impact."</p>
        <p>The crash on Station Street occured near the Southeast Expressway, where the helicopter reporter was watching traffic. Whitmore was filling in for WEEIs regular traffic reporter, Kevin OKeefe, who was on vacation this week.</p>
        <p>A few minutes before the helicopter went down, its occupants had radioed the station that they were having difficulties and would try to make an emergency landing near the expressway.</p>
        <p>Loca/ Stores, Offices Resume Normal Hours After Yule Holidays</p>
        <p>By DEBBIE JACKSON ReOectorStaffWriter</p>
        <p>Local stores and offices that were closed for the Christmas</p>
        <p>holidays returned to their normal schedules today.</p>
        <p>According to an offical at Greenville Public Works, there</p>
        <p>reflector**' -</p>
        <p>OTLinC</p>
        <p>752-1336</p>
        <p>Hotline gets things done for you. Call 7S2-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.</p>
        <p>Because of the large numbers received, Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only Initials vidll be used. Transcribing is done once a day.</p>
        <p>A HOTLINE TRIBUTE HONESTY</p>
        <p>I would like to pay tribute to Mrs. Dupree Taylor of Grimesland who returned the $1571 had lost. Im glad we have some honest people. Mrs. J. K.</p>
        <p>MASTERLIST</p>
        <p>I am one of those people who has a General Motors car, not a Chevrol^, with a Chevrolet V-8 enne. Do I need to omtact ai^mie to let it be known so I will be eligiUe for the $200 rebate GM has Just announced? D. B.</p>
        <p>According to a woman in the Consumer Protection Division of the N. C. Attorney Generals office, all you have to do is wait. General Motors has a master list of all owners of the cars in questions (1977 Buicks, Oldsmobiles and Pontiacs sold prior to April 10, 1977) You should be receiving a card which will state that you release GM from further liability. If you choose to sign this, you are promised a $200 rebate and a certificate of 36-month or 36,000-mile warranty.</p>
        <p>Sadat Says Israel Yet To Make Difficult Decisions</p>
        <p>ByTheAModatedPrMB</p>
        <p>Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was quoted today as saying that Israel, under the leadership of Prime Minister Menahem Begin, has not yet made the tough decisions or concessions needed to bring about a Middle East peace.</p>
        <p>The two leaders held a Christmas summit in Ismail ia. Egypt, and came away still divided over the</p>
        <p>future of Palestinian Arabs living on the Israeli-occupied West Bank of the Jordan River and Gaza Strip.</p>
        <p>"No. Israel has not yet taken the difficult decision. Sadat was quoted by Egyptian newspapers as saying. Mr. Begin may be of the view that he has made concessions but I see that he has not.</p>
        <p>Begin proposed self-rule for</p>
        <p>the 1.1 million Palestinian Arabs living on the West Bank and Gaza Strip with continued Israeli military presence. Sadat held out for creation of an independent Palestinian state and complete Israeli withdrawal.</p>
        <p>In Jerusalem, the Israeli prime minister briefed his cabinet on the Ismailia summit and met with U.S. Ambassador Samuel W.</p>
        <p>Lewis apparently to report on the talks and current status of the peacemaking effort.</p>
        <p>The semiofficial Egyptian newspaper A1 Ahram reported that the summit talks did produce agreement on Israeli withdrawal from the occupied Sinai Peninsula. Israeli troops still control more than 80 per cent of the 20,000 square mile Egyptian desert peninsula.</p>
        <p>Palestinian Problem Still Key Obstacle To Peace</p>
        <p>ByLARRYTHORSON AjMOdatedPTMB Writer</p>
        <p>TEL AVIV (AP) - Prime Minister Menahem Begin's declared success in summitry with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat must be translated into action if Israel and Egypt are to make steady progress toward peace.</p>
        <p>The next stage calls for ministerial-level talks on mUitary and political disagreements, and the road ahead looks pretty rocky at the moment.</p>
        <p>Gen. Avraham Tamlr, Israels military representative at the recessed Cairo negotiations admits, We must have many compromises. To tell you</p>
        <p>everything will be smooth, no. it will not be so.</p>
        <p>In the upcoming talks, details of Israels willingness to withdraw from most of Sinai will be discussed by Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman and Egyptian War Minister Abdel Ghani el Gamasy In Cairo.</p>
        <p>Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan and his Egyptian counterpart. Mohammed Kamei, will have a more difficult task in their political talks, centering on the Palestinian Arab problem.</p>
        <p>Sadat described this question as the core and crux of the Mideast dispute and reported in the agreed statement, at the end of the</p>
        <p>Ismailia summit Monday only that Egypt and Israel discussed differences.</p>
        <p>The Israeli proposal for Palestinian Arab self-rule plainly was unacceptable to Sadat even though Begin, back home in Israel, said of the idea, it is a great event in the history of this country and of the Palestinian Arabs.</p>
        <p>At the news conference before leaving Ismailia. Begin hinted that Palestinian Arabs may join the political negotiations beginning in about three weeks. In ad</p>
        <p>dition. Sadat said he saw a role for the United States and the United Nations in the Jerusalem talks.</p>
        <p>Who would represent the Palestinians? This is one of the first questions the foreign ministers will have to handle. Holding their talks in the Israeli capital may indicate some success for Israels proposal that the Palestinians be represented by people now living under Israeli occupation in the West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip.</p>
        <p>Rites Set For</p>
        <p>The newspaper said Israel wanted to announce the Egyptian-Israeli accord publicly but Sadat refused, saying their summit talks were aimed not at reaching a private agreement but a comprehensive settlement.</p>
        <p>In Moscow, the Communist Party newspaper Pravda called the Sadat-Begin summit a failure and said that the only way to achieve an overall Mideast settlement is for all parties and their allies to cooperate.</p>
        <p>The newspaper claimed the Israeli prime minister presented warmed-over peace proposals. All gestures by Cairo were viewed in Tel Aviv as a sign of weakness and readiness to make considerable concessions.</p>
        <p>Arabic language newspapers in Cairo stressed the positive aspects of the summit talks. But the English-language Egyptian Gazette said that despite Begins claim that the talks were successful, it is obvious for all to see that very little progress has been made because of the continuing inflexibility of Mr. Begin and his strategists. Man-in-the-street reaction in Egypt also reflected disappointment.</p>
        <p>"We will destroy Sadat and his imperialist-Zionist backers, said Zuhair Mohsen, leader of the Saiqa group, a Syrianbacked arm of the Palestinian Liberation Organization.</p>
        <p>Farmer Share Paul E. Jones Cochran Of Food Dollar Is Shrinking</p>
        <p>have been no unusual problems in collecting refuse that accumulated over the weekend.</p>
        <p>Van VanDyke of the Greenville Post Office said today that all mail that reached the post office by Christmas Eve was delivered. He added that although the mail volume was up from last year, the same number of mailmen as last year delivered this years parcels.</p>
        <p>VanDyke noted that the office was closed Sunday but that all mail was delivered as usual today.</p>
        <p>Local store managers noted unusually good sales at yesterdays after Christmas rush.</p>
        <p>Sales were up and there were less refunds than normal.</p>
        <p>Don Yeager, manager of J.C. Penney Co., noted that the reason Penneys numbers of refunds were low was probably that there was a better selection of merchandise on the floor after Christmas this year than in the past.</p>
        <p>. Manager of Kroger-Sav-On Don Merritt said that yesterday was the biggest day so far for the</p>
        <p>(CoatiauedoapageS)</p>
        <p>By DON KENDAU.</p>
        <p>AP Farm Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The middlemen in the grocery business are taking more of the consumers food dollar, new government figures show, while the farmers share is going down.</p>
        <p>The Agriculture Department says farmers in November received 38.5 cents of each $1 spent for food in retail stores, while middlemen  those who transport, process and sell food after it leaves the farm  got 61.5 cents.</p>
        <p>In October, farmers got 39 cents and middlemen 61 cents.</p>
        <p>The figures are based on a 65-item list of food items which originate on U.S. farms. Seafood. imported products and restaurant meals are not Included in the analysis.</p>
        <p>The new figures tend to sup</p>
        <p>port long-standing complaints by farmers, who say consumers dont understand that middlemen account for most of the average familys grocery bill.</p>
        <p>When the middleman price spread is measured another way, the gap between farmers and consumers is even larger, the department says.</p>
        <p>For exanqile, for total food purchases in 1977, farmers are getting 31.1 cents of each $1 consumers spend, and middlemen are getting 68.9 cents.</p>
        <p>Thus, if a hypothetical basket of food could be put together and sold for $18 to reflect the total food spending of consumers this year, the department says, the farmers share would be $5.60 and middlemen would get $12.40.</p>
        <p>Officials said that the difference is due primarily to the added costs of serving food eaten in restaurants.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Former Pitt County Senator Dr. Paul Erastius Jones, 87, of Farmville died Monday.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 3 p.m. from the First Christian Church in Farmville with the Rev. J. Robert Parvin officiating. Burial will follow in Forest Hills Cemetery in Farmville.</p>
        <p>Dr. Jones was born near Bethel, graduated from Bethel High School in 1907, and attended Richmond College and Medical College of Virginia. He received his degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery in 1910. He was also a veteran of World War I.</p>
        <p>Dr. Jones was a member of the Pitt County Medical and Dental Society, the American Dental Association. He was a member of the Council of Legislation, American Dental Association, with a six-year term. He also served as chairman of the Council from 1954-56.</p>
        <p>Appointed by the American Director for Veterans Administration as the Central Office Consultant in 1952, he was a member of the Fifth District of N.C. Dental Spciety and served as secretary and president. Dr.</p>
        <p>Jones was elected to N.C. State Board of Dental Examiners in 1938 and served until 1947.</p>
        <p>H was elected president of the American Association of Dental Examiners in 1943 and served two terms. Director of tiie Bank of Farmville, Dr. Jones was a member of the Farm Bureau. Rotary Club, and local school board. He served on the (CottOaaedcpaget)</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>PAULE. JONES</p>
        <p>Escapes His Jail</p>
        <p>AMERICUS, Ga. (AP) -Buddy Cochran, convicted of ramming a car into a Ku Klux Klan rally in President Carters hometown of Plains, Ga., last July, and another inmate escaped from the Sumter County jail early today, Sheriff Randy Howard reported.</p>
        <p>The sheriff said Cochran. 30, and the other inmate, tentatively identified as Michael Proctor. sawed the lock to their cell door and ran out of the jail about 7:45 a.m.</p>
        <p>Initial reports said they escaped in an automobile, but sheriffs officers said they were searching nearby woods where they were believed to be hiding.</p>
        <p>The sheriff said that Cochrans wife, Mary Sue, was taken into custody at a bus station in Americus shortly after the jail break.</p>
        <p>Howard said she visited the jail Monday and is being held for questioning and has not been charged.</p>
        <p>Colby Sees Intelligence Agency Frustrated</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -Former CIA Director William E. Colby testified today that intelligence agents doubling as journalists were not told by the CIA how to write their news reports.</p>
        <p>The use of news correspondents as CIA informants has now been ruled out. but Colby said he handled CIA employees on intelligence missions abroad who served as real or pretended journalists when</p>
        <p>he directed the agency from</p>
        <p>1973 to 1976.</p>
        <p>"My agents and I had a clear understanding that they did their intelligence work for me. but that the news reports they wrote were a matter between themselves and their editors, and were not given prior clearance or direction by me, Colby told the House Intelligence Committee.</p>
        <p>He acknowledged, that this understanding may not have been followed in some</p>
        <p>isolated instances, but contended that a serious</p>
        <p>study would put to rest any myth that CIA dominated our media output.</p>
        <p>Colby, who is now a lawyer in private practice in Washington, said intelligence officers cannot be effective in hostile areas of the world if they wear the initials CIA on their hatbands.</p>
        <p>The problem of providing cover, he said, is one of the</p>
        <p>agencys greatest areas of frustration and difficulty. During the last 10 years, he</p>
        <p>said, nwre and more possible sources of cover for agents have been ruled out of bounds, including the Peace Corps. Fulbright scholarships. the U.S. Information Agency, the U.S. Agency for International Development and now the news media.</p>
        <p>In many countries, he continued, "the remaining areas of cover are few and ...</p>
        <p>many CIA officers are all to easy to identify.</p>
        <p>The melting ice floe of adequate cover has already</p>
        <p>led to the tragic death of one of our officers and the frustration of the work of a number of others, Colby said.</p>
        <p>He said the committee should compensate for the loss of journalistic credentials as a cover by insisting that the agencies of the United States government incorporate in their ranks small numbers of intelligence officers under proper administrative arrangements, so that they are not revealed.</p>
        <p>Now Convinced Russia Deploying New Missiles</p>
        <p>By FRED s. HOFFMAN APMUttary Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  After months of uncertainty. U.S. officials now believe that Russia has started deploying a new mobile iand-based missile with potential to hit the United States.</p>
        <p>In its present form, the Soviet SS-20 missiles estimated 3,000-mile range limits it to tar^ts in Western Europe. China and the Middle East.</p>
        <p>But U.S. specialists say its range can be extended easily to 5,500 nautical miles by adding a third rocket stage to the present two stagey.</p>
        <p>That would make it similar to the SS-16 intercontinental ballistic missile and put the</p>
        <p>United States within its range.</p>
        <p>U.S. military officials are concerned the conversion could tip the nuclear balance against the United States quickly in a time of diplomatic crisis, especially since mobile missile bases would be hard to find and knock out.</p>
        <p>Penta^n officials warned earlier about the potential for ^version of the SS-20, but noted then that the missile had not been deployed.</p>
        <p>The months of uncertainty and conflicting reports on deployment apparently stemmed from difficulty in locating and identifying the SS-20s movable launch equipment at combatready positions inside the Soviet Union.</p>
        <p>However, U.S. military intelligence analysts now say the SS-20 is deployed in eastern Russia.</p>
        <p>That suggests the first combat-ready SS-20s, which can carry three nuclear warheads each, are aimed at targets in China, with which Russia has been feuding for years.</p>
        <p>Intelligence analysts also believe preparations are under way to deploy mobile missiles in western and central Russia. From western Russia. SS-20s could blanket Western Europe. From central Russia, the missiles, could strike targets in the Middle East.</p>
        <p>With their 3,000-mile range, the SS-20s are unlikely to be subject to limitatkMis on strategic</p>
        <p>nuclear weapons now being negotiated by Soviet and U.S. diplomats.</p>
        <p>That is because, although they couid be converted to long range missiles, SS-!^ as now deployed do not have long enough range to strike the United States from Russian soil.</p>
        <p>Also, the Russians have shown no interest In President Carters bid for a mutual ban on mobile strategic missiles.</p>
        <p>The United States is developing a possible huge new intercontinental range missile which could be deployed in underground movable launch pads, but the Carter administration has delayed full-scale development work.</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0002" />
        <p>2The Dally Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.Tuesday. Decembn- 27.1977</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>Time To Start Up When So Far Down</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>1977 by The Chicago Tftbone N Y News Syn&amp;lt;3 tnc</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Ive been married for six years to a man who has some kind of hold on me and I cant shake it. I loved him once, but all my love for him is gone now. Ive left him 11 times but he always begs me to come back and says if I dont hell commit suicide, so I go back to him. We have two kids who are practically being raised by my mother because my husband refuses to work steady. He has a bad drinking problem, too. I cant count the places weve been kicked out of because we couldnt pay the rent; we cant get credit anyplace.</p>
        <p>When he met me I was really no good. I was a 16-year-old prostitute with a drug habit. He keeps reminding me that he took me out of the gutter so I owe him my life.</p>
        <p>Can you help me?</p>
        <p>TRAPPED</p>
        <p>DEAR TRAPPED; No. But you can help yourself. You need counseling, and so does your husband. There are mental health clinics in your area that offer excellent help, and its free for those without funds. If your husband refuses to go, go without him. Dont let your past dictate your future. You need a better self-image, and the fact that you wrote to me indicates that youre looking for answers, which is half the battle. Get going and good luck.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Why is the bride expected to write all the thank-you notes for the wedding gifts?</p>
        <p>Most of the gifts are for the home to be shared by the couple. So assuming the husband isnt illiterate, why shouldnt he write half the notes?</p>
        <p>JUST ASKING</p>
        <p>DEAR JUST: Nowhere is it written that the bride should write all the thank-you notes for the wedding gifts.</p>
        <p>Acknowledging wedding gifts should be a joint venture (even though some grooms may tear the joint apart at the</p>
        <p>suggestion).</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I recently went to the hospital for some exploratory surgery as I was concerned about the possibility of cancer. Two neighbor women, whom I do not know very well, came to visit me there. 'Hiey took turns asking prying questions as to the nature of my illness, whether more surgery would be necessary, etc. I tried to fend off these questions as best I could.</p>
        <p>After they left, a member of a fraternal group to which I belong called on me. The same line of questioning was pursued. Only this person spent nearly an hour telling me about similar cases in which all the patients died of cancer. I was depressed beyond words. Why do people visit the sick and leave them sicker?</p>
        <p>DEPRESSED</p>
        <p>DEAR DEPRESSED: Because common sense is so uncommon. My advice on bedside manners: Make your visit short, sweet and cheerful. Leave the coughs and the kids at home. Ask no questions. If you cant do that, stay away.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: While talking to my husband one evening, I asked him if he had ever had an affair before we were married. He laughed and said he was taking the Fifth Amendment on that one.</p>
        <p>We talked some more and he finally said, If I were to tell you I had, then youd want to know with whom and when, and then things would never be the same between us.</p>
        <p>He is very proud of the fact that he never lies. I then said that I knew that he had had an affair with a certain person and 1 just wanted him to admit it. He made no comment and the conversation ended. (I dont really know, but I have strong suspicions.)</p>
        <p>Now I am wondering why he took the Fifth. Isnt that an admission of guilt? If he was not guilty, all he had to do was say so.</p>
        <p>Would you say he is acting like a guilty man or one who is innocent? i</p>
        <p>SUSPICIOUS</p>
        <p>DEAR SUSPICIOUS: I would not presume to judge him guilty or innocent. However, he appears to be very intelligent. And if you're wise, youll not bring it up again.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I used to think that your colunm was a form of glorified gossip and I turned up my nose at it. But I couldnt resist reading the letters, which span the human condition in such touching personal ways.</p>
        <p>Those letters and your spirited, succinct replies remind me that unless life is really felt and experienced fully, it isnt really life.</p>
        <p>At times I wonder why peoples small problems gain such a big audience. Then I realize that these are not small problems but signs of individuals struggling to make their lives more livable and meaningful. Through</p>
        <p>your column I lose my cynicism (which as a journalist I acquire easily). I am moved. I am touched. Thank you.</p>
        <p>STEVEN CARTWRIGHT, ORONO, ME.</p>
        <p>DEAR STEVEN: The reaction of my readers means a great deal to me. Thanks for writing. Your letter made my day.</p>
        <p>HEATINGOIL</p>
        <p>to</p>
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        <p>Economy Hinders Irish Women</p>
        <p>By ED BLANCHE Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>IHBLl.V Ireland lAPi Irish women, trying to speed up their campaign for equal rights, have been set back by the ec'onomy Theres a 9 5 percent unemployment rate in the Irish Republic, highest in the European Common Market, and its sparked a backlash campaign to send working married women back to hearth and home.</p>
        <p>One Catholic priest said in a radio phone-in program on the state-run RTE network: The working wife is the greatest curse of this country.</p>
        <p>But Sen. Gemma Hussey, one of the handful of women in the Irish parliament and a champion of working women, says theres more to it than unemployment.</p>
        <p>In Ireland, the attitude that a womans place is in the home is embedded deep in the national consciousness, formed by the Catholic Church Men very much resent womens changing role, she says.</p>
        <p>The Roman Catholic Church in Ireland has traditionally maintained its influence through women, as the linchpin of the family. But, said Ossie Dowling, spokesman for the Dublin diocese: There is a definite liberalization process within the church that in some ways is more radical than the politicians </p>
        <p>Sen. Mary Robinson, a longtime agitator for a new deal for Irish women, would be hard pressed to disagree.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Robinson, a 33-year-old lawyer and professor of constitutional and criminal law at Dublins prestigious Trinity College. said in an interview: There has been a drastic change in social mores in recent years, but the law has not yet caught up with it.</p>
        <p>Indeed. Irelands 1.5 million women face a formidable battery of laws that appear Draconian when compared with the</p>
        <p>increasingly liberal feminist legislation in Europe:</p>
        <p>Sale of contraceptives is banned under the Republics -10-year-old constitution, although the high court ruled four years ago. in a landmark decision, that they may be imported by individuals for their own use</p>
        <p>Abortion is illegal under the constitution and bitterly opposed by the church, but thousands of Irish women go to England every year to terminate unwanted pregnancies.</p>
        <p>Divorce is prohibited by the constitution and only a national referendum can change that. The church has stonewalled moves to legalize divorce but has in recent years granted hundreds of annulments as the divorce rate soared. Couples can get civil divorces outside Ireland, but under the Republics civil law they are still legally married and can be charged with bigamy if they remarry,</p>
        <p>A husband can bring criminal charges against his wifes lover for deprivation of services because in the eyes of the law she is the husbands property. But the wife of an unfaithful husband cannot bring charges against his lover.</p>
        <p>Husbands charged with wife-beating can ^t legal aid, but wives filing the charges have to pay for legal representation.</p>
        <p>Battered Wives Aided By Shelter</p>
        <p>A man can collect unemployment checks even if hes never worked a day in his life. A woman has to work a full year before shes eligible.</p>
        <p>All this is naked discrimination, says Mrs. Hussey, who won her senate seat last September with a whopping majority. Things are beginning to change, but were far behind the times here. The laws where women are concerned are medieval. Where family affairs are concerned, especially divorce, weve got a lousy, rotten legal system.</p>
        <p>All-Purpose Wrap</p>
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        <p>ANNAPOLIS. Md. (AP) - As national attention begins to focus more sharply on the problem of battered wives, Anne Arundel County in Maryland has provided a shelter for those women who need someplace to run and get away.</p>
        <p>The creation of the shelter was motivated by women like Sarah Stewart, who spent 19 years as a battered wife.</p>
        <p>"I didnt have anyplace to go. she said. If Id go to my mothers, hed just go over there raising hell. I thought k was doing it for my children. The Anne Arundel house is sponsored by a group called Good Neighbors Unlimited, which leases the house from the county government for $1 a year. Under the agreement, the shelter serves only Anne Arundel County women.</p>
        <p>Miss Stewart said she had talked about the idea for several years before she finally found someone to help her get it started. One day. someone suggested that she seek help from Judge James 1. Wray of the Anne Arundel County Circuit Court.</p>
        <p>Wray, a deeply religious man. said Id been looking for some channel where I could take part in what the Church of the Saviour calls a journey outward  helping people.</p>
        <p>Wray and Miss Stewarbtook their plea to County Executive Robert Pascal, who found them the house a few weeks later.</p>
        <p>Since the house opened in August, eight women and their children have stayed there for various lengths of time.</p>
        <p>The shelter is staffed by a woman who left her husband four months ago, after five years of beatings. She is paid no salary, and donates part of her monthly welfare check to cover the cost of running the home.</p>
        <p>Susan Smith (not her real name) said she brought her children to the shelter when her husbands beatings intensified.</p>
        <p>We were together five years, she said. He was an alcoholic, and the only time he hit me was when he was drunk. When he was sober, he was a different man.</p>
        <p>Hed see the bruises and ask me how it had happened, and I would tell him, and he would apologize, and promise it would never happen again, but it always did.</p>
        <p>She said her story was similar to those of most of the women who come to the shelter for help.</p>
        <p>According to Ms. Smith, a new shelter for battered wives is being opened soon in Baltimore. That shelter, called the</p>
        <p>At Wit's End</p>
        <p>By Erma Bombeck</p>
        <p>Open Letter to Researchers at the Rat Place:</p>
        <p>Flnough is enough.</p>
        <p>You people have succeeded in taking every bit of joy out of my life under the guise of sparing me disease and prolonging my life. For this I am appreciative.</p>
        <p>Our relationship existed solely on blind trust. When you told me research rats succumbed from coffee, diet pills, loud noises, glue from envelopes, snow, I stopped drinking, dieting, listening, writing home and falling face down in the cold, wet stuff.</p>
        <p>When you told me your rats ex-pired from saccharine, cyclamates. X-rays, booze, cigarettes and too much sun. I swore off all those things.</p>
        <p>Now I must insist that you arrange a meeting between a bleached blond rat with lipstick on her teeth and myself or its all over.</p>
        <p>Frankly, Im beginning to feel</p>
        <p>like Im in a Mel Brooks movie and Marty Feldman just issued a story to a newspaper warning, Two bleached blond rats died mysteriously today on two little bar stools in Transylvania. Dom DeLuise, a bungling researcher, says their deaths could be the result of hair bleach  however, their sugar-free root beer and their rouge containing No. 2 red dye are under investigation.</p>
        <p>I am not the only one who is becoming suspicious of anonymous rats. We sit around in groups and ponder where are the peopl who make their little cigarettes? Their little cocktail</p>
        <p>House of Ruth, will offer longterm assistance for women who need a place to live.</p>
        <p>Martha Wyatt, an Annapolis attorney who works with battered wives, says she hopes the shelters are helping to change attitudes about the problem of battered wives.</p>
        <p>What I hope is that there is some sort of consciousness developed where women dont feel a sense of shame, that they realize it is not their fault, that they are in no way responsible, that they simply become more open about it, she said.</p>
        <p>Fiafaer Signed</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Carrie Fisher, who costarred In Star Wars. will head the cast of Universal Pictures I Want To Hold Your Hand, playing a teen-age activist. The daughter of Debbie Reynolds and Eddie Fisher will play one of six New Jersey kids through the wacky happenings of the first Beatles tour of the United States.</p>
        <p>glasses? Who does their makeup? Sews their little beach towels?</p>
        <p>And if no one has questioned it  they should  why is it only the wonderful things of life are hazardous? Why dont rats succumb to mince pie? (1 hate mince pie.) Or rhubarb? Or working Saturdays? Or seeing your dentist twice a year? Or sweat? Or fresh-cut grass or castor oil?</p>
        <p>Im sorry to be a doubter, but you researchers have to understand theres a lot at stake here  my ultimate will to live.</p>
        <p>1 respectfully request that at some date in the near future you arrange a meeting between your research rats and myself. Even if they have expired, but have a smile on their faces and look terrific . . . thats good enough for me.</p>
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        <pb facs="00093567_0003" />
        <p>Puzzled</p>
        <p>Seeking</p>
        <p>By The Anodated Praas</p>
        <p>Federal officials are puzzled by the small number of farmers eligible for Small Business Administration loans because of last summers drought who have applied for the special aid.</p>
        <p>Fifty six counties were declared a disaster area because of the dry weather, and 176,000 farmers were affected. But only 3,600 farmers asked for SBA loan applications by mid-December and only 478 farmers and farm-related businesses actually applied.</p>
        <p>Something must be wrong, said George W. Marschall, SBA district manager in Charlotte.</p>
        <p>In many of the counties.</p>
        <p>By Few Loans</p>
        <p>farmers had a choice between SBA and Farmers Home Administration loans at 3 percent interest, offered in 70 counties including most of the 56 in the disaster area.</p>
        <p>The FHA received applications from 5,437 farmers. That gives you some idea of the gigantic need. an FHA spokesman said.</p>
        <p>Marschall said one possibility is that farmers are reluctant to borrow from the government. Or it could be that many farmers feel they would not qualify for one reason or another, he said.</p>
        <p>Some farmers have complained that both agencies have failed to help the farmers who</p>
        <p>Speaking of Your Health...</p>
        <p>Lester LColenan.M.D. How to Deal With Frequent Fainter</p>
        <p>My litter goes into a dead faint at the drop of a hat Mmi the only one in the family who doei tfaii. In between fainti he leemt to be to perfectly fine health. Conld there be tomethfaig wrong with her that we're not aware of?  Mn. C. C., Ore.</p>
        <p>Dear Mrs. C.:</p>
        <p>I doubt that there is anytbiiig seriously wrong with your sister, eqiecially since she has no outwwd evidence of other trouble. Some people have a greater tendency to faint than others.</p>
        <p>When there is a sudden inadequate flow of blood and oxygen to the brain, fainting or temporary loss of consciousness results. Sometimes when there is a nMxnentary drop of blood pressure due to a change of position, or fcdlowing a severe emotional upset, a sanse of wooziness, or faintness, may occur.</p>
        <p>Years ago, fainting was IdenUfied with frage femininity. In fact, at the turn of the century it was a graceful art to be able to faint at will It was found that women who were tightly corseted were taking shallow breaths and thus interfering with an adequate supply of blood to the brMa</p>
        <p>Elxtreme weakness, fatigue, hunger and an allergic response to dnigs may cause episodes fainting.</p>
        <p>Another cause of fainting that nuist be reckoned with is the sudden impact of an emotionally stressful situation, such as the announcement of shocking news.</p>
        <p>This is as good a time as any to offer some suggestions to those,who can be of help to the fainter. Probably the greatest contribution is calm reassurance. Clothing around the waist and the neck should be loosened. Whenever possible, elevate the legs and buttocks so that blood can more readUy flow to the ltda</p>
        <p>At no time should alcohol be forced down the victims throat</p>
        <p>In fact no fluid should be given until the fainter has recovered consciousness.</p>
        <p>Occasionally, a patient feels faint in the doctors office. When this happens, the doctor wUl have the patient bend the head down between the knees. Then, the doctor applies pressure to the bade of the head whUe the patient tries to fwce his head back against the doctors hands.</p>
        <p>This maneuver, like lying flat. Increases the flow of blood to die brain and hdps the victim come out of the fainting qwU more rapidly.</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>Is there anything wrong with ostng the new medicines for removing wax in the ears?  Mr. TJl, m.</p>
        <p>Dear Mr. M.:</p>
        <p>Its perfectly normal for wax to accumulate in the outer ear. Some people seem to coUect more wax than others. Sometimes a particularly narrow canal will collect wax noore readily.</p>
        <p>The new diemicals whidi soften or disaolve wax can be very irritating to the delicate skin of die external canal. They should not be used over long periods of time without ohv suiting the doctor who prescrttied them.</p>
        <p>most need the loans. And many have complained that the forms, records and other paperwork required have discouraged farmers from applying.</p>
        <p>Officials of both agencies said they were following procedures prescribed by law and said they must take precautions to make sure the loans are repaid.</p>
        <p>The 478 applications for SBA loans requested an average of almost $58,000 each. Of those requests, 64 had been paid out, 176 had been approved and 210 were being processed. Only 28 applicants were turned down because they failed to show substantial drought-related economic losses, Marschall said.</p>
        <p>A Dec. 9 report showed the FHA had approved 2,272 requests for loans totaling nearly $70.9 million, an average of about $31,000 each. Of those, 999 had been paid out. More than 2,000 applications were still being processed.</p>
        <p>Held Intruder At Fingerpoint</p>
        <p>ROOPVILLE, Ga. (AP) -Maxine York captured an intruder in her mobile home Christmas Day by holding him at fingerpoint. And it wasnt Santa Claus.</p>
        <p>When she saw a man in her home, she slipped up behind him, stuck a pointed finger in his back and told him not to move or she would shoot, according to the Carroll County Sheriffs Department.</p>
        <p>The ploy apparently convinced him. for he stood still long enough for Mrs. Yorks son to fetch a more substantial weapon: a butcher knife.</p>
        <p>A sheriffs spokesman said the boy was guarding the man with the knife when deputies  summoned by Mrs. York  arrived on the scene.</p>
        <p>Carroll County authorities charged Gene Wellborn, 41, of Mableton with burglary.</p>
        <p>Staii Post For Chancellor's Son</p>
        <p>Convertible Is Priced $20,000</p>
        <p>with money for such things found them more desireable after Detroit automakers .stopped making them in 1976.</p>
        <p>ECU News Bureau</p>
        <p>,ST. LOUIS - James L. Jenkins. MD. eldest son of East Carolina University chancellor 1^*0 W. Jenkins of Greenville, N. C.. has been appointed chief of staff in anesthesiology of The Jewish Hospital of St. Louis.</p>
        <p>Jenkins, a 1970 graduate of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, has been ac</p>
        <p>ting director of the Department of Anesthesiology and a member of the hospitals medical staff since 1975.</p>
        <p>The Jewish Hospital of St. Louis is a 600-bed private hospital which has an affiliation with the School of Medicine of Washington University of St. I/)uis. Jenkins, in addition to posts in the department of anesthesiology, also serves as assistant professor of anesthesiology in the school of medicine.</p>
        <p>He has also served as director of operating rooms. The hospital, with an annual budget of more than $40 million, has 16 operating rooms and performs</p>
        <p>ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) -And now for something completely different. An autombile with a roof that can be taken down.</p>
        <p>What? You say you've heard of such contraptions? You say</p>
        <p>virtually all types of major surgery.</p>
        <p>Born Jan. 17. 1944, in l&amp;gt;ong Beach. Calif., during his fathers career in the Marine Corps, he grew up in Greenville where he attended the public schools and J. H. Rose High School.</p>
        <p>He is married to the former Nancy Karan Jacobs of Raleigh and they have three children, Mada McDonald Jenkins. 10; Jason Arnold Jenkins, 7; James Gabriel Jenkins, 5.</p>
        <p>He received his BA degree in pre-med from Duke University in 1966.</p>
        <p>they called them convertibles back in the old days?</p>
        <p>But did they sell for $20.000? Don Bruce sells Lincolns with</p>
        <p>J.L.JENKH*K</p>
        <p>Tts Con piness, G</p>
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        <p>ling Year Lather Up With Hap-ood Health, Peace, and Love. hanks For Your Patronage</p>
        <p>lock's Barber Shop</p>
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        <p>The family of the late</p>
        <p>to thank everymie for the many flowers.</p>
        <p>Streeter, Sr.</p>
        <p>wishes</p>
        <p>food, and cards. We appreciate the love and synmathy that was shown by our many friends and family. May God Mess each one of you.</p>
        <p>Tbe Family of the late Ephraim Streeter, Sr</p>
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        <pb facs="00093567_0004" />
        <p>Some Very Thoughtful Giving</p>
        <p>THERES ALWAYS THE NEXT ROUND-</p>
        <p>Christmas is a giving season and the holidays abound with stories of people being nice to other people.</p>
        <p>One group last week was especially thoughtful. It was the 253 individuals who visited the Bloodmobile at the Moose Lodge to offer a pint of their blood. There were 246 pints collected during the two day visit with seven persons rejected for medical reasons.</p>
        <p>There is hardly a person who is not extremely busy during Christmas week and it took time for all those people to go to the Bloodmobile.</p>
        <p>We dont know whether individually they thought of it as a Christmas gift, but thats what it was  a gift to someone they would never know.</p>
        <p>The donors and Bloodmobile workers deserve special commendations for the successful visit during Christmas week.</p>
        <p>Dependance On OPEC Is Risky Living</p>
        <p>Thanks to an oil surplus, there will be no increase in the price of oil for the time being.</p>
        <p>The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) decided that during a meeting in Venezuela last week.</p>
        <p>The holding of oil prices even temporarily  is</p>
        <p>welcomed by the world. It will help slow the rate of inflation.</p>
        <p>We can be certain, however, that oil price increases are ahead. The sooner the United States and other nations can reduce their dependance on oil the better off the world will be.</p>
        <p>THIS AFTERNOON</p>
        <p>Outside N.C. Boundaries</p>
        <p>ByBILLNOBLTIT</p>
        <p>R.ALE1GH  Of course Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr. denies that it has anything to do with higher political ambitions. but his remarks of late have begun to take on territory outside the boundaries of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>At a gathering of the Development Council of North Carolina State University recently. Gov. Hunt followed a predictable track in talking about getting people involved in a significant, personal kind of way... </p>
        <p>Suddenly, however, he was talking about that involvement in North Carolina as producing a turning point for the nation.</p>
        <p>Speaking to the wealthy and influential peopleboth from this state and elsewhere nationallywho support the private fundraising activities at State University, the governor issued a call for a new ethic of citizenship: 1. to pay your taxes; 2. to give of your resources to the church, the United Fund, and other worthwhile endeavors; and 3. perhaps most importantly to give some of themselves . . , their time, and energy, and love, and caring for others.  </p>
        <p>ntfapnshlp</p>
        <p>Such a new and larger citizenship" is what this nation is going to have to find "in order for America to become what it can be, what it must be. Hunt said.</p>
        <p>1 am concerned with the spirit of America . . . there are too many people who are cynical, who are critical, who don't care . . . about themselves, their communities, or their government.</p>
        <p>The preceding remarks were spontaneous and off-the-cuff. They were not written into his prepared remarks. They fit in. however, at a time when he talked of the failure of government to meet all the needs of all the people.</p>
        <p>"But its obvious that, no matter how benign, how generous, how wise governments are they can provide only a portion of the services our people need. the text stated. Again extemporaneously. Gov. Hunt added: I further submit that government ought not to provide some of the services ... contrary to what some people say who clamor for everything nowadays... and you know what I mean.</p>
        <p>The Development Council .</p>
        <p>leaders that day reported a new record $5 million in private gifts during the year. Such citizen involvement, said Hunt, is the kind of thing needed to make society work, and is particularly important to a public university largely financed by funds which must pass scrutiny of the General Assembly.</p>
        <p>Private funds can meet needs which legislators might tend to reject. The General Assembly is not very good at</p>
        <p>the</p>
        <p>tiludes; concern with sprit of America?</p>
        <p>No. I'm not starting any campaigns. . . but I believe that we can start something here in North Carolina that has national importance," he said.</p>
        <p>Why can't we develop it here and then take it on to na-tional awareness? he wondered.</p>
        <p>NOBUTT</p>
        <p>making leaps of faith .,. they like to deal with things that have been proven, that can be demonstrated. the governor commented, again departing from his text.</p>
        <p>NoComment * After the meeting, the governor was asked privately if his comments represented any thinking on his part of a national strategy for future years. Why else begin now talking of new ethics of citizenship; national at-</p>
        <p>THE INSIDE REPORT</p>
        <p>The Shcharansky Switch</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - The unprecedented six-month delay in bringing Anatoli Shcharansky to trial on espionage charges may signal Communist retreat from a semiblackmail policy of using the leading Soviet dissident to force President Carter to cool his human rights campaign.</p>
        <p>That is the conclusion of some Kremlinologists in this country, in and out of the Carter administration. Last October, these analysts leaned strongly the other way: That Shcharansky, a major figure among dissidents demanding Kremlin adherence to human rights commitments made at the 1975 Helsinki conference, would be the victim of the first Soviet "show" trial since 1970.</p>
        <p>But apparently the refusal of the (Tarter administration to knuckle under  notably Ambassador Arthur Goldberg, chief U.S. delegate at the Belgrade conference  persuaded Moscow to change its tune.</p>
        <p>Instead of toning down his</p>
        <p>grim recitation of Soviet human rights violations, Goldberg stepped it up  and then returned here last month to engender greater support from President Carter.</p>
        <p>Shcharansky was arrested on unpublished charges of espionage for the U.S. - a charge categorically denied by Jimmy Carter. Soviet law requires bringing a suspect to trial within nine months of the charge. Experts here recall no case in which the defendant in a political (as opposed to a criminal) case has been given as long an extension as six months  and few non-criminal cases with any extension at all.</p>
        <p>Proof does not exist as to the Kremlin's motives. It can be argued, for example, that the six-month postponement (announced Dec. 16) would bridge impending U.S.-Soviet developments: a new strategic arms agreement, a Carter-Leonid Brezhnev summit. and the end of the Belgrade conference. The Soviet game might be to delay a bloody trial of vShcharansky until after that summit.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209 Cotanche Street, Greenville. N.C. 27834 EsUblished 1882 Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD. Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD</p>
        <p>Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable in Advance</p>
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        <p>MEMBER OF ASS(K'IATED 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 reserved.</p>
        <p>UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL</p>
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        <p>But most Kremlinologists take a different view: that in the face of repeated, ominous and unpublicized warnings from the President on down, the Kremlin may have concluded that the trial could have a devastating U.S.-Soviet impact before or after a Carter-Brezhnev summit. If true, this means that the politicians, led by Brezhnev, hold more power in the Kremlin than the KGB (the Soviet police apparatus), a matter of great significance.</p>
        <p>Jews And Die GOP</p>
        <p>An unannounced tete-a-tete with Laurence A. Tisch, the Jewish leader and Manhattan millionaire who runs Loews Corp. (theaters, hotels, tobacco and insurance), has opened new political doors to New Yorks fatcat goldmine for Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee, a prospective 1980 Republican presidential candidate.</p>
        <p>At Tisch's request, he and the Republican Senate leader talked Mideast and economic politics in Bakers office for half an hour pn Nov. 29. Their consensus: President Carter had fumbled Mideast peace and was making a mess of the economy. That combination has now brought Tisch, a 1976 Carter man. to Baker  ostensibly for Bakers 1978 Senate campaign but actually looking to 1980.</p>
        <p>Tisch will wine and dine Baker with a select group of well-heeled friends in New York Jan. 17, following a</p>
        <p>fund-raiser given by Wall Street financier Bernard Lasker and other Republican Baker backers. Tischs immense contributions to Israel (close to $1 million every year for the United Jewish Appeal) miake him a major force in the American-Jewish community.</p>
        <p>A footnote: Another 1980 Republican hopeful. Sen. Bob Dole, is also courting and being courted by American Jews, leading to this possibilitycontinuation of the shift of Jewish voters to Republican presidential tickets. The shift went from 18 per cent in 1968 to around 35 per cent in 1972 and 1976.</p>
        <p>White House Finesse</p>
        <p>A classic explanation for politicians despairing over Jimmy Carters political housekeeping was the insensate White House response when a former political aide of Sen. Hubert Humphrey recommended him for the Medal of Freedom.</p>
        <p>Robert C. McCandless, a manager of Humphreys 1968 campaign now practicing law here, was deeply moved by the Dec. 2 Humphrey testimonial dinner. He wrote the President Dec, 5 urging that the medal be given to Humphrey in recognition of the life he has lived for our country, If Mr. Carter agreed, McCandless added, the medal should be awarded at the earliest possible moment.</p>
        <p>(Continued oo page 5)</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>BE YE PERFECT?</p>
        <p>Christopher Columbus came upon America while he was seeking a sea route to the Far East. In fact, he never would have reached America had he not aimed for the Far East. It was while he was reaching for something he never attained or could attain that he made one of the most significant geographical discoveries in world history.</p>
        <p>Jesus commanded his disciples to seek perfection. Be ye perfect, he said, even as your Heavenly Father is perfect. Has anyone ever attained this</p>
        <p>ideal? Not a single person in the last two thousand years. Are Jesuss words, then, the counsel of folly? Not at all. It is the very consummation of gospel commandments.</p>
        <p>If we did not aim at perfection, most of us would not attain even to common decency. Our arrow will always fall short of the mark, but the best way to get closer to that mark is to aim high. Seek perfection, nothing less, and by the grace of God we will achieve a moral status better than what we have today.</p>
        <p>Elisfaa Douglass</p>
        <p>By ART BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>Energy-Loss Research</p>
        <p>Wouldnt that require somebody who was involved to carry it to national awareness? he was asked. The answer was a simple % long and a fleeting smile.</p>
        <p>Some close observers of the governor believe that his push for volunteer action in schools and other community concerns, support for community crime and court watches. his reading program alhd Community School Act approach, participation in ef-forts to increase volunteerism ... all are geared to demonstrating that government can do things for people more effectively when the people organize and demand change for themselves, the foundation, some speculate, is now being built for a vice presidential bid in 1984.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - It was not given much publicity, but the Department of Energy has now come to the conclusion that the greatest amount of energy lost in this country is caused by heat escaping from peoples heads.</p>
        <p>The original discovery was made by a Washington lawyer, named David E. Weisman. when he noticed his brother-in-law, who never wore a hat, complained he was always cold. Then one Sunday, during halftime of a particularly bitter Redskins game. Weisman actually saw steam escaping from his brother-in-laws ears!</p>
        <p>He put two and two together and reported his observations to ERDA, the research arm of the Department of Energy. The research people had suspected that heat was escaping from peoples bodies, but up until then no one had thought the loss was going out of their heads.</p>
        <p>So the researchers dresseo up rats in warm clothing, but left their heads uncovered. Then they placed them in</p>
        <p>refrigerators. Sure enough the tests showed an appreciable energy loss depending on the size and shape of each rats head.</p>
        <p>Encouraged, they proceeded to test volunteer Energy Department employees. The data were confirmed. A poin-tyheaded person lost 10 percent of his body heat when he did not wear a hat. and a flatheaded person lost 20 percent. Also, volunteers with hair managed to be more insulated from the cold than those who were going bald.</p>
        <p>Once all the results were in. they were turned over to the Department of Energys Policy Committee. After making an environmental impact study, the Committee recommended new legislation which would assure the conservation of Americas body heat.</p>
        <p>The first recommendation was that a new law be passed requiring every American to wear a hat. Knowing that this might put a burden on many bald people, the Committee suggested that as an incentive. a tax credit be given to</p>
        <p>each bald person who purchased a nevt hat. The credit would be limited to the purchase of one hat per person, with not more than four deductions per family. The third suggestion was thal the President wear a hat at all his press conferences and state dinners to set an example to the rest of the country.</p>
        <p>These recommendations were sent up to the cretary of energy. James Schlesinger,</p>
        <p>ART</p>
        <p>BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>Other Editors Say: Wheeling &amp;amp; Dealing</p>
        <p>who immediately ordered his lobbyists on the Hill to add them to the energy bill.</p>
        <p>Unfortunately, the Hat Manufacturers lobbyists got wind of the new legislation and immediately went to work sabotaging it. They testified that they had no objection to making everyone in the United States wear a hat. But they attacked the tax credit plan maintaining that the money set aside for rebates to bald people should go instead for the exploration of new felt.</p>
        <p>(The Shelby Daily Star)</p>
        <p>A state official, David C. Robinson, is fussing at the City of Shelby because it has decided not to spend $10,000 of taxpayer money for a spurious study on mass transportation.</p>
        <p>Fussing, mind you. because the city council rightly turned down a federal grant of $8,000 and a state grant of $1,000, not to mention deciding not to spend $1,000 in local tax funds.</p>
        <p>Cmon!</p>
        <p>They also demanded complete deregulation on the price of new hat bands. As one lobbyist put it, Unless we get $2.25 per cubic yard for our hat bands we will be unable to find new sources of domestic material to supply all the head gear that will be needed this winter.</p>
        <p>Surely to goodness, the official of the State Department of Transportation has had his nose buried in the bureaucracy when he signed the letter to City Manager David Wilkison.. Surely the administration of Gov. Jim Hunt is not insisting that local governments spend money when there is no need to spend money. Surely the state government is not saying  as Mr. Robinson did - that this tax money just has to be spent.</p>
        <p>We had thought, until this occurred, that Raleigh was a little saner place than Washington, D.C., but now were not so sure. We had thought all the free-spending drunken sailors were based in Washington, not in Wake County. We had thought that the state understood the need to conserve tax dollars, not spend them just because someone said they could be spent.</p>
        <p>We understand, of course, that the city council was split over the issue, but the majority did prevail and rightly so in turning down the grant. Now, the state official says in his angry letter, that the state thinks Shelby will change its mind, and thus, the state will hold the grant for us.</p>
        <p>Luckily, the city council majority has shown more statesmanship than state government has in this instance. Mass transit studies may be right for some municipalities, but not for us. In this sort of situation, its easy to separate the taxpayers from the tax spenders.</p>
        <p>To complicate matters the shoe industry got the act and said they should also get tax credits for conserving energy. If we didnt make shoes,, one of their lobbyists said, body heat now rising from peoples heads would escape out of their toes.  </p>
        <p>Alleged</p>
        <p>Spoken</p>
        <p>Record</p>
        <p>By DONALD M. RODIBERG Asaodated Pwtt Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -Words, words, words. Is it possible that even such practiced talkers as the members of the U.S. House and Senate said so much the last day they were in session in 1977?</p>
        <p>The Congressional Record for that single day runs three volumes, more than 600 pages, at a cost of $322 a page, to record the words allegedly spoken on the floor of the two chambers.</p>
        <p>.Not even the best Senate fili-busterer could read aloud that much material in less than 48 hours. Yet, the House was in session that day for six and one-half hours, the Senate for</p>
        <p>.seven.</p>
        <p>A lot of those words went unsaid. They were statements submitted for the record by members of Congress and inserted as though they were part of the debate.</p>
        <p>Some people want to change that practice. Sen. Bob Pack-wcxkI, R-Ore.. has campaigned, without much success, to win approval of a measure to require that the record clearly show which material was spoken on the floor and which was merely inserted.</p>
        <p>There is a place in the record for statements. Its called extensions of remarks and appears at the end of each days issue.</p>
        <p>Every member of Congress is allowed to fill two pages a day in the extensions section, something which few do. If a member wants to insert material that runs more than two pages he must obtain permission on the floor, permission which is routinely granted.</p>
        <p>But he also must state publicly, for the record, that he intends to insert umpteen pages of material at a cost of $322 a</p>
        <p>page.</p>
        <p>What sort of material is placed in extensions of remarks?</p>
        <p>The iast day of the session produced the expected state-nients on issues ranging from Social Security and crime to energy, jobs and whether the Crown of St. Stephen should be returned to Hungary.</p>
        <p>There also was a brief tribute to the Alcoa, Tenn., high school football team which won the state Class A championship; and Rep. Larry Pressler, R-S.D.. informed his colleagues that jars of South Dakota honey, contributed by Alvin C. Zietlow of Rapid City, would be found on the tables of House restaurants.</p>
        <p>There were nice words about the University of Michigan football team, as well as about Nick Santoro of Reading. Pa., a member of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Commission for 37 years, and Emerson Street, who is retiring as business representative for the Santa Clara County, Calif., Central Labor Council.</p>
        <p>Among the words spoken on the Senate floor that final day were some by Sen. S. I. Hay-akawa. R-Calif who offered two resolutions. One of them would designate Memphis, Tenn., as The Home of the Blues, and the other would recognize blues singer Memphis Slim as an ambassador-at-large of goodwill.</p>
        <p>Despite the intensive lobbying pressures, an administration spokesman said he was optimistic that Congress, in its wisdom, would keep a lid on the price of hats, rather than overheat the economy; And he predicted that if both the House and Senate kept working at their present pace, everyone in the country would be wearing a warm hat by July.</p>
        <p>Both resolutions were adopted with the hearty support of the two senators from Tennessee, neither of whom explained why a Californian had emerged as a champion of blues singing in Tennessee.</p>
        <p>The last word was from Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. D-N.Y.. who was presiding. Moynihan noted that "we have just congratulated a blues singer for spreading good cheer.</p>
        <p>Swallowed' A Spending Binge</p>
        <p>ByJOHNCUNNIFF AP Business Analyst</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) -Americans really went on a spending binge in the final weeks of the year, and there are indications that a good percentage of the purchases didnt end up under the Christmas tree.</p>
        <p>They were consumed instead, literally swallowed, in the form of food and drink. Or so it would seem.</p>
        <p>Final figures wont be available for a couple of more weeks, but we do know this: Food store sales in November rose 2.9 percent over those of October, suggesting an amazing increase in intake.</p>
        <p>True, some of these purchases might have made gifts, but another set of statistics suggests otherwise. November sales at eating and</p>
        <p>drinking places leaped 2.1 percent after having been weak in October,</p>
        <p>Economists are now studying such statistics to find out what they can about the behavior of the sometimes unpredictable consumer. They have already drawn some conclusions:</p>
        <p>The public was in mofe ol a buying mood than was generally foreseen. The buying began unusually early: October retail sales leaped 2.7 percent over September, and November added another 1.5 over October.</p>
        <p>Early reports of a 1.5 percent increase in the dollar value of automotive purchases for November are suspect.</p>
        <p>There is a possibility that revisions will trim the</p>
        <p>November auto component of retail sales. Citibank comments. For one thing, it questions  that  unit  sales</p>
        <p>would be  down  but  dollar</p>
        <p>sales up so much.</p>
        <p>Shoppers apparently were not reluctant to use credit, That, at least, was the trend that seemed to be setting in early in the final quarter of the year.</p>
        <p>Contrary  to  what  some</p>
        <p>people might expect, consumers assume credit burdens when they feel confident  not when the the absence of ready cash leaves them no other choice.</p>
        <p>Personal incomes were up; people were confident; they took on credit.</p>
        <p>This burst of consumer activity  now  presents</p>
        <p>analysts with the question of how much longer it might</p>
        <p>continue. Some credit critics say the burden of repayments could hamper sales in 1978.</p>
        <p>Another school of thought, however, observes that consumers are still able to repay their borrowings on time. They feel that 1978 sales might indeed be affected by activity this year, but merely because consumers have already purchased many of the items they need.</p>
        <p>Whatever, the indotnitable consumer has again surprised some of those who claim the title of expert, and has almost made certain a continuation of the expansion into a fourth year.</p>
        <p>He might have done it with food and drink and a lot of gifts that the recipient is inclined to return, but thats the way the economy turns.M</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0005" />
        <p>The Dally Reflects, Greenville, N.C.Tueaday, December 27,19778Rain, Snow, Fog And Clouds Hit Pacific Coast</p>
        <p>By llie Associated Press</p>
        <p>A wet weather system covers the Pacific Coast with rain, snow, fog and clouds, while a mass of arctic air is nipping at the East today.</p>
        <p>Sometimes heavy rain pelted much of California Monday with more expected today, including snow at higher elevations. The precipitation is expected to continue through Wednesday. The same weather system kept a light rain falling across Arizona Monday and</p>
        <p>forecasters said it could continue for several days.</p>
        <p>Patchy fog was expected in some areas of Washington State today, with mostly fair skies across much of the state. Temperatures are below the freezing point across the state and across much of Oregon. Winds sometimes gusted to 30 mph in parts of Oregon Monday.</p>
        <p>Temperatures were in the 30s. 40s and 50s across cloudy New Mexico. The temperatures were about the same, but the skies were clear across Utah.</p>
        <p>The FARM SCENE</p>
        <p>Federal investment tax credit has been an important feature of farm tax management and reporting in most years for over a decade. The credit is currently 10 percent of qualified investment through December 31. 1980.'and is a direct reduction against Income tax liability. If the credit cannot be used in the year it is earned, it can be carried back three, then forward seven years to offset tax liability in these other years. If property is disposed of before credit claimed is fully earned, the credit must be recomputed to determined by the qualified investment." which is a percentage of the cost basis of the qualified asset.</p>
        <p>If the useful life for depreciation purposes is;</p>
        <p>ItePcraotli:</p>
        <p>3-433Mi percent 5-6 66^ percent 7 or nK)re 100 percent Eligible property must have a useful life of at least three years to qualify for the credit. The principal types of Investment eligible for the credit are new and used machinery and equipment and livestock (other than horses). Qualfied investment in used property is limited to $100,000 through 1980.</p>
        <p>Some types of real estate qualify. These include tile drains, fences, water wells, paved barnyards, outside power, light, or water systems, tobacco bulk barns, and such storage facilities as silos, grain bins, com cribs, and gasoline storage tanks. Orchards and vineyards qualify in the year production starts.</p>
        <p>Buildings and their components are not eliglWe for investment credit. There are some indications, however, that the definition of what is clearly a building vs. what is an integral</p>
        <p>part of a production facility (qualified structure) has been liberalized. When the structure is specifically designed for the property it encloses.and would have no other economic use, it would qualify for investment credit and the credit should extend to milking parlors and poultry houses.</p>
        <p>North Carolina Tax Credit For Imulatlon, Storm Windom And Doon,And Solar Eqnipaieat An income tax credit is allowed an individual (including an individual member of a partnership) or corporation who install during 1977 or 1978 new or additional insulation, storm windows, or storm doors in a building located in North Carolina, which as built and occupied prior to 1977.</p>
        <p>The credit is limited to 25 percent of the cost, but may not exceed $100 in any year for each buOdiag or family unit or multidwelling building. The credit nuQt not exceed the North Carolina income tax liability for the year. The insulation or equipment must have a useful life of at least three years.</p>
        <p>A tax credit is also allowed for the construction or installation of a eolar heating, cooling, or hot water system in a building located in North Carolina owned by the taxpayer. This credit is limited to 25 percent of the cost, but may not exceed $1,000 per building. Credit in excess of the years North Carolina income tax liability may be carried forward three years.</p>
        <p>Revival Begins</p>
        <p>On Wednesday</p>
        <p>Evans-Novak..</p>
        <p>(Continued frmn page 4)</p>
        <p>On Dec. 13, White House staff assistant Landon Kite thanked McCandless for his letter, then added: We appreciate your thoughtfulness in bringing Sen. Humphreys work to the Presidents attention.</p>
        <p>Good living... ...when you top.</p>
        <p>working!</p>
        <p>If you are now saving for retirement, or if you have been thinking about starting a plan for yourself, you shoula find out right now about the advantage of a tax deferred plan under the Pension Reform Act.</p>
        <p>Called the Individual Retirement Account, it permits you to set aside tax deferred dollars for retirement. Investment earnings on your dollars are also tax deferred until you stop working. As an employee or self-employed individual, not covered under a qualified plan at your work or business, you could be eligible for the full benefits of an Individual Retirement Account.</p>
        <p>L. Htnry Hudion Routes, Box 227 GrMiwlllo.N.C. 27134 7S2-4974</p>
        <p>Fountain P. Cade P.O. Box 20S Greenville, N.C. 27S34 752-501</p>
        <p>Bob Pickett 209E.10tl Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 751-7515</p>
        <p>Bill Deans 400 A. West 10th Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 752-8821</p>
        <p>NATIONWIDE</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>Nationwide is on your side</p>
        <p>Clear to partly cloudy skis are expected across Colorado, with mild temperatures.</p>
        <p>Montana has partly cloudy skies with scattered light snow in the mountains. Parts of Wyoming were dusted with light snow Monday. Light snow was expected in Idaho today where fog yesterday created widespread highway problems.</p>
        <p>The cold weather in the East is caused by a mass of artic air pouring in from the upper Great Lakes and Wisconsin.</p>
        <p>Massachusetts expected high temperatures to be in the 20s today under clear skies. Northern New England also has clear skies, with a chance of some flurries later today.</p>
        <p>Heavy snow and high winds along Lake Erie Monday stranded motorists and closed a section of Interstate 90 in Pennsylvania.</p>
        <p>Travelers advisories for heavy snow squalls remained in effect today across much of upstate New York. Buffalo expected up to six inches today in high winds. New York City has clear skies with temperatures in the 20s.</p>
        <p>Occasional light snow continues to fall on the Maryland Mountains. Skies are cloudy across much of Maryland and Delaware.</p>
        <p>Virginia is under partly cloudy skies with temperatures getting down near five degrees at higher elevations.</p>
        <p>A large high pressure system is dominating the weather picture in the Southeast, bringing frosty temperatures, but clear skies to wide areas.</p>
        <p>Some snow flurries were expected today in the North Carolina mountains. Clear skies and cool weather are expected today over much of Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia.</p>
        <p>Florida is braced for cooler temperatures, at the freezing point on the northern part of the state. Temperatures in the Miami area were expected to dip below 50.</p>
        <p>Illinois temperatures today range from zero in the northern part of the state to the teens in southern areas. Minnesota and Wisconsin had temperatures below zero, with the mercury expected to drop to lower than 15-below-zero in some parts of</p>
        <p>Wisconsin and to lO-below in .Southern Minnesota. Skies were clear across Indiana.</p>
        <p>Snow fell across upper Michigan over the Christmas weekend, with more expected in some parts today. A 45-year record snowfall for a 24 hour</p>
        <p>period was recorded at midnight. Monday  9,9 inches at Sault Ste. Marie,</p>
        <p>Pearly morning temperatures around the nation ranged from 23 degrees below zero at War-road. Minn,, to 65 degrees at San Diego,</p>
        <p>MORGAN INSULATION, INC.</p>
        <p>Nf W INStU ATION</p>
        <p>Rf insulation 756-46 1 1</p>
        <p>tX)ug Morgan, Owrwr</p>
        <p>Generally fair and cool weather prevails over Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana,</p>
        <p>Revival services will begin at the Shelmerdine Baptist Church Wednesday night and will continue through Jan. 1.</p>
        <p>The evangelist will be Grady Lemons of Shelby. Services will begin nightly at 7:30 and will include special singing. A nursery will be provided.</p>
        <p>The church is located on Highway 43 across from Chicod School.</p>
        <p>Travis Smith is pastor of the local church.</p>
        <p>Clear weather prevails over Kansas and Missouri, with seasonably cool temperatures and some high wind.</p>
        <p>A HERO DIES  Oliver P. Smttfa, the Marine general who became a legend during the Korean War, died Christmas Day at hia home In Los Altoe, Calif. He was M. Smith became famous during the breakout of the 1st Marine Division at the Chang] in Reaervtdr when he said Were not retreating, we are just attacking In a new direction. He is riiown as he arrived in Oakland, Calif., April, 1961. (AP Laaerphoto)</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>GREAT, NEW</p>
        <p>FISH</p>
        <p>(So Good, Jack Guarantees Youll Enjoy It!)</p>
        <p>MAKES OUR $1.99 WEDNESDAY SEAFOOD PLATTER BETTER THAN EVER</p>
        <p>SAVE $1.00</p>
        <p>Need a reason ti eat out this Wednesda&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>ONLY $1.99</p>
        <p>Reg. Price 92.W</p>
        <p>Nixht? Wait untU vou tasU- .lAC'KS grvat. new fish. MMft.MM! A large, tender, meatv filet that is so good JACK</p>
        <p>ed w ith l(&amp;gt;s, a I, fresh</p>
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        <p>arge baked potato or french fries, fi haked roll and .JACK'S FREE</p>
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        <p>STEAK HOUSE</p>
        <p>Dinners Include Free Salad Bar</p>
        <p>500 W. Greenville Blvd. Greenville</p>
        <p>2207 Neuse Blvd. New Bern</p>
        <p>DON T MISS THE SAVINGS DURING OUR AFTER CHRISTMAS</p>
        <p>CLEARANCE SALE</p>
        <p>PRICESGOODTHRUWED.,DEC. 28</p>
        <p>COSMETIC</p>
        <p>SALEI</p>
        <p>ASSORTED FLAMEOLO COSMETICS AND LASHBRITE EYE MAKEUPS</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>SELECTED</p>
        <p>CHRISTMAS GIFT SETS</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>OFF REGULAR RETAIL</p>
        <p>REVLON CHRISTMAS SETS AND GIFT ITEMS</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>OFF REGULAR RETAIL</p>
        <p>SELECT MAX FACTOR GIFT &amp;amp; CHRISTMAS ITEMS</p>
        <p>60%</p>
        <p>OFF REGULAR RETAIL</p>
        <p>SNACK^CmVCKEBS</p>
        <p>Your choice 8-oz. Twigs, Sociables, Triscuit or Wheat Thins! Reg. 79 ea.</p>
        <p>'Stm^avor</p>
        <p>POPCORN</p>
        <p>Fresh, butter flavor!</p>
        <p>Reg. 49*</p>
        <p>39*</p>
        <p>Dennis balls</p>
        <p>Can of three. Reg. 1-99</p>
        <p>WARM-UP</p>
        <p>SUIT</p>
        <p>Polyester. Reg. 21.99</p>
        <p>TITELiST GOLF BALLS</p>
        <p>Pro-trojectory. 1 dozen.</p>
        <p>Reg. 15.99</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>TOBOGGANS</p>
        <p>Watchcap toboggan or with pom pom.</p>
        <p>Reg. 1.00</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p>KRACO AM/FM 8-TRACK PLAYER AUTO SYSTEM</p>
        <p>in-dash with all mounting hardware. No. 560-r D Reg. 99.99</p>
        <p>ECKERD</p>
        <p>9-VOLT</p>
        <p>BATTERY</p>
        <p>Proven performance.</p>
        <p>38*</p>
        <p>SPEAKERS... 11** PR.</p>
        <p>Flush mount. No. KS44-4 Reg. 14.99</p>
        <p>OE FLASHBAR</p>
        <p>17QlOguaran-teed flashes. ||a Reg. 2.59</p>
        <p>ALL CHRISTMAS ITEMS IN STOCK</p>
        <p> CHRISTMAS TREES</p>
        <p> TREE TRIM  ORNAMENTS</p>
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        <p> CHRISTMAS CARDS</p>
        <p>m PRICE</p>
        <p>ALL CHRISTMAS WRAP, RIBBON, BOWS, TAGS &amp;amp; SEALS AND MOREI</p>
        <p>VsOFF</p>
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        <p>ALL HOUSEWARES &amp;amp; PERSONAL CARE APPLIANCES IN STOCK</p>
        <p>25% OFF</p>
        <p>LIMITED QUANTITIES HURRY...THESE WONT LAST!</p>
        <p>-jP0J-LBALLET</p>
        <p>bathroom tissue</p>
        <p>6 roll family size pack.</p>
        <p>LLOYDS  _</p>
        <p>POCKET CALCULATOR</p>
        <p>Ultra slim with large 8-digit</p>
        <p>tilfiu  mul</p>
        <p>tiply and percent keys. Full</p>
        <p>rnemory, direct sq. root kev No. E603 Reg. 13.99</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>MYLANTA</p>
        <p>ANTACID</p>
        <p>SUSPENSION</p>
        <p>12-ounce.</p>
        <p>127</p>
        <p>SINUTA^</p>
        <p>TABLETS</p>
        <p>Pack of 30.</p>
        <p>WARMCREST ELECTRIC BLANKET</p>
        <p>Twin Size With Single control. Asst, colors Reg. 19.99</p>
        <p>|29i</p>
        <p>14*</p>
        <p>GERITOL TABLETS</p>
        <p>Bottle of 100. 1^1</p>
        <p>NEWIATRA RAZOR</p>
        <p>"Pivoting head twin-blade razor. Reg. 4.19</p>
        <p>^SSOFTED blankets &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>THERMAL BLANKETS 099</p>
        <p>Reg. 6.99, 72 X 90"  U</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>GOODWIN WALKIE TALKIES</p>
        <p>AOQ Solid state, 3 transistor. High-impact fl case with telescopic antenna. No. ^  '91-011  Reg.  9.99</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0006" />
        <p>This Vietnam Veteran Was Wounded In Peace</p>
        <p>By RICHARD SISK</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI) - The lawyer from the Legal Aid Society looked at the former paratrooper tying face down and handcuffed in the dingy-holding pen of the police precinct and thought "Damn, what a mess."</p>
        <p>No use trying the police brutality number on this one, the lawyer thought. Danny had tried to punch out two cops and they had kicked the hell out of him. It was to be expected</p>
        <p>The cops had caught him trying to stick up a grocer with a knife. Danny was mean and quick and it was a nasty job wrestling him into the squad car. Then he kicked out the rear window of the cruiser.</p>
        <p>Afterwards, he couldnt remember a thing about it, a total blank. A junkie, a thief, a pusher, a switchblade street-fighting man, Danny was definitely one sad piece of work, the lawyer thought.</p>
        <p>He had been arrested 15 times and convicted nine times on charges ranging from petty theft to assault in the five years since his discharge.</p>
        <p>Some psychiatrists would say that Danny was experiencing post-Vietnam syndrome, an extreme case of "trauma neurosis The Veterans Administration pays benefits to the worst cases. They call it a conversion reaction disability.</p>
        <p>*This evfl in me</p>
        <p>To Danny, the terms are meaningless, the jargon of academic Muzak makers. You aint been cut, you dont know. What he knew was that he didnt care, not about anything, and he didnt know why  There was just this evil in me</p>
        <p>By no means is his case typical. The walking time bom'b stereotype of the</p>
        <p>combat veteran, perpetuated by too many bad books and movies, is a cruel and false affront to the approximately 2.5 million men who served in Southeast Asia during the offical Vietnam era of Aug. 4, 1964 to May 28, 1973, the longest war in the nations history.</p>
        <p>They are variously labeled "forgotten warriors, or the discarded army or the prisoners of peace. Catchy.</p>
        <p>Senior officers and veterans organizations correctly bridle at the suggestion that veterans are more prone to violence than non-veterans and say crime statisics for those who have had military service are about the same as for those who have never served.</p>
        <p>While cases such as Dannys arise, psychiatrists are hesitant in drawing a causal link to the war experience and point to contributing factors such as the individuals background and social environment.</p>
        <p>Probleais before sendee</p>
        <p>Chuck Hansen, chief social worker at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Boise, Idaho, said. Most of the men I have counseled had problems before they entered the service. Some guys are screwed up emotionally and the service only shows them the way to use their violent intentions.</p>
        <p>Dr. Thomas Fullmer, head of the psychiatric unit at the Atlanta Veterans Hospital, said. The youth of this generation is experiencing all kinds of frustrations, problems of not being educated and finding a job. 'The Viet vets we see have had an added experience. The military had an impact. They were exposed to regimentation and discipline.</p>
        <p>It began for Danny at age 19 when he volunteered for the Army, taking basic training in June 1967 at Fort Gordon, Ga.</p>
        <p>At six feet, about 175 pounds, he was fit and easliy coped with the mandatory harassment. You aint totally worthless, dirtbird. We can always use you as a bad example. Later came jump school and assignment to the lOlst Airborne Division at Fort Benning, Ga.</p>
        <p>In November, he put on jungle fatigues, |rabbed his M16 rifle and rucksack and marched with the rest of the division aboard C41 transports. The first stop was Wake Island, then the Philippines. thi Bien Hoa, Vietnam.</p>
        <p>A Kaiy burioMS They were in country, down south, the ultimate delation from magnetic north, land of Luke the Gook, alias Mr. Victor Charles, and the big green body bag. marching down the tarmac under a slate sky spitting out ropes of rain.</p>
        <p>Whoopee, we're all gonna die, the song said. It aint much but its the only war we got, the lifers would say.</p>
        <p>Col. Forest S. Rittgers, commanding officer of Fort Devens, Ayer. Mass., said this particular war was a scary business. You were going against a couple of opponents in a game that really didnt have any rules. In Vietnam, any action was a lot of action. Most men who went into action were scared. If you werent scared, you didnt last very long. Before it was over, 46,092 Americans were to die from hostile fire and 10,317 from nonhostile causes. A total of 303,652 were wounded.</p>
        <p>The grunts scoffed at their apprehensions with helmet cover graffiti. Pray for War, they said, and Bom to Be Wild and Get Some and No Way. John Wayne never cries and Flash Gordon never bleeds.</p>
        <p>NEW COMBAT OOPTESS - A of British Lynx helicopters fly over the cathedral in Salisbury, En^and. The Lynx, bolder ot a wmid speed reond, is a multi-purpose aircraft hkfa can carry troops. Are and-tank missiles, provide</p>
        <p>an airtorae oommand poM, and undertake search and rescue operations. Manufactured by Westland Helloopters, the will rqdace die Scout and is to ^ into service with armed forces in Germany early next year. (APLaserpboto)</p>
        <p>Perhaps, the songs they liked were a more accurate gauge of their feelings. We gotta get outa this place, if its the last thing we evah do-ooo, was a special favorite, along with Otis Reddings Dock of the Bay  This loneliness wont leave me alone...</p>
        <p>His sflver star</p>
        <p>Dannys unit spent Christmas in Cu Chi and then moved out on a 90-day operation. It was just strai^Jt leg stuff, humpin hills, Danny said. Looney tunes in the afternoon.</p>
        <p>And there were the night patrols, lying still and silent in the bush, a tightness in the gut coiling in the dark. It was cold. They never told you how cold it got.</p>
        <p>Waiting for first light, you thought about everything you had ever done in your life, every detail. It killed about five minutes.</p>
        <p>The first firefight came a few days later.</p>
        <p>We were on point and crossing a paddy and started taking sniper fire. I hit the ground. Man, 1 couldnt get no closer to it. Then the man just faded away. Eight guys took hits. Hippie got wasted that day.</p>
        <p>The unit saw nearly constant action after that, incliKiing the siege of Hue during Tet. By April, Danny had won a silver star  I just went crazy with a machine gun  and was one of three left from his original platoon who had not been wounded. His turn came early that month.</p>
        <p>We were taking sniper fire and I was crawling through the elephant grass trying to find out where the hell he was. I raised up a little and Charley had me. The first round scratched my chest and went through my right arm. The second got me in the left thigh.</p>
        <p>The medic got to me and gave me a shot to kill the pain. I tried to crawl and then I just told him. Leave me here. I aint gonna crawl no more. Then the stuff started getting to me and I was singing that song about 1.000 miles away from home.</p>
        <p>Vets Tlt expfotted</p>
        <p>Dr. John P. Wilson, a Qeveland State University psychologist. recently completed a study funded by the Disabled American Veterans Association of about 400 Vietnam veterans.</p>
        <p>He found Many of them felt that they had fought a war njotivated by economic reasons and consequently felt exploited or ripped off for serving.</p>
        <p>Danny had never felt exploited. The moral aspects of the war did not concern him. Neither did revolutionary development to win hearts and minds. That was a rear echelon dance.</p>
        <p>I never thought about it. The service was just a job to me. That changed while he was recuperating in Cam Ranh Bay and had time to think.</p>
        <p>There was this time in a ville where this lady had half her rear end shot off and her kid was screaming \vhile we</p>
        <p>put her on the chopper. I started thinking this whole thing was messed up. I started doing marijuana and going after drugs, seconal, darvon, anything I could get.</p>
        <p>He was given orders to report back to his unit. It was different. Cool Papa had been killed. Bulldog was hit. Preacher and me were the only ones left. 1 was scared, man. I started thinking how 1 could get out.</p>
        <p>Back to the worid</p>
        <p>His chance came on his first patrol. I fell and hit my knee on a rock. I picked up another rock and hit my knee with it. It started swelling up and they sent me back.</p>
        <p>The magic words, DEROS CONUS, Date of Estimated Return Continental United States. Back to the world, land of the big PX. johnny Carson, nmning water and clean sheets and the roundeye stone fox.</p>
        <p>But it was dove and hawk time back home and he returned to a nation deeply divided on the purpose of the war and suspicious of his contribution to it.</p>
        <p>We lost our war and thats a blow to the older generation, said Jack McCloskey, counselor at the Swords to Plowshares organization, a San Francisco veterans aid group.</p>
        <p>We didnt want parades, just to be welcomed back. And there was incredible frustration when we came back. Most of our World War II counterparts came back by troopship and had a chance to adjust gradually to the change. We came back in 72 hours and three days later were let loose on the streets of America. Danny arrived at Newark Airport and took a cab to Manhattan. My wife was crying. I put my arm around her but I didnt feel nothing. I was numb.</p>
        <p>High divorce rate Nicholas F. Rose, 30, executive director of the Vietnam Veterans Association of Rhode Island, is a disabled veteran jyith two bronze stars and seven purple hearts for Vietnam service.</p>
        <p>Many returning vets, he says, have problems readjusting to married life after a years separation.</p>
        <p>We do know from speaking to our own clients that the divorce rate is very, very high. Most are sought on grounds of extreme and mental cruelty, which can include violence." Danny saw his wifes needs as demands. I was just dying for a break. I couldnt understand it. I had to go upside her head a few times. liiey split.</p>
        <p>There were complications from his war wounds and he entered St. Albans Naval Hospital in Queens. There was a big drug scene there and I got into it. It made me feel good. By the time I got out, I had a habit.</p>
        <p>It was afl drugs</p>
        <p>For the next five years, It was all drugs. My jones (habit)</p>
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        <p>got worse. I was pushing and taking off other junkies. He tarried a knife and a gun and he used them. I had this thing about having a weapon.</p>
        <p>During that perk^, he was arrested 15 times and convicted nine times on various charges related to his heroin and cocaine habit. His head was on full automatic and the safety was off.</p>
        <p>In most cases, judges impressed by his war record gave him suspended sentences or probation and he never spent more than a few months in jail.</p>
        <p>In 1975, he was stabbed in the back in a fight over drugs and spent the next three months-in Bellevue Hospital. He had hit bottom, his only possessions the clothes on his back. A hospital counsellor convinced him to try a drug rehabilitation program.</p>
        <p>With the support of the counsellor, he kicked his narcotics habit and enrolled at a city college where he is majoring in psychology.</p>
        <p>How many Charleyi?</p>
        <p>How many Charleys came honae from the war and what can be done to help them?</p>
        <p>Joseph M. Cleland, new head of the Veterans Administration, who lost both legs and an arm in a Vietnam grenade explosion. said not enough research has been done on the psychological damages of Vietnam.</p>
        <p>Cleland said all v^erans are affected in some way by their war experiences  some adversely  but he said many Vietnam veterans have suffered from the time bomb tag because of the problems of a few.</p>
        <p>Two Charged In Early Hours</p>
        <p>David Frank Moore, 19, and Benjamin Franklin Moore Jr. both of Scotland Neck were charged with possession of marijuana following a 2; 15 a.m. incident at the intersection of Greene Street and N.C. 33 Christmas Eve.</p>
        <p>Chief Glenn Cannon said officers stopped a vehicle driven by the older Moore and discovered a small anwunt of marijuana.</p>
        <p>In addition to the drug charge. Benjamin Moore was charged with driving under the influence and driving while his license was revoked, while David Moore was charged with allowing driving under the influence and driving while license was revoked.</p>
        <p>Im not convinced the war in Vietnam had a greater detrimental effect than any other war that would cause veterans to come back and commit violent acts. he said. The major difference between Vietnam and other wars is the psychological repercussions.</p>
        <p>And Im just not sure that automatically transfers into violence.</p>
        <p>NoVetCrim^Flgures</p>
        <p>There are no figures on the number of crimes committed by veterans, but the VA cites studies showing veterans make up nearly 50 percent of American males between 16 and 65 but only about 30 percent of the nations prison population.</p>
        <p>The VAs contention is supported by Dr. Arthur Egendorf, a psychologist with Mount Sinai School of Medicine at the City University of New York, who said interviews with 450 men in the Northeast showed Vietnam veterans are no more prone to violence than non-veterans.</p>
        <p>In fact, he said, the guys who were in combat tend to be less explosive than the guys who were not. But some do have problems.</p>
        <p>On the outside, the veteran may look like everything is</p>
        <p>fine, he said. But on the inside, he might have gotten hi head all turned around.  Danny lives now a short walK from his college on a tree-liner^ street in a comfortable one-bedroom apartment with a huge fishtank, soft lighting and a shaggy white rug on th^ living room floor.  ;</p>
        <p>He continues to work with a drug counselling program a the school, rummaging througlt the five-year narcotic time warp in his spirit looking fon reasons, and hopes to be a counsellor himself when he graduates in about two years.  He lives alone. Ive had this thing since I got back to be bji myself. 1 cant get too close. I</p>
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        <p>How's The Weather? Hope Stirs For Coma Woman</p>
        <p>FORECAST</p>
        <p>Until Wednesday</p>
        <p>SO</p>
        <p>Snow</p>
        <p>ESSI</p>
        <p>Flurries</p>
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>Rain</p>
        <p>_</p>
        <p>Showers Stationary Occluded</p>
        <p>Figures show low</p>
        <p>temperatures for oreo.</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>40Data</p>
        <p>NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE, NOAA, U.S. Dept, of Commerce</p>
        <p>WEATHER FORECASTShowers and rain are forecast today over wide areas of the West.</p>
        <p>Unseasonably oool to very ooid weather is due across the nation. (APLaserphotoMap)</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>North Carolinians who looked out their windows at sunny skies this morning may not have been ready for what greeted them when they stepped outdoors.</p>
        <p>It wasnt Just cold. It was frigid.</p>
        <p>Morning tows ranged from 7 at Fletcher, in the mountains south of Asheville, to 27 at Cape Hatteras. Asheville recorded a low of 11, while the mercury dipped to 14 at Raleigh-Durham Airport and 20 at Charlotte.</p>
        <p>The Highway Patrol said all roads in the state were open this morning.</p>
        <p>Mondays highs ranged from 31 at Asheville to 44 at Wilmington.</p>
        <p>And the forecast for today and Wednesday offers little to warm Tar Heel hearts  or toes.</p>
        <p>Cold air will continue to flow southeast into the Carolinas, with highs again expected to be in the 30s in the Piedmont and along the coast and in the 20s in the mountains. Lows will be in the teens in the west and the</p>
        <p>20s in the east.</p>
        <p>Except for brief snow flurries. there is no precipitation in the outlook. Coastal winds will c'ontinue to be from the north today at 10 to 20 knots.</p>
        <p>The extended forecast for Thursday through Saturday calls for partly cloudy skies and a slow warming trend. Highs should be in the 40s Thursday and Friday and reach the 50s by Saturday.</p>
        <p>Overnight lows will be in the 20s Thursday, increasing to the upper 30s and low 40s by Saturday.</p>
        <p>Thirsty California fs Getting Precipitation</p>
        <p>By JACK SCHREmifAN Aaoxdated Pran Writer</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Three solid storms have dumped rain and snow across thirsty California since Thanksgiving, but the two-year drought may not be over yet. a forecaster says.</p>
        <p>A wet weather depression meandering in the eastern Pacific funneied another storm into the state Monday, sending added snpw to the Sierra slopes and widespread rains to lower elevations. More of the same was expected today.</p>
        <p>Despite the storms. National Weather Service forecaster Ray Williams says: So far this year precipitation is normal.</p>
        <p>but we dont know what the rest of the year really is going to do.</p>
        <p>Williams noted the water table is still far below what it should be and that water rationing is still the rule in many areas.</p>
        <p>Three of the largest reservoirs in California are still at critically low levels, the state Drought Information Center in Sacramento points out.</p>
        <p>Shasta Dam, which has a capacity of 4.5 million acre-feet, has only 914,000 acre-feet in storage. Folsom Dam, with a million-acre-foot capacity, has 182,000-acre-feet; Oroville Dam has a third of its 3.5 million-acre-fool capacity.</p>
        <p>A fair weather high pressure system had hovered over northern California for two years, diverting storms from the stale. But the system has broken up and there is little evidence on weather charts to indicate any new high pressure formation in the offing, Williams says.</p>
        <p>California utilities do not have enough water on hand to talk about an end to the drought. But they do have hope.</p>
        <p>The East Bay Municipal Utility District last weekend reported eo inches of snow at 6,-000 feet, while normal for this time of year at that elevation is 30 inches. Last year at this time, there was no snow at all.</p>
        <p>By NAOAKI USUI Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>TOKYO (API - Harriet Rosenberg, a 34-year-old mother of two from East Monroe, N.Y.. who has been in a coma for almost a year, shows "small, first signs she might regain consciousness through a new blood circulating thereapy started last week, her husband said today.</p>
        <p>"Doctors told me there have been small improvements. First, her finger muscles softened. Now you can bend her fingers which we couldnt do before, Ted Rosenberg. 38.</p>
        <p>Quiet Rites For Chaplin</p>
        <p>CORSIER-SUR-VEVEY. Switzerland (AP)  Charlie Chaplin was buried this morning in a simple ceremony in the graveyard of this Swiss village where he died Christmas day at the age of 88.</p>
        <p>The funeral was as he wanted  without fanfare in the little town overlooking Lake Geneva and the majestic French alps where he spent the last 25 years of his life.</p>
        <p>Only about 30 relatives, close friends and household staffers attended the rain-swept, 20-minute ceremony for the cane-twirling Little Tramp of the silent screen.</p>
        <p>About 150 reporters and curious villagers observed the ceremony from behind an enclosure set up by police around the burial site.</p>
        <p>Chaplins widow Oona, looking pale, drawn and tired, was surrounded by seven of their eight children as the Rev. David Miller of the Church of England in Lausanne, and the Rev. Richard Thomson, who looks after Anglicans in this region. officiated.</p>
        <p>Miller delivered a brief eulogy on the life and work of the great London-born comedian in a low voice audible only to the small group surrounding the grave. Thomson recited The Lords Prayer.</p>
        <p>Thomson said Chaplin was not a member of the Church' of England, but he was a supporter.</p>
        <p>After the prayer the family left. Chaplins widow in the lead, and drove away in a fleet of Rolls Royce and Mercedes limousines, before the coffin was lowered into the grave.</p>
        <p>told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.</p>
        <p>Doctors also told him his wife now blinks her left and right eyelids to an equal degree and that she can swallow saliva, although unconsciously, Rosenberg said. She could do neither before the thereapy. he added.</p>
        <p>"Doctors said the blood-circulating therapy is a step-by-step</p>
        <p>Charged With Fireworks Saie</p>
        <p>Greenville Police arrested Earl Cornelius Atkinson of 504B Battle St. on charges of sale and possession of pyrotechnics Christmas Day, Chief Glenn Cannon said this morning.</p>
        <p>Cannon said Atkinson was arrested following a 7:30 p.m. incident and searcii of Earls Grocery at the intersection of 14th and Fleming Streets during which officers found a quantity of fireworks.</p>
        <p>A hurricane that swept through Florida in September 1935 resulted in the deaths of 409 persons.</p>
        <p>Tide Table</p>
        <p>Atlantic Beach Hieaday HOgb Tide  Low  Tide</p>
        <p>AM  PM  AM  PM</p>
        <p>8:04  8:24  1:46  2:25</p>
        <p>Wedneadav Hi^ Tide  Low  Tide</p>
        <p>AM  PM  AM  PM</p>
        <p>8:40  9:01  2:19  2:59</p>
        <p>Hooo: FuUMoon A4|uBtments for tide at;</p>
        <p>proc'edure, especially to a patient of her age. And 1 dont expect an overnight miracle. But let me .say doctors and I are cautiously optimistic. Rosenberg said.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Rosenberg underwent the first of a series of "autogenous blood pumping therapy sessions at the Iwate Medical College in northern Japan on Dec. 22. The treatment calls for pumping 20 cubic centimeters of patients blood into an aspirator  a partial vacuum chamber  where a chemical is added and the blood then pumped back into the artery.</p>
        <p>The 20-cc pumping process is repeated 30 to 40 times in a single treatment and repeated after two-week intervals. The chemical is added to dilate the constricted arteries suffered by persons in a coma. The resulting dilation of the arteries helps the patient to receive an adequate flow of blood throughout the body, including the brain.</p>
        <p>The treatment has been effective more than 50 percent of the lime, including the case of an 11-year-old girl. Sachiko Iwadate, who regained consciousness after a three-year coma and now is back in school. Dr. Haruyuki Kanaya of the college reported earlier.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Rosenberg is the 50th patient to undergo the treatment. hospital officials said.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Rosenberg suffered brain damage in an automobile collision in January while she was taking her 5-year-old son. Barry, to nursery school. She has been in a coma ever since, although she started to blink her eyelids in March. Rosenberg said.</p>
        <p>After about one month of observation. the second series of treatment for Mrs. Rosenberg will start on Jan. 26. Her husband is the consumer relations manager of an American subsidiary of a Japanese camera manufacturer, who is helping' defray the costs of treatment.</p>
        <p>PIANO-ORGAN</p>
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        <pb facs="00093567_0008" />
        <p>8The Daily Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.Tueaday, Decemter37,1977</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Poultry</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP&amp;gt; (NCDA) -The trend on the North Carolina f.o.b. dock broiler market was higher than last week, with supplies adequate, demand good, weights desirable. The dock weighted average price is 36.09 cents per pound this week for small purchases of sized plant grade broilers picked up at processing plant. Estimated slaughter today 1,299,000.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina hen market was steady, supplies adequate. demand lit Prices paid per pound for hens over seven pounds at farm Monday and Tuesday slaughter too few to report; f o b. plants too few to report.</p>
        <p>Ho9</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA) -No trend was reported today on the North Carolina hog market because of holiday closings. Rocky Mount. 43.(XM3,50; Wilson. 45.75; Clinton. Fayetteville. Dunn. Pink Hill. Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level. Laurinburg and Benson, unreported; Tar-boro and Bethel. 42.5(M3.00; Salisbury. 41.00. Spiveys Comer. 44.75.</p>
        <p>Kroger Co, topped the active list, down '4 at 27, A 175.000-share block traded at that</p>
        <p>price.</p>
        <p>General Motors, which posted an 8.5 percent drop in mid-December car sales Friday, lost h to 63 in active trading.</p>
        <p>The NYSEs composite index of all its listed common stocks gave up .06 to 52.20. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was off .01 at 126.27.</p>
        <p>Volume on the Big Board slowed to 7.52 million shares by noontime from 10.13 million at the same point Friday.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) Midday stocks</p>
        <p>LOW Last</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market declined slightly today, showing little left-over strength from the rally it staged before the Christmas holiday.</p>
        <p>The Etow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 23.65 points in the last three trading days last week, slipped back 2 17 to 827.70 by noontime today.</p>
        <p>Declines outnumbered advances by a 6-5 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.</p>
        <p>Analysts said investors were expecting some adverse news Wednesday when the government reports on the U.S. balance of trade for November.</p>
        <p>A large trade deficit of late has been cited as a primary reason for pressure on the dollar in foreign-exchange markets.</p>
        <p>Paul Jones...</p>
        <p>(Ooatinued from page 1)</p>
        <p>Pitt County Board of Directors from 1944^9, the Pitt County Democratic Executive Committee, and the state Democratic Executive Committee.</p>
        <p>He was appointed to the N.C. State Board of Health in 1944 and SHved four years. Dr. JiMies authored several essays for the N.C. Dental Society, including a presidential address to the American Association of Dental Examiners. He authored and sponsored legislation setting up a dental college in the University of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Dr. Jones served as a state senator in 1949, 1%1, 1953, 1955, and 1957. He was elected president pro-tem of the senate in 1955 and chairman of the Rules Committee. He also served an eight-year term on the Board of Trustees of UNC.</p>
        <p>Dr. Jones, for whom Jones Dormitory at East Carolina University was named, was a member of the Fisrt Christian Church of Farmville where he served as a deacon.</p>
        <p>Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Charles M. Duke of Fairfax, Va.; one son, Dr. Paul E. Jones Jr. of Concord; three sisters. Mrs. Virginia Jones Spencer of Greenville; Miss Olive Jones, and Mrs. Annie Gertrude Farabow. both of Bethel; seven grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.</p>
        <p>Abbott Labs Akzona Aiiis Cnalm Alcoa Am Atrlin Am Baker Am BrarKfs Amcr Can Am Cyan Am Motors Am Stand AmTT Beat Food Bern Steel Boeimj Borden Burt lr&amp;gt;d CaroPwLI Cclancse Cent Soya Cbamp int Chessic Sys Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Eds ConAgra Delta A.rL Dow Ch duPont Duke Pow Dymo ind EastnAirL East Kodak Eaton Corp Esmark Exxon Firestone FtaPowLt FordAV&amp;gt;t For Me Kess Fuqua Ind Go Oynam Gen Etec Gen Food Gen Mills Gen AAotors GenTeia-Ei GaPacit Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co Greyhound Gull Oil Hcrcule liK Honeyvyell IBM</p>
        <p>inti Harv int Paper int Rectif intTeiTel K mart Kaisr Alum Kane Mill Krafttnc Kroger Co Ligget Grp Lockheed Loews Corp Masonite Med Corp MinnAiSM Mobil Monsanto Nabisco Nat Distill OlinCp OwensiH Penney JC PepsiCo Pet Inc Philip AAorr PhillpsPet Polaroid Proct Gamb Quaker Oat RCA</p>
        <p>RalstpPur</p>
        <p>45H 10'</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>77H</p>
        <p>n8&amp;lt;3</p>
        <p>2IS</p>
        <p>13H</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>16H</p>
        <p>770U 769^ 270</p>
        <p>S7H</p>
        <p>4SH</p>
        <p>2IH</p>
        <p>ys</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>64^*</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>4$*</p>
        <p>35H 27k 35H</p>
        <p>76^</p>
        <p>94</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>RepUbiM Revlon Reynold Ind Rockwel int RoyCr Cola StRegis Pap Scott Paper SeabCsl Lm SealdPow SearsRb Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co Sperry Rnd Std Brands StdOil Cal StdOil Ind Stevens JP Texaco Inc TexEastn Texasgult Un Camp Un Carbide UnOil Cal Uniroyal US Steel Wachov Cp Westgh El Weyerhsr Winn Dixie Woolworth Xerox Cp </p>
        <p>44*4  44  44*.</p>
        <p>16'</p>
        <p>28^8</p>
        <p>U</p>
        <p>47^</p>
        <p>IS 27'k</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Atktawn</p>
        <p>NORWALK. CONN. - Mr. Raymond Atkinson died Saturday in Norwalk. Conn.</p>
        <p>He was the husband of Mrs. Carol Atkinson. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Hemby FYineral Home in Fountain.</p>
        <p>Baker</p>
        <p>Mrs. Nolie Bumes Baker of Rt. 5, Greenville, died Sunday at Martin General Hospital in Williamston.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. at Bellmont Baptist Church in Robersonville with the Rev. J.E. Williams, pastor, officiating.</p>
        <p>Burial will follow in the Robersonville Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Baker was a native of Martin County and ^&amp;gt;ent most of her life in the Robersonville community. She was a member of Bellmont Baptist Oiurch, the senior choir and the Bellmont Gospel Chorus. She also served in the Hayes Chapel Baptist Church choir.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband. William Baker of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Deloris (Hon-gleton of Robersonville, Mrs. Mary Grimes of Lakeview, N.J.; four step-daughters, Mrs. Ethel Thomason of Greenville. Mrs. Hazel Steveson of Brooklyn, N.J.. Mrs. Lilly Uttle and Mrs. Annie Calhome of Bronx, N Y.; five sons. Johnnie Ray Bumes of Brooklyn. N. Y.. Willie Bumes of Newark. N.J.. Garland. Artis, Gene, and Alton Bumes, all of Robersonville; one step-son, William Baker of Brooklyn, N.Y.: (Mie sister, Mrs. Ceola Hardison of Williamston; 33 grandchildren:  16 great</p>
        <p>grandchildren; and eight step-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The body will be taken from Flanagan and Hardy Funeral Home to Hayes Chapel Baptist Church. Pactolus, for viewing from 6:30-7 p.m. Wednesday. Family visitation will be at Flanagan and Hardee Chapel in Robersonville Wednesday from 8-9 p.m.</p>
        <p>Earl Jones of Greenville, and Ben Allen Jones of Vanceboro; two half sisters. Mrs James Williams and Mrs Donnie Riggs of Vanceboro f'uneral services were conducted Monday afternoon at three oclock at Calvary Baptist Church by the pastor. Rev. Bobby Thomas assisted by the Rev. Ted Reynolds. Burial followed in Pinewood Memorial Park</p>
        <p>Becton</p>
        <p>NEW BERN - Funeral services for Mrs. Mable Becton who died Friday will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Pilgram Chapel F, W.B. Church in New Bern with the pastor Rev. P H. Freeman and the Rev L.E. Philpot officiating.</p>
        <p>Burial will follow in the Oak Hill Memorial Cemetery in Kinston.</p>
        <p>Surviving are one daughter. Mrs. Mary Adams of New Bern: two sons. Fred Lee Dixon and Travis Dixon, both of New Bern; three step-sons. Johnnie Becton Jr.. William Becton. and P'rank Becton. all of New Bern; and one step-daughter. Mrs. Lilly Ruth Taylor of Richmond, Va..</p>
        <p>Family visitation will be at Pllgrams Chapel Church today from 7-8 p.m. The body will be taken from Mitchells Funeral Home to the church one hour prior to the funeral.</p>
        <p>Baker</p>
        <p>Mr. William Tyson (Bill) Baker. 55, died Saturday night in Beaufort County Hospital. He was a member of Calvary Baptist Church and a veteran of World War II. He was an employee of Bordens (Chemical Co. and also a refinisher of furniture.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mabel Farmer Baker; four rothecs, John, Robert and Harvey Baker, all of Greenville, and Tom Baker of Louisiana; a sister. Mrs. John Kerr of Greenville: two half brothers, William</p>
        <p> 27* a 27H  27H</p>
        <p>Post-Christmas...</p>
        <p>(CoatiDuedtrom pagel)</p>
        <p>new store.</p>
        <p>Merchants said that they expect sales to taper off tomorrow.</p>
        <p>The low on Christmas Day was 39 degrees with a high of 54 degrees. Todays 8 a.m. temperature was a cool 22 degrees.</p>
        <p>most</p>
        <p>proUsms can be</p>
        <p>If you have been finding it increasingly difficult to hear the sounds that are important to you. you are invited to have an electronic nearing lesi on Monday and Tuesday of this week.</p>
        <p>See if you are one of those a hearing aid will help to hear and understand better. Stop in or call for shut-in service.</p>
        <p>BELTONE HEARING AID SERVICE iS'e^one' 2725 E. TENTH ST.</p>
        <p>(COLONIAL HEIGHTS SHOPPING CENTER) TEL. 758-5121</p>
        <p>JWwm</p>
        <p>To our friends:</p>
        <p>This year, as every year, we look forward with great airtteftiatk to Che hi^deet of holidays.</p>
        <p>Hope and joy are more meaningful to the world than ever belbre  hope for the fulfillment of those words, Peace on eartti, good will toward men, and Joy in the</p>
        <p>It is our ierveat wish that this Christmas wUl bring us doaer to these goals and to the true q&amp;gt;irit of txotheriy love that we may remain a free people, living without fear In the land we love.</p>
        <p>Your patronage and friendshh) have encouraged us to strive harder In our eftortsto please you, and during the years to come, we shall do our best to deserve your cacaimKd friendship and goodwill.</p>
        <p>And when the New Years ships come sailing into harbor, may they bring you all the good things of life.</p>
        <p>Including good bealto, lu^plness, andprospolty.</p>
        <p>Best Wishes From the AAanagement and Staff of</p>
        <p>NORCOn COMPANY</p>
        <p>FUNEML HOKS OF AYDEN t GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Phillip Brothers Chapel by the Bishop Carney</p>
        <p>Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Cemetery Mrs. Jones was a Martin County native and later made her home in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Surviving are one son. Julius L. Jones of the home; two daughters. Mrs. Dora Twyman of Tuckahoe. N.Y., and Mrs. Viola Dixon of Rocky Mount: one sister. Mrs. Beaulah Copper of Stanford. Conn.</p>
        <p>i'amily visitation will be today from 7-8 p.m. at Phillip Brothers Mortuarv.</p>
        <p>Bradley</p>
        <p>Mr. Willie Bradley of 515 McKinley Ave., Greenville, died Monday in the Oak Manor Nursing Home, Kinston.</p>
        <p>He was the husband of Mrs. Martha Liughinghoust' of the home and the father of John W. Bradley of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Flanagan and Hardee iYineral Home.</p>
        <p>Jones</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Mrs. Anna A. Jones will be conducted</p>
        <p>Jones</p>
        <p>FAR.MVILLK - Mr. William Henry Jones ol 126 Andeison .\ve.. Farmville. died today.</p>
        <p>He was the husband of Mrs. U&amp;gt;ar Jones of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Flcmb&amp;gt; Funeral Home in Fountain</p>
        <p>Woodland Dr . Wilmington, died Saturday in the Cape Fear Hospital in Wilmington.</p>
        <p>F'uneral services will be held 11 a m Wednesday in the Winter Park Pentecostal Holiness Church with the Rev. Calvin S. Trueblood and the Rev. Ezra B. Fann officiating.</p>
        <p>Burial will be in the Greenlawn Memorial Park.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Mcl^whom was bom in Greenville in 1917 and was the daughter of the late Henry Davis and l.aura Green Fornes.</p>
        <p>Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Charles (Barbara) Todd of ('astle Hayne, Mrs. Gene Robbins of Wilmington, and Mrs. Ix'muel (Linda) Hall of Simp-sonville, S.C.: three sons. Ernest D. McLawhorn of Arnold, Md., Harry Bob McLawhorn. and Clifton Ray Mcl^whom, both of Wilmington; five sisters. Mrs. Eva Forest, Mrs. Betty Wilson, and Mrs. Janice Smith, all of Greenville. Mrs. Mildred Isrel of High Point, Mrs. Ann Laura Garris of Farmville; one brother, Watson Fornes of Swansboro; 12 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Family visitation will be from 7-9 p.m. today at the funeral home. The family will be at 210 Woodland Drive.</p>
        <p>be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James C. Grimes.</p>
        <p>Sparkman</p>
        <p>Mr. Raymond (Rainbow) Sparkman, of 934 Wolf St.. Baltimore. Md., formerly of Ayden, died Friday in John Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Md.</p>
        <p>He was the husband of Mrs. Martha Lee Smith Sparkman.</p>
        <p>I'uneral arrangements are incomplete at the Norcott 4 Co. F'uneral Home, Ayden.</p>
        <p>Boyd</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Mr. Lee Boyd Jr. will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Saint Peter Baptist Church by the Rev. Willie Langley.</p>
        <p>Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife. Mrs. Corrine Boyd of the home; four sons, Lee Boyd III, Herbert Boyd, Bobby Boyd, all of the home, and Charlie Boyd of Farmville; six brothers, Willie Boyd of Ballards Crossroads. Jasper Boyd. (Tiarlie Boyd, and James Boyd, all of Greenville, Jolui'Boyd and David Boyd, both of Simpson, and Arthur Boyd of Newark, N.J.; three sisters, Mrs. Ella Boyd Crandall of Ballards Crossroads. Mrs. Doris Harris of Greenville, Mrs. Mary Daniels of Greenville; his father, Lee Boyd Sr.; and ten grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Mr. Boyd spent his life in the St. Peters community and was a member of the St. Peter Missionary Baptist ('hurch male choms and usher board of the church.</p>
        <p>Family visitation will be from 8:15-9:15 p.m. today at Phillip Brothers Mortuary.</p>
        <p>Uttle</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Mrs. Retha Perkins Little will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. at Phillips Brothers Mortuary by Bishop W. L. Jones. Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Little was born and reared in EnfieldT later making her home in Greenville She was a member of the Mt. Calvary FWB Church.</p>
        <p>She is survived by her husband. Mr. James Mack Little, two sons. William Earl Little and Mack Ray Little, both of Greenville: three daughters, Mrs. Mildred Hunter. Miss Janice Marie Little and Miss Lucinda Little, all of Greenville; one sister, Mrs Mildred Byers of Greenville; three stepdaughters. Miss Rosa Marie ONeal of Greenville, Miss Debra Brown of New York, and Miss Brenda L. Little of Boston, Mass.; four grandchildren.</p>
        <p>' Visitation will be Wednesday night from seven oclock to eight oclock at Phillips Brothers Mortuarv.</p>
        <p>Phillipa</p>
        <p>GRRTON - Miss Sherron Denise Phillips, nine, of Main Street here, Monday in Duke Hospital. Durham. She was the daughter of Mr. Herman Earl and Mrs. Mamie Ruth Dixon. Phillips of the home.</p>
        <p>Funeral arrangements are in-c-ompiete at the Norcott and Co. Funeral Home. Avden.</p>
        <p>Stokes</p>
        <p>Mr. Norman Benjamin (Bennie) Stokes Jr.. 24. died Friday from injuries sustained in an automobile accident in Richmond, Va. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Steve Jones. Burial will be in the Stokes family cemetery near Gardnersville.</p>
        <p>Mr. Stokes, bom in Germany, was a graduate of D, H. Conley High School and attended Pitt Technical Institute. He moved to Richmond, Va.. in January and was employed by the City of Richmond as waste water plant operator.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Thornton Stokes: a son. Norman Benjamin Stokes III of the home; his mother. Mrs. Jennie Padgett McCormick of Richmond. Va.; a brother, Ronald Wayne Stokes of Atlanta. Ga.: and two sisters, Mrs. Norma Sugg and Mrs. Barbara S. Bovd. both of Richmond. Va.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Mrs. Mary Dail Sutton. 90, died in Kinston Monday.</p>
        <p>Graveside services will be held Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Ayden Cemetery with the Rev. Willis Wilson officiating.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Sutton was a life-long resident of Pitt County and a member of Reedy Branch F. W.B. Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are one son, M.E. Sutton of Greenville; four daughters. Mrs. Charles Dove of Greenville, Mrs. Marvin Baldree of Ayden, Mrs. Magdaline Phillips, and Mrs. Fred Moore of Farmville; one brother. C.L. Dail of Macclesfield; nine grandchildren; 19 great-grandchildren: and three great -great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Family visitation will be at Farmer Funeral Home today from 7-9 p.m.</p>
        <p>Walatoo</p>
        <p>MACCLESFIELD - Mrs. Fannie Walston of Rt. 1. Macclesfield died Monday at Edgecombe General Hospital in Tarboro.</p>
        <p>She was the wife of William H. Walston of the home. Funeral arrangements are Incomplete e at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuarv in Tarboro.</p>
        <p>BREAKFAST</p>
        <p>I SPECIAL.......</p>
        <p>I HAM-EGG</p>
        <p>I SAND  .....454</p>
        <p> Carolina Grill'</p>
        <p>ORDERS TO 001</p>
        <p>McLawhorn</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON - Mrs. Lottie Fornes McLawhorn. 60, of 210</p>
        <p>Pollard</p>
        <p>Mr. WilliamC. (Fats) Pollard. 48, died Monday morning at his home near Stokes. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Roger Tripp, pastor of Grace Free Will Baptist Church. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.</p>
        <p>Mr. Pollard was a native of Pitt County and had been employed at Roebuck and Parker Service Station, Stokes, for several years.</p>
        <p>Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. James C. Grimes of Stokes, and Mrs. Christine P. Crisp of Tarboro; two brothers, A1C. (Dick) Pollard of Greenville, and E. C. Pollard of Raleigh.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends at the funeral home from seven to nine oclock tonight and will</p>
        <p>Hooker &amp;amp; Buchanan, inc.</p>
        <p>Jimmy Brewer  Skip Bright  Charles P. Gaskins, Jr.</p>
        <p>Insurance</p>
        <p>Auto  Accident  Life  Fire Specialists in AAobile Home Insurance 511 Evans Straat 752*6186</p>
        <p>Card Of Thanks</p>
        <p>The family of the late Grover C:3evdand Skeet Smltti wishes to express sincere appreciation to all of their many relatives, friends, and nel^ibors for worda of comfOTt, flowers, food, cards, telegrams, and all other acta of Undneas gtvoQ to than during their hareavemnL May God bless each and everyone of you.</p>
        <p>Mrs. (Charlotte L. Smith ft Fam&amp;amp;y</p>
        <p>7%% Individual Rediement Accounts payoff now and then.</p>
        <p>No matter how far you are from retirement age, nows the time to start saving for retirement. Because nows the time you can use the tax breaks you get with a First Feideral Savings Indiviidual Retirement Account for the self-employed.</p>
        <p>You can put away $1500or 15% of your income every year (which</p>
        <p>ever is less), and write it all off your taxesa great payoff now. And with the 7 3/4% annual interest* that money earns, you can look forward to a big payoff latera really comfortable retirement. Tax break your way to retirement.</p>
        <p>Come see us today, and well explain how IRA can work for you.</p>
        <p>* Fadaral Ragulation Raqulra Subatantial Panaity For Early Withdrawal of Cartlflcata.</p>
        <p>RRSTFEDERAL</p>
        <p>SAVINGS</p>
        <p>Greenville. Ayden, Farmville, Grifton</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0009" />
        <p>Sports the DAILY REFLECTOR ClassifiedTUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 27, 1977</p>
        <p>Rose, Others Host Tourneys</p>
        <p>Holiday basketball tournament action opens tonight on three fronts involving area teams.</p>
        <p>Tournaments will be held at Rose High School, Williamston and North Lenoir, involving all of the areas public school boys teams, and many of the areas girts teams, also.</p>
        <p>Four teams wilt be in action at Rose High School, starting at 7 p.m. Wednesday. The first game will send North Pitt up against D. H. Conley, while Farmville Central will meet the hosting Rampants at around 8:30 p.m. in the second game.</p>
        <p>'Thursday night, the two losers meet at 7 p.m., with the winners meeting for the championship at around 8:30 p.m. in the second game.</p>
        <p>The event, which has been only a doubleheader in the past, is a full-fledged tournament this year, due to changes in the North Carolina High School Athletic Association rules. Teams in the state are allowed to participate in two tournaments, with the district tournament counting as one. In the past, conference tournaments, when not being played as a district tournament, were considered the second event, but this year, conference events which qualify at least (me team for the district, are considered part of the state playoffs.</p>
        <p>Admission for the Rose tournament is $2 per person.</p>
        <p>At Williamston. both boys and girls teams wilt be playing.</p>
        <p>Wednesday night. Jamesville and Roanoke open the series with a girls game at 6 p.m. The Jamesville and Roanoke boys follow at 7:30 p.m.. with the Bear Grass and Williamston girls meeting at 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>'Thursday, the girls losers meet at 7 p.m., white the Bear Grass and Williamston boys meet at 8:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Friday, the boys losers meet at 6 p.m., with the girls championship at 7:30 p.m.. and the boys at 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>At North Lenoir, four games are slated for Wednesday. At 3 p.m.. the Greene Central and Ayden-Grifton girls play. At 5 p.m., Greene Centrals boys face South Lenoir. 'The North Lenoir and South Lenoir girls collide at 7 p.m., followed by the North Lenoir and Ayden-Grifton boys at 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>Thursday at 7 p.m., the girls consolation event is slated, with the boys consolation following at 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>The championship for the girls will be Friday at 7 p.m., with the boys following at 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>Marquette Wins Wild Contest</p>
        <p>By KEN RAPPOPORT AP Sjporte Writer</p>
        <p>It was playground basketball at its b^  but it was the worst kind of basketball as far as Hank Raymonds was concerned.</p>
        <p>You cant afford to play that kind of a game against anybody. said the Marquette coach.</p>
        <p>Fortunately for the nations fifth-ranked team, the Warriors could play a wild, one-on-one style instead of the classic team concept and still get away with a 17-point victory in the Milwaukee Classic Monday night.</p>
        <p>I dont tike that kind of basketball, said Raymonds after the 90-73 victory over Eastern Kentucky. Its my job to put a stop to it.</p>
        <p>Marquette will have to be more disciplined tonight in the title game against Texas, a 74-73 winner over Army in the other opening-round game.</p>
        <p>I saw the first half of their game, said Raymonds. Texas plays match-up defense. They move the ball very well. This is a good basketball team.</p>
        <p>Were going to have to control the tempo. And weve got</p>
        <p>Calendar</p>
        <p>Today'* Sports Wrastllng</p>
        <p>East Carolina at Wilkes Open Wadnosday'tSports Baskatball</p>
        <p>Ayden Griffon, Greene Central, South Lenoir at North Lenoir Tri County Holiday Classic North Pitt, D.H. Conley, Farmville Central at Rose Holiday Tournament (7p.m.)</p>
        <p>Jamesville, Roanoke, Bear Grass at Williamston Holiday Tournament Wrestling Rose at WRAL Tournament East Carolina at Wilkes Tourna ment</p>
        <p>DOES YOUR STAFF TURNOVER FASTER THAN YOUR INVENTORY?</p>
        <p>Even in smaller firms, todays best people look for incentive now, and independence when they rtire.</p>
        <p>Talk to the Integon Listener about getting and keeping the best employees, with the latest in profit-sharing programs, pension plans, and group insurance.</p>
        <p>Tell him about your staff and set-up. Hell tell you about tren(is, tax-favored benefits, and tailoring a plan to match the needs of your people. And their boss.</p>
        <p>Clarke StoKes</p>
        <p>W.M. "BoogeP' Scales</p>
        <p>201 Commerce Street, P.O. Box 3395, Phone 756-3738</p>
        <p>Talk to the Listener.</p>
        <p>INTEGON*</p>
        <p>VIkes Slosh To 14-7 Win</p>
        <p>Providwd Winning Touchdown NFC jriayoff game in Loa Angetoa.</p>
        <p>Angelea RamTas he scores the VIk-    raln-aoaked  games, 14-7.</p>
        <p>Ings seccmd touchdown Sunday in the</p>
        <p>(APLaaerpboto)</p>
        <p>to get the ball inside. We simply have to get the ball inside.</p>
        <p>In other tournament actkm Monday night, the University of Detroit and Elastem Michigan advanced to the finals of the Motor City Classic in Detroit. 'The host Titans, ranked 20th in the country, whipped Harvard 77-69 and Eastern Michigan defeated Long Island University 81-70.</p>
        <p>Marquette was led by Butch Lees 25 points and Jerome Whiteheads 21. The Warriors charged ahead by outscoring Eastern Kentucky 17-2 in a four-minute stretch midway through the first half to lead 35-16 with 6:27 remaining before intermission. Six of the last eight points during the Warrior spurt came on long jump shots by guard Gary Rosenberger.</p>
        <p>But Eastern Kentucky then scored nine straight points, including five by Ken Elliott, to make it 35-25 with 3:43 left in the half. Marquette responded with a 10-3 spree, including five points by Lee, that made it 45-28 at the half, and the Warriors maintained the lead throughout the second half.</p>
        <p>Texas survived a late Army comeback and beat the Cadets with John Moore and Tyrone Branyan hitting key free throws in the closing seconds. The Longhorns won their eighth straight game after an opening-season loss.</p>
        <p>Terry Duerod had 20 points to help Detroit come from behind to beat Harvard. Harvard was ahead the entire first half, leading 40-26 at the buzzer. But Duerod had eight points in four minutes at the beginning of the second half to put the Titans in a tie at 46 with 15 minutes to go.</p>
        <p>Tar Heels Regain Number two Position</p>
        <p>By DAVE KAYE AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>Four of the top five teams in The Associated Press Top Twenty college basketball poll juggled positions this week after No. 2 Marquette lost to Louisville.</p>
        <p>The Warriors, last years national champions, were beaten 61-60 Thursday and fell to fifth while the next three teams each moved up a spot.</p>
        <p>No. 1 Kentucky remained at the top of the heap, walloping Iona, 104-65. The Wildcats, 8-0, received all 45 first-place votes cast by the nationwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters for a total of 900 points.</p>
        <p>North Carolina, 7-1, beat Tu-lane 108-103 to edge from third to second with 820 points.</p>
        <p>Arkansas, 8-0, one of last years surprise teams, beat Hardin-Simmons 86-55 and Kansas 78-72 to rise from fourth to third with 614 points.</p>
        <p>Notre Dame, 7-1, routed St. Josephs of Indiana 108-72 and totaled 560 points to move up from No. 5. Marquette, now 5-1, collected 519 points.</p>
        <p>Indiana State, 7-0, did not play during the holiday week and remained sixth.</p>
        <p>Louisville. 6-1, moved from eighth to seventh through its victory over Marquette and a</p>
        <p>69-63 triumph over Dayton.</p>
        <p>UCLA, 8-1. defeated San Jose State 109-69 and New Mexico State 86-67 but dropped one notch from seventh while unbeaten Nevada-Las Vegas held its ninth-place spot by edging Northwestern 100-95 and Iowa 85414 to raise its record to 11-0.</p>
        <p>Also holding its previous position was No. 10 Syracuse. 8-1, which was idle last week.</p>
        <p>Cincinnati. 6-1, advanced from 12th to No. 11; Holy Cross. 6-0, moved from No. 13 to No. 12 and Providence, 6-0, rose from 14th to 13th.</p>
        <p>Maryland. 7-1, leaped from 20th to No. 14.</p>
        <p>Indiana, 6-1 and unranked a week ago, reached No. 15 this week thanks in part to its 66-57 victory over Alabama.</p>
        <p>Rounding out the Top 20 were Virginia, 5-0: Kansas. 7-2; previously unranked Florida State. 84); San Francisco. 6-3 and Detroit. 6-1.</p>
        <p>San Francisco lost twice and plummeted from 11th while Detroit fell from No. 15.</p>
        <p>Falling out of this weeks Top 20 wre Alabama, 18th a week ago. and Utah, at No. 17 last week.</p>
        <p>The T&amp;lt;^ 'Twenty teams in The Associated Press college basketball poll, with first-place votesin parentheses, season</p>
        <p>records and total points. Points</p>
        <p>based on 20-18-16-14-12-10-9-8-7-6-</p>
        <p>5-4-3-2-1:</p>
        <p>1.Kentucky (45)</p>
        <p>84)</p>
        <p>900</p>
        <p>2.NCarolina</p>
        <p>7-1</p>
        <p>820</p>
        <p>3.Arkansas</p>
        <p>84)</p>
        <p>614</p>
        <p>4.NotreDame</p>
        <p>7-1</p>
        <p>560</p>
        <p>5. Marquette</p>
        <p>5-1</p>
        <p>519</p>
        <p>e.IndianaSt</p>
        <p>7-0</p>
        <p>455</p>
        <p>7. Louisville</p>
        <p>6-1</p>
        <p>449</p>
        <p>8.UCLA</p>
        <p>8-1</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>9.Nev-LV</p>
        <p>11-0</p>
        <p>279</p>
        <p>lO.Syracuse</p>
        <p>8-1</p>
        <p>220</p>
        <p>11.Cincinnati</p>
        <p>6-1</p>
        <p>213</p>
        <p>12.HolyCross</p>
        <p>64)</p>
        <p>146</p>
        <p>l3.Providence</p>
        <p>64)</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>14.Maryland</p>
        <p>7-1</p>
        <p>60</p>
        <p>iS.Indiana</p>
        <p>6-1</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>16.Virginia</p>
        <p>54)</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>17.Kansas</p>
        <p>7-2</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>IS.FloridaSt</p>
        <p>8-0</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>I9.SanFrancisco</p>
        <p>6-3</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>20.Detroit</p>
        <p>6-1</p>
        <p>28</p>
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        <p>By KEN RAPPOPORT AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>Most everybody talked about the weather in Los Angeles, but the Minnesota Vikings did something about it.</p>
        <p>Faced with surprising swamp-like conditions in the ever-dry Southern California city, the Vikings adjusted to the new scenery and came away with a 14-7 victory over the Los Angeles Rams Monday that was even more shocking than the weather.</p>
        <p>We knew it was tough to hold onto the ball, so we just tried to hold on, get what we could and go down and score. It was no day for heroics, said Chuck Foreman after the victory sent the Vikings into next Sundays National Conference playoff game against the Dallas Cowboys.</p>
        <p>The Cowboys did not surprise anyone in the other NFC playoff game Monday, bumping Chicagos wild-card Bears out of the playoff picture with a clinical. 37-7 decision.</p>
        <p>The Minnesota-Dallas game will be one half of a championship doubleheader next weekend. The Denver Broncos will play the Oakland Raiders for the American Conference championship and the right to meet the winner of the Vikings-Cowboys game in the Super Bowl on Jan. 14 in New Orleans.</p>
        <p>The Broncos earned a berth in the AFC title game with a 34-21 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers Saturday, and Oakland edged the Baltimore Colts 37-31 in a double-overtime thriller.</p>
        <p>Minnesota, a 9'2-point underdog to Los Angeles, forged a 14-0 lead behind the passing ol Bob Lee and the running of</p>
        <p>Foreman, then withstood some late heroics by the Rams, who scored their touchdown and had another shot at a score, all in the last minute.</p>
        <p>The Rams, who had beaten the Vikings 35-3 earlier in the year on a sunnier field in the Los Angeles Coliseum, couldnt excuse themselves this time because. as Los Angeles Coach Chuck Knox said, We had a couple of opportunities in the first half and we couldnt get in and that hurt us. The field conditions were terrible for both teams. It was a quagmire, but a quagmire for both teams.</p>
        <p>"The conversation in the Minnesota locker room, quite naturally. also turned to the deplorable weather and field conditions.</p>
        <p>Playing on a field like this is worse than snow. said Minnesota quarterback Bob Lee, who directed his team through the rain and mud to touchdown bursts by Foreman and Sammy Johnson. Youre slipping, your runners are slipping and your receivers are slipping. I think the thing that I was most impressed by was the way our ballcarriers and receivers held onto the ball. Its kind of amazing that we didnt have one turnover.</p>
        <p>While bad weather plagued the Minnesota-Los Angeles game, the sun was shining in Dallas, literally and figuratively, for the irrepressible Cowboys.</p>
        <p>Quarterback Roger Staubach had them riding high with a 17-0 halftime lead and the Cowboys breezed through their 11th playoff game in a dozen years. Rookie Tony Dorsett sprinted 22 and 7 yards for touchdowns and outgained Chicago all-pro Walter Payton, 85 to 60 yards.</p>
        <p>We have got the game breaker we have needed, said Staubach about Dorsett, the much-heraided All-American from Pittburgh who gained 1,-008 yards in his initial NFL season.</p>
        <p>In the Bears locker room, Payton was still shaking out cobwebs after being gang-tack-led by three or four Cowboys on almost every down.</p>
        <p>I got hit in the head and I just dont remember anything, said Payton to newsmen. I feel real bad. I wish you fellows would give me a break. Maybe then 1 could get dressed.</p>
        <p>Linebacker Doug Buffone appeared to reflect the generally helpless feeling in the Chicago dressing room.</p>
        <p>With Dorsett around you cant concentrate on any one thing. he said. They come at you from every direction.</p>
        <p>Ernie Nevers scored 40 points . in one National Football League game, playing for the Chicago Cardinals against the Chicago Bears in 1929.</p>
        <p>Pittsburg Pirate outfielder Dave Parker was an outstanding ballcarrier in high school football but a knee injury made him choose baseball as a career.</p>
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        <p>Hawks Tired Of Seeing Bullets</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>The Atlanta Hawks must be sick of seeing the Washington Bullets , and equally sick of losing to them</p>
        <p>The Hawks played the Bullets two consecutive nights in a home-and-home series and both times lost to them by indentical margins  the last one a 113-106 decision Monday night.</p>
        <p>it's hard to win after you have beaten the same team the previous night, ' said Washington Coach Dick Motta ' Traditionally, teams split when they play on consecutive nights.</p>
        <p>"But the fact that we won two nights in a row by seven points does not mean that we are seven points better than they are. It just worked out that way."</p>
        <p>Atlanta Coach Hubie Brown felt a bit chagrined, especially with the home-court loss.</p>
        <p>Well, " he said, "that's two tough losses for us. It's the first time in a while we've been under 500. We are 0-5 at home now. But I guess we have to be objective. It's been two seven-point losses to a heck of a good team."</p>
        <p>The Bullets won the first game 100-93 Sunday night.</p>
        <p>In Monday nights other NBA games, the Detroit Pistons defeated the Boston Celtics 122-100; the Houston Rockets</p>
        <p>tripptHl tht' Kansas City Kings 113-99 and the Denver Nuggets whipped the Phoenix Suns 127-108.</p>
        <p>Larry Wright scored 10 of his 17 points in the final period to spur Washington over .Atlanta. Atlanta scored ;J0 points in the last period  including 14 by Steve Hawes  but the Bullets held on to their nearly game-long lead with the help of W right s burst at the end Pistons 122, Celtics 100 Kric Money's 23 points led Detroit over Boston .Moneys nine points in the third helped the Pistons to a 100-68 margin at the end of the quarter. The Celts, who have now lost six straight and IL straight games on the road, were led by former Piston Dave Bing with 19 points.</p>
        <p>Rockets 113, Kings 90 Calvin Murphy and Moses Malone pumped in 22 points each to spark Houston over Kan^s City. Murphy scored 20 of his points in the first half as the Rockets took an early lead and were never headed.</p>
        <p>Nuggets 127, Suns 106 David Thompson and Dan Is-&amp;gt;el each tallied 24 points, leading six Denver players in double figures as the Nuggets defeated Phoenix. The Suns were led by Walter Davis 23 points.</p>
        <p>Conley Wrestlers Capture Five Titles</p>
        <p>Rose Rampette Swimmers</p>
        <p>Members of the Rose High School girls swimming team are, first row, left to right: Kathy Ckmway, Nancy</p>
        <p>Radeka, Jennifer Wooles, Mary Beth Ferrell; second row, Ruth Huber, Pat Moore, Susan Tucker, Lee Aim Huber. (Reflectt* Photo)</p>
        <p>Rampettes Strong, But Lack Numbers</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor</p>
        <p>Fuller Not Up To Cavanaugh</p>
        <p>ByF.T.MacFEELY Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (,AP)  Although Clemson's Steve Fuller has been picked the Atlantic Coast Conferences football player of the year, his Coach Charley Pell says it isnt fair to compare him to Pittsburgh quarterback Matt Cavanaugh.</p>
        <p>Pell says the junior, who will duel with Cavanaugh in the Gator Bowl game Friday night, is just reaching the stage Cavanaugh. a senior, was at more than a year ago.</p>
        <p>Steves ability is unlimited. his coach said, but he's just beginning to demonstrate his potential. He alternated with one or two other quarterbacks in the past two seasons.</p>
        <p>We expressed confidence in him in the spring and let him know he was the quarterback. Its impossible to compare him to Cavanaugh where the two are today.</p>
        <p>Fuller, a straight A student, said he wasnt worried about the inevitable comparisons.</p>
        <p>"This game is going to be a lot of fun. and thats the way I treat it. he said. The game isnt a matchup between two players, its a matchup between two teams.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, Clemson followers are ready to stake the accomplishments of their 6-foot-4, 198-pound Fuller against the 6-foot-2, 219-pound Cavanaugh.</p>
        <p>Fuller ran for 403 yards and completed % of 182 passes for 1,497 yards this season.</p>
        <p>Cavanaugh, out three games with a broken left wrist, ran 47 yards and completed 87 of 151 passes for 1.457 yards.</p>
        <p>Clemson players assembled here Monday afternoon after the weekend Christmas vacation and went through a practice session at Fletcher High School in Jacksonville Beach.</p>
        <p>Pitts Panthers, who had practiced there since last Thursday, moved their Monday workout to the Jacksonville baseball park because rains on Sunday left the Fletcher field sloppy, according to Coach Jackie Sherrills.</p>
        <p>The numbers are small, but the ability is good, according to Rose High School swimming coach Sam Collier.</p>
        <p>He is talking about the Rampette swim team, which this year has only eight girls.</p>
        <p>.All of the girls are quality swimmers. Collier said. "Weve already qualified one girl for the state meet, with her time against Greensboro Grimsley, and we expect several others to qualify in later meets  Jennifer Wooles qualified with her time in the 500-yard freestyle.</p>
        <p>"Pat Moore was within a second of qualifying times in the 50 and 100 freestyles and should qualify. Lee Ann Huber with within a half-second of the time needed in the 50 freestyle, and</p>
        <p>Kristia Dunn is real close to the needed time in the 200 freestyle." Collier said.</p>
        <p>Despite the small number of swimmers. Collier expects to have a good record with this years team. We came close against Grimsley. and we were missing our best swimmer, Susan Tucker, who was attending a family reunion and was unable to swim with us in that meet. She placed high in the 100 backstroke last year and we expect her to do real well again this year. She also swims well in the 200 individual medley. the coach said</p>
        <p>Collier gave an event-by-event rundown of the team.</p>
        <p>In the 200 style, Dunn is the leader, while Ruth Huber is a leader in the 200 individual medley.</p>
        <p>Lee .Ann Huber and Moore pace the 50 freestylers, while</p>
        <p>Nancy Redeka leads in the 100-butterfly. Moore tops the 100-yard freestyle, with Wooles and Dunn in the 500. Ruth Huber is the leader in the 100 backstroke along with Tucker.</p>
        <p>Wooles, Lee Ann Huber and Mary Beth Ferrell star in the 100-breaststroke.</p>
        <p>I think we can do fine against most of the teams on our schedule. the coach said. Depth will be a weak point for us, as we will only be able to swim one person in some events. But unless someone has a lot more depth, we should be very competitive.</p>
        <p>The Rampettes finished last year in llth place in the state meet. Like the boys team. Collier has set high goals for the girls. Id like to think that we could finish in the top five in the state, maybe even in the top three.</p>
        <p>DURHAM  D.H. Conley captured just about every honor possible in the Bull Durham Tournament, but due to the lack of three weight entries, found themselves only in second place after the event ended this past weekend.</p>
        <p>High Point Ragsdale finished the meet with a total of 147 points, while the Vikings were right in their tracks with 135. Cary ended up with 116 points and third place, just ahead of Eden Morehead. 115.</p>
        <p>Greensboro Grimsley was fourth with 73'j, followed by Hillsborough Orange at 58'2, Durham Jordan at 58. and Northwest Guilford at 55.</p>
        <p>Conley finished up with five first place titles, along with a second and a fourth. The Vikings, however, did not entry enter the 155 pound, the 195-pound and the heavyweight classes, and Ragsdales overall depth, despite only two titles, claimed the title.</p>
        <p>Conleys Gary Harris, wrestling at the 98-pound level, was named the winner of the Most Falls Trophy, pinning both of the men he wrestled in the least amount of time in the tournament.</p>
        <p>Alton Crandall, at 119, who defeated last years third-place winner in the state championships. was voted by the coaches as the Most Valuable Wrestler in the tournament.</p>
        <p>Harris, who had a bye in the first round, came up with a pin over Homer Purcell of Ragsdale in the second round, in 1:26, then gained a pin over Tony Bennett of Grimsley in the finals for the 98-pound title.</p>
        <p>At 105. Rick Farris gained an 8-7 win over Barry Woods of Orange in the first round, but lost by a pint to Ricky Bolton of Ragsdale in the semifinals. He then lost a 2-1 decision in the con-</p>
        <p>Win Okay With Joe</p>
        <p>solalioi) semifinals to Paul Newton of Morehead.</p>
        <p>Donald Hardy, wrestling at 112. lost to Keith Hill of Jordan in a I; 10 fall, in the first round, and then fell to Mark Shelton of Northwest Guilford. 10-4. in the consolation semifinals.</p>
        <p>Crandall, at 119. took a 17-2 win over Mark Eastridge of Morehead in the first round, and followed that up with an 11-2 win over Ragsdales Kerry Goins in the semifinals. He took the title with a victory over last years third place state winner Scott McDonald in the finals. The two wrestled to a 7-7 tie in regulation. but Crandall gained a 6-6 overtime victory.</p>
        <p>At 126, Robert Carney lost to Andy Sova of Ragsdale by a 10-9 score in the first round, then won. 7-6 over Doug Davis of Cary in the censolations before bowing to Ike Galloway of Morehead. 10-4, in the semifinals.</p>
        <p>Ronald Harris, at 132, added Conleys third title. He pinned Cliff Hargrove of Cary in 3:08, then took a 19-1 decision over defending state champion Tim Edwards in the semifinals. Harris then beat Ronnie Mann of Northwest, 15-3, in the finals.</p>
        <p>Marvin Hardy also took a title with a win at 138. He pinned Wayne Moore of Grimsley in the first round, and rolled up a 2(M win over Bobby Poole of Northwest in the second round. He pinned Sam Wilson of Cary in the finals.</p>
        <p>The fourth place finish came in the 145-pound level. William Small lost to John Medlin of Cary on a 1:58 pin. then beat Mike Holleman of Jordah, 13-3, in the first round of the consolations, He then pinned Jesse Lightsey in the semifinals before again losing on a pin to Medlin in the consolation finals.</p>
        <p>Charles Hanson gained the second place award at 167. He pin</p>
        <p>ned James Ruffin of Orange In 5:,59 in the first round, then pinned Mike Goff of Jordan in 3; 15 in the semifinals.</p>
        <p>Defending state champ Roger Allen of Morehead took a 3-1 victory over Hanson in the finals.</p>
        <p>Jesse Davis, the defending state champ, won the 185-pound class. He beat Kevin Torres of Cary in the first round with a 5:15 pin. then took a 9-1 win over Alan Taylor of Jordan. In the finals, he beat Gary Deans of Morehead. 7-3.</p>
        <p>Conley returns to action on Thursday, taking part in the West Carteret Invitational.</p>
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        <p>NFL</p>
        <p>RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) -Duke and North Carolina State are favored to win their respective ends of the doubleheader here Wednesday night, but neither coach is predicting an easy victory.</p>
        <p>Duke will meet Duquesne in the opening game. The last time they met was last year in Pittsburgh, where the Blue Devils walked away with a resounding 76-49 victory. But Duke Coach Bill Foster says this year won't be so easy.</p>
        <p>One thing that worries me is that they gave Holy Cross the best game anyone has given them, and Holy Cross is a top ten team.  Foster said. "They have good quickness. They dont have great size, but they have good jumping ability.</p>
        <p>.Another thing about them is that they keep coming at you, he added. "They dont let up.</p>
        <p>Foster noted that all five Duquesne regulars are averaging between 10 and 15 points per</p>
        <p>game.</p>
        <p>PLAYOFFS Saturday, Dec. 24 First Round American Conference</p>
        <p>Ociklcind 37. Baltimore 31. OTs</p>
        <p>Denver 34, Pittsburgh 21 Monday, Dec. 26 National Conference</p>
        <p>Dallas 37. Chicago 7 Minnesota 14, Los Angeles 7</p>
        <p>21 12 16 11 14 15 13 15 13 15 12 18 9 19</p>
        <p>Saturday's Games</p>
        <p>No games scheduled</p>
        <p>Sunday's Games . No games scheduled</p>
        <p>Monday's Results Birmingham 6, Soviet Stars 1</p>
        <p>Winnipeg 9. Quebec 4 Tuesday's Games Btrmingham at New England Quebec at Edmonton Wednesday's Games indiandp&amp;gt;ol&amp;lt;s at Cincinnati Soviet All Stars at Houston, c?xhibition</p>
        <p>Milwaukee 131, Kansas City 122</p>
        <p>New York 113. Philadelphia 110</p>
        <p>Washington 100, Atlanta 93 San Antonio 115, New Orleans 105</p>
        <p>Portland 109, Golden State 97 Los Angeles 111, Seattle 97 Monday's Results Washington 113, Atlanta 106 Houston 113, Kansas City 99 Detroit 122 Boston 100 Denver 127, Phoenix 108 Tuesday's Ganges Milwaukee at Buffalo New Orleans at Cleveland Indiana at San Antonio Portland at Chicaco Seattle at Phoenix Los Angeles at Ootdcn State Wednesday's Games Chicago at Philadelphia Indiana at Atlanta Buffalo at Washington Portland at Detroit Seattle at Phoenix</p>
        <p>All</p>
        <p>College Basketball</p>
        <p>TOURNAMENTS MllwaukM Clawlc Flrt Round</p>
        <p>Marquotto 90, E Kentucky 73 Texas 74, Army 73 Motor City First Round</p>
        <p>E Michigan 81, Long Island U</p>
        <p>NBA</p>
        <p>Detroit 77, Harvard 69</p>
        <p>Sunday, Jan. 1 American Conference</p>
        <p>Oakland at Denver</p>
        <p>National Conference</p>
        <p>Minnesota at Dallas</p>
        <p>National Basketball Association EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division</p>
        <p>W L Pet. GB</p>
        <p>Transactions</p>
        <p>TEMPE, Ariz. (AP)  Penn State Coach Joe Paterno hedges on the question of whether the 1977 Nittany Lions were the best in his 12-year reign as head coach, but he said it was a vastly underrated team.</p>
        <p>Id like to think about that a couple of nights. Id like to sleep on it to make sure Im fair. Certainly, at times, this is the most explosive team Ive had, Paterno said after the Lions defeated Arizona State 42-30 Sunday in the seventh annual Fiesta Bowl.</p>
        <p>Paterno said the Lions, which wrapped up an 11-1 season, were better than their No. 8 national ranking would indicate.</p>
        <p>We are pretty good, said the 51-year-old coach, who celebrated a birthday in Arizona last week. I believe we should be ranked among the top teams in the country, and it was obvious he referred to the top five.</p>
        <p>Penn State got off to a quick 14-0 first-period lead. Defensive end Joe Lally returned a blocked punt 21 yards for a touchdown.</p>
        <p>Real Estate Today</p>
        <p>W.G. Bloynt</p>
        <p>Realtor-GRl</p>
        <p>Lll Bill</p>
        <p>Realtor</p>
        <p>THE IMPACT OF EXTERNAL APPEAL</p>
        <p>The external appearance of your home has an Im-portaot impact on potential buyers. You will never get a proopect interested inleai he stops to look. Dont rely on tte Inside &amp;lt;4 your sdling" It. Your</p>
        <p>may be turned off before be reacbee the front door. So look at the exterior with a critical eye.</p>
        <p>Give the house a fresh coat ot paint If needed. Replace any broken or cracked windows. Replace loose shingles. Fix the fence. Keep the lawn mowed and the shrubs trimmed to give your bouse that well-cared-for look. Make sure your aereen or st(X7n (kxH-Is In top shape and your wooden door is-</p>
        <p>tnvlting with a freab coat of paint or varnish. It is not uncommon to see a bmdred dollara iforth of im-provementa'and aome elbow grease increaae the value of a houae over a tbouaand dollars.</p>
        <p>Put yourseli In the bayeris shoes. He la looking for charm, comfort, locatk and a bargain. Give him the beet show tor the money.</p>
        <p>If there is anytuing we can do to help you in the fidd ot real estate, {deaae phone or drop in at BLOUNT&amp;amp; BALL REALTY CO. 201E. Arlington Blvd., Greenville, Phone: 756-3000. Were here tobdpi</p>
        <p>N York Buf f.ilo Boston N Jrsy</p>
        <p>2*^</p>
        <p>.645</p>
        <p>.531</p>
        <p>433</p>
        <p>313</p>
        <p>242</p>
        <p>Central Division</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>'I'd look for a high-scoring game, because I don't think theyll hold the ball and we wont either. he said.</p>
        <p>Pro Hockey</p>
        <p>The Wolfpack will be up against the Hawks of St. Josephs, and Coach Norm Sloan is impressed with their strength.</p>
        <p>Wash</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press National Hockey League WALES CONFERENCE Norris Division . . W L T PtS GF GA rn  22  7  4  48 128  68</p>
        <p>37 101  81</p>
        <p>27 111 136 24  90  103</p>
        <p>18  71  123</p>
        <p>Wash Clovo S Anton Atlanta N Orlns Houstn</p>
        <p>WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division</p>
        <p>613</p>
        <p>60f)</p>
        <p>S4S</p>
        <p>485</p>
        <p>.406</p>
        <p>6 .</p>
        <p>Holiday Sporta Transactlona By Tha Asaociatad Fraaa</p>
        <p>COLLEGE</p>
        <p>TEXAS TECH  Named</p>
        <p>Koith Samples sports informa tion director.</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Named Bob Smith receivers coach and Lloyd Carr defensive backs coach.</p>
        <p>"Theyre not that tall, but their people in the 6-6, 6-7 range are all strong, he said, "And they have a couple of excellent shooters in Zane Major and Mike Thomas.</p>
        <p>16 I 1 10 16</p>
        <p>10 17  4  24</p>
        <p>6 20  6  18</p>
        <p>Adams Division</p>
        <p>21  7  5  47  123  87</p>
        <p>21  7  5  47  121  82</p>
        <p>20  8  4  44  122  86</p>
        <p>10 20  3  23  83  125</p>
        <p>CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Patrick Division Phila  22  6  4  48  139  71</p>
        <p>NY 1st  18  8  8  44  139  82</p>
        <p>NY Rng  12  15  7  31  119  122</p>
        <p>Atlnfti  10  13  10  30  92  106</p>
        <p>Smythe Division</p>
        <p>Denver</p>
        <p>Che go</p>
        <p>Milw</p>
        <p>Detroit</p>
        <p>Ind</p>
        <p>K.C.</p>
        <p>19  13</p>
        <p>18  13</p>
        <p>12 16</p>
        <p>13  19</p>
        <p>594</p>
        <p>581</p>
        <p>.543</p>
        <p>.452</p>
        <p>429</p>
        <p>406</p>
        <p>Pacific Division</p>
        <p>25  4  .862</p>
        <p>.613 .469 457 .438</p>
        <p>CIcve</p>
        <p>Port Phnix GIdn Sf Seattle LA</p>
        <p>Saturday's Gamas</p>
        <p>No games scheduled</p>
        <p>Sunday's Results</p>
        <p>Cleveland 111, Buftaio 105</p>
        <p>Each one of the Oydesdale horses which performed at Yonkers Raceway on June 18 ate 60 pounds of hay, 25 to 30 quarts of feed and a few pounds of carrots.</p>
        <p>Chgo</p>
        <p>Don McGlohon</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>Hines Agency, Inc.</p>
        <p>The two teams will change partners for Thursdays play with Duke again taking the opener. This is the fourth year State and Duke have hosted a doubleheader, and theyve always won so far.</p>
        <p>Colo Minn S Lou</p>
        <p>10 I 10 13 8 16</p>
        <p>8 21  4  20</p>
        <p>7 22  4  18</p>
        <p>Saturday's Games</p>
        <p>No g.imcs scheduled</p>
        <p>Sunday's Games No gcimes scheduled</p>
        <p>Monday's Result Pittsburgh 5. Toronto 4 Tuesday's Games Colorado cit Detroit Boston tit Washington St Louis at Minnesota</p>
        <p>85 96 28  90  1  I  1</p>
        <p>22 106 1 16 20 95 150 78 139</p>
        <p>FOR RV'S AND LIGHT TRUCKS</p>
        <p>THMK MWHBJN HRST!</p>
        <p>YOUR AUTHORIZED DEALER IS...</p>
        <p>BIB THE MICHELIN MAN</p>
        <p>SUnONS SERVICE CENTER</p>
        <p>1105 DICKINSON AVE. GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>752-6121</p>
        <p>STATE FARM</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p> _</p>
        <p>For insurance cal I</p>
        <p>Bill McDonald</p>
        <p>East lOth street Extension</p>
        <p>Phone 752-6680 Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES HOME OFFICES: BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS</p>
        <p> _ P  77607:</p>
        <p>TherO^ANew Pizza Hut In GreGnieNil</p>
        <p>*2offor'^offorbofli</p>
        <p>Save $200 on your favorite large pizza Or save $1.00 on your favorite medium pizza Or save on both' Thick n Chewy* pizza or Thin n Crispy pizza Just cut out this coupon and take it to a participating Pizza Huf restaurant Phone ahead we II have your order hot n</p>
        <p>ready for you I Offer good on regular menu prices -  'iDec.30.'  </p>
        <p>nmugh I One cc</p>
        <p>.1977</p>
        <p>Jne coupon per customer per visit At participating Pizza Hut restaurants listed below</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>New Store-305 Greenville Blvd.  Other Store-2601 E. 10th Street*</p>
        <p>ORE</p>
        <p>756-4320</p>
        <p>752-4445</p>
        <p>The more &amp;gt;ou eat (he more</p>
        <p>^Misare.</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0011" />
        <p>Dissension Is Hampering Strangler Investigation</p>
        <p>By LAURINDA KEYS Associated FTeas Write-</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - Investigators of the Hillside Strangler case have been hampered by dead-end clues, a lack of tips, and false confessions. But perhaps most frustrating of all has been dissension among law enforcement agencies drawn together by the dumping of murdered females across the northern suburbs.</p>
        <p>The latest disagreement centers on whether one of two young women found slain over the weekend is the stranglers</p>
        <p>latest victim. But disputes in the case began soon after it was noted in mid-November that the bodies of young girls and women were beginning to turn up with unusual frequency in the Los Angeles area.</p>
        <p>Investigators from the agencies then involved  the sheriffs office and Los Angeles and Glendale police  met but could not agree on which victims were connected. They continued to handle the cases separately, although a tentative liaison was set up.</p>
        <p>On Nov. 25. Sheriffs Lt. Phil</p>
        <p>Bollington dropped two names from a list of 11 possible victims of the strangler. He said no definite connection could be established between the nine other slayings and the deaths of 7-year-old Margaret Elizabeth Madrid, found Nov. 6 in the city of Industry, and 19-year-old Theresa Berry of Pomona, found Nov. 4 in Walnut.</p>
        <p>But Los Angeles police Cmdr. William Booth declined the same day to rule out any of the 11 victims as targets of the same killer or to pinpoint any as connected.</p>
        <p>Arrest Two Suspects For 'Copycat' Murders</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two men have been arrested in connection with what police believe may be a copycat slaying patterned after those of the Hillside Strangler.</p>
        <p>Stephen DOrsey Devezin, 40, was booked for investigation of murder Monday night in the death of 21-year-old Carolyn Williams, Lt, Don Foster said. Thomas Davis, 24, who police described as a friend of Devezin, had been booked on the same charge earlier.</p>
        <p>Miss Williams semi-naked body was discovered Saturday morning in a parking lot in Los Angeless Wilshire district. The body of 18-year-old Paula Gwen Ward had been found hours earlier a few miles away in Pasadena near the Rose Bowl.</p>
        <p>Police Lt. Dan Cooke said the two slain women had been seen together Friday and that whoever killed one probably killed the other.</p>
        <p>However, because Miss Wards body was found in another jurisdiction. Cooke said. Los Angeles police could not book anyone for her death.</p>
        <p>Based on the evidence of the way the murders were committed. its altogether possible that whoever did it tried to make a similar type of killing to the Hillside Strangler murders, Cooke said. Copycat</p>
        <p>killings are not too unusual when there is this type of publicity in the case.</p>
        <p>But Pasadena police were not convinced Monday night that the death of Miss Ward was a copy of the work of the Hillside Strangler.</p>
        <p>"We havent been able to prove It one way or the other, Pasadena Sgt. Ben Hethering-ton said. Were keeping an open mind on It.</p>
        <p>Los Angeles police said they arrested Davis and Devezin after an employee of the Cloud Motel in the Wilshire area took down the car license number of a man he reportedly saw carrying a woman out of a room wrapped in a blanket.</p>
        <p>Officers said they traced the car, staked it out and arrested Davis Sunday night when he got into it. Devezin was arrested Monday morning in an apartment.</p>
        <p>Police said Debra Husband, who identified herself as a friend of Miss Ward, told them Miss Ward had planned to meet a man at the Goud Motel Friday night and asked that police be called if she was not heard from within an hour.</p>
        <p>Authorities said Miss Ward, who had been staying in a halfway house, had been In trouble for such things as shoplifting</p>
        <p>Recollections Are Sent Solzhenitsyn</p>
        <p>ALEXANDER SOLZHENITSYN is asking exfled Russians for tbeir recoUectimis of Russia. The material is for his Russian Memorial Library. (AP LaseriAoto)</p>
        <p>MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) -Russian immigrants in the United States. Europe, Australia and Japan have answered exiled Russian author Alexander Solzhenitsyns plea for recollections of their native Russia. Solzhenitsyns interpreter says.</p>
        <p>Solzhenitsyn, a Nobel Prize-winning writer now living in Cavendish, recently asked his countrymen to write their recollections for use in his Russian Memorial Library.</p>
        <p>Coming Soon!</p>
        <p>HA5iGETT'S</p>
        <p>STO?(E</p>
        <p>2500 South Charles Street Ext. (Oakmont Professional Plaza)</p>
        <p>and marijuana possession. They said Miss Williams was arrested on prostitution charges three times during 1975.</p>
        <p>Both Davis and Devezin are black, as were Miss Williams and Miss Ward, police noted. Previous fragmentary descriptions in the Hillside Strangler case have pointed to the killer or killers being white.</p>
        <p>See Boom In Accessories</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM. N.C, (AP)  The president of a national distributor of equipment used for smoking marijuana says business has never been better and its only a matter of time before the drug is decriminalized nationwide.</p>
        <p>"We have customers in every state of the union. said Frank J. Pietras. president of Infinitys End. in an interview with the Winston-Salem Journal. "And its only a matter of time until the number of states wih decriminalization increases. When that happens, the only way for business to go is up.</p>
        <p>North Carolina businesses are supplied from a Charlotte warehouse that stocks Pietras supplies of plexiglasss pot pipes, cigarette papers, weighing scales, processing equipment and roach clips  holders for marijuana cigarettes that have burned down too far to be held in the fingers.</p>
        <p>The largest retailer in the Winston-Salem area for the products is Ridgetop Records.</p>
        <p>In addition to the usual marijuana gear. Ridgetop Records stocks mirrors and razor blades used to prepare cocaine for consumption, tiny glass pipes for smoking hashish oil and pamphlets on growing marijuana and hallucinogenic mushrooms.</p>
        <p>A clerk said the drug materials bring in more profit than the records, all strictly legal, since there are no laws against selling such items.</p>
        <p>"Weve been selling head gear for about three years, and those customers have been probably the nicest and most polite of them all, he said.</p>
        <p>"Because of the dissimilarities in the case, the ages and backgrounds, there is a .strong possibility that a number of the cases are not connected in any way. he said.</p>
        <p>However, when the strangler</p>
        <p>His 'Bigfoot'</p>
        <p>Is Missing</p>
        <p>SUMTER. S.C. (AP) - Jesse Singleton is looking for a missing 6-foot, 160-lb. creature covered with brown and black hair with 5-foot arms.</p>
        <p>Its name is Bigfoot.</p>
        <p>But the monster thats been unaccounted for since it was apparently stolen late Friday night is not really the fabled creature, sometimes called an abominable snowman or a yeti, that has puzzled scientists and fascinated science-fiction fans.</p>
        <p>He, or it, is actually a statue of Bigfoot that stood outside Singletons Taxidermy.</p>
        <p>Singleton says his stuffed monster is worth about $500.</p>
        <p>task force was formed shortly thereafter and put out its official list. Miss Berry and the Madrid girl were ruled out. At least two more victims have turned up since.</p>
        <p>Differences were also apparent in other areas.</p>
        <p>After interviewing witnesses under hypnosis. Glendale police issued a composite drawing of a man reportedly seen driving the car of Kristina Weckler, 20, whose body was found Nov. 6 on a residential lawn in Glendale.</p>
        <p>I.OS Angeles police said they would not comment on the sketch and have not released any drawings of their own.</p>
        <p>Tension between the Glendale and Los Angeles departments rose .sharply when Glendale Police Chief Duane Baker made an offhand remark at a civic meeting that some of the victims had been sodomized.</p>
        <p>Details of the sexual attacks on the victims who were molested had been a closely guarded secret. Police had wanted certain information kept secret so it could be used in polygraph tests of suspects.</p>
        <p>Vote Rumsfeld To Think Tank Board</p>
        <p>DONALD RUMSFELD has been elected to the board directors of the Rand Corp., the California think tank. (AP Laseriflioto)</p>
        <p>SANTA MONICA. Calif. (AP)  Former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has been elected to the board of directors of the Rand Corp. think tank.</p>
        <p>Rumsfeld, 45, is president and chief executive officer of G-D. Searle and Co. of Skokie, 111., a worldwide health care supplier. He joined the firm last June after teaching at Northwestern Universitys Graduate School of Management.</p>
        <p>Solzhenitsyns family spokesman, Irene Alberti, said Monday that no material has arrived from the Soviet Union although Solzhenitsyns request went there by radio.</p>
        <p>"They wouldnt be able to send it by mail. We hope to eventually get some from there. she said in a telephone interview from Cavendish.</p>
        <p>The library now is in Cavendish, but Mrs. Alberti said Solzhenitsyn hopes to some day move it to the Soviet Union.</p>
        <p>PROTECTO-PANE</p>
        <p>DELUXE</p>
        <p>GLASS FIREPLACE SCREENS</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>REDUCED</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>Heavy Duty Wood And Cool Iron Grotes NOW ino/</p>
        <p>REDUCED I U /o</p>
        <p>Fireplace Ensembles, Spark Guards &amp;amp; Andirons</p>
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        <p>20% GLOBE HARDWARE</p>
        <p>COMPANY</p>
        <p>120 West 5th St., Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Telephone 752-6175</p>
        <p>Another such detail was how the victims were strangled. Police had refused to say, but the county coroners chief investigator, Bob Danbacher, disclosed Nov, 23: No necks were</p>
        <p>broken. Theres no other marks on (heir b(xiies to indicate they were beaten </p>
        <p>Elected officials entered the case when it was charged that Los Angeles police refused to</p>
        <p>answer a call about a prostitute who failed to check in when she went to meet a client Dec 14. The woman was Kimberly Diane Martin, apparently the stranglers 11th victim.</p>
        <p>Holiday Traffic Took Twelve Lives In N.C.</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Christmas holiday weekend traffic claimed 12 lives in North Carolina between Friday evening and midnight Monday, the Highway Patrol reported.</p>
        <p>That made 1,402 persons who died in traffic accidents so far in 1977, compared to 1,505 at this time last year.</p>
        <p>The weekend accidents included a head-on crash Friday night on a Beaufort County rural road about one mile north of Washington that killed four persons.</p>
        <p>The victims were identified as Howard Eugene Kilby. 25, of Washington; James Hassel Lil-ley. 35. of Rt. 5, Washington; and James Cedric Sparrow, 43, and Carol Waters Sparrow, 35, both of Pinetown.</p>
        <p>Kilbys car collided with another driven by Lilley. The Sparrows were passengers in Lilleys car.</p>
        <p>PUBLISHER SUCCUMBS</p>
        <p>BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP)  Albert Gainza Paz, one of Latin Americas best-known journalists and publisher of the prestigious newspaper La Prensa, died Monday at the age of 78.</p>
        <p>Opal E, Camp, .59, of Kings Mountain, died when her car collided with another vehicle at an intersection three miles south of Kings Mountain Sunday afternoon.</p>
        <p>James F]dward Silver. 20, of Hollister died at 5:45 p.m. Sunday when the car he was driving struck another vehicle head-on on N.C. 43 about 13 miles south of Warrenton. Silvers car then struck a second vehicle.</p>
        <p>Emma Costner Jordan. .50, of Greensboro, died when the vehicle in which she was a passenger ran off U.S. 421 less than a mile north of Wilmington.</p>
        <p>Mich Albert, 17, of Rt. 1, Mayodan, was killed early Sunday when he lost control of his car on N.C. 770 in Stokes County 12 miles east of Danbury. Alberts car ran off the road, struck a tree and burned.</p>
        <p>Johnny Rouse. 58, of Rt. 2, Farmville, was killed in an accident Saturday on N.C. 121 in Pitt County just north of Farmville. Rouses car ran off the left side of the highway and overturned.</p>
        <p>A collision at the intersection of two Davidson County rural roads Saturday took the life of Donna Rocket, 15, of Thomas-ville. Miss Rocket was a passenger in a car that ran a stop sign just south of Thomasville</p>
        <p>and was struck by another vehicle.</p>
        <p>Herbert Bell Baker. 25, of Winston-Salem was killed in a tw'o-car collision early Saturday in Winston-Salem that injured .seven others. Bakers car ran a stop sign and was hit by another vehicle.</p>
        <p>Gary Neal Milligan, 17, of Rt. 3. Tabor City, was killed Friday night when the car he was driving ran off N.C. 904 in Columbus County 12 miles east of Tabor City. The car struck a culvert and overturned, throwing all occupants from the car. Three passengers were injured.</p>
        <p>Christmas weekend fatalities were counted from 6 p.m. Friday through midnight Monday. Last year, 29 persons were killed during the Christmas weekend in North Carolina traffic accidents.</p>
        <p>W.R. Nichols, Ins.</p>
        <p>p. O. Box 6J4 Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Call 752-3327 SCMJttlWBBtOm Lifts</p>
        <p>Rumsfeld served as defense secretary from November 1975 through the end of the Ford administration last January. In August 1974 he chaired the transition team as Gerald Ford became president, and a month later was named a special assistant to the president.</p>
        <p>He also has served as U.S. ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and director of the Cost of Living Council.</p>
        <p>KIDS EAT FREE THIS WEEK</p>
        <p>AT JACKS STEAK HOUSE</p>
        <p>Hey Mom and Dad! From now thru January 2, 1978, children under the age of 12 accompanied by an adult purchasing any Jacks Steak or Seafood Dinner will receive a juicy V4 lb. Chopped Sirloin Steak Sandwich and a regular order of French Fries, absolutely FREE! Limit 2 children per adult customer. What better way to treat your family during school vacations than to stop in at Jacks where Kids Eat FREE! This offer is good anytime during regular store hours. Gather up your bunch and stop in today. Its our way of saying THANKS for a great year at Jacks.</p>
        <p>500 W. GREENVILLE BLVD , GREENVILLE &amp;amp; MYRTLE BEACH. S. C.</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0012" />
        <p>12The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Tuesday, December 27,1977</p>
        <p>District</p>
        <p>Report</p>
        <p>Court</p>
        <p>'pay</p>
        <p>Jud^e Robert D Whet'ler disposed of the following cases during the November 28 December 1, term of District Court in Pitt Countv.</p>
        <p>Lerov Avory 3004 S Elm St dnv &amp;gt;DQ unctor tDo influerKe 6 months lad suspended on payment ot SlOO and costs surrender operator s Dccnse</p>
        <p>Joseph Oaniei Brennan Rafouh speed*nq, X days tail suspended on pay mentotcosts Clinton Ray Carmon 1102 Jones Dr ex ceedmq sale speed 30 days la-i suspended on payment oi $15 ar&amp;gt;d costs  '</p>
        <p>RarxJali Carson OawKins Randieman. speeding, prayer lor ludgment continued on paymentotcost</p>
        <p>Billy Don Elhs Jackson Trailer Court receiving stolen property, dismissed</p>
        <p>Almichael Ebron, 1504 Myrtle Ave driv ing urvcier the influence 6 months lad suspended on paynsent of $100 and costs. surrefKier operator s license</p>
        <p>Thomas Gentile. 205 E 8th St exceeding safe speed. 30 days laii suspended on pay n&amp;gt;ent of $15 and costs</p>
        <p>Bobby G Gurganus. Williamston, com municating threats. 6 months laii suspend ed on payment of costs</p>
        <p>Bruce Kevin Hall. 904, Forbes Trailer Park, driving after drinking 90 days laii suspended on payment of $50 and costs James Phiilip Hughes Route 5 Green ville, no operator's hcense, X days laii suspended on payment ot $25 and costs Thil Deaton Hurley. Scott St . driving left of center dismissed</p>
        <p>Samuel John Lambert. Kinston speeding, X days laii suspended on pay ment of $ 15 and costs Jackie Lilley. Route 2, Greenville posses sion of mariiuana. $100 and costs James T Williams. West Virgma. reckless driving. 6 months tail suspended on payment ot $lWand costs</p>
        <p>Plan Center On Artifacts</p>
        <p>FORT FISHER. N.C. (AP) -North Carolina, which has agreed to establish a research center to coordinate planning and research for the possible recovery- of the Civil War ironclad Monitor, may already have the nucleus of such a center.</p>
        <p>The state Division of Archives and History has two units that probably would take an active part in such work  the North Carolina Underwater Achaeological Research Unit and the Fort Fisher Marine Preservation Laboratory.</p>
        <p>Their work gets little notice and less money, but they have already been involved behind the scenes in work on the Monitor.</p>
        <p>We did the research that led to finding the Monitor, said Gordon Watts, head of the archaeological research unit.</p>
        <p>Both units have also been involved in discovery and restoration of Civil War cannon and other artifacts from the Roanoke River, charting of shipwreck sites, surveys of sites where planned development threatened other artifacts and studies of older artifacts than the Civil War items that seem to get so much attention.</p>
        <p>Right now, for instance, weve got a canoe recovered from Lake Waccamaw about 35 miles west of Wilmington, Watts said. We had it carbon dated at 1825. plus or minus 15 years. But the design is aboriginal. The design is 7,000 years old. How can that be? We cant reconcile it.</p>
        <p>One project resulted in a book that is now at the publishers and another is in progress on the Confederate 1-am Neuse,</p>
        <p>Facing Charges Of Air Piracy</p>
        <p>ATLANTA (AP) - A man held for the Christmas Day hijacking of an Eastern Airlines jet faced air piracy charges before a U.S. magistrate today.</p>
        <p>Nikolai Wischnewsky, 32. of Pearl River, N.Y.. allegedly commandeered the DC-9 about 50 miles from Atlanta on Sunday using a toy pistol and a portable radio taped to resemble a bomb.</p>
        <p>The Austrian-born landscaper was being held without bond in the Fulton County jail.</p>
        <p>Wischnewsky boarded the Miami-Indianapolis flight in Jacksonville, Fla., FBI agents said.</p>
        <p>Agents said the hijacker passed a flight attendant a note demanding that the plane fly to Cuba.</p>
        <p>Women and children were allowed to leave when the aircraft landed in Atlanta at 8:20 a.m. and the FBI then persuaded the hijacker to release the rest of the 32 passengers and four crew members. Agents overpowered him a few hours later.</p>
        <p>There were no injuries.</p>
        <p>EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.</p>
        <p>Partly cloudy Thursday through Saturday with a slow warming trend. Highs in the 40s Thursday and Friday, warming to the 50s by Saturday. Overnight lows in 20s Thursday, warming to upper 30s and low 40s Saturday.</p>
        <p>Alien Wh.tc^urM Route 5 Green viHo 'ONptstioo viOiAfrOO 10 fleys i^i!</p>
        <p>.uspc'ixfoo on pivtncnf 0 costs vVili.am Guv Sutton. LAmont Drive, .iSSAuif by pointing a gun 24 n&amp;gt;onfhs tails suspi'ixJCvi on payment ot costs, probation 3</p>
        <p>Mary Margaret McOaoe Lexington spo'ciing. X davS tail suspeodoO on pay ment of $10 and costs Carl Beniamin AAorns Jr Rt 5. Green vilio, driving under the -nfiueoce 8. dnvmg while license expired, 6 months lail Suspended on payment of $100 ar&amp;gt;d costs, surrender operator s lbense</p>
        <p>Ocbra Pollard Mixon Ailhamston. possession ot a controlled substarKe $100 and costs public drunk, prayer tor ludg rrn'nt continued upon payment of costs 12 months probation</p>
        <p>R M Milieson Stokes, worthless check X days lad suspended on payment qI costs Dana Phdiip Nelson 1211 E Rockspnr&amp;gt;g Rd speeding X days lad suspended on payment of $256 and costs</p>
        <p>Paul Arlington Nelson. Stokes, driving under the inllueoce 3rd offense. 6 months laii suspended on payment of $300 and costs surrender operafor's license tor 5 years</p>
        <p>Vyiiham Wcstey Pridgen, Washington driving ur&amp;gt;der the influctKe 6 months ial suspended on payment ot $100 and costs, surrender operator s license Crarg Edwm Pearson. Fayetteville, speeding. 60 days lail suspended on pay ment of $X arxJ costs, surrerxter operator's license</p>
        <p>William Floyd Roach. Grimesland. driv ing under the mfiuerKe. 6 months tail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operator's license</p>
        <p>James Randolph Rt 4. Greenvilie. pubhc drunk $X and costs</p>
        <p>Kenneth Strayhorn 800 Heath St , im proper passing, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Thomas Eugene Sharkahnas, Ayden. possession of marijuana, verdict not guilty John Dorsey Teel Rt 6. Greenville, dnv ing under the influeixe 6 months latl suspended on payment ot $100 and costs, surrender operator's hcense</p>
        <p>Joseph HoHaixJ Underwood. Newport reckless driving 6 months lail suspended on payment ot $100 and costs</p>
        <p>Robert Glenn Padgett, X4 Nash St driv ing under the influence. 6 months lail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrencfcr operators hcense</p>
        <p>Edward Alphm, Route l. Greenville, trespass. 10 days lad suspended on pay ment ot costs Cafhoruse Alexander Allen, 1311 B Willow St allow 00 operator's hcense. dismissed</p>
        <p>W M Buck, SOS Mumford Road, wor thicss check, X days laii susperxied on pay ment of costs and check</p>
        <p>Timothy Wayne Barnes. Durham, driving m excess 10 percent blood alcohol content by weight, 6 months laii suspertded on pay men! ot $100 and costs, surrender operators hcense Walter Randall Cannon. Chocowinify, speeding, X days lad suspended on pay ment ot $25 and costs, surrertder operator's license</p>
        <p>Bobby Oaii. Route 4, Greenville, com municating threats, not guilty</p>
        <p>Kenneth Earl Dail. Kenland Manor, driv i,nq while license revoked. 3rd offense, not guilty htterinq. X days lail suspertded on payment of $25 and costs Matthew Oamel. Route 2. Greenville, driving under the influence and no operator's license. 6 months lail suspended on payment ot $100 and costs, surrender operator's hcense</p>
        <p>Ricky Rhodes Heath, Riverview Estates, registration violation, X days jail suspend ed on payment ot $25 and costs no liability insurance, dismissed Ehiabeth Gill Reavis. Raleigh, dispose of mortgaged property, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>Jeffery Kenneth Smith, 105 Graham St. careless arxt reckless driving. X days jail suspended on payment of costs Ora Mae Smith. Route 8. Greenville, wor</p>
        <p>ihh'ss thtx k X days laii suspended c moot ol costs and V heck</p>
        <p>Eugene Stokes 109 S Summit St wor thicss chtxk X days lail suspended Oh pay ment ol c osts and c hoc k Paul David Shirley. Tarboro. exceeding safe specH. 10 days laii suspended on pay moot of costs</p>
        <p>Danny Ray Taylor Route 8. Greenville possession of mar 11 uana. $ 100 and costs Floyd Wilson 116 Azalea Dr, reckless driving 6 months tail suspended on pay ment of $100 and costs</p>
        <p>Eddie Vernon White. YoungsviHe. speeding. X days lail suspended on pay rncnt ot costs Alck'an M Waters. Farmville, worthless check 6 months tail suspended on payment of costs aixJ check, probation 12 months Cynthia L Warren. Farmville. worthless ciH'ck X days tail suspended on payn&amp;gt;ent of costs and cho&amp;lt; K</p>
        <p>Dawn L*0 Withamson. X D Langston Park, fail toriducc speed to avoid actideot, X days tail suspended 00 payment of costs and $25 for failure to appear Michael Ray Haddock. Ayden, speedir&amp;gt;g. X days lail suspended on payment of 125 and costs</p>
        <p>Oarreti Lee Brinkley. Kmston. speeding to elude arrest and death by vehicle. 24 months (dll suspended on payment of $1000 restitution arxf costs, probation 5 years, stop light violation, careless arxf reckless, tail to stop for blue light and siren and speeding, dismissed</p>
        <p>Ethel Brown Oak City, worthless check, dismissed William Barrett. 803 Bradley St. wor ihless. Xdays tail suspendedonpaymentof costs and check</p>
        <p>Jasper R Bullock. 804 Ward S. worthless chock X days laii suspended on payment of costs and check</p>
        <p>James Marvin Barnhill. Stokes, driving under the influence. 6 months lail suspend ed on payment ot $100 arxi cost, surrender operator's license David Timothy Barteii, Beihaven, shoplifting. Sdays tad.</p>
        <p>Bill Bateman. Route 5. Greenville. 2 counts of worthless checks, 6 months jail suspended 00 payment of costs and check m cachease probation 12months</p>
        <p>Donms Juan Burge AycocR Dorm, did and abet trespass, dismissed Gerald C Bunn. Nashville felonious possession ot mariiuana. dismissed</p>
        <p>Jennifer Leigh Bnckell. Garrett Dorm, trespassing, dismissed</p>
        <p>Kenneth J Capron, Jones Dorm, aid and abet trespass, dismissed</p>
        <p>Wilhc Clark, 1200 Clark St . auto larceny. 27 days idii Coleen Ann Coogan. Garrett Dorm, trespass, dismissed Myra Dawn Cave. Garrett Dorm, trespass, dismissed</p>
        <p>Fenner Roscoc Carter, Grimesland. break into coin operated machine and damage to property. 24 months jail suspended on payment ot $300 and restitu tion arxi costs, probation 2 years Wiley Ray Chancey. Simpson, drive left of confer. X days lail suspended on pay men? of cost and $25 tor failure to appear Margaret Sanford Dempsey. Fletcher Dorm, trespassing, dismissed f\Aar\ftn Haddock, Jr , 2509 Jefferson Dr . red light violation, dismissed</p>
        <p>Elizabeth Kenth Hudson. Clement Dorm, trespass, dismissed, trespass, 60 days lail suspended on payment ot $25 arxl costs Daniel JosepH Humphrey. Kmston. ex ceedmq safe speed. X days tail suspended on payment of costs Milton Hawkms. Jr , Grimesland. driving under the mflucrKC and improper equip ment 6 months iail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operafor's license</p>
        <p>Jessie Ingram, 100 Contentnea St , trespass, 6 months jail suspended on pay ment of cjasts</p>
        <p>Kimberly Ann Jones. White Dorm, trespassing, dismissed</p>
        <p>Roy Earl Johnson, Kmston. driving under the influence 6 months tail suspended on payment ot $100 and cost, counsel tees, pro bation 12 months, transporting whiskey with seal broken and disturbing the peace, dismissed</p>
        <p>Lori Jeanne Licko. 1703 Riverdrive Apt , stop light violation, dismissed.</p>
        <p>Jasper James Langley, Grimeslarxl. break mto com operated machif&amp;gt;e and damage to property. 24 rrxoths lail suspended on payment of $300 and restitu tion and costs, probation 2 years.</p>
        <p>John j Lonegan. Aycock Dorm, aid and abet trespass, dismissed Andrea Clair Lennon. 124 S Eastern St, trespass, dismissed</p>
        <p>Barry S. McCarthy, Scott Dorm, trespass, not guilty Neil Curtis Mayo, Washington, reckless</p>
        <p>Py</p>
        <p>FURNITURE</p>
        <p>INC</p>
        <p> SlIKT. CIKNVIiil</p>
        <p>SQ-</p>
        <p>Ft-</p>
        <p>, (^n^strong</p>
        <p>desir</p>
        <p>ed.</p>
        <p>Floor design copyrighted by Armstrong</p>
        <p>FURNITURE</p>
        <p>I  I</p>
        <p>ilMM</p>
        <p>driving 6 moi&amp;gt;fhs aii suspended men 1 ot $ 100 and i. osts Dennis Raymond Murphy. Farmville. m spoctionviolation costs Sheila Wilson M&amp;lt;mnmg. Wmtcrvillo. speeding X days tail suspended on pay moot ol $15 and costs Wiiham Frankim Norman. Aycock Dorm, aid and abet trespass, dismissed Barbara A Ptcasants. White Dorm, trespass dismissed Joseph Henry Pasell. Washington, careless and reckless. Xdays lail suspend od on payment of $25 and costs David Roland 109 Greenway. worthless chock. Xdays lad suspended on payment of costs and chock</p>
        <p>Sam Carson Rankm, Aycock Dorm, aid and abet trespass, dismissed David William Rice. Hamlet, careless and reckless and tail to obey officer sdircc fion. X days tail suspended on payment of $25 and costs Donald Mornson Rmger Fayetteville, driving while license revoked, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $300 and costs Felton Spencer. Stokes, non support. 6 months tail suspended on payment of costs and ISO per week for support</p>
        <p>Neal David Sword, Scott Dorm, aid artd abet trespass, dismissed Thomas Larry Summer Belk Dorm, aid and abet trespass, dismissed Wi'iiam Muyck Stevens. Jor&amp;gt;es Dorm, trespass, dismissed Christine Lynne Trainoi. Garrett Dorm, trespass, dismissed VarKc Clayton Tmqier, Belk Dorm, aid arxJ abet trespass, dismissed</p>
        <p>Sharon Kay Watson. Beihaven. shoplif ting. Sdays lail Leroy Worsley. Greenville, public drunk. 2days lail</p>
        <p>Alfred Daniel Warren, Hi. 228 Greenville Bivd speeding. X days laii suspended on payment of $25 and costs</p>
        <p>Steven Hopkms Wright. Jones Dorm, aid and abet trespass, dismissed, aid and abet trespass. 60 days tail susperxfed on pay ment of $25 and costs Oliver Davis. 807B Bancroft Ave . assault on a female prayer for ludgement con tinued on payment of costs, costs remitted James Bunn. Stokes, break into com operated machine 24 months jail suspend ed on payment ot $X0 and costs, probation 2 years</p>
        <p>Sammy Earl Howard. Stokes, break mto coin operated machine. 24 months laii suspended on payment of $300 arxJ costs, probation 2 years</p>
        <p>RonmeEarl Bunn. Stokes, break into com operated machine, dismissed Sybil Colby Mississippi, shopiittmq. dismissed</p>
        <p>Eddie Lee Austin. Farmville. registration Violation, dismissed Lcwis Glenn Baker. Farmville. speeding. X days lail suspended 00 payment of costs and $25 for failure to appear Joseph Barrett. Farmville. drug viola tion, dismissed, public drunk, X days tail, public drunk. 10 days jail at the expiration of prior sentence shoplifting. 6 months jail suspended on payment ot costs and counsel fees, probation 12 months Albert Sylvester Bynum. Walstonburg, reckless driving. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $KX and costs</p>
        <p>Theenic Elizabeth Barnes. 1914 A Ken nedy. exceeding safe speed, X days tail suspended cm payment ot costs.</p>
        <p>Marion Edwards. Fountain, damage to property, X days jail suspended on pay ment of costs Ralph Glenn Evans. Farmville, careless</p>
        <p>and riH kicss ttisniissod</p>
        <p>Konix'th Earl Gams Rocky Mount, driv mg under the miiuenco. 6 months tail suspt'^nded on payment ot $100 and cost, sur render operator's license Wdlic Carson Head. Snow Mill, dnvmg umter the mMm'nce and speeding. 6 months laii suspended on paymeni ol $100 and cost, surrender operator s license AUxTt Mayo Hams. nOOA N Washington St . reckless dnvmg. 6 monlhs tail suspend ed on payment of $100 and cost, counsel lees $100</p>
        <p>John Frank Haddock. Farmville. assault with deadly weapon, not guilty damage to prop'rty, X days lail suspended on pay ment ol costs Bobby Ray Joyner. Farmville. spctxJinq, X days tail suspended on payment ol $10 and costs</p>
        <p>Clarerxc Johnson. Fountain, public drunk. X days lail suspcndcdonpayment ol costs</p>
        <p>David Lee Little. Snow Hill, speeding. X</p>
        <p>days tail suspended on payment of $ and i osts</p>
        <p>Robin Williams Miles. 409 S Library St. cxcecxling safe speed. X days lail suspend ed on payment of $ 10 and costs,</p>
        <p>Michael Ray Rodciers. Farmville. slop Sign violation, X days lail suspended on payment ol $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>Andrew Richardson. Farmville, inisde meaner breaking, enterinq and larceny, 2 years tail suspended on payment of $200 and c osts and c ounsei tees, probat lon 2 years Joseph Coiicn Randolph, Raleigh, spcHxfmg. X days jail susperxfed on pay men! of $X and costs</p>
        <p>Timothy Duane Tctlerton, Bethel, spix'dmg. X days jail suspended on pay ment ot costs Johnny Gray Walston, Farmville, reckless driving, 6 monlhs lail susperxJcd on paymeni of $ 100 and costs Charles Veral Nichols. Bell Arthur, dnv mg left ot center, prayer for judgement con tmucd on payment of costs</p>
        <p>Tadlock Insurance Agency, Inc.</p>
        <p>Evans Mall at 314</p>
        <p>Contmuous ?&amp;gt;Aoiessioiia{ ^usuAQNce 2crtce</p>
        <p>2mcc 1935 '</p>
        <p>C. Frank Dali  Agent</p>
        <p>Phone 758-1165</p>
        <p>Western Sizzlin Steak House</p>
        <p>The Family Steak House</p>
        <p>U.S. Choice Beef Cut Fresh Daily!</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>Lunch &amp;amp; Dinner Special</p>
        <p>8 Oz. Sirloin Steak</p>
        <p>Served With Idaho King Baked Potato or French Fries &amp;amp; Texas Toast.</p>
        <p>$2</p>
        <p>Ail For 39</p>
        <p>For Take Out Cali 758-2712</p>
        <p>OPEN REGULAR HOURS. TUESDAY.27TH</p>
        <p> PMCB GOOD TUESDAY, DEC. 27TH THRU WB).. DEC. 28TH e NONE TO DEAB e WE RESOVE THE RIOHT TO UMIT CMJANTITIES</p>
        <p> MMNO U4. CHOICf mr</p>
        <p> MEATY SHORT RIBS la 89c</p>
        <p>() MAND U4. CHOICf K0 OMflltl</p>
        <p> SIRIOIN TIP ROASTS^$1.59</p>
        <p>() MAND U.S. CHOICf MEF eONfUSS</p>
        <p> SIRIOIN TIP STEAKS</p>
        <p> MAND UA. CHOICf IRF ONafSS</p>
        <p> FAMILY STEAKS u $1^9</p>
        <p>brand</p>
        <p>REGULAR, THICK OR BEEF BOIOGNA  99c</p>
        <p>lUCK tMAMI, nC8&amp;gt; UMCMON 0</p>
        <p>HAMACHKSE *^69c</p>
        <p>*r TW CHUNK</p>
        <p>BRAUNSCMlMEieER i. S9c</p>
        <p>SAUSAOE</p>
        <p>$1A9</p>
        <p>MOWA*. DMNM OK</p>
        <p>BEEF FRANKS</p>
        <p>M0.99C</p>
        <p>,PICNICi^$1.99j$2.29 e</p>
        <p>UMCNMN, neni * mmnto o SUC&amp;gt;SALAMI ^$1.19  ^</p>
        <p>RttH PORK8AUI</p>
        <p>BRAND U.S. CHOICE LAMB SALE</p>
        <p> WHOLE LEG *0 LAMB  u $1.89</p>
        <p>KMIAMCUT</p>
        <p> SHOULOR ROASTS  is $1.19 , e RIB CHOPS is. $2.49 e LOIN CHOPS is.$2.59</p>
        <p>e GROUND Rou$1.99e PAHIES  u. 69c</p>
        <p>DifF SOUTH ()</p>
        <p> MAYONNAISE :^89c</p>
        <p> BLUE BAY PINK SAlMON'iSl$1A9</p>
        <p> HIDRYTOWEIS</p>
        <p>SUCMMiAKIM ^</p>
        <p>e LOINS  u.$1 J9</p>
        <p>BLADE FOmON ^</p>
        <p> ROASTS  ia.$1P9 COUNIXVSTVU ,</p>
        <p> ACKBOMSu.l1.19</p>
        <p>OOUNraVfTVU ^</p>
        <p>eRISS  ull.29</p>
        <p>Bim JIFFY CORN MUFFIN MIX</p>
        <p>MAXWEU HOUSE</p>
        <p>COFFEE 'JL$3.19</p>
        <p>UMIT ONE. PLEASE</p>
        <p>BAKERY PRODUCTS FROM W-D!</p>
        <p>24-OZ.</p>
        <p>LOAVES</p>
        <p>WHOUE GRAIN BREAD  2i^89c</p>
        <p>DAINTY DINNER ROUS 3 ^$1.00</p>
        <p>OD NmnoM m&amp;gt; wAxm SHARP DAISY CHOSE</p>
        <p>FRENCH FRIED POTATOES;xt49c</p>
        <p>TASTB04EA</p>
        <p>FISH STICKS</p>
        <p>SEA PAK</p>
        <p>SHRIMP BUR6ERS</p>
        <p>jyRVEST FRESH PRODUCE CABBAGE 2  25c</p>
        <p>UA. NO. 1 WHITE</p>
        <p>POTATOES</p>
        <p>FOIY BAO</p>
        <p>UA. NO. 1</p>
        <p>YEUOW ONIONS</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0013" />
        <p>NEW KIND OP CHRlSTIfAS WRAPT - Actreas Goldie Hmm trtof oo a boa for ChriitiDas, bid its not a gift. The snake is co-staiTtaig adUi Goidle in ber new comedy-tbrUler Foul Play which is currently under production. The she foot-two inch Brasilian red-tailed boa constrictor named Shirley will share the spotlight with GokUe in sevo^ scenes in the movie. (AP Laaerpboto)</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28,1977</p>
        <p>GENERAL TENDENQES: Underneath aU the fuw and furor on the surface which seems to be holding you back from achieving results of importance, there is a very fne influence of a positive nature. You will accomplish some very worthwhile matters, especially in activities that have long-range implications.</p>
        <p>ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Put those creative ideas to work that can bring you added success very soon. Know what you want and use positive methods to gain them.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Dont stir up a hornet's nest at home, but quietly get conditions improved. Arguments could lead to serious trouble.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Questionable situations should be handled intelligently so you avoid potential trouble. Tak an interest in important civic matters.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Study monetary matters well and know where and how to improve them. Stop being so extravagant and cut down cm expenses.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Don't be impulsive where gaining some personal goal is concerned, since it will take some time to do so and hasty action could ruin it.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Anything you want to do of a confidential nature should not be broadcast or you spoil it all. Do not be harsh with a loved one over something you are not sure about.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Fine time to be with friends, but dont force them into doing what you want or they would resent it. Know what you want and then go after it.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You seem overly anxious to handle some civic matter for which you are not well prepared, so study it further first and avoid ill will from bigwig. A void one who is detrimental to your welfare.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Study torther into that outlet that will bring you added success. *^get about scattering your forces. Take no chances with reputation.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) You want to got into big expense and this would be very wrong at this time, so cut down on expenses instead. Avoid arguments.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) An objective talk with a partner can bring fne results now. Be sure to keep it on a most courteous level. Wait for more developments before you make up your mind about a national situation.</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Ideal time to delve into all that work awaiting your attention, but be sure to schedule well. Listen to ideas of a co-worker.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY .  .  he  or  she</p>
        <p>will be sure of himself or herself and can accomplish a great deal in life, provided you give encouragement and praise early in life. Slant education along lines of government Or work with large corporations, educational institutions. Do not neglect business courses.</p>
        <p> 'The SUrs impel, they do not compel. ' What you make of your life is largely up to YOU!</p>
        <p>1977 McNaught Syndicate, Inc.)</p>
        <p>buccaneer MOVIES 1 * 2</p>
        <p>S  )OHN TRAVOLTA' K^EN LYNN CORNEY</p>
        <p>2:15-4:45-7:15-9;X ...Catchit</p>
        <p>W\im</p>
        <p>Carrie Fisher No Tinseltown Admirer</p>
        <p>By JAY SHARBUTT AP Tdeviih Writer</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD (AP) - New Years Eve is when many people drink. It also is when NBC, for reasons known to only its deities, airs a TV version of Come Back Little Sheba. It</p>
        <p>co-stars Carrie Fisher, 21.</p>
        <p>The daughter of Eddie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds, she is accustomed by now to living with the fact she played the imperiled heroine of the hit movie "Star Wars and will play same again in a sequel.</p>
        <p>(mA HOPEFUL - Noive BoytKYtckmer, X, {dam to return to Europe to pursue an opera career. Her neighbors in Beddey, W. Va., provided the money this year. She swltdied fTMn oboe to vtdoe while studying at the CoU^eOservatm7 at Cincinnati, Ohio. (APLaserpboto)</p>
        <p>GOREN BRIDGE</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>O Ir7 by Cliicivo Tnbun*</p>
        <p>Both vulnerable. South deals.</p>
        <p>NORTH</p>
        <p> 94</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;7K10 0 AJ1054</p>
        <p> QJ54 WEST EAST</p>
        <p> Q105S2 KJ7 &amp;lt;794  &amp;lt;78653 OQ87 OK96</p>
        <p> K8S SSB</p>
        <p>SOUTH</p>
        <p> A86</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;7 AQJ72 0 32</p>
        <p> A107 The bidding:</p>
        <p>Seath West North East</p>
        <p>1 &amp;lt;7 Pass 2 0 Pass</p>
        <p>2 NT Pass 3NT Pass Pass Pass</p>
        <p>Opening lead: Three of .</p>
        <p>West used the power of suggestion to deflect declarer from the winning path, with the result that a seemingly impregnable no</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT-TV Ch. 9</p>
        <p>7:00 Gunsmoke 0:00 Fitzpatricks 9:00 MASH 9. 30 One Day 10:00 LOU Grant 11:00 News 11.30 AAovie</p>
        <p>6:00 Carolina 8 00 MorninQ 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 Price Right 11:00 MatchGame 11:30 Love of 11:55 Paul Harvey</p>
        <p>13:00 9/Alive News 12:30 ScarchFor 1:00 Young and 1:X World Turns 2:30 Guiding Light 3:30 All in 4:00 Marcus 5:00 Rascals S:X Giiiigan 6:00 9/Alive News 6:30 News 7:00 Gunsmpke 8:00 Good Times 8:30 Syzsznyk 9:00 AAovie 11:00 News 11:30 AAovie</p>
        <p>WITN-TV Ch. 7</p>
        <p>TuMday</p>
        <p>7:00 Adam 13 7:30 Name Tune 8:00 Atlantis 8:30 AAovie 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 1:00 News</p>
        <p>5:00 ironside 6:00 Almanac 7.00 Today 7:35 News 7:30 Today 8:25 News ax Today 9:00 Griffin 10:00 Sanford 10:30 Squares</p>
        <p>11:00 Fortune 11:30 KockOut 12:00 News Noon 12:30 Chico 1:00 Gong Show 1:30 Our Lives 2:30 Doctors 3:00 Another world 4:00 Loi&amp;gt;c Ranger 4:30 Virginian 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Adam 12 7 :30 Truth or 8:00 Grizzly 9:00 BtackShccp 10:00 Policewoman 11:00. News 11:30 Tonight 1:00 News</p>
        <p>WCTI-TVCh.l2</p>
        <p>Tutiday</p>
        <p>7:00 Liar'sClub 7:30 ShaNaNa 8:00 Happy Days 8:30 Lavorne 9:00 3'sCompany 9:30 Soap 10:00 Family 11:00 Hartman M X AAovie I 00 News</p>
        <p>5:55 Tidings 6:00 PTLClub 7:00 America 7:25 News 7:30 America 8 25 News</p>
        <p>8 30 Afnorica</p>
        <p>9 00 Donahue</p>
        <p>10 00 Douglas 11:00 Happy Days</p>
        <p>11 30 Family 12:00 Noon</p>
        <p>12 X Ryan's</p>
        <p>1 00 ChHdrcn</p>
        <p>2 00 Pyramid 2:30 One Life 3:15 Hospital 4:00 Archies 4:30 Partridge 5.00 Emergency</p>
        <p>6 00 Action 6:30 News</p>
        <p>7 00 Liar's 7:30 Price 8:00 8 Enough 9:00 Angels</p>
        <p>10:00 Barctta 11:00 Hartman 11 30 Slarsky 2 00 News</p>
        <p>trump game went down to defeat.</p>
        <p>Despite his good five-card suit, we approve of Souths decision to rebid two no trump rather than two hearts. It is far more descriptive. However, as the cards lie, a contract of four hearts would have proved easier than three no trump.</p>
        <p>West made his normal lead of the fourth best of his longest and strongest suit. Declarer correctly held up the ace until the third round, discarding a club from dummy. There were ght tricks on top, and the ninth could come from either minor. However, West had to be kept off lead, for if he regained the lead, he could ' probably cash enough spades to defeat the contract. Therefore, declarer decided that it was better to play for split diamond honors, for by taking two diamond finesses he could keep the lead in the E^ast hand.</p>
        <p>At trick four declarer led a low diamond. Against rou-tine defense, declarer would coast home. When West follows with a low diamond, the finesse of the ten loses to the king. The best East can do is shift to a club, but declarer rises with the ace, repeats the diamond finesse and ends up with ten tricks.</p>
        <p>Unfortunately for declarer, West came up with a brilliant counter-maneuver. He followed to the first diamond lead with the'queen!</p>
        <p>This gave declarer the impression that West held both missing diamond honors. So, taking a different tack, declarer. won the ace of diamonds in dummy and ran the queen of clubs. A grateful West gathered in the king of clubs, cashed his two spade tricks and then led a diamond to his partners king for a two-trick set.</p>
        <p>Rubber bridge clubs throughout the country use the four-deal bridge format. Do they knew eomethlng yon dont? Charles Goreus Four-Deal Bridge" wiU teach yon the atratogies and tactics of this iast-pacod action game that provides the cure for nnending rubbers. For n copy and a Bcoropad, send $1.60 to Goren-Four Deal, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 259, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make checks payable to NEWS-PAPERBOOKS.</p>
        <p>When she arrived at a restaurant here for a Sheba interview, shed just finished posing for Star Wars pictures touting Star Wars knicknacks. She seemed a mite weaiy, but not jaded.</p>
        <p>Miss Fisher, who has a deadpan, sardonic sense of humor akin to that of Eve Our Miss Brooks Arden, was asked how many Star Wars interviews shes done. She started adding them up.</p>
        <p>Oh, my God ... 300? she said. She grinned when asked the most-asked Star Wars question put to her. She said it was, Did you know It was going to be a hit?</p>
        <p>Now that the Star Wars hype has eased, Is there anything youd like to add, Miss Fisher? She did. It was a discreet screech that briefly startled a cluster of patrons at the next table.</p>
        <p>Oddly enough, Carrie, a brown-haired, brown-eyed lady so tiny you could carve a life-size statue of her from a pebble, didnt get the NBC</p>
        <p>Sheba role because of her Star Wars fame.</p>
        <p>She said she got it because of her work in her only other film, Shampoo, done when she was 17, just before she began a formal study of acting at Englands School for Speech and Drama.</p>
        <p>She taped Sheba - which stars Lord Laurence Olivier and Joanne Woodward, both of whom she praised highly, in England last January, well before all the hoopla over Star Wars began.</p>
        <p>Hollywood moguls tend to type-cast thespians whove been in'a box-office hit. But no such thing has happened to Miss Fisher, who began in show biz at 13, working in her mothers night club act.</p>
        <p>I was offered a part as a retarded person - which I thought was apt -but no Star Wars stuff, she said, almost in relief.</p>
        <p>She has other options available. -She can sing, even worked at age IS in the chorus line of Irene on Broadway,</p>
        <p>Ctosswotd By Eugene Sheffer</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>41A refuge</p>
        <p>81 Erode</p>
        <p>Sindicato</p>
        <p>IGdf term</p>
        <p>43 Nothing</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>asaent</p>
        <p>4Containa-</p>
        <p>44 Over again</p>
        <p>IPopular</p>
        <p>18 Arid</p>
        <p>7 Female</p>
        <p>48 Type sizes</p>
        <p>desserts</p>
        <p>12 JoeNamath,</p>
        <p>red deer</p>
        <p>58 Fish sauce</p>
        <p>2Roguish</p>
        <p>and others</p>
        <p>UArab</p>
        <p>SSIhusfL.)</p>
        <p>3 Uncommon</p>
        <p>1 Fixed</p>
        <p>country</p>
        <p>55 Voids</p>
        <p>IFoodfish</p>
        <p>duu^e</p>
        <p>13Gdd,in</p>
        <p>partner</p>
        <p>SBibUcal</p>
        <p>21 Musical</p>
        <p>Spain</p>
        <p>58 Undersea</p>
        <p>region</p>
        <p>notes</p>
        <p>14 Scent</p>
        <p>elevation</p>
        <p>1 Inventor &amp;lt;4</p>
        <p>23EIssay</p>
        <p>IS Beige</p>
        <p>57 Universal</p>
        <p>dynamite</p>
        <p>25 Throw with</p>
        <p>18 Flatfish</p>
        <p>language</p>
        <p>7 Stadium</p>
        <p>violence</p>
        <p>17 Elaris wife</p>
        <p>58 Assam</p>
        <p>yell</p>
        <p>28 Grafted</p>
        <p>18 Bundle of</p>
        <p>silkworm</p>
        <p>S Mountain</p>
        <p>(Her.)</p>
        <p>grain</p>
        <p>56 Totals</p>
        <p>in</p>
        <p>27 Saintes</p>
        <p>28 Declare</p>
        <p>8 Seine</p>
        <p>Crete</p>
        <p>(abbr.)</p>
        <p>for score 22 Soak flax 24 Machines for turners 28 Certain horses 22 To move aside S3 Nautical word 24 Edible root 36 Comedian</p>
        <p>Avg. solatlon time: 21 bHr.</p>
        <p>BBBQ nmm</p>
        <p>BOdsn Mmm SradDldBIld</p>
        <p>BSia BSIlia [^D S11D Q[3Qn</p>
        <p>ITIRIYI</p>
        <p>J(4Bisoa 27TrapordrumlG|A|E|L SfPomidiiig '  12-27</p>
        <p>imidements Answer to yesterdays pmsle.</p>
        <p>TT</p>
        <p>28Amiztare 29 Arm bone S6^i|Voadi II Weaken 35 Chess pieces 38 An eternity MThste 42Ronin 41 Extensive</p>
        <p>47 Heal</p>
        <p>48 Other (L) 4Ufli S8Arabdoak</p>
        <p>51 Youth</p>
        <p>52 Finale</p>
        <p>54 Small bed</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>i5</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>52</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>rr</p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>54</p>
        <p>FT</p>
        <p>?o</p>
        <p>CRYPTOQUn</p>
        <p>12-27</p>
        <p>ONGGKZ LZNIHAKZ OKUHDAKP</p>
        <p>SHII HC LKZIHADS CZKKPHU</p>
        <p>Yesterdays Cryptoqnlp TURKEY FRAME MAKES FOR POT OF TASTY SOUP.</p>
        <p>O IOYT King rtgtun SyndicaU, Inc.</p>
        <p>Todays Cryptoqai^ dne: N equals I</p>
        <p>The Cryptoqnlp is a simple substitution cipher in which eadi letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostro|d)e can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.</p>
        <p>r.</p>
        <p>WfUk toweladks skat*at Sport* World That* why *vry Tuesday night is Ladies Night. When ladies rent skate free. Or, get In for $1.00 with their own skates. With supervisin. Anda super good time.</p>
        <p>WUNK-TV Ch. 25</p>
        <p>TuMdwy</p>
        <p>7 00 People</p>
        <p>7 30 Report</p>
        <p>8 00 Ballet St&amp;gt;ocs</p>
        <p>9 30 Hocdown 10 30 Country</p>
        <p>8 30 Astronomy</p>
        <p>8 45 Animals</p>
        <p>9 00 Sesame St 10.00 Images</p>
        <p>10 20 Ready</p>
        <p>10 40 Metric</p>
        <p>11 00 People II 30 Bread</p>
        <p>11 45 Holiday</p>
        <p>12 00 Elizabethan 12 30 Elect Co</p>
        <p>I IS 1 30</p>
        <p>1  40</p>
        <p>2  00 2 15</p>
        <p>2  30</p>
        <p>3  00</p>
        <p>3  X</p>
        <p>4  00</p>
        <p>5  00 5.</p>
        <p>6  00</p>
        <p>6  30</p>
        <p>7  00</p>
        <p>7  30</p>
        <p>8  00</p>
        <p>9  00</p>
        <p>10  30</p>
        <p>/Cents 2 Plus You Rcadalong Holiday Self, inc Ammals People Lilias Over E asy Sesame St Mr Rogers Elect Co Zoom</p>
        <p>Discoverers</p>
        <p>Ebony</p>
        <p>Report</p>
        <p>Ballet</p>
        <p>Performance Book Beat</p>
        <p>when her mother starred in it. And shes thinking of a stage role early next year.</p>
        <p>Im probably going to do a show at Joe Papps Public Theater in New York next March, an original musical by a girl named Sarah Kemochan, she said. A wee smile tugged at the comers of her mouth.</p>
        <p>Its called, ah, Sleep-aroundtown.</p>
        <p>She wont have a long commute to work. Unlike her fa-.</p>
        <p>mous parents, she said she lives in New York, not here. She was asked if this is to avoid getting addled by life in Tinseltown.</p>
        <p>Yeah, and they have better old movies in New York, she observed. And its easier for me to be active there.</p>
        <p>Here, I just sort of end up sitting in my car and turning on the radio. After two weeks, I know all the words to the tops in pqjs and nothing else.</p>
        <p>Slopes In Top Shape</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Heres a report of the latest conditions on ski slopes in and around North Carolina from the Southeastern Ski Area Association and resort owners as of 9 a.m. today:</p>
        <p>APPALACHIAN:  Excellent</p>
        <p>conditions. 24-to-30 inch base. 8 inches of new man-made powder. two chairlifts and one tow operating, one advanced, two intermediate and one beginner slope open.</p>
        <p>BEECH MOUNTAIN: Good conditions. l2-to-60 inch base, groomed powder surface, four chairlifts and one tow operating. one expert, two intermediate, and two beginner slopes open.</p>
        <p>CATALOOCHEE:  Good to</p>
        <p>very good conditions, 15-to-20 inch base, 10 to 12 inches of new man-made snow, one chairlift and two rope tows operating, one intermediate, one novice and one beginner slope open.</p>
        <p>HOUND EARS: Good to excellent conditions. 24-to-36 inch base, three inches of new man-made powder, one chairlift and</p>
        <p>Show Stopped By III Liza</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - A doctor was to examine Liza Minnelli today to determine if she can return to the Broadway production The Act after missing seven shows because of bronchial trouble and the flu.</p>
        <p>Miss Minnelli was resting at home, eating chicken soup and watching television. according to the stars spokeswoman, Peggy Siegal.</p>
        <p>A doctor examined Miss Minnelli before last Wednesdays show and found she had a 104-degree fever, the spokeswoman said. The star missed two shows Wednesday, one each 'Thursday and Friday, two shows Saturday and one performance Monday night.</p>
        <p>Producers for the show said they lost $184,000 in revenue because Miss Minnelli has no understudy and the show couldnt go on. The Act has a t&amp;lt;^ ticket price of $25.</p>
        <p>Miss Minnelli also missed a performance recently when she suffered mild smoke inhalation after the drapes in her apartment caught fire.</p>
        <p>one tow operating, one intermediate and one beginner slope open.</p>
        <p>MILL RIDGE: Excellent conditions, 18-to-24 inch base, 5 inches of new man-made powder, one chairlift and one tow operating, one intermediate and one beginner slope open.</p>
        <p>SAPPHIRE VALLLEY: Excellent conditions. 30-to-36 inch base, 2 to 8 inches of new man-made powder, one lift and one tow operating, one intermediate and one beginner slope open.</p>
        <p>SEVEN DEVILS: Good conditions. lO-to-14 inch base, 6 inches of new man-made powder. one lift and two tows operating. one teaching, one intermediate and one beginner slope open.</p>
        <p>SUGAR MOUNTAIN: Good to excellent conditions, 12-to-55 inch base, powder surface, three chairlifts and one tow operating, two intermediate and two beginner slopes open.</p>
        <p>WOLF LAUREL: Good conditions. 18-10-40 inch base, man-made powder surface, one chairlifts and one tow operating. one intermediate and one beginner slope open.</p>
        <p>GATLINBURG, Tenn.: Very good to excellent conditions, 10-to-24 inch base, powder surface, one chairlift and two tows operating, one advanced, one intermediate and one beginner slope open.</p>
        <p>SKY VALLEY. Ga.: Good conditions, 12-to-48 inch base, packed powder surface, one lift and one tow operating, one intermediate and two beginner slopes open.</p>
        <p>q DOWNTOWN g.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>PLAZA</p>
        <p>Cinema 1</p>
        <p>PITT-PLAZA CENTER  756-0088</p>
        <p>CLOSE ENCOUNTERS</p>
        <p>OF THE THWO KWO</p>
        <p>Sorry. No Passes Of Any Kind Accoptad On This Engagement! Show 12 Noon-2:30-5;00-7:30-10 PM.</p>
        <p>Thairtrs Claarwf Ahw Each Showing I</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0014" />
        <p>14The Dily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.TiMKUy, Decembers?, 1977</p>
        <p>J5T BEFORE TH TEST BE6AN OUR TEACHER 6065,"(X)e5 EVER'f'ONE HAVE A PENCIL?"</p>
        <p>THIS FAT KIP ACROSS THE AISLE FROM ME GOES "I PON'Tl''</p>
        <p>THEN THIS OTHER KIP WITH THE 6LA5S6S 6065,SURE YOU PO. HOU HAVE MINE!"</p>
        <p>whatever HAPPENEP TO THE WORP SAlP"?</p>
        <p>-r</p>
        <p>Four Injured In Five Accidents</p>
        <p>An estimated $10,800 property damage resulted and four persons reported injured in a series of five traffic collisions investigated by Greenville Police on Christmas eve, Christmas Day and yesterday.</p>
        <p>Officers reported heaviest damage resulted from a Christmas Day mishap on Tenth Street, 150 fwt East of the Forest Hill Circle intersection involving cars driven by Robert Leon Chandler of Route 1, Chocowinitv; Robert Gaines Kit-trell of 202 Fern Dr.: Cathy Lynn Hardee of 2003 East Greenville Blvd.: and Rosalie Keys Grimes of Washington.</p>
        <p>Police, who charged Kittrell with driving under the influence and operating left of center, estimated damage at $300 to the Chandler car. $5,000 to the Hardee vehicle and $2.500 to the Grimes car.</p>
        <p>Kittrell. Miss Hardee and Mrs. Grimes were reported injured in the mishap by investigators who failed to report any damage to the Kittrell auto.</p>
        <p>Michael Todd Brown of 1006 West Wright Rd. was charged with failing to stop for a stop sign following investigation of a 4:15 p.m. mishap Saturday at the intersection of 14th Street and Myrtle Avenue.</p>
        <p>Officers reported the Brown car collided with an auto driven by Warden Ormond Brown of Williamston, causing an estimated $800 damage to the</p>
        <p>Warden Brown car and $900 damage to the Michael Brown vehicle.</p>
        <p>A 4:55 p.m. Saturday collision at the intersection of Greenville and Arlington Boulevards involved cars driven by Frank James Haddock of Route 1. Grimesland and Thomas Peter Butler of 2605 South Wright Rd.</p>
        <p>Officers, who charged Haddock with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety, set damage to the Butler car at $200. No damage resulted to the Haddock car, according to police.</p>
        <p>A 2 a.m. Monday mishap on Greene Street. 80 feet South of the Dudley Street intersection involved a pedestrian. Gloria Maxine Burton of Route 1. Greenville and a car driven by John Randolph of 1207 South Pitt St. police reported.</p>
        <p>Officers reported Mrs. Burton was injured and taken to Pitt Memorial Hospital for treatment after being struck by the Randolph car as she allegedly ran into the path of the vehicle.</p>
        <p>An 11 a.m. mishap yesterday on Hooker Road. 300 feet South of the Glendale Court intersection involved a city-owned car driven by Alton Earl Warren of Yorktown Square Apts., and William Glenn Chase of 29A Glendale Ct.</p>
        <p>Police estimated damage from the mishap at $300 to the Chase car and $800 to the car driven by Warren.</p>
        <p>Charges Dropped Over Protesting</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - A Superior Court in the District of Columbia has dropped charges lodged against comedian Dick Gregory and four other people arrested for protesting at the South African embassy.</p>
        <p>A court spokesman said Monday that federal prosecutors decided against pressing charges</p>
        <p>Light Damage In Sunday Fire</p>
        <p>Greenville firemen reported light damage resulted to a dwelling at 1006 Hillside Dr. from an 8:47 p.m. fire Christmas Day.</p>
        <p>Officers said the blaze, which involved wood and insulation behind a chimney, apparently started from a fault in the fireplace.</p>
        <p>Nurses Taking Duty Calls</p>
        <p>The following nurses are taking calls for all registered private duty nurses:</p>
        <p>Ann Barlow, 758-2360, Dec. 26-Jan. 1; Grace Turner, 756-0375, Jan. 2-8; and Beulah Haddock. 746-3838, Jan. 9-15.</p>
        <p>These nurses can be contacted at home or work for all registered private duty nurses.</p>
        <p>Dr. Wallace Hume Carothers invented nylon and obtained patent No. 2,071,250 for the fiber on Feb. 16, 1937.</p>
        <p>against Gregory, his wife, Lillian. Allan Jackson of Salisbury. N.C.. and Michael S. Matthews and Eric J. Burit of Washington.</p>
        <p>The five were arrested Christmas .Day on charges of violating a local law prohibiting demonstrations within 500 feet of a foreign embassy.</p>
        <p>Similar charges against the Gregorys and Massachusetts State Sen. William Owens were dropped last week. They had been arrested on Thank^ving Day at the same place for the same thing.</p>
        <p>Gregory said Sunday he was demonstrating to protest South Africas segregationist racial policies and objecting to U.S. corporate involvement with the apartheid regime in Pretoria.</p>
        <p>01 PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN THE DISTRICT COURT FILENO.:</p>
        <p>77CVDM AAelodie Austin Salter, Plaintiff vs</p>
        <p>Vannie Dwight Salter, Defendant To: Vannie Dwight Salter</p>
        <p>TAKE NOTICE, that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being Sought is as follows:</p>
        <p>The plaintiff in this action seeks to recover an absolute divorce from you on the grounds of a one year's separation.</p>
        <p>You are required to make a defense to such pleading not later than the 22nd day of January, 1978, and upon your failure to do so, the party seek ing service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.</p>
        <p>This the 6th day of December, 1977 Williamson, Shoffner,</p>
        <p>Herrin &amp;amp; Stokes R. Cherry Stokes Attorney for Plantiff P. O Box 552</p>
        <p>Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Dec 12, 19, 27, 1977</p>
        <p>01 PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>Norm Carolina PlttCounty</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Board of Commis sioners, pursuant to a Resolution passed at their meeting on the 5th day of December, 1977, do herewith declare their intent to close per manently a certain street or road</p>
        <p>shown on a map recorded in Map Book 26 at page 24 of the Pitt County Public Registryas a thirty foot street</p>
        <p>or road. Said road is located in Pitt County, outside any incorporated municipality and does not adjoin any residential subdivision. Said road is described as follows:</p>
        <p>A thirty foot street or road as shown on that map recorded in Map Book 26, at Page 24 of the Pitt County Public Registry.</p>
        <p>A public hearing relative to the closing of this road will be held at the Pitt County Courthouse in the Library at 10:00 o'clock, on the 3rd day of January, 1978.</p>
        <p>The Board ol Commissioners will hear any citiien relative to whether or not closing the road is contrary to the public interest and whether any individual owning property in the vicinity of the road would be deprived of reasonable means of ingress and egress to his property, and such other matters as the Board may deem rele vant.</p>
        <p>This the 5th day ol December, 1977 PITT COUNTY BOARDOF COAAMISSIONERS By: B. Alton Gardner,</p>
        <p>Chairman Dec. 12, 19, 27, 1977 and Jan. 2,1978</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE QUESTION OF THE ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER SI. ARTICLE VII OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE BY AMENDING SECTION 3MM ENTITLED "TABLE OF MINIMUM NUMBER OF REQUIRED OFF-STREET PARKING SPACES" Pursuant to Chapter I60A, Section 381 et. seq. of the General Statutes ol North Carolina, notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Greenville, North Carolina will hold a public hearing in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building, Greenville, North Carolina, on Thursday, January 12, 1978 at 8:00 P.M on the question ol the adoption of an ordinance amending Chapter 32, Article VII, Section 32 106 of the Code of the City of Greenville, North Carolina by adding "elderly housing projects - one space per unit".</p>
        <p>All persons interested are re quested to be present at iMhich time they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUN CIL.</p>
        <p>Lois O. Worthington City Clerk December 27,1977 8i January 3, 1978.</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEAR ING ON THE QUESTION OF THE ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE AAAENDING CHAPTER CHAPTER 32,</p>
        <p>ARTICLE VII OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE BY AMENDING SECTION SM04(a) ENTITLED "REWIRED VEGETATIW AND TRAFFIC CONTROL" Pursuant to Chapter 160A, Section 381 et. seq. of the General Statutes of North Carolina, notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Greenville. North Carolina, will hold a public hearing in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building, Greenville. North Carolina, on Thursday. January 12, 1978 at 8:00 P.M. on the question ol the adoption of an ordinance amending Chapter 32, Article VII of the Code of the City of Greenville, Norm Carolina, by amending Section 32 104(a) entitled "Required Vegetation and Traffic Control."</p>
        <p>A copy of said ordinance is on file in the City Clerk's office and may be in spected by any interested citiien dur ing regular business hours at any time prior to said hearing.</p>
        <p>All persons interested are re quested to be present at which time they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUN CIL</p>
        <p>Lois O. Worthington City Clerk December 27. 1977 &amp;amp; January 3, 1978</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING</p>
        <p>Notice is hereby given that the Greenville City Council will conduct a public hearing on Thursday, January 12. 1978 in the City Council Chambers, third floor of the Municipal Building, Greenville, North (Carolina at 8:00 P.M. on the proposed South Evans Redevelop ment Project of the Community Development Program No. BN 77 HN 37 0005.</p>
        <p>The Redevelopment Area designated as appropriate for the Redevelopment Project is as follows:</p>
        <p>BEGINNING at a point where the center line of the Norfolk Southern Railroad intersects the center line of the Seaboard Coastline Railroad and running in a northerly direction and along the center line of the Seaboard Coastline Railroad approsimately 1,640 feet more or less to a point where the center line of said Seaboard Coastline Railroad and the northern property line of 11th Street (if extended) would intersect; thence running in an easterly direction along the northern property line of 11th Street approximately 1,100 feet more or less to the western property line of Greene Street; thence, in a northerly direction and along the western right of way line of Greene Street approx imately 330 feet to a point, the southern rightof-way line of 10th Street; thence, in an easterly direction and along the southern property line of lOth Street approximately 1,260 feet more or less to a point in the western right-of way line of Charles Boulevard; thence in a southerly direction and along the western right of way line of Charles Boulevard approximately 2,300 feet more or less to a point in the center line of the NorfolkSouthern Railroad; thence, in a westerly direction and along the center line of the Norfolk-Southern Railroad approximately 3,050 feet more or less to the point of BEGINNING.</p>
        <p>The purpose of such hearing is to consider the undertaking of a project under State and local law with Federal assistance under Title I of</p>
        <p>01 PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>the Housing and (.ommumiy Development Act ol 1974, to acquire land in the project area, to demolish or remove buildings and im provements; to install, construct, or reconstruct streets, utilities and other project improvements, to make land available lor development or redevelopment by private enter prise or public agencies as authoriz ed by law At the hearing, the proposals and plans for the relocation of families, individuals and businesses located within the above redevelopment area as well as other elements ol the pro ject will be open for discussion The redevelopment proposals with such maps, plans, contracts or other documents as form a part of said pro posals will be available, for at least ten days prior to the hearing, at City Hall in the Office of the Planner. Greenville, North Carolina. Any per sons or organization desiring to be heard will be afforded an opportunity , to be heard at such hearing.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUN ;</p>
        <p>^"ciTYOF GREENVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>Lois D. Worthington. City Clerk December 27, 1977 &amp;amp; January 3, 1978  ,</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS OF LUCY CHERRY CRISP North Carolina PlttCounty All persons, firms and corporations having claims against Lucy Cherry Crisp, deceased, are notified to ex hibit them on or before June 2), 1978, to Richard H Crisp at 1201 North Overlook Drive, Greenville, North Carolina, or to Evelyn Laurence Boyette at 1703 Beaumont Drive. Greenville, North Carolina, Co Executors of the decedent s estate, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Debtors of the dece dent are asked to make immediate payment to the above named Co Executors.</p>
        <p>This the 16th day of December. 1977.</p>
        <p>BLOUNT, CRISP a. SAVAGE BY: NELSON B CRISP attorneys AT LAW 119 West Third Street Greenville, NC 27834 Dec 20, 27, 1977, Jan 3. 10, 1978.</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION BY PUBLICATION</p>
        <p>Notice is hereby given that the cor -poration known as Bunion's Super market, Inc is being dissolved. All persons having claims against said corporation should present them to the undersigned on or before January 10. 1978. or this notice will be plead in bar ol any recovery</p>
        <p>This the 15th day of December. 1977</p>
        <p>BUN TON'S SUPERMARKET,</p>
        <p>INC.</p>
        <p>By. InaM Bunton President Dec 19, 27, 1977, Jan 2, 9, 1978</p>
        <p>APPENDIX "A"</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC DOCKET NO. W-6SI BEFORE THE NORTH CAROLINA UTILITIES COMMISSION Notice IS hereby given that HerKfrix Barnhill Company, Inc , Post Office Box 1904. Greenville. North Carolina, has applied to the North Carolina Utilities Commission lor a Certificate ol Public Conve nience and Necessity to furnish water utility service in Pleasant Ridge Sub division. Pitt County, North Carolina,, and for approval ol the following rates:</p>
        <p>METERED RATE: (Residential Service)</p>
        <p>Up to first 2,000 gallons $8.00 per month</p>
        <p>All over 2,000 gallons $.40 per 1.000 gallons CONNECTION CHARGE:</p>
        <p>$800.00 per tap.</p>
        <p>The Commission has scheduled the application lor public hearing in the Commission Hearing Room. Dobbs Building. 430 North Salistzury Street. Raleigh. North Carolina, on Tuesday, January 24, 1978. at 11:00 A M The Public Staff is required by statute to represent the using and consuming public in proceedings before the Commission. Written statements to the Public Staff should include any information which the writer wishes to be considered by the Public Staff in its investigation of the matter, and such statements should be addressed to Hon. Hugh A. Wells, Executive Director of the Public Staff, North Carolina Utilities Com mission. Post Office Box 991. Raleigh, North Carolina 27602.</p>
        <p>Persons desiring to intervene in the matter as formal parties of record should file a motion under North Carolina Utilities Commission Rules R1 6. R1 7. and R) 19 at least ten (10) days prior to the date of the hearing Persons desiring to present testimony or evidence for the record should appear at the hearing. Per sons desiring to send written statements to inform the Commission of their position jn the matter should address their statements to the North Carolina Utilities Commission, Post Office Box 991, Raleigh, North Carolina 27602. However, such writ ten statements cannot be considered competent evidence unless those per sons appear at the hearing and testify coTKerning the information contain ed in their statements.</p>
        <p>The Attorney General is also authorized to represent the using and consuming public in proceedings before the Commission. Statements to the Attorney General should be ad dressed to: Hon. Rufus L. Edmisten, Attorrrey Gerreral, c/ Utilities Divi -Sion, Post Office Box 629, Raleigh, North Carolina 27602</p>
        <p>ISSUED BY ORDER OF THE COMMISSION.</p>
        <p>This the 12th day of December, 1977</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA UTILITIES COMMISSION Katherine M. Peele.</p>
        <p>Chief Clerk Dec. 20, 27, 1977</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the" estate of Herbert Avery late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate ol said deceased to, present them to the undersigned Ex ecutor within six (6) months from. date ol the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate please make im mediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 1st. day of December, 1977. Robert Avery P O Box 23 Trenton, N.C.</p>
        <p>Executor ol the estate of Herbert Avery, deceased.</p>
        <p>December 5, 12,19, 27, 1977</p>
        <p>beetle, PIPNO-</p>
        <p>I TELL YOU LAST WEEK TO...</p>
        <p>LAST WEB&amp;lt; WAS LAST WEEK. THIS IS THIS</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0015" />
        <p>TheDafly BeOectw, Greenville, N.C.- Tuesday Decemba27,197715</p>
        <p>01 PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>NOTICe TO CRBOITORS</p>
        <p>Th undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Juanita W. Whichard, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or before the 2nd day of June, t7#, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the said estate will please make im mediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This the 2nd day of December, 1977. Judson Eric Whichard, Sr. Administrator of the Estate of Juanita W. Whichard Route I, Box 68 Stokes, NC 27884 Robert O. Rouse, 111 James, Hite, Cavendish 8, Blount Attorneys at Law P. O. Drawer IS Greenville, NC 27834 Dec. 6, 13, 20, 27, 1977</p>
        <p>INTHJOCNERAL COURTQf JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE MATTER OP THE ESTATE OP W.J. BULLOCK NorttiCwdllM</p>
        <p>County of Pitt</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executrix if the Estate of W. J. BULLOCK, late of</p>
        <p>Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said W.J. Bullock to present them to the under signed Executrix, or her attorneys, on or before June U 1978, or this Notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate ment.</p>
        <p>his 9th day of December, 1977. ALMA CANNON BULLOCK SIS East 2nd Street Ayden, N. C. 28SI3 Executrix of the Estate of W.J. BULLOCK, Deceased</p>
        <p>payr</p>
        <p>Th</p>
        <p>Gaylord, Singleton 8, AAcNally at La</p>
        <p>Attorneys at Law P O. Drawer S4S Greenville, N. C. 27834 December 13, 20, 27 and January 3, 1978</p>
        <p>ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Nortti Carolina Pitt County</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the estate of ALMA SMITH BRANCH, deceased, late of Pitt County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the under signed at the offices of LANIER 8, AAcPHERSON on or before the 13th day of June, 1978 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will</p>
        <p>fI lease make immediate payment to he undersigned.</p>
        <p>This the 12th day of December, 1977.</p>
        <p>AAARGARET MARIE FLANAGAN ADMINISTRATRIX ESTATE OF ALMA SMITH BRANCH LANIER 8i MCPHERSON P.O. Box ISOS 219 Cotanche Street Greenville, NC 27834 Dec. 12, 19, 27,1977 and Jan. 2, 1978</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>AutwForSM*</p>
        <p>HASTINGS PORO has daily rentals at reasonable prices. Call 7S8 0114.</p>
        <p>Having Engine Trouble? See "The Engine People"</p>
        <p>Auto Specialty Co.</p>
        <p>917W. 5th. St. 758-1131</p>
        <p>Will Pay Top Dollar For Junk Cars Call 752 6838 or 758-2901</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>AMC</p>
        <p>PACER DL W. Fuljy equipped, payments. Call 746 4728 after</p>
        <p>Take up 5 p.m. and weekends.</p>
        <p>GREMLIN W4. Air, power steering, front disc brakes. Make offer. 758 5297, ask for Robert.</p>
        <p>Buick</p>
        <p>BUICK my Electra 225. Good condi tion. 756 4961.</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>OwvrolBt</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET 1976 Corvette. 24,000 miles, air, automatic, power win dows, stereo. Like new. *7995. Caii Holt Oldsmobile, 756 3115.</p>
        <p>CORVETTE 1977.  350  engine,</p>
        <p>automatic, fuliy equipped, 10,000 ac tual miles. Still under warranty. 244 0294.</p>
        <p>CORVETTE 1976. T</p>
        <p>power windows, AAA/FM radio. Will trade. 756 4364 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>MONTE CARLO 1976. Assume payments or buy. Excellent condi tion. 752 6340.</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>MUSTANG II 1975. Blue, AM/FM radio, radial tires, vinyl top, 4 speed. 758 1280 or 758 4286 after 5.</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>Oldsmobile</p>
        <p>OLDS 1973 Royale 88. 2 door vinyl top. 28,000 miles. Top Condition. *1550. 756 1210.</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>REALTOR'S</p>
        <p>Corner</p>
        <p>Buying or Selling, For Best Results Try Our "Personal Service."</p>
        <p>Hd.g. nichoLs</p>
        <p>AGENCY</p>
        <p>_</p>
        <p>f.hyp^756-365tf</p>
        <p>752-4012 anytime</p>
        <p>IDEAL LOCATION FOR OFFICE SITE. Located near Downtown Greenville, 1 block from the Courthouse and near the Post Office. Approximately 22,000 square feet of land area. Contact the D.G. Nichols Agency, 752-4012.</p>
        <p>2, 3, g 4 BEDROOM HOUSES IN GRIFTON FOR SALE OR RENT</p>
        <p>SAM E. NELSON</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>realtor</p>
        <p>524-4146</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>Foreign</p>
        <p>CAPRI 1972. V 6, 4 speed. Good con dition, good gas mileage. 756 3662.</p>
        <p>CAPRI 1972. Silver gray, superb itio</p>
        <p>miles per gallon. Excellent condition Cheap. 756 6967.</p>
        <p>VW 1962. Good mechanical condition. Good local transportation. *300. 752 7066.</p>
        <p>BICYCLING IS GREAT exercise . . . and you'll discover a great selection of models and equipment listed daily. In the Classified Ads.</p>
        <p>27 Bicycle For Sale</p>
        <p>SCHWINNS 45 speed. 15 speed, girl's 3 speed, tandem 3 speed. Sting Ray. 756 0689.</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>Camper For Sale</p>
        <p>SASSERS CAMPING Center now has Motor Homes, Mini Homes. Con verted Vans, Prowler Travel</p>
        <p>Trailers, Cox and Starcraft P&amp;lt;ups, Cabover, Truck Campers and Truck Covers, in stock. North 117 Business,</p>
        <p>Goldsboro NC, 734 4616, Open Mon day through Saturday, 9 a.m. until Dusk. Friday. 9a.m. until 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>1973 VW CAMPER. Good miles per gallon. Excellent condition. *3150. 756 2502 or 756 2295.</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>NEW 1977 Ford Van America. List price *10.400. Sale price *8750. Call John Wharton at 756 4267.</p>
        <p>1961 CHEVY 20 Pickuo., Large custom bed *700 Call 758 976.</p>
        <p>1976 JEEP Wagoneer. 22,000 miles, one owner, power steering and brakes, air. *4800. 752 2754 days, 756 1469 nights.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>HelpWented</p>
        <p>PARTY CHIEF / Instrumentman. Contact Olsen Associates. Inc., Engineers &amp;amp; Surveyors, R. O. Box 93, Greenville, NC, 752 1137</p>
        <p>HARO WORKER wanted for counter clerk. Must be neat and dependable. Apply College View Cleaners, 109 Grande Avenue.</p>
        <p>NURSES WANTED RNsand LPNs. Straight 7 til 3 or 3 til 11. Starting salary for RNs, *5.25, LPNs, *4 an hour. Every other weekend off. New 124 bed nursing home. Call 792 1616, 792 1646, 792 4049.</p>
        <p>SALES OPENING for one person with ambition and desire to be in sales. Salary plus commission to start Paid schooling. Call 756 1133 between 9 and II a.m., the last two weeks of December.</p>
        <p>DUE TO THE increase in business, we are now hiring broilermen, cashiers, waitresses and bos people. Apply in person from 9 a.m. til 11 a.m. daily at Bonanza, 520 Greenville Boulevard. No phone calls.</p>
        <p>CONSTRUCTION HELPER, trainee tor supervisor position. Good spot tor advancement. Transportafion pro vided. Call East Carolina Builders, 752 7194, 9 5,</p>
        <p>RN AND LPN needed. Orientation and training program provided. Competitive salary, excellent fringe benefits. New modern iacility. Call Greenville Hemodialysis Center, 752 1520between* 30and5:30.</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENING tor re^</p>
        <p>tionist with typing and light keeping. Paid vacation and in surance. Good hours. 9 til 5, Monday Friday. Downtown office. 758 4131 for appointment.</p>
        <p>WorkWaitttd</p>
        <p>ODD JOBS unlimited. Painting, carpentry and roofing. 758 6085.</p>
        <p>PAINTER DESIRES interior and ex terior work. Also wallpapering. 19 years experience. All work guaranteed. 746 4936._</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>4S Farm Eqiiipmant</p>
        <p>FARM MACHINERY Auction Sale Tuesday. January 3 at 10 a.m. ISO tractors, 500 implements. Wayne Im plement Auction Corporation, P. O. Box 233, Highway 117 South,</p>
        <p>Box 233, Highway 117 south, Goldsboro, NC 27530 NC 188. 734 4234.</p>
        <p>50 Garaga-Yard Sale</p>
        <p>YARD SALE Musical instruments good for school band, antiques, bot ties, furniture and books. November 19,9 til 4. Corner of 13th and Evans.</p>
        <p>LIvestocK</p>
        <p>HORSEBACK RIDING, riding equipment. Jarman Stables, 752 5237.</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>/Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>WE ARE Beautyrest headquarters  bedding and hide a beds. Home Furniture Company. 701 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>STEAM CLEAN your carpet the newest way to professionally clean your carpet at home. Available to rent at Carpets by George, 752 3523 or 752 3524.</p>
        <p>FILL DIRT, builder sand, top soil, and rock. J. L. McDaniel, 756-2351, after 3:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>YOU CAN "STEAM" clean carpets, professionally clean with new pro table Rinse N Vac. Rent at Rental Tool Company across from Hastings Ford. Now open  Rental Tool Company.</p>
        <p>FILL DIRT, lop soil, rocks and sand for sale. Large loads. Henry Wor thington, 746 3461.</p>
        <p>NEED FURNITURE? We have it Brands you'll recognize. Financing available to fit your needs. Home Furniture Store, 701 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>LOT CLEARING, bulldozer and bacKhoe work and farm ditching. Cannon 8, Smith Construction. Call Donald Scott Cannon, 746 4600 or David H. smith, 746 3692.</p>
        <p>BOOTLEG PRICES:  Men's  knit</p>
        <p>slacks and jeans, *9.99, sportcoats, *19.95; lady's pantsuits, *11.99, slacks, *5.99; tops, *4.99. Large selection, Mill Outlet Clothing, 264 Bypass, (acrossfrom Nichols), Greenville</p>
        <p>DO IT YOURSELF and save. Rent the professional carpet cleaning machine, Steamex. Call Larry's Carpefland, 3010 East Tenth Street, 758 2300.</p>
        <p>WANT YOUR AREA rug bound or fr inged? We do it! Whifchursf Floor &amp;amp; Carpet Center, 103 Trade Street 756 2747.</p>
        <p>OAK FIREWOOD for sale. *35 a load Over ' 7 cord. Call Mike at 758 9165.</p>
        <p>PIANOGRGAN WAREHOUSE If</p>
        <p>you didn't buy it here, you probably paid too much. 730 Greenville Boulevard, 756 2032. Sales Rentals</p>
        <p>THE SALVATION ARMY NEEDS YOUR used clothing, furniture.</p>
        <p>household items, etc Receipts for in</p>
        <p>come tax are available. 756 3388.</p>
        <p>POOL TABLE. 4X8 regulation size.</p>
        <p>slate top. 758 0027 or 758 :</p>
        <p>OAK FIREPLACE wood. Split and stacked. Ready to deliver. Call H. T or Judy Caton, 752 6730.</p>
        <p>PUMP HOUSE thermostats. *12.95 Womack Electric Supply. 758 5047.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>MICBllanou</p>
        <p>LARGE LOADS of sand, topsoil, field dirt and rock. Also landscaping. Jim Hudson, 756 4742.</p>
        <p>HARDWOOD Split and delivered anytime *35. Phil or Johnnie, 756 1409 or 756 1841 days, 758 4978 or 756 5394 after 5</p>
        <p>TREES RE/MOVED, pruned and top ped. Dead wood cleared, cabling. Chip'n Dale Tree Service, 752 5996.</p>
        <p>POLAROID SX70 camera, *100, Na tional cash register, *140; new cassette stereo with BSR record changer, *175. 614 Clark Street.</p>
        <p>FIREWOOD. Cut and delivered. *25 a load. 753 4458after 5p.m.</p>
        <p>LARGE LOADS of split oak wood. *25. Any length, any time. 752 3759 or 752 4354.</p>
        <p>TWIN HORIZONTAL Whirlwind power plants for sale. Most practical wind machine on earth. Disengages hydrogen gas from tanks, ponds or wells. Charges battery packs for cars, golf carts and business places or homes. Grant Dohm, 604 Oak Street, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>/MOVING TO NEW location. Must sell black sofa, end fable, lamps, glass kitchenette fable and 2 chairs, chair mats, drafting fable and other furniture. Priced to sell. 756 3359.</p>
        <p>load. Delivered and stacked. 75 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>FOOSBALL M/kCHINE. Commercial type Priced to sell at *100 751 321*</p>
        <p>Sporting Good</p>
        <p>REMINGTON RIFLE. Bolt action 243 With Weaver 6X scope. *250. 758 4578 or 758 3375.</p>
        <p>WINCHESTER RIFLE 300</p>
        <p>magnum. Excellent condition. *175. 758 3375 or 758 4578.</p>
        <p>60</p>
        <p>INSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>PIANO AND GUITAR lessons. Daily, afternoons. Richard J. Knapp, B.A., 756 2563.</p>
        <p>A60BILE HOMES</p>
        <p>64 /Mobile HotTiM For Rant</p>
        <p>3 /kND 3 bedroom mobile homes. Good location. No pets. 752 3286 or 825 5391.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES and lots for rent. City sewer and water. Colonial Park. Licensed mobile home movers statewide. Also repair work. 758-4413.</p>
        <p>la X 60, three bedroom, furnished. Days, 756 5527, evenings after 6:30, 746 6537.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM trailer. Located on (rivate lot near Proctor &amp;amp; Gamble. 56 0528</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS, furnished. Telephone 756 1900</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE JANUARY 1. 12 X 60. 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, *120 Also 10 X 50, *90. No pets. 758 3644</p>
        <p>12 X 80. 2 bedrooms, furnished, central heat and air, washer. 752 3940.</p>
        <p>SALE OR RENT 12 X 70  3</p>
        <p>bedrooms. 2 baths, totally electric with washer, dryer and air. 756-4027.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM carpeted mobile home. Raised kitchen, 1'/j baths. No pets. *125 a month 752 0278.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROO/WS. washer, air Nice large lot. 756 7912 after 5.</p>
        <p>12 X 6S totally electric mobile home. Colonial Park. *160 per month. 758 2347.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOMS For rent or sale. Ex cellent condition. No pets. 758-2679.</p>
        <p>66 Mobil* Homo For Salo</p>
        <p>1973 RITZCRAFT 12 X 60.  2</p>
        <p>bedrooms. Excellent condition. Priced to sell. 746 3857.</p>
        <p>1969, 10 X SO Circle M. Fully furnish ed. *2600 firm. 758 7271.</p>
        <p>1974, 12 X 65. 2 bedrooms, central</p>
        <p>heat and air, partially furnished. Ex nt condition. 756 0035.</p>
        <p>cellenf (</p>
        <p>1973 HAVELOCK for sale or rent. Sell for *3995 or rent for *125. 756 0131.</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>72</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>INSULATION</p>
        <p>Four Seasons Foam Insulation Inc</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Executive Desks</p>
        <p>60"x30" beautiful 'walnut finish. Ideal for home or office.</p>
        <p>Reg. Price</p>
        <p>$79.50</p>
        <p>Special Prica</p>
        <p>$129.50</p>
        <p>taff office</p>
        <p>EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>569 S. Evans St. 752-2175</p>
        <p>CRAFTED</p>
        <p>SERVICES</p>
        <p>Quality Furniture Refinithing and Repairs. Superior Caning for all type chairs, larger Selection of Custom Picture Framing, Survey Stakes  Any length, all types of pallets, Hand-crafted rope hammocks, selected framed reproductions.</p>
        <p>Eastern Carolina Sheltered Workshop</p>
        <p>Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 758^18  8 A.M.-4i30 P.M.</p>
        <p>Graanviila, N.C.</p>
        <p>12X60 HOLIDAY home. Great condi tion. *250 down, *107 nr&amp;gt;onth. *200 rebate on down payments of all single wides. See J. M. Brown or Greg Har baugh at Conner Homes Corporation, 756 0333.</p>
        <p>13 X 60 CONNER. Great condition. *236 down, *99 nKMith. *200 rebate on down payments of all single wides. See J. M. Browm or Greg Harbaugh at Conner Homes Corporation, 756 0333.</p>
        <p>MUST SELL. Owner moved. Payments of *97.68. No equity. Colonial Park location. 752 6074 after 6 for appointment.</p>
        <p>PAINTING, ROOFING and repairs. No job loo small. All work guaranteed. 756 2008 anytime.</p>
        <p>FOR ALL YOUR real estate needs, call Fleming 8, Associates, 756-6234.</p>
        <p>73 Comnrwrclal Property</p>
        <p>2300 SQUARE FOOT commercial building in Greenville, Central air and heat, 2 restrooms. Financing available Harold Dail Realty, 758 0138 or call 758 0027.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT. 1500 square toot building. Available January 2. 107 Arlington Boulevard. Contact I. J. Edwards, Jr , 758 2616or 756 5024.</p>
        <p>COA6MERCIAL BUILDING for</p>
        <p>intai</p>
        <p>lease. Containing over 5000 square feet of floor space. On Dickinson Avenue, Phone 7M 57Mor 758 0638,</p>
        <p>76</p>
        <p>Farm For Laaa</p>
        <p>SOJMW POUNDS tobacco tor rent. Amoved off farm at 3S per pound. Call after 6 p.m., 825 3871.</p>
        <p>304180 POUNDS of tobacco for rent. To be moved off farm at 45c per pound. 752 6496.</p>
        <p>Housas For Sala</p>
        <p>GREAT LOAN assumption in Oakdale. Small equity and assume present owner's loan. Call for more details, Hignite and Company, Inc., 758 6666 anytime.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM HOME in well established neighborhood. Living room with fireplace, V'a baths, den. kitchen with eating area. Basement which could be used for game room with adioining laundry area All of</p>
        <p>this lor *39,500 Estate Resify Com pany. 752 50 nights, 752 3647 756 6652</p>
        <p>308 CAST 13tti 3 bedrooms, V'3 baths. garage.Oncorner lot Perfect for col lege. *29,500. Bill Williams Real Estafe. 752 2615</p>
        <p>REDUCED FROM *35.000 to *32,000. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air and heat. Good location. Harold Dail Realty, 756 0138 or call 7 0027.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROO/MS, I' l baths, garage, heat pump. *5500 and assume loan. 758 302.</p>
        <p>WHAT A WAY TO live. AAodern con temporary includes dining room, a large great room with Cathedral ceil ing, exposed beams, fireplace and sliding glass doors. 3 carpeted bedrooms, 2 baths, workshop and 2 wood decks. Beautiful wooded lot is setting for this home. *45,500. Whitley's House Station, 756-6050; evenings, 7 0816.</p>
        <p>Blount &amp;amp; Ball Realty</p>
        <p>756 3000</p>
        <p>New Listing In Belvedere Im maculate L shaped ranch features 3 bedrooms, 1'/ baths, cozy den with fireplace, carport, outside storage, fenced backyard. Nicely landscaped wooded tot. *45,400</p>
        <p>Slip info something more com fortable slip into this 4 bedroom split.level in Dellwood. Sunken den with fireplace, 2Vj baths, carport, fenced backyard. Owner transferred immediate occupancy possible. Very affordable at *51,900</p>
        <p>Well trimmed shrubs and price! Traditional style brick home in Dellwood features roomy family room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 tile baths, kitchen with breakfast area, carpet over hardwood floors, carport. Priced to sell at *47,500</p>
        <p>The spacious 1850 sq. ft. floorplan of this lovely home in Drexelbrook begins with a very inviting living room, dining room, and toyer area. When you add a restaurant size kitchen, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, closets galore, and a carport, rou really have a comfortable arxJ unctional home. See for yourself. *57,500</p>
        <p>WESTHAVEN. Start the New Year with a home we all can afford. 3 bedrooms, den, formal living room, dining room, central air, 2 baths. You will not find a home in this area for less. Only *42,500 or make us an offer. Stack Kiger Realty. 756 3088; nights, Dianne Whitehurst, 756-7222.</p>
        <p>PRETTY!</p>
        <p>NORTH HILLS This is such a quiet and pretty area and this is a strikingly beautiful home. Living room, family room, three bedrooms, two baths, garage.</p>
        <p>patio. Nicely landscaped lot. *38,900. BELVEDERE</p>
        <p>This floor plan is a best seller because of it's so functional and well planned. Great room with fireplace, dining area, kitchen with breakfast area, three bedrooms, two bafhs, garage. One fo see. New. *54,800.</p>
        <p>DUFFUS REALTY, INC.</p>
        <p>756 5395 Anytime</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM HOMES for rent. Great neighborhoods. Call Blount &amp;amp; Balt Realty, 756 3000.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>HouM For Sal*</p>
        <p>4 BEDROOM split level in Elmhurst School district. Family room with fireplace, 2' j bafhs, dining room, kit Chen, living room, carpet, fenced in backyard and workshop. 1900 square feet for *51,900. Call Blount 8. Ball Realty Company, Inc., 756 3000; nights, 752 8819, 752 4499, 752 0345.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM home Central heat. Desirable location, on lot 100 X 200 feet. Priced for quick sale at *13,000 E. G Anderson, Rober sonville, NC 27871.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE by owner. 3 bedrooms, 1</p>
        <p>bath, fireplace, carport, large shaded</p>
        <p>... .   -</p>
        <p>uaiii, HI  L.OI  ft ftf</p>
        <p>lot 1302 (Totten Road. College Court. Reduced for immediate sale. 756 3829 after 6.</p>
        <p>BIG SPACIOUS home waiting for you. Over 2,000 square feet. 5 bedrooms, living room, dining room, den with fireplace, kitchen with eat in area, 2 baths, workshop off car port, patio and deck. A home you have to see to believe. *59,500. Whitley's House Station, 756 6050, evenings, 7M08I6.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY LIVING AT its finest in this brick ranch home about 7 miles outside ol city limits sitting on an over I acre lot. Living room, dining room, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, outside storage, carpeted throughout. Built by A. B. Wingate *46.000 if you want a coun try home with modern touch, call Whitley's House Station. 756 6050, evenings, 752 7073</p>
        <p>HAS eVBRYTHiNC yoo're looking for 7 room home features living room, dining room, kitchen with eat in area, den with fireplace, built in bookshelves. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large utility, double garage, patio. Also a large lot *,500 Whitley's House Station. 756 6050. evenings. 756 4471</p>
        <p>Lots For Sal*</p>
        <p>HALF ACRE wooded lots in the coun try, 8 miles from Greenville. *4500. Hignite &amp;amp; Company, Inc., 7 6666 anytime; nights, 756 1921.</p>
        <p>B4</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>STORAGE Private, monthly. U Store It. Mini-Max Storage Warehouse, 756 3791.</p>
        <p>B6 Apartment For Rent</p>
        <p>Kings Row</p>
        <p>One and two bedroom garden apart ments with dishwasher, garbage</p>
        <p>disposal drapes and carpet. Perfect location. Located just off east Tenth</p>
        <p>Call 752 3519</p>
        <p>ONE, BEDROOM apartment. Carpeted, central air and heat. Close to university. 7 3311.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM large kitchen, den, bath, appliances, quiet location, no children, no pets. 756 2671.   -</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM townhouses. Fully carpeted, central air conditioning, electric heat, pool, laundry room. 756 3450afters.</p>
        <p>NEW 3 BEDROOM duplexes in Bren non Village. t4th Street Extension. Central air. *210. 756 7181.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment conve niently located to ECU. Call 7 2628 between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>BURNER REPAIR SERVICE</p>
        <p>OIL L.F., and Natural Gas 30 Ymts Exprinco</p>
        <p>Calldayornlght</p>
        <p>753-4764</p>
        <p>OUR CARPET PR ^ ARETHEBESTI .</p>
        <p>For furtner proof, ask about</p>
        <p>out free Waverly and Schumacher drapery fabric FREE with your purchase of carpet.</p>
        <p>WHOLESALE FABRICS OF SNOW HILL_</p>
        <p>WE REPAIR SCREENS &amp;amp; DOORS C.L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>CHIMNEY SWEEP</p>
        <p>A new service offer^ to Greenville and surrounding areas. We clean your chimneys. You can save up to 10% - 15% on the amount of heat generated. Helps prevent fire hazards.</p>
        <p>Dial 753-3503 day or night</p>
        <p>Farmville, N.C.</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE MECHANIC ELECTRICIAN</p>
        <p>experience in</p>
        <p>Requires minimum 5 years residential and industrial wiring. Salary range $9,708  $12,660. All State employee's benefits. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Contact:</p>
        <p>N.C. Division of Prisons P.O. Drawer 5044 Greenville, N.C. 27834 . 919-752-5138</p>
        <p>86 Apartment For Rent</p>
        <p>Ultimate In Apartment Living</p>
        <p>1, 2, and 3 bedrcxjms, washer, dryer, hook ups, pool, club house. Only 5 blocks from East Carolina University</p>
        <p>HOLIDAY DANCES</p>
        <p>2BIGONESI</p>
        <p>Holiday Dance  Wednesday,  December  28</p>
        <p>New Year's Eve Dance Party  Saturday, December 31</p>
        <p>LIVE MUSIC 8:30 until 12:00</p>
        <p>PIANO AND GUITAR LESSONS</p>
        <p>RICHARD J. KNAPP. B.A.</p>
        <p>y::;</p>
        <p>y; 105 Dupont Circle y:  Greenville,  NC  27834</p>
        <p>Phone</p>
        <p>756-2563</p>
        <p>LOTS OF FUN</p>
        <p>CanriUnas Largest</p>
        <p>WHICHARD'S BEACH</p>
        <p>Washington, N.C.</p>
        <p>For reservations, call 946-4275 (days) or 946-4727 (nights)</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>mbmdhI</p>
        <p>Check everywhere el* first. Then Call</p>
        <p>TAR RIVER ESTATES</p>
        <p>1401 Willow St 752 4225</p>
        <p>COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.</p>
        <p>Call 756-5067</p>
        <p>EASTBROOK</p>
        <p>AND</p>
        <p>VILLAGE GREEN</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments with heat, air condition, carpet, kit Chen appliancet. garbage disposals, nice laundromat facilities. 3 swimm ing poofs, 2 tennis courts and heat and hot water furnished in some units. No pets or loud parties allowed. Rent from *140 *210 per month Eastbrook - Eastbrook Drive off Greenville Blvd. (264 By pass). Call 758 4012. Village Green - *00 Heath Street off E 10th Street</p>
        <p>Love Trees?</p>
        <p>Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door. Quality construction, fireplaces. Heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units). Dishwashers, Washer dryer hook ups. Wall to Wall carpet, Ther mopane windows, extra insulation</p>
        <p>COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Arlington Blvd. Call 756 5067</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WE BUY USED CARS</p>
        <p>.JOHNSON /V'lOTOR CO</p>
        <p>Hadquortrs For Stihl a Homoitto</p>
        <p>Chain Saws</p>
        <p>Hendrix-Barnhill Co. 752-4122</p>
        <p>Rosictpntial Commerci</p>
        <p>J.B. Construction Co,</p>
        <p>General Contractors</p>
        <p>FREE ESTIMATES call 756 4673</p>
        <p>1978 TIME FOR ACHANGE</p>
        <p>Wm 1977 Really A Succeisful Yaw For You? Doat Your Preaant Job Offar /Ml The Opportunity You Want?</p>
        <p>If your anawar is no, you wiM ba m-laratfad m ttw oppertumty we offer. You may have been driving a truck, working In a factory, sotllng goods or sarvlcoo, feacMna ochool, or doing Ml ofhar IMnga poopio do to earn a living-yat you ora dtoutlsftod with your Mb. your tow Income, or the poopto you work wftti. Wo havo on opening lor one ponon in the (Jraanvilto aroa. Our aatoctton will bo based upon an unbtos-od portonal toitorvMw that will toll us and you If you ore suttabto for our buamass. If you ora sotoctod, you will bo thoroughly tralnod and may antoy oomingo of *I0 - *400 a wook. For a porsonal Intorvtow, coll 919-237-SI46 and ask for Mr. WSst.</p>
        <p>An Bowl Opswtunnv Compwy</p>
        <p>Banker's Life and Casualty Company, Inc.</p>
        <p>152 Parfcwood Shoppine cantor Wtlsoa N.C.27893</p>
        <p>MhmMU</p>
        <p>of GREENVILLE, N.C. INC</p>
        <p>1205 South Evans Street Greenville, N.C. 27834</p>
        <p>919-758-2107</p>
        <p>A National Personrtei Service</p>
        <p>REPRESENTATIVE SAMPLING OF JOB OPENINGS</p>
        <p>CoBAccawMigMiMgM</p>
        <p>MHtrWBigliMf*... MedHnicalEiiginMn. PncatiEflgiiMr......</p>
        <p>wytomnaMnaVftoi</p>
        <p>OttlMBiewir.......</p>
        <p>..tollUN</p>
        <p>..iofnm</p>
        <p>..toOMH</p>
        <p>..tillUN</p>
        <p>..BtaM</p>
        <p>IWBNtllllirlRirRlllBir</p>
        <p>IRSieirvBer.........</p>
        <p>ProyuiiirMily*!.</p>
        <p>ALL POSITIONS ARE FEE PAID</p>
        <p>B6 Apartmant For Rent</p>
        <p>Cherry Court</p>
        <p>Most luxurious 2 bedroom townhouses and 1 bedroom apart ments in Greenville. Chandelier, trash compactor, fully carpeted, drapes, etc., plus washer and dryer hook ups, fabulous pool, sauna baths, tennis court and club room</p>
        <p>752 1557</p>
        <p>Greenway</p>
        <p>Apartments</p>
        <p>Beautiful large 2 bedroom garden apartments with wall to wall carpet, draperies, dishwasher and swimm ing pool, Located on Country Club Drive adjacent to Greenville Golf and Country Club.</p>
        <p>756 6869</p>
        <p>DON'T COMPROMISE</p>
        <p>Stratford Arms offers quality apart ments in a secluded, beautitully land scaped atmosphere yet in the heart of everything.</p>
        <p>1900 Charles Blvd BIdg. 19 756 4800</p>
        <p>TWO NEW duplexes available take out. Brennon Village on 14th Street Extension. Includes washer and dryer. *225 monthly. 756 6965 or 756 7238</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM furnished apart ment. Utilities extra *135 a month. 758 2300 days, 7 1742 nights.</p>
        <p>FE/MALE DESIRES roommate im mediately. *67 plus utilities. Langston Park Apartments, Building E,40.</p>
        <p>FE/MALE DESIRES roommate to share apartment. 7 1062.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Stancill Drive. Air conditioning, insulated, range, refrigerator, washer hookup, storage, AAarrieds. *180. 756 7480.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM DUPLEX. Stove, refrigerator, washer dryer hookups, space oil heat. Corner Higgs Myrtle. No children, no pets. Lease, deposit. *160 month. 756 6635.</p>
        <p>FE/W1ALE DESIRES roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. 7M-3644,</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>PEANUT HAY For Sale Call 758-0168</p>
        <p>Pollard Construction Co</p>
        <p>( usi'iin  6,</p>
        <p>r-lnin.' Iniprov(mi-nf, f ni f-ri'C f slitn.it.' .  D&amp;gt;.</p>
        <p>otii.r 7S6 .'i69 or 7S6 6I  ittiT b</p>
        <p>FOR SALE RESIDENTIAL LOTS IN RAGLAND ACRES</p>
        <p>Water, Sewer, Paved streets Curbs, Gutter^ No city taxes</p>
        <p>PHONE-756-1016</p>
        <p>BB</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>LARGE 4 OR 5 bedroom country home. Stove, refrigerator furnished. Approximately iO miles from Green lie. Plenty of privacy. With private air strip if needed. Call 746 3284.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM house in country. Ap proximately 9 miles from Greenville. 746 3284 or 726 3884.</p>
        <p>NEW, 3 BEDROOMS. 19} baths, heat pomp, garage. Lease, deposit. Responsible family. 758 3028.</p>
        <p>91 Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE for rent. Suite or individual. In new Duffus Realty Building on Commerce and Clifton. Call Duffus Realty, Inc , 756 5395.</p>
        <p>OFFICES AND suites for rent. All services provided. Located on Arl ington Boulevard and Commerce Street. *75 *100 per month. One month deposit required. Fleming &amp;amp; Associates, 756 6234 or 756 0805.</p>
        <p>10 OFFICES *50 each Heat and air 402 South Memorial Dirve. Call 752 2987</p>
        <p>WAREHOUSE 2000 to 20,000 square feet. We will divide and i rove fo suit tenant. Call today tor additional in formation, 756 3791.</p>
        <p>RETAIL OR OFFICE space for lease. KXX) square feet. Arlington Boulevard. 756 6001 from 10 til 6, 756 4736 after 6.</p>
        <p>94</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Wanted To Rent</p>
        <p>YOUNG STUDENT couple wants to rent home within 10 mile radius of Greenville. *175 range. Phone I 851 4865.</p>
        <p>FEMALE WANTS private or semi private lot lor trailer. Greenville area. 758 3323.</p>
        <p>100 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ROOFING</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS DOORS 8. AWN INGS</p>
        <p>C.L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>SERVICE STATION OPERATORS AND ATTENDANTS WANTED</p>
        <p>Send resume to: Service Station P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N.C. 27834 All repites will be held canfktontlal</p>
        <p>RENT-A-KAR</p>
        <p>Special December Rate</p>
        <p>$38.50</p>
        <p>per week</p>
        <p>Sutton's ARCO Service Station</p>
        <p>33(X) S AAemoriai Drive 756-6327</p>
        <p>lUARRY SUPERVISORS</p>
        <p>Leading crushed stone company seeks experienced pit, plant and maintenance supervisory personnel. We offer competitive salaries and excellent benefits. Send resume or handwritten letter to:</p>
        <p>'  Personnel  Director</p>
        <p>/MARTN AAARiETTA AGGREGATES SOUTHEAST DiVISiON P.O. Box 30013 Raieigh.N.C. 27612 An Equal Opportunity Employer</p>
        <p>SEASONS GREETINGS</p>
        <p>from</p>
        <p>CLIFFS BODY SHOP</p>
        <p>llSWestlOthSt. GreenvUle, N.C.</p>
        <p>At this time of the year, there are more people on our highways keeping with the holiday spirits and shopping sprees. So be alert and drive carefully.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <p>TOWING SERVICE</p>
        <p>We are offering a new special service to the motoring public, if your vehicle becomes disabled, or yourself, we will dispatch a wrecker to take the driver and vehicle home or to a suitable repair facility.</p>
        <p>Starting December 19th we will tow 24 hours a day for $15.00 within 5 miles of Greenville and maximum $25.00 anywhere In Pitt County If you display our Towing Service sticker.</p>
        <p>Come by our shop and pick up your free sticker.</p>
        <p>We offer complete body repairs and paint iobs. If you should need our services in the coming year, feel free to call or come by to check our prices.</p>
        <p>Day Phone 758-7540</p>
        <p>Nights and Weekends 756-7880</p>
        <p>i::</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>F ask for</p>
        <p>INTRODUCES...</p>
        <p>HAPPY JACK I</p>
        <p>HI ENERGY DOG FOOD</p>
        <p>.your dog would</p>
        <p>Formulated specifically for hunting dogs at prices beiow national brands.</p>
        <p>available at HARRIS SUPERAAARKETS &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>GENERAL CASH 8. CARRY  1</p>
        <pb facs="00093567_0016" />
        <p>Carter Faces Another Rough Year With Congress</p>
        <p>By STEVE GERSTEL</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (UPI) - If, looking ahead toward 1978, President Carter sees similarities with the year just past, it is not an illusion. He appears headed for another rough time with Congress.</p>
        <p>In fact, the second session of the 95th Congress could pose bigger problems than the first as Carter moves to the midway mark of his presidential term.</p>
        <p>He has to deliver on some of his campaign promises. To do that, Carter needs congressional cooperation.</p>
        <p>But, with the exception of retirees, all 435 House members and 33 of the 100 senators must face the voters in November. The votes these lawmakers cast wilt more likely be geared to their own political needs than the desires of the White House.</p>
        <p>Presumably, Carter will have shed those nagging mistakes that plagued him in the first year and which critics and supporters generally attributed to a lack of experience on his part and on the part of the White House staff.</p>
        <p>Sen. Alan Cranston, the assistant Democratic leader, said the errors  notably a lack of advance consultation on legislatkm and a shortfall of contact with the people on Capitol Hill who can help his programs  have been the mistakes of beginners who are still learning how to run the White House and the executive agencies.</p>
        <p>Presumably also. Carter will refrain from what Sen. Edward Brooke, R-Mass., calls a policy of entrench and retrench which several times in 1977 left those whose support Carter needs stranded with a pn^x)sal or position abandoned by the administration.</p>
        <p>To fare well. Carter still needs in the Senate what he has in the House  a strong partisan leadership willing to go down the line for his programs.</p>
        <p>Speaker Thomas ONeill provides Carter with that in the House.</p>
        <p>But Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd has adopted a much more independent stance. There also is some ^juestion whether Byrd has yet acquired the clout to deliver votes on a major issue.</p>
        <p>Carter also needs other allies, especially in the Senate, who can argue his programs on the floor, in committee, in the corridors and the cloakroom.</p>
        <p>Slightly more than midway through his first year. Carter was having dinner with Sen. Ernest Hollins, D-S.C., about the giants of the Congress and was fascinated by it.</p>
        <p>You know wtio makes giants in Congress. Hollings asked. Carter said he didnt and Hollings replied you do.</p>
        <p>Hollings told Carter that the giants are those who have</p>
        <p>Sports Holiday In Black Forest</p>
        <p>HOEHENSCHWAND, West Germany (UPI)  This resort town in the southern part of the scenic Black Forest hills offers sporting holidays through Feb. 10.</p>
        <p>The package, excluding the Christmas and New Year hdidays, offers a $98 one-week stay for active guests, including room and breakfast in comfortable hotels, indoor swimming pools, coach tours, mini-golf and bowling.</p>
        <p>direct contact with the president  both ways. He told Carter to find some friends on Capitol Hill.</p>
        <p>Hollings also reminded his fellow southerner that there were a number of senators who had also sought the presidency only to be beaten and were not adverse to the Georgian being a one-term president.</p>
        <p>And it is in the Senate where two major forei^ policy initiatives meet their test in 1978.</p>
        <p>For them to go into effect, the Senate must ratify the two treaties which eventually would turn the Panama Canal over to the Panamanians. And should agreement be reached, the Senate must approve any new Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty.</p>
        <p>Should the Senate reject either the agreemwit with Panama or SALT, it would be a devastating blow to Carters foreign policy leadership.</p>
        <p>If the canal treaties are approved. Carter should thank Byrd. It was the Senate Democratic leader who put his foot on the brakes and decided that no action would be taken until late February or March.</p>
        <p>It was Byrd  not Carter  who realized that a vote wi the treaties before the end of 1977 would have meant certain defeat. Even so, the administration will have an extremely hard fight to win approval, especially in an election year.</p>
        <p>There are indications that a similar fight is shaping up over SALT II and the man that Carter has to reckon with is Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash. Jackson is regarded not only as the most knowledgeable man in the Senate on strategic arms but also a man supremely distrustful of the Russians.</p>
        <p>Carter needs Jackson on this one. SALT II conceivably could win approval even if Jackson says no but it would be much easier if the Washington senator lent his support.</p>
        <p>Domestically, Carter has pretty much already indicated what he would like Congress to work on in 1978.</p>
        <p>Charged with trying to do too much too fast. Carter has agreed to slow down the avalanche of legislation that last year almost buried Capitd Hill.</p>
        <p>There is enough major legislation already before Congress or promised for 1978 to keep the Senate and House in session up to election night and beyond.</p>
        <p>But the economy is going to force Carter into action early on a step he hq&amp;gt;ed could be put off until later  a tax cut.</p>
        <p>With unemployment still running around seven percit and Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal and Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Bums projecting an economic growth rate of only 4.5 to 5 per cent. Carter has to provide the economy with a stimulant.</p>
        <p>He also has to compensate taxpayers, wage earners as well as corporations, for the extra money they will have to pay under the new Social Security financing program.</p>
        <p>The answer appears to be a proposed tax cut and it is expected early in the session. Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., has urged Carter to propose a $20 to $25 billion tax cut, two thirds for individuals and a third for business.</p>
        <p>Proxmire said the tax cut should be accompanied only by</p>
        <p>For the Small Businessman, Professional, Self-employed</p>
        <p>DOME</p>
        <p>makes|)ookkeeping easy!</p>
        <p>AND YOULL SA VE TAXES TOO!</p>
        <p>PAYROLL RECORDS</p>
        <p>Simol* wd wy to uie with many txclusiv* ftaturas.</p>
        <p>No. no FOIt I-IO EMPtOYCES $3.25</p>
        <p>No. E2S FOR 1-IS EMPLOYEn S4.4S</p>
        <p>NO. UO FOR 1- EMPLOYEES</p>
        <p>$5.45</p>
        <p>BOOKKEEPING</p>
        <p>RECORDS</p>
        <p>Easy to keep sln|le entry systems of cash received and cash paid out.</p>
        <p>No. 600 WEEKLY $5.45 No. 612 MONTHLY $5.45</p>
        <p>TRAVEL EXPENSE RECORDS</p>
        <p>An approved record of travel, entartairtmanl. auto and other expenses.</p>
        <p>No. 700 POCKET SIZE No. 760 DESK SIZE $2.25  $4*5</p>
        <p>BUDGET BOOK</p>
        <p>More than a Budget Book, also a financial guide.</p>
        <p>No. 140 BUDGET BOOK . $1.95</p>
        <p>ON THE MALL</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>TELEPHONE 758-1148</p>
        <p>reforms that are generally acceptable and would not jeopardize or delay passage of the cut.</p>
        <p>In effect. Carter Is much in the same position as when he took office. His first wve was to send up legislation to stimulate the economy. He dropped a proposed $50 per person tax rebate but other parts of the package were adopted.</p>
        <p>By proposing an early tax cut. however, Carter may be undermining hopes of rnajor tax reform. The consensus is that reform and reduction must</p>
        <p>come together for real reform to have a chance.</p>
        <p>Another major Carter goal was welfare reform, for which his proposals already are before Congress: jobs and supplemental income for poor persons in place of the present system of family welfare payments, food stamps and aid to the disabled.</p>
        <p>It has stirred more opposition than interest. Part of the reason is that Carters $31.1 billion plan would not go into effect until 1981.</p>
        <p>Under the prodding of Sen.</p>
        <p>Daniel Moynihan. D-N.Y., who is expected to play a leading role in welfare reform. Carter has agreed to a plan under which states and municipalities would get some relief in the next three years.</p>
        <p>Moynihan feels that this has helped the plans chances of joassage. A special House Welfare Reform subcommittee is expected to draft a new bill, probably after making substantial changes to increase the number of public service jobs.</p>
        <p>Carter also is expected to send Congress a proposed national health insurance pro</p>
        <p>gram in the spring but there is no indication yet of its scope or the date it would go into effect. That was also a campaign goal.</p>
        <p>Carter has not done well in Congress with another major health proposal which would hold annual hospital revenue increases to nine per cent instead of the present 15 per cent. Although Carter wanted action by Oct. 1. opposition from hospitals and indifference by labor have put it in limbo.</p>
        <p>Despite different interpretations of its meaning, there will be heavy pressure on Congress to approve the Humphrey-</p>
        <p>Hawkins full employment bill. Its goal is 4 per cent unemployment by 1983.</p>
        <p>Those may well be the major domestic battlegrounds in the, coming Congress. They all cost, either in increased spending or in lost revenues.</p>
        <p>Where does Carter  short of an economic boom  retrieve the money in his efforts to reach a balanced budget by the end of his first term?</p>
        <p>The coming year does not seem to offer much hope.</p>
        <p>In recent years, the military has become the prime target</p>
        <p>for budget cutting but if Proxmire is right Pentagon spending will reach $130 billion in fiscal 1979 compared to 1116 billion this year.</p>
        <p>Carters plan to reorganize and streamline the federal bureaucracy, a nice target for saving money, Is proceeding very slowly although Carter has always conceded it would take time.</p>
        <p>And if Carter hopes to carve deeply into domestic programs - health, housing, education, aid to cities and others  he will find Congress extremely stubborn in an election year.</p>
        <p>The only low tar menthol cigarette with Salem satisfaction, i</p>
        <p>Enjoy the satisfying cool taste you expect</p>
        <p>from Salem. Salem Lights and</p>
        <p>Lights lOO's, the Lights that say enjoy.</p>
        <p>Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.</p>
        <p>LIGHT lOO's; 9 mg. "tar", 0.7 mg. nicotine, LIGHTS: 11 mg. "tar". 0.8 mg. nicotine, av. per cigarette, FTC Report AUG. 77.</p>
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