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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0001" />
        <p>WEATHER</p>
        <p>Fair aild colder toiiigiiCI.owf Jo near 30 coast Wednesday fair and continaed niflier cold.</p>
        <p>85th Yeaf NO. 9</p>
        <p>OP</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N. C</p>
        <p>TRUTH/IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>TUESDAY AFERNOON, JANUARY 11, 1966</p>
        <p>12 Pages Today</p>
        <p>STRAY'DOO OR CAT? Clioek and RmhhT adi^ in Clattiliad. You may rnaka, owner and pat happy.</p>
        <p>Price 5 Cents</p>
        <p>Bear Body Of India's Prime Minister</p>
        <p>LEADERS CARRY CASKET OP INDIAS SHASTEU  Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin, leit, and Pakistans President Ayub Khan carry casket of Indias Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri to plane at Tashkent airport for return to New Delhi. Shastri died to the Soviet Asian city earlier Monday of a heart attack after attending the final session of a peace conference with Ayub Khan. (AP Wirephoto)  ^</p>
        <p>New Dehli Street^ Pqcked By Mourners As Shastri Returns</p>
        <p>NEW DELHI, India (AP) -Millions of mourning Indians packed the streets of New Delhi today as the body of Prime Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri was brought home for cremation beside the sacred Jumna River.</p>
        <p>As representatives of governments hurried from around the world to attend the funeral rites Wednesday, the worlds leaders poured in tributes to the frail little man who struggled for 19 stormy months after the death of Jawaharlal Nehru to lead tliis troubled land of 460 million people.</p>
        <p>Within hours after Shastris death from a heart attack, Indias new prime minister, Gul-zarilal Nanda, promised to carry through his predecessors final workthe peace pledge he signed with Pakistan a few hours before he died.</p>
        <p>Shastri, 61, died early today in the Soviet city of Tashkent. The 5-foot-2, 110-pound prime minister had signed a limited peace pact Monday with Pakistani President Mohammed Ayub Khan agreeing to pull their forces back from territory seized during the September war between India and Pakistan.</p>
        <p>Nanda in a nationwide broadcast said Shastri died after successfully concluding a mighty effort for peace. We shall honor the agreement he made and implement it faithful-</p>
        <p>A Soviet plane bore the remains of the humble-born little leader across the Hindu Kush ly.</p>
        <p>Mountains to Indias dusty  plains.</p>
        <p>; Ayub Khan, whose forces fought Indian troops in a bloody 22-day undeclared war last Sep-itember, and Soviet Premier i Alexei N. Kosygin, who was host ito ^the Tashkent conference, helikd carry Shastris coffin to the plane in the Soviet Asian :city.</p>
        <p>: Kosygin left shortly after to 'attend the funeral. Ayub re-i turned to Rawalpindi, the Pakistani capital.</p>
        <p>' Shastris body will be cremat-;ed beside the sacred Jumna i River in New Delhi.</p>
        <p>Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and Secretary of State Dean Rusk flew from Washington for the funeral. They were accompanied by two former U.S. ambassadors to India, Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., and John Kenneth Galbraith.</p>
        <p>Queen Elizabeth II sent Earl Mountbatten, last viceroy and first governor general of India, 'to represent her. i Tributes to Shastri poured in ' from many parts of the world.</p>
        <p>President Johnson said his death was a grievous blow to the hopes of mankind for peace and progress. He said Shastri had proved a fitting successor</p>
        <p>to Pandit Nehru by holding aloft the highest ideals of Indian de-uiocracy.</p>
        <p>Kosygin hailed Shastri as a great humanist of our time. British Prime Minister Harold Wilson, attending the Commonwealth conference on Rhodesia in Nigeria, said the loss of Shastri will be felt throughout the Commonwealth, and indeed everywhere. His qualities of statesmanship, sincerity and mtegrity are valued.</p>
        <p>Ayub Khan saia he was deeply shocked and sorrowed. Shastri died at 1: 32 a.m.  EST Monday in the villa where he was staying outside Tashkent. Aides said he had dined alone at 10:30 p.m., telephoned his family in New Delhi, and went to bed half an I hour later but could not sleep.</p>
        <p>At about 1:20 a.m., the prime minister was seized by a cough-i ing spell and staggered into the 'hall crying, Doctor, doctor. i His staff, packing to leave Tash-jkent today, put their chief back |tc bed and summoned his per-isonal physician Dr. R.N. Chugh.</p>
        <p>! The doctor said Shastri lost con-jsciousness three minutes later and stopped breathing at 1:32. A team of eight Soviet physicians joined in unsuccessful attempts to revive the Indian leader.</p>
        <p>Tass, the Soviet news agency, reported that death was due to a heart attack. Shastri had had serious heart attacks in 1959,</p>
        <p>before becoming prime minister, and another a month after suceeding Nehru.</p>
        <p>NEW LEADER OF INDIA-Gulzarilal Nanda, above, is the new Prime Minister of India. The 67-year-old Nanda succeeds Lai Bahadur Shastri who died Monday. Nanda had been the Home Minister in the governments of Shastri and Jawaharlal Nehru.</p>
        <p>(AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Senate Considers Reducing Districts</p>
        <p>N.C. House Tentatively OKs Reapportioning</p>
        <p>Guerrillas Once More Escape Into Jungle</p>
        <p>Two Big Viet Cong Hideouts Are Mopped Up By American Forces</p>
        <p>SAIGON, South Viet Nam outs northwest of Saigon and in (AP)  Large forces of disap- the central highlands near the pointed U. S. troops mopped up Cambodian frontier after the</p>
        <p>today in two big Viet Ck)ng hide-</p>
        <p>Get-Tough Order For Mediators</p>
        <p>bulk of guerrillas once more had escaped into the jungles.</p>
        <p>For U. S. officers the operation by more than 8,0(X) Americans and Australians 35 miles from the capital was particularly annoying. Although they raised the Viet Cong aeath toll to 84 and captured 38 in the four days of Operation Crimp, they /AON  hoped for far better results</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)    the  biggest American of-</p>
        <p>on the</p>
        <p>saying as they  war. But only rear-guard ele^</p>
        <p>they had reached i^o formal |  fight while the</p>
        <p>decision  ^  ! main enemy force vanished,</p>
        <p>tion had not changed.  Ain.</p>
        <p>The massive Oow of automo- Paratroopers of the 173rd Air-fivp traffic meantime eased off borne Brigade took on one guer-from uif reSrd Zme 0^ 85,- rllla band in a brisk fight Mon-000 vehicles which poured into  Commumsts,</p>
        <p>Manhatten Monday.  U. S. spokesmen reported.</p>
        <p>In a radio and television broadcast, Lindsay sternly laid down Monday night three possible routes to resolution of the raLEIGH (AP)North Caro-crippling transportation tieup,jjg Motor Vehicles Depart-and declared:  ments report of traffic deaths</p>
        <p>The government  of  this  city  injuries for the 24-hour pe-</p>
        <p>will not capitulate  before  the  ending at 10 a.m. today:</p>
        <p>Traffic Toll</p>
        <p>lawless demands of a single power group. It wUl not allow the power-brokers in our city, or any special Interest, to dictate to this -city the terms under which it will exist in New York.</p>
        <p>Killed-2</p>
        <p>Injured (rural)21 </p>
        <p>Killed this year-56 Killed 1965 to date^Sl-Injured to NoV. 1, 1965-Injured to Nov. 1, 196439,655</p>
        <p>-41,090</p>
        <p>other 16 bodies were found after i an air attack.</p>
        <p>Soldiers of the 1st Infantry Division killed six more guerrillas in a 20-minute gun battle when the Reds tried to protect a a large tunnel containing 15 bales of cotton and six tons of rice.</p>
        <p>While U. S. troops explored a maze of tuppels underneath more than 100 houses in the area, soldiers of the Royal Australian Regiment reported killing three Viet Cong in small actions in the afternoon and finding five more bodies.</p>
        <p>A U. S. spokesman reported only light, sporadic contact in the whole battle area by tonight.</p>
        <p>Equally frustrating was an eight-day search for guerrillas by the U. S. 1st cavalry, Air-! mobile, Division in the central highlands on the Cambodian frontier, not far from the la Drang Valley where the Flying Horsemen battled it out with North Vietnamese regulars last November.</p>
        <p>This time the Communists hurriedly pulled out, abandoning four rest camps capable of accommodating 3,000 guerrillas. The cavalrymen destroyed the camps.</p>
        <p>The operation netted eight communists captured. Some of the captives were identified as members of the 32nd and 66tb North Vietnamese regular regiments. There also were reports that an antiaircraft battalion with 18 Chinese machine guns</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)- The North Carolina House of Representatives gave tentative approval today by a vote of 106-10 to a bill which would reapportion the House on the basis of population.</p>
        <p>An attempt to bring the bill up for final vote failed, however, when an objection was raised to third reading.</p>
        <p>This means the bill will not face a final vote until Wednesday.</p>
        <p>The Senate, meanwhile, sit-j ting as a committee, gave ap-i proval to a measure realigning 1 its membership by reducing the number of districts from 36 to 33.</p>
        <p>The Senate, which was to debate the bill this afternoon, killed a proposal to increase Senate membership from 59 to 60.</p>
        <p>The Senate, also was expected to take a final vote on its bill sometime Wednesday.</p>
        <p>The tentatively appro ved House bill had one major change from that drafted by a special study commission.</p>
        <p>The change would allow Joneg County to be in the same district with Greene and Lenoir, moves by Rep. J. Paul Wallace of Montgomery to take his county out of a district with Randolph, a Republican County.</p>
        <p>Rep. Iona Collier of Jones said Jones County should be with Lenoir and Greene counties because the counties have economic connections.</p>
        <p>Jones was in a district with Craven, Carteret and Pamlico counties. The district of Carteret, Craven and Pamlico counties would be 12 per cent below the ideal population figure.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Colliers move to have Jones moved to another district touched off a flurry of parliamentary moving.</p>
        <p>The House reapportionment bill already had received preliminary approval in the House. When Mrs. Collier rose to propose the change, Rep. Roger Kiser of Scotland objected to the final vote. This would carry the bill over until Wednesday.</p>
        <p>However, several legislators argued the bill should be discussed today.</p>
        <p>The controversy was dissolved when Rep. Allen Barbee of Nash asked the House to reconsider the vote when it had approved the bill.  I</p>
        <p>The House voted to reconsider and thus put the bill up for discussion.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, a group of Piedmont senators drafted an alternate plan of redistricting the</p>
        <p>states 11 congressional districts.</p>
        <p>The plan drafted today would take Durham out of the 5th District with Forsyth County. This was one with objections to the plan drafted by a special legislative committee.</p>
        <p>The bill would take Warren County out of the First and place it in the 2nd District.</p>
        <p>House Speaker Pat Taylor said he planned for the House to consider House reapportionment before going to congressional redistricting and bills to increase the membership of the House and Senate throu^ constitutional amendments.</p>
        <p>One bill, sponsored by Rep.</p>
        <p>I George Wood of Camden, would around Guilford County, making increase House membership it a one-county district.* H from to 150. Rep. Thurston would take Randolph County, jArledge of Polk offered anoth-.now with Guilford, and place it ,er to increase it to 190 mem-'with Moore County in a new bers.  i  district.</p>
        <p>Sen. Julian Allsbrook of Halifax sponsored a bill to increase Senate membership from 50 to 60.</p>
        <p>A special three-judge federal court has given the state until Jan. 31 to meet the U.S. Supreme Courts one man, one vote equal representation ruling.</p>
        <p>In the Senate, Sen. L. P. McLendon of Guilford said he planned to chai^ge the Senate plan. Changes would center</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, an undercurrent of sentiment to let the federal court realign the congressional districts was building.</p>
        <p>One lawmaker, who did not want to be quoted by name said:</p>
        <p>The sentiment is there and it is growing each day.</p>
        <p>Another said: The courts couldnt do a worse job than the special legislative commiU tee. We might be happy to take a court plan.</p>
        <p>HIGH LEVEL POW WOW  Lt. Gov. Bob Soott, left, House Speaker Pat Taylor, center and fresident Pro Tem of the Senate Robert Morgan get together for a conference during Mondays opening of North Carolinas special legislative session callea to reapportion the N. C. Legislature. (AP Wirephoto)__</p>
        <p>Tells Story Of Klan Beating</p>
        <p>had been in the area.</p>
        <p>As the Americans crashed ino one campsite, they saw a squad of armed men in a patch quilt of khaki and black uniforms flee across the Tongle San River, the border with Cambodia 40 miles west of Plei-ku. A big cooking kettle still simmered. A Viet Cong brigadier general left behind a small satchel with a single star pinned to it and his toothbrush and paste inside.</p>
        <p>Death Is Ruled Due To Cold And Exposure</p>
        <p>Otis Wilson, found dead in a ditch along Skinner Street Sunday morning, died of cold and exposure, Pitt County Coroner E. W. Harvey said today.</p>
        <p>Harvey said following an investigation of the death that Wilson apparently stumbled in-ito a ditch on the east side of I Skinner Street and after travelling a short distance down that ditch, got out and crossed the road and entered the ditch on the western side of the street where he was found.</p>
        <p>The official said he had last been seen at a Howell Street residence about midnight.</p>
        <p>The body was fountl 75 feet from the Howell Street intersection. Wilson had been drinking.</p>
        <p>Harvey said Wilson had been dead from five to seven hours before bis body was discovered about 7:45 a.m.'</p>
        <p>It's 40-Below,</p>
        <p>But Life Goes On In Minnesota</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL FALLS, Minn. (AP)Car engines started, children went to school, water flowed from household taps.</p>
        <p>The temperature dropped to 40 degrees below zero this morning, but life went on as usual in this Minnesota city on the Canadian border.</p>
        <p>The only complaints were about the heavy snow cover.</p>
        <p>Electrical car engine warming devices and well-h e a t e d school buses gets things rolling. The deep snow has reduced water pipe freezing to a minimum.</p>
        <p>Pulpwpod cutting, a major pursuit in this area, has been stymied by heavy snow accumulation. About 50 inches have fallen so far this winter, and has settled to around 38 inches. It acts as insulation against the cold with the result that the ground beneath is soft.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)-^A selfdescribed former member of a Ku Klux Klan wrecking crew told today of the beating of a white youth in rural Louisiana.</p>
        <p>The witness before the House Committee on Un-American Activities was John H. Gipson of Slidell, La., about 30 miles from New Orleans.</p>
        <p>Gipson, 29, testified that he joined a unit of the original Knights of the Ku Klux Klan because the way they ex-jplained it, it did sound good.</p>
        <p>I But he said he became disgust-ied after finding the Klan engaged in violence.</p>
        <p>Soon after he joined the Klan lii- 1963, Gipson testified, he was recruited for the wrecking crew or enforcement unit. He testified he was told' the unit was to take care of smart niggers and others and that it might be necessary to murder somebody.</p>
        <p>Gipson said the only act of violence in which he participated was the whipping of a white youth in the community, Clarence OBerry. He did not give an exact date, but said the incident was planned after a klavem meeting.</p>
        <p>He said Oscar Anderson, whom he named as chief of the Klan bureau of investigations for the area, told the wrecking crew that OBerry drank and didnt take care of his family and he needed to be straightened out with a belt.</p>
        <p>Plan Study ABC Enforcement</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The Institute of (Government at Chapel Hill will study the State Board of Alcoholic Controls enforcement division.</p>
        <p>The study was sugested Monday by ABC Director Ray Brady who said, our law enforcement division leaves quite a lot to be desired. Brady (tid not elaborate.</p>
        <p>He said policies, procedures and personel should be studied.</p>
        <p>TO SWITZERLAND</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-Mrs. John F. Kennedy and her children are scheduled to fly to Switzerland Friday for a stay of about two weeks in the winter sports center of Gstaad.  *</p>
        <p>Plan Caravan To D.C. For Swearing-In</p>
        <p>A group of friends and su{^ porters of congressional nominee Walter Jones are organizing a caravan for his swearing-in Feb. 9 in Washington.</p>
        <p>Acting on the assumption that Jones will score a victory over Republican opponent Dr. John East of Greenville, Marvin Speight of FarmvUle is beading a group which will charter buses for the trip to the nations capital.</p>
        <p>If Jones, a member of the State Senate representing Pitt and Greene Ck)unties, wins the Feb. 5 election, swearing-in ceremonies will be held lour days later.</p>
        <p>When asked how his campaign is going, Jones said his opponent, the uncontested GOP nominee, is conducting a television campaign beyond my financial means to compete with. I think this is due in part to the fact that he is a newcomer to the district, having been a resident of North Carolina only a few months, and is possibly receiving help from sources outside the district.</p>
        <p>As to the final outcome, Jones added, I feel confident we will win, for I have traveled most of the First District for some 20 years and the people are familiar with my record and my convictions.</p>
        <p>Stabilization Tobacco Stocks Said Lowered</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  Surplus tobacco stocks being held by the Flue-Cured Tobacco (Cooperative Stabilization Corporation were reduced 8.5 per cent in 1185, according to an announcement today from the Stabilization Corporation.</p>
        <p>According to the Stabilization Corporations monthly newsletter for January, stocks as of January'!, 1966 totaled 877,000,-000 pouncis, which is 8.5 per cent less than fhe 958,000,000 on hand as of January 1, 1965.</p>
        <p>Sales of surplus tobacco in</p>
        <p>1965 were the largest since 1961 and 4.6 times the 33,000,000 pounds sold last year. During the marketing season. Stabilization receipts totaled 71.3 million pounds, while sales of surplus stocks during 1965 totaling 152.3 million pounds.</p>
        <p>Stabilization holdings now encompass crops from 1957 through 1965. An analysis of the stocks shows 26,189,798 pounds of the 1957 crop, 34,421,596 pounds of the 1958 crop, 14,217,-194 pounds of the 1959 crop, 29,956,090 pounds from - 1960,</p>
        <p>50,718,734 pounds from 1961, 210,457,998 pounds from 1962, 197950,930 pounds from 1962, 242,168.252 pounds from 1964 and 71,320,320 pounds from 1965.</p>
        <p>An analysis of the Stabilization receipts in 1965 show that 6.21 per cent of gross sales on the five belts were sold under government loans to the Stabilization (Corporation</p>
        <p>The Old Belts gross sales totaled 241,347.062 pounds with 21,205,778 or 8.79 per cent sold to Stabilization. In the Middle Belt, gross sales totaled 117,-</p>
        <p>086,178 pounds, while Stabilba-lion receipts totaled 9,568 874 pounds or 8.17 per cent of gross sales.</p>
        <p>In the Eastern Belt, sales totaled 313,586,702 pounds with Stabilization receiving 19,371,356 pounds or 6.18 per cent of sales. Hie South CCarolina-Border Belt sold 304,069,557 pounds, with Stabilization receiving 18,794,024 pounds or 6.18 per cent of sales and in the Georgla-Florida Belt, sales toteled 171,942,766 pounds with 2,380,288 pounds or 1.38 cent of gross sales going to tha Stabilization (Corporation.</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0002" />
        <p>IDilly Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, January 11, 1966</p>
        <p>*ECC Gets $55,000 Grant For Geography Institute</p>
        <p>East Carolina College has|U. S. Office of Education from erally at improving the teach-been awarded $55,000 to sup-,National Defense Education ing of geography in junior and port an eight-week institute j Act (NDEA) funds.  senior  iiigii  school classrooms,</p>
        <p>next summer for 35 junior and j The award came in response To do Uiis, he says, the in-iw^ high school teachers ofjtc a proposal drafted by Dr. stituie will u-e four regular geography.  Chestang  and three of his col-^^^^^^y members, morning</p>
        <p>Scheduled June 13 to Aug. 5,|leagues, and submitted to the classroom sessions, afternoon</p>
        <p>the institute will be conducted in the ECC geography and ge&amp;lt;^ logy department under the direction of Dr. Ennis L. dhes-tang, faculty member.</p>
        <p>Participants, who will get</p>
        <p>Office of Education through ECCs new Office of Special Projects headed by Dr. James L. White.</p>
        <p>One of 46 NDEA-supported</p>
        <p>workshops, four one-day field trips and two guest lecturers.</p>
        <p>Joining Dr. Chestang on the institute faculty will be two other ECC geographers, Clyde</p>
        <p>stipends Md de^ndengr | program will be the only one of</p>
        <p>its kind in North Caroiina in</p>
        <p>cbers who apply. Application information is available from Dr. Chestang.</p>
        <p>Money for the institute comes In a ^ant awarded ECC by the</p>
        <p>geogra{^y institutes in the na- James Dunig^ and ^Pbihp tion this year, the ECC summer</p>
        <p>Shea, and a visiting faculty member yet to be announced. Attention will be focused on 1966. East Carolina geograph- world regional geography, users were also awarded an NDEA ing Latin and North America as institute grant last year. two examples of world regions According to Dr. Chestang, j and taking up cultural as well this years Institute aims gen-1 as physical geography.</p>
        <p>Prepare Launch Pad For Mightier Saturn</p>
        <p>launch pad 34  silent since March 28, 1963, when the fourth 8atnm 1 rocket thundered aloft  is a beehive of activity again today as technicians prepare for the first test of an evoi mightier Satom boosta*, the Saturn IB.</p>
        <p>Since the fourth Saturn 1 loared into apace, the National moMutics and Sp^ct Adminis-6idioo has pocD^ more thim |7A million into renovating jqxopim 34 for the taller, fatter a more powerful Saturn IB, eoond of the three generations f Saturn rockets.</p>
        <p>While modifications were being made at complex 34, six</p>
        <p>CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)| Saturn 1 rockets rumbled sky- The blocMiouse at Saturn ward from complex 34s neighbor, Saturn complex 37. All 10 launches in NASAs Saturn 1 program were nearly flawless, and a $6.75-milli&amp;lt;i contract has since been awarded by the Army Corps of Engineers* Canaveral District to get complex 37 ready for Saturn IB rockets also.  r</p>
        <p>Riding (HI the nose of the first Saturn IB will be an Apollo q&amp;gt;acecraft similar to the ones which will one day carry three Americans to the moon.</p>
        <p>NASA originaly hoped to carry out the launch in December or January. A variety of technical problems now point to the first two weeks of February.</p>
        <p>It wiU be the first of three unmanned tests of the Apgllo on Saturn IB rockets this year. If all goes well, three astronauts may climb into a fourth Apollo late this year or early 1967 to take a test ride in earth orbit The first unmanned Saturn IB launch is scheduled to drill the Apollo spacecraft into a ballistic trajectory 5,000 miles down the Atlantic Test Range.</p>
        <p>Between now and the first Saturn IB fli^t, NASA plans to orbit a picture-taking Tiros weather satellite. It will be the first of some 13 scientific satellites scheduled to rit aloft from Cape Kennedy on Delta rockets tfds year.</p>
        <p>The launch, originally scheduled about Jan. 26, may be delayed about one week because of the late arrival of the space-</p>
        <p>Graduates From Northrop Tech</p>
        <p>INGLEWOOD, Cam.-Larry J. Taft, SOD of Mr. and Mrs. Jessie J. Taft of 709 B Vander-bOt Lane in Greoiville, was graduated this week from the Coltege oi Engineering at Northrop Institute of Te(duiology here, who% he was awarded the BadieltH* of Science degree in aerospace engineering.</p>
        <p>While pursuing his studies at Nortlnnp Tech, Taft was active Jn the student chapta* of the &amp;gt;An^rican Helicopter Society, 'the NIT For&amp;amp;isic Society and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.</p>
        <p>NIT is a four-year, accredited college of engineering, specializing in programs oriented to space age activities. Its 1,500 students come from the 50 states and 41 foreign countries of the free world.</p>
        <p>Taft is a 1952 graduate of C. M. Eppes High School.</p>
        <p>craft to the launch pad, project sources said.</p>
        <p>It Took Some Doing, But Nuns' Old Car Now Runs</p>
        <p>See Community College Limits.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The director of the State Department of (immunity Colleges says it may be necessary to limit enrollment in the states community colleges next year.</p>
        <p>Dr. I. E. Ready said Monday'the village of Xuan Thuon, 10</p>
        <p>AFTER 57 YEARS  Mrs. Augustine M. Bucher, In her 80s, is finally near her goal of a college degree. She expects to receive her bachelors degree in March from the University of Minnesota. It took her 57 years to complete. She first enrolled in college in 1909, but marriage and three adopted children kept her from finishng. She doesnt plan to work after she gets the degree, but hopes to travel. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>QUI NHON, South Viet Nam (AP)  The Sisters of the Cross of Love have their car back in running order but it took five U.S. helicopters to do it.</p>
        <p>The story goes back a year to</p>
        <p>we may not have the money to start the new programs that institutions want, and it is conceivable we will have to deny some students admission to existing programs that are already full.</p>
        <p>When the budget was prepared for this biennium, the de</p>
        <p>partment figures that 21,000 fulltime students would be enrolled in the system by next year. But already about 25,000 students are enrolled.</p>
        <p>The community college system includes 12 community colleges, 17 technical institutes, one industrial education center and 13 units operated by parent institutions in other counties.</p>
        <p>miles north of Qui Nhon and 260 miles northeast of Saigon, on the South China Sea coast.</p>
        <p>The Viet Cong seized the</p>
        <p>oasis surrounded by the Viet Cong.</p>
        <p>The nuns went back to their convent base and found the vehicle useless.</p>
        <p>Sister Julienne is stubborn about things that are useless. Through Father Sanh in Qui Nhon she appealed for help.</p>
        <p>The U.S. 1st Air Calvary Division responded. Five choppers</p>
        <p>place and Sister Julienne, act-1 were lined up for the job. In ing as mother superior, herded went tires. Pathfinders secured her handful of nuns out to safe-i^ area. A Chinook hovered \y  I  over  the  beat-up  old  vehicle.</p>
        <p>They left behind their UtUe diesel-powered vehicle, but first stripped it of battery, distribut</p>
        <p>or</p>
        <p>so it</p>
        <p>cap and other vitals could not be operated.</p>
        <p>Bridges in and out of the village were down and the car couldnt get far ^^how.</p>
        <p>Two months ago Korean troops came back to Xuan Thuong but the bridges still were out and the village was an</p>
        <p>The rescued vehicle was landed in Qm Nhon and now is transporting children to school, running errands for the parish and is a generally pretty zippy addition to the work of the church.</p>
        <p>Discrimination In Dfoft Denied</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)  North Carolinas Selective Service director says the states draft boards do not discriminate against Negroes and that some local boards have Negro members.</p>
        <p>William H. McCachren was questioned Monday about a telegram from Dr. R. A. Hawkins, a Negro civil rights leader in Charlotte.</p>
        <p>Hawkins, charged in the telegram to McCachren, Lt. Gen. Lewis Hershey, U.S. Selective Service director, and Defense Secretary Robert McNamara that North Carolina draft boards have made reprisals against Negroes. He also asked for Negro representation on draft boards.</p>
        <p>Hawkins said draft boards had made reprisals against Negroes because of their race and dvil rights activities.</p>
        <p>McCachren, reached by telephone at Ft. Stewart, Ga., where he is ateending a conference, said inductees are not drafted by race, color, or creed. They are selected in birthday sequence. All registrants are 1-A unless they meet other requirements for deferment.</p>
        <p>He said nominees for draft board membership are not asked their race, creed or political affiliation. He said they are apointed by the President</p>
        <p>after being recommended by the governor.</p>
        <p>Hawkins emphasized he was encouraging Negroes to avoid the draft. He said he w^ mainly concerned about future draft calls, not past incidents.</p>
        <p>Warn Against Sale To Minors</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Hie State ABC Board is warning local boards not to sell whisky to minors.</p>
        <p>Were getting more and more complaints about this, Brady told the state board Monday. You cant afford to overlook violations of this nature.</p>
        <p>The board was discussing an Edgecombe County case in which a 20-year-old youth was arrested for purchasing liquor at an ABC store.</p>
        <p>Brady said the purchaser was prosecuted, but Tarboro police took no action against the store for selling the liquor. He noted that selling liquor to a minor is a misdemeanor under state law.</p>
        <p>' WISHES. TO RETIRE LEWISTON, Maine (AP)  Bates College says its president. Dr. Charles F. Phillips, 55, has informed college trustees of his wish to retire on Jan. 1,1967.</p>
        <p>Women Heavier  Than Elephants</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP&amp;gt; - A 120-pound woman can exert, more pressure than an elephant if she happens to be wearing high stiletto shoes^, says the Tile" Council of America.</p>
        <p>In a torture test of various flooring materials in which only ceramic mosaic tile survived, it was found that a woman shod in high fashion shoes can pul a pressure of 3,500 pounds pressure per square inch beneath its foot, the Tile Counci Isaid.</p>
        <p>Could Look, But No Grabbing</p>
        <p>FRANKFORT, Ky, (AP) -The state plans, with Army permission, to build and operate a museum at the Ft. Knox military reservation.</p>
        <p>The museum would cost $250,000 and provide a viewing platform for tourists to see the gold depository.</p>
        <p>ARTHRITIS?</p>
        <p>If you are sufferinf from pain, soreness, stiffness or swelllnf caused by arthritis, neuritis, or .rheumaUsm, .1 think I can help. Write.me for free information.</p>
        <p>KAYl SMITH</p>
        <p>2301 Terry Road, XM Jackson, Mississippi  39204</p>
        <p>SPECIAL OFFER OF SPECIAL RELIEF FOR COLD SUFFERERS</p>
        <p>1-day trial supply</p>
        <p>when you buy</p>
        <p>THE SPECIAL OFFERi</p>
        <p>Cut out this ad and give it to your druggist. He'll give you a 1-day trial pack of Colchek with your purchase of the regular size Colchek. Use the 1-day trial pack first. If you are not satisfied with the relief you get, return the unopened regular package to your druggist for a full refund of your money.</p>
        <p>THE SPECIAL RELIFFl</p>
        <p>We think Colchek is the most complete formula you can buy for relief of the major miseries of colds end flu. Were making this offer for we're stxe you will, too, when you try it.</p>
        <p>Colchek tablets contain 5 fast-acting Ingredients:</p>
        <p>1. Decongestantto reduce swelling in sinus cavities and nasal passages to break up congestion. To help restore normal breathing.</p>
        <p>2. Analgesicto relievo headaches and the achy feeling accompanying flu.  ^</p>
        <p>3. Antihistamineto bring relief from sniffles, sneezes.</p>
        <p>4. Antitussiveto relieve coughs with the noi* narcotic drug that works on the cough nerve center.</p>
        <p>5. Stimulantto help overcome that tired, dragged-</p>
        <p>out feeling.</p>
        <p>One product at one low price that fights the major symptoms of colds and the aches of flu and relieves coughing, too. Take advantage of this special offer of special relief today.</p>
        <p>Mt, Vesuvius erupted in 79 A. D. and buried an estimated 20,000 residents of Pompeii under hot ash.</p>
        <p>JANUARY</p>
        <p>OEORANtt</p>
        <p>ALL WOOLENS - Rag. 2.99 Flannels  Crepas  Checks  Tweeds</p>
        <p>SPECIAL LOT WOOL - Reg. $2.49</p>
        <p>VELVETEEN - Reg. $2.29 6 colors</p>
        <p>Compton's</p>
        <p>VELVET - Reg. $3.99 5 colors</p>
        <p>WARM RECEPTION  Despite chilly temperatures, tormer Preeldent Dwight D. Basenhower and wife, Mamie, receive a wann reception as they arrived in San Bernardina, Calif., Monday for their annual vacation in Palm Desert. (AP Wkepboto)</p>
        <p>Rayon and Acetate SUITINGS - Reg. $1.99</p>
        <p>One Table</p>
        <p>COnONS - Reg. $1.00 GABARDINE - SHARKSKIN - POPLIN</p>
        <p>One Table</p>
        <p>MADRAS - AND FLANNEL SUITING. Reg. $1.29</p>
        <p>Pin wale CORDUROY -</p>
        <p>One Lot</p>
        <p>SLIP COVERS &amp;amp; DRAPERY PRINTS 54 in. wide Reg. $1.59</p>
        <p>One Lot</p>
        <p>UPHOLSTERY FABRICS Reg. $2.99 Values</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>yd-</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>yd-</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>yd-</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>yd-</p>
        <p>$139</p>
        <p>I yd.</p>
        <p>69? 77? 67? 99c *1.88</p>
        <p>yd-</p>
        <p>yd-</p>
        <p>yd.</p>
        <p>yd.</p>
        <p>ONE TABLE</p>
        <p>ODD BOLTS A SHORT</p>
        <p>LENGTH FABRICS</p>
        <p>VALUES TO $1.00 CLEARANCE</p>
        <p>39?</p>
        <p>YD.</p>
        <p>WHITE'S STORES, INC.</p>
        <p>Th, Big Slora On Dickinson Avonuo</p>
        <p>CASPER THE FRIENDLY GHOST SAYSi</p>
        <p>"HURRYIN FOR ^ SUPERNATURAL</p>
        <p>Specially built, specially equipped,</p>
        <p>' full-sized '66 Fords-sale priced now!</p>
        <p>Only the eco no mies'of volume prodOc-tion let us include all this glamour equipfrient within our very special White Sale prices.  uiTi-</p>
        <p>Equipment includes: 240-cu. in. Big Six; deluxe pleated, all-vinyl, color-keyed seats; deluxe bright-metal trim; whitewalls; deluxe wheel co\?ers.</p>
        <p>LIMITED TIME SALE! COME IN NOWI</p>
        <p>FORD -FIRST IN SALES - NORTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>SEE YOUR lOUL FORD DEAUR</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0003" />
        <p>Fashion Writers View Spring Styles</p>
        <p>Qcdajndwi</p>
        <p>Th Daily taflactor, Graanvilla, N. C.fuatday, January 11, I9A6-1</p>
        <p>Style Preview By American Hat Designers</p>
        <p>A PREVIEW OP DRESSES  These dresses by Pattullo-Jo Copeland, Inc., are shown as they were modeled at preview  for fashion  writers in New  York  yesterday arranged</p>
        <p>by the New York Couture Group.  At left is a  grey and white^  checked naked wool  two-</p>
        <p>piece dress with a wide calf belt  and kimona  sleeve. At right  is a  black cocktail  dress</p>
        <p>with inched lace top and a crepe  wrap skirt.  (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Hair Stylist. Says 'Get Ric.</p>
        <p>Of Hair And Do Some Living</p>
        <p>By KELLY SMITH</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Vidal Sa.ssoon, the London hair stylist who makes Janes look like Joes, claims every woman in America ought to get rid of her hair so shell have time to do some real living.</p>
        <p>Nightly pinups, teasing, bouffant hairdos and bobby pins are ridiculous, he says, especially when this country is otherwise such a modern, spectacular place.</p>
        <p>Short hair, he says, would give women time to be more feminine.</p>
        <p>Sassoon expressed his views</p>
        <p>for 200 fashion writers attending New York Couture Group style previews Monday. The ladies gasped when shown one German model with platinum blonde hair shorter than Sassoons.</p>
        <p>Every woman would cut her hair this way if she saw how easy it is, says Anna Lenz of Munich. To contrast her close-cropped hair, she wears makeup that takes an hour to put on.</p>
        <p>Men love my hair short, says Sassoon model Judy Mursch, 23, of Copenhagen, Denmark. They rub their hands in it. They cant believe</p>
        <p>ROBERSONVILLE NEWS</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. William Hugh Roberson have return to North Palm Beach, Fla., after a visit with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Rogers of Williamston and Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Roberson of Robersonville.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taylor left Wednesday morning for a short visit with his daughter, Mrs. Ralph E. Wiber, her husband and their three children in Richmond.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. James E. Smith, Juanila and Aaron of Newport News, Va., were weekend guests of her mother, Mrs. George Matthews.</p>
        <p>Mrs. H. L. Keel returned from Durham where she spent a few days with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mack Roebuck and sons.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Everett visited her sister-in-law, Mrs. Jeff Taylor, in Norfolk during the weekend.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Blanche Roberson spent Sunday withjgjier son, J. L., a patient at Duke Hospital, Durham.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Bowen returned to Port St. Joe, Fla., following a visit with their son, Lawrence and his family.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taylor spent some time in Winter Park, Fla., where they were the guests of their son and daughter-in-law, the Rev. and Mrs. William T. Taylor, Tommy and Todd.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Margaret Blackwell of Raleigh is visiting her brother, W. D. Sanford and Mrs. Sanford. i</p>
        <p>Miss Daisy Johnson attended her class reunion and dinner in Macclesfield Saturday evening.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brown, formerly of Gold Point, have returned to Kitty Hawk following a visit with relatives.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. A. E. James have returned to Knoxville, Tenn., where he will resume his work on the tobacco market. After a visit with their daugh-</p>
        <p>Fresh Daily</p>
        <p>FRENCH BREAD</p>
        <p>Oiener's Bakery</p>
        <p>ter-in-law, Mrs. A. E. Everett Jr., Alton Everett III land Jeanette Cross Everett.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Dell Coe and daughter, Candy, have returned from New York where they spent several days.</p>
        <p>j Mrs. Edith Lewis of Conetoe is visiting her daughter, Mrs. L. L. Everett, Fate Everett : and children, Gail and Craig.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Johnnie Gray Everett has returned to Smithfield following a weekend visit with her sister, Mrs. George Matthews, and other relatives in Robersonville.</p>
        <p>I Mrs. W T. Hurst spent one day last week with Willie T. Hurst a patient in Duke Hospit-j al. She returned to Durham Thursday to accompany her husband home.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sharp were the Sunday and Monday guests, of Mr. and Mrs. John Watson and children of Greensboro. i Sy Parker of Jamesville ar-: rived here Thursday to spend a| few days with his grandmoth-i er, Mrs. Nettie Parker.  j</p>
        <p>Roy Wilson of Rocky Mount visited Charles L. Wilson, Mrs., Wilson and children, Leon, Matt, Dee and Ann, recently.</p>
        <p>Mrs. John L. Roberson, who has been in Durham since Dec. 10 when her husband entered i Duke Hospital for si|gery,| spent some time here last week 1 visiting her children, Cather^ie,! J. and Celia, who are staying; with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Tyler. She returned to Durham Thursday morning to stay until her husband leaves the hospital the last of January.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Clara Burch are in Ripley, Ohio, where he is a buyer on the tobacco market.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Harold Evans and children have returned to Signal Monntanc, Tenn., following a visit with Mrs. Wiley Burrus Rogerson and family.</p>
        <p>Carl Johnson left for C;i / lion, Ky., where he will be on</p>
        <p>the tobacco market.  ___</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. H. James returned home ^Thursday after a short visit with her son, Delbert Ray, and family in Norfolk and hisj brother, ^mmie ^d Mrs. Sem-i mie James of Virgini</p>
        <p>its so straight thick. I think its very sexy.</p>
        <p>Kelly McKeown, 28, of New York, wears her blonde hair in what looks like a blown cut. Its so interesting I get twice las many job bookings now, she I says.</p>
        <p>Sassoon charges $25 when he cuts a girls hair, and she must have it recut every two to three weeks.</p>
        <p>Each girls hair is done indi-handsome, has been cutting to her bone structure and contour of her face. She can brush it any direction and it will look perfect.</p>
        <p>Sassoon, 38 this month and New York States College of womens hair for 28 years. Most important is the over-all image.</p>
        <p>The clothes image is destroyed without a good haircut, he says. Modern clothes need short, architectural hair. He has a new style, also short, ready for the Paris and Rome fashion openings, but he wont talk about it. He just laughs.</p>
        <p>So far, ladies in this country arent rushing to their hairdressers to cut their tresses.</p>
        <p>In the words of beauty expert Virginia Graham:  Imagine</p>
        <p>showing your wedding pictures and have people ask, Which ones the groom?</p>
        <p>Sassoon shrugs off criticism.</p>
        <p>A womans haircut is the most important part of her dress, he says. And who cuts his? Anybody I can find sitting around. You want to?</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.The Electrical Contractors Association will meet in the Starlight Room of Carolina Grill.</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.Creasy K. Proctor, Order of DeMolay meets at Masonic Hall</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Naval Reserve .meets in basement of Austin Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.The Patient Circle of The Kings Daughters and Sons meets in board room, Wachovia Bank. Hostesses are Mrs. M. R. Long, chairman, Mrs.^ Charles Blanchard and Miss Thelma Exum</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Withla Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Alcoholic Anonymous meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville Hwy.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.St. James Wesleyan Guild meets at the church</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Aries Book Club meets at the home of Mrs. J. O. Derrick</p>
        <p>8:00  p.m.Mrs. Norman</p>
        <p>Little entertains the Semi-Centi Book Club</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 10:00 a.m.The Brookgreen</p>
        <p>BIG-BRIMMED BONNETS FOR SPRING  Tt^ese picture haU were among the faahion.s shown by American hat designers in New York Sunday at a New York Couture Group style preview. At left a pale yellow straw hat f;ames the face with a brim that cuts away and buttons under the chin. In center is a black and white topper that ripple.v back like an Indian war bonnet, and at right a silk hood Is topped with a pale yellow straw hat bent into a butterfly shape.</p>
        <p>(AP Wirephoto</p>
        <p>Good Citizen Is</p>
        <p>IV.w I.1U.iiic oiuuagieeii  -p  r    </p>
        <p>Garden Club meets at the  rroqram I heme For AAeet</p>
        <p>home of Mrs. Ruland Daven-  ^</p>
        <p>port.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE Mrs. Moses and Marilene Mewbom;</p>
        <p>Mrs.  D.  S.  Spain;  Mrs. J.  0.  les Carr, Mrs. M. C. Williams-</p>
        <p>Pollard;  Mrs. W.  J. Heame;  ton and Mrs. Joseph Batchelor.</p>
        <p>Mrs.  Rawl;  Miss  Tabitha  de  Hostesses for the meeting</p>
        <p>were Mrs. Moye, Mrs. Carr, Mrs. C. H. Mozingo and Mrs.</p>
        <p>1:45 p^^m.-Wednesday After- Moye, the Rev. Jack Daniel, noon Duplicate Bridge CHub  Tommy  Bullock  and Mrs.</p>
        <p>weekly game at Planters Bank y jones gave the program</p>
        <p>at the Major Benjamin May j Chapter of DAR meeting Satur-! day.</p>
        <p>The theme for the program was DAR Good Citizen with the introduction given by Mrs.</p>
        <p>Creative Writing Is Woman's Club Program Topic</p>
        <p>A program on creativa writ- yf- S!*'  ^</p>
        <p>ing was given at the Greenville ^&amp;lt;!  f"'.  ro.'?,'</p>
        <p>Womans Qub meeting Friday 1,^</p>
        <p>afternoon at Planters Bank. ^o'  MewWn;  Martha</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. Lindsay Savage pre-sented the program. A number</p>
        <p>of original writings of literary  Beaman;  Caroline  Lewis</p>
        <p>merit were read by the authors who received a club award during the 1965 Arts Festival luncheon.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Grover Everett, a mem-</p>
        <p>Tranquilizing Tip For Working Women</p>
        <p>BRUSSELS (WNS) - Mon-</p>
        <p>ber of the EC English Depart-Prevoit, a marriage coun-ment, read Ple^e Arrest Me   ^^^king  wives  here</p>
        <p>I that the woman who is all ner-I forgettable Character.  when  she  comes  home  from</p>
        <p>Mrs. Donna Congleton, also ofl^! TJl  hnl  tT</p>
        <p>the EC English Department-.WoioWn ih.</p>
        <p>read a lyric i^m Intellectual;   Watrfung  the</p>
        <p>and a sonneL When Age</p>
        <p>Overtaken My Stout Helrt. '    their  world  of  silence</p>
        <p>Mrs. Savage concluded the program with an anonymous  ^he  promised.  Mme.  Pre-</p>
        <p>Noel Lang and Beverly Lang; Annette Moseley; Marion Allen, Judy Joyner; Mary Lamarr</p>
        <p>Simpson; Ann Joyner and Jean Harvey.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Daniel, pastor of the First Oiristian Church here, gave the second part of the program. He showed the relationship of Christianity to good citizenship by using the life of Jesus as an example.</p>
        <p>Several vocal selections were given by Mrs. BuIIock, accompanied by Mrs. Jones.</p>
        <p>Reports given included: President Generals message, Mrs. Troy Rouse; Mrs. E. E. Rawl; Mrs. R. T. Williams; and Mrs. Charles Carr.</p>
        <p>The state convention will be held in Asheville March 15-17. The following delegates were named: Miss Eliza^th Lang;</p>
        <p>Visconti.</p>
        <p>Alternates are: Mrs. J. B.</p>
        <p>Wright; Mrs. M. V. Jones; Mrs.  W. R. Burke.</p>
        <p>W. C. Murray; Mrs. J. G.  Throughout the  chapter house</p>
        <p>Lautares: Mrs. M. P. Hoot;  were decorations  of  pink  can-</p>
        <p>and Mrs. M. C. Williamson.  magnolia  leaves.  Pink</p>
        <p>Members of the nominating camellias, frosted fruit and oth-</p>
        <p>committee named by Mrs. jer arrangements of fruit were Rouse, regrent, are Mrs. Cliar-'also used.</p>
        <p>REDUCTIONS ON WOOLENS - COnONS ORLON KNITS - ORLON JERSEY DOE CORD - CORDUROY</p>
        <p>Evelyn's House Of Cloth</p>
        <p>NEW BERN HWY. I 264 BY-PASS</p>
        <p>childs poem The Fish, The iBee, The Zebra and the Flea. Mrs. W. E. Roseveare, presi-jdent, presided at the meeting. I The Diamond Jubilee Convention scheduled for April 15 in</p>
        <p>Chicago war discussed. ^</p>
        <p>Hostesses were Mrs. L. S.</p>
        <p>voit warned that women who are basically lazy should avoic aquariums. You need a lively stimulant instead, she said. Best thing is to get a dog.</p>
        <p>Peel fresh ripe pears and cut into lengthwise sections; team the pears with membrane-free</p>
        <p>Worthington, Mrs. D. M. Clark,</p>
        <p>Mrs. K. T. Futrell, Mrs. Syl-,, ,  _</p>
        <p>vester Green, Mrs. T. T. Holl-!  ''"8  sections. Serve</p>
        <p>ingsworth, Mrs. Paul Ricks and the refreshing combination as a Miss Mamie Ruth Tunstall. dessert.</p>
        <p>BIRTHS</p>
        <p>Hardee</p>
        <p>Born to PFC and Mrs. Austin Ray Hardee of Frankfort, Germany, a son, Austin Ray Jr., on Dec. 26, 1965. Mrs. Hardee is the former Laverne McLawhorn of Winterville.</p>
        <p>BUY 3 PAIR REI6NIH6 BEAUTY SEAMLESS MESH NYLONS AT</p>
        <p>Shubert</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shubert of Lavallette, N. J, a daughter, Terry Lynn ,on Dec. 29, 1965. Mrs. Shubert is the former Janie Simpson of Robersonville.</p>
        <p>1.77</p>
        <p>GET 1 PAIR FREE</p>
        <p>EYEGLASSES</p>
        <p>CONTACT LENSES</p>
        <p>SUNGLASSES</p>
        <p>HEARING Ains</p>
        <p>MAGNIFIERS</p>
        <p>OPERA BUSSES</p>
        <p>Hrginia Beach.</p>
        <p>LAUTARES JEWELERS</p>
        <p>Oiuarrlllea relfaibto jeweler. Dlainond eetttng, TCUMUittiic and repalre done on prernaa</p>
        <p>hring your prescription</p>
        <p>KCKTI liH) .IKWKI.KIi 'W AMlHlfAS (IK.M'-SOCIE</p>
        <p>N I N I ( i: N \ I I 0 N \ I (I K \ N I / \ N (U IIM F M A K I K .1 K W F 1.1</p>
        <p>to:</p>
        <p>fjldgamayi</p>
        <p>OoriCIANt le.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>Raleigh And Charlotte Alta In Crfeensbora,</p>
        <p>Positively one of the most generous ideas weve ever had. Each box of three pairs has a fourth, taped right on the back. You pay for 3; you get 41 All part of our campaign to get you to oin the ever-growing Reigning Beauty mutual admiration societyl All first quality, all neW-for-Spring shades. All sizes 8 Vs to 11.</p>
        <p>BIG REDUCTIONS FOR BOYS</p>
        <p>SUITS!</p>
        <p>SPORT COATS</p>
        <p>A REAL SAAART SELECTION OF SUITS</p>
        <p>AND SPORT COATS FOR BOYS IN SIZES</p>
        <p>6-20. GOOD SELECTION OF COLORS AND WANTED FABRICS.</p>
        <p>OFF</p>
        <p>BOYS' SWEATERS</p>
        <p>Choose from many famous brands In cardigans and pullovers. Lambs-wool, all wool and blends in wanted colors. Sizas 6-20.</p>
        <p>V4</p>
        <p>OFF</p>
        <p>BOYS' DRESS</p>
        <p>SLACKS</p>
        <p>Ivy styles in wanted fabrics including wash and wear types. Smart colors for boys in sizes to 20 years.</p>
        <p>/4 OFF</p>
        <p>BOYS'</p>
        <p>CAPS</p>
        <p>Leather, fabric and other wanter boys caps. Most all sizes. Good selection of colors. Values to $2.</p>
        <p>/2 OFF</p>
        <p>BOYS' OUTER WEAR BOMBER</p>
        <p>JACKETS</p>
        <p>Pile Lined Poplin, Corduroy Values to $16.00</p>
        <p>V4 OFF</p>
        <p>BOYS' LONG SLEEVE</p>
        <p>SPORT SHIRTS</p>
        <p>Long Sleeve Sport Shirts For Boys In Sizes 6 to 20 yrs. A Real Smart Selection Of Colors To Choose From.</p>
        <p>VALUES TO $2.50____\.  SALE</p>
        <p>'1.77</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>VALUES TO $3.00...... SALE  *2  47</p>
        <p>VALUES TO $4.00</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>2.97</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0004" />
        <p>Tuesday, fTuary I960</p>
        <p>Power Struggle</p>
        <p>Lfs Reconsider That Gym Site</p>
        <p>We differ with the Recreation Commipions plan to place its new gymnasium squarely in the center of Elm Street Park.</p>
        <p>Originally the thinking had been that the building would be placed oh the west side of Elm Street oil school property.</p>
        <p>Admittedly this would place a major street between the gym and the park, which is on the east side of the street. Nevertheless, we doubt that there would be a constant stream of pedestrian traffic back and forth across the street As, as a matter of fact, there are already the Kiwanis train and other facilities on the west side.</p>
        <p>The Park facilities on the east side of Elm have long been the mo^ popular recreation area in the city. The area is even now far too small for the</p>
        <p>;i^eal Fight Is Seen In Senate</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM A. SHIRES</p>
        <p>SESSION Most observers now are looking for major opposition to Congressional r^ districtiag plans to develop in the Senate rather than the House during this weeks special session of the General Assembly.</p>
        <p>And it may result in a reluctant decision on the part of legislators to let the federal courts do the job of redrawing the states 11 Congressional districts Instead of prolonging the special session in an atmosphere of futility and bickering.</p>
        <p>Id rather just quit and go fishing, is one typical comment by a legislator prepared to support all three redistrict-ing and reapportionmcnt plans submitted by special legislative committees.</p>
        <p>Many lawmakers said they saw no reason to drag the extra session beyond one week although the deadline laid</p>
        <p>Opinions In Brie:</p>
        <p>Thank goodness we live in a free country where a man may say what he thinksif he isnt afraid of his wife, neighbors or boss, and if hes sure it wont hurt his business or reputation.  San Jacinto (Calif.) Valley Register.</p>
        <p>What is one to do when &amp;lt;Hie receives a notice suggesting a contribution for a new hating plant fM* the church? Particularly when one has been under the impression one has been contributing heretofore for some assured cooling system after St Peter calls.Lexington (Ky). Herald.</p>
        <p>An work and no play makes Jack a dull boy  so remarked a nursery rhymster long ago, who should have stuck around to see what all play and no work turns out Nashville (Tenn.) Banner.</p>
        <p>down by a three-judge federal court for political reapportionment is Jan. 31.</p>
        <p>BLOCKEDThere are widespread predicitons that if one of the three pre-session re-districting plans is blocked by disagreement it wili be that to realign the Congressional districts.</p>
        <p>It is also this plan that many legislators say they are more willing to turn over to the court if no quick legislative agreement can be reached.</p>
        <p>There Is no single package</p>
        <p>for redistricting and reapportionment The plans for reapportioning the House, re-districting the Senate and realigning Congressional districts are being submitted and acted upon separately.</p>
        <p>PLANSPrearranged plans called for the House to act first on House re - apportionment and the Senate to act first on Senate redistricting.</p>
        <p>Any amendments to the respective plans were to be offered in the affected house for approval or rejection. There was, in effect, a gentlemans agreement among many legislators to accept the plan as approved by the body affected.</p>
        <p>There is no such agreement, however, on Congressional redistricting and amendments to this planalong with alternate plansww expected in both houses.</p>
        <p>Most sources predicted that the House and Senate plans would be whisked through by late Tuesday or Wednesday-after rather lengthy debate and a series of key votes on alternate plans in each chamber. For example, key votes may come on proposals to submit a constitutional amendment to increase House membership to assure each county of at least one representative, and other alternate plans.</p>
        <p>PREDICITONS  A few counties may be shifted, but most sources predicted approval of the respective redistricting plans for House and Senate by substantial vo^.</p>
        <p>These swirces also predicted approval of the Congressional redistricting plan in the House with some 75 to 80 votes on key roll calls or standing votes. In the Senate, however, the Congressional redistricting situation was precarious. There was considerable opposition to this plan, especially among Piedmont legislators. _</p>
        <p>number of people who make use of it almost year round.</p>
        <p>It makes little sense to us to use up- with a building more of the limited open space available, particularly when the building can go somewhere else. Recreation commissioners should take another look at this decision. Perhaps the building can yet be placed on the west side of Elm. Perhaps some location away from the park entirely would be suitable.</p>
        <p>The matter needs further study and we would urge the commission to reconsider.</p>
        <p>Nothing To Be Gained By Arguing Over Court</p>
        <p>During the course of this special session of the General Assembly some legislators will take time out to denounce the Supreme Court for its one-man-one-vote edict and also the federal court for applying this ruling to North Carolina.</p>
        <p>This is to be expected in a session in which the basic formula for representation in the legislature is to be rewritten.</p>
        <p>It is important, however, that the special session not get bogged down in venting of objections to the court ruling. The ruling has been made; it applies to North Carolina as well as to other states, and it must be followed.</p>
        <p>The legislators must turn their attention to the problems of legislative apportionment and congressional redistricting in accordance with the court ruling. The sooner the matter is done properly, the better off the state will be.</p>
        <p>Nothing is to be gained now by arguing the merits of the court decision which has forced legis-  .  -</p>
        <p>lative reapportionment upon the state.</p>
        <p>'Good</p>
        <p>By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN</p>
        <p>Copyright, 1966, King Features Syndicate, Inc.</p>
        <p>Why do the good ones have to go? And, a subsidiary question, why arent they recognized for what they are at the time of their going?</p>
        <p>These queries, the second of which is not rhetorical, are prompted by the untimely death, at the age of 45, of Marguerite Higgins, who, though she looked like a demure debutant when she first became a war correspondent back in the Nineteen Forties, had the steel to compete with case-hardened men of the journalistic profession, by digging harder and longer in order to overcome military prejudice against permitting women to report in dangerous places.</p>
        <p>JOHN</p>
        <p>By HAL BOYLE</p>
        <p>?eking Turning A Mans Castle In Spain Against Castro</p>
        <p>By BEN F. MEYER WASHINGTON (AP)</p>
        <p> The Communist world found itself embroiled today in a new and bitter dispute which could have far-reaching repercussions.</p>
        <p>The new controversy centers around a charge by Communist China that Cubas Prime Minister Fidel Castro lied in saying Peking refused to carry out a plan to barter rice for Cuban sugar.</p>
        <p>But deeper than a trade dispute is the real cause of the</p>
        <p>This Date-40 Years Ago Today</p>
        <p>By JOHN G. DUNCAN</p>
        <p>' January 11, 1926</p>
        <p>PROGRESS MADE BY PITT</p>
        <p>COUNTY SCHOOLS</p>
        <p>In the movement taken by the larger schools in the county for cleaner schoolrooms, more attractive premises, tidier children and better sanitary conditions in general. Belvoir, so far has led all the other schools in this accomplishment of the points laid down in the score card of the Pitt Countys teacher handbook.</p>
        <p>The Ratings</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of The Board</p>
        <p>Publlihed Every Afternoon Except Sunday Established 1882 JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers entered at Post Office, GrcenvUli, M. 0. as second class mall mattir.</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES</p>
        <p>By Garner (In Towns)</p>
        <p>By Carrier (Motor Routos)</p>
        <p>By MAIL, PayabI# In Advenco</p>
        <p>GreenviUc Post Office, Pitt County. RobersonviUe. Washington and Oho&amp;lt;wlnlty.</p>
        <p>Three Months  ..........................</p>
        <p>Six Months  ...........................</p>
        <p>One Year ................................</p>
        <p>North Carolina (other than listed above)</p>
        <p>Three Months .........     ..........</p>
        <p>Six Months ......... ....................</p>
        <p>One Year ......   ..........</p>
        <p>Plus 1% N. O. Sales Tax AU Other Outside North Carolina</p>
        <p>Three Months ............................</p>
        <p>Six Bionthi ..............................</p>
        <p>One Year ................................</p>
        <p>Wook 30c Wook 35c</p>
        <p>Vance boro,</p>
        <p>S.7B</p>
        <p>7.00 Ui</p>
        <p>4.00 7.80</p>
        <p>114.00</p>
        <p>4JB</p>
        <p>8.00</p>
        <p>818.00</p>
        <p>IIEIIIIEB ASSOCIATED PRESS The AasoelMed Press U exclusively enUUed to use for pubU-ill JSKWM dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to Utikt pap*r *^&amp;lt;1 idso the local news published herein. All rt0ftf ol publications of special dispatches hers are also rdWVsA</p>
        <p>Mflnber AudU Bureau of CJlrculaiHAi.</p>
        <p>AH advertlsinf c6pf must be received at itast two days j^Ucatlon date. _ .</p>
        <p>Belvoir</p>
        <p>Grimesland</p>
        <p>Bell Arthur</p>
        <p>Bethel</p>
        <p>Winterville</p>
        <p>Falkland</p>
        <p>Grifton</p>
        <p>Fountain</p>
        <p>77 per cent 69 per cent 65 per cent 60 per cent</p>
        <p>59.5 per cent 59 per cent 58 per cent</p>
        <p>55.5 per cent</p>
        <p>FEASTS OF UGHT A GREAT</p>
        <p>SUCCESS</p>
        <p>The Epiphany service proves most beautiful and impressive.</p>
        <p>St. Pauls Church</p>
        <p>Mr. Sam Worthington of Ayden was a Greenville visitor today.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Gorman have returned from a two weeks trip through the middle west.</p>
        <p>controversythe Peking-Mos-cow struggle fc -afership of the Communist 1  and the timing of the cu rent disagreement</p>
        <p>One immediate effect of the Peking-Havana quarrel could be an internal struggle at the three-continent solidarity conference now under way in Havana. Some said it might produce a walkout of Red Chinas delegation which has found the conference heavily weighted in favor of the Soviet Line. Moscow bolsters Castros regime with economic and military aid estimated at $1 million a day.</p>
        <p>The timing of the dispute is significant. It was begun by Castro on the eve of the Asia-Africa-Latin American meeting. He announced that his government and Red Clhina found themselves in disagreement on a plan under which China would send rice to Cuba in exchange for sugar.</p>
        <p>The Peking governments action has caused a cut from six to three pounds per month in the ration of rice in Cuba, where rice is a major staple of the diet.</p>
        <p>Now the Peking government has issued a blistering statement about Castros declaration. Stripped of its diplomatic niceties, Peking says in effect:</p>
        <p>1. Castro is a liar.</p>
        <p>2. Castro violated the norms of international good manners in speaking out publicly about negotiations then under way, particularly since Cuba has an official mission now in Peking to present h i s view point.</p>
        <p>3. Castros timing in attacking a sister nation on the eve of the Havana conference gives broad reasons to suspect the sincerity of his motives.</p>
        <p>Observers here are watching the new controversy closely. They wonder if North Viet Nams Hanoi regime will be able to keep on playing it cozy with both Moscow and Peking as Castro tried to do. A high-level Soviet delegation is now in Hanoi talking things over with government leaders.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) -Every mans castle in Spain is his memory.</p>
        <p>Such a castle has certain advantages.</p>
        <p>You can spend as much or as little time in it as you choose. It has no mortgage. You dont have to pay rent,</p>
        <p>taxes or upkeep. But the longer you live the more rooms there are in that castle. It keeps getting bigger all the time.</p>
        <p>In any case, your castle of memories is pretty sizable if you can look back and remember when</p>
        <p>At night, as you stared up at the bedroom ceiling, the reflected light from a car passing outside revealed leering faces in the wallpaper.</p>
        <p>A mother was afraid to leave the family cat alone in the room with a baby for fear it would suck away the infants breath.</p>
        <p>If something broke, you could always get the hired man to fix itfor half a dollar or less.</p>
        <p>Unless the preacher put a lot of fire and brimstone in his sermon, his congregation felt he had let them down. You couldnt denounce the devil too often in those days. People felt he was putting in a 24-hour day tempting them individually.</p>
        <p>Here in Manhattan, the horse cars were a slow form of transportationbut the horses never went on strike.</p>
        <p>Some farm women hated to visit a city doctor because it made them nervous to ride up to his office in an elevator.</p>
        <p>A favorite sport in a small</p>
        <p>Other Editors Saying</p>
        <p>Officers Made Records</p>
        <p>town was watching the local pool shark give a smart aleck traveling salesman his come-up-pance.</p>
        <p>Only gypsy women and high society ladies had pierced ears.</p>
        <p>Dogs ate table scraps and went through life without ever shaking paws with a veterinarian.</p>
        <p>People would travel miles in a horse and buggy to listen to a politician make a speech from the back end of a wagon, After all, amusement was pretty limited.</p>
        <p>It was firmly believed by many that bankers earned most of their money by robbing orphans and foreclosing on widows.</p>
        <p>Most Americans were more afraid of another depression than another war.</p>
        <p>The most awe-inspiring event at a state fair was the balloon ascension.</p>
        <p>One of the predictable things about life was that a kid would have his tonsils taken out before he was old enough to wear long pants.</p>
        <p>Girls with long hair combed itregularly. Washed it regularly, too.</p>
        <p>(Goldsboro News-Argus)</p>
        <p>Concerned over evidence that Ku Klux Klan activities as in any state, if not more so. Governor Moore has taken action. He has opened a campaign to curtail, control and eradicate the terror tactics of the bed-sheet organization.</p>
        <p>Governor Moore several times has spoken clearly, fully and forcibly to warn against Klan activities. He has emphasized that the Klan does no good to any person, cause or idea. The Klan, he has also emphasized, is an instrument of lawlessness.</p>
        <p> In his new campaign he has organized a committee of top state officials who are charged with keeping tab of the Klan, its members, and its doings. He has called on the corrimittee to lead in restoring what it lost in revelations of large Klan membership. Many say that North Carolinas growing campaign for more industry, so successful in recent years, will be damaged by Klan revelations if the</p>
        <p>growth of the bed-sheet wearers is not controlled.</p>
        <p>Governor Moore has picked a fighter and a man who has hit out harshly against the bed-sheet boys on earlier occasions. He is Malcolm Sea-well, former attorney general, now chairman of the Board of Elections, and a leader noted for his forthright approach to all problems.</p>
        <p>Mr. Seawell and his committee will find a mass of material already at hand in the new assignment.</p>
        <p>For many months State Highway TVoopers and enforcement officers have made lists of numbers of motor vehicles at public Klan rallies. They also have made lists of numbers of motor vehicles parked at sites where Klans were known to be meeting regularly.</p>
        <p>Of course most of those at Klan public cross burnings were there as curiosity onlookers. They did not con^ as Klan members, but the officers will know pretty well who is who in their lists.</p>
        <p>Ooinions</p>
        <p>'n Brief</p>
        <p>The National (Consumer Finance Association claims current consumer assets total $1.3 trillion. Then how come you have to stop 23 people before you can get a quarter in change for a parking meter? Lexington (Ky.) Leader.</p>
        <p>A significant paradox in todays complex society is that do it yourself projects are becoming more and more popular among homemakers and weekend handymen, but less and less popular with American cities.  Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger.</p>
        <p>Copperhead snakes do not bite unless disturbed. SSSSH'</p>
        <p>Surest way to succeed is work.</p>
        <p>CHAMBERLAIN</p>
        <p>Miss Higgins died of a rara tropical disease which she picked up from an insect bite during her tenth trip to Southeast Asia. The obituaries accented her earliest feats^ of derring-do in Korea, where she appealed to General Mac-Arthur over the head of General Walton Walker in order to have a ban on women war reporters removed. What the obituaries missed, probably because they were written on an overnight basis, was the reflective quality of Miss Higgins own writing and thinking ip her last months, a quality that broods over a book which she had just seen through the press in the days before she died. Called Our Vietnam Nightmare, and published by Harper and Row, the book is only now reaching the stands. If the words of its concluding chapter are not heeded by President Lyndon Johnson in his quest for an honorable peace that will not sell the South Vietnamese down the river then woe betide the United States.</p>
        <p>This columnist has always had a feeling of personal pride in Marguerite Higginss success. Back in 1941 I taught a once-a-week course called Editorial Methods at the Columbia University School of Journalism. Miss Higgins was one of forty or fifty students whom I had to face each week. In the week before Pearl Harbor I asked the class to do a 700-word backgrounder piece on the Far East that would meet Joseph Pulitzers standards of terse writing. Marguerite Higgins turned in some twenty pages of closely written text, which, on its face, was a clear violation of the assignment. But on reading the piece I discovered that it contained no padding whatsoever. It was only after this that I learned Miss Higgins had been born in Hong Kong, and could give a relative ignoramus such as myself some lessons that I badly needed in the real meaning of Oriental affairs.</p>
        <p>Some of her Ck)lumbia Classmates thought that Maggie Higgins was arrogant; they used to quote her prediction that she would some day be as well-known in the newspaper world as columnist Dorothy Thompson. But this, as it turned out, was not mere bravado; it was a statement of desire matched by a unique (Continued On Page 5)</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>Old Inflation Curbs Are Unused</p>
        <p>By EARL L. DOUGLASS A COMPLETE SYSTEM Recently I voted for the erection of a college to be established by public funds in the county in which I live. This would appear to be a great step in advance. We will not have ail ideal country. Or a country anywhere near the ideid, until every person has an opportunity to receive as much education as he can take. For some, this will be only grade school; for others, high school; for other, college liberal arts degrees; for still others, techniques that are greatly needed in the worlds life in every generation.</p>
        <p>Providing high schools for the population would have been considered an absurd undertaking a hundred or more years ago. Tojiay it is taken for granted. The next</p>
        <p>step will be establishing of colleges in every area which will enable young men and women to go on and get as much education as they are capable of absorbingand doing this at public cost. There will still be a place for the independent college. Some boys and girls today attend high school; others attend expenlsve preparatory schools. One does not conflict with the other. Each has Its place.</p>
        <p>We will have taken the greatest of all steps when opportunities for a college education are open to all who can meet the academic requirements. Let them go to the Ivy League colleges or state universities if they want to, but let there be county colleges, or sectional colleges, for all who want further education at public cost.</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER Fear of inflation is abroad in the land. The administration has warned of the dangers; many economists have been even more outspoken in warnings.</p>
        <p>There are some classic measures that may be taken to prevent inflation or, at least, to slow it down. Among them are:</p>
        <p>Increase the backing of the currency.</p>
        <p>Increase taxes.</p>
        <p>Cut government spending. Control wages.</p>
        <p>Control prices.</p>
        <p>Increase interest rates. Restrict consumer credit. Encourage savings.</p>
        <p>. Increase production.</p>
        <p>NOT MUCH ACTION. SO FAR The government has done very little to combat infla-*</p>
        <p>tion; in fact, some actions seem inflationary.</p>
        <p>It cannot very well increase the backing of the currency. It would be impossible to restore gold backing because so much gold has been drained away. It is even difficult to get silver dollars for dollar</p>
        <p>KIMEB</p>
        <p>ROBMNER</p>
        <p>bills. The copper-sandwkh coins are making the old silver ones rarer and there are already signs of hoarding.</p>
        <p>TTie government has increas</p>
        <p>ed taxes slightly. It has raised social security rates but lowered excises, and it may be forced to increase other taxes later this year, not as a brake on inflation but to raise money for the Viet Nam war and the Great Society.</p>
        <p>(lovemment spenciing is being increased.</p>
        <p>LITTLE WAGE, PRICE CONTROL The government has set guidelines for wage increases, but has not been vigorous in making them stick. The 3,2 per cent annual increase has become a minimum instead of a maximum, and the government has sat quietly by when demNsds exceed that mark.</p>
        <p>The government has acted to control aluminum prices and, after, opposing steel price increases, agreed to a .smaller rise. However, its</p>
        <p>farm program tends to keep many prices up.</p>
        <p>The Federal Reserve, not the government, raised interest rates. The administration seemed to oppose the action, but now seems glad it happened.</p>
        <p>There has been no restrio tion on consumer credit. The Federal Reserve action makes savings more profitable, but the government has no action to encourage savings.</p>
        <p>The government Is encouraging increases in production, notably in war material. However, current threats of inflation do not arise from a shortage of goods, so Increases in consumer goods would not b8 highly elective.</p>
        <p>In summary, very little action is being taken to combat  inflation. Inflation is becoming a way of life.</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0005" />
        <p>New Prime Minister</p>
        <p>\  </p>
        <p>Is Gandhi Follower</p>
        <p>NEW DELHI, India AP) -Indias new prime minister, Gulzarilal Nanda;^ is a trade union veteran who in the past year jailed more than 1,000 Communists whil^ home minister.</p>
        <p>Like all leaders of Indias ruling Congress party, the 67-year-old prime minister is a disciple of Mohandas K. Gandhi, ttie leader of the nonviolent revolution against British rule.</p>
        <p>I believe" in freedom of the individual because I believe individual freedom leads to growth, he once said. Therefore, I want to stave off totalitarian symptoms wherever they appear.</p>
        <p>He viewed communism as a greater threat to Indias democratic socialism than right-wing political groups because of the proximity of China and the display of power there which has dazzled some of our people. Nanda founded the Indian Na-tonal Grade Union Congress to counter the Communist All-India Trade Union.</p>
        <p>He once described himself as a pragmatist and a Socialist but not a Marxist.</p>
        <p>My heart bleeds for the working classes and this makes people think I am a leftist, he said. But I am a Gandhian in and out and I want a fair deal for workers.</p>
        <p>If we enlist the sympathy and support of the underdogs that is the most effective reply to our Communist friends. Nanda resigned as professor</p>
        <p>of economics at Bombays National College in 1921 to join Gandhis movement Gandhi named him to head the Congress partys labor movement</p>
        <p>The British jailed Nanda five times lor his independence work and he spent in all seven years in jail.</p>
        <p>He entered the government in 1952 when Prime Minister Ja-waharlal Nehru named him ^labor minister. Later he became home minister, the No. 2 post in Nehrus government.</p>
        <p>After he became home minister, Nanda said in an interview he never imagined himself rising so high in the political world.</p>
        <p>I always thought I was carved out for social and economic tasks, he said.</p>
        <p>One of Nandas close aioes once described him as basic</p>
        <p>ally an economist, a social worker and a religious man.</p>
        <p>He founded a nationwide organization of the Hindu holy men known as Sadhus in an effort to put them to work in active social service.</p>
        <p>When Nehru died last May, Nanda was sworn in as caretaker prime minister. Five days later he stepped aside for Lai Bahadur Shastri, who died Monday in the Soviet Union, and returned to the home ministry.</p>
        <p>Nanda married while an undergraduate and has two daughters and two sons. Both daughters and one son became doctors.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C-Tueaday, January 11, 1966-5</p>
        <p>Six From Pitt Attend 1% Advancement School'</p>
        <p>Coverad Heavy Snow</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM  Pitt inated by their home</p>
        <p>PARIS (AP)-Tbe first snow of the year  and one of the toviest falls since Worid War f IIcovered Paris with 6 to  schools'inches of white today.</p>
        <p>County will be reprcswitcd by to attend the three-months sm-six students during the winter   ^  '</p>
        <p>session of the North Carolina Advancement School now going on in Winston-Salem.</p>
        <p> _______ The snow started about 8:30</p>
        <p>sion and are often accompanied Monday night and was still com-by a few teachers from the fug down at mid-moming. Bus-same school system.  ies and cars crawled through tha</p>
        <p>Under a new schedule at the icy    S-</p>
        <p>I M  I  unaer a new scijcuuic ure, '  .  c</p>
        <p>Enrolling in the winter ses-Advancement School, mornings i**</p>
        <p>Sion. whiSi.hegan on January i are spent in .11 academic class-A mmber of runs were su-</p>
        <p>5, were Frederick Douglas Car-ies and the afternoons are de- pcnoco. mon, Victor Mature Carmon,; voted to individual instruction,</p>
        <p>James Nelson Gilbert, Curtis I physical education and intramur-Danicl Wilder and Ivey Ray I al athletics.</p>
        <p>Bryant, all of W. H. Robinson. The after-supper hours of from School in Wintcrville and Wil- g.jQ g p  spent in</p>
        <p>liam Paul Bateman of Ayden enrichment program of class-School.  cs  in such things as arts, crafts,</p>
        <p>FALSE TEETH</p>
        <p>Tbrt Leottn Need Net Emborrot!</p>
        <p>Mmny wmnn of utttb tblr plat* drypad.</p>
        <p>....... ------.  bled t jut tlw wrong ume ^ no*</p>
        <p>The school, which is now mjshop, camping skills and music.] uve m  th*</p>
        <p>its second year, is a residential p^om 8 to 9:30 p. m., the boys: iiiiine%on\cuirpnwde^on^ja</p>
        <p>- -    1  nni/  r&amp;amp;iee  teth  moTe  nrmiy</p>
        <p>research laboratory for eighth grade boys of good ability who are not achieving up to their potential. The students are nom-</p>
        <p>. u   *  .1      piSrHid</p>
        <p>O.V. in their rooms studying, *o they fe*i mw reading and talking with their] tSe'bwitb).*^/aJsteith  house advisors.  '  counur.</p>
        <p>THEIR DOG IS HOME  Three youngsters of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Grill, Philadelphia, joyfuUy hug their Irish setter, Reds" after the dog, which disappeared more than a year ago. was restored to the family. The dog turned up in hands of a New York state hospital from a Pennsylvania firm dealing in animals for research purposes. Through efforts of doctors at the hospital and other dog lovers, the dogs owners were traced to the Grills ^ho said the setter wajs missing since 1964. Enjoying the reunion are Mary EUen, 3; Billy 4. and KeUy Ann, . (AP Wirephoto)  ___</p>
        <p>ennetff</p>
        <p>uiAvio cicMrr oLlAiJTV ^</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson has nominated Dr. James L. Goddard to be commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration.</p>
        <p>The selection is subject to Senate confirmation.</p>
        <p>Goddard, 42, now is assistant surgeon general of the U.S. Public Health Service and chief of the Communicable Disease Center in Atlanta, Ga.</p>
        <p>The commissioners job was vacated last month when George P. Larrick retired.</p>
        <p>of more than $10.</p>
        <p>The fee for certified mail will be increased from 20 cents to 30 cents an item.</p>
        <p>ECC Symphony Concert To Be Given Sunday Afternoon</p>
        <p>cert the orchestra will p 1 a y ed for two oboes, two flutes, Handels Concerto Grosso in two bassoons, a continuo and a B Flat Major and the Rim- string orchestra. sky-Korsakov piece, The Cap-! According to Serrins, the Rim-riccio Espangnol. After in- sky-Korsakov work, written in</p>
        <p>The 64-piece East Carolina College Symphony Orchestra, the only resident symphony in Eastern North Carolina, will</p>
        <p>give its first concert of the ..v-v-.v,  -----  ^  ^  ju  mu  </p>
        <p>1965-66 season n^t Sun day termission the audience will 1887, has been termed by Tchai afternoon, Jan. 16.  hear the four movements of;kovsky a colossal masterpiece</p>
        <p>The program is scheduled at Brahms fourth symphony. jOf instrumentation.</p>
        <p>3:30 p.m. in Wright Audi tori-! Members of the orchestra in- Serrins calls the Brahms sym-um. It is free and open to the'elude East Carolina students |phony one of the greatest or-</p>
        <p>from 14 North Carolina coun- chestral works since Beetho-ties and five other states, facul-'ven. Although it ends tragical-ty instrumentalists and non-col- ly, he says, it does so with the</p>
        <p>public.</p>
        <p>David R. Serrins, in his four-rxPtTAi oiiOTFS  season  as conductor, will</p>
        <p>D THi? AQSOfiATED PRESS  orchestra  as  it plays</p>
        <p>R Pa -  T^^  by  Brahms. Handel and</p>
        <p>antipoverty program has be-  Serrins  says, All in all it is a</p>
        <p>come a nightmre o  I  school  of  Music  which  sponsors  |  progam  that  those  inte^sted</p>
        <p>prntip hiinslins. over-paid  ad-  ,  ,_____ artistic  expressicfi  of</p>
        <p>lege musicians from the Greenville area.</p>
        <p>Describing Sundays concert, Serrins says, All in all it is</p>
        <p>cratic bungling,  .'.he  svmobonv</p>
        <p>ministrators, poorly orgamze&amp;lt;^ | tt^^sympnony</p>
        <p>field workers and partisan pol itics.</p>
        <p>of</p>
        <p>In the firs't half of the con- man will certainly want to</p>
        <p>AUMIMI FtR8T QUALITY</p>
        <p>COMPLETE SELL OUT BEFORE</p>
        <p>NEW</p>
        <p>SHIPMENT</p>
        <p>JUST</p>
        <p>RECEIVED</p>
        <p>Advises Against Pesticide Ban</p>
        <p>the current cost of amounts</p>
        <p>Wants Faculty Free 01 M'isiits</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The Post Office is planning to boost prices for money orders, insui;-ance, registry, certified mail and C. 0. D. service, effective</p>
        <p>The fee for domestic and in-; RALEIGH (AP)  Dr. N. C. temaonal money orders willlBrady, director</p>
        <p>'i,- 1,1..SdS7 At?,?.':</p>
        <p>cent insurance fee for material ^ ^</p>
        <p>valued at $15 or less. Most oth-1  nradv  told  450 agricul-</p>
        <p>er insurance rates ,11 be ratsed^^^Dr- Brady^W^</p>
        <p>lu cents.  ,  7e  lers  representatives  at the an-</p>
        <p>The current 60-ceri  ^-;nual pesticide school at N. C.</p>
        <p>cent registry "'1 bej:on^- ig^^^^ Monday that farm leaders bined mto one 75-cent fee  jeaji  the way in develop-</p>
        <p>values up to $100.  pescide  control  laws.</p>
        <p>C.O.D. rates will be revamped, otherwise, he said, others to combine the present 40-cent</p>
        <p>and 50-cent brackets into onO|  gajd  those  engaged in</p>
        <p>60-cent  category for amounts up,  ^ ^.^iture must recognize the</p>
        <p>to $10.  There  will  be no change  become alarmed be-</p>
        <p>in the current cost of amounts j  the cran</p>
        <p>berry contamination, the fish killed in the Mississippi River and dumping of polluted milk.</p>
        <p>Widespread and unprecedented attention to pesticides has alarmed and confused the public, he said. People on all rHAPFT  HILL  (AP) -  A  sides are genuinely concerned</p>
        <p>member of  the  University  Z</p>
        <p>quarading misfit who employes unlawful tactics and irresponsible publicity - seeking extremists.</p>
        <p>Victor Bryant, Durham lawyer, told the Chapel Hil chapter of the American Association of University Profesors Monday that a university faculty also should rid itself of the charlatan cutting corners with his deceitful practices, the slanderer plying his frauds, and the warped - minded purveyor of filtv</p>
        <p>ReceiveReports</p>
        <p>Of Guns Slolen</p>
        <p>hear.</p>
        <p>The ECC Symphony, he i|lds,' takes a great deal of pride! in making music of this quality available to the campus and the surrounding area. He said the musicians and their sponsors 'are hopeful that a large audi-;ence will attend next Sundays Greenville police have receiv-! concert, ed reports of the theft of two| Discussing the three works shotguns and a rifle from frat-jthe symphony will play, the ernity houses over the Christ-!conductor noted that the open-mas holiday period.  I  ing  Handel concerto, written in</p>
        <p>Chief Henry Dawson said the! the early 18th century, is scor-two thefts were reported yester-day.</p>
        <p>First of the reports was made</p>
        <p>greatest of nobility, tenderness, brilliance and heroism. Brahms composed it in the mid-1880s.  i</p>
        <p>Students scheduled to play in Sundays concerto, listed with the instruments they play, include:</p>
        <p>PITT COUNTY, Greenville John Charles Bircher, percussion, son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Bricher, 112 Lord Ashley Drive; ami Robert Van Veld, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Van Veld, 100 Pineview Drive.</p>
        <p>by Charles Brandau of 414 West Fourth St. who said a .20 guage pump-type shotgun was taken from the house there while students were away for Christmas.</p>
        <p>The value of that weapon was set at $80.</p>
        <p>Later, John T. Lamb of 308 Jones Dorm reported that a .12 guage automatic shotgiin and a .270 caliber bolt action rifle were taken from a fraternity house at 412 East Ninth Street over the Christmas holiday period.</p>
        <p>Lamb set the value of the weapons at $150 each. Investigation of the cases is continuing.</p>
        <p>Firemen Called To Local School</p>
        <p>Greenville firemen were called to Third Street School about 2:45 p.m. yesterday when a rag in the boiler room caught fire.</p>
        <p>Fire officers, who said children were evacuated from the building before they arrived, re-jiorted the small blaze had been extinguished by the time trucks responded to the call.</p>
        <p>No damage resulted.</p>
        <p>School officials said the building was cleared of students when fumes from the burning rag was smelled in the main ^part of the building.</p>
        <p>Chamberlain ...</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4) quality of iron in her will. The significant thing about Marguerite Higgins is that she could reach conclusions even against her own ideological preconceptions when exposure to facts dictated a change. Judging by her reporting, she had few sources among conservatives or so-called right wing circles. But she was never taken in by the fashionable liberalism that considers the U. S. has no business opposing the spread of Communism in Southeast Asia. She had the cold eye that should be the journalists first qualification. This is* what made her disliked by some of her masculine colleagues who resented it in a woman.</p>
        <p>Judge Recalls Father's Words</p>
        <p>WICHITA, Kan. (AP)  U. S. Atty. Guy Goodwin was pros- j ecuting a criminal trial in fed-1 eral court here and on cross-examination fired questions at a witness faster than the witness could answer.</p>
        <p>Presiding Judge Wesley E. ea- miHucu  Brown  finally broke  in. My</p>
        <p>obscenities acting in the'father used ^ aay  he told</p>
        <p>i^^C/SriOHflNDlC^</p>
        <p>guise of academic freedom.</p>
        <p>Discussing the Speaker Ban Law, Bryant said 'fhe evidence points clearly to the fact that racial demonstrations in which UNC faculty members and students participated contributed heavily to the passage of this unfortunate and ill-advised legislation.</p>
        <p>Few Shadows On Groundhog Day</p>
        <p>JERSEYVILLE, 111. (AP)  Ground hog shadows hereabouts are scarce on ground hog day.</p>
        <p>Mark Matthews collected 307 ' ground hog scalps this year.</p>
        <p>Matthews bagged more than 400 gioimd hogs last year. His hobby pays him 25 cents a scalp.</p>
        <p>The American flag of 1777 was not changed until 1795 when Vermont and Kentucky were admitted to the Union requiring 15 Iripes and stars.</p>
        <p>Goodwin,  The hardest thing to do is to hear with your mouth open.</p>
        <p>Goodwin chuckled, bowed, and replied:</p>
        <p>I recognize the wisdom of your father.</p>
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        <p>See your local authorized Buick dealer</p>
        <p>Our own Picket 'n Post tops for heather-toned coordinates!</p>
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        <p>COMPARE THIS VALUE</p>
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        <p>MORE PEOPLE BUY PENNEY SHEETS THAN ANY OTHER SINGLE BRAND IN THE WORLD! the'REASON: OUTSTANDING QUALITY AND VALUE!</p>
        <p>All Penney sheets are flawless first quality; woven of</p>
        <p>sheets have firm balanced weaves, no weak spots; smooth finish, minimum closely stitched, precise Iv^ms. All Elasta-fit bottom sheets are ^i^rizcd. AL fashion sheets are colorfast. Penneys sets high standards and tests To see the&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>are met!</p>
        <p>NATION-WIDE</p>
        <p>long-wearlnf cotton muslins! 183 count.*</p>
        <p>WHITI 149</p>
        <p>twin 7ixl08" flut or ElasU-fit Sanforised aottom sbet</p>
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        <p>pillow</p>
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        <p>CHARGE It At PENNIYS - OPEN HO. NItE 711  PM</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0006" />
        <p>P^koge Price Will Go Up On Theatre Ducats</p>
        <p>The East Carolina College i^immer Theater this we^ iaaued a final reminder to pur&amp;gt; dbase 1966 season tickets before the package price goes up next weekend After midnight Saturday, Jan. 15, nil season ticket books y^ill cost $18 each rather than the original $15 price.</p>
        <p>Ptoducer Edgar R. Loessin reminded. that all mail orders postmarked after Jan. 15 and all purchases from the office or from the theaters various community chairmen after Saturday will be subject to the $18 rate.</p>
        <p>Early this week the theater bad banked about $25,000 from m season ticket sales. That fgure, said Loessin, does not Include complete returns from chairmen in various communities where sales reportedly have been running ahead of last fears.</p>
        <p>The money figure reflects the tale of about 1,700 season tickets. Thus at the most, less than 2,800 of the theaters season ticket supply, 4,500. are left.</p>
        <p>Scheduled next summer are die musicals Kismet (June 27-July 2), Stop the World I Want to Get Off (July 4-9), a non-musical comedy (July 11-16), Sound of Music (July 18-80, two weeks), Finians Rainbow (Aug. 1-6) and another non-musical play (Aug. 8-13).</p>
        <p>If they are made available for off-Broadway production in time tb plays may include .4ny Wednesday, Never Too Late or Mary, Mary.</p>
        <p>Summer Theatre representatives in the various communities of Eastern North Carolina include:</p>
        <p>Ayden, Edward N. Warren: Bethel,  Tom  Andrews;  Farm-</p>
        <p>ville, B. S. Smith, Jr.; Fountain, James Jefferson.</p>
        <p>Greenville, Mr. and Mrs. Tyson Bilbro, Dr. Harrj^ Billica; Mrs. Ralph  Brimley;  Morris</p>
        <p>Brody; M. H. Bynum; Mrs. Donald  R. Calloway;  Joseph</p>
        <p>0. Clark; M. Louis Collie; Percy  Cox;  James  Ficklen,</p>
        <p>Jr*; Mrs. L. S. Ficklen; Leslie Gamer; Mrs. Ralph Garrett,</p>
        <p>Sr.; Mrs. Louis W. Gaylord; Curtis Hendrix; John L. Howard; R. Wallace Howard; J. B. Kitrell, Sr; J. T. Marston; Reynolds May; John F. Minges; Dr. Ray D. Minges; Henry Morris; Mrs. E. E. Rawl, Sr.; Mrs. E. E. Rawl. Jr.; Ed Ricks; Mrs. W. M. Scales, Jr.; Mrs. Katherine Stubbs; Hank Tribley; Mrs. W. A. Tripp; Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. White; Mrs. Robert L. Wolff.</p>
        <p>Grifton, Mr. and Mrs. W. Ivan Bissette; Sam Nelson;</p>
        <p>Will Be Briefed On Hanoi Contact</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)-A congressional panel planned to question CIA Director William</p>
        <p>gaged in.any substantive nego</p>
        <p>tiations. Johnson</p>
        <p>has offered uncondi-</p>
        <p>F. Raborn today on the newly'tional discussions. To this the</p>
        <p>announced direct U.S. diplomatic contact with Hanoi.</p>
        <p>The Central Intelligence Agency chief was to brief a joint subcommittee on the CIA at midafternoon on the Johnson administrations Viet Nam peace offensive.</p>
        <p>Secretary of State Dean Rusk had been scheduled to brief the House Foreign Affairs Commit^ tee this morning on the</p>
        <p>Nam situation. But he left for   1  -J  iiif  roll-  India shortly after midnight as</p>
        <p>m"' a member of e U.S. delegaUon</p>
        <p>Robersonville, Rep. and Mrs. Paul D. Roberson; Stokes, J. B. Congleton, Jr.</p>
        <p>GJommunists have not yet given any significant response through diplomatic channels, it was stated. Publicly, the Reds are continuing to berate the United States as the aggressor in Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>The U.S.-North Vietnamese meeting was said to have occurred some time ago. Johnsons current peace campai^ Viet began Dec. 24 with the halt in air strikes against North Viet Nam targets.</p>
        <p>of the U.S.</p>
        <p>Hanois receipt</p>
        <p>to the funeral of Indian Prime communication this time  during last Mays bombing pause it refused a U.S. message sent</p>
        <p>three Americans just returned from an unauthorized trip to Hanoi.</p>
        <p>The White House spokesman said the three  Yale Professor Staughton Lynd and two others were incompletely informed in asserting that there had been no direct U.S. government contact with Hanoi ^ Moyers said it was a safe deduction that there had been direct contact.</p>
        <p>Moyers also said U.S. Ambas-</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>Minister Lai Bahadur Shastri.</p>
        <p>Winterville, Mr. Vernon E. White.</p>
        <p>WITN</p>
        <p>throqgh the British  was not</p>
        <p>Turkish Guests At Ruritan Club</p>
        <p>U.S.-North Vietnamese contact'regarded as significant here</p>
        <p>pending a reply from the North Vietnamese capital.</p>
        <p>At least a dozen Commurfist</p>
        <p>late Monday but refused to tell more  including how, when or where it came about.</p>
        <p>It was learned that a U.S. dip- i and non-Ck)mmunist countries lomat met for a few minutes have both U.S. and North Viet-</p>
        <p>with a Hanoi representative and handed him a message concerning U.S. proposals for peace in Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>The Pactolus Ruritan (Hub,  .</p>
        <p>i- ed to have exchange routine! matic remarks, but not to have en- asked</p>
        <p>namese diplomats accredited at their capitals. While Moyers declined to hint at the site of the</p>
        <p>sound out GOP sentiment on for the Viet Nam in the light of the new</p>
        <p>sador-at-large W. Averell Harri- development man is going to Saigon, but he But it speaks well didnt know what the response intensive (peace) efforts made development, would be if Harriman were invited to Hanoi.</p>
        <p>While administration sources said the direct contact disclosure did not signify a change in the immediate military situation.</p>
        <p>House statement</p>
        <p>by the President not only over the past two months but  over</p>
        <p>the last eight months, he  said.</p>
        <p>The Mansfield group said in a formal report released las^L diplomatic  or  | week that chances for a  just,</p>
        <p>the  White  negotiated settlement are  slim,</p>
        <p>heightened; Sen. George D. Aiken, R-Vt.,</p>
        <p>Sen. Leverett Saltonstall of Massachusetts, chairman of the Senate Republican Conference, said that if there is no accepta-)le Communist response to the J.S. peace probes, a decision on ntensifying the war will have to be made soon. Saltonstall is one</p>
        <p>already intense congressional one of those who accompanied of the select group which gets interest in what might be done Mansfield on the trip, said he | CIA briefings, about Viet Nam.  iknew nothing of the contact. Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., a</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Hobo 7:30 The Cer 8:00 The Daisies 8:30 Dr. Kildare 9:00 Movie 11:00 Weather 11:05 News 11:10 Sports 11:15 Tonight</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>8:25 Aspect 6:55 Farmer 7:00 Today 9:00 Beaver 9:30 Peopie Are 10:00 Fye (iuess</p>
        <p>contact, he lifted the adminis- 10I25 nbc News The two officials were report- trations secrecy on its diplo- 0= concentration</p>
        <p>efforts slightly about the statement</p>
        <p>of</p>
        <p>Monday, heard a good compari son of the farming industry in Turkey and the United States.</p>
        <p>Guests of the club were Mrs.</p>
        <p>Meriman Buyuktopcuoglu and Suat Cuhadaroglu, delegates from Turkey who are in this country to study the methods of farm development and finance.  ,  </p>
        <p>Following short talks by both' WASHINGTON, N. C. Dr.,mental institutions, housing, guests, the floor was open to ajjohn East, the Republican can- hospitals, poverty programs, and question and answer session ! didate in the First District The guests were introduced by  Congressional election to be</p>
        <p>I 11:00 Morning Star when; n.30 Paradise Bay</p>
        <p>12:00 Jcijpardy 12:30 Post Otfice</p>
        <p>12:55 News 1:00 G'rl TalK 1:30 Make Deal 1:55 News 2:00 Our LIvas 2:30 Doctors 3:00 Another World 3:30 Don't Say 4:00 Match Gama 4:25 News 4:30 Funny Paga 5:30 Cartoons 6:00 News 6:15 Sports 6:25 Weather 6:30 Hunt.-Brlnk. 7:00 Beaver 7:30 The Virginian 9:00 Bob Hope 10:00 I Spy 11:00 Weather 11:05 News 11:10 Sports 11:15 Tonight</p>
        <p>Senate E&amp;gt;emocratic Leader Mike Mansfield, who headed a 13-capital tour by five senators late last year, called this new report a hopeful sign. Mansfield said he had no word from either the White House or the State Department on the</p>
        <p>I hope it is true, he said. U Foreign Relations Committee hope it is a first step toward I member, said in an interview he further understanding between feels there may be some more the conflicting parties.  hopeful elements in the John-</p>
        <p>The Senate Republican Policy son search for i^ace that have</p>
        <p>Committee arranged a luncheon at which Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen expected to</p>
        <p>Dr. East Addresses Washington Club</p>
        <p>Sam C. Winchester, Pitt Farm agent. The program followed dinner and a short business session.</p>
        <p>Edward Lee was announced as first-place winner of the Home Decoration Contest and Dick Latham placed second. The door prize of the evening was awarded to Bobby Edwards.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Eddie Dollar, pastor of Parkers Chapel Free Will Baptist Church was inducted into the club.</p>
        <p>held on Feb. 5, in a speech before the Washington Kiwanis Club on Monday evening, struck at the Johnson Administration on its civil rights laws, its attempt to impose an unreasonable minimum farm wage, its attempt to abolish Right to Work Laws, and its failure to use the conventional military means at hand to bring the War in South Viet Nam to a successful conclusion.</p>
        <p>_ Regarding civil rights. Dr.</p>
        <p>Greater London covers 443,-  singled  out  for  parti-</p>
        <p>WNCT</p>
        <p>TUESDAY 5:00 Bronc</p>
        <p>6:00 News 6:10 Sports 6:25 Weather 6:30 Newt 7:00 Bobby Lord ":30 Daktari 9:30 Pettioat 10:00 Reports 10:30 Battlellne 11:00 Final Report 11:30 Movie WEDNESDAY 6:30 Carolina 8:35 News 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 Lucy 10:30 McCoy*</p>
        <p>11:00 Andy 11:30 Van Dvke 12:00 Debnam 12:15 Farm News</p>
        <p>455 acres.</p>
        <p>HEATIKG OILS</p>
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        <p>cular attack the withholding of federal funds by the Johnson Administration unless forced racial integration is achieved in</p>
        <p>New Members On Cheering Squad</p>
        <p>education.</p>
        <p>Dr. East said that such unrealistic and foolish policies are insulting to both races in North Carolina. He further charged that the withholding of federal funds under the 1964 Civil Rights Bill to achieve forced racial integration has given i Tuesday us government of men rather than of laws because the decisions are left to federal bureaucracies subject only to the approval of President Johnson, s-m McHaie</p>
        <p>Candidate East proposed that | J; pyfo^pi. if the federal government ser- j io;oo ioUSly wishes to assist in de-|U : 10 weather veloping quality proverty, housing, hospitals, mental institutional, and educational programs it should stop immediately complicating these programs by injecting the delicate and tive racial problem.</p>
        <p>In conclusion, Dr. East commented on the failure of his</p>
        <p>12:25 Weather 12:30 Search 12:45 G&amp;lt;Jg. Light 1:00 Love Life 1:25 Timely lip* 1:30 World Ttrns 2:00 Password 2:30 Houseparty 3:00 Tell Truth 3:25 News 3:30 Edge Night 4:00 Sec. Storm 4:30 Cartoons 5:00 Cheyenne 6:00 News 7:00 Wanted 7:30 Thaxton 8:30 HillbiKles 9:00 Gre-3 Acres 9:30 Van Oyke 10:00 Danny Kaye 11:00 Pinal Report 11:30 Movie</p>
        <p>WNBE</p>
        <p>5:00 Fun House 5:30 L. Young 6:00 News 6:10 Weather 6:15 News 6:30 Seahunt 7:00 Combat</p>
        <p>11:15 Playhouse WEDNESDAY 7:00 ""armr 7:30 Goodmornmg 8-00 Romper 9:00 Early Show 10:30 LaLanne 11:00 Super Mart, ^pnci-I It10 Dating</p>
        <p>112:00 Donna Reed</p>
        <p>12:30 Knows Best 1:00 Ben Casey 2:00 Nurses 2:30 Time Por Us 2:55 News 3:00 G. Hosp.</p>
        <p>3:30 Marrleds 4:00 Too Young 4:30 Action Is 5:00 Fun House 5:30 L. Young 6:00 News 6:10 Weather 6:15 News 6:30 Sea Hunt 7:00 One Step 7:30 Batman 8:00 Patty Duke 8:30 Blue Light 9:00 Big Valley 10:00 Amos Burke 11:00 Late Report 11:10 Weather 11:15 Falcon</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1. Idle talk</p>
        <p>4. Self</p>
        <p>7. Thrcc-bandcd armadillo</p>
        <p>11.100 square meters</p>
        <p>12. Greed</p>
        <p>14. Uriat</p>
        <p>16. Process of decorating metal</p>
        <p>17. Prescribed quantity</p>
        <p>18. Humor</p>
        <p>19. Buddhist pillar</p>
        <p>20. Country homes</p>
        <p>22. Edible fish</p>
        <p>23. Negative</p>
        <p>24. Witty saying</p>
        <p>25. Feminine pronoun</p>
        <p>26. Nourished</p>
        <p>27. Sandwich meat</p>
        <p>28. Compass point</p>
        <p>30. Retired</p>
        <p>32. Repletion</p>
        <p>34. Bad; comb.</p>
        <p>o  s.  ^SOLUTION  OF  YISTItDAY'S  PUZZLI</p>
        <p>35. Pear-shaped</p>
        <p>not come to public light.</p>
        <p>Sen. Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa., sad Johnson should have complete freedom to play out the string for peafte.</p>
        <p>It would be foolish to start bombing again just when the Presidents strategy may be beginning to pay off, Clark said.</p>
        <p>fruit 36. Unusual 37iArum plants</p>
        <p>39. Kingly</p>
        <p>40. Uneducated</p>
        <p>42. Be situated</p>
        <p>43. Cape</p>
        <p>44. Fr. article</p>
        <p>45. Adjective sufifix</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1. Flower plot</p>
        <p>2. In the style of an air</p>
        <p>3. Quadruped</p>
        <p>4. Girl's name</p>
        <p>5. Proceed</p>
        <p>6. Avifauna</p>
        <p>7. King topper</p>
        <p>8. Post</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>Z</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>7~</p>
        <p>7-</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>\o</p>
        <p>//</p>
        <p>It</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>/4</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>li</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>1$</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>If</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>3!</p>
        <p>92</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>Va</p>
        <p>3S</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>3i</p>
        <p>d</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>9. Book of maps</p>
        <p>10. Peasante of India</p>
        <p>13. River island</p>
        <p>15. Yoked</p>
        <p>18. Dank</p>
        <p>21. Bushy dump</p>
        <p>22. Sink in mud</p>
        <p>25. Chapeau</p>
        <p>26. Criminals</p>
        <p>27. Ugly old woman</p>
        <p>28. Overtax</p>
        <p>29. Small perforation</p>
        <p>80. Forcefrdly</p>
        <p>31. River boat</p>
        <p>32. Cordbge fiber</p>
        <p>33. Our national emblem</p>
        <p>35. Famous President</p>
        <p>38. Peacock butterflies</p>
        <p>39. Rights: abbr.</p>
        <p>41. Compass point</p>
        <p>SERVING THE COMMUNITY</p>
        <p>OF EASTERN N.C.</p>
        <p>SINCE 1933</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>Marble &amp;amp; Gran'rt* Works</p>
        <p>JOHN CONWAY, OWNER W. Dickinson Ave. Ext. Phone PL -8309</p>
        <p> MARBLE TABLE TOPS</p>
        <p> MARBLE FOR FIRE PLACES  '</p>
        <p> MONUMENTS</p>
        <p> MARKERS</p>
        <p> LARGEST SELECTION OF BRONZE IN AREA</p>
        <p> BEAUTIFUL CEMETERY FLORAL DESIGNS</p>
        <p>Democratic opponent to join</p>
        <p>The cheerleading .squad of j him in a television debate and Stokes-Pactolus High School has ^stated that this refusal siuigest-gained two new members, the'ed that his opponent, Walter school announced today.  j  Jones,  must  be  in  agreement</p>
        <p>Harriet Adams and Carolyn ''  *'h1.u'</p>
        <p>Nelson were named to the squad j  Democrac  Adminis-1</p>
        <p>last week, replacing Patricia! ^  </p>
        <p>Ward and Linda Fae James.</p>
        <p>Kenneth Smith has not yet been replaced.</p>
        <p>The new cheerleaders took over their duties at the basketball game held in Stokes Friday night.</p>
        <p>Seat-Numbering System is 'Legal'</p>
        <p>.1</p>
        <p>K Olds 88 Swing Fever is mighty hard to resist!</p>
        <p>TOIWIUOO W DflTA M HOUBAV coast</p>
        <p>A good thing always is.</p>
        <p>Got that canVwah-for-tpfliti, can*t-wait4or-that-new-car feelingl Welcome to the cluW Olds M Swing Fever U catching up with just about everrbody, and they*re lovinn every minute of it. But the best pert U the cureea eeey to take as a swingii &amp;gt;g new Jctstar, Dynamic or Delta 881 Theres one priced right for you. See your Olds Dealer for a Rocket Rx today. Then entch yonr lever go down as your fun goes up. Happy convalescence! LOOK TO OLDS FOR THE NEW f</p>
        <p>OLDS 88</p>
        <p>K SWemNG THE COL NTRY!</p>
        <p>I RALEIGH (AP) ~ Atty. Gen. Wade Bruton says the seat num-Ibering system proposed for the State House of Representatives would be legal.</p>
        <p>Bruton wrote Rep. Thomas D. Bunn of Wake that This office concurs in the conclusion of an opinion given by the Institute of I Government at Chapel Hill, j Under the numbering propos-|al, seats in a multi - member i district would be numbered and I candidates would run for specific seats.</p>
        <p>Bruton pointed out the num-'bering system has been used for some time to fill vacancies iin other bodies, including the 'state Supreme Court and U.S. Senate.</p>
        <p>Occidental Life I Official Dies</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Francis M. Frank) Houston, vice president and treasurer of Ocident-, al Life insurance Co., died Monday at Rex Hospital. He was 56.</p>
        <p>He had been treasurer of Occidental since 1962 and was I elected vice president last year. He also was assistant treasurer of the Occidental Fire and Casualty Co. and the Virginia Surety Co. Ind.</p>
        <p>Houston was a native of Monroe but moved to Raleigh as a boy. He was a graduate of the University of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>FEWER BABIES</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Fewer babies were bom in this : country during 1965 than in any year since 1951, a Public I Health Service spokesman said I today.  _</p>
        <p>Public Notice</p>
        <p>cm FRONT</p>
        <p>OLOBMOBII-E</p>
        <p>rZ,. iHUHofd OkJsmobiU G&amp;gt;., Inc. Hooker Rd. &amp;amp; Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>".Thenti 7SI-41f7M-8417758-S41S  N. C. Dealer License No. Ml  Greenville,  N,</p>
        <p>C.</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>ThA undersigned, having this day qualified a4 administrator of the estate ot J. D. Hudson, Sr., deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify al* persons having cl.iims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit the same, duly itemired and verified, to Ihe undersigned .dminlslrator at Grlmes-land, Nokth Carolina, Route 2, Box 256, on 01 before the 28th day of June, 1966, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to said administrator.</p>
        <p>This the 22nd day of OeceMb'r, 1965, J. D Hudson, Jr.</p>
        <p>Administrator ot the Estate of J. D Hudson, Sr.</p>
        <p>R. B. Lee, Attorney Dec. 28, Jan. 4, II, IB</p>
        <p>Gtceo</p>
        <p>4'*</p>
        <p>O'*</p>
        <p>\o</p>
        <p>b</p>
        <p>90</p>
        <p>I**</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0007" />
        <p>ao^ecf the daily reflector</p>
        <p>TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 11, 1966Pirates Gain Third Straight As Richmond Falls</p>
        <p>Cox And Alford Lead 76-72 Win</p>
        <p>East Carolina finally put together its offense and defense and took a 76-72 victory over arch-rival Richmond last night.</p>
        <p>It was the third straight victory for the Bucs, and boosted them to a 2-2 conference record and a tie for fourth place in the standings with William &amp;amp; Mary.</p>
        <p>The victory is even more amazing when it is considered that high scorer Jerry Woodside spent the evening on the bench with an injured leg.</p>
        <p>The Buc&amp;lt;i,defenses were what made the game however. This has been the weak point of the Bucs up until the last three games, and it blossomed into full bloom last night</p>
        <p>For example, John Moates, Richmonds leading scorer, was limited to only six points in the first half, four of them coming on fast breaks.</p>
        <p>He finished with 21, however, but most came when Billy Duckett, the man assigned to him, was screened off, and another player took over Moates.</p>
        <p>The game, however, was not actually decided until the final 13 seconds. East Carolina was leading then with a 74-72 lead and Richmond had the ball. However, Buster Batts, the man assigned to take the shot, was charging, and the Bucs got the ball back. Jimmy Cox was then fouled and made both shots for the final four-point margin with only two seconds left on the clock. A desperation shot was missed by the Spiders.</p>
        <p>Richmond came into the game with a 5-2 record in the loop, "losing only to Davidson and West Virginia, both by close scores. The Spiders gained the initial lead on a bucket by Spike Welsh, but East Carolina came back to take a 4-3 lead on a pair of buckets by Cox.</p>
        <p>Richmond grabbed it back at S-4, but the Bucs went back ahead of a follow-up by Charlie Alford, and shot out into a six-point lead at 13-7 in the next few minutes.</p>
        <p>From there on out, the Bucs held the lead in the first half, building up to a nine-point lead at 31-22. Richmond then rallied with the fast break and pulled back to tie it up at 33-33, but couldnt gain the lead, as the Bucs pulled away again.</p>
        <p>At tie half, it was 41-36.</p>
        <p>In the second half, the Bucs</p>
        <p>pulled out into a 10-point lead at 49-39, but again Richmond rallied, mostly gambling on giving the Bucs the shot, and using only four men down court and passing long to a breaking player.</p>
        <p>TTiis cut it back slowly, and finally Richmond gained the lead at 68-67 on a shot by Batts. But it didnt last long, as the Bucs took it back on a shot by Bobby Kinnard.</p>
        <p>Batts then again put Rich mond out at 70-69, but again, Gerald Smith hit to push the Bucs ahead, 71-70, with 2:41 left.</p>
        <p>From there on-out, the Bucs were in control and pushed out to a five-point lead as Danny Pasquariello hit on a foul shot and then came back with bucket and the Bucs held 74-69 lead.</p>
        <p>Richmond cut it back to two, but then Cox hit and it was all over.</p>
        <p>Cox had one of his best nights, hitting for 26 points, while Alford dumped in 17 and Kinnard had 10.</p>
        <p>Moates led Richmond with 21, while Welsh had 16, Batts had 12 and Green had 10</p>
        <p>The Bucs also had a good night on the boards, as Kinnard pulled down 14 and Alford had 11. Overall the Bucs held a 50-36 rebounding edge.</p>
        <p>Wednesday, the Bucs travel to Charleston, W.Va., to meet the University of West Virginia in their toughest game to date.</p>
        <p>In tlie preliminar^, the Richmond freshmen rallied from a first half deficit to lake a 71-56 victory over the ECC frosh.</p>
        <p>FRESHMAN GAME</p>
        <p>Richmond: Ukrop Jones 16, Frazier 23, Ford 8, Weddington 13, Wilkinson, Powers, Layne.</p>
        <p>ECC:  Franklin  2,  Kier  4, Sabo 8,</p>
        <p>Lanier 2, McMakIn 8, Verrone 14, J. Damowski 3, Licko 2, Roberson 4 Lind-felt, Hatcher 8, McAdams.</p>
        <p>Rkhmond ECC</p>
        <p>varsity ^AME Rkhmond</p>
        <p>Moates</p>
        <p>Welsh</p>
        <p>Green</p>
        <p>Roberts</p>
        <p>Batts</p>
        <p>Burgess</p>
        <p>Balderson</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>East Carolina</p>
        <p>Cox</p>
        <p>Kinnard</p>
        <p>Alford</p>
        <p>Williamson</p>
        <p>Campbell</p>
        <p>Duckett</p>
        <p>Smith</p>
        <p>Pasquariello Totals Richmond East Carolina</p>
        <p>4571</p>
        <p>3256</p>
        <p>FC FT TP</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>36-72</p>
        <p>35-76</p>
        <p>Duke Grips To First In Poll</p>
        <p>By BEN OLAN</p>
        <p>Associated Press Sports Writer The streaking Duke Blue Devils held onto first place in The Associated Press basketball poll today and Kansas replaced Iowa in the major-college Top Ten.</p>
        <p>Dukes margin place Kentuck</p>
        <p>over^second-</p>
        <p>sion to Wisconsin.</p>
        <p>Kansas whipped Colorado 69-55 and Iowa State 82-65 for an 11-2 mark and moved into 10th place.</p>
        <p>Duke defeated Penn State 83-58 and North Carolina 8-7 while Kentucky defeated St. Louis 80-70 and Florida 78-64. The Top Ten with won-lost</p>
        <p>place Kentucky was trimmed'  through games Jsn.</p>
        <p>considerably, though. The Blue j 8.  total points on a 10-9-8</p>
        <p>Devils, winners of nine in a rowiCto.Jbasis: for an 11-1 mark, collected 32 1. Duke ............. 11-1</p>
        <p>405</p>
        <p>In the balloting by 44 regional experts.</p>
        <p>Kentucky, unbeaten in 10 games, trails by only 40 points, 50 less than a week ago. The Wildcats polled eight votes for the No. 1 position and 365 points L the latest balloting based on games through last Saturday.</p>
        <p>Duke and Kentucky set the Pattern for the other teams in last weeks Top Ten, each win-nihg twice. Among the other eight teams, only Iowa was a loser. The Hawkeyes, seventh a week ago, dropped a 69-68 deci-</p>
        <p>2.</p>
        <p>Kentucky .......</p>
        <p>10-0</p>
        <p>365</p>
        <p>3.</p>
        <p>Vanderbilt ......</p>
        <p>12-1</p>
        <p>338</p>
        <p>4. St. Josephs, Pa. ..</p>
        <p>10-2</p>
        <p>238</p>
        <p>5.</p>
        <p>Bradley .........</p>
        <p>13-1</p>
        <p>236</p>
        <p>6.</p>
        <p>Providence ......</p>
        <p>10-1</p>
        <p>174</p>
        <p>7.</p>
        <p>Brigham Young .</p>
        <p>10-1</p>
        <p>149</p>
        <p>8. Texas Western ...</p>
        <p>12-0</p>
        <p>120</p>
        <p>9.</p>
        <p>UCLA ..........</p>
        <p>9-3</p>
        <p>103</p>
        <p>10.</p>
        <p>Kansas</p>
        <p>11-2</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>COX FIRES . . . Jimmy Cox, who led all scoring with 26 points, fires for a bucket in last night's game with Richmond. The Bucs took their third straight win 76-74, and gained a share of fourth place with the victory. Watching, from left to right, are Buster Batts, Charlie Aiford, John Moates, Terry Burgess and Gerald Smith.</p>
        <p>(Reflector Photo)</p>
        <p>Phants Seek To First With</p>
        <p>Solidify Grip On Victory In New Bern</p>
        <p>Rose High School will be out to thin the ranks of the unbeaten teams in the Northeastern Conference tonight as it travels to New Bern to meet the Bears.</p>
        <p>New Bern, Elizabeth City and Rose are all tied for first place with 2-0 records, and a win for ihe Phants would make it only a two-way tie, providing Eliza beth City gets a win in its game.</p>
        <p>But the victory is not expected to be an eas^ one for the</p>
        <p>Phants, who took their first two conference games by a total of four points.</p>
        <p>Oddly enough, New Berns two victories were over the same two teams, but by a slightly larger margin. They and Rose had both defeated Tarboro and West Carteret.</p>
        <p>Neither team looked spectacular in the pre-conference games, but both have come on strong following tlie Christmas break.</p>
        <p>The biggest note of hope for</p>
        <p>ihe Phants was the fine performance of Steve Fuller on Friday night. Fuller dumped in 19 pointy to pace the scoring in the West Carteret game, and appears to be getting back into his All-Conference form of last season.</p>
        <p>In addition, Ricky^Webb, the only other regular back from last season, is chipping in 13 points per game, and is the teams leading scorer thus far.</p>
        <p>The starting five is rounded</p>
        <p>Western Carolina, High Potnt Showdown</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOOATED PRESS Western Carolinas high-scoring Catamounts visit first-place High Point tonight for an early showdown in Carolinas Conference basketball.</p>
        <p>High Point, a veteran team paced by Eugene Littles and John Davis, leads the conference race with a 6-1 record and is 8-2 overall.</p>
        <p>Western is 3-1 in the conference, 103 overall, and fresh from a 113-93 victory over Atlantic Christian in whicn Henry Logan scored a career and individual Catamount high of 46 points.</p>
        <p>The game is one of only two tonight for small colleges in the Carolinas. Nortii Carolina Methodist is at North Carolina Wesleyan in the Dixie Conference.</p>
        <p>Appalachians Mountaineers</p>
        <p>stayed among the Carolinas Conference contenders Monday night with a 69-67 overtime victory at Newberry. Jim Wilcoxs three-point play at the end and 18 points won it for the Mountaineers, now 5-3, 7-5.</p>
        <p>Newberry slipped to a 3-5 tie with Pfeiffer which lost 83-78 decision at Atlantic Christian.</p>
        <p>In other games, Lenoir Rhyne beat Presbyterian 87-72, Erskine</p>
        <p>National Basketball Association</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mondays Results No games scheduled Todays Game East-West All-Star Game at Cincinnati</p>
        <p>Wednesdays Games Los Angeles at Boston Philadelphia at Detroit New York at San Francisco</p>
        <p>Wednesday's</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>East Carolina at West</p>
        <p>Vir</p>
        <p>ginia ECC frosh</p>
        <p>at Southwood</p>
        <p>National Hockey League By THE ASSOCTATED PRESS Mondays Results No games scheduled Todays Games No games scheduled Wednesdays Games No games scheduled _</p>
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        <p>Cash</p>
        <p>Monthly Paymsnts For</p>
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        <p>18 Mo.</p>
        <p>$300</p>
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        <p>28.70</p>
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        <p>47.73</p>
        <p>61.55</p>
        <p>1200</p>
        <p>$40.92</p>
        <p>67.24</p>
        <p>73.82</p>
        <p>1500</p>
        <p>51.14</p>
        <p>71.48</p>
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        <p>2000</p>
        <p>68.18</p>
        <p>95.28</p>
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        <p>whipped Piedmont 84-62, Elon downed Campbell 79-53 with 21 points by Henry Goedeck, Winston-Salem outscored Elizabeth City 125-118, and Morris beat Florida 117-108.</p>
        <p>Atlantic Christian had five players in double figures with Bob Gilmores 20 leading the way, to offset Pfeiffers Mike Smith and Harold Williford who scored 22 each. ACC now is 3-3, 7-6, Pfeiffer 3-5, 4-8.</p>
        <p>R. D. Carsons 38 points led Lenoir Rhyne, 5-4, 7-15, while Ken Martin had 23 for Presbyterian, 1-5, 2-11.</p>
        <p>out by Van Harrington, Billy Ipock and David Fowler, all of whom have been giving fine performances, but scoring in spurts.</p>
        <p>This imbalance may be a good thing for the Phants, however, since a defense cannot key on one man, for another is capable of breaking loose at any time.</p>
        <p>New Bern, with only one starter back from last season, has stated that they feel they can be tough at home and may be building up toward the end of the season.</p>
        <p>With a young club, they may be doing-this early. Only four seniors appear in the lineup, with just three starting, Gary Holt, Billy Guptill and Jimmy Blythe. Holt is the only starter back.</p>
        <p>Joining them are two sophomores, Scott Davenport and Pat McGuinness.</p>
        <p>The team has no big man, however, with McGuinness, the tallest at 6.4.</p>
        <p>Scrappiness may again prove the big factor in the game, as the teams appear to be equal in everything else.</p>
        <p>Ayden, Bethel Clash For First</p>
        <p>The Pitt County race gets down to brass tacks tonight as Ayden meets Bethel in the showdown game.</p>
        <p>Both teams are undefeated in conference play and Bethel is holding a half-game lead on Ayden. Bethel has won four games, while Ayden is 3-0.</p>
        <p>The winner of the contest is expected to go on to victory in the regular season standhigs, and will tlierefore be favored to win the tournament too.</p>
        <p>Ayden is paced by Billy Stokes, the countys fourth leading scorer with a 20.7 average. Walter Claybrook is seventh in the stax witii a^l6.0 average.</p>
        <p>Bethel, meanwhile, is led by Robert Young, who stands number 12 with a 13.7 average. Douglas Dunning is Bethels second high man with a 13.1 average, good enough for 17th.</p>
        <p>Winterville, in third place, will be taking on sixth place Grifton, which is still looking for its first loop win. The Wolves, 2-1 in the loop, are led by Levi Smith, with an 11.8 mark, and Jeffrey Hazelton with a 10.7 average.</p>
        <p>Grifton, 0-3, is paced by Steve Rogers, number 11 in the standings with a 14.8 mark.</p>
        <p>Fourth-place Chicod will be attempting to increase its luck against last place and winless Stokes - Pactolus. The Hornets are 2-2 in the loop while Stokes</p>
        <p>has yet to win four starts.</p>
        <p>The Hornets have a big factor going for them in Fred Mills, the countys top scorer with a 25.0 average.</p>
        <p>Bel voir, 2-3 in the loop, playt host to non-conference Bear Grass. Belvoir has two men in the top 20. Tommy Meeks is fifth with a 17.2 mark, while Mac Bullock is 15th with a 13.2 average.</p>
        <p>The standings:</p>
        <p>W L</p>
        <p>Bethel ................  4  0</p>
        <p>Ayden ..........  3  0</p>
        <p>Winterville ............. 2  1</p>
        <p>Chicod .........  2  2</p>
        <p>Belvoir ...............2  3</p>
        <p>Grifton..............  0  3</p>
        <p>Stokes ..................0  4</p>
        <p>Reward!</p>
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        <p>Tk Daily Raflactor, Graanvilla, N. C.Tuasday, January 11, 1966</p>
        <p>Citadel Seeks To Upset Davidson</p>
        <p>The teams at the top and bottom of Southern Conference bas-ketball, Davidson and Die Qta-del, meet tonight and if you think The Citadel coach Mel Thompson is intimidated, youre right.</p>
        <p>Davidson looked overpowering to me when they beat West Virginia (105-79) last Saturday at Charlotte, says Thompson. So how do you reckon theyll look against us in their little old home gym?</p>
        <p>We dont know if well come out alive, but were going to give it all weve got. If they can be had, Id like to have them.</p>
        <p>Thompsons Cadets, 3-8 overall and 0-4 in the conference, have dropped seven straight since Dec. 11. Davidson is 11-2 against all comers and 6-0 in the conference.</p>
        <p>The Citadel, however, may not be as bad as its record. The last two setbacks  both in the conference  have been by two points, 68-66 at East Carolina and 74-72 at home against Furman last Saturday night.</p>
        <p>Complicating the (]ladets job tonight will be the absence of junior whiz Danny Mohr, who</p>
        <p>er 0,</p>
        <p>with a sprained ankle, rcfjrned for this Furman game, and now has sprained the other ankle.</p>
        <p>Last time I saw him, he was in a wheelchair, moaned Thompson. We sure could use him. Mohr is averaging 16.6 points per game.</p>
        <p>Wig Baumann (17.0) currently is the Cadet scoring ace.</p>
        <p>East Carolina, whic| had dropped two of three conference starts, waylaid Richmond 76-72 on the Pirate court Monday night.</p>
        <p>In other games, VMI won its third in a row by downing Fur^ man 90-83 and Georgetown handed George Washington its ninth loss in 11 starts, 100-81.</p>
        <p>Jimmy Coxs 26 points led East Carolina over Richmond, which got 21 points from Johnny Moates.</p>
        <p>Charlie Schmaus collected 35 points and Robin Porter 20 for VMI as the Keydets upped their conference record to 3-4 and dropped Furman to 2-5. Don Webster scored 29 for Furman.</p>
        <p>The Davidson - Citadel game is the only one tonight for conference teams.</p>
        <p>DUNKER . . . Charlie Alford dunks one in last nighFs game with Richmond. East Carolina won, 76-64 for their second conference win in four starts. Trying to stop him is Buster Batts, while Terry Burgess and Tom Green of Richmond, and ECC's Bobby Kinnard watch. Alford scored 17 to help pace the Bucs.</p>
        <p>(Reflector Photo)</p>
        <p>Kentucky Squeaks Past</p>
        <p>Rose Wrestlers</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>Dump New Bern</p>
        <p>Rose High Schools wrestlers took a 47-10 victory over New Bern last night.</p>
        <p>It was the first victory for the Phants, now 1-1 overall, and 1-0 against conference opposition.</p>
        <p>The Bucs took all but two matches, six of them by pins.</p>
        <p>Summary:</p>
        <p>97-pound class: Tom Treva-than (R) pinned John Parker.</p>
        <p>105: Gary Bostic (R) pinned Carl Dutcher.</p>
        <p>114: Ricky Lloyd (R) decis-ioned Charlie Justice.</p>
        <p>122: George Garrett (R) de-cisioned Jerry Paschal</p>
        <p>129: Mike Buck (R) pinned John Anderson.</p>
        <p>135: Kent Leggett (R)'decis-ioned Allen Ck)nnelly.</p>
        <p>140; Ernest Murphey (R) de-jCisioned Bob Ward, o ^</p>
        <p>: 147: Chris Hodges *(R) won I by forfeit.</p>
        <p>I 156: Gene Griffin (NB) pinned I Jerry Forsyth.</p>
        <p>!  167:  Nick  Roberts (R) pinned</p>
        <p>Charles Nobels.</p>
        <p>182: Buck Eubanks (NB) pin ned Greg Jones.</p>
        <p>199: Chris Wagand (R) pinned Worley Knowles.</p>
        <p>Unlimited: Jim Wygand (R pinned Jim Rhodes.</p>
        <p>The Phants return to action on Thursday, traveling to Kinston for a 7 p.m. match.</p>
        <p>Houston Regrets</p>
        <p>NCAA Ruling</p>
        <p>Duke Wary Of Georgia In Overtime</p>
        <p>Southern Visit</p>
        <p>By ED SCHUYLER JR. . ulation</p>
        <p>ranked Wildcats scored only one By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS derstatement of the year to say|P"^ j" overtime period. It Dukes top-ranked Blue Devils that well have our hands full!  ^n</p>
        <p>visit Qemson tonight, wary of tonight, said Clemson coach |</p>
        <p>Bobby Rboerts, But the boys I Td 60-60 at the end of reg-</p>
        <p>time, Kentucky and Associated Press Sports Writer Georgia each converted single Kentuckys unbeaten, second- foul shots to force the game into</p>
        <p>a second extra period in which</p>
        <p>the now - healthy Dgers and mindful of the last time they basketball in the State of ith Carolina.</p>
        <p>That visit resulted in a 73-71 loss at South C^olina, the Blue tnoBgh to keep the Wil^ats in games. Since, Duke has won nine in a row, including two victories over UCLA and wins over Michigan and at North Carolina. Duke also beat Clemson at Durham, 83-68.</p>
        <p>The game is tonights only one for Atlantic Coast Conference teams and a Duke victory would shot the Blue Devils out of a tie for the conference lead with North Carolina State. Both are 3-1.</p>
        <p>Clemson, on the road since a season  opening victory over North Carolina, is 1-2 in the AC and 4-4 overall.</p>
        <p>But the Dgers have the home-court advantage in tight (3em-son Field House and starters Ken Gardner, Randy Mahaffey, Buddy Benedict and Jim Sutherland seem recovered from a variety of injuries and illnesses that kept them out at various timeiR.</p>
        <p>I guess it would be the un-</p>
        <p>are ready and we should be back at near full strength for the first time since the opening game.</p>
        <p>Sutherland leads the Tiger | scorers at 16.7 with Gary Helms i at 15.5, Mahaffey at 14.3 and Gardner at 1.0. Mahaffey also is rebounding at an average of 8.8 per game.</p>
        <p>All five Duke starters  Jack Marin, Bob Verga, Steve Va-cendak, Bob Riedy and sophomore Mike Lewis  have double figure scoring averages, and the Blue Devils are scoring nearly 90 points a game as a team.</p>
        <p>In Monday nights only game in the ACC, Wake Forest beat Virginia 99-87 at Winston-Salem for its first conference victory. The Deacons now are 1-3 is the ACC, 4-7 overall. Virginia slipped to 2-4, 2-7.</p>
        <p>Paul Longs 26 points</p>
        <p>One Out, One In In Pro World</p>
        <p>. .. ByMIKERATHET Associated Press Sports Writer</p>
        <p>The latest standings in the pro football coaching sweepstakes show:</p>
        <p>One resignationWally Lemm at St. Louis, by mutual consent.</p>
        <p>One hiringGeorge Allen at Los Angeles, without mutual consent.</p>
        <p>Still openFive jobs, and George Halas mouth.</p>
        <p>'The latest shuffling and and I scuffling occurred Monday</p>
        <p>Associated Press* Top Ten saw action and recorded victories  No. 3 Vanderbilt, 106-58 over Mississippi and No. 10 Kansas, Kentucky outscored the 89-68 over Oklahoma.</p>
        <p>Bulldogs 8-4 for a 69-65 victory Kentucky started out at Ath-Monday night.  ens,  Ga.,  as if it would have an</p>
        <p>Two other members of The'easy time in running its record</p>
        <p>to 11-0, building a 34-21 halftime margin. But Georgia fought back and sent the game into overtime on Frank Harschers basket at the buzzer.</p>
        <p>The Wildcats Louie Dampier, who scored 23 points, sank one foul shot but missed a second in the first overtinie. The one enough to keep the Wildcat s in the game as the only point the Bulldogs could put on the board in the period was a foul shot by Harscher.</p>
        <p>Newton Scots 17 rebounds led Wake which also got 19 points from Bob Leonard and 13 from Jim Boshart. Mike Katos with 23, Jim Connelly with 19 and Jery Sanders with 13 toped Virginia.</p>
        <p>'Big' Problem All-Star Coach</p>
        <p>By DON BANDY CINCINNATI (AP) ~ Deciding whether to start 7-foot-1 Wilt Chamberlain or 6-9 Bill Russell at center for the East squad in the National Basketball Associations All-Star Game tonight is a towering problem for 0&amp;gt;ach Red Aua*bach.</p>
        <p>So. Auerbach said he will fiip a coin before the game to determine wliidi of the superstars will be in the starting dne-up against the Western Division All-Stars in the 16th annual clastic in Qodnnati Gardens.</p>
        <p>The East, with the likes of forwards Jerry Lucas and John Havlicek and guards Oscar Robertson and Sam Jones to support Russell and Chamber-lain, is a 10-point favorite to capture their fourth straight victory over the West.</p>
        <p>League rules state that the five i&amp;amp;yers receiving the most votes must start in the classic. Both Russell and Chamberlain were unanimous choices for the pivot positioo.</p>
        <p>With his array of talent, Auerbach admito, I think weve got the edge.</p>
        <p>But Los Angeles Coach Fred Schaus, who is guiding the West squad, said he was not giving up until the final buzzer.</p>
        <p>Theyve got all the firepow-</p>
        <p>when Lemm and the Cardinal owners agreed to a parting and the Rams and Halas agreed to disagree over Allens decision to leave the Chicago Bears for the head coaching job at Los Angeles.</p>
        <p>Halas, infuriated at losing his defensive coach to the Rams, citd the signing of Allen as a flagrant case of tampering and said the Rams utter disregard and contempt for legal obligations present a serious chal-tenge not only to the Bears but to the entire structure of tiie if National Football League. er. DO doubt about it, said. And he threatened action in a</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>were interested, then had sought Halas permission to talk to the Rams.</p>
        <p>Mr. Halas gave him this permission, said Reeves. Later, George Halas rescinded this permission and his objection was quite strong. Mr. Halas said he didnt want me to take Mr. Allen, or, if you prefer, Mr. Allen to take me.</p>
        <p>But, added. Reeves:</p>
        <p>I cant believe (Jeorge Halas will stand in his way.</p>
        <p>Lemm, however, did let one thing stand in his way. He wanted to be tlie Cardinals head coach on a six-months basis.</p>
        <p>When I hired Wally we wanted a coach who would be with us the year around, said Cardinal President Charles Bidwill. We knew that Wally wanted to be head coach on a six-months basis and that was fine.</p>
        <p>In the ensuing years, however, we felt moie and more strongly that we wanted* a head coach tiat would be with us all the time. When the issue came up again today, there was no compromise available, and by mutual consent, he is leaving the Cardinals.</p>
        <p>Lemm leaves a club as disappointing as the one Allen takes</p>
        <p>Schaus, but I think weve got .. ^ uuc&amp;lt;icucu c.v.tiuu i.. a much better defense at all posi*:</p>
        <p>ODS except maybe at center'^%ver.</p>
        <p>when Russell is in there.  whatever  are  cardinals,  considered  as</p>
        <p>ne^ed to protect our best mter-contenders before the sea-</p>
        <p>The West starters will be for- est.</p>
        <p>wards Rick Barry of San Francisco and Bailey Howell of Baltimore, center Nate Thurmond of San Francisco, and guards</p>
        <p>Halas pointed out that Allen still had two years to to on his cwitract with the Bears and had been expected to fulfill the</p>
        <p>Jerry West of Los Angeles and terms of his agreement.</p>
        <p>Results</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOOATED PRESS Waki Forest 99, Virginia 87 Lenoir Rhyne 87, Presbyterian 72 VMI 90, Furman 83 Bast Carolina 76, Richmond</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>Atlantic dirlstlan 83, Pfeifer</p>
        <p>rs</p>
        <p>Eraitiiit 94, Piedmont 62 Winston-Salem State 125, Elizabeth C3ty 118 (overtime)</p>
        <p>Elon 79, Campbell 53 As^achian 69, Newberry 87</p>
        <p>Guy Rodgers of San Francisco Barry is the only rookie oa either team.</p>
        <p>Lucas and Robertson are from the C^cinnati Royals and Jones and Havlicek from the Boston Celtics. Auerback is the Boston Celtics. Auerbacn is the Celtics coach.</p>
        <p>Dan Reeves, president of the</p>
        <p>son got underway, finished with a 5-9 record-the second worst in Lemms four years as head coach. The Rams were last in the Western Division with a 4-10 record under Harlan Svare. Four jobs now remain open in</p>
        <p>Rams, said Allen had first con- the Naonal League and one in tacted the club to see if they the American League.</p>
        <p>1 The NFL openings are at st.</p>
        <p>Hialeah Park opened in 1925 Louis; Atlanta, which still has and the featured Miami Handi- not signed a coach for i-s new cap was worth |1,500. This sea- Club; Pittsburgh, where Mike son the smallest purse at the Nixon has been fired, and Wash-south Florida track was $3,500. ington, where Bill McPeak has</p>
        <p>In the second overtime, Kentuckys Pat Riley opened with a basket, but Georgia came back with two free throws by Jerry Waller, who also finished with 23. The Wildcats then went ahead to stay on a pair of foul shots by Cliff Berger and Tommy Krons field goal.</p>
        <p>Big Clyde Lee scored 29 points and snared 28 rebounds in Vanderbilts easy victory over Mississippi at Nashville, Tenn.</p>
        <p>Another big man, Kansas Walt Wesley, netted 27 points and blocked seven shots in the Jayhawks defeat of Coahoma at Lawrence, Kan.</p>
        <p>Iowa, who dropped out of the Top Ten after losing 69-68 to Wisconsin Saturday, got back on the right track with 70-58 triumph over Northwestern.</p>
        <p>In other action, No. 5 ^radley beat the touring Polish National Olympians 81-77; Cazzie Russell got 27 points as Michigan trounced Indiana 88-68; Michigan State beat Purdue 8fl78 despite 30 points by Purdues Dave Schellhase, the nations scoring leader; DePaul set a school single-game scoring record by routing Western Ontario 120-51; and Southern Illinois, the first-ranked small-college tea|i, held off Kentucky Wesleyan 60-56.</p>
        <p>By BOB GREEN Associated Press Sports Writer WASHINGTON (AP) The University of Houston, stunned with a three-year probation-one of the longest in NCAA history-expressed regret today. University officials said theyd try to see that it didnt happen again.</p>
        <p>Dr. Frank L. Stovall, chairman of the universitys athletic board, and Athletic Director Harry Fouke said they deeply regret that violations have occurred and have taken appropriate steps to make certain that violations do not occur in the future.</p>
        <p>Their joint statement came after the National Collegiate Athletic Association had prohibited the schools football teams from participating in postseason bowl games or appearing on NCAA-sponsored telecasts for three years.</p>
        <p>The school was found guilty of violations on three counts of financial aid to athletes, five of illegal recruiting and one of out-of-season football practice. All took place between 1962 and 1965.</p>
        <p>These are serious violations, said Art Bergstrom, NCAA assistant director, The seriousness of them is reflected in the type of penalty.</p>
        <p>The violations were caused by some members of the coaching staff and by several weel-inten-tioned but somewhat overzeal-ous friends of the University of! Houston, Dr. Stovall and I Fouke said in their statement.</p>
        <p>In other major developments at the NCAA convention which</p>
        <p>opened here Monday:</p>
        <p>1. The rules committee of the Football Coaches Association overwhelmingly approved the unlimited substitution rule and asked that the rule makers leave the game alone for two or three years.</p>
        <p>2. The College Basebal Coaches Association namec Bobby Winkes of Arizona State coach of the year. It also inducted 18 former coaches into the Collegiate Baseball Hall oi Fame.</p>
        <p>3. The NCAA Council lifted a one-year probation from Arkansas and West Texas State aiK restored them to full membership.</p>
        <p>4. The NCAA Extra Events CJommittee heard requests for four new bowl games from groups in Tampa, Fla., Phoenix, Ariz.; Raleigh, N.C., and Atlanta, Ga.</p>
        <p>Jack Curtice of the University of California at Santa Barbara, chairman of the Coaches Rules Committee, said a survey of football coaches showed 98 per cent in favor of unlimited sub-stitition.</p>
        <p>Mondays Fights By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>PARISJacques Marty, 163V4, France, outpointed Ferd Fernandez, 163V4, Las Vegas, Nev., 8.</p>
        <p>TOKYO-Eiji Maruki, 145^, Japan, knocked out Eliseo Aranda, 146, Philippines, 3.</p>
        <p>LAS VEGAS, Nev.-Ernie (Indian Red) Lopez, 145, Los Angeles, outpointed A1 Andrews, IMVz, Fresno, Calif., 10.</p>
        <p>been fired.</p>
        <p>With Joel Collier taking over for resigning Lou Saban at Buffalo, one AFL job remains open at Miami, which still has not signed a coach for its new club.</p>
        <p>Chuck Davey, chairman of the Michigan Boxing Commission, is a former Michigan State boxer who had some success in the professional ring.</p>
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        <pb facs="00090179_0009" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.-Tuesday, January 11, 1966-9</p>
        <p> V ^   \.....'</p>
        <p>Last Number On Licence Plate Is ImportaI</p>
        <p>By ROB^WOOD ^ the license plate is the key toiVrill be inspected v i month. quest.</p>
        <p>Associated Press Writer .when you must have your car Lindsay said the only delay in On the military bases, Lind-</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  When you  checked.  granting certificates to service say said, inspections  are  being</p>
        <p>North Carolina motorists pick  If the last number is  3,  your  stations is the lack of nroper niade on all vehicles  regardless</p>
        <p>up the 1966 auto license plates,jauto must be inspected  no  later  inspection equipment. Several.of whether the cars have  North</p>
        <p>|be sure and check the last num-than March 31; 4, by April 30;  stations have not received head- Carolina plates.</p>
        <p>ber.  5May 31; 6June 30; 7July'nght aimers and once they do If a serviceman has an auto</p>
        <p>The  states  Motor  Vehicle  In-  31: 8August 31; 9Sept. 30; 0  the  number of certified inspec-  registered in  Florida,  he  ex-</p>
        <p>^ spection  Law  becomes  effective  Oct. 31; 1Nov. 30 and  2  tion  point! will increase sharp-  plained, the  car will  be  in-</p>
        <p>Dec. 31.  ly   spected  on the base and, if ap-</p>
        <p>Insp^tions will be handled by   ^  3,  proved  givm  a  North  Carolina</p>
        <p>a I qualified service Stations dis- ,3(3'' numbers, Undsav said, '"spection sticker.</p>
        <p>playing a certificate of approval    Heres  what  a motorist can</p>
        <p>issued by the state.  . cnmpnnp q mif nf thp statp  expect when he drives in for an</p>
        <p>C. D. Lindsay, director of  the / someone is out of the state  ^</p>
        <p>Motor Vehicle Department's U-  rSt  he  pays  a fee of $1.50.</p>
        <p>cense and Theft Enforcement  are  making  allow-  check  is  made  of  brakes</p>
        <p>Hivicmn u;hn ic rpcnnncihlp frvr aUCeS for that. Qut WC are nOt  d  IS  nidue  I  UrdRCS,</p>
        <p>Division, who is responsible for     ,  .  ^ snecial re-  windshield  wipers,  head-</p>
        <p>administration of the new law. said todav 1,500 stations al-</p>
        <p>this year and the last digit in</p>
        <p>Math Prof Will Lecture At EC</p>
        <p>must have no more than thrM inches of play: windshield wif^ ers must work; the front end cant sag: the turn .Signals must work and the horn must honk.</p>
        <p>Lindsay pointed out one other feature of the inspection law.</p>
        <p>If an individual purclnses or trades for a car that does not have an inspection sticker, he will be given 10 days  ora the date of purchase to have the auto checked."</p>
        <p>A Duke University mathe-</p>
        <p>lights, rear lights, steering mechanism and directional sig-' nals.</p>
        <p>If the car fails the test, the motorist can take it anywhere for repairs and then bring it</p>
        <p>SCORCHED EARTH OPERATION  Paratroopers of the 173rd Airborne Brigade looK out for Viet Cong snipers as flames leap from a burning hut in a village along the Vaico On-eutal River, 20 miles west of Saigon. The operation was an assault on the Viet Cong-controlled ight bank of the river which served as a base for guerrilla forays into the countryside. The w civilians found by the U.S. troops were evacuated by helicopter and the paratroopers set -e to ah houses and fields in the vicinity of the operations area. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>.laptured Photos Add New Side</p>
        <p>Keeping Office Open Saturdays</p>
        <p>matics professor. Dr. J o h n jready have been approved. 'CollectS HORGV R. Roberts, is scheduled to vis-j We are processing 2,500 ad-  ,  ,  ^</p>
        <p>it East Carolina College Wed-  ditional  applications right now,  Fof  HiS PfltlGllC</p>
        <p>nesday to give a public lecture  i yndsay  added. And still re-</p>
        <p>and to meet with faculty mem-  ceiving  25 requests a day from  SALINA, Kan.  (AP) - Ed^^^^</p>
        <p>hers and studento.  stations  throughout North Caro-  Kliem  watched a  swarm of bees </p>
        <p>Dr. Roberts will speak on hislUna.  build  and work  a honey  comb  tr  u  thinks another insoec-</p>
        <p>JfnaT'i  !n'  no  for three years between the tbird  ,33  ,ay bg ,3rer, he Can give</p>
        <p>math, tojwlogy, at 7.30 p m. m jbortage of certified inspection j floor  ceiling and  the roof  at St.  (   put pay another $1.50.</p>
        <p>Srested per^nf ry'"attend'"'  ^  ca'i  may' L rejected if the</p>
        <p>1 Ho will icrtiire in Lciiltv and' Ijndsay Said 2'4 million North, When workmen began tear-emergency brake is not work-of Q  CaroUna  cars  must be inspectediing down the building, Kliemiing, regardless of the condition</p>
        <p>ifi,f ppr !rronaHt.?nrad'lis year.  moved  in  and  collected  three!of the toot brakes.</p>
        <p>11  * fu f d f f 1 Under the numbering sys-gallons of honey for his patience Cracked headlight lens must</p>
        <p>will meet with stude^ facu -  one-tenth  and  trouble,  be  replaced;  the  steering  wheel</p>
        <p>ty and groups by appointment.  r  .  o</p>
        <p>The Duke mathematician hasl AB and PhD degrees from thei 'University of Texas and is ai former National Research Fellow at the University of Pennsylvania. From 1950 to 1961 he j was managing editor of the Duke Mathematical Journal.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Humphrey A 'Best-Hatted'</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (API - Thosv husbandly cracks about a wifes huts will have a hollow ring in the household of Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Humphrey was named one of four best-hatted women of the year. She'll get a Golden Hat Award to prove it.</p>
        <p>Hie awards to Mrs. Humphrey and entertainers Polly Bergen, Lena Horne and Barbra Steisand were announced Sunday at the Millinery Insti-jtute hat style previews for th I fashion press.</p>
        <p>Boyfriends Are</p>
        <p>Thomas F. Wyatt, district Dr. Roberts ECC visit manager of the social security sponsored by the Mathematical j office in Greenville, announced | Association of America with; today, that because of the ex- financial support from the Na-pected heavy workloads for theitional Science Foundation, first three months in 1966, the office will be open each Saturday from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00</p>
        <p>noon beginning January 8. niifranUorl Rv Wyatt emphasized again thatj all persons 65 and over who|l^:l Corriorc 'wish to  enroll for  hospital and  VieirrieiD</p>
        <p>medical  coverage  must do so  ^5.,^  yORK (AP) -  The</p>
        <p>by March 31, 1966; and, he con- jman outranks the boy friend tinned, this deadline applies  j^e  holiday  gift</p>
        <p>list of  secretaries round  thise</p>
        <p>ing and  will not be eligible for  j fUp  10vs</p>
        <p>retirement benefits. Should they</p>
        <p>'tail to  enroll by  the end of  second  fiiMle to the gent  wh o</p>
        <p>.March, they must wait until^e^ers the mail.</p>
        <p>October, 1967, when a new en- Th's mfromation was disclosed rollment period begins.</p>
        <p>For those nearing 65, Wyatt continued, the enrollment begins three months before age 65 and extends through the month after 65.</p>
        <p>in a study of Christmas gift-buying trends conducted recently by the Bulova Watch people among members of a nationwide fourth organization.</p>
        <p>Forty-five per cent of the girls</p>
        <p>VIET CONG ON THE MARCH:A Viet CoriK regional force, .some wearing regular uniforms, some steel helmets, and most of them wearing rubber sandals, made from tires, marches in district of Cu Chi. about 20 miles west northwest of Saigon. Viet Cong flags are red and blue with yellow Btar. Picture from captured Viet Cong film bore caption: A regional force unit of the Liberation Front Forces is on the way to a victory parade field m the Cu Chi district.</p>
        <p>(AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>, .  ..  ..  information  about</p>
        <p>A woman kneels beside him,  program.</p>
        <p>, The extra Saturday hours,,Ped indicated they intend to Wyatt feels, will give many S^ve a Yule gift to the mailman. Eastern Carolina residents who hut only 16 per cent will buy I are unable to contact this office something for the boy friend, at any other time ihe opport- ^he boss will be remembered by unity to visit the district office 38 per cent of the secretaries-</p>
        <p>SUNSHINE WHAT?:A Ihree-fvjot-high snow drift on top and part way down the side of this bus does little to lend weight to the slogan printed on the side. The bus is wheel-deep in snow in front of the service station in Hope, B. C., and apparently it will be a while before it reaches its assigned destination of Vancouver, 90 miles to the west. &amp;lt;AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>at 207 Boyd Avenue in Green-</p>
        <p>but 92 per cent of them expect</p>
        <p>growth was recorded in many holds him up. memorable pictures on the side! Other pictures show destroyedi of the Vietnamese government outposts and hamlets, pieces of; and its allies.  crashed  helicopters, Communist)  I</p>
        <p>Cameramen from many na- troops marching or lined up ^^,,,,^3.</p>
        <p>tions went into combat with formation.  dollar  nrocram  to  identifv  haz-</p>
        <p>U.S., Vietnamese, Korean, Aus- Pictures have been captured</p>
        <p>ville to file their claim, or seek a gift from him.</p>
        <p>the social' Most-wanted gift on the girls lists  if price is no object  is a fur garment, particularly a mink coat or stole. Jewelry in general rates second place.</p>
        <p>By EDWIN Q. WHITE</p>
        <p>SAIGON, South Viet Nam giving him a drink of water (AP)  The war in Viet Nam from an American-type canteen p. . ,  .</p>
        <p>grew rapidly in 1965 and this cup, while another Viet Cong Irian lOenTITy</p>
        <p>Road Hazards _  </p>
        <p>Governor Ended</p>
        <p>QCCp.</p>
        <p>Depart- Up On Crutches</p>
        <p>WARWICK, R,I. (AP) - Gov.</p>
        <p>U.S., vieinamese, ivureau, ua-  7'n*n0'*^rdous highway spots to com- John H. Chafee, leaping from a</p>
        <p>tralian and New &amp;amp;aland troops "h past from  accidents.  hayloft at his home, turned  an</p>
        <p>to picture the victories and de-some showing Viet Cong units commissioner  Francis W.i ankle and has ended uli</p>
        <p>feats, the horror and sorrow and drnling and traimng,  Sargent said the work will in-crutches for a few days,</p>
        <p>the rare moments of humor and The ^ctures seized by volve such items as wiclining The governor jumped flieer  I6fst Division paratroopers,  -    </p>
        <p>But the world got only; however, give a wider view of glimpses, usually colored in the fighting as seen by the Com-propaganda, of the war as seen mmunist side, a view that ap-through the eyes of the Viet'Pears aimed in part at least a Cong and North Vietnamese. showing the nearnws of Viet Communist photographers did, Cong strength to the nation s however, record their side capital.</p>
        <p>Most of the pictures were never, released for worldwide viewing, but they were given wide dis-</p>
        <p>on</p>
        <p>Wants Students In City Govm't</p>
        <p>LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)  The</p>
        <p>as wic3ning The governor jumped some narrow traffic lanes and fouror five feet to another level bridges; flattening side slopes in the barn and landed on a and removal of roadside curbs i loose board concealed by hay. A and fixed obstructions; and in- doctor taped the ankle and pres-stallation of traffic control and cribed the crutches, protective devices.  -</p>
        <p>'Daily Worker' Needs New Name</p>
        <p>Wanted Back In: It's Cold Outside</p>
        <p>WAYNESVILLE, NC. (AP) -LONDON (AP)  Britains Arlin Barker, 23, an escapee Communisty party has asked its from a prison road gang, was 33,700 members to help find a walking along a street in 15-de-</p>
        <p>tribution throughout Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>They presented a special view designed to show only a favorable record.  mayor  of  Lincoln  believes that j new name for their struggling gree weather when he hailed a</p>
        <p>Capture of a series of these high school students should be j paper, the Daily Worker. | passing police cruiser, pictures gives the Western: involved in city government.  Sales of the paper, which first Let me in, he  said. Im</p>
        <p>world a look at the enemy in In a letter sent to the heads of; appeared 35 years ago, have freezing to death.</p>
        <p>Viet Nam as he sees himself. | city advisory boards, Mayor | dropped to 60,245. This is the Patrolman Lowell Edwards</p>
        <p>The pictures were seized by a Dean Petersen asked that each unit of the U.S. 101st Airborne recommend young persons to Division which stormed into a serve as full, active members. Viet Cong encampment about 30 j dont mean that they</p>
        <p>miles northwest of Saigon.</p>
        <p>Despite water stains and dirt, the pictures are ofvgood quality. All carried caption lines, some extensive. Many had an identi-ficatton stamp that said: National Liberation Front informationSaigon, C h 010 n, Gia Dinh.</p>
        <p>Gia Dinh is the province that surrounds the capital. Cholon is the Chinese quarter of Saigon. The stamp itself could hardly be challenged for the Viet Cong have demonstrated an ability to operate in and near the city.</p>
        <p>One shot, said to have been taken within Gia Dinh Province, shows Viet Cong riflemen removing parts from a wrecked vehicle the caption described as an amphibious tank. Actually the vehicle was an armored personnel carrier, a type knocked out frequently by Viet Cong now well armed with recoilless rifles.</p>
        <p>There are rarely seen views of Viet Cong medical treatment of Communist soldiers wounded in action. One shows a wounded guerrilla ^ith a bandage around his had and blood on his face and uniform.</p>
        <p>should dominate these boards, Mayor Petersen said, but thei^ viewpoints could Hbe very helpful. .</p>
        <p>lowest figure for two.years. Re- obliged and drove him to jail, cent issues have appealed ur-' He will get a hearing Hiursday.</p>
        <p>gently for donations from read-i---</p>
        <p>ers to keep it afloat.  The  .farthest  point  in  the</p>
        <p>---Republic of Lebanon can be</p>
        <p>There are more than 28 mil- reached by car within two and lion Americans now enrolled in!a half hours from Beirut, the adult education courses.  [capital.</p>
        <p>save on DRUGS</p>
        <p>With</p>
        <p>^'Reasonable</p>
        <p>Prescription</p>
        <p>Prices"</p>
        <p>OUR PHARMACIST IS A SKILLED PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>CREATORS OF REASONABLE DRUG PRICES</p>
        <p>PITT PUZA SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>lally round the Dodge Boys! Join the Dodge Rebellion! Down with dull driving!</p>
        <p>Man, Charger has made the scene-new leader of the Dodge Rebellion-hot, big and beautifiiL Where is it? Where else? At the Dodge Boys. So, like, why wait? Rally round the Dodge Boys! Join the war on Dullsville! Grab the big excitement-Charaer-tcxlav!</p>
        <p>DODGE TOWN, INC.</p>
        <p>South Momorial Dr.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N. C.</p>
        <p>N. C. Daalar No. 4775</p>
        <p>BOW</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0010" />
        <p>10Th Daily Rfltcor, GrMnvilto, N. C.Tuasday, January 11, 196A</p>
        <p>and adequate public liability insurance.</p>
        <p>Lester Earl Cox, 308 Manhattan Ave., driving under the influence, transfered to superior court for jury trial; Mae Braswell Jordan, Negro, Route 1, Box 67, Fountain, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of costs and not operate motor vehicle for 10 days, and surrender drivers license to clerk for 10 days.</p>
        <p>William Henry Tom Barnhill, Route 1, Box 588, Winterville, driving while license suspended and failing to yield the right o way, judgment suspended on payment of $50 costs deducted and not operate a motor vehicle without a proper drivers license on his person and make adequate restitution for property damage in this case; Geneva Harris, Route 1, Grifton, no va-</p>
        <p>The Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>Women Want A Share Of Husband's Worries</p>
        <p>Check These Bargain Buys</p>
        <p>Harry hiade the mistake of gallantly trying to shield his wife from his own business worries. Thats wrong. For wives like to help do their husbands worying! And it inflates their ego tq have him come to them for advice. So scrapbook this case and by all means test yourselves on the Rating Scales below.</p>
        <p>By GEORGE W. CRANE Ph. D.. M. D.</p>
        <p>CASE Y-408: Harry G., aged 34, is a successful cattle rancher lid operators license, 30 days in Texas. jail suspended on payment of| He recently attended my Bi-$25 and costs and not hereafter | ble Class at the Chicago Tem-</p>
        <p>UP AND OUT  Workman climbs with ladder up^ a steel frame of an exhibition hall during the dismantling process of the New York World's Fair grounds buildings.</p>
        <p>Many Coses Heard In Pitt Recorder's Court</p>
        <p>^ operate a motor vehicle without la proper drivers license and I adequate liability insurance.</p>
        <p>Roy Hemby, Negro, b6B Pamlico Ave., no operators license, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs and not operate a motor vehicle with-</p>
        <p>Jndge Dink James disposed of the following cases at the January 4 term of Pitt County Recorders Court.</p>
        <p>Harley Plum Woolard, Route 4, B 0 X 249, Washington, speeding, pay $10 and costs; Henry Hawlrins Hodge, P.O. Box 277, Cliffside, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of $25, costs deducted and not operate a motor vehicle on the public highways for 10 days and surrender drivers license to clerk for 10 days.</p>
        <p>Robert Lee Pridgen, Jr., 801 East 12th St, Washington, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of $25 costs  deducted and not opo'ate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender drivers license to clerk for 10 days; Dale Reid Edmonds, Route 1, Camero speeding, judgment suspended on payment of $25 costs deducted and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender drivers license to clerk for 10 days.</p>
        <p>Newton Norwood Meece, 214 North Harvey St., Washington, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of $25, costs deducted and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender</p>
        <p>pie and had dinner with me afterwards.</p>
        <p>Dr. Crane, he began, I____</p>
        <p>have been married for 8 years poj to a very fine girl.</p>
        <p>And I had thought we were ideally happy.</p>
        <p>But last week she informed</p>
        <p>So why should she want to break up our marriage?</p>
        <p>Harry belongs to the old school where a husband believed a wife should run the home but not participate in his work.</p>
        <p>Harry thus admitted he had never asked his wife for advice nor shared his worries with her.</p>
        <p>But, Dr. Crane, he protested, I didnt want to add to her troubles by placing my worries on top of her own household problems.</p>
        <p>Husbands, that is a sad niis-take!</p>
        <p>For wives LIKE to worry with their husbands (but not ABOUT them)!</p>
        <p>Such mistaken gallantry as Harrys has often led to divorce.</p>
        <p>women wish to be helpers.</p>
        <p>And they want words!</p>
        <p>These words should involve a</p>
        <p>daily verbal compliment from their mate, p! i affectionate hug and kiss.</p>
        <p>Alas, broken homes also fur- envelope, pliw nish the major percentage of de- them for adult linquent^ school dropouts and discussion, too.</p>
        <p>20 cents. Use Sunday School</p>
        <p>But also let her help share bWe rousers on college cam-</p>
        <p>your business worries. This may even lessen your chance of getting an ulcer!</p>
        <p>Often she will pve you some new slants, especially from the consumers viewpoint.</p>
        <p>For happy wives must feel needed!</p>
        <p>They grow frustrated when you treat them too gallantly and give them the impression that they are merely kept women for harem purposes.</p>
        <p>Uncle Sams major worry right now is not the terrific federal debt or even the Viet Nam war but the zooming divorce rate in America!</p>
        <p>For over 25 per cent of marriages now end in divorce.</p>
        <p>And another 25 per cent are failures, but the feuding mates stick together till the children are out of high school.</p>
        <p>So American weddings now have only a 50-50 chance of success!</p>
        <p>write to Dr. Crane</p>
        <p>puses.  (Always</p>
        <p>Men olease wake up to the in care of this newspaper^ en-</p>
        <p>fact</p>
        <p>a wifes devotion but your inflation of her ego by making her feel necessary.</p>
        <p>I WANT TO FEEL IMPORTANT is her wifely desire.</p>
        <p>Many a young bride of an older man has been tempted to run away with a'romantic idol, but has changed her mind at the last moment by finding that her husband needed her.</p>
        <p>So leam to lean upon your wife for advice and suggestions.</p>
        <p>Let her be the treasury of your little family corporation if she is an intelligent modem woman.</p>
        <p>And occasionally boast about some of her accomplishments, such as her bargains at t h e department stor.</p>
        <p>Send for my 200-point Tests for Husbands and Wives, enclosing a long stamped, return</p>
        <p>to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.)</p>
        <p>CARD OF THANKS</p>
        <p>I WANT TO THANK THE club and my friends In the way they remembered me at Xmas. May God bless each and everyone of you. Lizzie Foreman.</p>
        <p>AirroMonvi</p>
        <p>Avtot For Salo</p>
        <p>BUICK  1962 Invicta 4-dr. hdt. radio, heater. V-8, auto, P.S. &amp;amp; Brakes. Sale by owner $1400. Pete Taylor PL 8-2117 night PL 2-2027</p>
        <p>BUICK  1963 Special, 4-dr^ sedan, air cond., P. steering, one local' owner. Call Vic PezzuUa, PL 8-1123.</p>
        <p>Chcvelle  1964 Malibu 4-dr. auto. P. Steer &amp;amp; Brakes. R/H Extra clean S&amp;amp;E Motor Service Ayden.</p>
        <p>out a proper drivers license andjnie she was tired of our marri</p>
        <p>age and she wanted to call quits.</p>
        <p>Well, I was dumfounded. For I always gave her plenty of</p>
        <p>car of</p>
        <p>drivers license days Etouglas Elwood</p>
        <p>adequate public liability insurance; Patricia Loflin Pertalion,</p>
        <p>124 North Eastern St. speeding, judgment suspended on payment of costs and not operate a mo-spending money and a tor vehicle for 15 days and sur-her own. render drivers license for 15: to clerk for 101 days.  |</p>
        <p>Harry Harris, Route 5, Green-1 ville, assault with a deadly</p>
        <p>McPherson,</p>
        <p>89 Franklin St., Roanoke Rapids,  weapon, judgment suspended on</p>
        <p>speeding, judgment suspended on payment of $50 and costo, the court reccommends drivers license be suspended for a period of 6 months; James Reynold Hanke, 323 Fourth St., Slang-ton. Pa., speeding, judgment</p>
        <p>payment of costs and the sum of not less than $15 for the use and benefit of Johnny Lee Harris; John Thomas Speeller, Negro, Pactolus, assault with deadly weapon, continued to.</p>
        <p>Nubians Settle Down To A New Life At Aswan</p>
        <p> , _____,   Earl  Clinton Daniels, Negro,</p>
        <p>suspended on payment of $25! Box 89, Winterville, assault on  Special  Report</p>
        <p>costs deducted and not operate'female, prosecution not required, ,  MAHMOUD</p>
        <p>a-motor vehicle for 10 days.  I of public interest, case dismiss- ASWAN, Egypt  AP)Their</p>
        <p>Bobby Lee Wells, 517 Eastied; Hubert Best, Negro, Route  vfr,  the Nubians  of u^</p>
        <p>Main St., Washington, speeding, |6, Box 32, Greenville, worthless  succeed-  ^</p>
        <p>judgment suspended on pay-check, nol pros with leave.  m  settling  down  to  a  new  ^</p>
        <p>ment of $10 and costs. Mary Car-! Harold Rodgers Buck, Route    Aswan,</p>
        <p>den Ball, Box 393, Ange Street,, i, Box 15, Grimesland, driving</p>
        <p>Uprooted from</p>
        <p> .....  beloved</p>
        <p>Wnterviile, driving under th|lid^7theinfluencr^t^^^^  history,</p>
        <p>influence, judgment suspended to superior court for jury trial;  Nubians  now</p>
        <p>0. payment of $100 and costs Harold Ross, Route 1, Box 116, and drivers license be revoked' Ayden, assault with deadly</p>
        <p>weapon, 12 months jail and Fountain, i roads suspended on condition he</p>
        <p>for 12 months. Jessie Galloway,</p>
        <p>drivers license to clerk for 10 days; Faye Harrell Goff, 1010</p>
        <p>larceny, not guilty; Leara Hunter, Negro, 107 Woodside Dr., reckless driving, court finds prosecution is not required of public interest, case dismissed; Joyce Boyd Taylor, General Delivery, Bethel, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of costs and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender drivers</p>
        <p>license to clerk for 10 days. Robert Lee Joyner, 2113 Mont-</p>
        <p>Ward St., speeding, judgmentjclair Dr., speeding, judgment</p>
        <p>suspended on payment of $25  sts deducted and not operate a notor vehicle for 10 days and surrender drivers license to cleric for 10 days.</p>
        <p>Judy Byrd Bishop, Box 524, Swan Squarter, no valid operators license; judgment suspended on payment of $25 and costs; Joseph Henry Bishop, Box 524, Swan Quarter, allowing an unlicensed person to drive, judgment suspended on payment of $10 and costs;</p>
        <p>Gerald Williams Keys, 1413 Maetzel Dr., Columbus, Ohio, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of $25 costs deducted and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days; Heber Augusta Nobles, Route 1, Washington, speding, judgment suspended on payment of $25 costs deducted and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender drivers license to clerk for 10 days.</p>
        <p>Nellie CJhappell Perry, 103 Twlddy Ave., Edenton, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of $25 costs deducted and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender drivers license to clerk for 10 days; Frank Eugene Langley, Box 480, Cool Spring Rd., Rocky Mount, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of $25 costs deducted and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender</p>
        <p>suspended on payment of costs and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender drive license for 10 days; Lester Ac-klin, Negro, 912A Le^on St., no financial responsibility, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Glenda Ekiwards Landen, P. 0. Box 483, Bethel, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of costs and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days; (3iarles Thomas Wells, Jr. Route 1, Box 429A, Greenville, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of costs and not operate a motor vehicle for 15 days and surrender drivers license for 15 days.</p>
        <p>William Junior Harris, Negro, 37 Brentwood Ave., Fairfield, Conn., reckless driving and no valid operators license, 60 days jail and roads; Charles Ed Mayo, Route 6, Box 154, Greenville, speeding, judgment suspended on payment of costs and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender drivers license to clerk for 10 days.</p>
        <p>Bobby Glenn Roberson, 108 Albemarle Ave., Apt D., allowing an unlicensed person to drive, suspended on payment of $10 and costs; Janie Mae Roberson, 108 Albemarle Ave. Apt. D., no valid operators license, 30 days jail and roads suspended on payment of $25 and costs and not operate a motor vehicle without a proper drivers license</p>
        <p>TwIaZ. Tr i  the  Aswan  Dam.</p>
        <p>type ot iirearm or wea^n lor, Nubians, whose forefa-</p>
        <p>thers once invaded and ruled Pharaonic Egypt, consider</p>
        <p>seem convinced they have to adapt themselves to new conditions and overcome homesickness. Their once sacred villages now lie beneath Lake Nasser,</p>
        <p>two years and not interfere or engage in any fight with Abeie-yonis Barrett with in two years, pay costs and pay into court for the use and benefit of Barrett</p>
        <p>themselves a purer people than their fellow Aswanis. Tall, slim</p>
        <p>$100 and pay medical and doc-''* ^ugh, Nubi^ pride them-tors bills in the sum of $712.50.</p>
        <p>Robert Lee Elks, Route 1, Vanceboro, destroying personal property, prosecution not in public interest, prosecuting wit-nes taxed with costs, case dis-mised; Donald Lee Franks, Negro, Route 1, Stokes, temporary^ larceny of auto, 60 days</p>
        <p>old traditions. Even when they go to Cairo and Alexandria to work as porters or servants they demonstrate this sense of pride. They are known for their cleanliness and honesty.</p>
        <p>Late in 1964, the Egyptian government mobilized steamers and sailboats to start the Nu-</p>
        <p>jail and roads to run concurrent-  exodus, perhaps the most ly with following case; breakmg  tys  area  since</p>
        <p>and entering, ammended to forc-able trespassing, 12 months jail and roads.</p>
        <p>Oliver Wright Leary, Route 1, Box 81, Vanceboro, larceny of auto, prosecution not of pul&amp;gt; lie interest, case dismissed; James Clark Gurkin 604 Bank</p>
        <p>Moses flight with the Israelites from the Egyptian Nile delta to Palestine.</p>
        <p>Nubians were reluctant to leave. Officials had to convince them that their land was doomed and would be sub-</p>
        <p>, merged forever as Lake Nasser St., Washington, speeding, Judg-jjQjgjj 314 miles behind the ment suspended on payment ofjjjgni.</p>
        <p>costs and not operate a motor vehicle for 10 days and surrender drivers license to clerk for 10 days.</p>
        <p>Curtis Lee Evans, Negro, 809 Bancroft Ave., worthless check, 90 days jail and roads; William Earl Phillips, Route 2, Box 659, Ayden, driving left of center line, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Willie Hooker, Route 2, Box 65, Ayden, no valid operators license, 30 days jail and roads, suspended on payment of $25 and costs and not operate a motor vehicle without a proper drivers license and adequate public liability insurance.</p>
        <p>They were promised better! homes, better fields and more money, but Nubians moved only when they felt they had to leave.</p>
        <p>Witnesses to the departure from the village of Ballana, near the Sudanese border, said tears streamed down the face of young and old as they stripped their homes of doors and windows. Some kissed the ground and the walls. They kept looking back at abandoned houses and the cemetery where their dead were buried.</p>
        <p>One woman, a widow, was heard addressing her dead husband: I leave despite myself. I The  slender  coconut  palm,leave you to the care of God</p>
        <p>supports  a  giant  industry  in  the  who never sleeps. Farewell</p>
        <p>Philippines; it is the source of 1 now. I long for the day when livelihood of almost a third of this soil will combine us forev-  </p>
        <p>the Philippine population.</p>
        <p>itand^'</p>
        <p>imid his</p>
        <p>PASSION FOR TRAINS  Arthur Palmer</p>
        <p>yatem built up ver  period of 40 years, it takes up all of a one-car garage luiro. Fie. He le donating</p>
        <p>the collection to a local museum for the</p>
        <p>model train in St. Peters-edificatlon of ail.</p>
        <p>er."</p>
        <p>Every adult carried a sack full of earth, a barakahsource of blessingfrom the land they left behind.</p>
        <p>At Aswan, workers and students were mobilized to receive them with songs and flowers. But few Nubians smiled.</p>
        <p>Although they found their new villages neatly built, they spent their first nights in^e open air, unwilling to accept^e new life.</p>
        <p>Most had farmland, which they started immediately to till. Others were told they had to. wait until the dam made possible the reclamation of 1.2 million acres. Meanwhile, they were given jobs on the dam. Others went away on their own, seeking jobs as porters, cooks or servants in Cairo. Young Nubians were encouraged to join the Egyptian army.</p>
        <p>The new villages at Korn Ombo, 24 miles north of Aswan, bear the names of the submerged villages. Ballana has become New Ballana, Debod is New Debod, and so on.</p>
        <p>Heavily veiled women rarely are seen outside their houses. Men seldom visit the city of Aswan.</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0011" />
        <p>. .Th Daily Raflecfor, Graanvilla, N. C.^Tuasdiy, January 11, !964-&amp;gt;11</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Aulot For Sala</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET - 1963 Impala. 4-dr. sedan, V8 P. steering, white with blue trim. Call Tull Worthington, PL 8-1123.</p>
        <p>CORVETTE  1966 Sport Coupe, 300 H. P., auto, trans., P.S. &amp;amp; brakes, air cond., elec. windows, 300 act. miles, was $5600 now $4550. Bill Haddock, PL 2-3134.</p>
        <p>COMET  1963 Wagon, white, auto, trans., radio, $1495, Call 237-4058, Wilson, N. C. after 5:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>Dodge  1964 Polara 4-dr. hdtp. extra clean WW tires auto trans. P. Steering, radio, heater. Dodge Town, Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>FALCON   1962 Country</p>
        <p>Squire 4 dr. stationwagon. Black finish, outside paneling luggage carrier, new tires, air conditioned. Excellent running condition. Price $925. Call after 6 p.m. PL 2-7670.</p>
        <p>FORD  1958 Stationwagon, auto, trans., R/H, interceptor engine. Repossession for sale or take over payments. Contact Great Southern Finance, 405 Evans St.</p>
        <p>FORD  1964 Galaxie 600 Past-back, white. Like new condition with only 25,000 actual miles Privately owned. Phone 752-6541.</p>
        <p>IN YOUR CLASSIFIED SECTION</p>
        <p>BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY  EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>IHEEE ARE SO-O-OT vMAHY BAR"AIH BUYS</p>
        <p>TURN BACK TODAYAND SAVE!</p>
        <p>COFFEE ROUTES</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>Route Invest Per Month 14  $ 2,190  $  343.00</p>
        <p>2  I 2,580  686.40</p>
        <p>*  '  $ 5,160  1,372.80</p>
        <p>8  $10,320  2,745.60</p>
        <p>Write and tell us about yourself giving your phone nmnber. You will be contacted inunedl-ately.</p>
        <p>WRITE TO</p>
        <p>'COFFEE"</p>
        <p>BOX 408</p>
        <p>Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>Malo Help Wanted</p>
        <p>FORD - 1956 Priced to sell. CaU PL 8-1317 or PL 2-4414.</p>
        <p>MUSTANG  1965 Convertible R&amp;amp;H, auto, trans. P. steering. A good buy $2395. Phelps Chevrolet PL 2-3134.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC  1962 Catalina 4-dr. V-8, auto., P. Steering, It. blue. One owner, 22,000 miles, like new Stafford Olds</p>
        <p>WANTED: SOMEONE TO TAKE over payments on 62 Volks. Call 758-3855 After 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>THERES NO BETTER WAY TO begin a New Year . . . than a like-new used car from Wagner-Waldrop Motors, West End Circle.</p>
        <p>SAVE $ $ $</p>
        <p>40 Miles To The Gallon Or Better. Test Drive Our . . .</p>
        <p>FIAT</p>
        <p>600-D</p>
        <p>For The Comfort Economy ft Su-prise Of Your Life. 12.000 Miles Or 1 Year Of New Car</p>
        <p>Warranty</p>
        <p>ONLY $1295</p>
        <p>Plus N.C. State Tax</p>
        <p>BROWN-WOOD INC.</p>
        <p>*05 Dickinson Ave. PL -7111</p>
        <p>Don't Sell Yourself ShortI</p>
        <p>RECESSION  DEPRESSION PROOF BUSINESS EXCEPTIONAL HIGH EARNINGS PART-TIME-WORK FOR ADDED INCOME</p>
        <p>Reliable party or persons, male or female, wanted for this area to handle the world famous R.C.A., Sylvania, GE and West-inghouse TELEVISION and RADIO TUBES sold through oui latest modem type tube testing and merchandising units. Will not interfere with your present employment. To qualify you must have: $3,495.00 Cash Available Immediately, Car, 5 spare hours weekly. Should ne' up to $500.00 per month in your .pare time. This company will extend financial assistance to full time if desired. Do not answer unless fully qualified for the time and investment.</p>
        <p>** Income starts immediately  Business is set up for you  We secure locations  Selling, soliciting or experience not necessary</p>
        <p>For personal interview in your city, write, please include phone number.</p>
        <p>TELEVISION P.O. Box 3373 Younkstown, Ohio 44512</p>
        <p>MEN</p>
        <p>Can Use Men with car In Greenville area to sell and service htterinr maintenance equipment. Permanent opportunity but must have good references. Willing te do good days work for a better tban average day*o pay. No objection to age. 40 and over. To arrange personal Interview write</p>
        <p>MANAGER P.O. Box 847 Williamston. N. C.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>EMKOYMENT</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1964 2 pick-ups 1 step side &amp;amp; one fleetside, extra clean. S&amp;amp;E Motor Service, Ayden.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET -  1962  2  tOD</p>
        <p>truck, heavy duty, fully equipped, with body, P&amp;amp;D Motors, Bethel PL 8-4800.</p>
        <p>Fenmle Help Wanted</p>
        <p>SECRETARY  GOOD SHORT-hand ft typing. Excellent starting salary with opportunity for advancement. Call or come by Personnel Office, Empire Brushes Inc., 758-4111, Box 422, U. S. 13 North. An equal op-portimity employer.</p>
        <p>FORD 1955, H ton pick-up, call PL 8-1868.</p>
        <p>SALESLADY WANTED. Experience unnecessary, neat appearance. Age 28-45. Interviews Jan. 10 &amp;amp; 11, from 10-4. 109 Atlantic Ave. Wigarama</p>
        <p>SECRETTARY  FIVE DAY week  $65  Must be Experienced and must be ood typist office located in Tarboro. Write Tarboro, Box 408, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>DOGS ft PETS</p>
        <p>GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES 8 wks. old, AKC regl tered, contact W. J. Brinson, Snow Hill, N. C. 747-3034 or Ayden News Leader.</p>
        <p>TO BOOST BUSINESS run aassl-fied Ads! They work!</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>DAILY REFLECTOP</p>
        <p>Order your ad to run 7 times the cost l9 lesB per day When you get desired results, call PL 2-6166 and stop the ad. You pay (or only the number of days your ad actually appeared.</p>
        <p>RATE5</p>
        <p>75c minimum charge (or b lines or leas for first inaertloft. I Day 25c Per Line Per Day 4 Days22c Per Line Per Day 7 Days20c Pn* Lino Per Day contract Rates Ayailabla</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED D18PLAT RATEB $1.35* Per Oolisiin Incft.</p>
        <p>Open Rato Cootraot Ratoe AyaUaUa</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>No new ads. kills or correo* ..ions accepted after 3 p.m. the fay before PubUcatioii.</p>
        <p>RRORS</p>
        <p>The naUy Reflector wtD bo 'esponsible only (or tlw (In* ncorrect or omlttof) taaortloo )f any advtrsciiioat a ti)M columns and then only t$ the extent of a make-food toeer Ion Errors which do not .essen the value of the advw* f.Lsement wlD not ho oorrootid jy a make-food inaeiHon. jublleber reiwrvce the r^t  evlse or rejeot any</p>
        <p>CAU</p>
        <p>PL 2-6166</p>
        <p>YOUNG WOMAN TRAVEL</p>
        <p>Ages 18 to 24, neat, single, free to travel Fla., Calif, and return for large Southern firm. On the job training, transportation furnished. $250 a month drawing account to start. Average earning $105 weekly for those who qualify. Apply:</p>
        <p>Mr. or Mrs. Fleming Kenland Motel 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wed. Only</p>
        <p>MAIDS  N.Y. To $65 wk. Rush References. Top Jobs. Fare Advanced Quickly. Hav-A-Maid 4 Bond Street, Great iveck, N.Y.</p>
        <p>MAIDS FOR NEW YORK AREA, make $35 to $55 weekly Contact H. C. Mitchell. 601 Pgrker Goldsboro. N.C. Dail 734-2457</p>
        <p>FULL OR PART TIME</p>
        <p>We have permanent employment openings for full or part time ladies over 21 years of age with auto. Starting salary of $1.75 per hr. This is personal contact work, simlliar to census taking. Neat appearance and good personality a must. Apply rm. 12, Tetterton Bldg., this week, between 9 &amp;amp; 10 a.m.</p>
        <p>Male Help Wanted</p>
        <p>SALESMAN FOR LOCAL DEPT. Store. Full time only. Experience desirable In mens clothing or shoes. Will consider training young man with desire to learn trade. Write Manager, Box 237, Greenville.</p>
        <p>AGENT WANTED IN AND around Ayden. Starting Salary $300 per month. Hospitalization Si Weeks vacation, bonus at end of year. Apply between 8-9:00 a.m. Phone 746-3711.</p>
        <p>2 EXPERIENCED SALESMEN with Incentive and ambition, in-tereated in making top money. Apply in person to Phelps' Chevrolet, West End Circle. See Bill Haddock.</p>
        <p>PARTNER IN PROFIT We are see^g men with ih-come'needs of $25,000 to $50,000 a year. Amazing new product. $7A00 investment secured. Write Century Brick Corp. of America, Cqnlyry Brick BidfErie, Pa.</p>
        <p>SHORT ORDER COOK AT SAM ft Daya Snack Bar. Located, Darwin Waters Rcrvice Station. 1114 N. Greene:, Phone day 2-4229, night 2-6047. Also, part-time help for weekend.s. Ebcperl-ence preferred but not ncces-sary.</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>"Many listings in the *niale' and 'female* columns are not Intended to exclude or diseonr-age applications from persons of the other sex. Such listings are for the convetiience of readers because some ocrupatlomi are considered more attractive to persons of one sex than the  other. Discrimination in employment because of sex is pro&amp;gt; hibited by the 1964 Federal Civil Rights Act with certain exceptions (and by the law oi North Carolina State). Employment agencies and employers covered by the Act muri indicate in their advertisement whether the listed positions are available to both sexes.**</p>
        <p>UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>Large United States and Canadian Company in. agricultural field urgently requires representative in this county for Crop Service Department. Applicant must have recent agricultural background and be well regarded in area.</p>
        <p>Position Is full time, r can be handled at first along with your present farming operation. Successful applicant can expect earnings beween $100-$150 weekly with excellent opportunity for early advancement in tlds area. Write and tell me about yourself. Reply at once to:</p>
        <p>State Manager P.O. Box 10872 Raleigh, N.C.</p>
        <p>^ TOBACCO SEED</p>
        <p>COKER, BELL'S. BISSETTES WIDE VARIETY BED GAS &amp;amp; COVERS</p>
        <p>R.F. McLawhon &amp;amp; Sons</p>
        <p>N. GREENE ST. PL 2-3286</p>
        <p>LARGE SELECTION OF TOYS left at discount prices. Hurry in to Western Auto, 319 Evans St.</p>
        <p>FLAKE  BOARD, 3 SIZES; Pi,</p>
        <p>4x6, 10  cents  per  sq.  ft., 1,</p>
        <p>3x10, 12  cents  per  sq.  t., /a,</p>
        <p>2x10, 7  cents  per  sq.  ft. Call</p>
        <p>SK 3-3503 after 7:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>LAST CHANCE!!!</p>
        <p>BRING YOUR COUPON IN FROM PROGRESSIVE FARMER MAGAZINE. YOU MAY WIN A POULAN AUTOMATIC CHAIN SAW. HURRY!</p>
        <p>R.F. McLawhon &amp;amp; Sons</p>
        <p>N. Greene St. PL 2-3286</p>
        <p>WESTTNGHOUSE RANGE with 4 surface units. Switches for many heats. Bakes, roasts, broils. Now $109.95. Smith Electric Co., 415 Evans St.</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>WOULD YOU BUY $10,000 LIFE Insurance for $30 per year, if so Call 2-4119.</p>
        <p>LOST ft FOUND</p>
        <p>LOST: GERMAN SHEPHERD.</p>
        <p>answers to name of Bullet 9 mos. old. Lost in vicinity Bus Station on 5th St. Call 752-9930.</p>
        <p>POUND - BLACK AND WHITE setter Bird Dog. Call 752-7194.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT ft sale. Contact Bobby McLamb at 752-2911. B ft W Mobile Homes. Memorial Dr. Greenville.</p>
        <p>lEM OTATt</p>
        <p>JFolfg</p>
        <p>^faltg</p>
        <p>Coni-nng</p>
        <p>MORTGAGE LOANS $21 S. Green St. - PL 2-360$</p>
        <p>HeuMt For Solo</p>
        <p>3 BR, LIVING ROOM, DINING room, kitchen, utility room. 802 W. 8th St., Ayden. Phone day 746-3213 night 746-6241.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>Aparimontf For Ron!</p>
        <p>. l^NISHED DUPLEX APT. 1 Br., one block from college, inquire at 310 S. Jarvis St. PL 2-</p>
        <p>6233.</p>
        <p>AENTALS</p>
        <p>Rooms For Ront</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APARTMENT, Stancil Drive Phone 752-5715 before 5:00 p.m. or 758-4860 after 5:00.</p>
        <p>ONE ROOM AVAILABLE POR young lady. Reiercnce.'. Call after 5:00 p.m. PL 8-4058.</p>
        <p>|DROM POiTtWO; PRIVAT!2 'entrance. PL 2-.&amp;gt;.-)07</p>
        <p>i njCHoToLS^INhTRUCTK</p>
        <p>SELECTION OF 3 USED TRAIL-era. Will let buyers take up payments of $62 for one and $72.79 for other two, no down payment Just take up payments quoted above. Call 752-2911 or come by B ft W Mobile Homes.</p>
        <p>(ENGELWOOD, BRICK. 3 BED-!rooms IV2 baths, reduced and ready to move in Bill Williams Real Estate Agency. PL 2-2615</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>SIX R(X)M HOUSE CLOSE TO Epps High. New Siding. Newly painted large rooms, attractive landscape, 1105 W. 4th St. Sale by owner. $8,000. PL 2-3509.</p>
        <p>MODERN 3 RM. FURNISHED apt. Utilities furnished, private entrance. Call PL 2-3898 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>3~RMrnPURNISHm3*~AP^ ment. 1 block from college. Inquire at 310 8. Jarvis St. PL 2-6233.</p>
        <p>STARTING A BEGINNFR 3 mo. typing course at night jan. 18. Greenville School cf Commerce. PL 2-2261.</p>
        <p>HOME FURNITURE STORE IS having their annual Inventory Clearance Sale. Big Savings on Quality Home Furnishings. PL 2-2879.</p>
        <p>FOR GOOD EATING IN A Nicer atmosphere, try the Coed, an original in Greenville. Open 24 hours.</p>
        <p>All Toys ^2 OFF All Furniture V3 OFF</p>
        <p>GARRIS SUPPLY</p>
        <p>FURNITURE COMPANY</p>
        <p>5 Pts.</p>
        <p>PL 2-5225</p>
        <p>YOUNG MEN TRAVEL</p>
        <p>Ages 18 to 24, neat, single, free to travel Fla., Calif, and return for large Southern firm. On the job training, transportation furnished. $250 a month drawing account to start. Average earning $105 weekly fOr those who qualify. Apply:</p>
        <p>Mr. or Mrs. Fleming Kenland Motel 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wed. Only</p>
        <p>MECHANICS ft MACHINISTS</p>
        <p>Experienced industrial mechanic and machinists for new industry. Apply Empire Brushes Inc., Box 422, U. S. 13 North, Greenville, N. C. Tel. 758-4111.</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>WILL CARE FOR OLD PEOPLE or sick in Home or Hospitals. Call 758-3576.</p>
        <p>EXPERT SERVICE</p>
        <p>TREAT YOUR LIVESTOCK OR Poultry to fresh food processed on your farm, regular schedule. Nutrena Concentrates, warm molasses. Ayden Mobile Milling.</p>
        <p>BE SMART . . . WINTERIZE</p>
        <p>your car now. Have your Winter checkup done by experts at Carr Allen Texaco, 213 Evans.</p>
        <p>AVOID DOCrrOR BILLS WITH Borg-Warner, York entire house heating. Financing. Coastal Re-frigeratiwi, PL 2-2294.</p>
        <p>STAY WARM ALL WINTER by having Sullivan Oil Co. check and fill your tank each month. Fk)r Information, Cal) PL 8-4644</p>
        <p>YOU DONT NEED GLASSES, just a better picture. H &amp;amp; M Radio-TV Shop, 917 Dickinson Ave., PL 8-2436. Free Parking.</p>
        <p>FLOOR COVERING CENTER Armstrong Products. Linoleum, floor sanding, Formica tops. Pitt Tile Co., PL 2-4998.</p>
        <p>SINGER SEWING MACHINE: In nice modem cabinet. Dams, hems, buttonholes. ZIG-ZAGS beautiful decorative designs. Pay last 7 payments of $8.22 monthly or discount for cash. Can be seen and tried out locally. Pull details write: "National, Repros-session Dept., Box 283. Ashe-boro. N. C.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR FOR RENT</p>
        <p>See our new 10 wide, 2 bedroom mobile homes for $3.295  $295</p>
        <p>down and $54 per month. AZALEA MOBILE HOMES Phones: PL 2-3109. PI. ^58^2 3012 East 10th Street</p>
        <p>LIVE AT PINEVIEW COURT Just five minutes from downtown, Port Terminal Rd., turn leit Cliffs Oyster Bar, 264 East of Greenville. L&amp;amp;Tge shaded lots, patio, play area, picnic tables. 10 and 12 wide homes for rent. 758-3641.</p>
        <p>Trailer Space For Rent</p>
        <p>TRAILER SPACE FOR RENT, Hillcrest Trailer Court near college PL 2-3772.</p>
        <p>lARGE TRAILER LOTS</p>
        <p>In city limits with city garbage collection, water, sewer, fire &amp;amp; police protection. Metered gas school bus ft laundrette. 3 min. from the 2 new shopping centers. Call PL 8-3162.</p>
        <p>MONEY TO LOAN</p>
        <p>(300D USED APPLIANCES and furniture. Must be in good working condition. Call Garris Supply now, PL 2-5225.</p>
        <p>SEE OUR TABLE FULL OF terrific buys. 50% off. Hurry to Western Auto, 319 Evans Street.</p>
        <p>FIREW(X)D FOR SALE. CUT any length. Maple or Oak. Call Rudolph Scheller, PL 2-7162.</p>
        <p>SINGER SEWING MACHINE: In nice modem cabinet. Dams, hems, buttonholes, Zig-Zags, beautiful decorative designs. Pay last 7 payments of $8.22 monthly or discount for cash. Can be seen and tried out locally. Pull details write; National, Repos-se.ssion Dept., Box 283, Asheboro, N.C.</p>
        <p>FARM LOANS</p>
        <p>Up to 25 Years to Repay. Competitive Rates. Immedfato Appraisal Available. Mortgage Loan Departmea*</p>
        <p>Wachovia Bank</p>
        <p>AND TRUST CO. PLAZA 8-2151</p>
        <p>REAL ESTAH</p>
        <p>CUSTOM BUILT AND IN-talled porch railings, columns, interior rails, screens ft dividers. Metal Specialties, 758-4591.</p>
        <p>CHAIN SAW REPAIRS</p>
        <p>McCulloch Chain Sales ft Service</p>
        <p>CLARK &amp;amp; CO.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON ft TENTH PL 8-2125</p>
        <p>New Year! . . . New Home!</p>
        <p>Help In Choosing A Home Which Suits You In Every Respect In 1966. See or call</p>
        <p>E. H. Williford</p>
        <p>105 E. 2nd St. Night P 2-4409</p>
        <p>3 HOUSES LOCATED. Ill S. Washington St., 122 N. Cotanch St., ft 127 E. 1st St. For demolition ft/or removal. Bids will be received by the Re-Dcvelop-ment Comm, of Greenville until 12:00 noon, Jan. 21.</p>
        <p>DUPLEX APT. NEAR COLLEGE 1900 E. 3rd St., 5 large rooms, auto, heat, piped for washer, hardwood floors, insulated, Venetian blinds. Two private entrances. CaU Ed Griffith after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p> PROFFESSIONAL GUITAR LESSONS Study guitar with experienced graduate teacher. Night instruction. Bargain rates. Call 758-2884.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NOTICES</p>
        <p>1008 COLONIAL AVE., 5 RM. house, 2 BR. Uving room, dining room, kitchen ft bath, house in exceUent cond. Call 2-2305.</p>
        <p>BRICK HOME IN BEX.VEDERE Section, 3 BR., 2 full baths, den with built up fireplace, sliding glass doors with a patio, wooded lot. Shown by appointment only. 752-2301.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER, 3 BR BRICK house. Furnished, unfurnished. Large lot near college &amp;amp; achools. By appointment 758-4095.</p>
        <p>1016 COLONIAL AVE. BRICK House, 9 rooms, 2 baUis, completely redecorated inside, PL 8-1253 for appointments.</p>
        <p>Lo^ For Salo</p>
        <p>SEVERAL % ACRE WOODED lots, outside city. Call Charlea Kinfe, PL 2-3662 evening</p>
        <p>^BITAL^</p>
        <p>TIRED OP HOUSE HUNTING? Let us solve your worries now. Grier Rental Agency, 205 E. 3rd. St., PL 2-6700, Closed Weds.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>4 ROOM UNFURNISHED APT.</p>
        <p>5 blocks frofm college. Couple or couple with one child. $55 per month. CaU Ed Harris, 758-4151 day.</p>
        <p>3 BEDRCX)M APT., 111-A StancUl Dr., fully insulated, forced air heat, range, refrigerator furnished. Air conditioned. PL 2-4628.</p>
        <p>DIXON BARBER SHOP - NEW Hours - starting January 10  ,open every night Mon. - Fri. 7 -9:00 p.m. Working at Rays Barber Shop across from Hwy Patrol Station.</p>
        <p>KIWANIS AUCTION SALE Friday. Feb. 4. 9:00 a.m. Ki-wanis of WintervUle.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Farms For Laato</p>
        <p>9,969 LBS. TOBACCO AT 18 cents lb., to be moved. CaU PL 8-3249, Roosevelt Spain.</p>
        <p>7.14 acres ef tobacco, 15.844 lbs. to lease ft move. Phone PL 2-6307.....................</p>
        <p>FOR LEASE 'TO BE MOVED, 6,324 lbs. tobacco. CaU PL 2-4874.</p>
        <p>Houses For Ront</p>
        <p>3 RM HOUSE, 1203 FORBES ST. $35 per month. CaU 2-2664. Can be seen after 6:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>5 RM HOUSE, WALL-TO-WALL carpet, central heat. $75 per mo. CaU PL 8-2773,</p>
        <p>Wantad To Buy</p>
        <p>INDIVIDUAL WILL BUT equity to $2,0002 te 3 bedroom house or will lease. 752-6191 or P.O. Box 2512.</p>
        <p>WANTED TO BUY ACREAGE wooded or clear with no crop aUotments, that can be subdivided for residential buUding sites. Anywhere between Orif-ton ft Greenville, preferably the Ayden-WintervUle areas. Contact; M. K. Branch. Tarheel Realty Co. Ayden, N. C. Dtty 746-6253, night 746-3453</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISTIAY</p>
        <p>EXTRA CLEAN 5 RM. HOUSE With garage, storm windows ft doors. Insulated, completely permanent fenced in yard. CaU 2-4207.</p>
        <p>3 BR. ONE STORY COUNTRY home, with all modem con-viences. Located 2^^ miles East of Ayden on N.C. 102. CaU J. D. Wilson, Sr. PL 2-2460.</p>
        <p>HOUSE FOR KENT IN BELL Arthur. CaU j. u. Nichola, PL 2-6939.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>FARM FOR SALB</p>
        <p>100.22 ACRES</p>
        <p>39 Cleared, 4 Acres Tobaeee, 1902 lbs. per Acre, f Acras Corn.</p>
        <p>Locatad Trantars Craak Saction</p>
        <p>for laformatioB, pbooe 946-3523 or see Alton or Harold Harding Travelers Service Statisa, Washington.</p>
        <p>Realtor PL 8-3911</p>
        <p>USED DESKS $25 UP. NEW upholstered cuairs, 50 per cent off, used chairs $5 up. ConsoU-dated Equip. Co., 1127 Evans. Taff Office Equip. Co., PL2-2175.</p>
        <p>HUNTERS PARADISE. NOW in stock - Browning. Winchester, Remington, Pranchi, Savage, Ithaca, Marlin, H ft R. Singles. Automatics, Pumps, double. H. L. Hodges Co.</p>
        <p>SHOP GEORGETOWN SUN-dries for your greeting cards, sundries, medicine, out of town papers. Open Sun. 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., PL 2-3060.</p>
        <p>LOST BRIGHT CARPET colors . . . rest'- ^ them with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Oliddens.</p>
        <p>HOME HEATING WITH LEN-nox  More people buy Lennox for home heating than any other make furnace. We offer quality workmanship and materials. For free survey with no obligation. Financing. General Heating, Inc. 1100 Evans St., 2-4187.</p>
        <p>FARM LOANS</p>
        <p>EASY FARM PINANCINO with E. C. Newton, FarmvUle. 20 yr. term. Pair Interest Rates. SK3-4321.</p>
        <p>FLORISTS</p>
        <p>TAKE ADVANTAGE OP THIS pretty weather. Plant shrubs and trees now from Jefferson Florist ft Nursery, W. 5th St. Ext.</p>
        <p>FLOWERS REFLECT YOUR thoughts, so show you think enough to send the finest  Kathleens Flower Arrangements. PL 8-2308.</p>
        <p>S-TORM WINDOWS Storm windows and doors. Awnings. Venetian blinds, porch enclosures, paint and hardware. No down payment, three years to pay.</p>
        <p>C. L. LUPTON COMPANY "Yonr Comfort Is Our Bnsiness" PL ttXK</p>
        <p>THREE GUYS PROM DIXIE is the place to shop for sleeping bags, tents, waders boots. 629 Dickinson Ave., PL 2-4166.</p>
        <p>DEALING IN SERVICES? Classified Ads get you new bus-</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>ACREAGE</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>SUBDIVISION</p>
        <p>Charlotte Developer - BuUder, Opening Greenville division, needs acreage for two subdivisions. Write or Call Collect.</p>
        <p>704-333-6612 Hallmark &amp;amp; Co., Inc</p>
        <p>2000 Randolph Bd. Charlotta, N. C.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APT. TO WORK-ing man. All private. Water, lights ft utilities furnished. $35 per month. Write: Apartment P. O. Box 2646, City.</p>
        <p>4 ROOM UPSTAIRS UNPR-nished apt. Heat ft water furnished. 2 blocks from college. 508 E. 3rd St. Phone PL 2-3528.</p>
        <p>NEW 3 BR DUPLEX. AIR CON-ditioning, blinds. Centrally heated. Stancil Drive. PL 8-3940.</p>
        <p>STRAITORD ARMS - 1900 Charles St., located on New Bern Hwy. near 264 By-Paw, 1 ft 2 bedoom gard(Hi apts. Available Feb. 1. CaU PL 8-3572 to reserve yours.</p>
        <p>CONTINUE YOUR EDCA-tlon! Check Classified now for business and industrial schools under "Instructions,</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>CLASSIHED DISPUY</p>
        <p>HEATING</p>
        <p>AND</p>
        <p>PLUMBING</p>
        <p>We can handle yonr complete heating and plnmblng needs prorapUy. Finance plan available.</p>
        <p>POLLARDS</p>
        <p>PLUMBING ft HEATING CO.</p>
        <p>W. G. Pollard, Owner 209 E. Third St.</p>
        <p>Phone PL 2-7232 or PL 2-46SS</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>ELECTRICIANS &amp;amp; ELECTRICAL JOURNEYMEN</p>
        <p>Permanent employment by growing oattorn Carolina electrical Contractors. For interview roply P. O. Box 72B, Grifton, N. C. stating experience, wage expoctod and talaphone numbar.</p>
        <p>WANT TO SELL YOUR HOME?</p>
        <p>CALL US!</p>
        <p>We will either buy or sell it for you. Comparo our service for selling homes:</p>
        <p>5 Selling Agents . . . Complete Financing . . . Total Effort Put Behind Each Home We List For Sale . . . Daily Calls From People Moving Into Greenville . . . And Most of all . . . Courtesy</p>
        <p>Ed Tipton Agency. Inc.</p>
        <p>203 BOYD AVE. GREENVILLE, N. C.</p>
        <p>THE ONE-STOP AGENCY</p>
        <p>PL 8-292</p>
        <p>BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>Weben Coin-Operated Self-Service 25c Car Wash</p>
        <p>FOR SALf</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>FARM MACHINERY AUCTION Sal Tuesday Jan. 18 at 10 a:m. 150 farm tractors 300 implements. Wayne Implement, Inc., Cioidsboro, N. C., South on Hwy. 117.</p>
        <p>Furniture - Appliance</p>
        <p>PINEVIEW MOBILE HOMES haa a wide selection of uiecj turn-tturt and appliancea Come see at our E. 10th Ext. location.</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous Fot Salo</p>
        <p>OFFICE CHAIR, NEW. a Christmas gift. Retail $100 will sell for $40 Call 758-1933.</p>
        <p>i&amp;amp;triuuieu oy</p>
        <p>VEND^A-MATIC, Inc.</p>
        <p>316 N: Fayetteville St.</p>
        <p>Asheboro, N. C.  Phone  629-9911</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA'S URGEST CAR WASH DISTRIBUTORS</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>CONTINUES</p>
        <p>WE HAD SUCH GOOD RESPONSE FROM LAST WiBCS SALE THAT WE HAVE DECIDED TO CONTINUE IT. FOR THOSE WHO MISSED IT LAST WEEK COME ON OUT . . . DON'T MISS OUT THIS WEEK.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET Sta.</p>
        <p>Wagon 6 cyl., auto. P. teer. Was {</p>
        <p>$1995. Now only</p>
        <p>..r,</p>
        <p>62</p>
        <p>rn CHEVROLET font 2-dr. Sedan iserO</p>
        <p>CA FORD  90i;</p>
        <p>O J 2-dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET Impato Sport Coupe, V-t, P. steer, ft brakes. Air cond. auto. ^ICQC trans, clean  lUirO</p>
        <p>PONTIAC 8U. Wagen VL, d-dr. Was</p>
        <p>SU. Wgn., 4-dr. OLDSMOBILE $</p>
        <p>$1595. Now only</p>
        <p>g| FALCON 4-dr., Sta.</p>
        <p>Wagon, 6-cyl. auto. Clean</p>
        <p>,*1195</p>
        <p>Sta.</p>
        <p>*695</p>
        <p>58 58 58;</p>
        <p>57;</p>
        <p>*395</p>
        <p>"r* 4-dr.</p>
        <p>FORD i-dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>FORD -dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>57 FORD</p>
        <p>Station Wagon</p>
        <p>Fairlanc 5M ..  V-8,  auto.  It.</p>
        <p>FORD 01 4-dr</p>
        <p>green, low mile-</p>
        <p>age. One owner</p>
        <p>MERCURY OU station wagen</p>
        <p>rA MERCURY 4-dr^S^n</p>
        <p>gg peTmouth</p>
        <p>OUTH dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>CA OLDSMOBILE 4-dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>59*</p>
        <p>Fglriane **$00</p>
        <p>*395</p>
        <p>*395</p>
        <p>*195</p>
        <p>*390</p>
        <p>*350</p>
        <p>C7 FORD Oi 4-dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>Cfl OLDSMOBILE OV 4.dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>PLYMOUTH 00 4-dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>CC BUICK 00 4-dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>CADILLAC 4-dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>ec CHEVROLET 00 4-dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>ee OLDSMOBILE 00 4-dr. Sedan</p>
        <p>GET 'EM WHILE THEY'RE HOT</p>
        <p>150</p>
        <p>*  95</p>
        <p>*  95</p>
        <p>*  95</p>
        <p>*  95</p>
        <p>*  75</p>
        <p>*  50 *125 *295 *175 *100</p>
        <p>SOME OF THESE ARE JUST RIGHT FOR HUNTING ft FISHING OR JUST A SECOND CAR.</p>
        <p>STAFFORD OLDS</p>
        <p>Dickinson Ave. ft Heoker Road  PL  8-3416</p>
        <pb facs="00090179_0012" />
        <p>12-Tb Oilly  OrMnvill*,  N.  e.-TtPMchy,  JaiiiMry  II,  1966</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  (NCDA)-orlh Carolina hog Market mostly steady, instances of 25 cents higher. Prices 28.00-28.50 Statesville and Salisbury; 27.50-28.00 Hickory; 27.00-28.00 Kinston, New Bern, Benson, Mount Olive, Newton Grove, Albertson and Lumberton; 27.25-27.75 Murfreesboro and Robersifflville; 26.'^27.50 Rocky Mount; 27.75 Selma; 27.50 Goldsboro; 27.25 Greensboro, Tarboro and Bethel; 27.00 Siler aty, Mount Gilead and Denton.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  NCDA -North Carolina egg markets generally steady. Supplies about ad^iiate, demand fair to mostly good. Prices paid producers for clean,/ unsized eggs on a grade-yield basis, cases exchanged: grade A large whites 37 to 37*4 mostly 37; medium, whites 32Vi to 33 mostly 32V4; small, whites 29 to 29*4 mostly 29Su</p>
        <p>Anken Chemical, Mondays most active stock, opened on a delayed block of 65,000 shares, up 1 at 28, and imtfroved this price fractionally.</p>
        <p>Crucible Steel, the biggest recent gainer In its group, clipped a fraction from its 2V4-point spurt of Monday.</p>
        <p>Prices  advanced  in heavy</p>
        <p>trading on the American Stock Exchange.</p>
        <p>Corporate and U.S. Treasury bonds showed little change.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK AP)The stock market mounted a renewed advance to historic highs in heavy trading early this afternoon.</p>
        <p>blocks in speculative as wdl as investmeot-grade issues were traded.</p>
        <p>Wan Street was continuing its efforts to crowd a full days trading into an abbreviated foup^KHir session instead of the usual 5^ hours which have been reduced because of the transit strike in New York.</p>
        <p> Hie sharpest week-to-week gain in steel production in two years was (me bullish factor and steels respcmded to it by rislpg. But this ran afoul of some mild {H'oftt taking as the seson wore on.</p>
        <p>Airiines, rails, electronics, coppers and chemicals posted gains.</p>
        <p>The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .6 at 265.8 with industri^ up .7, raRS up 1.3 and utilities off .5.</p>
        <p>Hie Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 2.28 at</p>
        <p>Shooting Victim Said Remaining In Fair Condition</p>
        <p>John Cleve, seriously injured in a January 2 shooting here, was reported in fair condition today in Duke University Hospital in Durham.</p>
        <p>Hospital spokesmen said this morning that Cleve had a fair night and remained in fair condition.</p>
        <p>WEATHER FORECAST  Snow Is expected tonight in the lower Lakes, the northern Rockies and the northern Plains and the upper Mississippi Valley. Showers are likely along the northern and central Pacific coast. It will be colder from New England to northern Florida and warmer from the Great Plains to the upper Lakes. (AP Wirephoto Map)</p>
        <p>Miscegnation Ban Challenged</p>
        <p>Commonwealth Leaders In Secret Rhodesia Parley</p>
        <p>LAGOS, Nigeria (AP)  Commonwealth leaders began a two-day* secret conference on Rhodesia today after most delegates indicated they were willing to</p>
        <p>indicators were above eir latest closing highs on an intraday basis.</p>
        <p>C-of-C Collection Service Set Mark</p>
        <p>The Collection Service Division the Greenville Chamber of Commerce and Merchants Association set a new record for collections in December.</p>
        <p>The (fivision coUected $1,655.-I7,i the most received in one moixth since the service was reactivated in Feb., 1965.</p>
        <p>Decembers collections broo^ the total collected in 2P55, to m(e than $11,000.</p>
        <p>CSiamberAssociation Executive Director Harold Crech say that if a heavy volume of bifS&amp;amp;iess continues, we will soon be aMe to justify adding a second employe.* Creech urges busiiiessmen to send the Odiectkm Service IMvision any acconnts you have been unable (Lconect**</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK</p>
        <p> END 8TONIGHT</p>
        <p>30 COUNTRY MUSIC STARS</p>
        <p>AnHesOf</p>
        <p>JIIINTX NAU ilO AORCiy</p>
        <p>TICE</p>
        <p>DRIV&amp;amp;IN</p>
        <p>THEATRI</p>
        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>RICHMOND, Va. (AP)- Virginias Supreme  (Dourt had  under advisement  today a  suit________</p>
        <p>11 ji u  u  th  constitutionality  whether  economic</p>
        <p>Cleve  was  allegedly  shot  by  of the states 32-year-old  law</p>
        <p>Johnny  Gray  Dixon,  32-year-old  prohibiting the  marriage  of</p>
        <p>Negro of Route 1, Winteryille.</p>
        <p>V  X____ ^  M.</p>
        <p>Investigators said Dixon fired a .16 guage shot gun at Qeve through a window of Cleves store on Boyd Avenue. The shooting followed an argument the night before.</p>
        <p> C3eve, 56, has lost the sight of one eye as a result of the shooting, police reported.</p>
        <p>Dixon is being held without privilege of bond on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill pending the outcome of Cleves condition.</p>
        <p>sanctions bring down the rebel j  regime of Prime Ministl* Ian</p>
        <p>whites and Negroes.  Smith</p>
        <p>^guments in the suit on be-| gmu,e delegates quaUfied half of a white instruction ,^iiijngpess in their arrival</p>
        <p>Community</p>
        <p>Announcements</p>
        <p>Bishop T. H. Gibbs. wUI preach at St. Rest Hold Church, Wnterville, Thursday, January 13.</p>
        <p>Mount Nebo Lodge No. 39, Knights of Pylbuis will' hold a special meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the lodlge hall on Albemarle Ave.</p>
        <p>The Evening Star Saving Qub will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Odessa Gray, 519 Boyd Ave.</p>
        <p>The SeniiH* Choir of Holly HiU FWB Church will have rehearsal Thursday at 8 p.m. at the church.</p>
        <p>The.Gpspel Choir will meet tonight at 6 oclock at the home of Mrs. Pattie Grimes.</p>
        <p>Choir Bap</p>
        <p>of Cornerstone *wil 'have rehearsal Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>The Senicnr Choir of English Chapel Church will have rehearsal Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the church.</p>
        <p>The Gospel Chorus of Selvia Chapel Church will have rehearsal tonight at 8 oclo(d( after dionh.</p>
        <p>The Junior Choir of Holy Trinity Church will meet Wednesday at the home of Michael Garrett, at 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>J. A. Nimmo Choir of Sycamore Hill Baptist Church will have rehearsal Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the church.</p>
        <p>The Holly Hill FWB Church will observe' its pastors seventh anniversary this week with the following services: Tonight, Rev. Stephen Jones and choir of Haddocks Chapel; Wednesday, Rev. W. L. Jones of Mt. Calvery; Thursday, Holy Hill Senior Choir rehearsal, Friday, Rev. Terson of Falkland St:  John Baptist</p>
        <p>Church. *</p>
        <p>Services begin each night at 7:30.</p>
        <p>worker and his half-Negro, half-Indian wife were heard by the court Monday and produced at least one surprise.</p>
        <p>The surprise came with the contention by attorneys for the complainants  Mr. and Mrs. Richard Perry Loving of Carolina Chunty  that the law (iis-criminates more against white people than against Negroes.</p>
        <p>This, said attorney Philip Hir-schkop, is because the law forbids a white person to marry anyone but another white person, and permits Negroes to marry any race except a white person.</p>
        <p>Loving and his wife were married in 1958 in Washington, D.C. after growing up together in Caroline (bounty. When they returned to Caroline they were arrested, convicted by a circuit judge of violating the anti-miscegenation statute, and sentenced to a year apiece in jail.</p>
        <p>The sentences were suspended on the understanding the Lovings would move out of state. They moved to Washington, but in 1963 returned to Virginia and lodged their suit against the law.</p>
        <p>Again Bum An American Flag</p>
        <p>PANAMA (AP)-Demonstra-tors have burned the U.S. flag for the second time in two days at a rally marking the second anniversary of the bloody Pan</p>
        <p>ama Canal Zone riots.</p>
        <p>Barely 100 persons showed up for the second rally in Santa Anna Plaza Monday night. Speakers of the leftist Students Union atacked the United States and proclaimed solidarity with Fidel Castro and Mao Tze-tung.</p>
        <p>statements with a warning that other measures, including armed intervention, should not be ruled out if the British-sponsored sanctions prove ineffective.</p>
        <p>No radical new policy moves toward the breakaway British colony were expected from this first conlonwealth conference ever held outside London.</p>
        <p>British Prime Minister Harold Wilson was expected to remain firm against military intervention in Rhodesia and also was expected to resist setting any absolute time limit for the replacement of Smith.</p>
        <p>Sources said he was likely to call on commonwealth nations to assist Zambia, whose economy is tied to the Rhodesian railway, electric power, transport</p>
        <p>FLOODING DEATHS</p>
        <p>RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)  Thirty-six persons perished and many more were feared buried in the debris of 50 buildings  mostly in the slumswhich collapsed Monday night after a downpour caused extensive flooding.</p>
        <p>and telecommunication systems.</p>
        <p>Rhodesia has started rationing gasoline and a spokesman for the Dunlop rubber factory in Bulawayo, one of the countrys largest industries, said Monday that trade sanctions will force the firm to go on a short work week starting Jan. 17.</p>
        <p>Ga. Governor Is Urged To Call New Election</p>
        <p>ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - The Student Nonviolent Coordinating (&amp;gt;)mmittee, a militant civil rights organization, urged Gov. Carl E. Sanders today to call a new election for a seat in the Georgia House denied one of its officials.</p>
        <p>Rep.-elect Julian Bond, 25, who last week endorsed an SNCC statement denouncing U.S. policy in Viet Nam as ag-gresion and urging American youth to avoid the draft, was barred from his seat Monday night. He was elected in the predominantly Negro 136th District of Atlanta in reapportionment elections last June.</p>
        <p>Bonds draft classification is lY  a broad classification based on many factors which qualifies him for military service only in time of war or national emergency, the Atlanta Selective Service said today.</p>
        <p>May Halt Classes In Integration Quarrel</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP) - Central Piedmont Community College apparently will close its basic adult education program at least temporarily in mid-February in a controversy over integration.</p>
        <p>The schools board of trustees voted Monday to halt the 142 basic adult education classes rather than abide by federal requirements encouraging integration.</p>
        <p>The Office of Economic Opportunity set the requirements last fall as a condition for granting an additional $92,000 to help keep the program alive.</p>
        <p>In order to qualify for OEO funds, Central Kedmont officials r must totally integrate all classes in 33 locations in four counties by bussing students and faculty members from one neighborh(X)d to another.</p>
        <p>This, CPIX officials say, would disrupt the basic concept of the adult education courses, and probably reduce enrollment drastically.</p>
        <p>Rep. criarles R. Jonas, R-N.C., called the whole affair outrageous Monday and urged anti-poverty chief Sergent Shriver by letter to reconsider his agencys position on the grant.</p>
        <p>Jonas said he hopes the OEO could be persuaded to stop this harassment and put an end to the delay so they (college of ficials) can go ahead and implement the program.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, Harold M. Bailin, in charge of the OEOs community action program, said, We are shocke&amp;lt;!. . . since we asked very little of them. We were only asking for the facts on the status of the classes now, and how tiey were going to place students in light of the fact that freedom of choice in unacceptable.</p>
        <p>At present, adults attending the night-class program go to whatever class they find convenient. This is the so-called freedom of choice plan.</p>
        <p>Dr. Richard Hagemeyer, Cen</p>
        <p>tral Piedmont president, said the basic concept of the adult education courses was to take the education to the students. He said in many of the classes throughout the system whites are very much in the nunority, while in some of the classes Negroes are in the minority.</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>obituary</p>
        <p>Krlokey</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE-Mrs. Gertrud# Bundy Krinkey, 35, died suddenly Monday afternoon at her home in Baltimore, Md. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>She is survived by her husband, Donald Krinkey of the home; her father and stepmother, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Bundy of Farmville; two daughters, Carol and Jackie^ of the</p>
        <p>home and a son, Donald Jr., also of the home; and five bro-* thers, Richard end Burnell Bundy, both of Farmville, Jam-</p>
        <p>About 90 per cent of the 2,100 |es of Newport News, Va., . B. students enrolled in the free of Lenoir and Clarence Bundy</p>
        <p>classes are Negroes.</p>
        <p>of Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Walt Disneys</p>
        <p>most 1</p>
        <p>0196S Wl't 0.sny PraducMns*</p>
        <p>DpfHCfJ^.</p>
        <p> ORi.  M</p>
        <p>lECHNlCOLQRij</p>
        <p>STARTS</p>
        <p>FRIDAYl</p>
        <p>HALET MILLS DEAN JONES DOROTHY PROVINE</p>
        <p>JAN. 15th DEADLINE</p>
        <p>AFTER JAN. 15th All SEASON TICKETS TO E.C.C. SUMMER THEATRE Will BE ADVANCED FROM $15.00 TO $18.00 PERMANENTIY.</p>
        <p>IF YOU WILL MAIL YOUR CHECKS IMMEDIATELY SO THAT THEY ARE RECEIVED BEFORE MIDNIGHT, JAN. 15th TO E.C.C. SUMMER THEATRE OFFICE OR TO CHARLES A. WHITE, 504 EAST 9th ST., GREENVILLE, N. C., YOUR SEASON TICKETS AT THE OLD PRICE OF $15.00 WILL BE SENT TO YOU BY RETURN MAIL. ENCLOSE SELF ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE.</p>
        <p>Statement of</p>
        <p>TO s. VIET NAM</p>
        <p>CANBERRA, Australia (AP) Roving Ambasador W. Av-erell Harriman will fly to South Viet Nam Wednesday U.S. officials announced today. He is on a world mission for President Johnson to explain U. S. policy on the Viet Nam War.</p>
        <p>Britains Princess Margaret receives $42,000 anmiaUy from Parliament*</p>
        <p>PUN FOR THf YOUNG, THE OLD, THE KIDS, THE MIDDLEAOE, THE TEENAGE, ANY AGEl 1 I YOU WILL UUGH YOUR PANTS OFPI</p>
        <p>pmtntta Robert Yoongton RroMton</p>
        <p>TBBKBTGP</p>
        <p>nANilOIXIlf</p>
        <p>253</p>
        <p>SOUD UUGHS ACTUAUV aOCKED IN SWORN SURVEYI</p>
        <p>*Xeufi8f</p>
        <p>Obituary</p>
        <p>Boulware</p>
        <p>Mrs. Jessie Bell Wiggins Boulware, the daughter of Mrs. Annie Beil Wiggins and the late Jesse Wiggins died suddenly Thursday night in Mt Vernon New York.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be Wednesday 4:00 p.m. at York Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church with Rev. P. H. Munford officiating. Burial will follow in Brown Hill Cemetw.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband, George Etoulware of Winston-Salem; one daughter. Miss Montresa Boulware of Greenville; her mother, Mrs. Annie Bell Wiggins of Greenville; one sister, Mrs. Minnie Moses and one brother, Leanden Wiggins, both of New York.</p>
        <p>Her paternal grandmother Mrs. Lou Wiggins (rf Greenville; two aunts; two great aunts.</p>
        <p>The body will remain at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home until the funeral hour.</p>
        <p># STARTS </p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>Ult ThBM Todi,  inCQDEEN  In</p>
        <p>THE CINCINNATI KID"</p>
        <p>TODAY A WEDS.</p>
        <p>ncnm^KNECMT CT,</p>
        <p>BHLtflnl</p>
        <p>JANE FONDALEE MARVIN Features At 1:403:35 5:257:20-0:15</p>
        <p>FREE TV STAND</p>
        <p>PHILCO</p>
        <p>DECORATOR-STYLED PORTABLE TV</p>
        <p>Beautiful new furniture finisties, striking , new Decorator Colors! Choose from 7 models!</p>
        <p>PHILCO</p>
        <p>COOL p I CHASSIS</p>
        <p>I FOR LON6ER TV LIFE I '  ^</p>
        <p>^ 1#</p>
        <p>Fully equipped for 82-channel VHF-UHF reception</p>
        <p>PHILCO 3530 WH Driftwood Whit* finish with polishod chrome and Champagne Gold controls. Telescoping Pivotenna,</p>
        <p>3" X 5" speaker with out front sound, slim styling with molded finished back. 19* overall diagonal measurement,</p>
        <p>172 sq. in. viewable area.</p>
        <p>PHILCO</p>
        <p>PORTABLE TV *</p>
        <p>PHILCO MM m BIf 16- etetufs* In  li|hlwei|ht ***0. portable: Antique White finish.</p>
        <p>*16- ovarail diaional fflsaMiremwit, 125 sq. in. viowsbls area.</p>
        <p>Taft Furniture Store</p>
        <p>MEUeER FCOCRAL DEPOSIT INSUNANCE CORPONATION MEMUe FCOERAl HESEnVE SYSTEM</p>
        <p>planters</p>
        <p>^Mational</p>
        <p>I B Bank and T</p>
        <p>535 DICKINSON AVE.</p>
        <p>PL 2-2059</p>
        <p>Bank and Trust Company</p>
        <p>December 31, 1965</p>
        <p>Resources</p>
        <p>Cash and Due from Banks ...............</p>
        <p>United States Securities ..................</p>
        <p>Federal Agencies .........*.............</p>
        <p>State, County, &amp;amp; Municipal Securities........</p>
        <p>Other Securities.........................</p>
        <p>Loans and Discounts........ $28,461,848.64</p>
        <p>Brokers Loans............. 200,000.00</p>
        <p>Commercial Paper  ........ 2,150,000.00</p>
        <p>Total Loans............. $30,811,848.64</p>
        <p>Less Reserves........... 491,138.10</p>
        <p>Banking Houses and Fixtures .  $ 1,944,154.33</p>
        <p>Less Depreciation Reserves  863,356.18</p>
        <p>Other Assets...........................</p>
        <p>Customers' Liability - Letters of Credit.......</p>
        <p>TOTAL............................</p>
        <p>$11,650,220.22</p>
        <p>10,562,550.98</p>
        <p>3,399,470.15</p>
        <p>3,786,833.70</p>
        <p>91,000.00</p>
        <p>30,320,710.54</p>
        <p>1,080,798.15</p>
        <p>343,152.03</p>
        <p>134,164.00</p>
        <p>$61,368,899.77</p>
        <p>Liabilities</p>
        <p>Capital Stock.......... $  1,197,125.00</p>
        <p>Surplus .....  2,402,875.00</p>
        <p>Undivided Profits ....................... 419,392.13</p>
        <p>Reserves for Unearned Discount, Taxes</p>
        <p>Savings Interest,  etc................... 1,180,537.30</p>
        <p>DEPOSITS ............................. 56,034,806.34</p>
        <p>Letters of Credit - Outstanding ............ 134,164.00</p>
        <p>TOTAL............................ $61,368,899.77</p>
        <p>4/4%</p>
        <p>CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT</p>
        <p>(6 to 12 Months)</p>
        <p>r/ie PLACE to BANK</p>
        <p>... and SAVE</p>
        <p>MEMSte rsoERAL oceoeiT weueANCE coeeoNATKw</p>
        <p>MCMaU FEDERAL MSCJIVE SYSTEM</p>
        <p>planters</p>
        <p>^Matianal</p>
        <p>Bank and T</p>
        <p>Bank and Trust Company</p>
      </div>
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