Hub Sft«.()Jra#nt aomUfl ^ublU The NEW BERN I PUBLISHID WIIKLY IN THI HIART OP ^Gp-f '•'•N NORTH Newsmen who handle coverages in their area for the larger State dailies make countless long distance calls. In our case, during a spance of 40 years, we’ve found that almost without exception telephone operators are courteous, spi^y and efficient. Occasionally, there have been humorous slips and unexplained crossing of wires. Once, for example, we heard an operator turn to a fellow operator and say, "I just had THAT WOMAN on the line again, and she burped like she always does." For the heck of it, we in terrupted and expressed sympathy. One of the operators—probably the young lady who made the remark- gasped audibly and b^ of them snickered. If their supervisor was nearby, she may have snickered too. llien there was the time when this writer was in the midst of dictating an important story to a desk man at the Ralei^ News and Observer. AU of a sudden, a woman’s voice broke in. "Spot has had puppies,’’ she proclaimed excitedly to anothw woman at the other end of the line." For several minuteg th« MeBsea"in>wn detail. Although we didn’t know Spot, toe course of the con versation revealed that there were seven pif>pies in all—five girls and two boys—and every single one of them looked just like Spot. The voices finally faded, and we Ciiftim^d dictating our own grim newp about an automobile accident that had snuffed out three lives. Not however before the desk man in Raleigh asked, "Who in toe hdl was that on the line?" TO which we replied, "A couide of folks who love Spot." Back in Coastal Plain League days, when we served as statistation of the loop, we had a plug-in telephone in the pressbox at Kafer Park. It had an unlisted number to keep a constant stream of calls from coming in to ask what the score was' at that point in toe game. As a courted, for emergency reasons, the number was fur nished hospitals, physicians and law enforcement postmnel. One night the phone rang during a rally by the New Bern Bears in a red hot game with Kinston. Picking up the receiver, we immediately became the target of a torrent of bitter words from a very angry wonuui. "I wish you would hang up," she screamed. "Every time I try to use the phone you’re always listening in. I can’t open my mouth without having yw eaves^op. You make me sick, you old snooper. Just you wait. I’m going to report you to the company." ^ Very foolishly, bung on until the woman ran out of breath. By that tone the Nw Bern rally had been nipped in the bud, and the Kinston Eagles went on to win the ball game. As things turned out, a lot of fans at Kafer Park were Just as mihappy as the woman who spared no words in giving us (Continued on page 8). Euclid Duval Armstrong, m, Awaits His First Christmas. —Hioto by Wray Studio.