(Bnucn^mintB West Craven Highlights News From Along The Hanks Of The Neiise NAIftMAl rXWSMiVS VOLUME 12 NO. 39 OCTOBER 12. 1989 VANCEBORO. NORTH CAROLINA PHONE 244'0760 OR 946-2144 (UPSP 412-110) 26 CENTS EIGHT PAGES Eagles celebrate touchdown over Rams en route to 12-7 win. Becton touchdown lifts Eagles By Mike Voss Editor HAVELOCK — Junior running back Lee Becton scored on a six^yard plunge with 3:16 left tolift unbeaten and eighth-ranked West Craven to a 12-7 Class 3-A Coastal Conference win over seventh-ranked Havelock last night. Becton’s ID capped a fourth- quarter rally in which the Eagles took advantage of two Ram miscues to get the win and good positioning for the state playoffs. Becton scored the go-ahead touchdown three plays afWr a high punt sailed over the Havelock punter’s head and was recovered by the Eagles Ray Hardee at the Rams* * 7-yard line. The Eagles overcame two procedure penalties before Bec ton snaked his way through a mob of defenders at the goal line to stand triumphantly in the end zone. A two-point pass conversion failed. The Eagles were down 7-0 at the end of the first quarter and Becton, who finished with 69 yards on 23 carries, was limited to four yards rushingin the first half. But the Ea gles closed to 7-6 when Eddie McKee] hit Rams’ bock Kenny Fra zier and forced a fumble eventually recovered by Hardee at the Rams* 22. Becton moved the ball to the 1 in three plays and quarterback Kevin Hclzwor^ scampered in firom the 1 with 7:09 left in the fwrth (quarter to bring the Eagles wimn enepoint. Chris Stilley*s converrion kick was wide. Havelock, having scored on a 24-yard rush by Silas George in the first period, took possesion on the ensuing kickoff but, on a fourth- and-10 punt attempt, the ball sailed high and was recovered by the Ea gles to lead to Becton’s go-ahead score. Havelock had one more chance af ter Becton’s touchdown. Facing a fourth-and-20 after a quarterback sack, the Rams saw a pass fall three yards short of the first down. West Craven took possession and ran out the clock with five running plays by Becton. Becton also posted two sacks and at least two tackles for losses in the omtest. The Eagles’ longest play in the game was 28 yards and came in the first half. The Rams unveiled a new defense against the Eagles’ lone- back set, said coach Wilbur Sasser. It worked as Becton in the first half. For the game, Holzworth threw eight incomplete passes, completed five and threw one interception in the first half. Neither team showed much offen sive firepower as West Craven had In defense of Pack, Campbell speaks out By Mo Krochmal Sports Editor RALEIGH — If there has been one constant this season for the N.C. State football team, it has been the plq^f the defense. : fVG^e member of that defense, wbojusthappenstobe fix>m Vanceb- oyo, "speaks out* loudly with his performances. • Saturday afternoon, it was the Pack’s defense that held NCAA Di vision I-AA opponent Middle Ten nessee at bay until the offense could nank up as the Wolfpack emerged With a 35-7 triumph in posting its liXth-straight win this season. ■ But, for the second straight week, ah unheralded opponent had Wolf- pack fans worried. •; The Blue Raider defense inter- tepted the Wolfpack twice in the firsthalfandkept things close, trail ing 7-0 at the half. ;' Last week, it was Dick Crum’s pe sky Kent State that aggravated the \Volfpack before falling 45-22. ! I') Ibe second half Satur- ttej'^fl^eemed like the officials were the best weapon the Wolfpack had as a pass interference call at the Middle Tennessee 2-yard line fueled a 48-yard scoring drive, capped by tailback TVrone Jackson’s 1-yard TD plunge to give the Peek a 14-0 lead it took into the intermission. Tlie Wolfpack then found some momentum on a turnover in the third quarter as Vanceboro’s Jesse Campbell, an all-conference defen sive back and lost year's rookie of the year, got into the act. Campbell looked like he was tak ing a ^p into a zone for pass pro tection. Then, suddenly, Cam(i)ell was sprinting out of the pack, bcdl in hand. He ended up in the end zone after grabbing a fiimbled pitch but was not able to advance it and had to trot back after sprinting to the end zone. *They missed the pitch,” Camp bell said. "I was right there, it was easy. It would have been a touchdown.” Campbell, who came in as the leading tackier on the Wolfpack squad with 45, said the defensive goal was to hold the Blue Raiders to three downs each possession. See CAMPBELL, Page 7 U» Kroctanil photo N.C. State's Jesse Campbell (42), escorted by Bobby Houston, tries to advance a fumble recovery In Saturday's win over Middle Tennessee. Powers misses football, football misses Powers By Mike Vos Editor Jeir Powers grimaced in pain. Both physical and emotional pain as he sat in a wheelchair, shackled to the sideline. Perhapa moat of the pain came from knowing there was rfothi ng he coul d do to help his team- fpates — nothing physical that is. Powers, a 6-1,260-poundlineman for the West Craven Eagles, had been sidelined the week before with akneeinjury. Last Tuesday, Powers underwent surgery end appears lost to the Eagles for ths rest of the spason. But there is more to life than foot ball and more to football than suit ing up and playing on the field — a philosophy Powers believes. West Craven’s Eades faced con ference rival Havolou this post Fri day night. ‘Hie Engles hadn’t beaten the Rams in four years. And with Powers out of the lineup and unable to open holes for Eagio tunning backs, the outlook for West Craven dimmed. 1 miss it already,* ssdd Powers from his wheelchair. But as much as ha missed the game, the Eagles were missing Powan. Iha senior provides leadership and axperisnea that has helped Ism the E^les to a 6-0 record and a ranking among the top 10 3-A schools. ‘Ws’rs going to miss him, both for his playing skills and what ha con- tributos in other ways,* said heed Sea POWERS, Pago 7 Four-laning Highway 17 is celebrated NEW BERN — The four lane UB. 17 bypass proposed under the state Transportation Improvement Program is iMing looked at as a way to remedy the "bottlenecks” near New Bern, especially at the Neuse River bridge. Local government officials got a firsthand look at the location of the bypass during a dinner at the Shera ton Hotel herelaat night tocelebrate thedecisiontobuild a four-lane U.S. 17 from the Virginia border to South Carolina. The project would also four-lane the highway from Wilmar at the Craven-Beaufort county line to Bridgeton at a cost of about $29 mil lion. The bypass around New Bern will cost about $100 million. The projects will be financed mostly through the recent 5^4 -cent-per-gallon tax increase on gasoline and an increase in title fees. The project puts easter North Carolina on the "brink of finaliza tion of four-inning U.S. 17 from state line to stote line," said Basnight. The bypass is part of an overall program costing over $720 million that will encompass all of the 285-mile U.S. 17 system, one of the largest in the state. U.S. 17 stretches from Camden County at the Virginia border to Brunswick County at the South Carolina border. Senator Marc Basnight, spokes man for a del^ation of eastern North Carolina legislators who pushed for the passage of the high way bill, said, "I think it was a mqjor breakthrough for eastern North Carolina.” See HIGHWAY, Page 7 183 total yards and Havelock had 170. Prior to the opening kickofT, Bec ton visited injured lineman Jeff Powers on the sideline and showed Powers a towel tucked into his his (Becton’s) waistband. The towel had the name "JefT printed on it. Becton told a reporter the towel was a re minder to score for the lineman who has opened holes for the Eagle run ning back. The towel worked. It worked late, but the Eagles are now 6-0 and earned a win over Havelock for the first time in four years. Kip Bryan, the leading pass re ceiver for the Engles and the confer ence, caught four passes for 56 yards, had one interception and broke up two passes. Tony Coward also added an interception to the West Craven defensive effort. See EAGLES, Page 7 Mums the word The Latham Garden, foreground. Is abloom with mums in time for the New Bern Chrysanthemum Festival. The gardens and groundsofihe 13-acre Tryon Palace historic site will be open free to the public Oct. 13-15 during the festival. Area codes required for toll calls in 1990 TARBORO — Beginning March 2, 1990, North Cardina residents will have to include the three-digit area code when they dial long distance, even if they are phoning a number with the same area code as their own. According to Carolina Telephone officials in T^rboro, the reason for the change dwells in the theory of supply and demand. The number of available three-digit prefixes to loco] telephone numbers — known as NNXs—no longer is sufficient to meet the demand for liiore central offices to serve the growing demand for telephones. A solution, though temporary, is to increase the number of available prefixes by allowing a *l*or "0” to be the middle digit. The 1 and 0 have been excluded in the past because they were used for access to long distance dialing. By allowing 1 and 0 to be used, 152 new prefixes — to be known as NXXs — will become available for both the 919 and 704 area in North See PHONES. Page 7 Study of currents should not delay drilling: Mobil JafI Powers watches teammates from sideline. GREENVILLE - Mobil Oil Corp. officials told a representative of three conservation groups calling for a study of ocean currents off the North Carolina coast that such a study has already been mode. A spokesman for Minerals Man agement Service, a division of the U.S. Department of the Interior, said the request by the three groups should not delay Mobil’s proposed oil and natural gas exploration. The comments were made during a public meeting on the company’s exploration plan Tuesday on the East Carolina University campus. "We just spent $1 million for a study on the dynamics of currents in this area,” said James C. Martin, Mobil environmental and regulat ory affairs manager and manager of the North Carolina drilling project. "Our report should have four times the data of the proposed Congres sional study.” "It would not be appropriate to de lay this decision based on this re quest,” Martin said. Representatives from the North Carolina Coastal Federation, the Sierra Club and LegaSea, a Dare and Hyde County-based conserva tion group, said Mobil shouldnotex- plore for oil or gas off the coast until the congressional study is complete. The groups called for the study in a press conference yesterday morn ing in front of the Department of En vironment, Health and Natural Re sources in Raleigh. The request was reiterated at the public meeting by Tom Perlic of Sec OIL, Page 7