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wmm CAROLINA THUS 8t, Dec 15, 1971 Maravich Recovers Scoring Lead Bucks and Celtics Hit Streak NEW YORK - Atlanta's Peter Maravich recaptured the National Basketball Association scoring average lead recently, aided by a 42-point outburst against Buffalo, whose star Bob McAdoo slipped to second place In scoring. Maravich, whose 18-for-18 free throws was one short of Bob Pettit's record, had 637 points and a 29.0 average, official statistics revealed Monday. Teammate Jim Washington took the field goal percentage lead, shooting ll-for-18 for the week. His .552 percentage tops Kareem Abdul-Jabbar of Milwaukee at .542 Chicago's Clifford Ray dropped from first place to The Boston Celtics, who had snapped a Milwaukee winning streak at 13, saw the Bucks, end their i 2 game streak," 117-93, Nov. 30. The Bucks now have the NBA's top winning percentage at .840 (21-4). Portland's Larry Steele, who had seven steals against Phoenix Nov. 30, came close to Chicago's Jerry Sloan, the leader at 2.68 per game and Steele's 2.67. Capital's Elvin Hayes had 29 rebounds against Seattle Dec. 2 at the opening game in the Capital Centre and widened his rebounding average lead, 19.1, over Boston's Dave Cowen, who is averaging 15.7. Buffalo's Ernie DiGregorlo (8.0 assists) and Golden State's Jeff Mullins (.935 free throw percentage) held their leads. "A Dream For Christinas" Star All Black Cast on Christmas Eve STUFFS BASKET - Kareem Abdul Jabbar (33) of the Milwaukee Bucks "stuffs" a basket m the tint quarter in a game Tuesday night against the Buffalo BtaVes. Braves' Jim McllttHah (5), Bob Kauffman (44) and Randy Smith (9) helplessly took oh, along with Oscar Robertson 6t ihe Bucks (r&t). Milwaukee won 115-110. Northern MEAC Teams are Off to Fast Beginning If the first two weeks can be used as a yard stick, the four teams in the northern division of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) are going to be the front runners In the 1974t basketball race. Delaware State, Maryland-Eastern Shore, Morgan State and Howard all finished the first twp weekends of the season undefeated in conference and overall play. Maryland -Eastern Shore and Morgan were picked to finish one-two In the regular season MEAC race. But Delaware State and Howard have joined this duo in the race for the conference title won by Maryland-Eastern Shore last year. Maryland-Eastern Shore averaged better than 102 points per game in winning three games last week Including a pair of conference wins. The Hawks warmed up for their conference action by posting a 101-88 win over Lincoln last Thursday at home. The 1972-78 l$MA runner-ups came back to romp to 105-88 conference victory over North Carolina Central Friday night and then won rather easily over North Carolina A&T Saturday night by the score of 102-84. Delaware State kept pace with the defending champions by matching wins last week. The Hornets walloped D.C. Teacher's College, 106-78 last Tuesday in a warm up contest for their conference competition. Delaware State defeated A&T, 9471 Friday night and then took the measure of North Carolina Central to the tiineof l0B-79. Howard escapped with a come-from-behine 73-72 conference win over South Carolina State Friday night in Organgeburg before Morgan State came on to trip the South Carolina cagers the next night by a 98-67 margin. In addition to a pair of non-conference losses, South Carolina State also took it on the chin from Johnson C. Smith, 107-69 during the week. Joe Pace scored 22 points and grabbed 20 rebounds to lead Maryland-Eastern Shore to i ts win over NCCU. Michael Casey also scored 22 points for the winners while Rueben Collins added 17 points. Top scorers for the Eagles were Wesley Johnson and Dellwyn Johnson, each with 18. Five players scored in double digits for Delware State in its win over A&T, the first ever for the Hornets in basketball since the two teams joined the MEAC. Sam Shepperd led the way or the winners with 22 markers. James Outlaw scored 26 points In a losing cause for the Aggies. Sooth Carolina State led Howard all the way until the Bison look the toad at 73-72 on two free throws by Bob Lewis with 13 seconds remaining in the contest. S.C. State had a chance to try a shoot following a time out with 11 seconds but threw the ball away on the inbounds pass in. Lewis was the top scorer for Howard with 23 points. Delware State took advantage of 41 turnovers by North Carolina Central enroute to a 106-79 victory Saturday night in Dover, Delaware. The Hornets used balanced scoring with five ptayerthln double figures. Wade Pittman and Shepperd each scored 18 points for the winners while Jerry Gillospie and Fred Simmons each had 17 and James Roundtree chipped in with 14 points. Robert Little was the top scorer for the Eagles with 22 points and 15 rebounds. Maryland-Eastern Shore led all the way in its win over A&T. Casey and Tommy Nelson each tallied 16 points for the Hawks. Marvin Webster, a junior scored 39 points, grabbed 18 rebounds, and blocked seven shots to lead Morgan State to a convincing victory Saturday night. Byron Bailey was the top scorer for S. C. State with 17 points and 10 rebounds. A list of non-conference games wil 1 highlight the schedule in the MEAC this week. Winston-Salem State is at North Carolina Central Thursday night. Four non-conference games are on tap for Saturday night. Howard travels to Pittsburgh to meet the University of Pittsburgh, Norfolk State will play Morgan State in Baltimore, Bowie State will be at Delaware State and A&T and Winston-Salem State wil 1 play in Greensboro Coliseum. A&T goes to Huntington, West Virginia next Monday to meet Marshall College. Howard will be at home Tuesday against Savannah State. MANY YAMS North Carolina far mers produced sweet potatoes valued at $9.8 million in 1962. Ten years later, the value of production was $20.1 million. "A Dream For Christmas," a Lorimar production starring an all black cast headed by Hurl Rhodes, Beah Richards ad- Lynn Hamilton, is a tender, moving story of faith, w ti fc t ei'n b y : .JR. m m y Award-winner John McGreevey ("The -Waltons") with Max Hodge, which will air on Christmas Eve, ABC-TV, 9:00 11:00 P.M. , (ET). The Rev. Will Douglas, (Rhodes) pastor of a Baptist ei$Mn Sweet Clover, Arkansas, is offered a new post in Los Angeles when a state highway sounds a death knell for the tiny town. He, his wife and mother and four children make the long trek across country' in his vintage automobile which finally succumbs as they park in front of his new church. It appear s that the Elders tried to get in touch by mail to tell Rev. Douglas the church was to be torn down in a few weeks to make way for a new shopping center. He has five weeks in which to preach the gospel and, adding to his problems, most of the once flourishing congregation has moved on to newer and finer churches. , ' .. Undaunted, the Douglas clan pitch in to make their dream of a full church and a joyous Christmas, shared by an overflow congregation a reality. Rhodes, who heads the cast, te currently co-starring with Alex Rocco in "Detroit 9000," a General Films feature now in nation-wide release. He also co-starred in "Conquest Of The Planet Of The Apes" for 20th Century Fox and has appeared as guest star in virtually every major TV series. Lynn Hamilton, will be remembered for her role as Redd Foxx's girl friend in f'. Sandford And Son", and has appeared in a number of important TV shows including two episodes of the award-winning "The Waltons" series. Lynn was originally a New York stage and television actress. She plays Will's wife, Sarah, in this show. "f. Beah Richards, who was "Oscar" nominated for best supporting actress for her portrayal of Sidney Poitiers mother in "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner," play Will's mother, Jessie. She has appeared in countless motion pictures and TV shows. George Spell, Will and Sarah' s oldest son, Joey despite his tender years-he's 15--was co-starred in Walt Disney's "Moreover," with Johnny Whittaker, played a title role opposite Bill Cosby in the feature film "Man and Boy" and has appeared in dozens of top television series including "Kung Fu," ' 'Lassie," and "The Flying Nun. Telephone, electric and cable television com panies often give away empty wooden or metal i spools that were used Storing "wire. tm- omX f cover or paint these spools and convert them into handy, low-cost tables. . "ft BaT k sahU laY I I IS- BIG O got just that- zero- on this shot 1120 when Cazzie Russell of the Golden State Warriors blocked a shot by Oscar Robertson of the Milwaukee Bucks in Milwaukee. Life of 1 1 0-Yr-old Former Stave Set as TV Special NEW YORK-- "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman," a two-hour dramatic special, based on a recent novel, about a one-time slave who lived to participate in the Civil Rights movement, will be sponsored by Xerox Corporation Thursday evening, Jan. 31 (9-11 o'clock, ET) over the CBS Television Network. Cicely Tyson, an Academy award nominee last spring for her role in the movie JSounder," stars ..title Kile. The special filrndlon location in and around Baton Rouge, La., was written by Tracy Keenan Wynn, based on Ernest J. Gaines's novel. The epic story of this nation's southern blacks is told In the 110-year-life of "Miss Jane Pittman." Reflected in her "autobiography" are the peri od of slavery, the Reconstruction era and the Ku Klux Klan, the stirring events ; that led to the Supreme Court's desegregation rulings in 1954 and, finally the birth of the Civil Rights movement. More than the tale of a century of change, it's a I warmly mtlnatetoistpryftoyme persojn s Jong )iie, oi newye and personal tragedies. Her' triumphs and her never-failing courage. Miss Tyson, with several movies and numerous IV specials to her credit, also co-starred several years ago with George C. Scott in the "East Side, West Side" TV series. The supporting cast of "Miss Jane Pittman" features, among a number of Broadway, Off-Broadway and TV actors, folk singer Odetta and Haitian singer Josephine Premice. John Korty directed the drama, produced by Bob Christiansen and Rick Rosenberv Jqr Tomorrow latetjijlisinerj, inc.-' I 4 "JitlS&itimR" .jbarks, the second in a series of TV specials that Xerox will bring to the nation's viewers during 1974. HOLIDAY TH IMMINGS Pretty Joyce Boyd, a freshman at Fayettevllle State University, puts the final touch on the Christmas Tree. Joyce is a native of Henderson, N.C. and is an elementary education major at FSU. pjypawy ;"'.. J f ,l5iJ,r--" '"f'akfceVWi H laal iaaaBflf? JhL v'aaijaaiatSfea2&B hh .sIsftsBH w ., sawr asp i as ajaF avjP AV suf -?r?Hygai aajpHHaMj Hat HHp ' w Hl&sk 9HRH Bar I ttaa Bar aB(BajsssssUsaJ aajpaj HnpHiiy!o 1 F' 'aVawawam aW. lllrl)! L Uavie. Kenhyay . . .-pJpjawJ'H One of the nicest things you can do for a good friend is introduce him to another good friend Charter. . . made just right to give it the kind of smoothness a bourbon drinker really appreciates. - OLD CHARTER The smoothest Kentucky Bourbon you'll ever know. s i mm i muiMN wHisur m mm o cmm mit. m.. twimui. str. YOUR LIFE INSURANCE Settlement Options Offer Choices to Beneficiaries When a life insurance policy holder dies, the entire amount of the policy become payable im mediately to the beneficiary, un less the policyholder has specified otherwise. The beneficiary, most often a wife, may need the money for final expenses, bills, and immedi ate income. But there may be circumstances where the beneficiary does not need or want all of the money in a lump sum. That's where the "settlement option" of a life in surance nolicv can be useful. There Are Several Choices A beneficiary has several choices under the "settlement options" of life insurance, which offer consi derable flexibility in meeting a widow's money problems. The family's life insurance agent can help advise her on making a choice. Even if she is experienced at handling money, it may be difficult for her to make vital financial de cisions under the shock and grief of a recent death. And, particu larly if she is a younger woman, she may not really be able to gauge her long-term financial needs. So she can leave part or all of the money with the life insurance company until she needs it or de cides how to use it. Meanwhile, the company will pay her interest on the funds. She can normally withdraw any amount whenever she wishes, or change to a differ ent option later on. It Can Be Done in Advance A policyholder can specify in advance exactly how his insurance is to be paid to his beneficiary and can make his decision binding. In some cases, this may be pru dent But since financial needs chanee. estate planners usually advise that the policyholder give his beneficiary the right to select the method of settlement. A widow will likely need con tinuing income, and there are sev eral different income options to which she can apply her husband's life insurance. One option will pay her an in come as long as she lives. The amount of income per $1,000 of insurance depends on her age when she starts to collect. Based on current interest rates, a typical $10,000 policy would now pay i woman about $60 a month start ing at age 60, or about $80 i month if she started receiving it at age 70. By taking slightly less, she can set it up so mat if she died within 10 yean after start ing to collect, the income would continue to her beneficiary for the remainder of the 10 years. A widow with young children may need extra money while they are growing up. Instead of life time income, she can choose a larger income for a certain num ber of years For example, at car rent interest rates, $10,000 of life insurance would give her more than $100 a month for 10 years. Her age would not be a factor, since the income would end after 10 vears. Or she might choose to receive some other specific amount of money each month until the $10,000, plus interest, was paid out. Her present or future Social Security benefits are a factor she should consider in choosing an income option. What a Career Woman Can Do If a career woman does not need income from her husband's life insurance during her working years, she can defer part or all of it at interest until she retires when the same amount of insur ance will bring her a larger in come. The entire proceeds of a policy do not have to be paid out under the same settlement option. With a larger policy, for example, some of the money might be taken in a lump sum, part of it left with the company at interest, part used to guarantee a life-time income. and part for extra income over a certain numbeT of yean. The cumulative amount set a side in 1973 with life companies for payment of supplementary contracts arriving out of settle ment options totaled almost $8.1 billion, up $120 million from the previous year, according to the Institute of Life Insurance. Pay ments to beneficiaries from these accumulated funds amounted to $1.2 billion during 1972. ipuke Professor, nt Comi egal Guide CORN, BEANS Well oyer half of all the crop land farmed in North Carolina is devoted to corn and soybeans. Tobacco, cotton and pea nuts combined are grown on only about 16 percent of the crop land. A Duke University law professor and a student have compiled the first comprehensive guide to North Carolina legal research materials, spanning almost four hundred years of jurisprudence. Dr. Igor Kavass, professor of law at Duke Law School, and Bruce Christensen, a second-year law student, wrote the 89-page guide as an aid to students and young lawyers. Kavass, a member of the Duke faculty since 1972 who also serves as the university's law librarian, said he had frequently found himself searching for answers to "elementary questions" about North Carolina law, but had nothing to guide him to the proper research sources; Using the new guide, for example a lawyer wishing to research the early constitutional history of North Carolina would be referred to Parker's "The Colonial Records of North Carolina: North Carolina Charters and Constitutions, 1578-1698". The book was published in 1963. Kavass and Christensen took it upon themselves to write the first guide to the state's legal research, after being assured by a Buffalo, NY, publisher that it would be printed. Kavass said no one had attempted to publish such a guide before, for there was a lone-held belief that "it wouldn't pay." The paperback vereion of Kavass and Christensen's book sells for $4.50, and a hardback version for about $10. he said. Canadian exhibitions inherited their character mainly from the Old World agricultural fairs. AMT . f -r'4-tt , -- - 1 - i ' - ' r Aet STUfFED WITH I GROW AND GBOW J WIR.OT.C ' 1 TrVj 7r Kwl M WBtST' JBk 3bV- " , - Yt I j DO BEARS SOMETME-S tPTT I VHPT IS THE COLOR OF THE I OcJ i It is very 'dark blue... BTI ! l GEMERg-LV WVOURHE .R OWMj NEARLY BLRCKf T' JU foj ITR0M WHPfT PORT OF THE RUBBER j HrlOW DlO VE GET OUR 1 yNKfclEL!ON '"T jS SOd 0B g J j THE NIGHT BEFORE f jg$E f W . . I ri .M . k N Tromtue milk or lrtex m" of the Rubber tcee EL Crossword Puzzle 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 20. 21, 23 24 25 26 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 38. 37. 38. 39. ACROSS Sever .Post Reduced to mean Sea eagle Retreat Hint Existent Levee Shuts Celestial bodies Male bees Horn sound Lentils abbr. Scrap Structure Metal Printer's measure Phone parts Lease Changes Joint Dwellings Networks bear ; m-- -a? JOB Ml 58B3T kU . - A2fl . " If " """BlIIBIll mm 40. Biblical name 41. Anger 44. Perceives Amn to Panto III h ipj i i i tawi hi i IvIwplalA-lvwIvUlat?! 45. Neglect 47. Existence 48, Declaration DOWN 1. Gloomy 2. Man's mother 3. Hanging ornament 4. Metric measure 5. Frame works 8. Fever 7. Golf term 8. Boy's name 9. Fruits 10. Ascend 11. Laying siege 12. Dregs 17. Solitary 19. Annoy 20. Forces 21. Foot covering 22. Storms 23. Distributes 25. Nails 27. Stake 29. More sensitive 30. Strain 32. Debauch 33. Bone 35. Body marks 36. Vital body organ 37. Church part 38. Bird 40. Hail! 42. Fabulous bird 43. Increase 45. Opening 48. Article: Fr. LIFE Iff 8r" WUI . . Os NOT AtvVAYS AS CHEAP AS AGENTS MAKE IT SEEM. THEY OFTEN PRESENT FISURES CLAIM ING THAT AFTER 20 OR 30 YEARS THE CASH VALUE WILL BE AS MUCH OR MORE THAN THE TOTAL PREMIUMS YOU PAY. THE IMPLICATION IS THAT THE INSURANCE ITSELF THUS COSTS LITTLE OR NOTHING SINCE YOU CAN GET BACK AS MUCH AS YOU PUT IN. HIS SEEMIMQ MIRACLE IS POSSIBLE ONLY BcLAUbt THE INSURANCE COMPANIES ARE NOT INCLUDING THE COMPOUND INTEREST WHICH YOU WOULD BE PAID IN ANY OTHER aakisJAS Bl Aalf IVE YOUR DOLLAR MORE POWER WHEN VOU SHOP K WOMEN'S AND CWLDREN'S APWVREL mT ON THE LABEL AT THE RIGHT. AT THE LEFT IS THE lABELOf THF AMWMCAN wire vfBt& pBerrecTivB "'. INFO "V 40MQRA9L6 "N AND CEM6BAL L OISCMARCES Stf M QUALIPV YOU HfB VETERANS FOR VMNEFITS. J infoniMlNM. camarl Ihr Mnl VA iiffor KHmi !). I0 Vnm Att.. NW. w.r.hii.,1..,. D.C ms About how manV bees are NBCESSAfiy TO PRODUCE ONE FOUr4D OF HONEy? teg: , . " a "iKlf' "i. it"1 t(cr --v ' WNC ruUNyur nuNCT KerKCcrsia THE Lire VOKK , APPROXIMftTELV lOOOBEES! HOW DID THE WORD HIPPoParAMUS,...OPJQr4ftTE ? ROM THE GREEK "HIPPOS" MEANING "HORSE" P)N0 POTAMOS".....SlGNlFyir4S "RlVER"! tS THE HOOM LRRGER THAN "THE UNITED STPITE5 ' ES...THE MOON IS APPROXIMrTElV lf.fr TIMES.... THE SIZE OF m THE U.S. h. "WHhT HRVE GRRPES.... 1M OOMMON Vitrl HOMRN ? 5& GRRPES....LIKE HUMRrJ BEINGS. RkE SUSCEPTIBLE TO LLSirritl -irSn SUN STROKE..EVEN MEASLES? DAY TO DAY. . . .. Living can eat up a lot incluping the money you set asjpe for the future! but there's a foolproof vyay to avoid this happening to you THS PAYROLL SAVINGS PLAN WHERE YOU WORK.' AN AMOUNT YOU SPECIFY WILL BE SET ASIPE FROM YOUR PAYCHECK AND USED TO BUY U.S. SAVINGS BONDS ooooo FIRST COUSINS! Tuc nui)U IC A MCMRCD OF THE LILV FAVULV. . . AND THE MOSS THAT GROWS ON SOME TREES IN THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE US. DIRECTLY RELATED TO PINEAPPLES! THE FIZZLE FAMILY AH...NOW FOR A NICE QUIET EVENING WITH MY PAPER 1(1 1 B M By H. T. ELMO DOESN'T MOTHER TUT LIKE A BIRD, DADDy ' 9IN6 (COURSE A BIRD UP AT NIGHT J SHUTS VlU WK' 1 I rHOVI MUCH VOU IfOHM RSKIN6 F0RTrATJ3CX)' rjfliLER , MisnrERjp2 Y Ttiarrta & oncvsotM X I'LL BUY IT J HERE'S NOUR MONCy i TVOU FOOU! VOUH NO CAR!! HOW CAN IT TAKE VOU RNV PLRCF VlTHOUT ONE? r UNTIL I GET A CAR, I CAN GO TO PLACES THAT ARE DOWNHILL r Kvou CANTHHVE anv 1 YU&GY THESE OUMDKDrl V ARE MINE AND I'M EPTT- ING THEM ALL MV5ELF' Wmjkkm. ARE SOU ' :?) 1 H selfish, PUGGY If LETS SEE HOW GOOD J 1WU HUE IN HKllHnCUV., Pussy nj okav, r A ' i l m ivii-ie l VZJ VOU HAD FIVE Ml ORANGES AND COUSIW 06CAR ASKED VOU FOR TWO.... HOW MANV NNOULD VOU HAVE LEFT? A 1 l ECT? VM AM W1! ih," ' -J L. WJL' 7 V r CONTROLLED NUCLEAR HSSiOH fS A FFAT OF SOUNP fNGlNEERMG... 'TfHE EXPERTISE TO ffAKNEX? inc. iln FOR PEACEFUL PURPOSES, NCLUPNG THE GENERA TOAt OP EtECTRCITY. . . HAS BEEN PEVEIOPEP . OVER THE LAST 35 YEARS. COM&USTfON ENGINEERING, 0 OF THE MAJOR t.S. NUCLEAR POWER SYSTEM SUPPLJERS, BEGAN CPERATNG fN 92, BULPtHG FOSSIL FUELEP STEAM GENERATING SYSTEMS FOR NPUSTRY ANP THE ELECTRIC UTUTE5... NP N 1946 NUCIEAR ACTIVITIES BEGAN AT C-E rYTH STUPfES TO PETERMfAtE THE PEASmtlTY OF GENERATING FOWtK KOm NUCLEAR FUELS... TOPAY C-E S KAIOWN AS THE ENERGY SYSTEMS COMPANY..-: 40o OF THE FREE tNORL&S THEBMAL ELECTRIC POWER 75 GENERATE? BY EQUIPMENT OF CE PESGN. THE URANIUM ATOM WAS FRST FISSONEP BY THE GERMAN SCIENTISTS HAHN ANP STRASSmAN AT THE KAISER WLHELM INSTITUTE IN BERLIN LATE IN 1938... IT WAS THE NECESSARY PREREQUISITE TO ACHEVING THE FIRST SELF SUSTAINING CHAIN REACTION, ACCOMPIISHEP BY FERMI'S GROUP UNPER STAGS FIELP, -Q CHICAGO, ON PECEM8ER 3, 19Z. I DIDN'T KNOW l LEARNED VOU COULD COOK IT FrOM cpQflUETT . r-f A KeClrc m fVAlT'LLVOU TASTE K Vrf. YOU'LL LOVE rrjy HOW DO YOU LIKE THE SPAGHETTI , TOMMY ? n IT Q3ULD STAND aH LITTLE MORE CD0KIN6! J (I S"GlW LLi In Our Time TOPAY, VIRTUALLY ALL OF THE OVERHEAIS tLCC IKt POWER TRANSMISSION LINES ARE MAPE OF LIGHTWEIGHT ALUANNUM ...A FIRST COUSIN TO THF ROCKET THAT TOOK OUR ASTRONAUTS TO THE MOON. ALUMINUM ELECTRICAL WIRE IS ALSO USEPIN THE WORLPS J SMALLEST ANP TALLEST BOILPfNSS. FROM PRIVATE J HOMES ALL OVER THE COUNTRY'. TO THE 1,454-FOOT-HGM SEARS TOWER IN CHICAGO. Haiti ElECTRCry AT 230, OOO VOLTS AS AOW auFMH TRANSMIT TEP THROUGH dMMtM CnHPUCTOK INSIPE AN a IN. FP fuFC WITH OX AT A FKESSURE OF 200PSY ANP WEP CAMPER CTY STREETS TO SUPPLY OUR GROWING ELECTRKAL NEBPS. i 2
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 15, 1973, edition 1
16
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