section b (Jhp ||}an*Ett iRecori SectionB Wednesday, August 15, 1984 %■% w w ,^ ^ ^ Wednesday, August 15, 1984 When Unit 1 at CP&L's Harris Nuclear Power Plant begins commercial operation in 1986, it will generate up to 900,000 kw of electricity, or enough power for about 180,000 homes. In the foreground is the fuel handling building, Behind it are the dome shaped containment building and the cooling tower. N. C. Archeologists Studying Secrets Of Occaneechi Tribe By MERCER CROSS National Geographic News Service HILLSBOROUGH, N. C. — He might have been a young warrior, killed near his village by unknown enemies, his body left to decompose in the semitropical Southern heat. His Occaneechi breth ren buried him about 1700 in the heavy clay soil just outside the wooden stockade surrounding their town on a bend of North Caro lina's Eno River. The tightly trussed body was adorned with a breastplate, elaborate for its day, fashioned from tubular shell. In startling incongruity, an English rum bottle was placed near the head. Indian-European Mix The presence in the same burial pit of both Indian and European artifacts is yet another clue in an archeological mystery being unraveled by scientists from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. What became of the Occaneechi, a little known tribe of only a few hundred members that flourished briefly on the river bottoms between 1680 and 1720, only to disappear a few years later? How much of an im pact did British traders have on the compara tively primitive In dians? How large a role did the Europeans play in the demise of the Oc caneechi? Dr. Roy S. Dickens Jr., director of the Research Laboratories of Anthropology at the university, sees the tiny tribe as a possible ob scure link in a century of tumultuous events leading up to the Revolutionary War. It is known, for exam pie, that in 1676 troops led by Nathaniel Bacon attacked the Oc caneechi, who then lived on an island in the Roanoke River near the Virginia-North Carolina line. Remnants of the tribe fled to North Carolina after that at tack and after repeated raids by other, larger Indian tribes. "There's very dramatic evidence of this acculturation situ ation, where they're get ting more and more committed to the (European) trade system," Dickens says. "But they're never quite giving up the value they place on their own things." Profitable Summer Every morning this summer, a crew of graduate and under graduate students led by Dickens, Dr. H. Trawick Ward and Stephen Davis, Jr., staff archeo By S DMwa Jr. Artifact* buried with an Occaneechi Indian child near Hillsborough, N.C., in the early 1700s are clear evidence of the influence of English traders on the small tribe. Beaded bag, lead musket balls, and pewter porringer are among the European-made items. Only the clay pot was made by Indians. logists at the anthro pology lab, meet at a campus parking lot. They pile into vans and pickups and drive 15 miles to the dig on the eastern outskirts of Hillsborough. Dickens is excited about what's been found already and what he ex pects to find before sum mer's end. "We've been very im pressed," he says, "with the abundance and the kinds of European items that we're finding here, among a people who were rapidly approach ing virtual extinction as a culture." Probably the most ex citing discovery of the summer is an oval "sweat house," a sort of Indian sauna with a fire pit in the center, ad joining the burial area. It's the first such structure ever found that had been used by the Occaneechi or other Indians of that time and territory, although sweat rooms were common among some other Eastern Indians, Dickens says. On the basis of frag ments of handmade brick found at the site, he also hopes to uncover the chimney foundation of a European-style cabin, possibly the main house of the village. The burial sites alone, three of them excavated last year and four being explored this summer, are giving the scientists a rare chance to look at the evolving relation ship between two civilizations. In a grave a few feet away from the warrior, for example, lay an adult's skeleton. Buried with it are not only an Indian clay pot but a long musket, a metal hoe, and a lead smoking pipe, all English in origin. Unfaded by time, a bright-red blob of ver milion pigment, a European import, marked the remains of a small child in another burial pit Surrounding the badly decayed skele ton were an English made silver-plated spoon with a clearly decipherable hallmark, a European copper ket (Continued on page 2B) Warren Laborers Lending «K. I Hand At Nuclear Plant By KAY HORNER News Editor Every weekday morn ing at 4 a. m., while Warren County is still covered in darkness, two men from the Beth lehem community get up and begin preparing for their 55-mile ride to work. Glenn Richardson and his nephew, Anthony Richardson, are two of more than 4,000 workers involved in the construc tion of Carolina Power & Light Co.'s Shearon Harris Nuclear Power Plant at New Hill about 25 miles southwest of Raleigh. Both are carpenters for Daniel Construction Company, an interna tional firm building the $3 billion plant scheduled for full operation in March 1986. For the Richardsons, the benefits of their em ployment far outweigh the inconvenience of commuting. The elder Richardson, a self-taught carpenter, found himself unem ployed two years ago when a lagging economy forced layoffs at the Rocky Mount construc tion company where he worked. Opportunities in Warren County were limited, and Glenn heard about job-open ings at the Harris plant. "A lot of people I knew were working here, so I came up and applied," Glenn said during a recent interview at the plant site. "I had a good record and I was able to be certified." Certification, which translates into oppor tunities for advance ment within the com pany, is one of the reasons the Richardsons are willing to commute more than 100 miles daily to work. The program was set up on a companywide basis by Daniel about three years ago. Workers are given writ ten and hands-on tests of (Continued on page 2B) Glenn Richardson (left) and his nephew, Anthony Richardson, (right) are among 4,000 workers em ployed by Daniel Construction Company in the building of the Shearon Harris Nuclear Power Plant at New HOI, a community about 25 miles southwest of Raleigh. Both men commute from their homes in the Bethlehem community of Warren County to the plant site. (Staff Photo) If you're lookingfor More for your money, you just found it! 6-Month CD ANNUAL RATE ANNUAL YIELD 11.35% 12j02% 12-Month CD ANNUAL RATE ANNUAL YIELD 11J>5% 1214% 18-Month CD ANNUAL RATE ANNUAL YIELD f 1.75 12.47% Annual Rate compounded daily Rale effective August 14 to August 20 $500 minimum deposit Count on Conner Savings & Loan for the of purchase for the full term. highest interest on your savings. Our rate \bur account is insured up to $100,000 is announced weekly, and the Certifi- by FIAC. Stop in and start getting more catesof Depositearntherateatthetime for your money. Conner Savings & loan Corporation. 115 North Church Street, Rocky Mount, NC 27801 Please send me more information. Here's my check fort for a CD that will mature in months, registered in the name(s) below Name - Addtess. j City State Zip. | Phone Soc. Sec/Tax. I D. Signature ■ Substantial penalty foready withdrawal horn all time deposits OOMnCR WNGS fit UCAN A subsidiary ol Conner Homes Corporation^ •OK GONNER SA/INGS « IQMM CORPORATION More for your moneys T15 North Church Street, Rocky Mount. North Carolina 27801 (919) 446-1275 Brentwood Shopping (Wet Wibon, North Carolina 27»3 (919) 217-1774. 207 South Main Street, Waoenton, North Carolina 27589 (919) 257-1231. HWwuv 64, Spring Hope, North Carolina 27882 Q (9»)47W«4.