Weather Temperatures dropped into the twen ties Tuesday night, but are expected to be in the thirties tonight. High today is predicted in the fifties. Chances for rain over Thanksgiving are 20 percent. Vol. 55-No. 4 c^l LOT Index B-dBa 44 Pages Southern Pines, North Carolina Wednesday, November 27, 1974 44 Pages Books, 2-B; Church calendar, 3-B; Classified Ads, 8-11-C; Editorials, 1-B; Entertainment, 4-5-C; Obituaries, 7-A; Pinehurst News, 1-2-C; Social News, 2-5-A; Sports, 7-A. Price 10 Cents THANKSGIVING EVE — This huge tom turkey struts proudly but fearfully at the Gozzi Farm near Pinebluff on the eve of Thanksgiving. Long a symbol of America’s Thanksgiving Day, the turkey is standard fare for this holiday feast.~ (Photo by Glenn M. Sides). Objections Raised at Meeting To Report On Traffic Survey BY VALERIE NICHOLSON The mention of parallel park ing, closing off of railroad crossings and installation of traffic signals in downtown Southern Pines invariably raises the hackles of many people doing ^siness in that area. So it was Tuesday night, at a special meeting of the Town 2 "Council for discussion of the 'latest traffic and parking study of the business district. This was the fourth such study to be discussed in council meetings in a little more than a year. The first, made by State highway engineers, had been followed by variations by citizen committees, one headed by Councilman C.A. McLaughlin, the other by Charles Sullivan and a Chamber of Commerce com mittee. The latest was a professional study prepared by Wilbur Smith and Associates, consulting en gineers, of Winston-Salem. While only a handful of people were present-probably because Holiday To Be Observed In Thanksgiving Service 'It With thanks in their hearts for a nation at peace, persons in Moore County will join those in the nation in a day of church going, feasting, and joining in the traditional rites of Thanksgiving Thursday. An ecumenical Community Thanksgiving Service will be held on Wednesday night at 7:30 Jj.m. in Our Saviour Lutheran Church with the Rev. Mr. John Paschal of Southern Pines United Methodist church bringing the message. Other ministers will also take part. There will be special music including trumpet ac companiment provided by a girls’ chorus from the various churches and also the senior (Continued on Page 8-A) Christmas Parade Slated; Several ‘Queens’ to Ride Southern Pines Jaycees will sponsor the community’s tradi tional Christmas Parade on jjThursday, December 5, starting ^at 6 p.m. The parade will originate at the corner of South East Broad St. and East Massachusetts Ave. and will proceed on Broad St. to East Vermont Ave. After cross ing the railroad tracks, it will move south on West Broad St. to West Massachusetts Ave., where it will disband. Headlining the participants wilt be the reigning Miss North Carolina, Susan Lynn Griffin of High Point. Appearing with her will be the'recently crowned Miss Southern Pines, Julie Ann Kick- lighter, and her court. (Continued on Page 8-A) Phone Firm Negotiating 1\ew Contract With Union The United Telephone Com pany of the Carolinas, Inc. and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, AFL-CIO- CLC have concluded negotiations for a hew contract to be effective December 1, 1974. The current contract expires at 'i^nidnight Saturday, November 30. The Union represents certain employes of the company in the plant, traffic and commercial departments in its Beaufort, S.C., District and its Siler City and Southern Pines Districts. The parties have had a collective bargaining relationship for over twenty years. The company said that its offer was fair and in the best interest of the public, its customers, its employes, the union and its stockholders and that hopefully its offer would be accepted by the membership at their ratification meetings this week. The pH'oposed contract is for three years. There are about 85 to 90 members of the union in the Southern Pines District. Young Soldier Slain At Vass; Girl, 15, Held In Moore Jail • Angelo Lassiter, 21, of Vass, a soldier stationed on Fort Bragg, was fatally shot Saturday even ing at a rural home near Vass, and his 15-year-old girl friend is being held in Moore County Jail ?3on an open charge of murder. Sheriff C.G. Wimberly said it is expected that a hearing will be held Wednesday, at which it will be determined by a judge if the case will be handled in the juvenile or superior court. In the meantime, he declined to give the young girl’s name. He did, however, reveal that the shooting took place at the home of Grey Taylor on Vass, Rt. 2, that the girl is Taylor’s daughter and a younger sister was an eye-witness. Both girls gave statements to investigators of the sheriff’s department indicating the shoot ing was an accident, which took place while the older girl was “playing with’’ her father’s 12-gauge shotgun in the front room of their home. Lassiter came in the front door just as the Jobless Below State Level Despite Layoffs, Closings of conflicts in this Thanksgiving week-it was the same story as before. While most were articu late in their comments, few agreed with the study’s reco- mendations, or with each other. After a couple of hours of discussion. Mayor Earl Hubbard commented, “I know none of the studies is a perfect solution and I doubt if there is any such thing. I think something can be done, on the basis of all the stupes together. But we also have to recognise the human factor- people aren’t always ready to welcome change.” And, fitting that picture, Charles Sullivan responded, “I think probably I like it best the way things are now.” It was, however, Sullivan who presented what amounted to a fifth study, prepared by the Southern Pines Retail Council, and complete with its own set of recommendations. All the studies, noted David Yount, an engineer with the Smith firm, “are basically alike.” But there was consider able variation among them. Town Manager Lew G. Brown, showing a chart of Broad Street, north and south, east and west, from Vermont to Massachusetts Ave.-with two alternates, A and B-summarized the major (Continued on Page 8-A) Dr. Bruton Is Honored By Board Plans for use of the little old Bellview School building as an educational resource, as well as for the enjoyment of the school children, their teachers and the public in general, also a program by which Moore County school children will share in the purchase of an animal for the North Carolina Zoo, were dis cussed by the County Board of Education in regular meeting Tuesday night. This was the last meeting for Dr. H. David Bruton of Southern Pines, who was elected to the board as a member-at-large in 1968, reelected in 1970, and, completing the four-year term, chose not to run again this year. A resolution of appreciation for his service to the cause of education, and his contribution of (Continued on Page 8-A) BY JIM SUTHERLAND Unemployment in Moore County crept past the 4 per cent level last week-but is still below the statewide average of a little over 5 per cent and far better than the national figure of more than 6 per cent. The rise of unemployment has been gradual over recent weeks, according to Alton Cockrell, supervisor of the Moore County office of the North Carolina Employment Security Com mission. Hardest hit have been the textile firms, but layoffs have been spread through most in dustries in varying degrees, he reported. One result has been that unemployment compensation claims rose to 407 in the county last week, compared with 251 a month ago. In some instances employes have been laid off for indefinite periods; in others, plants have shut down entirely for the holiday-shortened Thanksgiving Week. Proctor-Silex, one of the county’s biggest industrial employers, reported it has laid off 100 employes and will close all operations for the three-week period December 12 - January 6, affecting another. 400 workers. Slow sales and an excessive inventory of the electric irons it produces were given as causes for the layoffs and shutdown. The Sandhill plant of Stanley Furniture in West End also is closed this week, idling about 375 workers. Operations will be resumed Monday. Management has not yet determined what it will do over the Christmas period. Pride-Trimble Corporation’s furniture plant in Southern Pines has had two layoffs involving 31 employes since October 1. Production has been halted this week, but part of the company’s 149 workers were brought in Oie first three days to take in ventory. The plant will be closed on Thursday and Friday, and will reopen Monday. Local officials of area textUe plants are loath to give em ployment information, referring inquirers to corporate headquarters. However, some information was available. At Quality Mills at Carthage, there have been scattered layoffs of one or two workers for short periods, it was reported. The plant employs 250 persons. No further layoffs are scheduled, a spokesman said, commenting that “the situation doesn’t look bad at all.” Part of the manufacturing operations at the Gulistan Carpet Division of J.P. Stevens Co. in Aberdeen were shut down this week, but full production will be resumed Monday, it was (Continued on Page 8-A) 4 X HOSPITAL EXPANSION APPROVED — Final approval was given last week to expand Moore Memorial Hospital. After considerations of the nearly $13,000,000 bid and consultations with expansion architects, the board of directors voted to proceed with the project. Among those present were: (left to right) Robert Ewing, president of the Board of Directors, J.E. Parker, chairman of the Finance Committee, A.A. McDonald, chairman of the Building Committee, and Crenshaw Thompson, Administrator. Hospital Awards Contract Thanksgiving Day Hunt For 13 Million Expansion The famed Moore County Hounds will open the hunt season here on Thursday morning at 10 o’clock. The Thanksgiving Day hunt is an annual event and has signalled the opening of the hunt season for many years. It is the only drag hunt scheduled and thus the public will have the opportunity to watch. It will be held at Kaylor’s Field off old U.S. 1 north of Southern Pines. W.O. Moss is the master of the hounds and Richard Webb is the joint master. Golfers Held Up, Robbed At Course In Pinehurst Two men wearing ski masks and pointing handguns robbed two golfers of cash totaling about $280 Saturday about noon on the Pinehurst No. 4 course. Vincent B. Fuller and K.W. Astrom, members of a foursome from the Philadelphia area week-ending at the Pinehurst Hotel, told police that they rode up to the nth hole, got out of their cart and were looking for a ball in the edge of the woods, when two men in dark jackets, wearing ski masks, burst out from among the trees. Each was carrying a handgun, which he waved at a golfer, demanding, “Give me your wallet.” One forced his victim (Astrom) to throw his billfold on the ground, where he scooped it up, while the second one grabbed a moneyclip from the other golfer, and toth robbers quickly disappeared into the woods. They are believed to have fled in a waiting car parked nearby. Astrom had $250 in his billfold. The golfers shouted, “Rob bers! Robbers!” to attract the attention of their friends, who were on the far side of the green, but later said, “It all happened so fast-they were there and gone, before anybody could do a thing.” They described the pair as black, one tall and husky-built, the other shorter and slender, both acting “like amateurs, very nervous and hurried.” This is the third incident of the sort to take place on a Pinehurst course in altout four years. Sheriff C.G. Wimberly said their investigation is still under way. Parade Dec. 7 The Christmas Parade sponsored by the Aberdeen Jaycees and Merchants will be held on Saturday, Dec. 7, beginning at 10 a.m. Anyone interested in placing an entry in the parade has been asked to call Sam Jordan at 944- 1114 or Ron Ward at 944-1122. THE PILOT LIGHT gun accidentally went off, the young girls said. Lassister, a member of the 429th Medical Co. on the post, had come to his mother’s home in Vass on weekend leave, as was his custom, and was visiting the Taylors about 6 p.m. The 15-year-old girl had gone into a bedroom and gotten her father’s shotgun to “kill a dog” but had stopped to “fool with” the gun when Lassiter came in the door. (Continued on Page 8-A) MORGAN - U.S. Senator Elect Robert Morgan made a brief stop in Washington a few days ago while returning from a post election vacation but he had little time to make many plans for his move to the capital in early January. Morgan expects to move into the office now occupied by the man he is succeeding. Senator Sam Ervin, but he is not sure he will stay there. Senators with seniority can lay claim to offices which are being vacated if they like them better than the ones they are now occupying. Tlie new Senator from North Carolina will take long-time friend and associate Carroll Leggett, formerly assistant at torney general, with him as chief administrative aide, but he plans to go slow on filling other “senatorial assistants positions. UNITY - Morgan said last week that he did hot know how he would be able to thank everyone who helped him to victory not only in last spring’s Democratic primary but in the general election, but his campaign staff is still busy writing letters. As for his victory in the general election, Morgan is quick to say it was a victory for the Demo cratic party. “I think we have more unity now than we’ve had in a long time,” he says. He thinks the big Democratic sweep in North Carolina can be attributed to all of the candidates and the party leaders working tn^pthpr FIRESTONE - Miss Hazel Macdonald of Southern Pines sends us a clipping from the (Continued on Page 8-A) More than five years of planning culminated in a move to expand Moore Memorial Hospi tal last week by a vote from the board of directors to expend funds totaling over $13,000,000. A low base bid of $12,887,000 submitted by the construction firm of D.R. Allen & Son of Fayetteville, was accepted by the hospital’s board of directors at a special session of the board on Tuesday, November 19. The base bid involves the four-story addition which will provide 150 new beds, 27 emer- gency-out-patient treatment rooms, new laboratory and Open House At Prison Scheduled The Carthage Unit of the N.C. Department of Corrections is planning five days of “Open House” during North Carolina (Corrections Week from Dec. 8 to 14. Captain J.C. Russell of the Carthage unit said that open house will be observed from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Monday through Friday of that week. Monday will be set aside for visits by community leaders such as mayors of towns, county commissioners, legislators and others. Tuesday will be for the news media, and Wednesday will be Citizens Day when the public at large is invited to tour the facility. Thursday has been set aside as Schools Day and Friday will be for civic groups. In a notice sent from his office in Raleigh, (Commissioner Ralph Edwards of the Department of (Continued on Page 8-A) physical therapy space, a new obstetrical area, a newborn and pediatric intensive care unit, and a new dietary department, as well as the medical-surgical beds. “We are very pleased to arrive at this point,” said Board President Robert Ewing. “For over five years we’ve been planning. Our announcement to proceed is the result of the combined efforts of the directors, the administrative staff, the medical staff, and employes at many levels. We have seen much hard work by many dedicated people.” In addition to the four-story wing, an alternate bid of $174,000 was accepted which will result in (Continued on Page 8-A) Officials to Take Oaths At Ceremonies Monday The quadrennial swearing-in of newly elected-or reelected-- county officials will take place Monday morning in the office of Charles McLeod, clerk of Moore Superior Court, who, according to precedent and protocol, will be the first to take the oath. Resident Judge John D. Mc Connell is expected to swear him in, as soon as possible after the clerk’s office opens at 8 a.m. Judge McConnell will leave as soon as he can to take part in more such doings in a couple of other places, and McLeod will administer oaths to other county officials-hoping to get done by the time Special Judge Charles Kivett arrives to preside over the opening of the December crim inal term. This will not be until 11:30 a.m., as the judge will be delayed by swearing-in ceremonies tak ing place in his home city of Greensboro. Following the swearing-in, as the court term begins, the county (Continued on Page 7-A) Defendants Make Reply In Duncraig Manor Suit Defendants in the suit brought by the Town of Southern Pines in the Duncraig Manor affair are asking that the town’s zoning ordinance be declared “un constitutional and invalid.” In an answer filed Tuesday in Moore Superior Court at Car thage, they called the zoning ordinance “arbitrary, capricious and an unreasonable exercise of police power.” The Town filed suit August 30 against the Southeastern Re gional Mental Health Center, its board of directors and officials to have the group home for emotionally troubled children, operated by the Southeastern Center, removed from Wey mouth Heights, a wealthy neigh borhood on the outskirts of Southern Pines. The Town contends that the group home in its present location is in violation of the extraterritorial zoning law. A jury trial is asked. The defendants, through their (Continued on Page 7-A) Murder, Rape Cases Docketed For Court Session Next Week One murder case, one rape case and several involving armed robbery charges mark the calendar of the December term of Moore Superior Court, which will open Monday with Special Judge Charles Kivett back on the bench. It will get off to a late start, as Judge Kivett will be taking part in swearing-in ceremonies in his home city of Greensboro and is not expected to arrive until 11:30 a.m. Jurors are requested to be in the courtroom by 11:15 a.m. Though criminal terms have proliferated in Moore in the past few years, and this one will be the fourth within five months (others were held in August, October and November) it is loaded with cases ready for trial-73 of them calendared for the first three days. The grand jury will not convene for this term, which it is hoped will help get the court caught up with cases for which true bills have already been found. Prominent among them is the murder case against Mrs. Martha Jeannette LeGrand Baldwin, 22, charged with the fatal shooting of her husband, James Odell Baldwin, 32, on October 27 in their farm home near West End. She is being held under $15,000 bond. Cary D. McRae, 21, is under $10,000 bond in a case in which he is charged with the rape of Mrs. Alice Wolff, 30, both of Southern Pines. (Continued on Page 8-A)