STATESVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA - J.P. Huskins, a former state House member and retired publisher of the Statesville Record & Landmark, died Wednesday in Athens, Ga., at the age of 93. <br>
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Huskins, who served in the House starting in 1971 through the early 1980s, was known for his work helping establish the East Carolina University medical school. <br>
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``He was known statewide,'' said Bill McMillan, an Iredell County attorney who served with Huskins in the General Assembly. ``If you know anybody that's been governor since 1950, they know Jay Huskins. ... He was truly one of the powers in the state.'' <br>
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McMillan credited Huskins with getting Interstate 77 to go through Iredell County instead of through Salisbury and Winston-Salem. <br>
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Huskins wrote his ``Down in Iredell'' column for 35 years, a staple on the Record & Landmark front page. <br>
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``He really changed the Record & Landmark from just a regular reporting newspaper to an active one,'' said Chester Middlesworth, who worked with Huskins at the paper. ``He was an activist, promoting good programs, good community relations and economical welfare in the community.'' <br>
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Huskins also worked to bring Mitchell College, then a private junior college in Statesville, into the state community college system. A library at the college is now named in honor of him and his wife, Mildred, who died in 1998. <br>
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Huskins was a native of Burnsville and served in the Navy during World War II. <br>
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Huskins also served on the University of North Carolina Board of Governors and was chairman of the House Congressional Redistricting Committee in 1981. His late brother, Frank, was a state Supreme Court justice. <br>
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Funeral arrangements were incomplete Thursday night.
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