Daily Reflector, January 11, 1983


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Partly cloudy tonight with temperatures in low 30s. Partly cloudy, c(dd and iMmy on Wednesday.

102ND YEAR

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

NO. 9

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FiaiON

GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JAJ^UARY 11, 1983

12 PAGES TODAY

INSIDE READING

Page 1-Area items Page 5-10 CoUisioQs Page 12-Discount leaf

PRICE 25 CENTS

BRIEFS REPORTERS -Mideast negotiator Philip Habib gestures while briefing reporters at the White House after an Oval

Office meeting with Sec. of State Shultz and Pres. Reagan. He is returning to the Mideast for further peace efforts. (AP Laserphoto)

Habib Returns To Mideast Deadlock

By The Associated Press The Lebanese government has agreed with one reservation to a U.S.-proposed composite agenda aimed at breaking the deadlock with Israel in two-week-old talks over withdrawal of foreign armies from Lebanon, Lebanese officials said today.

The report came as U.S. troubleshooter Philip C. Habib headed back to the Middle East, declaring that it is taking too long to get forei^ troops out of Lebanese territory.

Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasser Arafat wound up two days of talks with King Hussein of Jordan, who Washington hopes will take an active role in Middle East peace efforts, and PLO aides said Arafat planned to visit Moscow for solidarity talks

with the new Soviet leadership.

However, a ^kesman for the PLO diplomatic office in the Soviet Unions capital said he had no information about Arafats travel plans.

Israeli and Lebanese negotiators will hold the sixi round of the troop withdrawal talks Thursday in the Israeli border town of Kiryat Shmona.

So far, the discussions have been deadlocked by Israels insistence that normalization of relations between the two countries must head the agenda, and Lebanons demand that withdrawal of an estimated 25,000 Israeli troops come first, The Lebanese also seek the removal of about 40,000 Syrian and Palestinian troL^s.

ECU's Vice Chancellor Maier Quits: New Role

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer Dr. Robert H. Maier resigned Monday as vice chancellor for academic affairs at East Carolina University to become a professor of experimental surgery in the ECU School of Medicine.

Chancellor John Howell said Maier, who has been vice chancellor since August 1979, has an extensive background in chemistry and in the field of trace elements in soil chemistry. He will be engaged in research in the medical schools trace elements laboratory,

I hope his work there will

be enjoyable and fruitful, Howell said, adding that the important and promising research projects which Maier will undertake are closely related to his past academic training and research.

Howell said an interim vice chancellor for academic affairs will be appointed until a search committee is formed to consider candidates for the position.

Other officials at the university said Dr. Angelo A. Volpe, dean of tte College of Arts and Sciences, was filling in for Maier today until an acting vice chancellor is announced.

REFLECTOR

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ROBT.H. MAIER

Maier, 54, came to East Carolina as vice chancellor from a post as professor of science aiHl environmoital change and of public and environmental administration at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. He succeeded Howell, vriw returned to teaching after (Please turn to Page 6)

17 Hostages Hunt Will Ask

At Ossining iFreed Today

Pay Freeze End

By LAWRENCE KIUfAN Associated Press Writer OSSINING, N.Y. (AP) -Rebellious inmates at Ossining Correctional Facility released their 17 hostages unharmed early today and said they received amnesty for their 53-hair takeover. But prison officials said there was no such deal.

The siege at the prison once known as Sing Sing was declared over by the inmates Monday ni^t after local television stations broadcast 10 points of agreement that prisoners said they had reached with state correction officials.

At 12:28 a.m., the watch commander at the prison . announced over guards walkie-talkies that the last hostage had been freed. Except for some bumps and bruises, all were reported in good condition.

One by one, the hostages, some dazed and looking tired, walked out of the cellblock, greeted by applause from coworkers. One correction officer.

from

siege

asked how he felt, said, Glad to be out.

Oieers were heard the cellblock as the drew to a close.

Hey, thanks a lot, one prisoner called through bars to reporters 200 yards away. Another said the prison administration deserved no credit for the bloodless end to the incident: Its not the administration that did this (end the siege)... Its us and you.

The inmates said they would lock themselves in their cells, and at 1:40 a.m. special state troops reoccupied the five-story cellblock.

Gov. Mario Cuomo, who took office Jan. I, had refused to deal with the inmates until every hostage was freed. He praised prison officials for resolving the crisis without serious injury to any hostage or inmate.

Dozens, maybe hundreds of hard decisions were made and most were made without time for reflection, Cuomo told a news conference.

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Gov, Jim Hunt said today the ily new spending he will recommend to the Legislature this year is 8100 million to lift the freeze on salaries for state workers and teachers.

Hunt told superintendents and board chairman from the states 143 local school units today that he will propose several smaller pro^ams in the budget for current operations, including some money for improving writing and science and math instruction.

Hunt praised the school officials efforts to cut ending by 2 fwrcent. He said their attitude would be crucial in meeting their goal of saving as much as $30 million this fiscal year.

I appreciate your attitude, your spirit in this matter and the hard work youre doing, Hunt said. Well work with you every way we can.

State Board of Education Chairman C D. Spanker said the school officials are sponsible for accepting the cuts with the best spirit we can.

Hunt said he maintains his interest in public schools, although there will not be a great increase in money for them next year.

Were beginning to see again in the depths of tough times that our real salvation lies in public schools and what we do with our people, he said.

School Systems Given Some Suggestions On Their Budget-Cutting

Med Student Ratio Backed

Dr. William Laupus, dean of the East Carolina University School of Medicine, said today there is general agreement among medical school deans in North Carolina that the number of individuals going into naedi-cine through the four schools is approximately correct for the projected growth and needs of the state.

Our stance generally is that, although there may be on the horizon a large number of physicians na tionwide, continuation ol present retention of physicians in the state leaves us in a situation which is just about ri^t, Laupus said.

The original estimates by the GMENAC (Graduate Medical Education National Advisory Committee) study are considered to be very loose at this point. Reap

praisal by various expert groups adjust the (projected) surplus of physicians nationwide by 1990 to be less than 5 percent, Laupus said.

The truth of the matter is that there is no agreement on the appropriate ratio of peculation to the number of physicians. And in fact, it must vary considerably, depending on the ecemomic status of the patient peculation.

A total of 446 students wCTe admitted to medical schools in North Carolina last fall, Laupus said. He^ estimated that about 264 are North Carolina* residents, suggesting that non-residents are more likely to practice outside the state when they graduate.

(See related story on page 10.)

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - State School Superintendent Craig Phillips has asked local school systems to save 2 percent of their budget by freezing vacant positions outside the classroom, not awarding some contracts and withholding staff development money.

Phillips promised local superintendents Monday that he will ask the Legislatures help if schools cant find ways to make the 2 percent cuts.

To avoid an anticipated $120 million shortfall in the states 1982-83 budget, state officials have asked the Department of Public Instruction to reduce spending by 2 percent for the rest of the fiscal year. That amounts to $13-15 million.

Gov. Jim Hunt ordered that the cuts not affect classroom teaching. He said schools could not try to save money by laying off classroom workers, reducing teachers

salaries or reducing the length of the school year.

Budget officials say the schools voluntarily saved 2 percent of their money during the first half of the fiscal year and need only hold those spending levels steady for six more months.

But Phillips said he is concerned that many bills wont come due until near the end of the fiscal year, June 30.

Thie pressures will build as we come closer to the end of the year, he told the superintendents at their twice-a-year meeting. If necessary. Ill take the issue to the Legislature because theyll be in town when the chips get down.

Almost all of the states 143 superintendents attended the opening of the two-day leadership conference Monday. Local school board chairmen are meeting at the same time in Raleigh.

Game Room Licensing Is Voted ByAyden's Board

By ANGELA LINGERFELT Reflector Staff Writer

AYDEN - An ordinance that would require game rooms operating in Ayden to be licensed was adopted Monday night by the Ayden Board of Commissioners.

which also fixed 2 a.m. as the mandatory closing time for the businesses.

As originally drawn, the ordinance would have required game rooms to close at midnight on weekdays and

Hunt To Recommend Drinking Age Be Increased From 18 To 19

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Gov. Jim Hunt said today he will recommend that the minimum legal drinking age for beer and wine in North Carolina be increased from 18 to 19.

In a sUtement released by his office. Hunt said he had decided to support the recommendation by the Governors Task Force on Drunken Drivers,

I believe that the comprehensive package submitted by the task force, including raising the drinking age to 19, will be a powerful deterrent to drinking and driving, Hunt said. I believe we must present the Legislature with an overall package that will be enacted in full.

The governor said the primary goal of increasing the legal drinking age is to get drinking out of the high schools. Meanwhile, an aide to Hunt said the governor will outline his proposals for combating drunken driving during a television appearance later this mimth.

Gary Pearce, the governors press secretary, says Hunt

had considered raising the minimum the a^ to 21 as recommended by the Governors Crime Commission.

But Pearce said Hunt clH)se 19 because increasing the age to 21 could endanger the rest of the governors proposals.

Hunt has indicated his proposals may include a driving-while-impair^ law that would make it more difficult to plea bargan for a reduced char^. Also, Hunt may eiKlorse a new law that making jail terms mandato^ for offenders.

The governor also has said he supports a dram shop law making tavern owners civilly liable when they serve anyone who is under age or who is already drunk.

The full extent of the governors proposals will become public Wednesday, when the governors bills are introduced on the first day of the 1983 session of the GenM-al A^mbly.

Hunt is scheduled to appear on statewide tdevision Jan. 24 to seek grassroots support in his fight against drunken drivers.

1 a.m. on Friday and Saturday.

'The curfew was extended at the request of Transporter Room owner Willis Manning, who said he may not always want to stay open until 2 a.m., but he wanted that option if customers were still spending quarters.

The commissioners also authorized the town manager or chief of police to grant exemption from the curiew for special events or holidays.

According to the ordinance, a game room is any place of iHisiness that principally operates mechanical games, pay devices or tables for which charge is made directly or indirectly. Examples of game rooms are ^1 rooms, bowling alleys, billiard halls or amusement centers.

In order for a person to obtain a license, the ordinance states, he must not have been convicted of unlawfully selling intoxicated liquors or narcotic drugs within the last five years or be a habitual user of alcoholic beverages or narcotic drugs. An applicant must (Please turn to Page 6)

Hotline gets things done for you. Call ^-1336 and tell youi problem or your sound-off or mail Jt to Hotline, The Dafly Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.

Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items cimsidered most pertinwit to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.

Im a concerned citizen. Why dont the priice patrrt on foot the way they used to? A lot of crime coaid be averted. Greenville could have less crime if our poUcemen were more directly invcrfved to the malls and dMppingcentm. B.R.

Police Chief Glenn Cannon said officers do patrol on foot -along Evans Mall, Dickinson Avenue and at Pitt Piaza and Greenville Square shopping centers. And he said Carolina East Mall has its own security forces patrolling on foot.

Covering as much terriUny as local officers have to cover, it would be almost impossible to put them on foot and cover the city. Cannon said.

We have to use them where we can get the most advanUge and the best coverage, he said.

Winterville Board OKs Police-Training Plan

By TOMMY FORREST , Reflector Staff Writer WINTERVILLE - A basic agreement fw training new police officers was presented to the Winterville Town Board Monday ni^t by P(riice Chief Keidi Knox.

The agreement says a trainee agrees to undertake a basic polioe trainhig course for a period o 12 weeks, and to succesihiily com|g^ the tridning, including attainment d a passing grade on the basic training test required by the Criminal Justice Education and

Standards Commission. The board af^roved the agreement.

The board also approved the acceidance of an insurance check in the amount of $4,600 for a Wintarville police car that was damaged in a Dec. 11 wreck. The insurance company also agreed to pay for medical tnlls and the transfer of equipment to another car.

Aldennan Leland Tucker said it would be a good idea if spare parte were kept at the sewage lift statkms in the town. He presented the board

vYith a list of parte totaling about $900. The board approved Tuckers recommendation.

Alderman John Weathington reported that bad weather had delayed curbing mi North Railroad Street.

Aldennan Bobby Crawford reported that repairs to reclosers also had held up completion of the electric line project. The repairs are to be made in the near future.

Crawford also suggested that new street lights be

placed in several locations. They are :

On Church Street, between Cooper and Blount; Acadiemy Street, between Cooper and Blount; at the A.G. Cox School gym; on Blount Street, east of Railroad Street, and on Sylvania Street at Mill Street. The board af^rovd thenewli^ts.

Town Clerk Elwood Nobles said the delivery date for the new town street sweeper will be between Jan. 20 and Jan. 30. The Elgin sweeper cost approximately $42,000.

A letter was read to the board from L.E. Wooten Co. of Ralei0) in behalf of Sun-nyside Egg Corp. requesting use of the Winterville sewa^ system. After some discussion, the board told Nobles to write a letter explaining the sewage system was operating at capacity. The request was rejected.

^ Bernard Willis challenged a $9 service charge on his electric bill, saying he had talked to the town clerk about paying the bill late. The board, after bearing the

complaint, said there seemed to be a lack of communication between Willis and Nobles, and approved the reimbursement of the $9 on WUlisnextbUl.

A special called board meeting has been schechiled for Jan. 24 at ? p.m. At that time the Community Development Block Grant budget will be adopted and a public information meeting held for persons living In the impact area. Dale Holland of Talbert, Cox Associates will be on hand to present the meeting.





On-Campus Escort Service To ' Be Launched At East Carolina

ON-FARM TEST COOPERATORS...Three Pitt County farmers have received plaques in recognition of tbeir successful participation in (-fann tests in 1982. Above, from left to right,

are Vic Corey of Winterville, Jimmy NorviUe of Fountain and Marion Mills of Greenville.

In The Area |Possibly 7 On

Missing Plane

Police Check Out Fliers

Greenville police continued their investigation today of a case brought to tbeir attention Friday involving the distribution of fliers at several local grocery stores.

Chief Glenn Cannon, who said the Fwieral Trade Commission and the N.C. Attorney Generals office are also looking into the matter, said the handbills were placed on cars saying several supermarket chains were associated with United Financial Incentives.

The chief said the fliers suggested that if shoppers would send their cash register receipts from the stores, along with their credit card, bank account or bank deposit slip to the firm, they would get a 1 percent rebate on the amount of their groceries.

Cannon said the grocery firms, including Winn-Dixie, Kroger, the A&P, Big Star and Safeway, are not associated with United Financial Incentives.

Phoenix Chapter Meets Thursday

The Greenville (Tri-County) Chapter of the Phoenix organization of North Carolina will hdd its January meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Bachelor Benedict Gub, 707 Wyatt St. The meetings are open to all persons interested in criminal justice and correctional work.

Festival Planning Meetings Set

GRIFTON - Shad Festival planning meetings will be be held each Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. until further notice, according to Janet Haseley, publicity chairman for the festival.

All scheduling and plans must be completed before the souvenir brochure goes to press, she said. All meetings are open to the public.

Student akes Dean *s List

BOONE - Gloria Luanne Keel of Bethel was named to the deans list at ^palachian State University for the fall semester. To qualify, students must maintain a 3.25 average on a minimum of 12 hours work.

Parks Commission To Meet

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Commission will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the auditorium of the Administrative Office Building, 2000 Cedar Lane.

One item is on the old business agenda - a report from the study committee on a proposal from the Greenville Foundation. Two items are on the new business agenda -recognition of Uike Hemby, who is retiring after over 30 years service, and a report from a committee studying a joint use agreement with the East Carolina Vocational Center.

Exercise Class Scheduled

A ladies exercise class, sponsored by the Greenville Recreation and Parks D^artment, will begin Wednesday at the West Greenville Recreation Center. Classes will meet each Monday and Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Interested persons may register at the first class.

The West Greenville Center is located on the comer of 4th and Nash streets. For more information, call 752-4137, extension 252 between 3 and 5 p.m.

An exciting, colorful multi-media program, look Up. America will be presented Tuesday. January 18th at 7:30 P.M. at Peace Free Will Baptist Church on Tilghman Road one mile off the by-pass, Wilson, N.C.

This hour-long dramatic portrayal of our American heritage is being presented by the LBC Singers, a group of young people from Liberty Baptist College of Lynchburg, Virginia. The program Includes special lighting effects, 12 computerized projectors, and three screens, with over 1500 visuals synchronized to the dramatization and music.

These young people are taking a year out of their college education to travel from coast to coast sharing their allegiance to their country and a call for our nation to return to the principles on which she was founded.

The host pastor. Rev. Gordon Sebastian invites the public to attend, and admission is free.

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP)' - As many as seven people may have been aboard a private plane that cra^ into the Atlantic Ocean off the North Carolina coast Sunday after colliding with a National Guard jet fighter, authorities say.

Coast Guard and Federal Aviation Administration of^ ficlals declined to identify the occupants, however, saying they are uncertain of the names. The pilots flight plan, filed before the plane took off from Nassau in the Bahamas, listed six passengers but gave no names, said Jack Barker] a public affairs officer for the Federal Aviation Administration.

We have seven possible people who might have been on the plane but a flight plan that said six people, a Coast Guard spokesman said Monday night. Right now we have seven distressed families.

The parents of Jo-Al Kohl, 23, a secretary from Virginia Beach, said the Coast Guard had told them she may have been on the plane.

Albert and Joan Kohl of suburban Cleveland, Ohio, said a woman friend of their daughter, who also lived in Virginia Beach, may have been with Miss Kohl.

William Graham of Waukegan, 111., said Monday night the friend was his

daughter, Robin Ann Graham, 24, of Virginia Beach. Graham said his daughter was Miss Kohls roommate and worked for a finance company in Virginia Beach, where ter stepfather and mother live.

He said he had pretty much resigned himself to the fact his daughter was dead.

I dont know... They were at 9,200 feet when they collided. Thats a long way to drop, Graham said.

Aircraft ddoris, including parts of a liferaft, clothing and seat cushions, was recovered late Monday 40 miles southeast of Jacksonville, N.C., near where the plane would have crashed, said Garth Groff, a spokesman at the Coast Guards 5th District headquarters here. No survivors were seen.

Two Marine Corps helicopters from Cherry Point, N.C., a C-130 fixed-wing Coast Guard aircraft from Elizabeth City, N.C., and the cutter Point Martin from Beaufort Inlet, N.C., searched during the day Monday. The aircraft returned to land at night, but the Point Martin remained, the Coast Guard said.

Barker said the pilot of the twin-engine Beechcraft Baron BE-55 was identified in the flight plan as H. Tiffany. Associates of

Cigarettes And Gum Stolen

Greenville police were investigating a break-in at Wainwri^ts Amoco Station at 1201 W. 14th St., which officers discovered about 1 a.m. today.

Chief Glenn Cannon said entrance to the building was gained through a window, and reported that eight cartons of cigarettes and two cartons of chewing gum were reported taken.

Guests Set For City Radio

City Manager Gail Meeks announced that the guests on the citys radio program, City Hall Notes, this week will be Floyd Little of the tax department and Mayo Allen, public works director.

Little will talk about listing taxes and Allen will discuss his departments winter weather preparedness. The program is aired each Tuesday and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. on WOOW Radio.

Greenville Gymnastics Club

with

East Carolina University

Announces Regittratlon For The Spring Session Of The

Chiidren's Qymnestics Program

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Tues.-Jan. 11-5 p.m.-7 p.m.

Wed.-Jan. 12-5 p.m.-9 p.m. Thurs.-Jan. 13-5 p.m.-7 p.m.

Classes will begin the week of Jan. 17 Session Fee $a.00

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CbH For More Information Director: Darlene Rose 757-6583 or Secretary at 757-6490

The East Canriina University Student Government Association and the Studoit Residence Association are scheduled to begin an (-campus student escort service, called Pirate Walk, Jan. 17.

Pirate Walk director Paul Sumrell said the purpose of the escort program is mainly to provid siq)port for female residents; not to stop attacks. There have been no rapes on campus in the last five years, Sumrell emphasized.

There wasnt an outcry for the service, Sumrell said. Sumrell said the service was proposed by SGA President Eric Hendersim. It was one of his campaign promises, Sumrell said.

Sumrell said the service will be available to men or women. Its for all the students. If men call, well

Waynesboro, Va., attorney Henry H. 'Tiffany, 47, said Monday the lav^er was overdue on a trip to the Bahamas.

Tiffany, according to associates, left his Waynesboro home Friday to fly the plane to the Bahamas.

The F-4C Phantom jet fighter that hit the B^hcraft at an altitude of 9,500 feet landed at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base in Goldsboro, N.C., Sunday evening with wing damage, said Master Sgt. Bob Hanson, a ^kesman for the base. The Phantom was one of two sent to intercept a plane reported to be flying in restricted military air space.

The Air Force identified the crew of the F-4 as Capt. John Weller, the pilot, and Lt. Col. Les Williams, the weapons system officer. Both are members of the Air National Guard.

Neither man was injured, said Col. Jerry Hix of the 20th North American Aerospace Defense Command at Tyndall Air Force Base, Fla.

Air Force officials were investigating the cause of the collision, Hanson said.

The Beechcraft had left Nassau at 1:49 p.m. Sunday, bound for Norfolk, said Erwin Goldstein of the FAA.

Hanson said the Phantom had taken off about 4 p.m. to intercept an unidentified object over the Atlantic, and the collision occurred about 5 p.m.

The airspace in which the collision occurred is sometimes closed to private aircraft by the military during training maneuvers. Barker said.

Private aircraft are supposed to check whether the area is open before entering it, he added.

The FAA in New York reported the Beechcraft had made a radio report before the crash, saying that it had to go around some inclement weather.

send one, be said.

Sumrejl said students wishing an escort fran the dcMtn to the library, dorm to dmrm, student unk to the (km, can call ^-6616 between 7 p.m. and midni^it on Sunday thnw^ Thureday ni^ts, and an escort will be assigned to walk with the stu(^t wherever she or be wants to go on campus.

He emphasized that escorts will be provided only on campus and that no cars will be used. It will be walking (mly. The escorts

will have Pirate Walk idoi-tification cards, Sumrell explained.

The escort service will not operate Friday and Saturday nights, Sumrdl said.

He said so far 32 students have volunteered to be esc(Hts, includii^ several women. We need over 100, Sumrell added.

In additkm to the escorts, who are scheduled to be on call <mly two hours each ni^t they work, Sumrell said there are 10 volunteers assigned on a rotating

schedule to answer the Pirate Walk telqihone and make assignments.

Students wishing to volunten* as escorts have to fill in an af^kation, whidi is reviewed and approved by Dean Jim Mallorys office, Sumrell said.

Some 2,000 fliers advertising the escort service have been distributed, and telephone stickers, listing the Pirate Walk number ate the campus police number, have been printed for distribution to students.

Kites And Plastic Owls Better Than Scarecrow

HAMDEN, Conn. (AP) -Gardeners should give up their scarecrows ate go fly a kite, says an agricultural expert who invented a soaring hawk ate movable owl to help keep away hungry bir^.

Four years of experiments showed that a hawk-shaped kite is more effective than the traditional straw man for protecting com and blueberries, said Michael R. Conover, a wildlife ecologist for the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Statkm.

An ima^ of a human isnt as terrifying an experience as it used to be, say, 100 years ago, Conover said Monday^ The crows have gotten used to the presence of man. This started to happen after their bounties were lifted.

Another effective crop guardian is a plastic attacking owl that appears to be killing a model of a crow, Conover said.

Crop-eating birds, wary of predatory hawks and owls, appeared to be fooled by the kite and owl scarecrows in state expCTiments from 1978 to 1982, Conover reported in

Anti-Semitic Violence Down

NEW YORK (AP) - Increased publicity, new laws against religiously motivated vandalism, stricter law enforcement and educational programs may have reduced incidents of anti-Semitic violence, officials say.

the current edition of his agencys newsletter. Frontiers of Plant Scknce.

Conover tested his handmade hawk kite on several blueberry and com patches in Hamden, Glastonbury ate Lyme. He sanded the kites from an airborne helium balloon so they flew 90 feet above the ground, with any passing breeze caused them to flutter and soar.

In cornfields, the kites reduced damage by 83 percent compared with unprotected fields, better results than achieved by some chemicals or propane-powered cannons that fire about every 15 minutes to scare off birds, he said.

The kites reduced bird damage to blueberries by about 35 percent, Conover said.

The researcher said he invented his attack owl, by taking a plastic owl and attaching a plastic crow to its talons, making the crow appear to be strug^ing to get away and the owl appear to be killing it.

The crows wings had flexible joints ate fluttered in the wind or when connected to a battery-powered motor.

The owl reduced bird damage to cantaloupes and tomatoes by more than 80 percent compared with fields where no scarecrow was used, he said.

Standing models of predators have been used In the past as scarecrows, but as with the traditional straw man, birds became used to them, Conoer said. The scarecrows worked better when they were made mobile, he noted.

These are relatively new types of methods, said Conover. They really havent been used, but theyre certainly easy to make and can easily be obtained in any sporting goods store.

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A report released Monday the Anti-Defamation League of Bnai Brith said cases of anti-Semitic vandalism in this country dropped almost 15 percent in 1982 after more than douUing each year since 1979, while arrests for such qiisodes were iq> almost 50 percent last year.

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Clough, As In Tough: He Calls A Miracle

By NANCY SHUUNS APNewsfeatures Writer

CLAREMONT, N.H. (AP) In this hard-working New Hami^ire city of 12,500, ringed with mmintains and lined with mills, Leslie Red Qough and trouble

were synonyms for 40 years. Stolen cars. Cracked safes. Armed robbwy.

Hiats Clough as in tough, no sm^ iny as rhymes go. He was the sort of kid fathers warn sons about, the sort dain^ters are

Kissing Cousin Unaware Of

Ties That Bind

By Abigail Van Buren

IMS by UnivMal Praia Syntflctii

DEAR ABBY: When I wa 16, I got pregnant by my ; ateady boyfriend. I wanted to keep the baby, but my parents wouldnt let me. Instead they sent me to another state to stay with my ount and uncle, who took wonderful care of me. After I had my baby (Ill call her Tammy), my aunt and uncle adopted her on the condition that I would never tell her I was her real mother.

Tammys real father, who had just turned 17 at the^^ time, couldnt accept the responsibility, so as a favor to him, I listed Tammys father as unknown. (I dont even know where he is now.)

Tammy is now a beautiful, happy, well-adjusted 15-year-old. She knows shes adopted, but that is all. I am now happily married and have two fine sons who arent aware that Cousin Tammy is really their half-sister. When I see Tammy, my arms ache to hold her close and tell her who I really am.

How can I fight tiie urge to tell her?

ACHING HEART

DEAR ACHING: Remember your promise to your aunt und uncle, and honor it One day, when Tammy it of legal age and sufficiently mature to handle it if ahe wants to know who her biological parents are, I think she has the right to know - but you shouldn't be the one to tell her.

For now, thank God she is a happy, well-adjusted chil^ and leave well enough alone.

DEAR ABBY; Sometimes when people call me and my line is busy, they call agmn and ask, Who were you talking to? What should I say?

Im a respectable 41-year-old woman with notiiing to hide, but I tiiink audi a question is an invasion of ones privacy. I would never presume to ask that question of anyone because its none of my business, yet when I am asked Im never quick enough to respond in any way other than to name the p^n I was talking to. Then I could kick myself. Any brilliant ideas?

PRIVACY PREFERRED

DEAR PRIVACY: Put the offender on the defensive with this response: "Why do you ask?

DEAR ABBY: My ex-husband is now seven months behind on his child support payments. I lost track of him five months ago and cant find him. I have heard that he has left the state. Is there any way I can find him? I cant afford a private detective.

NEEDS SUPPORT

DEAR NEEDS: He can be traced through the "Parent Locater System," operated by the federal government under the Uniform Reciprocal Child Support Law.

For more detailed information, call your local welfare office. You do not have to be on welfare to qualify for assistance from this office.

DEAR ABBY: TTie letter from His Wife, who was suspicious of her husband because it took him ail day to play 18 holes of golf, reminded me of something that happened many years ago.

Our telephone number was one digit different from that of a nearby golf course. We frequently got telephone calls from people asking for reservations, imd we always gave them the correct number of the golf course.

()ne Sunday morning I got a call from a lady who asked, Is my husband playing a round over there? Needless to say, immediate steps were taken to have our number changed.

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forfoiddoitodate.

By the time hed been branded a habitual offender and thrown into prison in three states, Reds life lacked oidy a suitaUe ending. Anyone who knew him could have writtmi one.

He could have bea shot by another street punk. He could have killed himself with cheap whiskey. Or froz^i to death in the city park, too drunk to come in from the c(rid.

Instead, at 54, Red has earned a (xunmunitys respect and a govmwrs gratitude. He fiends his days helping problem teen-agers, having undergone a transformation he calls a miracle.

Red Goughs transformation began when a po-sistent parole officer be^ find him a job as a street counselor. In the five years since. Red has earned an award for outstanding advocacy from the New Hampshire Federation of Youth Services, a ^ on the Governors Commission on Children and Youth, and the position of executive director of an agency called Community Youth Advocates.

He flirts with the middle-aged women he terrorized as a schoolboy, rubs elbows with the cops who once chased him around town, and hobnobs with the judges who threw him in jail.

If a miracle was ever performed, youre looking at it, says Red, a non-filtered cigarette pinched between nicotine-subed fingers.

For years, nobody could do a thing with me. I was a black sheep with red hair. I was a rotten kid.

Adam Bauer, GaremcHits chief of police, says Reds .Community Youth Advocates takes a heavy load off the police. Wm we send kids over there, we dont see them again. Red takes every case pers(mally. He believes in these kids, and hell go the whole mile with tlKm.

Tlie police chief says its no coincidence that Garemonts vandalism rate (hxipped by 21 percent last year.

Says Red: Wien I started this job. I said^t if I kept one kid from going to reform school, itd be worth it to me. Last year, I stepped 25 kids from going. Of those 25, only two were involved with the law again.

He says he still gets goosebumps when he beam a pcdice siren, and while his own drinking days are over, he still tiips a few bucks to the town drunks now and Uien. I love old drunks, he says.

What makes him happiest is that his mother lived to see his transformatkm. I had two years to make my peace with her, and for those two years, I visited her in the nursing home every day. She died at 94.

She just refused to dfo until Id made something of myself.

ASHOCKINGCASE SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A mail-order house here offers a briefcase that really startles would-be thieves.

When the owner of the $1,200 cpse leaves it switched on, it ddiivers a 2,000-v(rft slKick to anyone who tries to steal it. The nonlethal j(rit causes any thief to drop the case in a hurry, acc(Htling to the catalog.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE AP Food Editor DEAR CECILY; A few years ago I found a recipe you piddisbed for Ginger Mimulade. I have tried it sucoKSfully several times, but I woiiM like the result to be fokto than it is. Perhai you an teil me how I can makeitso.-GINGERFAN.

DEAR GINGER FAN: Heres a recipe that produces a thick Ginger Marmalade. I hope you have good luck with k.-C. B.

GINGER MARMALADE (Thick Variety)

1 poimd (about) fiesh

2 taUe^wons lemon juice l^-otmce package powdered fruit pectfo

5 cups (2V4 pounds) sugar

With a swlvel-blade peeler thinly pare gingerroot; slice about (^-inch thick. In a 5-to 8-quart saucepot generously cover ginger with cA watm-; ting to a boil; boil gently for 15 mimrtes; drain in a strainer. Retiffn ginger to saucepot and geuCTously cover with fredi cold water; boil until gingerroot is teiKler-cri^ enough to be pierced with a fmt - about 45 minutes; drain in a strainer. to sauc^ and generously cover with fresh cold water; 1^ stand 15 minutes; thoroughly drain in a strainer.

With an electric or hand-operated kitchen a^diance (hop ^ger so it is the size of ih grains - do not puree; or use a sharp knife to chop finely. Turn Vk ctqjs of the finely chopped ginger into the clean dry 6-to 8<]uart saucepot; add 1 cup fresh cold water, the ienmn juice and fruit pectin. Over hl^ heat, stir until mixture comes to a full boil. Stirring constantly, immediatdy add all the sugar and bring to a full rolling boil; stirring constantly, boil hard for 1 minute.

Off heat, with a metal qioon, skim off foam. (Quickly ladle into clean, hot, wide-mouth bounce preserving jars, filing to within V4-inch of top. With a clean doth, wipe tops and threads'of jars. Adjust covers (caps and screw-bands) according to jar manufacturers directions. Process in a boiling-wato- bath for 5 mimdes. (fool (m a wire rack. Store in a cool dry place. Makes tix to seven 8-ounce jars.

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The Daily ltoOe(Xor, GimovUc, N.C.T(ieaday, JxMiiy .

At

Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

'

If I ever stage a telethon, it vrill be for one of the most undorated diseases of the 20th cenbiry - cabin fever.

Cabin fever has been with us for as long as there has been (ildren, biX during snowstorms the disease reaches q>idmic pn^-tions.

A minister in Iowa recently noted that citys Dial-a-Prayer number increased 125 calls a day due to the malady. Theres no doubt about it. be said. Cabin fever is a reality and people are depressed when theyre shut in and unable to get around.

Back in Ohk) when the kids were little, 1 used to crawl oid of bed ewry mcMning during the wintor, fall to my knees and pray, Please God, let

there be school. For my in-teiXkHis, I would offer up 18 shirts to be ironed by the end of the day, ao pounds of hand-washaNes to be dmdmd, and a {NTomise to return the banks call.

Bridal Policy

A toack and white ^oasy five by seven photognqgi Is requested for engagemttt announcements. For INibUcatkm in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be rdeased at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After toree weeks, only an announcement will be prtoted.

Wedding write-iqw will be printed through toe first week with a five by sevoi picture. During toe second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, Jife as an announcement. Wedding ferms and pictures should be returned to The Dsily Reflector one week prior to toe date of toe wedding. AU informatk should be typed or written neatly.

The Housing Authority operates with the goal of buihUng, maintaining, d operating safe and saniuio' puNic houting for low-income families. For infonna-tioo. call 752-3118.

Everything gtis through to you when you have cabin fever: Its as if you have no control over your own actions. You find yourself sitting tboe wahng a child f(xxte a button up his nostril and saying nothtog. You see them coloring your marriage license and you mumble, Stoy in the lines. You observe the chandelier over the dining room shaking as they jump up and down on their beds above and you are iHimb.

You go to the window and fm* toe life of you cant remember what color the lawn used to be... mr what the downtown area looked like. To keep in touch with reality you count by sevens backwards . . . recite'the Greek alphabet... or name the presidents in order.

Your mind drifts back to your youth when the most traumatic moment in your week was when you had used 14) all your no-shower days after ph^.ed.

Bitterly, you my nuns their social life and nuce plans for all the things youre going to do when the weather clears. These include training for the Boston Marathon, finishing college, and dedicating your life to P(4>ulatkm0.

Cabin fever is nothing to kid about. Ive seen women vriK) retreat into the house just after the New Years Eve party as vivacious, spirited women only to emerge in April pale, heavily sedated, and ntily catatonic.

Help stamp out cabin fever by taking a mother to lunch or offering to carry her odw-ing book. Were making progress. Due to last years sparse donatkms, we have research going on. To date, one rat has responded to a cure for cabin fever.

Now, all we have to do is cure him of bis acute alcohtilsm.

Engagement Announced

PATRICIA RUTH PURVIS...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dalton Purvis of Bethel, who announce her engagement to James Allen Dilda, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred DUda of Wilson. The wedding is planned for Feb. 19.

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4 The Daily Rdlector, GreenviUe, N.C.TuescUiy, Juuary 11,1S>3

School Cuts Ahead

UNTIL SOMEONE RELEASES THE SHACKLES!

It seems to be offical there will be a 2 percent cut in the spenthng of (1.5 billion appropriated for operation of the states public schools, the cuts will have to be made during the remainder of the fiscal year.

Local school administrators do not know where the cuts will be made. There will be a state meeting of superintendents this week which will be attended by Greenville superintendent Delma Blinson and Pitt County superintendent Edward West. Both say at present there is only speculation as to where the cuts will be made and they will receive the details at that time.

The cuts stem from an order from Gov. Hunt to reduce state spending due to the disappointing state revenues. At that, the schools are faring

better than other state agencies which have been ordered to reduce spendihg by 6 percent.

For schools the governor has suggested that there be no layoff of teachers or reduction of salaries.

Most school units usually dont have enough funds to do the job. Now we will see even tighter times for the schools in the first 6 months of 1983. It is likely that local school units will be given some discretion in determining how the cuts will be made. We hope that there will be no reduction of teacher staffs in any schools or, for that matter, any layoff of personnel. Making the reductions is going to be difficult, but it has already been determined that it will have to be done. It should be done in a way that will cause the least disruption of the educational process.

Roads Will Be Maintained

President Reagan has formally signed the 5 cents tax increase on gas into law. It will provide $5.5 billion annually for roads and bridges and create up to 320,000 jobs.

Increasing any tax is not something that President Reagan relishes and it is to his credit that he became convinced of' the need for

THIS AFTERNOON

this one and saw it through Congress.

More and more users of government services will be called upon to pay the cost of the services directly and that is what this paiticular tax accomplishes. We depend on our roads too much to allow them to fall apart. They must be maintained.

Hunt Keeps Clout

By FAULT. OCONNOR

RALEIGH-It was one of those balmy March days during the 1961 session when spring fever and the thought of another Legislative Building dry white tuna sandwich sent me downtown in search of peace, (piiet and real food. A legislator joined m^ and, as we crossed Capitol Square, he spotted Gov. Jim Huntatworkinhisoffi(%.

This is a sign of bow the governor is losing his clout, the legislator said in reference to a Hunt pnqiwsal that was hung iq;> in Committee. Legislators already saw Hunt as a lame duck, my companion said. The governor, although <mly two months into his second term, was on the downbl slide.

LitUe did the legislator know that while we clHunped down our Glory Cheeseburgers, Hunts lieutenants were chewing up the bills roadblocks. The next day, the bill was srat to the House floor.

Ever since Hunt started his second term, political observers and r^rters have been waiting for the first signs that his considerable clout is disappearing. Governors traditionally lose their influence in the final two years of their term. In the final two years, governors will have used iq> a lot of their leverage - appointments, jobs, jiKigeshi]^ and roads, says Gary Pearce, Hunts press secretrary. Its also psychological. They (legislaUNTS) are thinking, I dont have to deal with this guy any longer.

Hunt sold the state on gubernatorial succession -ratified in 1977 - on the grounds that governors would maintain their influ

ence for a full term. With the possibility of a second term, a governor has the power of leadership for all of his first term.

Now, as he enters his seventh year as governor, there is hardly any talk of Hunt being a lame duck. Sure, he faces some strong challenges from a legislature bent on increasing its awn clout. But that move spears

FAULT. OCONNOR

to be indqiendent of Hunts sltuatiMi. bi fact, some of the advocates of a stronger legislature are Hunt allies -like Rep. A1 Adams.

Hunts ability to retain his ^ngth rests mi a number of factors. Most importantly he is seen as the likely challenger to Sen. Jesse Helms in 1964. If there is any one issue mi which the states Democrats can unite, it is on the drive to retire Helms. Hunt is seen as the man who can ck) that. Democratic legislators see Hunt as the leadw of their party, the roan who in 1982 brought them back bom the reverses of 1980, and they dont want

to hurt the partys chances for the ultimate revenge in 1984.

Hunt also retains great personal respect in the legislature, after four years as lieutenant govenwr and six as governor, hes just seen as Uie boss, the leader. Many legilators see tliemselves as Hunts allies, common spirits in pursuit of common goals.

Even tbou^ he retains much of his prestige. Hunt isnt piudilng his luck in 1983. His legislative package is small. (He says hes got a big executive agenda to carry out in his last two years putting his legislative victories of the past six years to work.) Hell propose a tiidif budget, and some popular non-budget items.

Hunts crime package comes at a time when public concern about crime is extraordinarily high. His drunk driving prc^als may be nipped at but Hunt is almost assured of getting the greater portion of what he puts forward. Public interest is just too hi^ for legislators to fight Hunt here.

This March, when I again tire of watered-down Legislative cafeteria soup. Ill pass by Hunts office on the way to a decent lunch. Most likely, hell be at his desk, changing votes, using his clout.

By JAMES KILPATRICK

Smoot-Hawley's Ghost

WASHINGTON - Before the opportunity passes, one kind word should be said for last months lame duck session of Congress: The Senate quietly killed the dome^ic content bill that the House had passed on Dec. 10. Hooray for the Senate.

Only in legislative halls is death a temporary condition. The bill will be bom again in the new 98th Congress, and such is the liberal shift in the House that the House almost certainly will pass this miserable measure once more. Raspberries for the House.

The domestic content bill is a reversion to protectionism, pure, simple and untainted by the slightest trace of statesmanship or common sense. The idea is to protect the domestic automobile industry by requiring foreign manufacturers to meet certain content requirements for cars sold In the United States. Toyota and Nissan, for example, by 1985 would have to have 70 percent to 75 percent of their cars assembled from American-made components.

In theory this would create new jobs for American workers as many as 1 million new jobs, in the warped view of tne United Auto Workers. The theory is bogus. For every job. that might be created in the domestic parts industry, another job would be lost in industries that rely upon export trade. In the course of

the House debate. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., put the matter bluntly; This is not a jot bill; this is going to destroy jobs.

Kemp comes from Buffalo,

The Doily Reflector

INCORPORATED

20t Cotanch* Straat, OrMnvilla, N.C. 27834 EatablishMi 1182 Publiahad Monday Through Friday Aftarnoon and Sunday Morning DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD. Chairman of tho Board JOHN S. WHICHARD - DAVID J. WHICHARD Pubiiahort Sacond Claia Poataga Paid at QraanvHla. N.C,

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Other Editors Say Secretary Dole

(Greoi^ro Daily News)

Whenever a North Carolinian shines in the national arena, our native pride swells too. Elizabeth Hanford Dole, a native of Salisbury and graduate of Duke University, presents us with the latest cause for regional chauvinism.

Last week Presictent Reagan nominated Dole to join the Cabinet as secretary of transportation. Liddy Dole, by her own admission isnt especially knowledgeable about bridges, roads, mass transit, air traffic control and the myriad areas that fall within the purview of the transportation department.

But in her case, thats a small hindrance. Dole is a demonstrably fast and astute learner. She is currently Reagans assistant for public liaison, an appointment for whi^ ^e had no particular expertise aside from an enga^ng charm and a quick intelligence.

Before that. Dole served on the Federal Trade Commission, a job for which her lawyers training did provide some hdp. Dole resigned that post when her husband. Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan, ran for the GOF presidential nomination. He lost, of course, but Uddy Dole learned about grassroots politics in the process.

These wide-ranging experiences gave Dole a useful knowledge of how Washington works. She may not know much just yet about upgrading roads or urban subways but she definitdy knows her way around the corridors of i^wer, which cant be said of aU members of Reagans Cabinet.

Nor is Dole expected to be a cowering yes person in the Reagan circle. She is a woman of independent thinking. Dole is a vocal ERA booster, although the President oppo^ the amendment. Dole supported tighter busine^ regulations at the FTC, although the President is a loyal friend of big business. Whether her independent mindedness can survive a White House that cherishes team players is questionable.

Lidify Doles achievements are not merely professional. Those who know the couple well say that she has been a positive influence on her husbands career. Tlw senators atvasive edge of the past, for example, has been smoothed. His political rigidities have been tempered with compromise and pragmatism.

Liddy Doles nomination will probably sail throu^i the SMtes confirmation process. It shodld.

JAMES J. KILPATRICK

wpere the depressed steel and auto industries presumably would benefit from the bill. It was an act of hi^ political courage' on Kemps part to oppose the measure. This was also true of J. William Stanton, R-Ohio, who comes from the very heart of UAW country. He refused to Iwad down the protectionist route. Joel Pritchard* of Seattle was another vdio stood on principle against the bill.

The bill passed the House 215-188, but not before a dozen amendments had been debated. Sam Gibbons of Florida compared the amendments to putting a Band-Aid on a ratU^ake. 'Theres not much you can do to improve a rattlesnake, he said, and there is no way you can improve this bill.

One projposed amendment.

however, would have been a distinct improvement. It was offered in scorn and derision by WiHiam E. Dannemeyer of California. He Wanted to provide a substitute title and a new statement of purpose: This Act may be cited as the Smoot-Hawley Trade Barriers Act of 1982. The purpose of this Act is to reduce competition in the automobile industry, protect jobs in one in-dusti7 to the detriment of jd9s in other industries, and to increase the price of automobiles to consumers. .

The Dannemeyer amendment had the perfection of good cast irony. It precisely stated the case. The infamous Smoot-Hawley Act of 1930 was intended to protect Midwestern agriculture and Northeastern industry by drastic increases in the _ tariffs charged to imported commodities and manufactures. The act immediately provoked retaliatory measures by our trading partners. Over a 10-year period, the value of world trade dropped in half and U.S. trade dropped by two-thirds. Smoot-Hawley was a calamity.

P^tectionism was not the answer in 1930, and it is not the/answer 50 years later. In- ~ deed, protectionism is a much poorer answer now thap it was then, for the volume and the complexity of world trade are much greater today. If the domestic content bill ever becomes law, the ^st of Smoot-Hawley will be snickering around the world. The legitimate grievances of American manufacturers will not be relieved; they will only be compounded.

These grievances ^ in-

(PleasetumtoFage5)

Behind The Tax Schemes

By ROWLAND EVANS

and ROBERT NOVAK

WASHINGTON-Although President Reagan seemed at la^ weeks press confoence to leave the dow to-nmre tax increases, he buad referred that very morning to the revenuebo(ting schemes drafted at the Treasury as foolish.    _

Reagans remarks were prompted when Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan sought to take a step away from published reports about new tax increases to reduce the budget deficit. Such reports during the Christmas holidays, putting the secretary behind Treasury plans to limit tax deductions on mortgage and other loan interest payments, angered the presidiMt. ______

ConsequenUy, vriien budget discussions resumed at the vriiite House last week, Regan said he h(^ the presiitot did not believe newqiiqier stories about his tax-increase plans. Reagan re^nded that he iM^ the secretary did not believe subsequent news accounts of his anger, because he knew Dra R^an would not be foolish eiu)ugh to take such a position.

Conservative Disarmer

The effort to put a conservative at the Arms Cimtrol and Disarmament Agency (ACDA) has now concentrated (Ml former represra-tative David Emry of Maine, defeated for the Senate last year, as the prospective new deputy director.

Two other conservative Republicans defeated Nov. 2 - former representatives Robert Daniel of Virginia and Robin Beard of Tennessee -have been mentioned for the post since Foreign Service officer Robert T. Grey Jr. failed to win Senate confirmation and will not be renominated by President Reagan. But key Republicans in Congress have united behind Emery as their choice.

ACDA Director Eugene Rostow has forwarded to the White House the name of Foreign Service officer Roger Kirk as bis selection. Rostow, a moderate Democrat who was under secretary of state in the Johnson administration, has hinted he would quit if he did not get the dqiuty of his choice - a prospect that

might please* the White j House.

For Glenn?

Promise of badly-needed help to Sen. John Glenns slow-starting presidential campaign organization could be on the way with astute political strategist Greg Schneidera ready to sign on as press secretary.

Schnektos, who curroitly handles pubUo relations for Senate Minority Leader Robert Byrd, would fill Glenns gaping hide in press operations. But beyond that, be could iNX)vide a needed strat^c overview.

He believes that Glenn ehould leave bidding for Democratic ^lecial-intoest groups to his principal rivals, former vice president Walter F. Mndale and Sen. Gary Hart, and instead cxMicen-trate on his astronaut-heros appeal to the vdrale population. Schneiders cut his political teeth as aide and (Kxistant traveling (xnnpa-ni(Mi to Jinuny Carter during his 1980 presidential campaign and later served as an aide in the Carter White House.

Tip To Hie Rescue Speaker Thomas P. ONeUl was so concerued that* rankand-file House Democratic militancy to discipline would get out of hand and purge well-liked R^. S(mny Montgorooy of Mtesiss^pi as chairman of the Veterans Affairs Committee that he personally lobbied congressmen in Montgomerys behalf.

After the House -Democratic Steering and Policy Committee kicked Rep. Phil Gramm of Texas off the Budget Committee for partisai disloyalty, it came within five votes of ousting Montgomery as Veterans Affairs chairman. ONeUl, not wanting the punishment of Gramm to trigger mob action against all conservative Democrats, intervened to Montgomery in the full caucus.

A footnote: Gramms fellow conservative Boll-WeevU Democrats are not happy with him. They gnim-ble that whUe they were t<Ul-ing to save bis committee seats, to was making secr^ plans for his Republican conversion with Soi. Paul Lax-alt, the GOPs general chairman, and White House (PleasetumtoPageS)

Strength For Today

FRANKUNSREUGION Benjamin Franklin was by reputation an agnostic. Actually, alttuHigh his beliefs were unorthodox, they were well-formulated and can even to hdpfUl today. For example, on one occasion he wrote, I think vital religion has always suffered wdien orthoAixy is more regarded than virtue; and the scriptures assure me that at the last day we M be examined not for what we thought, but for what we did; and our recommendation wUl not be that we said Lord, Lonl, but that we did good to our fellow creatures.

Urging that the Constitutional Ccmvaitto of 1797 be opened with prayer, he remarked, The longer 1 live the more convincing proofs I see of this truth, that God governs in the affairs of men. And if a yarrow cannot fall to the ground without his notice, is it probaNe that an empire can rise without his aid?

A good qu^tion, Mr. Franklin, which deserves to be asked more often.Elisha Dou^ass

Clean, Safe Food Has A Price

ByJOEBIGHAM Associated Press Writer VISALIA, Calif. (AP) -Everybody wants clean and safe food, but how much are we willing to pay for it?    -

That was a question discus^ recently at a forum here on food safety.

* Tim Wallace, an agriculture economist with tto University of California, noted that rats and mice nibble on grain stored in tto Midwest, and he said people would be "surprised at the number of iiect parts in ketchup.

people who re^ariy eat bread or ^nread ketchup on their food stay healthy, be said.

If we Say we dooH want anything in the food we eat-animals, rodents, pc^kides, - tto cost of (xocessingfood coidd become quite hi^, Wallace said, if it doesnt hurt us, do we really want to eliminate it?

Wallace said tto issue of cost is important because Americans are spoidhig a greato share of flieir income to feed themselves. The average U.S. consumer now pays 20 percent of his or tor

income for lood compared to 16 percent a few years ago, he said.

Aboitf a third of tto retail C(t of food represents the gross price paici to. farmers, and more than half the remainder covers labor costs for processing, transportation and marketing, he said. .

Maybe there is no bad iuy, Wallace said. Maybe he way we are evidving, we are coming to a place where food is going to have to assume a higher c<t in our society.

That is where tto question of safety and cost ,come in. Much of the discussion at the forum centered on reaching a balance in using pesticides to produce bountiful crof while preventing barm to people and tto environm^t,

I California has tto natiixis tou^st pesticide regulations, said Lori Johnston, assistant pe^ mana^meid chief to tto state Depart-ment of Food and Agriculture, and Pamela Jones, director (if tto Council to the Mhance of Food and Fiber.

Ms. Johnston said the number of state employees

involved in pesucioe enforcement has more than tripled in the past decade. The 7,000 to 9,000 food samples they test each year for pesticide residues represent up to 20 percent of tto samples taken by all 50 states and is nearly as many samples as tto Food and Drug Administration tests, she said.

Ms. Jones said 79 percast of tto food tto ^te tests shows no detectable level of pesticide. One percoit of the time, (the (^[lartment) finds residue levels in excess (A toleraim that have beoi established.

She said field workers face file gr^test ilsk in food productkm. She said there were 253 rqwrts of pesticide-rdated illness last year among 300,000 farm workers in Calif(Hiiia, 75 percent of them skin rashes.

Ms. Jones said peofrie who fear that something is wrof^ with their food should study how long pesticides used on crops take to degrade and now likdy the ccmsumer is to to tposed to tto chemicals.

Without question, pesticides are poison

chemicals man uses to control pests, die said. They are poisonous to intoded victims and sometimes to unintended vkUms.

But, she contended, with most chemicals termed carcinogenic tboe is little likelihood that they will cause cancer unless Umre.is high exposure or (exposure) over a rdativdy long time, which is not tto case with pescidesinfood.

Mickey GeiM^, a Tidare C(Mmty fruit grower and pactoar, questioned vdiether scientfilc ability to detect chM residue levels of less than one part per billion had brought an equal ability to umtostand what those levels mean.

Are those conqwunds really a threat at those levels? he asked. Has our ability to test for (tomkal residues outgrown our ability to uiKtostand tto answers? George defended judkkNis use of agricultural ctomkals to provide {den-tiful crops, but at the same time, to said, fanners must take every reasonable pie-cautioo to {NTOtect woil^ consumers and the eaivirHiment.





The Dally Reflector. Greenville, It.C.-Tuesday, January 11, n*j-5Ten Traffic Collisions Investigated Here Monday

An estimated $12,750 property damage resulted from a series of 10 ti-affic collisions investigated by Greenville police Mtmday.

Cars driven by Francis Lumpen Gwynn of 1111 Ragsidale Road and Ndson Miles Hester of 1101 W. Wright Road collided about 9:45 a.m. at the intersection of 10th and Evans streets, causing an estimated $1,500 damage to the Hester car and $1,000 damage to the Gwynn vehicle, officers said.

A 3:40 p.m. collision at the intersection of Greene Street and Mumford Road involved cars driven by Donnell Alphonso Spellman of 1809 W. Third St. and Tony Ray Ross of Route 4, Greenville.

Police estimated damage from the wreck at $1,000 to the Spellman car and $1,500 to the Ross auto.

Investigators said cars driven by Harry Cassious Cook Jr. of Goldsboro and Cheryl Carter Halsey of 200 Allendale Drive collided about 10:18 a.m. at the intersection of 14th and Evans streets, causing $2,000 damage to the'Halsey car. No damage resulted to the Cook vehicle, according to officers.

Cars driven by Benjamin Thomas Eastwood Jr. of Route 2, Greenville, Deborah Elaine Plueddeman of 209 Cherrywood Drive and Evelyn Brown Hill of Route 1, WintervUle, collided about 5:25 p.m. on Charles Street, 25 feet South of the Elm Street intersection.

Police said no damage resulted to the Eastwood car, while dama^ to the PliKd-deman vehicle was set at $1,000. Damage to the Hill vehicle was estimated at $700.

Paula Lee Cobb of Kin^ Row was charged with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of a 7:29 p.m. collision on

Evans-Novak...

(Continued From Page 4)

political aide Lee Atwater.

Budget Moves Left

The middle-reading Democratic chairman of the House Budget Committee, Rep. James Jones of Oklahoma, will have his hands full with a committee moved well to the left by the nature of its eight new Democratic members.

Rep. Martin Frost of Texas is the most conservative of the newcomers with a 50 percent liberal voting record as measured by the Americans for Democratic Action (ADA). The other seven include such liberal stalwarts as Michigans Howard Wolpe (94 percent liberal), Californias George Miller (94 percent) and Californias Vic Fazio (89 percent).

With rambunctious Phil Gramm kicked off the committee and switched to tbe Republicans, the only Boll-Weevil Democrat left on Budget is cautious Bill Nelson of Florida. But other Boll Weevils are warning the Democratic leadership they will join ranks with Republicans on the House floor if the budget resolution coming out of committee calls for too much domestic spending.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

Kilpatrick Col....

(Ckmtittuedtrcan page 4)

deed legitimate. Our industries must compete on world markets where an overvalued dollar tends to price our goods out of the market. Not only Japan but European nations also impose serious obstacles to American competition. Foreign govemiiwnts subsidize their industria in ways that we do not. Wage levels are vastly disproportioite here and abroad. Our domestic producers have plenty to complain about, but the Smoot-Hawley Trade Barriers Act of 1982 would make bad matters worse.

No simple answer is in si^t. It would be {Peasant to wave a wand and devalue the dollar against tbe yen; in-cantatkms work no magic here. Only by patient adherence to sound principles will we work our way out of the monstroiui trade imbalance that now afflicts us. A fair balance wont be easy, anditw(Hitimeso(m.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

Verdant Street, 200 feet north of the 10th Street intersec-ti(Ml.

Police said the Cobb car collided with a vehle driven by Wanda Gay Hart of Cherry Court, cat^g $800 damage to the Hart car and $200 damage to the Cobb auto.

Cars driven by Estelia Jackson Barnes of 116D Riverbluff and Jacqueline Midge Williams of Bdhaven colli^ about 4:36 p.m. at the intersection of Dickinson Avenue and Greoie Street.

Officers, who charged lib. Williams with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety, set damage at $200 to tbe Barnes car and $700 to the Williams

car.

Police charged Linda Diane Little of Route 3, Washing^, with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety following investigatkm of a 5:25 p.m. collision on Memorial Drive, 175 feet south of the Airport Road intersec-tkm.

Shuffle Launch Tesf Goes Well

By IKE FLORES Associated Press Writer CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - A simulated countdown for the space shuttle Challenger got off to a great start after being delayed for a day by a power system failure, officials said.

The rqwrt I get toni^t is that everything is great, NASA spokesman Jim Ball said shortly after the 144iour simulation began at 9:40 p.m. Monday.

The rehearsal was to culminate with a make-believe liftoff shortly before noon today, and should prepare the astronauts and ground crews for Challengers first fli^t, a five-day mission now scheduled to start in late Febru

ary.

The countdown simulation was delayed one day by the failure of a power inverter unit Aboard tbe reusable spaceship during tbe start of a similar run-through on Sunday night. The unit was replaced early Monday, tnit officials scrubbed the rehearsal and started over from the beginning Monday night.

The latest difficulty was not expected to have any effect on the newest launch schedule set last Friday.'

AstriHiauts Paul Weitz, Karol Bobko, Story Mus-grave and Donald Peterson were to go through the routine of an early wake-up.

ECU Professor Guest Lecturer

RALEIGH - Dr. David S. Phelps, professor of anthropology at East Carolina University, will be guest lecturr at 7 p.m. Wedn^ay in room 211 of tbe Archives and History Building, 109 E. Jones Street, downtown Raleigh.

There is no admission charged for the lecture/slide, and the public is invited to attend.

Dr. Phelps will summarize the archaeology that has been completed on the Algonkian Indians in northeastern North Carolina from the Neuse River north to the Virginia border. He will show slides on tte type of people, their culture, where they lived and their villages at the time of first English contact from 1584 to about 1650.

Phelps will also offer a brief overview of archaeologyrin the future in his lecture entitled Advances in Algonkian Archaeology.

Another lecture In archaeology is being offered to the public at the same place on Jan. 26, with Dr. David S. Weaver of Wake Forest University to lecture on Human Skel^ Analysis: How Its Done and What it Reveals.

For more details on the lectures, interested persons are to contact Margaret Lane Peterson at 733-7342.

weather briefing, suiting iqi and entry into the ^cecraft on the launch pad for the last hours of todays practice run.

The new shuttle has had technicians puzzling over a hydrogen leak into its main engine conqiartment for several weeks. That problem has shoved back Challengers launch date about a month.

Kennedy Space Center spokesman Hu^ Harris said the proUem on Sunday night involved a power supply inverter which converts direct current to alternating current and is used to cerate fans and pumps aboiud the spacecraft.

Harris said tbe problem with the inverter unit would not have delayed a real launch because of built-in hold times in the countdown, during which it would have been replaced.

There are also two backup units, but we dont like to use backup units on test, Harris added.

Experts of tbe National Aeronautics and Space Administration on Friday bowed to the danger of an undetected hydrogen leak and decided to do what they wanted to avoid - test fire Challengers main engines a second time.

The engine test has been scheduled for the end of this mimth, forcing a launch delay until at least the end of February.

The source of the hydrogen leak into the engir compartment has gone undetected since the engines were initially tested with Challenger on its launch pad Dec. 18.

Technicians feel the second test firing will permit them to trace the leak to its source. They will fit Challengers engines with ^ial sensors for that test.

Officials fear an accumulation of hydrogen could ignite into a flash fire if oxy^n mixes with it in the engine compartment.

STORMED HOSPITAL SAO PAULO, BrazU (AP) Two hundred police stormed the Franco da Rocha state mental lxpital to crush a rebellion and breakout attempt, killing six inmates and a hostage, authorities said Monday.

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Damage htrni the collision, which involved a car driven by Bfildred Lowinda Brady of Route 4, Tarboro, was estimated at $200 to tbe Little car and $400 to tbe Brady vehicle.

KeUy Lenora Butler of 107 Dellwood Ehrive was charged with failii^ to see her in-toided movement could be made in safety after her vehicle (xdlided with a utility pde on 14th Street, 100 feet east of the West Rock^rings Road intersection about 3:35 p.m.

Investigators estimated damage to the car at $500 and set damage to the pole at $50.

An estimated $250 damage r^ted to each of two cars invdved in a 12:20 p.m. mish^ at the intersection of 10th and Maple streets.

Police Identified the drivers of the vehktes involved as Robert Otto Horst of Elizabeth City and Terry John Jones of 305C Tobacco Road.

Trucks drivai by William G. ComeU of Hubbanl. Ohio,

and R(^ B. Smith Ayden cdlided about 9:51 a.m. on Memorial Drive, 75 feet north of the Trade Street intersection.

Officers said no damage reilted to the Cornell vehicle, while damage to tbe Smith truck was set at $500.

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No rainchecks on this ad





6-The Daily Reflector, Greenvilk, N.C.Tuesday, January 11,1M3

Stock And Market Reports

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 50 cents higher. Kinston 55.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn. Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 55.00. Wilson 55.50, Salisbury 54.50, Rowland unreported. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 49.00, Fayetteville

48.00, Whiteville 49.00, Wallace 49.00, Spiveys Corner 49.00, Rowland 49.00, Durham 47.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina i.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 41.75 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized to 3 pound birds. 91 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed, with a final weighted average of 41.49 cents f.o.b dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate to good demand. Weights mostly desirable to heavy. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was

1.772.000, compared to 1,726,000 last Tuesday.

NEW YORK(AP)-StQjCk prices opened mixed but then moved mostly higher in heavy trading today as ma-, jor banks nationwide cut their prime lending rates to 11 percent from 11,5 percent.

But the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials had trouble climbing above its record high reached Monday, and was off 4.05 points at 1,088^30 after two hours of trading today.

The markets best-known measure rose 16.28 points Monday to 1,092.35, its third straight gain to a new peak.

Nearly seven stocks rose for each five falling on the New York Stock Exchange today.

Big Board volume swelled to 47.20 million shares at noon EST from 40.00 million at that hour Monday, when the days volume exceeded 100 million shares.

Many analysts expecteda cut in banks prime, or base, lending rates following reductions Monday in some open-market rates and in some banks broker loan rates, which apply to loans to investment brokers using securities as collateral.

Among the banks cutting their primes today were Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., Citibank and Chemical Bank, all in New York, First National Bank of Chicago and industry leader Bank of America, based in San Francisco.

Chase Manhattan Bank already had cut its prime to 11 percent on Dec. 28.

Among the NYSE-listed gainers today were Xerox 1 to 4(P4, International Business Machines '4 to 98'4 and Westinghouse Electric to 424.

The NYSEs composite index slipped 0.35 to84.27.

At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 1.26 at 370.73.

The

Meeting

Place

TUESDAY 7:00 p.m. The Down East Chapter of the Painting and Decorating Contractors of America will meet at Western Sizzlin No. 1 7,00 p m - Parents Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian (liurch

7:30 p.m. The United Ostomy Association, Inc. Greenville Chapter will be meeting at the Pitt County Mental Health Center *

7:3U p.m - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 8:00 p.m. - Withla Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m. Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous at AA BIdg.. Farmville hwy.

8:00 p.m. - Exceptional Children's Advisory Committee meets at the Greenville City School office

WEDNESDAY

9:30 a.m. Duplicate bridge game at Planters Bank 1:30 p.m. - Duplicate bridge game at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m. - Kiwanis Club meets 6:30 p.m. - REAL Crisis Intervention meets 7:00p,m. - Jaycettes meet 8:00 p.m. Greenville White Shrine meets at Masonic Temple 8:00 p.m. Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville hwy.

, 8:00 pm. John Ivey Smith Coluncil No. 6600 Knights of Columbus meet at St. Peteras Hall 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County AJa-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy.

NEW YORK (API -Midday stocks:

Hish    Low    Last

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IJA,    12S    13\

J4i    34'<    34V4

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Allis Ch^m Alcoa Am Baker

AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmKamily Am Motors AmStand Amer T4T Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX<^o(j) CaroPwU Ceianese

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Inti Harv Int Paper Int Rectif Int T4T K mart KalsrAJum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrogerCo

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Monsanto

NCNBCp

NabiscoBrd

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Norflk^ n

Olin^

Owenslll

Penney JC

Penney . PepsiCo

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32'7    32\

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15**    15-S    m

Vi,    TV.    7*4

32<4    32    32tv

64,    64*    64\

22i    22>4    22\

23'i    23    23Hi

35,    35    35*.

39,    3S4    39*4

49^4    49,i    49i

27*4    27'/    27'

54*,    53*4    54

21'/    21    21'/

52i    52^    52'

16**.    16'4    I6*(.

25/,    25*,    25*4

17*,    17*fc    17*,

52    51*4    51*4

20    19*4    19/,

25*4    25*,    25*4

28'    28M.    28'/4

36*4    36*,    36t4

43    42'/    43

30    29'    29^4

41/,    41',    41*,

23',    23    23

8*4    8',

86    85*,    85'

34',    341,    34>,

58*,    58    58*,

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20',    19*,    19*4

37/*,    37    37'.t

19\    19'4    I9'/4

40    39*44    m

42*4    42'    42'

33'    33'/4    33'/4

41V4    40,    40,

31'4    30*4    31

99*,    98',    99*4

39*4    39'    39*4

48,    48*,    484

64*    63*(.    64'

33'    331,    33*,

45*,    444    45'/4

27'    271,    27'

36    K*,    36

36>4    354    35,

42'/4    41*4    42

38    38,    39

18*4    I8>/4    18*,

31V,    31    31

30*,    30    30V,

92*,    91*,    91*,

55*,    55    55'/4

42'    42'    42'

42^4    42    42',

98*,    97V,    98

4V    4*,    4'

52*4    Sl4    52

IIV,    IIV,    IIV,

32'    32'4    32'/4

23',    23V,    23V,

IT*,    17*,    17*4

I5'4    ISV,    I5'4

18    I74    18

39*4    39*,    39*,

80*4    79*4    80*4

157'    156'    157'

46,    46*,    49*4

21',    20,    21

21,    21*,    21,

78',    77*,    78'.,

26',    25'    2SV

83',    82    83V,

19*,    19V,    191,

35V,    34%    35

26%    26*,    26*4

56    56*,    55*4

26    26    26

29V,    28%    29

46%    45V    46*,

38*4    35*4    35%    ,

33*4    33*4    33*4

59*4    58'    58*,

35*,    35    35'/4

28    27*,    27%

116    114'    116

42    41*,    42

23*4    23*,    23%

17*4    17'    17*,

8    8    8

18*4    18'    18'

32'    32*,    32'

52',    51*4    51%

45    44*,    44*,

20*4    20*,    29*4

27*,    27*,    27*,

22    21*4    21%

45,    45'    45*4

29    28*4    28*4

44*,    43*4    43*4

24*4    24*,    24*4

14%    14'    14*,

16*4    16    16%

33%    33*,    33%

34*4    34    34%

45*4    45*,    45*,

40%    40*4    40*,

21*,    21*4    21*,

71    70'    70*,

31*,    31*,    31*,

59*4    59    50*4

10'/4    10%    10*4

89'    69'    69'

59*4    58%    59*4

31*,    31    31%

12%    12*4    12%

21%    21%    21*,

31    30%    31

45*,    44*4    45%

40%    40%    40%

42%    41%    42%

40*4    40%    40%

44%    44*,    44*,

26*4    25%    26%

42%    42%    42%

40*4    40*4    49%

Got Tougher

WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) -r Unhappy after receiving three days in jail, a fine and loss of his license for two years, a Winnabow man a^ealed a driving under the influence convictkm tmly to receive nine months in jail.

After a Siqxerior Court jury found John Troy Lewis, 44, guilty of second-offense driving under the influence. Judge Herbert Small passed sentence.

Lewis originally was sentenced last Aujpist in New Hanover District Court. His St^erior Court trial ended last week.

Hk piddic awar^iess of drunk driving is having an effect < sentences," Assistant District AtUnney John Smith said. I think that people can start expecting longer seatces in Superior Court for driving under the influence.

Area Is Closed To Protestors

POINT PLEASANT, Pa.

(AP) - An environmentalist group has bei barred from interfering with the start of construction of a water diversion project to serve drought-plagued communities near hire.

Before the injunctkm was served Monday, about 400 protesters from Del-AWARE Unlimited Inc. briefly held up the start of construction at the $47 million Point Pleasant Pumping Station, desi^wd to divert ig) to 96 millkM) gall(ms of water from the Delaware River f(Nr irrigation.

Maier Quits...

(Continued from Pagel) having held the vice chancellor p<^ since 1972.

Maier holds toiure as a professor of bioic^ and as a professor of political science at ECU.

A New York City native, Maier received his BS degree in cbemisti7 and botany from the University of Miami in 1951, aiKl earned his masters and Ph.D. degrees in plant and soil chemistry, with minors in analytical chemistry and botany, from the University of Illinois in 1952 and 1954.

After receiving his doctorate, Maier served as technical adviser to the U.S. Army Chemical Corps in classified biological research, then tau^t at the University of Arizona, was a fellow in academic administration at the University of North Carolina at Ci^l Hill, and was assistant dean of the graduate college at the University of Arizona before moving to Green Bay in 1967.

Ayden Board...

(Continued from Page 1) also be a 'resident of North Carolina. '

The town manager, after giving an operator of a game room adate notice and an opportunity to be heard, may revoke the license of any game room i^rator who is convicted of unlawfully selling alc(^lic beverages or narcotic drugs.

The revocation may be appealed to the Board of Commisioners, but must be submitted within 10 working days after the license has been revoked.

in other business:

A hearing was held on the assessment rolls for improvements made on Cledar Lane, Willow Drive and Pinewood Drive. Several residents of the streets complained to the board about ditches filled with water that were left in their yards after excavation. Some complaints were also made about not being able to mow yards because of damage caused by street improvements..

The board resolved to correct the problems. I live oyer there in that area and Ill see to it that something is done. If nothings done, call me, added Commissioner Marvin Baldree.

The commissioners voted that the town refund $10.50 per 1,000 kilowatt hours on bills sent out in February.

The board adopted an increase in utility deposits.

Commissioners agreed to enter into a l2-m(mth contract with the Ayden Council of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce to promote industrial development through visits, brochures and mailing. Cost for the services is $1,500. Monies appropriated in this years budget for such is $2,000.

The board agreed to form a task force for a utilization study of the Ayden Middle School. Town Manager Don Russell mentioned that East Carolina University Pro-

Free Surplus Groin Is Assured For Farmers

Obituories

By TERENCE HUNT

Associated Press Writer

DALLAS (AP) - President Reagan, promising fanners that help is on the way, today announced the government will give them free surplus grain for idling up to half their fields.

The program, which Reagan called a crop swap, is desi^ied to pump up sagging farm prices by whittling massive government commodity stockpiles.

Agriculture Secretary John Block predicted the program will have little impact on grocery prices, increasing the cist of bread less than a penny a loaf.

Reagan, speaking to the 64th annual convention of the American Farm Bureau Federation, said, Because these are unusual and critical times on American farms, we dont have time to stand around chewing our cud.

He had asked the lame-duck session of Congress to authorize the payment-in-kind, or PIK, program, but put it in place on his own

Toastmasters' Dinner Meet

Greenville Toastmasters Club No. 2595 will meet at Western Sizzlin Steak House, East loth Street, Wednesday night. Dinner will be at 6:15 p.m. and the business program will begin at 7; 15 p.m.

Toastmaster for the meeting is Pat Flanagan, table topics master is Joe Sherwood and general evaluator is Steve Johnson. Speakers are Bill Sancters, Mary Murrell and Robert HoweU.

The club will discuss a new meeting place for the remainder of the year and will make plans for a youth leadership program, which will begin Jan. 24 in conjunction with the Pitt County 4-H program. The program is a five-to-seven-week course in speaking skills and leadership development for ages 12 to 19.

fessor Harry Baxley may be Interested in doing the study as a class project.

A resolution was adopted to repair the metal shell building on old N.C. 11. Some of the work to be performed on the building included cleaning the exterior and interior of the building, repairing holes in the roof and the sides, replacing damaged panels, painting, sandblasting some exterior parts of the building before painting and other repairs.

Annexation of Juanita Street from the housing project to North Hills was approved.

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today because the measure did not pass the Senate.

The administration has now concluded it does not need congressional approval to go ahe^, but is inviting Congress to endorse the program anyway.

The plan will be used on top of existing production control programs, under Mdiich eligible fanners will receive cash and continued price support protection for idling 20 percent of their land this year.

Under the program announced today, farmers will be eligible to take an additional 30 percent of their fields out of production.

In exchange, they will receive surplus wheat, corn, sorghum, cotton and rice, which they could sell or use for livestock feed.

The government hopes 23 million acres of land will be idled by the PIK program. That would reduce wheat, corn and sorghum production by 10 percent, cut cotton production by 20 percent and reduce rice production by 15 percent, the Agriculture Department estimates.

Reagan said the program is designed to reduce this years harvest so that price-(lepressing government stockpiles can be depleted. Farmers buying power now is the lowest ever recorded.

Lets face it; lets not fool anybody, he told the farmers. UntU farm prices go up, you will be hurting. Reagan said the plan is aimed at bringing supply more in line with demand and strengthening farm income in future years, ft makes our problem the solution.

Reagan said the surplus commodities are sitting useless in bins and are overflowing in warehouses.

Lets put those surpluses to work to help the American farmer. Those surpluses hanging over the market cant help but have an effect on prices.

The president also noted dairy fanners unhappiness with the 50-cent-per-hundredweight fee recently imposed on milk they sell. Block imposed the fee, which is to double in April, after authorized to do so by Congress as a means of reducing the nations enormous milk surplus and to shift approximately half of the cost of the $2.2 billion dairy price-support program to fanners.

Reagan told the farmers that t^ayers arent happy about the cost of the price supports, youre not happy about the new 50 cents-^r-hundredweight assessment, and Im not happy about any of it. ... If the assessment doesnt cut producticm, we must work together to develop a better plan for the dairy industry, a plan that is fair to tte farmer and as free as possible from governments heavy hand.

On Monday, a federal judge in South Carolina

barred ie Agriculture Department from collecting the new fees until a lawsuit filed by a former state agriculture commissioner is beard. Former commissioner Bryan Patrick says midwestern fanners have brought about the surplus and only they should have to pay the new assessment.

Reagan also criticized Eun^an agricultural ^b-sidies as unfair trade practices.

I want to say now and other countries should take notice we expect fair access to international agriculture markets. We will not give in to protectionist measures, but at the same time we arent going to let ourselves be plowed under. Reagan announced that the administration was making available an additional $250 million in credit over the next year to promote U.S. agricultural exports.

The open-ended crops-swap program Reagan announced stands in contrast to his advocacy of free-market policio. Block, in an earlier briefing for reporters in Washington, said, Really, we are in a situation right now where the free-market system is not functioning quite like it should.

Reagan said that under the program a fanner who takes land out of production would be able to swap what he didnt grow for a certain amount of the commodity already in surplus. He can then do with it as he wishes. He said farmers who take part in the program will have the same or greater net returns since they will avoid production costs and their risks will be lower.

Seeks Students For

A Clogging Class

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department is seeking students for a clogging class scheduled to begin Thursday at 7:30 p.m.

If sufficient numbers enroll, the class will be offered at Jaycee Park.

Persons interested in this class may preregister by calling 752-4137; extension 200.

CHAPTER MEETING The Down East Chapter of the Painting and Decorating Contractors of America will meet toni^t at 7 p.m. at Western Sizzlin No. 1. For information call 756-7910 or 756-7611.

MASONIC NOTICE Queen of the South Lodge No. 77, Ayden, will hold a communication at' 8 p.m. Thursday. AH Master Masons are invited to attend. WUlieStaUwroth, Master Jesse Lee Wilson, Secretary

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Cherry FAYETTEVILLE - Dr. Charles Cherry, formerly of Greenville, died here Monday. He was the f(ter brother of Lucille Gorham of Greenville. Funeral arrangements will be announced later.

Corbett FALKLAND - Mrs. Lillian Dunn Corbitt, 91, died Monday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday in Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. L.B. Manning and the Rev. Rod Pender Jr. Burial will be in the Dunn Family Cemetery near Falkland.

Mrs. Corbett spent all her life in the Falkland community and was a member of Kings Crossroad Free Will Baptist Church.

Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Agnes Edwards of Flakland; a son, Josephus Coihett of Falkland; a sister, Mrs. Maggie Owens of Falkland; 17 grandchildren; 31 great-grandchildren and six great-great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. toni^t.

Jones

FARMVILLE - Mr. Charlie Arthur Jones of the Butts Store community died Monday. He was the husband of Mrs. Mary Jones of the home and the father of Mrs. Mattie Jones of Greenville. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hemby Funeral Home, Fountain.

Moye

MAURY - Mr. Lawraice Anderson Mbye Sr., 83, of Maury died early Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital following a short illness. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday from the Church Street Chapel of the Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Lee Parker. Interment will follpw in Forest Hills Cemetery, Farmville.

Mr. Moye, a merchant and fanner, was a life-long resident of the Maury community. He was a member of the First Christian Church, Farmville, and served there as an eider emeritus. He was also a director emeritus of Branch Banking and Trust Ch. and an emeritus trustee of Atlantic Christian College, both in Wilson.

He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Charles L. Stokes of Maury and Mrs. Jeanne Moye Graham of Morehead City; one son, L A. Moye Jr. of Maury; three brothers, Milton Moye of Tarboro, Cieorge C. Moye of Farmville and Qarence H. Moye of Maury, and seven grandchildren.

Family visitation will be at the funeral home from 7 to 9 tonight. In lieu of flowers, it is suggested that memorials be made to the First Christian Church in Farmville or to Atlantic Christian College.

Williams

NEW YORK-Mr. Robert Williams, 77, died in New. York Sunday. A graveside service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Pinewood Memorial Park, Greenville, N.C., by the Rev. Cedric Pierce.

Mr. Williams was a native of Pitt County, N.C., and had made his home in New York for a number of years.

Surviving are a brother,. Heber Williams of Columbia, S.C., and a sister, Mrs. King Laughinghouse of New Bern, N.C.

The family will receive friends at Wilkerson Funeral Home, Greenville, from 7-9 p.m. toni^t.

Card of Thanks

Thank you for the many ways in which you helped us during our bereave ment. We deeply apprec iate you kindness.

The family of Emeet Lee Buck

Card of Thanks

The family of the late Mrs. Mamie Corey Clark would like to thank everyone for their thoughtfulness, concern and prayers during our time of sorrow. It was sweet of you to take the time out of your busy schedule to express your love. We extend special thanks to Dr. Spencer Raab, the Pitt County Memorial Hospital, and the Hardees Funeral Home. May Gods blessings shower each of you.

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REGISTRATION/ORIENTATION will be held 11 Jenuary, 7:00-8:30 PM in room 209 Humber buHdlng.    _

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REGISTRATION/ORIENTATION will be held 11 January, 6:00-7:00 PM in room 209 Humber buflding.__

FOR INFORMATION CALL John Hutchens

Telecourse Coordinator 756-3130, ext. 219 8:00-3:00 PM





Sports THE DA TTY REFLECTOR Classified

TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 11. 1983fed-Hot Pirates Dump Campbell, 67-54

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sp(ts Edito

FAYETTEVILLE - East Carolinas Pirates shot a blazing 74.3 percent from the field a new schod record and had little trouble in downing the Campbell University Camels in Fayettevilles Cumberland County Aroia last night, 67-54.

The Pirates, paced by Johnny Edwards and Barry Wright, rolled out to a 20-point lead with two minutes left in the contest before Coach Charlie Harrison emptied his bench and the Camels were able to cut seven points off that lead.

The Pirates canned 26 of field goal attempts during the game, 14 of 19 in the first half and 12 of 16 in the second to the new mark. The old record was 72.7 percrat set against VMI in January, 1969.

But debite it all, it was not a totally happy evening for Harrison, who felt his team got too cute in the second half.

We put on a clinic at both ends of the court in the first half, Harrison said afterwards. Wten we executed in the first half and in the secwid half - we did anything we wanted to.

But we werent sharp in the sec(md half, and I ckt want us to play like that. We got too cute out there. We were almost too unsdfish in the second half. I like for than to lo(A for a second (^)ttoi when the (toense is playing it hard, but you've got an opoi shot, you should take it.

In the second half, the Pirates who tiioroughly dominated the first half, found things coming too ea^y and blew a nun^r of scoring

to^ss off whM^y hSto good shot. Many of those times, the pass turned into a turnover. ECU was charged with eight turnovers dui^ the poiod, most of them from errant passes.

At least twice, too, the Pirates blew dunto, as both Charles Green ami Edwards

Hokies Upset No, One Tigers

By The Associated Press While voters in The Associated Press college basketball poll were moving Memphis State up a notch, the Tigers were being taken down a peg by the Virginia Tech Hokies.

I give Virginia Tech credit, Memphis State Coach Dana Kirk said after the 69-56 upset Monday night by his teams Metro Conference ponent. They made things happen tonight at both ends of the floor.

The defeat was the first of the year after 11 victories by the Tigers, who were ranked No. 2 behind Indiana w4ien they took the court Monday ni^t against the Hokies, but were pished to No. 1 in the latest rankings as a result of Indianas loss Saturday night to Ohio State.

Virginia Tech played exceptionally well, said Kirk. We didnt handle the ball like we have been. We really sputtered in the ^read offense (which the Tigers went to when star Keith Lee got into foul trouble), If you dont execute in the spread, it can really hurt you, and it did toni^it.

According to Virginia Tech Coach Charlie Moir, Ive had teams play better, but Ive never had one play harder than this team did.

Perry Youngs tipin with 7:59 left sent Virginia Tech, 13-1, ahead to good and the Hokies used a foul-line parade down the stretch to bold on. Reggie St^pe came off the bench to spore 21 points for the winners and Keith Colbert pulled down 10 rebounds and held L^ to six points.

I thoi^t Keith Colbert did a magnificent jdb on Lee, Moir said. Hes giving away a lot of height, but he really stayed with him and did the job.

Elsewhere in the Top Twenty, No. 5 UCLA beat Arizima State 87-86, No. 6 Kentucky defeated Mississin>i State 58-53 in overtime, Georgetown sto{^ No. 13 Syracuse 97-92, No. 16 Housto edged Southweston Lmiisiana 79-78 and No. 18 Tennessee turned back Louisiana State 59-58.    -

Top Ten

Rod Fosters long jumper

with 15 seconds remaining lifted UCLA over Arizima State in a see-saw game. Foster finisted with a game-high 30 points, with 14 coining inthesecmidbalf.

Paul Wiiliams jumper with 47 seconds left had ven the Sun Devils an 86-85 lead before Foster drilled home bis game-winning shot.

After a timeout, Arizona State tried to work the bali to Byron Scott, but he was heavily guarded and Shawn Holidays missed a de^ration shot at file buzzer.

Kentucky used the free throw in overtime to turn back Mississippi State. Derrick Hord and Melvin Turpin eadi hit two free throws in a run of four Haight Wildcat points. After Terry Lewis hit a layiq) for Mississippi State, Dickie Beal hit two more free throws to give Kentucky a 53^9 lead.

Butch Pierre hit an l8-fo(to with 35 seconds remaining in overtime to pull the Bulldogs within two, but Beal answered with two ntoe free throws. Overall, the Wildcats bit 19-OM9 from the line.

It was nice to get a break, especially on the road, and we did toni^it, said Kentcky Coach Joe B. Hall of the foul shots.We didnt play well against Mississippi State. Second Ten

Michael Jackson scored 31 points, including four in the final 68 seconds, as Georgetown withstood a furious sec(d4)alf rally by Syracuse for a Big East victory before a record crowd of 31,327 at the Carrier Dome.

It was the largest on-campus crowd in NCAA basketball history, surpassing the 27,318 that watched the St. Johns-Syracuse game in Syracuse last year.

Georgetown blew a 21-point lead early in the second half before coming back to win. The loss was the second strai^t for Syracuse, which (^)ed the season with 11 (xmsecutive victories.

We never totally lost our composure, said Georgetown Coach John Thompson. During a timeout, I told them they were playing Syracuse, not the crowd.

We played only 15 minutes of defoise, and that was almost enough to win, said Syracuse Coadi Jim Bodieim.

Sports Coltndor

Editor's Note: Sdtedules are supfdied by scboois or spoasoriag agencies and are subject to change without notice.

Todays Sports BaskeUMdl Manteo at JamesviUe Bear Grass at Belhavoi Greene Central at North Pitt (6:30p.m.)

Southern Nash at Ayden-Grtftoo (6:30 pm J North Lenoir at Farmvllle Central (6:30 p.m.)

West Carteret at Conley (6:30 p.m.)

RtMinoke at WUliamston (6:30

'p.m.)

Rocky Mount at Rose (6:30 p.m.) Greenville Christian at FiUs Road (5:30 p.m.)

E.B. Ayrack at Rocky Mount (4 pjn.)

AihdtLeagne TheWizvs.HiBtlas PCC vs. Pirales TRWvsAtho.

Midget League

Tmapins vs. Tarheels JuniorLeague Cavalien vs. BlueDevOt WrtaUIng Coiiley at West Caiteret (7p.m.) Rose M Rocky HoiiM (7 p.m.)

Roanoke, Edenton at Taitoro (5:30 p.m.)

Washington at E.B. Aycock (4 p.m.)

BaWmOMtt wrniam & Maty at East Caniina

(7:30 pm)

Adult League ECFPvsGreegviaeVDla Clwrrys vs. Feransons Rockers vs. Hooker

Pee-Wee Llague CavaUenv8.Wolfpack

C!avaUersvs.W(>U|Mcfc Pirates vs. Tariwds JuniorLeague Pirates vs. TarheeU CsvaitBnvK.WoUpack Tempteavs. Blue Devils

slammed the ball hito the rather than throiig|i jk. Edwards did ^ two mBgis, however. ^

I really (kmt care how they get it into the hole as long as it goes it, Harrison said. But Ive tod them that a' basket is too impcHtant for them and to the team for them

to be putting on a show for the fans.

For the fourth night in a row, Harrisoo started a different linetq). This time he had Green, Edwards and Thom Brown in the froot-court and T(xiy Robinson and Wright in thebackcourt.

The lineup may change ten

more times betoe the year is over, Harrison said. But guys like Thom Brown and John Williams and (tot Van-derhorst dont care if they ckmt start. Who starts will depend on the makeup of the other team. And we did get a good effort from our botch in the first half.

East Carolina scored the first five points of the game as Edwards tossed back a missed shot in the first 20 seconds and Wright got a three point play a minute later.

Campbell finally scored on a drive by Kim Griffin with 17:13 left, and baskets by Harvey Smith helped the Camels to tie it up at 84 and 8-8 before the Pirates ran off

six more points in a row.

Green got it started with two free throws and Wright followed with a dunk off a steal. Wright then added two more free throws with 11:32 left.

At that point, the scin^eboard clock jumped to 10:00 as it was turned back on, but the gap was unnoticed by the officials and whoi it was finally called to their atten-tkm, no adjustmoit was made.

Finally, at 9:20, Ron Whitted made one of two free throws, but that was followed by three iiKHre ECU baskets, a jumper by Bruce Peartree, a steal and dunk by Edwards and another jumper by Edwards. That made it 20-9

Pirates Host WiM Indians

Going For The Hoop

Memphis States Bobby Parks (22) drives for the basket against Virginia Tech during first half action of their Metro Conference basketball game in Blacksburg, Va., Monday night. The Hokies beat the top-ranked Tigers, 69-56. (AP Laserphoto)

East Carolinas Pirates entertain The College of William & Mary in a key ECAC-South game in Minges Coliseum on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.

The Indians gained a 47-46 victory over George Mason Saturday night in their first conference game of the year and currently stand alone in the league lead with a 1-0 record. East Carolina, which bowed by a point to Mason in their first league game, downed James Madison, 4341, Saturday to even their ECAC-South mark at 1-1.

William & Mary comes into the game with a 44 record, having beaten Christopher Newport, 84-51, Norfolk State. 72-56, and Lockhaven, 89-52, in additon to Mason. Theyve lost to West Virginia, 65-51, Temple, 62-61, Notre

Dame, 83-60, and Maryland, 56-51.

The Indians are led by 6-9, 230-pound senior forward Brant Weidner with a 14.5 average and 6-4, 163i)Ound sophom<H guard Keith Cieplickl, hitting 12.5 per game.

The Pirates have one other mutual rival with the Indians to date, besides Mason, in Christopher Newport. The Pirates beat them, 96^.

The two teams split last year, ECU winning the firot game, 61-58, whUe the Indians took the second meeting, 80^1.

W&M leads the series between the two scho(ds, 20-18.

Following the game, the Pirates face another ECAC-South foe as they travel to Riclmumd for a 1 p.m. game on Saturday.

North Pitt Faces Big Week In Eastern Carolina League Race

ByRICKSCOPPE Reflector Sports Writer

BETHEL - North Pitt enters the second week of action in the Eastern Carolina C(hi-ference facing two critical ECC games that could help decide the Panthers fortunes in 1983.

North Pitt battles Greoie Central toiight and FarmvUle Central Friday. Both games areinBetbd.

The Panthers are 8-3 overall and 24) in the ECC, tied with Ayden4irifton and Farmvllle for Uie top spot. The Rams, who tied the Poithers to the ECC title last year, are 1-9 and H.

Two wins would Itop cemoit North Pitts hold on first. Two

EostemGirolina

Boys Standings

V

Conf.

AU

W L

W

L

North Pitt

2 0

8

3

Ayden^irifton

2 0

7

3

Farmville C.

2 0

7

4

SouthmiNash

0 1

1

8

Greene C.

0 1

1

9

SW Edgecombe

0 2

7

4

C.B. Aycock

0 2

0

10

Girte Standings

Conf.

. AU

W L

W

L

SW Edgecombe

2 0

10

1

Greene C.

1 0

8

2

Southern Nash

1 0

7

2

C.B. Aycock

1 1

8

3

AydeihGrifton

1 1

4

6

North Pitt

6 2

5

7

Farmville C.

0 2

1

U

Coastal Coirftrtfica

Boys Standings

Conf.

AU

W L

W

L

West Craven

9 0

9

1

OmiIm

Hav^

0 0 0 0

8

6

2

4

West Carteret

0 0

4

3

North Lenoir

0 0

4

6

White Oak

0 0

2

7

GirbStaodingB

Conf.

AU

W L

W

L

Conley

0 9

10

1

North Lenoir

0 0

8

2

Havelock

0 0

8

4

West Carteret

0 0

3

4

White Oak

0 0

2

7

West Craven

0 0

1

10

defeats, however, and the Panthers would have little room left for any more losses if they hope to win the ECC crown.

This is a crucial week, North Pitt coach Ccltiby Deans admitted yesterday. Were in for a tough time.

If you lose both, Deans added, I ,d(mt think it would knock you out of it but you put yourself in a position where you must win your remaining games in order to win the thing.

If you win, thats two giant s^ forwai^ toward your goal.

While many are anticipating the early-season showdown between North Pitt and Farmvllle, Deans said the Panthers cannot - will not -overlook the Rams, who Deans said are bdter than their reomi.

I think the kids know who theyve got to play. Greoie Central is good, but theyve played some tough com^i-tion, Deans insisted. Were not going to go into this blind.^

Greene Central, vliich lost its first nine before defeating North Lenoir last Friday, is led by James Thompson with a 13.0 scoring average.

Theyve got a good shooting team. They do a good job getting the ball to their perim-eto shooters, Deans said.

North Pitt goes into the game without senior guard Greg Hines, who hurt his ankle in the Pitt County Christmas Tournament. Hines, the teams No. 2 scorer at 11.6, practicd last night but is not expected to play tonight.

I was hoping hed play some Tuesday night, but I dont think he will now, Deans said. I would think hedplay some Friday.

Keith Clark, a 68 junior, is starting in place (A Hines. Dennis Bradley, a 6-1 senior, leads North Pitt in scoring with a 13.1 average. Forward Charles Harris is averaging 10.3 per game.

While the Panthers are favored over the Rams, the North Pitt-Farmville game is a toss-up. Farmvllle, which has perhaps the best inside duo in Terrance Pettway and Andrew Edwards, has won three straight and four of its last five.

Theyre tremendously strong inside, he said. And theyre accurate from the outside, but I think theyre strength is with those two. Ever^iody who is has big men iitode gives us proUons and theyve got two.

Pettway, uriw has hit double figures in ail but two games this year, leads the Jaguars with a 13.4 average. Edwards is averaging 11.0 a game.

Forward Tony Hargrove, who pulled down a game4iigh 10 rebounds in Fannvilles 70-62 win over Southwest Edgecombe Friday, has sc(Nred in douUe figures the last three games and gives the Jaguars as strong a front line astbereisintbeECC.

In other ECC games Tuesday, Ayden4Jrifton (7-3, 24)) takes a six-game winning streak to Southern Nash (1-8, 0-1) and Farmville Central goes outside the ECC to play host to North Lenoir (4-6,04)).

D.H. Conley (8-2,04)) opois Coastal (Conference play at home, taking on West Carteret (4-3,04)).

In the Northeastern Coi-ference, league-leading Roanoke (8-1, 60) travels to WUliamston (2-7,1-5), which is tied for last.

In the Tobacco Belt Conference, Bear Grass (2-6,1-4) is at Belhaven (3-6, 3-3) and winless JamesviUe (0-8, 0-6) plays host to Manteo in a nonconferoicegame.

Also Tuesday, GreoiviUe Rose (0-1, 04i) ays host to Rocky Mount (61, 04)) and GreenvUle Christian (3-4) travels to Falls Road.

In games Friday in the ECC, Greene Central is at Ayden4irifton. In the OC, the Vikings play host to White Oak whUe GreenvUle Rose travels to Wil8(H) to take on Bed-dingfield.

In the Northeastern Conference, Roanoke Rapids is at Roanoke and WUliamston travels to Washington. In the Tobacco Belt Conference, Mattamuskeet goes to JamesviUe and Cbocowinity at Bear Grass.

WUmington Christian is at GreenvUle (Christian Friday and the Knights then travel to Faith Christian Saturday night.

with 7:51 left in the haU.

WUUams hit a jumper with 4:13 left for a 13-point edge, 28-15, and after two more CampbeU baskets, Edwards made a three-pointer, WiUiams hit again, f(dk)wed by two more baets, (me each by Edwards and Wiiliams for a 37-21 lead at the half.

Early on in the second half, Green upped the lead to 18, 43-25, but the Pirates got cute at that point, and although Campbdl was unable to dent the lead more than four points, never really turned the game into the rout it could have been.

FinaUy, with 2:26 left, Edwards slamed through another dunk for a ^ lead and at 2:02, ECU sent in its bench.

I was reaUy disiqi^ted in the way that last group played, Harrison said after Campbell outscored ECU, nine to two, in that stretch. I (kmt want people to think that theyre the meat squad Uiat they only go in to wipe iq> the floor. Theyre better than that. Theyve worked their butts off in practice and deserve the playing time, and Im disappointed that they didnt play better.

For CampbeU Coach Daimy R(U)erts, it was a case of too much defense ~ both in the first and second halves. The difference in the game was their pressure ddfense, he said. Ive never played a team that was any more aggressive on defense. They jumped on us when we came out of the cjressing rtxnn door, and I had to teU a coUple of them that the game was over when they tried to take us back to the dressing room afterwards.

Edwards Top Rookie

CENTERVILLE, Mass. --East Carolina freshman Johnny Edwards was named Rookie of the Week in tte ECAC-South for the second time this year, it was announced Monday.

Edwards, a 66,226pounder from Charlotte, scored 37 points and added 12 rebounds in two games this wedi.

Edwards pumped in 27 points and piiUed off 11 rebounds in a 84-72 loss to Virginia Tecb. Edwards scored 10 points and one rebound in East Carolinas 4341 upset win over James Madison Saturday.

Edwards leads ECU in scoring (17.9 points per game), rebounding (7.1) and shooting percent^ (58.0%). He also leads ECU in steals with 15.

Edwai*ds finished the game with 17 points whUe Wright had 15 and WUliams had a careo* high 10. SmiUi was the only Camel in double figures with 19.

The Pirates, now 65, return home on Wednesday to face WUliam & Mary in a key ECAC-SouU) game.

EMtCraliiit(C7)

MPFGFT RbFAP Green    37    M    24    4    1    1    4

Brown    S    1-2    64    0    6    5    4

Edwards    S3 1-12 M SOS 17

Robinson    SO    1-1    l-S    0    1    3    3

Wrisht    S5    4-7    7-7    5    2    1    15

Gilchrist    2    04    04    0    1    0    0

Vandertnnt    U    M    64    0    I    O    2

Foi    264640000

WUUams    12    44    2-2    2    0    1    10

McLeod    5    M    ^2    0    1    l    4

PMrtree    14    34    64    0    1    0    I

Harris    S    64    64    1    3    0    0

Rekheneker    2    64    64    0    o    0    0

Team    i

TWab    IN 2M5 1540 23 11 17 17

(bm|Ml(S4)

19 1-2    04    1    1    1    2

24 24    2-2    4    4    3    0

17 14    64    1    3    0    2

32 l-lf    34    4    4    2    19

34 3-10    64    1    3    3    6

i 14    64

04 64 64 14 1)4

GrlOln Caimady

Blhaiim

Smith

Austin

WiUlams

Spain

Vudy

Parker

Whitted

Nash

Team

Totab

EtetCaroUu

0 10 3 0 0 3 0 3 0 14 110 4 1117 10 0 3 3

290 3446 M 29 U 14 M

.............37    29    -17

21    22-M

8 O-I 7 14 21 M 19 34

2 1-1

Turnoven:G(^I8,(^lS.

Technical (oubiNooe.

Attendance; 2,154.

VikesFall To Fourth

KANNAPOLIS - D.H. Conley has dropped from second to fourth in the latest high school wrestling rankings.

Conley, 61, traU No. 1 Cary and two other schools in the latest rankings of high school teams, released this weekend by Mat News.

Brevard is ranked second and ThomasvUIe third.

The Vikings wUI put their No.4 ranking on the line tomorrow in Morehead City vKhen they meet seventh-ranked West Carteret in a crucial Ctoastal Conference match.

Completing the top 10, Northern Durham is fifth (oUowed by Sanderson, West Carteret, South Rowan, Tuscola and Southern Guilford.

The seomd 10 includes: WUson Beddingfleld at No. 11 followed by Cape Fear, Statesville, St. Stephens, Morsanton Freedom, Havelock, Davie County, Hickory, Durham Jordan and Westover and Hilbriten tied for 20th.

luir S SHOE REPAIR

QUALITY SHOE RERARINQ

111 Orand Avs.. Fhont 7M-122I

OpuWliltoiW

Mon.-Trt.M

DISC BLADES

Sauara

2rxii/ni/4te $12.12

Round

Mx11/4 Round Axl*.....$8.27

tr'xl 1/4 Round Axte.... $10.96

-Farm Bureau Producta-PtowShimt-WlngS'Baldr Twine

Eastern Tractor & Equipment Co.

218W.QreemMtBM.*796Z7N Open7:30AMuirtN9PMMon.-Frl.

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AeroM From Airport On N. Memortei Dr.

2 Badroom, 14 Wide - 8,495.00

3 Bedroom, 14 WMe -11,995.00 DouMewide, 1,130 >q. ft. - 16,995.00

All Houses 10% Over Cost

ECU ..William & Maiy

Jan. 12 - 7:30 P.M. - Minees Collaeum

The Gills of ECU Night

From the 1982*83 Color Calendar Antograplis & Pictures 6:30*7:30 P.M.* Prizes To Be Given Away*

Watch the Pirates attack.





Tigers Lack Experience As They Struggle Through Early SeasonMemphis State Moves To Top For What May Be Brief Stay

ByRICKSCOPPE Reflector Sports Writer WILLIAMSTON -Williamston, without a returning letterman, has had its troubles this year. After splitting their first four games, the Tigers have dn^ped five straight.

Williamston could be headed for a long year, but first-year coach Vann Pinell refiKes to give up.

Were getting betta* every game, Pennell said. I really feel like we can win. Honest. WUliamsti will try to do just that tonight when the Tigers face Northeastern Conference leader Roanoke Umi^t at home. Williamston comes into the game with just <xie win in six league outings.

I fed like we can compete, Pennell said, if we can just keep improving on the

small things.

The key to it is playing time, he said. We dont have one lettoman this year. Its just taking smne time for the kids to fed crnnfortaUe on the court. Weve lost a lot of close games but I think the kids can see that were getting better.

Having to adjust to a new coach pd the Tigers behind at the start.

Williamston Girls Are Lacking In Talent

ByRICKSCOPPE Reflector ^wrts Writer WILLIAMSTON -Williamston is short on talmt this year, but coach Peggy Taylor said her Lacfy TigCTs wont be caught ^rt on desire (r hustle not if she has anything to say about it.

Were just tr^g to hold our own, but we ar not going to give up, Taylor said. Were going to out there and fight.

The Lady Tigers lost their first three games but have since won three of tteir last six and are 3-6 overall ami 3-3 in the Northeastern Conference going into tonights f game against Roanoke.

We dont have the super f talent this year, Taylor said.

Theyre good kids but we just . dont have the talent it takes.

; Were just struggling and - trying to rebuild.

Wiamston returns two se-. nior starters - the only se

niors on a squad that has three treshman and two sophomores.

Back are 5-7 forward/guard Lynne Sanders and 5-6 forward Lynn Mills, who leads the squad in scoring with an 8.0 average. Also stating are 5-7 sophomore Sonya Purvis, 5-9 junior forward Timberly Rodgers ami 5^ junior crater Kim Floyd, a tranfer frwn Plymouth.

The starting unit is small no player is over 5-9 - and the four reserves are even smaller - and th^ are all first-year players, three of whom are frrhman. Sofdio-more Re^dna Rodgersra (B-3, guard) heads the group. The three freshman are S-8 forward/center Lisa Little, 5-3 guard Beth Gardner and 54 guard Jan Mills, sister of starter Lynn Mills.

Were mighty smaU and U we get into foul trouble we dont have any depth, which

has made some of the see playing time before theyre ready, ^ said. Bertie (a 4741 victory) was our best game. Hie rest of the games we havrat shown much. Taylor said it the problem irat in her team not working bard. They do.

They go get it, Taylor said. Its just that (HI the floor we sometimes forget our fundamentals. They tend to forget what to do and dont execute at all.

Particularly on defense. Defrase is one of our most inconsistent things. It really has been pitiful.

As for the conference race, Taylor said Tarboro is the best by far. Tarboro sIXHild be the lea^ winner this year, she said. Right now, I think they should take anybody we have.

Plymouths got some speed and iey could give Uwm some problems.

It was a big adlju^mrat for the kids and me, Pennell said. Ive [dayed basketball all my life, but (caching is a bigdifferrace.

I guess I can say Ive blown a few games but they know Im to learn. Theyve bera patirat with me and were getting better.

Pennefl saki the Tigers prime problem is that they are falling behind too far behind too early.

SaidPenneU; Were falling behind by 15 or 16 points; tbra we come tock and get within four or five, but we always end ^ falling slxHt. Theyre hanging in there, though, and they believe they can win.

Under Pennell, Williamston has 10 players who are considered starters, four of whom form the nucleus for Williamston. Those four are: senior forwards Maurice Carter (64) and Roosevelt Everette (5-11), s(^more center David Little (6-2) and junior guard Donnell Griffin" (5-10).

Little leads Williamston in scoring with a 14.0 average.

Forward/guard Larry Brown, a 64 junior, is just behind those four. Others who have started <ht sera extensive playing time include: guards Mike Peele, (5-10, junior) and Tony Speller (54, senior) and junior forwards James Ward (64) and Craig Brown (6-1).

Others on the team are: forwards Quinton Hudgins (64, senior), Rodney C4nnor (6-1, junior) and Keith Perry (5-10, junior), guard Eric Daniels (5-7, senior) and center Joe Williams (6-2>/fe, senior).

We can go at lea^ 10 deep

By The Associated Press

For the third time this season, theres a new No. 1 team in college basketball: Memphis State.

The Tigers, No. 2 last week, siqiplaided Iixfiana today in the nationwide voting by ^rts writers and broadcasters aftra the Hoosiers were upset over the weekend by Ohio State 7047.

Memphis State recoved 42 of the 60 first^ace ballots and 1,164 p(nts from the votos, made their selection based on last weeks results when the Tigers roided the

and really dont lose a lot, Penndl said. I think this has been good. Everybodys playing and theyre all con-trilNiting. We dont have any one dominate player.

The thing that is hurting IK is our height, Pennell added. Its kilU^ us. We arent getting beat that bad on the boards but were falling behind and getting into foul trouble.

On offense, Williamsh is running a contndled fast break on offrase and tx^ a man-to-man and zone (2-3 and 1-3-1) (Ml defense.

Both have taken time to learn. Said Pranell: (On offense) weve bad to find out what style we could play. We try to be patient and very controlled. We dont have any pure shooters.

Defensively, Pennell said: One of our advantages is (Mir quickness. That has our defense. Our defense is our man-to-man, but weve gotten into foul

University of Baltimore 103-57 and St. Louis University 7844 to improve their record to 114. Monday nights 6946 upset by Virginia Tech was not taken into coosideratk.

The Tigers held a 54i)oint margin for first place over Virginia, No. 2 this week with 13 first-place votes and 1,110 points. The Cavaliers, No. 1 until they were upset by tiny Chaminade of Itewaii last month, moved up two spots in this weeks voting.

Virginia, ll-l, whipped Blaryland 8344 last week, but has a tough week ahead with agiinst two other Top teams-No. 11 North Carolina and No. 19 North Carolina State.

St. Johns, 134, holds down

No. 3 this wedi - the highest ranking in the sdMxds history. The New York school was awarded three votes f(Nr first piara and 1,028 points.

AP RonkinQS

ByAaodatcdPTMi The Top Tweotv teams lo the Associated Trms eoSefls bmfcetbaU poU, with flmt-Dlace votes in pareotbMn, records aodMal poinU. PohsU baaed <n 2tt-191t-17-lt-lS14-13-12-ll-10

-6-7-6*44-2-l:

l.M^St.(42) .

11-1

1,164

LVbtaa(U).....

3.SLJtaa(3).....

.U-1

,134

Lite

1,036

4.IndiaBa (2).......

10-1

164

5.UCLA............

. 9-1

OK

SKentucky.........

.11-2

867

7.Arkaoaai.........

.114

714

O.Nevada-Laa Vegaa. 12-0

734

OLouiaville... ..

11-2

(50

10.Alabuna.........

. 9-2

804

llJtorth(toroitoa...

.163

m

12.I0WI.............

. 9-2

511

13.Syracuae.........

MMtoaouri..........

11-2

10-2

411

403

IS.VUlanova.........

. 0-2

385

ISHouitoa..........

.11-2

3U

n.MtoneaoU.......

.10-1

3K

U.Teniwaaee........

10-2

234

18J4.C. Stale .

. 7-1

iw

30.0hk) State........

33

a

UPl Rankings

NEW Y(HIK(UPI)-The United Press Inteniatinial Board of Coaita Top 2D co^ tafcetbaU ratines (Hnt^ votes and records through Jan. 9 in

S52

ss

527

456

442

316

271

231

209

174

155

139

126

127

123

101

95

75

23

22

MemptoSt.(2t).......(114)

tVto|tala(14).........(IH)

3.a.Johns(l ).........(134)

4. Indiana..............(lo-i)

5. UCLA.................(t-i)

6.Ktucky(l).. :......(.2)

Z     DM)-

S.Lmtaille............(ii-2>

9. Nevada-Las Vgs.......(124)

10. Alabama...    (9-2)

!l.^CaroUna........(104)

12-Iowa.................(M)

13. Houston.............(10-2)

..(IM)

16. Minnnota ! i ]!!!'.!!!(10-1)

n.ViUanova............(7-2)

U.Tenoesaee...........(9-2)

tt.^(taUaa8t.......(7-2)

30. nihiQisst............(lo-i)

u. Syracuse! 15.]ltaouri.

Junior High Basketball

Note: By agra^t with the National Asmiato of Baskethall Coaches of the United Sates, teams on pratetioo by the NCAA and ineiigibie tor the NCAA Tournament are inelble tor Top 20 and nati^ tanmiooeh^consideration by the UPl Board of Coaches. Those su^ lin for the 198243 season are. OUahoma City, St. Louis and Wicbito State.

trouble bad to go to the zone.

Formviil*.....'....45

Wwllcome 43

FARMVICLE - Farmvflle Middle Schofd won a pair of junior high school games from Wellcome Middle School yesterday.

Farmville wtm the boys game, 4543. Kenny Williams led Farmville with 13 points while Gary Moore picked up 10. Wellcome was paced Russell Williams with 15 and Jerry McKeel with 13.

In the girls game, Farmville took a 27-17 victfM^. Laura Lang had ei^t to lead the winners, while Wellcome was led by Tammy Beacham with seven.

Bwtkel  .........42

Chicod...........30

CHICOD - Bethel Middle School rolled to a 62-30 junior hi^ school victory over Chicod yraterday.

Paul Blow led Bethel with 16 points while Jarvis Massen-burg added 12. Otis Brinkley hadl6toleadOiicod.

Chicods girls rolled up a 174 win over Bethel. Teresa Stancill led Qiicod with nine points.

Chicods boys are 0-2 while the girls are 24. Bethels boys are 24 and the giris are 0-2.

SCOREBOARD

Bowilng

i BurrouglisWdlcoiiie    W    L

{, Aims Anflels..........35    25

.-Carolina Cowboys 34    28

;E.T....................34    28

[ Themtos..........;..33

I HHodm............33

Unicom rW..........30

WashI

Green

NFC

.SaturdaysGuiMs inghm31,Dwt>lt7 1 Bay 41, St. Louis M

TANK HFNAMARA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

Sundays Oi

Dallas 30, Tampa' Bay 17 MlmwH>U90,MaiitaM

, Ebonylvery...........30

StrikePorce...........25

! Pin Wreckers .....24

I LollyPops.............22

( Mens high series - James ' Manning, 588; Mens high aame -; Johnny Edwards, 231. Womens ' high series & game Sandy Harrison, 531 & 205.

RocBotkotboll

ADivisk

Cherrys...............33    41-74

Rockers...............53    39-92

Leading scorers: C Terry SbelhHi , Richard Heller 10; R Mike Underwood David Wooten 23.

'ECFP.................14    17-31

Hooker................28    5371

Leading scorers; E Pat Baker 14, Mark PhlUips 7; H - Dennis Whit 21, Calvin Kirven 20.

AADMaton

Coke..................43    43-88

BobsTV..............29    32-81

Leading scorers: C Craig Smith 21, Bob Cot^ 18; B - (^ Rackley 14, Butch Talbot 14.

Second Roaid AFC

Raiders (1), 4p.m. i

WBta,Jan.U San Dtogo (sTanUaml (3). 13:30 p.m. NFC Saturday, Jan. IS Minnesota (4) Washington (I), 12:30 p.m.

Sunday, Jan. 16 Green Bay (3)atDaUaa (3), 4 p.m.

CONFERENCE CHAMP10NaP GAMES (WinnenolJan.lS-Mi athonwoLhlMMatrmatahiaaedi)

.Jan. 23

PCMH.................44    51-95

Empire Brush.........28    82-80

scorers: P James Dwaln Clemens 18; E (Cobb 29, James Tyson 14.

Taff...................29    24-53

Grady White...........20    29-A9

Leading scorers; T Dallas Pugh 14, MilUm aemons 14: G -Frank ftown 18, Sylvester Cheny 8.

Integon................22    37-59

Fergusmn   M    32-54

Leading scorers: I    Tony

Gatlin, Ken Stallings 10; F - Stuart Halthcock 20, Danny Hinds 14.

PeeWeeDivisk

Terrmins........5 8 8 8 0-27

Blue Devils... ...4 4 11 8 2-29 LeadliM scorers: T Walt Clark 8, Jimmy Lee 8; B - Chris Warren 10, Jonathan Powers 9.

SUPER BOWL XVU Suu Jan. 30, Paaadena Roae Bowl, 6 p.m.EST

AFC VI. NFC cbamphMn, tor Vlnce Lombardi Trophy

niOBOWL SuOm Feb. I, Honolulu AFC AlLStan VI. NFC AH-Stan

NBAStondifigt

EASTERN OONFBRENCB AUanUeDivWiB

W LPct. PhUadeipUa    27    5

BoMon    26    8

NewJeraay    22    U

Wamington    17    18

NewYorfc    12    22

^ OntralDhMon Milwaukee    14    12

AUanU    17    17

Detroit    II    20

Indiana    13    21

gucago    11    22

aevland    s    21

NHlStondinfls

OB .844 -.785 3 .639 Vk

.516 lOH .353 16

Walea Conference PaMckDhrWon W L    T    GF    GA

PhUaddphia 36    13    5    181    133

NY IsiM 21    16    7    156    134

Waablngton 19    12    11    180    148

NYRai^ 22    16    4    175    147

Pittsburgh 12    34    6    135    189

NewJeney 9    38    9    124    186

AdumDtvtilon Boston 25    16    7    178    120

Montreal 22    12    I    193    148

Buffalo 18    14    9    188    140

U U    6    180    185

10 r    5    141    305

(toebec

Hartford

.567 -.500 .474 7 .314 10(4 .333 im .151 17H

Kansas aty San Antonio Denver Dallas Utah Houston

LosAngeies Seattle Phoenli Portland Golden SUte San Diego

TOSTERNOONFIRENCE JOdwMt OiyWn

10 13

22 14 IS 20

13 30

14 33 S 18

PaeMcDivlilan 27 7

23 13 12 15 22 IS

15 18 I V

.825 -.611 -.444 8

.3M 74 .378 84 .147 16

.294 -.667 44 .566 64 .966 64 .411 124 229 194

Chicago MinneioU St. Louis Detroit Toronto

Edmonton

Winnipeg

Calgary

Vancouver

(tanbaU OonfHunee Nonto

DlvMoo    10    6    111    142

21    13    9    177    156

14    34    6    153    172

10    23    11    135    188

10    21    6    146    110

SmytbaDlvtalon 33    13    8    225    173

18    19    4    164    173

16    21    7    176    182

14    1    9    151    158

New

Mondays Ohmb No games staSded

TtadaysOamss

Los Angta St New Jersey OukiiMateatNewYorfc PhiladeipliiaatAtlanU Phoenix at CbicagB SanDlenoatHoudan Dallaa at San Antonio Kansas aiy at Utah Denver at Seattle

LosAngdes 14 31 S 135 170    I Game

rsbamei

Los Angdes at Wuhtogtou Hartford at Montreal Wnnipeg at New York Islanders Edmonton at St . Louis

WeihMSdays Games MtamesoU at Pittsburd)

Quebec at Buffalo Winnta at New York Rangers Boston at Toronto Edmonton at CJdcago (tolgary at Vancouver

Pto

57

49

49

48

30

27

57

52

47

42

25

HOCKEY National Hockay Leagw PHILADELPHIA n.YERS-Traded Rick St. Croix, godtender, to Toronto for Michd Laitaiue, goallender.

CollBgB Boikftboll

EAST

DrexdOS, Ramapo53 Duiiuesne94,PettiSt.82 FalrmaatSt. 61, Winding W Fordbam62,Aray47 Georgetown 97, Syracuae 93 Harvard 75, St. Anidm 67 Ufayette 3, Colgate 36, or Peim88,JohinHopUns42 Robert MorrlaasrVaimontSB Rutgert8l,Ldiigb88

SOUTH

MIDWESr

Detroit 73, YoungstownSt. 72 Evansville 81, V^aralso 88

SW Missouri 62, Arkamas St. 80 WicMUSt.72(!oradoSt.48

SOUTHWEST

63

Southern Metboditt 57, Rice S3 Southern U. 74, Pralrte View 62 Stephen F. Aintto 75, E. Texna Baptist

Texas Southern 8^ Alabama St. 71 Texas Wesl^an 79. Texat-Aitagoa 77 FARWBST Cal-Irvine90,Partland74 Cent. WasM^ 76, Puget Soundll (totoradoK,C^CdB!77 Great Falla 73, CanroU, Mont. 42 N. Arixona e. Grand Caayoo 47 Rocky Mountain IS. Montana Tacha SanU Clan 81, Lo Beach St. 79, OT UCLA87,Ariiflilii9! Whitww1hR,Sedtle61

SeidMdLov^^YmiWM^^^IIt

B.s Island Seafood

Open: Sunday Thru Thursday 5-9:30 Friday ft Saturday 5-10 - Closed Monday

Serving the flneet eelectiona from the sea prepared Tsland etyle. Raw. steamed, and broUed to your delifdit.

Tuesdav-Ovster Night

Steamed or    og%    /

Hall-Shelled Oysters.......... 3    /    do*.

SI?

Broiled Oysters............... dwDU

Large Oyster Platters.....

6.95

Akron 63, MhMleTenn. Alcorn % a, Miss. Vi

St. 56 AST 67

DdawanSt. 61, N. Carodna A East (torollna 67, CampbeU 54 E. Temnsaee St. 57!citadd 54 Florida AAM 79, Md.-B. ax>re74 Geo^5S,MladadppiS3 Ga. Southeni74, Hai&-SimmoMM

New Orieani 12, Cameron K NkhoUsSt. TXGrambUng Norfolk St. 79, J.clmithV South Carolina 75, Loyol% Md. a Tenneaaee 59, LoidalaaaSt. 56 Tennesaee St. 72, Jackson St. 53 Troy St. 96, Ddto St. 77 Virginia Techa, IfemphisSt. 36

Texaa-El Paao S3, Texa8an Antonio 50

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Retreads 00

Tramodioni

ii

i

il

4

3

X

*

6

Pirates  ......2 2

WUfteate ......2 8

LeacUng scorers: W (}a^e8, EKw Johnson 7.

0 2-6 6 4-20 Matthew

Midget Dlvtakm

Pirates................14    16-30

WUdcata............... 2    10-12

Leading scorers; P.- Neiaon Galloway 12, Jeff Ukosar 8; W -Jonathan West 5, Tommy Baker S.

GotdrniSUIeatl MUwaukee at PhUaddphia Chicago at Cleveland Waahtoipon at Detroit New Jersey at Indiana San Diego at Dallas San Antonio at Kansas City Utah at Denver

BASKETBALL Ndiood Bndtdbatt Aindatton

WASHINGTON BULLETS-Placed Don CoUlns, guard, on the Inlured list. Slmwd Cbubt^ Cox, guard, to a lOday contract.

FOOTBALL NOIoad FootfaeB League

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES--Announced the resignation of Dick VmneU head coach; named Marion Canqrbell bead coach.

Senior Dtviak

Deacons...............22    20-42

plMtes.............. IS    2439

Leading scorers: b - Anthony PhiiB 13, Craig Duprees 9; P -Tony Daniels 10, Gr^aft 7.

Tarheds  ........27    21-48

WUdcata...............26    16-42

Leading scorers: T Ed Frasier 18, BlUy Michel 11; W - Mike Kialeyl6,TrayePugua9.

Wolfpack..............20    22-42

BlueDevUs............22    18-38

Leading scorers; W Mm 8, Paul Boioi 8; B - Eric 12, Mike Taylor 8.

NHPMHt

ArTIbmiBST (Beiangi fc Fmalhime)

The top e^ warns to each contorsMe arc seededTto I tor the duratton of the ijtoj^fa 1^ wofrtoal pmtangaa and

FMRmmI

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Los

SataidayiGaaw tos Rakton 17raiwland 16 l,NewEMludl3 SundmOamw kJWi44,Ctnctooal

lOaam

New York Jds4<CtnctoiMti 17 SMOtadH.PIttsbotpi

Haw You Missed Your Daiiy Reflector?

First Call Your Independent Carrier.

If You Are Unable To Reach Him Cali The Dally Reflector

752-3952

Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 6 Til 0 A.M. On Sundays.

NOTICE

For

SIZES:

TAKE NOTICE that tha Pitt County Board of CommisakMiars will of far for rantal on Monday, January 17.1M3 2:00 p.m.

Pin COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS ROOM ON SECOND FLOOR OF Pin COUNTY OFFICE BUILDING 1717 WoBt Fifth Stroat QreanvNlo. N.C. 27034 tho following:

1. Tho Pitt County Farm: 12.1 acres; 5 acras back of QroonvMo Nursing Homo; 2.10 acres of coUon, and 4.6 acrosof wheat 14.2 aorta of doarod land adjoining PHI CommunHy CoNogo on which com may bo plantod wM bo includod in wtth tho high bid at tho tamo biddod per acra prica should it be datarminod not to ba uaad during 1983 by Pitt Community CoNogt. Tho dotormination of uaa wNI bo made and tho appropriate biddor notlfiad prior to March 1.1H3. Tho high bidder that rants tha property wW ba raaponalbla for leaving the land in luat at good condition at H was at tho beginning of ttio latao wfth dttchbanks mowed, adding lima and fertilizar as naadad. and atalka cut with the land disc harrowed.

2.30,015 pounds of tobacco to ba offered for rantal in percate of 4,000 pounds. PHt County wW pay tho 7* por pound foo roquirad by tha No Coat Tobacco Prog^ whan quotaa are moved off tha land.

NOTE: Tha land wRI ba auctionad firat In erdar for tho high biddor of tho farmland to obtain any portion of tho tobacco quota and uao H on the County tend if thoy so

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I This premium computerized retread is warranted against failure due to workmanship and matarial. FULL FREE REPLACEMENT for first 20% of I tread wear. Prorated adjustabla afterwards.

The Pitt County Board of Commiaaionira raadrvos tho right to rajoct any or aH bMa and wafvo any in-formaWiotinthobid.

This tha 7th day of January, 1983.

PITT COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS

By: Charioa P. Qaaklns

Chairman

3012 Memorial Drive Phone 355-2400!

OREENVnXE

NEARPARKEirS

BAR-BE-QUE

OPEN NON.-FRI. 7 JO-S JO OPEN SAT. 7J0-2.ee





Hie Dally Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.-Tuewlay, Januwy il, 1963-

Ex-Charlie's Angelin Convincing Role

ABC PRESIDENT - Frederick S. Pierce, right, was elated by American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. Board of Directors Monday to succeed Elton H. Rule, left, as the companys president and chief operating officer. The board, SL? ^ *PPtated Rule, president of ABC since 1972, op(Mnte vice chairman. The amouncemmit was made by Uonard H. Goldenson, center, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of ABC. (APLasaphoto)

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1983 Tribune Company Syndicate. Inc

DONT GUESS OR FINESSE

North-South vulnerable. , West deals.

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The bidding:

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Opening lead: Six of 0.

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ByTOMJORY Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) -Miners lamp and grimy overalls might seem unlikely garb for Cheryl Ladd, but the former star of Charlies Angels is convincing nonetheless as Maggie Telfwd, who takes a job diggmg coal when her ailing father is fenced out of work.

Kentucky Woman, tonight on CBS, is sensitive and appealing drama that pays tribute in the process to those noble men and women who spend ieir working lives deep underground.

Walter Doniger, who re

searched, wrote, produced and directed the two4iour, made-for-TV movie that was shot on location in eastern Kentucky, has csqihired a mountain ambience that is refreshin^y devoid of clkfae;

Guvment?Maggies father, played by Ned Beatty, asks in obvious wonda whoi Ward Elkins shows igi from the federal Labor Department to help his daughter get a job in the mines. Womens movement?

Luke Telford is 53, two years away from his $126-a-month pension, vriien Doc Bartholomew tells him what the company physician

wouldnl. Tiie only way youre gonna get the company doctor to say you got the black lung, Luke tells Ma^, is when be does an autopsy on yon.

Maggies got a job, at Ouulies Chkdcen in town, but what she makes there, including the nkkd tips, wont be enough to supp^ herself, Luke, and her fatherless son, Antfy. Shell take Lukes place in the mines.

Luke and Andy arent the only ones against that plan. Varney, the mine sg)erin-tendent, already has one woman. Loma Whateley, on the job, and hes not about to

Grammy Contenders Will Get Word Tonight

hire another. Hes got all sorts of reasons.

Youre too pretty to work in a mine, he protests. Youd be takina mans job. ... What you need is a husband. ... Miners are superstitious about a woman in a mine.

It looks hopeless until Elkins puts the stpieeze (hi the rductant Varney and Maggie is hired. Not my lunch bucket, Luke complains as his daughter-is about to leave for work. I worked with those men for years. I can hear em laughin.

Maggie is harassed inside the mine and out. Shes attacked (me day by Spinner Lynnbaugh, the one truly evil ' character in the film, and is bumped from the church choir by the perspiring, weak-kneed Rev, Paltetater, whos been pressured by Varneys wife.

Whatd I ever do to them? she asks Luke one day after work.

SUrie somethin from em, I guess, Luke replies. "... What makes em go down in that mine every day.... Then you, ordinary woman, goes down there withem.

But her real trouUes start when she accuses Spinner of smoking in the mine, and is fired when she cant prove her charge.

Kentucky Woman is without flaws. The story develops in fits and starts, and Miss Ladd, who grew up in Huron, S.D., often seems to force her Kentucky drawl.

But Beatty is near-perfect in his seemingly effortless portrayal of Luke Telford, and the rest of the cast is good - Philip Levien as Elkins. Sandy McPeak as Varney, Lewis Smith as Spinner and Peter Wella as MasKies boss down below.

Deke'CuUover.

And writer-producer-director Doniar 1ms Included scenes^! igipear to add little m<me than humanity to the film. In one, Maggie invites Elkins to Sunday dinner at her Uncle BiUys, and the guvment man offers to bdp Aimt Minnifa serve the meal. Hes told that the men will eat first, and the women later. Indeed, there are only enough seats at the table for the men.

Billy: "Sit down, Mr. Ward. Women dont need no help. They do it evry Sunday.

Luke: He aint from these parts, Billy.

Ward: Boston.

Billy: Boston? How do they do it there?

Ward: On Sundays, we would all eat bother.

Billy (after some tiMUght): Weil, lets get them other chairs.

COUPON CO UPON COUPOI

Two players from the Washington D.C. area. Kit Woolsey and Ed Manfield. distinguished themselves on the team that finished second af the recent World Olym piad held in Birritz, France. Here's your chance to savor the technique of Woolsey. author of an excellent book on partnership defense.

Wests no trump overcall showed a two-suited hand, and Easts two clubs was an attempt to locate a suit fit. North-South might have doubled profitably at the two-level, but at this vulnerability it is not surprising that South preferred to look for game.

West led his fourth-best diamond against South's three no trump contract. East won the ace and returned the suit, and West made a good defensive play when he allowed dummys queen to win the second trick. It now seemed that declarer would either have to bring in the whole club suit or else score three heart tricks to land his game. Since he could not afford to lose a trick without having the defenders cash enough diamond tricks to defeat him, the percentage play for declarer is to take the heart finesse. If you look at the diagram, you can see that the finesse is due to fail.

Woolsey tackled the hand in a different, and most elegant way. At trick three he finessed the jack of clubs and then exited with a diamond! West was faced with the choice of cashing his diamonds now or never, since he had no outside entry. So he elected to take his tricks, and his partner began to feel the pinch.

For the moment. East sluf-fed two spades while dqplar-er parted with two hearts. West exited with a spade, won by the queen in the clos ed hand. Declarer cashed the ace of clubs, followed by dummy's top spades.

East had to hold onto his king of clubs, so he was forced to pitch two hearts. However, declarer had a

ByYARDENAARAR Associated Press Writer BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) Preparations for Grammys silver anniversary celebration ^ into high gear today with the announcement of contenders for 62 National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences awards.

While record sales are slumping, Grammy presentations continue a tradition of expanding. There are more than twice as many categories as in 1958, when the first Grammy awards were given to 28 winners.

This year there is only one new addition: the bat traditional blues recording category. Previously such records were including in the best ethnic and traditional category, but blues recordings so dominated the classification that it was separated this year.

Winners will be announced Feb. 23 in a gala 25th anniversary telecast on CBS.

This years Grammy

awards show will be longer than ever a full three prime-time hours. But oniy about a dozen winners will be announced on camera during the telecast, which will feature John Denver as host aiKl tributes to Grammy winners of the past as well as clips from previous awards telecasts.

The rest of the awards will be presented in pre-teleca^ ceremonies at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles:

Behind Wheel Of General Lee

Actor Tells Of Booze, Drugs

LONDON (AP) Movie and stage actor Richard Harris says that at the height of his bout with^nk he was downing two tx^flps of vodka a day and also using cocaine.

Harris, now starring in a stage revivai of Camelot, said in an interview with Womens Own magazine published today that he managed to drop drinking by filling the house with alcc^l and there was vodka in every room - even the bathroom. Hie temptation was huge but I didnt toah a drop.

Harris, 52, also said that after two marriages which both ended in divorce, I feel I am entering a new stage of my life. Now I want to be al(Hie. I wouid be most astounded if there were to be a third Mrs. Harris.

While drinking, he also used between 5 and 8 grams of cocaine every day, Harris said.

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Not every 10-year-old gets a chance to sit behind the wheel of the car featured in Dukes of Hazzard, tnit it helps to be the son of a Saudi prince, Hazloul Bin Ab-dulaziz.

Hie 10-year-old boy, who has the same name as his father, sat in the General Lee on Monday after watching the filming of a scene with a fight between Boss Hogg and Sheriff Rosco. Later, the boss, Sorrell Booke, gave the boy his hat and a cigar. The sheriff, Jimmy Best, also gave him a cigar.

Publicist Mike Casey said there were two reasons why the boy wanted to acc(Mnpa-ny his father to the United States: to see the television series being made and to visit Disneyland.

The prince, who is in this country on businos, was accompanied by bodyguards, an interpreter, a teacher, two other businessmen and six of his 12 wives, Casey said.

complete count of the distri bution. Since both opponents were known to be down to two hearts, he simply cashed the ace and king of hearts to drop the queen, and the jack was his fulfilling trick.

CORPORATE GIFTS TO OPERA COMPANIES NEW YORK (AP) - Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. will help to underwrite the Metropolitan Operas spring tour with a gift of $300,000. This is the second year in which the Financial services firm has made this gift.

Exxon Corp. has contributed $60,000 to the Washington Opera to underwrite j^ormances of the companys production of The Turn of the Screw. The gift is part of the (^ras three-year, fund-raising campaign, The Challenge to Greatness.

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Nominations for most categories are determined by balloting of the record academys 5,000 members in seven chapter cities. Categories Are divided into 14 fields, but each member can only vote in up to nine fields in which they consider themselves qualified.

In certain craft categories the nominees are voted on by national committees of experts in the craft.

Winners all are determined by voting of academy members. In both the nominating and final balloting, all members vote in the top four catetes of album, record and song of the year and best new artist.

The rest of the categories - including the crafts - are divided in 22 fields, and individual members are allowed to cast ballots for categories in up to 10 of those fields.

TV Log

For complMtM TV progrwnmlng in-tonMtkMi, oonnull your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sundayo DMIy Rofloetor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

Tuesday

7:00 JokwtWlld 7:30 TicTk Dough 8:00 WaltDlsnty 9:00 Movie 11:00 NevYS*

11:30 LatcMovIo WEDNESDAY 5:00 JImBakktr 0:00 Carolina 8:00 AAornlng 8:25 News 9:35 Navn 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Child's Play

11.00 Pricali 13:00 News9 13:30 Youngand 1:30 At The World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Light 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hlllblllias 5:30 AndyGrlftlth A:0O N0WS9 A:30 Newt 7:00 Basketball 9:00 Baskatball 11:00 Ntwrs9 11:30 Movia

T PLITT

, THEATRIS

PLITT

WHN.TV-Ch.7

Peace Prize To Attenborough

ATLANTA (AP) - Pro-ducer-director Richard Attenborough, who brought Gandhi to the movie screen, has been named co-winner of the 1983 Martin Luther King Jr. Nonviolent Peace Prize.

Coretta Scott King, widow of the slain civil ri^ts leader, said Attenborough demonstrated determination and courage in his 20-year struggle to bring to the screen the life of Mahatma Gandhi, the man whose (dii-l^hy probably was the sin^e most influential element in shaping my husbands belief in non-violwice.

Tlie co-winner of the prize, announced Monday, is Kings father, the'Rev. Martin Luther King Sr.

The annual prize fiH* outstanding work and commitment to the ideals of peace and non-violence is the highest award given by the Martin Luther King Center for Nonviolent Social Change, of which Mrs. King is president. It will be presented to the two men on Saturday.

Attenborough is the first European and first filmmaker to receive the awaid.

TUESDAY 7:00 Jfffftrson 7:30 Family pRud 8:00 F.AAurphy 9:00 Gavllan < 10.00 St. ElsevYhwe 11:00 Nawt 1|:30 Ntwl 13:30 Ltlltrman 1:30 Ovarlgtit 2:30 Ntwl WEDNESDAY 5:30 Addamt 8:00 Almattac 7:00 Today 7:35 Naw*

7:30 Today 8:35 Ntvn 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmon 9:30 Muppati 10:00 FacttOf Lila 10:30 Salaoftha

11:00 WKaalof 11:30 Hit Man 13:00 Ntwt I2:X SoarcbFor 1:00 DaytOfOur 2:00 Anottwr WId. 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Alllntba 4:30 Dark Shadovn 5:00 LHtlaHouM 6:00 NavY* a:30 NBC Ntwt 7:00 Jaffarton 7:30 Family Faud 8:00 Raal Paopla

9:00 FacttOf LIfa 9:30 FamilyTIat 10:00 Quincy 11:00 Nawt 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Lattarman 1:30 Ovarnlght 2:30 Nawt

WCTi-fV-Ch.12

10:00 Romance 10:30 Lavtrna 11:00 LovaBoat 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan'tHopt 1. 00 My Children 2:00 One Life 3:00 Gan. Hoapltal 4.00 Carnival 4:30 BJ/LOBO

TUESDAY 7:00 3'ttompany 7;30 Alice 8:00 Happy Days 8:30 Lavarna 9:00 3'tCompany 9:30 9to5 10:00 Hart to Hart 11:00 ActlonNawt 11:30 NIghtline

12:00 Movia    Pwviie'*

5:00 AG Day 5:30 J. Swaggart 8:00 Stratch

7:00 Good Morning f : Fail Guy 8:25 Action Nawt |0:00 Dynaity 8:55 AcllonNawt 11:00 ActlonNawt 7:25 ActlonNawt 11:30 ABCNawt 8:25 ActlonNawt 12:00 Movia 9:00 Phil Donahue 2:00 Early Edition

m

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Wednesday Night

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8:30 ABCNawt 7.00 3'tCompany 7:30 Alice 8:00 Gold Monkey

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

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TUESDAY 7:00 Report 7:30 Almanac 8:00 Nova 9 :00 Myilary 10:00 Holmatand 10:30 Nalghbort 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 MoTKambt WEDNESDAY 7:45 AMWtothor 8:00 TBA 8:35 /MuilcBox 8:50 Roadalongl 9:00 SotamoStroot IQ:00 Thinkabout 10:15 Terra 10:35 Solutions 10:55 NASA 11:00 Foottlapt 11:30 OnthoLavol 11:45 WrIliOn

11:50 RoodalongF 13:00 Storybound 12:15 Broad A 12:30 Living Things 12:45 Electric Co. 1:15 All About You 1:30 Soup to Nutt 1:45 Mutlc&Mo 2:00 Fast Forward 2:30 Nutrition 3:X TBA 4:00 SatamoSt. 5:00 Mr.Rogart 5:30 Powtrhoutt 8 . 00 Dr . Who 8:30 TBA 7:00 Roport 7:30 NCMooting 1:00 Crooturot 9:00 Hillary's 10:00 Tom Ruth 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 Morocambt

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10-Tbe DaUy Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.-Tuesday, Jeniary 11. is

Offshore Hunt Will Resume In Spring

By ROBERT WADE Associated Press Writer ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) - Drilling for oil and natural gas in the Atlantic Ocean resumes this spring with plans to explore previously untouched ocean bottom in deep waters off the

PEANUTS

Continental Shelf, including an area off of Cape Hatteras, N.C.

Oil ctHnpany officials say they are optimistic that deep water drilling will uncover profitable ammounts of fossil fuels. More than two dozen wells have been drilled so

far, without a ctanmercial discovery.

All the drilling to date has been back on the shelf and it has been very discouraging, said Burton ShuUaw, exploration manager for Qievroo U.S.A. Inc, v^h is based in New Orleans.

Chevron U.S.A. Inc. is scheduled to start an ex}^* atory well in April off Cape Hatteras, N.C., and Shell Oil Co. will move a drill ship into position off New Jersey in July, ^x)kesmen said.

Anything thats going to be found along the Atlantic

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Coast is going to be found a long way from shore in fairly d^ watm*, SbuUaw predicted Monday.

Chevrons proposed well will be in 2,100 fert of water, while Shell will expknre land at a w(MTld reoird depth of 6,800 feet beneath the surface.    ^

Officials said the wells would be the first in deep water exploratkm off the Ea^ Coast. Previously, the deepest Atlantic Ocean well off the United States was in water about 650 feet deep.

It would be the first drilling since October 1981, when Mobil ca(^ its last exploratory w^ in the Baltimore Canyon Trou^, an area that stretches to 125 miles off the coast and extends from Long Island, N.Y., to the o)ast of North Canfina.

The fir^ mid-Atlantic exploration well was started by Exxon in March 1978. By t| time Mobils effort failed, there were 28 explcnratory wells. Five produced natural gas strikes, but none in commercial quantities.

When there was nothing commercial after drilling all those holes, youre obviously disappointed, said Normal Altstedter, a ^kesman for Shell, which has leased the drillsJdp Discoverer Seven Seas from Sonat Off^ore Drilling for its well.

FUNKY WmKERBEBH

DEFINE 1BE RlUjOailN&:

The U.S. Department of the Interiors minerals management service estimates tl^ are 9 billion barrels of oil and 26 trillion cubic feet of natural gas beneath the Baltimore Canyon. Company officials said the trouble is in finding it.

Sedeo 472 will drill in 2,100 feet of water, said Outlaw. He added that the $25 millHm to $30 million operation would take about 90 days.

Conoco, Union Gas Co., Mobil Oil Co., Marathon Oil Co. and Amerada Hess also are partners in the Chevnm project, Shullaw said.

Discoverer Seven Seas will begin operations in Wilmington Canyon about 110 mUes southeast of here in an area that is part of the larger Baltimore Canyon Trouj^, said Altstedter.

Meanwhile, the Interior Department will offer 22.7 million additional acres of underwater land for lease to oil companies during an offshore lease sale scheduled for April 26.

The land is located in coastal waters of 10 states from Massachusetts and North Carolina.

Interior Department spokeswoman Barbara Karlen said it would be the largest area-wide lease sale to date by the Interior Department.

Unaffected By Doctor Surplus

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -While there may be a nationwide surplus of doctors by 1990, there is no immediate need to increase or decrease the class size of medical schools in the state, a Duke University Medical Center official says.

The national doctor surplus was foreseen in a study by the Graduate Medical Education National Advisory Committee, a group chartered to advise the federal government on physician manpower planning. The study predicts a glut of doctors thoughout the country by 1990, and an even greater surplus by 2000.

But Dr. William Anlyan, vice president of health affairs, said the anticipated surplus wont seriously affect North Carolina.

He says when he became Duke medical school dean 20 years ago, everyone was asking why we werent producing more physicians. At Duke, we responded by increasing class size from 72 to 84.

Now, he says there is a pretty good state of balance in the number of M.D.s in North Carolina.

States such as Illinois and Michigan are producing too many doctors, Anlyan said. Those states over-responded to a physician shortage 20 years ago, he said.

While there will be a surplus of (toctors of certain ^ialties, there will be shortages in others, Anlyan said. The medical education

advisory committee predicted Portages in 1990 of doctors in general psychiatry, child psychiatry and emergency medicine.

In 1969, President Richard M. Nixon announced that the physician shortage had become a crisis and asked medical schools to increase their class size by 10 percent.

But in 1973 Caspar Weinberger, then secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, announced that there were too many physicians and began phasing out federal aid for medical education.

If there is a boon in doctors might make it more difficult for M.D.s to find a good living wherever they choose, resulting competition could be a boon for consumers, Anlyan said.

Forestry Meeting Set

A meeting of the Pitt County Forestry Association will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Pitt County 'Agricultural Extension Office on the second floor of the county office building.

According to Sam Uzzell, county agricultural extension agent, the meeting is open to anyone interested in forestry and woodland management.

The Pitt County Forestry Association is a group of wwxlland owners that meets several times each year.

For further iitfojrmation contact Uzzell at 752-2934.

Let the Cards Fall...

Teams of bridge experts from all over the world are converging on tie Palace Hotel in St. Moritz, Switzerland, for the International Bridge Tournament that opens there this week. Contract bri^e, a variation of the 19th-century game of whist, is the Most widely-played card game in the world today,, and yet it was almost unknown before 1930. In that year, Ely Culbertson, publisher of Bridge World, decided tb promote his magazine by staging an international challenge match between the best players of this little-known game. The U .S. tem won the "bridge battle of the century," and the contest received so much publicity that contract bridge became an overnight sensation throughout the world.

DO YOU KNOW - What film actor is also a leading authority and writer on contract bridge?

MONDAY'S ANSWER - The first meQ of the U.N. was heki in London.

141^    '    '    VEC.    Inc.    1983

1HE DAILY REFLECIDR Classified Advertising Rates 752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Osya.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More

Days.....40* per line per day

Claaaif led Display

*2.75 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES ClassHled Uneage Deadlines

Monday Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday. .Tuesday 3 p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.nv

Friday......Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday.........Friday    noon

Classified Display Deadlinaa

Monday Friday noon

Tuesday.......Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday .. Monday 4 p.m. Thursday... .Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday.... Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.

ERRORS Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reservas tha right to adit or relact arty advertisartwrtt submitted.

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans AAall, Downtown Greenville.

010

AUTOA80TIVE

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BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79-82 model car, call 7S6-1877, Grant Bulck. We will pay too dollar.

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people read classified

PUBLIC

NOTICES

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ANNIE LAURIE AAcARTHUR, DECEASED NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the estate of ANNIE LAURIE McARTHUR, late of Pitt County,

North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of ANNIE LAURIE McAR

THUR to present them to the undersigned Executor, or his attorneys, on or before June 29,1983, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.

This 22nd day of December, 1982. ALVIN OAVIS AAcARTHUR,

JR

P.O. Box 46 Farmville.NC 27828 Executor of the Estate of Annie Laurie AAcArthur,

Garylord, Singleton, AAcNally

& Strickland

Attorneys at Law

P.O. Drawer545

Greenville, NC 27834

December 28,1982; January 4,11,18,

1982_'

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION JUDGMENT BOOK 31, PAGE 248 NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY TOWNOFAYDEN,

PLAINTIFF,

PHILLIP AND CHARAAAINE HADDOCK,

DEFENDANTS

NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of an Execution issued by the Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt County pursuant to Judgment entered In Judgment Book 31, Page 248, to the undersigned Sheriff from the Superior Court of Pitt Coun^, In the above-entitled action, I will on the 7th day of February, 1983, at 12 o'clock noon, at the door of the Pitt County Courthouse in Greenville, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highet bidder for cash, to satisfy said Execution, all right, title and interest which the Defendants now have or at any time at or after the docketing of the Judgment In the aforesaid had in and to the following

in

Town of Ayden, Pltt County, North Carolina, and being known and designated as Lot No. 136, Block 13; Lot No. 137, Block 13, and Lot No. 148, Block 15, of West Haven Annex as appears of record on plat in AAap B<k 1, page 42, FW County Registry, to v^ich plat reference is hereby directed for a more complett and accurate description. Being all of that property shown on that OMd dated June 18. 1949, from Ina J. AAcLawhorn Bunton and husband H. J. Bunton, to Joste McL. McLawhorn, Eva AAae AAallard and

ilstr^ Bai

sell YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorlzad Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758-0114.

1978 LeAAANS, cruise, tilt wheel, power steering and brakes. AAust sell. S2950.1977 Cadillac DeVille, all , leather Interior, S46S0. 756-davs; 756 2542 nights.

power

9318

013

Buick

1974 BUICK CENTURY. AM/FAA, redials, S850. Before 5 call 758-4121.ask for Hal, after 5.758-7559.

1975 BUICK SKYHAWK AAA/FAA stero cassette, tilt wheel, air, good condition. S1595. 752-3610 ask tor Greg.

1977 BUICK Electra Limitad. 4 door. 756-0489 after 5 p.m._

014

Cadillac

1975 FLEETWOOD CADILLAC

69.000 miles. S1995. 752-5334._

015

Chevrolet

IMPALA 1979. Power windows,

power seats, fully equipped, Jow mileage, extra clean. Call SmlthXhavrolat. Avden. 746-3141.

Rax

1974 VEGA station wagon. S600 or best otter. 746-3557.

Clean.

1977 AAALIBU CLASSIC, 4 door. loaded. $2800.750-1198.

1978 AAALIBU CLASSIC Station Wagon. Loaded, clean. $3000 naootlable. Attar 5:00 call 746-2630.

   Estate

41,000

______    owner.

1979 CHEVROLET AAallbu I Station Wagon. Full power, miles, excellent condition, 1 c

1979 CHEVROLET, strali^t drive, 6 cylinder, good condition. S27SO. 758 0185._

1980 IMPALA Diesel Station Wagon. 3 saater, 59,000 miles. S4S00. 757-1580._

018

Ford

FORD AAAVERICK, 1974, air, automatic transmission, 4 door, good condltlon~S900.746-6146-

FORD, THUNDERBIRD. 1981, AM-FM stereo, tilt, cruise. Price naootlable. Call 758-5278 or 756-4914.

MUSTANG 1979. Light blue, good condition, extra clean. Call Rax Smith Chevrolet. Avden. 746-3141.

1966 MUSTANG Convertible, rm-centiv restored. S5S00.752 1037.

1969 MUSTANG Good condition, must sell. SHOO or best offer. 752-1708.

1976 FORD TORINO Station Wagon. Air, good condition, claan, price neootiable. Call after 6 pm. 753-4003.

1976 FORD PINTO.,, Auttwnatic, Excellent condition. For Info call 756-6843._

1978 FORD PINTO, original ownar, S1900.756-9761 attar 4;30 weekdays.

1979 PINTO RUNABOUT, 26,000 miles, air, automatic, power steering and brakes, aluminum rims and aaor strloas. S3200' 753-3409._

021

Oldsmobile

Td^ouamyTTun'i^^

I    *    P^'lces    In

ConlTR.fll,tfy7RKw tfw same property deeded to Phillip MorgM HaStock and wife, CtNHrmaine V. Haddock, bV daed recorded in B^ V-44. page 120, Pitt County Registry. Being shown on Tax AAw 01M, Block 13, Lots 134 and 137; Block IS, Lot

'^he aforesaid sale will be made subject to alt liens, encumbrances, taxes, assessments and judgments having a higher priority than the aforesaid Juwmit.

The higher bidder at such sale will be required to make an immtdiale cash dei^t of ten percent (10%) of the amount of bid up to One Thousand Dollars (S1J)OO.DO), and of ^ percent (5%) of any excess ofver One Thousand Dollars (iLOOO.OO).

This 7th day of January, 83. RALPH L TYSON,

SHERIFF OF PITT COUNTY January 11,19,27; February 4,1983

1902 OLDSAAOBILE Cutlass Sta-tionwagons and Sedans. Several colors. Lugoage rack (sta-tionwagon), aM/FM stereo, cruise, tilt, diesel. 27 miles per gallon. S7950. Cell Mr. Whitehurst. 75?3143.

022

Plymouth

1972 PLYMOUTH Grand Fury 360 4 barrel, will sell for parts. AAost parts brand new. New battery, starter, master cylinder, oil pump, boltage regulator, water pump, AM-FM radio plus more. S160 or best otter. Confect Janet Johnson, 756-2186, 7 am to 4 pm or Rex, 7j4-2i938amto7pm.-

1*78 PLYAAOUTH ARROW, 2 door, automatic transmission, clean, flppdCOfldltlon. Aftff 6,355-6930,-

023

Pontiac

1977 GRAND LEMANS Safari Station Wa^. Fully equipe^ low mileage. Mint condition. 756-7800.

024

Foreign

1973 MG M DCET,^ ne transmission, brakesandfrontand. S17Q0. Call 758-^ taitt

1*74 TOYOTA CORONA Af^k II, 4 door, automatic, alt, S**S firm. Call

742.S480

1*76 MERCEDES 230S AAust tell.

|8,()9ff,<r*i|7S2-m

1*80 HONDA CIVIC OX. S.tpeedL Excellent condition, must lelll

1*80 TOYOTA^ CELIWAA^FM.

coition. Need to sell.

032

Boats For Saie

fssjsssii.smi'ju.si

an offer on a 1**J Sailor, Highway 244

^ilb^* R& ^    ^

lilLZMML

14* DIXIE fiberglau boat, .* Mar-and Long trailer, MI. 7S6-2SM

SS

1*7S 3.9 AAercury motor for sale.

I?wyb*itffff*f*ii7jf.m

1978 RANGER. 178 V, 115 Evlnrude. 12-24 troll ftwtor, 2 diath finders, Coxdrlveon.758-0t36arief6P M

034 CampanForSait

miCK

Leer FI

RS All u and in stock.

mm

1*72 VOLKSWAGEN But OwnM-, 14*5.^-

condition, asking si4*s.

1*80 COACHMAN 1x2*. I co^elned. SiLOW, Cell 7-xi()6.

self





036 Cyctes For Sate

irn so YAMAHA in

7S?O074" ^ i ovi-ISSSa

1W KAWASAKI, WOCC, Z 1, 17,0M mil*, xcallcnt. $1100 firm 7 1037._

HONDA Goidwino Gt 1000 WindUmcr nd *twto ExctlSnt coodiWsHso. Aft^K 5.7M

039 Trucks For Sate

1972 CHEVROLET Btzr, gray whit*. 4X4, SI900. 7S2-U7?aft*r 4 pm.    _

197* CHEVY BLAZER RmI good condition. S3S00. Days 756-TO9-night* 756^771    ^

1979 CHEVROLET Silvorado, "PP*! *5300. Call

19M CHEVY BLAZER Sllvwado LMJW. *9200. Say* 75 2929.TS^

1981 TOYOTA SRS PICKUP 5 speed, air, AM/PM sterM good condition. Call 753-4906after n

1982 SlO PICK UP Long bed excellent condition. $300 Cali 756^738?

SAVE MONEY this winter shoo and use the Classified Ads ev^ day!    '

051

HetpWantad

RN SUPERVISORS needed tar (ill TaclIlH. Goed satary phi* benefits, tilio tar 3-11 shift m $l4.S0tarll 7NUft.CallE Lultanat 758^121far interview._

SALES e year.

expanding, need Sale* Manager?: Mr

7980.

N*i?si.?iSnraJ!r

   "    '    I    Rapsand

, (213) 327

sentative to ell to large Hog Farmer in the Northeast port t^th C^ina. Contact Dr. M L Jones, E Z Mix Animal Nutrition. Ctaawer P, Wendell, NC 27S91. 919-3*5 4957

SALESPERSON

Sal vy+3)% Commlasioii

PoMlble yearly income *45.000 plus! No experience required. Company will train you starting out Refltanal AAanager ot your area. Qualiftad applicantwill be flown at pur expense to area office tar training. Must have *3,250 cash securit

For at;

urity to cover original inventory. ' details call Pat Murphy coiiect

(404)969-0460

040

Child C^re

C^hlRISTIAN AAOTHER would like to keM children In her home. An Trailer Park area

LULLABYE DAY CARE 355 2056, Dally, weekly or monthly rates. Open *: 30 until, 7 days per week

SECRETARIES, word processors and typists needed immediately for long and short term teinporary assignments. Must have at least one year work experience. Call for an appointment - H7-3300.

046

PETS

ADORABLE half (German Shepard pups, have had shots, *10 each. 403 Oak Street after 5:30.

AKC BLACK AND SILVER male Norwegian Elkhound pup. 7 months old. Very friendly. *50. 755-9984.

AKC GERAAAN SHEPHERD pup pies, mostly black with sliver Mother and father both solid black Shots and dewormed. *150. 758 *252

AKC (SOLDEN RETRIEVER pies, born Thanksgiving. 757 3524.    '

AKC Golden Retriever pups Excellent hunting stock and com oanions. *150 each. 752 *13*.

AKC REGISTERED Boxer puppies, 4 weeks old, ready for a good home 0*11752 8510.

BASSET HOUND PUPPIES, AKC regisfered, tri-colored, beautiful and healthy, 3 weeks old. Put some money down to save yours now *175,^8 4811

gLA CHOW puppy tor sale. Call

DRASTICALLY REDUCED AKC Cairn Terrier puppies. 3 males 8 weeks old. *75.7573270._

EXPERT DOG Obedience training 758 5590._

FOR SALE: 1 Female Boxer Bulldog, 13 weeks old. **0. Call 753-35 after* pm.

HIMALAYANS - 12 weeks CFA aCFA Registered, first shots. Blue and Seal Points. *150 to *175 1-743-2721 -Mavsvllle._

051

HelpAVanted

ACCOUNTS PAYABLE Clerk. At least 2 year degree in accounting. Experience helpful. Excellent benefits. Please apply after 1 to Crgech and Jones Business Machines. 103 Trade Street, Greenville. _

AUTOAAOTIVE SALESPERSON: Experience helpful but not neces sary. Individual must have successful background and the ingrtess to advance quickly, those settled, responsible an_ siring to earn top commissions need to apply! All replies held confidential. Apply to: Automotive Salesperson, P O Box 19*7, Greenville. N C

AUTOMOTIVE CASHIER needed Immediately (xiening, office expe riegce a must. Good salary and company benefits. Send resume to Automotive Cashier, RO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

PENTER ex^ience framing,

CA    ,    _

crew lead man. Must be competent anchases house construction. 758-9210 between * and 8 pm

COUNSELORS

Positions in Newport, k(orth Caro lina at wilderness camp for problem youth. LIve-in positions, faking extended canoe, backpack and ran frips. Two years college pre ferred with child care work, camf or recreation background. *770( plu* room and board, training, anc benefit package. Call Art Rosen bere at 9l9 726-9058 or send resume to Eckerd Foundation, PO Box 31122, Charlotte, NC 28231. Equal Opportunity Employer

Real

EMPTY DESK

Estate agent rteeded.

Must

haye a pleasant personality, self starter, and willing to work 40 hours per week. In house training, sales tools, and prospects furnished. Commissions of *20,000 feasible for first year. For your confidential interyiew call DeeHeffren, 756-8724

EC,T,NGJ,|W^^^TUNITV

Earn up to 50% on eyerything you sell. Call 752-700*._

FLOOR COVERING Salesperson with retail carpet and yinyl sales experience needed by established company. Send resume to Floor Covering, FKD Box 19*7, Greenville, NC278M.__

HOMEVYORKERS

ductlon. We train ______ ^

For full details write; WIrecraft, .2TO1.

_________ WIrecraft pro-

We train house dwellers.

PO Box223,Norfolk,Va.

INSTRUCTOR full time. 40 hour* or more per week to instruct men and women in adult fitness. Career health minded Individuals need only to apply. Sales experience helpful, but not necessary. Apply In person. The Spa of GreenvilTe, Soutn Park Shopolno Center. Greenville._

LOCAL FINANCE company needs experienced collector. Must be boridable and have valid NC drivers license. Send resume only to

arJnch Manager, PO Box 294, reenvllle. N C 27834._

LOCAL FINANCE company needs secretary cashier. Must be bonda-ble; must type at least 50 words per minute. Send resume only to Branch AAanager, P O Box 294, Greenville. N C 27834._

AAANAGEMENT Large corporation looking for management potmtial. Must start in sales. *0 hour week. Some door tp door. Salary and benefits. Conner AAobile Hsg)tt.7j*:0aa

AMNPOWER TEJMPORARY SERVICE

_118 Reade Street

SOMEONE TO SPEND NIGHTS

with lady. Call 746-3*54._

three

service our

AAATURE persons - -jr equi other work. May

to

KE per Ipment and learn mean doubling

074

MtaUmrnun

ASSUME PAYfMENTS of *37.92. 3 smH; seta, chmk,

W. 757^1

ptace llvkw room m fegytef*"rp>t!jhgaj

EfKYCLOPCDIA BRltANNICAS.

and retarenoe trnaks. *1188 vafue^ will 1^1 pr t5B0. CaH Jtwi. 7*8-792*.

FOR SALE; 7dial

iiSLMsttea

diamond ctaetar ring.

FROST-FREE ter aaie. Like new, itapof" (4x32x3H. avocado.

duced to iuef *258 ter quick sale; Call 7 4348 from 18 a.m. til p.m. angTSt-Miepfterlfcrn

FURNITURE, 1/3 Price Clearance Sale now at Fumtture World. Fi-nanctey available. 1888 East NNh St.

FURNITURE FOR SALE Call between 4-8 om. 746-1379.

CaNi.

wHh 34 tiour

(xE 38" electric range ... cook timer, glass door. Excelient condition, tm. Cali 756^1 from Hyys^lfftqr*.

J t rt ANTIQUES now eaorating at Woodside. James AJtm a^ nyAAove.Note:75*-1133.

R<XENE HEATER, Radiant King. Excellant condition. *100. Sll

LOVE SEAT hide-aHaed condition. *195. 74*-*294.

AAOVING AAUST SALE I Wood stove efficient and beautiful Belgian made stove. Can be used as open hearth or ctaeod maxintum effi-ciencv. (SrIII goes with It. 946-3981.

AAOVING out of town, must sell woodheater new *8(XFnow *350, Seigler oil heater. *45; 14* flat bottom wood creek boat, *50; eiectric baseboard haators, 2 tor *15; componant sat-Ftrack AAA/FM-2 spaakors, naads repair, *25; humidifier, *15; shrubbery; sntell appliances; knick knacks and much much morel 756-9532 after* p.m._

your previous Income. Opportunify *10,000 a year to start. AAanagement opening. Call 756-38*1.

TRAVEL ENTIRE U S

Rocky AAount is now hiring 15 sharp guys and gais to start work today end travel entire USA if you are 17 or over, single and tree to travel. We are now starting a two week training program. Transportation and lodging provided. *1000 cash bonuses to those who quality. For interview contact Miss Johnson, AAonday-Thursday, between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. only.

756-2792

TV PRODUCER AND CaHOST tor one of eastern NC's top morning programs. Prefer talented person In voice, dance or musical instrument. College graduate. Knowle<^ of eastern NC Call for appointmont, AAonday-Wednesday or Thursday, 9:30-10:30 a.m., WNCT-TV, 756-3180. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer.

059

Work Wanted

ADMINISTRATIVE position de sired by experienced BBA John Shelton, 819 East 4th Street, Washington. NC 946-8*89.

All types tree service. Trimming, cutting, storm damage, cleanup, and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancll, 752-6331.

CUSTOM CARPENTRY WORK Framing, remodeling, repairs. Reasonable rates. References. Greenville. 355-295*.    _

FRENCH AND COMPUTER

science tutoring/lessons available. Hourly rate. Caff 758-8551._

HOMEOWNERS SPECIAL Paint or wallpaper any room, second room painted or vfallpapered '/i price. By DesionT758-71*5._

ST PAINTING, year round.

Call, Ralph Birchard, Jr. * pm. to 11 pm. 7S7-3702._

I WILL KEEP children in my home at Shady Knoll Trailer Parx. 752-4064.    _ _

INCOME TAX prepared at reason able rates. Call Phyllis Streeter at 757-0385._ _

LOOKING FOR painting |obs. Interior and exterior. Chea^t man in town. 746-3949 or 746-2751._

NO JOB TO SMALL Free

estimates. With this clipping 10% discount. Remodeling, carpentry and repair work, cabinets, counter tops, painting and roofing. 752-1*23,

PAINTING, Interior and exterior. Free estimates, work guaranteed. 11 years experience. 756-6873 after *pm,

PLUMBING AND CARPENTRY All type repairs and remodeling, specializing In bathroom repair. State License 7037-P 746 2*57; If no answer 752:4064,_ _

PRIVATE DUTY attendant, work. 8 hour shift. 75*-*8*2.

shift

SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter lobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service. 75-2SM anvtlme.lf no answer cell back

TREES topped, trimmed, taken down and removed. John Perry, 758-4625^___

WOULD LIKE TO CLEAN House or babysit. Dependable and reasonable rates. Call Susan at 355-43 (local) for more Information.

WOULD LIKE to do odd job service, window cleani paint lobs, etc. Call 752

ling ar 1-4942.

060

FOR SALE

PAINT INTERIOR, Exterior, rest dential, commerlcal. Well experi-enced. 752-5320._

1979 CHEVROLET condition. 752-5320.

VAN (xood

064 Fuel, W00(J, Coal

ALL TYPES OF firewood for sale. P StancTl. 752-6331 ___

FIREWOOD FOR SALE 830 e load. Call anvflma. 758-4611.

LARGE LOADS OF hardwood, *40 load. Call days 757-1521; after 6,

OAK FIREWOOD for sate.

752-8647 9f7;8ag^

Call

SEASONED OAK 850 Vt cord, dallvered and stacked. 757-1637

W(XX> FOR SALE: Oak 845, mixad *40. Call 752-628*.

WOOD FOR SALE: Oak 845, mixad

140^1

:all 752-6286.

100% OAK FIREWOOD, grwMi *50, seasoned *55 per W cordT (xuaran-teed full measure. 752-0091

100% OAK FIREWOOD for sale. *45 a load If we deliver; *40 a load If

you Dick UP. 758-3797 Of 752-548*.

MECHANICS

Two first class GM or Chrysler auto mechanics. Paid holidays, paid vacation, hospitalization and insurance. Salary plus commission. Call 823-615* or come by. Don Whitehurst Pontiac-Bulck-Chrysler, 1308 W Wilson St.. Tarboro, N C

MOBILE HOME SET UP AAAN with experience. Apply In person at Azalaa AAobile Homes, see J T Williams. 756-7815._

OILCOMPANYOPENINGS

Offshore Rigs. No experience nee Start Immediately. *35,000

essary

plus year. For information call 1 312 92(1 93*4. extension 1074 B

PART-TIME Sociology Instructor to teach introduction fo Sociology, Tudsday 10:30 to 11:30 and Thurs day 10;k) to 12:30. Start Immadiate

ddy

ly, end March 22." AAasters ^ee or 18 Graduate hours in Sociology required. Contact Hugh

Beaufort County Community College, phone 946-6I94. An Eoyal (Jp^funlty/Afflrmative Action Employer

PART-TIME Business Education Instructor needed tor Winter Quarter only (January 1983 - AAarch 1983). AAastars degrae In Boslr^ Education raqulred with taachlM exparlence in tho sacratarlal skills area prefared. Cont^t Debprah Hopkins, Beaufort (rounty Com munlty College,

Equal Opportunlty/Afflrmatlva Action Employer. -

PHOTiXiRAPHy Have you had ^ Interest in photography, couW not get started. Mtell est^lshed business is now hiring and ftalr^ part time photographers. If you tael thal you are very sociable ^ have transportation, call 752-6717 from 4 unttlToom. Photo Soecialtlas Inc.

ROOM AT ; THE TOP

Du6 to the promgfiens in this area, two openings #xt new fr yoonfl minded partans In the hl ot a large carpafatlon. If tainted, yeu wilt receiue eomplet tralnlf^. We provide godd company 1^^, malor medteeTprofit tarl"'

g"5BUiifZrS

era-looking for a career opportunity

CALL 757-0186 9:00AM-6:00PM

065 Fami Equipnwnt

ALLIS-CHALMER-CA new 3 point hitch. *1500. C^all after 4 p.m.,

mm..

FENCING-keep your iivtstock in with barbed wire-all prices 5 or more roHs-Dlxie/HI-Ten \r/2 gauge, *32.70 each; Iowa 12W gauge *27.95 each; Lasso/HI-Tan l5>/i gauge *22.49 each; Gaucho 18 gauge *19.01 each. Field fencing (5 or more roils) 8-32, t*0.ra each; F39 869.10 each; 10-47 *77.84. AgrI Sup^y, Greenville, NC,

. 752 3999.

14' TANOEM-AXLE tllf-bod all-steal trailer. Also International 400 Cycio corn planter. Both In excellent condition. 757 1827 or 752-*m_

072

Livestock

BEAUTIFUL QUARTER HORSE

15.1,    15.2    hands.    Liverchestnwt.

white blaze face, four white stockings. 3>/t years oW. Ridas English. Also a beautiful Palomino WaTkIng Horia. 15.1,15.2 hands. 8 to 9 years old. Anyone can ride. 752 *500._

HORSEBACK RIDING

Jarman

PEANUT ^Y FOR SALE SLSO

par bale

Of 756-0920

after 7 p.m. 7S2-922S

074

MiscellanBOus

ASSUME PAYAAENT5 of 849.46. 7 pleca Western living room suite; sofa, chair, rockar, 3 tablas, ot-toman. Furniture Wwld. 757-0451

ASSUAAE PAYAAENTS of 863.12. 3 complete rooms of furniture. FumWe WorkL 757-8651.

BEDDING AND WATERBEDS Save up to Vi and more. Pactenr AAattrMS And Wafar^^. 73l

Graenvilta Blvd. next to PHt Plaza.

mm-

and Installation. 919-769734.

CALL CHARLES TiCE, 758;38t3. for small loads of sand, tapaoil and stone. Also driveway wgrfc.

COPY MACHINE I year oM. 75e2i4ltrom8to5.

Can

CUSTOM BUILT handrails, grills, gates, spiral stafcways, inter^. axtorior, resldsnflal, commercial. AAetai tewciatttes. 758-4574. 1218

A8yf5<s5S&_

DISCOUNT PRI

!I^S on new Sharp copy machines. Lam setecttan of

NEED 3 PERSONS to taka London Paris trip end of June. Studont rates and other student benefits. Call after 5:00. 756-7278. _

NET SUPPLIES: Webbings, rope, floats, lead, everything you naoo to make your own net or complato net ready to fish. Commercial flshl^

licenses

4275.

Whicharcrs Marina,

POLAROID AUTOMATIC 104 Land (Ornara. *15. Soundasign 8 track tape player, AAA/FM fl5. Both in good condition. 355-6538.

015    Loans And Mortgagis

LOAN PLACEMENT structure.

pisce business, forming slate de

opmanf

merciai real estate loans. Short and 1^ term business

purpose loens. C J Horrl Company, inc.. Financial An keftng Consuftanfs. 7S7-880I,

Harris And

nightsThe Daily Reflector, Greonrille, N.C.Tuesday, January 11, un-ii

109

Houses For Sait

WHY RENT? WHh poymanfs of oniv (363 monfh. you con own this 3 bedraom, iv> bMh brick ranch. For sale by ownor. 758-8999 eftor6D.m.

093

OPPORTUNITY

CONVENIENCE STORE & GRILL COMBINATION

Small business qppartunHy locatod in the Eastern Pinss Community, ideally locatod tor growth. Coll 355^065 days. 756-3229 aftor 6 om

LIST OR BUY your buslnoss with C J Harris A Co.. Inc. Financial A AAarkating Consuftanfs. Serving the Southaastarn Unifad States. Grsenvilte, NC 7S7-800I, nights 753-4015.    _

MAKE 19(3 A REALLY NEW YEAR FOR YOU

Join International Sarvk* (Uxnpany in recession proof business. Full training and management assistance. Opportonfty unlimitod. Earn *25,000 to *125.000 aiwMially. Exclusive territory eveiiabie now. Call Jarrv Arthur, faoo-433 3322.

SERVICEMASTER professional home and office cleaning franchises available in the Eestom NC area. *14,000 includes equipment end training. Financing aveileble. For information call or write ServicaAAastar, 204 West Peace Street. Rataioh 27603.833 2002.

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEYSWEEP Gid Hoiiomen North (ferailna's orig

sweep. 25 years expeH------

on chimneys end firepleces. dayorfriahf,7--------

iginel chimney rience wrking

firepleces. Call

7S3-350X Farmvllta.

PORTABLE DISHWASHER 10 :le wash, harvest^^fod, butcher

lock too. *100.750 347

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS end Shamoooors. Call Doaler. 756-6711.

SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent and vacuums at Rental

shamMoarsan Tool Comowv.

SLIDING PATIO DOORS. plated glass. 6'. *125. Call 750-9549.

double

THE REAL THING Weathered barn board, authentic, rustic look. 746-260*.

USED

2929.

REFRIGERATORS 756

USE03MC0PIER Call752 7111.

WEDDING DRESS and veil, never worn, white with Princess Anne neckline, size 5. 757-4459, ask tor Judv._

FINANCIAL CONSULTANTS Investor, farmer or morchant, we went to help you set and achieve your goals through financial plixi-ning and satoctlve investing. Progress through planning. C J >larris And Company, Inc.. Financial And AAarketlno Coruftants. 757-0001.

THE CABINET SHOP

Commercial and residantial tntori-ors. Complate design and construction sarvica. Call 7ST1043.

1304 N (weana St.. (xreenville

102 Commercial Proparty

WILL LEASE or sale: 21.000 square foot building locatod at the comer of Cotancha and I4th Street. Lot Is 110' X 365' Zoned commercial. AAultl uses possible. 752-1020._

106

Farms For Sate

WINTERVILLE okter home with good rehab potential, appraximato-ly 1200 S4pMwe toet. 6 rooan. large tot with storage building. (lOJMO Cell J L Harris A Sons. Inc.. Rqeltors.75A4711._

IMO SQUARE BalveEKt.Cpll

istm.

2 OR 3 BEORCXTMS toot. 2 story rusNc

2300 iquTt

old.' Loc4ted~ 4 **miiS**?iid off Stantonsburg Road. 7SAS780. ntafrts?52 1637.

-ROOM house and lot tor sale by owner. Approximately 4 miles from Burrou^ Wellcome, one mile off GreenvTlle-Bethel Highway. Cell

752^267. Good Btavl_

861^. Centrally locatod. This 3 bedroom, 3 bath brick ranch features family room with fireplace, plus formal area. Attractive neighborhood, conventant to schools end shopping. Call Juna Wyrick at AWridStA^oufherland Raalty, 756-3500or7S8-7744.

111 Investment Proptrty

ATTENTION INVESTORS Oktar home converted Into 3 apartments Rental income *525. (30's. Call Davis Realty 753-3000, 756-3904 or 75A1997.    _

121

Apartments For Rent

reeneWai

wreeneway

(.arge 2 badraom garden apart mants, carpatad. dish-washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balcenias, ipaciout grounds wfth abundant parking, aconemical

IN WINTERVILLE 3___

apartmwrt, appliances^ fumtahad. no children, no pets. Da^t and lease. *195 e month. CMim-SOt?. Avallebtaondot-

KINGSROW

APARTMENTS

One end two _____

tmonts. Ceriwtod.

bedroom gerdon

monts. c^erpetod. range, re-frigeretor, dishwasher, dls|Msel end cable TV Convantantty locatod

off HMh Street.

II 752*3519

LARGE I BEDROOM Duplex. 785-B Hooker Road. Stove and refrigere dryer hookups, sir

5 pm. 7SAS3f7, 7SA6383, or

condition, heat lease after 756^409

LARGE 4 BEDR(X)M HOUSE on West 4th Street. Good rental. FI nancing availabta. *31,500. Speight Realty 756 3220. nioht 7S8 mi

NEW DUPLEX Yearly re *6600 with assumable loan. Excellant tax shelter. *61,000. Aldrldoa A Southerland. 756-3500.

RIDGE PLACE Duplex. Possible loan assumption on this nice duplex. Two bedroom, tVi baths, living

room, dining area on each side".

to msoo. Duftus Realty

Reduced Inc. 756-5395

113

Land For Sate

BY OWNER 3.1 acres, 7 miles east of Greenville. Ideal location for country estate or 4 small houses. *24.000. Call 756-3530.

C J HARRIS A Co., Inc., J Locfco Conrad, ragisterad forester on staff. Land and timber sales, appraisals.

pprslsdls, investment analysis, managamant planning. Initial consultation free of charge. 757-0001. nlohts 527-47*8.

115

Lots For Sate

ACRE LOT Well and septk tank. Bethel Highway. *7900. Speight Ra-altv 756 3Q0. night 758 774T

13 ACRES all cleared with 3Vi acres tebacco allotment, 8 miles North of Greenville. Aldricte A Southerland Realty, 756-35007 nights Don Southerland. 756 5260.

WEDDING GOWN AND VEIL. could fit size 8 to 12. *200.757-1337.

10 SPEED mans Schwinn Bike. Radint Kim kerosene heater, 9600 BTUs. 19 CMdsmobile Station Waoon. 752-6396._

100 FEET chain length fence; 4' high, 6 corner post gate, misceile-neous hardware included, SITS. Call 756 7912._

2 QUEEN ANN CHAIRS; custom made drape, 110x84, antique satin

gold. 756-05.    _

3M-107 COPIER wfth paper dispensers. Best offer. Call Boyd Associates at 758-4284.

35 MM CAMERA Fujica ST 901, automatic and manual, good condition. *125. Day, 752-747for night, 756-4373._

7 PIECE bedroom suite; Lowry organ, (anie LS; brass trumpar. Call anytime. 746-4174._

075 AAobile Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW OOUBLEWIDE for tho price of the single. 48x24, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, loaded with extras including beamed ceilings, storm windoxvs, 200 amp total electric, frost free refrigerator, and much, much more.

$17,495

Delivery and set up Included. VA FHA and conventional financing. Mobile Home Brokers, 630 West (ireenville Boulevard. 756-0191.

BRAND NEW T983 top of the line double wide. 52 X 24, Tbedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof, bay windows, frost tree refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much more. Regular price, *24,995

Limited Time Only

$19,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up included. Hours, 8 AM to 7 pm. /MOBILE h6mE BROKERS tst (^oonvllle Boulevard

630Wast<

FOR SALE wHti

hydraulic lift, ftts awjT pick emHuMlirtec. MBS. Swing or drag btaute ffts any 3 poinf bgpk up. Usad dp 20 ndnuta^USB. Call 3SS-6045 3a^7SAg2* after 6pm.

BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with' extras, cathedral beamed callings, plywood floors, plywood counter tops, total elactric, ran^^ refrigerator. Regular price.

Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and sat up Included: Hours, 8 AM to 7 pm. i^lLE HME BROKERS 630 Wocf Groonvllla Boulevard

mm

DOUBLEWiOE, 24x52 Havelock, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, totally furnished, sat up and dallvared for 814,900. all Art Oellano Homes.

LARGE ROOMS, aftractivaly daco^ rated, 2 bedrooms, 1V<> bafht, 12x60, front kitchen modal on private

*5500

Sr

MO. (^

sn.

752-3000.

I on prh i; nlgnta

laf 750-4821

MOBILE HOME furnishod. Excotlanf

Workshop. 811900. tetetght 756-3220. ntaht75l-774ir*^

AND LOT

MOVEDI /MUST SALE or Imrnediately. 12X65, 2 bedroom mobtio home, unfurnished, Grimasland area, owner financed

NEW HOMES START as low as *129.93 a inonth at Azalea Mobile Homes. Saa Tommy Williams or Lin Kllpafrlck. 75^7015:_

REPO 70X1 bodrooms

bedrooms

ittecfion.

2

Low

downpaymont. Oalivery and sat up included. Contact J T Williams at Azalaa /Mobtia Homes. 756-7|i5.

USED HOMES 1 12x65, 2 bedrooms. 2-12x50's. 2 bodroeme. 1-12x65, 3 bodrooms. 2 baths. 1-12x55, 2 bedrooms, front kltchon. All can be seen at Art Dallano Homes, 756-9841._

12X40 RITZCRAPT 2 bedrooms, 1W bath, central heat and air, eiectric appliancas. Located In nice trailer park. Partly fumishad or unfumisiwd.       "

*6500. 756^2564 after

1987 AZALEA 12x60, 2 bedrooms. *400 down and taka up payments of *83.00 month. 756-3616.

1973 Catabrtty 12x60, 2 bodroom. air condlflonar, unfurnished, nice, 5500.752-5404 after 5.

1973 12x65, 3 bedrooms, needs some work. *3100.7564)975 after 5 p.m

1975 12x65 mobile home, fully furnished, 2 bedrooms, central air, *7.000 firm. 919-637-3206 after 5:30

1979 OAKWOOO Mobile home, un fumishad 14 X 70, central air and heat. *500 and taka up payments. 75641031 after Sum

1979 REDMAN 40 x 12. Located in Greenville. Good condition. Assume low oavmenfs. 023^3505._

076 Mobite Homt Insuranct

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance at competftive rates. Smith Insur anca and Raaftv. 752 2754._

077 Musical Instruments

/MORILE DISCO console, ampiifiar.

sS:Jzssr'Stissr-

IM GIBSON LES PAUL JR Ra-worfcad, solid mahogotty, (MO. Pander Deluxe Reverb Amp, 13" B L woonor,sm.m^.

071

Sporting Goods

MTTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion repairs. Spscializing in marina pra-gte    iwB.^lgrfc>fraft,

on    LOST AND FOUND

LOST: I . andblacA

wagian Elk Hound. Gray fwnaia. no collar. Stakas

795-4649.

as LomAndMorlgtgn

NEED CASH, gat a second mortgago fast by phone, om also buy morfgagas; make commercial

37 ACRES wfth 31 cleared and 2 acres of tobacco. Locatod near Stokes. For more informetion contact Aldridge 4 Southerland, 756 3500; nights-Don Southerland, 756 5260._

58 ACRE FARM Good road Iron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,309 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call MoMley Marcus Raalty at 746-3166 tor full details. _

107

Farms For Lsase

TOBACCO P(XJNDS for sale. Price *4 per pound- Call 752-5567 after 6 pm._

WANT TO BUY tobacco pounds. CgLl.iifty6..758 2fS9.

WANTED TO LEASE Com and Soybean land in Awtan area. Call Oavid Harold Smith at Colonial Acre Farms. 746-3692._

WOULD LIKE pounds. 753-3644.

to lease tobacco

WOULD LIKE TO RENT paanut pounds. Call after 6p.m.. 758-3742.

WOULD LIKE TO LEASE tobacco pounds. Call 746-6741 after 5 p.m.

109

Houses F(x Sate

BE SNUG AS A BUG this winter in this 3 bedroom brick venoer ranch heated by a woodstova, new dishwasher, carport, on large lot In country, *39.900. Call Oavis Raalty 752 3000.756-2904or 756-1997.

BRICK VENEER starter home in the city close to schools and shopping. Assume FHA loan. No credit check. 3 bedrooms, kitchen and breakfast room and living room, carport, detached building (could be used for beauty shop, office or etc.) 30's. Calf Da^s Realty 752 3000. 756 2904 or 756 1997.

BY OWNER 2 bedroom, 1 bath, house, university area, excellent starter home or retirement. Priced at *38.500. Call 756-9070 after 5.

BY OWNER 3 bedroom. bath, carport and boat shaltor all on a large lot in the Eastern Pines area. (Sood neighbors. Seller will pay points. *39,900.758 7526 after 6.

Townnome to maei yo desire! Monthly payment rent, firaplece optional, costs! Can A/toora8, Saute

CHESTNUTS ROASTING .. open fire; AAoore 8, Sauter has a townhome to meet your hearts ^mants lets than onal, no closing

__I    Sautar    7584050.

COMFORTABLE home In South Evans Radavalopmant Area, recently rehabilitatad, cozy 960 square feet, large front porch, (,000. Call J L Harris 4 Sons.

Inc.. Roaltors,758-47n._

EXCLUSIVE LISTING over 1300 square feet of comfort In this 3 bedroom, bath only 3 years old.

rtth heat

Oevis Realty 752-:

Huge great room wl attractive subdivision, dote *54,500. Cell ~    

FOUR BEDROOM 2 bath house, located in Fvmville, *12.000 and assume mortgage. 756-51 753-5582._

HANG YOUR MISTLETOE and holly In your ntw 2 or 3 bodroom townhome by gollyl Shared equity financing. Payments less than rent makes anyone feat lollyl Call Moore 4 Sautar 758-6050 for ifia garland of details beginning with no closing costs!

HOI HOI HOI To your new home you will go - and your peymonts vlll be low - Call Moora 4 Sauter and find out how sharod equity financing makes ft soli 758-6050. No dosing cost*!

% ACRE LOT in country, a fitting setting for this 3 bedrom, 2 full bath doublawide. Close to city, central heat and air, furniture negotiable. Only *32.900. Call Davis Realty

752 3000, 756 2904 or 756-1997._

BAYW0(X3, TWO ACRE lot. FI nanclno available: Call 756-7711. BELVOIR HIGHWAY Nice area. Good for Mobile homes. Speight Realty 756-3220. nIoht 758-7741.

1 ACRE WCXXIEO LOT 6 miles east of Greanvilta on Highway 33.

Inf,

very quaint pr rvate development with community water

Part of

LOVE TREES?

E xperiofK the unique In afMriment living with nature outside your door.

COURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS

construction, firepleces.

i3%

Quality

heat pumps (heating costs ___

than comparabla units), dtshwash r, washer/dryar hook-ups, cabla TV.wall-to-wair car^, tharmopane windows, extra Insutatlon.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    1-5    Sunday

/Marry Lana Off Arlington Blvd. _75*-5057

OAKAAONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouso wart ments. 1212 Rodbankt Road. Dish washer, refrlgoretor, range, dit-potel indudedTVte also have Cable Tv Very conventant to PIft Plaze and University. Also soma furnishod apartments availabta.

' 756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished aparin^ts or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T Wllllems. 756-7815.

Tommy

ONE BEDROOM apertmenf, carpeted, kitchen appliances. (195. ^M3311

ONE BEDROOiM one block from ECU Libranr. *190 per nMnth. Cell 7580200 or 75^5077.    _

ONE BEDROOM Apartment

rfnt, partly tymtshed. 752 7Nl

for

ONE 1 bedroom eparimont; one 3 bedroom epertmom; one 2 bedroom trailer. Can 752-3839.

and bridle trails, *8500. Owner financing available. Cell John Jackson nights and weekends only

HOME NEEDS SOME fix Reduced to *25,000, 2 bedroom wfth kitchen, dining room, living room wfth firaplece, upstairs walk in attic, basamant, detached 2 bedroom apartment over 2 car garage, (rental Income possibility about *123 par month). (^11 Davis Realty 752 3000. 72904or 756 1997.

NEAT 4 WELL KEPT starter home

in the country, 3 bodrooms, famly room with woodstova, deck, assume loan. S30't. Call Oavis Realty 752 3000. 756 2904or 756-1997.

NEAT AND WELL KEPT older

homo nestled on a wooded tat in a

quiet neighborhood. Attractive front porch tor your roiexing pleosure -home has been remodeled in the last few years. 3 bedrooms, cheerful kitchen, outside storoM building, *20's. Ciall Davis Raalty 7S2-30W, 756^2904 or 756^1997

NEW LISTING - assume TV, FmHA loan brick veneer home with carport. 3 bedrooms, kitchen, dan, *39,900. Appraximately 5>/a miles from (Greenville. Call Davis Realty 752-3000. 756-2904 or 756-1997

NICE S room house. Encloeed beck porch,^ carport,^ imv^^int in and

out. Vary good county. (Good pi

By owner.

im.

ntton. In the d paean trees. *34,000. 7S131S. After 6, call

OWNER MUST SELLI Said make us an after on this nicely redaco-retod, 2 bedroom bricfc

bungalow. Roomy kitchon and dining area, dishwasfter, convenient location sag's. Call OavIs Raalty 752 3000. 756^2904 or 751997

UNIQUE homo, one block from univarsity, approximately 1200 square foot, all-metel construction, three bedrooms, garage, on et-trectlve comer tot. call todeyl Call J L Harris 4 Sons, Inc.. Realtors.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SjERVICES

PMB. BaaMalM pom mm-8fc8, 8Uet8d irooipd fOpPOBMOBOM.

Eastem Carolina ~ Vocational Cantar

m4m

N.C.

*100 DOM/N wfth owner financing own lot. 12 miles east ot Greenville on Pactolu Highway. Purchase price *5000 with payments of *79.63 for 8 years at 12% interest. Call John Jackson nights and wtekends only 756-4360

12x65 AAOBILE HOME furnished with lot. In Black Jack area. Call days 757 1191; nlohts 758-3761.

SI200 WILL BUY you this aftractiva lot in WintervlMe area - all hookups and amenities on quiet cul-da-sac. Call Davis Raalty 752 3000, 756-2904 or 756-1997._

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mohUe homes. Securit (its reqO^lred, no pets

depot!

7SM

4413 between 8 and 5

'2I

NEED STOAAGE? W, hav,

(to

i>gl    ____

day-Friday 9 5. Call

size to nrteet your storage need.

Lton Self Storage, AAon-

Arlin

rage. Open III7599S.

121 Apartmgnt* For Rent

AVAILABLE A ONCE I 2 bedroom University Condominium Townhouse, m baths, carpeted, inclosed petio, pool, air, stove, refrigerator, dishwasher. *250 Includes water, lawer, cable TV Lease and deposit. No grass cut No pets. AAarried couplet red. ?-3610or 756-4532.

ting. I

Rrg-tyr

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds end studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water end sewer and yard maintananca.

All Mriments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-free refrigerators.

Located in Azalaa Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact J T or Tommy Williams 756-7815

RIVER BLUFF has 2 bedroom townhouso epertments end 1 bedroom gerdon apartments. For more Information call 758-4015 or stop by the (ftvar Bluff office at 121 River Bluff Road between 10 a.m. and6p,m,AAondayFrldeY.

STRATFORD ARM3 APARTMENTS

The H^y Pla^ To Live

(Xfice hours lOa.m.toSp.m. AAondey through FrMey

Call us 24 hours a

iirs a day at

7-4)0

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer _ hook-ups, cabla TV, pml, club house, playground, Noar ECU

Our Reputation Says It All

"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Sfroff (Xfica Carmr Elm Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM townhouso, 1W teths, carpatad, kitchen appliancas, heat pump, 100 G Cedar Court. 8280 month. 758-3311.

TWO BEDROOM rant. Verdant St. -Village East 8300 Square. 3 bedrooms

mants tor lax 8290.00;

York town 8400.00. All

require tease end security daiioslt. Dulfus Realty. Inc.. 756-08fi.^

CARRIAGE H(XJSE Apartments Highway 43 south, just past PIft Plaza. 2 bedroom townhousas, all electric. Oishwashar, rafrigarator, fully carpeted, cabla TV, pool and laundry room. 756-3450 aftor 5 p.m.

Cherry Court

ious 2 bodroom

Spacious 2 bodroom townhousas with lVi baths. Also i bodroom apartments. Carpet, dlthweshers, conwectors, petIo, free cable TV, wesner-dryar hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, clue home andppoi. 752 1557

DUPLEX Two bedroom, i</i bath, carpatad, waher-dryar hookup, hoat pump, djshwashar. Availabta Feb-

DUPLEX APARTMENT 2 bedrooms, washer, dryer hookups, on large country lot mile from Groonvllle. Nopots. *230 par month CaU 758-4904 after 5

plus deposit pm

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and toswnhousa apartments, faaturing Cabla TV, modern appliances, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry (acllfttas, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive 752-5100

F(XJRTH ST WEST, 2 bodroom duplex, wall to wail catling, washer and dryer included. *230 per month. Call after 6.756-0942.

FOURTH ST EAST, 1 bedroom livinq room, oat In kltchan, perch. I75l:alt after 6.7540942._

Y(XJ CAN SAVE nwney by shopping for bargains in the Clessificd Ads

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS& AWNINGS

Rpo-ioapii-ic;Boor AddiiiOns

C.L. Lupton, Co.

WEDGEWOODARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, ft/i bath townhousas. Excellent location. Cerrior heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis

court.

756-0987

WILSON ACRES APARTMENTS

Now 2 and 31

K*-up:-diS!W','Sr5S

sauna, self cleaning

tennis, pool, ovens, Irost free refr blocks from ECU Cell J or night. Equal Housing

Y.

t BEDROOM energy off I

rnlrmLmfm y mmf

fficlent

752 2754.__

2 BEDR^ DUPLEX near ECU

Inergy efficient heat p^.

121 ApartmBiits For Rent

2 BEDROOM Apartment, caipetod, appliancas. IW balh. 8254 802 ^yTment 4. Willow Street. 758-

135 OfflctSpactForRfftt

^ILAB^ now PWt Plaza. hm> KXIO fool offica aces, (kxxl loca-tk>n. reasonable rant. Call 757 8689.

S

Fpr1it| AflttY

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX near Uni yrpfr m m^TTf.

3 ROOM furnishod apartment with rivato bath and ontoranca. Prq without

prvala bath and anterano larrod marrtad cowta \ chlhlr8n.at43W oSlhooi.

125 CondominiuinsFor Rint

mon^ 12 monte toON. Young ozupla praterrod. Call Clark Brandi Realtors, 75M336._

127

Houbbs For Rifit

AVAILABLE I/M/MEDIATELY 3 bedroom, IVi bath townhouso In Windy Ridge. Includes ftraplece In living room, kltchon complete wfth range, refrigerator end dishwasher, washer end dryer, tree use of pool, seuno end tennis ceurts. *425 per

month/one monte socurfty depcisil. Cell Mavis Butts Realty,

758^655

CHARMING HO/ME 2 badrooms, 2 baths, study, dan and formal living room, porch, dock, pool, wood and oil fumaca. and fenced yard. In Ayden. 746-2898.

HOUSES^ AND APARTIMENTS In

town and country. Call 746-3284 or

AYDEN OFFICE SPACE tor rent. 307 South PWt Sti^. Cell 746-3767.

MODERN, eftractive office space for lease. Appraximetoly 1500 Locetad 2007 Evans   Meeelay Bratears.

square

NEAR DOWNTOWN Singta office *140 monte including uttlftlM. Also suites end conference room evaile-bte.EveiUnot. 752 3848.

OFFICES FOR LEASE ______

JT or Tommy Wllll8ms.7S6-7tlS.

Contact

SINGLE OFFiaS or suftM, wfth utilities end Tonftoriel. Cha^ Little building. 3106 S Mamarlal Briyf:Cpii756-779y.

STORE/RESTAURANT/SINGLE or mltiple offices aveileble new downtown. Offices convenient to wrfhQvf. 75HWL mm.-

TWO ROOM or tour room office suite. Highway 284 Business. Eca-

nomical. -        -

storage Branch 756-6336.

ngnway 2m ousmass. ec-I. Private parking. Soma availabta. Call connally at Clark Branch Raalters,

TWO OFFICES FOR S2S8. I oHtaa for *125. (Xfice pT area. SITS answer phone formation call

Z56J22

icejplut use of focepHon Office plui someone te

or more In-Heftren at

300 SQUARE FEET two room office and 440 square teet teroa room office, Joyner-Lentar Building. 219 N otenche Street. Perking avatlabie. Call Jim l^niqr,

LYNNDALE Four bodroom ranch home availabta early January, (SSO

month. Dagpsit and one year lease required. Call Richard Lane at Blount 8, Bell. 756 3000

excellent 2 bath

NEAR HOSPITAL, neighborhood. 3 bodn homo on 4VS acre lof. 1 veer lease. ^ month plus dsposit. To see Allte Carroll, Afdrldge 8, Southerland. 756-3500 or 756-8278.

Drive. MS.OO; Hardee Acres,

8U5.M; Green Farms, *325.00; ^rles    *375.00; Yorktown

Square. 3 bedrooms. *400.00; Lynndele, *400.00. All rsqylrt loese

TWaBEDROOM home, aftrectlve h*. living room, dining room, kitch an. bath. *290 per monte. Cell J L Harris B Sons, Inc^ Roaftors, ZaZU

bams, larga living room, dining room, study, kltchan, utility room, garags id basamoni, *3so por monte. ^11 JL Harris 8. Sons,

Inc.. Reatters. 758-4711

BEDROOM country apwtmoni iTlas south of Groonvllla Highway 43. Call 524-5587.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE witein walk ing distance of tea unL monte. CENTURY II

unlvorsity. (325 B Fi

3 BEDROOM HOUSE locatad closa to University. 7564)528.

3 BEDROOM houso. 2 bath, central locetion end mere. *425 monte.

AtSOClatel. 3542727.

BEDROOMS,

room, dinr

plus

lOOMS, 2 bates, living ling room, *198 por monte urity dsposir No peta.

133 Mobil# Hornet For Rgnt

wasfwr, dryor, and canlral air. Low Home*. 7548131

FOR RENT 12X90 Colonial Park.

and *160 rent. Cell

SPECIAL RATES tor students. 2 bedroom with carpet, iissTNo pats, oochimren. 798 4941

:i^*fcalr,Sroffl2S!"da

required. 752 1623

dqposlt

UNFURNISHED I bodroom. 1160 e monte, stove and refrigerator in-ciudd.<roodiffitftff

2 BEORQOMS, 2 ... wosner/dryer, exoalk Lbcated n good park. Noi)8t*.aW85).

, *175 monte. In porson.

2 BEDROOMS. 1 bate, cwitral haaf, air condition, *225 a monte. Ml Steve 6 vent t AMoclatos. 355-2727,

WIntlfYlllt. Nopetl. H9D. 756 1315.

5,.iSfe'pisnriiH

Con|tY.lRf)t. 7548875 eftar 5.

138

Rooms For Ront

LARGE FURNISHED ROOM, *130

aeiiafig: rpim.

PRIVATE ROCNM with kitchen priv

ft4^. female, near collog.^S4

PRIVATE Student oi 756-7674.

ROOM FOR protessional

RENT

ROOMS FOR RENT Call 7 a.m.

until 11 p.m., 752-6583._

140

WANTED

6p.m.

142

RoomfTMrttWBirtBd

FEMALE NICE 3 bedroem^hgu^

including local phone. utl|ltle:tall738#ll4.

*95

FEMALE ROOMMATE wwitad to share 3 bedroom homo. SI2S. 754

7247.__

LOOKING FOR responsible male to share 3 bedroom apartment. 893^0 month and holt uHlgSi. 7547399.

rniSied"??S;fi?hn8r

Eastbrook Apartments. (139 per month end half uHlitles. Contact

PROFESSIONAL or grad Nudont wanted to share 3 bsroem townhouso In Windy Ridge.

ESfgSiiyaiilSiWSSSli

mXSi

ROOMMATE WANTED to share 3 n trailer, *178 monte, In^ avaryteing but feed. Call

TO SHARE 3 bedroom traitor. *190 a monte. Includes everting. 794 4938 after 7 p.m._Z

144

WBfiMToBuy staurat^wSSTbcT

heve a client who wants to buy an operating restaurant in (xroanvlila

or In a ------  "    '    

astad Harold

nowdan, Jr. with The idea. Inc.. 753 3666.

ring resteurent in (roenvllle a nalgf^lng ci^; If Inter-

I's

rdan, Jr. wifh The

146

Wan1#dToLBBSB

totw!m^lni^rita\nd Brosnvme! Call 756 3633 eftem._

pounds to taasa.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE 8UY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS&DOORS

'I A.lilil.r.r.

( .1.1 upton Co.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

C.L. Luptoii, ( )

Coll Claffifid At 752-6166

TRAVEL FLORIDA

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GOLF AND SKI

SALE

NOW IN PROGRESS

Reduced 25% to 70%

Gordon Fulp Golf & Ski Sho!

At Ite GimnsM# CflNNlif 7S-MM

SPECIAL

Safe

Model S-1 SpoclNPrfe# $-|22*

Reg. Pric# $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

5e08.EvBni8t. 752-2175

MPORTANT VALENTINE MESSAGE FROM COX FLORAL SERVICE 117 W. 4th ST. DOWNTOWN

VALENTINE DAY CONES ON MONDAY THIS YEAR. WE WILL BE DEUVERING VALENTINE FLOWERS ON SATURDAY 12. SUNDAY 13 bmI MONDAY 14.

PIcM# plac# yo*N ofdctB arlir to <

BN dxtia day Miflp to c*4ey.

Caet piBtMit## pnMqit dtttaeiy e phcodoR Neadap. Feb. 14th.

Oa Noaday ibc eaM>    pMli ap

avoid dlsappoi**toat. TUa ! a l8e...Plaaaa ofdar aaely.

Cox Floral Service, Inc.

flaatew te day fot

1937-1983

7S8-2I83

THE REAL ESTATE CORNER

AydenN.C.

609 Snow HNI St.

tSi'SSTLS**'    iWeldence:    fonwl Wnfl

room eW

In grNI; double carport; outilde igWjnd itofiOt; 2S3Q equero laet hea^

528 Park Avd.

^Dedroome; 1JMR, living room, dinino room, Wlchei^

LdouWegwioiendM^

heeled erie; oomer lol wHh thade ireee. fireplice In

living room.

Heueee elwwi by appoiMtMnt only RiWiBni lomad Med Mr

devMepmeiillersMe

Chester Stox Real Estate

74l4iiidny

Aydea.N.C.

T4833M after 5:38 PM

I





(^89WOrd By Eugene Sbeffer

ACROSS

IDiUheft

{Fireplace

projection

SObns

12 Fizz drink

U Summer co(^r

14 Woodwind

15 Baal, for one

17 Village

U Haggard novel

19 Sense organ

20 Bards

21 Malay gibbon

22 Englands air arm

23 French painter

2i Young bankers

30 Tel-

31 Immerse

32 Olive genus

33 Pottery baking dish

35 Cease; naut.

30 Goal

37 Wrath

38 Expert

41 Doctorsorg.

42 Unmatched 45 Ooze

40 American favwite

48 Corridor

49 Puzos Fools-

50 Heal

51 Gaelic

52 Girl of song

53 Secondhand

DOWN

1 Vipers

2 Biblical fHlot 3Border 4C3iine8e pagoda 5 Horrible hero 0 Fragrance 7 Couch 8Cu{Hd

9 Cotral American tree

10 Legal wrong

11 Serpent lizard

Avg. soiutimi time; 24 min.

urm

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

10 Tidy

20 Buddy

21 Tomato, once

22 Corded fabric

23 Train unit

24 Eggs

25 Perimeter 20-Pan

Alley

27 High note

28 Thing, in law

29 Posed for the artist

31 Blurred 34-Carson 35 Inland sea

37 Urge

38 Tennis star

39 Diary word

40 Morays

41 Samoan seaport

42 Musical work

43 Dreadful

44 Legal paper 40 Paid

notices 47 Shield

CRYPTOQUIP

AW G FGEGMXV EAKTVVC WFKNJ G

MKKTV JK N. W. WVJJXVCW?

Yesterdays Cryptoqulp - THE DROLL DOCTOR NEEDLED HIS CLIENTS.

Todays Cryptoquip clue; K equals 0.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipha* in which each letter uMd stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single lettma, sl^ words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

C) itn King FtaturM Syndicate, Inc

FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, JAN. 12,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES; It is important today and tonight that you don't neglect routine matters. Also, concentrate on working out a specific plan that will give you many benefits in the future.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Put aside recreation for now and engage in career matters that are important to your welfare. Be careful in travel.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Take steps to improve your appearance and make a fine impression on others. Bring your finest talents to the fore.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Have ulks with close ties concerning new plans and come to the right decisions. Don't neglect business matters.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Go over any reports carefully and be sure they are correct. Be more cooperative with others. .

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) New ideas you have can be made more practical if you analyze them accurately. The evening is best spent at home.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Study your appearance and know where to make the right improvements. Be sure not to lose your temper with anyone today.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Make changes in your surroundings and gain added comfort. Be more thoughtful of family members. Use care in motion.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Long talks with friends bring about improved arrangements for the future. Diplomacy is important at this time.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Make sure you keep the promises you have made and handle all duties. Take time for entertainment.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Your hunches are accurate now so be sure to follow them. Engage in favorite hobby. Be more enc(Hiraging to others.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Know what your responsibilities are and how best to handle them. Avoid one who is a troublemaker.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Good day to confer with associates and clear up any possible misunderstanding. Intprove your surroundings.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wiU possess much ability and will have the ptamina to work long hours on a project which will lead to success. One who will abide by the ethical standards in life. Ideal family life in this chart. /

The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

^ 1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

To Offer Social Security Plans

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., said Monday he plans to offer his own propo^s for refinancing of the nations Social Security system in the next few weeks.

Helms, ^leaking to the Raleigh Rotary Gub, gave no details of the proposal he will make by the aid of this month or in eariy February, but said it would probably be viewed as controversial.

Discount Leaf Boosts Program Costs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Farmers should refrain from growing discount varieties of flue-cured leaf becaise it has boosted the cost of the fedo*-al U^cco program, a state official says.

Marshall Grant, chairman of the North Carolina Agriculture Stabilization and Conservation Service Committee, says part of the reason the amount of leaf going to the Flue-Cured Tobacco Stabilization Cor-^ration has increased is because companies wont buy discount varieties.

Grant, one of several tobacco officials who met in Raleigh lai^ week to discuss leaf quality, said the ASCS is discussing ways to encourage farmers to plant only acceptable seed varieties when sowing their plant beds in the next two months.

"We feel like it has grown to the proportton that some-

agricufture c^misskmer, recently urged farmers not to grow discoiBit varieties.

Federal law requires a grower to certify that he has not planted any discount tobacco. If a fanner does not provide that certification, be is eligible for only 50 porcent

of the normal price siq)p(xt lid.

level. Grant said.

A grow- found guilty of falsing the califcate is subject to fme and reductkm of his allotment.

The state agriculture department will ^ve.tbe ASCS

my evidence tt finds of a grower planting discount tobacco, say George E. Spain, bead of ttie departments seed divisioa, and William G. Parham Jr., d^ uty commissioner.

Charies King, secretary-treasurer of Tobacco Associates in Raleigh, said rules governing tobacco quality should be more strictly enforad.

He said the issue would concern Tobacco Associates, the flue-cured growers woridwide prmnotkmal or

ganization, if tobacco does not meet the chemical make-up foreign buyers expect fixxn quality U.S. tobacco.

Nicotine coiRent is lower and sugar cmtent is higjter in discount varieti, causing them to lack in flavcNr, King said.

Some discount varieties are popidar amoog farmers since they are hi^i-yielding and rdatively easy to produce and cure.

Farmers meeting last week asked the stabilization cooperative, which tests leaf for cbonkal residues, to

consider analyong the leaTs chemical composition as well.

Fred Bond, stabilization general manager, said the coopoative w^d consider tberequest.    ^

Growers also asked the ASCS to consk! spot checks of fields.

Pain-Killer?

I

thing needs to be d(e about it,Grant says.

There are particular communities that have developed a reputation for planting discount varieties, Grant added in a telephone interview. He declined to name the conununities.

Grant said buyers have been asked to tell the state where the discount tobacco is found, but they refuse to do so because they say divulging the information may je(^ardize their firms.

Jim Graham, state

A

1

LONDON (AP) - Eight of 10 women who tried dectric shock treattnent to reduce pain during childUrth said the new method was successful, the Sunday Times rep(Ml8.

Doctors at Hammersmith Hospital who are developing the technique hope it will enable them to use fewer drugs during chUdbirth.

In the new tedinique, weak current Is aiqplied throu^ four pads fixed on either side of the spine above and below the waist, causing OKlorphins - natural painkillers - to be released by the womans body, the new^>aper said.

Developers of the treatment say there is no danger involved.

Says Economic RecoveryBegun

Classes Are Starting

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Economic recovery has begun and will accelerate in the next four months as interest rates (xmtinue to decline, said Dr. James W. Christian, chief economist for the U.S. League of Savings Associations.

Christian made his remarks Monday at a press conference held by the North Carolina Savings and Loan Leagim.

Christian predicted that mortgage loan rates would dnq) to about 12 percent before mid-year and that the prime rate would fall to about 10>.4 percent. The strength of the recovery will dq>end on sales of new cars and houses, he said.

Stenciling

Quilting

Crochet

Knitting

Smocking Candlewicking Folk Art Stitchery Cross Stitch

Basket Making

ScotcH Bonnet

NEEDLE ARTS STUDIO, INC.

602 Arlington Blvd. Open Wednesday TU 9:00 P.M. Call for Information 756-4877 PCC sponsored

Hene(X)mes

BRIGHT

A fresh iiew taste experience that outshines menthol.

It not only tastes fresher while you smoke. It even leaves you with a clean, fresh taste.

-AL _


Title
Daily Reflector, January 11, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.)
Date
January 11, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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