Daily Reflector, January 18, 1983


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





Wathr

Lows tooigbt wUl be oear 15 desees and Wednesday high in the 30; continued dear Uirou^ tomorrow.

102ND Y^AR

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 6-OPEC crisis Page 8-Vatican session Page 14-Mideast talks

NO. 15

GREENVILLE. N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FiaiON TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 18, 1983

20 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTSBllnson Given Authority To Meet Cuts

JERRY RAYNOR Reflech* Staff Writo*

Members of the Greenville Board of Education Monuay night voted to give Siqierintendait Delma Blinson authority to take necessary st^ to meet the tight bud^ situation created by cuts in state funds.

In a report to the board on the recently announced 2 percent cut in the State Board of Educations 1982-63 budget, Blinson pointed out that Gov. Jim Hunt does not want any cuts in the personnel budget. Since state hinds allocated to Greenville city schools has 96 percoit of the amount tied up in personnel budget items, this means that all other items constitute only4 percent of state money allocated to us.

Noting that i the 2 percoit cut has to come from general expense funds, a situation could devek^ in which it might become necessary to relace rescinded state funds in that category.

Itenu allocated to the general expense budget from state funds for the current fiscal year amount to 1235,595 -(Eno^, $114,527; instructional sigiplies, $74,213; vocational st^plies, $32,789, and other items, $14,066).

Overall state funds allocated to Greenville schools is $6,253,508. Two percent of that total is $125,070. By subtracting the $125,070 from the $235,595 general expense budget, that leaves $110,525 theoretically availaUe fw this category of funds.

However, as of Mwiday, the unappropriated fund balance in the general expense budget from state funds stands at $97,821. Technically, by subtracting the $97,821 on hand from the $110,525 figure representing the called-for 2 percent cut in this area, it can be interpreted to mean that the general expense budget is already in arrears in the amount of $12,704, with more than five months to go in the current fiscal year ending

It is a crisis situation, Blinson omunented, pointing out that there will still be a need for acklitional energy costs and necessary instructional and custodial siqjplies that normally would come from the state-allOcated general expense fund.

In an effort to resolve the budget situation, board members

authorized Blinson to act on his five-point reconunendation to try to cope with the problems involved.

Hie recommendations presented by Blinson were:

(1) FYeeze purchases and expentures on state and local funds which may be necessary to replace rescinded ^te funds.

(2) Curtail personnel costs by any action not in violation of the State Board of Educations policy of Jan. 5. (The policy on not cutting in personnel areas).

(3) Adjust individual line items subject to current laws and regulations and subsequent approval of budget amendments; provided, no such adjustments would cause a deficit within

(Please turn to Page 2)

Pitt's Tobacco Allotment Leased By County BoardMoving The Depot

GETTmG READY FOR A MOVE - Workmen of J.W. Lanier movers prepare a part of the Seaboard Systems freight station in WintervlUe to be moved to the Eagles Homestead at the Pitt County Fairgrounds. J(to Lanc^ spokesman for the

company, said only aboitt 60 feet, starting from the front, of the

statkm will be moved. Preparations were made today and the actual move will not take place for a two weete. Landen said the weight of the section being moved will be about 90,000 pounds. (ReQector Photo by Tonuny Forrest)

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer

The Pitt Board of Commissioners leased the countys

38.015-pound tobacco allotment Monday for $30,492 - more than 80 cits a pound - and rented 106.3 acres of cropland for $5,952.80.

Johnny Harris was the high bidder - at $56 per acre - for the farmland, which includes 79 acres at the county farm near Bells Fork, 6.5 acres of cleared land near Pitt County Memorial Ho^ital, and 20.8 acres of land near Pitt Community College.

The tobacco was leased in nine 4,000-pound lots and one

2.015-pound section.'

Six of the 4,OOOpound lots and the 2,015-pound offering were leased for 80 cents a pound (12,015 pounds to Glenn Loftin, and 4,000 pounds eachs to Alton Joyner, Roman Buck and Robert Eari James), while the remainder of the poundage was leased at 81 cents per pound (12,000 pounds to James Uttle).

Before the bicUing began, commissioners announced that the county would pay the 7 cents per pound fee required by' the nchcost tobacco program when quotas are moved off the land.

Traditionally, leasing of the countynowned tdtiacco quota and land serve as a guideline in the leasing of other quota and land in the county. The price of qimta has increased this year

as a result of the 7-cent assessment levied on allotment holders, the 10 percmit cut in over-ail (^ta and the rising support levd for tobacco.

The no<ost program levies the 7-coit assessment on allotment holders only when the qimta is transferred to another farm. Individual growers also pay a 7-cent assessment when the h^acco is sold.

In otltor business Monday, commissioners received a written report from Greenville schools indicating that between $3,000 and $5,000 worth of repairs will have to be made to the Fullilove School building on Chestnut Street if the facility is to be operated for the 1983-84 school year.

The report also said if the building is to be used as a school facility in the future, a major renovation, estimated to cost $300,000, will be needed.

The board also reai^inted members to the Board of Health, the Domiciliary Home Community Advisory Committee, the Pitt County Development Commission, the SBA Certified Develi^ment Co., the Pitt County Industrial Facilities and Pollution Ckjntrol Commission and the Nursing Home Advisory Committee, and named Ephraigm Smith to the Pitt Community College board of Trustees.Board VotesHunt*$ NC BudoQt PoHcyPaper

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Gov. Jim Hunt today proposed that the Genei'al Assembly lift the freeze on state employees and teachers salaries, spend more for math and science instruction and expand

Medicaid contributions in the 1983415 budget.

The budget is based on predictions that the economy will begin to show signs of recovery in 1983. Bud^ officials say the biggest risk is if the recovery fails to begin as early as they predict.

Next years proposed

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Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell youi problem or your sound-off or maU it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.

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MADE UP HERE?

According to Ralph Kimmel, executive director of the N.C. Principals Association, a bill [mssed in 1982 by the N.C. Legislature stated that up to five days missed due to hazardous weather or other disaster do not have to be made up by students and employees. Will the Pitt County and Greenville schools abide by this? L.H.

A spokesperson for Greenville schools said the city Board of Education voted Oct. 4,1982, to go ahead and use any snow days already worked into the school calendar and then to look at the situation again if the need to miss more days arises. Its thought that this would be unlikely due to this areas history of minimal snowfaU and other weather conditions that Would warrant schools being closed, she said.

Tom Craft, associate superintendent of the Pitt County schools, said virtually the same thing: that its believed that this will not be an issue in Pitt County since snow days are already incorporated in the school calendar. If it were to, however, it would have to be looked at again by the board.

It should be made clear that the legislation stated that local boards of education may excuse students and employees for up to five days used tor bad weather, but not that they have to. The final decision-making was left to local boards.

budget incliKles $6.182 billion in total spending, 14.5 percent more than this years $5.91 billion, llie pn^josed 1984-85 budget is $6.373 billion.

Special budget provisions ask the General Assembly to find money to match federal highway fuitos, r^ir and renovate state facilities and increase the travel allowance for state employees.

Hunt also recommends that private colleges and universities be allowed to Submit funding reqiKSts directly to the governor, instead of the University of North Carolina Board of Governors.

Legislators were to receive a copy of the budget and a written message from Hunt today. The governor, with advice from the 12-member Advisory Budget Commission, prepares the budget for action by the General Assembly.

The 198344 bud^t is based on estimates that general tax revenues will grow 8.8 percent, to $3.553 billion. That does not include highway funding, federal funding or other agency revenues.

No revenue predictions were made for 198445 and ending was set just high enough to cover continuing expenses and lift the salary freeze.

A sustained recovery in automobiles and housing should set the stoge for a general edmomic revival begiiming in 1963, the prepared budget said. But the

document stipulates that the states economy is not expected to show much improvement during the initial stages of the national turnarwmd.

Officials say two p<itive economic indicators - the downward trend in interest.

rates and the increased sales of new cars and Iwmes -influenced the 1983-85 revenue projections.

The budget predicts that revenue growth for 1982-83 will be 5.9 percent by the years end, far short of the predicted 8.9 percent, and

there will be $900,000 left with which to begin 198344.

Traditionally the budget is divided in three parts -money for continuing existing programs; for expanding services, adding new services or increasing (Please turn to Page 2)

Lawmakers Say Budget Posing A Big Challenge

By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer Gov, Jim Hunts budget message to the General Assembly Monday poses quite a dialloige for all of us, Pitt Countys Rep. Ed Warren said this morning.

Warren said the governor showed good vision in \i4iat he is trying to do. The concept is good ... I sqiport the things he is trying to do. Theres a lot of dq>th in vitiat he was saying.

But Warren, and Pitts senior representative, Sam Bundy, said the availability of money is the key issue.

All the pn^osals are good, provided we find the funds to do what he (the governor) wants, Warren said. I havmt fotmd anybody yet who is ready to pn^)ose any additkmal taxes.

His speech was all right if

we can find the money tor it, Bundy said. His speech was good, and I dont know of anything the state doesnt neied, but some of it we simply will not be able to fund.

Bundy said that while Hunt received some applause during the speech, the response from the members of the General Assembly was not the number of tim^ or the intensity which the governor has received in the past.

1 agree with the fact that we should take the freeze (on sstate wages) if we can, Bundy said, but some things we will not be able to fund. It all comes down to May, when we see what weve got to do with.

Rep. John Gillam of Windsor, who represents Pitts Bethel and Canfina townships in the House, said:

I feel like the speech and the budget presented to us is a package for urban North Carolina. Rural Ninlh Carolina and agriculture once again have not been given a top priority.

Gillam said Hunts speech was really good.

1 agree with some of the things he said, Gillam said. I think all North Carolinians must remember that were dealing with an economically d^ressed time, and its very difficult to do everything we want to do.

Gillam continued, I really believe North Carolina is fortunate to have to have a ballanced budget. Its times such as this that causes deficit spending and we cannot spend more than we take in. Im glad to be a part of a General Assembly thats

(Please turn to Page 10)

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer Greenville school board members Monday night approved a first reading of a policy paper covering Reduction in Force - Certified Personnel. Personnel in the certified category are teachers.

The purpose of the policy is to provide guidelines in the event of the loss of funding, declining enrollments, program changes, or revision of the school systems goals and priorities it is necessary to reduce the number of certified positions...

All policy papers adopted by the school board require a first and second reading before a policy becomes official. Hie second reading of he Reduction in Force -Certified Personnel will be held at the second February school board meeting on Feb. 21.

On Feb. 14, the date of the first school board meeting for February (which is a change from the regular first Monday date the board normally meets), public participation by liaison committee members, members of NCAE and other interested groups or persons is being encouraged to provide input and suggestions for final formulation of the policy.

The preliminary policy position presented to school board members Monday entails four principal criteria on which reduction (tecisions will be based. Briefly, these

criteria are ones of: seniority in the system; professional standing; training and certification, and performance. At this point, no specific priority or weight each criterion will carry has been (totermined. Itiis will be established at the time of the final reading.

After adoption of the policy, a set of rules and recitations to q^ate the pdlcy will be drawn up and presented to the board for action.

In other matters, the board:

Approved f(Hir budget amendments. These are: A State Public School Fund amendment representing an increase of $16,751 in special instruction programs and business si^rt services; Federal Fund Amendment No. 2, representing an increase of $6,449 in pupil support services; Current Exi^nse Budget Amendment No. 3, an increase of $60,733 in regular and special instructional services and regular community services; and Capital Outlay Budget Amendment No. 3 for $3,000, to cover the previously approved outlay for band equipment.

Approved, with appreciation expressed, a proposal from the staff of the ECU Medical School to provide identification services for medical consultations of chilcben in the Greenville City Schools.

Voted against sending two delegates to the National

(Please turn to Page 10

Jobs, Schools Targeted In 'State Of State'

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Gov. Jim Himt targeted jobs and schools in his State the State speech Monday nij^t as areas that will receive a lot of attention during his last two years in office.

The peofde Nwth Carolina need good jobs, Hind told members of the House, Senate, Councit (rf State, cabinet, Suprmne Court and Appeals Court as they crowded into the House chamber. They need good paychecks. Their children need a good educatioa.

He said his 196345 budget, which he described as the most austme Nmth Carolina has seen in a decade, will outline a lO-step plan for preparing paUic school students to work in a hi^i-te^nology economy.

Hunt repeated his call fm* lifting the freeze on salaries for state workers and teachers but reiterated his previous sUtements that he opposes tax increases for granting the raise. The only tax incrmse be said he could support is one on alcoholic beverages to generate money for highways.

We cannot afford to let uur hard-earned tax dollars that we send to Washington go to build roads in other states, Hunt said.

The budget and a written message from the governm- was to be presoited to legislators this morning.

Some iegislators were skq>tical Monday night that Hunt could find enough money to carry out the goals he outlined.

The numbers dont make smise, said Sen. Cass Ballenger, R-Catawba. He wants to expand education and increase math and science courses. He cant do it all by

increasing the alcohol tax.

Sen. Itobert Jordan, D-Montgomery, a budget leader, said he doesnt know how the Legislature can lift the salary freeze. Hes putting the burden on our shoulders to find the money, Jordan said.

It was Hunts fourth State of the State address during his six years as governor. In the 45-minute speech which was intenrqited 11 times by applause, he rqxMted on his administrations past achievements and future ambitions.

The 10-step educational plan outlined by Hunt calls for:

- Continuing a reading program in kindergarten through the third grade.

- Retraining instructors who are teaching math and science without certification in those subjects. In 198041,

(Please turn to Page 2)





Personal Income Keeps School Board... Up With Inflation Rate

State Of State...

(Cootinjed from pagel) about 40 percent of the math teachers in grades 7-12 were teaching out-of- field compared to 29 percent in science.

- Recruiting math and science teachers with a schdarship program.

- Paying some high school math and science teachers for an additional six weeks employment.

- Establishing model math and science projects in elementary' or secondary schools.

- Gradually increasing minimum standards for passing the competency test and consider putting science questUMis on the test.

- Approving proposals to increase high school graduation requirements from 18 to 20 units.

- Implementing a North Carolina Scholars Program to give recognition to students who complete a more rigorous high school curriculum.

- Increasing the number of math and science courses required for college admission.

- Continuing to build the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics.

All of North Carolina, led by its governor and General Assembly, must make a new commitment to excelloice in education, Hunt said. We ought to bold up good teachers and good principals and good schools as examples. We ought to recognize their accomplishments and issue a challenge for excellence.

Hunt also called for more commitment to provide jobs for North Carolinians. He said he would ask legislators to strengthen skills training in community colleges by spending more money on equipment and would sign an executive order soon setting out a job-training policy for the state.

He said hell seek money to continue efforts to attract high-technology industries to the state, including continuing support for the Microelectronics Center of North Carolina.

He defended his past spending record despite cutbacks this year to avoid a $150 million shortfall and criticized lawmakers in Washington for failing to keep their budget in line.

He said some people will claim that North Carolinas progress has come at too high a price, with too much spending and hiring.... The fact is that while some people in Washington talk about balancing the budget, we in North Carolina do it,

Other' areas of concern mentioned by Hunt were a crackdown on drunken drivers, disposal of hazardous wastes, maintenance of strong environmental laws and more support for community mental health programs.

Goldsboro Suit Gets Underway

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Attorneys for Wayne County schools say evidence in a desegregation lawsuit being heard in U.S. District Court will show the board wants to preserve the community school structure.

Testimony in the suit began Monday before U.S. District Judge Franklin Dupree.

In their suit, Goldsboro schools claim the Wayne County school board has promoted a racially dual system of education in the county by refusing to merge or make boundary line changes.

The city school board says thats in violation of the U.S. Constitution.

But the Wayne County school board said it has no control over population changes which are responsible for the schools racial makeup.

Alfred Lindseth of Atlanta, the county boards attorney, said evidence would show the county wanted to preserve the community school structure. He said the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled theres nothing wrong with that.

The Goldsboro city school board said the refusal by Wayne County schools to merge is discriminatory.

The Goldsboro systems 77 percent black student population is the sole reason no merger has taken place, said James Fuller, an attorney representing the Goldsboro City Board of Education.

Goldsboro Superintendent Kenneth Brinson testified Monday that the city schools have gone from 9,051 su-dents, 53 percent of them white, in 1965 to a system of 4,871 students with 77 percent of them black in 1983.

The Wayne County schools are 32 percent black.

'The trial could take three to five weeks and involve 60 witnesses. It has already cost the Goldsboro system $90,000 and the Wayne County system $252,700 in legal expenses.

The outcome of the case c(mld have implications for surrounding counties with predominantly black city systems and predominantly white county systems.

See No Basis For Dam Alarm

KELSO, Waali. (AP) - A report saying that a break in a debris dam at the foot of Mount St. Helens could bury towns in mud up to 40 miles away should not be cause for alarm, officials say.

The study confirmed for us what we suspected the scenario would look like..., said Hugh Fowler, state director of emergency services, after the federal report was released Monday. But he added, The likelihood of a breakout is very, very small.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been pumping water out of Spirit Lake to keep its level below the rim of the dam, which was formed by the deadly eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18,1980.

Will Investigate Higher Prices

BOSTON (AP) - Gov. Michael S. Dukakis says the state will investigate whether retailers are raising prices illegally now that the states container-deposit law has taken effect.

There were about 100 telephone calls to the state attorney generals office Monday, the day the law went into effect, most with complaints of higher prices. Some store owners also cited an increased workload.

The refundable deposit is 5 cents for cans or bottles under a quart and 10 coits for larger containers.

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By ROBERT FURLOW Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Americans total personal income rose 6.4 percent last year, the smallest ^arly gain since 1963 but still enough to more than keep pace with inflation, government figures indicated today.

In December, inoune rose 0.6 percent while personal consumption spending rose 0.3 percent, the Conunerce Department r^rt sakl.

Personal income rose gradually throu^xxit 1982, despite the recession, but the yearly gain was far below the 11.8 percent of .1981. The just-finished year marked the first time total income had grown less than 10 percent since 1975, also a recession year.

On the other hand, each dollar of Americans 1982 income should have ^ne further than in the previous few years since inflation was down substantially. Inflation for all of 1^, as measured by the Cmisumer Price Index, is estimated at under 5 percent.

By comparison, prices rose about 8.9 percait in 1981 and

12.4 percent in 1980.

Many eccHiomists, both inside and outside ^vemmen:, are forecasting moderate economic growth this year in a recovery from the Iwig recession based at least partly on omtinuing gains in personal income and spending. The fact that the growth probably wont be robust should keep inflation from taking off again, they say.

For last year, the report said:

Personal income rose to a total of $2.57 trillion. The

6.4 percent increase was the smallest since the 5.1 percent of 1963, a year in which consumer prices rose just 1.6 percent.

-Disposable, or after-tax, income rose 7.1 percent to $2.173 trillion after increasing 11.2 percent in 1981.

-A separate Commerce inflation measure, reflecting changing buying patterns as well as prices, rose 5.9 percent in 1982, leaving a 1.1 percent increase in disposable income after adjusting for inflation. That compared with a 2.5 percent real income gain in 1981.

-Personal consumption spending, which includes just about everything except interest on installment credit, rose 7 percent to a 1982 total of $1.972 trillion.

-Personal savings rose 8.4 percent to $141.1 billion, leaving a national saving rate of 6.5 percent, up slightly from the 6.4 percent of 1981. The rate measures new savings as a percentage of disposable income.

Todays report said total income reached an annual rate of $2.637 trillion in December, while spending rose to a rate of $2.046 trillion. Disposable, or after-tax, income rose 0.6 percent to an annual rate of $2.235 trillion.

Ruled 'Exempt' From Lawsuits

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The government is exempt from lawsuits prompted by the Armys mock germ warfare attack off San Francisco in 1952, a federal appeals court has ruled.

In upholding a ruling by a U.S. cHstrict judge, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday dismissed a $300,000 suit fUed by the family of Edward Nevin, 75, who died of teart muscle inflammation.

The suit said Nevin was killed by bacteria released in the tests conducted to determine how winds would carry poisms released off the coast. The government said the tests were harmless.

In its appeal, the Nevin family conced that immunity covered the test, but not the choice of bacterium.

(Continued from pagel) tlmtfund.

(4) Call for voluntary curlailment of all non-esseitfial expenditures by princq)als, teachers and staff.

(5) Monitor the fiscal status moiUhly and repcnrt to the board and/or County C^ommisskmers any necessary action to comply with the 2 percent mandate.

Blinson said it may come to the point whoe the board may have to say specific actions are needed, for example, (and) we may have to go to the County Commissioners to ask for supplanental funds w seek other alternatives."

Commending on the superintaxteits cooferoice hdd in Ralei^ la^ week in which State Board of Edacatkm officials discussed the 2 percoit cut, Blinson said the formula adopted at the state level does not mean necessarily that each local school unit will receive 98 percent of its allotment. Some will get less, some more. But, collectively, the 143 school systems must spend 2 percit less than budgeted."

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(CMitinuedjhtMn pagel)

employee benefits; and for construction,* renovations or land purchase.

The only item in the expanskm part of the budget is $%.9 million in 1983-84 and $207.1 million in 1984-K for lifting the salary freeze.

There is no money provided for capital expenditures.

Hunt said the top priority in the budget is lifting the freeze on state employees and teachers salaries. The freeze was instituted July 1, 1982, as a cost-cutting measure.

If the freeze is lifted, almost all teachers would get automatic pay increments and between one-half and two-thirds of the state employees would get merit pay increases.

The greatest portion of the budget, about 58 pen^nt, would be spent on elementary, secondary and higher education.

There is $1.8 million a year for training teachers in math and science, $11 million a year for elementary textbooks, $13 million a year for replacing school buses and $30 million over the two-year period for school and institutional utility bills.

The budget also provides increases to give the community colleges $10 million a year for equipment and $4.1 million a year for new industry training as part of Hunts emphasis on training workers for hi^-technology jobs.

In addition, there is $17.3 million in 1983-85 for operating the Microelectronics Center of North Carolina and buying equipment for the facility.

The Department of Human Resources is the next largest category in the budget, with $67.7 million the first year and $137.8 million the second year for increased medical c(ts under the Medicaid program.

Other social programs include about $3 million a year for WUlie M. chUdren, youn^ters who suffer from emotional or mental problems accompanied by violent behavior.

Hiere is about $1.8 million a year for defending poor people in court and $4.5 million a year for operating new prison units.

TT^ budget omits federal funds for highways under the assumption that the state will be unable to match them. North Carolina needs $52.5 million the first year and $54.9 million the seomd year to match $264.5 million in federal funds.

Hunt recommended in his State of the State spe^h Monday that legislators raise

the alcoholic beverage tax to generate money for matching federal funds. He offered no Rifles.

The governor also is urging the General Assembly to find money to fill $142 mUlkm in requests for repairing or renovating state buildings and to use continuation budget money to increase state employees travel allowances from $35 to $42 per day for in-state travel and $45 to $52 per day for out-of-state travel. ,

To avoid budget confrontations, the governor is recommending that private colleges and universities appeal for more money directly to the governor. In the past the private schools have taken budget requests to the UNC Board of Governors, which has been hesitant to ask for more money fmr th private institutions.

Revenue for the Highway Fund is estimated to be $8.1 million higher by the end of the current fiscal year than ^timated because gasoline consumption did not decline as much as anticipated. The fund is expected to drop $2.5 million or .5 percent in 1983-84 and increase $0.5 mUlion in 1984-85.

Mail Booklets On Radiation

MIAMI (AP) More than 100,000 booklets explaining how to (teal with radiation entergencies are going to post offices serving communities within 10 miles of the St. Lucie and Turkey Point nuclear power plants.

The booklet, Emergency Measures, includes emergency telephone numbers, early warning methods and evacuation route maps for Dade, Monroe, St. Lucie and Martin counties, said Joan Geggen, secretary of the state Department of Veteran and Community Adairs.

TO THE JURY ROME (AP)-The trial of 63 Red Brigactes members charged with the kidnap-killing of former i^mier Aldo Moro and a host of kother crimes has gone to the jury. The panel of 12 men and women was expected to take a week to reach their verdicts.

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Teacher Preaches Writing Process Method At School

By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL Associated Press Writ^

WASHINGTON (AP) OK, what do you know? WHat are the facts? What are you trying to say?

Donald H. Graves barks out the questions, stHinding like a latter-day Hildy Johnson. But Graves doesnt operate out of the city room of The Front Page, and his questions arent aimed at hard-nosed reporters, but ai^leKjeeked first-graders.

The genial, bespectacled Graves is a college professor v^o has spent several years in grammar school classrooms exploring how children ages 6 to 8 learn to write.

Hes a leading apostle for what is called the writing process method of teaching writing, which has fUtered into classrooms across the United States, as well as schools in England and Australia.

It involves early, frequent practice at writing, with children spending days, perhaps weeks, writing and revising drafts of a single essay, then publishing it in booklet form for classmates to read and criticize. The method, he says, works with students of all ages, although it is banter to do in hi^ schools where class time is more rigid and the writers may be set in their ways.

Six-year-olds can change on a dime, says Graves, a professor of early childhood education and dilator of the Writing Process Laboratory at the University of New Hampshire in Durham. He is the author of a new book, Writing: Teachers and Children At Work.

"Children want to write. They want to write the first day they attend school, Graves insists. This is no accident. Before they went to school they marked iq> walls, pavements, newspapers with crayons, chalk, pens or pencils anything that makes a mark. The childs marks say, I am.

Ninety percait of children come to school thinking they know how to write, compared with only 15 percent who think they can read. Graves told a reporter during the recoit

At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

Thoughts of a mother who is driving home from a drivers test with a daughter who just got her license.

Ive had a good life. An education. MafHed a man I loved. Gave birth to children. Have an automatic washer. All my own teeth. Came within V4 inch of sideswiping that patrol car. What more could I ask?

If I keep the seat belt on,

I wont go through the windshield. On the other hand, if I want to get out in a hurry. Im trapped. How can she see that dog when the radio, is on so loud? '

Are you listening iq) there? I make you a promise. Let me get home safely to my driveway and I will never again talk about my neighbors, go off my diet, yell at the kids, cheat at cards, overcharge or complain about housework. You think I dont mean business? You get me there without any abrasions and . . . Ill clean my oven!

conventi(H) of the National Council of Teach^ of Engli^, which gave him its research award.

Six-year-olds do an enormous amount ot writing. ... As soon as a kid knows six consonants he can write, says Graves. Any six will do. For instance, a kid might write: i W T STR - I went to the store. They begin to write the way they begin to ^)eak if we let them, says Graves.

He thinks teachers should keep the caps on their red pens and not underline every ^)elling or punctuation mistake in a childs first draft. Instead, Graves urges teaclm to confer with each ^udent and draw the child out about the tq;>ic.

If you drive a person hard for the facts and ordering those facts toward meaning, in the long nm you take care of the ^ammar. Theres nothing more ungrammatical than a rough first draft, saj^ Graves.

Its the writing process aK>roach to writing: ^u dont get it ri{^t the first time. Traditionally in American educati(m, the dummies bad to do it twice, which really was just copying it over for neatness and correction. 1116 bright kids who really needed to be pushed on their information and the way they say it, they ^ by, says Graves.

In his book, be (toides this as putting a good manicure on the corpse. Qiange the spelling, make the penmanship more presentable, take out any heinous punctuation mistakes. But dont change the informaticHi.

Graves, 52, has been an educator for 26 years, starting as a reading teacher in Fairhaven, Mass., where I couldnt wait to bring Tolstoy to 13-year-olds,... Althou^ I loved literature, I made the diildren feel unworthy to read from the elite. When I taught writing, my objective was to stamp out sin and to correct every error on childrens papers. I helped the children to have both literature and writing.

He became a principal, spent ei^t years as education director for the Hamburg, N.Y., Presbyterian Church, worked on education programs for an Indian reservation in iq)state New York, and then on bilingual education before writing his doctorate in 1973 on how children write.

The National Institute of Education provided $240,000 to allow Graves and colleagues from the University of New Hampshire to spend three years in the Atkinson, N.H., Acactemy, a public school, ob^rving how 16 children learned to write.

Graves beiieves that children suffer throu^ some of the same blocks and dry iqiells that professional writers often moan about. He says teachers and parents should expect that, Occasionally a childs work will ^ downhill. In the course of a year a normal writer of any age will go through four of five di7 periods and one or two taU^ins.

For the child, the first struggle is the code, to get it down so someone else can read it; then he gets blocks at the point of ^)elling, then on how to arrange it, then on how to choose a Uq)ic.

Graves says the Atkinson pupils are p(q>ping the cork on their reading scores.

They become assertive, not only as readers, but as human beings. Weve got to have more of that because Uiere are too many shuffling learners out there who just think they know nothing, says Graves.    

Were always looking for what a Ud cant do.... But weve got to find out what it is that kids can do and work from there.

nie DaUy Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Tuediy, January II, ues-3 next month, and David has to find a new roommate. He says he will accept either a male or a female. (The apartment has two bedrooms.)

I told him I do not want him living with a girl. He says if he does, there will not be anything between them, and I will just haV to trust him.

Abby, I dont Uiink I could handle his having a female r<Mmmate. He says he loves me and I don't want to lose him, but how can I be sure nothing will happen between him and his new roommate if shes a woman?

IN LOVE WITH DAVID

Wife Is Not Hubbys Mother

DEAR IN LOVE: Many men and women share living quarters without becoming romantically involved. In any case, his next roommate may not be a woman, so don't worry about something that may never happen.

By Abigail Van Buren

1963 by l>nivfMl PrtM Syndict

DEAR ABBY: I couldnt believe the advice you gave Not His Mother, who objected to being called Mamma" by her husband. You said, Its a loving title. Cherish it. Abby, this is 1983! I am the mother of two little boys, ages 2 and 5, and all I hear all day long is Mommy this and Mommy that. The last thing I want to hear is my 29-year-old husband calling me Mommy. Im too young to have a 29-year-old son.

Whatever happened to Darling, Sweetheart, Honey, and whatever her name is? Id even settle for Toots or Babe.

CALL ME SANDRA

CONFIDENTIAL TO UNEMPLOYED IN DETROIT: Yes, I think you were foolish to have turned down the Job because you were trained for something better.

He that hath a trade hath an estate; and he that hath a calling hath a place of profit and honor. A plowman on his legs is higher than a gentleman on his knees. (Benjamin Franklin)

Birthday Meet Planned

DEAR SANDRA: My mail has been running 100-to-1 against Mamma. The consensus: The only name that's worse is my old lady.

DEAR ABBY; I was appalled that you saw nothing wrong with a man calling his wife Mamma. Women in our society are continually identified as somebodys wife or somebodys mother rather than, as people in their own right.

When a man refers to his wife as Mamma instead of Jane or Margaret, etc., he is saying, She is not a person, she is only the mother of my children.

You should have told that husband to shape up, shut up or ship out!

COLUMBUS, OHIO

Hie Greenville Business and Professional Womens Club held its meeting Thursday night. A program was given on the founding of BPW in February, 1956.

The program was presented by the foundation conunittee, chaired by Ruth Scott. Members of the photography committee, chaired by Vivian Stanley, were

Rqisy Baker, 756-5690, (ur Elizabeth Deal, 752-2917.

Joy Farrell, Pam Parrott and Mallie Penry have been named as new club members.

Membership is open to all persons actively engaged in business or a profession and those enrolled in college, university or accredited educational institution above the high school level. For in-.formation call Pam Davis at 758-7728.

DEAR ABBY: Not His Mother wrote: My husband calls me Mamma and I hate it.

Your advice, Abby, was: Change your attitude; Mamma is a loving title one that you should cherish. Accept it as a compliment.

Abby, my dictionary says that mamma means mother. It also says it is a term used by a child.

It may be too late for Not His Mother, but I am a newlywed, and if my husband ever calls me Mamma, I might just send him back to his!

BARBARA IN WALLA WALLA, WASH.

Plans were finalized for the birthday meeting scheduled for Feb. 10 at the Ramada Inn. Reservations for the dinner should be made by Feb. 9 by calling

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Nifty To Be Fifty

Right?

WiiiisWiison

P.S. Yes, Abby, there is a Walla Walla its right between Waitsburg and Wallula.

Over The Hill Gang R.B. Couple* Clas*

DEAR ABBY: Theres a problem between me and my new boyfriend. David (false name) has shared an apartment with Steve for many years. Steve is getting married

;lts going to be nice hav-i ing a teenager who drives. Sending her to the store for me. Picking up the boys at baseball. Taking in the cleaning. Ill have time to loll around on the phone talking to the police, checking the . ho^itals ... the tow trucks ... our insurance

man.

Somehow, she doesnt look like the same sweet innocent who climbed into the car this morning. She looks like Bonnie speeding to meet Clyde. First the license, then its cigars.

Detroit sits up there trying to improve their hubcaps. Why dont they put a brake on the passenger side of the car? . Fifty million mothers would thank them. Are you listening, Detroit? I want to open my eyes, but I cant.

If I were a well woman, it would be different. People think I am strong, but I have fluttery innards. If we meet anoUier car (m this road I am going to spit up.

Maybe if I hummed. My throat is dry. Maybe if I tapped my feet. My legs! I cant move my legs! Its just a muscle spasm. Ive got to relax.

WILLIAMSBURG DECOR WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) - A weeklmig program, The Origins of American Style: The Period of Settlement, opens here Jan. 30, giving a background for a better understanding of 18th century decorative arts.

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So wheres big shot when his daughter is driving his car home? Hes in an air- conditioned office. He doesnt care what happens to me. Land in a ditch. Just so theres a casserole in the oven.

FIRST LADY'OF ALABAMA - Lisa Wallace receives a kiss from husband, Gov. George Wallace,' after he was sworn in by his brother Judge Jack Wallace in Montgomery, Ala. yesterday. He has held the position three times before.

Shes driving wide opeu! Or is that the gas gauge? Whatever, shes going too fast. Its all her fathers fault. Hes the one who gave her confidence. I said wait till shes 35. Has some respmisibility, something to live for, but no...

Those poor devils who work for the highway d^>artmmit. They should be making $50,000 a year. Ak for drivers ed teachers, they have to be pill pqipo^. Otherwise, how c(^d they climb into Ufese cars every day with

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4-The Daily Reflector, Greenvllie, N.C.Tueaday, January IS, IflO

A Babble Of Tongues

CENnAl FieUltE IN ANY ARMS NEG0TIATI0N9

The resignation of Arms Control chief Eugene V. Rostow last week created an uproar in Washington, and well it should.

Rostow was apparently forced out by some Senate conservatives and major questions were raised by respected observers of government as to whether President Reagan is really in control of the administrative processes.

Rostow resigned to vent his anger over the constant battling between some senators and his top assistants concerning the way he was conducting the nations arms policy.

It was reportedly a very cool departure between Rostow and the White House.

The situation is a dangerous and embarrassing one for the Reagan

administration. Arms negotiations are at a very sensitive stage at this point given the change in leadership in Moscow. Yet the cwitroversy over the chan^ is signaling the Soviet, as well as our allies, that there is confusion in the American camp. This is hardly the way to carry out negotiations.

The president and some of his supporters have made a case for a strong military as being essential to any arms negotiations. They may be right and the president is heeding the advice of a predecessor, Theodore Roosevelt, who suggested carrying a big stick. President Reagan should also remember that the big stick word were predicated by speak sofely. On arms control the Reagan administration is now speaking with a babble of tongues.

Make Way For Fire Units

City firemen responded promptly to a major fire which destroyed a warehouse on May Street near West End Circle last week.

The local fire units were backed up by rural fire fighting units which were called in by prearranged plan.

There was a problem, however, the usual one of heavy traffic racing to the scene and hampering the fire fighting efforts.

Fire Chief Jenness Allen said

THIS AFTERNOON

there was a major traffic problem. We had trouble getting fire units in there where we wanted them because of the traffic.

It is natural for the public to want to see what is going on when a fire of this magnitude breaks out at midday. Everyone should bear in mind, however, that the first priority is to get fire and emergency units on the scene promptly. It means the difference in saving property or, perhaps, lives.

More Difficult?

By FAULT. OCONNOR

RALEIGH - In 1971, the state of North Carolina adopted a new Constitution. Several years of study and a couple hundred yers of experience had ^ne into the document - a combination youd have thought would guarantee that the constitution would be left alone for awhile. But since the new Constitution was adopted, the legislature has approved 19 constitutional amendments and sent them to the voters for ratification. Only four of those amendments have been defeated.

The Committee for Constitutional Integrity thinks the legislature has done enough toying with the constitution. The committee, a wide-ranging body of private citizens, former and present officeholders and academics, is an outgrowth of Tom Gilmores Keep the Two-Year Term Committee which last year successfully fought four-year terms for legislators. The committee has endorsed a series of propias that will make it more difficult to get a constitutional amendment on the ballot.

The committee has formally endorsed two proposals which Gilmore has previously advocated. If a constitutional amendment is to go to the voters, the committee feels the vote should be taken during the November statewide general elections. This way, the greatest number of voters will decide the issue. They also want the state to make a special effort to explain the

amendment to the voters.

The news from the committees January meeting was a pn^iosal to make it more difficult to get an mnendment on the ballot in the first place. Now, three-fifths of each house must approve a constitutional amendment before it can go to a public vote. Under the committees proposal, a two-thirds vote would be needed.

FAULT. OCONNOR

Now it takes 72 npre-sentatives and 30 smiators. If this proposal became law, 80 representatives and 34 senators would be needed to send an amendment along. Had that standard been in effect in 1981, the pri^iosed constitutional amendment on longer legislative terms wouldnt have passed the assemMy.

The change would bring the state into line with the fe(teral Constituticm and the

constitutions of 14 other states.

Gilmore sees degree of difficulty as the issue. How difficult do we want to make the amendment process? He contends that there have been far too many constitutional changes approved in the past 15 years and he wants the process slowed down,

But others see the question centering on the states ability to adqit to a changing world. They say the process is already slow enough. Oliver Williams, a pditical science professor at N.C. State University, asked if slowing down the process wasnt an outdated 18th century sentiment that didnt work well in modern times. Reps. Mary Seymour of Greensboro and Bertha B Holt of Burlington, both veterans of the amendment process, said the process already allows for plenty of deliberation.

Mrs. Holt noted that 72 representatives voting for an amendment often represents far more than three-fifths of

(FteaseturntoFageS)

By JAMES KILPATRICK

Watt's Side Of Story

WASHINGTON - James G. Watt, the eternally embattled secretary of tne interior, turned up recently on Meet theFress.

His purpose was to defml his stewardship, and to insist that the nations parks and public lands are better managed than ever before.

It may be so. Then, again, it may not be so, but it is not necessary to buy every puff and boast in Watts annual report to suggest that he is entitled to be heard. For the past two years he has been on Uw receiving end of an unremitting barrage of vilification from ravironmen-talist groups. Sw;h well-heeled outfits as the Sierra Club, Audubon Society, Friends of the Earth and the Wilderness Society retain skilied publicists; they nave easy access to sympatnetic media. Watt has taken a terrible beating.

Looking back over the past two years, I am inclined to the view that Watt has been drubbed more for the tnings be said - and the way in vidiich he nas said them -than for the things ne actually has done. It is an interesting fact of life that some women (and, I supp<^, some men) are just naturally sexy; they exude a certain attraction. In the same way, at least in the eyes of the professional conservationists, Watt is just

naturally obnoxious; he evokes Um kind of instant an-tagonism that produces apoplectic palpitations. Richard Nixon had the same dubious gift.

The Doily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 Cotanch* StrMi, OrMnvUia, N.C. 27194 Ei|pbliahdlM2 Publishad Monday Through Friday Aftornoon and Sunday Morning DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of tha Board JOHN S. WHICHARD - DAVID J. WHICHARD Pubiiahara Sacond Claaa Poataga Paid atQraanvHla.N.C.

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Other Editors Say Man Of Ideas

(Asheboro Courier Tribune)

This is by no means an enAirsement, but the more we read about Tom Gilmore, the more we like what hes saying. Mr. Gilmores chances of winning the governor^p are not the best right now, but even if he falls short, he will perform a public service if be is able to pqnilarize soim of his ideas.

In the wake of his successful fi^t against the four-year term for l^ators, Mr. Gilmore is active in two organizaticMis. One is designed to look into the sedation of powers issue in North Carolina; the other aims to promote Mr. Gilmore all the way to the governors mansion.

Along with most everyone else well consider that second one in a year or two. The first one interests us greatly.

In an interview with Jack Lail of The Courier-Tribune, Mr. Gilntore, a former legislate and fmmer Liberty residoit, explained his interest in separation of powers:

We need to make governmott simple. I think we can best do that by keqping the branches separate and distinct.

Indeed, he notes that the N.C. Cc^itution mandates as much; The legislative, executive and supreme judicial powers of the state government shall be fcnever separat&and distinct from each other.

Unfortunately, that is not the case. So many legislators wound up on administrative groups by l^ative ai^x^it-ment that the courts have had to intervene. And the Advisory Budget Commission, the granddaddy of indistinct government, is still operating freely.

That simply must be changed. And Tom Gilmore has {Hit together a groq) which may push ttte state toward constitutional com{Hiance by its own diversity. He has managed to put David Stedman and Mickey Michaux, among others, under the same teit, no small acromplishmeit in itself.

Beyond the separation questicm, Mr. Gilmore is also pushing these ideas;

He wants the con^tution amended only at November elections. This is a notion weve been promoting for some time and we are pleased it has his attnkkm.

He would like to establlsfa some kind of clearinghouse to detormine whether {Hoposed l^atkm is constitutkmal. The gubernatorial veto serves that nmctk in most states, bed he is not going that far.

When constitutional amendments are proposed, be wants to make someone responsible tor explaining them to the pdblic.

Hear! Hear!

t

JAMES J.KILFATRICK

Thus, when Watt sounds off about taking the padlock off the resources owned by all Americans, he raises ap-pr^nsions that he intends to give away the national ^re. When he takes a poke at tne privileged few who want to preserve wilderness areas solely for tnose witn mimy enough and time enou^ to hike around in tneir Gucci boots, ne gets the saliva flowing.

Watt has been berated unmercifully, by way of example, for opening up large areas of the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) fOT oil and gas leasing. In one view, the allegation is absolutely true. Over tlm past two years the department has leased a little more than 4 million acres of OCS tracts to petroleum prospectors; it is an immense crease over preceding years. But the OCS comprises 1 billion acres, of which only 13 million acres are actually undmr lease. The tracts leased under Watts administration are a tiny patch on the

whole, and the leases have produced $17.5 billion in sorely needed revenues.

Recent leases of federally owned coal dq)osits ougnt similarly to be put in per^-tive. The past two years have seen 118,600 acres leased, more tnan double the acreage leased in the preceding nine years put tc^ther. But in the days of Lyndcm Johnson, when Stewart. Udall was secretary, tne department leased 98,100 acres in 1967 and another 164,200 acres in 1968. The charge that Watt has been reckless and irreqionsi-ble is not easiiy sustained.

Another flap developed over Watts decision to ^ buying additional land for the natkM^ paries and to concentrate instead r^iairing and modernizing the park pn^rties we have now. Watt concedes that his moratorium may result in nigher costs for future acquisitions (HI down the road, but tnere is much to be said for a pdicy oased on tne homely prec^t that an ounce of prevention is wortn a pound of cure.

Far from destroying the Wild Rivers System, says Watt, ne nas asked for the addition of 245 river mfles. He innerited 523 National Recreation Trails; be has designated anotner 192 trails for inclusion. Watts critics have blasted him for declaring war on tte National Wilderness Freservation Sj^tem; his response is that he has added 21,000 acres to it. On Meet the Fress be pled^ flatly not to approve leases in wUdemess areas. Watt contouls that he nas strengthened the program to preserve endangered ^ies; last week he added a caribou herd in the Facific Northwest to the protected list.

Like most annual reports. Watts Rowing record of ac-compli^ents is subject to critical intopretation. His (Please turn to Page6)

Undercut By Blank Check

By ROWLAND EVANS

and ROBERT NOVAK

WASHINGTON. - Hoimd-ed by his own staff and cm-gressional Republicans to reassert presidential leadership by focieing on the budget deficit, Ronald Reagan has banded Treasury tax etqierts a Uank check that could further the undoing bpth of his leadership and his presidency.

The new budget has been wrapped iq> for a wedi, ex-cqit for revCTue estimate for future years (the out years). Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan has been givoi a plug f(HT fiscal year 1986 and suteequent years a flat dollar amount with carte blanche on how to raise taxes to readi that figure. Barring a last-minute change, Regan will fill in Uiat blank check with a 10 popcent surtax on all inctnne, beginning iiU986.

That remarkable proposal not (Hily completes Reagans transformation from tax-cutter to tax4*aiser but may hasten the calamity it is intended to prevent: a runaway Congress, with the president reduced to impotence.

The pro^t of Reagan being the first president since Lyndcm B. J(kmson to initiate a surtaxa tax on a tax and, therefore, a siqier-graduated form of taxation - leaves Reaganites desolate. Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, Reagans former assistant Treasury secretary, calls it the most harebrained scheme yet from these incompetents. Rq). Newt Gingrich, typifying the younger generation of ccmser-vative congressmen, promises it will produce a fundamental revolt in the Rq;)ublican Party this year.

But the bad reviews are not limited to the GOPs ri^t wing. The partys two principal tax-writers - Sen. Robert Dole and Rep. Barber (Enableare appalled by an out-year surtax. Besides being an invitation for ctm-gressional spending in anticipation of the future tax, it has the lawmakers projecting economic ccmditions three years hence. As for the Democrats, they are quietly licking their chops in relishing Reagans tax folly as the threshold for their own agenda'.

All this wrings from the conviction of Reagans economic team that massive deficits are the cause, not the prodtKt, of hard times. That has led to preoccupation in the presidents councils for

the p^ month with imagined deficit spoxling years into the future and inattention to todays massive unemployment.

Tlte unavoidable consequence has been to enshrine austerity over growth. After breaking faith with soldiers and sailors by cutting back on their promised pay increases, the president now (xmders advice from his staff for a national call to setf-sacrifk (diqjlicating the {xriitically destructive course of Jeny Ford and Jimmy Carter). . Unlike the events preceding his $100 billion tax increase last year, the president has ' proceeded down this austerity path with no visible resistance and no orchestrated prodding from the bipartisan congressional establishment. Rather, Reagan has passively submitted to arguments from chief of staff James Baker and Republican congressional leaders that he would be surrendering leadership to Congress if he submitted huge out-year budget deficits to Capitol Hill.

But why such big deficits? Because of the extraordinarily slow growth estimates -1.4 percent for 1983 - insisted on by Dr. Martin Feldstein, chairman of the presidoits Council of Economic Advisers. Feld^in has become the major new player in the administrations game. The force of his personality and intellect dominates the Tl meetings between him, Regan and budget director David Stockman.

Middle-level administration ec(Hiomists were brushed aside by Feldstein when they pressed for more realistic growth estimates that would yield smaller deficits. Rep. Jack Kemp got notriiere in his effort to avoid (xdicy confrontation with the president by anticipating greater revenue from economic growth.

Reagan is still enough the siq)ply-sider to summarily reject massive excise taxes for the currrat year proposed by Stockmans Office of Management and Budget. But he made no resistance at< all when T-l came up with the* notion for a future surtax made conditional on budget deficits. Thus, with practically no internal debate, Don Regan was handed his revenue plug - a blank check for future taxation.

Unless the blank check is pulled back even as the budget goes to the printer, the (FleaseturotoFage6)

Strength For Today

DANGER IN SUCCESS

The dictiiHiary deflnes success as obtaiidng ones desired end... succeeding fiilly or in acc(Mrdance with ernes desires.

Yet neither the dictionary nor any other book can completely define success. The Biblical dictum that to whom much is given much is required, means that the measure of aiccess for one person is mk necessarily the measure of success for anothm*. He who starts high must go hi^r. And then, again, success can even amount to a catastrophe. It

can puff people up with pride, ruining them with an abundance of good fortuiK, making them feel that the power of adiievement lies only in themselves. The truth of the matter is, of course, that no (Hie ever succMds apart from tte efforts of others. We may say that we have siKceeded by the work of our own hands, but God gave us those hands.

We should all yearn for success and try to achieve it. But we should be careful whoi we have done so. Success can be very dangerous.

Expecting Decade Of Recovery

ByJOHNCUNNIFF Business Analyirt

NEW YORK (AF) - Over the past 10 years there have been three recessions and no real booms, and two of the recessions were longer and deeper than any since World Warn.

In the same period, interest rates were in double digits as often as they were less than 10 percent, and the yearly increase in wiKdesale prices ranged as high as 18.3 percMit.

No wonder the stock market was knocked to its knees, says John Wright, the Bridgeport, Conn., investor and stock market sage, who points out that the Dow Jones industrial average today is less than 3 percent higher than a decade ago.

Well, not even that. On an Inflation-acDusted basis some

popular averages are really only half what they were at the end of 1972, and it took an almost uiqirecedented surge todothatwril.

Wright, who founded Wright Investors Sm^ce, a company that advises m-stitutional investors and handles portfolios for many bank trust dqpartmoks, has always avoided the irotant analysis, prefering basics instead.

Almo^ all of his firms analysis rties on long-term statistical evidaace, but occasionally It becomes difficult to overlocA certain signs and portents, ami of these is the January forecast.

Going back through the years, Wri^t finds that the markets actkm during the m(H)th of January has correctly foreca^ tlw hdl-year traxl seven of every 10

years in the 20th century.

The data show also that the first five days of January have an accuracy record almost as good as the entire nMHith in forecasting the direction of stock prices in the new year.

The records shows, he states, that the first week of trading has correctly forecast the direction of stocks for the whole year two-thirds of the time since 1900 and four-fiftfas of the time since 19f.

So what did the market do in the opening days?

ToriWeon the first day. In the opoiing session it fell more than 19 points. However, before the week was out the industrial average was iq) 30 points.

Wrights assessment of the market hardly relies on such foreca^lDK tMds, but he (rf-

fers them as confirmatkm for conclusi(His already reached.

While hardly conclusive,* he told clioits last week, the first weeks activity nevertheless provides technical siqqMrt to the case f(H- im^ proving economic *and corporate fundamentals pro> pelling the stock market substantially higher in 1983^ ;

Hie accounts his firm' manages, he says, are viri tually fully inve^ in the expectation that stock prices will move considerably bighor during 1963.

And for the deciKle ahead?

To the extent that 1982a dismal economic perfor manee has (nk% and for all discredited the dogma of monetarism, we look forward to the decade ahead as a pmiod of recovery and advance for the U.S. economy and capital markets.





The Daily Reflector, Greeovflle, N.C.-Tueaday, January U, 191^THE SAVINGS NEVER STOP!Super Wednesday!Hurry down! Limited Quantities on many items.

Save 37% to 87% on girls & toddlers sportswear

Group of sportsvt^ear for girls, preschool and toddlers. Includes skirts, tops, pants, dresses, blazers, sweaters and more.

Orig. Sala

Tops, sweaters, baseball jerseys ................. $5    to    $16    1.99

Preschool pants, skirts, gowns & tops.............$11    to    $14    4.99

Toddler robes, jog suits, blouses, pants............$8    to    $10    4.99

Big girls pants, tops, sweaters, dresses and more.. $20 to $28 4.99

Pre school dresses  .......................$15    to    $24    6.99

Big girls blazers, dresses & more..................$20    to    $28    6.99

Save 74% to 80% on all girls winter coats.

6.99,

$27 to $36.

Save 50% to 75% on womens, childrens shoes.

Group of winter shoes for women and children. Includes dress and casuals in broken sizes. Save on ail house slippers for the family.

Orig. Sale

All slippers for the family.  ......................$10 to $20 4.99

Women's low heel flats ........ $15to$17    5.99

Boys & girls casuals............................. $15 to $17 5.99

Womens casual & dress shoes...................$20 to $29 7.99

Boys & girls casuals..............................$20 to $M 7.99

Women's casual & dress shoes...................$30 to $3810.99

Save 33% to 70% on mens suits, sportcoats & slacks

Men's winter 3 pc. suits, sportcoats and assorted slacks all at big savings.

Orig. Sale

Group of assorted slacks. $21 to $ao 9.99 JCPenney Comfort slack... $2113.99 Group of sportcoats .... ito to its 29.99 XPenney Comfort sportcoat, iso 39.99

Poly/wool 3 PC. suits  iiss 50.00

3 PC. suits..................1135    74.99

24% to 79%

on mens sportswear

Assorted winter group of mens velour shirts, flannel shirts, sweaters, robes and thermal underwear. Various styles & colors.

Orta Sals

Thermal underwear speclalbottoms & tops...........  3.79    ea.

Group of flannel shirtsspecial.............................. 4.99

Young mens plaid shirts....................   ne    4.99

Group of velour shirts.................................i20toi28    5.99

Flannel shirts................ s.gi    5.99

Group of sweaters....................................us    to    12s    6.99

Velour robes................................................ 9.99

Cotton sweaters..................   ,25toi3s    18.99

Save 50% to 68% on all mens winter coats.

Now 29.99

Orig. $M to $95. All winteiweight coats and jackets, includes ski jackets and others.

Four-in-oneParka orig.$95 now39.99

Save 40% to 70%

on Womens Sportswear

Group of winter skirts, blouses, pants sweaters, jog suits and more. Styles and prices like these cant last long. So coma see whats in store.

Orig. Sal*

Jr. & Misses tops and sweat pants    9.99 to $26 3.99

Jr. Shirts & Skirts ........................i3.wto$23 7.99

Jr. Slacks, jeans...................................$20    to    $32    7.99

Jr. Misses fashion slacks, sweaters & blazers.. $26 to $37 12.99 Jr. Misses blazers...............................$52 to $80 18.99

Save 40% to 75% on Womens Winter Coats

Save 26% to 57% on Sporting Goods.

Orig. Sal*

Truck gun rack....................  6.M    2.99

Men & women Osaga tennis shoes.... 124 14.99 Mens Osaga running shoes.. 37.88 & 30.99 27.99 Womens Adidas wamHip suits $55 39.99

All E.T. Toys

50S.1.99

Orig. 3.29 to 7.99

Ail womens winter weight coats and jackets. Still a good selection in assorted styles and colors.

Orig.    Sal*

Ski jackets .................$26to$5o    15.99 to 24.99

Survival-type jackets.................S85to$9o    29.99 to 42.99

Leather Jackets.................... $199    33.99

Full length leathers........................$289    79.99

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OPEC Crisis Meeting Could Set Off Price War

BERTBURNS AP Business Writer

NEW YORK fAP) - The decisions OPEC oil ministers make at their emergency meeting next Sunday could touch the wallets of energy users worldwide, perhaps by setting off a price war.

The traditional giants of oil trade - Saudia Arabia and its allied sheikdoms in the Persian Gulf - are angered by the tactics of Iran and other OPEC members, who are ignoring price rules in order to increase their oil exports.

The Saudis and their supporters are threatening to retaliate by unilaterally cutting their prices, even though it could lead to a price-cutting free-for-all.

The meeting Sunday in Geneva, Switzerland is seen by many analysts as a last-ditch try to avoid a price war in tbe Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. OPEC has never reduced its basic price structure in its 22-year history.

If the Saudis reduced their price, which currently is $34 a barrel, other oil exporters would be likely to adjust theirs as well, in order to hold customers. Srnne analysts think the Saudis are cmisidering a cut of between $2 and $4 a barrel.

If the world average price of oil were reduced by $4 a barrel, from its current level of $33, the price of gasoline and other products made from oil would drop, too. As a rule, a $1 drop in the price of crude oil translates to a decline of about 2'^ cents in the price of gasoline, although any drop would not

In The Area

Bundy Gets Committee Assignments

House Speaker Liston Ramsay has announced the appointment of Rep. Sam D. Bundy, D-Farmville, to a number of committees in the state House.

Bundy will be vice chairman of the Finance, State Personnel and Pension and Retirement committees. He is also appointed to the Constitutional Amendments, Education, Hiier Education, Election Laws, Local Government No. 2 and University of N.C. Board of Governors Nominating commmittees.

He was reappointed to the Advisory Budget and State Board of Awards committees.

Children's Art, Craft Classes

The winter session of arts and craft classes at the Greenville Museum of Art, 802 S. Evans St., starts today and tomorrow. Linda Darty will be instructor for the eight-week classes.

Arts and crafts classes for children ages 8-11 (q)en today with classes from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m., throu^ March 8. Classes for children ages 5-7 will open We^sday with classes from 3:30 to 4:30, through March 9.

Tuition is $20 ($15 to children of parents who are members of the Greenville Arts Society). All supplies are furnished. To register, call the museum at 758-1946.

Films For Small Audiences

Hansy Jones, childrens librarian at Sheppard Memorial Library, said the special film program from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Thursday is designed basically for individual attendance and attendance by small groups of children, five or less in number.

Although the space at the childrens library will accommodate a sizeable number of children at any given event, Ms. Jones said library personnel will not be able to effectively deal with large groups reporting at one time.

Five films, suitable for children of elementary grade level, will be shown on Thursday, which is a teacher work day-student holiday.

Solicitation Requests Approved

Police Chief Glenn Cannon has announced the approval of two requests for solicitation permits in Greenville.

Cannon said the requests were submitted by: Hospice of East Carolina to conduct a merchant and door4o-door solicitation Jan. 17 through Feb. 28 to raise funds for operation of the program; and by the Welcome Wagon of Greenville to conduct a merchant solicitation Jan. 17-18 to collect gifts to be given away at a benefit card party.

Red Cross Schedules Courses

The Pitt County Red Cross has scheduled three courses during January and February at Memorial Gym on 10th Street, according to Ruth Taylor, executive director.

She said an advanced iifesaving course will start Jan. 20 at the Memorial Gym pool and continue each evening from 6:30-9:30 on Jan. 25 and 27 and Feb. 1, 3, 8 and 10. One Saturday class from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. is set for Jan. 22.

Jim Parker will be the instructor and participants must be good swimmers and have reached their 15th birthday. Everyone will be tested, Mrs. Taylor said.

A cardio pulmonary resuscitation course will be taught by James Brown on Jan. 24, 26, and 27 from 6-10 p.m. in room 102.

Mrs. Taylor said a multimedia first aid course will be taught by Miss Nell Stallings on Jan. 26 and 27 from 6-10 p.m. in room 105.

For more information, contact Mrs. TayJor at the Red Cross office, 752-4222.

OWENS & ROUSE

Attorneys at Law take pleasure in announcing that

JAMESA. NELSON, JR.

has become a partner in the firm and that the firm will now be known as

OWENS, ROUSE & NELSON

Mark W. Owens, Jr.

Robert D. Rouse, III James A. Nelson, Jr.

105 West Third Street Greenville, North Carolina 758-4276

J

be uniform.

Any sizable dn^ in world oil prices would mean significant savings in fuel prices to motorists, farmers, homeowners and many companies that use oil as a raw material or as a power source.

Lower energy prices could push down the U.S. inflatkm rate and give an added thrust to the economic recovery expected in 1983, economists believe.

A $4-a-barrel drop in oil prices this year would save the United States about $9 billion on its oil-import bill, based on the amount of foreign oil purchased last year. That is a savings of about $40 for every man, woman and child in the country.

It also would be a welcome relief for the oil-importing developing countries, such as Brazil, as well as industrialized

Activities Join Telethon Event

Several activities will take place this week in Greenville in conjunction with the Cerebral Palsy Weekend With the Stars Telethon, scheduled for broadcast by WNCT-TV from 11 p.m. Saturday until 7 p.m. Sunday.

The telethon, featuring actor John Ritter, will be hosted locally by two CBS TV soap opera stars, Frank Runyeon and Margaret Colin, from As 'The World Turns.

Tuesday night, the Occupational Therapy Club from East Carolina University will sponsor a Learn to Clog night at Carolina Opry House. The admission price of $2 will be donated to cerebral palsy.

Thursday night, the Super Grit Cowboy Band will perform at the Opry House, with the $1 admission price

Kilpatrick Col....

(Continued From Page 4) frosty relationships witn major environmental groups nave not warmed up. Wnen ne remarked that he was getting input from 220 otner conservationist groups, he was equating the East Ipswich Rod and Gun Club with the Audubon Society - an unimpressive defense. Nevertheless, on balance, my own impression is that Jim Watt has done an excellent job. His bark is often annoying, but his bite is not that bad.

O'Connor Col....

(Continued From Page 4)

the House. You need 72 votes but most times you dont have a pool of 120 members from which to draw. Youll have a certain number of people off the floor at all times, she said, especially when the issue is controversial.

If you make the process too difficult, the two legislators said. North Carolina wont be able to amend its constitution when the need arises. They noted that several of the amendments involved only minor changes - adjustments, for e' ample, needed to allow the state to take advantage of the nations changing bond markets. By slowing down the process, are we binding the state to outdated practices?

also donated to cerebral

palsy.

A pig pickin is scheduled for Thursday fnrni 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. at the Riversicte Oyster Bar (m Greene Street.

The^ city has ckmated antique fire alarms and city fire department personnel will sell chances on the alarms with benefits going to the fund-raising cause.

The Kiwanis Gub will be at the flea market at the Pitt County fairgrounds Saturday and Sunday selling chances on a shotgun, with proceeds benefiting cerebral palsy.

Runyeon, who plays Steve Andrq^lous, and Ms. Colin, who plays Margo Montgomery, will be at Harris Supermarket on Memorial Drive autographing pictures from 2:304 p.m., prior to hosting the local telecast portion at the Greenville Moose Lodge..

Evans-Novak...

(Continued From Page 4)

Republican rebellion on Capitol Hill will spread. Gingrichs eloquent personal plea for the president to seize the initiative with a freeze on . all spending was used to justify the freeze on military pav and the out-year surtax. A bitter Gingrich is heading into rebellion..

It is inconceivable that Democrats wil support the beleaguered president by drinking the surtax hemlock.refused by his own Republicans. Instead, they will use Reagans call for austeilty to assault what is left of the visionary tax reduction passed in 1981 specifically, tax indexing. In. following his staffs advice to avoid intransigence, Ronald Reagan has committed one of the worst follies of his career.

NURSES REGISTRY Registrars taking calls for the Pitt County Professional Private Duty Nurses Registry are as follows:

Elayne Waeltz, R.N., 758-0908 - today through Jan. 21; Grace Turner, R.N., 7564)375-Jan. 24-28.

The registry is closed weekends. For emergencies, try the above.

Automotive Machine Shop Foreign-Domestic Engines Rebuilt

Auto Specialty Co.

917 W 5th St 758-1131

108^st Church Street Fartpville. North Carolina 753-4117

Bausch & Lomb

Soflens

69

Lenses Only (per pair)

ProfcMlonal Fee ISO: Includee examination, fitting, care kit, all Inatructlona. follow up care, and an eyeglaaa prescription. Total fee 1149. Noet aoft lenses can be worn out of the office the same day m die examination.

Also available are extended wear soft lenses, soft lenses for astigmatism, hard, semi-soft, gas permeable. ^Icon, hard and soft bifocals, special design contact lenses and replacement contact lenses.

Generous refund policies apply to all contact lenses.

CarSlina Eye Centei^

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Pukvtew CowaM StaatoMbinaRoaS GnmU. N.C.

countries with little domestic energy productkm, aicfa as Japan and some west European countries. Those are the countries that suffered the brunt of the oil-price shocks of the 1970s.

But the cheer would not be imiversal.

Mexico, for exanqile, relies heavily tm oil exports and was badly hurt by the recoit decline of about $1 a barrd in oil prices.

Mexico, like many otlwr oil-exporting countries, had based its economic plan tm the assumption that petroleum {Hices would keq) risii^ as tbQr did in the late 1970s.

Mexico is not an OPEC member, but it keeps its prices -currently at $32.50 a barrel for its top-grade crude - fairiy closely aligned with those in OPEC.

Javier Murcio, an economist ^ializing in Mexican affairs at the U.S. consulting Arm of Data Resources Inc., said Monday that a drop in world oil prices would be terrible for Mexico even though Mexico recently has increased its sales.

Murck) said Mexico could be forced into technical default on parts of its estimated $85 billion in foreign debt if its oil prices were cut more than $3 a barrel. The Mexican government currently is counting on $14 billion in 1983 oil revenues, representing about 70 percent of its projected total ejqiwrt income, Murcio said.

Mexico would not be the only country to suffer from a dn^

in oil prices. The British and U.S. governments, for example, would see their oil tax revenues fall sharply if prices declined more than a couple of dollars po- barrel.

William Randd, an enwgy analyst at the investment firm of First Boston Corp., calculates that each dollar drop in U.S. oil prices would reduce government revenues by nearly $3 billion a year.

Randol and other analysts believe the Reagan administration would, if world oil prices fell significantly, consider imposing an oil import fee to offset the drop in tax receipts from dome^ic oil production.

Forgot Kids In His Locked Car

GUNS FOR MONEY Greg Bohloi, sraior viceyresidrat of the Bank of Findlay (DI.), bolds two Colt .357 Python guns that the bank offers as prepaid interest on $2,500 certificates of deposit. The bank pUms to advertise the promotion nation-wide. It is the first bank in the country to offer guns as a promotion. Thirty to 40 sets of guns have already been given i out in Illinois. (AP Laseaiilioto)

Charles Starts Arts Festival

DELAND,Fla. (API-As temperatures in this central Florida town

dipped to 30 degim, a man locked his lightly dressed young daughters in his car while he ^nt time in a hotel bar, police say.

The children, ages 2 and 3, were fine but tired, their mother said.

The father, Michael Gtene Williams, 26, of nearby Tavares, was arrested on a child abuse charge early Monday as he drove off, apparently unaware that police had taken the girls from his car, officials said.

The children were taken to West Volusia Memorial Hospital for observation, released into the custody of the state Department of Health and Rdiabilitative Services, then returned to their mother, Glenda Williams of Tavares, according to police.

Theyre fine ... but theyre' very tired, their mother said Monday.

Police were sent to the Putnam Hotel about 1 a.m. Monday after a caller reported seeing the chiidren locked in the car at the hotel parking lot.

Officers checked the bar but could not find the cars owner, so they forced qpen one of the car doors to release the girls who had been in the vehicle for an hour before police arrived. Officer James Locklear said.

The girls were scantily dressed for the freezing temperatures, Locklear said. One girl, wearing a short-

sleeved shirt and no shoes, was crying when officers freed her from the car, police said.

The Williamses are divorced, police said. Williams had the children during the weekend and was suppt^ to have returned them to their mother by 6 p.m. Sunday, officers said.

When the bar closed at 2. a.m., Williams drove away but was stopped a mile from the hotel.

When he was stopped, he wasnt aware that his children werent In the car, Police Capt. Gene Johnson said.

In addition to child abuse, Williams was charged with drunken driving, driving with a revoked license, possession of marijuana and possession of stolen property, police said. He was being held in lieu of $2,500 baU.

SHOP-EZE

West End Shopping Center

Phone 756-0960

Wednesday

r

Luncheon Special

Spaghetti

*2.49

Fried Chicken

M.79

Special Sarvad With 2 Fraah

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LONDON (AP) - Prince Charles, back from a week of skiing with his wife. Princess Diana, has launched a British arts festival that will soon (^n in New York.

Charles cracked jokes and looked more relaxed than the princess as the couple ^nt an hour Uxiring the festival Monday ni^t at the Royal Academy of Arts.

The exhibit will be shipped to the Museum of Broadcasting in New York, wliere it will run from April to

1^*

p->

September. It marks the 200th anniversary of the final Briti^ evacuation from New York on Nov. 23, 1783, two years after the end of the Revolutionary War.

The festival was the the royal couples first public engagement since they re-tunied from a week-long skiing holiday in Austria Where th^ were followed by 50 reporters and photographers when they set out for the slopes.

Dr. R. Ted Watson

Optometrist

is pleased to announce that he has assumed the practice of

Dr. Kenneth Quiggins

Optometrist

upon his retirement' as of July, 1982.

All records have been transferred to Dr. Watson's office located at 1805 Charles Boulevard.

Office Hours Monday - Friday 8:30 - 5:00 Saturdays Evening Hours Available

Full Service Prescription & Professional Vision Care For The Entire Family

For Appointments or Information Telephone

756^780    752-3779

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The Dally Reflector, GreravUle, N c Tumdav. January II, im7

Someai^

lo'X^Out

HereWllil2S00Q

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5. PROitOTION PERIOD. Sweepstakes runs fromJanuc^3-Jtuuimy3t, l983.Wianers sefocted at random drawing conducted on or about February15,1983at location selected by Spoiisof

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are forfeited, and wilt not be awarded. Notihca-tion made via certified letter.

1. CONDITIONS OF ENTRY: Limit 4 entries per participant, anyone not complying will be disqualified. Inde^ndent agent sole judge of validity of entries. Agents decisions fnaLAll entries prwerty of Sponsor.

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9. EUGWUTY: Entrants must be 18y^ of age w older and a resident of North Carolina or S^h Qtrolina to qualify. Drawing rwt <^n fo

enyployeesofSpomor,itssubskliarles:nmiintetrtr

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regwridmg&xMudofdrawingshouldbeac to New Banking Sweepstakes, P.O. Box29629, Raleigh, NC27626For list of winners, senda starrg)ed,seU-address&ienvlopetosameaddress.

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-The DtUy Reflector, Greenvttle, NC.-Tuesday. January II, l3Vatican Convenes JVleeting On Nuclear Weaponry

By SAMUEL KOO Associated Press Writer

VATICAN CITY (AP) -Responding to a call by U.S. bishops, the Vatican today convened a two-day meeting of top Western Roman Catholic prelates to discuss the American churchmens denunciation off the use of nuclear weapons.

The Rev Romeo Panciroli. the Vatican spokesman, said the initial three-hour closed session was cochaired by Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Agostino Casaroli and Cardinal Joseph Ratz-inger, the Holy Sees top theologian as prefect of the Sacred Congre^tion for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The meeting took place at the old Synod Hall in the Apostolic Palace, Panciroli said.

Archbishop John R. Roach of St. Paul-Minneapolis, president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, said his coUeagi^ are preparing a final version of a draft pastoral letter that condemns nuclear warfare, as well as some af^ts of . American strategic policy.

"We simply want the insights of our peers in Western Europe as well as the Vatican, Roach said of the gathering.

The 25,000-word disarmament document was proposed at a Catholic bishops meeting in Washington last November and is expected to be adopted, with revisions, at another meeting in Chicago next May.

It condemned any intent or threat to use nuclear weapons and said even possessing them as a deterrent can be tolerated only if steps are being taken toward mutual disarmament by the United States and Soviet Union.

Archbishop Joseph L. Bemardin of Chicago, who

led the ^ial cmmnittee that issued the draft letter, stressed that the closed-door meeting here was not to develop a document on nuclear arms for the entire Roman Catholic Church.

Bemardin called the meeting an informal consultation.

He said although the original idea of consultations had come from the Americans, the preparation for the bishops conference, including the decision on who should be invited, was made by the Vatican.

After Pope John Paul II announced Bernardins elevation to cardinal on Jan. 5, the Chicago cl^gyman said he thought hb selection could be intopr^ as an affirmatim of his stand against nuclear war.

The Vatican has made no official comment on the U.S. bishops statement on nuclear arms. But in an interview, Bemardin and Roach said its reaction to the draft document was basically supportive.

Asked if the Vatican conference might lead to a

Barney Clark Has Nosebleeds

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Artificial heart recipient Dr. Barney Clark is being given reduced amounts of anticoagulants because of persistent nosebleeds caused in part by irritation from a gastric-nasal tube, a hospital spokesman said.'

Clark remained in serious but stable condition today at the University of Utah Medical Center.

Dr. Clarks nosebleeds are considered more serious than previously stated simply because they have not stopped, said John Dwan, miical colter spokesman.

Qark had been suffering from moderate to severe nosebleeds for eight days, Dwan said.

The 61-year-old retired dentist from the Seattle area has been sleeping well despite the nosebleeds, said Jan Belnap, nursing supervisor.

Dr. WUliam DeVries, the

surgeon who implanted the artificial heart Dec. 2, has decreased the amount of anti-coagulants Clark is given, Dwan said.

Qark must remain on anti-coagulants the rest of his life because of the artificial heart.

Doctors remain iHpeful the bleeding problem, partially caused by irritation from a gastric-nasal |tube, will resolve itself, Dwan said.

The nasal passages were sealed with a bi^oon-like catheter and packed eariy Friday.

Prior to that time be was bleeding quite heavily, the spokesman said. Even with the packing, blood still was o(aing, hesaid.

Doctors had said earlier that Gark might be able to leave the hospital by months end, but this delays at least for the time being his leaving the ho^ital or meeting the public, Dwan said.

GATES TO ADVENTURE - Overall view of the sailing boat ^w which opmied in Paris this weekend and wiU dose January 24 for the benefit of sea lovers. Over 800 exhibition participants coming from 25 different

countries display their up4(Hlate sailing and motor craft in a spirit described by exhibition organizers as Taking a boat is taUng the best fare fmr Holidays. (AP Lasen^ioto)

Collision

Cars driven by Ibrahin A Al-Ahideb of 228 Aycock Dorm and Rachel EmUy Pope of 1409 Dickinaoa Ave. collided about 6 p.m. Btoiday at the intsection of 10th and Washington streets.

Police, who made no charges, estimated damage from the collision at 8800 to the Ai-AhidriD car and 1800 to the Pope auto.

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churchwide anti-nuclear movement. Roach said;

Wed welcome any initia-tive^for the cause of peace. Our purpose is simply to instruct our own peale in the United States and to be a part of public policy discussion there. If that kind ot thing is goi^ to be a catalyst toward a disassk (rf other groups on the issue of peace, wed be just ddighted.

Bemardin said the issue is so important - and touches

on every aspect of life throughout the worid - that its not going to go away, and churd) leacta^ the world over will be addressii^ the issue one way or anotbo. Among others invited to

the conference were French BlslK)p Jean Vilnet; West German Cardinal Joseph Hoffner, British Cardinals Basil Hume and GtHikm Gray, and Italian Bishop Dante Bernini.

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1-The Daily Reflector. GreenvUle, N .C.-Tue*day, January U. MB3

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was steady. Kinston

57.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn. Pink Hill, Chadboum. Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 56.50, Wilson 57.00, Salisbury 56.00, Rowland 56.50. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 50.00, Fayetteville 49.00, Whiteville

50.00, Wallace 49.00, Spiveys Comer 50.00, Rowland 50.00, Durham 47.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.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. 100 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed.with a final weighted average of 41.45 cents f.o.b dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a good demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Tuesday was

1.781.000, compared to 1,772,000 last Tuesday^

Hens

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was steady. Supplies fully adequate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over seven pounds at farm for Monday and Tuesday slaughter was 14-15, mostly 15 cents.

NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices retreated today as

TUESDAY 1:00 p.m. - Round Table meets with Vivene DeShaw 6:30 p.m. Greenville Claims Association meets at Thre Steers 6:30 p.m. Down East Chapter of the Painting and Decorating Contractors of America meet at Three Steers 7:00 p.m. - Parents Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church 7:30 p.m. Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbyterian Church

7:30 p.m. - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 8:00 p.m. - Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous at AA BIdg., Farmville hwy.

WEDNESDAY

9:30 a.m. Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 12 Noon The National Association of Federal Retired Employees will meet at Three Steers 1:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m. - REAL Crisis Intervention meets 6;30p.m. -Kiwanis Club meets 7:30 p.m. - Winterville Jaycees meet atJayceeHut 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at BIdg. on Farmville hwy.    I

8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA BIdg., Farmville hwy.

Cent Soya Champ int Chrysler

CocaCola

Colg Palm

Comw Edis

ConAgra

ConU Group

DeltaAirl

DowChem

duPont

Duke Pow

EaslnAIrL

East Kodak

EatonCp

Esmark s

Exxon

Firestone

FlaPowLt

FlaProgress

FordMot

For McKess

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GTECorp

GnDynam

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Low

21%

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47%

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36%

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IS

Vh

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traders cashed in on some of the markets recent gains.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials fell 6.81 to 1,078.00 by noontime.

Losers held an 8-5 lead over gainers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Analysts said there was some disappointment among investors that a widely predicted cut in the Federal Reserves discount rate hadnt yet materialized.

They also noted that since it briefly touched the 1,100 mark last week, the Dow Jones industrial average had been unable to reach that level again.

Also on many observers worry list was the persistent problem of the federal budget deficit, and talk that it might loom larger and larger as an obstacle in the path of an economic teeov-ery.

American Telephone & Telegraph, the most active NYSE issiw, slipped to 68%. A 190,000-share block traded at that price.

The NYSEs composite index dropped .44 to 84.35. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was off .73 at 369.%.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 35.10 million shares at noontime, against 41.57 million at the same point Monday.

Following are wiected U a.m. stock market quotations:

Ashland    3>%

Burroughs    7%

Carollila Power A Light    21%

Collins A Aikman    21%

Connor    18%

Duke    23%

Eaton    34%

Eckerds    23%

Exxon    30%

Fleldcrest    31%

Halteras    15%

Hilton    43%

Jefferson    30%

Deere    34%

Lowes    32%

McDonalds    .    57%

McGraw    43%

Piedmont    31%

Plxsa Inn    7%

PAG    109

TRW, Inc.    72

United Tel.    22%

Virginia Electric    15

Wachovia    31%

OVER THE COUNTER Aviatkm    19-19%

Branch    16%-16%

UtfleMInt    1%-%

Planters Bank    29%-29%

AMRCorp AbhtUbs Allis Chalm Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmStand Amer TAT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Coro CaroPwLl Celanese

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -The leader of sevai religious zealots who died in a p^ice shootout after killing a hostage officer had wanted to kill the policeman and broadcast the death m live radio, authorities said today.

Police Director John Holt told reporters that Lindborg Sanders, head of the religious sect, made only one demand during the 3G4K)ur siege last week - that he wanted to speak with a disc jockey for a local radio station.

"The intent was to execute officer Hester and preferabiy publicly, Holt said.

The hostage, patrolman Robert S. Hester, was found beaten to death after police stormed the house where the cult members had held him.

Holt said an officer crept up to a window of the house shortiy after the siege began and heard Sanders, 49, say he wanted ttie people of Memphis to hear when he put the...officerslightsout.

Officials said all seven members of the police-hating cult were killed by gunshot wounds to the head when police stormed the house.

Dr. Jerry T. Francisco, the Shelby County medical examiner, reieased autopsy information on the seven men Monday. He said ail seven sect members died in the police assault, but neither Sanders nor any of his six followers had powder bums on their skin. Experts said a gunshot leaves powder bums if a weapon is fired within a foot of a body.

Lawmakers...

(Continued from pagel)

going to have to act fiscaliy responsibie.

Sen. Vernon White termed Hunts speach very optimistic, suggesting that the governor has high luqies of an upturn in the economy within the next few months. I think his recommendations to the General Assembly are based on optimista. However, White said, If we (kmt have an upturn, there is going to be considerable cutting from what he recommended. White said Hunts proposed $6.18 billion budget for

1983-84 and $6.3 billion in

1984-85 put the major emphasis (m operating the government at the current levei.

'M

26%

Gen Food

37%

37

37%

28

Gen MUIs

47%

47%

47V.

36%

Gen Motors

63%

63%

63%

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Gen Tire

34

33%

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GenuParU

43%

43

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40%

GaPacIf

25%

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G 0

0

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0

8%

Gulf Oil

30%

SITH.

30%

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Herculesinc

30%

30%

30%

34%

59%

Honeywell UMptep s

93%

39%

92

39%

92%

39%

30%

Ing Rand IBM

45%

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45

17%

98%

98%

96%

37%

InU Harv

4%

4%

4%

19%

Int Paper

S3

52%

52%

38%

Int Rectlf

14%

14%

14%

42%

Int T4T

32%

32%

32%

32%

Kmart

24%

24%

24%

42%

KaisrAlum

17%

17%

17*/4

35%

KanebSvc

18%

18%

16%

96%

KrogerCo

LocEheed

37%

87%

37%

86%

37%

86%

Loews Corp

150%

150%

150%

Masonite n

44

44

44

1

McDermott

20%

19%

19%

Mead Corp

21%

21%

21%

MinnMM

80

79%

79%

Mobil

25%

25%

25%

Monsanto

83%

82%

83%

NCNBC^

NabiscoBrd

19%

37%

19%

36%

19%

36%

Nat Distill

26%

25%

25%

NorflkSou n

55%

54%

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OllnCp

26%

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Owenslll

29

29

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Pennev JC PepsKo

43%

36

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35%

Pheljw Dod PhlllpMorr

31%

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PhillpsPet

33%

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Polaroid

29%

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I09%:i

106%,

108%

Quaker Oat RCA

44

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RalstnPur

17%

m,

17%

RepubAIr

7%

7%

7%

Republic SU

16%

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16%

Revlon

34%

33%

34%

Reynldind

50%

50%

50%

Rockwelint

45%

45%

45%

RqyCrown StRegIs Pap

21%

21

21

26%

%-

26%

Scott Paper

21%

21%

21%

SealdPow

48%

48%

48%

SearsRoeb

28%

28%

28%

Shaklee

' 48%

47%

47%

Skyline Cp

25%

25

25%

Sony Corp Southero Co

14%

16%

14%

16

14%

16%

Sperry Cp Sldlfcaf

34

31%

33%

31%

33%

31%

StdOilInd

42%

41%

41%

StdOilOh

37

36%

36%

1

Stevens JP

30%

30%

20%

TRW Inc

72%

71%

72%

Texaco Inc

31%

31%

31%

TexEastn

53%

51%

53%

UMC Ind

10%

10%

10%

Un Camp Un Carbide

67%

67%

67%

59%

58%

56%

UnOUCal

30%

30%

30%

Uniroyal US Steel

12%

12%

12%

29^4

20%

20%

Wachov Cp

31%

31%

31%

WalMart a

46%

46%

46%

WestPtlW Westgh ES

38%

36%

36%

45

44%

44%

Weyerliar

%

31%

36%

WInnOIx

44>4

44

44%

Wool worth

14

23%

33%

Wiigley

40

40

40

Xerox Cp

4(P4

40%

46%

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Meanwhile, a man who escq)ed from the house, Tyrone Henley, 27, was being held on $250,000 bond on charges of assault to murder for allegedly striking Patrolman R.O. Schwill, partner of Hester, in a fight before the siege began.

Franciscos office announced iast week that Hester, 34, had been beaten to death 12 to 24 hours before police rushed Sanders house.

Henley was arrested Sunday and a preliminary hearing was set for Jan. 31. It was not known whether he was a member of Sanders small, nameless sect, which taught that police are agents of the devil.

A police affidavit filed in General Sessions Court (Hi Monday said Henley jumped on (Schwill) and struck (him) in the face when Schwill and Hester answered a call at the house Jan. 8.

After being struck by Henley, other male blacks took SchwilTs pistol away from him and Schwill was shot in the fa(% and hand, the affidavit said. H did not identify the other attackers.

Gunshots were exchanged and, according to the autopsy, Sanders and at least one of his followers suffered non-fatal gunshot wounds. Schwill and Patrolman Tom Turner, who was among backup officers arriving, escaped. Hester was taken hostage and the siege began.

The standoff ended 30 hours iater when police stormed the house. P(dice said Sanders, a former mental patient, and his followers fired first and officers returned fire, killing all seven suspects.

Policy Paper

(Continued from pagel) School Board Convention in April being held in San Francisco. The stand of most board members is that, in light of the ti^t budget situation, the approximately $2,500 tab for sending two delegates cannot be justified at tbis time. One member, Ernest Brown, cast a dissenting vote. Brown contends that the knowledge gained at these annual conferences justifies the expense.

In executive session approval was given to hiring four personnel to fill interim positions, and a maternity leave for one teacher.

A special presentation on the Status of Exceptional Children in the city schools was made by Ann Harrison, director of pro^ams for exceptional children in Greenville schools. Mrs. Harrison concluded her report by saying that consideration must be given to various alternatives for certain programs in light of budget cuts.

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Summer AAay See Contract

Greenville Utilities Commission director Charies Home said today a CfHitract may be ready to let by this summer on a proposed $10.4 million waste water treatment plant.

The North Carolina Environmental Management Commission last week approved Greenvilles application for state assistance in funding the treatment plant. However, Home said this morning there will be no firm confirmation of it until tb^ make us a grant offer which is expecited to be in February.

Home said the grant applicaticm is being prepared and (mce the grant offer is macte, the door is closed.

In accordance with the

EMC af^roval, Greenville will receive $7i millk in federal funds and $1.3 million in state money to help build the new plant.

The local share - $1.3 millkm - is already in hand, and tho% will he no need to sdl $4 millkHi in bonds for the project that were q^roved voters in 1979.

Planning for the 10.5 milliofl gallon a day sewage treatm^it plata b^ in 1973. Changes in r^a-tkms and federal red t^ delayed the completion and final s^roval of preliminary plans until mid-1%1, and final plans for the project were aK>roved last year.

Until late last year, officials believed that it would be 1984 or 1965 jefore any fedo'al funds would be available.

Obituaries

Door Is Closed On Zero Option

BONN, West Germany (AP) - Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko today rejected the U.S. zero option proposal for limiting intermediate-range nuclear, missiles in Europe, but said the Kremlin was prepared to destroy some of its rockets as part of a deal with the West.

The answer is no. This is impossible. We can under no circumstance accept this zero (^tion, Gromyko told a news conference (m the second day of his visit to West Germany.

However, Gromyko said the Soviet Union is willing to destroy some of its medi-um-range nuclear missiles aimed at Western Eun^ as part of an arms reduction agreement.

We have said in Uie (Geneva) negotiations, some of the missiles could be destroyed, others C(Hild be transported to other parts of the Soviet Union where they could no longer reach the countries of Western Europe, Gromyko said.

He did not say how many of the missiles would be dismantled and how many moved, nor did he say specifically whether he meant SS-20 missiles or the older SS-4s and SS-5s.

The zero option proposal, presented at talks in Geneva, calls for the Soviet Union to dismantle about 300 SS-20 missiles targeted (Hi Europe in exchange for United States scrapping plans to deploy 572 new Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in Europe this fall.

About one-fifth of the U.S. missiles are slated to be deployed in West (iermany, where there is growing anti-nuclear sentiment among voters who elect a new leadership in eariy March. The (qiposition Socita Democratic candidate, Hans-Jochen Vogel, just returned from

talks in Washington and Moscow, where he appealed for sharp reduction in nuclear arms.

Gromyko said if the Soviet Union acc^ted the American pn^posal it would give NATO twice as many missile carriers and three times as many nuclear warheads as the Warsaw Pact. He said the U.S. proposal would end a parity reached over the course of many years.

We believe that those who proposed this variation were not led by serious considerations. I emphasize this: not led by serious consideration, because one cannot describe as serious a partner who puts such proposals on the negotiating table, Gromyko said.

Gromyko, who ends a three-day visit Wednesday, was expiected in talks with officials here to press a counter pn^posal offered by new Soviet leader Yuri V. Andropov in December.

Andropov said the Soviet Union would reduce the number of intermediate-range nuclear missiles aimed at Western Europe to 162 the combined number of similar missiles held by Britain and France, if NATO would scrap plans to deploy new missiles.

Gromyko called the British and French missiles ihter-mediate-range weapons but said they are strategic niissUes because some of them are installed on submarines.

MASONIC NOTICE AYDEN - Queen of the South Ltalge No. 77 asked all candate for the Third Degree to be at J.H. Robinson School in Winterville at 6 p.m. Saturday.

WUlieStaUworth, Master Jesse Lee Wilson, Secretary

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Name

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' IMeplnie

S5T

Abbott

Mr. Duffie Abbott of Grifton died Monday in Lenoir County Memorial Hospital. He was the hmb^ of Mrs. Katherine Steuart Abbott of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott and Company Funeral Home, Aydoi.

Battle

TARBORO - Mr. Richard Battle, f(HTneriy of Temple Height, Long Island, N.Y., died Monday in Edgecombe General Ho^ital here. He is the brother of Mrs. Louise Battle Joyner of Penny Hill Road Community.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary.

Powell

TARBORO - Mr. Jeffery Powell of Tarboro died Monday in Edgecombe Gim-eral Ho^ital b^. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary.

Har^

Funeral services for Mr. Arthur Joyner Cling Hardy, 73, will be conduct Tliur^ay at 2:30 p.m. in the Flanagan Funeral Home Chapel here by the Rev. David Hammond. Burial will be in Brown Hill Cemetery.

Mr. Hanty was a Pitt County native who spent most of his life in the Simpson community. Surviving him are two daughters, Mrs. Eleanora Lee of Baltimore and Mrs. Mary Louise Heath of Greenville; a son, James Hardy Jr. of Camden, Conn.; seven grandchildren and 23 great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends Wednesday from 7 to 8 p.m. at the Flanagan Funeral Home du^I. At other times they will be at the home of Mrs. Louise Heath, North River Estates, Greenville.

Nichols

CHARLOTTE - Mr. Charlie Nichols, 62, 1812 Belvedere Ave., died Mon-

FAMILY REUNION Hollywood Presbyterian Church on Hi^way 43 south of Greenville will have a Family Reunion Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.

After the evening meal; the Rev. and Mrs. John Somerville, missionaries to Korea, will speak and present riides. Mrs. Somerville is the sister-inMaw of Evangelist Billy Graham.

MASONIC NOTICE There will be a regular stated communication of William Pitt Masonic Lodge No. 734 Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. All Master Masons are urged to attend.

Durwood Wayne Adams, Master

Thurston Wynne, Secretary

day. Fune-al services will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at McEwen West Chapel by the Rev. Billy Sdlers. Burial will be in ShaitHi Memorial Park.

Mr. Nichols was a sales representative. He was a member of the American Legion.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mary Bartlett Nicbofe of Charlotte; two sons, Charles Edward NiclxAs Jr. of Matthews and William Frank Nichols of Chartottec three daughters, Mrs. Mary Griffin of Monroe, Mrs. Andrea ONeal of Greenville and Mrs. Sallie Wri^t of Charlotte; two brothers, Gilmer S. Nichols of Greenville and I.V. NkdKrfs of Charlotte; one sister, Mrs, H.P. Daigle of F(h1 Myers,* Fla.; his mother, Mrs; Mildred McArthur Nictads of Greenville, and eight grandchildren.

Ihe family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. today at McEwen Funeral Home in Charlotte.

Rives

SANFORD - Lombe H. Rives, 61, died M(mday.

Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Bridges-Cameron Funeral Home chapel in Sanford. Graveside services will be at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at Greenwood Cemetery in Greenville.

Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Karen Mann of Siler City and Mrs. Eleanor Cole of Sanford; two sons, Leon Rives of Lexington and J(tan Rives of Georgia; his mother, Mrs. Lelia Rives of Raleigh; one sistm*, Mrs. Eleanor Clark of Raleigh, and five grandchildren.

The family will be at the funeral home from 7 to 8:30 p.m. today. In Greenville, the family will be at the home of Mildred Pate, 1101 Oakview Drive.

Teel

Mr. George Elbert Teel, 61, of 109 Church St. died Sunday at his home. His funeral service will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the WUkerson Funerta Cluqiel by the Rev. Ray Williamson. Burial will be in the Brown Cemetery near Conetoe.

Mr. Teel, a Pitt County native, ^nt most of bis life in Greenville. He served in the U.S. Army during Wcvld War II and was mnployed at SeaOxBoats.

Surviving him are a son, Donnie T^ of Belvoir; a daughter, Mrs. Peggie Carter of Belvoir; a brother, Luther Teel of Belvoir; three sisters, Mrs. Ethel Dunn of Greenville and Mrs. Hazta Spain and Mrs. Olive Bullock, both of Belvoir, and three grandchildren.

ITie family will receive friends at the funeral home Tuesday from 7 to9p.m.

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THE DAILY REFLECTORTUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 18, 1983

Baptist Stuns Pirates, 64-56

Lane Jumper

East Carolinas Johnny Edwards (33) goes up for, a one-handed jumper* in the lane against the guard of Baptist Colleges Doug Young <22) during action last night. Watching for a possible rebound are

Thom Brown (42) of ECU and Anthony Woods (30) of Baptist, with Boyzie Perry (12) looking on. Baptist stunned ECU, 64-56, in the contest. (Reflector Photo by Katie Zemhelt)

UCLA Climbs To Top Of Poll, Tar Heels Third

LOS ANGELES (AP) -UCLA basketball, the most successful program in college sports history, had been in a * relative decline since Coach John Wooden retired in 1975. > But die Bruins are back.

With an 11-1 record under second-year coach Larry Farmer, UCLA jumped from fifth Ip first in The Associated Pres^ Top Twenty college bask^bail poll this week. It marl^ the first time since February of 1979 that the Bruins, who won 10 NCAA chaihpionships in a 12-year span during the 1960s and 70s, have been raidcedNo.l.

UCLA became the fourth team to hold the top ^ this seaon ami the rapid move up the; rankings came on the heds of losses by last wedcs top three teams - Memphis State, Virginia and St. Johns. The Bruins received 22

Sports Coltwdor

Editors Note: Schedies are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.

Todays Sports BasketbaU Aurora at JamesviUe Bear Grass at Columbia Adult League Pirates vs. HusUers Flamingo vs. PCC Taff vs. Pitt Memorial Midget League Tartieds vs. wildcats Junior Divisioa Tarheels vs. Wildcats Women's League Dazzle vs. Pitt Memorial Burroughs Weiicome vs. Johns

Florist

WedneadaysSpo WresUlng smston, Roanoke

sSports

WUIiamston, Roanoke Rjq>ids at Roanoke (S:30p.m.)

E.B. Aycock at Rocky Mowit (4

p.m.)

nfcjehaii East Carolina women at UNC Charlotte (7:p.m.)

South Carolina at East Carolina (7:30p.m.)

Adult League IntegonvsE.CFP.

Rockers vs. Greenville Villa Cherrys vs. Hookers ^

Pee Wee League ~ Wildcats vs . Cavaliers

WildcaU vs. Cavaliers Blue Devils vs. Pirates Junior League WildcaU vs. Cavaliers . Blue Devils vs. Pirates Terrapins vs. Woiijpacfc

first-place votes and a total of 1,099 points in the weekly balloting by a 57-member national panel of sports writers and broadcasters.

In the extremely close balloting, UCLA finished only eight points ahead of runner-up Indiana, fourth last week after being No.l earlier in the season. The Hoosiers, 12-1, collected 29 first-place votes seven more than UCLAbut only 1,091 points.

UCLA replaced Memphis State as the No.l team after the Ti^rs were upended by Virginia Tech 69-56 last Monday night. Memphis State, 12-1, bounced back with an 80-63 victory over Cincinnati, but ^ill slipped to sixth in this weeks poll with 810 points, including one first-place vote.

Rounding out the tqi five this week are No.3 North Carolina, uhich is 12-3 and was No.ll last we^; No.4 Arkansas, 13-0; and No.5 Nevada-Las Vegas, 134.

If the 1983 Bruins resemble the Wooden-guided teams who dominated ccdlege basketball for more than a decade, its no mistake.

Farmer, 31, played under Wooden at UCLA during 1970-73, a period when the Bruins wrat 89-1. He still calls Wooitei simply (Joaiii.

The schools fourth head basketball coach since Wooden retired. Farmer said his coaching philosophy is solidly groimM in on what he learned under his old coach.

Our program now is pretty much the same as it was back thai, Farmo said. We do a lot of the same drills. Our basic philosophy is that, while we do try to prepare for each opponent, we believe its most important that we do diat we need to do. We spend a lot of time 00 what we want to do, not what we expect the other team to do.^

Farmer laughed and added, 1 would imagine if you went to a LousviUe {nacttee, v a BYU practice, they would look about the same as ours. After all, it worked pretty well for Coach.

Louisville is coached by Denny C!rum and BYU by Frank Arnold, both of whom served under Wooden at UCLA.

While the Bruins are back in their once-accustomed spot atop the basketball poll, Farmer said hes well aware they wont necessarily stay there.

I read where pei^ile say this team or that team was iqiset, and I dont think tq;)set is the right word, he said. At this time of the season, people are still jockeying tl^ir teams around; teams are going to lose one here or there, then not lose one for a long time.

APTop20

The Top Twenty teami In the AtsoGiatedTrnt coliege basketball poll, with fint-place votes In oarentheses, records and total points. Points based on 20-19-I8-17-1S-IS-14-I3-12-11-10 8-7-kM-S-M:

I.UCLA(22 )............H-I    1.09

2.1ndiana(29)..........12-1    1,091

S.North Carolina (l)....U-3    IB

4.Arfcansas(2 ).........134)    ISO

5.Nevada-Las Vegas    144)    815

6.Memphi8St.(l)    12-1    810

7.Vtr ^..............12-2    806

ISt.Jriin's............14-1    804

9.Louisv01e............13-2    750

lO.Iowa.................11-2    571

ll.Kentucky............11-3    511

IZ.Missouri..............12-2    451

ISViUanova............. 10-2    450

14.Houston..............13-2    435

15.Syractwe.............12-2    249

16.Minneso U............11-2    184

17. Virginia Tech......... 14-1    171

II.OUahomaS t..........12-I    128

19.Georgetow n..........11-4    115

20. Auburn...............10-3    

UPITop20

NEW YORK (UPI) - The United Press International Board o( Coaches Top 20 cMege haskeUnll ratings (Orst-plaa votes and reconto through Jan. 16 in parentheses):

lUCLA(ll) ...........(11-1)    565

2.1ndiaaa(ll)   (IMI    550

3.it)Mn)ptaBt.(l)..........(13-1)    4U

3.(tte)No.Car.(l)..........(114)    413

5. Arkansas (3).............(134)    397

IVMnia..................(U-2)    3

7.Sl.^s.................(14-1)    374

I.IiOuisville(l ).............(13-2)    346

9 Nev-LmViKI)..........(144)    2B

10. Iowa....................(11-2)    201

II.MJSMur i.................(122)    171

12. Houston.................(122)    190

IS Kentucky.................(11-3)    121

M.Villanova...  ..........(122)    117

15.SyracuK.................(122)    93

14. Georgetown .........(11-4)    SI

irnUootoSt.................(121)    59

U.MiineaaU ......(11-3)    49

19. OUahemaSt..............(0-1)    29

2l.(tla)N.C.IL...............(t4)    19

29.(tle)Tnoeisac...........(M4)    19

Note: By afreemak with the Natloaal Aaeociatton o( Basketball Ceachea at the United Staica, taans on prabetttn ^ tbc NCAA md ineUgMe W Om NCAA Toumanwnl are Mi^ farTap99sKl natlooal (hamntenshllp conaMsratlon by the UPI Board o( Coachts Thoae scb leant lor the lM2a aeaioa are OUNHina CKy, St Lam and Wlchka Stne.

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor

East Cantinas Pirates did something theyd never done before last ni^t and something they hadnt done this seascm either. The stumbling Pirates lost to Baptist Colley of Charleston fcH- the first time ever and the loss was thrir third in a row - the longest streak of the year.

Baptist, playing inspired basketball at times, overcame the Pirates, 64-56, to snap a six-game losing streak to the Pirates. It marked the first time ever Baptist, now 84, bad beaten the Pirates.

The loss, the eighth overall this year for the Pirates, marked the first time they had lost more than two in a row. ECU has now dro(^ three straight.

The chief factor in the string would appear to be the ateence of senior forward Charles Green, out with a dislocated shoulder. Green was injured early in the William & Mary game - the first of the three losses.

Granted some things have not gone (mit way, Coach Chariie Harrison said. With Charles Hurt, and Bruce (Peartree) out hurt, and Cliurt (Vanderhorst) playing hurt, and Johnny (Edwards) having cramps, we could use that as a crutch. But we cant use that as an excuse.

Harrison said that he felt the effort was there siqierficially, but that he felt the biggest problem was that I dont think they believed us when we told them how good they (Baptist) could be.

We were a half-stqi late on

neariy evry play. We didnt play intensely entHi^. Its like we said, ho hum, here we go, and I guess thats my fault.

The Pirates, in the game of the way, wmt from a four^ioint lead, 42-38, with 8:50 left, to an eight-point deficit, 50-42, with 4:04 to play. Center Jack Avent led that charge, scoring six of the 12 points (HI two baskets and two free throws.

Aftor that, Baptist never lose the lead, althou^ the Pirates did cut it back to two and bad the chance to pull event. But Baptist used the foul line, hitting all but two of their final 16 points at the foul line all in a row. Only the final basket, a slam dunk by Randall Slawson, broke that string.'

They (the Pirates) have to look to themselves, too, Harrison said. "When adversity strikes, you have to reach in and pull something out that you havent pulled out before. And thats true not just in sports but in life also.

We had the chance to get things going our way and never did it, he added.

The game was close until those final moments. East Carolina got an initial four-point lead, and held (Hi until Avent hit from underneath for an 8-7 Baptist lead. East Carolina took it back but lost it again on a goaltending call, 11-9, but regained the lead on a three-point play by Edwards, 14-13.

The Pirates didnt lose the lead again the rest of the half, although Baptist managed to tie it twioe, at 22-22 and 26-26.' A pair of free throws by Mike Fox with 43 seconds left gave

the Pirates a 28-26 lead that held the rest of the way.

Baptist, \riiich shot 55.6 percent in the second half as compared to 40.7 for the Pirates, tied it up early on a jumper by Marcus Beasley but again fdl behiiM] by four points as Wri^it and Thom Brown scored, 32-28. The Pirates were unable to shake the Buccaneers, however, and they tied it again at 36-36, then took the lead on two free throws by Anthony Woods at 38-36.

East Carolina then scored six strai0it points, two free throws by Wri^t, and baskets by Edwards and Vanderhorst, to take a 42-38 lead.

It wask then that the bubble burst.

We missed some easy shots and we made some terrible, terrible judgements on the fa^ break, Harrison recalled. We took some terrible shots and, too, we were without Edwards for most of that time. Edwards had gone to the bench with leg cramps just after the Pirates regained the lead and missed about five minutes of play - during which Baptist forged its lead.

During the final five minutes, Baptist played keep-away and the Pirates were forced to foul and the Buccaneers made good on 14 of 18 shots to forge as much as a ten-point lead before Wright hit at the horn to cut it back to the final ei^t.

East Carolina hit only 35.6 percent of its shots, as Baptist hit on 45.7 percent. Baptist also outrdtwunded the Pirates, 41-30, led by Jose Laras ten. ECU was led by Edwards with ten.

NFL To Investigate PBS Allegations Of Fixing

NEW YORK (AP) - The National Football League will study the allegations of fixed games and ties to illegal gambling raised by a Public Broadcasting Service television documentary, says a league spokesman.

Any comment from this office will come after our staff has had a chance to study the shows allegations, Joe Browne, the NFLs director of information, said Monday night, just after the PBS broadcast aired. He said he expected the league to review the show in the next couple of days.

The broadcast, titled An

Unauthorized Histoi^ of the NFL, was the (^ing program in PBS FronUine series. The show presented a history of the leagues gambling problems and detailed alleged associations of owners and players with alleged gamblers and people with ties to organized crime.

One of those interviewed was a gambler identified as John Piazza, vriio claimed a coach, (]uarterback and defensive captain of an unidentified team were paid to fix four games each year during the 1968, 1969 and 1970 seasons. Piazza did not identify the players.

Thurman: Td Attack Me, Too

DALLAS (AP) - Dennis Thurman has been in a lot of game plans lately - tte opp(Hients.

Teams keep attacking his ri^t comerfoack position and finding the results sweet and sour.

Thurman was burned twice by the Green Bay Packers in the Dallas Cowboys 37-26 National Football League playoff victory Sunday on passes to James Lofton - but he returned the favor with three intercepUois. He dashed 39 yards for a touchdown on one of them.

In this league, you have a different challenge every week, said Thurman. One week its James Lofton. The next week its somebody else. You cant let them psych you out, get you back on your beds.

You just have to brieve you are going to get as many as they do," he said.

Thurman said one reason be is such a popular bombing target Is that teams are afraid to take on the left comerback. Ever Walls, the National Football Leagues leading in-tercqHer.

Id probably attack me, too, Thurman said. 1 think I will be a part of the other teams attack the rest of this year.

Thurmans three interceptions tfod a did) record hdd by Charlie Waters.

Any time you can tie Chariie Waters, youre in good (XHnpany, Thurman said.

Thurman said he could sle^ only a few hours before Sundays game with the Packers. He kept seeing Lofton in his sle^.

A defensive back can lose the game (]uicker than any other individual on the field other than the (]uarterback, Thurman said.

On his interception return for a touchdown, Thurman's experience paid off.

I read his move because he pudied off a little, said Thurman. He turned and I went inside. I was just in the right place at the right time. TTiey had completed one like that earlier.

Dallas travels to Washington for Saturdays National Conference championship game and Thurman figures the Redskins will test him.

"Im not worried," Thurman said. The pressure is (Ml Washing. The Redskins have to feel a lot of anxiety.

Theyve played wdl this year, but tb^ havent beaten Dallas in a while. Their fans were yelling for us, but the team has to have a little doubt.

Walls said he was disappointed Green Bay didnt throw more in his directkm.

If they want to go right just becaioe Im on the 1 think it hurts their offense, be said. I think they ought to go to their 3trei^ and not let someone dictate what they will do.

Baptist had balanced scoring, getting 11 from Slawson and 10 each from Avent and Beasley. Two others, Lara and J(^ Battle each had nine.

East Cantinas scoring was led by Edwards with 18 while Wright had 17. Brown added eight but was the only other Pirate to contribute as much asfivepiHnts.

Bruce Peartree, who has ^n limited action in recent games, did not dress for the game - it was said he was injured.

Were very shallow. We dont have a lot of depth, Harrison said. You cant tap someone on ttie shoulder and make them get the job (knie.

One game doesnt make a season. I dont fed good because we lost; 1 feel like hell. But Im just worried about how well do afterwards. Im upset with the way they played, but Im not worried about what the fans think. I do want them to support these kids.

Unfortunately, the same people who were patting them

on the back after the James Madisoii game are nowhere to be found toni^t.

East Carolina, now 6^, returns to action on Wednesday, hosting    the    University    of

South Carolina at 7:30 p.m. in Min^.

t(M)

PGFT RbFAP

Lara    31    24    M    10    2    1    9

Battle    22    44    1-2    2    2    0    9

Avent    20    44    2-2    4    3    0    10

Beasley    27    24    44    2    3    0    10

Perry    25    25    21    0    1    3    3

Artis    5    22    04    1    0    1    0

Richardson    I    21 20 10    1    0

Young    21    24    20    2    2    0    4

Woods    23    34    22    5    1    2    I

Slawson    II    2-3    74    $    4    1    II

Team    7

Totals    100    214122S2 41II    I    M

EaACmllBKSI)

Wright    36    7-14    25    5    2    0    17

Brown    33    211    M    5    4    1    8

Edwards    M    7-17    44    10    1    0    18

Robinson    34    1-3    2-2    2    5    5    4

WUliams    13    14    20    I    4    1    2

GUchrist    3    20    04    0    3    0    0

Vanderhorst 25    14    24    2    2    2    2

Pox    12    1-2    2-2    0    4    0    4

McLeod    5    22    1-2    0    0    1    I

Harris    5    24    04    I    1    0    0

Team    4

Totals    200    2141 12U 30II10    M

Baptist....................II    -64

BaatCaroUu.............M    B-H

Turnovers: BC18, E(^ 11.

Technical fouls: none.

Ofllctals: Ellis and Haymore. Attendance: 1,500.

Lady Pirates Visit Charlotte

NFL (fommissloner Pete Rozelle was interviewed on camera, but was not adted about Piazzas charges. The shows moderator, Jessica Savitch, said she later asked Rozelle on the telephone about Piazzas allegations and that Rozelle said he had never heard of Piazza and knew of no fix attempt.

The NFL had asked to see to show in advance but was refused by the'shows producers. The show was previewed for the press last Thursday.

The broadcast also sug-gested that Carroll Rosenbloom, then owner of the Los Angeles Rams, may have been murdered by a wet-suit clad swiimer who pulled him under water while he was swimming off Golcfon Beach, Fla., in April, 1979. The cause of Rosenblooms death was listed as accidental drowning.

Raymond Tanquay, a Canadian tourist who was a witness to the drowning, was interviewed on the show and said he saw a black object about five feet long and about 20 inches wide, about 30 yards from Rosenbloom at the time.

It might have been a man, it mi^t have been a fish or a boat, Tanquay said. I saw the object only briefly and then it entered a wave in a plunging motion.

Tanguay, who was on vacation in Florida at the time, said he was interviewed by two private detectives last month who suggested the pos-sibility Rosenbloom was drowned intrationally.

I said it was possible, Tanguay added. "I dont know.

There was no mention on the show that Tanguay said last weekend in Montreal that he was skeptical of the theory that Rosenbloom was murdered.

A SUff Report

East Carolinas Lady Pirates hit the road again to face UNC Charlotte Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.

The Lady Pirates take a 5-6 mark into ttw contest, the first meeting ever between the two schools.

ECU has lost its last two in a row, the latest last Friday night at Old Dominion, 92-52. In that contest, the biggest fireworks came afterwards when ODU Coach Marianne Stanley accused the Pirates of dirty play and of assigning Mary Denkler to get aU-American Ann Donovan.

ECU Ckiach Cathy Andruzzi w8tt QMMcvttUv* witli hr post-game comments at the time, but fired off a few barrels at Stanley after viewing the films.

"Old Dominion coach Stanley accused our players of playing to hurt them and that hurts me, eqiecially the accusation that Mary Denkler roughed iq) Ann Donovan, Andruzzi said. Mary Denkler would not know how to hurt anyone.

Mary did a good job on Donovan in holding her to seven points. Im surfHised at the comments made by supposedly a professional person. Mary kept down an all-American and they couldnt face that fact. It was a case of sour grapes.

As is customary of our teams, we are very aggressive and hard working. That comment really hurt me very badly as a coach.

If winning by 40 points isnt enou^i, then vriiat else does she want? You have Ann Donovan at 6-8 playing on the

inside and (she) has only two fouls. That shows what happens when you go up there. The officials let the game get out of hand. It was a situation which took back basketball several st^s.

This week, the Lady Pirates, in addition to Charlotte, plays in the South Carolina Invitational Friday and Saturday.

Were playing against the same type of Khedule weve played in the past with this young team and we still have problems in height. But we need those games to keep the consistancy in our program. Chari(^te has a good team. We have to stop Candy Lucas (former N(JS player - 22.5 ppg), and Sylvia Akers (14.0 rebounds). Coach Anne Payne is doing a good job. Payne is the wife of ex-ECU mens aide Eddie Payne, now head coach at Belmont Abbey.

UNCC comes into the game following a 62-57 win over UNC-Wilmington last night. The Lady 49ers are now 5-5 on the year.

Friday, in the first round of the South Carolina Invational, ECU will face Georgia, currently 12-2, and ranked ninth in the country.

That game will be broadcast over the Pirate Sports Network at 5:50 p.m. Friday.

South Carolina plays Mercer in the other first round game, with the consolation and championships set Saturday.

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12-The DaUy Reflector. GreenviUe. N.C.-Tueaday, January It. 1983

Auburn Is Upset By Vanderbilt

By The Associated Press

The Auburn basketball team was playing Vanderbilt, but thinking Kentucky, according to Coach Sonny Smith.

We left our game in Kentucky in the first half, Smith said, referring to Saturdays upset of the Wildcats.

The poor first-half play Monday night put the Ti^rs into a hole from which they never recovered and the new Top Twenty team lost a 64-62 (tecision to Vanderbilt as a result of it.

It was a case of us getting too far down in the first half and overextoiding wirselves to catch iq), said Smith, whose 20th-ranked Tigers trailed 43-28 at intermission.

Ttie Auburn comeback fell

In The Middle

Wake Forests Delaney Rudd, (15) and Danny Young (20) box in William & Marys Tony Traver (30)

during action last ni^t at William & Mary Hall in Williamsburg. William & Mary downed the Deacons, 80^. (AP Laserphoto)

Weidner Leads Indians To Stunner Over Deacs

WILLLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) - Brant Weidner scored 18 points and pulled down 16 rebounds Monday night as William & Marys Indians burst to a 19-point lead in the first half and went on to a surprisingly easy 80-65 basketball victory over IjVake Forests Deacons.

It was the fourth triumph in a row for the Indians, 7-4, and only the second defeat in 13 starts for the Deacons.

William & Ma^ led by 19 points several times in the first half, but the Deacons rallied at the end to cut the gap to 40-27 at intermission.

The Indians, who also got 18 points from Tony Traver, upped the advantage to'' 19 points again at the start of the second half, and the Deacons

never got closer than 10 down the stretch.

Kevin Richardson added 14 points and Keith Cieplicki 11 for the Indians, who shot 71.4 percent from the floor in the second half and 56.5 percent for the gune. The IndtM also were 28 of 32 at the foul line with Scot Coval conv^ing nine of 10.    v

The Deacons, who shot 34.2 percent in the first half and 41.5 percent for the game, were led by John Toms with 19 points and Alvis Rogers with 10.

Its a great, great win for us. I dont know if we can play much better than that, said Indian Coach Bruce Parkhill. Wake Forest is an exceptional basketball team clearly a Top 20 squad.

Everybody contributed

Long Rivalry $et For Renewal

WASHINGTON (AP) - The way the Dallas Cowboys and the Washington Redskins are talking, somebodys going to be awfully suprised Saturday afternoon when the final score goes up at Robert F. Kennedy Stadium.

We wont be denied a third time, says Dallas linebacker Bob Bruenig of the Cowboys third strai^t appearance hi the National Conference championship game..

Redskins quarterback Joe Theismanns answer: Theres no doubt in my mind we can beat them.

The Cowboys and the Redskins renew their longstanding rivalry at 12:30 p.m. EST Saturday. At stake, a trip to Pasedena, Calif., for Super Bowl XVII.

The Redskins are 10-1 this season and 13-1 over the last two years. Their only setback, a 24-10 defeat here came on Dec. 5 as Dallas Coach Tom Landry celebrated his 200th National Football League victory.

I think the Cowboys will find we are a different football team this time around, said Theismann. We have a lot more confidence in our capabilities.

The Cowboys, with victories over Tampa Bay and Green Bay in the playoffs, are 8-3 on the year.

You know its still Dallas but there is something missing this year, says Redskin linebacker Rich Milot. They are losing a little more often and even in victory they appear vulnerable at tim. They still win their share but they dont scare people the way they once did.

Two streaks will be on the line Saturday. The Cowboys have won the last six meetings between the two Eastern Division rivals, holding the Redskins to 10 points or less in each game. At the same time, the Redskins have never lost a playoff game at RFK Staum.

The one thing we definitely have in our favor is the fans, Theismann said. We have had trouble in Dallas although it has happened there. But this is the place where the Redskins have traditionally been tough on the Cowboys. If a home-field advantage ever really exists in this league I would say its when the Cowboys meet the Redskins.

As loud as the fans will be, they still wont be on the field trying to stop Tony Dorset! from running through the Redskin defense or trying to keep Dallas defenders off Theismanns back.

Im not going to look back at and try and figure why we havent (tone well, what I have to do is look ahead, Theismann said. I know we will have to score more than 10 points for us to have a chance to win on Saturday.

Except for some light exercise, the Redskin players enjoyed a second day off on Monday. The teams coaches, busy since Sunday night reviewing Dallas game films, gave the team its game plan Uiis morning.

Good news at Redskin Park came from injured All-pro kick return specialist Mike Nelms, who reports he expects to be 100 percent for the Cowboys.

and our effort defensively is what a coach hopes for and we sure got it tonight. A big key was rebounding (W&M won off the boards 40-32), and Brant really asserted himself.

Wake Forest Coach Cari Tacy said in a game like this, our defensive effort had to be good. Its a part of the game that has gotten us this far this season.

Tacy said the Deacons played too tentatively early in the game. I thou^t we needed to get our early and get a lead, but we never did. Youve got to give it to William & Mary. They were ready to play and we weren;t.

WAKEFOREST

HP FG FT R A F Pt

Rogers    32 5- S 0- 0 5 0 4 10

Toms    33 0-23 1- 1 8 0 4 19

31 3- 6    2- 4    9    0    1    8

29 4-11    M    1    1    3    9

32 3-10    2- 4    1    4    3

11 1-1    3-4    6    0

5 0-2    0- 0    2    0

8 0- 2    0- 0    0    2

8 0- 0    0- 0    1    1

2 0- 0    0-0    0    0

8 2- 2    0-0    0    1

200 27-65 9-14 33 9 25 WILUAMAMARY

MP FG FT R A F 2- 5    2- 2    6    2    1

27 4- 8    6- 7    4    0    2

37 7-14    4- 4    16    0    2

27 7-10    4- 4    7    4    3

28 4-11    3- 4    3    4    4

25 0- 0    9-10    0    4    4

13 2- 4    0- 1    4    0    2

3 0- 0    0- 0    0    0    0

200 2146 28 14 18

Teachey

Rudd

Young

Green

Garber

Kepley

Karasek

Warden

Davis

ToUls

Strayhom

Richardson

Weidner

Traber

Cieplicki

Coval

Bland

Brooks

Totals

Wake Forest.........

Wm.*Mary...:.....

short, however, when Vanderbilts Ted Young sank a 15-footer with 57 seconds left. Auburn actually ted, at 58-55 with about seven minutes remaining on a field goal by OdeUMosteUer.

The Commodores battled back to tte the conte^ at 60 on a basket by James Williams and a three-point play by Phil Cox with 3:20 remaining.The teams traded bask^ before Young put in his game-winning shot.

Cox led four Commodores in double figures with 17 points. DarrellLockhart, Charles Barkley and Mosteller each had 16 points for Auburn.

I was scared to death down the final few minutes, said Vanderbilt Coach C M.

Newton, txit Im ^ad our players werent. Our guys didnt panic down the stretch and really executed our delay game to perfectton in the last minute.

In other games inv<riving the nations ranked teams. No. 7 Virginia tripped (tecH-gia Tech 66-52, No. 11 Kentucky stopped Florida 70-63, No. 14 ItousUm walloped Texas Tech 96-73 and I5th-ranked Syracuse rolled past BosUm College 102-85.

Ricky Stokes scored five points during a 13^ spurt that erased a six-point, seoHid-half deficit and helped carry Virginia over Georgia Tech.Georgia Tech, riding a 20-point flurry from Mark Price, held a 40-34 lead with

Virginia Romps Pasf Georgia Tech By 66-52

ATLANTA (AP) - With its offense ^ttering, seventh-ranked Virginia turned to intense defensive pressure in the second half and rolled to a 66-52 comeback victory over Cteorgia Tech in an Atlantic Coast Conference basketball game Monday night.

1 think in the second half we played great defense, said Coach Terry Holland of the Cavaliers. I dont know what the final was, but they couldnt have had miKh more than 22 points in the half.

Actually it was only 20 as the Cavs took advantage of a 6:06 scoreless drou^t by the Yellow Jackets to reel off 13 consecutive points, five from Ricky Stokes, to turn a 40-34 deficit into a 47-40 lead.

I think in the first half we were either a little flat or a little uptight, but lets give Georgia Tech credit for creating those problems, Holland said.

We got tired late in the game, said Coach Bobby Cremins of Tech. They really wore us down.

Virginia is a great team,

he added. They played their game and we didnt maintain our composure when it counted. This team is learning.

Tech, riding a 20-point flurry from freshman Marie Price, held a 40-34 lead with 15:12 remaining before the heavily favored Cavaliers made their move.

Othell Wilson sank two free throws and Craig Robinson scored off the baseline before Stokes converted a ttiree-point play on a driving layup with 11:51 remaining to give Virginia the lead for good 41-40.

Ralph Sampson, who led the Cavaliers with 18 points, drilled in six free throws after that, and Rick Carlisle also added six points as the Cavaliers won handily.

The victory lifted Virginia to 13-2 overall and 4-1 in the ACC. Price, who had four three-point goals in the game, finished with 23 points for game scoring honors. He had 20 of those, however, after less than a minute of the second half had elapsed.

The setback drowied Tech to 6-6 for the year and 1-3 in thec(Hiference.

VIRGINIA

Robinson

MuUen

Samfson

Wilson

Carlisle

Mfller

Stokes

Edeliii

Merrifield

Smith

Totals

GA.TECH

PearsMi

Harvey

SaUey

Thomas

Price

Bradford

Byrd

Totals

HP FG FT R A F Pt

33    2-    6    4-    8    11    0    4    8

19    1-    4    4-    4    4    1    6    7

31    6-    9    6-    9    9    1    4    18

35    3-10    2-    4    2    4    2    8

22    2-    3    6-    6    3    2    1    10

17 2- 4 0-0 23 4- 6 1-1 14 0- 0 0-0 5 1-20-0 1 0-0 0-0

0    3 2 3

1    1 0 1 0 0

200 21-44 23-32    a    1119    66

IIP FG FT    R    A    F    Pt

27    0-    2    2-    2    2    2    2    2

21    0-    2    0-    0    1    0    3    0

34    ^    6    4-    9    8    1    4    8

4-15 0-    0    4    1    4    8

38 9-17 1-    2    3    2    3    23

27    3-    4    3-    4    1    1    4    9

13    1-    5    0-    0    1    0    3    2

200 IMl 10-17 24 7 23 52

.30 36- 66

.32 20- 52

Vi

Ga.

Three-point goals: Virginia 1-6; Mullen 1-2, Wilson 0-3, Stokes 0-1. Georgia Tech 4-17: Thomas 06, Prlce46, Bird 0-2.

Turnovers: Virginia 15, Georgia Tedi 11.

Technical fouls: None.

Officials: Pataro, Taylor, Wooldridge. A-10,543.

Eostern Corolino

.    Boys    Standings

   Conf.    All

15:12 remaining before the heavily favored Cavaliers made their move.

Othell Wils(Mi sank two free throws and Craig Robinson scored off the baseline before Stokes converted a three-point play on a driving layup with 11:51 remaining to give Virginia the lead f(H* good at 41-40.

Ralph Sampson, who led the Cavaliers with 18 points, drilled in six free throws after that, and Rick Carlisle also added six points as the Cavaliers w(hi handily.

I think in the second half we riayed great defense, said Virginia Coach Terry Holland. I dont know what the final was, but they couldnt have had much more than 22 points in the half. Actually it was only 20 as the Cavs took advantage of a 6:06 scoreless drou^t by the Yellow Jackets.

I think in the first half we were either a little flat or a little upti^it, iMit lets give Georgia Tech credit for creating those problems, Holland said.

We got tired late in the game, said Coach Bobby Cremins of Tech. They really wore us down. Virginia is a great team. They played their game and we didnt maintain our composure when it counted. This team is learning.

Mel Turpin scored 17 of his 23 points in the second half as Kentucky came from bdiind to defeat Florida. Turpin had four points during an 11-0 scoring run that gave Kentucky a 61-56 lead with 5:02 remaining.

I really cant explain how' we did it, except for just going to Melvin, and he did an exceptionally fine job for us,

said Kentucky Coach Joe B-HaU.

Turpin: I needed to post up more and get meaner. We wanted this game and we (XMildnt afford another toss. I posted up in the second half, bending down and making a big post, and they couldnt get aromwl me.

Gyde Drexler and Mich^ Young scored 18 points each and Akeem Abdul-Olajuwon had 13 points and 12 rebounds to lead Houston to a runaway victory over Texas Tech. Making 60 percent of their field goal shots in the gatee, the Cougars were in command virtually all the way.

Erich Sanlifer scored a career-high 30 pidnts, and Tony Bruin added 29 as Syracuse built an 11-point halftime lead and rolled past Boston (tollege. Winning 37-26 at halftime, the Orangemen scored the first two baskets of the second half and held leads of between 13 to 24 points the rest of the way.

Others

Elsewhere, Brant Weidner scored 18 points and pulled down 16 rebounds as William & Mary bprst to a 19^point lead in the first half and went on to a surprisingly easy 80-63 victory over Wake Forest.

Also, James Banks scored 21 points as Georgia took the lead in the first half and held on for a 75-59 victory over Mississippi State; Dave Brooks scored a career-high 28 points to pace Navy to a 69-57 victory over Lehigh; Troy Lee Mikell scored 18 points, including a game-winning layup with 11 seconds left, to lead East Tennessee State past Davids(m 67-66 ^ John Paxson scored a gam?-high 19 points as Notre Dame downed Lafayette 51-40.

Dawkins, Perkins Get ACC Honors

27 36- 63

4(^- 80

Turnovers: Wake Forwt 9, William & Mary 14.

Technical fouls: None.

Officials: Dona^y.Oaks.

A-7,100.

GREENSBORO <AP) -Dukes Johnny Dawkins^the Atlantic Coast Conferences pre-season rookie of the year choice, has been named the legues rookie of the week.

Dawkins, a 6-foot-2, 160-pound frenan guard from Rockville, Md., scored 31 points in boosting the Blue Devils to an 8647 ACC victory at Maryland last weekend.

Earlier, junior center Sam Perkins of reigning national basketball champion North Carolina was chosen ACC player of the week.

The h(mor is the second this season for Dawkins, who scored 14 points in Dukes 91-76 loss to nationally-ranked Louisville earlier in the week.

Dawkins is averaging 17.3 points and 4.1 rebounds per game, while shooting ^.1 percent from the floor and 67.3 percent from the free throw line.

Perkins, a 64, 234-pounder from Latham, N.Y., scored a career-hi^ 36 points in leading the Tar Heels to a 101-95 victory over Virginia. TTie pre-season all-ACC pick was 12 of 17 from the floor and 8 of 8 from the free throw line.

Four of his 12 , field goals came from beyond the ACCs experimental 3-point goal line.

Against Maryland, Perkins sco^ 12 points and collected 11 rebounds In the Tar Heels 72-71 victory over Maryland.

Perkins averages 16.3 points per game and 8.9 rebounds a game.

The selections were ma(le by members of the Atlantic Coast Sports Writers Association.

SENIORS PROSPER

PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP) - The Senior PGA Tour is growing every year.

When it began three years ago, it had only two tournaments. In 1983 it will have 18 with total purses expected to jump over the $3 million mark.

Interest in the Senior Tour has grown by leaps and bounds over the past couple of years, Commissioner Deane R. Beman of the PGA said. In 1983 we are delighted to find ourselves going into several cities that have n(rt enjoyed tour competition previously.

W L

W

L

Ayden-Grlfton

4 0

9

3

FarmvilleC.

3 0

9

4

North Pitt

3 1

9

4

SW Edgecombe

1 2

9

4

.Southern Nash

1 2

2

9

Greene C.

0 3

1

11

C.B. Aycock

0 4

0

12

Girls Standings

Conf.

All

W L

w

L

C.B. Aycock

3 1

10

3

SW Edgecombe

2 1

11

2

Greene C.

2 1

9

3

Ayden-Grifton

2 2

3

7

Southern Nash

1 2

7

4

FarmvilleC.

1 2

2

12

North Pitt

1 3

6

8

Coastol Conference

Boys Standings

Ctonf.

All

W L

W

L

Conley

2 0

10

2

Havelock

1 0

9

4

North Lenoir

1 0

5

8

West Craven

0 1

9

2

West Carteret

0 1

6

4

White Oak

0 2

3

10

Girls Standings

Conf.

All

W L

W

L

Conley

2 0

12

1

North Lenoir

1 0

10

3

Havelock

1 0

9

4

West Carteret

0 1

4

6

West Craven

0 1

1

ll

White Oak

0 2

2

11

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"QUALITY CLOTHING AT REASONABLE PRICES"





Coryell Looks To Build Up San Diego's Defense

Flyers, 76ers Just Zip Along

SAN DIEGO (AP) - The San Diego Chargers, owners of the National Football Leagues most productive offense, have reached the playoffs four years in a row. But each time, their Siqier Bowl hopes have been short-circuited by teams taking advantage of their porous defense.

Help may be on the way, however, for San Diegos beleagured defwiders, rated 25tb overall among 28 teams in 1982, and last against the pass.

Shoring up the defense that .was repeatedly dismantled by Miami in the Dolphins 34-13 playoff victory Sunday has to be*a major priority, San Diego Coach Don Coryell said Monday.

A year ago, after losing to the Cincinnati Bengals 27-7 in the frozen American Conference finale, the Chargers made some drastic moves on defense. Four veteran defenders - Tim Fox, Dewey Selmon, David Lewis and Bruce Laird - were acqui^ and Tom Bass, defensive coordinator at Tampa Bay, was hired.    j

> Neverthd^, the distinct lack of balance between the capabilities of the Chargers offense and the Chaigers defense remained.

. After Sundays defeat, ti^t end Kellen Winslow suggested the offense must have more help from the defense.

Its kind of hard for us to go out and score 35 to 40 points per game,he said.

Coryell, \riiose dub finished 7-4, partially blames the strike-shortened season few the lack of improvement.

I cant speak for the other teams, but 1 think it really hurt our defense, said Coryell. When the season started, (mu' defense was really coming on. He was referring to San Diegos 23-3 season-opening victory at Denver and a 19-12 loss at Kansas City.

Then came the eight-wedc strike.

The things we really worked ( during training camp were lost when we came back, said Bass. There were a lot of tools wed like to have used that we never really got in a position to use after the strike because we werent comfortable enough with them.

While another major oveitaul is not likely, Bass acknowledged Sunday that we have to make some changes. He indicated the Chargers need more speed in the secondary - and more time to jell.

We have to go back to vriiat we were doing during training camp that was siKcessful in the first two games, Bass said. When you look at the teams left in the playoffs, you see balanced teams. Thats what we have to strive for. We

have a tremendous offense. We have to get our defense up toere, too.

Prior to the strike, Coryell was quoted was as saying that Chargers owner Goie Klein made it very clear he wanted the club in the Sup^ Bowl this season.

Coryell recalled the remark Monday, but noted: Remember that was before the strike, and as the strike went on he said, Forget the season. The only thing thats important is 1983.

We ^art now, said Coryell. We start preparing for next year.

He said the Chargers, with two first-roumi draft ctoices and two secmd-round picks, are in good position -to improve themselves.

But that doesnt mean the first two dioices will be de-frasive jdayers, he said. Its going to d^iiend on \iri)o is available.

Because of the Fred Dean trade with San Francisco, San Diego has the 49ers first pick this year - the fifth selection.

Coryell makes no bones about who his preference would be if San Diego had the first pick in the draft.

Qeariy, he covets John Elway, Stanfords outstanding quarterback.

Never pass up a great quarterback. Youd have to be some kind of a nut to do that. Hes one of the best potentially, certainly, he said.

PHILADELPfflA (AP) -While the citys pro football teams have been playing musical coaches, the Philadelpha Flyers and 76ers have, almost unnoticed, been playing at record paces.

Dick Vermeil quit as bead coach (rf the Ea^es in a tear-stained farewell last week and defensive coordinator Marion (Campbell was named his replacemrat.

The Pbilkldphia ^ars of the new United States Football Lea^ lost coach George Perles to Michigan State, but last Friday signed New England assistant Jim Mora ashisreplacemoit.

Tlie football news tended to obscure somewhat the playing deeds of the National Hockey League Flyers aiid the National Basketball A^)ciation 76ers.

Prior to a tie Satq^y night againat Chieagij, the Flyers had won stright, tying a club recowj. They are in the midst of an eight-game winning streak on the''road, equalling a league record managed by only five teams in NHL history.

They have an opportunity to break that mark tonight in Washington against the Capitals.

In all, the Flyers are unbeaten in 12 games.

But, as usual, the playere are low-key kbout the strtks, almost to a man claiming the only thing that counts is winning the Stanley Cup.

Coach Bob McCammon describes it as exciting, but not

that exciting, while captain Bill Barber says, First ^ace is the only thing that matters.

But you can tdl in talking with the players ttiat they're proud, and want to carry the streak as far as possible.

Veteran Bobby (Harke ju^ smiles and insists it means nothing, but to the contrary it means that the Flyers have

opoied a seveniwint lead in the Patrick Diviskm ovor the defending Stanley dtam-pion New Ymt Islanders.

The Flyers are known for streaks, especially whoi they were unbeatei in 35 games (29^)4) in 1979410, a mark ui^)recedented in all of ^rts.

Theyre not thinking of another 35-game binge, but until somebody beats them.

the possibility remains.

Then, there are the 76ers.

Moses Malone, Julius Erv-ing, Andrew Toney, Maurice Cheeks and company have woo 11 straight. One more ties the club rec(Htl in 1960-81. And since that next game is tonight against the 6-30 Cleveland Cavaliers, the chances are bright theyll reach that plateau.

Tro Helps Spark Knicks, As King Is On Sidelines

SCOREBOARD

TAimnmMAM

l0FUit4r&PfMiSEib ^ (aEiwvBvjr Rx>reAU,'TMe fteB2iiKniAG6,PJE 03rAI?fPlAVlMMA?CH, h l?Uk^P ID MAVE H(0S> AW OOWt wmiw-y

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

...

BlOMAZARP

NEW YORK (AP) - With meal ticket Bernard King on the sidelines with an ankle injury, tte New York Knicks needed a big scorer.

Bill Cartwright came through for them. o did Truck Robinson. Ditto Paul We^phal.

The three veterans, each of whom has averaged more than 20 points per game at least twice in his career, have rarely reached that total this season. But all three players exceeded their season highs in scoring Monday ni^t to lead New York to a 119-109 National Basketball Association victory over the Chicago Bulls.

Cartwright led the Knicks with 28 points, one more than his season best, while Robinson had 26 points and scored more than 16 for the first time since he reached his previous high this season of 21 on Nov. 3.

Wes^als 25 points were six more than he has had for the Knicks in any game since they signev^ last M|irch 13.

Truck, Clhd^^ and 1 have historreilTy been scorers, Westphal said. We have been running plays for Bernard this year, but with him injured we had to pick up the slack. Usually, we want to have balanced scoring, but we got in a rut and have been going to King.

King was injured Friday night after leading New York in scoring for 18 straight games. He is averaging 22.6 points per game, while Cartwright, Westphal and Robinson have combined for an avera^ of only 28.9.

Only getting eight or so

Biwling

M^nsCity

W    L

Comedy of Ennrs......56    24

Earls Pearls 1........53/i    26M

} Hot Dogs...(1........49    31

t ffldewlnders. i.........4514    34'4

*D.G. Nichols, j.........m    m

Ball Music.............37*4    42'4

I Family -t- Oni.........36*4    43*4

* lieam 45....  .........35*4    44*4

. Challengers...........34    46

* TeamllO..............33    47

* Hondfl-SuzuW..........32',^.    47*4

; Chain Reaction........28    52

* !High game, Ron Hamby, 23; ! high series, lUly Whitehurst, 579.

I

* , Burroughs WeUcome

Anns Angels........38

High Hopes............37

Ihe Fritos.............37

la.T.

In

38

26

38

26

37

27

37

27

35

29

33

31

30

34

25

39

25

39

22

42

JnicomFour..........33

; Bbotty amHvory.......30

i arike Force...........25

> Bin Wreckers..........25

Holly Pops...,.........22

: * Mens hi^ game, Herb Kallweit, * lie; merfs high series, Curtis '^Ward, 500; womens high game and series, JaheToothman, 170,494.

: toe Boskatboll

Pee Wee Division

Blilebevlls..........2    4    4 1020

Pirates..............4    2    0    4-10

Lekding scorers: BD Jonathan Powers 12, Jason. Adams 4; P -Jea|ones4, LeoLee4.

Tetrapias...........6    6    4    218

Woifpack............6    2    6    8-20

beading scorers: T Walt Clark 6, Jimmy Lee 6; W Jason Wing

Midget Division

Terrjipins...........1    8    J    1-16

Wcjfpack............4    6    6    7-23

heading scorers: T - Teague TrlpiS, Pierre Nelson 4; W Chris ChNMopher 10, Jamie Brewington

I Soiior Division

IriSi'.................16    23-39

Tit,.;..............18    25-43

LMing scorers: I Jeffrey La^inmouse 17, Tynme Williams 8; ?*-Michael Harris 21, JEssie

wilirs..............29    31-50

W^ts...............24    44-68

Leiilng scorers: Wa - Raymong Byftum 25, Derick White 11; Wi -Tr^Fugua 20, Mike laboni 18.

Taftieels..............10    2535

WflJtock..............25    20-45

beading scorers: T - Bill JoRnaon 12, Gene West 11; W -Toa^Johnson 16, John Jordan 13.

AADtvision

..................40    55-96

IreBrush.........26    38-64

ding sewers: C - Russell } 25, Craig SmlU> 19; E -5 Tyson 34, wady Cobb 28.

irWhlte...........24    44-

........... 32    37-69

ding scorers: GW - Moses ^r 16. David Ward 12; A -lEvans 20, Mike Smith 16.

4tV..............32    27-59

i..................44    37-81

Qding scorers: B Mike m 16, GaryJames 18; T -wy Barnhill 22,    James

ftistonia.

A Division

ECFP.................31    44-75

Rockers...............15    3247

Leading scorers: E - Jamie Croswell 21, Dave Day 16; R David Wo(^ 19, Ed Hobby 13.

Cherrys...............30    54-r4

Integon................36    52-88

Leading scorers: C - Terry Shelton 30, Gordan Dunn 22; I Tony GaUin 31, Ken Stallings 17.

GvlUa  ..........17    31-48

Fergusons............34    34-68

Leading scorers: G    - Tim

Barnes 14, Danny Hinds 9; F Dexter Owens 20, Bobby Coggins 14.

NBA

EASTERN CONFERENCE AtUnlicDlviiion

W LPct. GB 31    5    .141 -

28 9 .757 3^ 25 IS .625 8 17. 19 .472 14 14'' 24    .313    18

Minnesote St. Louis Detroit Toronto

Edmonton

Calgary

Winnipeg

Vancouver

23    14    9    193    173

15    S    7    168    185

11        12    146    199

10    24    9    158    196

Smytbe Divisa

26    13    6    252    186

18    22    7    189    im

5 176 192 9 163 173

6 153 191

16 22 15 21

LoeAngelei 15 23

lioodaytGaiiMi Boston 4, MUneaota3 St.Louis4J'oronto4,Ue

Yuiaday's Games hiiTatWaii

N.lowa82,Ui.-ChlcagD70 Notre Dame 51, Lafayette 40 Rio Grande 04. W Virginia St. 68 W. Ulinois84Jalparalso62

Houston 98, Texas Tech 73 Jackson St. 70. Prairie Vlw04 Loyola, Ul. 71, Oklahoma City 37 McMurry90,SulRo*sSt.62 New Orleans 60, Pan American 56 N . Texas St . % Arkansas St . 61 Oral Roberts 72, DetnHt 62

Philadelphia Boston New Jersey Washington New York

Central DIvtaioo Milwaukee    27    13    .675    -

AUanta    19    19    .500    7

Detroit    19    21    .475    6

Chicago    13    25    .342    13

Indiana    12    24    .333    13

Cleveland    0    30    .107    10

WESTERN CONFERENCE

likhnstDivim

San Antonio    25    15    .625    -

Kansas City Denver Utah Dallas Houston

PadflcDlvtska Los Angeles    28    8    .776    -

Phoenix Portland SeatUe

Golden State San Diego

21    16    .566    214

19 21    .475    6

17    24    .415    8*4

15    22    .406    6*4

5    32    .135    1614

New York 119,    .v.

AtlanU 101 New Jersey 96 TuaidnrsGamei PhUadehihiaataevehuid Denver at San Antoido Boston at Indiana Washington at Houston DaUas at Golden State

Wednaadnrt Games ChicafloatPhUadel^ia Seattle at Atlanta MUwatatee at Detroit NewYorkatKansMCKy GoMen State at Utah Houston at Denver

35    t5    .635    5

34    15    .615    5*4

24    15    .615    514

16 23    410    1314

10    30    .250    20

sOamee ago 101

Pbiladdphta at Wuhington St. Louis at Quebec Hartford at New York Islanders Calgary at Montreal Edmonton at Los Angeles New Yoit Rangers at Vancouver Wedneedays Garnet New Jersey at Pitttturgh Washington at Chicago Toronto at Winnipeg Detroit at Minnesota Vancouver at Edmonton

CoiltgRScortf

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Bucknell6rNtagm48 Qevdand . M,. Francis, Pa. 63 Dickinson 75, Enfizabethtown 57 Falrtetgi Dickinson 68, Merc)i>urst 80 Hofstra 81, Loyola. Md. 61 Marist49,Coige47 Navy6e,LsihiS57 Rider83,Tra3iSt.67 Rutgers 70, St. Joseph's 77 Syracuse l01,^Boeton Coll. 85 Vennant79T(tanlslus76 WestVirgintaO^^Di^esneTO .

Alcorn St. 85, SouUiem U. 7B BapUst 64, East Carolina 56 citadel 57, VMI50 Dist. M Columbia 94 Jtrginia St. 69 E. Tennamae St. 67, Dav^ 66 Florida AAM 59, N. Carolina AAT 57 Geo^ Mason 76, Boston U. 74 Georis7S,llisaissi{nlSt.S6 GrunWng 80,Arfc.PiDe Bluff 77,2 OT Kentucky n, FhH^ 63 LouUtana St. 70, N.C.-WUmtngton 55 Louisiana Tech 56, Texa^ Antonio

48

Marshall 70, Furman 54 NichoUaSt.61.SWMisaowt36 N. Alabama 61, Vahtata St. 76 N.C.-CbarlottelO, CampbeU67 NW Louisiana 77, Centenary 75 South Carolina 81, Bnxtklyn Coll. 63 S. Carolina St. 95, BetbuneCookman 70 SWLoul8tana63.McNeeteSt 61 Vanderbilt 64, Auburn 62 Vtrgbita 66, Georgta Tech 52 W. Cardlna72, Appalachian St . 65

WUItam * Ma^fcjW^ Forest 63

Carieton 66, Cornell 47

,S.niinois53 ,St.Louls61

shots a game is kind of hard for me to take when I used to get 20 a game, said Robinson, who leads the team in rebounding but is averaging only 7.5 points. But we have a system that calls for King to shoot. Im not washed up at 31.

I need to be in the flow of the game.

Robinson said he realized that when King recovers, well go back to Bernard King. But my confidence will be better. Itll also help Paul, who also has been an offensive player all his life.

Reggie Theus, who had only six points at halftime, led Chicago with 31, while Dave Corzine had 18 and Oriando Woolridge 17 for the Bulls.

Theus had 10 Chicago points in a row, including two three-point plays, early in the third quarter to reverse an 11-point deficit. But a W) streak by the Knicks gave them an 81-73 lead.

New York then scored the first eight points of the fourth period for a 93-79 edge, the first of three occasions on which the Knicks led by 14.

The Bulls rallied to narrow the deficit to 102^, but a free throw by Marvin Webster, a three-point play by Westphal, two free throws by Robinson and another basket by Westphal put the game out of reach.

Cartwright, Robinson and Westphal together were 31 for

37 from the free throw line as New York outscored the Bulls 39-20 in free throws, offsetting a 4440 deficit from the field.

Hawks 102, Nets 96 Eddie Jcrfinson had 28 points and 11 assists to lead Atlanta over New Jersey, which lost for only the second time in 14 games.

Hawk center Tree Rcdlins added 13 points, nine rebounds and 10 blocked shots, the most a player has ever had in a game against the Nets.    

New Jersey led 96-95 with 1:41 left (Ml a basket by Otis Birdsong, who scored 20 points. But Atlanta scored the last seven points of the game.

The Hawks led 81-71 with 10 minutes to go, but New Jersey outscored them 19-10 to cut the deficit to one. Then the Nets took their first lead 9443 on a jump shot by Albert King, who had 21 points.

The string has enabled the them to open a 3^-game lead over the second^iilace Bcton Celtics in the Alantic Division, but the 76m know that no lead is too great again^ the Oltics.

Both the Flyers and Sixers have been winning debite vital injuries. Ihe Flyers, for example, have lost goalie Pelle Lindbergh, who has a severely sprained wrist and will be out another week. Barber, Ron Flockhart and Brad Mar^ have been out with injuries at various times.

The Sixers lost Erving and backup forward Eari Cweton for two games. Toney has played with aches and bruises, (^ch Billy Cunnin^am is fortunate that his bench has reacted positively to the situation. Hes gotten a performance beyond what was expected from rookie starter Marc lavaroni.

And there always is Malone, who leads the NBA in rebounds, averaging better than 16 per game. Hes had 30 garo^ of 20 points or more, and six of 30 or more.

His 219 offensive rebounds is just one less than team-leacter Erving had for the oitire 1981-82 season.

Malone, however, just plays. Erving sets the tone.

Streaks arent a team goal, he says.

Erving says a team tries to win as many as it can, and when it loses it starts all over again. The first NBA title in his fabled career is Ervings goal.

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Texa-EI Paso 0, Wyoming 54 Texas Southern 73, Miss. VaUey 67 FAR WEST Goiui^ 64, Whitman 54 New texlco 89, Air Force 76 S. Colorado 62, W. New Mexico 56

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BOSTON RED SOX-^cqulred Brian Kingman, right-handed pitcher, from the Oauand As for a player to be named later.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Slgned Qlff Johnson, designated hitter; Lloyd Moseby, outHelder; and Ganh lorg,

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HAHTFORd"' wiSKSCMlIne Dan Frldgan, left wing, and Jeff Brownscnidie, defenseman, to Blng^ton of the American Hockey

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SW LOUISIANA-Announced the resignation of Mel Didier, athletic dirsctor.

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WUllam* Mary 60. Wake Forest 63 AUantlc Cluistianil, Wlnte60 N Carolina Central 74, UvingMone 72 E. Tennessee St. 67, Davtdson66 Baptist 64, E.0millnaS6 N. Carolina Wesleyan 65, Chiiatopher Newport 74 Catawba 87, Pembroke St. 86 N Carollna-Charlotte60, CampbeU 67 Gardner-Webb 75, Belmont Abbey 72 Marshall 70. Furman 54

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N. Caroiina-Greeniboro81, Pfeiffer 52 N Caroitna Central 62, Livingstone 70 N. Carollna-Charlotle 62. N Carolina-Wllmii^ 57 Campbi^, St. Augustines S3 -    191,    Newberry    48

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Lebanon Insists On Early Istaeli Troop Pull-Out

ByFAROUKNASSAR Associated Press Writer

BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP) - The government is demanding that Israel withdraw all of its troops from Lebanese territory before Lebanon will a^ to a formal id to the 35-yeaf-old state of war with Israel, a government spokesman said today.

The announcement came as police reported a new round of sectarian fighting, with Christian and Druse militiamen trading artillery and rocket fire in the hills overlooking U.S. .Marine positions south of Beirut. None of the shells came close to the Marine positions.    >

Christians and Druse also fought gun battles farther iqi in Lebanons central mountains, near the towns of Aley and Bhamdoun, police said. Israels state radio said Israeli forces in the area were put on alert.

An Israeli patrol approached the Marine position Monday night and asked to cross the Marine lines to get to a villagie near the airport, but the .Marines refused and briefly went on alert. The U.S. Embassy said today it expressed concwn over the incident to the Israeli government, which indicated it will not happen again

.Antoine Fattai, Lebanons chief delegate to the troop withdrawal talks, stated the Lebanese position on peace with Israel during Mondays session of the ne^iations, the I Lebanese government spokesman said.

Agreement on terminating the state of war cannot be concluded before a total withdrawal is completed, the spokesman, who declined to be named, quot^ Fattai as telling negotiators during the seventh round of talks.

Israel and Lebanon a^eed to an armistice in 1949, after the first Arab-Israeli war in 1948. Lebanon did not enter later .Middle East wars, but there has been disagreement over the status of the 1949 agreement and a technical state of war

Driver Charged In School Bus Wreck

JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) - The driver of the school bus that was struck by a train last Friday has been charged with a misdemeanor traffic violation that requires a school bus driver to remain stopped at a railroad crossing until it is safe to proceed, the N.C. Highway Patrol says.

Sgt. Douglas Deacon of the state Highway Patrol also says the transmission and braking system of the bus have been inspected by Onslow County school officials and the National Safety Council and were found to be OK.

The driver, Marilyn Fran-cine Mills, 17, of Jacksonville, had told observers at the scene of the accident that she hit the brakes as the bus moved forward onto the railroad tracks, but she said the brakes failed.

Miss Mills was formally charged with failing to operate a school bus within 50 feet but not less than 10 feet from the nearest rail of such railroad and remain stopped upon the approach of a train before proceeding until being'able to do so safely, authorities said.

If found guilty, she faces a maximum penalty of a $100 fine and 60 days in Jail.

The bus, which was nearly filled with 55 students as it was carrying students on their way home from the Tabernacle Middle School, pulled too cl(e to the tracks after Miss Mills stepped on Spring Hill Road, the patrol said.

The bus was halfway over the tracks when the northbound Seaboard Systems Railroad train struck. Investigators said after the

Dutch Prince In Hospital Care

THE HAGUE, Netherlands

(AP) - Prince Claus, who had been under treatment in a Swiss psychiatric clinic for depression, has transferred to a Dutch hospital.

Because the condition of the Prince requires a long clinical treatment, the Prince prefers that further treatment should be in a Dutch hospital, said a government statement discussing the transfer Monday.

Since October the German-born prince, 56, husband to Queen Beatrix, has been under treatment for what the government describes as complaints of a depressive nature.

He accompanied the queen on her state visit to Britain in November, but appeared to be tired.

PCALU MEETING 'The regular meeting of the Pitt County Association of Life Undwwiters is scheduled for Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Three Steers Restaurant.

Dr. Bruce Wardrep, chairman of the department of finance at East Carolina University, will be the guest speaker.

accident. The bus was pushed 218 feet away from the intersection.

Passengers said the driver attempted to put the bus in reverse, when instead the bus remained in forward gear and lunged forward. The train hit its emergency brakes, but not in time, and struck the bus at about 20 mph.

Meanwhile, the last of the 12 students hospitalized as a result of the collision is expected to be released from the hospital today. Kevin Brown, 13, was treated for pelvic injuries at Onslow Memorial Hospital.

A total of 42 students aboard the bus were injured. Most serious injuries were pelvic fractures, although some students also had broken collar bones.

At Seminar

On Tobacco

FARMVILLE - Jackie and Hardy Moye believe tobacco growers need to take two steps to safegaurd the future of the crop - develop a positive working relationship between growers and exporting companies and grow a competitively priced, quality product.

The Route 1, FarmvUle, couple recently comnpleted the executive development seminar for tobacco growers and tobacco farm women conducted by North Carolina State University and say the seminar influenced their thinking on tobacco production.

As a result of tte seminar, the Moyes say they plan to improve their accounting methods in 1983 by keeping abreast of costs and expenses and making more accurate projections.

Participants attended four days of classes at N.C. State University and made a two-day visit to R.J. Reynolds World Headquarters in Winston-Salem.

Dr. Cluster Black, director of the Agricultural Extension Service, said the seminar is for innovative tobacco farmers who want to broaden their knowledge of tobacco production and marketing.

It is one of the first statewide educational programs to recognize the role women play in modern agriculture, he said.

Sucker control and descriptions of tobacco grades were ranked by the Moyes as the most interesting topics of the seminar.

The Moyes have been farming 12 years. They raise 310 acres of corn, soybeans, wheat, oats and cucumbers in addition to 50 acres of tobacco.

KEEP BROAD POWERS ROSEAU, Dominica (AP) Prime Minister Eugenia Charles government has officially extended the statof emergency on this Caribbean island, giving itself broad powers of search, arrest and travel restrictions for another 12 months.

therefore exists.

At their first meeting four weeks ago, the negotiators to the withdrawal talks clashed openly over the 1949 armistice, with Lebanon claiming it still is in force and Israel arguing that it was nullified during the 1967 Mideast war.

U.S. delegation ^wkewnan Christopher R<s said the next round of talks set for Thursday in the Israeli town of Kii^at Shmona will deal with the operation of the plenary sessions and subconunittees.

Im sure we will be intensifying their work, Ross added. Ross said a st^ticommitte formed to discuss an end to the state of war between Israel and Lebanon made good progress during Mwidays session in the Beirut suburb of Khalde.

U.S. special envoy PhUip C. Habib and his assistant, Morris Draper, have been pressing for a quicker pace in the talks, whose ultimate aim is the removal of more than 60,000 Israeli, Syrian and Palestinian troops from Lebanon.

In Jerusalem today, Habib and Draper met for 2^^ hours with Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir and David Kimche. the chief Israeli negotiator. No details of the meeting were available.

Lebanese Foreign Minister Elie Salem said the troop withdrawal talks were expected to produce a protocol accord to regulate future relations between the neiboring nations, but a peace treaty is out of the question. It is impossible.

Lebanon is opposed to a treaty with Israel, fearing the wrath of its Arab neighbors.

Israeli troops invaded I^ebanon last June 6 to rout Palestine Liberatiiw Organization guerrillas from its neighbor to the north.

About 25,000 Israeli troops hold the south of Lebanon. An estimated 30,000 Syrian soldiers, sent by the Arab League as peacekeepers at the end of the 1975-76 civil war, now hold the east and north. At least 6,000 PLO guerrillas are believed entrenched behind Syrian lines.

In todays fighting, police said night-long duels between Christians and Druse south of Beirut flared into midmorning in the areas of Shweifat and Basaba, about five miles south of the capital.No casualty report was available.

Associated Press correspondent Terry A. Anderson, watching the duels from Beiruts international airport, said shells and rockets flew within 1.5 miles of the positions held by 1,200 U.S. Marine who are part of the international peacekeeping force in Beirut.

In other Middle East developments;

- Jordans King Hussein returned home Monday from Saudi Arabia, where he discussed peace initiatives with King Fahd.

PLO chief Yasser Arafat, in an intariew published in Cairo, was quoted as saying Egypt should return to its position of leadership of the Arab worid and stop demanding that the PLO recognize Israel. The interview was published in

the economic w^y A1 Ahram al Iktisady.

Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon arrived in Zaire to discuss military, economic, political and agricultural cooperation with President Mobutu Sese Seko, the Isr^li army radio reported in a broadcast from Kinshasa.

INCREASING WEIGHT Tliis we^-old Lori, a Lemur bom at the Skansen Aquarium in Stockholm, is getting an unusual start in life. Its mother couldnt feed it wt# milk and the baby started losing weight. The alarmed keepers then placed it in an incubator and fed it with a breast-milk compensator ai^ crickets. On the picture, taken recently, the scales show that

the weight is increasing and sotrn the baby Lori will be united again with mother Huida and father Kiut-Holger, both originally from the University of Vienna in Austria. In the meanwhile, a toy panda, in background, will have to do as a mother-sufastitute. (APLaserphoto)

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Four Charged With Smuggling Aliens Into U.S.

By RANDALL HACKLEY Associated Press Writtt EL PASO, Texas (AP) -Four men have been charged with stuffing 53 aliens froiii

El Salvador into a truck like sardines and snuggling them into the Southwest for a fee of about $55,000.

Two dozen iiKn, 26 women and three Salvadoran chlldri were ^rehended Sunday near Lordsburg, N.M., afto* sneaking into Uk

The Forecast For

Wednesday, January 19 Low Temperatures

RainQ Snowf^ ShowersIIBJ Flurriesf?^

Fronts: Cold

WEATHER OUTLOOK - The National Weathm- Service predicts showers Wednesday for most of the northeast with rain predicted for Texas and the Missis^i River ddta r^(m. Snow is indicated for the Rocky

Occluded

.Sl.ttiofi.uv

Mountain States as far south as Utah and Cdorado with Kansas and Oklahoma also predicted to receive snow in parts. <AP LaserphotoMi^)

By The Associated Press Tonight will pitd)ably be the coldest night of the season in North Carolina with lows ranging from 5 bdow to 5 above in the northern mountains to the teens and 20s near the coast.

Temperatures toni^t will probably be even colder than the low readings the state experienced Monday night.

Wednesday will be fair but still cold with highs once

more in the 30s.

Snow flurries in the northern and central mountains were expected to taper off today, ami ski^ were sunny over most of the state today.

Although the sun was out for most of the day, it was cold - and brisk northerly winds made it seem even colder.

Highs reached only into the 30s, except in the northern

Mild Weather Allows Reduction In Fuels~Use

By The Associated Press

With temperatures avera^ng 25 percent higher this winter than last, North Carolinians have cut their use of , electricity, oil and natural'gas to the dismay of suppliers.

Carolina Power and Li^t Co. sold 501,283,711 kUowatt hours of electricity to 555,045 residential customers in North Carolina in December, said spokeswoman Ky Young. By comparison, the company sold 563,678,418 kwh in December IMI, a decrease of about 7.38 percent, she said.

Duke Power Company, the states largest utility, had a similar decline - from 707,663,277 kwh in December 1981 to 701,465,725 the same month the previous year, said spokeswoman Mary Boyd.

Heating oil sales have dropped by 20-30 percent, according to the N.C. Oil Jobbers Association.

Its hurting our business, said Larry Elmore, vice president and manager

of Randolph Oil Co. in Asheboro. Our deliveries are way down.

Clarence Owens, vice president of Vanstory Oil Co. in Greensboro, sajis other oil dealers throughout North Carolina except in the western mountains - have reported similar sales slumps.

Twice in recent months, natural gas suppliers won N.C. Utilities Commission approval of rate increases. The weather has been so warm that theyve hardly been noticed, but an official of the commissions Public Staff says they soon will be.

I would say some (customers) are beginning to get (higher bills) now, said Ray Nery, director of the Public Staffs natural gas division. This winter customers will begin to feel the effect of all those increases.

The use of natural gas is measured in therms, said Steve Ctmner, spokesman for Piedmont Natural Gas Co. in Charlotte. One therm equals

I HITTING THE POWDER - Gafl Calvert teadi a trio of sletUers (tom a hiO near her hooM tn Unnvflle (N.C.) as the ki(to to()k advantage (If the tour bKhes ()(aw that feO (the North Carolina monntpins Saturday. Behind Gafl on the sled are Andy YoderandCtatdy Norman. (APLaaerpboto)

approximatdy 100,000 British thermal unitsBTUs -or 100 cubic fet of gas.

In December 1981, the average year-round customer used 152 therms of gas and paid a bill of $77.50, Conner said. In December 1982, the same average customer used 110.2 therms and was billed |72.10.Even the use of wood, an increasingly p(^ular beating source, is down fnnn last year, experts say.

William Smith of Greensboro, who has been in the firewood business for over six years, says two years ago he was delivering as many as five cords of wood per day. A cord is a 4-by-4-by-8-ft. stack of wood.

The only time were selling now is on really c(dd days, Smith said.

Musician In Concert

Raymond Williams, visiting artist for Davidson County Conunimity C(rf)ege in Lexington, will present a free concert for classical guitar and lute at 8 p.m. Thursday in Gray Gallery cm the East Carolina University can^.

A North Caitdina visiting artist for the ptet three yars, Williams holds an undergraduate degree from Kings CoUege and the masto* degree from Hunter College in New York. He is working on his doctoral degree at UNC-Greea*oro.

Williams has w<m performance prizes in the III Concurso International de Guitarra Clasica de Puerto Rico and in the First In-tematkmal Guitr Competi-tkm in the Guitar Fouklation of America. He has recently produced a solo album.

Williams comes to Greenville as part of the N.C. Visitng Artist Program in an exchai^ of performances with Christoperh Deane, visiting artist at Pitt Ccn-munity Ccdlege, in cooperation with the Pitt-Greenville Arts Coimcil and the ECU Gray Art Gallery.

In early February, Williams is scheduled to perf(Hrm at botii the N^tonal Gallery in Washington, D.C., and at Cunegie Recital Hall InNewYorkCity.

For more information on Williams program, call the Arts Council at 757-1785.

United States frmn El Paso, authcHltiessaid.

The gnxq) had beoi packed into a 2((^-ton truck for a '^mile tilp to Los Angeles, said Joe Aubin, chief intelligence agoit of the U.S. Border Patrol in El Paso.

The SalvadiMmis \n^ literally standing packed like sardine in a refrigerated truck, Aubin said Monday. They were locked in back of the truck with air but nothing else. Thats a rough way to go to L(^ Angeles.

The aliens told authorities they paid $1,000 to $1,200 each to be taken to

California, and were headed for cities in Californias farm belt. New Jersey and New York, he said.

Hk four men arrested included Victor Rivera Gutierrez, an El Salvadoran, and Mexican nationals Rafael Ureha-Paredes, Miguel Angel Zuniga-Alegria, and ^Javier Castaneda Najera, said Alan Eliason, chief of . the border patnds El Paso sector.

The four were were taken before a U.S. magistrate in Las Cruces, N.M., on multiple federal counts of smuggling aliens into the U.S., he

said. Each was being held in the IXHia Ana (tounty Jail on $50,000 bond.

Authorities believe the Salvadorans, fleeing their war-torn Central American country, trickled across the border to gather in El Paso for the final pcntion of their trip to Los Angeles.

Each Salvadoran faces Immigration and Naturalization Service dq;)orta-tion proceedings which probably will return them to their homdand, officials said.

The smugglers were picked up (HI Interstate 10 near the Arizona border

Sunday whi patrolmen saw the truck stop near a temporary bonter inspection station and the suspects run away.

This was a pretty good-sized ring. And to have 53 stuffed standing in a truck thats not very big could have been dangerous in the end, Aubin said.

There were no toilet facilities or water in the truck, he said.

Last October, four Salvadorans died in Edinburg in South Texas after suffocating in a tractor-trailer. Another Salvadoran

was found dead in a nearby canal, and several others smuggled into this country were hospitalized.

Authorities report apprehensions of illegal aliens along the 1,760-mile U.S.-Mexico border are up atxHit 30 pmnt this month from the same period last year. Data shows about 99 percent of those apprehended are Mexicans fleeing economic hardship.

The majority of the (rthers are Salvadorans v4k) usually enter the^fJ-S. through the Lower Rio Grande Valley, officials say.

NOWTIUTWEItl

HHIETOIMK

mountains where reading will be no hi^r than the 20s.

Brisk northerly winds ushered in a fresh supply of cold air over the state Monday ni^t.

Early morning temperatures were mostly in the low 20s in the foothills but the clouds over the northeast held reading in the low to mid 30s near the northeast coastal sections.

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16-The Daily Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Tueley. January l, 1M3Rare Chaplin Films Being Aired On British TV

By ED BLANCHE Associated Press Writer LONDON (AP) - British television is broadcasting three hours of out-takes, rushes and other film shot by Charlie Chaplin but kept

hidden in a vault by the secretive comic ^nius, some of it for six decades.

Kevin Brownlow - one of two British movie buffs who culled the program from 300,000 feet of film - called

RARE CHAPLIN Charlie Chaplin assumes the role of the blind girl in the movie *City Lights', in a sc^ie which is part of three hours of Chaplin film never seen by the public being broadcast on British TV. (AP Laserphoto)

TV Log

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11:00 NmnO 11:30 LataMovIt WEDNESDAY 5:00 Jim Baklwr ;00 CweliM 1:00 Morning 0:35 Nwi 9:25 NoW9 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Child'iPlay 11:00 Pricali

13:00 Nw9 12:30 Young and 1:30 Ai The World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Light 4:00 Waltons 5:00 HlllbilllM 5:30 Andy Gritflth 6:00 Ntwt9 6;X Nawi 7:00 Jokor'tWlld 7:30 TIcTacOougt 8:00 Spt<;lal 9:00 Batkttball 11:00 Nowt9 11:30 Movio

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TUESDAY 7:00 Jafforton 7:30 Family Ftud 1:00 F. Murphy 9:00 Gavllan 10:00 St. Eltawhtrt 11:00 Nawi 11:10 Nawa 11:30 Lattorman 1;M Overlght 2:10 Now* WIDNIIOAY l:N AMams 0:00 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:39 Now*

7:30 Today 0:19 Now*

0:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmon* 9:30 Muopat*

10:00 Fact* Of Lit* 10:30 Salaotth*

11:00 Wh**lot 11:30 Hit Man 13:00 Now*

12:30 SaarchFor 1:00 OaysOtOur 3:00 AnotharWld. 3:00 Fantaiy 4:00 Allinlha 4:30 Dark Shadow* 5:00 LtltlaHou** 8:00 Now*

;10 NK Now* 7:00 Jaftarton 7:10 Family Faud 0:00 Raal Paopla 9:00 Fact* ot Lila t:XI Family Tia* 10:00 Oumcy 11:00 Naw*

11:10 Tonight 13:30 Lattarman 1:10 Ovamlght 2:30 Naw*

HOLLYWOOD (AP) - It was Just 80 years ago, George Bums recalls, that four Jewish boys got together as the PeeWee Quartet and sang at the Presbyterian Church on the Lower East Side in New York.

That was in 1903, when he was known as Nathan Bimbaum. On Monday ai#it as George Bums, lie was saluted at a banquet by his fellow ptDfe^ionals for a show business record that seems unbeatable.

Its nice to have an 80th anniversary, the comedian told an admiring crowd of 200 at Chasens restaurant. Its even nicer to show iq) for it. Bums not (Mily showed iqi, he seemed to enjoy the party

more than anyone. Posing he zinged

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2:00 Early Edition

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13:00 Spaclal 12:15 Animal 12:45 Electric Co. 1:15 All About You 1:30 Soup to Nut* 1:45 A6u*lcAM* 2:00 Fa*t Forward 2:X Nutrition 1:10 Adult Baalc 4:00 SaaameSt. 5:00 Mr. Roger* 5:30 Powerhouaa 6:00 Dr. Who 6:10 Fa*t Forward 7:00 Report 7:30 StaMiiw , 8:00 Craatura*

9:00 Skating 10:00 Kannady 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11: Moracamb*

for photographers, out one-liners.

Q. How do you account for your longevity?

A. IrtayaUve.

Q. What makes you so sexy?

A. Ive been longer at it than anyone else.

He managed to visit every taUe and greet all the guests, who included studio bo^ Marvin Davis of 20tti Century-Fox and Lew Wasserman of MCA-Universal, former U.S.. Ambassador to England Walter Annenberg, Fred Astaire, Ernest Borpiine, Angie Dickinson, Cary Grant andBiUyWUder.

Comedian Danny Thomas conducted the program, which included comedy turns by Sid Caesar, Buddy Hackett, Jan Murray, Red Buttons, Jack Carter, Siecky Greene, Don Rickies, PhyUis Diller and Bob Newfaart and songs by Eydie Gorme, Steve Lawrence, Connie Stevens, Bernadette Peters, Tony Martin and John Denver, Bums co-star in the movie, Oh God!

Among those paying tribute were Carl Reiner, who directed Oh God! and NeU Simtm, who wrote The Sunshine Boys, which won Bums his Oscar as supporting actor in 1975.

the discovery of the coUec-tkm at Chaplins Swiss home the equivalmt of finding Rembraixlts kmg-lost sketch books."

Chaplins widow, Oona, allow^ Brownlow arid David Gill to produce three one-hour pro^ams as a tribute to one of cinemas masters of comedy. The series, mtitled Unknown Chaplin, is being shown by Thames Tdevision on Britains commercial network and marks the first public screening . of the footage.

Much of the film dates from 1916-17, when Chaplin

directed and starred in 12 of his ^Little Tramp two-reelers in 16 montla. Thne also is illuminating footage of the lator Quqdin, by that time a star, wmting (m such classic features as Gold Rush and City Lights.

The footage provides a unique insight into how the actor-director booed bis art, usually improvising as be worked, sometimes shaping his in^iratkm only at the end of a movie and then shooting the whole thing again.

He was a dervish, recalled a (xdleague fnm the

early days. He did everything. He was like a god.

Chaplin, who died on Christmas Day 1977 at the age of 88, was secretive atxNtf bow be worked and often said that if peo^ saw how it was done, the magic would bespit.

Btd the two movie buffs argued, and Chaplins widow agreed, ut be woidd have recognized that the raw ma-tolals of his art bekmged to posterity.

Brownlow believes the trilogy will reestablish Charlins reputatkm as a cinematic master.

His repirtatk has suf-fered, he said, particularly in Britain, partly due to sot of revisionism which selected Buster Keaton as the suprone comedian, partly because Qiaplins hlms were hardly seen.

He and Gill lucked into the film tbrou^ Chiqdins business manager, Rachel Ford, while doing research for a TV series on early' H(dlywood. Describing the first time they viewed it in the projection room at the Chaplin home on Lake Geneva, Brownlow recalled:

Familiar Faces Are Repeaters Among Music Awards Winners

We found oursdves watching superlative quality prints of Chaplin footage never before seen in public. We reeled with the impact of it all, suppressing the desire to run fo the street with the cans under our arms.

There was a conqilete edited sequence from City Lights, as simple and brilliant as anything ChRplin evor did, a scene from Modem Tins, rushes fnmi three unused sequences for The Circus, and fragmmts fOT a film about his studio, be recalled.

Wed never been exposed to such complete rushes of sUent films beftnre and ones that showed so cleariy how Chaplin worked. It took us months to view them, and our originai idea for one 52-minute documentary som was eiqianded into a trilogy.

The films show Chaplin inventing gags vriiiie the

cameras rdl, refining them in take after take, frequently rejecting them and evm deciding whm be finished a movie to reshoot the whole thii^ with diffo^t actors.

There are shots of Chaplin as the baggy-pants tramp, crackii^ iq) with laughter in front of the cameras and wrecking the scene. In others, be rebukes actors and acto out j^ir p^ fi^r ttem.

He is seen agonizing over the classic scene from City Lights in which the biiiKi flower girl sells Cbartie, the tramp, a flower, believing him to be a tycoon.

It took him 534 days to make the movie, including 368 days during which he shot nothing while be tried to figure out how to show why the giri, who couldnt see, thou^t the tramp, who never spoke, was a rich man.

Chaplin shot 342 takes to get the scene be wanted.

ByYARDENAARAR Associated Press Writm* LOS ANGELES (AP) -Kenny Rogers, Willie Nelson and Lionel Richie headed a list of familiar faces who were r^t winners on the 10th annual presentation of the American Music Awards voted by 30,000 record iMiyers nationwide.

The exceptions were Daryl Hall & John Oates, named favorite pop groq); J(^ Cougar, favorite male p(q> vocalist; Alabama, favorite country groiq), and Marvin Gaye, favorite soul angle winner for Sexual Healing. Rogers won as favmlte male country vocalist and for the favorite country single Love Will Turn You Around at Mimday nights nationally telecast ceremonies. He also was presented a special Award of Merit for his contribution to the entertainment of the American public.

The bearded singer, whose country hits have also enjoyed tremendous success on p(9 charts, lent a homey note to the ceremonies by bringing his wife, Marianne,

and their IS-mmitlHdd son, Chrishq^r Cody, with him as he accqjted the merit award.

He also was the subject of a singing and ^^n tribute by several artists, including Richie and stow co-hosts Melissa Manchesto* and Mac Davis.

Not including the special merit award, which is ^ven by a committee of music industry figures, Rogers 10-year total now stands at 12 American Music Awards.

The winners are determined by a poll of 30,000 record buyers selected to reflect the age, sex, ethnic background and geogrzqihic locations of record buyers nationwicte. Nominees are drawn from year-end charts of music industry trade publications.

Richie increased his total to six by taking favorite male soul vocalist and favorite pcq) single for Truly. He said he was surprised to win the award over Survivors Eye of the Tiger and Ebony and Ivory - the Paul Mc-Cartney-Stevie Wonder duet.

I like surprises, Richie added.

Willie Nelsons hit LP Always on My Mind won in two categories, favorite country album and favorite pop album. The country singer, who accepted via satellite from San Diego, said shnply, All of you who voted tor me, thank you. Thats all I can say.

Olivia Newton-John brought her total to nine by winiUng as this years favorite female pop vocalist. She accepted via a satelilte transmission foom Hawaii.

Barbara Mandrell took her fourth award by being named favorite female country vocalist for the third straight year.

Another repeat winner was Diana Ross, voted favorite female soul vocalist for a second time. Last year she bad won two awards for Endless Love, bo* du^ with Richie, and in 1961 she

won a favorite soul sin^e award for Upside Down. Miss Ross was not presoit filis year.

Kooi & Tlie Gang were declared favwite soul groiq) for the second year in a row. It is always good to know, through perseverance, that your work is appreciated, said Robert (Kool) BeU, who brought (mly one member of his nine-man gang with him to the awards show.

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Aretha Franklin, another co^Mstess of the ABC tde-cast, got her rd American Music Award, winning favw-ite soul album for Jump To It. She had wmi female swil vocalist h(m in 1976 and 1977.

Other highlights of the show were Stray Cats performance of Rock This Town, Miss Manchesters You Should Hear How She Talks About You and Hall & Oates Maneater.

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FAVORITE SOUL SINGLE - Marvin Gaye, making a comeback after several years away from the music industry, stands with the award he received for his hit single Sexual Healing. (AP Laserphoto)

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U.S. Says Soviet Ignoring American Arms Pleas

By GEORGE GEDDA Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) The Reagan admlnistratiMi sa^ the Soviet Union is insisting on preserving its massive nuclear weaptms advantage in Europe while ignoring American appeals for the elimination of such armaments.

Hie White House and the State Department issued identical statements on the subject Monday in response to reports that U.S. and Soviet negotiators in Goieva had readi] an informal arms agreement last summer that later was rejected by Washington and Moscow.

Acwrding to the reports, Paul H. Nitze, the chief U.S. negotiator to the talks on limiting medium- range nuclear missiles, had worked out the tentative agreement in discussions with his Soviet counterpart, Yuli Kvitsinsky.

There were contradictm^ reports about the nature of the agreemrat, with some officials saying it would have preserved the Soviet advantage and oth^ saying it wiMild have ensured Soviet-American parity.

In either case, the proposed accord negotiated by Nitze represented a dqiarture from the administrations position that the Soviets dismantle all of their nuclear weapons targeted at Western Eun^. In return, NATO countries wmd cancel their proposed plan to install 572 cruise and Pershing II missiles starting in December 1983.

Nitze apparently conducted the discussions away from the negotiating site during informal exchanges with Kvitsinsky. The administration statements Monday si^ested that tactic does not violate Nitzes instructions.

Ambassador Nitze has always been authorized to explore flexibility in the Soviet position, the statements said.

1 And MWle House Deputy Press Secretary Larry Speakes > said President Reagan does not feel Nitze had done anything ,outofthe'ordinary.

, But supporters of Eugene V. Rostow, the ousted director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, believe Rostow was fired because of his role in recommending the I informal accord to the White House.

; One such aide was reported to be mystified as to why Nitze 'appears to have escaped from the ^isode without criticism j while Rostow^s ttrfe in it cost him his job. r (hie possible explanation offered here is that both R(^w and Nitze are conservative Democrats and the dismissal of ; both could cost Reagan badly needed political support from -that group.

Hardee's Today is 3rd Largest

Whatever hopes Rostow and Nitze may have had for the tentative agreement woe quickly dashed when Washington and Moscow disassociated tbonselves from it.

The administratk refused commait on the miture (rf Nitzes informal disctasioifi, b^md saying that the Soviets have proved imwilling to aoc^ any outcinne other than one which wmdd preserve its massive advantage and monopdy in

intermediate miclear force systems.

The que^ion remains wbetho- the administration will bow to Eun^iean pressure and abandon its 14-month (dd pcdicy in su{^ of the total ellminatkm of all hdomediate range nuclear forces from Europe.

On Monday, the White House and the ^te Dqiartmeflt insisted that this was the 'best scdi^ dthout saying whether the administration would settle for less.

Many in Europe believe the White House proposal is

PEANUTS

unrealistic, and that it should show more flexibiuty in the interest of reaching an agreement that would preclude the Amalean dqiloyment of missiles in alliol countries.

Soviet leader Yuri Andropov has offered to reduce the presmt Soviet arsenal to 162 missiles the same number d^yed by ftitain and FYance.

The United States has termed that offer unacceptaWe, but the two sides will reconvene their discussions in Geneva (mJan. 27.

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f CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Hardees Food Systems Inc., which began expansion from a single outlet in Rocky Mount in the 1960s, has vaulted past Wendys into .third place in sales by na-,tionwide hamburger restaurant groups, says a retail food (Plication.

A Hardees 1982 sales totaled t$1.7 billion - putting it behind McDonalds, the in-'dustry leader with 67.8 ^ billion, and Burger King, Ywith $2.4 billion in sales. ^Wendys, which had held rthird place, had sales of $1.6 billion, according to figures listed in Restaurants and Institutions, of Des Plaines,

m.,.

The companys move iq> was made after it purchased two fast'food chains last year.

Industry analysts say Hardees rowth is the residt of a st^by-step expansion that will shore up thinly covered midwestem markets and lay the groundwork for a i push in the West.

This strategy is a nice geograihical extension of the company, said Bill Chisholm, a retail analyst at Loewen Undaatje McCut-cheon & Ch., a Toronto brokerage.

Hardees appears to be carefully planning its moves much more adeptly than it did in the 1960s, vhen it began expansion from a single outl^ in Rocky Mount, Chisholm added.

Pushed by declining market share and increasing competition in the fast-food industry, Hardees bought two establiriied hamburger : chains last year. The addi-;; tion of about 680 restaurants ; gave Hardees a total of 2,170 ' outlets.

In March, Hardees acquired Burger Chef Systems Inc., an Indianapolis-based hamburger chain. Burger (hef added about 656 restaurants and two new states Ohio and Indiana - to the Hardees system.

Their immediate priority is to get the Burger Chef units q[)en and going as Hardees, thoi to expand into other markets, Chisholm said.

Jack Laughery, chairman and chief operating offico- at Hardees, said the company has been gaining strength in North Ct^ina and Scrnth Cardina but has lost market share in the Midwest, where its restaurants are scattered.

Were very (xmcentrated in some states, he said. Most of our stores are located in the Southeast, with about 300 of them in the Carolinas.

In November, Hardees made its westernmost move by purchasing Dees Inc., a chain of 28 Utah restaurants. Thou^ Dees is smaller and removed from Hardees operations, Lau^ry says the stores eventually will fit with Hardees isirfated restaurants in Arizona and New Mexico.

The acquisitions were backed financially aiul organizationally by Imasco Ltd., a Montreal-based conglomerate that purchased Hardees in 1981.

Imasco also owns a bakery and cigarette manufacturing plant in Canada.

Imasco officials say Hardees is the companys second-largest revenue producer, behind the tobacco division, and they say they inteiKl to finance further expansion.

CHALLENGER ON PAD - The Space Shuttle Challenger rests on the pad at Kennedy Space Center awaiting the second test-firing of the orbiters engines. In an effort to locate an* uiM;xpectedly high level of hydrogen in the ei^ine compartment, NASA announced the test-firing will be held Jan. 26, plus or minus a day or two, an official said. (AP Laserpboto) '

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AN' TANP BACK

A Legal Slip

If youre wearing skates, ice is nice, but if not, walk with care during these winter months. Of course, even the most careful pedestrians slip now tmd then. Lets say youre entering a store and you fall on ice at the entrance. Can you sue the store and win? Probably so, according to Joseph A. Page, Professor of Law at Georgetown University. He says the store is responsible for injuries caused by conditions on the premises, even if those conditions are the result of the weather. Signs warning customers of danger are not enough to satisfy the courts. So, store-owners, please salt those walkways. And, customers, please be careful. Even a successhil lawsuit wont make up for a sorious injury.

DO YOU KNOW - Who developed the first known code of law?

MONDAY'S ANSWER - REO Speedwsgon's album. Hi Infidelity." sold more copies than any other album in 1981.

HM3    eVEC,    Inc.    1983

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Opening lead: Four of .

r After trials held in Min--neapolis, two strong teams T emerged as the American ; Contract Bridge Leagues representatives for the 1983 'World Team Championship Jor the Bermuda Bowl, to be - held in Stockholm, Sweden, ;! at the end of September. By winning the event, Bobby ; Wolff, Bob Hamman, Peter :; Weichsel, Alan Sontag, Ron ; Rubin and Mike Becker earned a place in the semifinals. The beaten finalists. Dr. ; George Rosenkranz, Eddie Wold, Mike Passell, Jim Jacoby, Jefi Meckstroth and Eric Rodwell, will have to play through the qualifying rounds to earn a place among the last lour. The wiauers of the European ChaapiaaMdp will also be seeded through to the semifinals.

Slams played aa important part in the result TI eventual winners took an early lead that looked as if it might assume runaway propor-tiras. On this hand, Rubin-Bedwr were doubled in four hearts and made an overtriek for a score of 990. At the other table, Hamassn opened "otM Mufo awl MecfcMroths

jump to three hearts strong, awrding to their system! There was no holding Rodwell. He launched into Key-Card Blackwood and, when his partner showed either two aces or one ace and the king of trumps, he bid the slam.

Had Wolff led a diamond, he would have won the match there and then. But he made the normal lead of his partners suit and, thanks to the lucky distribution, Meckstroth never looked back.

He ruffed in hand with a high trump and led a club. It made no difference what the defenders did. Two ruffs would bring down the outstanding club honors, setting up the ten as a trick. And there were just enough entries to dummy to set up the fifth spade and take two diamond discards on spades. Declarer lost only one club trick to score 1430 points and pick up 10 International Match Points.

Rubber bridge clubs tbrougbeut the eeuutry use the four-deal bridge iurmut. Do they knew somethhig you deu't? Charles Goreas Four-Deal Bridge will teadi you the stratogies aad tactics of this fost-paeed ac-tfoa game that provides the cure for uaeaidii ruhhors. Fw a copy and a scoropad, sead I1.7S to uron-Foar Deal, care of this newspaper, P.O. Bex 2S9, Nerwoed, NJ. 07648. Make payable to News-

Military Chiefs

casa 42^111 over 43 Schoolings. '44 High 49 Streetcar 48 American tnidge-builder 48 Quiet mouse

'JF-

VAGUE PROMISE NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -Chinese Premier Zhao Ziyang has returned home an ll-natkm tour of Africa in which be made a vague promise that PeMng would follow up on requests for mUitaiy aid by black African natfoos.    *

By CARLOS ARCE ' Associated Press Writer LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) The new civilian government is purging key officers who served in military regimes that ruled Bolivia after a 1980

COtQ).

The purges have been placed in the bands of newly appointed institutionalist military cimunancters who supported Bolivias return to civilian rule in October and who now seek to restore the militarys fallen prestige.

In the past 2^ months, military honor tribunals have dischar^ 23 army officers including Gen. Luis Garcia Meza, leaiter of the 1980 coiq), and the navy and air force commanders who governed with him cm a military junta.

Garcia Meza, who has fled Bolivia, is under military invttigation on narcotics-trafficking charges. Bolivia is a major source of cocaine.

Two hundred more officers are being tried by the honor courts, .and scores of others promoted by Garcia Meza in exchange for political favors were relegated recently to the reserves or stripped of important commands.

The purge is the biggest within the 35,009-man armed forces in three decades.

The elected government of President Hernn Siles Zuazo has been able to confront a severe economic recession without the military power politicking that plagued most of his predecessors.

The> armed forces are determined to work within the constitution, said Goi. Simon Sejas, the new army commander, who has been close to SUes Zuazo since their exile in Chile a decade ago. The time has come to achieve a reencounter with the people.

Garcia Meza seized power in July 1980 to prevent the election of Siles Zuazo, the leftist presidential candidate, by a Congress that had been chosen by the voters the month before. The generals 13-moihh preridency, ended by another military coup, was marked by death-squad killings of dissidents, a boom in the military-protected cocaine trade and a near collapse of Bolivias legitimate economy.

Faced by nationwide labor strikes in Sqitember and unwilling to impose the austerity measures needed to obtain international financial aid, the generals decided to recognize the 1980 election results and withdrew to the barracks.

At least seven officers, including Garcia Meza and his interior minister, Col. Luis Arce Gomez, fled the

RADIOGUESTS

City Manager Gail Meeks announced that the guests this week on the citys radio program, Qty Hall Notes, will be A1 Averette, finance officer, and Capt. Tony Smart, training officer for the fire-rescue dqiartment.

Averette will discuss the local-option sales tax and the gasoline tax, and Smart will talk about the fire-rescue advanced life qiport program.

The radio program is aired each Tuesday and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. on WOOW Radio.

country in the waning days of milita^rule.

Both the Congress and a military court are investigating charges that Garcia Meza, Gen. Waldo Bernal of the air force and the former navy commander, Rear Adm. Ramiro Terrazas, received kickbacks from an Argentine company, Rummy Ltd., to which they awarded exclusive mineral rights near the Brazilian border while serving on the junta.

According to testimony published in Bolivian newspapers, Garcia Meza allergedly accumulated about 120 million in monthly payments frcn the mining company.

Others dischar^ from t^ army Included Gen. Hugo Echeverra Tardio, former commander in Santa Cruz, cento* of the cocaine trade; Capt. Luis Cossk) Viniez, former qierations chief of the military-run National Council against Narcotics Trafficking, and Col. Freddy Quiro^ Iteque, former chief of the Special Security Service, a death squad set up by Arce Gomez.

The army announcement of their dismissals said they had committed crimes against the ptfolic order but the charges were not specified.

Three receit former military presidents, Gens. Alberto Natusch Busch, Celso Torrelk) and Guicfo Vildoso, wre assigned to the reserves, a step toward early retirement.

Bolivias armed forces have not had such a cteaniq) since the 1952 reviriuUon, when they were dismantled by an alliance of national policemen and armed tin miners, then reorganitod as a political tod the National Revdutkxiaiy Mov-emoit.

The movement ruled until its new army, takii^ sides in what amounted to an internal party ^lit, overthrew Presi-(font Victo Paz Estotssoro in 1964. The armed fmtes ran the country as an indqien-dent force to most of the next 18 years.

Siles Zuazo, a revolutionary leader who was also president from 1956 to 1960, anticipated the army purge of anti-democratic and corrupt elements in a November interview and predicted a new period of staUe civilian cmtrol.

Later, however, in his year-end message, be declared that a mimnity military sector ... has not resigned itself to the loss of its privilege and is seeking to destabilize the government. He said in the ^eecb that the, paramilitary groiqis of recent years have yet to be dismantled.

The civilian defense minister, Jose Ortiz Mercado, says be is drafting a new military doctrine to keep soldiers out of the countrys fractious politics. And toe top militaiy commanders instaUed toe day after Siles Zuazo toc^ office have promised publicly to stay on toe sidelines.

FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, JAN. 19.1963

from the Carroll RIghtar Instituto

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Considerable confusin end muddled thinking exists later in the day, so k* a point to make impixtant decbions earlier. You begin to see things more clearly in the evraing.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Go to the ri^t sourcee for the daU you need. Dont take advice from thoee who ara ncA cognizant of all the facts.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Obtain important information about a project you are interested in before you go ahead with definite plans. Use your wisdom.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) If you handle routine duties in a more up-Unlate way. you get more benefits. Study a new plan before twkfag tny fhngff

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) D<mt Migfoft important work early in the day. Try to cooperate more with co-w<H'kers. Strive for noora harmony.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Take care you dont take on any heavy expenditures of money in the evening. Allow time to engage in creative activity.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Postpone going ahead with a new interest you have in mind and wait until a better time. Evening is fine fi- recreation.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Improve the foundation of your life so you can have added abundance in the days ahead. Get rid of annoying conditions.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Iron out any problems with others in a quiet anid Uctfiil manner. Seek the company of congeniis in the evening.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You have to use careful thought in huidling monetary affairs today. Use your intuitive facultws for best results.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Use a diffrant attitude in handling a puzzling situation and you get better results. Rekx in the company of friends tonight

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) You have hidden desires that need more study befwe you pursue them.' Strive for increased happiness.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Some of your friends may have problems so be sure to give a helping hand. Show others you have practical wisdom.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he she will be one who comprehoids the problems of others and knows instinctively how to solve them. Be sure to give your gifted progeny the right education to bring out this ability. A busy life in this chart

"The Stars impel, they do not onnpel. What you muk* of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

@Veicy0C7PV KN0W$ that E(565 sou? 0v THg

Tweuvg/

^&ccen /VVANUFACTURgRS Op SaAAUU ?CF|Zk5eKATORS /

^    (NUAT    (X>    *yO    VO    (S/lTN    tXtf    MK.T1SA    TWO    ?

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Psrsonals...............

...002

In AAsmorlam...........

Card Of Thanks.........

...005

Sfwcial Notices.........

...007

Travel & Tours..........

Automotive.............

Child Care..............

...040

Day Nursary.............

...041

Haalth Care.............

...043

E mployment............

...050

For Sale................

...060

Instruction..............

...080

Lost And Found.........

......

...082

Loans And Mortgages...

...085

Business Services.......

...091

Opportunity.............

...093

Professional.........

...095

RaalEstate.............

...100

Appraisals..............

...101

Rentals.................

PUBLIC NOTICES

sub-

iect to the land ua rtgulattonc and

controls as confaintd In tha R(

Radevttopmant Plan for said pro-iact and the covenants as contained

I:

the declaration on file at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Straet, Gremvilla, North Carolina.

Bidder nnay beany person, firm or corporation who agrees to conform in all respects with the provisions of bidding documents, including Redeveloper's Statement tor Public Disclosure, Form HUD-4004, and Redeveloper's Statement for Qualifications and Financial Responsibility, Form HUD-4004A, copies of which may be obtained ^ reamt at City Hall, 201 West Rfth ^reet, Greenville, North

WANTED

Help Wanted.....................051

Work Wanted..........  059

Wanted............... 140

Roommate Wanted.............142

Wanted To Boy.................144

Wanted To Lease................144

WantedToRent.................140

Carolina. Any furthar information or copies of the proposed diuosal agreement may be obtalned^af City Hall. In general the property is being solo for redeveloment as

feS'T'1S3l S' K

comi or a corti

c^, cashier's check,

. ,_dieck payable to the Community Development Department of the CIfy of Greenville (nan amount equal to five (5%) percent of the bid price.

Bi shall be opened at 11 ;00 A.M., E.S.T., on the 4ih day of February, m at City Hall, 1 West FiWh Street, Greenville, North Carolina.

The Department reserves the right to waiver any irregularities In Kd-

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent.......

.... 121

Business Rentals............

Campars For Rent..........

.... 124

Condominiums for Rent

....125

Farms For Lease ...... 1

....107

Houses For Rent............

....127

Lots For Rent...............

AAoblle Homes For Rent.....

....133

Office Space For Rent.......

....135

Resort Property For Rant...

....137

Rooms For Rent............

SALE

Autos for Sale............

...011-029

Bicycles for Sale..........

Boats for Sale.............

Campers for Sale.......

.......034

Cycles for Sale............

......036

Trucks tor Sale...........

Pets......................

......046

Antiques..................

......061

Auctions..................

Building Supplies .........

......063

Fuel, Wood, Coal..........

Farm Equipment.........

......065

Garage-Yard Sales........

......067

Heavy Equipment........

Household Goods..........

......069

Insurance.................

Livestock.................

Mlscellsmeous............

......074

Mobile Homes for Sale____

......075

/Mobile Home Insurence..,

......076

Musical Instruments......

......077

Sporting Goods...........

......078

Commercial Property... .

Condominiums for Sale____

......104

Farms for Sale............

......106

Houses for Sale...........

......109

Investnwnt Property......

......Ill

Land For Sala?............

Lots For Sale.............

Resort Property for Sale ..

......117

ding and the r bids submi"

it to reject any or all All sales or other

transfers of land shall be subject to Coun

the approval of the City Council of the City of Greenville.

Contact the office of the Community Development Department of the City of Greenville for further details. Community Development Department of the City of Greenville January 18,25,1983

INTHE^ENE^COURT

COUNTYOFPITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ANNIE LAURIE A4cARTHUR,DECEASED ^ ItTICTOCREDITORS Having qualified as Exacutor of the estate of ANNIE LAURIE ARTHUR, lato of Pitt C^. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the tato of ANriE LAURlf McA? THUR to present them to the under

signed Executor, or his attorneys, on or before June 29,1983, or this notice will be p^ in bar of their rec^y Al persons Indebted to said estate please make immediate

payment.

This 22nd day _ ALVIN DAVIS

JR

of December, 1982. AAcARTHUR.

P.O. Box 46 Farmville.NC 27828 E xecutor of the Estate of Annie Laurie AteArthur,

Garylord, Singleton, AAcNally

& Strickland

Attorneys at Law

P.O. Drawer 545

Greenville, NC 27834

lumber 28,19tt; January 4,11,18,

1982

M7 SPECIAL NOTICES

PARTIALLY FURNISHED house, 2 room, kitohan.

bedrooms, llvli washer, drvr .

Call 758-1723.

^y and Sunday at n15o 8:,

AAonday - Friday we deliver platos or more. Now ottering quail and flounder. Can

takeouts. 752-0476.

S

tried

tec

WE PAY

Floyd G

loydG' RO^lMon ________

Evans AAell. Downtown Greanvllle,

010

AUTOMOTIVE

Oil

Autos For Sale

before YOU SELL or trade yo^

W-82 tnodel w, cell 756-1877. GraM Quick. We will oev top dollar.

CARSS100I TRUCKS V5I.

^7, extension 1074B tor your directory on how to purchase. >4 hours.

CARS$100!TRUCKS$75!

0241. extension 1504 for your direc-font qnhowtoPurches8.it hours

CARS ^o Trucks AUCTI0I

every Friday from 7 p.m. until. Yeu ^Ing them, we will saH thanh Oealm^welcomed. At the Onslaw County Fairgrounds. 347-2424.

NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND AND STATEAAENTOF PUBLIC DISCLOSURE NOTICE is hereby given that tha

City of Greenville Is considering the ^ro^l to enter into a contract for

the disposal of project land and the redevelopment thereof to

PUBLIC NOTICES

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Ernest Loe Buck late of

Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims

against the estate of said

to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before July 18,1983 or this notice or same will be plead

ed in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.

This 3rd day of Jmuary, 1983. AAartha AAay Buck 1411 Polk Avenue Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xacutrix of the estate of Ernest Lee Buck, deceased.

Jan. 18,25; Feb. 1,8,1M3

  Robert L.

White and wife Rosa E. Shaarin-White; of Greenville, North Carolina, on or before February 15, 1983, said land being Disposal Parcel K-7B, located In the Southside Redevelopment Project, N.C.R-134, Greenvilto, North Carolina, dwrib-ed as follows:

Beginning at the intersection of the northern property line of 14th

Str^ and the western property line thmNrideg

of Evans Street; runs .......

54 mln. W along the northern property line of 14th Street 217 feet to a point which is the southwest corner of the Sinclair Flalds prope^ d^ri^ in Bo^ 0 32 poga M of the Pitt County RMlstryTf^ this corner runs then N 78 deg. 54 mln. W

4 feet to a point In a curve; runs then along the curve having a tangent of 105.44 feet, a radlous of 49973 feet and a central angle of 23 deg. 55 mln. a chord distance of N 84 deg. 01 mln. W 94.38 feet to theNEWLY ESTABLISHED BEGINNING POINT

^ From this NEWLY ESTABLISHED BEGINNING POINT, continues

NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND AND STATEMENT OF PUBLIC DISCLOSURE NOTICE is hereby given that the

City of Greenville Is considering the gro^isal to enter into a contract tor

the disposal redevelopm

it of project land and the lopment the^ to the Evans

CornijiNMy, Inc., of Graenvillo, Norto

on or befora February 15,

1983, said land being Disposal parcel G-1, located in the Soumslde Redevelopment Project, N.C.R-134,

Greenville, North Carolina, dtscrlb-ed as follows:

Beginning at the northwestern corner of trie lot described in Deed )ok C 24, paoe 519 of the Pitt County Registry (this corner being the in

tersection of the southern right of way line of Howell Street and the easteito right of way of line of Ames Street balore Howell Straet was widened at the intersection); runs

then S 02 deg. 45 min. 30 sec. E 14 INEWL--------

feet to the NEWLY ESTABLISHED BEGINNING POINT which is located in the existina curb at ttie southwestern corner or the Intersection of Howell and Ames Street.

From this NEWLY ESTABLISHED BEGINNING POINT runs then N. 83 deg. 17 min. 30 sec. E 30.4 feet to a corner; runs then S 02 deg. 45 min. 30 sec, E 141 feet to a corner; runs then S 87 deg. 14 min. 30 sac. W 30 feet to a comer; runs then N 02

deg. 45 sec. 30 sec W 136 feet to the NEWl

ItLY ESTABLISHED BEGINN

ING POINT The Evans Company, Inc. Hw pro-

then along the san curve a chrt distance of S 86 deg. 44 min. 30 sec.

W 75.82 feet to a corher; runs then N 11 deg. 04 mln. E 127.2 feet to a corner; runs then S 78 deg. 54 min. E

73.45 feet to a corner; runs then S11 06 mln. W 108.42 feet to the

ESTABLISHED BEGINNING

Robert L. White and wife Rosa E Shearin-White, the proposed redevelopers, h^ tiled with hie City of Greenville, a Redeveloper's STtatement of Public Disclosure in

local Government Auctions. Fof

directory call eY-ser- txtip.sion|752:Call mtundeble

805-487-6008

SELL YOUR CAR the Nettonel Autofinders Wayl Authorized Dee^ In Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Cell 758-0114.

013

Buick

1977 BUICK Electra Limited. door. 756-0489 etter 5 p.m.

014

Cadillac

1972 ^DORADO Convertible. Take best otter 752-0476.

FLEETWOOD CADILLAC 69^mlles. $1995.752 5334.

015    Chevrotet

^MPALAT^TTcySrr^

DOW stoering, power brakes, red natchback, with camel Intarier)

000-W 1559.

1979 CHEVROLET Melibu Estel Wagon. Full power, 41,880 condition, 11

Station Wagon, miles, excenont < 825-9431.

$3495. 752-3487._

017

Dodgt

1949 FORD GALAXIE DwendeM

TM'Sito *0'*'    0^

automtto.?r^CeH758^7459

1974

4 doer.

the form prescribed by the Secretary of the Dmrtment of Housing and Urban Devokipment

to foctton 105(e) of the

jActof 1949, as amended. The Mid Redeveioper's Statement is available tor public examination

at the Office of the Community Development Department of the City of Greenville during Its regular

hours. Mid office being located at 201 WMt Fifth Street. Greenville, North Carolina, and its regular office hours being from 8:00 AM to 5AAondey through Friday

Community Devolopment irtment

of the City of Greenville January 18, S, 1983

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S , WLE OF REAL ESTATE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the

power and authority contained In that <rtain Deed of Ti

Msed redeveloped, have tiled \ he City of Greenville, * nent of [iprescrl Departo I uevek

with

a

redeveloper's Statement of Public Disclosure in the tornyirescribed by the Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development lursuant to Section 105(4) of the

'tousing Ad of 1949, as amended.

The Mid Redeveioper's Statement is available tor public examination at ttw Office of the Community Development Department of the City of Greenville during its regular hours. Mid office being located at 201 West Fifth Street, (denville. North Carolina, and its regular office hours being from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PAR. Monday through Friday aachweek.

Community Devetopment

Department of the City of Greenville

.25,

January 18,25,1983

NOTICE OF SALE COAAMUNITY DEVELOPMENT

8EPARTMNT0F

_ _ jtyofgri

AOVi

NOTI

. ... -. ,R|ENVILLE ERTISEMENT FOR BIDS ICE is hereby given that the

Community Oeveldpment ment of the City of Greenville will

Depart

unHI 11:00 AAA., E.S.T., on tho h da of February. 1903, at City Hall, Ml West Fifth, Strea. Greenville, North Cirolina. receive saaM bids for ttw purchase end development of toe tallowing dMcrtoad property locatod in the Southside Radevttop-ment Proied Area known as Projed NCR-34. Greenville, North Caroline, Pitt County:

DispoMi Percol D-S: Located in Greenville Township, Pitt County, Greenville, North Carolina; baginn-Ing at a point in the sowtoam property line of Griffin Stroet, m.Otoet east of the inlarsectlon of toe

foiitoarn jpreparly line of (riffin Streetandmeaslarnproperty line of Perkins Street as measured along the seutoem property Ik of (rriffln Street, from me boginnng point runs then N 84 dim. M mln. EMr.00 fsef to an iron nake set; runs then S 4 dag. W min. E 150 JO feet to an fron st^ set; runs then S 04 dag. 00 min. W 30.00 toet to an iron stake    runs

tlwn N 4 deg. 00 mki. W 130.00 fact to

Ideo. 00 HI an Iran stahe set, tlw point

nxarf imiw iriv fiWRii w

Ing, oordaininf 7 square mere or laix by actual survey made WlllliwnR. hirvis, R.L.S camber 14. 19|1,

|edN.C.R.-134.

^ ^      rust    executed

and dellverad by Lae A. Boi^, dated the nth of AMrch, 1900, and racord-ad in the office of toe Register of Deeds tor Pitt Count^ North Carolina, in Book V48 at page 245, and becausa of default in ttw payment of the indebtedness thereby

secured and failure to cany out and perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained and, pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by Mid Deed of Trust, toe undersifpwd Trustee will expose tor

Mie at public auction to toe highest bidder for cash at the usual place of

Mie in the County courthouse of PHI County, In the city of Greenville, North (Carolina, at 1:00 p.m. on Fri

day, the 28th day of January, 1983, at that certain k or parcel of land

Pitt County, stale of a, and more ticularly described as follows:

situate, lying and being in Greenville Township, Pitt County, State of North Carolina, and more par-

bor Street, Carolina.

epefly and location: JW located at 407 Ar-

Graenville, North

Legal dOKr^ion; BEGINNING

1977 DOPGE ASPEN Station Wagon, Swlal Edition, 6 cylinder, loaded. V^ good condition. Low

018

Ford

FORD AAAVERICK, automatic

1974,

------ transmission,    4

good condition. 1850.744-4144.

air.

FORD THUNDERBIRO, 1981, AM-FM stereo, tilt, cruise. Price

negotiable. Call 758-5278 or 754^14.

1944 MUSTANG Convertible, ra tjtored-

cssiiyj

1948 MUSTANG, dark blue, excellant condttlon. $1,450. S5-6235 fftor.4pm,

1974 FORD LTD, SSO or best offer.

2$L56!L

1974 FORD

everything. Iif A^^onditlon neaollable. 759-3149

loaded wHh S2M

cqrjdltlqn. Intprnijitign gall 756-^ 1974 PINTO STATIONWAGail, utonwtlc.

$1495. 36,3151 miles, autonwS... radio, new Interior, new paint |eb, rerYj99d<ar,73??89-

19M FORD PINTO, original owner, $1900.756-y741 oftoF4:30rweekdevs.

021

Oidsmobile

1975 OLDS CUTLASS. *tff9P'.alr conditioned. SI700.

AM/

757 7185 days; 758-1941 nklhti.

1977 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME,

ffltkmlng,'^lfXeir*)u3i^

stereo. Silver with landau top, Mue cloto Interior, new set of tires. 83880 neggtlable. Cell 753-2448 efty 6 p-ig.

im OLOSAAOBILE Cutlass Sto tionwagons and Sedans. Several colors. Luggeoe rack (sta-ttonwaoon), AM/FM stereo, cmtoe,

l%M.SArVttrsr75g{aP

024

Foreign

^^^210. Good condition.

TOYOTA COROLLA 1982. Air, 3880

sarfe.rS^oiJ!'-A

19U A^RCEDES BENZ. 220 manual 4 speed, nwcheniw.

at a stake

line of Arbor Street, Mid_________

210 teat north of toe Interiedion toe northern property line of Arbor

Street if extended; running toincc N. 73-30 W, 100 feet to a staka, a^cor

ner; running thence N.

feet to a ^ake, a    .    _

thence S. n-30 E. 110 feet toa slake.

16-30 E. 40 running

acornar in ttw western property line of Arbor Sti^ and running toi western

S.14-30W.andwHhthe^

party line of Arbor Street 40 te to Mw pokit of Beginning and being all of Lot No. SixTfJ, "C" oTtoe Villeoe Grove SubcHvislon, as ahown OT plat praparad by Tfiomas W d In

praparad Rivars and recordad In (Map Baok 4

M 1^ ISO at toa PHt County

racord ownara of prepar

ty:LatA.Boyd The Mie 411 be made subject to

ail unpaid tuces end

and tlw sale will ramein

nents

days tor upset bid as law. The Trustee wHI

mein cmn tan a required by raquireacam

deposit of a parcantoga of tot

amount of tlw bW tram toe sue-resstui biddarattheMie(1t%orthe amount of the bid up to tim phis

3% of any excesa ever |1,MI). This 4to day of January, T9I3. JohnB.Wiitity

(Utley Substituto Truatoa

ChaiioHae, January1X2S,lfl3

1945

tion. i

N,

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

HELP

WANTED

many pr)Ple think we oftar "THE MOST REMARKABU SALES CAREER IN THE WHOti WOmj) baeaiiee typical tat tub year eemkiga an 820,00000,001. CAN YOU QUAUFY7 Age 21 or over, high achool or better, aporfl iMndad. ambHloua for a CAR^ not |M a Job. SaH what peopM NEB>. WHAT, an happy to buy, wmiy to our old attabHelwd 18-counla for a oompony top niad In be kidualry with oaeela over a MMon W. Some travel In tocM ooutdlaB. guaranteed kworao to tfort S promotion on bCRIT. nbt aontorky. Mtany of our poopto ad-

vMco rapMly biio manroonwM and an t30,00OD.S0O or mora.

For a poraonoi iMMviow CM; Tha

Morxray, Tuaaday ar Wralnaedty, tami. to t p.m.. 7

I





mm

024

Foreign

iTTrmrsm

transmiuion. brakM an

LZaSESOi

ET, na<

aoAUi

1974 TOYOTA CORONA M^k 1^4

door, aulotnafic, air, |99S firm

70:518

X. Hrdiop commrtlbla witi 1^, A4A/FM slaroo. axcaiiant condition. Mwt a. taafS. 757

iim

1979 DATSUN 3W GX Excallant condition. S3i00. 7S-5113 aftar 5:30.

032 Boats For Sal*

SoSST^rOU MISSED OMT Da-

camfaar ipaclals but it's not too lata

to make us an offer m a iw sailboat. RB Sailor, Highway 264

East, 751-4*41.

034

Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS - All sizas. colors. Lear Fibarolass and %Mirtsman tops. 250 units In slock. O'Briants, RalOlgh.N C >34 2774

1973 VOLKSWAGEN Bus Camper, good condition, asking S149S. 752-1037._

036

Cycles For Sale

HONDA 300 1981. Price negotiable. Call Mika 74^4841.

1979 CBX 6 Loadad. C

IHONI

BX 6 cylir I. Conmiml MO-iSLIflg,

I indar. Like new. )y chromed. Must

1983 flONDA 7S0 custom, 3000 miles, still new, with extras. $300 and

   ^

assume payments 753-5455 after 6 pm.

039 Trucks For Sale

FORD PICKUP 197*. .M ton. Automatic, power steering, air. Call RMSmlth Chevrolet, Ayden, 744-

1974 JEEP CJ-5, hardtop, softtop, superwinch, new exhaust system.

hew battery, tow miles, S3000 negotiable. 7M-5240.

1974 JEEP CHEROKEE Chief, air.

eqwer^_$tw^, pomr brakes.

AM/FM Goocf condition. $2500. 754-0907 after 5 pm.

VAN, 4 cWinder, straight drive, good on gas, FM-AM radio, captain's seats. Below wholesale at $2695.754-0100.

1901 CHEVROLET </> tan picku truck, automatic, red.

tan pickup

____________ -d,    7-7l^

extension 237, 9-5 weekdays. Best over $4.000

offer) tool A

..01 AAAZOA B2000 longbed, 5 spaed overdrive, 29,000 miles, one owner. 75M247after5.

1982 CHEVY 310, V4, power steer

ing, air condition, automatic, 12,000 miles.

, assume loan. 754-2929.

1982 S10 CHEVROLET Excellent condition. Low mileage. $5995. 954-7302._

040

Child Care

CHRISTIAN MOTHER vmuld like to keep children In her home In WIntervllle area. Call 754-2201

BO YOU LIKE personalized care for your little girl or boy that gives

Ca feeling,) security when your <e them ?Xall anytime. 754-3247.

I^TURE LADY would like to babysit in her home. References If ^^50-4479._

PETS

ADORABLE half German pups, have had shots, 1 Oak Street after 5:30.

ADORABLE part Lab, German Shepherd p^ies. 4 old. Wormed. 752-oj79 after 4 p

art Lab,^ part

AKC BLACK UkBRADOR Retriev

^^^(|M^|les^ Chamjsion biapd line

em.

Call 754-7407 between 7 and 1

AKC. BLUE. EYED Siberian

Huskies, 4 girls, 3'b^s. Mom'arid POP on premises. $125.754-7105

AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD, black male, 4 weeks old, $150. Call

750-4449 after 3:30._

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pup pies, born Thanksgiving. Pnom 757-3524._

AKC Golden Retriever pups. Excellent hunting stack and com panlons. $leech. 752-4134.

AKC REGISTERED red and black Doberman puppies. $100. Call 744-3742 after 4.

AKC YORKSHIRE Terrier pups for sale. 2 females left, beautiful markings. 8275 each. (^11 754-2414 evenings

kRDING AND EXPERT Dog dience training. 750-5590.

FREE 3 KITTENS Gray and white male and white female, fl weeks old.

752-4495 after 4 p.m.

HH^LAVANS - .12..weeks - CFA

Registered, first'shots, Bliie Bl .Points... $150 to $175.

and Seal ________

1 743-3721 AAaysvllle

051 HelpWanM

ASSISTANT TO Director -Applications accepted through -January 24 for full-time position as aulstant to director. Among duties, assistant will work with planning and coordination of publicity for major celebration. Applicant should have excellent organizational and c)>mmunlcatlons skills and be

flex

ibie enough to handle a variety of ponsTb ----------------

responsTblllties. Consistent employment record necessary.

Send cover letter and salary re jlrements to: Assistant, DCTB.

Box399,Alipntep,NC?g.54.

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON: ExperieiKe helpful but not necessary. Individual must have successful background and the willingness to advance quickly. Only those settled, respoiMble and desiring to earn top commissions need to apply I All replies held confidential. Apply to: Automotive Salesperson, P O Box 1947, Greenville. N C_

AVON

 Wanted sales repre-

jsentatlves. Earn 50% Call 744-3494

'oriam.

BRODY'S has an opening for full Jime Cashier. Must be pleasant, iieat and accurate. 5 day vreek ipb.Good company benefits. Apply Brow's Pitt Plaza, 2-5 p.m. Mon-dav-Friday._

CARPENTER exoerienca framing, crew lead man. Must be competent

ell phases house construction. 758-lObetwo)

9210 between 4 and I pm.

CASHIER, PART TIME, experienced only. >^M>ly The Pirate's Chest, 740 E Gmmvllle Blvd. No

EXCITINOJjl^W^^TUNITY

Earn up to 50% on everything you sqll.c;n.752:75gs,

.= ULL TIME SECRETARY Established national company. Please send resume to Secretary, PO Box 1947, Greenville, NC 27B*.

'HA

Cal

J40MEWORKER.S Wirecn^^

ductlon. We train house For full details write: Wirecraft, P O Box 223. Nixielk. Va. 23501

JOB INFORMATION: Overseas.

Cruise Ships, Houston, Dallas, Alaska. OX.GOO to $40,000/yoar ' le. Call 005-487-4000, extension

possible. C) >0752. Call

refundable.

LIVE-IN COMPMIION ^ oldar lady in Farmville. Cooking and minimal house duties. Call 7&2SS7 or 753-5973 between 3A p.m. Refer-ences reoulred

'MANAGEMENT Large corporation looking for management ' potantial. Must start in sales. 40 hour week. Some door to door. Salary and benefits. Conner Mobile Homes, 754-0333

MECHANICS

Two first class GM or Chrysler auto mechanics. Paid holidays, paid vacati .........

atioa h)Mpltalization and insur anca. Salary plus commission. Call   come by. Don

823-4154 of com# by. ____

WhltefH^t Pontlac-Buick-ChrpMer, ~ ' l!LE_

1308 W Wilson St Tarboro, I

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST

pxrsMsrtnrrs.'i;

Medical Receptionist, PO Box 1947,

Graenvltte.NC 27834

NEED WORK? Hire

Choose your own hours, peo^ you work with. No invest ment. No Inventory requirements Become a Royal American Distributor. Call today, 3S5A719 after 4:00

Bjn,

ROOM AT THE TOP

Due to the promotions in this area, tvM> openings exist now for young minded parsons In the locai brandi of a large corporation. If satectod.

you will receive complete trainif^. Wb provide good company benefits, mate medicarpronisharlng, dental care and refiremant elan. Starting pay will be $860-8356 de

pending on your ability. All promotions are based on martt, not seniority

We are oarticuiarty Intererted in thoae wifti loadarsi^ abHHy who are looking tor a career opportuni

ty.

CA.L757-06K 9:00AM-6:00P M

051 IWpWOnM

365se!

wwv-*wnSI toiOv ttw    of    m

N C midway between summer and winter recreational areas. Halifax Memorial Hospital (approximately 200acutecarebixH) isetuMndlng to meet the iiKreasing ancT changing demand of its sarvke areas. Tor further information on competitive salaries and generous benefit opportunities contact Mrs. Linda House, Personnel Officer, at 919 585-8104 (coltact)

OFFICE HELP iwaded----

OILCOMPANYOPENIN6S

Offshore Rigs. No eiwerience nee-. StaH Immetfately. $35,000

essary

^us a year. For Informaflon call T-312-920-9344, extension 1074 B

FpeBwim BiMWM seevtaMBViviw fvo

and short term temporary  Its. AAust have at least one

year work experience. Call for an appointment - W-3300.

MANPOWER TEMPODARV SERVICE

IBSefltStraL

JllJ

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST Send resume to PO Box 5004, Grge*v1l1e,N<; 27834

STARTING a 9 trwnth Secretarial Course, January 24, (raenvii School of Commerce. 752-3177.

ille

IMNTED babysitter for every other weekend. Transporatlon re-

 ___________ ransporatlon ._

quired. Previous ^llcants please call. 754-0399 after

WANTED COUNSELOR for posi seoandary educational Institiiflon

Prefer master's degree In guidance I, or closely relatad area.

counseling,  ___

2 years experience with adult students; community college environment preferred. Salary

commensurate with education and I. (iood benefits. Submit

experience.    _    _

1^ resume to C A Bucher,

Nash Technical Collega, PQ Box 7408, Rocky Mount, NC before January 27. EOE_

,(X - $35,000 in first year. A new ational Health aiKi Nutrition

Corporation now expanding to North Carolina. Opportunity for people in all levels of sales and ' icluding supervisory, to Supervisor, 3113 I, Raleigh, NC 27404.

education, including Send resume    "

Quinley Street.

059 WorkWanM

ALL TYPES tree service. Trimming, cutting, storm damage.

cleanup, and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancll, 752-4331

CUSTOM CARPENTRY WORK Framing, remoileling, repairs. Reasonable rates. References.

Greenville, 355-2954.

I WILL KEEP children in my home at Shady Knoll Trailer Park. 752

NO JOB TO SMALL .. estimates. With this clipping 10%

Free

discount. Remodeling, ' car^try cabinets, cixmter

and repair work, __________ _______

tops, painting and roofing. 752-1423.

PAINTING, Interior and exterior.

Free estimates, work guaranteed.

7S-487

If years experience. 754-4873 after 4pm

PLUMBING AND CARPENTRY

All t' --------- ^ ----------

All type repairs and remodeling, specializing in bathroom repair. State License 17037-P 744-2657; if no

answer 752-4044

PRIVATE DUTY ATTENDANT wtxild like to work wifh the elctely. 154:4042

WOULD LIKE to do odd job service, wiratow cleaning and small paint jobs, etc. Call 752-4942.    '

064 Fuel, Wixxt, Coal

ALL OAK FIREWOOD, split, stacked and delivered. $50 cord.

Call 752-098?.    _

ALL TYPES OF firevlraod for sale. J P Stancll, 752-4331

FIREWOOD FOR SALE $30 a load. Call anytime. 758-4411.

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

$40 FOR PICKUP

CALL 757-35U or 758-6063

MlVED FIREWOOD tor lal*. Seasoned all hardwood. Stacked

and free deliyery. $80 a cord. 754-8358 after 5 p.m,

MIXED FIREWOOD tellt and ready to be hauled. 830 pick up load.

752-1132 niohts. __

OAK FIREWOC for sale. Call 752 8847 or 292-4420

WOOD FOR SALE: 840. Call 7-4286.

Oak 845; mixed

100% OAK FIREWOOD for sale. 845 a load if we deliver; $40 a load If you pick UP. 758-3797 or 752 5488._

065 Farm Equipment

ALLIS-CHALMERS tractor-CA, new 3 point hitch. Call after 4, 750-7972,

WHEAT STRAW FOR SALE Lmtm bate,. S1.M. 7H-IMS(ir

2 U^g^^Log blue harvesters. Call

754

8 POI^LL BULK BARNS, 124 racks. Call 754-4309 after 4

069

Household Goods

ERKLINE couch, chair and ot-in. 8100. Call 754-7972._

072

Livestock

COASTAL BERMUDA HAY $l.5Q-S2JN>parbate  <^794-3605

^RSEBACK RIDING Jarman

, 752-5237.

074 /Misceilaneous

ASSUME PAYMENTS of 837.92. 3 piece living room suite; sofa, chair, roveseat. Furniture World. 757-0451. ASSUME PAYMENTS of 849.44. 7 piece Western living room suite; sofa, chair, rocker, 3 tables, ot-toman. Fwrnlture World, 757-0*51

ASSUME PAYMENTS of 843.12. 3 complete rooms of furniture.

Furniture world, 757-0451._

AND WATERBEDS Vi .and more. Factory

met.

_____     orv

Blvd, nit*ff^*Plawi.

l^jmSy^lCK.. SLATE _PPOL

 _____ discounts.    Delivery

ffl.lQte.l.ltf.^.fW-78?-97?4.

CALL CHARLES TICE. 758-3013, tor small loads of sand, topsoil and fjgtt-. A<8adv!WBy vgrK.

CHURCH FURNITURE. Pulpit, Communion tobla, and 17. 12 tM

paws made of pIna with a medium Srlsjt.eia.7w?T

COLONIAL AND Queen Anne style furniture for living, iflning end

furniture for living, oning end bedroom avallebte tooethar or tep-erately. Afters. 7te^._

COPY MACHINE 1 year oM. Celt 758-2141 from 8 to S.

CUSTOM BUILT hendrells. grills, Intelor,

gates, spiral stelrways, exterior, resktontiel, <mmercial

-     IW3 _________ ___________

Motel Specialties, 758-4574, 1210 0 Ro)

AOumtordRoad.

CUSTOM MADE DRAPES for

picture windows, traverse rod ih-I fabric.

ciudad. Swivel rocker, green I

7itsm

CYPRESS LOOS end antique lumber. Intrestod in building e log cabin 20X22? Tobacco bam end

smoke house timber and lumbar. 752-1231.

DEN FURNITURE, 3 piece, with 3 tables and 2 lamps. $3S0. RCA tstevision, XLML txcallant condi-

DISCOUNT PRICES on now Sharp copy machinaa. Large selection of usod copters. Spocial prtoing on XemxMSond Xerox 3106, gTw.

FRENCH PROVINCIAL Couch, biuo, cromo, greon, ruet and gold stoipos. Exosflmt condittan. IBs. Excariso bench wHh lag lifts end weight pulley OWgchments. One me^ old. sb. Cril 750-7544 aftar

MW^Iny evollobte. 2000 East tOfh St.

GAS HEATER, 30A00 BTU, four

vmE \ mm- wvn,

6E 30^' electric range wHh 84 hour cook timer, Mess oaer. Excellent condHlon. 82C^I 754^ tram

cook timer.

tisLzasmifiEi.

GUN TRADERS SHOW Kinatan, NC Modem an'

and antiqiie

miitary relfcs. coins, etc'. Guard Armory, HI East

Avenua, Jantey 2^2^; Satun 94; Sunday 10-5, AdmtialonstJB. HANDMADE Mahogany corner

cupboard with olid raised panel

-----.gll7j4-M^.gft9r.

HARDWARE: TRSdO Medal II business computer, heavy business grintar, 3 di^ system' SSNOJO. Software: general lidgir, payroll, accounts recefvebte. accounts poy-ablo. mailing IM. towentafy control All Softwm Frael Call ^SB4 or 757 B9.

, JNE HEATER, 19,000 ijUs^ Kupanoff. uasd only onca.

074

/Miscoildnoous

with built in iaaf and4 chairs. 8150.

752 8594.

MATTRESS AND SPRINGS, regular siza. Saaly Posfwretedic. Ex)w4tent cenditien. 8150 or bost blte.7524W4.

MOVING Items for sale include sofa, cttair, marble coftac table, reitwood set, drapes. h)>usehold Itotns. etc. Cell 754-2403 after S.

NEED SOME extra nrwney? Would like to buy y)ur clothes you've outgrown or just don't wear anyriMre. Children's clolhes, also miscellenoous Items. Cell 752-5324 after 7 pm.

NEED 3 PERSONS to take London Paris trip end of June. Student rates ana )>ifher sfudont benefits.

Call eftor 5:00.754^7270.

NET SUPPLIES: Webbings, rope, ftoate, lead, everything you need to make your own net or comptele net ready to fish. Commercial fishing llceraes. Whicherd's Marina, 947 4275.    ___

PIANO FOR SALE, sod condition. 8400.7444035. cell anifflme._

RATTAN furniture, 8 pieces, 8200. 752-1247.

REGULATION SIZE pool taMe with accossorias. Cost 8700

sacrifica at 8350. Days 751 2879; nlghte75a-.?990.

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS ai Shampooers. Call Pealar, 7544711. ROSSINGOL SKIS wifh Look Blnd-Inos. 8150 or bost offer. 752-1247.

SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent shampooers end vacuums at Rental Tool Company. _

Inflation by buying end rough the Classified ads.

II 7524144.

SOFA AND CHAIR and 2 trastle benches. 754-MI2.

TOBACC BARN, 14X14. Interior 1X8 pine boardA exterior covored with roofing. Block foundation.

Must remove completely fri sight. 8200 or best ofter. 752-1231

sight. 81

7iNm

from

WESTERN horse SADDLE Es<ilfitapdl,tig,..M6..ga:4743,_. WOOD STOVE EHicient end beautiful. Danish made stove. Can be usid as )foan haarth or closed for mexim)n efficiency. Must sell. 8450. Wes 8450 new. Call 944 7978

ZEINTH 25' console color TV, wood ceblnef. 8150.750-1571

1 EARLY AMERICAN lovesoat sofa. (^ condition. 8120. 752 1418 anvtlmo.

2M AMP SERVICE with pole and wire. 8200.752 1132 nlQhts.

25 CUBIC FOOT chest freezer, < condition. Phone 750-4554.

075 /Mobile Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW DOUBLEWIDE for the price of the single. 48x24. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, loailed with

extras including beamed ceilings, storm wimlows, 200 amp total electric, frost free refrigerator, and

much, miKJi more.

$17,495

Delivery and set up inclu)led. VA,

,    ^    -|))i        ------------

FHA and convent()>nal financing. /Mobile Home Brokers, 430 M/est Greenville Boulevard. 754-0191.

BRAND NEW 1983 t) of the line double wide. 52 X 24,Tbedrooms, 2

full baths, many extras including

masonite siding, shingle rex, bay windows, frost free refrigerator, gar)len tub, cafhadral ceiling and much, much more. Regular price,

windows, frosf free "refrigerat)', Tng

824,995

Limitad Time Only

$19,995

VA, FHA and convantional on lot financing. Delivery and sat up Hours, 8 AM to 7 pm.

ILE HOME BROKERS

430 West (Sroonvllte Boutevard 7544191

Incl

BRAND NEW 1903 top (uallty 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home toaiied with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors, plywood counter tops, total electric, ran^, refrigerator. Regular price,

Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up

430 West (rroenvllte Boutevard

DOUBLEWIDE, and shingle roof, 3 815,000. Call Art

754-9841.

24x52, tapsiding bedroom, 2 bath, Detlano Homos,

(JUST ARRIVED) 14X74, 1903, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, stereo, frost fret

refrlgerat^, garckm tub,

electric. Must tee to believe. Art PellPfW Homes. 754-9041

LIQUIDATION SALE 19M, 14x40 /Montebello by Oakwood. 2 largo

bedrooms, 2 full baths. Ilka now condition, fully furnishod, hoot pump agd central air, storm wln-dowa, dFiclerpinning, set up on nice lot In Evans /Mobile Home Park, FlretMMr Road, 810,500. Make an olte. 7544134

NEW HOMES START as low as 8129.93 a month at Azalea Mobile Homes. See Tommy Williams or Lin Kllpotrlck. 754-7815:_

REPO 70X14, 3 bedrooms or 2 badroomt. (rood selection. Low

downpayment. Delivery and set up IncluoM. Contact J T Williams at

AMlte Mobile HotiteS. 754-7815.

USED HOMES. 1971, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 1971, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. 1947, 12xH. 1909, 12x50. Coll Art Dellano HggiM,7lfcjf41

12XH, 2 large bedrooms, partially furnished. AXust sail. CatlT92-S4n

after 5.

12X45, 1974 Esquire, 3 bedrooms.

12X45, 1974 Esqyl

V/ baths, 7V37S.

12X45 2 badroomt, furnished, central air, storage building, deck. Located at Majattes Traitor Park,

1947 AZALEA, 12x40, 2 bedrooms. 8400 down and taka up payments of

WHEN SOMEONE I^^toj5uy,

ihey turn to the --------- ,-

Place your Ad today for quick results.

ini MARSHFIELD. 14x40. Un-fumishad, 2 bedrogms.. Take

furnished, 2 bedrooms. Take tm payments of $148. (^11 Susan 751-7407 days; weofcandt 3554474.

ini OAKWOOD FREfpOM 14x40, 2 badroomt. 1 bath. 6E air condl-ftanor and heat punnp. Located in Shady Knoll Wublla Home Park. or 754-5431.

Shady H

ini REPO, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Pay #5 down it 12% lnforst:Call Ai4

Walk-Jnc!

oom, 2

_ Ingle roof, groat room. Inside

)lllty room, firwdace, air condl-flonaA over 1480 tqusro feet <

beautiful living ipact

076 /Mobile Honw insurance

/MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance at competitiva ratos. Smith Insur-anca and Raaltv. 752-2754._

077 AAuslcal Instruments

LEBLANC NOBLET wooden clarinet, 82S0_, ^ll fammy 7444442

after 5 p.m.; 744-4452 anytime.

070 Sporting Goods

HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion repairs. Specializing In marine pre-ducf t. 7a^l. 11W Clark Sfreol.

MS Loans And/Mortgages

NEED CASH, get a second mortgage fast by phone, we alto buy mortgages; make commercial 080463 3W9,_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

( I . Lupton Co

093 OPPORTUNITY

BE YOUR OVVN BOSS

Jotn Intornafional Service Company

i.Tuli

in recession proof buslnest. tralnino end menegement assistance. Opportunify unlimltod. Earn 825,000 to 812S,0M annually.

Exclusive territory available now! ur, H

Call Jerry Arthur, 140040 3322.

LIST OR BUY your busi C J HarrisJ8 Co,, Inc. Financial A

with

AAarkefing Consultants. Serving tf '    -    -------4 States

Southeastern United _______

Greenville, NC 757-<KI0l, nighte 733:H15,    ^

SERVICE/MASTER professional home and office cleaning franchises available in the Eastern NC area.

814,000 ii5_luctes, e)^ipment ^

training. FInaiKing avalli^.

information call or write ServlceAAaster, 204 West Sfroet. Ramgh 27403.833-2102.

095 PROFESSIONAL

nneys and fireplaces. . day or nlohf. 753-3503. Farmville.

DR R TED WATSON, Optometrist would like to inform patients of (jr. Kenneth Quiggln Optometrist that issumed the    '    ~

he has assumed the practice of Or.

Quigglns upon his rtirement fnxn active vactice as of June 1982. All rocor)ls and files have been transferred frixn the 114 W 5th

files have been

Street office to Dr. Watson's office located at 1805 Charles Boutevard.

Office Hours: AAonday - Friday 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM Wurday and

evening hours available for appointments or lnf)M'mati)>n. Tele-Dhone 754-4780 or 752 3779.

TAX RETURN preparation. Ap-p)ntmants not necessary. Call 757-3255 or 355-2815 after 5.

102 Commercial Property

WILL LE/kSE or sate: 21,000 square foot Milding located at tho corner

of Cofanche and I4th Street. Lot It 110' X 345' Zoned commercial.

Multlusesposslble. 752 1020.

104 Condominiums For Sale

OWNERSHIP LESS than renfl Ateore A Sauter's Shared Equity Finance Prgram makes It pixulMe

to enjoy 8S0 -I- or - monthly payments with less than 82,(>00

ckMvn. No closing costsi Choice of

        I. C)

carpet, spacious orlMllat75840S0

clotoft. Call Jana

TWO BEDROOM Cannon Court condominiums. Immediate oc-

cupaiKvl Ou nance Progra or monthly

I Our Shared Eciuity Fi-s a 8S0 -h

ram provides    .

 ly payment and umler

82,000 down. No closing costs, excollant floor plan, l)ta closet space and stata fireplace I Call Jane W^ren or WII Reid at Moore A Saufer. 7584050

YOU CAN BEGIN a happy new

year In your^ nsw two ) thr^ee foadr)xxnn

condominium with monthly payments under 8300. Fireplace optional. Throe com-munitlos to chooae from - Call /Mooro and Sauter tor Shared E)ultv Financing datallsl 7584050.

106 Farms For Saie

13 ACRES all ctear^ with ^acrw

tobacco allotmant, 8 miles . Groonville. Aldrich A Southerlond Realty, 754-3500; nights Don South-land. 754-5260

37 ACRES with 21 cleared and 2 acres of tobacco. Located near

Stokes. For more information contact Aldridg^ A Southerland, 754-3500; nlghtrOon Southerland, 754-

5240.

SO ACRE FARM Good road tron taga on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51

)Kras cleared, 4,209 p)xjnds tobacco allofmont, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call tor nsore details. Call AAoselay /^rcus Realty at 744-2144 tor full

107 Farms For Lease

WANT TO LEASE tobacco pounds. Call attor 4.758-2859.

WANTED Corn and Bean land tetwaan WIntorvillo and Greanvllte. CaH7S4-34Matter4pm.

WANTED peai CaM750-2e5ir

nut pounds to lease.

WANTED TO LEASE Corn and Soybean land In Ayiten area. Call David Harold Smith at Gonial

Aero Farms, 744 3492.

WANTED TO LEASE tobacco pounds. 753 3932 days; 753-3417

WOULD LIKE to lease tobacco poutK^. 753:3^,_

109 Houses For Saie

ANXIOUS TO SELL This beautiful

contemporary on a proHy wooded lot has been reduced in price.

Foyor, great room with fireplace, dining        ^    ~    '

_ -Ing area, three badrwxns, two baths, garage, wood deck. Possible

loan assumption. Imprattlve. Lake Glonwood. $47,400. Duftus

Inc., 754 5395.

Realty

BY OWNER 2 bedroom, I bath, house, university area, excallant starter home or retirement. Priced at $38.500, Call 754-9070 otter 5.

BY OWNER 1700 tquaro foot brick homo, 3 bedrooms, large kitchen, living room with tireploco, den and bath, central air. Muaf sea to appraclato. Located 4 miles west of Washington on Highway 244. 944-1478atttel

CLUB PINES- Colonial Williamsburg, 532 Cr)Mtrina, 1050 square teet. l bedrtxxns, 2Vi baths,

fireplace with wooilstove, matching utility shad, R-30 ceiling, 3 years old. Open houia Sunday, January

14, 23, and 30, 1-5 pm or call tor anpolntmant, 754-4220 after 4 pm.

EASTWOOD Owner selling. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. $50,900. Phono 756 7047,

NICE 5 room house. Enclosed back porch, carport, new paint in and out. Very good conditton. In fiw county. (Sood pecan trees. $34,000. By owner. 750 3210. After 4, call 758-4199.    _

OWNER WITH 1500 square foot house In Elmhurst area desires to

tchange house for rental priiperty. Call 754-1042attar 4.

3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, firtplace. 1 aero lot. Scuth of Aydsn. 7444440.

4-RCXMM house and lot for sale by

owner. Approximately 4 miles fr)>m

Burroughs "----

Groonville

67,

Mtellcome, one mite ott Highway. Call

$41,500. Centrally located. This 3 boroom, 2 bath brick ranch features family room with tiroplaca, plus format aros. Attractive neighborhood, cgnvoniont to schooit and shopping. Call June Wyrick at Aldri)lM A Southerland

Realty, 7jO-??pQ(y?a:776<,_

WHY STORE THINGS you never uta? Sell then '

Classified Ad.

3S you cash )

with a

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

Rpmodpiinq - Hoom Artdilions

C.l. Luptin Co,

CRAFTED SERVICES

OiMriNy fumltwe ItoflnWiIng antf npatn. Bgparter Mnbig (or oR type dMlrs, larBor oalacBow ( cuMorn pletiiro fnMlng, survey ttekoa-awy ion(|i. aR typM of hwid-onfM lOM I Tro

ecko, ooloeteR fronied

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

MitiWPwk.Hwy.11 7IR41M    IA.RI.4:P.RI.

1.N.C,

LOG LENGTH

FIREWOOD

APPROXIMATELY i CORDS MXEOHAflOWOOO OCUVERED TO YOUR YARD

792-6072

200

WHITLEY LUMBER CO.

Ill lnvtstmnt Proptrty

NEW DUPLEX Yearly rental o( 84400 with assumable loan. Excellent tax shelter. $41,000.

Aldrldoe A Southerlend. 754-3500.

_______ .    -jpli

bedrooms, ivy bsth, liviiK room with dining area, kitchen with dishwashar, disposal, stove, refrigerator on both tides. Heat pump, oatlo. 1912 square feet total dufiox. FHA-VA firrartclng available. Cell 752-MI4 tar detallt v Faye Bowsn 754 5258 or Winnie Evans 752-4224. The EvatfS Company, 701 W Four-teenth Street.____

115

Lots For

BAYWOOD. TWO. ACRE nancino evelliibte. Call 754

_ tot. Fl-

_1-7711.

CANDLEWICK Large bui in excellent nalgtSorhood.

/Mavis Butts Reaffv. 750^

lot

12x45 /MOBILE HOME furnished with tot, in Bla ' '

lack Jack area. Call days 757H91; niohts 750-3741

2 LOTS OFF highway 244 rear Pactolus. Ldaal for trutolte home or

homesite. Possible owrwr finartcirtg. 84500. 85000. Mavis Butts Realty. 750^._

117 RosortProporty For Sale

KILBY ISLAgOw Pamlico River

......    tlrepl

bedrooms rtownstairs. For ap-

and AAixon Creak. Largo livlng-...... r.    2

dining area with fireplace.

polntment call 754-3721.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security Its required, no pets. Call

Ltiltiltaasiianl.

NEED STORAGE? We have any storage need. Can

size to meet your storage need Arling^ Self Storage, Open dOY-Friday 9

121 Apartments For Rant

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest end most uni))uely furnished orte bedrrxxn apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Fraa water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on grourtd floor with porches.

Frost-frse rstrlgerafors.

Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Ctob. Stwwn

by appointment only. Couples or

sin ^    '

tingles. No pets.

Contact J T or Tommy Williams

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with V/2 baths. Also 1 bedroom

apartments. Carpet, dlshwash^s, compactors, patio, tree cable TV, wasner-dryer hook-ups, laundry

 -dryer hook-ups, laundry

room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752 1557

DUPLEX Two bedroom, 1</5 bath, carpoted, wahar dryer hookup, heat pump, dishwasher. Available Feb-ruary 1. Call after 4, 754-3543.

DUPLEX APARTMENT 2 bedi

lr(x>ms, washer, dryer hookups, on large country lot i mile trin Greenville. No^s. 8230 per month plus deposit. (Tall 758-4964 after 5

pm.

APARTMENT tor rent.

location. 2 badrooms.

with patio. Toby Circle. Call ba-^ " 4109,

tween 8-4. 754-4109; after 4. 522-0782.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and thrae bedroom gar)len and townh)Hiae apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry tacillties, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive 752-5100

FOURTH ST WEST, 2 bedroom

duplex, wall to wail carpeting, washer and dryer included. 8230 per month. Call after 4.754-0942.

GreeneWay

Large 2 beilroom garden ^rt ments, carpafcd, dishwasher, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and poor Adjacant Grtonvllte Country Club. 754-4849

IN WINTERVILLE- 3 bedroom apartmont, appliances furnishod,

   ___

no children, no pots. Deposit and lease. 8195 a month. Celt 754-5007.

AytilQblt ftmi 9tP*an>iby

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

On# and two bedroom garden apartmants. Carpatod, ranos,

tr igoratpr, dishwasher, disp____

and cable TV Convonlentiy located

isposal

to shopping center and schixits. Located liMf off 10th Stroot.

Cll 752-3519

LARGE NEW 2 bedroom apart-mant. Low utilities. No pots. 8225.

mm

-S-

Ilstod in Hto ClaMltlod columns of to

day's paper.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

wsssassm

B

SPECIAL

Safe

ModtlS>1

Spiwial PrICB

$122

Reg. Price $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

S008.Evwi8St.

7S2-2175

mss

121 Apertment For Rent DERGT1Sr"Be3r

downtown. Heal and w

wlWn

.    .    -    _    _    water

furnished. No pete. 754-9318 do^;

Zgfcg41,l9Ml

LARGE 2 BEDROOM Duplex. 70S-B Hooker Road. Stove and rofrigara-

tor, washer, diw

coodfilon, heat

tease required. No pate.

.....17,    1

dryer hookups, air I pump. Osposlt and . No pote.l^. Call

after 5 pm. 754-5217, 754-4382, or

754E

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique In apcrtmerrt living with nature outside your door.

COURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% test than co)nparable unite), dishwath

er, washer/)lrytr hook-ups, cable TV.well to-wair carpet, tharmopane wimlows, extra Insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    1-5    Sunday

AAerry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

LUXURY 3 bedroom apartm^. Ocean view. Winter rates. Call

NEED FEMALE ROOAAMATE, 2 bedroom furnished apartment, share rent, 8120 oius utilities Few blocks from ECU 758 4445

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart-

lOlsh-

mante. 1212 Redbanks Road.

washer, refrigerator, range, dis poMi Inclu We also twve Cobta TV Vary convenient to Pitt Plaza

and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished

apartments or mobile rent. Contact J t

tor

Williams. 754-7815.

or T)>mmy

ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, kitchen appliances. 8195.

zaSu

ONE BEDROOM, one block from ECU Library. $190 par month. Call 758-4200 or 7-S077.    _

ONE BEDROOM apartmont, appll furnished oiiTOth StraetToiU

anees______________.....__________

month. Call Echo Raalty, Inc. at 524-4148: nlohts 524-5042

RIVER BLUFF has 2 bedroom townhouse apartments and 1 bedroom garilen apartments. For more Information call 750-4015 or stop by the River Bluff office at 121

Rivar Bluff Road between 10 a.m. and 4p.m. /Monday Friday._

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The H^^PI|ce To Live

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a

iirsadayat

7S6-4iO

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer hook-ups. cable TV, pool, house, playground. Near ECU

club

Our Reputation Uyt It All -

"A Community (

1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm A Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM townhouse, IVY

baths, carpeted, kitchen wpHancas, heat pump, 100 G Cedar Court, montK:75i-3311

8210

TWO BEDROOM ajMirtmante for rent. Bryton Hills WSMi Stancll Drive - 8^.00, Verdant St. "

8290.00; Village East - 8306.00. Yorktown Scjuara, 3 bedrooms 8400.00. All require lease and secu

require k___________

rity deposit. Duftus RoaltY Inc., 7544)011^

.WEDGEWOOOAR/IAS

NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom, 1V> bath townhouse*. Excallant location. Carrter haat pumps, Whirlpool kitchon, washar/dryar hookups, pool, tannis court.

756-0987

WILSON ACRES APARTMENTS

New 2 and 3 bedroom, washtr-dryor hook up, dishwashar, heat pump, tannis, pool, sauna, self cleaning ovens, frost tree refrigerator. 3

blocks from ECU Call 7/^0277 da Housing

or ni(^t. Equal

3L.

1 AND 2 BEDROOM opartmante. AvQllfbH IfnmrfjottlY, TgwM,_

1 BEDROOM aneroy aft apartment. 754-5W or f&D025

fflclant

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

You QotThoBott Pricing At Tysons QESRCATVt

OibMn A QE AppHanott Utton IMcrowtvit A Acootaonot

SUtaaMaElaetrlcal

Strvica

Henry Tyson Electric & Appliance

7H4I2I laZN.RaaroidSt.

WlntarvMa

SALES OPPORTUNITY

Prefer Bomeoite vith automobile aalea x* pcrlcnce, but not neccaairy. Will train rt^t par* ton. Apply In pcraon to Al Brttt.

TOVOTA

EAST

756.3228 109 Trade Street Greenville, N.C.

AUCTION

THW OAflNWAT

Ariington Solf Storage 408 W. Ariington Bouievard SATURDAY, JANUARY 22.198311:00 A.M.

Vartoua Hams, tablaa, ctiairs, lampa and other fumHura, ovan, waahing machinas, TVs, at araos, buiding malurlalt, rnatal Windows, antiquaa, raataurant aquipmant and much mora.

For more information Caii 756-7711 Monday-Friday, 9 to S

AUCnONEERS: Prwlon NmIIi, NCAL ISM; Jwry Oatot. NCALZas.

RAIN DATE, Jan. 29,1983,11 A.M.

The Daily ReOedar. GreenvUle. N.C.-Tuelay, Jiniary II, 1N3-It

121

Apartmanta For Rant

9f5RoSr!M>B'RAr^r%

riiiihWPS.!w75ti. IZJ.

2 BEDROOM Aparlmant, cametod. applten<to*, balh. 825t 102 4toartnMnt 4, VMIiow Street. 758-

lucsl

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE 101 Courtland Drive. Century 21 B F)ybesAflfncy. 754-2121

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX near ECU Carpet, heat pump, range, refrlger-ator. No Pets. 8245: 754 7llO.

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE Energy efficient heat pump, m

baths, carpet, range. refrlgeral<x, dishwathar. hookups. 8295.7 7410. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, central haat/air, No pete, tease and dwoslt. 8245. Can Jon752-0345or 758

3 BED

ysm

DROOM DUI>LEX tff9,7jfr7779.

Unl-

3 ROOM furnished apartment with j^lvate bath and enterance. Fre

tarred married couple without children, at 413 W 4thSfreot

122 Businasa Rantals

1900 SQUARE FOOT commercial space for rent cm Greenville Boutevard. Call Echo Roolty, Inc. Ot7S4-404Q; nighte 524-5042._

125 CorXkMniniums For Rant

TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shmndoah. saoo per rTMnth, 12 month Iqpto. Young couple proforrod. Call Clark Branch

Roaltoi^,.754-4934,

2 BEDROOM, m bath, carpeted, major appllonces furnished, N Pete, marled couple prefered.

127 Housaa For Rant

CLEAN THREE ROOM furnished house with shower bath. Call 758

HOUSES AND APARTMENTS In

town and country. Call 744-3284 or

LARGE 2 BEDROQ/M. study, tiv ing, central air, Insert, solar, washor/dryor.744-209a.

THREE BEDROOM housas for rent. Grimoslond. 8300.00; Sylvan Driva, 8325.00; Hardoo Acres.

8335.00; Country Squire, 8325.00, Pittman Drive, 8325.00; Paris Ave., S5.00; Green Farms. 8325.00; Charles St., 8375.00; Yorktown Square. 3 bedrooms, 8400.00;

Lynndale, 8400.00. All roifulre. lease and security deposit. Duftus Inc.. 7344)811,

Realty

TWO BEDROOM, University arte, Call 72 3240

available now

1 BEDROOM HOME 1210 S Pitt Stroot. 8125 per month, (tell 751

2111.

112 NORTH SUMMIT 3 bodroom Tklngdir sity.    _

31 B Forbes Agency. 754-2121,

house within walking dNtance of toe 8310 month. CENTURY

unlvorsit

3 BEDROOM HOUSE to University. 754-0528.

located close

3 BEDROOM house, 2 both, central location end more. 8435 month. 754-4410 or 754-5W1.

3 BEDROOM ranch style home. Carport, storage, (wiet subdivision. #11 757-0001 or ni^ts, 753-4015, 754 9004._

4 BEDR(X)MS, Ite boths, gas heat, central air. 8400 i^ moto, 1403 Eden Place. CENTURY 21 Forbes

Agency, 758 2121.

4 ROOM HOUSE with bath for rant.

6 mjigt    Cf188:8781

133 A/lobiWHomMForRgnt

FURNISHED 2 bedrooms and 3 bedrooms, 81S0 and 8185 month. Colonial Pork. 758-0174

SPECIAL RATES for stunts. 2 bodroom with carpet, 8115. No pets, no Chlldrtn. 768-4581 or 798^491

SPECIAL THIS MONTH ilshod.

bodroom traitor, furnis requlrtd. 752 1823.

12X4Uj^ bo)lrepms,, 3 baths, fully

Call 756-1235

washor/dryor, no pets.

3 A 3 badrooms, w

.78-1444#fi^3:00

washer, dryer, air,

Mobile Home for rent.

3 BEDROOMS, porttelly furnished, akt good location, no pets, no chlidWL758-4857._

3 BEDROOMS. 3 baths, furnished on private lot. No pots. No children. 752:^79.

3 BEpROp^, underplnneil. 8 mile* (rom Pitt Ptez*. Near 0 H Contev. no pete, 758-0975 after 5.

CLASSinCD DISPLAY

WE 8UY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

13S Office Space For Rent

FOR RENT Approximately 800 *Quor* 0*4. $258 par month: tOth Coital HNght Shopping

758-4257

MCX3ERN, attractive office space tor tease. Approximately 1500 i^ro toot. Lc^tod 2007 Evans

NEAR DOWNTOWN Single office $1^ month including utlllftes. Also suites end conference room avoila-ble. Evoninw, 752-5040.

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JTorTon ------ -------

fommy William*. 754-7815.

SINGLE OFFICES or suites, with Chapln-

utllitlos and janitorial.

Little building, 3104 S Memorial Privo. Call 754 7799

STORE/RESTAURANT/SINGLE or multiple offices avallebte now downtown. Offices convenient to courthouse. 754-0041.754-3444.

TWO ROOM or four room office suite. Highway 344 Business. Eco

nomical. Private parking. Soma storage available. Call Gonnally Branch at Clark Branch Realtors, 754^334.

3 OFFICE on Charles Boulevard next to ECU Practice Field. $100 >er nranth (or 1 or $180 tor both, '88-7878.

380 SQUARE FEET two room olflce and 440 square feet three room pftlcoj Joyner Lanier Building. 219 N Cotanche Street. Parking available. Call Jim Lanier. 752-5505.

138

Rooms For Rent

ROOM FOR rent February 1 for student or commerclol, with kitch

en privileges. 403 Jarvis Street. Call 752-3544.    *

ROOMS FOR RENT Call 7 a.m. until 11 p.m., 752-4583._,

140

WANTED

142 Roommate Wanted

ELDERLY PERSON needs some one to stay with him. No exponeos. In Farmvlll*. Call attor 9 p.m., 757 1137.    '

FEAAALE ROOM/MATE iwodad to share (rallar. $75 rant and Vy uLUtl*. Clp|a.tocan)put. 759-784.

FEMALE ROOMMATE deairod to I. Muat ba

share my house with m*.

able to My bills. $113.50 rent plus ties. Call 754-2414 evenings, by 212

1/2 utlllf

les. Call ask for Theresa, or come Arlington Circle <lays.

droom

ment.

TO SHARE 2    _________

young mate, protesskmal 1 Call Jim )Mys 7S4-M34; nights 754 9344.    _

144

Warded To Buy

WANTED TO BUY tobacco^wmds,

at rtasonabte price, Call 744-i

WANTED TO BUY 13x45 or 14x70 nobllo home. Days 758-2879; nights

?aZ99Q.

146

Wanted To Leeie

WANTED TO lease tobacco pounds tor 19B3.751............

75I-8310 or 758-4353.

148

Wanted To Rent

FEMALE STUDENT wonts to rent a )>no bodroom apartment. Ca(l Cheryl at 752 1959.

CLASSIFIED display:

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & WNINS

noriclmy Hoorn Addition'

C. .L. Lupton, Co

COUPON

Wheel I

lUipMHti

Special !

Only I

13!

With Coupon. I

IP*r moot osrs and plet api. Pour' | Wliate  ----- bOa.    0dm,r

. awfeea. *1 hiMeaeon...to imka I I your ddo saiooili and sate.    _

'    Call7S8-S244    I

*    For Appokitmont    |

Lmm COUPON oi4|

THE REAL

ESTATE

CORNER

Aydon N.C. 609 Snow Hill St.

6*B6<irooni; Brick Venter Residence; formal living room and dining room den, large rec. room wHh fireplace and built In grill; doutde carport; outside garage and storage; 2530 square feet heated area. Lot 123'X240.

520 Park Ave.

2-Bedrooms; 1 bath, living room, dining room, kitchen, den, double garage and side porch, 1290 square feet heated area; corner lot with shade trees, fireplace In IMng room.

Housee shown by appotntment only BuNdlng Iota and land for ^ dovttopmtnt for salt

Chester Stox Real Estate

74M11fday

Aydan, N.C.

74B-33M after 9:30 PM

FARMERS HOME A SPECIALTY!

Wp at The Evans Company havt bptn twlping famHiee qualify for Farmors Homa loans with tho samo staff for over 12 yoaro.

Exeollont floor plana and lot locations.

40 years buHdlniB oxporionco.

You chooM colora, carpet, wallpaper.

Call Now For Complete Details 752-2814

WbMiia Evans 782-4224

Or

FaytBowan

798-9254

Evans

ComDMiv ISaHi

Geerwlelnc

701W. FourteenlhSL

f

I





att-The Daily Redector, Greenville. N.C.-Tuetdav. Jamurv IK tlR

^ r    V.V. fWMflT. fAinMI V Ifl IVh'l

Some Conservatives Seek Alternative To Reagan

RvnNAi.nM onTURirDn j i. *_____    ..... ... ..

By DONALD M. ROTHBERG AP Political Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Frustrated conservatives, describing President Reagan as displaying a lack of interest in running the country, are threatening to challenge his re-election unless he fires several top aides and veers his administration to the right.

1 would think the conservative cause and the Republican Party would be better served if the president

Judge Again is Indicted

WHITEVILLE, N.C (AP) - District Court Judge J. Wilton Hunt, who already faces federal bribery charges in the COLCOR probe, was indicted by a state grand jury Monday on conspiracy and bribery charges.

Hunt, who has pleaded innocent to similar federal charges in the FBIs COLCOR probe, was charged with conspiracy, conspiracy to receive and receiving bribes in an eight-count indictment handed down Monday by a Columbus County grand jury.

This is basically the same as what hes charged with in the federal investigation, said SBI agent Bill Dowdy. There is an additional count that he wasnt charged with by the feds.

Hunt was arrested by federal agents July 29 and is scheduled to face trial in U.S. District Court in Ralei^ Jan. 24 on charges of accepting bribes from undercover FBI agents.

District Attorney Michael Easley said the indictment Monday resulted from an investigation by the State Bureau of Investigation and the N.C. Attorney Generals office. The probe was initiated based on information that surfaced during the federal governments investigation of corruption in the county, nicknamed COLCOR by the FBI.

Hunt was arrested at the county courthouse by two agents of the SBI.

Hunt was taken before magistrate Ralph Edwards and was released on a (10,000 property bond posted by his father, Donald Hunt.

Just Call It Space Tech

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Scientists at the Research Triangle Institue working under a million-dollar federal contract are putting space technology to biomedical uses.

The contract directs scientists of RTIs Biomedical Applications Team to make three transfers of aeronautical technology into biomedical and commercial uses each year.

One of these transfers is a cooling vest for quadriplegics, said Doris Rouse, BAT director. Since people with spinal cord injuries cannot perspire below the level of injury, they risk heat stroke in even moderate heat. The cooling vest can help cool their bodies and reduce heat stroke risk.

Hiis technology was developed as water-cooled m\s to control temperatures within atronauts space suits. Its now being evaluated for use by quadriplegics by the Veterans Administration Hospital in Palo Alto, Calif.

Another BAT-coordinated project based on space technology is a blanket to prevent infants from losing heat during surgery.

In last Sunday, January 16 ad in Tha OaHy Reflector the capacity of freezer No. 11126 waa Incorrectly elated aa 23.1 cu. ft. It abould have reed 12.0 cu. ft. Aleo the 33207 freezer deaerjptlve copy is correct t^t the artwork incorrectly shows a refrigerator. We regret any inconvenience tMa may cause you.

doesnt run for re-election, Richard Viguerie, a conservative publisher and fUfKi-raiser, said in an interview.

It would have been unthinkable a year ago to oppose Reagan, added Viguerie. 1 think theres a strong chance that if he does run, he would be opposed by a strong conservative. *

I think there will be an all-out effort to persuade him not to run in 1984, said Howard Plt^ips, chairman of the Conservative Caucus, in a ^parate interview. .

Reagan has saki he has not yet decided whether to seek a second term in 1984.

While Viguerie and Riillips have been persistent cai-servative critics of the Reagan presidency from its outset, this marked the first time they opmly discussed challenging the presidmt for the 1984 Republican presidential nomination.

John T. Dolan, chairman of the National Coi^rvative Political Action Committee, said he saw little chance such a challenge could succeed.

Whoi told s(Mne fellow coiKervatives were talking about finding an alternative to Reagan in 1964, Dolan commented: Good luck.

I obviously share their frustration, but I really dont know what we can do about it, said Dolan.

Ilie latest administration decisions to anger and frustrate the conservatives were the presidents endorsement of the compromise a^ment on Social Security, which will result in accelerating increases in

payroll taxes, and his ap-pointmoit of forfDo* Rep. Margaret Heckler. R-Mass., to be secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.

Phillips said he still hoped the president would fire White House aides James A. Baker III, Michael Deaver, David Gergen and Rkdhard Darman. lliose four are often described by conservatives as leading Reagan away from the principles on which he ran in 1980.

There is no way in which conservatives are going to

get elected in 1984, running on a record of the biggest tax increases and the biggest deficits in the history of the country, said Phillips.

Viguerie referred to the cratinual lack oi interest by the president in running the country and letting Jim Baker and Howard Baker (the Senate majority leader) run the operation.*

Talking about the prospects for a campaign against Reagan, Viguerie said, It would be very ea^ to put hither a significant campaign based on the

Reagan campaign of 1980.

In othw words, reduce taxes, balance the budget, stop busing, bring school prayer back, you name it. Abolish the Department of Educatkm, the Department ofEnergyr Hes done so very little that it would be vary easy to put together his canqiaigi pledges and promises and for a major conservative to run Ml that.

Neither Viguerie nor Phillips woidd talk about possible challengers to Reagan.

But among the Re-pi^licans oftoi praised by Vigueries magazine Crni-servative Digest, are Smis. Jesse Hdms of North Carolina and Orrin Hatch of Utah and R^. Jack Kemp of New York.

Viguerie said he believes Rea^ will decide against running in 1984.

He may indicate sometime this year that he will run for re-election, said Viguerie, But I think that before the primaries start in 1984, that he will withdraw.

tmtaj KvNOiosiQtaecocoVANTAGEme nsTc OF success


Title
Daily Reflector, January 18, 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 18, 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/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95273
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