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102ND YEAR
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
INSIDE READING
Page 8-Plea to truckers Page 13-The Assembly Page 16-Obituaries
NO. 34
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION GREENVILLE, N.C. VVEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 9, 1983
74 PAGES5 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS
Sharon Resists Stepping Down
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Pressure mounted on Defense Minister Ariel Sharon today to resign as recommended by the judicial report that gave him a lar^ share of blame for the Beirut massacre. But Sharon was said to be resisting efforts to force him out.
The three-man panel urged Prime Minister Menachem Begin to fire Sharon if he did not step down voluntarily, and Israeli newspapers said most Cabinet ministers favored removing the defense ininister.
Israel radio said most P^uritament factions believed t^at in light of the the commissions criticism of himself and his government, Begins only viable option was to resign and schedule an early election.
The prime minister met with his Cabinet for two hours Tuesday without reaching a decision on Sharons status and %hed-uled a second meeting for today.
The news reports said some ministers were willing
to give him another government p<^, but Sharon was determined to keep his ministry.
Most major newspapers urged the government to accept the findings of the commission.
The daily Haaretz editorialized, The commission having said what it said about Mr. Ariel Sharon, he has no place in the Israeli government, plain and simple.
Maariv, which usually is more friendly to Begin than other papers, said:
If we throw the conclusions of the commission in the trash can, we will once again be giving ammunition to all the enemies and slanderers whose arguments were silenced when Israel decided that there would be an Israeli investigation into the circumstances of the massacre.
The right-wing Tehiya faction, . which belongs to Begins coalition, sought to forestall Sharons ouster by presenting a private bill to Parliament setting elections
REFUSES TO RESIGN? - Israels Defense Minister Ariel Sharon leaves Menachem Begins office in Jerusalem. The Kahane commission recommended Sharon should resign or be fired, if necessary. It has been reported by Israeli radio that Sharon has refused to resign. (AP Laserphoto)
REFLECTOR
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752-1336
Hotline gets things done for you. Gall 752-1336 and tell youi problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, Hie Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.
WOMAN MISSING
Greenville police are searching for Peariie Mae Edwards, 55, who was last seen at the home of her aunt here Jan. 12.
Mrs. Edwards, an employee of Jhe East Carolina Family ftactice Onter, (pictured). Anyone knowing anything about her whereabouts is urged to contact the Greenville Police Department, Officer Lee Ganlsh, or her dau^ter, Doris Jean Oryema, 756-7966, Dr. Marys Raabs office. East Carolina University School of Medicine.
on Oct. 25, two years ahead of schedule. It was not clear when the bill would come up for debate.
A key figure in the ruling coalition said Begin would not dismiss the former general, a bulwark of the prime ministers p<9ularity with his right-wing constituency.
Its hard for him to do such a thing, Avraham Shapira, chairman of the parliamentary coalition, tdd reporters after meeting with Begin. Anyone who knows the prime minister knows he is a noble man, and he respects Arik (Sharons nickname).
As to what happens next, Shapira said, That is in the hands of Menachem Begin.
Dozens of peqrle protesting in Tel Avivs Dizengoff Square demanded the whole government r^ign after the findings were released Tuesday. But many Israelis viewed the report as a testament to the countrys democracy.
Only a nation with the moral strength of Israel could afford to publish such findings, said an insurance salesman, who asked not to be identified. The state of Israel has been saved.
Pro-govemment protesters who gathered at the prime ministers office during Tuesdays Cabinet meeting sang, Arik, king of Israel when Sharon emerged.
Were with you, Arik! they yelled.
Much of Begins political travail would end if Sharon would resign voluntarily, but the 54-year-old defense minister declined a puWk* opportunity to state his Intention Tuesday ni^t. He told a gathering of political supporters in-Tel Aviv that the government would discuss the matter in private.
Sharon indicated that he would continue to fight, and that he considered his domestic political enemies on a par with Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasser Arafat.
Sharon stnmgly defended the army officers vdio were recommended for punishment, and he said iere were people in Israel who would jeopardize national security for the sake of minor political gain.
Of the commissions findings, he said, I heard that Arafat was little pleased ... Here, too, there are some who are a little pleased.
Sharon also implied that his ouster would be a reward to the United States, which has been pressuring Israel to make concessions during talks on the withdrawal of its troops from Lebanon.
Begin, trusting his enduring popularity, let it be known months ago he might go for early elections if the commission report blamed his government or the army. But some of his coalition partners are not eager for electiors because their standing in the polls is low.
Some members of his coalition, notably the National Religious Party and the Liberal faction of his Likud Bloc, want Sharon to leave, and their pressure threatens his 64-56 majority in Parliament.
If they were to defect, the opposition Labor Party might try to form a coalition without new elections.
Begin cannot just resign and call an election, he must gather a majority in Parliament to set an election date. Political observers believe that Begin might not get a majority if he sought new elections, at least partly because the Labor Party also is not optimistic about its chances against Begin.
The 69-year-old prime minister himself was not severely criticized by the report. But it said he failed to pay enough attention to the decision to permit Lebanese Christian Phalange troops into the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps where hundreds of Palestinians were slaughtered last Sep-tebmer.
Gnibbin* Tim
Sea Gulls took advantage of worms and grubs turned up by this tractor early Wednesday morning on a site off Greenville Boulevard. When
farming season rolls around, birds will flock to the fields in anticipation of an easy meal. (Reflector Photo by Sue Hinson)
Continue Study Noise Levels
'The City Council, which visited a ni^tclub in December to hear a noise level demonstration, got a firsthand idea of noise situations in a residential area this week as it amtinued to study redrafts of the local noise ordinance.
Some 20 residents joined the board members at the home of Councilman Stuart Shinn on Rotary. Avenue as Dr. Garrett Hume, a faculty member in the ^leech and hearing department at East Carolina University, measured stereo music levels.
The gathering, positioned in the front yard at the street edge of Shinns property,
heard various music levels from Shinns house that measured between 40 and 75 decibels. A reading on Uk ambient noise level of the area measured 42 decibels.
The city is considering a redraft of the ordinance that would permit a residential level of 60 (tecibels until around 10 p.m. and then 55 decibels after that hour.
During the demonstration, noise levels were measured from the yard with windows and doors of the house open and then wdth the house closed up. A reading of 98 decibels was recorded inside the house with the stereo turned up and a level of 48 decibels was measured from
BySTUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer *'
Members of the Greenville Utilities Commission Tuesday night relaxed the water and sewer outfalTline extension policy by voting to allow developers to pay the sewer acerage fee in stages as property is develcqied.
Under the old policy, developers were charged a sewer acreage fee, based on the total gross area of the total parcel of land to be served by the sewer outfall, at the time of application for service.
The relaxed policy will allow developers, if the land is to be developed in phases, to pay the acreage fee as service to the various phases is requited.
The change in policy will serve to lessen the financial burden on a developer if a parcel of land is to be developed in stages, rather than all at once.
T^e fee $700 per acre - is charged to help offset the cost of installing sewer outfall lines. Developers are still responsible for installing sewer and water lines and taps within the development at their own expense.
The commission also approved an electric resale rate schedule. Currently the town of Winterville is the only GUC customer vriiich purchases power from the GUC for resale to its retail customers. *
The new schedule, basically the manner in which Winterville has been billed for some months, ammounts to the resale customer paying the GUC wholesale power cost plus cost of delivery.
In other business, the commission declared a 1965 TD-9 bulldozer as surplus and authorized a negotiated sale of the piece of equipment.
the yard with the doors and windows closed. 'The vard reading was over 70 when the windows were opened. The yard measurements were taken from a point 49 feet from the front door of the Shinn home. i
Some of the residents on hand for the demonstration expressed concern with the noise levels, indicating they felt the levels were too high.
Mac McCarley, assistant city attorney who is working on the pix^wsed ordinance redraft, said a review of the citys complaint file relative to noise indicated that most of the complaints are lodged during the spring and summer when doors and windows are open. Some of the complaints have generally been directed at fraternities.
The council, which will have another workshop to decide the remaining policy issues for the ordinance, will consider how to treat residential area enforcement relative to noise levels, time of day, and whether to include the areas in a permit process that would allow higher levels.
McCarley and ECU student intern Tom Marzilli have conducted public meetings on the proposed ordinance and have discussed the regulation with ECU officials. The council hq>es to take action on the redraft in order to have the ordinance ready for enforcement this spring.
LOST AT SEA MANILA, Philippines (AP) - The U.S. Navy has terminated the search for Jeffrey Lynn McNeil, 21, of Alexandria, Va. who slipped and fell from the destroyer Hull into the South China Sea last Thursday, the 7th Fleet announced Tuesday.
Lengthy Agenda Faces City Council Tomorrow
A lengthy agenda, including two rezoning requests and five community development items, faces the City Council at Thursdays 7:30 p.m. meeting at city hall.
The council will consider requests by: James H. Ward III to rezone two acres, located south of Section 3 of Sedgefield Park subdivision and Pinehurst Drive, east of Memorial Drive, from R-15 (residential) to office and institutional; and by Phillip, Joseph, and William Goodson, to rezone .82 acres, located north of 12th Street, south of the Walter Perkins property, west of Clark Street, and east of the William Taft Jr. and Seaboard Coast Line property, from R-6 (residential) to unoffensive industry.
The CD items include consideration of: an amendment to the resolution authorizing city officials to exercise administrative powers relative to redevelopment policies, programs, and plans of the city; CD budget
amendments; an ordinance establishing the 1982-83 Small Cities/South Evans grant project budget; and r^u-tions approving the sale of two disposal parcels in the Southside project.
Other business on the t agenda includes; appointments to boards and commissions; special use permits for mobile homes; consideration of a resolution endorsing and supporting the establishment of a Recreation and Parks Department Trust with the Greenville Foundation; receipt of the annual report of the planning board; consideration of a resolution declaring intent to close a portion of Sedgefield Drive between St. Andrews Drive and Memorial Drive;
Consideration of three recommendations by the Comprehensive Plan Comrnittee; consideration of' two Greenville Utilities items; tax releases and refunds; privilege license applications; adoption of a resolution declaring equipment
\
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) The state House Tuesday adopted new jules limiting debate and putting House members in their places - at least when votes are being taken.
Among changes adopted are rules limiting a members debate on adopting a minority report to 20 minutes, prohibiting members from speaking on a bill during its first reading and requiring members to be in their seats to push the buttons during electronic voting. *
Also, House members will no longer be allowed to use the question of privilege to take the floor, said Rep. John J. Hunt, D-Cleveland, who chaired the House Rules and Operations Committee.
He said the rule is strictly interpreted to apply only to actions affecting the "safety, dignity and integrity" of the House and its members.
Weve abused this rule of privilege, he said. Weve talked about the score of the (North) Carolina-Wake Forest game.
Other changes adopted:
- Allow only the Speaker of the House to extend the courtesy of the House to visitors in the gallery.
- Change the time allowed for changes of committee assignments from 10 legislative days to 10 days.
- Stipulate that a bill must be in a jacket with 30 copies to be inL'oduced.
- Require that adoption of a substitute bill be immediately followed by a vote for an unfavorable report on the original bUI.
- Require reporters, but not television cameramen, to wear dignified dress in House chambers.
- Require the reconsideration of amendments rather than additional amendments deleting them.
Still Investigate Shooting Death
surplus to the citys needs; amendments to the city personnel policies ordinance; and consideration of a Traffic Commission recommendation.
The council will also consider: a contract for city code supplement services; an audit services contract; a resolution authorizing the execution of an agreement with Southern Railway Co.; a resolution authorizing absentee voting in municipal elections; a technical amendment to the city code;
.An amendment relative to the contract for the second phase of the comprehensive community energy management program; a resolution requesting the General Assembly to dissolve the Tar River Port Commission; and a resolution endorsing and supporting the Carolina Association of Passenger Train Advocates in an effort to promote and secure Amtrak service from Greenville to Raleigh and Charlotte
^ BySTUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer The shooting death of 25-year-old Donald Minges of 105 Templeton Drive early Tuesday morning has been ruled a homicide by Medical Examiner Stan Harris. But Police Chief Glenn Cannon suggested that investigators are still not satisfied.
The medical examiner ruled the death homicide, Cannon said this morning, but we havent made any ruling. There are still several items of physical evidence that have to be examined by the SBI (State Bureau of Investigation) lab.
The dictionary definition of homicide is the killing of ^one human being by another.
Minges called the police department about 5:58 a.m. Tuesday to report that he was hearing "a lot of strange noises and thought someone was trying to break into the rearof his house. i Officers arriving at the Minges home about 2'-. minutes later found the rear door open. WTien they entered the house, they found Minges lying on the floor of the den.
He had been shot one time in the left side of the chest. A 9mm automatic pistol was found on the floor beside the body.
Cannon said today that, while the rear door was found open and there were marks on the door, investigators were told that Minges sometimes left the door open He also said investigators were unable to determine how long the marks had been on the door
Other sources close to the investigation said the bullet that killed Minges will be sent to the SBI lab for examination. But they said
the bullet appears to have ' come from the pistol found beside Minges body.
The sources noted that investigators are trying to determine if the pistol belonged to Minges Dr. Harris, who conducted an autopsy Tuesday, said this morning that he had decided the death was homicidal. There were too many things going on for it not to have been homicidal
He said Minges was dead in moments after being shot, because the bullet perforated the heart.
Skip Bright, who worked with .Minges at Hooker and Buchanan Inc. for about 44 years, said today that Minges was one of the finest young men Ive ever known in my life, and said his death was shocking.
Gilbert Cox. a high school classmate, termed Minges adose friend.
Cox said. "Ive known him for 15 years or longer Weve done a lot together 1 feel like he could get along with anybody.
DONALD MINGES
t
From The Mouths Of
Babes.:.
By Abigail Van Buren
' 1983 by Universal Press Synflicale
KATHLEEN PEATIE GUMMING, VICTORIA. B.C.
DEAR KATHLEEN: Probably not. But the folks back in Sioux City, Iowa, might have guessed: One of the Friedman twins.
DEAR ABBY: I had guests for dinner three times during the holidays. I set a beautiful table and take a great deal of prirle in my conking i
I made everything from scratch, including the turkey dressing, hot breads and desserts. All my efforts seemed so worthless becaise my guests tore into the food and ate so fast you would have thought they were on a l.'i-minute lunch break at a hamburger stand!
What is a hoste.ss to do'. Should I have tapped my water glass with a fork to get everyones attention, and said, "Whoa . . plea.se slow down?
DISCOURAGED
DEAR DISCOURAGED: Although its discouraging to see hours of careful preparation gobbled up in a matter of minutes, hold your tongue. Your guests are paying you a compliment.
To suggest that they slow down would only embarrass them and make everyone feel self-conscious.
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have been invited to a wedding in Chicago next June. Our host and hostess (distant relatives) have asked us to let them know soon if we plan to come so they can reserve a block of rooms fir all the out-of-town guests. We do plan to attend.
My question; Who pays for the room they re.serve for us? If we are expected to pay for it, we dont want to be stuck with one thats too expensive. j How do we handle this? We dont want to be crude, but neither do we want to risk a surprise we cant afford.
COUNTRY COUSINS
DEAR COUSINS: Unless your relatives are very well-to-do, and generous to boot, the guests are probably expected to pick up their own tabs. But leave nothing to chance. Call or write, and ask: (1) Who is paying for the room? (2) How much will it cost? *
DEAR ABBY: Thank you for saying that a doctor doesnt always "know how long a patient has to live; he can only predict.
Mv grandfather was told that he had six months to live in 1919. 1924, 1927, 1944, 19.58 and then again in 1968.
Grandpa went to be with the Lord in 1982. outliving every doctor who told him when he was going to die,
J I IN BAY SHOjiE. N Y.
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AD COLLECTION NEW YORK (AP) - Posters, trade cards, sale catalogs, labels, handbills, invitations and manufacturers premiums will continue on display at the New-York Historical Society until next July 31.
The showing traces the history of advertising in America from the late 18th century to the early 20th century.
The perfect match for\^lentins Day.
Valentines Day is Monday, Februaiy 14.
The beautiful look of fresh flowers. The beautiful scent of Arpege. AD in the FTD - Fragrance 'n Flowers '*' Bouquet
Open Saturday. Feb. 12. And Monday. Feb. 14-9 A.M. to 5 P M.
Open Sunday, Feb. 13-1 P.M. to 5 P.M.
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Send your love with special care.'
Valentines Day Can Sausage, Apples For Brunch
Put Romance Back
In Marriages For Good
DEAR ABBY This isn't a problem, but as it concerns you, I thought It was worth sharing.
I love children and have served as a summer camp director for many years A few years itgo. the children asked me to tell them a (hristmas story, so I told them about the story of Abigail, the innkeepers daughter in Bethlehem Briefly, my story goes like this:
An innkeeper had a daughter named Abigail who was the brat of the village Nobody could stand her, and she was generally known as the Bethlehem brat. However, on the night that Jesus was born, when she heard the goings-on in the stable, she went down to have a look, and there she found Mary and .Joseph and the baby. Mary let Abigail hold the baby Jesus, with the result that she became a very changed little girl, and she never again was known as "that brat, Abigail. or the brat of Bethlehem.
At this point in the story, a 10-year-old boy raised his hand and said. "I'll bet I know what they called her! I said. "Do you, Luv'.'" And he replied, "Yes, Dear Abby! Id never have thought of that in a million years, would
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -A psycbolc^t named Hart says Valentines Day can help put romance back in you^ marriage for good.
Valentines Day can be the first step for many married couples to enhance their relationship, says Temple University professor Gordon Hart, who is also a counseling psychologist with a private practice. His ^ialty is couples and family therapy.
Our society doesnt encourage romance, Hart says. Were too busy, we work too much, and we just dont take
time for te.ndemess.
For couples who arent as romantic as they used to be, Feb. 14 L the one day out of the year whoi its ail right to be mushy.
Hart divides married couples into three groups.
The first includes coiq)les who are OK in the romance department and who make it a ^int to include romance in their relationship.
He says Valentines Day gives them another chance to express their love. Newlyweds tend to be in this group.
The second, and
largest
Intern Toured With Jazz Show
Joni Buck of Greenville traveled last summer as a R.J. Reynolds Industries intern. She did public relations work and accompanied the Jazz In troupe from the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem.
Miss Buck wrote of her experiences in a recent issue of JAFA News, alumni magazine at the University of North Carolina, where she is a graduate student.
When I first accepted the internship, I envisioned a relaxing summer writing press releases, clipping news articles and doing research. I did all thoes things and more, but the pace was anything but relaxing, said Miss Buck.
During its five-week tour, the 27-member troupe gave more than 50 performances in 20 cities across the country. Performance sites included Lincoln Center in New York, Louisville Downs, the Houston Astrodome, Disneyland and an oil rig off the Califomia coast.
Besides being a wonderful way to see the country, Jazz Is provided some valuable on-the-job experience. By necessity, I could not sit back as an intern and wait for step-by-step instructions. I was forced to perform as a fulltime, experienced employee, becoming at once a reporter, tour guide, PR representative and mother hen.
The internship also gave me the opportunity to work under some of the most talented practioners in the public relations field. Their willingness to trust my judgment in some difficult situations was a tremendous incentive and confidence builder, Miss Buck said.
Difficult situations can certainly add up during five weeks on the road. Because of the ti^t performance schedule, time was always of
group, stands to gain the most.
Hart calls them mid-range couples, Although couples who have been married two to 10 years fall into this category, coi^les oi all ages may be middleHif-tbeHroad, romantically.
He says the mid-rangers are committed to each other. Divorce is far from their min(^, txtt kids teid to dmn-inatkbeir lives.
H<V can you be romantic with your wife when (me of your (kids (xmies into the room xrying and says, Tommy i^bed me in the mouth, or, The dog just girt sick?
The psydKriogist says Valentines Day gives these couples a chance to pick out a card or, better yet, write their own message on a card and give some candy or other present.
Its a chance to be expressive with each other.
The third group of coiqiles doesnt fare well during any holiday.
YouD usually find cynics among them, the ones who are in every shaky relationships and believe Valai-tines Day is stupid and a waste of time and money.
Tliey use the occasion to rationalize and help fight off resentment and stress. Hart says.
People in this category usually arent interested in romance or sex or anything.
ByCECHYBROWNSrONE Anodated Prw Food Editor When winter bruncbtimes come around, good cooks know sausage links and apple rings make a delicious and thrifty main com^. And for a really hearty menu, scrambled eggs and buttered ^its are great
Becmise rec^ few Sausage Apito are on the vague side, we wiMted o(k a precise procedure. If you are the sort of cook who likes to know exactly how many a{^ rings may be fried successfully in a specific slpUet, youll probaUy appreciate the following recipe. Because the sausage links are fried rst, and all or part of their fat is used to cook the api^ rings, there is only one utsensil to wash, dry and piit away. And if you use an etecfric or other attractive skiM, you can bring it right to the table.
SAUSAGE APPLES 4 pound (8 small) p(k sausage links, thawed if frozen
3 medium (1 pound) red apples
teaqxwns sugar
GOOD BRUNCH Apple Rings served with golden brown pork sausage Unks.
we
Choose a skillet used a noo-stkk one measuring 12 inches across the ti^ and 10 inches across the bottom. In the skillet, over medium heat, cook the sausages with 2 taUespocms water, covered, for about 4 minutes. Continue cooking, im-cov^, turning the sausages with tongs, until ^Iden brown on aU sides. Drain on paper toweling andkeepwarminaslowovai.il there is more than 2 or 3 tablespoons of fat in the skillet, remove the excess.
rings in all. Add half the apple rings to the hot sausage fat in the skillet; cook over medium heat, turning as necessary with a large spatula (plastic if skillet is nonstick) until the apples are tendw wdien pierced with a fork but still bold their shape. (Time will d^nd on variety of apple used.) Sprinkle the rings with half the sugar. With the spatula, remove apples and keq> warm in a low oven. Add the remaining apple rings to the skillet (using more sausage fat or butter if necessary) and cook the same way. Save at (Bice with the sausage links.
Meanwhile wash and dry the apples; do not peel; core. Cut e^ apple into about '^-incfa thick rings - there should be 12
Makes 2 large or 4 small servings.
Joni Buck
the essence. At one point in the tour, bus trouble made it necessary to fly the entire troupe from Louisville, Ky. to New Orleans to make a performance date. In another bus-related incident, I learned that is costs approximately $220 to recover two buses towed from a San Francisco parking lot, she continued.
By and large, learning experiences on the tour were pleasant ones. I learned to work with various media situations, from press conferences to radio interviews to early-morning talk shows. I also was able to work closely with a team from the Center for Public Broadcasting which followed the troupe in connectio& with a documentary on the School of the Arts.
The internship called for a lot of hard work. The hours 'were extremely long and I was physicaUy and emotionally drained at the end of the tour. But I was also a much better writer and much surer that I wanted a career in the public relations field, she concluded.
Society Has Memorial Tribute Saturday
Eastern
Electrolysis
133 OAKMONT DRIVE, SUITE6 PHONE 75M034, GREENVILLE, N.C. PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST
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A memorial service honoring Sally Hinton Klingenschmitt, who died Dec. 28, 1982, was held Saturday at St. Pauls Episcopal Church.
Sponsored by Beta Alpha chapter of Delta. Kappa Gamma, international honor society for teachers, the service was attended by friends and relatives in the Greenville-Wilson area.
A member of Delta Kappa Gamma since 1945, Mrs. Klingenschmitt became a charter member of Beta Alpha in 1965. The tribute was delivered by H. Frances Daniels, professor of business education at East Carolina University. Music for the service was provided by Andrea Norris, organist and Anne Keel, vocalist. Others participating on the program were Louise WiUiams, Ruby Edens and Sallie Mann, president of the group.
A breakfast meeting was held by the members. Linda Warner, of the ECU
psychology faculty, was guest speaker. Her program topic was Provocative Techniques for Self-Improvement. She focused on meditation for relaxation, citing cases in which various tbou^t control techniques overcome the frustration of real life situations.
Anne Briley was named for recommendation to the Eta State Nominations Committee for consideration as a nominee for state office in Delta Kappa Gamma.
Irma Worthington urg^ members to participate in Friendship Force.
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Marilyn Miniatiire
FURS AND DIAMONDS Robert Seidaiberg, vice prudent of Work! Doll Inc. shows off a porcelain replica of Marilyn Mrairoe dressed in diamonds and mink during a promotion in New York. The doll will retail for $6,000. (AP Laserphoto)
Cooking Is Fun
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Pres Food Editw
Births
SLTPER FARE Ham & Baked Hommy Salad & Biscuits Baked .\pple & Beverage
The Daily Renector, Greenville. N.C.-Wednesday, February 9,19*3-3
to edges Pour remaining u ci^ milk around edges to flow down and under hominy as much as x^ible. Sprinkle with salt and cker crumbs: dot with butter cheese Bake in a preheated :i50-degree oven until golden brown - 60 minutes Let stand at
Whitley Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Whitley Jr., Fountain, triplets, a daughter, Tcmya Raee, and two sons, Benjamin Wayne and James Donbas, on Feb. 2, 1%3, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Evans
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Earl Evans Jr., Ayden, a dau^ter, Michelle Elizabeth, on Feb. 3,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
BAKED HO.MIN'Y A small-size version of one of our favonte recipes.
Salt
1 cup milk
2 tablespoons fine cracker crumbs
1 tablespoon butter
2 tablespoons grated (medium-fineI cheddar cheese
dllU
rs
\ :i50-<
room temperature for 10 minutes, serve at once. .Makes 3 servings
1-pound can whole white hominy l-2 tablespoons butter I'-j tablespoons flour
Drain hominy well and turn into a buttered 0-inch glass pie plate Make a while sauce of the butter, flour, K teaspoon salt and 4 cup of the milk gently spread sauce over hominy but not quite
Fresh Rolls Daily
DIENER'S BAKERY
115 DtcMnton Am.
Dixon
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Ray Dixon, Route 1. Greenville, a daughter, Kewana Rena, on Feb. 3, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Ho^i-tal.
Wood
Bora to Mr. and Mrs, Rory Allen Wood Sr., Hookerton, a son. Brooks Lee, on Feb. 3, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
CORRECTION
In Swars Sl For Bargain Huntars section many of you received in the mail, the following merchandise will not be available for this sale: On page 15, Misses Essentially Separates and on page 21, curling irons, and maternl-ty panty hose. We apologize for any inconvenience.
Sears, RoebHck&Co.
GrMnvill*. N.C.
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4-TheDay Reflector. GreenvUle, N.C.-Wednesday, February 9,1963 ,
Industry Selling Tool
IF THE DOaORS COULD ONLY AGREE!
Gov. Jim Hunt made it official on a visit here last week that Greenville can expect to receive a $7.8 million federal grant to construct its new 10.5 million-gallon-per-day wastewater treatment plant, probably this year.
The grantj accompanying a state grant, and the $2 million fund the local utilities has saved for the project will mean that none of the $4 million in bonds which voters approved for the project will have to be issued.
The governor praised local efforts to plan the facility and noted that there might be another 10 percent grant as a bonus from the Environmental Protection Agency for advanced technology incorporated in the project.
He offered commendations for the plan, which provides land to meet Greenvilles needs for 40 years rather than the usual 20.
The governor said the project will mean Greenville will no longer have to turn away new industry or discourage population growth. In ?^ort, this project means that Greenville is back in business, and no one is happier about that than me.
The turn this project has taken will mean a great deal to every Greenville Utilties customer since the customers will not have to pay off the $4 million in bonds originally anticipated.
Equally important, those who are entrusted with seeking new industries for Pitt County have no excuse not to push forward with their mission. It is not necessary to wait until the waste water plant is completed to use it as a selling tool in seeking new industries and the jobs they will provide for area workers.
Let us sell our advantages industries now.
to
First Sign Of Improvement?
There was at last a favorable report from Washington last week that the nations unemployment rate fell from 10.8 percent in December to 10.2 percent for January.
Never mind that the military was included for the first time. Without that there would have still be a drop in January to 10.4 percent.
The important thing is that there may have been a peak in the unemployment rate, particularly
THIS AFTERNOON
when we know that some auto workers have recently been called back to work.
The millions unemployed are still a national tragedy. Some will never go back to their old jobs because the positions have been eliminated.
A downturn in the unemployment rate is most positive, however. We hope it is indicative of a trend that will see unemployed Americans back at productive jobs.
By ART BUCHWALD
Other Side Of A Coin
The Consequences
By FAULT. OCONNOR
RALEIGH - One development which has made this recession so much worse than others in recent years is that heads of households have been particularly hard hit by unemployment. The news * media has correctly emphasized the hardships caused when a familys primary wage earner loses his job.
But another aspect of the unemployment problem may have far more serious longterm implications for both North Carolina and the nation. Youth unemployment is at a crisis level and one researcher writing for the N.C. 2000 Commission says today's youth unemployment spells trouble down the road.
Clark G. Ross, an economics professor at Davidson College, says youth un
employment IS running 250 percent higher than that for the general population. This
FAULT. OCONNOR
joblessness is a problem that has long-term consequences not just for the individual
Public Forum
I>ettep> submitted for Public Forum should be limited to 300 'Aord.s The editor reserv es the nght to edit longer letters
young person but for society as a whole, he writes in Fopular Government magazine.
The states December unemployment rate was nine percent. The latest figures available on youth (age 16-19) unemployment in North Carolina show that the average annual rate during 1981 was 17.2 percent. Remember, the recession got worse in 1982.
Ross says high youth unemployment raises four especially disturbing consequences for society.
As with all unemployment, joblessness among the young denies our economy of their potential contributions. For every one percent increase in the, jobless rate, theres a three percent change in the gross national product.
Second, being unable to get a job can lead young people to withdraw permanently from the labor force, a phenomenom that economists term the discouraged worker effect, he says. Faced with constant frustration in his attempts to (Flease turn to Fage 5)
WASHINGTON - Larry Speaks, as all presidential press secretaries seem to do when their boss is in trouble, took out after the press the other day. In a speech he complained about coverage of the bad economic news by the media, as opposed to the good news.
When inflation was at 13 percent, he complained, the media reported it. Now that it is 3 percent (thats Larrys figure, not mine) the press has ignored the fact that the Reagan administration licked the countrys number one problem.
Speakes also questioned the public opinion polls that indicated the American pecle considered unemployment the present No. 1 problem.
And why not? he asked his audience. Every night we have seen the unemployed line up and march across the television screen, and I certainly would not make light of the people who are unemployed ... But why is it that 10.8 percent is news, but 89.2 percent of Americans who are employed and enjoy the highest standard of living is not?
Larry posed a good question. Why arent the news programs covering the employed people instead of tbe unemployed? And how would they handle it, if they did?
This is Tom Brokaw in New York. The big news tonight is that 89.2 percent of all Americans who want jobs
To the editor:
So many of us who have passed 70 years of age and have worked all our life and have been paying Social Purity ever since there has been a Social Security Administration are having to pay bills on top of bills. We cant pay our doctors. We keep getting bills from our doctor. Medicare doesnt pay and some of our checks dont amount to $200.1 have not heard of a Democrat,^or a Republican who is concerned about us. Sometimes I am in awesome wonder. Just why should we vote Democratic or Republican
Chesterfield Fayton ,
606 McKinley Ave.
The Daily Reflector
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Other Editors Say Important Ruling
(Washing Daily News)
In no way do we offer criticism of anyones religion here nor do we imply any such criticism. We are dealing solely in the educational field, and we do have some pertinent questions regarding teaching children at home rather than in either public or private schools.
In a Harnett County case. Superior Court Judge Gordon Battle has ruled that teaching children at home does not violate North Carolina law. Judge Battle based his decision on that part of the N.C. General Statutes which says The General Assembly shall provide that every child of appropriate age and of sufficient mental and physical ability shall attend the public schools unless educated by other means.
Those last five words form the key this decision. Unless educated by other means, in Jud^ Battlete decision means that parents may teach their children at home. But this decision is bound to bring up many good questions, and surely the decision will be appealed to higher court.
Firstly, are parents truly qualified to teach at home? Are adequate facilities available? Is the association with other children a real part of the educational processes? From where does adequate supervision, testing, and the like come from?
In this case the parents say they are teaching their two children (ages six and seven, one a boy and the other a girl) at home because they believe the Bible instructs them to do so. So this family is teaching its two children at home, according to testimony given in court, for relipous reasons.
But as we look at the problem, parents trying to teach two children are almost sure to fail because they cannot have the adequate materials, the proper atmosphere and the association with other children which we consider vital and important for well-rounded ediKational proc^.
The Harnett County educational officials claim that failure to send these children to public schools violates the states compulsory attendance law. This family was brought into court by the Harnett County School Board on this charge.
In truth, the final court decision on this case is most important. It will be an answer a^ to the very fitness of parents to seek to educate their children at home versus the law which requires attendance at public or private schools.
have them. Irving K. Levine reports on the pli^t of one of these men in Scarsdale,New York.
This is Irving R. Levine and Im standing here with Frank Davis, broker for E.F.
ART BUCHWALD
Hutton, who is one of the millions of people now employed in the United States. To the Reagan administration, Davis is just another statistic. But in human terms, he and his family tell the real story of what is going on in America today.
Frank, this is a lovely house you have.
Yup. Its worth $250,000. But since Im working. Im not about to sell it.
How much do you make a year?
With bonuses about $100,000.
Then you dont have to depend on food stamps, unemployment insurance or use up your savings to keep ^ing?
Certainly not. We eat very well, and we have enough money left over to own a boat, and send our kids to private
schools, and go out to a good restaurant when it moves us. If the stock market keeps up the way it is, we might buy a second home in East Hampton.
Does being employed make you feel any different than being unemirioyed? Very much so. It makes me feel good. I like to work, and I enjoy being paid for it, and Im not mad at anybody.
How does your wife feel about you being employed? She thinks its just great. Shes very supportive, as are the children, that Im making it during the recession. I dont know what Id do without them.
But dont you get discouraged sometimes and say to yourself, Tm sick and tired of working, and Im going to throw in the towel.?
I imagine the thought has occurred to me. But my wife and I like nice things, and if I threw in the towel, we couldnt afford them. Were going on a ski trip next week toVaU.
Then youre not angiy at Fresident Reagan b^ause you have a job?
Why should I be made at Reagan? Hes not to blame because Im making a good living.
(Cut to Irving R. Levine standing beside the Davis swimming pool, alone.)
Frank Davis is an example of one of the 89.2 percent of the American working class, blessed with all the things this country has to offer. Unlike the 10.9 percent who are unemployed, he believes in tax cuts, military aid to foreign governments and an increase in defense spending. He may not represent all the employed people (Flease turn to Fage 5)
Nixon Keeps Up Interest
By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK WASHINGTON-Although ex-representative Margaret Hecklers liberal voting record did not dissuade Fresi-dent Reagan from nominating her to be secretary of health and human services, Richard M. Nixon was outraged that an anti-Reaganite should join the Reagan Cabinet.
Nixon minced no words in unloading his feelings to a Reagan aide in private conversation. Showing how closely the former president still follows national affiars and politics, he detailed Hecklers voting record against the principles of the Reagan administration. Hecklers name rang no such alarm bells with Reagan himself when it was presented to the president by his staffers.
Nixon also disputed the wisdom of naming another woman to the Cabinet immediately after the selction of Elizabeth Dole as secretary of transportation. Contending Reagans Cabinet needs balancing in other directions, Nixon asked rhetorically: What about an Italian? What about a Jew?
TheFopelnFoland
Fresident Reagans top foreign policy advisers hope that the trip by Fope John Faul II to his native Foland planned for this summer will stir up trouble among the oppressed Folish peqple and perhaps force Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski to relax his Stalinist rule.
That explains why word has been quietly passed to the Vatican from Washington that the Reagan administration strongly favors the papal visit despite outrageous restrictions insisted on by the communisy regime in Warsaw. Jaruzelski is demanding total control over the pqies sermons, homilies, schedules and street crowds' in Foland to protect against anti- communist incidents.
The pope has not yet officially confirmed that he will make his second papal visit to Foland. Nevertheless, White House officials believe the trip is certain unless blocked at the last minute by fear of the Warsaw regime that John Fauls presence would generate uncontrollable outbursts against Jaruzelski.
(?old-ShouIdering Jerry Falwell
Although.the Rev. Jerry Falwell has been a tireless booster of Rwvald Reagain, the presidents senior aides prefer that the head of the Moral Majority keep his distance from the White House.
When a routine request from Falwell to see Reagan came before the senior staff meeting last week, widespread concern was voiced about adverse public relations. Maybe we can invite him (Falwell) over to the mansion for a drink wth the president, cracked deputy chief of staff Michael Deaver. It was decided to postpone consideration of the Falwell visit until the next staff, meeting.
That treatment of Reaganite Falwell fits the present White House strategy of trying to mute the presidents conservative image ,and seek broader associations. For example, Chrysler chief Lee lacocca is being lionized at the White House despite no past record of sup--port for either Reagan or Reagan programs.
Kissingers Return
Secretary of State George Shultz has elevated Henry Kissinger to the eminence of an unofficial senior adviser by conferring, more often than he lets on, in quiet, tete a-tete lunches with his heavily-publicized predecessor..
The lunches, held in Shultzs private dining room on the seventh floor of the State Department, take place once every two or three weeks. As a result, some Shultz intimate worry that the worlds most famous diplomat is having entirely too much influence on the worlds newest diplomat. When named by Fresident Reagan, Shultz had no diplomatic experience.
Shultz still intends to keep tapping Kissingers brain for advice, and neither the president nor any White Hoi^ staffer has complained. That poses this irony: Loathed by hard-line Reaganauts during Reagans campaign for the presidential nomination, Kissinger now has beime essential (the word of one State Department official) to the making of Reagan ad-
(FleasetumtoFageS)
Strength For Today
THE NATURE OF CRISIS
The (Chinese character for the word crisis is made up of two other characters which mean, respectively, danger, and opportunity.
We can learn much by studying the derivation of words. Crisis, say the Chinese, is a situation fraught on one hand with danger and on the other with opportunity. There is never a crisis, no matter how mild it may be, which does not involve a certain jeopardy. No one of us ever faces a crisis in the home, in business matters, or in decisions about health which does not involve some hazard.
But every crisis is also an opportunity. We can choose the wrong way out of it, but in every crisis there is opportunity to decide aright.
God has a providential plan for every one of us, and that plan leads through every crisis of life. If we ask Him to guide us at these crossroads, we can be sure that He will always do so.-EMa Douglass
Number Of Jobs Did Not Rise
ByJOHNCUNNlFF AF Business Analyst
NEW YORK (AF)-It isa tossup whether it was the slide in the January jobless rate or the White Houses exultant response to it that was the m(t interesting economic news of the past few days.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics announced a decline in the jobless rate to 10.2 percent in January from 10.8 percent in December, creating confidence in and beyond the White House.
But muffled by it all was the disturbing news that the number of jobs didnt rise at all. And even worse, that the number of jobless actually rose to 12,517,000 from 11,628,000.
And perhaps worst of all: A process designed to remove statistical aberrants might actually have introduced some.
Several things made the results appear positive, chief among them being seasonal adjusting, which is a technique for processing the raw count, and the addition to the
employed rolls of military personnel.
If you think such procedures are unfair, you have lots of company. But you must remember that no matter what emerges from the statistical machinery will be questioned. Statistics appear to be hard and precise; they really are soft.
This is how Janet L. Norwood, BLS commissioner, explained the procedure to Congress last Friday, Feb. 4.
Seasonal adjustment is a statistical process designed to remove or to filter out from the data movements in the time series due to such seasonal events as changes in the weather, major holidays, Christmas sales, and the q)ening and closing of schools.
TTie purpose of such tampering' is to remove temporary statistical changes that blur the longer-term underlying trend.
'This January, she continued, there were several departures from the usual seasonal patterns. Winter was milder than usual, sales
slower than normal, fall hiring and January firing less than usual.
Therefore, she concluded, The evidence suggests that the seasonal adjustment process may have somewhat exaggerated the December to January change in the data released this morning.
But wait. Wasnt the seasonal adjusting process supposed to eliminate exag-gerationas so as to create a clearer picture of the economy? Yes, it was. And so was the latest change in the Consumer Frice Index.
In this years monthly CFI reports, a rental equivalent will be substituted for the price of homes and the cost of mortgag^, one reason being criticisms that high home and mortgage costs exaggerated the index.
These high costs, critics pointed out, were confined to those who bought houses or renegotiated mortgages, a relatively small percentage of all families. Existing owners, for example, generally werent affected.
The new standard begins with the January figures.
scheduled to be released Feb. 25. Because of a shift in housing-rental costs, the timing could prove unfortunate, especially for those trying to prove inflation is waning.
Mortgage costs, for example, have been falling, and housing prices have almost stabilized. But those who make a living renting out apartments say that rents are poised for a sharp, abnormal ascent.
Landlords - among them the operators of huge real estate limited partnerships that own many thousands of units - argue that rents have lagged increases in other living costs. As they put it, rents will be adjusted upward.
If home-ownership costs rose sharply enough to exaggerate the CFI, cant the same be said for sharply rising rental expenses? It would seem so.
And it would seem also that those tight little numbers through which so many people interpret the economys movements might bear sharper examination.
mmm
Th DUy Rcnector, Greenville, N.C - Wednesday, February 9.1983-5
O'Connor Col..
(Contimied from page4)
get\a job. the teen decides the situation is iK^ess. He stops looking and, in many cases, he loses a great deal of self-respect. This decision can be permanently debilitating, Ross says.
Third, the young person is not learning how to work. At a time when he should be learning job habits like punctuality, responsibility, dependability and the ability to acc^t supervision, hes not vrorking at all. Without these characteristics, a young job-hunter is permanently handicapped in finding employment. Also, employers often view skep-tically applicants for employment who have not held a job or been in school during the 16 to 24 age period.
Fourth, the worst unemployment is hitting the poor. The black teen unemployment rate has been as high as 50 percent. No doubt there are many other young blacks who arent even counted in that statistic. The current high youth unemployment, therefore, is likely to perpetuate the economic disadvantages of whole classes of current poor. If the poor kids cant get jobs and learn how to work, if they cant build the resume theyll need to get jobs as adults, theyre as likely to be poor as their parents were.
Ross doesnt highlight one other consequence' of high youth unemployment social turmoil. History can point to many cases of political rebellion helped in great part by the energy of young people angry about the absence of a role for them in society. While the youth unemployment rate may not bring social or [wlitical revolution to the United States, it is bringing turmoil.
Common sense tells you that a youngster unable to find work to earn an honest living is much mor susceptible to the temptations of seeking a dishonest way of making some money.
Buchwald Col____
(Continued From Pagei) in this country, but his story is worth telling because it gives a true picture of what is really going on in the country today.
Tomorrow well talk to another employed person who is doing very well as a golf pro in Palm Springs, California. This is Irving R. Levine in Scarsdale, New York.
(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate ,
Shot To Death In An Exchange
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -Larry Oakley, 32, was shot to death in an exchange of gunfire with a cab driver early Tuesday, police said.
Oakley, of Raleigh, entered the Ebony Cab Co. downtown at 3:30 a.m. and fired three or four shots from a .22 caliber pistol at cab driver Melvin Scott, who pulled out a gun and shot back, officers said.
An Orbiting Junkyard
Soviet satellite Cornos 1402 plunged harmlessly back to Earth last month. But the satellites fuel core, which may still contain radioactive materials, remained in orbit. Experts thought it might fall to Earth this week. Cosmos 1402 is one of more than 13,750 satellites that have been launched into orbit since 1957. At present count, almost 4,800 of these satellites and other bits of debris are still out there. Every year, up to 550 man-made objects in orbit fall back to Earth out of control. Most bum up when they enter Earths atmosphere. But, in 1978, Cosmos 954 another Soviet satellite dropped out of orbit and scattered radioactive debris over the Northwest Territories of Canada.
DO YOU KNOW - Which nation has the most man-made devices in Earth orbit?
TUESDAY'S ANSWER - Gerald Ford was the first Eagle Scout to become President of the United States.
2-^3 VEC, Inc. 1983
Evans-Novak...
(Continued from page 4)
minstration foreign policy.
Wooing Bert Lance
Walter F. Mndale is seeking to attract Southern delegates* to the 1984 Democratic National Convention through one of Jimmy Carters closet political associates: former budget director Bert Lance, who is not (Georgia Democratic state chairman.
Lance is a key figure in trying to get the Southern Democrats to work together in picking the partys presidential nominee, in-sisting that and Democrat who hopes to carry Dixie in
the general election had better campaign there during the primaries. Despite Mon-dales concern over being linked too closely to Carter, his well-organized campaign operation understand and is attentive to Lances desires.
Accordingly, Mndale will tour the South early on March 6 and 7, winding up in Atlanta March 8 for a Georgia Democratic dinner run by Lance. Beyond that, the former vice president has renewed old ties with Lance from the first year of tiie Carter administration, established before he resided under fire from the office of Management and Budget.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.
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TALLYING RESULTS... Pitt County Schools volunteers began work Tuesday compiling the information from the completed needs assessment survey filled out by employees, school advisory council and PTO members. The surveys went out last
fall and the results will be used, county school officials said, to set up a five-year plan based on need for the iodi^dual schools and the central office. (Barry Gaskins Photo)
Large Turnout For School Bd. Meet
WILL1AMSTN - A large number of persons were on hand at the February meeting of the Martin County Board of Education, seeking action to upgrade Skewarkee Park, an aging athletic facility where the schools baseball and football teams play.
\ request has been presented to the board for funding totaling $175,362 for improvements and constructions at the field. The request includes $75,000 each for a new field house and aluminum bleachers. Johnny
Burn 'Spoiled' Rocket Fuel
TILLAHOMA. Tenii. i.APi - .About 9,000 pounds of spoiled solid rocket fuel left over from an MX missile engine testing accident has been burned safely, the Air Force says.
The fuel was destroyed Monday at the Air Forces Arnold Engineering Development Center. Maj. Thomas Koch said Tuesday.
Rogers, spokesman for the group, urged the board to support the idea.
In their response to the public request, boaird members said it will need to be considered as a special budget item in the 1983-84 budget.
It was pointed out that even if a new sports field was constructed at Williamston High School at a future date, there is not sufficient space for both a football and
baseball field, so that the old Skewarkee facility would still be needed for play.
- The school board approved funds left over from a parking project at Farm Life School to be used for beautification of the grounds. Wayne Peel reported to the board that because of citizen voiunteer help on the paving project, the work was done at about $5,000 less than, was budgeted.
Dr. Danny Price reported
that the Martin County Social Services Department has been asked to help to control a persistent lice problem which has been going on at Rodgers School since September,
Projects Announced By Pitt-Greenville C-of-C
A legislative workshop and a program called Coffee With Your N.C. Legislators are two projects announced by the State Concerns Task Force of the Public and Governmental Affairs Council of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce after its recent meeting.
The projects are planned in addition to the task forces re^ar program of work, said David Scearce, task force chairman.
The legislative workshop is schedul^ Thursday at the Holiday Inn in Greenville and will feature Gene Hill of the North Carolina Citizens for Business and Industry headquartered in Raleigh.
Coffee With Your Legislators will features state Reps. Ed Warren, Walter B. Jones Jr. and John Gillam and Sen. Vernon White. These four will meet informally with interested persons at 10 a.m. every second and fourth Monday at the Fleming House.
In addition, Scearce said, a reception will be held in Raleigh for all the General
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MOFFinS MACNAVOX
2803-B EVANS ST. 756-8444
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CORRECTION
The following item was Incorrectly furnished to the Dally Reflector. The Item appears IrTtodays paper on page 40. It should have read...
MAOLAMILK
GALLON JUG
$|M
Assembly on ^ril. Representatives from East Carolina University, the ECU
Club Planning Music Lessons
Town and Country Senior Citizens Gub held its business meeting recently with 80 members and gue^ attending.
Rosemary Fischer spoke to the group concerning music lessons for the elderly. The classes, she said, will run ei^t weeks with two 45-minute sessions per week at 10 a.m.
Members who signed up for the music lessons are requested 4o meet at Hooker Memorial Church on Greenville Boulevard Monday at 10 a.m. Interested senior citizens should contact Mrs. Fischer at 752-4357.
It was reported that members will help the March of Dimes at the Mall-A-Rama at Carolina East Mall March 24-26.
The deposits for the Dis-neyworld trip scheduled for May 9 must be paid by Feb. 17, club President Sarah Ashton said.
Medical School and immbers of all four councils of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce will be attending, benoted.
We have never hosted a gala party fw our legislators as have other universities
around the state, said Scearce, so now with the medical school in full swing the opportunity for doing so has presented itself.
Details on the trip, he said, may be obtained by calling the chamber of commerce.
Complete Radiator Service
Auto Specialty Co.
917W SIhSt.
758-1131
jooll^ Factory Outlet
10
Grimctland, N.C., Hwy. 33
logs
Special On
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Located in Old Grimesland School House ' On Hwy. 3,3
Hours: Thurs -Fii. 9:.30-5 Sat. 9:,30-3.30
Try Us Youll Be Glad You Did
Balloons
Well send a bunch! or with flowers with candy (chocolate, cinnamon hearts, or jelly bellies) in a box (UPS anywhere)
Jefferson Florist
W. 5th St.
Open Sunday, Feb. 12, Noon til 6 P.M.
greenville
EASTERN CAROLINA'S MOST COMPLETE COSMETIC AND FRAGRANCE STORE. . .
Valenti nes'Day February 14
Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Urjtil 9 p.m.-Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
The Forecast For
Thursday. February 10
Low Temp(rat(jf(*s
Fronts: Cold
Statfonory
WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service forecasts rain and showers Thursday for the Southeast. Raip is expected
for the Pacific Northwest and mixed Stowers and snow flurries are due in the central and northern Plains. (AP Laserphoto)
By The Associated Press Rain will fall in many parts of North Carolina tonight and Thursday, while mountain areas should be prepared for snow.
Occasional rain will spread into southwestern North Carolina by this evening and slowly across the west and south portions of the state later tonight.
Precipitation will likely take the form of light snow across the northern half of the mountains tonight and become mixed with rain on Thursday.
Thursday will be cloudy with periods of rain and temperatures mostly in the
40s with the exception of some 50s near the coast and some 30s in the northern mountains. Some rain will linger into Friday as an area of low pressure moves northeast through the Carolinas.
High pressure extending down across the Ohio Valley region and into the southeastern states continued a clear sky across most of the state during the night. A few clouds were noted across the mountains.
High pressure gave us a sunny sky across the region on Tuesday. Rather cold air covered the state and inspite of the sunshine, tempera
tures only managed to reach the 40s. The northern mountains stayed in the 30s. The actual range was from 35 at Boone and Spruce Pine to 50 at Fayetteville.
High pressure started today off on a sunny note, but some increase in cloudiness was brought in by our next weather-maker now developing over west Texas. This low pressure area is expected to move eastward along the Gulf Coast states later tonight and Thursday. This will bring an increasing chance of rain spreading our way by tonight and into Thursday.
Senate Prepares Dram Shop Bill Amendment
ByJOHNFLESHER
Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Gov. Jim Hunts drunken driving legislation may emerge from state House and Senate committees next week ^ but not without changes in its dram shop provision, lawmakers say.
Bill sponsors Sen. Henson Barnes and Rep. Martin Lancaster, both D-Wayne, say they hope to end committee work on the package next week, though some legislators were skeptical it would happen that quickly.
Lieutenant Governor (Jimmy) Green has indicated that he is very anxious for us to get finished on this, Barnes said. Its been debated for a long time and we need to get it to the floor.
Meanwhile, a Senate Judiciary 111 subcommittee prepared to discuss possible amendments to the dram shop statute being drafted Tuesday by legislative staff attorneys at Barnes request.
The amendments were said to deal with the statutes controversial requirement that establishments selling alcoholic beverages be insured and the extension of liability created by the statute to firms that sell alcohol for off-premises consumption.
Sen. Ben Tison, D-Mecklenburg, chairman of the subcommittee considering the dram shop section, said he might convene his V panel today if the amendments are ready.
Barnes, chairman of the full Judiciary 111 committee, said the amendments put into writing some of the most frequently mentioned objections to the dram shop statute. He said theyre not necessarily Javored by anyone on the committee.
We feel that its best to have some possible amendments drafted before we get started, rather than deciding what we want and then having to start from scratch, Barnes said.
As presently written, the bill would make people who sell alcoholic beverages subject to civil suits if they serve people already drunk or underaged who later cause accidents whether the beverages were sold for on-premises consumption as in a restaurant or for off-premises drinjiing such as by a grocery or convenience store.
It would require that any business selling alcohol be insured to make certain it would be able to pay in case its sued. ,
The off-premises provision has come under strong attack from some lawmakers and lobbyists for the businesses, who say it would shift responsibility from the drinker to the seller.
Supporters respond that
its only fair for the dealers to have k)me liability. Lancaster, chairman of the House Judiciary III Committee, said a weekend accident in Greensboro that killed four teenagers shows the dram shop statute is needed.
The youths were killed Saturday when a car driven by a fifth teenager smashed into several tres. Greensboro police say the victims, all below the legal drinking age, had purchased beer earlier that night without being asked to show identification.
The driver, who wasnt hurt, has been charged with manslaughter and driving under the influence.
It is indeed sad that it takes a tragedy such as this to graphically illustrate the need for this bill, Lancaster said. Clearly, there is a need to impose responsibility on dealers with so little regard for the law.
Tison said he would introduce a bill making it illegal for minors to attempt to purchase alcoholic beverages. Its illegal for anyone under 18 to buy beer and wine, while the minimum age for drinking hard liquor is 21, but attempted purchases by minors are not illegal.
FtiE-nSElF SHOPPE
DO-IT VOIWSELF i 48 HOUR CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING
606 Arlington Blvd. Telephone 756-7454
OPEN T0NITEUNTIL9 P.M.
Say something loving'on February 14.
Valentine's Day Canls
Showersmui PlurriesF^
STARTS TOMORROW!
HOME
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FASH ON
ISAIi
Super Savings Up to ^21 on Warm Blankets for You
25%
Off
Regular 8.00 to 85.00
Large assortment of warm cozy blankets to help you beat the cold of winter! Choose from electric blankets, sheet blankets, thermal blankets and more. Polyester and acrylic electric blanket with single control. Three colors. Twin and full sizes. Polyester/cotton sheet blanket available in flat and fitted styles. All sizes. Thermal 100% acrylic blanket with 5 nylon binding. Provides warmth without weight. Size 72x90 only. Virgin acrylic blanket in twin and double sizes. Stock up today while our prices are right!
Our supplies are going fast!
STARTS TOMORROW!
Cannon Main Street Towel Sale!
Flowerdesign towels in bath, hand, A fi
washclothsizes. Reg. 1.49 to 3.49........................../O Off
StatePride Regal Rose Spreads!
Woven matelasse-type bedspread. Twin, 0 K
full.queen, king. Reg.$29to$48............. hi W /O Off
Aurora Bedspreads Up to $12 Off!
Fully quilted spreads. Twin, queen, 0 R
full and king sizes. Reg. m to $50.......................... W /W Off
Martex Trianon Sheet Special!
AnISthcenturylook.All Cl 1 fl I R J II
sizes.Regular$13to$23...................we lU to Iwa Iw
CannonSanta CruzTowel Special
Fringed towels in bath and / ||f| X |1||
hand sizes. Val. Up to 4.50. ..................fa U V and U U W
StatePride Ritz Bath Rug Sale!
DuPont nylon barrel shaped rugs with |
waffle backing. Reg. 4.50 to 19.00...... /O Off
Great Buy pn Juliet Bath Rugs!
Thick shag pile rugs in many colors 0 K
and sizes. Machine wash. Special..................... ....faW /w Off
Cannon Royal Touch Towel Sale!
Bath, hand, wash, bath mat, \ II11
bath sheet. Reg. 4.50 to $29................U e VU tofaWeUU
Nomad Bedroom Ensemble Reduced!
Martexcomforter,sheets | || ^|| 1 | X 1111
and more. Reg. $15 to $160.......... I W W V to I IfaeWW
Save Over ^5 on Acrylic Blankets!
White, blue and beige blankets. 72x90" size ^ UK
only. Machine wash and dry. Regular 13.00............. e W
Martex Vellux Blankets for You
Slightly irregular in all | || Q Q |K QJl
sizes. If Parf. $30 to $52............. IWeWV to ll/eVV
Save 23% on Hampton Blankets!
Acrylic green, gold, bone and light blue K QW
blankets in 72x90" size only. Reg. 9.00...'........ ................w WW
Special Savings on Cannon Royal Classic Towels Now!
Throw Pillows Up to ^6 Off Just for You!
1.88.5.88
Regular 2.50 to 7.50
Lovely assortment of solid color towels with dobby border and 100% combed cotton loops to accent your bath! Bath, hand, fingertip and washcloth sizes available in eighteen colors.
Selected group of pillows to add just the right accent to any room! Prints and solids made of corduroy, velplush, cotton, antique satin, satin. Stock up while prices are low!
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Cannon Collegiate Towels at a Savings
25/<
O
Regulan.79 to 3.99
Solid color all terry towels complete with 100% cotton loops and decorative dobby border. Pink, rose, mocha and fern green colors. Available in bath, hand and washcloth sizes. Machirie wash and dry. Hurry while supplies last!
Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9p.m. Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
8-TheDailyRefleclor,GreenvUle,N.C.Wednesday, February 9,1*83 *
Gov. Hunt Urges Truckers To Return To Highways
RvTtw^Assnriated Press Tuesday night or
By The Associated Press
Gov. Jim Hunt says North Carolina is taking extra precautions to ensure the safety of truckers on state highways, and Hunt is calling on independent truckers to resume their normal shipment schedule to help the economy.
"The state is working in every way it can with local law enforcement agencies to ensure the safe flow of truck traffic on our roads,.and highways, and I hope truckers will return to the road as soon as possible. Hunt said in a prepared statement Tuesday .
Hunt said the drivers play an important role in the states economy and that "interruptions in normal truck traffic cost the people of our state jobs and monev.
Elbert Peters, executive vice president of the N.C. Motor Carriers .Association, said safety officers at trucking companies and state weigh stations indicates that traffic is increasing on North Carolina highways.
We think the strikes beginning to diminish some. Peters said.
Lt. Walter Chapman of the North Carolina Highway Patrol also said there have been more trucks on the highways this week.
"Truck traffic is picking up not only during daylight hours but during night hours too, Chapman said, adding that troopers across the state reported that truck traffic was noticeably heavier Monday night than it had been for nearly a week.
Officials at the State Farmers Market in Ralei^ said 50 trucks checked in between Friday and Monday seven more than the number unloading the week before as the strike was gearing up.
Meanwhile, reports of violent incidents have dropped from a high of 16 last Wednesday to three on Tuesday.
The patrol said early today that it had not received reports of any incidents late
Tuesday night or early today.
Larry Philbeck, 30. of Rutherfordton said two tires on his rig were blown out by gunfire as he drove on Interstate 85 in Granville County. Philbeck, who was not injured, said he heard a shot hit over the cab of the truck about 150 yards from an overpass near Creed-moor.
"I thought theyd hit the side window. I wasnt about to stop; I was too scared, he said. "The next thing 1 knew something was vibrating and I knew theyd hit the tire. Philbeck said he continued several miles down the highway before stopping.
The incident was not re ported to authorities, however.
.Meanwhile, police reported two incidents of objects being thrown through tractor-trailer windshields
Ronald Louis Whitted of Fayetteville told state troopers an object was thrown through his windshield as he drove on U.S. 401 south of Fayettevile Tuesday morning. Chapman said. Whitted was not injured.
In the another incident, a snowball with a rock in it was thrown through the windshield of a tractor-trailer south of Kemersville on N.C. 150. Forsyth County sheriffs officials said.
James K. Bray, 49, of King, was treated at Forsyth Memorial hospital for ^ass in his eyes after the incident which happened just outside Kemersville Monday night.
EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.
Chance of statewide precipitation Friday and Saturday, mainly in the east Sunday. Highs in 50s for east Friday; hi^s Saturday and Sunday mostly in the 40s. Low each ni^t in the 30s except near 40 in southeast.
Carolina east mall ^^greenville
Anchor Hocking GlasWare Monogrammed FREEI
You are invited to come in and visit our Housewares Department this Friday, Saturday and Monday. We will monogram each glass Item shown below with one letter of your choice in an attractive Old English style*. No extra charge! Makes an excellent gift for anyone . . . including yourself!
55-Oz. Beverage Pitcher
Special Purchase
15-Oz. Iced Tea Glasses
Special Purchase
12.5-Oz. Beverage Glasses
Special Purchase
12.5-Oz. Wine GiasseS
Special Purchase
16-Oz. Mugs
Your Choice
13-Oz. Doubie Oid-Fashioned
Square and Round Ashtrays
Monogramming orders will be taken by special order in Edenton, Farmville, Plymouth, Mouth Olive, Murfreesboro and Tarboro. Please allow delivery time of two to three weeks. Hurry in!
Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. - Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
greenvilleSAVE 18% TO 46% ON PYREX AND CORNING WARE
9
Pyrex Fireside Bakeware Drasticaiiy Reduced!
8.88
Loaf Dish Reg.14.19......
Square Dish Reg. 16.29..
Oblong Dish, Round Dish Reg 17.29 Ea..
9.88
10.88
Welcome the old world elegance of these lovely serving cradles. Add serving convenience to Pyrex ware practicality, the charm of Fireside, freezer to-ovr "i-to-table versatility and you have an unbeatable combination. Choose from 8-inch square cake uish, 1 /2-qt. loaf dish, 2-qt. oblong dish and 2 qt. knob-covered casserole. Great for anytime!
Corning Grab-A-Snack and Snack-it Set
YOUR CHOICE
Regular 12.39.........
Snack It set includes two 6" square Snack-ll dishes plus the Grab-A-Snack set includes one 6" dish and bowl too.
Corning Browning Skiiiet
Corning covered 10" browning skillet witfv special coated, ele-'vated bottom. Browns meat.
16.88
Reg. 27.49
Corning Browning Grili
Coming little sizzler grill to T O OQ brown, cook and serve in.
Unique new dish. A nice gift!
Reg. 17.99
Corning French White Hostess Sets
45.88
Regular 72.79 ..
Corning French White hostess set complete with 214-qt. oval, round casseroles with covers, 10" pie plate, 214-qt. open oval casserole and four 16-OZ. round casseroles. For yourself or as a nice gift!
Save 20% on Covered Oval Casserole Dishes!
Corning 2/2-qt. casserole. Shop today! Reg. 18.69 14.88
Bargain Buy on Covered Round Casseroiesl
Corning 214-qt. covered round dishes. Reg. 18.69 .. 14.88
Open Oval Casseroles Drastically Reduced!
Corning 2/2-qt. open oval casseroles. Reg. 16.19...........8e33
Save 46% on Corning Covered Round Dishes!
Corning 1 /2-qt. covered round casseroles. Reg. 16.69 . 8.88
Amazing 22% Savings on 10" Pie Plates Now!
8 AS
Corning 10" pie plate or quiche dish. Reg. 11.39........ O lOO
French White Sets at a Great 40% Savings!
Set with two 16-OZ. round casseroles. Regular 13.19.. 7.88
Corning French White Sets at a Great Buy!
7 88
Corning set with two 15-oz. oval dishes. Reg. 13.19........." iwi#
Handy 8%" Pie Plate Reduced 18% for You!
7.88
French white 814 " pie plate or quiche. Regular 9.59,Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. Phone 756-B-^-L-K (756-2355)
The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C -Wednesday. February 9,1983-9
greenville
LOW PRICE ON LADIES' 'CAMP MOC' SHOES!
SPECIAL VALUE ..
24.18
Sweetbriar shoes with 5/8" brown unit wedge bottom in tru-moc construction with soft leather upper. Both lace-up and slip-on styles. Ladies' sizes only. Don't miss this!
LADIES' BASS 'PENNY' LOAFERS JUST FOR HER!
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
36.88
Ladies' Bass 'penny' loafers in cordovan color with leather sole and upper. Classic and fashionable loafer s^le.
CHILDREN'S 'CAMP' SHOES AT A GREAT PRICE!
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
19.88
Tan leather 'camp' moccasin shoes with 4-eye tie and tru-moc construction. Sizes 12 V4 to 3,314 to 7, 814 to 12. Step right into fashion!
JUNIOR DENIM JEANS AT A BUDGETSAVER BUY!
GREAT
BUY. . .,
24.88
Fantastic comfort and fashion at a great low price! Made of 14-oz. cotton denim with Western styling, five pockets and 16" leg. Indigo blue. Sizes 5 to 15.
Take advantage of wonderful buys now!
Lee
SWEETBRIAR'PENNY' LOAFERS FOR LADIES
and
o o
LOWEST
era
I
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
24.88
Ladies' classic 'penny' loafers in mecca broVvn. Attractive tru-moc construction, leather upper and 4/8" heel. Step right intofashion at Belk Tyler! That's right!
GIVE HIM BOYS' LEVI'S DENIM JEANS TODAY!
16.88
Boys' LEVI'S jeans in boot-cut and straight leg styles. Enjoy our great-looking jeans at our fabulous rock-bottom price! Sizes 8 to 14, 25 to 30.
MEN'S TYLER 'PENNY' LOAFERS BY ANDHURSt*
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
38.88
Brown 'penny' loafer with leather upper, tru-moc construction and handsewn leather uppers. A terrific buy on men's top value shoes now at Belk Tyler. Shop early for best buys!
GREAT BUY ON MEN'S SIX-PACK TUBE SOCKS
6ni5.88
Orlon/stretch nylon, over-the-calf white socks with striped tube tops assorted colors. One size fits all(10to14). Comfortable, soft and absorbent, too!
LEVI'S DENIM JEANS FOR MEN!
16.88
100% cotton heavyweight denim jeans in straight leg and boot-cut styles. Western stitching and roomy pockets. Perfect for all! Round 'em up!
LEVI'S"
DENIM JEANS JUST FOR HER
GIRLS'
SIZES
7T014.
Polyester/cotton straight leg and boot-cut navy denim jeans by LEVI'S.
CHI TO 7
TODDLERS' JEANS
EXCELLENT FIT, LOOK AND PRICE ON BOYS' LEE DENIM JEANS!
17.88
Comfortable 100% cotton denim jeans with five pockets. Sizes 8 to 14, 25 to 30.
Lee
MEN'S HANES BRIEFS AND T-SHIRTS
6.88
BRIEFS
8.88
T-SHIRTS
Crew neck T-shirts are tailored to keep shape and retain fit. Machine wash. Packof 3. Men's knit all-cotton briefs. Sizes 28 to 42. Save!
BB
LOW PRICE ON MEN'S 'FRITZ' CAMPMOCS!
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE ....
28.88
Lace-up or slip-on brown leather casual 'camp moc' shoes for men. Sizes 7 to 12. Four-eye tie 'Fritz' or slip-on styles.
MEN'S LEE JEANS AT A GREAT BUY!
18.88
Men's 100% cotton denim jeans with straight leg styling and five, .roomy pockets. Belt loops and Western stitching. Don't miss this!
LeeShop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
BARGAIN ON GIRLS' LEE" DENIM JEANS
17.88
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
Have you discovered Lee jeans yet? They're 100% cotton denim jeans with 5 roomy pockets. You'll find these jeans so comfortable and fashionable you won't believe it! Girls' sizes 7 to 14. Hurry to Belk Tyler for this fantastic buy now'
Lee
BOYS' TUBE SOCKS IN OUR ECONOMY PACK!
SfBR 4.88
70% acrylic/15% nylon/ 15% polyester socks with over-the-calf striped top. White with assorted color tops. Sizes 6 to 814, 9to11.
B
T-SHIRTS AND ^ BRIEFS FOR BOYS!
T SHIRTS OR
BRIEFS...
100% cotton briefs and T-shirts available in white only. Package of three. Not in Murfresboro
GREAT BUY ON MEN'S BASS'PENNY' LOAFERS!
41.88
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE.
Men's cordovan color loafers with leather sole and uppers. A terrific buy!
In The Area
Ministers Cite Two For Service
The Greenville Ministerial Association has presented . -vards in the area of crime prevention to police detective l oter Lavin and Mary Smith, director of REAL Crisis Intervention center.
The engraved plaques were presented by Capt. J.A. Briley the Greenville Police Department at a meeting of the nnisters Monday.
Mrs. Smith has led the Crisis program for four years and IS worked with the center for seven years. Previously she S program coordinator and administrative assistant. She is -l aduate of Radford University in Virginia, l.avin has been a member of the Greenville Police I'partment since 1974. He graduated from Kubasaki High hool in Okinawa and New Mexico Military Institute. Lavin r\es as adviser to Post No. 33, Junior Police Cadets, and inducts classes for area banks and businesses on forgery cid fraud prevention.
MARY SMITH
PETER LAVIN
Waste Management Seminar Set
Hazardous Waste Mangement will be the topic of an informational seminar an(j public discussion at the Willis Building in Greenville Feb. 15.
During the session, beginning at 7 p.m., activities of the Governors Hazardous Waste Management Board will be discussed. Comments from the public will be welcome following the meeting, particularly in the areas of legislation and management.
Claud Buck OShields, chairman of the Governors Waste Management Board, will offer an overview of the boards activities, goals and recommendations.
Dr. Sarah T. Morrow, secretary of the Department of Human Resources, will explain enviromental regulations on disposal and Joseph W. Grimsley, secretary of the Department of Natural Resources and Community Development, will provide closing comments on information given.
' The meeting is co-sponsored by the Eastern Carolina Health Systems Agency. League of Women Voters of fJreenville-Pitt County, Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce and the ECU Student Affiliate of the National P^nvironmental Health Association.
City's Elementary Schools Accredited
The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, through Its Commission on Elementary Schools, has awarded continuing accreditation to Greenvilles elementary schools. The accreditation action was taken during the associations 87th annual meeting in Atlanta.
Accreditation is based on minimum standards that must be met by school systems.
Founded in 1895, the Southern Association is one of six regional accrediting bodies in the United States. More than 11,000 member public and private universities, colleges, junior colleges, secondary, middle, and elementary schools enroll approximately 5 million students.
Special Social Security Program
A special segment on Social Security will be aired on WNCT televisions Carolina Today program Friday morning.
During the program, from 6 to 8 a.m., viewers will be invited to call the station to ask questions, express concerns or obtain information about Social Security. Beginning at 7 a.m.. Social Security representatives will be on the air to respond to the questions received.
WNCT officials said the program is being presented because of the current debate about the future of Social security and the^ recommendations by the Social Security Reform Commission which are designed to solve the programs financing problems.
Telephone receptionists will be available at the station from 6 to 8 a.m. to receive call from viewers. The number to call on this program is 756-3180.
Elmhurst PTA To Meet
HImhurst Elementry School will hold its February PTA
l etmg at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Students of the first and I 'Cond grades will provide entertainment for the meeting.
Valentine's Party Set Sunday
\ heart - of paper, cloth, metal, ceramics, whatever the
heart maker desires to bring - is the only requirement to take part in the annual Heart Fund benefit Sunday in downtown Greenville.
From 2 to 6 p.m. in the parking lot behind businesses on Cotanche and East Fifth streets and Reade Circle, the annual Valentines Day Party coordinated by Hearts Delight will be held. Vehicles will not be permitted in the parking lot during the party.
Twenty-one downtown firms and entertainment centers are spotiMrs for the Valentine Party. Entertainment will be provided during the party hours.
All proceeds from the party will go the local Pitt County Heart Fund.
Gospel Concert Planned Tonight
Bill Moss and the Celestials of Philadelphia will hold a gospel concert at Little Creek Free Will Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m. today.
Also appearing will be the Rev. George McAllister and the DC. Knights of Washignton, DC., Bill Powell, and the Macedonia Sings of Albany, La.
The Pastors Aid Club will sell fish sandwiches in the fellowship hall. The concert is open to the public.
Beekeepers Schedule Meeting Thursday
The Pitt County Beekeepers Association will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Pitt County Agricultural Extension Office, 1717 W. Fifth St., room 201.
The meeting is open to persons interested in beekeeping. For further information contact Sam^Uzzell at the extension office, 752-2934.
Commission Meeting Canceled
The February meeting of the Greenville Recreation and Parks Commission, scheduled for 8 p.m. tonight, has been canceled.
The action agenda item on a joint agreement between the Greenville Recreation and Parks Commission and East Carolina Vocational Center, the main item of business scheduled for February, will be taken up at the March meeting of the commission.
Students Observe FBLA Week
Farmville Central High School this week is observing Future Business Leaders of America Week with a series bf community projects, poster displays and radio spots.
The chapter projects include distributing valentines at the Child Development Center and the Guardian Care Nursing Home. Members are being featured in radio spots on WRQR-FM
On Friday, refreshments will be served to the school faculty and throughout the week posters dealing with different aspects of FBLA will be displayed and badges will be worn by members.
Sadie Saulter PTA To Meet
Guidance counselor Shirley Peel will present a program on counseling to the Sadie Saulter School PTA Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the school cafetorium.
Tl|e combined third grades will give a presentation from their enrichment program. The business session will be conducted by Mary Guy, the PTA president.
\
Musical Program Is Scheduled
A musical program will be held Saturday at the Bethel Church of God, starting at 7:30 p.m. Sons of Thunder will be the featured group.
Country Day PTO To Meet
The Carolina Country Day School PTO will meet in the multipurpose room of the school Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Students of the third, fourth, fifth and sixth grades and band students of Jim Rodgers will present a musical Valentine program.
Owner/Manager;' Bill Evans
Men's & Women's Designer Fashions
New Spring Casuals Are Coming In, So Gear Up Now With Tops And Bottoms. Select Early!
ney. now
Lord Isaac Pants s4o.oo ^20 Organically Grown Sweaters.
Lord Isaac Paots $32.00 ^17 Organically Grown Sweaters .
Condor Pants...................$45 00
Union Bay Sweaters.........$24.00
Mens Long Sleeve Shirts.. $21.00
I
Jonathan Martin Tops.
Alberoy Tops..............
Reg.
$40.00
Now
$2695
1
$32.00
S-|y95
$45.00
S3495
$24.00
S-|295
$21.00
S-|-j95
$38.00
$2295
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S2395
Reg.
..$42.00
. $32.00
Now'
%
20 ANS Sweaters..............$4200
20 AN S Sweaters ......$37.00
Members Only Jacket.......$55.00
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Open Ball Field To School Team
WILLIAMSTON - Against considerable opposition, members of the Williamston Town Board Monday has agreed to permit the Williamston High School team to use the ball field at the public Youth Park six nights a week.
The high school team will be permitted use of the park with no charge for lights.
One commissioner, George Bagley, expressed his opi-
School Displays Special Exhibit
Sadie Saulter Elementary School is participating in the statewide celebration of the Year of the Public Schools by placing an exhibit on view in a Greenville bank.
The exhibit, entitled Sadie Saulter Prepares Children for the Future, is being shown in the lobby of the main branch of the North Carolina National Bank.
Using photographs and illustrations, the standing exhibit shows students involved in computer activities to learn new technology skills, the school counselors guidance role, studait actitivies using money to develop consumer skills, and student activities to promote good nutrition and its relation^ip to health.
The exhibit will remain on view at the bank through Feb. 15.
nion that giving the high school team use of the field for all but (Hie ni^t in the week made it difficult for town residents to use the facility.
Another dissenter to the decisim Monday night was Eddie Beach, head of the Williamston Recreation Department. Beach pointed out the disparity of the situation created by the town boards decision. He said when he has a program that needs the use of a gymnasium, the town must pay the school for such usage, but now the school teams can use the ballpark six nights a week without paying anything.
Defending the decision. Commissioner John Swain said the scheduling of high school use had not created an unbearable situation in the past. He added it would be a great help to the schools athletic program.
In a related matter, the board failed to approve a reqi^st for $5,500 for the repair of the Little League Field adjacent to the National Guard Armory. Board members insisted that
Solar Fraction
The solar fraction for this area Tuesday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 62. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 62 percent of your hot water needs.
because of a tight budget, there was no source of funds available for the proposed repair. The field has not been used for the past year due to the bad condition of the poles and lights. The field is needed primarily as a place for girls toplay softball.
One suggestion is that efforts be made to receive' funds and or/work assistance throu^ volunteer efforts.
In other matters:
The board opened four bids for a new garbage collection truck, ranging from a low of $38,272 to a high of $39,913.50, The board will study all the bids before
making an award decision.
-.Approved $500 to assist the U.S. 17 Transportation Association in its efforts to get the hi^way four-laned throughout North Carolina.
- Tabled action on a recommendation to join the Roanoke River Basin Association. The association is concerned about plans by the city of Virginia Beach, Va., to tap lakes on the Roanoke River for its water supply.
- Heard a report that proposes the construction of a new four-lane bridge across the Roanoke River into Bertie County.
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CAROLINA EAST MALL GREENVILLE, N.C.
wm
The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUJe, N.C.-Wednedy, Febniary i,
TAKE THAT, PAL! - Holly Warren squirts a refreshilng stream of water at Nunda, a retriever, in this photo that will appear with 52 others in an exhibit to be shown in 15 U.S. cities. Taken by Holmes Parker of Haveriiill, N.H., this photo and the others in the exhibit
were selected from more than 25,000 in a contest sponsored by Family Circle magazine and the Pets Are Wonderful Council. The council, based in Chicago, is a national noiq)rofit public service organization. (AP Laserphoto)
Farming Group Looks To Year 2000 In N.C
By JAMES GOGEK Associated Press Writer ' RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Tobacco will never disappear from eastern North Carolina, but leaf farmers will need to diversify in the future, says the dean of North Carolina State Universitys School of Forest Resources.
Speaking before a Tuesday conference on farming in the year 2000 in eastern North Carolina, Eric L. Ellwood said farmers should look at opportunities in other crops such as intensive farming for vegetables, livestock raising and forestry management.
The South is becoming the woodbasket of the nation and internationally, he said. There has been a move by the forestry industry from the Pacific Northwest to the Southeast.
From an economic viewpoint, financial returns for forest investments are competitive with other commodities, Ellwood said.
But its a deferred income, he said. Financial returns are 25 to 30 years down the road.
On the average, Ellwood said, private land owners in the state are not managing their land for forestry.
The opportunity is there for a very good income if they do manage land for forest products, he said. Its an under-recognized source.
Ellwood added that North Carolina has an especially favorable climate for forestry investment because of tax benefits for re-forestation by private land owners.
Gov. Jim Hunt, speaking to the conference, said education and conservation are important to farming development in the next 17 years.
As we look toward the 21st century, We know that agricultural research and education will need our fuU support, he said. Farm surpluses today may be followed by shortages of farm products within two decades, especially if we slacken our efforts in agricultural research, teaching and extension work.
Hunt also stressed (he need for increased conservation in the future to protect natural resources and use them wisely.
Each time the productive topsoil from another acre of land washes away, or another body of water becomes hopelessly polluted, every resident of our state becomes poorer, Hunt said. Each such loss also further limits the opportunities that our future will bring.
William C. Friday, president of the University of North Carolina, addressed the conference on the findings of the Commission on the Future of North Carolina, a committee established two years ago by the governor.
Friday is chairman of the committee which has 68 other members.
Were a very diversified group, Friday said, adding that group members include legislators, teachers, farmers, bankers, church laymen and various citizens group leaders among others.
Friday said the results of
the commission show that the priority for North Carolina in the future must be the stren^ and quality of education in the state.
He said the commissions report, due this spring, lays out a plan of action for the next 17 years in areas of the state economy, environment, natural resources and education.
DespiteRumors, No Number 8
NEW YORK (AP) - Dt spite rumors reported in a London tabloid, actress Elizabeth Taylor says she has no plans for an eighth marriage.
The London Daily Express reported Tuesday that Miss Taylor was engaged to marry Victor Gohzales Luna, 55, a Mexican lawyer. The newspaper said the wedding plans were disclosed by Lunas daughter, Irma.
Chen Sam, Miss Taylors spokeswoman in New York, issued a statement saying the report has no basis in fact.
The spokeswoman said Miss Taylor and Luna were friends and had spent Christmas and New Years together.
Miss Taylor, 50, is currently in Toronto filming Nobody Cries for Me.
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CONSOLIDATION
Junior Dresses
were $24...................now *9.60
were $28....... now
were $60........ ; now *24.00
were $78.................now *31.20
Shoes
Were To:
29.00..
Buy a Handful! Limited Quantities
Now
...................no.oo
38.0 0........ ...13.00
40.00:......................... 18.00
50.0 0................ 22.00
68.0 0 28.00
V2toAndU ISOOSSO''
Values to $40.00-$100.00 Downtown & Pitt Plaza
*7.20
Junior Fashion Blouses
{
were $18................... now
were $21 ............now^8.40
3-
were $33................now
*13.20
*11.20
Better Sportswear
i
One Group Skirts, Blouses, Slacks, and Blazers
75%
Off
Missy Blouses
were $21.................. now
were $24.................*...... now
were $27.............. now
were $31.......... now
no.50
ni.99
M3.49
M5.49
Lingerie
One Group Bras
3ali Bras-Vanity Fair
1/2 Price
One Group
Vanity Fair Gowns-Pajamas-Robes
1/2 Price
Were
100.00
120.0
140.00
150.00
Coats
Lightweight-Year round styles
Now
00
.................1...
00
MO 50
$5600
Sizes 8 to 2&
Junior Skirts & Slacks
were $18........ now
were $26 ......... now
were $30..................now
were $39 ...! ..... now
7.20
no.40 *12.00
*15.60
Junior Sportswear
*7.60
Sweaters were $19..........now
were $29................now
Blazers were $66..... now *28.00
*11.60
were $77............ now
*33.50
Half-Size Sportswear
were $20....................now '9.99
were $24.......... now
were $28 ....... row
were $34..................now
'11.99 '13.99
'16.99
Missy Sweaters
were $21...........................now^ 8.80
were $28....... now
were $30...................... now
were $32. ........... now
ni.2o
M2.00
n2.80
Childrens Girls Coats were up to $48 .......now^ 19.20
Sizes2T-14 SOI OH
were up to $78..........now 01. .V
GirlsSleepwear
were up to $14....................... pow^5.00
now^7.50
Girls & Boys Sportswear
up to $14............^5.00 up to $.35 ^12.00
upto$20............^7.50 upto$40 ^15.00
up to $26............^9.00 up to $48 ^18.00
were up to $20
Jury Loses No Time In Its Conviction For Bigamy
PHOFA'IX, Ariz. (AP) - A jury deliberated just 90 minutes before returning fraud and bigamy convictions against a man who admitted marrying more
than 100 women but didnt "keep score" - and who was brou^t to justice by one of his victims o Giovanni Vigliotto, 53, was convicted of two felonv
CONVICTED Giovanni Vigliotto is escorted out of the courtroom in Phoenix after a jury convicted him of bigamy and fraud. (AP Laserphoto) Copyright photo by Don Stevens of Mesa Tribune.
charges Tuesday in Maricopa County Superior Court by an eight-man, four-woman jury.
The fraud and bigamy "charges against Vigliotto stemmed from his marriage to Patricia Ann Gardiner, 43,
of Mesa, Ariz., who had testified that he vanished with $36,500 of her cash and property two weeks after their Nov. 16, 1981, wedding and abandoned her in a San Diego motel.
"The romance was quick
Egg Inside An Egg For His Breakfast
NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP) - George T. Woodhall got three for the price of two for breakfast - along with a lesson in chicken reproduction.
Woodhall, a laborer at the Millstone III nuclear plant construction site in Waterford, stayed home from work Monday because of snow. He made himself breakfast by dropping two extra-large eggs into a pot of boiling water.
As the snow fell, he sipped a cup of coffee and put bread 'in the toaster.
"All of a sudden I heard a pop, recalled Wpodhall. "When I put the pot under the cold water I saw that one of the eggs was cracked all around the top.
Inside the shell was the white of the egg - and another whole egg, shell and all. Woodhall finished his breakfast and then reported his finding to the New London Day newspaper.
Dr. Aaron Spandorf, a
poultry specialist with the University of Connecticuts Cooperative Extension Service, said the eg-g-inside-an-egg is an unusual occurence.
"It doesnt happen very often - maybe one in a million. said Spandorf, who serves as a technical adviser to the poultry industry.
After the e^ was formed, it reversed itself in the chickens oviduct and therefore was treated as if it were a new yolk coming through, Spandorf said. "Thats why there was white between two shells.
PROTEST MANEUVERS TOKYO (AP) - More than 100,000 North Koreans jammed into the main square in Pyongyang to protest military maneuvers being conducted by South Korean and U.S. troops, the official North Korean news agency said today.
and the courtship was short, Ms. Gardiner testified. I made an impulsive decision.
Ms Gardiner bri^tened when the verdict was read and hugged a female employee from the county attorneys office sitting next to her in the gallery. Both counts, she said, beaming.
Vigliotto was arrested Dec. 28, 1981, in a Panama City, Fla., shopping center. Sharon Qark, of Ray, Mich., had testified she tracked him there in a six-month, $10,000 search based on a map he left behind when he deserted her.
Ms. Clark said she was managing a campground and flea market in Indiana when she met and married Vigliotto. She said $49,000 of her cash and property vanished with him two weeks after their June 1981 marriage in Tennessee.
Contacted by telephone after the verdict was announced, Ms. Clark said: All I can tell you is Im so glad.
Joan Bacarella, 45, of Manalapan, N.J., another prosecution witness, had testified Vigliotto left her and her three children stranded in a Florida motel and I realized I had been victimized and my prince turned
into a frog.
She said $40,000 worth of merchandise from her retail store vanished after she entrusted it to two friends of Vi^iotto.
Ms. Bacarella said she met Vigliotto in Febn^ 1981 but never married him because she was not divorced from her estranged husband.
Vigliotto, who looked surprised upon hearing the verdict, lowered his head and confered briefly with his attorney, David Steiner.
During the trial, Vigliotto testified he married 105 women but never got a divorce. I dont keep score he said when asked how many women he married in a six-year period.
He denied defrauding any of the women who testified against him.
Bigamy is merely something this man does to perpetuate a fraud, David Stoller, a deputy county attorney, said in his cl(ing argument Tuesday. To use marriage, to use the values of family in this way, is, 1 think, despicable.
Steiner said in his closing statement that the state did not prove Vigliotto defrauded Ms. Gardiner.
Judge Rufus Coulter or-lered the panel to return to le courtroom today but did not explain his order beyond
DiaiAPrayer
752-1362
saying, "There are still some issues that must be resolved.
More jury consideration, however, would be needed if prosecutors were to use Vigliottos previous cravic-tions in seeking an increase in his sentence to a possible 34 years in prison.
Court records indicate Vigliotto, using an alias, pleaded guilty to illegal transportation of a car in 1956 and was convicted in 1969 for unlawful transportation of a stolen security .
Vigliotto claimed that his real name was Nikolai Peruskov and that he was bom of Russian parents in Sicily in 1929. He testified that his family was killed by Nazis when'he was 8 and he
began traveling the world, marrying 105 women while using more than 51 aliases,
But the prosecution maintained that be was bom Frederick Jipp in New York City in 1936 and used the story about his familys deaths to make himself appear vulnerable to the women, most of whom were in their 40s, independent and with substantial property when Vigliotto came into their lives.
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CORRECTION!
The JCPenney Presidents Days Circular has incorrect prices on page one Par Four* separates. Prices shown are 20% off. Correct pnces should be 25% off.
Vbull be the first lady of casual fashion in these great separates. Par Four* shirts, skirts, pants and more are 20% off. In easy-care poly/cotton and lots of your favorite colors. Misses sizes.
Reg. Sale Correct
Par Four* solid shirt.... $12 9.60 9.00
Par Four* solid pant.... $23 18.40 17.25
Scallop trim tee shirt .... $8 6.40 6.00
Wrap print skirt .....$16 12.80 12.00
Par Four* stripe shirt... $14 11.20 10.50
Par Four* skirt ........$21 16.80 15.75
Button front poplin skirt .$1713.60 12.75Reprimanded In Accident
PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP)
- The Oregon Inlet Coast Guard Station commander and five others were reprimanded Tuesday for failing to report an accident that damaged the William B. Umstead Bridge last year.
A three-month probe followed the accident, which occurred the morning of Nov.
.5 when a barge struck the bridge The span across the Croatan Sound was shut down nearly two months foir repairs.
Seaman's Apprentice Robert Chatman, the radio operator at Oregon Inlet, received the message from the skipper of the tug Columbia th^t a barge he was pushing had chipped a piece of concrete from the bridge.
Chatman was exonerated because he acted properly by reporting the incident to his superiors, investigators said.
But the accident was not reported to state highway officials until nearly three days later after a fisherman reported cracks in a piling.
Coast Guard Fifth District Commandant John D Costello issued letters of reprimand to Chief Petty Officer James McQueen, commander at the Inlet, and Oregon Inlet Duty Officer Klwood Eppard.
Costello also sent letters to Richard Brady, duty officer at Cape Hatteras Station at the time of the accident,) and William) Ingram, James Wallach and Fred Parsons,
all petty officers on duty at Oregon Inlet.In 'Good Shape'
HOUSTON (API - Comedian Jerry Lewis, who underwent a series of tests administered by noted heart surgeon Dr. Michael De-Bakey, was found to be in good shape" and can return to work Lewis. .56, underwent double bypass heart surgery six weeks ago in Las Vegas ^fter 1 experiencing chest pains caused by blockage in an artery pumping blood to the 1 heart.
After seeing DeBakey, Lewis was released Tuesday from Methodist Hospital.
"Dr DeBakey ran a series of routine tsts that are done on all patients who have heart surgery," said hospital spokeswoman Colleen Fox. "Dr. DeBakey 'said Mr. Lewis was in good shape, gave him a clean bill of health and told him he could go back to work.
Doctors determined one of Lewis arteries contained a lesion, which was blocking the flow of blood to part of the heart, A section of vein was removed from Lewis thigh and spliced arond the blocked artery to form a new path.
AMERICAS FAMILY
Voice Concern For MenfahPatieni Confidentialify
By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A bill designed to promote efficiency among mental health facility met resistance from a state House committee Tuesday because of a provision to allow officials to share patient records without their coieent.
Rep. Christopher Barker Jr., D-Craven, chairman of the Mental Health Committee, said there was no need to worry because records could only be transferred from one mental health facility to another. But Reps. Ruth Cook, I>Wake, and J Paul Tyndall. D-Onslow, were skeptical, i think we have to tread very lightly in terms of confidentiality, said Mrs. Cook. Im afraid if a patient knows that his records are not confidential he may decide not to seek that treatment.
"Im concerned about records that might go out into the community, added Tyndall. I think either person or his family should sign a release to share information.
The bill is designed to encourage groups of mental health' facilities to use one port of entry to help keep track of patients, said Angelyn McMillan, assistant secretary of the Division of Mental Health. She said it would help coordinate county and state mental health facilitiK while improving efficiency and reducing costs.
"There are times when pecle slip throu^ the cracks, Ms. McMillan said. We want to see that a person who needs care is moved to the best possible place to get that care and we want to be sure that in the process of moving paptients no one is lost in the cracks.
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In other legislative action:
Social Workers
Sens. Cecil Jenkins, IH^abamis. and Ollie Harris. D-leveland, introduced a bill that would retire social workers to be certifttd by their own board (rf examiners.
Jenkins said the measure, which emerg^ from a committee studying the possible licensing of social workers, fell short of that
Requiring licensing that would bar some people from practicing social work would be an unreasonable restraint of trade, Jenkins said. Besides, theres no evidence that its needed.
The bill would not pn^ibit people without certification from doing social work, but would help those who use social workers determine who is most qualified, he added.
Under the bill, the governor would appoint a seven-member North Carolina Certification Board for Social Work. A person would be certified as a social worker, master social worker, clinical social worker or social work manager, depending on experience.
Social workers themselves seem to be in favor of this legislation, Jenkins said. It wont expand the bureaucracy or cost the state anjihing. Its sort of like setting up a counterpart of the medical society for social workers.
Session Length
The Senate Rules Committee sent to subcommittee a constitutional amendment introduced by Sen. Donald Kincaid, R-Caldwell, limiting legislative sessions to 70 work days.
The full Senate on Monday night approved a resolution calling for a study of limits on the length of legislative sessions, a pn^osal backed by Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green. That resolution sug^ted a 60 work day limit.
UNCBoard
A bill to shorten the length of terms of University of North Carolina Board of Governors was sent to a subcommittee of the Senate Rules Committee.
The measure would allow board members to serve two consecutive four-year terms instead of the current two eight-year terms.
Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, said the subcommittee would write an amendment to allow current board members who have served no more than 11 years to seek one more four-year term. Lawing said the committee would then consider the bill as amended.
Parents
The Senate unanimously approved and sent to the House a bill that would cut off a parents rights after leaving a child in foster care for more than two consecutive years without showing progress in getting the child back.
Current laws de with removal of the child from the
parents because of neglect
Opponents charge that the bill could take children away from parents who are in prison or who are in an institution and fail to return home within two years.
NCAA
A Senate committee fell short of commwiding the National Collegiate Athletic Association for strengthening academic standards for athletes after questions arose ab^t whether the standards would discriminate against minorities.
Sen. Marshall Rauch. D-Gaston, had wanted the Higher Educuation Committee to commend the NCAA But Si William Martin. D-Guilford. the states only black senator, said there was a possibility such a resolution would be seen as racist.
He said there are serious questions whether the Scholastic Aptitude Test scores are racially biased, adding that colleges recruiting minorities occasionally waive SAT requirements for admissions.
But Martin said he felt blacks could support higher course requirements and grade averages so the committee sent the matter to a subcommittee for more work.
Education
Dr. Jerome Melton, deputy superintendent of public instruction, told the House Education Committee that the state Board of Education was considering changes in rules governing out-of-field teaching.
Melton said the board might require any teacher spending more than half his time in a given area would need to be endorsed or certified for that area.
But he said that would mean going back and providing instruction for those teachers at state expense.
Amendment
Sen. Helen Marvin. D-Gaston, said the House and Senate Constitutional Amendments Committees will hold a public hearing soon on proposals to require that constitutional amendments be put to voters only during statewide general elections.
Voters now may consider constitutional amendments at any statewidde election or primary. Supporters say that helps prevent the proposed amendments from becoming partisan issues.
Sen. William Redman, R-Iredell, has introduced a bill to allow constitutional referendums only in the November general election. A similar measure is expected to be introduced in the House.
Pets
The Senate Judiciary I Committee approved and sent to the floor a bill that would make the theft of dogs and cats valued at more than $400 punishable as a felony.
Theft of pets has been a misdemeanor regardless of their value while the theft of horses, mules, pigs or cattle has been
a felony carrying a presumptive prison sentence of three years
Architects
A bill was introduced to allow people over age 18 to take our test to apply for a Uctnse as an architect regardless of tMr training. While the bill would remove the "bequirement of a qualifying test to take the licensing exam, it would also make the licensing test more difficult
SpoUlgbting
A bill to extend the hours when it is illegal to use spotlights hunting deer won tentative approval in the House but as delayed because of the addition of several counties A final vote was set for Wednesday.
Under the bill, it would be illegal to use spotlights from one-half hour after sunset until one-half hour before sunrise Previously it was illegal only from 11 p.m. to one-haM hour before sunrise
The original bill included .Alamance. Iredell. Ranilalph. Rockin^am, Rowan and Wilkes counties, but the am^ ment adds the counties of Alexander, Alleghany. .Anson. Ashe, Catawba, Cumberland, Guilford. Stokes. Surry, Watauga. Yadkin. Cabarrus, Richmond. Scotland, Stanly arid Union.
Day Care
The House tentatively approved a bill that would clarify the definition of a day cai^ facility to include centers that "care for more than five children more than four hours a day
Under the bill, only children younger than 13 are counted, the operators after-school children are not counted and care must not be provided 24 hours a day. The bill also eliminates exemptions from licensing for day camps and adds exemptions for bible schools during vacations or cooperative arrangements among parents
Rep, Margaret Keesee-Forrester. R-Guilford. who filed the bill, said it would bring 75 to 100 more facilities under state licensing but would not require any additional state funds.
Birth Defects
Rep. Margaret Tennille, D-Forsyth, filed a bill seeking $1.1 million in the next biennium to screen for fetal neural tube defects.Resume Probe Of Shootings
VALUES
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C (AP) One of six witnesses to go before a special federal grand jury probing the 1179 slaying of five Commonist Party Workers has been ordered to appear again today after declining to tfismer questions Tuesday.
John Harris, 44.,0f Wilmington told repoAvs outside the hearing that he was a member of the Ku Klux KJan. But Harris said he took the Fifth Amendment when asked a similar question during Tuesdays hearing.
He (a federal prosecutor) just asked me if 1 was a member of the Klan in 1979, and 1 just said, I refuse to answer on the grounds it might incriminate me, Harris said.
He said prosecutors told him he must appear again today before a federal judge who will order him to answer.
Harris has said he doesnt want to testify before ttie grand jury because he thinks tHk government wants to destroy the Klan and favors Communists.
Five other witnesses, most believed to be Klan or Nazi associates, were called before the jury Tueiiiy. Most of those witnesses (te-clined to answer reporters questions about their appearance.
Harris told reporters he was a member of the Invisible Knights of the Ku lEkx Klan and said he was in fhe procession of Klan and Nazi members that clashed with Communists on Nov. 11979 But Harris said he didnt do any shooting.
The jury reconvmd Tuesday after a five-month recess.
Feature Exl^it Of Sculpturl
The Gray Art Gallery on tte East Carolina Unlveraty campus is featuring ip exhibition of recent ca*|^in sculptures by StdRHp Lawson. ,
The exhibtion will openH Friday and will be on view rtilFeb.25.
Lawson is a gradVRte of the Edinburgh CoUe'" and received his from the University orado at Boulder in is a professor of sculpture ai West Virginia Unive Morgantown, WVa.
He has hadone-i itions M Austnillifj and Northern li ,^well as in New Y( ^Washington, DC., Ckicago.
At 7:30 p.m Friday, Lavi^ will give a in the auditorium in Fine Arts Building.^ slide-talk show will career as a sculptor.
Following the presgfa^ ^>iewing of his wc
io the public lp,iJiGrayG Gra^ Gallery from 10 to 5 Monday v-JFriday.and from 1 8unday.
.ttL
14-Tbe DtlJy Reflector. Greenville. N.C.-Wedne*iay. Februery 9,1983
JUCl/aUJ (WUCVHM, usvivunr, V.V. T k M.-I . ^- , _ ^Former Colonels Help Refugees In MIA Search
ByJOHNRlCt; Associated Press Writer SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Some say Americans are haunted by the trauma of Vietnam Others say Vietnam is haunted by America, Jack BaiJey and Don McCullough are looking for the ghosts Aboard an old smugglers ship, they cruise the monsoon-washed Gulf of Thailand to guide teeming boatloads of starving refugees past scores of pirates From those refugees, the two retired Air Force colonels who run Operation Rescue seek clues about lost comrades, the 2.500 Americans missing in the jungles of Indochina "If you pick up a boatload of people that have been starved and raped and murdered . you^ find that some of these people have information on .Americans
that are held by the Indochinese communists. said the 60-year-old McCullough.
Bailey, 59, thinks at least 200 men may still be alive. In northern Vietnam, Bailey says, theres a prison camp where English-speaking Westerners have been seen.
"Tell the world were here. Tell the world were here. Dont forget us, one yelled to a passer-by. according to Bailey.
Operation Rescue started in 1978 when Food for the Hungry of Scottsdale, Ariz., launched a ship, the Akuna, to help the flood of refugees survive their journey.
Bailey and McCullough were operating an air crash investigation service here when they became interested in Operation Rescue.
The Rev. Larry Ward, head of Food for the Hungry, talked Bailey and McCullough into taking over the
FREEDOM FIGHTERS, Jack Baey, left, and Don McCullough, both former Air Force colonels, are trying to locate American servicemen held in jungle prisons of Southeast Asia. (AP Laserphoto)
anti-piracy program in 1981 and gave them the ship.
Although the flow of ref-ugees has declined, thousands still sail every month in tiny, overloaded fishing boats for Thailand or Malaysia. McCullough says about half dont make it.
Most run into pirates. Refugees report being robbed and beaten, watching family members raped and enslaved, watching their boats rammed and sunk.
Operation Rescue, which runs the 275-ton Akuna III out of Songkhla, Thailand, normally just offers assistance and escorts refugees past bandit ships, but it will pick up people in danger of sinking.
"The last boat we picked up, there were 81 people on the boat, Bailey said. "Theyd been drifting for 17 days, with no food for the last 15 days, no water for the past five days. ... And they were starting to actually physically eat their dead.
Said Bailey: Id never seen anything in three wars like what I saw out there.
But Bailey and McCullough have been dogged by money problems. They sold their first ship, a 750-ton vessel that cost $3,000 a day to run, and bought the smaller boat, a smugglers ship impounded in Singapore.
'The Singapore-based crew hasnt been paid in 34 months, Bailey said. Our chief engiiwers wife even hocked her wedding band for them to live because they believe in what were doing.
The two men have returned to their ramshackle office on a San Francisco pier to raise money. Much of their financial support comes from refugees who have made it to the United States. They said they planned to return to Southeast Asia and the Akuna III early next week.
Bailey said that he had helped plan the raid into Laos last fall, led by former Green Beret Lt. Col. James G. Gritz. The raid, reported this week, had aimed at finding and retrieving missing Americans, but Bailey said he had been forced to pull out.
The primary thing was
FREUDIAN SUP - Noted English actor Sir Alec Guinness stands in front of a portrait of himself dressed as Sipund Frud, the father of psychoanalysis. Guinness portrays Freud in Warner Bros new fUm, Lovesick, a
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that I could not financially support the number of people that was involved, he said. Gritz went ahead with the Nov. 27 raid, but his force of three Americans and 15 Laotians fled under attack.
Bailey moved acns the rootn cluttered with military decorations, mementos and model planes. He tossed aside snapshots he says are of Lao and Cambodian resistance fighters and spread out a hand-drawn tissue-paper map marked with places Americans have been seen.
Earlier this year, President Reagan said his administration assumes that at least some of those missing .Americans remain alive and that the remains of others can be recovered.
'There have been more than 460 reported sightings of Americans in Indochina and only about half have been identified as people there voluntarily, said 6)1. Jerry Venanzi, who monitors the situation at the Pentagon.
Bailey said the Laotian resistance has provided information about missing Americans and has given the remains of several to U.S. officials, althou^ they are people that are getting no credit from our government and no support whatever.
He said the Laotians have told him they know the locations of at least 35 more bodies.
Venanzi said he didnt know of any American bodies turned over by the Laotian underground.
Bailey has been involved with Vietnam since 1965, first as a highly decorated fighter pilot and teacher, later as a civilian worker. He was working for a U.S. engineering company in South Vietnam in April 1975 when the government began to crumble. Bailey took a leave and, with two boats financed by evangelist Billy Graham, tried to carry refugees out of the country.
He said be was arrested by South Vietnamese forces, who demanded a bribe for his freedom, and was thrown in jail. I walked out of there when everybody deserted, when Vietnam fell, he said.
McCullough says they have been accused of working for the CIA. .We are not working for the U.S. ^vemment on any kind of intelligence operation, he said.
If you think the cheapest
ground beef you can find is a bargain,
Overtons says, Baloney!
ff
You can be sure of just one thing if you buy the cheapest ground beef you can find: it will be made of the cheapest ingredients. With all the fat that can legally be put into it.
The fact is, at $1.69/lb. the ground beef we make and sell at Overtons is a much better value than the $1.19/lb. specials they run at some other stores. Theres less fat. Less shrinkage. And its made from choicer meats. Plus we dont truck beef in already ground. We grind our beef fresh several times daily.
Oh, we could sell you ground beef for $1.19/lb. But we wont do it. Our quality standards are too high.
At Overtons, we beljeve we sell the finest meats in town. And if that means our ground beef costs a little more, we think we make up for it by offering you a better value.
, So, try some ground beef from Overton's. And after youve tasted it,'we'think youll say, Hot dog!
contemporary romantic comedy about a psychiatrist who falls in love with a patient. Freud appears regularly throughout the film to offer advice. (AP Laserphoto)
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Report Fewer Students Are Scoring High On SATs
By JOHN RICE Associated Press Writtf SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tte brightest products of Americas high schools arent shining as brilliantly on college entrance exams the way they did a decade ago.
The number of students achieving high scores on the nationwide Scholastic Aptitude Test has fallen nuirkedly over the past decade - by half, in one major catagory.
It does worry me, Robert Sawyer, who runs a program for gifted youn^ters at Duke University, said Tuesday,
Some would say its just a
test score, but its a pretty good predictor of bow people do in higher levels of their education, and I think its symptomatic of things that are going on in education today, added Sav^er, a professor of education and psychology.
In 1972, 53,794 students achieved scores of 650 or better on the SAT verbal section. A full 17,560 scored 700 out of the possible 800. But by 1962, 29,236 were above 650 and only 8,240 hit 700. The number of students taking the test declined by only 3 percent.
The drop in top math achievement wasnt quite as steep from 93,868 to 71,916 at the 650 level and from
AskAddedTime On MX Basing
37,067 to 29,528 at 700.
Over the same period, the median sc(h% fell from 453 to 426 on the verbal section and from 484 to 467 in math.
I just see no reason why students today dont have the same potoitial as studoits 10 years ago. Nothing has happoied to give us a less ca^le group of pecle, said Stanford University admissions dean Fred Hargadon, former chairman of the College Board, which sponsors the SATs.
My sense is that they make for a lack of preparation as they work their way throu^ college, Hargadon said. But he added it seemed a waste of money to perform the catch-up work inc(^ege.
SAT scores are used by most colleges to help select
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Commission on Strategic Forces, named by President Reagan to find a politically acceptable MX missile basing system, is having difficulty making a recommendation and will seek an
School Lists Honor Students
The following students at Greenville Christian Academy received honors for < work done during the third marking period:
HONOR ROLL: Christy \ Briley, Sharon Dixon, Stuart ' Dixon, Heather Gray, Deborah Harrell, Neil Har-5 rington, Kerry House,
Tammy Huggins, Byron ^ Johnson, Ivela Jones, Kim May, Alisha McLawhorn, Kristi Overton, Clint Parker, Denise Robinson, Troy Stox *. and Kathy Vemelson.
- DEANS LIST: Terry r Baker, Stq^hanie Bell, Tonya I Bess, Tim Bland, Chuck ' Branch, Lisa Brock, Sheryl Brown, Chris Buck, Jennifer Collie, Tate Comey, Jessica Everett, Kim Faulkner,
* Brian Fleming, Kim Grant,
' Jennifer Gupton, Tracey Hardee, Steve Harrell, Elizabeth Harrison, Chad Hedgepeth, Billy Hodan, Franklin Huggins, Sandy Johnston, Kevin Joyner, Candy Little, Garrett Little.
Lisa Mayo, Anita Mills, Brenda Mills, Tonya Mills, Robin McGowan, Bobby McLawhorn, Amy Newsome, Tanya Oliphant, Kathy Parker, Valerie Person, Amanda Sadler, Geri Smith, James Stokes, Niki Taylor, Danny Vernelson, Laurie Vernelson, Ginger Wainwright, Suzette Wells, Jo Williams, Genena Buck and Lisa Mayo.
Aulander Student. To Give Recital
Gregory Barmer of Aulander, a student in the East Carolina University School of Music, will present his senior piano recital at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Recital Hall of the A.J. Fletcher Music Center on campus.
For his program, Barmer will perform a movement from the J.S. Bach Partita No. 6 in E Minor; George Rochbergs Nach Bach; the Beethoven Sonata in D Minor, Opus 31, No. 2; and Chopins Ballade, Opus 23.
There is no admission charged for the recital, which is open to the public.
extension of its Feb. 18 deadline, a published r^rt said today.
The Washington Post quotes administration sources as saying the panel is struggling to devise a proposal that would win backing in the White House and broad support in Congress.
Were not going to report until were done, a high-ranking official was quoted as saying in todays editions of the Post.
Commission sources said the 11-member panel is leaning toward a two-phase solution to the basing problem, the newspaper reported.
In the first phase, up to 50 of the new MX intercontinental nuclear missiles would be put into existing Minuteman missile silos in Wyoming. The second phase, intended to meet U.S. missile needs in the 1990s, includes a variety of long-term proposals, including underground basing and moving missiles on trucks, trains, or helicopters.
PULLOUT? - Rep. Morris K. Udall of Arizona, vidio lost the quest for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1976, has decided not to try again in 1984, knowledgeable sources said Tuesday night. (AP Laserphoto)
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the pick of the yeariy high school crop for admission. Many administrators have voiced concern at the declining median, or midrange, scores, but Hargadon said hes not sure anybodys paid as much attei^ion to the drop In tq[> scores.
Neither Hargadon nor Sawyer could say for sure Mriiat has caused the steep slide in the number of top scorers. But both said the quality of hi^ schools may
be declining - due to tight budgets, difficulty in attracting good teachn^ and a stress on equality that dis-coura^ challenges for top stiKlents.
Hargadon noted that teachers have lost some of the esprit and respect they once had. Bright female college students once funneled into teaching are now sought by other, better-paying professions.
But Julian S. Stanley of
J(to Hoplons University, a pioneer in special programs for gifted youth, said other factors are involved.
1 wouldnt blame the poor old teachers, he said. I think the culture has made it very hard to be a teacher now.
Television and video games compete with homework, drugs are not uncommon and student woric habits may be less rigorous than in the past, he said.
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Stock And Market Reports
By The Associated Press
Grain: No. 2 yellow shelled corn lower ar 2.53-2.78, mostly 2.65-2.75 in east and 2.64-2.92, mostly 2.85-2.92 in Piedmont; No. 1 yellow. soybeans lower at 5.67-5.97, mostly 5.68-5.87 in east and 5.35-5.63, mosUy 5.58 in the Piedmont; wheat 3.15-3.45, mostly 3.15-3.20; oats
1.20-1.45. (New crop - com 2.66-2.76; soybeans 5.95-6.16, wheat 2.87-3.221. Soybean meal f.o.b. N.C. processing plants per ton 44 percent
196.20-204.00. Prices paid as of 4 p.m. Tuesday by location for corn and soybeans: Cofield 2.78, 5.97; Conway 2.67,5.81; Creswell 2.53, 5.72; Dunn 2.70, 5.67; Elizabeth City 2.65, 5.82, Farmville 2.80, 5.80; Fayetteville , 5.87; Greenville 2.65, 5.73; Kinston 2.67, 5.73; Lum-
berton (2.73-2.75), 5.68;
Pantego 2.65, 5.73; Raleigh ~, 5.86'2: Selma 2.71, 5.72; Whiteville 2.75, 5.68; Williamston 2.65, 5.73;
Wilson (2.74-2.75). 5.73;
Albemarle 2.64, 5.61; Barber 2.92, 5.63; Mocksville 2.85; Monroe 2.90; Mt. LTla -, 5.58; Roaring River 2.90; Statesville 2.70,5.35.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market was mixed today in an atmosphere of caution on Wall Street.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 1.20 to 1,076.53 in the first half hour.
Gainers and losers ran about even in the early tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Analysts said more and more investors have become convinced that a recovery from the recession, possibly stronger than most economists had fore- cast earlier, has begun.
But they also said the market had already taken a substantial improvement in business conditions into account with its sharp rise since last summer.
Lately, concerns have arisen on Wall Street over whetlwr an economic upturn might put new upward pressure on inflation and interest rates.
Detroit Edison led the active list, unchanged at 14. A 180.000-share block traded at that price.
On Tuesday the Dow Jones industrials fell 11.77 points to 1,075.33.
Nearly nine stocks fell in
price for every seven that rose on the NYSE.
Big Board volume fell to 76.58 million shares from 86.03 million Monday.
The NYSEs composite index of all its listed common stocks fell .61 to 84.16. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was off .30 at 369.32.
Following are Klected market quotations .\shlandprC Burroughs
Carolina Power t Light
Cqllins & Alkman
Connor
Duke
Eaton
Kckerds
Exxon
Kieldcrest
Hatteras
Hilton
Jellerson
Deere
Lowe's
.McDonald's
McGraw
Piedmont
PiitaInn
P4G
TRW Inc L'nitedTel Virginia Electric Wachovia
OVER THE COUNTER
Aviation
Branch
Ultle Mint
Planters Bank
11 a m stock
37
46'k.
22'4
2414
16.
23\
aiPi
2S-4
31 >-4 15S. 40. 2', 33k 31'i 60, 42 S. 33 S. 8H. lOO-S. 64',
l!rS.
31^4
20-204 16>4 16^4
27>.4-28
NEW YORK (APi -Midday stocks:
High Low Last
a 22^. 22*4
37', 37*4 37',
12'-4 12
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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - The PTL Gub is considering selling the $375,000 oceanfront condominium it bought in Florida last October for president Jim Bakker and his family, PTL spokesman Brad Lacey said Tuesday.
Because of the invasion of privacy in exposing the Florida retreat for the Bakkers, due to security reasons only, the sale of the condominium has been discussed, Lacey said. These discussions center around the security of the Bakker family only.
Details of the condominium purchase were first published in Sundays Charlotte Observer, which reported that after PTL bought the condominium Oct. 29 it spent another $81,000 to furnish it, including $22,000 for floor-to-ceiling mirrors.
The purchase came at a time when the organization
Obituary Column
WEDNESDAY
7:00 p.m. - Greater Support Group. National PMS. meet at Regional Rehabilitation Center, Pitt County Memorial Hospital 7:00 pm. Jaycettes meet 8:00 p.m. Greenville White Shrine meets at Masonic Temple 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Al-Anor Group meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville hwy.
8:00 p.m. John Ivey Smith Council No. 6600, Knights of Columbus meet at St. Peters Church Hall
8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy
Eatmao
Mrs. Ethel Carney Eatman, 85, died Tuesday at Pitt Gninty Memorial Hospital. She was the sister of Mrs. Willie B. WUson of Greenville.
Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hardees Funeral Home.
Galloway
Survivors of Mrs. Isabel Hodges Galloway, who died Monday night, also include her stejprnother, Mrs. Nettie Hodges of Route 1, Grimesland; two half-brothers, Samuel Woodrow Hodges of Route 1, Grimesland, and Ernest Lee Hodges of Greenville; and three half-sisters, Mrs. Juanita Wainrigbt of Greenville, Mrs. Frances Meeks of Route 1, Grimesland, and Mrs. Blanche Edwards of Route 1, Chocowinity.
Gukm
Mr. William Isaac Guion of Route 1, Grimesland, died Tuesday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Mrs. Janie Pollard Guion of the home.
Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott & Company Funeral Home in Ayden.
Ipock
Mrs. Helen Shaw Ipock, 80, died Wednesday in Cravwi
was pleading fw increased financial aid and a few weeks after layoffs of 99 employees.
Associate PTL pastor James Smith said at the time the ministry was! facing a financial crisis.
PTL raises millions of dollars through its nationally televised Jim Bakker program and operates Heritage USA, a 1,200-acre retreat near Fort Mill, S.C.
MASONIC NOTICE ~ 'There will be a stated communication of Crown Point Lodge 708 AF&AM Thursday at 7:30 p.m. with work in the second degrw. All master Masons are invited,
Edward J. Harper II, master Wiley S. Christy, secretary
MASONIC NOTICE AYDEN - Queen of the South No. 77 will have a communication Thursday at 8 p.m. All master Masons are asked to attend.
Willie Stallworth, Master Jesse Lee Wilson, Secre-tary
Searching for the ri^t townhouse? Watch Gasafied every day.*ATTEMTION*GREENVILLE CITY COUNCIL AGENDA
Thursday, February 10,1983 - 7:30 P.M.
City Council Chambers
The Greenville City Council will consider the following Items: * 41.
1. Rezoning property located south of Sedgefield Park Subdivision, Section 3, and ^
Greenville Church of Gods property, west of St. Andrews Dr. and east of Memorial Dr. from R-15 (Residential) to O&l (Office and Institutional); j *
2. Rezoning property located north of 12th St., south of the Walter Perkins property, west of Clark St., and wt of the William Taft, Jr. and Atlantic Seaboard Coast Lines properly from R-6 (Residential) to lU (Unoffenslve Industry);
3. Amendment to ordinance relative to special use permits for mobile homes; . u ...
4. Resolution endorsing ar>d supporting the establishment of a Recreation & Parks Dept. Trust with GreenvHle Foundation;
5. Annual report of the Planning and Zoning Commission; ' >
8. Resolution declaring Intent to close a portion of Sedgefield Drive between St. Andrews Dr. and Memorial Dr.;
7. Amendment to resolution authorizing the City Manager, the Director of Planning & Community Development, and the Community Development Administrator to exercise administrative powers relative to the redevelopment policies, programs, and plans of the City of Greenville;
8. Ordinance amending the Community Development Budget and the 1981-82 Small Cities Budget;
0 Ordinance establishing the 1982-83 Small Cities/South Evans Grant Project Budget;
Resolution approving the sale of Disposal Parcels K-7B and G-1 In the Southside Project;
Resolution approving the "Heart of the City revitalization area boundaries;
Resolution requesting the N.C. Dept, of Transportation to improve the Intersection of Memorial Dr. and SUn-tonsburg Rd.;
Amendment to the Utilities Water Capital Project Fund;
Resolution requesting the N.C. Dept, of Transportation to Improve SR1534 In the vicinity of the new wastewater treatment plant;
Tax releases and refunds;
Application by Carolina Precious Metals, Inc. for a privilege license to operate a pawn shop at 405 Evans SI. (on the Mall);
17. Resolution declaring equipment surplus to the Citys needs;
18. Amendments to the City Personnel Policies Ordinance;
19. Request to establish a controlled residential parking area on the west side of Lewis St. from E. Third St. to E. Fourth St.
20. Contract for city code supplement services;
21. Contract for audit services; \
22. Resolution authorizing the execution of an agreemdM with Southern Railway Company holding them harmleee for any claims for Iniurles or loss to property resulting from any claim which may arise from the Citys erection of the water level marking on the railroads bridge on Dickinson Avenue;
Resolution authorizing absentee voting in municipal elections;
Technical amendment to the City Code relative to service of complaints and orders on abandoned structuret; Amendment to the contract with Argonne National Laboratory relative to the contract for phase two of the Comprehensive Energy Management Program;
26. Resolption requesting the General Assembly to dissolve the Tar River Port Commission.
27. Resolution endorsing AMTRAK from Greenville to Raleigh and Charlotte; /
28. Request for the County and City to develop a joint area-wide land use policy.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
23.
24.
25.
County Ho^ital. Her funeral service will be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chi^, Vanceboro, by the Rev. Waltr Sutton. Burial will be in Celestial Memorial Gardens.
A Craven County native, Mrs. Ipock ^pent most of her life in the Vanceboro community. She had worked at Oaven County Hospital from 1969-1979 and was a member of the Ladies Auxiliary the Veterans of Foreign Wars No. 2514 and the Women of the Moose No. 700 in Havelock.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Donald Murphy of New Bern; two sons, Lynwood Mack Ipock and Julius Frankie Ipock, both of Route 2, Vanceboro; a sister, Mrs. Neal Rich of Ralei^, and nine gran(k:hilctren.
'The family will be at the home of Blr. and Mrs. Mack Ipock, Route 2, Box 106, Vanceboro.
Ijuwfln
WILSON - Mrs. Louannie Williams Landin, 79, a retired saleslady, died Tuesday. The funeral service will be conducted at 3 p.m. Thursday at Thomas-Yelverton Funeral Home by the Rev. James H. McKinnon. Burial will be in Evergreen Memorial Gardens.
Mrs. Landin is survived by her husband, L.M. Landin of the home; two stepsons, Milton Landin of Marion and Kenneth Landin of Jacksonville, Fla.; three sisters, Mrs. Lillian W. Wooten of Falkland, Mrs. Nell W. Moore of Kinston and Mrs. Marie W. Warrick of Monroe; four stepgran-dhildren and four stepgreat-grandchildren.
The family will receive visitors at Thomas-Yelverton Funeral Home from 7 to 9 tonight.
Uttte
Mr. Ezekiel Little of Simpson died Tuesday. He was the foster father of Mrs. Josephine Gatlin in Greenville and the brother of Mrs. Rosa Tetterton of Washington, Mrs. Roena Johnson of Grimeland and William Little of Greenvilte.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced later by FTanagan Funeral Home.
Minges
Donald Winston Minges, 25, died at his home, 105 Templetmi Drive, Tuesday morning. The funeral service will be conducted in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapd at 11 a.m. Thursday by the Rev. Richard R. Gammon. Burial will follow in Plnewood Memorial Park.
Mr. Minges was born and reared in Greenville and attended the Greenville city schools. He attended the University of North Caro-lina-Chapel Hill and was graduated from the East Carolina University Schod of Business. He was a member of the First Presbyterian cihurch and was a partner and secretary-treasurer of Hooker and Buchanan Insurance Inc. He was also part-owner of Pepsi Inc. of New Bern. He belonged to the Noon Rotary and the Greeenville Country clubs. He was active in the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce and served on several committees.
Surviving are his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Ray Minges of Greenville; a brother, Thomas Eugene Minges of Greenville, and two sisters, Ms. Patricia Page Minges of Greenville and Ms. Virginia Morrow Minges of Alexandria, Va.
The family will receive freinds at the Wilkerson Funeral Horae from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight and at other times will be at the home of his parents, 150 Longmeadow Road.
The family suggests that anyone desiring to make a memorial contribution consider the Christina Elena Baro Memorial Foundation, Pitt County Memorial Ho^i-tal, P.O. Box 6028, Greenville 27834.
Nobles
Mrs. Minnie Griffin Nobles, 70, died Tuesday at her home in Ayden. The funeral service vrill be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Wilkerson Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. Gary Webber. Burial will follow in Greenwood Cemetery.
Mrs. Nobles was a former resident of Greenville. She
was a member of the Ayden Pentec(tal Holiness CSirch.
Surviving are five sons, BOly OBrioi Nobles and David H. Nobles, both of Aydoi, RdPert G. NoWes of Newport News, Va., Cari Nobles of Charlotte and Charles R. Nobles of Raleigh; a foster daughter, Mrs. Frances Murphrey of Elm City; a-sister, Mrs. Annablle Mozingo of Tarboro; 14 grandchildren; two step-grandchildrra, and two great-grandchildren.
Tte family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home, and at other times will be at 411 Edgewood Drive, Ayden.
ONeal
NEWYORK-Mr.Roberf ONeal Jr. formerly of Greenville, N.C., died Saturday in New York. He was the son of Robert ONeal of Greenville. The funeral was held Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the Metropolitan Free Will Baptist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Theadioushia ONeal; three daughters, Patricia ONeal, Theadioushia ONeal and Dorothy ONeal; a son, Robert ONeal; two sisters, Cora Blount and Dorothy ONeal, both of New York; his stepmother, Mrs. Glenn ONeal of Greenville, and
two grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements were handled by the Elizabeth Funeral Home, New York.
Ward
Mr. John Addey Ward, 58, died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Mrs. Arcennie Davenport Ward of the home and father of James A^ey Ward of Greenville. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hardees Funeral Home.
WUUaihs
Mrs. Callie Mae Williams, daughter of Mrs. Bessie Doward of Bethel, died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagan' Funeral Home.
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ClassifiedWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 9,. 1983
Pirates Have Ofily4Hpme Games In '83
A four game home schedule and a road slate that includes three trips to Florida highlight the 1983 East Carolina University football schedule, announced this morning.
Dr. Ken Karr, ECU Director of Athletics announced new ties with Temple University and the University of Miami (Florida) in panting the new schedule. Both of those teams appear
The schedule:
Sept. 3........ at Florida State
Sept. 10................... at N.C. State
Sept. 17............. ...............MURRAYSTATE
Sept. 24................. ,......at Miami (Fla.)
Oct.l.............. at Missouri
Oct. 8..................SOUTHWESTERN LOUISIANA
Oct. 15............ at Temple
Oct. 22......................................at Florida
Oct. 29....................EAST TENNESSEE STATE
Nov. 5......... Open Date
Nov. 12...............................William & Mary
Nov. 19 .................. at Southern Mississippi
Jaguars Stifle Panthers, 42-37
on the road schedule and will both come to Ficklen Stadium in 1984.
Home games for the Pirates include dates with Murray State, Southwestern Louisiana, East Tennessee State and William & Mary.
The rugged road slate has the Pirates facing not only Miami and Temple, but
Florida and Florida State, Missouri, Southern Mississippi and traditional rival N.C. State.
Southern Mississippi will be paying a return visit to Ficklen in 1984, giving the Pirates at least three top opponents on their home turi during that campaign.
Reserves Key Rocky AAt. Past Rampants By 68-53
ByWOODYPEELE Reflector Sports Editor ROCKY MOUNT - A math problem: when is the sum of five minus three greater than the sum of five minus one?
The answer, when Rocky Mount rolls up a 68-53 Big East Conference basketball victory over Rose High School.
The Gryphons, who had lost three of their last four games, lost three of their starters, including their.point guard and two others averaging in double figures, leaving them with only two starters. Two were declared academically ineli^ble and a third was dismissed from the team for disciplinary reasons. One of those was point guard Tony Joyner, and the other two were forwards Brian Hunter, averaging 13 points and eight rebounds, and guard Darrell
Vl^aters Inks With ECU; Wallace To Tar Heels
Two outstanding area football players signed NCAA letters-of-intent with North Carolina and East Carolina this morning, according to reports received here.
Bubba Waters, an outstanding running back from Bath High School, inked a grant with East Carolina University. Waters, 6-1, 205, rated as one of the states top runners, piled up 2,360 yards and 24 touchdowns this past year in leading Bath to the runner-up spot in the states l-A playoffs. He was an honorable mention player on the North Carolina AP All-State team.'
Waters on the Blue Chips Magazine Gold list - the publications top list. He was also among the top 25 selected by the Roanoke News and was All-East three straight years.
Waters gained 1,800 yards in his junior year and had 26 TDs while as a sophomore he had 1,340 yards and 17 touchdowns.
Donnie Wallace, a two-way lineman for Roanoke High School, considered by many as
(Please turn to page 20)
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Powell, averaging 12 points a game.
Rose, meanwhile, dost center Jeff Hopkins to a dislocated knee last Friday, and had only four regulars on the floor.
Nevertheless, the two Rocky Mount regulars (plus three reserves now starting) were more than enough to handle the four Rose regulars (plus one).
Earlier in the evening. Rocky Mounts girlS, unbeaten in league play, romped to a 54-32 win over Rose on a 35-point effort by Kim Taylor.
Roses boys gained an early lead, holding it through the first period and into the second, where the Rampants built up as much as a seven point lead.
But after that, Rocky Mount stormed back, moving ahead by three at the half. Then, in the third quarter. Rose lost
control of itself, put up too many ill-thought shots and fell back by 15^ before the period ended.
That third period was the death knell. Too many times, players tried to put up jump shots in the lane against a tightly packed zone defense that collapsed three defenders around the shooter. Many times, those shots were blocked or partially blocked, as Rose hit just one of 13 shots from the floor during the period.
In contrast. Rocky Mount made good on eight of 12 to run up the 15-point margin. *
We didnt play smart, Coach Jim Brewington said. I really thought that we could play better than this. 1 dont think it was a question of overconfidence. We have the kind of ball club where every-
(Pleasetumtopage22)
Hanging In The Air
Farmville Centrals 'Terrance Pettway (44) hangs in the air while trying to get off a shot against North Pitt in a key Eastern Carolina Conference game last night. Pettway scored 10 to lead the Jaguars to a 42-37 victory that brough them within a half-game of the first-place Panthers. (Reflector photo by Katie Zemhelt)
ByRICKSCOPPE Reflector ^rts Writer
FARMVILLE -Whoaaaaaaa! Hold everthing. The Eastern Carolina Conference title stakes is not over. It has just begun.
Farmville Central made sure of that Tuesday evening as the Jaguars used a 3-2 zone to stifle North Pitt and controlled the boards for a 42-37 win which left the ECC in a virtual dead heat.
Earlier, in the girls' game, North Pitt defeated Farmville, 52-47.
This game was d(H)r-die for us, Farmville Central coach Mike Terrell said afterwards. Weve still have an opportunity to win it.
The win left the Jaguars at
7-2 in the league, a half-game behind North Pitt, which fell to 8-2. Farmville can do no worse than tie for the title by winning its final three ECC games.
North Pitt, which could have clinched a tie for the ECC crown with a victory, now must win its remaining games and hope Farmville loses at least one. If the two teams tie, Farmville would get the No.l in the ECC tournament by virtue of having beaten North Pitt twice.
The win also kept Ayden-Griftons title hopes alive. The Chargers are now 7-3 in the league after beating Greene Central, 54-52, in overtime last night. A-G entertains the Jaguars Friday and is at North Pitt next Friday in its last two ECC games.
Farmville led, 11-10, after the first period and ran off an
8-0 spurt to open the'second period for a 19-10 lead and led at intermission, 20-14. North Pitt, which never led, trailed, 32-24, after three periods before putting together a 9-3 spurt that cut the lead to 35-33 with 4:56 remaining on a three-point play by Charles Harris.
The Jaguars extended the lead to 37-33 after Terrence
Pettway stole a rebound from Ken Whitehurst after a missed foul shot and laid the ball in with 2:42 to go,
Harris 18-foot jumper cut the lead to 37-35 with 1:43 to go, but Pettway hit a wide open Tony Hargrove underneath for a bucket and Hargrove nailed two foul shots moments later to give Farmville a 41-35 lead - and the win.
I think theyre better than us, North Pitt coach Cobby Deans said. Well 1 dont think they are, but the kids do and thats what matters. We just got outhustled and beat on the boards again.
And, Deans added, we missed free throws
The Panthers, who were last in the league in free throw shooting at one point but are now fifth, hit five of 15 from the line. Center Dennis Bradley had the worst night, missing all six of his free throws. I Farmville had nothing to do with the Panthers foul shooting problems but did have something to do with their rebounding woes. The Jaguars won the battle of the boards, 33-21, led by two guards. Guard Gary Hobgood grabbed nine rebounds and backcourt mate Reggie Gorham and forward Terrence Pettway each had seven rebounds. Bradley had nine rebounds to lead North Pitt.
Bradley also led the Panthers in scoring with 12 points. The Jaguars were led by Andrew Edwards with 12 and
Pettway and Hargrove with 10 each.
Farmville hit 43.9% (18 of 41) from the floor compared to 35.6% (16 of 45) by North Pitt.
*^Itlooks like North Pitt ^ brings the best out of us.' Terrell said. Every one of our kids did a real good job. All six players (who played) contributed, in some way, to the win.
I thought our execution both on offense and defense was excellent. 1 thought we carried out our game plan as well as we could have.
The gameplan included (a) controlling the backboards and (b) controlling three North Pitt players: Bradley, Harris and Greg Hines.
Farmville did both. Hines scored just seven points and was ineffective outside and Harris and Bradley five points between them in the first half as Farmville built a six-point halftime lead.
But, Terrell said the game may have been won elsewhere. 1 really think, he
( Please turn to page 20)
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Sports Calendar
Donnie Wallace
Todays Sports , Swimming Rose at Durham Jordan Basketball East Carolina at William & Mary (7:30p.m.)
Pee Wee Division Pirates vs. Blue Devils Midget Division Wolfpack vs. Pirates Wildcats vs. Cavaliers Junior Division Terrapins vs. Cavaliers Wolfpack vs. Pirates Blue Devils vs. Tarheels Adult Division Taffvs.PCC Integon vs. E.C.F.P.
Fergusons vs. Cherrys WresUing Rocky Mount dt E.B. Aycock ys Sports Baskc
North Lemrir at Conley (6:30
p.m.)
Midget Division Terrapins vs. Wolfpack Junior Division Wildcats vs. Cavaliers Adult Division Pirates vs. Pitt Memorial Hustlers vs. Coca-Cola TheWizvs.TRW Attic vs. Empire Brushes Bobs TV vs. Grady-White
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18-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, February i, 1983
TANK IFNAMAIU
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A-G Downs Rams In OT
Win, North Pitt Loss, Keeps Chargers In Title Race
d.
OiBtfiBivtJU,
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SCOREBOARD
Rec Basketball
Midget Division Blue Devils 5 2 5 7-19
Tarheels v 4 4 5 013 Leading scorers; BD-Brian WUle 15; T-Walter Gatlin 7, Derick Daniel 4
Junior Division
Wildcats 13 5 5 15-38
Tarheels .......8 8 14 16-46
Leading scorers: W-Eric Jarman 17, Greg Hallow 8; T Jimmie Giliihan 26, Bnan Mitchell 8, Jeff Mahoney 8
Womens League Burroughs-Wellcome .10 20-30
John's Florist.........22 2042
Leading scorers: BW-Ollie Mewbom 14, Jennifer Counterman 8, JF-Kim Sharpe 12, Cathy Daniels 12. Diane Wilson 12,
Pitt Memorial won by forfeit over Dazzle
AAA Division
Pitt Memorial 28 2755
TRW ......... 15 37-52
Leading scorers: PM-James Dupree 16. Durwin Clemons 12. TRHaywood Montgomery 21. James Burlington 17 i
Pirates............. .32 51-83
Flamingo 30 47-77
. Leading scorers: P-Mickey Hines 23, Jesse Harris 19: F-Keno Farrow 25, J.C. Daniels 12.
Wiz........ 32 36-68
Coke 32 30-62
Leading scorers: W-Bobby Fleming 25, Andy Roberson 17; C-Russell Eaves 20. Mike Shane 10.
Houston 116, Kansas City US. t/l Dallas 112. Ptwenix 100 San Dgo 125, Denver 9
Los Angeles 121. SeatUe 118 WctkMdays Gaines New York al Boston, (n)
Allanta at Philadelphia, ini Indiana at New Jersey, (n) Milwaukee at CTeveland, in) Detroit at Dallas, ini Golden State al Kansas City. i n i SeatUe at Denver, in)
Utah at Los Angeles, in)
'niundays Garnet Cleveland al Indiana, (ni
Rochester 94. AKredi? Kutgers-NewarkSI. Drew70 Salisbury St 58. GtassboroSt 49
Esasky, third baaeroan; Dallas WUliams, jtrielW; Tom Foiey, Inflelder, wd
Spttogileld 78, Assumption 71
Lriica^.r- -
V ...,-HamlltoiTS Villa/nova 86, Connecticut 79 W Maryland 90, Franklin & Marshall
outi
Steve ChrtoUnas, catcher FOOTBALX
National PhetbaOLeaine
GREEN BAY PACKER^Extended
Houston at Washington, (nl Philadelphia at Chkago, i n Portland at Milwaukee, (nl
Washington. (r iia at Chkago, i
n)
Golden Stale at San Antonio, i n i SeatUe al Utah, (nl Phoenix at San Diego, (ni
SOUTH
.Albany St. Ga 81, Florida A&M 79 Berea 105. Alice Lloyd 59 Carson Newman 93, Sewanee 83 Gardner-Webb 97, Catawba 78 Hampden-Sydney 78, Lynchburg 72 Hampton Inst 92, Winston-Salem 77 Kentucky 88, Mississippi St 87 Kentucky St. 68. E Kentucky 63 Liberty Baptist 10. Loogwood 48 MUes 78. Talladega 86 Presbyterian 93, Claflin 72 St Andrew's85. Methodists? Treveccs 65, David Lipscomb M
the contTKt of Bart SUrr, head coach, throu^ Jan. 31, 19B. Atmouncod the resijnwtlon of iW KeUda, offansive bacimid coach. Fired Paul RiMlxinskl, special aasistant.
Untted States Football League BOSTON BREAKERS-Slgned Brad Johnson, center.
PHILADELPHIA STARS-Slgned
Kelvin Bryant, running back; Irv Eatman, tackle, Scott FUzkce, wide
receiver, and
Jackson, safety
American Soccer Laaaw JACKSONVOXE TEAlSN-Named
NHL
Warren Wilson 88. Ginch Vall^ 66 er.Va.75
Wash & Lee 84, Bridgewater West Georgia 75. AusmU 72
Walee Conference Patrick Division W L T GF GA Ptt Philadelphia 35 13 7 228 152 77
NY Isles 29 18 9 206 162 67
Washington 27 16 13 221 193 67
NY Rangers 23 24 8 201 196 54
New Jersey II 33 12 155 232 34
Pittsburgh 12 36 7 168 266 31
Adams Division Boston 36 10 8 218 142 80
.Montreal 29 16 10 251 196 68
BuHak) 25 18 II 202 172 61
(Juebec 25 22 8 236 223 58
Hartford 13 35 6 174 268 32
Avila 67. Mo Western 62 Beloit 66, Lake Forest 64 Bethel 90. Marion 71 Cedarville 67, Urbans 64 Chadron St. 68, Kearney St. 67, OT Chica St. 85, Illinois tech 65 Clevemnd St. S3. Akron 82
Dennis Vioilet head coach and Onnrad Smith martating director.
&MXEGE AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL-Named Alex Rotsfco head football coach and Bob Burke associate aUiletlc director.
WEBER STATE-Blgned Mike Price, head football coach, to a three-year contract. ,
Eariham 51, Taylor 47 Findlay 68. Anderson 68
dlay6--------------
Fort Wayne BiWe 100. Concordia 91 Friends ra,OtUwa, Kan 67
Tobacco Balt Conftrance
Campbell Conference fwrrlsl
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Dinakn
W LPct. GB Phdadeiphia 41 7 854 -
Boston 37 12 755 44
New Jersey 32 18 840 10
Washington 23 25 479 18
New York 22 27 449 194
Central Divisin Milwaukee 32 17 653 -
AUanta 24 25 490 8
Detroit 24 26 480 84
Chicago 17 33 340 154
Indiana IS 33 313 164
Cleveland 10 39 204 22
WESTERN CONFERENCE MdwestDivlaiQn San Antonio 30 21 588
Dallas 24 24 .500 44
Kansas City 24 25 490 5
Denver 24 27 471 6
Utah 18 32 380 114
Houston 10 39 204 19
Pacific Oivlatai Los Angeles 37 10 787 -
PorUand 29 20 .582 9
Phoenix 30 21 588 9
SeatUe 27 22 551 11
Golden sute 20 28 417 174
San Diego 16 35 .314 23
Tuesday's Games New Jersey 115, AUanU 109 Washington 104, Boston lOl, OT San Antonio 147. Detroit 143. OT PorUand 108. Chicago 93
Divlsk
Chicago 35 14 7 240 191 77
MinnesoU 27 IS 13 224 196 67
St Louis 17 28 II 193 217 45
Toronto 14 29 10 197 231 38
Detroit 13 30 12 168 2T 38
Smytbe Divisian Edmonton 30 16 10 300 227 70
Calgary 23 25 8 231 234 54
Winnipeg 21 27 7 206 229 49
Vancouver 17 26 11 196 216 45
Los Angeles 17 28 8 190 234 42
TueedaysGame AU-SUrGame Campbell Conference 9, Wales Conr ference3
Wednesday's Games
Detroit at Hartford, ml Vancouver at Pittsburgh, mi New Jers at Giicago. m)
'nimdays Games Pittsburgh at Boston. m>
St .Louis at Philadeli^ia. (n i Winnipeg at Montreal, ml Washm^on at New York Islanders, (n) New York Rangers at MinnesoU. in) atCalgary, (nl
Grace l02,Goehen89 Hanover 94. Roae-Hulman 84 HuntUu^ 68, St. Francis. Ind 47 lUinoisXoll 70. Greenville 86 Indiana Tech 65, Ind.-Pur-Indpls. 64, OT
Iowa St . 73. Missouri 72, OT Macalester 46, St. Scboiistica 45 Malone 81. Ohio Dominican 60 Marquette 53, Old Dominion SO Mich -Dearborn 106, Mercy 86 MiUikin68. NorUi Park 57 (Juincy 80, Benedictine, Kan, 70 Rio Grande 94, Mt Vernon Nazarene 58 School of the Ozarks 79, Baptist Bible 66 SW Baptist 56, Pittsburg St. 54 Walsh 65, Tiffin 58 Wayne. Neb 95. BeUevue66 Westmar 83, Buena VisU 68 Westminster, Mo 67, ColumbU. Mo. 57 Wright St. 55, Cmt St. Ohio 51 YatSton 52. DakoU Wesleyan 51
Panhandle St. 108, Langston'88 erSndlh68
Wiley 76, Philander .____
FARWEST Azusa Pacific 71, Cal-San Diego 58 E MonUna 67, Rocky Mountmn 57 E New Mexico 98. N Mex. HlOdands
ffalo at Los Angeles, (n)
Great Falls 78. Carroll. Mont. 64 Lewis A Clark 92, E Oregon 71 Seattle Pacific 80. W Btmtist 56 Warner Pacific 88, Pacific, Ore 69
Boys Standings Conf.
Overall
W L
W
L
Mattmauskeet
13 0
16
0
Aurora
10 4
13
6
Belhaven
8 6
9
9
Creswell
7 6
10
7
Chocowinity
7 7
7
10
Bear Grass
6 7
7
9
Columbia
6 7
7
9
Bath
4 9
4
9
James ville
0 13
0
17
Clinched Champiooship
Girls Standings Conf.
Overall
W L
W
L
Belhaven
14 0
18
0
Chocowinity
12 2
14
3
Bear Grass .
10 3
13
3
Bath
7 6
7
6
Columbia
6 7
9
7
Jamesville
5 8
5
12
Aurora
4 10
4
13
Mattmauskeet
2 11
3
14
Creswell
0 13
1
16
Collggq Scores
W Washington 50, Simon Fraser 49 Westmont TO, Biola57
Willamette 97, ConcordU, Ore 82
EAST
American Int'l 81. Bryant TO Bentley 77, St Anselm 61 Brown 99, Yale 89 Cent Connecticut 81, Stonehill 66 Charleston, W Va 89, W Virginii St,
Transactions
Rocky Mount Defeats EBA
BASEBALL
74
Clark 82. Babean 60 Concordia. N Y 63. NyackS2 Connecticut Coll. 88 Wesleyan 65 CorUand St. 96, Buffalo 93 Geneva 73. St. Vincent, Pa. 72 Hobart 73. Rob^ Wesleyan 61 Ithaca 16, Btng^ton St. 64 JohnJay7,OTY72 Kings CoU 63. New PalU 58 LeMoyne 90. St. John Fiaber 73
American Leagw
D1ANS-,
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Announced that Jerry Dybzmskl, Mike Fischlin and Jack PercoDte, infielders. and Wil
Culmer. outfielder, bad agreed to terms. MINNESOTA TWIl-Sig
Williams, pitcher, and Tim
iigned Al IMel. In-
BUI
Brian
LonglslandU 9Z.MaristTO Maiuiatt
Allard. Jerry Don Gleah and Jed Murray, pitchers; Rick Sweet and Terry
itUnS7, lonaSS Merrimack 74, (^nnipiac 63 NazareUi 75, Buffalo S. 66 N Y Maritime 82, Stevens Tech TO
ng, cata
Dave Hendersoo and John Moses, outfielders.
Niagara 79, Holy Croas 78, OT .Northeastern 62, ColgaU 49
NaOaiialLMflK
ATLANTA BRAVES-^igoed Rafael
Oswego St 69. Fredonia St 66 Providence 81. Rhode Island 68
Ramirez, shortstop, to a one-year coo-U-act.
CINCINNATI REDS-Signed Ron Robinson and Ben Hayes, pitchers Nick
Derrick Jones scored 16 points to lead Rocky Mount to a 62-58 win over E.B. Aycock Tuesday in a junior high basketball game.
E.B. Aycock was led by Darryl Perkins with 19 points and Wayland Moore with 14.
EBAs girls defeated Rocky Mount, 45>39, behind Kim Duprees 18 points.
Rocky Mount was led by Toni Whither with 12.
EBAs frisare now 6-a.
,HlUonawhe^.wese.n.
-FOR LESS -
Southern Tire^
---.Charles Boulevard and Oreenvu.......
Corner oi Charles o , v , u i ()(
(yP.xMON IHl H 'r tOSXl H i
GieenvilleBlvci & Charles
NexlToP.ttPl''^^
th & Market
Washington
946-9400
DOUBLE BELTED WHITEWALLS
600x17 155/80B13 165/80B13
s, p,u,
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185/75B14.................oo 34,87
195/75B14................SJ 55 36.10
205/75B14 ,j5j 30
215/75B14................3951
225/75B14.................7550 40.65
600x15...................... 3^ 25
205/75B15................(ISO 3030
215/75B15.................70 40,41
225/75B15..................... 41.68
235/75B15.................1350 42 83
Plus F E T 01 1 *3 10 2 15
DOUBLE BELTED
RADIAL WHITEWALLS
MIg by
Kolly Spfinglitid
m 34'
155/80R13
Renl Sale Pnce
165/80R13........ )5oo 35.62
175/80R13 ...... 7) 50 36.41
185/80R13..... 79 55 37.81
195/75R14 ........... 12 75 40.50
205/75R14.....................37 75 45.88
205/75R15.....................9375 48.60
215/75R15....... ,5 49.74
225/75R15..................... so 51.30
235/75R15.......... oo 52.91
Plus F E T o( 1 53 )0 3 01
DOUBLE STEEL RADIAC WHITEWALLS
37=>
155/80R13
RaUH SataPrIca
165/80R13..................... 79 00 38,50
185/80R13..... 84.00 42.38
185/75R14..................... 68 50 46.64
195/85R14........... 9185 47.43
205/75R14................ 9495 49.33
215/75R14 .................96 50 50.84
205/75R15..................... 97 50 51.40
215/75R15..................... 9830 52.10
225/75R15........... .........10190 55.22
^235/75R15... .^.................io4 so 57.10
PluiF.E.T of 1.53 to 3.01
3995
Brakes Relined
4 Wheels or Disc Type
&
ml
SNOW HILL - It took an overtime to do it, but Ayden-Grifton kept itself in the race for the Eastern Carolina Conference title wii a 54-52 victory over Greene Central last ni^t.
The win coupled with Farmville Centrals 42-37 win over North Pitt, left Ayden-Grifton with a 7-3 league record, while North Pitt is 8-2 and Farmville is 7-2.
Greene Centrals giris took a 55-39 win in their meeting with the Lady Chargers.
Ayden-Grifton, which can control its own destiny in its two remaining league games
- at home against Farmville and on the road at North Pitt
- had a struggle on its hands, and had to hit the final shot of regulation to stave off what would have been its fifth loss in the last six games.
Greene Central struck for the eariy lead, building up a 13-10 margin in the first quarter. The Rams remained in charge during the second quarter, outscoring the Chargers, 13-11, for a 26-21 margin at the half. '
The Rams kept it up during the third period, building the lead out to 36-28 as the final quarter got underway.
Finally, however, the Chargers came to life, and when Greene Central lost three starters to fouls, traded by two points late in the game
- and the Rams had the ball. But a turnover gave the ball to Ayden-Grifton and Thomas Anderson hit with 14 seconds left to tie it at 46-46. The Rams then missed at the horn with the chance to win.
In the overtime, Ayden-Grifton scored the first four points and the Rams never got closer than two after that.
Anderson led Ayden-Grifton with 19 points while Jeff Dixon added 13. James Hiompson had 14 points, while Theo^re Edwards and Tracy McLaislJom each had 12 for the Rams.
Ayden-Grifton is now 12-7 overall. Greene Central is 3^ in the league and 5-14 overall.
In the girls game, Ayden-Grifton took a 10-7 lead in the first period, but couldnt hold it. Greoie Central came
JV Game: Ayden-Grirton 46, Cratrali?.
Greene I
GliiaGame Ayden-Grifton (39) - McCotter 3 1-5 7, Hicks 1 (M) 2, Faiflon 4 3-5 11, Brown 5 3-5 13, Roundtree 1 1-2 3, Moore 0 (M) 0, Braxton 0 1-2 1, Malone 0 94 0, Dixon 0 (Ml 0, Chamberlain 0 (Ml 0, Artis 1 (M) 2, MortO (Ml 0. Totals 15 9-19 39.
Greene Central (55) - Hicks 6 3^ 15, Bowen 2 0-1 4, Cox 0 54 5, A. WUkes 1 (M) 2. Jones 2 9-15 13, S. WUkes 1 0-2 2, BatUe 4 44 12,
Beamon 0 (M) 0, Myatt 1 04 2, ), Radford 0
back with a 15-6 advantage in the second (piarter to take a 22-16 lead at the half.
The Chargers came back with a 14-13 margin in the third period but ^U1 trailed, 35-30. Greene Central ran away in the final quarter, 204, to win going away.
Cync Hicks led Greene Central with 15 points, while Cynthia Jones added 13 and , Allison Battle hit 12. Ayden-Grifton was led by Lbdad Brown with 13 whileCora
Faison had 11. <
Aydi-Griftims girls fall to 2-8 and 5-14, whUe Greene Central is 4-5,12-7.
Greene Catral travels to C.B. Aycock on Friday, while Ayden-Grifton hosts Farmville Central.
For All Your Fencing Needs CALL 752-2736
f OR FNtt ESTiMAK S 1H' Fin incing A,,)il.,hlc
0 04 0.
Herring 0 04 0,
Totals 1721-3755. Ay(jtahGriftan...lO 6 14 9-39 Greene Central... 7 15 13 20-55
Wtiitetiurst Sons Fence Co
Boys Game
i-Griftoi
THE CaOPJTERKIflRF STQRE
Ayden-Grifton (54) T. Anderson 8 3-419, Gay 3 04 6, Dixon 40413, Woods32-48, Smith0242, C. Peterson 2 24 6, Newton 0 04 0. TotaU90144054.
Greene Central (52) - J. Thompson 5 4414, L ,toyner 01-21, Warren 31-3 7, T. Edwards 5 2-312, McLawhorn 6 04 12, Cogdell 0 04 0, A. Thompson 0 04 0, Duon 0 04 0, S. Edwards 10-1 2, Johnson 1 2-2 4. Totals 2110-1552.
Ayden4rrlfton 10 11 7 18 8-54 GreeneC 13 13 10 10 -S2
Your Full-Line Commodore Dealer For Greenville,
Is Now Open
Rivergate Center Greenville, N.C;
752-5894
A
A new City Services brochure is available. If interested, contact the Public Information Office, 7524137, Ext. 224.
PITT PLAZA formen
Semi-Annual Mens Sale
Group of Mens Suits.............
Wool blends and 1(X)% wools in solids, pinstripes and glen plaids. Reg. up to $340
Group of Mens Sportcoats
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Entire Stock of Mens Fashion Sweaters 1/3.1/2
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Group of Mens Neckwear_____
Foulard, repp, stripe, plaid, jacquard, dub and solid ties. Reg. to $32.50
Off
Group of Mens Dress Pants........................jl /
Entire st(xk of all trousers made of 100% wool. Choose belt-loop or beltless, clean front or pleats, solids or plaids. Sizes 29-44,
Off
Entire stock of fall mens swcaters-cardigans, v-neck, aewneck, cable, argyle, shawl neck, and vests in lambswool, Shetland, ragg, merino and acrylic knits. By such famous names as Izod, Alan Paine, Tricot, Lord Jeff, Chaps, and Brixfys Brand.
Entire Stock of Mens Shetland Sweaters
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Entire stock of outerwear by London Fog, Bert Pulitzer, Ocean Pacific, Pacific Trail and more at great savings
Group of Mens Dress Shirts .....
1(X)% cotton & pdy-cotton blend in solid oxfords, plaids & stripes. Neck sizes 14 1/2-17,
Group of Mens Sport Shirts____
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Group of Mens Dress Shoes...........
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12.99
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42.99
Group of Mens Gloves . *
20%
Off
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Holland Trying To Downplay UNC-UVa Clash
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) - Virginia coa<* Terry HoUaod is tryfaig to downplay tbe significance of his clubs Thursday nigM cmtest against top-ranked North Can^.
Virginia lost to the Tar Beds MU-95 in their first match of the season Jan. 15 in ChariottesviUe. ft was their last defeat. Meanwhile, N1h Carolhia, 2D-3, has won 17 straight.
Weve been involved in so many showdowns in the last few years, I think people down here probably cant get excited ^ut another game of the cwitury, said Holland, whose No. 3-ranked team is 19-2. But it is a big game and it is a game that everyone can get excited about.
Well have to play a great basketball game to beat the Tar Heels, Hollnd said. They definitely have two of the premier players in tbe nation in (Sam) Perkins and Michad Jordan.
Perkins scored X points, including four 3-point goals, in the earlier game. But Virginias AU-America coiter, 7-foot-4 Ralph Samp^, has been on a streak recently, scoring 76 points in Virginias last three matches.
North Carolina will be concerned about Sampson, but not too concerned, Holland said, adding that expe^ a combination of zone and oneK)iH)ne defenses against his star center.
I think North Carolina is awfully strong and awfully deep and well have to play extremely well, Holland said.
Meantime, North Carolina Cioach Dean Smith is pi^aring for a fight.
Virginia is playing better than anyone in the country right now, said Smith, whose teams 7843 win Saturday over Furman gave him a 13th straight 20-victory season. It will be a battle, and we have a chance to win. Virginia is really at the top of its game now.
The Cavaliers embarrassed ACC rival Duke on Saturday, 105-84. Sampson was limited to 10 points in the Duke game but grabbed 14 rebounds in just 23 minutes of playing time.
I think were playing well, Holland said. But I think we can play better. It will be a great test for us to play down there.
Gatlin's 38 Keys Vikings
JACKSONVILLE - D.H. Conleys Vikings brought the Keith Gatlin show to Jacksonvilles White Oak Hi^ School last night - and Gatlin did indeed put on a show.
By the time it was all over, Conleys Coastal Conference leading Vikings had romped to a 7344 victory behind the play ' of the 6-5 guards
For the night, Gatlins stats read like this; five rebounds, three steals, one blocked shot, .no assists, four of five from ^the foul line (80%) and 17 of 23 from the floor (74%) - a total of 38 points.
That was only six less than White Oak scored as a team.
Earlier in the evening, Conleys girls ripped White Oak, 70-16.
The Vikings pulled away quickly from the cellar-dweller in the lea^, running up a 20-7 lead in the first period. They kept it in the second frame, outscoring their hosts, 17-10. That made it 37-17 at the half.
Conley continued to pull away in the third frame, with an 18-10 mar^n for a 55-27 lead going into the final period. In ^at, Conley held an 18-17 margin.
No one else scored in double figures in the game.
Conleys girls had little
Roanoke Whips Tarboro; Girls Nearing Title
ROBERSONVILLE -Roanoke High Schools girls took a big step toward clinching the Northeastern Conference championship with a 50-44 victory over Tarboro last night. Roanokes boys also stayed atop, the boys standing with a 65-50 win over the Vikings.
The Roanoke girls are now 13-1 in league play and 14-3 overall. Tarboro drops to 11-2 and 14-3.
Tarboro pushed out into a 10-5 lead in the first period of the game, but Roanoke took charge in the second quarter, outscoring the Valkyries, 17-8. That pushed the Lady Skins into a 22-18 halftime advantage.
Tarboro rallied in the third period, 12-8, knotting the score at 30-30 as the final quarter opened. But in that, Roanoke
outhit the Valkyries, 20-14, to claim the victory.
Sheila Howell scored 23 points to lead Roanoke, while Mona Jackson had 14, Pam Long had 12 and Valerie Battle had 11 for Tarboro.
In the boys game, Roanoke moved out early, graWiing a 15-10 lead after one quarter. The Redskins held it with a 12-7 margin in the second period, taking a 27-17 lead into intermission.
The third period saw Tarboro rally, 18-14, cutting the lead back to 41-35. But Roanoke held the Vikes off, 24-15, in the final period to wrap up the win.
Greg Everett led Roanoke with 15 points, vdiile James Duggins had 14 and Ricky Highsmith had 11. Curtis Bryant had 17 and Alfonza Williams had 12 for Tarboro.
JV Game; Taitoro 61, Roanoke 51.
Girls Game Tarboro (44) - Jackson 6 2-2 14, Smith 0 1-21, BatUe 51-411, Lons 4 4-6 12, Longford 1 1-2 3, Caldwell 1 1-2 3, Petteway 0 0-0 0, Dancey 0 04) 0. Totals 17 20-20 44.
Roanoke (50) - Bland 0 1-3 1, Jones 3 3-5 9, Randolph 4 1-2 9, Howell 5 13-21 23, Duggins 3 2-4 8, Brown 0 0-2 0, Smith 0 04) 0. Totals 1520-3750.
Tarboro.........10 8 12 14-44
RoanAe..........5 17 8 20-50
Boys Game Tarboro (50) - Bridges 3 1-1 7, WUliams 5 2-212, Bryant 81-117, T. Bryant 2 0-14, Jones 3 3-4 9, Rose 0 l-21.Total8218-llS0.
Roanoke (65) - Wallace 1 2-2 4, R. Highsmith 3 5411, Everett 6 3-3 15, S. Bryant 3 2-2 8, Duggins 6 2-2 14, Baker 3 3-3 9, H. Bryant 1 04) 2,
Hines 0 2-2 2, M. Hi^mith 0 04) 0,
Danieis 0 00 0. Totals 2319-20 66.
Tarboro.........10 7 18 15-50
Roanoke.........15 12 14 24-65
Roanoke climbs to 12-2 in the league and 14-3 overall. Tarboro is 8-5,9-8.
The Redskins play host to Williamston on Friday.Perkins: Dons Offered Money
CHARLOTTE (AP)-North Carolina basketball star Sam Perkins says University of San Francisco recruiters offered him things such as stereos, cars, money, whatever.
Breaking a year of silence on the allegations, Perkins said in an interview with television station WBTV in Charlotte that there were some offers of cash, but it went beyond that.
They just went around the area saying, Youll be getting things such as stereos, cars, money, vidiatever, he said.
The allegations became public in March 1982, after it was announced that possible recruiting violations were being investigated.
Perkins was linked to the probe after investigators said NCAA officers noticed that Perkins and a coach from San Francisco were missing after the Dapper Dan Classic. The investigators staked out a hotel where Perkins was staying, and saw him return at 2 a.m. with a coach from the university.
Wed. Thru Sot. Sale
Ie-
The Saving Place*
'I i'
lilt
llite
J Ut J6 C^f6 Of You
4-PLY BLACKWALU
26.97
I Our Reg.
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Plus F.E.T. 1.43 Ea.
nusF.E.T. US To 2.54
SIZES
SALE
A7fx13
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Front Disc Brake Special
Sale Price
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FronI ortv Many U S and tofeign cor Ll^i trucks md Services, wfilcf'
higher Addrtlonol pcrls and services, which may be needed, ore at etro cost SemimeloHtc pods StO mote
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trouble with the White Oak lassies, rdling out to a 234 lead after one poiod. They increased tat to 39-8 with a 16-2 advantage in the second quarter.
Conley ^again outscored White Oak, 23-6, in the third period, upping the lead to 62-8. They finished things off with an 8-2 advantage.
Karen Barrett led Conley
JV Game; Cotey 62, White Oak 47. Girls Game Conley (70) Cannon 5 3-5 13, Bamhul 7 24 16, Komegay 5 3-413, Barrett 8 2-3 18, MUls 4 04) 8. Chipman 1 04) 2, Patrick 0 0-0 0. Totals 3010-16 70.
White Oak (16) - Henderson 2 04) 4, Plothner 0 04) 0, Bowen 0 04) 0, Posey 1 0-0 2, T Riggs 0 04) 0, Fonville 1 04) 2. Rigby 0 04) 0, S. Riggs 3 04) 6, Flynn 1 04) 2, Fritlner 0 04) 0, Adams 0 04) 0, Fr^ville 0 04) 0 Totals 8 04) 16.
Cmiley...........23 16 23 8-70
WhiteOak.........6 2 6 2-16
Boys Game Conley (73) - Gatlin 17 4-5 38, Payton 0 04) 0, L. Cox 3 2-2 8, Anderson 1 14 3, Clemons 2 04) 4, Smith 0 1-2 1, M Cox 3 04) 6. R Dawson 0 1-2 1, Redrick 0 1-5 1, Ruffin 3 34 9, Coward 0 04) 0, Holloman 104) 2 Totals 30 13-24 73.
White Oak (44) Tyson 1 04) 2, Smith 0 24 2, McAllister 2 04) 4, Sloan 2 04) 4, Jones 2 1-3 5, A. Waters 0 04) 0, R. Waters 3 2-3 8, Chappell 2 04) 4, Fonville 2 04) 4, Garics 4 04) 8, Oark 2 1-3 5. Totals 19 6-1344.
Conley..........20 17 18 18-73
WhiteOak........7 10 10 17-44
with 18 points, while .Irish Barnhill added 16 and both Darlene Cannon and Mechio Komegay had 13. No one scored in double figures (or WhiteOak.
Conleys boys are now 7-6 in the Coastal with a 16-3 overall record. The girls climb to 6-1 and 18-2. White Oaks boys
tumble to 0-7 in conference play and 4-15 overall. The girls are 0-7,2-17.
Conley returns to action on Thursday, hosting North Lenoir in a game that will start one-hour earlier than usual The junior varsity game will begin at 4 p.m.
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20The Daily Reflector, lireenvuic, n.c.-
Jags Down Panthers...
(Continued from page 17) said, the key was that we were so well-prepared for, their 1-3-1 zone. That is what makes them click.
The Jaguars actually forced the Panthers out of their 1-3-1 into a man-to-man late in the first half and North Pitt never returned to the zone the remainder of the game.
The game started slowly. A jumper and a free throw by Pettway gave Farmville a 9-6 lead and the Ja^ars led,
11-10, after the first ei^t minutes, which ended with Bradley missing two free throws, ^
The Panthers turned the ball over three of their first five possessions to begin the second period Farmville, meantime, used follow shots by Edwards and Gorham to key a 8-0 run that gave the Jaguars a 19-10 lead.
Farmville stretched its six-point halftime gap to 10 twice in the third period as Edwards muscled inside for three buckets and Hargrove added two. The Jaguars led by eight going into the final period, only to see North Pitt slice the lead to two before holding on to win. .
In the girls game, North Pitt outscored Farmville, 21 to 10,'in the second period to rally from a five-point deficit and then held off a late charge to defeat the Jaguars.
We had some tight spots tonight. Pant-HERS coach Randy Avery said. We tried hard at the end to help them out.
North Pitt led by nine going into the final period and upped its lead to 14 before being outscored, 17 to 4, over a five-minute span as the Lady Jaguars sliced the lead to 4847 with 1:09 left.
But. Delores Pittman maneuvered inside for a bucket with 48 seconds left to make it 5047 to seal the win, the Pant-HERS eighth in 21 games.
Farmville, now 4-16 overall and 3-6 in the conference, led, 10-5, after the first quarter, but the Pant-HERS scored the first eight points of the second period to take a 13-10 lead.
Pittman scored six of her 14 points in the run. Farmville regained the lead later in the quarter before a three-point play and a jumper by Linda Harrell gave North Pitt a 26-20 halftime lead.
Pittman hit a jumper and two foul shots to help the
...-4Ty9.1983
Coach Cheers
Farmville coach Mike Terrell cheers his team on during its 42-37 victory over North Pitt Tuesday night. (Reflector photo by Katie Zemhelt)
Pant-HERS go up, 39-30, after three periods. Two layups -both after turnovers against the Pant-HER press - by Sherri Bradley upped the lead to 44-30 with 6:31 left.
Farmville outscored North Pitt. 17 to 4, the next five minutes to slice the lead to 4847. Cynthia Hart scored seven of her nine points to key ther run, but the Pant-HERS heid on to win to up their ECC mark to 3-7.
One of our girls said, Gosh, 1 dont know what it feels like to win its been so long since we won. It feels great. Avery said.
Farmville was led by Stephanie Newton with 17 points. Harrell had 10 points for North Pitt.
North Pitt plays host to
North Pitt.......10
Farmville.......11
Pirates Sign Waters...
(Continued from page 17) one of the premier players in the country, signed this morning with the University of North Carolina. Wallace was twice selected to the AP All-State team and played in the Shrine Bowl this past December in Charlotte.
Roanoke coach Nolan Re-spess said Wallace narrowed his list of schools to four: Notre Dame, N.C. State, Wake Forest and UNC out of over 200 schools. Wallace then eliminated Notre Dame last week.
From there, Respess said: It was down to the last three until the last moment. He made the decision last night after the (Roanoke-Tarboro) basketball game,
Respess said .Vallace told a press conference this morning that Since he was a kid hes followed Carolina. He tried his best to block that out of his
mind, but he said that in the end he felt more comfortable in Chapel Hill.
Added Respess: The kid used a lot of savvy and character in eliminating the schools (from his list). Im proud of him.
Others signed by East Carolina this morning include: Terry Paige, 64), 185-pound tailback from Whiteville; Bruce Simpson, 6-2, 205 linebacker from Jacksonville; Ellis Dillahunt, 6-0, 177-pound defensive back from Jacksonville; Ron Gillard, 6-2, 222-pound outside linebacker from Gamer; Darrell Speed, 6-0, 195-pound quarterback from Lee County; John Williamson, 6-2, 218-pound outside linebacker from Scotland County; and Petey Davis, 6-3,260-pound offensive lineman from Scotland County; Brian Goodwin, 6-0, 180-pound defensive back from
Washington Hi^ School. '
Paige also made the Blue Chip (Jold list and made the All-Soqth team picked by the Orlando Sentinel and was listed among the top five in the state by the Roanoke News. Paige was two-time All-State and All-East.
Paige gained over 4,500 yards in three years, his senior year over 1,800 as he led his team to two second-place finishes in the state. Paige also had 26 TDs in 1982.
Simpson, Dillahunt, Speed and Williamson also all made the Roanoke News top 25, which includes players from the North Carolina-Virginia area.
Simpson was All-State and All-East. Dillahunt was also All-East and played in the Shrine Bowl.
Williamson was also a member of the Shrine Bowl team. Goodwin was second team All-East.
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Bear Grass Slips Past Belhaven
BEAR GRASS - The Bear Grass boys managed a 58-51 victory over Belhaven last night, but the Belhaven girls moved closer to clinching the Tobacco Belt title with a 63-50 win over the Lady Bears.
Both Belhren and Bear Grass scored eight points in the first period of the boys game, but Belhaven rushed away in the second frame. The Bulldogs outscored Bear Grass, 25-16, in that period for a 33-24 halftime lead.
Bear Grass rallied in the third period, however, 17-8, and pulled even with the Bulldogs, 4141 Then, in the final perio, the Bears out-scored Belhaven, 17-10, to wrap up the win.
Phil Peele led Bear Grass with 22 points, while Lawrence Watson added 13 an James Williams had 10. Ed Bumis led Belhaven with 21 while Leslie Davis added 12.
The Belhaven girls found Bear Grass a stubborn opponent as the two battled to a 14-14 deadlock after the first eight minutes. In the second period, however, the Lady Bulldogs inched away, 15-7, for a 29-21 halftime lead.
Winless Bullets Fall, 7244
JV Gtffle: Beiluven 42. Bear Grass 35 GlrisGame Belhaven (63) - Hwboo 12 1-2 25. Colton 4 O-18, Bumis 4 2-2 10, Peele 6 3-7 15. Leathers 2 04) 4, Whitney 0 1-3 1. Totals 287-15 63.
Bear Grass (50) - Mizelle 9 10-22 28, WUliams 5 5415, Rogerson 0 0-2 0, Rawls 2 i-4 5, Harrison 1 00 2, Cowan 0 04) 0, Land 0 04) 0, Taylor 0 00 0, Daniels 0 04) 0, Knox 0 04) 0, Ulley 0 04) 0. ToUds 1716-28 SO.
Belhaven..............14 15 30 1463
BearGra............14 7 U 16-SO
Boys Game Belhaven (51) - Burras 10 1-1 21, Harris 0 2-2 2, Palmer 4 018. Davis 4 4-4 12. O'Neal 0 4^ 4. Davis 104) 2, Cox 1 04) 2.Totals2011-l4Sl.
Bear Grass (58) - Watson 4 0913. T. WiUiams 0 2-4 2, Gardner 1 07 7, Peele 9 4-7 22, J. Williams 4 2-310, Taylor 0 010. Prk* 1 04) 2, Hardison 1 04) 2, Le^t 0 04)0, Lilly 004)0, Harrison 0 04)0. Totals 2018-3158.
Belhaven...............8 25 8 10-51
Bear Grass.............8 16 17 17-58
Belhaven continued to pull away in the third period with a 20-13 advantage, making it 49-34. Bear Grass outhit them to the wire, 16-14.
Toni Hudson led Belhaven with 25 points, while Felesha Peele had 15 and Amy Bumis had 10. Angie Mizelle led Bear Grass with 28, while Aria Williams added 15.
The Bears travel to Cliocowinity on Friday.
JAMESVILJE -Jamesville Hi^ School continued to look for its first victory of the season last night without success as 3-A Plymouth whipped the 1-A Bullets, 72-44. Plymouth also won the girls game, 65-36.
The Bullets, now 0-17 on the year, had little luck in trying to snap Uieir string. Plymouth jumped out into a 14-9 ead in the first period and held off a rally by the Bullets in the second period. The Vikings outhit Jamesville, 15-14, and led, 29-23, at the half.
In the third period, Plymouth again pulled away, building its lead out to 45-31. The Vikings thoi outscored the Bullets, 27-13, in the final period to win going away.
Tony Brown, Myron Bell and Ray Jordan each had 12 points for Plymouth with Lonnie Ford adding 11. Tracy Peele led Jamesville with 18 points, while Rex Bell and Kenneth Moore each had 12.
Plymouths boys are now 16-3 on the year.
The Greenville Fire-Rescue Department provides emergency medical services to Greaiville citizens. For information tm services, call 752-4137.
In the girls contest, Plymouth, now 134, jumped out into a 14-7 lead. Tlie Lady Bullets, 5-12, rallied with a 16-13 margin in the second quarter, cutting the lead back to 27-23 by halftime.
But the bottom fell out in the third quarter on the Lady Bullets. Plymouth poured in 29 points, while . holding the Bullets to zero. That made it 56-23 going into the final period. In that, Jamesville-was allowed a 13-9 rally.
Fondella Biggs led Plymouth with 12, while Angie Downing added 10. Jamesville was led by Kim Floyd with 15, while Crystal Perry added 10.
Jamesville travels to Mat-tamuskeet on Friday.
JV Game: Plyntouth 76, Jamesville 37.
Girls Game
Plymouth (65) Blount 3 2-3 8. Biggs 6 (M) 2, Armond 2 1-2 5, Hyman 0 12-31. Beil 3 3-5 9. Swain 1
I-3 3. Norman 2 1-2 5, A. Downing 5 0-0 10, M. Downing 1 0-0 2. Simpson 2 0-0 4. Chesson 2 2-3 6. Totate 27
II-2165.
Jamesville (36) Gardner 1 04) 2. Floyd 4 7-10 15, Hardison 2 4-4 8. C. Perry 5 0-0 10. Coletrain 0 1-4 1, Brown 0 04) 0, Crisp 0 0-0 0, Reason 0 04) 0. S. Perry 0 04) 0, Treadwell 0 0-00. Totals 1212-18 36.
Plymouth.......14 13 29 9-65
Jamesville 7 16 0 1336
BoysGame
Plymouth (72) Brown 6 0-0 12. Bell 5 2-612, Ford 4 3^ 11, Rose 2 1-2 5, Spruill 3 0-0 6, Jordan 6 0-0 12, Davis 3 04) 6, Cox 1 2-2 4, Fenner 2 04) 4. Totals 32 8-1472.
Jamesville (44) - Bell 4 4-7 12, Moore 6 0-0 12. Anthony 1 0-0 2. Peele 8 2-5 18, Biggs 0 0-1 0, Perry 0 0-1 0, Pierce 0 04) 0. Totals 19 6-14 44.
Plymouth.......14 15 16 27-72
Jamesville 9 14 8 1344
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JV Game - North Pitt 62, Farmville Central 46
Girts Game North Pitt (52) - Harrell 34-910; Bradley 4 1-2 9; Pittman 6 2-4 14; Cox 2 1-5 5; Purvis 2 0-1 4; Wilkins 1 04) 2; Daniels I O^kfLatham 2 2-5 6; Wiggins 0 04)^Totals 2110-26 52.
Farmyjllejjftitral (46) Joyner 2 0-2 4; TOrrts 3 1-3 7; Hart 4 1-1 9; K Smith 1 04) 2; Newton 6 5-5 17; Dixon 0 04) 0; C.Smith 0 04) 0; Totals 19 8-14 46 ,
North Pitt 5 .21 13 13-52
FarmvUle 10 10 10 17-47
Boys Game North Pitt (37) - C.Harris 4 2-3 10; Bradley 6 0-6 12; BrUey 2 04) 4; Keel 0 0-1 0; Yarrell 0 04) 0; Whitehurst 106 2; Totals 16 5-15 37.
Farmville Central (42) Car-raway 0 04) 0; Hargrove 5 0-1 10; Gorham 2 04) 4; Edwards 5 2-4 12; Willoughby 0 0-0 0; Pettway 4 2-4 10; Totals 18 6-1142.
4 10 13-37 9 12 10-42
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22-The Day Reflector, <5 reenvUle, N.C.Wednesday, February 9,1983
Slow Opening Quarter * * R. Rapids Whips Tigers
Sinks Knights By 53-31
WILSON - Todd Boykin and Tony Joyner poured in 16 points each to lead Wilson Christian to an easy 53-31 victory over Greenville Christian .Academy Tuesday night in a high basketball game.
Earlier, in the girls game, the Lady Knights whipped Wilson, 39-29.
GCA sputtered early, falling behind, 16-4. after the first period and never recovered as the Knights fell to 6-1 this season.
' The slow first quarter real-Iv hurt us, Greenville Christian coach Dale Thatcher said. "That first quarter gave them a lead they never really lost. And free throws hurt us, again.
GCA, which did not have anyone in double figures, hit just three of 11 from the foul line and it was worst than that. Thatcher said. A lot of those misses were on on-e-and-ones
The Knights played Wilson nearly even the second period but trailed at the half, 28"-15. Wilson built its lead to 42-23 before coasting home in the final period to win by 22.
In the girls game, GCA jumped out to an 11-3 lead after the first period and never looked back in upping its record to 6-7.
The Lady Kni^ts, who were led by Stephanie Browns 16 points, led at the half, 17-8. GCA upped its lead to 30-18 after three periods before winning by 10.
Jo Williams had 10 points for GCA. Melinda Deans led Wilson with 13 points.
GCA returns to action Friday when it plays host to Terraccia Christian out of Pantego. GCA was originally scheduled to play Springfield Christian, but that game was cancelled.
GCAs girls will play Bethel at home Friday night.
In another schedule change.
GCAs girls game with Faith Tuesay night has been cancelled. The jvs and boys will both play Faith Tuesday.
JV Game - WUson 46. GCA 40
Girls' Game Gret-nville Christian (391 -B Mills 1 1-4 3; Brown 8 (M 16; Hursi 0 2-4 2; Vemelson 3 1-7 7; Person 0 0^) 0; Williams 3 4-7 10; Boseman 01-21; Carr 00-00; Crisp 00^10, Totals 159-283,
Wilson (29) - Bostic 1 1-2 3; Wasielewski 12-3 4; Webb 0 3-4 3; Deans 4 5-12 13; Lane 1 (M) 2; Herndon 2 0-0 4; Medlin 0 (M) 0; Fngleman0(M)O; Toals911-2129.
GCA......
Wilson...
.11 6 13 9-39 . 3 5 10 11-29
Boys Game GreenvHle Christian (31) - Stox 0 0-10; Stancill 2 0-0 4; Griner I 04) 2; House 2 04) 4; Andrews 3 1-8 7; Bragg 2 2-2 6; C.Harris 2 04) 4; Comey 0 04) 0; Leneave 0 04) 0; Totals 143-1131.
Wilson (53) - Baker 1 0-3 2; Boykin 8 0-2 16; Joyner 8 0-0 16; Norville 3 1-3 7; Speight 3 1-2 7; Morgna 2 04) 4, Strickland 0 1-2 1; Roberts 0 04) 0; Page 0 02 0; Barnes 0 OO 0; Barrette 0 0-1 0; Totals 25 3-15 53.
GCA ......4 11 8 8-31
WUSOT...........16 12 14 11-53
GlrtfGame
Roanoke Rapids (23) Patton 1 3-5 5. Tam. Walker 2 4-4 8, Neal 104)
2. Tal. Walker 2 OO 4, Price 1 2-3 4. Home 0 04) 0, Duckett 0 04) 0. Totals 79-1223.
Wllliamston (30) - L. Mills 4 44 12. Bowen 4 04) 8, T RodgNS 2 0-14, Purvis 1 1-3 3, Sanderk 0 2-3 2, Gardner 0 1-2 1. J Mills 0 OO 0, R. Rodgers 0 04) 0, Li tUe 0 00 0. TotAhi 118-1730.
R. Rapids ...2 2 6 13-23
Williamston...^...9 4 6 11-30
Boys Game
Roanoke Rapids (61) Sledge 10 1-1 21, Ramsey 4 36 11, Lewis 0 35
3. Pant 4 2-2 10, Maness 3 00 6, IxKkaman 0 1-1 1, Walker 0 0-2 0, Ussery 1 1-3 3, Crebbs 2 2-6 6, Scarborough 0 00 0, Jones 0 00 0, CIpy ton 0 04) 0. Totals 341326 61.
Williamston (43) - Griffin 2 04) 4, Speller 1 0-0 2, LitUe 3 1-2 7, L. Brown 4 00 8, Carter 11-2 3, Wanl 1 04) 2, Everett 3 1-5 7, Peele 3 0-1 6, C. Brown 0 1-3 1, Conner 1 1-1 3, Williams 0 00 0, Hudgins 0 00 0. Totals 19 5-14 43.
R. Rapids.......12 13 18 18-61
Williamston......3 18 6 16-43
WILLIAMSTON - Roanoke ' Rapids High School took advantage of a cold first quarter for the Williamston Tigers and rolled up a 61-43 victory last night in a Northeastern CtHiference basketball game. Williamstons girls won their outii^, 30-23.
The game was played at the Williamston junior high school gym after some of the bleachers in the high school gym collapsed without personal injury on Saturday at the Northeastern Conference wrestling tournament.
Williamston could manage only three points in the first period of the boys game while the Yellow Jackets put through 12 points. The Ti^rs rallied in the second period, 18-13, but still traded at the half, 25-21.
In the third period. Roanoke Rapids again ^ot away from the Tigers, 18^, building its lead to 43-27. The Jackets outhit the Ti^rs, 18-16, in the filial quarter.
Keith Sledge led Roanoke Rapids with 21 points, while
Rodney Ramsey had 11 and Ed Pant had 10. No one scored in double figures for Williamston.
The Tigers drop to 2-11 in the conference <and 4-13 overall. Roanoke Rapids is iH)w8-6and8-8.
The Williamston girls pushed out into a 9-2 lead in the first period, but managed
only four points in the second period. That, however, was two more than the Lady Jackets got, making it 13-4 at the half.
Both teams scored six points in the third period, running it to 19-10. aiKi a Roanoke Rapids rally, 13-11, in the final frame, fell short.'
Lynn Mills led Williamston
vfith 12 points, while no one scored in double figure for RRHS. Sonya Purvis led Williamston on the boards with 10 rebouiMls, while*Hm-berly Rodgers added eight.
The Williamston girls climb to S-8 and 5-12, while Roanoke Rwids is 0-14, and 0-16.
The Tigers travel to Roanoke on Friday.
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In Pirates' Home Schedule
Karr: Improvements Coming
By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor
Dr Ken Karr said he expected improvement in the home schedule for East Carolina Universitys football program -but noted that some of that improvement would come only as ECU and other schools drop Division I-AA schools.
Karr, speaking at the Greenville Sports Club, noted that the ECU 1983 schedule would be released later this week. (It was actually released this morning - see elsewhere in todays sport section.)
Karr said that there is "light in the tunnel, for scheduling, pointing out that Southwestern Louisiana (a Division I-A school) would be here in 1983, while both Temple and Southern Mississippi appear on the home schedule for 1984. The 1985 schedule will include home games with Temple, Southwestern Louisiana and Miami of Florida, while the 1987 slate features both West Virginia and Florida State, with West Virginia here again in 1988.
"Traditionally. East Carolina has had five home and six away games. While we will have four home games In 1983, it appears likely that we will again have five in 1984 and on down the line,Karr said.
Karr said that at the most recent NCAA meeting. Division I-AA just did defeat a proposal to limit that group to 65 scholarships. "Should this pass in a year or two, that would make a wide gap between Division I-A with 90 and Division 1-AA This would virtually elminate the question of who would win in games between the two. So I would expect to see very few games between teams of the two divisions.
Rose Beaten...
(Continued from page 17) thing has to go right for us to
win.
Brewlngton 'said he didnt know how much not having Hopkins hurt, but he said he felt that the center was a valuable part of the club. "He was just beginning to come into his own, he said.
"But we didnt shoot well. And I dont know what some of them are trying to do out there, he moaned.
Whatever it was it didnt help things Rose finished the game with only a 37.0 percentage from the floor, while Rocky Mount made good on 63 0 percent of its shots. Rose held a slim 35-32 rebounding edge, and had four fewer turnovers.
Donnell Lee put the first four points on the board for Rose as the Rampants to a 4-0 lead. That was stretched to six at 12-6 on baskets by .Alan Dickens and Tony Clemons just beyond the halfway point of the first period. The frame ended with Rose up, 15-10.
Lee hit a baseline jumper to open the .second quarter, giving Rose a 17-10 lead, but R(Kky Mount -took charge at that point. Sparked by two baskets by Ernie Griffin, the Gryphons scored Six straight to cut the lead to one, 17-16. Then, a three-point play by Chuck Robbins tied it up for the first time at 21-21 with 5:15 left in the half.
Rose regained the lead on a steal by Lee and a free throw by Hunter Bost, but Rocky .Mount pushed ahead for the first time on a basket by Kelvin Brinkley at 27-26.
Rose pushed back ahead, 28-27, on a goaltending call on a shot by Lee, but Brinley hit two free throws with 2:01 left, and Byron Bellamy tapped in a shot with 51 seconds left to give R(K'ky Mount at 31-28 lead that held the rest of the way.
Rocky Mount scored the first two baskets of the third period and after Rose scored its only field goal of the period, ran off ten more in a row. including two by Brinkley off the fast break 'was never able to stop transition f>asket against trie Gr-pfioci break TVie fjer ended with Wjtm'. leading 48 34 Roie .neier closer than ti-je .-es? of the way, and by as much as 19.64-45 BnrJcJey led Rocky .Mount with 18. while Jerome Garrett
For this reason, Karr said, ECU is moving forward to schedule an all Division I-A schedule as quickly as possible: If this comes about, there is little question that the quality of home games will improve, he said.
As far as rumors of upcoming tie-ins, he said that Navy appears booked solid through 1990, but that the Pirates are working to get a series with South Carolina - with the possibility of a home game. Talks with other schools in the area are currently being met with no success. But we will continue to approach these schools and hope that the nos were getting now will turn to maybes in the near future. Karr said that he saw little hope in scheduling Wake Forest or Duke in football until the time that ECU established its credibility in Pitt County, in North Carolina, and across the nation, and people start asking these schools, Why arent you playing them?
As for other sports, Kaif said he hopes that East Carolina can continue its ECAC-South membership in both basketball and baseball and become more competitive in the former. He also said that he hopes that the womens programs will continue to grow stronger, although there may be some problems with softball since the NCAA has a fast-pitch championship but no plans for a slow-pitch title - and ECU and most southern schools play slow pitch.
Karr also said he hopes that the financial problems of the school will be met and that much of that will be up to the pwple who support the athletic program throu^ season ticket purchases and Pirate Club memberships.
had 14. Griffin had 12 and Bellamy, 10. The Rampants were paced by Lee with 18.
Roses girls took an early 4-2 lead on two baskets by Frances Barnhill, but never led again. The 6-2 Taylor dumped in three straight baskets as Rocky Mount scored the final eight points of the quarter for a 10^ lead.,
' From there it was a gradual pullaway as the Lady Gryphons continually lobbed the ball over the defense to the taller Taylor, who scored eight more in the second frame for a 26-10 halftime lead. ^
In the third period, they kept it up, moving out to a 40-16 lead, as Taylor scored 11 more. She finally left the game after adding ten more with Rocky Mount leading, 50-24. Rose then outscored Rocky Mount. 8-4 the rest of the way.
"We had a good game plan for about four minutes, Rose Coach Dennis Gibson said. "We wanted to get them out of their zone, and it worked until they ran off several in a row and got the lead back.
"And we just couldnt contain Taylor. We tried a box on her and that didnt work, either.
While Taylor had 35, Sharon Pratt added 12. Rose was led by Alma Atkinson with 13.
Roses boys are now 3-6 in Big East play, and are 4-11 overall. Rocky Mount climbs to 6-3 and il-4. The Lady Gryphons are 9-0 in the league and 10-5 overall. Rose's girls fall to 5-4 and 7-9.
JV Game: Rocky Mount M. Kose ,if). 'V
Girls Game Rose i.'iZi, Clark 1 04)2 Outlaw ! 12 3. Richardson :iO-l 6. Carmon 2 0-3 4. W(X)lard 0 04) 0, Bird 0 04) 0, Atkinson 3-3 13. Winstead 0 0-1 0. Barnhill 2 04) 4. Trevathan 0 04) 0, Smith 0 04)0 Totals 14 4-10 32.
Rocky Mount (Mi - Whitaker 0 04) 0. Pittman 0 04) 0. Hamad 0 04) 0, Lambeth 0 1-3 li Wahdan 0 04) 0. Pratt 4 4-6 12. l^wis 2 04) 4. Sharpe 0 2-2 2. Tavior 14 7-7 ikS. Battle 0 04) 0, Totals 20" 14-18 54 Rose 4 6 6 16-32
Rocky Mount .....to 16 14 14-54
Boys Game Rost* (Ml .Streeter 1 04) 2, Clemons 3 2-2 8, Smith 0 04) 0, Lee 9 0-2 18. Bo.sl 0 1-2 1. Brown I 0-0 2. Carraway 0 04) 0. Dickens 2 5-6 9. Wilson 2 2-4 6, Walston 2 3-5 7. Mahoney 004)0 Totals 20 13-21 53.
RfK'k> Mount 1681 Knight 4 0-0 8 Fitz'o (>-! 0. Garrett 5 4-4 14. Brinkley 8 2 :i 18. Edwards 0 1-2 1. Felton 0 -0 0. R(*bbins 2 1-1 .5. Bellamy 4 2-4 10. Griffin 6 0-3 12. Karl00-<i0 Totals2910-18 68 Rose 15 13 6 19-53
Rocky .Mount 10 21 17 20-68
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Medical Advice Dispensed By Long Distance Phone
By KATHY McCarthy Associated Press Writer SEATTLE (API - The phone number Dr Greg Hemingway found glued to the office telephone when he arrived in tiny Jordan, Mont. has linked him to expert medical advice on everything from heart attacks to delivering babies.
A single toll-free telephone
call connects Hemingway, and thousands of other physicians throughout a five-state area, with 190 full-time faculty members of the University of Washington School of Medicine.
Knowing that its there and I can reach an expert at any lime of the day or night is a wonderful feeling, says Hemingway, since 1978 the
only physician serving Jordans 700 residents.
In eight years, MEDCON has logged more than 104,000 calls from physicians in Alaska, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Oregon. Now a 24-hour service, MEDCON fields about 2,000 calls a month.
Hemingway once phoned at 3 a.m. to ask emergency
MEDCON - Dorothy Wright-Budke, program supervisor of the MEDCON staff, checks out a physicians phone number. MEDCON is a single, toll-free link between physi
cians in Alaska, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Oregon. The service has been in operation eight years. (AP Laserphoto)
advice on setting a 3-year-old boy's fractured thighbone.
"I got the chairman of the Department of OrM^ics, he said. T woke him up, but he very graciously talked with me and walked me through the procedure.
For 10/i hours each day, the calls are referred by a three-woman MEDCON staff headed by program supeTTlsor Dorothy Wright-Budke. At night and on weekends, calls are handled by University Hospital operators.
Once the doctor describes his question, MEDCON staffers track down a physician in the appn^riate specialty and link the expert by phone with the doctor asng for help.
If the on-call physician in any one of 14 medical specialties isn't reachable, MEDCON workers keep calling until they find a doctor who can answer the question.
Their search is not restricted to doctors at UW. Theyve phoned physicians in Anchorage, Alaska to get advice on frostbite.
While only about 2 percent of the calls are emergencies, Ms. Wright-Budke tells of doctors whove left the operating room in the middle of surgery to call for advice.
If necessary, Ms. Wright-Budke will ring Dr. Loren C. Winterscheid, the University Hospital medical director who also directs MEDCON.
Launched in July 1975, MEDCON was initiated by > Dr. Robert Van Citters, pro-fessor of Medicine-Cardiology and dean emeritus of the UW medical school.
Open House Events Set By'Friends Of Music'
The system was established to provide a link between the practicing physician and the active faculty of the medical school, says Winterscheid. .v
Doctors with questioiB are linked to faculty members, never doctors in training.
Three open houses events have been announced by the East Carolina University School of Music for the 1982-83 spring semester. The series of monthly open houses, initiated last September, is designed for Friends of the ECU School of .Music, a liaison group between the school and the community. .Membership in the Friends is now over 400.
The open houses will all be held on the East Carolina University campus. Hours for each open house will be from 10:30 a.m. until noon. The featured program and a "coffee hour will be incorporated into each event.
The first two events are open to those who hold individual or family memberships in the Friends of
Music. The third, the April open house, will be without charge to the general public.
Open houses scheduled to date for the 1982-83 spring semester are:
Friday - Putting an Opera Scene Together, with Clyde Hiss, director of Opera Theater, discussing the mechancis of getting a piece of music out of the operatic score and onto the stage. This event will be held in the Recital Hall of the A.J. Fletcher Music Center.
On March 18, the open house theme Is Music Library: Community Service to be held in the ECU Music Library. A tour of the facility by music librarian Geraldine Laudati will be featured, encompassing a look at present and
projected services for community members.
The open house event open to the general public is scheduled for April 8, in a School of Music site to be announced later. The April open house will be a special one devoted to Wedding Music to be conducted by E. Robert Irwin, professor of organ and church music. Irwin will discuss suitable music wedding music literature /or organ, voice, chorus and other instruments. The open house wil be highli^ted by live performances by students and faculty.
Anyone inter^ted in additional information on membership in the Friends of Music can contact the school of mitic, 757-6851. Membership fee, individual or family, is $15 annually.
Its really a one-on-one medical education endeavor, he said of the free consultation service. It allows a physician with a particular problem to talk to a specialist in that area...
Often its a matter of reassurance, says Dr. William Kirby, an infectious disease specialist who often answers MEDCON calls.
He (the phoning physician) says, Heres what Im doing and I just want you to reassure me Im doing the right thing.
Kirby recalled a late-night call from an doctor in eastern Washington who described'a patient Kirby concluded was suffering from gas gangrene in the abdomen.
I said, You better get a surgeon, and he said there
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Eatiiigaiboaie adds fbvBf to ywir life
was no (MK (in his town) who (XHild manage that, Kirby recalled. I Udd him about Airlift' Northwest. ... The next thing 1 heard, at 6 a.m., was that my son, who happened to be the chief orthopedic resident at Harborview Medical Center then, was (grating on this patient. Airlift Northwest is a program which provides an airplane on 24^wur call to fly patients from anywhere in the Pacific Northwest and
Alaska to one of four Seat-tle-area ho^itals - University, Harborview, Childrens OrtiK^ic and Providence.
MEDCON also can link doctors to ^ialists in the care of newborn infants through University Hospitals Newborn Care Program.
Their patients may be faceless case histories but the MEDCON staff finds it very hard not to get emotionally involved because
most of our calls are very, very sad, especially the pediatric calls, says Ms. Wright-Budke.
By chance she did meet one MEDCON patient, a young Skagway, Alaska, mother who gave birth to twins last September in Alaska with her physician in telephone contact with MEDCON.
One of the premature babies died and the second, weighing little more than a
pound, was flown to University Ho^ital, wtere it remains on a respirator.
Only rarely do consulting doctors learn how their advice turned out.
Occasionally, a doctor will call back and say, You know that case I Urtd you about two wedcs ago? You were just right ... the patients doing great, says Kirby. It doesnt happen very often ... but its very rewarding.
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26 The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, February 9,1963
CtOBSWOtd By Eugene Sxffer
FORECAST FOR THURSDAY. FEB. 10.1983
ACROSS
1 Sleeveless garments S Theater sign 8Schenie
12 David or LeJeune
13 Energy
14 Arrivi-derci "
Crosby-Kelly ong hit Mways lieale -Blues
I.arge itreams Speck .vift horse sphere resh 'ubway entrance !;ips deck Beaver fiifiee ,rie or luron
Fixed gaze 1 i^ester ' - Pan Alley
41 Head, in France 43 Fabled bird 45 Elapsed 47 Habituates
51 Alonzo Stagg
52 Hymnal, for one
54 Wine and-
55 Night before 56-andthe
King of Siam
57 Droops
58 Malay gibbon
59 American cartoonist DOWN
1 Behaves
2 Whartons lily
3 River in Asia
4 Celerity
5 Ocelot descriptive
,6 Race the engine
7 Musical work
8 Triumph
Avg. solution time: 2fimin.
Answer to yesterdays puzzle.
9 TVseries lOHeta^w measure 11 Old sailors MPoncede-20 Annoy
23 Goddess of harvests
24 Decompose
25 Barcarole 27 Pallid
29 What one does at Vail
30 Cognizance 32 Irons
34 Seaman 37 French season 39 Percussion instrument 42 Tired flop
44 Native (rf Havana
45 Cushions
46 Genus of thebowfin
48 Columnist Barrett
49 Eternities
50 Card game 53 Eggs
CRYPTOQUEP
FOTG-NA-EZZ BNZTA ZTTFXQ QTGO OBXTBZX
I'esterdays Cryptoquip - LEAN BARBER AVOIDS AC-.'IDENTS: THATS A CLOSE SHAVE.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: T equals 0.
The Cryptoquip is a simple aibstitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it 1 equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, u<\ words usmg an apostrof can give you clues to locating vels. Solution is accomplished trial and error.
King Faatur* Syndicati, Inc
ermnatons For
\
JPI's Employees
ment by Douglas F. Ruhe, UPIs managing director, as overhead management jobs. Braddick said the positions were all non-union and included clerical and other support jobs. He said no news jobs were affected.
The Times story sqid UPI planned to cut 100 management and clerical positions in the next few days. for an expected savings of $3 million. Braddick declined to say if there would be any further terminations.
The sale of UPI, which has lost money for years, stirred controversy within the industry when financial details of the transaction were not disclosed.
Media News is headed by Ruhe and William Geissler and had included Len R. Small, a newspaper executive in Moline, 111., and Cordell Overgaard, a Chicago lawyer.
NEW YORK (AP) - Unit-Press International has . mounced it is dismissing 45 employees, mostly at its New York headquarters, and is .idding 30 news people to iireaus around the country. Meanwhile, the New York Times disclosed in todays 'd it ions that Tennessee businessman John Jay pooker irchased a one-third nterin the agency from Media ' Corp. for $1 and other lierations.
he Times account also ! that the E.W, Scripps ull but gave away the iiey to Media News Corp. n the Nashville-based ip bought it last June. Braddick. UPIs vice nt for development, a telephone interview night that about half new positions have ady been filled, fhe positions eliminated ere described in a state-
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GENERAL TENDENCIES: The early part of the day is ideal to organize your thoughts and make plans for the future A time to avoid confrontations since a series of fixed adversities could follow.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 191 Attend to important duties early in the day so you'll have more time for social ac-^ tivities later. Be more optimistic.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) The time is not right for taking on new responsibilities. Sidestep one who is detrimental to your progress.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Take steps to patch up any differences with an associate. Study your financial position and make plans to improve it.
M(X)N CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Contact a wise and older friend for advice you need. You can make an excellent impression on higher-ups now.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Important business matter is best handled early in the day. Analyze your activities and be sureSyou are as practical as you should be.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Begin the day wisely by keeping any promises you have made. Go to the right sources for the information you need.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Try to economize more so you won't be caught in a financial pinch in the future. Steer clear of a group meeting today.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) An associate can help you solve a difficult problem in the morning. Show increased devotion to loved one.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Positive thinking will help you gain your aims at this time. You can make a fine impression on others now.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Put those creative ideas to work now and get excellent results. Avoid one who has an eye on your assets.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Find out what family members desire of you and then do your best to please them. Show others you have wisdom.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Listen to ideas of a longtime friend and follow through for good benefits. Make as many new contacts as you can.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be one who can become a great success in life because of the ability to understand the needs of others. One with a retentive mind, so be sure to give the best education you can afford. Don't neglect ethical training.
The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1963 Tribun# Company Syndicate. Inc.
BID BOLDLY, THEN PLAY WELL
North-South vulnerable. North deals.
NORTH
K652 ^ VoW
0 A 10 9 2
A Q 7 5 2 WEST EAST
A4 ^03 10 9
^AKJ2 108 7 3
0 QJ8643 0 7
9 10 8 4 3
SOUTH
873 'i? Q96 5 4 0 K5
K J6 The bidding:
North Eaat South West
1 4 Paaa 1 <7 2 0 Dble Paas 3 NT Dble Paaa Paaa Paaa
Opening lead: Ace of .
For a while we' will be studying the technique of some of the world's great players. The hands will be from the recent World Olym-* piad, held in Biarritz, France.
Our first hero is Tony Friday who, with his partner Claude Rodrigue, has been the mainstay of Britains teams for the past 20 years. Norths double was for
penalties, but Friday was not prepared to settle for a non-vulnerable set. Instead, he overbid to game and then proceeded to make it. Wests double was predicated on the fact that the suits were going to break badly for declarer.
West led the ace of hearts and shifted to his singleton club. Declarer won in hand and led a low spade. West played low and dummys king won. Four club winners followed, and West found himself under pressure. He sluffed three diamonds and the jack of hearts, but the writing was on the wall.
West was thrown on lead with the ace of spades. He cleverly exited with a low diamond, in the hope that declarer would carelessly win with dummys nine and so get his entries tangled. But Friday won the king, cashed the ace and tucked West back pn lead with a diamond. The best that West could do was to cash the king of hearts and then present declarer with the queen of hearts and his ninth trick.
ABA Official Warns Code Invites Lawsuits
By JAMES H. RUBIN
Associated Press Writer
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The American Bar Association is adopting a new code of ethics that may lead fraud victims to sue lawyers for negligence, a t(H> ABA official says.
John.C. Shepherd of St. Louis, who is in line to become president of the ABA in 1984, said Tuesday the new rules create a dilemma for attorneys who leam their clients are enga^g in fraud.
If the lawyers reveal what they know, they would violate their own ethical standards, he said.
But if they keep quiet, they could be sued by a victim of the fraud, said Shepherd.
If they know a fraud is about to be committed, they may be in court as a defendant, not as an advocate, Shepherd said. Thats the dilemma, isnt it? At least, I see it as a dilemma.
. The ABAs policy-making House of Delegates adopted the new rules in principle after an unusual evening session Tuesday. They were to wrap up loose ends today before adjourning until the summer convention in Atlanta where they will adopt the code in its final form.
Shepherd told reporters he will try and convince his colleagues to put in writing his doubts about the impact of the new rules which he said he supports.
The delegates voted to kill a proposed rule that would have encouraged lawyers to blow the whistle on clients they believe are involved in fraud.
Instead, they adopted a watered-down yersion of the rule that permits them to reveal a clients secret only to save someone from death or bodily harm.
AMERICAN EXPELLED WARSAW, Poland (AP) -An American mathematician, Garret Sobczyk, has been expelled from Poland for working with opponents of the Communist government, the government television service reports.
They took a different approach in dealing with courts, however, and approved rules requiring lavi^ers to tell a judge when their clients are lying in court.
The rule is stricter than the current regulation and requires a lawyer to disclose a clients perjury if he has failed to prevent the client from lying in court.
Shepherd acknowledged earlier that the broader rule on whistle-blowing poses problems for the lawyers. Asked how he intends to explain in the code that it invites lawsuits against attorneys who keep their clients secrets, he said, Its a tough drafting problem.
He initially seemed to suggest that the new ABA rules'would permit a lawyer to reveal a clients secret to prevent a fraud. When a reporter said the delegates acted otherwise. Shepherd said, I know what they did.
The ABA delegates also voted to limit the Obligation of lawyers to expose corporate wrongdoing by rejecting a rule authorizing them to tell shareholders if the head of the corporation is breaking the law.
The ABAs code of conduct.
while not carrying the force of law, serves as a guide for most states to discipline lawyers for miscwiduct. About
two-tbirds of tlK stat^ have formally adc^ted the current ABA code which was written in 1969.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C - Wednesday, February 9,19-27
DIFFERENT ROLE - Rock Star Mick Jagger. playing The Emperor, is comforted by kitchen maid Barbara Hershey in The Nightingale, which will air late this year on Showtime, the cable-TV network. Adapted from the Hans Christian Anderson classic by Joan Micklin Silver, the show is a presentation of Shelly Duvalls Faery Tale Theatre. (APLaserphoto)
Classes In TV Log
Acting Set
ECU News Bureau East Carolina University will offer two evening acting classes this semester.
Both are to be instructed by Stephen Finnan, director of Greenville Little Theater productions last year who has also directed off-Broadway productions in New York and has been associated with the New York professional drama workshop, Circle in the Square.
Beginning Acting I, set for Mondays, Feb. 14 March 21, is designed for persons with little or no acting experience. It will include basic acting techniques reflective of the method approach, and students will rehearse monologues and/or short scenes.
Beginning Acting II, scheduled on Mondays March 28-May 2, will continue with material begun in the previous course. Participants will prepare a scene from a selected play.
Both classes meet from 7 to9p.m.
Further information about these and other evening and weekend classes is available from the office of non-credit programs, division of continuing education, Erwin Building, ECU, Greenville, N.C., telephone 757-6143.
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11:57 Newsbreak 12:00 News 12:30 Youngand 1:30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding L. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A. Griffith 6:00 News9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 Magnum 9:00 Basketball 11:00 News 11:30 Movie
WITN-TV-Ch.7
WEDNESDAY
7:00 Jetterson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Real People 9:00 FactsotLite 9:30 Family Ties 10:00 Quincy 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Letterman 1 30 Overniaht THURSDAY 5 :30 Addams 6:00 Early Today 6:25 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 News 7:30 Today 8:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:30 All in the 10 :00 Facts Of Life
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10:00 Good Times 10:30 Laverne 11:00 Love Boat 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2:00 One Lite 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 BJ/LOBO 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 3's Company 7:30 Alice 8:00 Hero 9:00 Herman's 11:00 Actions News 11:30 Nightline 12:00 HarryO 1:00 Mission 2:00 Early Edition
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
WEDNESDAY
7:00 Report 7:30 Staieiine 8:00 Geooraph 9:00 Worldot 10:00 Mark Rus: 10:30 It's Your II :00 Hitchcock 11 30 Morecambe THURSDAY 7:45 AM Weather 8:00 Aduii Basic 8:35 Special 8:50 Readalong I 9:00 Sesame Street 10 00 TipTopTen 10:10 Special 10 30 Trade offs 10:50 ParlezMoi 11:00 19th Century 11:30 Thinkabout 11:45 WriteOrr 11:50 Readalong 2
12:00 Advocates 12:30 Readit 12:45 Electric Co. >:15 Footsteps Poctrv ase Studies 'eand Take inside/Out 3TS0 Over Easy 3:30 Gen. Ed.
4 :00 Sesame Si. 5:00 wr. Kogers 5:30 3 2 IContact 6:00 Dr Who 6:30 Fast Forward 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Previews 8:30 Enterprise 9 :00 Nature of 10:00 Austin City 11:00 Hitchcock 11:30 Morecambe
Two New TV Comedies Thursday Night
ByFREDROTHENBERG APT^viiton Writer NEW YORK (AP) - In a television breakthrough in 1971, Aithie Bunker hated everything he didnt understand, which covered much of the imiverse. ABCs new comedy series, Condo, beginning Thursday night, also is built on prejudice. But the fatal flaw is that its white bigot should know better.
Archie was a lower middle class WASP from Queens. In Condo, McLean Stevenson plays an educated, upper middle-class WASP from Los Angeles. Besides moving bigotry cross-country, television hasnt come very far in 10 years.
Condo is offensive. While All in the Family managed to enlighten as it probed human weaknesses, Qondo merely wallows in racial putdowns and prejudices.
The show provides 30
minutes of verbal pingpong. James Kirkridge (Stevenson) insults his next-door neighbor just because hes a Mexican-American, and the provoked Jessie Rodriguez (Luis Avalos) slings the abuse right back.
O)ndo hits rock bottom whenever Janws is calling Jessie a taco or a tortUla.
There are, however, a few funny moments, but how long can you take a steady diet of jokes about James neon golf pants (three different lines in the first episode) and the fact that Rodriguez is not the house gardener?
Americas current economic malaise is represented by-the fact that James is moving down in stature, by moving into the condo. An Arab bought his home, , and James business is falling off. People arent buying life insurance; theyre buying food, he says.
Meanwhile, the con-
Huge Audience For Opening Of 'Winds'
For completo TV programming Information, conault your weakly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays Dally Reflector.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
10:30 Sale of the 11:00 Wheel of .11:30 Hit Man 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 Another 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Dark Shadows 4 :30 Wild West 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jetfersons 7; 30 Family Feud 8:00 Fame 9:00 Gimme A 9:30 Cheers 10:00 Hill Street 11:00 News 12:30 Letterman .1:30 Overnight 2:30 News
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Winds of War, ABCs 18-hour epic on the events leading to World War II, attracted a record audience estimated at 85 million for the first episode Sunday night.
ABC said the opening chapter of the seven-part program drew the largest audience ever for the opening of a miniseries. The rating was slightly lower than Roots, still televisions No. 1 miniseries, but the total audience has grown since 1977.
The Winds of War was the No. 1 show of the week ended Feb. 6 and boosted ABC to a big victory in the network ratings.
Figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co. showed the three-hour telecast had 39.1 rating and a share of 33. This means that 39 percent of the nations homes with television watched some part of the show and 53 percent of the homes watching television at the time were tuned to ABC. ,
ABC estimated that 32.5 million homes and 85 million people saw some part of the $40 million miniseries. The number of viewers was higher than Roots because the television audience is larger. Roots had a first-night rating or 40.5 and a share of 61. A ratings point represented 712,000 homes in 1977, but today it represents 833,000 homes.
The second chapter of The Winds of War had a drop in viewership Monday night in six cities. New York had the highest rating, 42.5, compared to 45.5 on Sunday. Audience shares in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Detroit and San Francisco all exceeded 50 percent.
ABC won the week with a
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rating of 21.2. The networks say this means that in an average prime-time minute, 21.2 percent of the nations homes with TV were tuned to ABC. CBS was second with 18.5 and NBC was third with 16.6.
The second highest-rated show of the week was CBS Magnum, P.I., closely followed by CBS 60 Minutes. CBS had six of the Top 10 and ABC had five. Both the Top 10 and the second 10 had 11 shows each because of ties. NBCs highest-rated show was the first part of the rerun of the Shogun miniseries, which was in 14th place.
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dominium complex is a rung upward for the Rodriguez clan, a TV family that is less burlesque than past Hispanic stereotypes. The Rodriguezes are mortf reasonable than the Kirkndges, and the only be-bopperin the two households is the -youngest Kirkridge son, an ear-to-ear stereo freak.
The function of the wives is to mediate domestic peace b^ween the husbands. James' wife, Kiki (Brooke Alcterson), is a chowderhead, while Yvonne Wilder, as Maria Rodriguez, is allowed to give her character more dignity.
One element of conflict -besides the blatant prejudice - is the West Side Story romance between a Kirkridge son and Rodriguez daujghter.
Since Stevenson left M-A-S-H, all three networks have searched for a vehicle for his questionable comedy charm. Condo appears headed for the same dark hole as The McLean Stevenson Show, In the Beginnning, Hello, Larry, and Celebrity Challenge of the Sexes.
ABCs other new comedy, Amandas, also begins Thursday night. This, too, is an angry, insult-infested show, but minus the few good comedy lines.
Good putdown humor has compassion and concern beneath the sharp needle. Cut the characters, and they bleed humanity.
Amandas is pure barbed wire: obvious, vicious and unsympathetic.
V^at a comedown for Bea Arthur, who plays the pro-pietor of this sleazy seaside hotel. It wasnt too long ago, as Maude, that Miss Arthur was making a small TV contribution by giving issues like abortion a national forum.
Now she gets to preside over some seasickening slapschtick, while shrieking such immortal lines as: This blouse sucks eggs. or Anything you want, you can take a flying leap.
The laugh track, with outbursts of applause, really outdid itself this time. The people who might find this funny would laugh at The Gong Show. Where else would there be raucous applause for somebody getting banged on the noggin?
Tliere isnt a single amusing or enjoyable character -from the shrill Amanda to the chef who talks too much (Rick Hurst) to the alien bellhop who talks too little (Tony Rosato from Saturday Night Live) "The oven, she dead, is one of Rosatos immortal lines.
This show, she should be condemned!
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2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday February 9,1983
PEANUTS
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Gf^ADuATiON - (PREREQUISITE-NO OUTSTANDING UBRAI^ FINES)
GKADUATON IS A TUJO-HOUR, NON-CREDfT SE/VIINAR USUAUii^ SCHEDULED OUTDOORS IN 'mREATENlNG WEATHER / generally, a speaker GETS UP AND SAUSTHATAOUR GENERATION IS THE HOPE FOR THE FUTURE... A SOMEWHAT UNSETTUNG THOUGHT WHEN UOU REAUZE HE'S REFERRlMGTD THE SAME CIOWNS DO WENT TD SCHOOL WITH.
THE SPEAKER WOULD PROBABLE HAVE 66CDN0 THOOHTS ABOUT MAKING SUCH RASH STATEMENTB IF HE COULD SEE , THE SHAPE MOST OF THESE PEOPLE WlU. BE IN THE NEXT DAU /
Z-9
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
MISCELLANEOUS
Personals.......................002
InMemoriam........... ........003
Card Of Thanks.................005
Special Notices.................007
Travel a. Tours..................009
Automotive....................OtO
Child Care......................040
Day Nursery....................041
Healthcare.....................043
Employment....................050
For Sale........................040
Instruction......................080
Lost And Found.................082
Loans And Mortgages...........085
Business Services...............091
Opportunity..............
Professional.............
Real Estate..............
Appraisals...............
Rentals..........>.......
093 095 100 . 101 120
PUBLIC NOTICES
persons indebtod to said estate please mete immediete payment This 7th day of February, 19*3. AAary Louise Gladson Route 3, Box 117 B Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xecutrix of the estate of Lucy P. Wooten, deceased.
Feb, 9, to, 23, March 2,1983
NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
The undersigned having qualifie< ......afe of M. L
as Executrix of the esta Stocks, deceased, this is to notify all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to l her attorneys , 18
Stokes 8i Heffelfinger, on or before July 26, 1983. or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of its recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will lease make immediate payment to
he undersigned. This the 21st day
WANTED
Help Wanted.............
.......051
Work Wanted............
.......059
Wanted..................
.......140
Roommate Wanted ......
.......142
Wanted To Boy ..........
.......144
Wanted To Lease.........
.......146
Wanted To Rent..........
.......148
y of January, 1983. Geraldine B. Stocks Executrix of the Estate of M. L. Stocks, Deceased Route 1, Box 112 A 7 Winterville, NC 28590 Mickey A. Herrin Williamson, Herri^Stokes
& Heffelfinger Attorneys at Law P.O. Box552 Greenville, NC 27S34 January 26; February 2,9.16,1983
RENT/LEASE
Apartments For Rent...........121
Business Rentals................122
Campers For Rent..............124
Condominiums tor Rent.........125
Farms For Lease...............107
Houses For Rent................127
Lots For Rent...................129
Merchandise Rentals ...........131
A6obile Homes For Rent........133
Office Space For Rent...........135
Resort Property For Rent.......137
Rooms For Rent................13a
SALE
Autos tor Sale.....
Bicycles tor Sale
Boats for Sale.....
Camjiers tor Sale .
.011-029
030
032
034
Cycles for Sale..................036
Trucks tor Sale .................039
Pets.............................046
Antiques........... 061
Auctions........................062
Building Supplies............. .063
Fuel, Wood, Coal................064
Farm Equipment...............065
Garage Yard Sales .........067
Heavy Equipment ..............068
Household Goods................069
Insurance ..............071
ivestock ..... 072
Miscellaneous..................074
Mobile Homes for Sale.........^075
Artobile Home Insurance.........076
Musical Instruments............077
Sporting Goods.................078
Commercial Property ......102
Condominiums for Sale..........104
Farms for Sale..................106
Houses for Sale ............109
Investment Property............111
Land For Sale....................113
Lots For Sale....................115
Resort Property for Sale........117
THE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified Advertising Rates 752-6166
3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line peTday 4-6 Days.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More
Days 40* per line per day
Classified Display
2.75 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available
DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines
Monday Friday 4 p.m.
Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.
Wednesday. .Tuesday 3 p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.rr\
Friday Thursday 3 p.m.
Sunday.........Friday noon
Classified Display Deadlines
Monday.........Friday noon
Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.
Wednesday .. Monday 4 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
Errors must be reported Immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.
THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.
SHOE
I'ttnyithastakainie ^ Sc in lack
-F'VIO'' .nc 13
D<|tibui*d b. tfbuna Compar, Syndicd* lee
IMetip^pjr
thou^ti 3mi
rtycdiiitin...,
invifiichltn^Mr.Trumaii
iicttormfcrK-electicnj
people read
classified
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of fe of
Norih Caro persons having c against the estate of said deceased
the esta Pitt Count
Lucy P Wooten late of ity. North to notify all persons havl
Carolina, this is claims
to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before August 9, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All
t
f
FILENO 83-E-36 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OFJUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JOCIPHINE (JOSIE)S NORRIS, Deceased NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS Having qualified as Ad ministratrix C.T.A. of the Estate of Jociephine (Josie) S. Norris, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and cor porations having claims against Jociephine (Josie) S. Norris, Deceased, to present them to the undersigned or her Attorney on or before the 2nd day of August, 1983, or this Notice will bis pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms or corporations indebted to the Dece dent or her estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned Administratrix, C.T.A. or her Attorney.
This the 28th day of January, 1983. MRS BETTY JEAN NORRIS O'NEAL
Administratrix C.T.A. of the Estate of Jociephine (Josie)
S. Norris
Route), Box573 Ayden, North Carolina 28513 DIXON, HORNE, DUFFUS &DOUB
(Phillip R. Dixon)
Attorneys at Law P. 0. Drawer 1785 NCNB Building
Greenville, North Carolina 27834 February 2,9,16, 23,1983
FILE: 82 SP 342 FILM:
IN THE GENERAL COURT OFJUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF: James A. Nelson, Jr. and Robert D. Kornegay, Co-Administrators of the Estate of Gertrude J. Lane, Robert L. Lane Jr. and wife, Ann Parker Lane, Bar bara Jean Thorpe and husband, James A. Thooie; Carolyn Sue Sato and husband, Takao Lewis Sato NOTICE OF RESALE WHEREAS, a sale of the described below was held oh the 28tl. day of January, 1983 and a final bid of $35,(0.00 was received and whereas an upset bid raising the bid
to $36,8(X).00 has been duly f i UNDER AND VIRTUE of
Order of the Superior Court of Pitt County, made in the Mecial proceeding entitled "IN THE MATTER OF; JAMES A NELSON, JR AND ROBERT D KORNEGAY, CO- Ad ministrators of the Estate of Ger trude J. Lane; Robert L. Lane, Jr and wife, Ann Parker Lane; Bar bara Jean Thorpe and hysband, James A. Thorpe, Carolyn Sue Sato and husband, Takao Lewis Sato," the undersigned Commissioners will
on the 18th day of February, 1983 at at the Courthouse door in
12:00 noon _ ...
Greenville, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash that certain tract of land lying and being in Chicod Township, Pitt Coun , North Carolina, ana
iy
more par
ticularly described as follows
GINNING at the nail in the
BE(
centerline intersection of NCSR 1800 and NCSR 1925; thence, N. 09-12 06 E. 243.10 feet to a nail in the centerline of NCSR 1925 the POINT OF BEGINNING; thence, with the centerline of NCSR 1925 N. 09-13-06 W. 1701.03 feet to a PK nail; thence, N. 86-43-07 E. 2638.67 feet to an iron pipe; thence, to a concrete marker; N. 88-24-23 E. 2906.09 feet to an iron pipe; thence, N. 88-24-23 E. 48.96 to an iron pipe; thence, S, 82-03-29 E. 103.30 feet to an iron pipe; thence S. 35-18-10 E, 93.29 feet; thence S.
34-01-30 E. 319.38 feet; thence S.
80 21-48 E. 28.87 feet; thence, S.
18-51-58 W. 487.16 feet; thence S.
52-13-15 W. 177.90 feet; thence, S.
42-39-10 W. 113.68 feet; thence, S.
56-32-S6 W. 209.15 feet; thence N.
86-07-36 W. 235.75 feet; thence S,
84 31-01 W. 304.48 feet;
78-59-33 W. 58.71 feet;
87-11-52 W. 57.79 feet;
88-55-02 W. 100.22 feet,
73-09-11 W. 124 16 feet;
14-24-34 W. 96.03 feet;
E
02 46-21 12 36-53 W
thence N thence S. thence N. thence S. thence S. thence S. thence S. thence S
71.24 feet;
27.24 feet;
02-15-33 E. 89.94 feet; thence, leaving the ditch N. 58-15-27 W. 1550.25 feet to a pipe; thence N. 57 57-42 W. 660.93 feet, thence S. 41 -21 -49 W. 1893.80 feet to an iron pipe; thence S. 82-37-47 W. 192.76 feet to an iron pipe; thence S. 82-37-00 W. 226.92 feef to an iron pipe; thence S. 82-50 06 W. 1242.49 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING Being Lot No. 5 of the Robert Lewis Lane, Sr. Heirs property as shown on that Map recorded in Map Book 27, Page 105 and 105A of the Pitt County Registry, and containing 148.33 acres of land.
The property will be sold subject to any unpaid assessments, in eluding 198j ad valorem property taxes. Bidding will begin at
19
$36,800.00. The highest bidder shall deposit of ten percent (10%) of his bid to show
ighe
be required to post a cash ten percent (10%) his good faith, and said sale will be
remain open ten days and will be made subject to confir
rmation by the Court.
This the'7th day of February, 1983. Mark W. Owens, Jr., Commissioner Howard A. Knox, Jr., Commissioner February 9,16, 1983
PUBLIC NOTICE
ON REQUESTS FOR PRC
BID PROPOSALS Pursuant to the General Statutes of North (Carolina, Section 143 129, sealed proposals will be received by the City Council of the City of Green ville, until 9:00 AM, Friday, February 25, 1983, at the Office of the City Purchasing Agent at the Public Wks Facilfty, 1500 Beatty Street, Greenville, North Carolina, on the purchase of spring summer
uniforms for the Police Department r2 1983, the
At 9:00 AM on February sealed bids and proposals will be ubiicly opened in the First Floor onference Room, Municipal
publicly
Confert____
Building, Fifth and Washington Streets, Greenville, North Carolina.
Specifications, conditions, and bid proposal forms are on file in the Of tice of the Purchasing Agent and may be obtained upon request between the hours of 8:00 AM and 5:00
PM, AAonday through Friday No proposal will be cor
considered
unless accompanied by a bid deposit ....... t of the
of not less than five percent proposal. Bid deposits may be in the form of cash, cashier's check, or certified check or bid bond.
The City Council of the City of Greenville reserves the right to re ject any and all proposals.
Leavy Brock Purchasing Agent February 9, T
WANT
ADS
002
PERSONALS
A6AKE THIS VALENTINE'S DAY one that your honey will remember Send a singir Valentine from the Ladybug. Call 756 7J33 or
Singing
355^54.
024
Foreign
HONDA CIVIC, 4 door, A6^FM stereo, excellent condition, S5,5. Call after 4 :30. 756 3634
1W1 TOYOTA COROLLA Wegon, 5
spete, AM/FM, air, crulsa control. Call after 6 75< 9760.
19*1 VOLVO L, low mileage, excellent condition, white Call 756 4506 after 7 D.m _
029 Auto Part* & Service
SPECIAL NOTICES
BAKER'S BARBER Shop Greenville and Grimesfand Hair
between
CUT, S4.0U. want to buy um
and shotQunsrCall 75 1723.
CREDIT PROBLEMS?
Recelva a AAastercard or Visa, Guarantaed, even if you have bad credit, no credit or have been bankrupt, For free brochure, send self addrnsed stampad envelope to House of Credit, Box 280570, Dallas, Texas 75228 or call 214-324-5944.
010
AUTOA^TIVE
WANTED nice, clean used cars, reasonably priced. Phone 756 6783.
Oil
Autos For Sale
CARS AND TRUCKS AUCTION every Friday from 7 p.m. until. You bring tham, we will sell them, Raters welcomed. At the Onslow County Fairgrounds. 347 2424
JEEPS,CARS,TRUCKS
Under SIOO. Available at local government sales. Call (refunda ole) 1-619-569-0241, extension 1504 tor your 1983directory. 24 hours.
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer In Pitt County. Hastings
Ford. Call 758-0114
013
Buick
1977 BUICK Electra Limited. door. 756-0489after 5 p.m.__
1978 ELECTRA LIMITED, 4 door, Cali 756-8760
loaded. Must sell $4500 after 6 p.m. _
1979 REGAL, blue and white, fully loaded. $4850 758 4178.
1980 ELECTRA LIMITED, 4 door, 50,000 miles. $6800. Call 758-1427
015
Chevrolet
CAMARO 1981. Sports Coupe. Good condition, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141.
CHEVROLET, 1973 Monte Carlo, bucket seats, tilt steering, silver and maroon. $650. Call 756-0638.
IMPALA 1979. 4 door. Fully equipped including power windows and seats. Low mileage. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Ayden, 746-3141.
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA,
medium red metallic, 4 door, excellent condition, 350 V-8 engine, air, power steering and brakes.
80,000 miles. $1695. 746-6451.
1981 CAAAARO, red, excellent con-dition. Take up payments. 752-3563.
1981 CHEVROLET El Camino, excellent condition. 12,000 miles, air, stereo-cassette. $5800. 758-8160.
016 ^
Chrysler
CHRYSLER NEWPORT 1977 Good condition. New tires. Loaded. $1400 or best offer. 756-5069 after 5.
1973 CHRYSLER NEWPORT, low mileage, extra clean, $700. 753-2381.
1982 CHRYSLER LeBaron Medallion, possible assumption with approved credit. 758-1121, 9 to
017
Dodge
1976 DODGE ASPEN Stationwaoon, Special Edition. Power steering,
power brakes, automatic, air con dition, AM/FM Red with wood finish siding. Economy slant 6 cylinder. Retail price, $2200, Musi sell $1450, 746 692^
1981 DODGE Aries K Car. 29,000 miles. $6300. Good condition. 758 6911.
1976 AAAZDA PARTS for sale 5 spead transmission. Call aHer s p.m. 792 4027, _
033
Boats For Sale
t*7^ teilboat, ten Juan 21', galva niz^ trailer, VHF radio, work
sails. 5 horsapower, 756-0996.
ing
034 Campers For Sale
truck WVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops . 2M units in stock O'Brianfs, Raleigh, N C ta-2774
VOLUNTEER 17 camper, fully
loaded, slex^ 6. Can be seen by
calling 756
036
Cycles For Sale
tock fire, $650
752 2357 or 756 4019.
179 HARLEY LOW RIDER 946 5062.
Call
two KAWASAKI 1300 grand four mg, 6,000 miles, full dresser. Call 746 4863 after 6 p.m! or 746 3141 anytime, ask for La^rrv._
039
Trucks For Sale
ford PICKUP 1963 Good condi tion. $650. 756 5069 after 5_
1967 FORD VAN Econoline, cylinder, $400. Call 756 7185.
1971 DODGE tion. Automatic, air, po' ing. Good condition. Ma
pickup. Limited Edi ic, air, power steer - , - Ition Mags, yellow
and black, two tool boxes included
756 7971 after 6.
1972 FORD VAN, 6 cylinder, good running condition. 746-2313 _
*** New paint, RetBuilt motor. New exhaust
system, new carpet. AM/FM stereo irm
cassette. $3500 firm. 752 7341; After 6, 758-0027.
1975 SCOUT, V 8. automatic, air, .OOP miles. $2500. 756 9847 after 6.
1978 FORD Econoline 150 Van, fully eq u i pped ^ a n^d^ cp m_p I e t e I y
customized. 752-3920after 5
1979 CHEVROLET TRUCK Straight shift. 6 cylinder. $2650. Call 758-.0f85.
1981 OATSUN KING CAB, 5 speed. Call 756 7453 after 6
rail, tool box p.m
1981 JEEP CJ 7 RENEGADE, V6, 4 speed, AM/FM cassette, 19,000 miles, two tops, red. Call 756-1927.
1982 TOYOTA LONGBED, diesel, air, AM/FM, and camper shell. Call after 6, 524 5614._
040
Child Care
BABYSITTER needed 6:30 p.m, to 3:30 a.m. References required. Call 752 5377.
HAVE OPENING FOR 3 first and second shifts. Call 758-9361.
HOME AWAY FROM HOME
evening child care trom 3p.m. to 11p.m. Ages 2 to 7, Conveniently located between Greenville and Winterville. Call 756 0943 after 2
p.m._
046
PETS
AKC Boxer puppies, 9 weeks old. $75.926-5046._
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups, champion bloodlines. Sire Favor's My Choice, Dam Buck's Britta Honey, $200. Serious inquiries only. Hugh Bryan, 291-0378 days.
AKC MINIATURE Schnauzer pups, 1 female, 2 males. $200 . 758 3482, Grimesland. _
AKC REGISTERED Black Labs. Champion bloodline, available Feb-ruary 10. Call 752-4976 after 6 p.m.
1981 DODGE K, Excellent condi tion, 4 door, air, cruise, dolby stereo/radio, 1 owner. $6295. Cail 756 7829.
018
Ford
1975 FORD ELITE Good condition. 756 8597 after 5.
1976 FORD PINTO Automatic, Excellent condition, for information call 756-6843.__
1977 GRENADA Ford. $2600. Call 756 5859._
1977 THUNDERBIRD, Good condi tion. $3000. 746-3085 night._
21969 Thunderbird; 1-1969 Thun-derbird parts only. Call 746-4863 alter 6 p.m. or 746-3141 anytime, ask for Larry._
021
Oldsmobile
1973 CUTLASS SUPREME
condition. 355-2733._
Good
023
Pontiac
1973 CATALINA, 4 door, hardtop, power, steering and power brakes, air. With stereo. After 6 and weekends. 756-3517._
1976 PONTIAC paint job. Very good information call 756-68
CATALINA New
condition for 6843.
1980 GRAND PRIX Black, sunroof, tilt, cruise, AM/FM stero, air con
dition. Assume monthly payments, very small equity. 35S-2928._
1980 LJ PHOENIX with half vinyl
10-,000 m" .....
756-6733.
to^4ft000__miles, good condition.
1981 TURBO TRANS AM, low mileage. Many extras. Call weekdays after 6 pm. anytime
Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 756-9780.
024
Foreign
OATSUN 240Z, new tires, new paint, excellent condition, $3,895. Days 758 5907, extension 350, 753 4750 or 753-5500 after 6,_
SAVE A60NEY this vinter.. shop and use the Classified Ads every day!
DATSUN 260 Z, 1974, excellent condition. $3350. Call 756-7337 or 756-5555, ask for William
POMERANIUM puppies, (5) all black, adorable. 7M-8956 home, 735-9996 work. Goldsboro. _
SEALPOINT SIAMESE kittens. Three males, tvw) females. $50. Call 746 2501.
UKC ESKIMO SPITZ, male, $100. 11 monthsold. Call 746 2714._
UKC White Eskimo Spitz. 6 weeks. Ideal Valentine gift. $lfi). 756 1297.
051
Help Wanted
ACCEPTING applications for full 8< part time convenience store work. Manager, assistant manager,clerks needed. Mature, responsible indi viduals apply to Quik Snak, P O Box 590, Windsor, N C 27983.
AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON Experience helpful but not necessary. Individual must have successful background and the willingness to advance quickly. Only those settled, responsible and desiring to earn top commissions need to apply! All replies held confidential. Apply to: Automotive
Salesperson, P O Box 1967, Greenville, N C 27834._
AVON Wanted sales representatives. Earn 50% Call 746-3494 or 758 3159.
COLOR SEPARATION TECHNICIAN
Gravure or offset experience in four color camera separation or a de oree in photography or Graphic Arts. A 30 year old Southeastern company with wages and benefits among the top . m industry. An EquarOpportunity Employer.
Mail resume to Technician', P O Box 1967, Greenville, N C 27834.
COOK, WAITRESSES, bus persons. Lunch hours only. Apply In person after 4 pm. J B's Island Seafood, Rivergate Shopping Center, East 10th St.
EXCELLENT,OPPORTUNITY Large corporation has outstanding
sales opening for a sales repre sentative. Individual must be local
resident with managerial ability, ambition and show progress tor age. Business or sales background helpful. In requesting personal Interview, please submit resume stating personal history, education and business experience. Write: P O Box 406, Greenville, N C
MUST SELL , 1981 Toyota Corolla, 2 door, air. Will sacrifice at only $4.995. Call 757-3646after 5.
TOYOTA Celjca GT Sport l^u^e.
loaded, excellent condition 753 4750 or 753-5500 after 6
1963 VOLKSWAGEN, needs work. Best offer. 756 2982 after 5 and weekends. _
1974 OPEL, good running condition. $850. 753 2381.__
FANTASTIC opportunity for dynamic salesperson. No competition, calling on businesses. We train. 757-3497, 8 10 a.m. and 5-9 p.m.
GENERAL OFFICE Manager for Used Automotive Parts business. Must have an automotive parts background and be able to deal with the public. Call 752-6124, 9 to 5. GRAND OPENINGI Industry leading company announces brand-new markeling program to the areal High earnings, rapid advan cement, overrides,' bonuses and
more. If you're Interested In dignity plus prestige, you might qualify for our dymanic new program. Part-
1974 TOYOTA CORONA Mark II, 4 door, automatic, air, $995 firm. Call 752 5650.__
1975 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT, 4 speed, air, AM/FM stereo. 756-8281 or 758-9090._
1978 TOYOTA Corolla SR5 liftback. $2000. Call 756-9760._
1980 HONDA CIVIC, hatchback, 5 siped, new radia I s. $3500. 756 7417.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
full time available. No ex, necessary. We train! Incorporated, 757 3312.
)q>eri
Film
-rience Co.
HOMEWORKERS WIrecraft pro duction. We train house dwellers. For full details write: WIrecraft, PO Box 223, Norfolk, Va. 23501, HOMEWORKERS WIrecraft production. We train house dwellers. For tuH details write: Wirecraft, P O Bo< 223, Norfolk, Va. 23501.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
PUBLIC RENTAL OF TOBACCO LANDS FOR 1983 FARM YEAR
Guy Sutton Farmland
In Arthur Township, Farm Ssrial No. Q-2677, Containing 19 acres of claared land, 2.47 acres tobacco allotment with 4,947 pounds allotted for 1983.
Tobacco may be planted on the land or removed. The Lessee shall pay all assessments provided by the United States Agricultural Stabiization Commiaaion. Commissioners reserve the option to rent the poundage and rent the cultivatable land jointly or severally.
To be rented-for cash-pursuant to Order of the Superior Court of Pitt County at the Courthouse door at
Greenville, North Carolina February 11,9183 at 11:00 a.m.
MarkW. Owens, Jr. Stephen F. Horne, II William H. Lewis, Jr. Malcolm J. Howard
t
.
051
Help Wanted
IBM DISPLAYWRITER Gfeenvflle law firm needs someone
to operate displaywrlter Tempo rary position. Experience required
Send resume to PO Box 8IM. Greenville, NC
IF YOU ARE A HIGHLY motivated dental hygenisi or certified dental
assistant with quality experience, we may be interested in you tor a
position with our progressive dental practice Only those not afraid of challenge or change need apply
Send resume to Dental Hyoenist. PO Box 1967. Greenville. NC ifvu
INDIVIDUAL WANTED for a career in consumer finance man agement Will consider entry level position Good benefits. Com
prehensive training Corr^tilive salary. Contact Rob or G^reg at 756'628d.
IS QUALITY CARE YOUR PRIORITY?
051
Help Wanted
PROFESsioNA^O^ROOM for veterinary hospital In
Washington, NC,4t 2t3e
SALES REPRESENTATIVE to sell lirtes of lawn and garden power equipnrtent in Eastern North Carolina Wholesale sales experience in this or related fields preferred. Salary plus commission and expenses negotiable. Send resume to Ms Gerry Little. PO Box 4193. Winston Salem, NC 271 IS
TEXAS OIL COMPANY urgently needs mature person for Greenville area business sales representative. Sales experience nof necessary. We train Write T B Dickerson, South western Petroleum, Box TWt. Forth Worttv. Texas 7*101
TRAINED DENTAL assistant tor wotk in multi assistant offict. Sartd resume and referettces to Dental, PO Box 1967. Greenvllla. NC 27834.
Utilize Your Knowledge And Teaching Skills
RN'SNEEDED
Full Time 7 3,3 11,11 7
Shift Differential Available, 3 11, 117 and weekends
Vacation after 6 months
Competitive salaries
Willing to Work Around School Schedules
Interested persons call Lydia Morgan, RN
UNIVERSITY NURSING CENTER _ 758 7100
KWICK WILSON'S now accepting
applications for full and part time convenience work. Mature, re
sensible individuals apply _ . Patolus Highway and Ramhorn Road
LIKE TO TRAVEL AND MEETNEWPEOPLE?
Wilson Bus Co is seeking an enthusiastic person to work with groups in the Greenville area. For Information call 1 800-682 1165 Monday through Friday. 9 AM to 5 PM
AAANAGEMENT Large corpora tion looking for management puie,,;:al. Must start in sales. 60 hour week. Some door to door. Salary and benefits. Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333
MATURE LADY wanted to spend -" * Pho
rvsr-tiwf-\k I WaiMCVi lU 3UCIIU
nights with lady in Ayden. Phone 746 3654
MECHANIC WANTED Good reli
able mechanic with good working habits. Excellent pay and benefit package. Prefer Ford experience
Apply in person to: J C Jones, East Carolina Lincoln Mercury GMC, Greenville.
MECHANIC NEEDED Experience
necessary. Must have own tools.
_ n(
Excellenf company benefits. Apply to; Jesse Boyd, Grant Buick, Inc., 603 Greenville Blvd.. 756 1877.
MLT OR CLA Lab Technician wanted for full time work in physicians office. Experience de
sirable. Ryily to Lab Technician, -67; 6i -----------
PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.
NEED 3 PEOPLE to install Energy
Management Equipment. $15 per ^ s>e '
hour or paid per installation. Can be done part time (low voltage). Some heating and air background helpful Call Mr. Brown, 1 800-241 0356
PART TIME WAITRESS Tarheel Tavern, 746 2269.
PARTS COUNTER PERSON needed. Possible management op porfunity depending on experience. Excellent pay and benefit package. Prefer Ford experience. Apply to: Parts Counter Person, P O Box 1967, Greenville.
PAY
PROGRESS
PROMINENT
PRESTIGE
Three openings now tor smart-minded person in the local branch of a large International Firm. This is an impressive opportunity for an ambitious person who wants to get ahead.
WANTED- NON Smoking, live in housekeeper to care for elderly woman. Room and board plus salary. Health certificate artd references required. For information call 756 9658 day or night
WANTED PART TIME secre tary bookkeeper. Call Dr. Love, 756 920?;__
EXCITING NEW PRODUCT LINE
TO PEOPLE IN THE GREENVILLE AREA
Because of the steadily Increasing demand for our new Million Dollar
Catastrophic Health Care Plan and our many other new plans of protection. Mutual of Omaha Im mediately needs two new jles Trm
ly
representatives in this area. Tnn Is an outstanding opportunity for the right person with no limit on your income or chances tor advance ment. Call tor a personal interview:
060
FOR SALE
061
Antiques
HOME PLACE ANTIQUES Large selection of oak, depression glass, collactibles. Open everyday 10 5, Sunday 1-5, 14 miles east of
Qrgayil*9,Hiflhwoy?3_
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood tor sale. J P StaiKii. 752A33I
ALL QAK S40. Mixed $35. 7S2-62M.
FIREW(X)D FOR SALE
S4h FOR PICKUP
CALL 757-358 or 758-5063
FIREWOOD, $30 a load Call 758 4611 anytime tor delivery.
OAK FIREWOOD tor sale Ready to QO. Call 752-6420
OAK FIREWOOD tor sale Call 7528847.
QAK FIREWOOD, $45 pickup load. Call
Call 758 3)90.
OAK FIREWOOD 756 7159.
OAK WOOD $45 a load, or $80 for 2
iMdS, $35 if you 756 2913
after 5 and weekertds. 5
i 5977, 8 to
OAKWOOD BY JAMES All oak $40 load. 758 2840or 756 9193 anytime 100% OAK FIREWOOD: Green $50, seasoned $55 per Vj cord. Guaranteed full measure. Reliable de livery. 752 0091
100% OAK FIREWOOD tor sale $45 a load if we deliver, $40 a load if you Pick up. 758 3797 or 752 5488.
065 Farm Equipment
LaeW Weaver
1-756-1150 Greenville, N C Life Insurance Affiliate; United of Omaha
Equal Opportunity Companies M/F
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed free surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancil, 752 6331.
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 6 752 7765.
pm.
CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO
Quality construction and renova-tion. Phone 757 0799 after 6 pm_
FOR TUTORING K 3 N C Qualified Teacher available to tutor in her home. 756 1927. _
HANDYMAN: Painting, wall
papering, cleaning, yard work, whatever. 20 years experience. References. 752 3581 after 6, ask tor Don. _
JOHNSON&THIELE CO
Residential and commercial remodeling, repair and construction. Call 757-1843 for estimates. We offer a complete design service. 1306 N Greene Street._
AAATURE LADY, dependable, with references to live-in full time as housekeeper. 752-3090, ask tor Jean.
PAINTERS INC, recently moved to Greenville. Special rates of $25 per room regardless of size. Com
mercial and residential painting, interior or exterior, also drywall
yy
and plaster. Free estimates. Real tors, please feel free to call. 756-4955. 24 hour answering service, ask for Jerome. _ _
SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, remodeling burnt-out trailers. Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 2868 anytime.it no answer callback;__
TOQUALIFY YOU NEED;
A positive mental attitude 21 or over preferred Have self-confidence and pleas ant personality Free to begin work immediately after acceptance Good car Sporfsminded
This position has all company benefits and a complete training program. Previous experience un-neccessary. Guaranteed income from established accounts. Expect to earn $15,500 to $26,500 a year. Only those who sincerly want to get ahead need apply.
Call now for an appointment:
757-0686
MON FRI 10:00AM-6:00PM
SATURDAY 10:00 AM 1:0O PM
PROGRAMMER Minimum 1 year experience in RPG programming on IBM System 34 or 38. Send resume to Programmer, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834. _
REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT
Established small Raleigh real
estate comp^n^ is expanding.
Owner needs N C licensed broker to manage company and train salespeople. Excellent potential op portunity. Must be experienced, self-starrer, career minded, good character. Commission position. Send resume to Box 31174, Raleigh, N C 27622.
FULL ALTERATIONS One Hour Koretizinq. 756 0.545._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WILL DO AD LAYOUTS, copy writing, logo design, illustrations, n-store merchandising, handle romotions. By the hour or |ob. 4858 after 6 p.m. only.
pror 756 .
WOULD LIKE TO TEAR DOWN
old tobacco barns in and around Ayden. Call 746 2182 after 6 p.m
WOULD LIKE babysitting.
housekeeping and staying with tf
elderly during the day. Call 758-2851 Pat.
before 5p.m., ask for I
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
AUGER FEED WAGONS 90 bushel capacity, front or rear mounted 8' vertical unloading auger $1,185.49 unassembled. Agri Supply,
Greenville, NC, 752 :
067 Garage-Yard Sale
FLEA AAARKET Tice Drive-In.
Open every Saturda^^ For more
Information, call 756-:
PCX3R AAAN'S FLEA Market. Buy
or sell yard sale items and produce.
. ... - .H .
Open Wednesday thru Saturday, 7
am - 6 pm; Sunday, 8 am 6 pm. 264 East of Greenville, Pactolus Hwy.
Reserve space now. Outside spaces tree! 752 1400._
072
Livestock
BOARDING For 1 horse. 2 stall barn and pasture. 4 miles east of Greenville. 756-7266._
CROSBY Prix-Des-nation saddle. Excellent condition. $375. 756 7266. HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752 5237._
PEANUT HAY $1 to $1.40 per bale Call aher 7 p.m. 752 9225._
074
Miscellaneous
ALL USED REFRIGERATORS,
freezers, ranges, washers and reducec
dryers are reduced tor quick sale Call B J Mills, Authorized Appli ance Service, 746 2446 at Black Jack,
AMERICAN DREW oak bedroom suite. $600. 7 piece living room suite. $625. 756-5859.
ASHLEY WOOD AND COAL
combination. Used 2 years. $300. 746-3085 niohl
ASSUME. PAYMENTS of $37.92. 3 piece living room suite; sofa, chair, loveseat. Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade ins.
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $49.46. 7 piece Western living room suite; sofa, chair, rocker, 3 tables, ottoman. Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade Ins.
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $63.12. 3 complete rooms of furniture. Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade ins.
ASSUME PAYMENT on all wood 5 piece dining room table and chairs of only $16.82 month. Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, 757 0451, We take trade ins.
ATARI VIDEO GAMES repaired. ^ used ataris, any fondition.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
IMPORTANT VALENTINE MESSAGE FROM COX FLORAL SERVICE 117 W. 4th ST. DOWNTOWN
VALENTINE DAY COMES ON MONDAY THIS YEAR. WE WILL BE DELIVERING VALENTINE LOWERS ON SATURDAY 12. SUNDAY 13 and MONDAY 14.
Please place your orders early to ensure delivery. Send an extra day early to enjoy.
Cannot guarantee prompt'delivery on flower orders placed on Monday, Feb. 14th.
On Monday we suggest you pick up your flowers to avoid disappointment. This is a special day for love...Please order early.
Cox Floral Service, Inc.'
1937-1983
758-2183
Greemil6!s Finejt Used Can!
(Located At Honda Stpre)
1982 Jeep CJ-7 Renegade Hard doors, air condition, chrome wheeis, less than 2000 miles. New.
1982 Honda Civic Wagon Silver, dove gray interior, automatic, AM-FM radio, tinted glass, radial tires, 19,000 miles.
1981 Honda Civic Hatchback 5 speed, AM-FM radio, radial tires, 30,000 miles. 1981 Honda Accord - 5 speed, AM-FM stereo cassette, teak luggage rack, cruise control, digital clock, rear door locks, velour interior, trunk release, one owner.
1979 Ford Ranchero - Medium blue with tan interior, fully equipped.
1979 Olds Cutlass Supreme Maroon, white landau top, white interior, fully equipped plus tilt wheel, sport wheels, bucket seats with sports console.
1968 Datsun Sports Car Convertible. Extremely good condition, new top.
1981 Honda Civic Hatchback Medium brown, tan interior, 5 speed, AM-FM, tinted glass, radial tires. '
1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme Tan, landau top, fully equipped, sport wheels. 1980 Honda Accord Silver, 5 speed,
59,000 miles, extra clean.
(Located At Volvo Store)
1982 Datsun 280-ZX - Leather interior, T-tops, like brand new, 12,000 miles. 1981 AMC Spirit - Like new, 10,000 miles.
1980 Honda Civic Wagon Air condition, 5 speed.
1979 MGB Roadster Convertible
British racing green with black interior, AM-FM radio, road wheels.
1980 Honda Accord 4 door, maroon with velour interior, air, AM-FM radio, trunk release, power steering, rear door locks, digital clock and radial tires.
1980 Jeep Renegade Low Mileage, blue, 4 speed transmission, sharp. 979 Volvo 242 DLA - In great shape, one owner, A rare find. 1979 Jeep WagoneerGraphite, brand new tires, arare find.
1978 Olds Custom Cruise Wagon
31,000 miles, good condition.
1978 Ford Granada Dark blue, clean, Automatic.
1980 Ford Pinto ESS Orange with buckskin interior. 4 speed, stereo, sport wheels. A real eye catcher.
1979 Honda Civic Hatchback Automatic, radio, cheap to own Jnd operate.
1976 Volvo 245 DLO Wagon - Green. Runs great.
1975 Jeep Wagoneer - One owner, in great shape.
Bob Barbour!I30[3[3SBobBarbour
v'()IV() \.\K .lccp RlmkuiIi
S Memorial Dr Greenville
355*2500
!.'lilt; Si (ireenvilie 758-7200
074
Misctilansous
AUTOMOTIVE SHOP oulpment including valve mechine. air com preMor.lioring bar, iackt and jack stand. Call 7A 463 after 6 p m or 746-3141 anytime, ask tor Larry
BABY GRAND KUWAI PIANO, 2 years old. Danisti Teak Parquet coffee table, $125. 756 W78
074
Miscellaneous
074
Miscellaneous
LUGGAGE: Red Samsonite
Saturn II, 21 $25. 26 ' $35. both $55 Stlhoutte 25 " $35 758 1358.
WE TAKE TRADE-INS Pick up
BEDDING AND WATERBEDS Save up to 'd and nnore. Factory Mattress And Walerbeds 730 Grewtville Blvd. next to Pitt Plaza
BEDROOM FURNITURE Dresser, bureau, bed with mattress and box sorlnos. $150. Call after 5. 758 7229
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and Installation. 916-763-9734,
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013. tor small loads of sand, topsoil and stone Also driveway work
CASH REGISTER, Victor 5)1. used 6 months. $600 new. now $350 Call 757 1534 after 6.
CHICKENS FOR SALE 75< each Humbles Cage Farm. 2 miles west of Ayden, Highway 102 to County Road 1111. Please bring something to put chickens in.
CLARK 8. COMPANY
Sfihl Echo Sachs Oolmar Snapper Toro Lawn Boy
CLEARANCE SALE on Sony televi
sions. Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center and Dickinson Ave.,
Greenville.
CONTINUING CLEARANCE SALE on Mary Kay Products. Phofte 752 1201 or 756 8720
CRIB MATTRESS, $15. High Chair, $20. Both In excellent condition. 756 9878.
DINNETTE SET, clothes, miscel laneous Items. 758 4022.
DURST ENLARGER $100 or best otter. After 5, 756 3827.
ERIC HEATER 830 with load of wood. $225. 758 6919.
EXTRA LARGE DESK for sale (48"x60"); 7 drawers and 2 pull outs on both sides of desk. Lots of utility and a real conversation piece. Call' 752 4348 from 10 a.m. til 6 p.m. and 756-4619 after 8 p.m.
FOR THE NEXT 2 weeks Couristan roll back the clock sale on Oriental rugs. Save 30% at Larry's Carpetland, MIO East lOth Street, Greenville.
FREEZER AND 2 door refrigerator, $150 each. Washer and dryer set, like new, $300 . 30" gas and electric range, $125 each. All guar anteed days. Call 746 2446.
GAS WALL FURNACE 65,000 BTU, $150 Good condition. Call 753 5544.
GREENVILLE CITY DIRECTORY tor sale one copy available tor only $100 Call 752 434 from 10 a.m. til 6 p.m. and 756-4619after 8p.m.
H O^ TRAI_NS__and ac^ssories, good
condition. $140.3S5-<
HOME COMPUTER Word Pro cesser, TRS8 Model 3. 2 drives.
daisy wheel printer, super scripsit soft ware with word processer and 5000 word dictionary. Used less than
100 hours by one person. $4150. Call 756 7829.
CLEARANCE SALE on Kero Sun portable beaters it below 1982
rices Goodyear Tirt Center West nd Shopping Center and Dickinson Ave.. Greenville
the phone and give us a call at
- i.v- -
Furniture World. 757^)451
MOVING 25" console color TV, in a beautilul cabinet, sharp picture. only $185 756 0492
MOVING SAL El Sofa and chair. $125. I Sony 4 channel stero $225 1 complete new pine bedroom suite
$350 1 maple single bed and chiest of drawers, $90 I bed $25 1 dinnette
set, $100 Plus odds and ends. 758 2872 or 758 6028.
OFFICE FURNITURE tor sale desk, executive chairs, bookcase, typewriter stand. 746 2313
OLIVETTI LEXICON 90C ball ele ment typewriter with correction feature, includes elite and script elements Good condition $395 Call 753 4260
J>ROAAOTED! Must sell; 1977 VW Van, $4095, 1976 Fiat 131, $1795, GE washer and dryer, $195 Call 752 4809
RECLINER FOR SALE $198 Call 758 2818
RENT A STEAMEX Best n^ethod
for carpets Larry's
Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street, Greenville
REPOSSESSED VACUUMS and Shampooers. Call Dealer, 756 6711. SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental
shampooers an Tool Company.
SKI BOOTS, men's size 10'j Like new. $30. 758 1774
SMALL REFRIGERATOR tor sale (18x21x21'/3), perfect for office or dormitory room, reduced to half price ($65) Call 752 4348 from 10 a.m. til 6 p.m and 756 4619 after 8 p.m
SOFA FOR SALE, plaid fabric, oood condition. $100 Recliner. $50. Call 758,7316 after 60 m
SOFA FOR SALE Very good cor dition. Like new. $195. Call 756 8788
THE CABINET SHOP
Residential and commercial cabinet work. Design, construction, finishing and installation. Bring
your plans or let us design for you Call for appointment. 757 1843 i306 N Greene Street.
TIMBERLAKE PRINT signed and numbered, framed. "Morning Sun"
$400. Ward Nickols Print, signed and numbered, framed '^he
Legacy". $300. While wicker sofa, S1C 7^ 6468
TOP SOlU field sand, mortar sand and rock. Call 746 3296or 746 3819.
TWO SETS of full size mattress and springs. Hoover upright vacuum cleaner Good condition 756 7066.
HOME ENTERTAINMENT Center/Stereo/Radio and TV $250. 758-1702.
KING COIL bedding. Sale prices starting at $49.95 each piece. Pick
ti
the phone and give us a call at urniture World, 757-0451. We take
rade Ins.
Colonial style, like new, gold upholstery, $150. Three
LOVESEAT
sturdy wood chairs with gold vinyl
:h.
padded seats, like new, $30 each
Jne Early American painted block wood chair with cherry wood arms,
eagle emblem, very good condition, $5<r. One solid maple straight ch excellent condition, $35. 75A5269.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
You Get The Best Pricing At Tysons QE& RCA TVs Gibson & GE Appliances Litton Microwaves & Accessories Statewide Electrical
Service
Henry Tyson Electric & Appliance
756-2929 202 N. Railroad St.
WInterville
USED HEADQUARTERS; Used building materials: Lumber, windows, doors, brick, cement blocks, storm windows and doors, etc. Used heaters, furnaces, plumbing and electrical items, tools, furniture, appliances, household items, plus some new items-at used prices! W L Dunn & Sons, Antique Barn 8. Swap Shop, Pinetops, NC 27864.
USED 15.1 cubic foot refrigerator in excellent condition, $300. Call 758 1198.
Sell your used television the
Classified way. Call 753 6166.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WOULD LIKE to buy used retrig erators. freezers, dryers and ranges that need repair 746 2446
ZENITH 25 inch color TV, good color $165 Stars 12 inch Black and White TV. like new. $45 Gold fabric sofa. Ilka new. $100. Large swivel and rocker chair, $40 2 gas heaters with tan and thermostat. $75, and $125 Double dresser with mirror, $45. 3 bads $25 each. 26 inch girls bike. $25' 746^29
19" COLOR TV Take over pay ments of $27.48 tor 24 months Furniture World. 757 0451 We take trade ins.
2 BIRD CAGES with hangers $8 each. Good condition 3SS-A_______
2 WHEELCHAIRS from $50 to $150 1 walker tor $10 Call 756 7398
075 AAobile Homes For Sale
BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide. 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors, plywood counter fops, total electric.
rar^. refrigerator Regular price.
$12,995
Limited Time Only
$9,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot
financing. Delivery and set up
>ui
. - ^E_________________
630 West Greenville Boulevard
icing.
Includes Hours, 8 am to6 pm
AAOBILEHOME
i to 6 pm BROKE
RS
756-0191
BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide 52 X 24, 3 bedrooms. 2
full baths, many extras Including
masonite siding, shingle root, bay windows, frost trae retrlgarator, garden tub, cathedral calling and
much, much more. Regular price, $24,995
Limited Time Only
$19,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up Included. Hours, 8 AM to 6 pm. MOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard _ 756-0191
CLEAR 12x60, 2 bedroom, I'/j bath, set on private lot, financing availa-
1 private lot, financing a\ ble $5.500 Call days 752 3000;
nlohts 756 1997 or 758 48:
MUST SELL 1970 Ritz Craft. 12x60. 2 bedrooms, I'Z baths, electric appliances, central heat and air, washer/dryer, located in nice park. Unfurnished $5500 or best otter. 756 2564
MUST SELL AAoving 12 X SO 2 bedroom, 1 bath, partially furnished, excellent condition. $4500 or best offer Call 758 3951.
1976, 2 BEDROOM Mobile Home. Completely set Up with washer/dryer, and furniture. $5200. Call 753 24ft.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SSSBBE
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKING
National company looMng tor distributors In I North Carolina counttos. High Incomo polait-tlal. Invantory purchaaa It ra-quirad. Aak for Mr. Qlbaon, 1-800-241-0356.
I
If youre looking for a place to live thats centrally located and energy efficient (with heat pumps, range, refrigerator and water furnished and Thermal pane windows for lower electric bills) '
I
I
FOREST VILLAGE APARTMENTS
I
In Farmville is now accepting applications for 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS Office Hours: Monday thru Friday, 3 until 5, or
I
iLw
CALL 753-3026
Equal Opportunity Housing
GREAT
Used Car Vahes!
3138-A
3341-A
3538-A
3786-A
3809-A
4138-A
4167-A
4168-A
4214-A
4215-A
4216-A 4232-A P-8191 P-8157 P-8172 P-8180
1979 Ford Mustang
1981 Toyota Truck
1979 Chevrolet LUV
1978 Toyota Corolla
1982 Mercedes-Benz ^
1980 Mercury Zephyr
1979 Dodge Ramcharger
1980 Toyota Corolla 1979 Toyota Corolla
1981 AMC Spirit DL 1979 Ford Fairmont 1979 Pontiac LeMans
1979 Ford Pinto Wagon
1980 Olds Cutlass
1981 Toyota Cressida 1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
P-8183A1981 Toyota Truck P-8185 1979 Buick Regal
1978 Pontiac Bonneville 1981 Toyota Truck 1981 Toyota SR-5
1979 Pontiac Trans AM
1981 Toyota Clica
1982 Toyota Cressida 1981 Toyota Corolla
1981 Toyota Corolla
1982 Toyota Truck P-4082A1981 Chevrolet Chevette R-7085 1979 Toyota Corolla
1981 Datsun 280-ZX
1979 Toyota Corolla
1980 Toyota Truck
1981 Toyota Corolla
1982 Toyota 4X4 Truck
1981 Toyota Truck
1982 Toyota Starlet
P-8196
R-7046
P-7064
R-7070
R-7073
R-7077
R-7079
R-7082
R-7083
3719A
R-7087
R-7088
R-7089
R-7090
R-7092
R-7098TOYOTA EAST
109 Trade Street Greenville 756-3228
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday. February t, BI3-29
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
USED HOMES 1*71 2 bwlrawn. I bath. 12x65, 1 12x55 2 badroww. I bath 1 12x60. 2 bedroom, V, bam Ail can be seen al Art Dellano Homa. Call Lawrence or Tim at Art Dellano Homes. 756 9H1
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
! 1*76 TRAILER Two bedralMa, i i bath $5.900 Call 35 5 2727
12X60, fully lurnished 2 bedroom
porch $6.000
Call 75
! 1*ei BRIGIDIER trailer lor sale 14 I X 64 Call after 5 30om. 7*2 5461 19t2 DOUBLE WIDE with fireplace E^lty and assume loan Call 756
$155 PER MONTH You can now own a new Conner Home lor as low as $155 a month Limited time otter at Conner AAobile Homes. Intersec
hon of ^ Highway II.
Qteyivijj.e,
1*70 NORRIS. 12x65 2 bedroom
central air. appliances, good shape S5I00. Call 756 WO after foTn
1*72 ALL AMERICAN 12x70 Good condition 5500 752 6245
1*73 HOLIDAY, 12x45 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer Window air condi tioner. 2 baths. $5650 Sat up in Hoilvbrook Estates. 756 4541
1*73 12X65 STAR Mobtta Home 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, large living room with wood heater, electric heat and central air. Call after 6 00. 756 0205
IfBl 14x 54 2 bedroom I bath
washer and dryer, centrai air, total electric, underpirsnmg, stvsn win dows already set up some dM^v and assuma loan Call Lawrence at Aft Dellano Homes. 756 *641
24X52 POUBLEWIDE and
135x76 Set up 6S 6 home, b underpinned, large and snsall t
- let
-------... --- brick
underpinned, large and small back porch Central air and heat St.fOO Possible 119% loan asauiewtion Call 752 69B6alter 40 m _
CLASSIFIED DIS
1*75 celebrity 12X60 2
bedrooms. 1 bath, furnished.
ROOFING
central air, underpined, set up in nice park, 10X12 storage barn. 752 4126 days, 756 3161 nights
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
STORM WINDOWS DOORS 4 A WNINGS
R**TiodelmgRoom Ad-tilions
CM. Lupton.
7,'Z 6116
FULLTIME
SECRETARY
Needed Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Two to three years experience, excellent typing skills (6045 words per minute minimum), good telephone mannerisms. Downtown Greenville area.
Call 752-1010 and ask for Jane betweon 2 p.m. and 4 p.m.
SHOP THE BEST SHOP HOLT
QUALITY USED CARS
1982 Mazda RX-7GSL
5 speed, silver with burgundy leather interior, loaded
1982 Datsun Maxima Wagon
Diesel. Light blue with blue velour interior, loaded
1981 Datsun 280-ZX
5 speed, GL, blue with blue velour interior, loaded
1981 Datsun 280-ZX
2 plus 2. 5 speed, GL, burgundy with burgundy velour interior, loaded.
1981 Olds 98 Regency
4 door, beige with beige velour interior, loaded.
1981 Datsun 210 Hatchback
2door. Light blue with blue cloth interior, 5 speed, air.
1981 Chevrolet Chevette
4 door, beige, automatic, air, AM-FM stereo
1981 Datsun 210 Coupe
2 door, 5 speed, AM-FM radio, silver with black interior.
1981 Datsun4X4Truck
Long bod, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.
1981 Chevrolet El Camino
Blue with blue vinyl interior, tilt wheel, cruise, stereo.
1981 GMC Jimmy
Loaded. Blue with white top, blue interior.
1981 Chevrolet Chevette
4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, 12,000 miles. Red with buckskin interior.
1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Automatic, air, AM-FM, silver with burgundy interior.
1980 Volvo 265 GLE Wagon
Diesel. Loaded, silver with black leather interior.
1979 Olds Cutlass Supreme
2 door, yellow with white landau roof, buckskin interior Nice car.
1979 Ford Mustang
Black with buckskin interior, automatic, air condition. AM-FM stereo.
1979 Mercury Marquis
4 door, loaded. Silver with burgundy vinyl interior.
1978 Dodge Aspen
4 door, automatic, air, AM-FM, power windows, tilt wheel, dark green with green vinyl interior, 39,CXX) actual miles.
1978 Ford Customized Van
Air, cruise, two tone blue, one owner, local trade, sharp.
1977 Datsun 710 Wagon
5 speed, air, AM-FM, green with buckskin interior
1976 Lincoln Town Car
Loaded, 43,(XK) miles, silver with burgundy velour interior
1976 Ford LTD
4 door, yellow with tan vinyl interior, 55,(XX) actual miles
1976 Alfa Romeo Alfetta
4 door, 5 speed, air, AM-FM, black with tan interior
1975 Olds 98 Regency
4 door. Loaded, Light green with green velour interior Low mileage..
These Cars Are Former Driver Education QarsSave MOOOs
1983 Olds Cutlass Supreme Brougham
Fully equipped, dark blue
1983 Olds Delta 88
Fully loaded, white with blue top
1983 Olds Delta 88
Fully loaded, triple white
1983 Olds Cutlass Supreme
2 door, automatic, air, stereoHOLT OLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3111*)r-
I
J
I30 The Dally Refleclor. Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, February, 1983
075 AAobile Homes For Sale
3 BEDROOM. 1'? bafb mobile home *500 don and assume payments. Call 75S 5376 between 9 and l?a m ____
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS DOORS
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton Co.
076 Mobile Home Insurance
AAOBILE homeowner Insurance at coiTipfitiva rates Smith Insur ance and Realty. 752 2754.__
077 Musical Instruments
BEAUTIFUL BALDWIN Acrosonic piano *895 Tradein Piano & Organ Distributors. Arlington Roiilevard. GreenvtHe,35S 6002.
aaahogany uprignt piano.
*650 Call 746 535
OLD UPRIGHT piano *250 Call 752 1030 alter 5 pm.__
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
HAIR DRESSER
We have an opening for a sharp, self-motivated individual in our beautiful new salon. Established business with over 200 ladies on our beauty program.
Call Katrina at Isis For An Appointment
355-6972
WASHINGTON Wiilntw. U MOTOR CO*
INC
944-rm 44^t4
1982 OMtM Regency
4 door. Dark red, dark red vinyl rool, dark red crushed velour, fully loaded 7,000 miles, one local owner
1M1 Toyota Crosaida
4 door, white, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, power door locks. AM-FM stereo cassette, sunroof, alloys, showroom condition.
1M2 Chevrolet Camaro
2 door Silver metallic, t cylinder, automatic, air, power windows, stereo.
5.000 miles
1M1 Pontiac BonnevUla
2 door Light jadestone metallic, light jadestone vinyl roof, tilt wheel, stereo, air. wire wheel covers, one owner.
1M1 Chevrolet Corvette T-top. dark blue, dark blue leather Interior, glass roof, tilt wheel, cruise. AM- FM stereo with 6 track, rear window defroster, aluminum wheels. Eagle GT tires. 1SI1 Ofda Toronado 2 door Silver, gray padded landau roof, dark blue velour, tilt, cruise, power windows and door locks, stereo, power seats, air, wire wheel covers, 25,000 miles.
1911 Buick Regal
2 door hardtop, silver, red vinyl roof, automatic, power steering and brakes, air.
INI Buick Riviera 2 door. Dove gray, dark blue landau root, blue veldur, tilt, cruise, stereo, air, power windows and door locks, wire wheel covers, beautiful
INI Pontiac Trana-AM
2 door. T-top. silver with silver vinyl interior, 301 V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air, tilt wheel, AM-FM stereo cassette, honeycomb wheels, very sharp.
INI Volvo DL Wagon Beige, 4 cylinder, automatic, air condition, very nice, one owner. INI Pontiac Grand PrU Brougham. 2 door. Light gold, gold landau roof, gold crushed velour, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, door locks, power seats, AM-FM stereo, wire wheel covers, one owner. Showroom condition
1N0 Volvo 2M OLE
4 door. Gold metallic, gold leather interior, sunroof, air, stereo, alloy wheela, 32,000 miles.
19N Ford Mustang 2 door. White with white interior, 4 cylinder, 4 speed. AM-FM stereo with 8 track, 22,000 actual miles. We sold it new.
1M0 Pontiac Bonnevlle Safari Wagon
Cream with woodgrain, diesel, automatic, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, power door locks, power 8-way divided seats.
9 passenger, rally wheels, very clean, priced right.
19N Honda Accord 2 door hatchback, beige. S'speed, air Condition, AM-FM, extra clean. 1N0 Volvo DL
4 door, medium blue. 4 cylinder, 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, one owner 19N0lds Toronado 2 door. Medium bKie. diesel, XSC sports package, full power 1979 Mercury Grand Marquis 4 door Silver, silver vinyl top, blue velour split bench seat, full power, very clean, one owner We sold It new 1979 Volvo 284 GL 4 door. Dark green, saddle leather. 6 cylinder, automatic, air. AM-FM stereo, power windows, power outside mirrors, sunroof, alloys.
1179 Bukk Park Avenue
4 door White, white vinyl roof, dark red crushed velour, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, power seats, stereo, wire wheel covers.
1979 Buick Riviera
2 door. Dark green, dark green landau roof, saddle leather interior. full power, loaded.
1979 Pontiac Grand Prix 2 door Light blue, blue landau roof, bucket seats, console, stereo, power windows, wire wheel covers.
1979 Mercury Cougar XR-7 2 door White, white landau root, white Interior, tilt wheel, cruise. AM-FM stereo tape, power windows, power door locks, power 6-way seats, wire wheel covers.
1971 Dalsun B-210 2 door hatchback. Yellow with black striping, 4 speed, air condition. new radlals.
1978 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham
O'Elegance 4 door, navy blue with navy padded roof, light blue crushed velour interior, full power, moon roof, wire wheel covers, very nice Owned by a Budwelser distributor.
1978 Ford LTD II
2 door hardtop. Silver blue with striping, sports appearance package. V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air, AM-FM stereo, cast aluminum wheels.
44.000 miles, one owner We sold It new.
1977 Ford LTD
4 door. Light blue with dark blue vinyl roof, automatic, power steering, power brakes, air condition,
51.000 miles. We sold It new 1*77 Ford LTD II
4 door. Silver, black vinyl roof, gray interior, 302 V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition
tin ChavroMt Monte Cario Landau
2 door. Black, black landau vinyl root, automatic, air, stereo. Monte Cario aluminum wheela.
1977 Pontiac Grand PrU
2 door Dark brown, tan landau vinyl root. air. stereo. Rally II wheels, new tires, very clean.
Iin Cadillac SevHle 4 door Black, black vinyl roof. Wack leather interior, loaded with equipment, very low mileage. A real nice automobile
1978 Chevrolet Caprice Claaaic
4 door, beige, beige vinyl top, lull power, very clean.
1978 Dodge Aapen Wagon 4 door. White, 318 V-8. automatic, power steering, air, one owner
1976 Chevroiel Nova Concours
4 door, beige, automatic, air condition, clean.
1974 Chevrolet Caprice Estate Wagon
Medium blue with woodgrain, very clean, one owner.
1974 Dodge Dari Sport 2 door. Black Keystone wheels. $800.00.
TRUCKS 1982 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup
Short wheel base Silver, 305 V-8, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition. AM- FM, box rails, rally wheels, 8.000 actual wheels. Showroom condition. INI Chevroiel Silverado Pickup Silver, "diesel", automatic, power steering and brakes, air, cassette, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, power door locks, sliding rear window, rally wheefa, 15,000 miles, one local owner. General^ Motors MIC warranty available. Priced about '/t of a new one.
INI Chevrolet SUverado Pickup
Short wheel base. Medium blue and white, 305 V-8. power steering and brakes, air condition, AM-FM, box rails, rally wheels, chrome step bumper, 31,000 miles. Very clean.
INI Ford Ranger F-1S0
Blue and white two tone, V-8. automatic, power steering and brakes, air, AM-FM, low mileage, very clean.
19M Chevroiel El Camino Cream and gold two tone, 6 cylinder, automatic, power steering and brakes, air, 22,000 miles, very, very clean.
1980 Toyota SR-5 Pickup Medium blue, 5 speed, step bumper, very clean.
1971 Dodge D-100 Adventurer Orange and white deluxe two tone, 318 V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air, box rails. Dodge chrome wheels, 48,000 miles, very sharp.
1979 Chevrolat Scottsdale Medium gray, 305 V-8. automatic, power steering and brakes, air, AM-FM stereo, box rails, rally wheels, 6,000 miles.
1978 Chevroiel Cheyenne White, red yinyl interior. 250 V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, stereo, rally wheels, very clean.
197* Ford Conversion Van Econoline E-100 short wheel base. Silver and dark blue. 302 V-8. automatic, air, power steering and brakes, captain's chairs, cruise, AM-FM stereo tape, CB. sofa bed combination, refrigerator, sink, chrome rims, very sharp.
1976 Ford F-1N Ranger XLT Light blue. 460 V-8. automatic, power steering and brakes, air, cruise.
4 WHEEL DRIVE TRUCKS 1982 AMC Jeep CJ-S Black, Renegade package. 6 cylinder, 4 speed, chrome spoke wheels. All-terrain tires, like new. 1982 Ford Bronco Ranger XLT Lariat. Brown and cream Victoria two tone, captain's chairs, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows and door locks, stereo, air condition, chrome spoke wheels, all-terrain tires, 7800 miles, showroom condition.
INI AMC Jeep Scrambler Pickup Dark blue, white hardtop. 6 cylinder, 4 speed, AM-FM stereo, air, white spoke wheels, white letter Goodyear Trackers, one owner.
INI Chevrolet Silverado
Long wheel base, 4X4, light brown and cream two tone, V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air, AM-FM stereo cassette, white spoke wheels, all-terrain tires
INI AMC JEEPCJ-7 Uredo
Chestnut brown metallic with gold striping, beige hardtop. 304 V-8, 4 speed, power steering and AM-FM stereo, chrome spoke wheels, all-terrain tires.
INI AMC Jeep Wagoneer Limited
4 door. Maroon with woodgrain, leather Interior, tilt, cruise, power windows, power door locks, AM-FM stereo, air, alloys, luggage rack.
19N AMC Jeep Wagoneer Limited
4 door. Maroon with woodgrain, leather Interior, tilt, cruise, power windows, power door locks. AM-FM stereo, air, alloys, luggage rack.
197* AMC Jeep Wagoneer
4 door, dark green with woodgrain. 360 V-8. automatic, air AM-FM stereo, 52,000 miles, alloy wheels.
1977 Chevroiel SHverado Short wheel base 4X4 Black. 350 V-8. automatic, power steering and brakes, air. stereo, tool box. front bumper push bar, chrome spoke wheels, all-terrain tires, sharp
1976 AMC Jaep CJ-S Medium blue. V-8. 3 speed Renegade package, ali-terrain tires. KC lights
fiBpS) RiCRiS
MeirJx-r 1 DK
I
077 Musical Instruments
5u?"TjPROH^T7aNO, new
Ivories and felts, *200 You pick up Armstrong flute, excellent coryll tion, *175 746 4577 after 4 p.m
PRIVATE GUITAR LESSONS Cali 756 22S3 or 752-6069
VIOLIN, CASE and bow Phone 7S3 4682._
*200
078
Sporting Goods
HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion re pairs. Speclaliting in merirte pro-ducts. 758 0641.1104 Clark Street.
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST Gray, long haired cat. Trinity Free will Baptist area No collar, stomach shaved I'/j months ago. needs her pills. If you have seen her, please call 752 0024, you could>help answer my prayers Lost February 4, 1983
LOST Black and white male Pomeranian wearing a blue rhine stoise collar. Lost In Country Squire Estates north of Tar River Re ward. 752 6033
LOST VICINITY OF Greenville Boulevard and Dellwood Drive a young male orange tabby cat named Baby 756 4757.
MISSING 'Male chocolate point Siamese Cat, neutered Answers to Tigger Reward. 756 2064 or 752
zmZL
MISSING Small female deer hound Light brown with dark brown blanket back and white feet. Tato in ear. no collar, Call 752 6051 after 6 pm. _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
085 Loans And AAortgages
NEED CASH, get second mortgage fast by phone, we also buy mortgages, make commercial loan*, call tree I
I 800 645 3W.
091
Business Services
INCOME TAX SERVICES Hilton Bovd Call 756 3264.
INCOME TAX SERVICE Doug Reynold* 757 1009 or 758-0135_
093 OPPORTUNITY
FOR SALE: E*tablished scrap
yard, equipped tor ferrous and rwn ferrous metals. Call tor detail*. Teresa Jone*. Broker, 46 9649
FOR SALE: Established Jewelry and Gift Store, In Eastern Carolina. Write Gift Store, PO Box 1967. Greenville, NC 27834
093
OPPORTUNITY
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED in weight control, enjoy working with people artd would like to own your own business. Diet Center could offer the career for you Washington area now available 919 38-6923 _
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc Financial & AAarketIng Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015
SERVICEMASTER professional home and office cleanlr>g franchises available In the Eastern NC area. *14,000 includes equipment and training Financing available. For Information call or write ServiceMaster, 204 West Peace Street. Raleioh 27603, 833 2802
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
PINE FURNITURE
OiMllty Pin* Furniture at WholMala Prices Seen Something You Went?
I can build H for a lot loee. AnytMng custom buHt
Bookcesoa * Drossore
QunCabinots Conmutar Tableo
Shelvoa Nlghl Stands
Pleeafes * T v Hutch
Jolly Cupboard Stereo CeWnets
Drop Loafs * PencN Post Bed
Anything can be built from a akatch or pictura, staln-ad any color. Many Items finlahod and ready to soli
355-2720 After 5:30 ~ QroonvHIo
COST
ACCOUNTANT
Excellent opportunity for an Individual with a BS or BBA with an accounting major plus two years cost and budget experience in a manufacturing environment.
Will establish and maintain current cost data with details review and analysis. Develops forecasts, budgets and annual plans to meet management objectives.
Send resume with salary requirements to:
ACCOUNTANT
P.O. BOX 1967
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834 An Equal Opportunity Employer
OWN OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WELL ESTABLISHED convni*nce *tora located at intaraaction of 2 haavlly travaltad atraats; preantly doing axcaa* of *30,000 par month with potential of much more; 51% or more buslnea* available
night CLUB FOR SALE terrific shopping center location in college community; all equipment needed for successful operation; 2400 paid members; drastically reducacl for quick sale
TREMENDOUS OPPORTUNITY for someone who wants to work for himself. AM equipment needed tor full service cleaning service in eluding like new 1981 GMC Van, high pressure power wash at 3000 PSI enables operator to remove oil, paint, grease, dirt, smog and grime from any exterior surface such as store fronts, mobile homes, boats, airplanes, car engines, even graveyard nnonuments. Industrious oper ator can earn from *30 to *60 per hour. Heavy demand for service
?lives operator more than he can do n unlipnifed area.
WELL ESTABLISHED Restaurant/Grill for sale due to retirement. AAodern facilities and equipment. Well located at busy crossroads in thriving rural com munlty. Present annual gross In excess of *50,000 with potential of much more. Low overhead permits extremely good profit potential. May be bought for cash or on terms.
For additional information on the above and on more than 40 other business and Investment op portunities. call Harold Creech and/or J T Snowden, Jr. with
THE MARKETPLACE JNC
752-3666
095
PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman, North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Cafl day or night, 753 3503, Farmville
104 Condominiums For Sale
BY OWNER Ouail Ridge Cor^, 3 bedrooms, 2Vj baths, large livjng room with fireplace,- and dining room. Pool and tennis court. Cafl
355 6053.
CONDOMINIUM PRICED to sell!! I Hard to find a 3 bedroom flat in a lovely setting. The real plus is price ot *49,500. F^yer, living room with fireplace, kitchen, dining area, 3 bedroom. 2 full baths, patio. Contact D G Nichols Agency for information. 752-4012 or night, 752 7666. _
FOR RENT WITH OPTION to buy Large 3 bedroom Condomimium, enjoy the fireplace, the fenced in patio, the formal dining room. Call 752 1263 or 756-4244 after 7 pm. and ask for Richard____
GOTANOTHER RENT INCREASE?
You can have monthly payments lower than rent that will not go up! Contact one ot our brokers today to discuss our affordable alternative to rent.
AAOORE& SAUTE R 110 South Evans 758-6050
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
106
Farms For Sait
188 ACRES with 60 cleared and T
rjnds of tobacco aMotment iO< aled miles southeast ot WinltH ville Contact Don Southerland at AldridM & Southerland Realty,
756 35W; nights 756-5260._
152 ACRES with 31 cleared and 8000 pounds tobacco allotment located 3 miles west of WintervlMe. Contact Don Southerland at Aldridge A Southerland Realty. 756-3500; nights 756 5260. _
28 ACRES with 12 cleared. Near Chicod School. 15 miles Southeast of Greenville. Owner financing available. For more information call Aldridge A Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights Don Southarland, 756 5260. _
58 ACRE FARM Good road Iron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared. 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call AAoseley-Marcus Realty at 746 2166 tor full details. ,_____
107 Farms For Lease
TOBACCO POUNDS FOR SALE at
*3.50 per pound. Call 752-5567 attar
WANTTO BUY
CORN
Top Prices Pqld for your corn. Worthington Farms Inc., 756-3827 Days, 756 3732 Nights.
WANT TO LEASE peanut pounds, any amount. Call 758 2859
WANTED TO RENT TOBACCO POUNDS for 1983 Call
752-0310 or 758-4353
109 Houses For Sale
ATTRACTIVE LOAN Assumption. 3 bedroom brick, very attractive interior, large detached work shop. Assumable at 9!-% Ray M Spears, 758 4362, Aldridge 8, Southerland Realty, 756 3500.
CHERRY OAKS Fantastic 4 bedroom, in this desirable area. Carpet, wallpaper, interior decor, brand new, family room with Fish er woodstove. 3 baths, split heat pump. *86,900. Aldridge A Southerland, 756 3500, nights Allta Carroll 756 8278._
CLUB PINES Colonial Williamsburg. 532 Crestline. 1850 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, fireplace with woodstove, hardwood floors, matching utility shed, R-30 ceiling, 3 years old By owner *86,500. Open house Sunday, Feb 6, 13, 20, 27, 1-5 pm or call 756-6220 after 6 pm for appointment.
CONTEMPORARY STYLE, con venient location, cooperative seller. Three bedroom, 2 bath home. Great room with fireplace and track lighting. Patio and backyard with privacy fence. Mid 50's To see, call Allta Carroll, Aldridge A Southerland. 756-3500, 756-8278, C-6.
CONTENTED CHARM I love it! Roomy three bedroom ranch In desirable Tucker Estates. Formal entry foyer, living and dining room, huge family room with cozy
lOltlliy wilt f
fireplace, convenient utility room, double carport, only *73,r Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3; nlqhtsMike Aldridge756 7871.
COUNTRY HOME 3 bedrooms, IVj baths, new carpet, new appliances on lot. Only *37,500. Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727 or 758 3338.
DELLWOOD It's perfect neat and trim, 3 bedroom ranch in a picture book setting. Warm earthtones accent the sunny kitchen while a cozy fireplace warms the family room. Bring the family...They'll never want to leave! *59,900, Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500 or Jett Aldridqe, 756-2807.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
^300 REWARD
For information leading to ttM arrest of person or persons responsible tor the break in at Club Reflections, Highway 64 East, Bethel, N. C. on Monday, Jan. 31, between 6 and 10 pm.
PHONE 752-1092 or notify the Sheriffs Dept.
Washington Motor Co. Service Department
109
Houses For Sale
108 Houses For Sale
DRASTICALLY REDUCED!I New icj t jme features 3 bedrooms, 2 Ucith'i 1950 square feet on a 1 acre wuud>-<J lot. For additional In-tormalion call Aldridge and Southerland 756 3s00, Nifes, Myra Day 524-5004. D-l._
EIGHTIES
Wesfhavenlll...............82,0
Country......... *83,000
Dalabrook Circle............183,000
Orexelbrook Circle..........
Tucker Estates..............
Forest HIM*.................*,900
WIndemere.................Hf-SS
Brook Valley................*89,900
DUFFUS REALTY, INC
756-5395_
EXCELLENT STARTER HOME or for small family; two bedroom home with fireplace In living and dining araa. Almost new furnace and central air. Call now only *42,900. Estate Realty Company, TsrsnsB: nlohts 758-4476or 752-3647.
FOR SALE BY OWNER
Three bedroom, 2 ceramic bath brick home, fireplace, central heat and air on 1.4 acre* with 300 ft. frontage on Highway II near Griffon. Horsa stables, fenced pasture. Shown by appointment
only. 524 5218._ ^
GRIFTON 3 bedrooms, sunken living room with fireplace. Excellent condition. Large lot. Must see this one. *51,000. Financing available. Call 524 5266._
IF YOU'RE looking for something in the University area, this could be it! In this Eastern St, home you'll find three bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, dining room, eat In kitchen, patio and fenced backyard, not to mention tremendous storage space. *40's. For your siiowing, call Allta Carroll, Aldridge A Southerland, 756 3500, 756 827*: C 5.
LAKE ELLSWORTH 4 bedrooms in this price range with formal areas, dn with fireplace, country kitchen with eating area, and well landscaped lawn. Assumable financing. $65,500. Aldridge and Southerland, 756 3500, nights, 756-7871. <>071.
MAVIS BUnS REALTY 758-0655
NEW LISTINGS
PERFECT STARTER HOME or for single person with flair for decorating. This older home has been completely remodeled and otters fireplaces in both the living and dining rooms, new vinyl In kitchen and bath, 2 large bedrooms, hard wood floors, french doors and con venient location to the university and downtown areas. 13% fixed rate conventional money available up to 95% loan. *29,000.
EXCELLENT HOME tor extended family situation or possible day care program. Features include foyer, living room with fireplace
patio and carport. 12%% fixed rate loan assumption to qualified buyer;
and dining area, eat-in kitchen, pine paneled <fen, 5 bedrooms, 2Vj bams, hardwood floors, central air, fenced backyard and corner lot location. 13% fixed rate conventional money available, up to 95% financing, owner occupied. *59,900.
COLLEGE COURT is the conve nient and lovely location tor this immaculate home only 2 years old. Features foyer, great room with fireplace, dining room, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump, -"id rate
____ . . uyer,
monthly payments ot $425.24 *64,900.
CONSTRUCTION ABOUT TO BGtN on two enchanting wood sided contemporary homes in Greenwood Forest, only 3 miles from the hospital on Stantonsburg Road. Buy now and put your package together coordinating col ors and patterns to your liking. FHA/VA or conventional financing available. Prices range from $50,500 to *59,900.
Jane Butts.................756-2851
Elaine Troiano.............756-6346
AAavIS Butts................752-7073
AAODERNIZED COUNTRY place with homespun atmosphere on ap
Rroximately 1 acre. Home otters ving room with fireplace, large dining room, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, central heat and air, screened porch and detached garage. Room tor the children to have a horse! 12%% fixed rate loan assumption to
lualified buyer; new conventional ing up to 95% at 13% fixed rate. *56,900. Call Mavis Butts
tnancir
Realty, 758-0655 or Jane Butts, 756-285L_
NEW LISTING; Spacious white brick home, located on over an acre. Approximately 2,000 square feet. Greatroom with fireplace, 3 bedroom, 2'/i bath. Plus formal living/dining room. Approximately 2 adjoining acres available. Possible Federal Land Bank Financing. W-12. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500 or 758 7744.
Searching for the rrght townhouse? Watch Classified every day.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Sue Keplers Upholstery
15% Discount On Fabric 10% Discount On Labor Til Feb. 15th Free Estimates Call 758-6922
mr DAY OF CLASS
STARTSFEBRUARY17.
The totally new Cougar is coming soon. See it here. And find out how easy it is to enter the personal luxury car class.
NOW ON DISPLAY IN OUR SHOWROOM
Orders Now Being Accepted
MERCURY COUGAR LS
Ail-new aerodynamic design
Dramatic formal roof line
3.8 liter V-6/3-speed automatic transmission (optional 5.0 liter V-8 ADD also available)
LINCOLN
EAST
GMC
CAROLINA
West End Circle Greenville
756-4267
FARMERS HOME assumption, 8% 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths,, excellent starter home. Steve Evans A Associate*. 355 2727 or 758 3338
NEW LISTING 8'% VA loan assumption, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, and over ISOO square feet ot living area, conveniently located In Eastwood. Low tSO's. Call Jett Aldrito. Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500or756 2aorA7.
NICE S room house. Enclosed back porch, carport, new paint in and out. Very good condition. In the
county. an tree* *34,000
By owrx 756 4199.
By ownerT'tsfMTa, cal after' 6,
OLDER HOME IN GRIFTON Feature* 2 bedrooms, carpet over hard wood floors, remodeled kitchen, and new heating system *30's For more details call Aldridge and Southerland 756-3500, Nites. Myra Day 524 5004 0 3.
OWNER BEING TRANSFERRED, Immaculate throughout. Excellent location, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, beautiful landscaping. 210 Crestline Blvd. Call Ray Spears at Aldmieei, and Southerland. 756 3500 or 75 4362.
OWNER HAVE AAOV^D to Virginia and want to sale their 3 bedroom. 2 full bath ranch. Features large living area with fireplace plus separate dining area. Large lot, nice neighborhood. Call Aldridge and Southerland 756-3500, NItes. Myra Day 524 5004. D 2.
OWNER LEAVING TOWN, must sell opportunity! No need to quail fy; pay equity of approximately *6,400 and assume VA loan. This ranch beauty is only 1 year old and features great room with wood burning stove, dining area and patio doors to deck, lovely kitchen with pantry, 3 bedrooms (master is off by itself), 2 baths and heat pump. New financing available at 13% fixed rate to 95% loan; *59,900. Call Mavis Butts Realty. 758 0655 or Elaine Troiano, 756-6346
PERFECT STARTER home or in vestment property. 3 bedroom home in excellent condition inside and out. Assume loan or get new FHA or VA loan with nothing down. $35,900. Call Jeannette Cox Ag 756 1322.
Agency,
PRICE REDUCED! Westhaven. 10% assumable financing, 3 bedrooms, fenced backyard and garage. Very attractive home in one of Greenville's most desirable areas. *57,900. Call Jett Aldridge, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 2807 A2.__
THIS RIVERHILLS home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and a wooded lot has an entry foyer, living room, eat in kitchen, familY room with fireplace, and laundry/mud room. The 2 car detached garage provides a maximum of storage space. Upper 50's. For more information, call Allta Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland. 756-3500, 756 8278. C 7.
WEATHINGTON HEIGHTS Sit down, have your second cup of coffee in the sunny kitchen of this well cared for home. Or sit on the large wooden deck and enjoy a summer's evening. Three bedroom, IVa baths, great room. *40's. Farmers Home financing available. I'M be most happy to show you this ideal starter home. Allta Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500 or 756 8278. C 8. _
WESTHAVEN-You'M never believe this fantastic family room! Large enough for the kids, and Mom and Pop. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, screened back porch, fenced yard, and many extra features. 574,900. Aldridge and Southerland, 756-3500, nights, 756-7871. *068.
WHO COULD want more than a nice house, reasonably priced, in a good location. Come see this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch. It has living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, and family room with
woodstove. A total ot 1850 square foot of living area for *74,500 in Tucker Estafes. You really should
see it! C-3, Allta Carroll, Aldridge A Southerland. 756 3500, 756-8278.
Ill RIPLEY DRIVE, 4 bedroom, 2Va baths, double garage, workshop, hardwood floors, assumable loan. Large second mortgage available. *105.000. 355-6269.
2 STORY, 403 Student Street, 1 block from college. Call 758-4108.
3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, kitchen, large living room, storage, 'i acre. 8% assumable loan. 756-9656._
*53,500. Windy Ridge, 3 bedroom, ZVa bath condominium. Features family room with fireplace, heat pump. Recreational facilities available. Seller will make some allowance tor new decorating. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge 8, Southerland Realty, 756-3500 or 758 7744
*61,500. Centrally located. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch features family room with fireplace, plus formal area. Attractive neighborhood, convenient to schools and shopping. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge 8, Southerland Realty, 756-3500or 758-7744._
$68,000. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch home-with 2 car garage is located just oft Greenville Boulevard, convenient to shopping and ECU Also, you'll love the large sunroom or playroom. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500 or 758-7744.__
$93,900. NEW LISTING Exceptional location. 2 story Williamsburg. First class decor. 4 bedroom, I'/i baths. Less than 1 year old, heat pump, deck, custom Kitchen, built-in microwave. W 13. Call June Wyrick Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 758 77J4.
Ill I nvestment Property
GOOD INVESTMENT FOR TAXSHELTER
Office building with government agency lea^. Assumable loan or new financing. For information call toll free 1-800 443-2781. ext. C 14.
115 Lots For Sale
BAYTREE SUBDIVISION
Attractive wooded lots within the city. 90% financing available. Call 758-3421
EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY
BAYWOOD, TWO, ACRE Jot, FI nancino available. Call 756-7711.
HUNTINGRIDGE
Large residential lots near hospital. Restricted. FHA and VA approved. Call 752 4139, Millie Lilley, Owner-Broker. _
LOT- QUAIL Ridge Mobile Home Estates. Phone 758 5532.___
2 DUPLEX LOTS off Hooker Road. Priced to sell. 756 7473._
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758 4413 between 8 and 5
NEED STORAGE? We have any J size to meet your storage need. Cafl J Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday 9 5 Call 756-9933.
121 Apartment For Rent
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile honries tor ret. Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756-7815.
ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near campus. No pets. *215 a month. 756 3923. _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING
Rpmodelmq Room Additions.
C.L. Lupton. Co.
7S'J hi Ih
WANTED
GOOD
CLEAN
CARDBOARD
Paying 1 V2 per lb.
TARHEEL RECYCLING CORP.
WllllanfiBton, N. C. 792-1016
121, Apiments For Rent
A lEAUTIFULLY DECORATED 1 bth, I bedroom townhouse with loft bedroom Totally energy efficient. S240. Atter S:30 or anytime voeekend 752 W4t~_
AZALEA GARDENS
Greenville's newest and rnost uniquely turnisbed one bedroom apartments
AH energy efficient designed.
Queen siie beds and studio couches
Washers and dryers optional
Free vrater and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartn>ents on ground floor with porches.
Frosttree refrigerators.
Located in Azalea Gardens near Crnok Valley Country Club. Shown ty appointment only. Couples or singles No pets.
Contact J T or Tommy Williams 7S7I5
Cherry Court
Spacious X bedroom townhouses with l'/2 ^ths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. \Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, tree cable TV, wasnei
her dryerA hook-ups, laundry room, sauna. \ tennis court, club
house and pool .y52-1SS7
CYPRESlS APA
RTF,
GARDENS
MENTS
23ME Tenth Street Available immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook-ups, heat pump, frost free retrigeratCH, dishwasher, disposal. Call days 758-60A1, nights/weekends T58 5661.
Professionally managed by Remco East, Inc._
DUPLEX FOR RENT Cemetery Road. $250
752 0180.
300 A month.
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, V featuring Cable TV, mociern appll-
anc?s, central heat and air condl tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive'
752-5100
IFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
Ully furnished including linens. Id service, all utilities, cable.
mat
Newly renovated 1 or 2 beds. Starting at $105 week or $300 month. Olde London Inn, 2710 South AAemo-rlal Drive. Call 750 5555.
EXTRA LARGE 1
furnished apartment, close uptown, carpet, $175 752 3804.
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dishwasher, cable Tv, laundry rooms.
balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economicai nd poor
utiiities and poof Adjacent to Greenvilie Country Club. 750-6809
IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment, appliances furnished.
no children, fi pets. Deposit and 'air 75-5007.
lease. $195 a month. Cal Available end of December.
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator,_ dishwasher, disposal and c
I cable TV Conveniently located
to shopping center and schools, cated lusf <
Located lustoff 10th Street.
Call 752-3519
LARGE 2 BEDROOM Duplex. 707 A Hooker Road. Stove and refrigerator, washer, dryer hookups, air
condition, heat pump. Deposit and lease required. No pets. $250. After 5 pm. 756 5217, 75A 6382, or 75* 0489.
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside
your
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1-5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
755-5067
MODERN two-bedroom with living room, kitchen, bath and utllltly area, storage, paved private drive.
refrigerator and range, adjacent to Wellcome Middle ScWl. $215 per
ome
month. Call J L Harris & Inc., Realtors, 758-4711
Sons,
MODERN 2 BEDROOM duplex with electric heat near ECU Pi
fere couple with references. 5529.
OAKAAONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
bedroom townhouse apart-1212 Redbanks Road. Dish
Two ments
washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal IncludedT We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FLEMING FURNITURE
& APPLIANCE
NowSenrtees CraabyAppHanees KaMnatorAppNaneea Spaed Qwaaci Laundry Faddara Air CoodHlonara ISIZCHetdnaonAve. 7S2-1888
121 Aptrtnwnf For Rent
ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, appliances, central air and leaf. 802. Apt. 2, Wiilow St. $195. 758 3311
ONE bedroom duplex located on
2nd Street in Ayden. All appliencea furnished Energy efflcienf with heat pump. Judv 7S6-A33* before 5,
REDWOOD APARTMENTS SM E 3rd Street. I bedroom furnished apartment, haat, air, water furnished. 2 blocks ftem campus. No pen. 758 3711 or 75-(l8t9.
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live UETV
Office hours lOe.m, toSp.n AAoTKfey through Fridey
Call us 24 hours a day at
756
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook-ups. cable TV, pool, club ECU
house, playground, Near I
Our Raputation Says It All -"A Community Complax."
1401 Willow Street Office - Corner E Im & Willow
752-4225
TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT 2 bedrooms, IVj baths, energy etti cient. Convenient location. 757-0001 or nlQhts 753 4015
TWO BEDROOM apartment. River Bluff Roed. $240 per month. No pets. Call Smith Insurance I, Real-tv, 752 2759._
TWO BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, appliances, central air anoheat. 804, Apt. 2, Willow St. $250. 758-3311
TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX Carpeted, all appliances inclining
dishwasher. Heat pump, storm windows and doors. Located off 10th Street near university. $240 per month. Call 758-2558or 754-7477.
WEDGE WOOD ARMS
NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom, 1Vi bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court. .
756-0987
1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available immediately. 752-3311.
1 BEDROOM energy efficient apartment. 754 5389 or 7S4-0025.
1 BEDROOMn APARTMENT,
located 2 block from campus. Fully carpeted, energy efficient, appHcances and water furnished. No Pets. Call Judy at 754-4334
before 5:00.
1 BEDROOM, 2 blocks from downtown and ECU Convenient to hospital. $195. 754-7473or 754-7285.
2 BEDROOM FURNISHED Apartment for rent. Call 754-0407 anytime.
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT with sun deck. $285 per month. Pets allowed. 754-9175 before noon, Monday Friday.
2 BEDROOMS, IV2 bath. Ridge Available March 1.
Place. $290. 754 7310.
2 BEDROOM Duplex on Brownlea Drive. Range and refrigerator hookups, energy efficient. No pets. $265. 7^-7480.__
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, central heat
and air, lease and deposit, $245 per month. No pets. Call Jon Day at
Moore & Sauter, 752-1010; nights 752-0345,_
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT for rent. Reasonable price. Near campus. Pets allowed. Call 754-4747 after 5. ___
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX apartment. Appliances furnished. Located In Meedowbrook. $130 month. Call 756 1900__
3 BEDROOM Duplex on AAeade Street, near ECU Central air.
ran^e and_ refrigerator hookups.
. 754 7480.
122
Buslntu Rentals
SMALL STME SPACE for rant J feet of Moot space; Tanth Street (Colonial
2741
780 square
East Tei.... ------ .___
Heights). Extremely reesoneble rates. Cell 752-4348 from 10 e.m. til 4 p.m.aftf7ft-^819aflg.ip,m
1SOO SQUARE FOOT space for rent on _ ^uleverd. Cell Echo Realty, Inc
commercial
Greenville
125 Condominiums For Rant
FOR RENT WITH OfTION to buy. Large 3 be^oom Condomlmlum,
rioy the fireplace, the tencod In alio, tho formal dining room. Call
pal _. .
752 1243 or 754-4244 attor 7 pm. and ask tor Richard.
TWO BEDROOM flat ^p)ox availabla In Shanandoah. $300 par month, 12 month laasa. Young coupla pratarrad. Call Clark Branch RaaltoiX, 754-4334.
2 BEDROOM, m bath, carpatad, major appliances furnished. No Pets, married couple pretered. 825 7321 after 5p.m._
127
Housos For Rent
ELM STREET 2 bedrooms, new paint and carpet, few blocks from college. $245 a month. Slight
liege
Really, 754-3220, nights 758 :
FOUR BEDRROM house, 405 West Fourth Street. $300 per month. Call 7570488.
HOUSE FOR RENT 113Westhaven Road. 3 bedrooms, large fenced in yard, $475. AAey rent with option to buy. Call 754-4044._
IN FARMVILLE 3 bedrooms, nice neighborhood. $275 a month plus deposit 753-4214.
LARGE 3 BEDROOM Brick home. 2 baths, formal livlra room, dining room, kitchen with dishwasher, spacious den with fireplace, central heat and air. Small apartmant attachad to back. Availabla Immediately. $350 per month. Serious
only call collact 919-791 2559 nights, 919 ..........
799 9373 days. Ask for Mr. or Mrs. Mayo.
TWO BEDROOM, 1 bath house. University area. Marrieds only. No Inside pets. $275. 754 9070.
TWO-BEDROOM house, 3 blocks from university, convenient to
shopping area, perfect for students sherlng! ... - .
shering! $250 per month. Call J L Harris & Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758-4711.
UNIVERSITY AREA, 110 East 12th Street. 3 bedrooms, appliances furnished, washer/dryer connec tion, fireplace, just insulated. $275. Call 754-0745._
1, 2, AND 3 bedroom houses for rent . 752-3311
112 NORTH SUMMIT 3 bedroom house within walking distance of the
university. $310 month. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 754-2121.
2 BEDROOM HOUSE In the country. Deposit required. $150 per month. 1-523-3542._
BEDROOM ranch style home.
-port, storage, quiet subdivision. I 757-0001 or nights, 753-4015,
Cal 754-9004.
3 BEDROOM HOME near Simpson, nice kitchen, garden space. $215 per month. 787 04W. _
3 BEDROOM. IV1 bath, located near hospital. Central air, fenced in yard, $335. Call 752-4047.
3 BEDROOM, 108 North Elm. Fireplace, stove, refrlagerator, dishwasher, washer and dryer. No pets. 754-9526._
129
Lots For Rent
TRAILER LOT for rent, 100x200 Located at Lot 33 Quail Ridge Trailer Estates. 752-0038 after 5:30.
133 AAobi le Homes For Rent
COLONIAL PARK, 2 bedroom, air, underpinned, furnished. 754-3377 afters p.m.
FOR RENT 2 bedroom trailer on private lot. Water furnished Central air and heat. Call 754-1538.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
122
Business Rentals
5,000 SQUARE FOOT building for rent. About 1 mile west from Pitt Memorial Hospital. Phone 753 2014 days, 758-4294 nlQhts._
HENRY WHITEHURST CARPET SERVICE
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
iH0NE7520%7
c'oiififtf /ops //()(>/'
PUBLIC RENTAL OF TOBACCO LANDS FOR 1983 FARM YEAR
Guy Sutton Farmland
In Arthur Township, Farm Serial No. C<556, Containing 80 acres of cleared land, 8.60 acres tobacco allotment, with 18,079 pounds allotted for 1983.
Tobacco may be planted on the land or removed. The Leasee shall pay all assessments provided by the United States Agricultural Stablization Commission. Commissioners reserve the option to rent the poundage and rent the cultivatable land jointly or severally.
To be rented'for cash-pursuant to Order of th Superior Court of Pitt County at the Courthouse door at
Greenville, North Carolina February 11,1983 at 11:00 a.m.
MarkW. Owens, Jr. Stephen F. Horne, II
William H. Lewis, Jr.
Save At
V
Holt Oldsmobile-Datsun
With This 1983 Olds Delta 88
4 door, fully equipped with air condition, automatic transmission, AM-FM stereo, styled wheel covers, tinted glass.
All For Only
9328
Plu
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
Plus Freight and Sales Tax
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115The Daily Reflectw, GreaivUle, N.C -Wednesday, February 9,1983-31
133 AAoblle Homes For Rant
FOR SALE or rant. 40 X 12 two
T. Electric hsat.7to2S07.
FURNISHED 2 bMlrooms and 3 $150 and $185 month
badrooms. $150 and Colonial Perk. 758d174.
FURNISHED 3 badroonW S Bahind Vante
attar 1.
_ TRAILERS for rant. . . SMO; 2 badroom, $120. Vanfart Grill. Call 754 4982
FURNISHED 2 badroom naar four lana, dapoalt nagotlabla. 744-9470 or
534^dtfo7Bm,
SPECIAL RATES for ttudantt. 2
badroom with carpat, $115. No pat*. no chlldran. 75S-4S41 or 754-9491.
12 X 45 TWO BEDROOM, 2 bath, naw carpat. $150 par month. 5 mita 99Vm<H9r9Vn^|krCfl.ir#:^75.
12XAS, cantral haat and air. 3 milas north of city. Call 758-2347 or 752-4048. _
12X70 FULLY FURNISHED Good condition. Must hava rafarancas. No oats. Marrlad couplas only. 752 4245.
(BEDROOM AMblla Homa for rant 8
2 BEDROOMS, partially furnishad, ition, no
air, good locat chlldran. 758 4857.
pats, no
2 BEORO(3M TRAILER for rant Carpat, air, no pats, V/2 baths. 754 4005. _
2 BEDROOM, complalaly fvrnlsnfd,n9pgty7^-7?S1
2 BEDROOMS, furnishad, washar/dryar, air conditionar, axcallant condition, good location. Couplas only, no pats. 754-0001 aftar
5o.m.
2 BEDROOMS with carpat, washar. Locatad at Azalaa Gardens. $150 month. Call 754 1900._
135 Office Space For Rent
FOR RENT
i?;
Can
Approximataly 800 ara faat. $250 par month. lOth , Colonial Haight ~
raat, Colonial entar. 758-4257
Shopping
MODERN, attractive office space for lease. Approximately 1500 square faat. Locatad 2007 Evans Straat beside Moseley Brothers. Call 754 3374._
OFFICE FOR LEASE 1203 West 14th Street, 758-3743 or 355-4458. Availabla immadlataly. _
SINGLE OFFICES or sulfas, with utilities and janitorial. Chapin-
Little building, 3104 S Drive. Call 754 7799.
Memorial
SAAALL OR LARGE office suites tor rent. Reasonable rates Including utilities and janitorial. Mingas Building, Evans Street. Call Clark Branch, Realtors 754-6334.
TWO ROOM or four room office sulfa. Highway 264 Business. Eco nomical. Private parking Some storage available. Call Lonnally Branch at Clark Branch Realtors, 754 4334.__
THREE ROOM downtown office at 219 Cotanche Street, 440 square feet. Parking available. Call Jim Lanier at 752 5505. _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ARMY SURPLUS
CAMPING SPORTING
MILITARY GOODS Ovpi 100 nnlMipnl llPms New and U^nd
ARMY-NAVY STORE
15Q1 S Evans
Plastic Slip Covers
CMtom mtdd in honw. HMvy clMT ptMtlc. Protdcts tumltura from smoko, dust, ataino,
woaring.
J.AUSBY
Sofa & Chair Covered
(4 Pillows or Lom)
^95.00
Ausby Plastic Covers
isDyi
53M
I793*WELD0N
135 Offkw Spact For Ront
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy WIlTlams. 754-7815.
138
Rooms For Ront
SEMI PRIVATE ROOM for
|75 month. Cfll7ji-ff If
Looking tor an apartmant? You'll find a wide range W availabla units listed In the Classified columns of today's paper
142 Roommate Wantod
FEAAALE, nice 3 badroom homa. $95 par month and V] utilities. Call 758 6W4. _
FEAAALE ROOAAAAATE naadad. 2 badroom furnishad trailer, W dapos-It,' rant. Call after 4. 752-7509.
FEAAALE ROOAAMATE wanted to share duplex with fireplace. 1/2 rent and utilities. Furnishad except badroom. Prafar graduate student or professional. Must Ilka cats. Phona 758-7884._
FEMALE ROOAAMATE wantad,
professional parsOn. to shara 2 badroom. 1'/^ bath townhouse, no lease Available February 20. 754-7179
FEAAALE ROOAAMATE wantad
rent $112.50, Vt utillflas, dap
1/1
required 2 badroom duplex blocks from campus. Coma by 510 Apartmant F. East First Straat.
FEMALE ROOMMATE naadad immadlataly to shara nice 2 bedroom apartment. Reasonable. For more information call 758-1547 after 1p.m._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
142 Roommate Wanted
AAALE ROOMMATE needed to share naw homa In Stokas $115 month and 'n utllitiat. 757 1050.
MATURE FEMALE Roommate be twean age 20 and 30. Wantad to shara nice furnishad apartmant. Pay '/] expensas. Call attar 7,
ROOMAAATE WANTED immadi ataly. 2 badroom apartmant. Share bath. IW miles from ECU Female
S120 par month. </i utilities. $120
TV-----
(WDOslt. 752 3074 aftar 4 p.m
VERY NICE fully furnishad 2 badroom apartment at Eastbrook
Apartnrtants, $125 rant plus Vi ufilitlas. AAust be rasponslbla. Call
144 WantedTo Buy
WANT TO BUY Older home In country, with 3 to 5 acres of land, in Graanvllla, Washington area. Call collact 795 3459 atter 6 p.m_
WANTED: Si
prafar style
yr-----
752 3167
sawing machine, r MOe Call
1973 OR NEWER wracked Chevrolet Yi ton pickup for parts Call 752 2457
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
S-1 SENTRY SAFE
119
cttuiiomcEEiiinDin.
^^^^orn^olPnjOre^
SUPEBDS FBAMESTEi/BUILDDnS
For Business or Farm 5 Year Warranty 3 - Week Delivery Weather-proof and virtually maintenance free
JEWELL
BUILDING SYSTEMS INC
Licensed MELCO Manufacturer
J.L. Harris & Sons, Inc.
204 W. Tenth St.
75S-4711
AT
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
We Are Overstocked With The Sporty Datsun 280-ZX T-Top And 2 Plus 2
Save Up To *2600.00
During Our Pre-Spring Clearance Sale Over 25 In Stock To Choose From
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
FOR SALE
>20,000
Older home in Winterville with good rehab potential. Large lot, storage building.
35,000
All-metal home near university. 1200 square feet, 3 bedrooms, garage. A very good buy!
^^J.L
iz_r&
Harris
Sons, Inc.
204 w. 10th St.
758-4711
Df altor
THE REAL ESTATE
if
0
DWELLING FOR SALE
PLUS 4 APARTMENTS TO GO WITH IT! WILL TRADE FOR 2 or 3 Bedroom House
CALL 758-1578
CUSTOM BUILDING
YOUVE GOT TO SEE THESE TWO NEW HOMES TO BELIEVE THEM
Unique floor plan takes advantage of all available space which features great room with fireplace, separate dining area, three belrooms, two full baths, very convenient kitchen, extra large heated storage and utility area. Large wooded back yards with lots of privacy.
FHA-VA FINANCING AVAILABLE SELLER PAYS ALL DISCOUNT POINTS AND CLOSING COSTS
Located at 210 and 212 Freestone Road Orchard Hill Subdivision i
Sales price 153,500
Cali for an appointment and more details.
THED.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
752-7666
IS OUR SPECIALTY!
With Interest Rates Dropping, Now Is The Time To Build That New Home You Have Been Dreaming Of. Consider One Of Our Locations. ^
Club Pines->80s
One of Greenvilles finest subdivisions
Cherry Oaks *60s
1600 square feet minimum with beautiful recreation area
Camelot 50s
Both cleared and wooded lots backing up to Brook Valley. 1300 square feet minimum
Arbor Mills->^50s
Great country living directly across from Lake Glenwood. 1300 square feet minimum
Candlewick '50s
Near the hospital
Pineridge *40s
Located on Stantonsburg Road 2Vz miles from hospital
Country Place *30s
All wooded lots located 6 miles on Qrimesland Highway
Farmington *30s
Country living located near Simpson
Oakdale ^30s
Wooded lots with water, sewer and curb and gutter
We Also Have These Lots Available
Arbor Hills $7,500 Farmington ..... $6,500 Oakdale.........$7,500
Candlewick $8,500 Windermere.... $17,500
We Will Also Custom Build According To Your Plans Call Bill Clark At 756-6336 For Appointment Or Estimates
Bill Clark Construction Co., Inc.
1902 S. Charles St. 756-6336
32-The Daily Reflector, GreenvUle. N.C -Wednesday. February 9,19*3
tmcoupoNmnnfS^
CRISCO
SHORTENING
$159 jii
3 LB.
CAN I
WHH iWt coupon Mid S1S.M food oirdof oxehidlns dvortUod Homo, wnhout * coupon tl.M. LimH ono pof cuotomof.
.................VVi
f5#rrrwwieV#ee<
OVERTONS FINEST WESTERN
P^MHiCOyPONsjiMj
# iiSiTtpsi'fiiu 1
ISOZ. CARTON OF! ntj N COu ^ ^ Demit-**
MaB^m WHh iMa coupon Mid t1(.H food Oidor **** Mi oichiding odoortfood Homo. WHIioul ** *
fT! KM n plut dopooH. UmN ono
porcuttomor.ExplrooMt4a. *** i
lOUPONm^ ^assoy
BOUNTY PAPER TOWELS
CANT ggC
ROLL \/V UJJ
iMo eoupon and tUJi food ordor Mcludlnp advortlaod Nonw. WHhoui *4 I eoupon Tt*. UmH ono por cuolomor.
MAYONNAISE
98'
QUART JAR
WWi ttdo coupon ond S10.N food ordor *o* oiduding advortlaod Homo. WHHout eoupon ; I1.H. UmH ono por cuolomor. Explroo 2-11-.
SIRLOIN STEAKS
$
CHARGE
CARDS
WELCOME
T-NIIE STEMS
eoupon Tt-. UmH ono por cuolomor. 1J U. NuTj
SWIFT PREMIUM WHOLE
RIB EYES
$
CUT FREE!
COURTLAND PORK
SAUSAGE
roll99^
lUMBO EGtS
GRADE "A
GWALTNEY
SMOKED
PICNICS
CURTIS SMOKED
BACON $-|39
FRESH FRYER PARTS
LEG QUARTERS FRYER BREAST
IC
49' ..99
GRADE A WHOLE
FRYERS
FAMILY PAK SPECIALS PORKCHITTERLINS 10 LB. PKQ. M.99
PORK NECK BONES PORK SPARE RIBS
9-7 LB. PKG. LB.49*^ 5-7 LB. PKQ. LB.1.19
f
J
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY
CASE PRICE $32.20
HAPPY HOST
FRENCH DRESSING
BIG16 0Z. BOTTLE
DELTA OR GENERIC
PAPER TOWELS
Coronet
Uelta
TOWELS
Overton s
Supermarket, Inc.
SUGAR
2 LITER BOHLE
LIMIT 4 OF YOUR CHOICE
211 JARVIS STREET HOME OF GREENVILLE'S BEST MEATS QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.
BUY ONE GET ONE
MELLO BUHERCUP ALL FLAVORS
MAYONNAISE
CHARMIN TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLLPKG.
ROLL PKQ.
MARCAL "7^^ TISSUE
s
K
moloauttartup
W''
BANANA
PUOOW
N
ICECREAM
f <
wail*
ICE CREAM
REGULAR BUY ONE GET S2.79VALUE QNE FREE!!
KRAFTVELVEETA
MUCH MORE
CHEESE SLICES
TEA BAGS
REGULAR BUY ONE GET $2.39VALUE ONE FREE!!!
DUNCAN HINES YELLOW ONLY
CAKE MIX
OLD SOUTH FRESH
ORANGE iUICE
1/2 GALLON PAPER CARTON
SAV-MOR
MARGARINE
MORTON FROZEN MEAT LOAF
TV dinners;t
MAOLA OR SEALTEST WHOLE
FRESH MILK
1/2 GAL. PAPER CTN..
RITZ CRACKERS
U.S. NO. 1
BANANAS
WHITE
POTATOES
MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
FRESH GREEN
CABBAGE
t
tvL.
>
M
I
Youll Love These
PIGGLY WIGGLY
BAAII CM a 19 l*EII{RfTIIEMtllTT8UlllYMIMITfTIES.IIMESM.|TKALEM \
PRICES 6000 FEB. 9-12 n KSTMMMTt. ve eutifACCEFT. ujja F091 itamfs. a
MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT
WALDORF
BATHROOIVI
4 ROLL PK.
PIGGLY WIGGLY
MARGARINE
1 LB. PKGS.
34
GOLDEN BEST CRINKLE CUT
POTATOES
2 LBS,
LUNDYS SUUEU m M
Bacon ^1.48
PI66LYWI6GU ..
Bolognaii 98^
PI66LY WIGGLY ^
Franks^ 98^
98<
PI66LY WI68LV HOT OR MILO
SAUSAGE 2LB.PKQ.1.96 LB.
family PACK WHOLE SHjn
SPARE RIBS.... I.
fPUT
SPARE RIBS ... .1.^ V'^
FRESH WHOLE
PICNICS . . . . . .u^ 88
SLICED FRESH
PICNICS....
LUNDYS PORK
Chitterlhrs
10 LB. BUCKET
98
528
PIQQLY WIQOLY (GRADE A) SELF BASTED YOUNQ
Turkey Breasts
BRODUCE
WHOLE 18-22 LBS. ^
BEEF RIBS u 1.78
WHOLE 40-00 LIS. M MA
BEEF LOMS >. 1.58
SIRLOIN
STEAK
LB.
1.88
WHOLE LIP-ON
RIBEYES
SLICED FREE INTO STEAKS AND ROASTS
U.S.D.A. GRADE A FRESH WHOLE
FRYERS
44,
TWO PER)_
BAG "T T LB.
LIMIT TWO BAGS, PLEASEl
Beautiful
Baroque
Hand-Painted STONEWARE Created by HEARTHSIDE
c
FEATURE OF THE WEEK
SALAD PUTE
III
28
WAXED
RUTABAGAS . L. 190
TEMPLE
ORANGES . . . II250 ^CUMBERS. u 39C POTATOES
ORANGES.. 1.19 "1Q0
BMccou.79c f ^
5 LB. BAG
GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS
SI
WITH EACH SSiM PURCHASE
Collect a Complete Set Save More Than 50%.. .Start this week CHOCIV MTTBM
OtsiMMlMr Sai* nd iMM'gM proot Ov*n-8t* eoM (tom ovwt lo ItM tu (tmw
UI m IKcTt antw 0*n lodimcind nargy MWing (MMmg and coomng laary PtaM Oack Hawpad na ha*
tnaik ol quaMy pa^nanandy at m iha ImaM and moat aipanaiva dmnaraara
A Product o( Fiaiar PaicMiiatiiaang
Matchirtg OPENST(^ COMPANION PIECES AT LOW PRICES
Open Slock Oueranteed To Se AvaileMe For S Yeera
PIGGLY WIGGLY CAKE
MIXES
SPECIALS!
.63^
GRADE A EXTRA LARGE
Eggs
BIG TEXAS BUTTER FLAVORED
Biscuits or
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE! JIFFY
CORN MUFFIN
Mix
81/2 0Z.
WONDER LONG GRAIN
Rice
GOLDEN BEST APPLE OR GRAPE
lelly
3/1
LOW PRICE!
4/1
3/1
99'
MORTONS
sP^DINNERS I
CHICKEN. TURKEY OR SALISBURY STEAK
noz690
LIMIT 3 WITH THIS COUPON AND A S7 50 K'.
FOOD ORDER COUPON EXPIRES FEB 12 1983
ir>'.v>'MV>v COUPON =9 GOLDEN BEST
LIMIT I WITH THIS COUPON AND A STTiO FOOD OROER, COUPON EXPIRES FEB 12, 1983
nOGLY WI66LY
MILK
%99C
PIGGLY WIGGLY
WHITE BREAD
3/1
1 LB. LOAVES
COUPON
> / > t I t >(>_/>
tti^m
ROLLER CHAMPION
PI AIN OR SLLF--RISING FLOUR
PI AIN OR SLLF-RISING FLOUR
49' I
HA(, ^
LIMIT ! WITH THIS COUPON AND A S7.5 t'-
FOOD ORDFR COUPON EXPIRES FEB 12,1983
PIQQLY WIGGLY
VITAMIN D MILK
GAL
JUG
1
89
1/2% MAOLA LOWFAT
MILK
H69
GAL
JUQ
ROLLER CHAMPION SELF-RISING
FLOUR
25 LB. BAG
379
LUNDYS LARD
25 LB. STAND
099
SEALTEST
ICE CREAM
1/2 W QQ
6alIJ99
PIGGLYWIGaY
ICE CREAM
l/2 6L.i,ig
i -r
v . -------
Good For ONE BUS RIDE 35c FARE
GRFEWILLE ARFA TRANSIT
FREE WITH A 17.50 OR MORE FOOD ORDER. UMITl. EXPIRES 2/12/83.
PEPSI, MT.DEW, DIET PEPSI, &SUNKIST
2 LITRE BOniE
109
;in 69c
FRANKLIN NATURAL GRAIN
BREAD ...... LOAVES
Crunch & Munch 5 oz. 69C
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34-The DaUy Rdlector. Greenvilie. N.C.-Wedneaday, Febniary 9,1983Cruises: Royal Treatment'At Affordable Prices
By JAMES V.HEAUON
STAMFORD, Conn. (UPI) - Most Americans dont know anything about cruising, says Ralph M. Bahna, 38, chief executive officer of the British-owned Cunard Line Ltd.
Bahna should know, because apart from his association with Cunard he is chairman of Cruise Lines International Association, a trade group of 27 companies with an armada of 91 ships, He also is the first American head of Cunard, a native of Grand Rapids, Mich, and was a Big Ten wrestling champion while at the University of Michigan.
Theres probably a slightly higher awareness at the top end of the market because thats where the market has been historically, Bahna said in an interview at his Stamford home.
"But in the last 12 to 15 years, the business has changed and the change has produced rather sensational growth. As would be expected, if you have sensational growth, its not coming from rich people.
The switch began in the 1970s when the industry changed its marketing strategy. Then televisions Love Boat came steaming into the nations living rooms in 1974 and made cruising seem more democratic
Samuel Cunard, who founded the line in 1840, was a successful 53-year-old Halifax merchant who figured correctly that regularly scheduled liners would be an acceptable way for people to trave.
He sent the first of four, the 1,154-ton Brittania, a tiny paddlewheel steamer, across the Atlantic from Liverpool. The ships made the voyage in 14 days at m knots.
The flagship of todays Cunard fleet, the Queen Elizabeth 2, is a 67,107-ton leviathan, the latest of more than 175 Cunard ships. It makes the voyage eastbound in five days and westbound in six days, the extra day due to its docking schedule and a time change.
QE2 divides its time between making crossings - those voyages with no scheduled ports of calls - and cruises to the Caribbean, the Mediterranean and the Canary Islands.
"Its easy to see a lot of places by ship, says Bahna, and were the king of ports of call.
A typical Caribbean cruise has the Princess touching nine Caribbean ports in seven days, with fares starting at slightly less than $1,000, which includes air fare to and from Puerto Rico.
You know who youre dealing with, too, says Bahna. Youre not going to Europe or Mexico. Its all regulated by the U.S. Public Health Service, the Coast Guard.
When youre on a ship you have your choice of casino, disco, movies, physical fitness, jazz, tennis. Chinese cooking, yoga. Then while youre sleeping, the ships traveling. You wake up in Caracas. Its upbeat, active, economical, comfortable. The service is good. You enjoy a lifestyle you didnt think you could afford.
I dont want people to think theyre going to get caviar in bed, though. You get those things on the QE2.
Cruise ships serving the North American market carried 115,000 passengers in 1970. In 1982, they carried 1.4 million passengers, earning gross revenue estimated by the industry at $3.5 million, up from 1.1 million passengers and $2.1 billion in 1979.
The industry predicts 4 million people will be taking their ease aboard cruise ships in 1990. It looks so lucrative to Norwegian shipping maniate Helge Naarstad he plans cruise ships that will accommodate just 120 passengers who will pay $450 for the pampering. Naarstads new service gets underway in 1985.
The dawn of the jet age in the 1960s caused the demise of the cruise business as it was then structured. After 10 years of fighting a losing battle with the airlines, shipowners, particularly the new breed, decided to call it quits.
Were out of the business of taking people from A to B and were not going to get back in it, said Bahna, who moved to Cunard in 1973 from Trans World Airlines.
The industry stayed afloat in the early days of its resurgence by promoting tours. Then it engaged its old nemesis, the airlines, to fly its customers to and from its ships. Now Cunard is one of the airlines biggest customers.
Once you get a winning formula, Bahna said, you start varying the theme by whetting passengers appetites. Say yu want education, well, there are at least 50 educational programs. Weve even given courses for college credits.
Then theres sports, physical fitness. There must be several thousand combinations offe'red by the 27 companies that are in the Cruise Line International Association for Americans in 1983.
Business is so good and the competition for the passenger dollar so intense that three of the largest Miami-based cruise companies are offering discount prices, flying free, or for next to nothing.
Theres also a campaign to keep travel agents on their toes. Undercover agents for Carnival Cruise Lines pose as prospective customers and ask the agents to recommend a vacation. If they suggest a cruise, its worth $10. If they say, Carnival Cruise Line vacation, its worth $1,000.
Some cruise lines are even offering m^e escorts as unofficial cruise hosts to keep their single women passengers happy and to attract new business. Royal Cruise Lines of San Francisco says 120 distinguished gentlemen survived screening by the lines president, Richard Revnes, and are serving aboard Royals 17 winter cruises.
Isnt it about time, Royal writes travel agents, someoneSay Counterfeit Parts Costly
WASHINGTON (AP) -Counterfeit auto parts, ranging from spark plugs to rear view mirrors, are costing U.S. manufacturers billions of dollars and jeopardizing the reputations of American goods, an industry organization says.
"Product pirates are causing Americans and people around the world to question the safety, performance and reliability of American-made products, Julian C: Morris, president of
the Automobile Parts & Accessories Association, told a news conference.
The manufacturers displayed automotive parts, which they said were inferior look-alikes, to show that the legitimate product and the counterfeit version often cannot be distinguished by consumers or even by trained mechanics.
The trade group wants the federal government to ask other governments to crack down on the manufacture of the bogus products.Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?
First Call Your Independent Carrier. If You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Daily Reflector752-3952Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.
gives her what she really looks for in a cruise? This winter, give your single lady clients the cruise exp1ence they deserve!
Says Bahna, It looks like the industry is competing against itself if you pick iq} a travel section. But were really not. Our real competition is just getting awareness.
The potential market is everybody and anybodyhe says: Educated people, uneducated people, wealthy people, young ones' old (Mies, ones that want luxury, ones that want something simple, ones that want formal, ones that want informal. Modem, classical. Its a whole new business.
Bahna says the workhorse for.tbe industry still will be the short cruise with several ports of call.
Its a response to the (dd concerns about ships, that they were for very old pe(^le who were wealthy, very inactive, stuck on the hi^ seas fix' days on end the men in tuxedos, the old girls vrith a lot of jewelry around their necks, txH^d to tears, and probably ^ting^ sick. Thats the image of 85 percent of the American market, Bahna said.
Cunard promoted the slogan, Getting there is half the fun, and these days Bahna strives ( behalf of the industry to improve the reception given tourists once they get there.
He is on record warning government tourism offlciais in the Caribbean that if things dont change in some places, destinations will.
He told a trade (xmference in San Juan, Puerto Rico, that for too long government tourism officials have taken cruise, pa^ngers for granted. He said passengers are attacked by beggars and merchants when they step off the ship, and mugging are prevalent in some ports.
With ei^t new cruise ships scheduled for service in the next few years and none assi^ed for regular Caribbean service, Bahna said the handwriting is on the bulkhead.
T
High Hopes For Planned
f
Algae Farm
By RICHARD M. HARNETT
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Scott A. Brown wants to become the biggest algae fanner in the country.
His thrm is not in operation yet, but he hopes to start marketing algae products this year.
The harnessing of algae for food, medicine, sewage processing and other industrial uses is one of the exciting new applications of modem science.
I do not see opr approach to conunercial algae products as a breakthrough as much as an evolution, said Brown, who quit studying dentristy several years ago to get an MBA from Stanford in preparation for his algae farm.
He says he picked this business because he saw no other strong American entry. Most algae products are now imported from Japan or Mexico.
Brown teamed up with Dr. William J. Oswald, a profesor of biomedical and environmental health sciences at the University of California, to form Microbio Resources, Inc.
We are now past the development stage, said Brown. I expect that during ' 1983 we will have the first four or five products stemming from algae ready for the market.
These products include spirulina, a popular protein health food, beta-carotene, and live algae for use in cleaning up sewage water.
There are a lot of different processes that can be developed, said Brown. Dr. Oswalds research work formed the technical basis for Microbios entry into the marketplace. Our first focus is to get the various algae nutrients on the market for human consumption.
Microbio plans to build its algae farm near the Saltn Sea in Caliofraias Imperial County, where brackish water from the Colorado River and the warmth of the sun should produce masses of algae efficiently.
Nutrients will be added to the culture just like fertilizer is to crops, Brown said. He | believes a first-class algae farm in the United States, using the latest scientific knowledge and operating in a clean, highly efficient manner, will be able to compete in the boooming market for nutrition products now imported.
Beta-carotene, for exam-1 pie, is an increasingly popular food supplement, it is a source of Vitamin A, which scientists are looking at as a possible cancer preventative.
While Vitamin A itself can be dangerous in large amounts. Brown said beta-carotene is not.
Brown said his company has raised $1 million in venture capital to begin operations and hopes to have $3.5 million funding when it starts setting up the algae farm within a few months.
While its initial thrust is on selling the algae for health food items, Brown believes there is a much wider potential market for his business,
In another five years, human and animal waste may be possibly converted to protein and diet supplement for consumer use. Algae will take its place in the agricultural world. Its the most efficient plant there is.
He said some chicken i farms are already using j chicken manure to grow algae which is in turn fed back to the chickens.
Aid From U.S. For Displaced
WASHINGTON (AP) -The State Department says the United States is giving 810 tons of food and $70,000 for medical and emergency supplies for the several hundred thousand undocumented aliens ordered to leave Nigeria.
Deputy spokesman Alan Romberg, said 720 tons of food were donated in Benin, 30 tons in Togo and 60 in Ghana. He said the United States is coordinating with other donors, under UN. auspices, on the possibility of shipping additional aid to| Ghana and other countries.
Most of those affected by the Nigerian order arej Ghanaians. The government of Ghana has estimated that 350,000 of its citizens have returned home.
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36The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, February 9,1983
Texos Town
Climate Said 'The Best'
By RANDALL HACKLEY
Associated Press Writer
SIERRA BLANCA, Texas (AP) Forget frost-free Key West, Fla., and the tropical lure of Hawaii. The worlds finest weather is not in those places.
Its in Sierra Blanca, this West Texas town boasts.
Our weather Our weather is pretty close to perfect, says Dogie Wright, former Texas Ranger and Hudspeth County sheriff.
Residents agree: I rate it terrific, says secretary Brenda Bullock. "Id have 12 feet of snow right now if I was back in Schenectady (N.Y.).
Its a sparkling clear day in the mid-40s, and a dusting of snow from a surprise storm that struck Christmas Day still lingers.
But no one here lingers long in his or her assessment of the Sierra Blanca climate.
"Climate is one of our finest assets, something we feel we can vie with El Paso and most cities in the Southwest, says Beth Sweiven, head of the local Chamber of Commerce.
It was Chamber of Commerce honchos who baked up the worlds best climate concoction: Crudely painted
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".We need something to attract people, Mrs. Sweiven says. "We hqied this would attract people from the East and West.
She says that monthly temperature medians compiled nationwide from popular resort centers prove Sierra Blanca year-round
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Key West, the southernmost city in the continental United States and famed for its frost-free weather, hardly compares to Sierra Blanca, Wright says The same applies to Mauna Kai near Kona, Hawaii, which banker David Rockefeller claims has the best climate on Earth.
"Both those places hlO nearly bypasses the town, leaving State Highway 80 devoid of much traffic, Mrs. Sweiven says.
"So we decided to come up with a logo,she says.
But isnt the worlds finest climate a little pretentious?
"We do have dust storms | and some wind, admits sec- I retary Juanita Ramirez. And this year has gotten awful cold. I
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But citizens say the towns I l^atwewithcwponanot.soorder. .
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average of 11 inches of rain J per year makes its climate " benevolent, especially when | the rest of the Southwest i sweats each summer
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It never gets too hot ora too cold, says Wright, at 81 the dean of the town. "I do I remember once around 19471 when it got 20 degrees below zero from 6 bad storm, f Killed eight big trees around I
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Blanca now that the Palace^ Hotel is closed and boarded I up. The town also houses a | border patrol office, has an aged railroad depot and two ! residential developments. But Mile High and Country | Club Estates seem almost | lost on the high plains around Sierra Blanca. A 7,000-foot" ^ mountain devoid of trees I Sierra Blanca, or White I Mountain, hovel's near the
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A silver spike was driven | into the ground by business |
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tycoon Jay Gould to com-memrate the occasion, but I officials here say their his- | torical thunder was stolen a when El Paso claimed the f railroads were first con- nected about 90 miles away I in that far West Texas city.
"But we were first, says Mrs. Sweiven.
Sierra Blanca is also first among pretenders to the worlds climate crown, she insists. *
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The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, February 9,198337
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A&P CHOPPED (ALL VARIETIES) U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
Chipped Meats 2 99^ lUrkey Wings
RUDY FARMS HOT OR MILD EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM COUNTRY FARM A&P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF
Pork Sausage 1r Vs Pork Loin shcki P Cubed Steak 2
lb.
49 Beef Stew
lb.
HEADLESS AND
TALMADGE FARMS
CHEF PANTRY
Dressed Whiting Chicken Franks Chicken Fried Patties
... 999 fiQ0 139
^ IZOZ. , ^^3-7]a^QOOOTMRU8ArFEB 12ATA*P #671
MU pkg. lb. I
51b.
box
UPER SAVER COUPON
SAVE 20' ON
ELBOW MACARONI/ THUN OR REGULAR
Muellers Spaghetti 59
J2 at a*r #670
I uwuw innu mi., rcB. M Ai ' Uh>T ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER
SUPER SAVER COUPON
O)
SAVE 20 ON
LONG GRAIN
Mahatma Rice
S,b 179
oka
I Meat Specials
A.P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF
Rib Eye Steak
Soneless
1
lb.
399
^ Meat Specials y
A&P QUALITY FRESH
Ground
Chuck
3 lbs. or more
lb.
179
U.S. #1 JUMBO SIZE RUSSET
Bsridng Potatoes 3
RED RIPE SALAD SIZE
Tdihatoes
Ibe.
only
28 OZ. family pack
P
P
I
Poultry Specials^'
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH
Box-0-
Chicken
.49*
r'(^P^Ssupersayercoup^
O)
SAVE 20 ON
KRAFT
Veiveeta Cheese
VouPay 055
oda, 0
Fresh With Quality
CALIFORNIA TENDER CRISP
Broccoli
FOR YOUR SWEETHEART FOR VALENTINES DAY FRESH BLOOMING
Potted Mums VSi 5
BEAUTIFUL
Potted Tulips . pS 5
ASSORTED COLORS
Blooming Violets *plS
SPRING YELLOW
Daffodils p
PLUS HANGING BASKETS AZALEAS FRESH CUT FLOWERS
SUNMAID BRAND BREAKFAST
Prunes
FRESH TENDER CRISP
Spinach
24 OZ. bag
10 OZ. bag
P
99
FOR YOUR SALADS
Cucumhers 100
FLQRIDA GROWN SWEET & JUICY
Temple
Oranges
10100
J jumbo H
0)133aSl&
' SAVE 10" ON
, CHEF BOY-AR-DEE BEEFARONI OR
Spaghetti & Meat Balls
'can" 16^
UMIT ONE WITH COUPON ANO 7.50 ORDER
rr-TW^ 0000 THRU SAT, FEB. 12 AT AAR #669
^TON ANO^^^ ^ ^ ^
I SUPER SAVER COUPON
O).
SAVE 20= ON
25 OFF LABEL
Cheer Detergent
490Z 154
box I
' UMT 0 WITH COUPON AND 750 ORDER.
SUPER SAVER COUPON
SAVE 20=
WHITE
Cottonelle Tissue
' s 1
You Pay Only
I ^--------SAT. FEB 12 AT AAR
f - Ik JiP UMIT ONE WITH COUPON ANO 7.50 ORDER
'( P ^SUPER SAVER COUPOt^*
SAVE 20= ON
NEWBORN (24 CT) TODDLER (12 CT) DAYTIME (18 CT) OVERNIGHT (14 CT)
Kleenex Huggies
Choice im
^ Deeds
Jimmy Bright al TO Jimmy R. Bright al NS Clara M. Chauncey TO CharlesF. Gilbert al 1.00 Joseph 1. Cherry TO Fred S. Holec 14.50 '
Charles T. Clark TO Malcolm K. Jackson al 65.50 Charles C. clatterbuck al To Harold G. Till Jr. al 66.00 Thomas N. Egerton TO Alexander L. Bumis al 4.50 Margie Ann Potter Fanner TO Raymond W. Potter Jr. al NS
James C. Lanier Jr-Sub Tr. TO U S. -Administration of Veterans Affairs NS Nancy W Lewis TO William E. Lewis NS . R Frank Moseley al TO Ralph Barker 65.00 Eleanor Palin TO Rosa Bradley 26.00 Shenandoah Develt^ment Co. Inc. TO Robert C. Curtis al 11.00 Shenandoah Development Co. Inc. TO Robert C. Curtis al 11.00 Shenandoah Development Co. Inc. TO Robert C. Curtis al 11.00 Joyce Duke Spillman al TO Department of Transportation 3.50 Vivian S. West al TO *Joe Pecheles 80.00 Marvin Blount Jr. TO Thomas F. Taft 32.00 Bowser Construction Co. Inc. TO Arthur J. Haney al
53.00
Janice B. Buck TO Carlester Crumpler 58.00 J. R. Bunting II al TO James Ray Stancill al 50.00 James R. Daniels al TO James Ray Daniels al NS Francis D. Dixon al TO Martha D. Mills alNS Greenbrier Realty Co. Inc. TO W. Brantley Morrison al
12.00
Robert L. Johnson al TO Joseph S. Harmon al 7.50 j Donald L. Lemish al TO JolmT. Toole al 45.00 Charles Ray Nichols al TO Wallace E. Forrest al 7.00 John Ira Oakley al TO ' Robert Pierce Farms Inc.
50.00
Ethelyn Louise Ward Rumley al To Edward H. Stinson al 41.50 Robert L. Shoffner Jr. al TO Linda Walter Spino 54.50 Donna S. Simpkins al TO James Robert Stancil Jr. NS William Ray Stallings al TO Gordon L. Jendrasiak al
62.50
Orman E. Whichard al TO Holly Hill FWB Church NS Holly Hill FWB Church TO Orman E. Whichard NS Marvin Blount Jr. TO Louse Dibrell Webb 19.50 R. J. Boleman Jr. Sub Tr. al TO Evans Co. Of Grvl Inc. >6.00
Gary B. Davis Sub Tr. al To Neil Realty Co. Inc. 14.50 Lloyd W. Johnston al To Robert P. Bonitz al 41.50 Sarah K. Kavanaugh al TO' S, Reynolds May 5.00 Linda Lee TO Donald E. Lee al9.00 Don Lee al TO Linda Lee NS
Nellie Lee TO Lnda Lee NS S. Reynolds May al To Shamrock Realty Co. of Pitt Co. Inc.NS John M. Nuckolls III al TO Douglas E. Burnett 67.50 Stanley Peaden Builders Inc. TO William E, WUhelm al 72.00 William Strickland al TO Patricia Ann Strickland NS Michael David Weaver al TO Mark Dellasega al 35.00 Jack Eugene Jensen al TO Steven I. Cohen al 96.00 Raymond Randall Riggs al TO Jonathan G. Forlines al
6.00
Julia E. Warren-Excx al TO Phillip K. Flowers al 15.00 Julia E. Warren-Excx al TO Phillip K. Flowers al 4.00 Claude B. West Jr. al TO William C. Bowen al 35.00 Gladys May Brown al TO Dept, of Transportation 11.00 Mattie L. Cady TO Dept, of Transportation .50 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO Bruce N. Austin Jr. al
56.50
Bill Gark Const. Co. Inc. TO Robert Pierce al NS Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO David A. Susinaal 56.00 William Benjamin Everett Jr. TO Robert E. Tomlinson al 68.00 George Mason al TO Thomas Keene al 1.50 Clinton B. McGowan al TO Dept, of Transportation 1.00.
White Concrete Co. TO City of Grvl . 60,00
#677
#676
Your
Choice
0000 THRU SAT, FEB 12 AT AAR #674
UMIT ONE ^U^^AWmo^DER ^ ^ J
703 GREENVILLE BOULEVARD GREENVILLE SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER GREENVILLE, N.C.
Dean's List
RALEIGH - The following area students have been named to the dean's list at Meredith College for the fall semester:
Carol Lynn Allen, Farmville; Susan Peel Davis, Lisa Beverly Dozier, Lisa Faye Roebuck, Julia Irene Whitley, Williamston, and Freddie Lou Johnson, Hookerton.
jttificuauy tvuecu>r, uitseaviue, i^.c.weuiKouj, r cuiuaiy , iMki
^ Items and Prices
Effective Wed Feb 9. thru Sat Feb 12. 1983 In Greenville
Copyright t963 Kroger Sav on Ouanlity Rights Reserved Non# Sold to Dealers
advertised ITEM POLICY Each ol ihese adveriiseo ilemj is required 19 be readily available tor sale in each Kroger Sav on except as specilicaiiy noted m tms ad n we do fun out ol an iiem we will oiler you your choice ol a com parable item when available relieclmg the same savings or a ram Chech which wiii eniiiie you to purchase the advertised item at me advertised price withm 30 days
Let's go Krogering for the best of every
Pork Chops
CENTER CUT
Rib Pork Chops
U.S.D.A. CHOICE "HEAVY WESTERN BEEF BONELESS TOP ROUND
London Broil
$A68
Lb
lUSDA
CHOICE
U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED QUALITY CONTROLLED
Genuine
Ground Round $
Lb.
468
ANY
SIZE
PKG.
READY TO SPREAD 1Q
PHIsbury FrostingS,T^
LA CHOY
Soy Sauce 'bIi'
95
LA CHOY CHOW MEIN
Noodles
69
FRESH DOMESTIC LAMB CUT UP THE WAY YOU WANT
Lamb
Forequarter...
FRESH DOMESTIC LAMB
Shoulder Roast.
COST CUTTER FRESH
Fryer
Drumsticks ib
HOLLY FARMS FRESH CUT UP MIXED
Fryer Parts
45
u s D A GOV'T INSPECTED YOUNG 4^ LB AVG WGT
Turkey Breast.
STOKELY CUT OR - -
FRENCH CUT ^ ^ RICH KRAFT DELUXE DINNERS
Green Beans Hunfs Ketchup f/Mac. & Cheese
3H
Cans
RATH HOT OR MILO O O C
Pork Sausage . Pkg. U O
RUDY'S FARM
HOT OR MILD PORK Q fl
Sausage Patties Ikrl
BULK PACKAGED
COUNTRY STYLE R g
Sliced Bacon 1 Hjthmoig Jjssye. 4
32-Oz.
Btl.
100 99;
WALDORF
ROLL
PKQ.
STOKELY CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL
Corn........
516-OZ.S9
Cans (L
KROGER ALL MEAT OR
All Beef
Weners ' i Vegetable Oil
KROGER
LIBBY LITE
Peach Halves
PLAIN OR SELF-RISING
Pillsbury Flour
79
0
s
Bag
SERVE N SAVE
MARTHA WHITE
$428 ALL VARIETIES SLICED $429 SELF-R7SNG'^$4 HOME PRIDE 25- RINSO ti^OQ
I Luncheon MeatsCornmeal i . Aluminum Foil n 47' Detergent... .tS.'* I
Lb
FROZEN SEA FOODS
CHEFS DELITE
Stuffed Crab
99*
FOR MF m
FRESH BAY
Scallops
*3
FRESH
Flounder
c
DISCOUNT HEALTH AND BEAUTY
MAYBELLINE
Rich n Gentle Mascara
99
Only
NATURES ORGANICS SHAMPOO & CONDITIONER HENNA OR
JoJoba Twin Pack
2 $99
15-Oz.
Btls.
MENS COLOGNE
Engfish Leather $1:46
4-Oz.H# MfG
. SUGG. PRICE $6.50
NEW! COLOGNE
Vanderbilt
1-Oz. MFG. SUGG. Btl. PRICE $10.50
JEAN NATE
After Bath Splash
$078
1-oz.Wmfg.s
8-Oz.
Btl.
. SUGG. PRICE $4.50
AFTERSHAVE
Chaps
1-Oz.
Btl.
MFG. SUGG. PRICE $4.75
fsZ
COLOGNE SPRAY
Le Jardn
. SUGG. PRICE $7.00
LE JARDIN
Cologne... eti.
LE JARDIN PURSE SIZE
Spray
Cologne.. .bu.
$39
*3*
COLOGNE SPRAY
Jentue
$eo4
-Oz.91# MFG.
0.6-Oz.
Btl.
. SUGG. PRICE $6.00
L-.
^
0
1
Li -
jcvnLi. j
m.
1 .
tCTWItOf ^
thing including the price! /\
^Open Mon. thru Sat. 8am to Midnight Sun. 9 am to 9 pm
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville
KROGER NATURAL OR SWEETENED FROZEN
Orange Juice
$
120z.
Cans
199
Cherry
ne Fining
21-Oz.
Can
J\
FRESH CRISP 1%
Celery . .4, f I
CRISP anc
Collard Greens
IMPORTED SEEDLESS 14 ft Q
White Grapes...Lb 1
Salad Tomatoes, .u 69
CALIFORNIA
SWEET
Navel Oranges
0
KROGfcR HOMESTYLE OR BUHERMILK
. ISO OOP -----------4-PK-ync
Whipped Topping V 5l9' Biscuits SS 79 Bread ^*
CHICKEN AND DUMPLINGS, TURKEY OR SALISBURY STEAK
BLACK LABEL REGULAR OR LIGHT
Kroger Frozen
E^y Oinners
10 2.
easy uinnei
99
LIMIT 3 PKGS. PER CUSTOMER WITH $10.00 OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
White
Potatoes
ORIENTAL VEGETABLES
FRESH
AVONDALE
French Fries
S S149
Bag I
KROGER COLBY LONG HORN
Cheese X
BURGUNDY. RHINE. CHABLIS BLANC OR
Gallo
Red Rose.....
15
Ltr
*3
49
ASSORTED VARIETY KROGER
COST CUTTER INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SINGLES
Cheese Spread
0
OO^ $489
12-oz. 3/4. I
Pkg.
BIANCO, ROSATO, OR
Cella
Lambrusco
Bean Sprouts..
FRESH NAPPA AND P A ^
Bok Choy......ub59^
FRESH AAC
Eggroll Wrappers Pkg.
FRESH S099
Snow Peas.....u,
KROGER CUT
Corn Or Peas. .1^'
$*|79
KROGER ORANGE
Danish Rolls.
89
BURGUNDY. CHABLIS RHINE OR
Paul Masson Rose.........
1.5-
Ltr.
$425
FREE LB. OF POTATO SALAD WITH fl PIECE BUCKET OF WISHBONE
Fried Chicken
^ 98*
VALENTINE.
Decorated Cupcakes
29
FOIL PAN HEART SHAPED
Decorated Cake $499
FRESH CHEESE OR
Sausage Pizza
2.*5
GOURMET
Turke Breas
I
$499
SAVE
$100
COMPLETE ONE STOP SHOPPING STORE
G.E. #3-5305 2-WAY POWER EASY OPERATION
Mini
Cassette
Recorder
Reg.
$35.88
$9088
tl'
|l*'
,|U"
SHARP EL-509 A THIN MAN WALLET SIZE 32 FUNCTIONS
Scientific Calculator
$4^97
SHARP EL-824 A/838 BASIC THIN
Calculator
El 3 , (jjl
QQC3q
22 22
OOo
WHITMANS ASSORTED CHOCOLATES
Satin Heart
.*6*
Box
' GOLD CREST
valentine
Jelly Beans
lO-Oz.
Bag
^COLONIAL VILLAGE CHOCOLATE
6
88
i^vered Cherries
?99
g Kroger Pharmacy
Ain mmHom m taMy NmMi
Any nmeUoM m taaMy I wWf? Tmt Ktmtm nlwfudet
QrMTTvilto
756-7393
8 X10 Color Enlargement $169
Only
Each
From your favorit* color sIkJa or oolorntgativ*.
OflwooadlhniSM F* <2 1tS3 I CmPW0CW$IM90WLY iJMfT HI IMlAIWeMtNTntH COUPON
I wartWIFFIgFUltFlltUM.tlMi
Coupon mutt occo
Interiors Of Old, Failed Businesses In A Museum
By ROBERT LEE ZIMMER Associated Press Writer DECATUR, 111. (API -When old businesses die, their furnishings can go to heaven in John Bailog's - private museum,
Ballog has made it his business to save the interiors of failed enterprises like Michls Cigar Store and the Williamsville Barbershop from the trash heap Then he restores the look and feel of the old companies in displays on the second story of his office building.
His exhibits are complete with brass cash registers, oak display cases and dusty 60-year-old prescriptions.
1 just enjoy the original beauty of old things. said Ballog, who began his collection in 1980.
Ballog, who sells office furniture and business machines for a living, says restoration of five businesses is nearly complete. But he has no timetable.
It is a labor of love, and 1 havent set any deadlines because that would make it work, said Ballog, who has invested more than $15,000, and 3,000 hqurs in the project.
The hallway where Ballog rebuilds the businesses resembles a turn-of-the-century sid^alk, lined with now-defuncfousinesses like the cigar store and barbershop.
Also on his restoration list: the Hotel Orlando, Roth Johnson Drugs and the Williamsville Barbershop.
When the stores are finished, Ballog says he may rent them to people who sell antiques and collectibles, or he may turn the second floor into a museum of early 20th century commerce open to the public.
He frequently gives impromptu tours.
1 like to see somebody else get to enjoy this too, said Ballog.
On Bailogs second floor, a visitor can find the original store acquired for the collec-
Allowed Set Up New Nat'l Bonk
WASHINGTON I API -The Dreyfus Corp., a New York-based mutual fund firm, has been given government permission to set up a new national bank.
The action by C.T. Conover, the comptroller of the currency, is unprecedented and further blurs the distinction between securities and banking. It likely puts the comptrollers office at odds with the Federal Reserve Board, which earlier had expressed concern about the legality of any such approval.
The new bank Dreyfus National Bank and Trust Co. - will have full banking powers but will not make commercial loans or offer checking accounts. It will 'initially provide trust services and investment management for employee benefit and personal retirement plans, said Conover.
In the past year, the comptroller has given two other mutual fund advisers permission to charter national banks, but they were limited solely to trust activities. It has also let two banks set up discount brokerage subsidiaries.
NOT IN CLUB BARTLESVILLE. Okla. (API - The top oil-producing nation in the world is not a member of OPEC, the oil cartel.
It's the Soviet Union, which in 1981 produced more than 12 million barrels of oil a day. according to Phillips Petroleum. That is nearly 22 percent of the world's total daily production.
SHOP-EZE
West End Shopping Center Phone 756-0960
Thursday Luncheon Special
BBQ Ribs
^2.49
Fried Chicken
M.79
Special Served With 2 Fresh' Vegetables & Rolls.
tion, Michls, founded in 1858. It served as a recruiting center for Union soldiers during the Civil War.
In all those years, it never was remodeled, altered or changed in any way, said Ballog. It is just the way it was when , it opened, and thats why it holds so much charm for me
Except for its location, Michls still hasnt changed. Ballog photographed, then disassembled everything at the stores original downtown Decatur location. Using the pictures as his blueprint, he reassembled Michls in a room just six inches larger than the original.
It's all there: the wooden
dii^>lay cases with curved glass; ceiling fans and light fixtures; the rolls and presses used to make cigars; pipe tobacco with names like Wild Cherry No. 525, and even a couple of packs of Marvels cigarettes.
The Bullpit Saloon includes a 24-foot long mahogany bar and matching backbar. Ballog found it frozen in the
dirt floor of a leaking shed and pried it loose with a crowbar. Since the bar is one piece and would not fit in the elevator or stairwell, it had to be hoisted through a second-story window with a block and tackle.
Included with the purchase of Roth Johnson Drugs were pill-making devices, old chemicals and medicines.
and drawers containing more than 360 prescriptions dating to the 1920s.
In an ad}<rining room, is a three-chair barbershop that opened in the lobby of a QUcago hotel, was moved to Springfield, and later to Williamsville, where it closed. 'The mirrors in etched glass frames reflect tall bottles of oily hair tonic and
sweet-smelling aftershave lotion.
Often, Ballog has to act quickly to buy a defunct business while it still is intact. His offer for Michls was acc^ted just before the building was to be tom down.
We had to figjit the wrecking ball to get everything out, he said. The crew was knocking down the
iq?per floors while we worked downstairs.
Ballog enjoys restoring the big pieces of a business, but his real love are all the tiny details, like the canceled checks and biUs that came with Michls.
Some of the things that are of the most interest to me. Ballog admits, are junk to other people.
SWIFT PREMIUM
CHUCK STEAK
$|39
YOU SAVE 70' LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM BONELESS
SHOULDER ROAST
$|59
LB.
YOU SAVE 79' LB.
tWUTNEV
FIINIIIS
12 OZ. PKG.
99
YOU SAVE 30' PKG.
GWALTNEY 1ST GRADE
SLICED
BACON
1 LB. PKG.
69
YOU SAVE 30' PKG.
SWIFT PREMIUM
GROUND
CHUCK
$|59
YOU SAVE 30' LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM BONELESS
STEWING
BEEF
$|69
LB.
YOU SAVE
MAOLA PAPER CARTON
1/2
GALLON
MILK
99
GALLON JUG
$|09
YOU SAVE
MORTON IODIZED OR PLAIN
SALT
3 26 0Z.
BOXES
99*
YOU SAVE
CHATHAM RATION
FRENCHS
DOG FOOD MUSTARD
99 r 49*
FOODUND WHOLE KERNEL
CORN
CAMPBELL CHICKEN & RICE
SOUP..
KEEBLER CHOCOLATE FUDGE, FRENCH q, S 25 VANILLA, PITTER PATTER, OR OPERA CREME pkq. I
YOU SAVE 90'
$ 125
OR TOAST & PEANUT BUTTER SNAX.............rko! |
99.
CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE CHEESE, SAUSAGE. PEPPERONI, HAMBURGER OR SAUSAGE & PEPPERONI
YOU 12 OZ. SAVE 50' BOX
PIZZA
POLAR
BARS
6 PACK
BUNKER HILL
BEEF
PATTIES
24 OZ. BOX
$^19
MRS. SMITH'S APPLE OR DUTCH APPLE
PIE
26 OZ. BOX
59
MINUTE MAID
ORANGE
JUICE
$|39
16 OZ. CAN
YOU SAVE 9'
FOODUND
ICE MILK $119
1/2 GALLON I
COCA-COLA
I LITRE $ 09
BOTTLE I
YOU SAVE 10*
FOOOLAND
BREAD
llVELR $ 1419
w LOAVES .
COLD
POWER
GREER
49 OZ. BOX
1
49
YOU SAVE 20'
APPLE
SAUCE
3 303 CANS
88*
YOU SAVE 12'
SCOT
TOWELS
SINGLE ROLL
69
YOU SAVE 10'
CHEE*TOS
CHEESE FUVORED SNACKS ALLTYPES 80Z.BAG
$ |09
YOU SAVE 10'
FOODLAND
MARGARINE
31 LB.
PKQ.
$|00
YOU SAVE 20*
SOF-PAC
BATHROOM TISSUE 4 ROLL PKQ.
79
YOU SAVE 10'
|~ FOODUkNO coupon
\y
SAVE#
WITH THIS COUPON WHEN YOU SUT THE US. CAN OF
Maxwiu houm
COFFEE
ATFOOOUMO I
1 LB. CAN ONLY tl.H WITH COUPON I i
I OFFEN EXPIAESt/ll/n
SHOP EZE
WEST END SHOPPING CENTER
OWNED a OPERATED BY: SHOP EZE FOOD STORES, INC.
MANAGER: MELVIN WHITLEY MONDAY-SATURDAY 8 A.M.-9 P.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M.-6 P.M.
I VISIT OUR DELI FOR DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS. SHOP EZE FOODLAND ACCEPTS ALL FOOD STORE COUPONS THAT APPEAR IN THE. DAILY REFLECTOR UNDER THE SAME CONDITIONS AS THESE STORES.
SWIFTNING SHORTENING
YOU SAVE 1#- CAN
CAN
WE WILL GLADLY ACCEPT USDA FOOD STAMPS AND WIC VOUCHERS. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED-NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. PRICES EFFECTIVE: GROCERY-MEAT-PRODUCE-FEBRUARY10.11&12.1983._
SPAIN'S
1414 CHARLES BLVD.
OWNED a OPERATED BY ALTON SPAIN MONDAY-THURSDAY 8 A.M.-8 P.M. FRIDAY-SATURDAY 8 A.M.-8:30 P.M.-CLOSED SUNDAY
i
i
Affected By The Ordeals
PICKING UP THE PIECES - Penny Capstick, repairing her dreamhouse at Times Beach, Mo., says residents of the flooded and dioxin-tainted town have been affected psychologically by the double disaster. (AP Laserphoto)
ByRAYFORMANEK
Aviated Press Writer
TIMES BEACH, Mo. (AP)
- Angela Capstick, 7 years old, has nightmares of spacemen in white suits digging up the dirt outside her flood-ravaged home. She wakes up screaming.
More serious than the dreams of the government cleanup workers, says her mother. Penny Capstick, is the childs burden pf guilt, brought on first by the floods that devastated Times Beach, then the threat of the poison, dioxin, in the soil.
As evidence, the mother of four displayed a prayer her daughter had composed as an assignment in school.
Im sorry I was mean, reads the prayer. Jesus help me. I cant do it by myself. Please make some of ray friends come back.
The rest of the family is also affected.
You feel like youre on an island all by yourself, said Mrs. Capstick, whose neighbors were driven away by flooding and urged not to return because of the dioxin. There used to be lights and other people around. Now theres only darkness?*
Although officials have measured the physical damages caused by Decembers floods on Times Beach and surrounding communities, the authorities say they are just beginning to tally the medical, emotional, social and psychological costs.
Four suicide attempts, two of which required hospitalization, have been recorded along with cases of severe depression, withdrawal from reality and increased alcoholism.
Generally what were looking at is normal people under a lot of stress, said Dr. Karl Wilson, a psychiatrist who is organizing the couseling for the victims.
We know that under similar stress, suicide, child abuse and homicides all tend to increase, he said.
A lot of them have had their nerves stretched to the limits, added Judy Finnegan, a counselor for the Missouri Department of Mental Health. Most of them have been living in motels at government expense since early December and theyre going crazy.
The government pays for the room but they have to eat out so theyre going broke, too.
The anger and frustration of the survivors has been perhaps more painful than the original flooding and dioxin discovery, Ms. Finnegan said.
Theyve lost their support
- their friends, nei^bors and mementos which can never be replaced, she said. Its especially hard on the children. Weve seen as many kids as adults. Some of the children in Times Beach arent being let outside because of the dioxin. They cant play and none of their friends are around.
The isolation and uncertainty has made Mrs. Capstick and her husband.
Joe, angry at forces that seem to be conspiring against their hopes and plans for the future.
We dont have much money left, she said as she patched a hole punched in her living room ceiling by her floating furniture. We cant just walk out. This is everytiingweown.
My husband went to church again for the first time since the flood last week, Mrs. Capstick said. Hes just so angry. Hes still angry with God. Joe works all day and then works all night on this place.
Ms. Finnegan listed pent-up anger and depression as the two most common symptoms seen by the interviewers.
We try to get them to talk about their anger and sadness, she said. Once they get it out theyre on their way to gating better.
Ms. Finnegan said, hovrov-er, that the victims mental health depended on how theyre received by their new neighbors as they move into government-sponsored temporary housing.
A lot of ttem are saying that people are treating them like they have a disease or something, Ms. Finnegan said. And those still living in Times Beach are being called crazy by those who moved out.
Were being treated like lepers, agreed Mrs. Capstick angrily. The mailman wont come down here. We cant get a serviceman to fix the washer. The phone company wont even come out because of the dioxin.
As residents grapple with the problems of the flood and possible exposure to dioxin, doctors from the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta and state health officials are well into the first phase of identifying aiid treating those exposed to the deadly toxin.
Weve interviewed about 700 people so far, said Dr. Denny Donnell, an epidemiologist for the Missouri Division of Health. We anticipate seeing about 2,000.
Army Explores MissileDefense
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army says it is analyzing results from the first in a series of experimental missile. firings exploring technology needed for use of ballistic missiles as defensive weapons above the Earths atmo^here.
An experimental firing involved target intercontinental missile launched from Vanderberg Air Force Base, Calif., being intercepted above the Pacific Ocean by a missile fired from the Kwajalein"range in the Pacific, a Pentagon announcement said. t
A ballistic missile defense involves sending weapons aloft to inter^t and destroy enemy missiles before they can strike their intended targets.
SAVE LIKE NEVER BEFORE AT Quantity Rlghta
Reserved None
THE NEW FOOD KINO s..<.tod^
PRICES GOOD *tMITHFIILD*
Weve Lowered The Prices On Over 6,800 Items and Were Determined To Have The LOWEST Food Prices in Eastern North Carolina
LOCATED ON HIGHWAY 33 IN CHOCOWINITY
STEAK SALE
WHOU Blip lOINB
59
89
$|99
SIRLOIN STEAKS
T-BONE STEAKS
CLUB
STEAKS ^ 1
PORTERHOUSE STEAKS $^09
99
FEBRUARY lOTH. eHITTMUIIfta 11TH.&12TH.1983
PRANKS BACON.
45 TO MLB.
AVERAGE
(CUT FREE INTO SIRLOIN, T-BONE a CLUB STEAKS)
SMITHPIILD SMOKID PICNICS
79*.
SLICED...i9LB.
SUCID BIBP LIVBR
CENTER SLICES... M W LB.
mWRTnDmMITICKS
79*.
JAMISTB1INR0UIAWAM
It LB. *.9 .BUCKET*
1Z0Z.||||C
... PKQ. WW
1LB.| ft
PKQ. I
FRESH CRISP
LETTUCE
HEADS ^ FOR *
$|00
1 LB. PKQ.
COLD POWER DETBROENT
GIANT SIZE BOX
$4,
I
STOKELY
PRUIT COCKTAIL $|09
303
CAN
FOR
CUTGRIBNBiANS PRINCHSTYU SRIIMBIANS
3can$100
FOR I
APPLi SAUCi
3cTn$ioo
FOR I
ICORN-CREAM STYU OR WHOLE KBRMIL
Sokely
encorn
FLORIDA TEMPLE ORANOES
KIWI $,00
FRUIT 9 FOR^ 1
CARROTS bag 3forM^^
89* yCUCUMBiRS 4forM^^
SAUER'S MAYONNAISE
330ZO9C JAR ^ ________
SOUTHERN BISCUIT
FLOUR BAG
79
FROZEN FOODS
PINE PARE WHIP TOPPING PKG.
PROZENSHOE
STRING
POTATOES^a
FINE FARE ORANGE JUICE CAN
00
SEA PAK HUSHPUPPIES.mg
49
3/^1 85 69
LIPTON
TOABAOS
$ 179
100
COUNT
1
1LB.
PKG.
PARKAY
MARGARINE
00
a/* I
DR. PEPPER, SUGAR FREE DR. PEPPER. 7UP0R DIET 7 UP
$10
LITER
OLD SOUTH ORANGE JUICE
V2 GALLON
eiBr
'tPMKAMANS....................
DOVI LIQUID DimOINT..........
NABISCO CHIPS AHOY ...... ?K^. $1.69
1!0Z. AA*
NABISCO am CRACKBM........................... sox W
KBueoo's Ria krispibs ...........$ 1.22
220Z. AAC
BTL. TrTF
DIXIE DSW PANCAKE SYRUP O Q c
REG. OR MAPLE................................................24 OZ. BTL. IP M
OUAKEROUIKORITS g1 56
CRUNCH & MUNCH, caramel or mousses BOX 74
NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE .. JAR
$3
SANKA INSTANT COFFEE
8 0Z. . JAR
*DUNCAH HINIS* SHOWN
MIX BOX
230Z $ I 30
BLURBBRRT
MUmNIHx'iox
CHOCOLATI CHID $130
COOKIIMIXBox I
SCOTTOWELS
JUMBO ROLL
69
WHITE, ASSORTED, j
DECORATIVE, ARTS 4 FLOWERS ^
KRAFT GRAPE JELLY C
18 OZ. JAR
89
4'
SDRCIALS DAILY INCUR HOT DIU AMDBAKIRY
43-Tbe DaUy Reflector, GreeovUk, N.C.-Wedneaday, February 9.1983
i
I !'
! ! I
^ i
25^ Off
Regular Pepsi Free
(/)
Save on one 2-llter bottle or any multlpack.
TO THE RETAILER To receive payment, send this coupon to Pepsi-Cola Company, PO. Box 1776 Clinton, Iowa 52734 For each coupon you accept as our authorized agent in accordance with the terms of this coupon offer, we will pay you face value plus 7c handling Invoices proving purchase 60 days prior to submission of sufficient stock to cover coupons presented must be shown upon request; Cash value 1' 20 of IC Consumer must pay any sales tax and. or deposit charge Offer void where prohibited, rstricted, taxed or license required Offer limited to one coupon per purchase. Any other use constitutes fraud OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 30,1983
pCPSI FREE AND "PEPSI-COLA F^EE" ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF PEPSICO, INC.
o
X
0 m
0 o 00 o c 0 o
25
New Pepsi Free makes it easy for the whole family to go caffeine-free.
Theres Regular, and Sugar Free with only one calorie.
And both have the taste thafs positively Pepsi.
-s
Sugar FreelJ^ P^sl Free.
Save on one 2-llter bottle or any multipack.
o
X
m
TO THE RETAILER: To receive payment, send this coupon to Pepsi-Cola Company. RO. Box 1776.
Clinton. Iowa 52734. For each coupon you accept as our authorized agent in accordance with the terms of this coupon offer, we will pay you face value plus 7( handling. Invoices proving purchase 60 days prior to submission of sufficient stock to cover coupons presented must be shown upon request. Cash value 1/20 of IC- Consumer must pay any sales tax and/or deposit charge. Offer void where prohibited, restricted, taxed or license required. Offer limited to one coupon per purchase. Any other use constitutes fraud OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 30.1983
"PfPSI FREE" ANO "PEPSI-COLA FREE" ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF PEPSICO, INC.
c
s
z
25
BOTTLED BY PEPSI-COLA BOHLINQ COMPANY OF GREENVILLE, INC.. 1* DICKINSON AVENUE. GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA UNDER APPOINTMENT FROM PopMCo., INC. PURCHASE, N.Y.
1
1
V
i
\
Youll be the first lady of casual fashion in these great separates. Par Rxjr* shirts, skirts, pants and more are 20% off. In easy-care poly/cotton and lots of your favorite colors. Misses sizes.
Par f=our Mlid shirt....................$12 9.60
Par Four* solid pant .............$23 18.40
Scallop trim tee shirt ...................$8 6.40
Wrap print skirt. .|.... .$16 12.80
Par Four* stripe shirt '...........$14 11.20
Par Four* skirt ........................$21 16.80
Button front poplin skirt.................$17 13.60
JCPnny Co., Inc. 1983 S1W2 Some Home In thlt book art avallabla only at largar JCPtrmay atoraa. Spadala and cloaa-oula ara available only while quantltlea laat Intermediate markdowna may have been taken and we reserve the nght to limit quantities Sale pnces effective thru this week end
IH---
EVENT STARTS WEDESDAY, FEBRUARY 9 and ENDS SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA PITT PLAZA
Shop 10;00am to 9:00pm Daily '
Store Phone 7S6-1190 Catalog Phone 756-2145 Advertising Supplement to THE DAILY REFLECTOR I
ft25% off coordinatesDreamy
s eepwear.
Reg. SaiG
$11 8.25 $13 9.75 $1511.25
Waltz length gown
Floor length gown Sleep coat
Dreamy sleepwear in luxuriously soft nylon. With touches of lace and embroidery to make you feel extra ,feminine. Choose from long and waltz length gowns with V or rounded necklines. Soft colors for sizes XS,S,M,L.
Step to i
Only 8.99 and 10.99
Special 8.99! Canvas pleated ballerina teams perfectly with skirts and slacks. Red, white, khaki, or navy. ' Womens sizes.
Special 10.99! Cool and comfortable for spring. Colored canvas espadrille with a woven look cushioned sole. Womens sizes.
Save 25% on all
daywear coordinates.
Your days will shape up beautifully in these coordinates. Fashioned of Antron III nylon. Choose the teddy, bikini or underwire bra in soft colors.
Sale
Teddy sizes 32-36 Bra,BandCcup . Bikini, sizes S,M,L
Reg.
$1511.25 $12 9.00 $5 3.75
3 bikinis gift boxee. Special
A great Valentines Day gift. Three panties attractively wrapped in^^black or silver gift boxes. Choose briefs in white and pastels, bikinis in pastels, dramatic fashion shades or brights with lace trim. All in nylon for sizes S,M,L.
V.,
All girls dresses; all boys suits.
Get ready for Easter parading with savings on all our dresses for girls, toddlers and infants. In easy-care poly/cotton blends made holiday special with ribbons and lace. Toddler sizes 2T-4T, infant sizes V2,1, IV2, 2, girls sizes 4-6X, 7-14. ^ ,
Reg. Sale
Little girls' wild flower print . . ,$20 14.99 Girls 2-pc. peasant skirt set.. $21 15.75
Toddler's 2-pc. Nana's Pet a a
pinafore set.................$20 14.99
Dashing three piece suits and vest sets with grown-up details, a lot like Dad's. In easy-care polyester for infant sizes 1, IV2, 2, toddler sizes 2T-4T and boys sizes 4-7, 8-12 and 14-20.
Toddler's 3-pc. vest set ... Little boys basic 3-pc. suit,
sizes 4-7 ...............
Boys linen-look 3-pc. suit,
sizes 8-12..............
Boys pin stripe 3-pc. suit, sizes 14-20.............
Reg Sale $26 19.50
$30 22.50
$45 33.75
$65 48.75
Dress shirts
- : 4.,
\ ^ .
or the boys.
Sale 4.99 to 6.99
Long sleeve oxford,
sizes 4-7 .....
Short sleeve oxford,
sizes 4-7 .........
Long sleeve oxford,
sizes 8-16.......
Short sleeve oxford, sizes 8-16 ........
Reg.
Sale
$8
5.99
.37
4.99
$9
6.99
$8
5.99
Lay away now or Easter!
Of course you can charge it
1. I
\
Suit up.Save W
Orig. $160. This three-piece style in a comfortable, lightweight blend of 65% poly/35% wool is perfect for the changing seasons. It has a two-button jacket, four-pocket vest and traditionally tailored slacks. Mens regular, short and long sizes. Intermediate markdowns may have been taken.
Shirt sale.
6S9
and8S9
Reg. $9 and $12. Save on handsome dress shirts of easy-care poly/cotton broadcloth. Long and short sleeve styles with singleneedle tailoring. In a great selection of solid colors. Mens sizes.40%to50%off
m
Savings to go on American Tourister.*
Save $28 to $50. Pack up. Pick up. And go in style with American Tourister'^ "2900" Series. Scuff resistant heavy duty virfyl luggage with easy glide nylon zippers and reinforced steel frames.
Reg. Sale
Shoulder tote.........$56 28.00
21" carry on..........$73 43.80
24" pullman..........$83 49.80
26" pullman on
wheels .....$109 65.40
29" pullman on
wheels.............$125 75.00
Garment bag.........$99 49.50
Save 20.40 to 53.40. Cross Country^** 1500'' Series luggage. Rugged molded plastic featuring split lid cases for easy packing, springless sure-glide locks and rubber cushioned handles.
Reg. Sale
Train case..........76.00 38.00
Shoulder tote 51.00 30.60
19" carry on........74.00 44.40
24" pullman.......106.00 63.60
27" pullman on
wheels ......... 133.50 80.10
Garment bag 83.50 .50.10
4 >8
Pair up Par Rxir'slacks with a plaid shirt and save *10.
Saletl99
Reg $16. Short-sleeve plaid sport shirts. Of easy-care, no-iron poly/cotton. In button-down and spread collar styles. Assorted plaids. Mens sizes S,M,L,XL.
SsiIb 18.99
Reg. $25. Think spring. And save! Par Four* belted slacks of comfortable poly/cotton duck cloth. Comes with a fashionable belt with leather tabs. Choice of colors, including khaki and navy. Mens waist sizes 30-40.
Of course you can charge it
wsr
7 on our
5/8
Track&Couii;adidas;Nike
Exercise your options with great savings on three famous names.
Sale 599 to2299
Reg. 7.99 to $30. Vbu win every way with savings on sweat separates by Track & Court^' adidas and Nike! All in easy-care fabrics. Assorted colors. '
Track &Court": Reg. Sale
Ladies warm-up 29.99 21.99
Mens warm-up............29.99 21.99
Mens V-neck .. ....... 7.99 5.99
Mens sweat pants.........16.99 12.99
Nike: ,
Mens shirt ......15.00 10.99
Mens shorts..............14.00 10.99
adidas:
Ladies U-necktop.........10.00 7.99
Ladies sweat pant ........30.00 22.99
Men's canvas ..........21.99 16.49
Nbuth canvas ...........18.99 14.24
Mens Gamebreaker leather .37.99 28.49
Stow and go.
Sale 7.99 to 16.99.
Reg. 9.99 to 19.99. Take away great savings on Nike, adidas and Track & Courr** roll and shoulder bags. Choose styles with shoulder straps or carry handles, zipper closures. In assorted color combinations stamped with the logo.
6 8
IP
Priscilla and novelty curtains!
>
i
Entire line.
25% off Sal 1650
pr.lOOxSa
Rg. $22. Give your wlndov the ruffled treatment. Pltocilla curtains in aaay-care poly/cotton wUI add niiir dimmions to your room. Seam on valiuice and tie badts included v
14^' Reg. $24 Sale SI pn
phl^ar Reg.1
cur tie I Solid (
60xlfvam.R<
t.fh it
fit '
ff4.i 'i i'u
iKlf
//|r/7 5,
//
\
.
'4^
I
:r-\,
%
blight lights.
Now 39.99
Orig. $80. Brighten up your decor and switch on super savings! We have heavy
metal table lamps to complement just Percentage off represents savings on about any room. At 50% savings! Brass original prices.' look finish, stylish pleated shades. Intermediate markdowns may have been
31" high. taken.
; rH'
I:
s
Vv
ii* ,
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I
.7/8
u-'*
-s- -frV;
. V '^**s ' ' '
25% off
Womens top and
slack pair-ups.
1
Slo 14.25 Reg. $19. Our long sle/ed print
blouse of silky Ultressa stretch polyester features a convertible collar. Assorted colors. Womens sizes 38-44.
Sale 11.25 Reg. $15. Match up with pull-on
pants of double knit polyester. Great colors in womens sizes 32-40.
I
25% off
Sale 15.75 Reg. $21. Long sleeve polyester
blouse features a rounded collar and artist's bow. Assorted polkadots or stripes. Misses' sizes.
Sale 18.75 Reg. $25. Our leather-belted
pants have stitch down double pleats and front slash pockets. A knockoff of that famous name pleated pant. Choice of colors. For misses' sizes.
All cotton sweaters.
Short-sleeve Par Four ..
HuntClub^
Reg. Sale $12 8.99 $2015.00 $2216.50
For work or play, all cotton sweaters are a natural basic. And all of ours are now 25% off! Choose from assorted styles and colors to match any skirt, any pair of pants. Like our short sleeve scoop neck pullover with crochet trim. Or our crew neck Hunt Club^ pullover with that famous horse of a different color. Save on a Par Four crew neck pullover and lots lots morel
25% off
All vinyl handbags.
V-/
Choose from our entire stock of leatherlike vinyl hand and shoulder bags. Heres a sampling. Come see it all!
Reg Sale
Organizer ............ .$16 12.00
Shoulder bag .......$9 6.75
Swagger bag .......$13 9.75
LOUJE S7-Ptoc ScfWid^Set Or MiehMusUUtWk^
OrAIO-lnch
ViHWanch nmjsarssa-
99*
Vr*x12x4
Partictebowd.....
RgiMvnot PH Sim Terrific low-cost shelving. #01386,8,7 "xirxT PMUdelKMnl $949
StaMne W1386........
8-*ir*ro*Prtnl ShsMng #01387 v
5-Horsepower Chain Drive Garden TWer
*32ff
RMUMysaroA
buB-L-iil tines pulverize almost completely on the
first pass. #9921013 Diagonal $9Q99 Color IV fciv
Has advanced ; one-
button color control. #54476
m
Save 20.00!
14HP Garage $QQ99 DoorOpaiwr... W ReguMv t119A Its designed for easy installation. Courtesy light. Remote control. #11001
Fab. IN) (MS)
OoYouHwie
YourLiNMf
CradiCvd?
Ldiue's
Vbur Hotisehold Word
We Atoo Honor Vtoa
MeatofCanl
Ameitcan
Ei^ieee
2728 South Memorial Drive-Phone; 756-6560
QreenvMe. N.C.
gmm HaHr PfOB supplement to rs. 0..1, .k-
*lln.sdy. FMxuirv I9M
I is just as important as the product. And we can arrange instailation by professionals, so it s done just right.Heavy Grip Or Household Cement Your
Cfu^ ...WWOunoe Rsgulirfy $1 A Perfect for
most around-the-house tx>nding jobs. Bonds tight. Stock-up today and save, too! 40014.5
(
FoMng Lattice Screen/OMder
4x8Cool White iwDoaro$Q?99 $Q49
WCb n'x7r W Each
i1"x7T ReguMy$42A Panels are
Gre-hinged for convenience, nflnished; add paint or stain as desired. 10644
Great for irooms, kitchens, etc. Meiamine finish on 1 /8* hardboard. 16634Save 20%! Grey Or Brovvn 3/8 Bamboaid
Reguhaly IMJI. Features
a rustic rough sawn texture. Versatile enough to be used either inside or outside. SUined. 13784,5Furniture RefWahingKtt WHh Instructions
Raaiwly $12JT An ideal kit for me flrst-time raflnisher. This eMHo-use kit Includes 1-quart furniture refinisher,
3 refinishing pads, one 8-ounce tung oil finish (high gloss) plus an easy step-by-step instruction booklet 40570Save 23%! 5/32x4x8 Toast Bropn Paneing
RtgulMflylMS
A beautiful toast brown chestnut design simulated on a particleboard base. Goes with any decor. 113914Prices Cut On These Hems! -xTxTNMiCut. fC QQ
ClarPiMlliM ................W.W
af"* *** * particleboard base.JhjglSgf^OekPanalno................$7.99
R^lUa Simulated on a lauan plywood base. 13918 4/32x4*xr Smokay
Mountain Birch Panaing............50b49
plywood base.jWt^^%**x4*xr HMda M4) JAMapla Panaing ..................$14.49
Reg. ItSJa Genuine maple hardwood phood. 13830
11-Ounoa Tuba Of Panel IWWiAnd Fdam Adhaalva.....................99^
CholoaOf4Colofa ...............
Rag. lua Buff, Brandy, Fawn and Laurel. I018f8.1l
50% OFF!
Interior Latex Flat Wall Paint
ReguMy S8.99. Its warranted colorfast. Dries quickly to a ' handsome, flat finish thatll make any room look brand new. Choose from white and stock colors (at price). #47682-9A. Save 50%!
Interior Latex Semi-Gloss $i;49\3 CMon
Risqutarty SMLtt. Warranted color-fat^ Dries quickly to a smooth, semi-gloss finish thats easy to keep dean. For bath and kitchen wa s & trim. White only. #47834
B. Save $4.00! Exterior Latex House Paint$Q99^0 Galon
ReguMy H3JB. Its warranted to cover In one coat, and to be non-yellowing & non-chalking for 6 years. Resists blistering and peeling, too. White only. '
C. Save $4.00! Waterproofing Latex Paint$099^0 Galon
ReguMy $13J6. Ideal for use on interior basement walls (masonry, concrete block, etc.). Seals out moisture while adding good looks. Warranted for 3 years. #48280
<^1
HI
YourCholceOf 1%, 2 Or 3 Wide Paint Brush
89L
Raguhriy$13.Foruse wim a variety of paints. Just choose the size that nts the job. #40196
Save$20.0 SO-WattAMess PaMSoraverKH
toguMy
enamels,
Handles Stains and more. It makespalnting almost fun. #40B37
Lomws Home Fashion Proaram features designer-coordinated carpeting, wallpaper, paint and more. Its a beautiful new idea.
A.rx6'SoUOak Flooring Ties
39,
Each
Refaranoe Price 89*.
Tongue & groove, mxmm
B.irxir Real Oak SeN-AdhesiveTles
$239,
Each
RaguliriyCJB.With
cushion back, mxmn.td.i
A.Vemay^ irxir No-Wax He
59.
Each < Refaranoe Price IB*.
Self-adhesive vinyl. Stock colors. rtft3ll,2 B.StylBtl(irx12 No-WaxTle
79.
Each
flAa
VwlOv Ww m
Self-stick, in stock colors. f13i1,94,30-2
c.Sollan irxir No-Wax Tie
99.
Each
ReNienci Wpeyi.HL
Our best no-wax tile. Stock colors,
12" WIDECUSHIONBACKCARPETING
A. Mutti*Color Level
Candy $91^
.... Virt
Stripe Carpet......
Reference Price $3.99. An economical & long-wearing looselay carpet. Great for utility room or playroom. #15276
C. 100% Continuous Nylon Flament $C29 Valencia Carpet.. .U rd^lptured Carpet..
RoNffsno Price |7m Patterned loop Reference Price 19.99. Rich, multi-tone
gives this beautiful carpet a sculptured carpet with dramatic sculptured look,
look. Several stock colors. #152t,7 Several stock colors. #152M,2,4,6,8
B. MuKi-Color Level LoopCrysbri $A29
Coast Carpet Har
Reference Price $8.49.100% continuous filament nylon in a tweed-like weave. Choose from stock colors. #15016,8,9
D. 100% Continuous Nyjm ISIament Plush
m
12' WIDE NO-WAX FLOORING
A.Accotone12Wide Vinyl Looselay No-Wax Flooring
$429
Squan
Square Yaiti aPricel
Rafeianca Price $7.99. Has cushioned Inner layer for comfort & low noise. And a beautiful no-wax surface. The 12-foot width eliminates seams in most rooms. Stock patterns. #iais2.f7
B. Royelle 12 Wide Vinyl Nr^Wax $929
Floor Covering......war
Reference Price $4.99. Has cushioned inner layer. Not quite as "heavy" as Accotone. Stock patterns. #16162,6
c.SundiarSolarian
Is Our Best $099
No-WaxFk)orfng ....Oar
Reference Price $12.99.1%s exclusive Mirabond no-wax surface & cushioned inner layer. Stock patterns. #16139,42
2*Flat,Lauan Interior Door
EXTERIOR DOOR SAVINGS
B. 3-Foot Exterior Door_____
DaguMvtltim This solid fir door is a big 1% thick. It is designed to easily accomodate the door inserts shown above (extra). #10573
84 & 109
A. 28 EMe Exterior Doorllnit____
Regulaily 9198. Molded door has an Insulated foam core. Pre-hung In its own frame for easy installation.
Fully weatherstripped. #13661,2
c. CtNwse From Two Decorative Insert Panels For Exterior Door Atxwe........
ReguMy $48.98. Choose from this pair of tmely detailed Insert panels in soUd wood. Lets you custom-design your own door. Inserts come complete with moulding so installation is easy. Available via Catalog Sales. #10577,78
ReguMy IZ7J8. Prehung in its own frame. Unfinij^hed. #81900,1
2*6Laui
ReguMy $28A Prehung in Its own frame. Unfinished. #81904,5
rwood 8* Wood
RmetKMMtl ReguMy$3J8.
Adds to any decor. Unfinished. #02936,7
C9POQ rWoodCaainQOrWOOD BhFOLD DOOR SAVINGSA. Save $4.00! 2-Foot B. Save $6.00! 2-Foot
Flush Bi-Fold $iT99 $9ri99Lauan Door I Bi-FoW Door.....
ReouMy $21 JO. Elegant enough for Reguwfy $31.98. Make maximum use of a formal bedroom yet functional enough wall and floor space with this unfinished to bis used in the pantry. Unfinished. door. Its comes
With track and hardware. #10712c. Save $5.00 On This 32 Vinyl Folding Room Divider
r $21J8. This folding door room
with track and hardware. #10535
*16
solution for room and space division for every home. Pe family room, laundry room etc. Complete with track and
iractical
_______ ^ a closet,
hardware. #11326
Save $14.00! 2x32 Wood Insulating Window
ReguM/$8UB.
Double paned glass. Come in todayr#17942
^ ^ I who know whatbeyretalklna about* thats oneo our greatest strengths. And its one of your biggest advantages.
Bring In YowOwn MeMunments Well Help You Design Your Dream KMehen I
For FREE!
OieMhrmftef"
todolsl
rnaaawinwnls. WTthan dadgn leUlchan of your dreams free Ba. Act now d youl eaue 20%.
Come in and ^ save 20% off the regular price of the W cabinets of
' your choice
j' 130x96 Laminato Butcher Block Design |2|c>ien Countertop
Ragid^ 121 Jl. Give your kitchen countertops a new iook with this butcher block design laminate countertop. Its heat and stain resi^nt. We also carry a complete ine of installation accessories, including contact cement. #10445AKi^Faucel $00199
Easy-to-clean. Washerless. 124828
IL Has a Single asherless. #24829
& lOlciNii^auosI
S23Batf
imSrwasherlc
SIMessSMSink$4499
RapuMyfBiai This durable Muxe model sink has two deep, fully undercoated 7 bowls and a high luster finish. #28028A.PVCSfnkTnBOr
B.PVCCaiM^Tn>a.*15S.
ItS easier to
E fell?'*" metallic pi^ng. Will not rust. Come in and stock up today. #24810,12
Early American Antique^Brass 4-Light $9A99Chandeler..........XH
RipMy nui. Has a wood center column and white mlK-glass floral chimneys. (Bulbs are extra.) Ideal for dining room, foyer, etc. #74923A. 4T * Fluoreeoent Bub At A RMly Bright Price......
ftiisiwct Pitoe I2JB. Take advantage of our great price on this 40-watt Norelco bulb. #75240B.SaM$3.nEneigySmer $C99FhK)raMeiilUgMBua> 7.
BaguMy UM. Replace your incandescent bulbs & save money. Fits most table lamps, too. #75230
c. Save 15.00! 48 Ruoreaoent $-1499 Woribench Light...............11
RaguMy SUM. Includes chain for easy overhead InManon. Easy assembly. Bulbs extra. #74665
0. $ave $10.0012-Light $9Q99 Pkioieaoefit Fixtme............,
Bagularty VlUk Chrome-finish fixture uses a 22W and32W fluorescent bulb (included). #74220
ESeve $10.00! 48 Long $9^^ Fhioreaoent Fixture.............v*t
RsguMy $4Ua Has wraparound acrylic cover ^ simulated wood housing. Includes two bulbs. #75412
F. Save $ia00! Dusk To $QQ99 DawnSecurt^Ught...........yD
Raniiirty 9M. Automatically turns on at dijs^ off at dawn. Includes powerful 175W bulb. #74004200-Amp, 24-Space Panel__Box WHh Main $40099 CbcuH Breaker IU9
Raguhaly SMBJS C^n handle up to 40 circuits. And Includes main breaker and cover. Lowes is your complete electrical outietl #71756
59A. 18-Cubic-inch, Non-Metalc Wal Box. inducies Nals.....
. ReguMy 46*. Installation is easy with this unit. Attaches to wall stud. UL listed. #1^72
B. 15-Amp Broivn Or ivory Pynfftx urounded Outlet......____
Ragulariy M*. Its rated at 15 amps. Just choose the color that fits your decor. UL listed. #70485,683C. 15-Amp Brown Or ivory CQC Sbigie-Pole Grounded Switch .Uw
RaouMy W*. Its rated at 15 amps. Just choose the color that you prefer. UL listea #70407,608D.Sm$6jniS.Aiin)Qround $0499 FauNSUCMOulM............C. I ^
RmM87JI Senaas potenlld shock danger cu&off power. Indicator light & cover plate. #71915E. Reg. cm 290* Of 12-2 $^99 QRMndedCopperCaUs#70111....fc I
^VMOraundidCogparCM..........aJS*
Rag. S29.MI. Usa In a variety of wiring jobs. 70123F. Save nun lOO-Amp, $RQ9920-Clrcuil Panel Box..........
(mMytnm Designed for smaller electrical___
systams. Includes main breaker & front cover. 71751
SilWKtlonalLoiMt
togumnlMd. If you arent pleased with a product, well either, repair it, replace it or refund your money.
Sae$4.QOOn ToMTank Repair Kit
$799
RaguMrStimHsa
complete assortment of repair parts. 124449
Save (10.00 On A
21 Inii illn - -----
naiKie, urvome Lavatory Faucet
^499
NnrialirtlulL Comea With popHip drain. And its washerless. #24932
Save$15.000nA19xir
Regufeiriy IMJI. A ciassic-design cabinet, with goid trim, brass-finished hardware & beautifui cultured marble top. #20805
A. sma $20.001 irxir $7099 VanNy, Top a Faucet iSf
RsguhKW M90. Handsome singie-door model with gold accent & white/gold door knob. Cultured marble top; 2-handle faucet. #20804
B. Save $30.0012r*xir Vanity, Top a FMioet..
ReguMy tlJ9t Provincial double-door model has routed gold trim, cultured marble top and dual-control chrome faucet. #20808
119
Save (10.nN 23x19 $OQ99
Mfldcim Cabinet %&T rr.^
Reguhsty S39JB Oouble-door sliding mirrors: enameled steel cabinet; built-in light (bulbs extra). 1^716
A. Save $18.49! EooiKNny
RaguMy mM. Designed to use less water than regular models. Seat extra. 120701,2
BkiaQoldaCramsOolois SrOnlyl
rlZUOUoielMoniM
B.Daliixe
iM^a^ ^-------
wiiw uonvnocw RsguMy IMJI Low silhouette water-saving model with pushbutton flush. Seat is extra. #20711,2 BtuaQoUaCMmeOatait RrOriy tIUI Moral inriM
SBvo30%!Wax
Bowl Ring.....
RsguMy W. Forms a tight seal beween commode and Boor. 124391
?74^
69
Save $7.00! 12x16 Recessed Model Medfeine Cabinet
$1799
ReguMy $2190. Has enameled steel cabinet and removable-adjustable shelves. #23670
Save $5.00! 14x20 Wal-Mount Model MedkAie Cabinet
*19
ReouMrfy $U.9B. Its a larger, waiknount version of the 12 x16 model above. #23672
A. 5-Piece, White Wall Sunround......
RaguMy VtM. Fits a 5-foot tub. Easy-to-clean plastic panels come complete with adhesive and caulk. #20781 Blue, Gold & Creim Color For Only $10.00 More! 20782^
B.5Whtte Acrylic Tub......
Regulirty $158.90. Resistant to chipping and flaking. Easy-to-clean. Available in predrilled left or right hand models. #20420-1 Blue, Gold a Creme Colors For
Only $30.00 More! (H20422-27
Save $30.00!
32 Wide Complete Shower Stall
ttochinnina
Save $20.00 On A Fan/Ugbt/Heater With Switch Control
59*
ltogiiWy$79..Has
separate switches for each function. #25506
ReguMy $139.90. With everything shown here. Includes hardware for assembly. #25938
Save $1.00! 3-Ounce, SMoone Bath Tub Caul( $^60
Regutoty$2Je.
Forms a flexible seal. #40077
Save2S%ICPVC Hot&CoU $459i^**xiori^.....I
OR
Save31%ICPVC HotAOoki $999 %"xlorPlpe...;fc
Reg.$2JB(%)$3J0(44).
Lightweight yet durable. Will not rust or corrode like-metal piping. #^750,1
Save3%i%cpvc
j 2SF. tightweight. Stock up today. #23761Save 40%! W*CPVC 90* i9c
Bbow......... Ifc
RsguMy20*.Will not fiakeor scale. #23755
RsgUMyHJa. Flexible & resists freezing. #22752
Save2B%!%-a 14
RagulMly 19*. Long-lasting. No rust! #21710
Save 26%!^issr........14
RsquMy 1. Gives years of durable service. #21610
Save 26% On Polybutylene WxSTubing
$*169
ReguMy $ZA Durable. Easy to work with. #227^Save26%!1^*x2ir Type M Copper Pipe
2rSadion RaguMy $1.7. Come In k stock up today. #23786
S4VE $20j00!
40-Gallon Electric Water Heater
5109
Reguhiriy $129l99. Dual elements for quick recovery. Thermostat. Pressure valve. #26322
SAVE $40.00!
40-Gallon Natural Gas Water Heater
Rogulaity $19a|p^ BulIMn pressure relief valve and adjMftable thermostat. #26334
.00/
40-Gallo| Energy Efficient Electric Water Heater
99. Same features as electric mddCboy, with extra insulation. #26302
SAVE
$4.00!
Rack Sack Waste Disposal System
RegMy OA Metal frame with a continuous-feed roll of For convenient trash disposal. #2|^
RackSMdcftefll, ' Single Rol au. . ri v.
JO
Al The Materials Needed To Build This Home From The Foundation Plate Up
^0,899
0 HSfeamaKarHI LH188
1.000SQ. FT. OF HEATED LIVING SPACE
You supply the land, labor & foundation. We supply all the other materials, from lumber and nails to light fixtures and paint. Even the kitchen sink.
Price Is guaranteed for 90 dm tram rials of ootrtracL MalsiWs ara delwred to the rils In biiding sequence.
It In A Weekendj Storage Closet
9
Price Includes all materials needed to build this quality outdoor unit. Nalls, lumber, roofing, stain. Plus blueprint I easy instructions. #00036 Othif Weekender
Over 50 home designs. Send in coupon for tree cotof brochure.
Lowes Homestead Dept.
P.O. Box 1111 N. Wilkesboro, N.C. 28656
Name_
Address_
CHy _
Tsisphone.
-Stats-
.ap.
71
_l
Lowst Low Paymant CredMfenns
Your credit must be satisfactory. Our cash price excludes sales tax & Life & Property insurance. The monthly payment & deferred payment price includes Life & Property Insurance & 4% sales tax. If sales tax is different in your area, the monthly payment & deferred payment price will vary slightly. Delivery charges, if any are not included in our figures.SAVE $2.00!
AnswerOnly $^999 Sottaite I'* Phone... I C>
RsguMy $14J0. For areas in which you , answer the phone but seldom place calls. Comes with a handy wall hanger. tl55410
AM/FM Clock Radio/Phone With Batten Back-up And Automatic Redial Key*79
Regulwly VKM Phone is adaptable to rotary or touch tone lines. Features a mute key. Batteries extra. #55422
A 25 Diagonal Meditenanean Style Color Console TV With Color Monitor$51999
------ff^iriM tirnflfT
nOMIvim nwdiBWJKie
With extra-wide 40 cabinet. QEs new Color Monitor System. Automatic frequency & color controls. And black matrix picture tube for crisp, bold color. Come see. #5^42
a IfHF/VHF/FM Oiadoor
Antenna$2199
ReguMySZUL Years
of great UHF. VHP&FM stereo reception. IS6234
C.Anlenna Rotor a Control$4g99
RaguMymiL Rotor has super quiet movement. Heavy-duty motor.
AM/FM Electronic Digital Clock Radio
$1899 ^ S1099
Reference Price $29.95. Wake to music or alarm. Has a battery (extra) b^ck-up system. #55065 4t
AM/FM, FMStarao System Has Cassette$14999
RaguMy tmM Has a 2-speed rim driven turntable. Cassette has automatic shut-off. 154244
AM/FM Cassette Stereo With Audo Timer
Rogtiariy muiL Sleep or wake to music. Belt driven turntable. LEO clock display. 454239
Choice
25 Diagonal Color Console Television With Color Monitor
IWewee Pitee ISIM6.
The color monitor system automatically adjusts the color picture before you see it. Automatic frequency control locks in the
picture after one initial fine tuning. Has an energy efficient 100% solid state chassis, too.#54531
25 Diagonal XL-IOOMorTV With Electionic Tuning Feature:
Refeienoe Price MJPet . Signalock electrortic ' -tuning providesexcelferit reception even in many weak or fringe signal areas. Comes with both automatic fleshtone and color controls to help keep the picture sharp. Solid state chassis. #04653
12 Diagonal Black & White Portable Television$6499
Reference Price $89.95. Features a Quick Start picture tube. Has 100% solid state chassis. Contemporary design. #54446
25 Diagonal Color Console Television WKh SoM State Chassis569
Reguliriy $9BBJ0. With automatic fine tuning and color controls. Automatic fringe-lock circuit provides excellent reception in weak reception areas. Available in Transitional styling at same price. #54840,1
Your Choice359
iroiaabhiriColor Portable Televteion
R*iwea Price Uma RCA model features electrowictuning plus automatic cpiOf and fleshtone controls. Zenith model has automatic fine tuning and color ciartfier controls plus sharpness control. Both chassis are im solid state. 154610,54786
19 Diagonal Color Portable Television319
Reguiarty $359.99. Has automatic frequency and color controls & 100% solid state chassis. #54521
MM PWm nooucn
let you improve your home with confidertce. And from storm doors towtlipaper. youii find quaiity at Lowes.
lliO.|niJlL Has2
oven sheives, 4 lift up surface heating units plus a handy removable oven door. 152812
Sm $40.001
AiilQRiitle
aOTRm
w
llif.9flJlLHaa
one & three 6 phig4n turlace heating unha. Full . width storage drawer. Eaaydean^ooktop wIthralaedjedQes 10 keep am worn
runnmgriaKI
e4
SAVE $60!
Variable Power $07099
Microwave fai 9
NO DOWN PAYMENT Annual Peroentagefiale 23J7% Deferred Payment Prtoe $390.72 RaguMy |330.8Bi Cooks by time with an accurate 60^inute timer or by temp with automatic temperature probe. Has variabie power ieveis for quick and easy cooking. Features an ea^ioTead temp control, convenient start bar and f .3 cubic foot cooking cavity. 151751 '
Save $70.00! Deluxe 17.1 Cu. Ft. No-Frost Refrigerator
579
Reg. $649.99. Nature Fresh food life extension system. Comes with 2 adjustable split level steel shelves plus an switch. #53546
energy saver
Microwave
Close-Out!
AH Remaining
1982
Microwaves And Accessories In Stock, Act Now!
Limited
Quantities!
No
Fmsl
*489
15 Cubic Ft. Refrigerator....
RaguMy |54B.9B.Comes with 316 door shelves and 3 fixed steel shelves. Model features 2 Easy-Release^ ice trays plus an economical energy saver switch. Come in and save today.#5^34
Save $40.00! Automatic 30 Deluxe Range
Raguiirty$n9.99. Has two 6?' and two 8 ufoe heating units. Bdmoyabletrirn rings fr easy cleaning. Comes with an oven wthdow door. #52820
sSlnless steel sink fittings. Easy to Install. UL listed. 150301
Heavy Duty J259*
SAVE $30/
Pennanent Press vSensi-Diy Dryer
^49
RtgulHly $279.98. Features 4 temperature selections plua settings for perm press and knits. Cool down helps prevent wrinkle setting In perm press cycle. #61420
NO uown rsymein Aimvil Pementage Rats 2188% Detanwl Payment Pifee $382.64 ReguMy $288.98. Has 3 drying temp settings. Cool-down care helps to prevent wrinkles In perm press and knit fabrics. Choose from 3 drying cycles, regular, perm press or timed. Custom dry control provides automatic shut-off-convenlence. #51520
Save $30.00!. Automatic Washer
*319
Raa. $348.98. Has
a single speed. Regular cycle wash Hot or warm wash hhirtfuHjnire tomperatures. One water level. #51210
LOWES
BEST
HotpoM-
DWwnalw
SmSMLW Hwny Duty Diyw
219
Rag. I29BJ8. Standard capacity dryer has a regular drying temp. Provides up to 130 minutes of drying time. #51425
SAVE $50/
+hFtpjDrtfi^
Large Capacity
Automatic
Washer
*369
ReguMy $418J8. Has 3
cycles including poly knit/deiicates, and perm press. Has 4 water level selections. 3 wash/rinse temp options plus cold water rinse. #d1236
SAVE $50!
Undercounter
Dishwasher
*369
ReguMy $419J8. Lowes best , Hot^nt dishwasher. Has 7 cycle options including power scrub. 3 level Power Wash^ system. #51018
Save $40.001
UfKtofOOunler
DWMmelMr
289?*
RaguMy$82UB. Comes
wtttT^ycles. Mormal, normal eneray^aaver dry, short wash & short wash energy eaver dry. 191013
I----------t-t-
umovQiiMa 8p6cwi
are also available at Lowes every week. So It pays to stop by occasionally for a pleasant surprise.A. 48 Wide, Brown CeMng Fan
LIGHT KITS AVAILABLE!aS2 Brown, Tradiliorai lyleCeilngFan
LIMITED
QUANTmES!
C.S2 Polished Brass
CeMng Fan
S5999 89*; *99*
rWferonce Price S79.9S With variable speed wall control. Brass trim; teak blades. ^31712
Price $129.98. Reversible, multi-speed Imi features beautiful oak blades. 1(31762
Price $119.99. TradHional or classic style fan is reversibie. Wood blades. #31767,47
Qnat Valups!
A. 9,500 BTU Portable Kerosene Heater$0099
UmlMQiMnMlM nefeiencs Price $148.99. Features automatic starting & extinguishing. Convenient lift-out fuel tank.
Model Is UL listed. #30462FR^!
2.5-Gadon Of dear Kr^ne Wtth Purchase Of Envj-Ro-Temp Heaters In Stock
(w WmMlHM By Lm)
B. 6,800 BTU Portable Kerosene Heater$7099
M LMled QumMIm
Reference Price $119.99. With I ^ pushbutton automatic starting and^ extinguishing for convenient operation. UL listed. #30460
Umrndqummnotalllmtinitmataapfodueta.
QuartzStyla' ^ Work Bend^ Neater
$2999
Ref. Mos$MJBl Price ' includes cord set, timer- '
& suspension chaiiM.OSOSOS
*2.5-Qalon Claar 1-K Kerosene
Ref. Price $7.99. For use in all portable kerosene heaters. #30552
At Lowes, A New Armstrong Ceiling Doesnt Mean A Lot of Overhead
2x4 Impressions Ceing Panel
I Fool
RafmnoaPrtM30*.
Has washable surface. Sold by carton. #12325
Impressions
CwigTlie
2?c
fa I ir'xir'Tia Refain6e'Pitoe3Z>. Embossed and washable. Sold by carton. #12312
rxrTextured Fashion Tone
36^,
SwMwePool
nefewnce Price 32.
Has embossed pattern. Sold by carton. #12329
Oak Plank Ceing Panel
9Q
WW SwMraFoot ntWMOi nM
48" oak-k)Ok "planKs. Sold by carton. #12292
Easy-Up Celra Tie Instalation KH Reference Price w.
SAVE
$21!
28x68 High Storm Door
Storm Door For 6Patio Door
S30W 109
Regularly ^.99. Insulating aluminum door with slide-up safety glass panel. Includes latch and closer. 1131,2
Regularly $149.99. Fits over your existing patio door to seal out cold. Bronze finish (white, some stores). #i56T6.7
Put Your Home InTtiePkikWltli Owens-Coming R-19FI)erglas^ Insulation!
6x15 R-19 Unfaced Batt Insulation
25^^
Referenoe Price a.
Excellent add-on for the attic. (The higher the R-value, the greater the insulating power.
Ask your seller for the R-value fact sheet.)mM
lydr
Save $1.00! 10^j(25 Roll
UnfinishecI Bar Stools
Each
Regularty $16.99 & $17.99.
Choose the 24 or 30 size. Woven fiber seat. ^f96016,7
Black or Natural Polyethylene
Save $1.50! lOxIOO Ron
$499 $^099
Reg. $5.99 Reg. $18.49
Tough 4-mil thickness. Use it to cover drafty windows, protect r nts & shrubs, shield firewood <om rain & snow...the uses are virtually endless. ini6693,6,i6925,6
Paichand $i
JoinlKN.......7
RaguMylBJaLYouMi
5 lbs. ofcompoundjRT of tape, & knife. #11743
RaguMy UlnL Has 16 mesh. Great for small animal pens; gutter screen. #92202
ReguMy Vacuums up wet or dry spHfs with ease. Can be used as a blower, too. #98690
^
ReguMy IMI. Covers about IN sq. ft. Just add water. 10 lbs. #11715
IS
0r
CUT-TO-SIZE BOARDS!
1x4x4-Foot Rine Board.....
Roferenoe Price $1.49. Its appearance grade, so its suitable for bookcases, etc. Can be painted or stained.
99Economical C 2x4 Stud oy
Reference Price $1.09. Use these handy studs in home projects not governed by:local building codes. #07^2
1x4
99* 1.59 *2.19
p 1x8
159 *259 *3.19
1x8
1.99 *2.99 *3.99
1x10
*2.79 *359 M.99
1x12
*3.69 *559 *6.99
1x12 Random Length #3 SheMng Board
f013S0<
49
Umrn.
y4x2*x2* Pre-Cut Exterior Plywood
ftorewnoe Pitoa |2.29l Sanded on one side, so its easy tq ' paint or stain. #11766 !
MuM-Puipose Random Length 2x2 Lumber
UaMrFL
12:
I'Unon RmStawOf
WIMOrTNckf
iteel6*.Fo
use in light shelving & other projects. #04595
IL.n. WidMOrTNcknass
fMaranoePHeeW.For
Multi-Purpose 1x2x8 Funlng Lumber
C
Etch
ilefstenoe Price 69*. Use
as a base for put up paneling.
1XZXB'
StripL
48<
y4x4x8
Wafertx>ard...
Reference Price $8.99. All-purpose interior/exterior building panel. Can be painted or stained. #12261
Wx4x8 $C49
Partideboard... u
Reference Price $8.99. Makes ileal underlayment for carpet. #12259
All ..
ar
Law^Js Ybtv.Complet Roofing Store!
We Have The Products For Your Roofing Needs
If your home needs a new roof, dont overlook Lowes. We carry a complete line of residential rooflng-from standard #240 asphalt shingles to heavyweight fiberglass shingles that Took like rustic wood shakesall by brand name manufacturers, and all in a wide range of colors, from basic black to warm earthtone shades. So be sure to stop by & see us. Well give you a free quote and answer aii your questions about the types and styies of roofing that we carry.
#90 Asphalt Roll Roofing In Blade Green Or White
I 3*x36* Rol Reference Price $15.79. Durable & economical roofing for storaae sheds, barns, etc. Just roll it out, nail it down and cement the laps. Each roil covers about 100 sq. ft. #10280,5,90Re~SklefAnd Give Ybuf Home A Brand New Look!
7/16x12x16 Hadboard 7/16x4x8 Woodsman Lap, Exterior SicHngS539
flefetence Price 18.29. Smooth lap siding for a traditional look. And the hardboard surface is exceptionally resistant to weather. (That includes hail denting.) Primed, too. #15602
2Q
Plank Exterior Siding$^449
ReouMy S15J9. Remodel your homes exterior with the look of rustic cedar planks, styled in tough, long-lasting hardboard. All you add is paint or stain for a handsome finish. #15614
28x60 Sheet Of Galvanized Mobile Home Skirting
ReguMy IMI. These durable, reuseable panels are ideal for creating extra space under mobile homes. Panels are fire resistant. Installation is easy requiring only a few household tools. #60%2
Save $25.00! PickupTnick Steel Tool Box
White Rnish Regui^ $109.99. Comes with a removable tray with handles. Tool trays are easily removed from either end. Convenient adjustable dividers help keep tools properly organized. mA02,A
SAVE $27.00! Single Burner Gas Grill
sgggg
Rsgularty $126.99. Gives you that great outdoor taste without the charcoal mess. Has 20,000 BTUs; 272 square inch cooking area; stainless steel bar type burner & infinite heat controls. #97281
A. 96 Galvanized Clothes Line Post
$799
Regulaily $9.99. Ck>nstructed of heavy galvanized steeL Features cadmium piated hardware plus plastic capped
ends. Has 7 line hooks. #92610
a. 90 Fool Rol Cotton Clolhes Line
$^99
A. 4x4 Treated MaRwxPost
$1299
Rehuncs Price $1499. Made of quality Southern pine. Treated to resist rot & insect decay. Ready to be stained or painted. Some assembly. #92626
B. Galvanized Steel Rural Mattwx
scgg
ReguMy $2.44 Cotton line has a fiberglass core for years of durable service. Braided for extra strength. Stock up today. #66518
Rslswncs Mos 9M9. Built for vears of service. Has a ribbed design for added strength and durability. Bakeri on enamel finish. #92622 oh
14iGas Chain SawWHh Guard
mui. Weighs less than 8 poupfls yet it cuts an 8^nch k>T, ^ in 10 9Conds. Has automatic chnn
startec^rewina. fsiezs -JiST
SAW 3396/
-1 I |m.i rMlrl
wooQ rwnim QmtwHw
$4^
awSd^viead with s bio
6%x4olKle. Comes with ajl^ 48** handle. 198787
99
SAVB28%I 21 Blade Pruning Saw
$
8JIB$7JOOI
WtoodHandted
Wheetoanow
Step-Male
FolcInQ Metal StepSool
*39 *9
Rugged r steel frame. Has a psg tooth design bladeA contoured grip handle, tmm
RsgukdytlMaHasa
big 4 cubic foot capacity. Seamlesa steel tray for rugged durability.!
RsfsnnoePrtoalMm
Has a selHocking safety latch. Folds to 1V*'for easy storage. I92S21
A. Slow Release Ferttber Covers 5^^. Ft.
^ m ^oundBag
Stock 43bday. #92437 ZOlkBMljwnFMdiJmrn
#92438 Reg. $10.99......$8.99B. 50 Lb. BagGroui^
uniosionB99
lliBulMly$tJB.It8an excellent dditive for lewne and gardens. Works fast against acid soil reaction. #92426p.:l Wide D. Deluxe Drop Lawn Broadcast Spreadar
R^guMy I22JI. Finger RMuMy $34A Features
tlp^ntrols make all a 7>pound capacity non-your spreading jobs quick corrosive hopper. Has a and easy. Has a 65-pound 4x8 ^reading width, capacity hopper. #95307 Enclosed gear box. #95305A. Save $20.00!
3 HP, 20 Cut Push Mower*119
RnuMy SISIJI. Comes with a Briggs & Stratton engine with an easy spin recoil starter. Has an easy to reach, handle mounted variable speed control. Features manually adjusted cutting heights. 14-gauge steel cutting deck. #95106B. tl HP, 36 Cut Riding Mower
ReguMy $1199^9. Briggs & Stratton engine. Eiectric start, infinite range of forward speeds pius reverse. #95195
M Prior. 999C. 18 HP, 42 Cut Lawn Tractor
RaouiMlv $1849199. Hasabia
Stratton twin cylinder engine. 4 forward speeds plus reverse. Disc brake. #951^
Cash Prior lOoST
Lowes Low44S
Lowes Low731
No Down PaymentCSee Pue 12} Deferred Payment Prtoe $18M Annual Peroentage Ralr 23J9%
No Down PMfmanl (See Pior12) Deiamd Payment Pitee Aimual Paroonlaoe Raise 21 AMvfx
">n^B
Lowes Low Prices Are Just The Beginning
i
A.SMe|1JOOnA 20-GMonTmhCan
Sfi*RiQ. I7JI. Galvanized steel construction. 192377
B.SMe$1(LQOOnA 404>lMeToQliaiRag. SaA Comes with carry case. #91454
c.%*x1QQrLanoLOUJE'S
Your Household Word
*2
RaLMoetUHl
Oeneral use rope.D.tl-OunoefWy-Oii
OIBMeCwk
2^88*Rag* W (MCh)- Adheres to wood masonry,etc. #43470 SsMtlJiCaukQun Rag. $1A #43406...Do You Hme Your New lowotOwllCwclTlfs The Hmdy Card For Handy Paoplol
Come in and appiy to^l You may qualify for up to $750.00 instant Lowe's credit when you wesent your Visa,/unerican Express or MasterCard. Even without these cards, appiications wiil be processed promptly.
UHMtFMSA Ona-FootLMflM rimdlMOlVMh .OrTMoknaM.
LSavoHJOOn %'*x4*xr Potfboiid$gRsg.lMlL Ideal for
a workshop. #15407F.PitooCutOn , 4-Pack UgM BubosRTtoowstt tetIA Brass base
rrmsts corrosion. #75225,6Q.$awa$3JD0n JackPoatAAiatabla^
Rag. $12A Adjusts from 1^to31.kteaias support posts for mobiie homes,etc. #17228H.2rwUoClaar Vkwl CaqMt Runnar4w^UnaarFool*
Rsf. Price. Protects carpet from wear, na
YOURMOICE: Demon Attack, Ptt Fall Or Yars Revei^ Game Cartridge
S8.99. The
enfire family will enjoy playing these video cartridges. #5438i,4io,426Lowes Pricing Polcy
Mwiy ilwns In thW tabloid'carry a feterance relaH price.
TtM reference la Intended to provide a guide to M of retan aeNing prices In our area and may be uaed in Ma^ ni^ dHferant units of the aame manufacturer. An Mam a rafwenoa rafail price is althar ttie manufactorys w gaatod raiaii price of our detorminalfon of Me fuNjemn
pricebeaedonpriceaatwhicfiitoraimliariuerciftandlaeto offered by principal relaiiera (department storeajpadaKy
afiopa mid Other non-dtacountaeSara) In our aaiSag yea-WhNa WO beHava our reference rotoHo do not appredaw exceed me hlgheet refaM prioee at which aafeaaiywd^
our seMng area, we cannot aaaure you mat wr lelwenoe
roWl pticeo, as deecribod above ropreegnl S*a Prtpe^m
rvHR mm uuuvmwi wvw v^iwwgii
mry oofiwiunity on any olvon day. ooala NaM ^ Sr advwtiaonient a/e Mstoriy^^roguiy' aoM^ merchandise to offered at Ihia price exoapt ttoring a special aala. The purpoee of showing a lefarem rM price (or o'regular price) to to aaatol yw our euatomar, to makino a knowiedgeable and bettor IniDrmad buyfngSy*: Sion. We augged Ihai^ atoo do comparaffve ahoppmg
and compmreprtooa. (moeo to thto tobtoU do not lnide
doHvary chargee. Aak us about deilvery ratos.)Lowes Rabicheck Pdtoy
H we aaa out d an adimrttosd Nam. toaueym^^
you.