Daily Reflector, February 10, 1983


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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 12 - Area items Page 22-Big Bear Page 32 - The legislature

102NDYEAR NO. 35TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE. N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON. FEBRUARY 10, 1983

32 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

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Truckers In Washington

Strikers Planning A Vote

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By H. JOSEF HEBERT WASHINGTON (AP) -Regional representatives of striking independent truckers gathered here today for a planned vote on ending

their 11-day, violence-marred shutdown, the groups president said.

Michael Parkhurst, head of the Independent Truckers Association, summoned

about 40 officers of the organization and said the key to the vote could be congressional response to a letter circulating on Capitol Hill.

That letter calls for House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill, D-Mass., and Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, to

A Rarity For Pitt

THRICE BLESSED Bennie and Tammy Whitley of Route 1, Box 155, Fountain, pose with* their triplets bom Feb. 2 in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Whitley holds thei; daughter, Tonya Renee, and Mrs. Whitley. holds. their^ sons.

Benjamin Wayne and James Douglas. The they are the Whitleys first children and are the fifth set of triplets bom in Pitt County in the past 20 years, according to a keeper of vital statistics for the county. (Reflector Photo By-Carol Tyer) -

Israeli Cabinet Meets Over Commission Recommendation

By JONATHAN IMMANUEL Associated Press Writer JERUSALEM (AP) - The Israeli Cabinet convened today and a senior minister said he expected it would adopt the recommendations of the Beirut massacre commission calling for the resignation of Defense Minister Ariel Sharon.

Sharon was not present as the ministers assembled, but

REFLECTOR

the army officers criticized in the report for failing to prevent the massacre were on hand to address the Cabinet and defend themselves against the commissions charges.

About 500 people gathered outside the building holding placards addressed to the government and army saying the people are with you.

OTLinC

752-1336

Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell yout problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The 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.-

SATURDAY NIGHT HOUSING NEEDED

The String Department of the East Carolina University School of Music is sponsoring a workshop this coming weekend for high school students from North Carolina and Virginia. We have been swamped with some 70* respondents and are seeking assistance with housing, Rodney Schmidt of the school of music facullty said. He asked that anyone who can house a student Saturday night, with no meals required, call Mandy Meece at the school of music immediately, 757-6331.

BOMB GROUP HISTORY?

I am compiling a history of the 96th Bomb Group of the 8th Air Force and would like to make contact with anyone participating in or having knowledge of their activities during World WarlLB.H.

Anyone who can help Mr. H. is asked to call him at 756-3084.

A counter-demonstration demanding Sharons ouster also was scheduled. .

Interior Minister Josef Burg said he expected the Cabinet to adopt the recommendations of the Beirut massacre commission.

Burg told Israeli radio that his National Religious Party would urge that Prime Minister Menachem Begin form a new Cabinet within 24 hours without calling elections.

He told Israel radio his National Religious Party, a member of the Begin coalition. is among a decisive majority of ministers (which) favors accepting the recommendations of the Beirut massacre commission.

Sources close to Begin said he would not fire Sharon, but also would not accept Sharons proposal that the

Cabinet adopt only those recommendations concerning the government and reject those concerning the army.

Those recommendations urge the chief of military intelligence be fired and that Israels commander in Beirut be stripped of his command.

Israel radio said it was no longer a question of whether Sharon would go, but how soon.

Sharon has been trying to build up a public movement to keep him in office and hopes it will be strong enough to sway the government in his favor.

A government-appointed special inquiry commission on Tuesday found Sharon partly to blame for the Sept. 16-18 massacre of hundreds of Palestinians and recommended he resign.

review ITA complaints about recently signed legislation that raises motor fuel taxes and a variety of other fees truckers pay.

The letter is a key to what our position will be, Parkhurst said in an interview.

If a substantial number of congressmen sign the letter, he said, theres a very good chance that the ITA representatives may vote later in the day to end the shutdown, which began Jan. 31.    ,

The regional representatives began arriving in Washington earlier in the week and have been meeting with members of Congress in an effort to resolve their complaints,

Throughout the shutdown, Parkhurst has said Congress will have to roll back fees for the protest to end.

But today he said that If we get a lot of congressmen to sign the letter, the ITA representatives would vote on whether to continue the protest. If an end to the shutdown is sanctioned in that vote, he said he would urge drivers to end their. protest.

Parkhurst scheduled a news conference later in the day.

One of the congressmen circulating the letter. Rep, Douglas Applegate, D-Ohio, said, I think we could see an end to that strike by tomorrow.

Of the letter, Applegate said: Without making any rash promises, were going to do all we can to see that theres a resolution to their greivences. The problem as they perceicve it started here, (in Congress) and must be resolved here, not on the highways with the violence Applegate said that regional ITA representatives unable to attend todays meeting will make their position on the strike known to Parkhurst by telegram.

With the strikje in its llth day, police around the nation reported few acts of violence, and officials said few shortages of goods could be attributed to the shutdown.

Parkhurst called the strike Jn. 31 to protest future fuel tax and fee increases, contained in a law passed in December calling for a 5-cent-a-gallon'tax increase on gasoline.

ITA vice president Bob Scheffer said Wednesday that the strike had succeeded in its primary goal, focusing the attention of Congress on truckers problems.

Applegate and the three other congressmen trying to end the strike began circulating their letter for a congressional review of the fuel tax and fee increase on Wednesday. But Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., had already said he opposes holding hearings on the truckers problems, adding that he regarded the strike as over.

We do not seek to re-

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Vietnam Denies Again U. S. MiA imprisoned

ByUNDADEUTSCH Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) - A Vietnamese dipiomat says all Americans captured during the Vietnam War were released, and claims to the contrary are part of a U.S.-govemment public opinion campaign against her country.

But Nguyen Ngoc Dung, Vietnams representative to the United Nations, said more Information on servicemen missing in action might be forthcoming if the United States ended support of Chinese expansionism.

She made the remarks-Wednesday addressing a four-day conference on the war via a radio satellite

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hookup from New York.

All the captured Americans were released to the American side by the people of Vietnam, she said, asserting that the prisoners were treated leniently as victims of the U.S. government.

The U.S. government must bear the r^nsibility for its missing citizens, she said. It is they (the Americans) who forced their citizens to leave their country and commit crimes in another country and be killed and become MIAs.

The satellite hookup to the Vietnam Reconsidered conference at the University of Southern California was arranged after the State

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Department refused to allow Mrs. Dung to attend because of regulations requiring U.N. representatives of countries that do not have diplomatic relations with the United States to stay within 25 miles of New York.

One of the most widely attended sessions involved Vietnam veterans who spoke of the agonies of the war and their difficulty returning home. Most condemned the government for failing to give them adequate help in readjusting.

Adm. James Stockdale, a prisoner of war in North Vietnam for eight years, said he and his fellow prisoners were insulated from the political turmoil sweeping the United States over the war.

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ROOSEVELTS PROPOSAL compiling lists of Japanese in Hawaii This is a copy of President Franklin to be placed in concentration camps Roosevelts memorandum dated in case of trouble.(AP Laserphoto) August 10,1936, in which he proposed

FDR Raised U. S. Internmenf Camp Coacepf In 1936

ByMIKpFEINSILBER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (P) - The military told President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936 that it had been thinking along the same lines when FDR proposed compiling lists of Japanese in Hawaii to be placed in a concentration camp in the event of trouble.

The recommendation by Roosevelt suggests that his executive order calling for the roundup of people of Japanese descent following the Dec. 7,1941 attack at Pearl Harbor was not a snap decision by a harried commander.

Roosevelts proposal, dated Aug. 10, 1936, came to light this week; other documents on file at the National Archives show that the military had compiled lists of the first to be interned even before Roosevelt made the suggestion.

And they show that the U.S. military felt the Japanese had been spying on them at least since 1924.

After Pearl Harbor, on Roosevelts order, 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry were put in camps. Almost all lived on the West Coast; internment affected only 2,000 in Hawaii, then a U.S. territory The Roosevelt memo surfaced just as a government panel, the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians, is completing an investigation of the internment episode. Its findings are to be issued Feb. 24.    i

Bill Wise, a commission spokesman, said the report will not be revised in light of the new

finding.    I

In the memo, addressed to Adm. William Leahy, chief of naval operations, Roosevelt

said:    j

One obvious thought occurs to me - that every Japanese citizen or non-citizen on the Island of Oahu who meets these Japanese ships or has any connection wih their officers or men should be secretly but definitely identified and his or her name placed on a special list of those who would be the first to be placed in a concentration camp in the event of trouble,

At the time, the term "concentration camp did not carry the taint it acquired after existence of Nazi Germany's death camps

became known.

The term was coined by the British in South Africas Boer War at the turn of the century.

Navy Intelligence documents in the archives show that the military responded to Roosevelt by saying it was ready: Lists of suspects are maintained by those responsible for military intelligence and such suspects will normally be the first interned in the event of trouble. Other documents showed that the Navy worried about Japanese surveillance in Hawaii as early as 1925 but felt little could be done short of putting the entire island chain undr military control or closing the important Hawaiian commercial ports to the commerce of the world.

"The Joint Board has for years suspected espionage activities on the part of the indicated nation in the Pacific, a policy-advisory panel composed of Army and Navy brass told Roosevelt,

"Desirable as it may seem to terminate definitely and completely these activities, which are inimical to our national defense, the Joint Board has realized that such an objective would be impractical.

As for Japanese espionage, "Six Japanese sailors without authority, ascended the tower of the Royal Hawaiian Hotel and were seen taking camera pictures of the harbor and nearby fortifictions, the Joint Board told the secretary of the Navy in 1936.

It said Japanese naval officers arriving in Hawaii visited suspected centers of espionage activity and ^conduct lectures, motion pictures and exhibitions designed to advance Japanese nationalism among the local residents.

"Special interest is exhibited in the west coast of Hawaii which embraces four excellent , landing places and is populated almost entirely by individuals considered apathetic or hostile to U S interests.

^Another report said the Japanese had been watching the American military since 1924.

"The many years of observations indicate beyond any reasonable doubt that Japanese government vessels, particularly the naval oil takers, adjust their schedules So as to observe most effectively all special activities of the U.S. Army and Navy, ' the report said.





Comic Love Guide Is Not Homemakers Haven Just For Teen-Agers

By PATRICIA McCORMACK UPI Health Editor Your valentine pelts you with posies, candy, promises.

How can you tell if its true love

The question was put to Dr. Kathleen Everly, expert in such matters and former executive director of The Institute for Family Life Research and Education, Syracuse University.

Dr. Everly had a comic answer comic txxik on love put together for adolescents

She said it contains advice that lovers of all ages will find helpful in determining if the current love is mature or immature miserable or fantastic.

Love that exploits -physically or psychologically is never true love, she said.

Her comic book. How Can You Tell If Youre Really in Love helps young lovers to distinguish infatuation, dependency, sex and possessiveness from love.

The book comes from Ed-U Press in Fayetteville, N.Y., and was written by Dr. Everly and Dr. Sol Gordon. Dr. pverly is president of Ed-U Press.

. The signs of love cited in book include:

Immature love:

-You are tired most of the time.

-Love seems more like a burden than a joy.

-Violence is part of the relationship.

-You keep having thoughts like, "Maybe things will get better.

-Your partner frequently makes promises that arent kept.

-You feel miserable.

Mature love:

-You have a lot of energy. -You have a sense of humor.

-You really appreciate each others ideas.

-Neither of you frequently asks, Are you sure you love * me? Do you really care about me?

-When you are together, you spend most of your time enjoyably and creatively.

You can talk about each others likes and dislikes.

-You are a person and not a sex object. ,

You can spend a day alone with your partner (without television) and find it fantastic.

Mature love is when caring about the other person is just a little more important than having the other person care for you, Dr. Everly said.

This kind of relationship makes both partners feel better.

Mature love is playful, passionate, sensitive and proud. Both partners have a lot of energy

Immature love is when it is much more important to have the other person care for you than it is for you to care for the other person.

This kind of relationship often feels like a burden. It is exhausting beause it involves more taking than giving There is a lot of jealousy, bickering, meanness and apologies.

The love comic book is among family life comics Ed-U Press publishes to help preare todays youth for tomorrows family. Dr. Everly said.

To date. she said, we have sold over 4 million comics under titles such as Ten Heavy Facts about Sex, Gut News (on nutrition), Juice Use (on alcohol), and Protect Yourself from Becoming an Unwanted

Parent, (on birth control).

We sell many other publications on sexuality education, she said. The comic books are designed for young people who dont tike toread much.

Were meeting a need that youth have. Were providing models of responsible behavior.

Dr. Everly said the love comic book, re-designed for Valentines Day 1983, is a hit.

We can hardly keep it in stock, she said.

BY EVELYN SPANGLER Pitt Home Agent

Some all-purpose

Sample question from How Can You Tell If Youre Really in Love?:

Q. How can you tell if its infatuation or love?

A In the first couple of weeks of the relationship

(Please turn to Page 3)

Enzymes are found in all living matter and are necessary for life. 'They are chemicals, specifically proteins, that serve as catalysts to speed up chemical reactions but are not changed themselves.

Enzymes have been added to laundry products because of their ability to break down certain soils and stains into simpler forms. Once broken down, they can be more easily removed by the other detergent ingredients and the washing action.

Stains that are caused by substances made up largely of proteins include blood, baby formula, egg, milk, gravy and many other foods. The enzymes ^lit the protein molecules into simpler

A New Variety

STAYUP STOCKINGS - Models Tina Thomas, left, and Angie Layne, wearing filly petticoats display the latest offering from Berkshire Hosiery - self-suspending stocking

tops with built-in garters. The folies stockings come in a complete range of colors,including black. (APLaserphoto)

Very soon our spring shoes will begin to arrive and we hove to make r(xm. So now, most of our fall and winter styles are 50% off. We have fashion, selection, and savings. So don't wait. Come to our Semi-Annual Sale and Clearance and Sa\/el

T^Oiic:oe

Gmilpin

The World of Shoe Values

Carolina East Mall, GreeDville.

Also: Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, Rocky Mount, Wilson, Goldsboro, Roanoke Rapids, and Washington,

substances. In addition to removing such stains, enzyme laundry products help remove body soils including perspiration, collar and cuff soil or urine as well as ground-in dirt and grass. They also aid in restoring whiteness to yellowed or greyed fabrics and may work on stains that have been set.

Laundry products with enzymes are available as presoaks, detergent boosters, or all-purpose detergents.

The presoaks and detergent boosters are used in soaking before washing in order to allow extra time for enzymes to work on particularly stubborn soils and stains. Any type of container - washer, laundry tub, sink, dishpan or plastic - may be used for soaking. The length of the soad period depends on the nature and amount of soil present and also the water temperature.

Generally, the minimum soak f^riod recommended is at least one half-hour. Some heavy stains may require more time that could range from one hour to overnight. The amount of product depends upon the stain, amount and hardness of the water. Package directions should be followed.

Warm water is generally recommended for soaking, but cooler water may preferred for stains such as blood, egg, or milk.

After a soak ^period, the water needs to be drained and followed by a wash using a sufficient amount of laundry detergent. Presoaks and detergent boosters are not designed as replacements for a detergent.

Presoaks and detergent boosters can also be used in the washing cycle along with the detergent to aid in overall" cleaning.

detergents contain enzymes. Th^ products ae used Ike any all-purpose laundry detergent in the wash cycle but a^ another dimension to cleaning and stain removal. Detergents with enzymes may also be used for soaking fabrics before washing.

When a chloring bleach is being used in the wash water with an enzyme detei^t, add the bleach 5 or 6 minutes after the wash cycle has started. Chlorine bleach inactivates enzymes, but a time delay enables enzymes to (k) their job before the bleach is added.

Enzyme laundry products may be used with all waiable fabrics and colors.

It should be pointed out that while enzymes have no effect on fabric dyes, the prolonged exposure to water can be a factor ^ the bleeding or fading of sensitive dyes. Such fabrics should be soaked for a short period of time and alone or with similar colors.

The benefits of an enzyme product, or any product, can only be realized if used correctly. Manufactures offer directions on packages whicli should be read and followed

carefully.

Treating Paint Stains. Different types of paint require different treatments in removing stains from

(Please turn to Page 3)

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Woman Gets

Needle For Gift

By Abigail Van Buren

' 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEAR ABBY: This year I decided to make my own Christmas gifts. Abby, I worked my tail off crocheting toilet-paper covers for some of my special friends.

I made one for a woman 1 used to work with, using the color scheme in her bathroom. I bought a roll of very nice toilet paper and put it inside the hand-crocheted cover, gift-wrapped it, and gave it to her before Christmas.

She never mentioned it, so after Christmas I asked her how she liked my gift, and she said she didnt care for it and I should not have included the toilet paper. Plus, she said her mother could have made the same thing!

Abby, if I get something I dont like, I would not be so rude as to tell the giver I didnt care for it. I was hurt, disgusted and disappointed. Everybody else liked the covers hut her.

Do you think it was wrong of me to have included the toilet paper with the cover? And since she said she didnt care for my gift, should I ask her to return it? Int sure I could find someone else to give it to.

HURT

DEAR HURT: One as ungracious, ill-mannered and insensitive as your co-worker shows herself to be needs sympathy. To have included the toilet paper with your gift was, 1 think, a thoughtful gesture. Dont ask her to return it, but if the subject comes up, offer to take it off her hands.

DEAR ABBY: Sheldon and I have been married for three years, Everv year our parents exchange Christmas gifts, .so Sheldon and 1 carry the gifts from his parents to mine, and vice versa.

My mother-in-law always makes jam as her gift for my parents. And my mother sends homemade Christmas cookies to my in-laws. She packs them in very pretty cookie tins.

This year when my mother-in-law handed me the jam for my parents, she asked me when my mother was going to send her jam jars back. Abby, I didnt know you were supposed to return jam jars, did you? These jars were nothing special just plain, ordinary mason jars.

My nmther never expected to get her cookie tins back. Please let me know.

MRS. GO-BETWEEN

DEAR MRS.: Its my understanding that when one gives jam, the jar is part of the gift (same as the cookie tin). However, since y'bur mother-in-law expects the jam jars to be returned, pass the word on to your mother.

CONFIDENTIAL TO BETTY F. IN PRYOR, OKLA.: Yes, its the glow from within that creates beauty. People are like stained glass windows; they sparkle like crystal in the sun. But when darkness falls, they continue to shine only if theres a light from within.

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Consultant

To Visit

Zeta Psi Chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, East Carolina University, will have a chapter consultant visiting here Friday through Feb. 17.

Chris Carlson of Lincoln, Neb. is one of eight recent college graduates serving the sorority in this position.

She is a trained resource person and a liaison between the local chapter and the international organization. She is a graduate of the University of Nebraska and holds a B.A. degree in economics and political science.

Consultants work with collegiate chapters and colonies emphasizing community and campus involvement, leadership and scholastic achievement.

Engagement Announced

REGINA SUE GRAY...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Dail of Greenville and Mr. and Mrs. Linwood Gray of Florida, who announce her engagement to Michael Glenn Potter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond West Potter Sr. of Route 2, Ayden. The wedding will take place March 5.

Imaginary Journey Conducted At Meet

Greenville Service League members were taken on an imaginary journey to Never-Never-Land by Mrs. Jack Whichard, chairman of this years Charity Ball.

Mrs. Whichard and her committee chairmen described decorations for the ball which will be used to carry out the theme based on the story of Peter Pan. She said final preparations are taking place this week for Fridays ball.

President Mrs. Frank Layne continued the meeting with committee reports. Mrs. Kelly Barnhill announced the following bloodmobile visits: Feb. 9 at Rose High, Feb. 15 at Pitt Community College and Feb. 28 at the Moose Lodge. The two-day East Carolina visit Jan. 25-26 resulted in a total of 494 units with 53 workers volunteering 196>/2 hours.

Mrs. C.W. Harvey Jr. said that Valentine favors will be made for pediatrics patients at Pitt Memorial Hospital. Jo Betts Barrett thanked sustaining members of the league for donating $750 from their cook book sales to the Emergency Charity Fund. The Lending Chest had five calls and four items of equipment returned last month.

Mrs. Horton Rountree an

swered two calls for the Laughinghouse Fund and received four memorial donations. Mrs. Norwood Whitehurst furnished four layettes and announced a $45 profit from the sale of handmade layettes in the gift shop. She also thanked sus-tainging members for their gift of $250 to the layette fund.

Mrs. John King, placement chairman, told of the spring chart of hospital workers and announced that maps had been placed on the carts describing new routes. Mrs. Fred Robbins announced a CPR course begining this month. Mrs. Layne read a letter from Childrens Home Society and showed an outstanding service award plaque presented recently by the Pitt County Mental Health Society.

Mrs. Ed Harris, representing sustaining members, reported that her group will make desserts for the Charity Ball.

MUSEUM GETS GRANT NEW YORK (AP) - The Fraunces Tavern Museum has been awarded a $35,000 grant by the Institute of Museum Services.

Fraunces Tavern Museum is an institution which focuses on early American history and culture.

Love Guide...

(Continued from page 2)

theyre the same. But after iat, theres a big difference. If its infatuation, a short time after a couple gets to know each other better, the love starts going sour or even bitter for at least one person. When its real love, getting to know each other is a real turn-on. The relationship deepens and improves for both.

"The sex education of youth is a major concern because sexuality overlaps with virtually every phase of daily living, Dr. Everly said.

While society sensationalizes the end results of irresponsible sexuality such as unwanted pregnancy and venereal disease, there is a great need to reach youth with information that they can understand and use in making responsible decisions.

"We can no longer operate on the assumption that young people will somehow know the right answers at the right times.

Gordon said some adults consider the comic book format in poor taste.

"But we are not afraid to use it, he said.

"What people dont appreciate is that millions of comic books are sold every year. The kids love them. Our approach is to convey some of the answers to the questions young people have about sexuality in the kind of format they enjoy.

Dr. Everly holds a mastrers degree in guidance and counseling and a doctorate in child and family studies from Syracuse University. Dr. Gordons doctorate in clinical child psychology is from the University of London.

"How Can You Tell If Youre Really in Love? is available from Ed-U Press for $1.50, including postage. The address: Ed-U Press, P.O. Box 583, Fayettesville, N.Y. 13066.

May

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Glenwood Earl May, 100-B Independent Blvd., a daughter, Jennifer Nicole, on Feb. 4, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Henderson Born to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lee Henderson, 1104 W. Third St., a son, Henry Lee II, on Feb. 4,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Jackson Born to Mr. and Mrs. Earl Lewis Jackson, Grimesland, a son, Lewis Collen, on Feb. 4, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C.-Thursday, February 10,19C-3

At Wits End

Bv Erma BomlHH k

Entertained

There is a notation with my pharmacist that I not only prefer to have my prescription filled in a container where the cap screws on, but it is imperative to my mental health.

The child-proof safety c^p combined with my mid-life crisis was just too much for me to handle. (Some say its redundant.)

trie drill and paint brushes that cannot be raised There is no cupboard too high for them to scale with the promise of a banana on the top shelf.

I have seen small children pull bubblegum machines down to their level, lift an 80-pound dog on the dining room table or bend a roof T\' antenna with their bare hands

I cant think of anything that has caused the older generation more consternation during the past decade than these caps. Its one of the reasons why some women refused to have another child. They didnt mind the long exhausting days and the sleepless nights, the money, the stomach muscles that sagged around the knees. It was the thought of having to go through another period of asking their two-year-old to * help them get the top off their Valium.

The biggest complaint came from the elderly who couldnt begin to get the child-proof caps off without running over them with a wheelchair.

Now, manufacturers are at work trying to perfect a one-size-fits-ajl cap.

Good luck.

' In 30 years, I have never seen anything that is childproof. The strength of a two-year-old is awesome. There is no couch that cannot be moved by them, given the incentive of a dust-covered sucker underneath it. There is no garage door too heavy that contains Daddys elec-

1 dont think manufacturers will ever be able to serve youth and old age at the same time. It makes more sense for the elderly to Rent-a-Kid What a union that would make! The senior group would have the wisdom to know what is safe and what isnt and the child would have the strength to open their revolving caps, their hermetically sealed combs and laminated bacon packages.

The possibilities are limitless. You could take a two-year-old with you on airline trips to open the package of unsalted peanuts and just think of the lives they could save by being able to start a new roll of plastic wrap without tearing it.

Its rather ironic, isnt it. that the ones who caused the high blood pressure, headaches, dizziness and blurred vision in the first place are now capable of curing them.

On Friday evening bride-elect Carol Kelsey was honored at a shouer at the home of Mrs Robert Leggett

The honoree was given a corsage of pink carnations

The refreshment table was covered with a Viennse-cut cloth and centered with an arrangement of pink and white carnations and babys breath.

Hostesses were Mary Leggett, Faye Fornes, Edna Mills, Exie Mills" Sandra Dixon, Mary Dixon, Zelma Savage, Shirley Smith and Merldene Bailev,

^ Bride-elect Carol Kelsey was honored at a Saturday morning coffee held at the home of Mrs H Reginald Gray.

She was given a corsage of w'hite carnations

Guests li^re served from a lace covered table which was centered with an arrangement of pink and white carnations.

The couple will be married at St. James United Methodist Church Saturday.

Mrs.Gray and Mrs Robert Leith were assisting hostesses.

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4-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, FetMTiary 10,1883

EditorialRoad Project Welcomed

There was a time when it appeared feasible to dual lane U.S. 13-N.C.ll from Bethel to GreenvUle. Alas, the project became a casualty of the tight money situation which at times has threatened to bring new road construction to a halt.

It appears now, however, that there will be some improvements to the roadway. Gov. Jim Hunt announced during his Friday visit iat a project is in the planning stage to improve the highway. He said it would be made a first class road,

The governor said Transportation Secretary BUI Roberson is developing plans to widen the highway to 28 feet. Currently the road is 20 feet wide. The improvements will mean the highway wUl have two 12-foot travel lanes and two-foot wide paved shoulders.

It is expected that bids for the project wUl be let during the summer.

We welcome the project. Anything that is done to improve this important transportation link between Bethel and Greenville is certainly to the benefit of the area.

We feel, though, that the dual-lane road will eventually be constructed. Planners should design the improvements to the present lanes with the thought in mind that two additional lanes wUl be added. We feel this will be a thoroughfare between U.S. 64 and U.S. 264 and, equally important, it wUl serve as a link in an ultimate dual-laned highway north to Virginia.

James J. Kilpatrick

Admiral Favors Well-Rounded Education

WASHINGTON - Sen. Pete Domenici of New Mexico introduced a bill in the Senate a week or so ago, and by sheer coincidence, out of the clear blue sky, Adm. Hyman Rickover happened to telephone me the next day. Maybe the admiral had his vibes working; he may have suspected that I was about to charge off at flank speed in support of the Domenici bill. Anyhow, his advice was to signal my engines; Slow. >

Senator Domenici is concerned, as all of us ought to be concerned, at Uie parlous state of math and science education in our country. The Reagan administration also is concerned. The president will propose an extensive program for producing about 7,000 new science and math teachers annually for the next several years.

Admiral Rickovers concerns go in a different direction. He calls himself a technocrat. Much of his life has been spent in science and mathematics specifically, in nuclear physics and marine engineering. The point of his telephone call was to warn against crash programs in science and math at the ex

pense of the liberal arts.

"Give me a high school graduate with a well-rounded education," he said, "and the rest will come later.

Very well. The point is well taken. The scientist who knows his megatons but knows not Mozart is less than a wlxrie person. Intellectual breadth is more to be desired than narrow specialization.

Even so, when that has been said, there is much also to be said for the senator and the president. Domenici defined the problem on the Senate floor. Every standardized test for measuring science and math capabilities has shown a steadily declining level of achievement over the past 10 years. Our high school graduates, by and large, simply are not learning their elementary lessons; At community colleges, three out of four math courses are remedial in nature.

Most colleges and universities have reacted to this sorry situation by lowering their admission requirements for both math and science. The difficulty begins in the elementary grades. Domenici cited an international study with sobering fin

dings: American 13-year-olds scored more poorly on a standardized test than their counterparts from England, Japan, Belgium, Australia, France, Scotland and tbeNetherlifnds.

The root of the problem, as Domenici and the White House perceive it, lies in the scarcity of qualified math and science teachers who will stay the course in the classrooms. This past September, he says, half of all newly employed teachers were not qualified; they were put to teaching math and science only because qualified instructors could not be found -or at least th^ could not be found at an average minimum starting salary of $11,758.

The Domenici bill would provide nearly 2,700 two-year schdarships, each valued at up to $2,500, for college students who would agree to teach in fields of math and science for at least three years after graduation. A separate pro^am would provide Distinguished Teacher Awards annually for about a thousand teachers in elementary and secondary schools. A teacher who had been on the job for up to

five years could be nominated for a $5,000 award; a teacher with at least 10 years experience could receive $10,000.

. The administrations sli^tly more expansive program of scholarships and awards would be supplemented by an effort to recruit prospective teachers from among unemployed college graduates, retired teachers and teachers in other disciplines. They would return to college at public expense for 12 months to 15 months of new training in science and math. The price tags would range from $24.5 million for Domenicis bill to well over $50 million for* the White House plan. The money would be well spent,

No senator worries more about the ef^ fects of large deficits than I do, said Domenici - and because he is chairman of the Senate Budget Committee it may well be so. But the problem is critical. Either our school system gears up to turn out better-trained scientists, or 20 years down the road the Japanese will beat our "brains out. In many areas, sad to say, theyre doing tha^now.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

Editorial

Court Entitled To Relief

For decades there have been rumblings from the U.S. Supreme Court that its workload was becoming unmanageable. They could point to the record as one of an ever-growing number of cases.

In recent years Chief Justice Burger has made other appeals for remedial measures; but his most recent carried with it a suggestion: a special appeals court to resolve cases that have produced conflicting decisions by the 13 U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals.

That (the suggestion) makes a difference. The Congress has something to work with.

After years of inattention the Supreme Court should finally be getting some relief.

Its entitled.

TomRaum

Senate Going To TV?

WASHINGTON (.AP) - The Senate is moving toward an agreement for televising floor action, but the final plan is bound to fall far short of the gavel-to-gavel coverage sought by Majority Leader Howard Baker.

Baker, R-Tenn., plans to renew his two-year-long bid for Senate TV next week when the Senate returns from its Lincolns birthday recess.

The House has permitted TV coverage for .the past three years, but in the Senate, efforts to follow suit have been blocked by filibusters.

A recent assertion by Sen. Russell Long, D-La., the chief opponent, that he was agreeable to some kind of experimental plan for cameras in the Senate touched off a new round of negotiations,

"Ive talked to Sen. Long about it and were trying to see if we can work something out, Baker said the other day

However, details remain to be firmed up.

And aides to Long said he is still prepared to mount a lengthy argument against the overall concept of TV in the Senate if Baker attempts to move too quickly.

Still, there is general support for a pilot program to allow TV coverage of at least one upcoming Senate debate, yet to be chosen.

One compromise being considered would permit the cameras to be shut off by either the Republican or Democratic leader, or by a majority vote of the

Senate,**'

Another would only permit television coverage of debates on which a time agreement had been reached - thus keeping off the air filibusters and those long periods of time when nothing much is happening.

The Daily Reflector

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One major player in the debate. Sen. Wendell Ford, D-Ky., said he still plans to oppose anything more ambitious than his proposal for radio-only coverage of the Senate.

Baker is bringing up the bill early in the session so that, if there is another filibuster, he will have more time than he did last session to try to wear down opponents.

Baker and other supporters claim television and radio covrage of the Senate is little more than an extension of the public galleries, long overdue.

Critics of bringing the Senate into the TV era claim that the presence of cameras would impede legislative activity, giving senators a chance to play for the cameras, and providing a free platform for senators - like Baker -with presidential aspirations.

The outgoing secretary of health and human services, Richard S. Schweiker, made a final appearance before the Senate Finance Committee two days before he was to start his new job as director of the American Council of Life Insurance.

Committee Chairman Bob Dole, R-Kan., congratulated him on his promotion in the private sector and whatever goes with that.

One thing that goes with that is an undisclosed six-figure salary - far above , the $81,000 salary of Cabinet members.

"Even though you are leaving government service, we hope you will continue to vacation on the Jersey shore, said Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N. J

But Sen. George Mitchell, D-Maine, got in the last word. Now youll be able to afford to come to Maine, Mitchell said.

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

Administration Seems Content To Stand PatElisha Douglass-

WASHINGTON - With potential Democratic rivals ready to turn the gender gap into a 1984 windfall, now would seem the perfect moment for Ronald Reagan to back proposals extending justice to women.

Instead, administration officials seem content to sit on their hands.

Recently President Reagan piped a pretty tune before Congress, pledging to remove unjust discrimination in the U.S. (legal) Code and fight for equitable wages and pension benefits. With Uie presidents call for more strict attention to delinquent child-support payments, one could almost sense the emergence of a Reagan feminist agenda.

Despite the ripeness of the moment, however, the presidents strategy on womens issues portends a leisurely pace, Lilliputian scope, and little benefit to women. White House schemers have simply left their man with an unimaginative bag of tricks.

Consider first the vow to remove vestiges of discrimination from the U.S. Code. (Reagans favorite alternative to the Equal Ri^^ts Amendment replaces such words as he and "she in law with gender-neutral substitutes.) Most courts already ignore gender distinctions. Even Sen. Robert Dole (R-Kan.), who introduced the Reagan-backed package of word changes last October, admitted that it was a "modest proposal.

I want it to be understood that elimination of facial gender bias is just one small

step ... and cannot be equated with the true achievement of full equality under the law,Dole said then.

Meanwhile, Reagans newfound determination to eliminate wage discrimination is inconsistent with straitjacketing of

the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and other federal offices empowered to enforce the rights of working women. Reagan has not matched his rhetoric with specific proposals as yet.

In pensions. Reagan has eyed another

suitable quarry. Many insurance companies charge both sexes similar premiums buL pay women smaller benefits. The practice has tended to assure retired women an unjustly lower standard of living.

Paul T. O'ConnorJobless Youth Pose Problem

RALEIGH - Youth unemployment in North Carolina, already running far higher than the jdsless rate for the general population, isnt likely to improve much during the decade of the 1980s.

Thats the opinion of a Davidson College economist writing for the N.C. 2000 Commission. Clark G. Ross, whose views were published in Popular Government magazine, says that although the youth population of North Carolina will probably decrease in the next five years, the estimated number of unemployed youths will probably increase.

High* youth unemployment poses serious problems for society. Young people miss the opportunity to learn job skills. Others get so frustrated that they permanently drop out of the workforce. Idle youngsters, unable to earn a living, are more prone towards crime.

Ross proposes a three-point program aimed at helping 16-to-19-year-olds find their first jobs. He concedes that theres some make work involved, but argues that for these people any work is good training. Kids need jobs now to learn how to work when theyre adults.

High unemployment counties like Cherokee, Dare, Montgomery, Swain and Graham need experimental job corps programs. In such areas, theres little hope kids can get work.

The program would be aimed at hard-to-employ youths like high school dropouts and would include remedial work in reading, writing and arithmetic.

Participants in these programs would work at specific tasks like park or highway maintenance. He projects a per person cost of $10,000 a year to run the pro^am - a total state expenditure of $10 million a year to employ LOOO young people in areas hardest hit by unemployment.

Second, Ross suggests a youth-hiring tax credit for businesses. If a company hires a new employee who is between the ages of 16 and 19, the company would get a tax credit of maybe 20 or 30 percent of the youngsters salary.

"^Thlrd, the state should copy a program successfully employed by the,state of Delaware. Particularly in urban areas, better youth job-counseling is needed. The Delaware program identifies those high school students who are most likely to be unemployed after they graduate. Counsellors then work with these youngsters, preparing them for the job market or directing them to remedial education programs.

His three-point plan would cost $14 million and help 4,000 youngsters. Successful elements of the plan could be expanded, unsuccessful elements dropped. But, Ross says, weve got to work on this problem.

Strength For

Today Trader Says Domestic Problems Need Equal Time

John Cunniff

Among South American Indians, the yucca plant has long been used in making bread. Yet this yucca is so poisonous that only a few drops of its juice will in a few minutes kill a condemned prisoner. But the mealy substance of yucca provides flour for the people.

Poison and food! Used one way, yucca is bread; used another way, it is a devastating poison. So it is with life and the things of life. They may be bread or poison according to the way we use them and the motives by which wer are swayed. Here is a similarity to crisis, as we saw yesterday. It may be both danger and opportunity.

Every situation in life has possibilities of unhappiness and ruin; and every situation, no matter how desperate it appears, has in it the possibilities of glory and great joy. If we allow Him to do so, God makes all things work together for good.

NEW YORK (AP) - Its about time that U.S. trade negotiators took off the kid gloves and stood up for American rights, said Paul OLeary, president of Connell Bros. Co., Americas largest trading concern.

OLeary was upset. Just days bef(M, the Japanese had liberalized their trade policy, making access to their markets easier for a small range of goods.

But in trading with the United States, said OLeary, whose company does most of its $600 million annual business in the Far East, reciprocity is a dirty word, so considered by U.S. negotiators and foreign counterparts.

Instead of reciprocity, or equality of tariffs, he said, the United States always takes the worst of the deal, and has since the immediate post-World War II days when the United States was by far the strongest nation.

The Defense and State departments

are still running foreign trade, he said. Nearly four decades after the war, he mused, the United States still deals with trading partners as if they were weak and ne^ing special treatment.

And if it isnt that, he suggested, it is fear in the Pentagon that efforts for trade equality would cost the United States a military ally or complicate the overriding military considerations, such as the presence of U.S. bases.

Its about time that Commerce and Treasury deserve equal tinie with the Defense and State departments, he said, referring to a newspaper copy of President Reagans State of the Union Message.

Said the president: One out of every five jobs in our country depends on trade.

Said OLeary: That means that if the United States raised exports 10 percent it would have a 2 percent impact on

unemployment, creating more than 200,000 domestic jobs. He rephrased his plea:

Domestic problems in the United States, such as unemployment and trade deficits, demand equal time with Defense and State Department considerations.

The State and Defense departments would have trouble overcoming some of OLearys contentions. In 10 years throu^ 1983. for example, Japans exports to the United States will have exceeded imports by about $100 billion, o OLeary doesnt believe the answer lies , in the Inferiority or overpricing of American goods. He does feel that too few American managers are export-oriented. but the primary reason for the gap, he feels, is tariffs.

While he cites Japan, South Korea and the Philippines as among those with the toughest import restrictions, he suggests the problem is more widespread and that

Americans and trade partners should be morerealitistic.

OLearys company, one of the countrys largest privately held concerns, is a rarity. While there are 1,100 American trading companies, few of them are of any great size. Bigness in trading companies is mainly a Japanese phenomenon.

The Connell company, OLeary explains, offers an array of services to American concerns, including manufacturing, engineering, and marketing aids. It knows foreign markets, and can help U.S. companies get a foothold in them. '

But it also acts as a principal rather than another companys agent, buying products outright and reselling them abroad through 32 offices in 22 countries. Hie company, based in San Francisco, was founded in 1898.    





Call For Price Rollback, Freeze On Natural Gas

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - A consumer group, countering a Reagan administration plan for price decontrol, is urging Congress to roll back natural gas prices to their pre-winter levels and freeze them for two years.

The Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition said Wednesday that unless Congress acts, the average homeowner will see his hills increase by 55 percent over the next four years.

Those predicted increases come on top of hikes of 121 percent in residential bills that have occurred since 1978 when Congress began the current decontrol timetable.

In a study titled Gas Prices Out of Control: The Price of Inaction, the coalition charged that the 1978 law has b^n a failure, subjecting consumers to stiff price hikes despite record oversupplies of gas.

Phased decontrol is not working. All across the country, consumers are facing staggering price increases, said Robert

Brandon, executiye director of the energy coalition. Gas prices will continue to soar unless Congress stops the decontrol process.

The coalition plan would freeze gas prices for two years at levels in effect before this winter began. Once prices were allowed to rise again, the coalition plan would scrap the current scheduled increases and put into effect hikes that would be kept below the level of inflation.

The coalition predicted that these changes would trim projected residential price increase#er the next four years from 55 percent to 27 percent.

This would translate into a savings over four years of $640 for the average homeowner, who in 1982 paid $767 for natural gas. However, the coalition said the saving would be even greater in certain parts of the country. It predicted four-year savings of $1,306 in Hartford, Conn.; $1,151 in New York City, and $1,114 in Flint, Mich. w

We have already seen the

damage, caused by partial decontrol, Brandon said. This study shows that the only solution is to stop de-cpntrol.

The Reagan administration, however, wants to move in the opposite direction. President Reagan met with his Cabinet Tuesday and discussed a plan to remove price controls from all natural gas.

Currently, only about 60 percent of supplies are scheduled to be decontrolled by 1985 with the rest of supplies remaining under price controls forever. The administration would remove controls from all supplies of gas.

Energy Secretary Donald Hodel began a round of discussions Wednesday with members of Congress to work out details of a possible decontrol proposal. He said he hoped to reach a consensus on exact details within the next 10 days and present it to the president for his approval.

Earlier administration efforts to seek total decontrol have been sidetracked because of strong con

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'Incompetent' Due Delusions

ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) -Delusions of a worldwide conspiracy make Edward Thomas Mann incompetent to stand trial on murder and other charges from a siege at the IBM Building in suburban Washington, a judge

has ruled.

Montgomery County Judge William Millers decision Wednesday ran counter to the opinion of psychiatrists, who argued that the defendant could understand the proceedings against him.

Mann, 38, drove his car through the glass doors of the Bethesda, Md., building and, during a 7'2-hour siege, fired 150 rounds from several weapons, killing three people, officials say. He pleaded guilty to 75 counts, but his lawyers say the plea was part of his delusions.

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gressional opposition.

However, Hodel said the administrate bill this time will have sections to protect consiuners from sharp price increases.

One way of doing this, he said, would be to instruct the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in the law not to allow higher costs to be passed through if pipelines could not show they were bargaining with producers to get the best gas price available..

The Natural Gas Supply Association, which represents producers, hailed the administrations decision to push for decontrol. It said removing all price controls would result in lower prices for consumers just as the decontrol of domestic crude oUdid.

Nicholas J. Bush, president of the association, said he had not analyzed the energy coalition study but he called it the latest doomsday scenario. He said previous predictions by the group have been flawed by using inflated estimates of the price of oil, the fuel natural gas competes with in the marketplace.

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6-The Daily Renector, Greenville. N.C.-Thursday, February 10,1983

/Global Search And Rescue Capability In Space

By HOWARD BENEDICT APAePspace Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -Two young Spanish sailors on a trans-Atlantic crossing drifted helplessly in their disabled catamaran in high seas and blustery January winds. Their last hope was an emergency radio transmitter, switcted on when they ran into trouble 500 miles west of the Canary Islands Orbiting overhead was Cospas 1, the Soviet search and rescue satellite which locates distressed planes and

ships.

Cospas detected the signal and transmitted the boats location to a ground station in Toulouse, France. Authorities in the Canaries were notified; and a rescue plane was dispatched. It found the catamaran, dropped emergency equipment and directed a British cargo ship to ^ pick up the sailors.

The satellite has now been responsible for the rescue of 16 persons in just seven months, said Jim Elliott, a spokesman for the

Planning A Vote..

(Continued from pagel) design such programs to suit any one group, said the letter circulated in the Capitol. "We can however take a closer look at whether the public interest is being served by these particular increases, some of which exceed 700 percent

The "expression of concern letter was signed by Applegate, Peter H Kostmayer, D-Pa., and Ed Jenkins. D^a., who all met with Parkhurst on Tuesday. The fourth signer was Rep Carroll Campbell, R-S.C..

The letter asked that Congress hold hearings as soon as possible to consider "reforms" to help the truckers.

Reverse Order On Requirement

WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal judge has ruled that lists of ingredients of alcoholic beverages must be available to consumers, reversing a Reagan administration order that dropped the requirement.

U.S. District Judge John H Pratt said Wednesday the administration violated the law and ignored the will of Congress when it rescinded the ingredient rule in November 1981.

He gave the government a year to restore the regulation, which allowed the liquor industry to either list the ingredients on container labels or state on the container where purchasers can get the information.

) The Treasury Department ( had abolished the rule, saying the it "would result in increased costs to consumers and burdens on industry.

Rule Out Better Ties To Cuba

WASHINGTON (AP) -The State Department has ruled out improved relations with Cuba until that country adopts a more responsible international role," a spokesman said.

Deputy spokesman Alan Romberg also accused Cuba of "flagrant intervention in the internal affairs of other nations. His comments Wednesday were prompted by reports that Spains Premier Felipe Gonzalez had urged a normalization of U.S.-Cuban relations.

"The prerequisite for peace in the Caribbean Basin is not restoration of full diplomatic relations with Cuba, but Cuban restraint from fomenting and exacerbating tensions in the region, Romberg said.

Allow No Slots In Gun Shops

CARSON CITY. Nev. (AP) ~ The state Gaming Control Board doesnt think weapons and one-armed bandits belong together, and has voted against allowing slot macl\ines in gun shops.

The board voted 2-1 Wednesday against allowing slot machines in the Guntrader, a Reno gun shop. Board members Patty Becker and Richard Hyte both objected to slots in such locations.

Ms. Becker said she didnt think slots should be in every store we go into in Nevada. Unless a line is drawn, theyll end up in clothing and shoe stores and even ice cream parlors, she said.

Chairman Jim Avance disagreed.

"Its a matter of business that these people may elect or may not elect to have slot machines. he said.

There were only widely scattered incidents of violence against trucks Wednesday The Ohio Highway Patrol reported four tire slashings, one truck burned and one object thrown at a truck. Near East St. Louis, 111., one truck was struck with shotgun pellets, authorities said.

The violence was down sharply from last week when most incidents occurred. More than 1,700 trucks have been damaged. Including 560 hit by gunfire, resulting in one death. 66 injuries and 95 arrests.

There were no reports of serious produce shortages at markets Wednesday although prices of some items were up.

Laurence Stern of Sunkist Growers Inc., a California-based citrus company, reported that freight rates were halfway back to normal after skyrocketing at the peak of the strike.

Dole, Republican chairman of the Senate Finance Committee and husband of newly appointed Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole, met Wednesday with Mark Perry, a leader of the Owner Operators Independent Drivers Association of America. That group claims to have 5,000 members and is a rival organization to Parkhursts ITA, which claims 30,000 members.

After the meeting. Dole said he will not schedule hearings on the truckers grievances.

Tom Blank, a spokesman for the Transportation Department, said Mrs. Dole has no plans to meet with any of the trucking groups, although other department officials will continue to be available to meet with any responsible representatives to hear their complaints.

Charles Swinburn, the assistant secretary of transportation who has been handling the trucking strike said. "We are not dealing under the gun.

National Aeronautics and Space Administrations Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

Cospas, launched last July, is the first satellite in a joint Soviet. U.S., Canadian and French program for a worldwide search and rescue capability based in space. The Goddard center administers the U.S. portion of the effort.

Bemie Trudell, mission manager at Goddard, said the United States and Canada began the project in 1976 to save lives and cut the cost of search operations. The idea: equip satellites with repeaters that can receive and transmit signals from emergency locator transmitters (ELT) that are required by law to be on ail private American and Canadian ships'and planes.

France joined the program in 1977 and the Soviets in 1978. Many ships and aircraft in Europe and a few in the Soviet Union also carry ELTs, whose transmitters are activated automatically by crash impact or by manual switch. The Soviets are expected to use more ELTs now that Cospas is operating so well.

Under the agreement, the Soviets will orbit two satellites and the United States three, with three more anticipated to form a full global network by 1990. The first U.S. search and rescue satellite, called Sarset, is to be launched in March.

France and Canada are contributing ground stations and electronic equipment for the American payload.

We were just in the test phase with the Soviet satel

lite last S^tember when we got the first payoff it picked iq) the signal from a plane downed in the Canadian wilderness, Trudell reported.

Displaying a chart of squiggly lines - a readout from Cospas - Trudell pointed to a curved si^ line and said; There is a piece of data that changed the fate of three lives.

TTie trace of the curve pinpmnted the location of the ELT beacon from the crashed plane. The satellite signal had been received at a tracking station in Ottawa, and a search aircraft ^ to the scene, parachuting experts into an area of 50-foot trees to rescue the three injured fliers.

Officials said the reason the satellite picked up the signal which was missed by an earlier search plane is that it was high enough to avoid interference from the 7,000-foot-high mountains.

Later in Septembe^<>)s-pas (tetected a faint signal from another downed plane in Quebec, and a rescue team hurried to the site. One pilot had survived the cr^; the other had died,,

The first sea rescue credited to the satellite occurred last October when a catamaran carrying three Americans capsized in the stormy Atlantic 300 miles-east of Cape Cod, Mass. Their ELT signal was heard by a commercial aircraft crossing the Atlantic.

The Federal Aviation Administration passed the pilots report to the Coast Guard in New York, vliidi called the Air Force Rescue Coordination Center at Scott

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Air Force Base in Illinois to obtain more precise information from Cospas.

Scott received the distress signal from the satellite and directed a Coast Guard search aircraft and the cutter Vigorous to pickiq) iq) the three sailors.

Last November, a 36-foot sailboat carrying five Florida residents ran aground and sank in the dark in the Bahamas. They paddled a dinghy to a nearby ship which had run agnnind and been abandoned months earlier.

They carried their ELT with them, and its signal was picked iq> by Cospas. A Coast Guard helicopter was there within hours.

They were off the beaten path and probably never would have been found if it

had not bei for Cospas, said Goddards Elliott.

The initial goal (tf the program was to pinpoint a distressed crafts location within 10 to 12 miles, evmi-tu^ reducing that to three miles.

With Coqias we are well within the 10- to 12-mile

range, and frequently the satellite locates a test transmission within a mile," TTuddlsaid.

Accuracy was demonstrated in January when Co^as picked up a signal as it passed over Milford, N.H., and the Civil Air Patrol began looking for a downed

aircraft.

Signal detectors led them to a home, where they found the beeping beacon of an ELT in a closet. The ELT, which had been rwnoved from a plane for a battery change, was just two miles from where Cospas said it was.

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-The Dav Renector. GreenvUle. N.C.-Thtinday. Frtnjary 10.1983Public Broadcast Dispute Over Side-Channel Role

By NORMAN BLACK Associated Press Writer. WASHINGTON (AP) -The good guys are fighting among themselves. Commercial ventures being developed by National Public Radio have pitted NPR against the Corporation for Ptlblic Broadcasting, with radio services for the blind caught in the middle NPR wants the Federal Communications Commission to approve deregulation which would allow stations to hire out side-channel signals now being used to broadcast reading serv ices for the blind The services feature announcers who read newspapers and other current periodicals for listeners who cant do so themselves, Theyre afraid theyre going to be bumped off the air because their sjde-channel frequencies, known as SCAs, have become attractive to firms that want to distribute computer data.

No NPR station is going to kick a reading service off the air, says NPR President Frank Mankiewicz. "So it makes no sense to unfairly hobble everyone with continued regulation. He adds, "Our position is that government regulation is not needed.

-Mankiewicz and other

NPR executives say they can compensate for federal budget cuts and ensure their future if they can take advantage of the new commercial interest. But not all public broadcasting officials agree, and the issue has created a sharp division between NPR and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

"We think the institution (of public radio) must be first and foremost for noncommercial public service, says Edward J Pfister, president of the corporation. "They seem to be saying it should be used first and foremost commercially.

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting is a private, non-profit group chartered by Congress to distribute federal funds to public radio and TV stations. National Public Radio is a non-profit membership organization that produces programming for 279 member stations.

John C. De Witt, a national consultant to the American Foundation for the Blind, says 73 reading services are now operating in the U.S. on 113 FM subcarriers. Eighty-five of those signals are piggy backed on the main channel of an NPR-member station, he says.

These side channels, known as Subsidiary Com

munications Authorizations or SCAs, exist because a standard FM audio signal doesnt fill a stations entire operating frequency. 'Thus, a side channel is available to broadcast entirely separate programming." Most consumers have no idea the side channel exists because spwial receivers are required to pick up such signals.

The FCC has proposed deregulation under which

New Span To Replace 7'

public radio stations now banned from leasing their side channels (SCAs) for commercial services -would be free to do so.

Commercial stations already rent their SCAs -often transmitting a commercial music service like

Muzak to offices or stores. Prohibited from commercial resale of the SCA, the public stations use their side channels most freqwntly for a reading service, if at all.

NPR, while pushing for deregulation, has lined up deals with firms that want to

Summons For Overdue Books

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) Local residents who forget to stop by the public library and return overdue books may end up taking a trip to jail instead.

,A municipal court has iued summons ordering 21 people to court Feb. 17 for violating an ordinance passed last year that provided up to 30 days in jail and a $100 fine for people who persistently fail to return books.

Library director Donna Schremser said Tuesday she understands that if the books are returned before then, the charges will be dropped and

ANTIQUARIAN BOOKS NEW YORK (AP) - More than 100 exhibitors are expected to participate in the 23rd New York Antiquarian Book Fair April 7-9 at the 7th Regiment .Armory.

only court costs of $17 will be assessed.

"We dont want to put anyone in jail. she said. "We just want people to bring our books back.

She said she asked for the ordinance because the library was losing 6,000 books a year.

We lend 500,000 books a year to our patrons, and most people, after a few notices, return the books they borrow, Mrs. Schremser said. But some people like the 21 who are being summoned to court -fail to respond to written notices. They need a little encouragement.

All of these people have overdue books that they checked out in October, One of them has 13 books.

Mrs. Schremser said de fendants who have not re turned their books by Feb. 17 and fail to appear in court probably will be arrested.

ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP) What historians say is the fourth Y bridge throu^ this central Ohio city will soon give way to the fifth.

The 81-year-old bridge, a national landmark on the former National Road, will make way for a new Y bridge to (^n in 1984.

Work'on the new span is expected to start shortly after the present bridge is demolished. A Grove City, Ohio, construction firm has submitted a low bid of $3.2 million to build the new bridge. That compares with a $200,000 bond issue floated locally in 1900 to finance the one being torn down.

Through traffic long ago began traveling Interstate 70 through this 183-year-old city. However, motorists seeking a touch of nostalgia still turn off the fast track for a couple of miles just to drive the span where the Licking River empties into the Muskingum River and flows another 65 miles into the Ohio River.

What apparently was the first Y bridge to cross the rivers was constructed in 1814. It met an uncertain fate by 1819, when a second ^an was constructed. That, too, was short-lived and there is some evidence that both suffered under the wheels, hoofs and shoe leather of massive early-day migrants and their wagons and livestock from the East who pushed westward along the recently opened Zanes Trace.

That road, authorized by Congress in the late 18th century, was essentially a one-wagon track link between Wheeling, W.Va., and Aberdeen, Ohio, on the bank of the Ohio River across from Maysville, Ky.

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DISPUTE Frank Mankiewicz, left, and Edward J. Pfister, both playing key roles in Public Broadcasting, are on opposite sides over FCC deregulation proposals. (AP Laserphoto)

'Appalled By Court Sentence

MOUNT HOLLY, N.C. (AP) - Relatives of Crystal Benfield said Tuesday they are appalled by the sentence given to a man convicted in connection with a wreck in which the 3-month-old girl was killed.

Superior Court Judge Forrest A. Ferrell Monday sentenced Roger Allen Hawkins of Belmont to two years in jail, with all but six months suspended and a provision for work release, after the jury found him guilty of death by motor

vehicle, driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, driving with an open bottle of liquor in his vehicle and driving left of the center line.

The maximum sentence for death by motor vehicle is two years. |

The charges stemmed from the Nov. 1, 1982, automobile wreck in which Hawkins vehichle crashed head-on with a car in which the girl was riding with her parents.

use the SCAs of its member stations to transmit data.

Im not saying NPR is malicious or evil of intent, but the realities of our being in the position of no protection and c-ompeting against commercial interests puts us at a disadvantage, says Margaret Rockwell Pfanstiehl, who helped found the Washington Ear reading service here.

I wouldnt take my reading service off the air unless there was another technology to deliver the same service and I was hard pressed for money to run the main channel, says Patricia Deal Cahill, an NPR board member and^general manager of KMUW-FM in Wichita, Kan., which (grates its own reading service. But it should be my . choice and my responsibility. If you dont have enough money to operate the main channel, youve got no SCA to operate.

Mankiewicz sees no reason

TWO ASK ASYLUM STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Two Poles who say they are military officers flew an army helicopter to a Swedish island and asked for political asylum, police reported.

for conflict with the reading services. He notes the FCC is expected to authorize broadcasters to operate two SCA frequencies instead of just one, and that many larger cities have more than one public radio statkH).

Even in cities with only (me public station, Mankiewicz says NPR wou'd not expect that station to kick off a reading service to make room for a commercial venture. NPR directors'in December adq)ted a policy promising any member who carries a reading service in lieu of a commercial service a minimum $500 a month payment, plus a share of any commercial profits.

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting wants the FCC to authorize two SCAs - but reserve one for noncommercial purposes. If there were no existing or known potential non

commercial use," the public station could oWain an FCC waiver to use the reserved SCA commercially.

The corporations proposal may force half of our ventures to commercial stations, says E. Richard Hod^tts, an NPR vice president. Its like saying there should be 12 seats for the handicaw)ed on a bus when the chances are there normally wont be nrore than two riding at any one time. Counters De Witt: NPR is failing to recognize that there are, indeed, limits to its pursuit of commercial ventures.

De Witt says the American Foundation for the Blind, the American Council of the Blind and the Association of Radio Reading Services have urged the FCC to approve a straight reservation for one SCA with no waivers or loopholes.

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The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Thunday, Febntary 10.1W-*Dram Shop Amendments Ready For Subcommittee

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Two compromise amendments watering down the dram shop portion of Gov. Jim Hunts drunken driving package were to go before a state Senate subcommittee

today. .

Deiiberations on the con-troversiai dram shop statute were expected to highlight four separate meetings planned for today as lawmakers struggle to get the Hunt bill to the House and Senate floors next week.'

Sources said Wednesday the compromise proposals emerged from intense nego-

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Poses Prospect Of Negotiation

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WASHINGTON (AP) - A top State Department official has proposed the United States promote negotiations with leftist ^rrillas in El Salvador while continuing to support the Salvaitoran government, a published report said today.

The Washington Post, quoting unnamed administration officials, reported that the proposal was made by Thomas 0. Enders. assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, in a working paper yet to be formally submitted to the National Security Council.

The Post said that United Nations Ambassador Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, who is on a Central American trip, was known to be skeptical of Enders plan.

The plan calls for negotiations through a third country, such as Spain; Mexico or Venezuela, aimed at resolving the conflict in El Salvador, the newspaper said.

The Reagan administration has refused to endorse the idea that the guerrillas be given a share of power in El Salvador through negotiations and has called on them to seek their goals through democratic political means. The Salvadoran government has been trying to suppress the rebels.

The newspaper quoted administration sources as saying Enders is concerned that Congress will insist on talks to end the conflict in El Salvador if the administration does not encourage them.

Enders declined to comment on the report Wednesday night.

Bargain Has

A Big Hitch

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A Methodist church that wants to unload an 18-room, two-family brick house has it priced for quick sale at $1. But theres a hitch - the cost doesnt include the land.

If we were going to tear it down, it would cost us money, so we decided to sell it for a nominal fee, said Charles Lindabury, business manager of Summit United Methodist Church. He said it

would cost $2,000 to raze the building.

However, Melvin Lozier, owner of a house-moving company, says it could cost up to $20,000 to move the structure.

Theres an awful lot of work to moving a brick house, and it takes about three times as much equipment as moving a frame house, Lozier said.

The building sits on a narrow street, in a neighborhood with many trees, utility posts and lines, which would have to be trimmed, moved or raised for the project.

Raising or moving utility lines really runs the price up,Lozier said.

Nevertheless, church officials estimated the houses worth at $60,000. It is structurally sound, has nine rooms on each side of the 30-by 40-foot duplex and a front porch.

ARRESTED LONDON (AP) - Nigerian authorities have arrested more than 100 immigrants in the northern city of Kano who ignored a government order to leave the country, the official News Agency of Nigeria reports.

The Greenville Fire-Rescue Department provides emergency medical services to Greenville citizens. For information on services, call 752-4137.

A State Department official involved in Latin American policy, who spoke on condition that his name not be used, said policy papers were often prepared in the department, that no change in policy toward El Salvador was contemplated and that the United States continued to reject talks aimed at power sharing.

(AP) A special zoning permit has been issued allowing a paraplegic woman to build a house on her parents property in an exclusive subdivision.

The state Supreme Court had denied further appeal to an appellate court ruling that the lots in the Harrison Point subdivison were zoned for only one house each, but the Hamilton County Zoning Board on Wednesday made an exception for Gale Reese.

Mrs. Reeses lawyer, Jerry Summers, said he would ask the County Commission, which must give final approval to the permit, to consider the matter as soon as possible.

tiatkMis between Hunt administration officials, lawmakers and lobbyists on both sides of the issue that has emerged as the bills biggest stumbling block. The lat^t meeting, which Hunt attended, was on Tuesday.

They said Hunt and h t(^ legislative supporters were resigning themselves themselves to the necessity of yielding somewhat on the dram shop statute to avoid stalling the entire package.

The Senate subcommittee will consider three versions of the dram shop statute, including the present one that would make alcoholic beverage dealers subject to civil suits if they sell to the underaged or to people already drunk who later cause traffic accidents. Business lobbyists say thats unfair and shifts blame from the drunken driver to the dealer.

The amendments include: Imposing civil liability on those who sell to people already intoxicated who do

their drinking at the restaurant, tavern or store, and on those who sell to the under-regardless of where drink.

^Hh^jsing no liability for serving customers already drunk and applying liability to those who sell to minors, whether they drink on or off premises.

Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayiw, Senate sponsor of the Hunt bill and chairman of the Senate Judicary III Committee, said he would favor the first amendment if the Legislature finds the original proposal unacceptable.

Its impossible to arrive at a consensus, something accqi>table to everybody, he said. But this should be acceptable to enough people to get it through.

Barnes said lobbyists for restaurants, taverns, grocery and convenience stores and other establishments that have fought the dram shop statute probably would prefer the latter amendment.

Another probable change will be a reduction of the amount of liability insurance alcoholic beverage dealers will have to purchase, he said.

Brent Hackney, deputy press secretary to Hunt, said the governor was sticking by his original proposals but that he was amenable to constructive suggestions But the concept of a strong dram slu^ law, in some form, is non-negotiabie, he added.

The House subcommittee planned another meeting for

today after struggling for two hours Wednesday with the bills provision for immediate. 10-day revocation of the drivers license of anyone registering 0.10 or higher on the Breathalyzer.

Rep. Bob Slaughter, D-Staniy, complained that the provision wouldnt work because drivers could ^t replacement licenses before the department of motor vehicles learns the original has been revoked.

Theres no way to enforce this, Slaughter said. It says a lot and does nothing."

Blue said the issue boils down to whether magistrates should be authorized to revoke licenses, as would be the case under immediate revocation, or whether the revocation should be delayed the few days it would take to arrange a court hearing.

The problem is^t magistrates are not the most legally astute people in the world and dont carry the statutes around in their heads," he said. But we cant have judges sitting around at night waiting to conduct hearings.

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Insurance Company May Lend UPl Sum To Get Financing

LOS ANGELES (AP) -United Press lotanationals managing director says a major insurance company has tentatively agreed to lend the news agency money as UPI works to raise more

than $10 million in new financing, the Los Angeles Times rqxHted today.

Dou^as F. Rube, a partimr in Media News Corp., which owns UPI, would not reveal

NAACP Event Speaker Named

PR(HSOVERNMENT DEMONSTRATION - Demonstrators stvporting the govemmoit of Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin gatba* outside of his Jerusalem office Wednesday Just prior to a cabinet meeting held-in emergency

session to determine the government resp<se to the Beirut massacre inquiry panels call fw the resignation of defense minister Ariel Shan. (AP Laserphoto)

Carolyn Coleman, executive field director fw the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in North Carolina, will be the guest spei^er at a Saturday b^uet being held as part of an Emancipation Proclamation observance planned by the Pitt County NAACP.

Groucho's Son Testifies in Bank Suit; Tells Of An Estrangement

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) - Groucho Marxs son says his relationship with his father deteriorated after Erin Fleming began working for the late cometan.

A wedge was driven between me and niy father, Arthur Marx told a Superior Court jury Wednesday, testifying in a $400,000

Killer Satellite Doubts Raised

WASHINGTON (AP) -Citing the expected hi^ cost, congressional investigators want the Pentagon to reexamine a project to develop tiny space fighters designed to destory Soviet satellites.

A General Accounting Office repml made available Wednesday indicated strong reservations aboi the cur-* rent U.S. approach in developing a weapon system capable of destroying the satellRes.

Now is the time to determine whether the United States is developing the appropriate capability to perform the anti-satellite missk, the GAO said in a report purged (rf sensitive details.

The project is secret, but it is known that the U.S. antisatellite concept involves launching miniature vehicles from F-15 jet fighter planes. The weapons would be guided by infra-red sensors.

Gen. John Vessey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the Soviet Union already has an anti-satellite system that can threatoi U.S. surveillance

satellites at low altitudes.

The GAO said the miniature-vebicle technology selected by the Air Force was originally seen as a relatively cheap, quick way to develop an anti-satellite system.

This is no longer the case, the report said. It will be a more complex and expensive task than originally envisioned.

It said the cost of the current satellite killer program has be e^imated at about $3.6 billion. But it suggested the potmtial cost could reach into tens of billions of dollars.

Because the Defense Department regains committed to the system, the GAO sug^ted this is an issue the Congress may wish toconsicter.

VICTIM No. 337 MADRID, Spain (AP) -The 337th death from poisoned oil nearly two years ago occured this week, the Health Ministry announced Wednesday.

lawsuit against Miss Fleming. He was afraid I was going to do something to him, put him into a home or something.

Before Miss Fleming became Groucho Marxs companion in 1971, the younger Marx said his father had telephoned him every day fw 25 years.

It wasnt a sudden thing, but eventually he stopp^ calling me in the evenings, Marx said. He said Miss Fleming also caused Groucho Marx to become estranged from his other two children, Miriam and Melinda.

Marx, 61, took the stand for the Bank of America, which as executor of Groucho Marxs estate, is seeking the return of m<e than $400,000 it claims Miss Fleming obtained from the eider Marx by fraudult means.

Miss Fleming has countered with a $200 million lawsuit accusing Arthur Marx and the bank of conspiring to circumvent Groucho Marxs will, which left her the rights to some of his entertainment properties and also provided that any heir who challenged the will would get only $1.

Earlier Wednesday, Miss Fleming took the stand and was questioned about whether she had ever signed

Groucho Marxs name to any checks. She deni^ this, saying she was accused of doing it but I didnt.

Moments later. Bank of America attorney J. Brin Schulman presented as evidence a letter to Fleming from the late Marx which gave her after-the-fact approval to sign his name on two checks and two Saks Fifth Avenue charge slips.

Miss Fleming testified that on the advice of Marxs doctors and business associates she had occasionally helped the aging star to sign his name on checks by holding his hand.

'The younger Marx testified after Miss Fleming left the courtroom, saying she felt nauseous. Earlier in the trial she was diagnosed by a psychiatrist as mentally ill after a series of outbursts.

Arthur Marx also testified that several months before his fathers death in 1977 at age 86, Groucho Marx had tried to tell him Miss Fleming had his money.

He said that the money was down the hill and to the left, Marx said. It took me a while to realize what he meant, and that was that Erin lived down the hill and to the left of Groucho Marks home in the Trousdale Estates area of Beverly Hills.

CAROLYN COLEBIAN

The program, with the theme Elect We Must, People We Can Trust, will begin with a banquet at the Holiday Inn at 7 p.m.

On Sunday, the Rev. F.R. Petrerson, pastor of St. Mary Misskmary Baptist Church, will speak at a 7 p.m. mass meeting and freedom rally at Philii^i Missionary Baptist Church in Simpson, branch President D.D. Garrett said. '

Mrs. Coleman, a Savannah, Ga. native, is a

STRUGGLED, LOST SOUTHAMPTON, England (AP) - A baby boy delivered two days after his mother had been declared clinically dead, died 'Tuesday night after a 23-day strug^e for life, a hospital official reported today.

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graduate of Savannah State College and has done gradu-ate work at Memphis Theological Seminary and the University of Colorado at Boulder.

During the summer of 1965, she worked in the NAACP Summer Project in Mississippi which increased the number of black voters in that state by 20,000; participated in the Presidents White House Conference To Fulfill These Ri^ts in 1966; was a participant in the Presidents Council on Youth Opportunity in 1968, and served on the Presidents Council for Employment of the Handi-ca|^ from 1973 to 1975.

Mrs. Ctrieman represented the United States in West Germany and Brussels in a State D^>artment-sponsored trip designed to better relationships between the youth of both countries in 1974.

She was recently appointed to the N.C. State Goals and Policy Board the states chief citizen advisory board and the (Commission on the Future of North Carolina by Gov. Jim Hunt.

Tickets for the Saturday night baiK]uet are $12 per person.

Garrett said the observance this weekend is being held in ctmjunction with the 120th anniversary of the EmaiKipation Proclamation, vriiich gave freedom to Negro slaves on Jan. 1,1863.

the name of the insurance company.

Ruhe also told the new^-per that a number of p^ies are interested in either lending the news agency ifoney or buying into the operation to provide new capital. The company hopes to line iq) between $10 millk and $20 million, Ruhe said.

UPI is also moving to cut costs by dismissing administrative enq)loyees, the news agencys new chairman, John Jay Hooker Jr., said Wednesday.

UPI said it has eliminated 45 non-union jobs secretaries, office managers and executive positions, primarily In New York. It said no employees involved in news-gathering were affected by the cuts, but would not ^^fy the jobs being eliminated.

The New Yoik Times reported Wednesday that as many as 100 positions might be eliminated over the next few days, but Hooker said, That isnt accurate. He declined to rule out further layoffs but said, They are not planned at this time.

UPI spokesman William Adler said Wednesday that UPI also planned to add 30 news positions around the country.

Hooker, a Tennessee businessman, confirmed a New York Times report that he purchased his 30 percent interest in the wire service for $1 and other considerations, including his abUity to obtain other funds for tt company if necessary.

Hooker obtained a commitment in principle from the unidentified insurance company after he joined UPI on Feb. 1, the Los Angeles Times quoted Ruhe as saying.

Ruhe said the new money is needed for competitive reasons and to develiiq) specialty information products that exploit our news-gathering, information-gathering capability. He would not elaborate, the

new^>apersakl.

Hooker predicted Wednesday that UPI, which has lot money for years, would soon break ev.

He said the job cuts are aimed at reducii^ excess expenses and pledged there would be no cuts of news or photo producUon personnd.

Adler said, The net number of people in all the reporting areas and the bureaus is going iq).

UPI, the nations second-largest news agency bdiind The Associated Press, says it has 2,000 employees, including 1,300 in the United States.

Adler said discussion of where there was overhead waste and duplicative functions that could be eliminated had been going on since UPI was sold to Media News Corp. last June.

The New York Times reported that the E.W. Scriiq>s Co., which had owned the news agency, all but gave it away to the Nashville4)ased group.

At that time. Media News was a four-way venture including Ruhe and William Geissler, both Nashville businessmen; Len R. Small, a newspaper execikive in Moline, Dl.; and Cordell J. Overgaard, a Chicago lawyer.

On Feb. 1, UPI announced that Hooker, a former politician and publisher, had purchased a share of UPI, that Small and Overgaard were leaving and that Hooker was replacing Small as chairman.

The New Ywk Times said small and Overgaard bad returned their shares to the company without payment. The Los Angeles Times said most of those shares are to be used in an employee stock ownership program.

The Los Angeles Times said Hookers share was taken from the shares owned by Geissler and Ruhe.

Small and Overgaard have not publicly discussed the terms under xiiich they left the agency.

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The Forecast

Friday. Fet^uary 11

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WEATHER FX)RECAST - The Natkmal Weather Servkx forecasts siwwen fnr Friday I in the Southeast. Snow flurries are expect from the Midwest to Minnesota and snow from

the Valley to the Chesapeake. Rain and snow flurries are doe for the Northwest. (AP LaserpbotoMap)

Low pressure over western Alabama early this morning had already ^read some mixed precipitation over western North Carolina during the early morning hours.

A mixture of snow, sleet, freezing rain and rain moved into the mountains shortly after midnight and advanced into the foothills during the pre-dawn hours. Otherwise, cloudiness in advance of the system, continued to thicken across the state overnight.

A travders advisory has been issued for the northern mountains where a mixture of snow and sleet may accumulate an inch or two before becoming mbced with rain later today. Icy spots will make for locally hazardous driving conditions mainly in the northern half of mountains today.

The cloud cover helped to keep temperatures mostly in

the low and mid 30s during the night. A few places over the extreme northeast dipp^ into the upper 20s earlier in the night. A few readings nearer 40 degrees were reserved for the extreme southeast portion of the state.

Wednesday, temperatures averaged in the 40s although some low and mid 50s were noted over the southeast. Jacksonville reached 54 yesterday, followed by 53 at Wilmington. Cape hatteras levelled off at 42 and there were some 30s in the northern mmmtalns.

Rain will continue to Increase by toni^t as the low pressure moves'to eastern South Carolina by early Friday morning. Some of rain by be locafiy heavy at times.

Cold air to the north may produce some freezing rain

or sleet across the northern interior counties of North Carolina tonight with snow northward through the Virginias.

As the storm system moves up along the northern coast by late Friday, precipitation will taper off from the southwest. Some snow flurries are possible over the northern mountains on Friday.

Temperatures will be in the 40s and low 50s Friday except for mostly 30s in the northern mountains.

SEEK FLAG DESIGN BASSETERRE, St. Kitts (AP) - The government of St. Kitts-Nevis, which gets independence from Britain in September, has invited its citizens to submit designs for a new flag and coat of arms.

By JOHN RICE Associated Press Writer SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Researchers say they already have the medical know-how to transplant arms and le^ from one person to another but siKh operations may be a ctecade away due to' the lack of safe anti-rejectkm drugs.

From a technical point of view, it can be done. It can be done tomorrow; said Dr. Lars Vistnes, surgery professor and chief of the Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Clinic at Stanford University Medical Center.

The trani^lants have been made possible by advances in microsurgery on tiny tentkms, blood vessels and muscles, along with the discovery that large grafts of skin can rely on the blood and muscle structure at their new location, Vistnes said in an interview this week.

For a couple of years now its been fairly routine in this country and throughout the

world to reattach severed fingers, severed arms, said Dr. George Ksander, director of plagie surgery research at Stanford.

But transplants from one person to another have been stymied by the side effects of drugs luied to stifle the bodys immune system, which otherwise would reject ^ the new tissue.

Plugged Leak Of Natural Gas

KINGSLEY, Mich. (AP) -Red Adair, an expert on well fires, and his crew plugged a leak from a natural ga^ well that had forced the evacuation of 100 people.

Adair rushed here from his base outside Houston on Tuesday after the well blew out as workers were trying to insert a pipe to begin production for Traverse Oil Co., officials said.

"Youre really destroying the bodys immune system and you are exposing it to infection and so fwth, Vistnes said.

Such drugs are given to patients receiving internal organs such as hearts, lungs or kidneys that they need to stay alive. But, Vistnes noted, You can live without an arm."

Stanford is one of the leading centers in research on immunosuppressant drugs. One of those, cyclosporine, has been credited with making possi

ble Stanfords recent senes of combined heart-lung transplants because it doesnt completely eliminate the bodys disease-fighting abilities.

But cyclosporine is experimental - as ar other drugs of a similar nature, said Ksander.

"In our laboratories there are animal studies going on in which limbs are being transplanted from one strain of animal to another, Ksander said. "This is quite positive, but its very preliminary work.

Vistnes estimated it might be a decade before surgeons are sure enou^ of the drugs to perform a limb transplant on humans. When that occurs, he said, "virtually any part except the central nervous system will be a candidate for transplants. ;

Artificial limb technology . now is more advanced, Ksander said. But he speculated that once ; transplants become possible,

"a limb tran^lant would be preferred. Its more aesthetic. I think ultimately people would prefer a human arm.

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In The Area

Center Names Outstanding Employee

Dicie Creech has been named the outstanding employee (or 1892 at Walter B Jones Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center.

Mrs. Creech received her license in November 1982 as a practical nurse. She attended Pitt Community College as a full-time student while working at the center as a full-time health care technician to accomplish her goal. She has worked at the center since 1969.

She is married to Howard Lee Creech and has a daughter, Mrs Bruce Gray, and a son, Ricky Creech, and three grandchildren.    ^

Programs Explained To Realtors

Joan Giordano, manager of public and governmental affairs with the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce, and Sgt. Doug Jackson, community relations-crime prevention officer with the police department, were the guest speakers this week at the Greenville-Pitt County Board of Realtors meeting.

Ms. Giordano, who is director of junior achievement and director of the RECAST program in Greenville and Pitt County, cited a need for community participation in helping with junior achievement. She said a site is needed for a trailer that is being donated to the program by a local company.

Jackson discussed the new crime stoppers program and told how it has worked and benefited other areas. The officer said a minimum of $15,000 is needed to get such a program started in the Greenville area Jean Hopper, chairman of the boards Make America Better" committee, said that the committee will look into the possibility of the board supporting the programs discussed by Ms Giordano and Jackson as community projects for 1^.

Hollander Makes Dean's List

Frank Thim Hollander, of 1010 E. 10th St., made the Deans List for the fall semester at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,

Troy, N.Y.

To qualify, Hollander had to be a full-time student and earn at least a 3.0 quality point average and have no grade below a C"; Hollander is a sophomore majoring in chemical engineering.

Public Meeting Is Scheduled

A public meeting will be held Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the East Carolina University Regional Development Institute by the Governors Waste Management Board.

The meeting is designed to explain the current waste management program and hear from the public about the future needs and wants surrounding the issue of hazardous and toxic waste management in our state. For more Information call N.C. CATCH (Citizen Action on Toxic and Chemical Hazards), 663-2258.

Valentine Program At Phillipi

Evanglelist Evelyn Delores Peoples will be the guest speaker at Phillipi Baptist Church in Simpson at 3 p.m. Sunday as the youth and young adults of the church share in a Valentines Day Program. The service is entitled From God With Love

Ms Peoples, a native of Rocky Mount, graduated from Rocky Mount Senior High School in 1973. Further studies include Norfolk State University, where she is majored in business administration, and North Carolina Wesleyan College. .Ms. Peoples is also a minister of music at the Gethsemane Holiness Church in Battleboro.

Quarterly Services Scheduled

Haddock Chapel will observe quarterly services SaturdSy and Sunday. The schedule is as follows.

Saturday, 7:30 p.m. - Holy Communion with the pastor and congregation of Union Grove Church; Sunday, 9:45 a.m. church school; 11 a.m. - worship led by Bishop Stephen Jones, choirs and ushers of Haddock Chapel imd Carey Chapel Free Will Baptist Church; 2 p.m. - dinner, and at 3 , p.m. The Rev. Tyrone Turnage, choir, ushers and congregation od Little Creek FWB Church will be in charge.

School Begins Registration

Y The Grifton School has begun preregistering kindergarten students for the 1983-84 school year. A child must be 5 years old by Oct. 16,1983 to be eligible.

Information blanks and medical examination forms may be obtained by calling the school, 524-5141.

Legion Auxiliary Makes Donations

American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 39 recently contributed $25 to the Ronald McDonald House and $10 to the Childrens Heart Fund. A donation also was made to the Kennedy-Whichard Scholarship Fund by Donna Craft in memory of her husband.

The District 3 meeting will be held March 26 with Farmville Unit 151 as the host. Registration will be at 2 p.m. The Spring Conference will be held Feb 25-27 at the Bordeaux Inn. Fayetteville Sarah J. Ashton of the Greenville unit will

attend.

Post No. ,39 Ladies Night will be March 15 and all auxiliary members and Gold Star parents may attend.

Jones Introduces Academy Bill

Rep. Walter B Jones, D-N.C., chairman of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, has introduced legislation providing (or selective pre-appointment travel to the Coast Guard Academy for cadet applicants.

Jones' bill authorizes the Coast Guard to pay travel expenses for .selected cadet applicants who want to see the academy before accepting appointment or entering the school, the legislation would authorize up to $20,000 per year for the first five fiscal years after enactment.

City Tags Due On Feb. 16

City Tax Collector Floyd Little reminded local vehicle owners that the deadline for purchasing city automobile tags

isP'eb. 15.

Little said the city tags are sold only at the tax office at city hall and not at the N.C License Agency on Dickinson Avenue. He noted that vehicle registration cards are needed in order to purchase city tags, which cost $5 per vehicle.

City tags expire Dec. 31 and vehicle owners have until midnight on Feb. 15 to display new local tags, according to Little.

Trio Named To UNC-W List

Three area students have been named to the deans list at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington for the fall

semester.

On the list are Felicia Brown of Farmville and Judy Little and June Wease, both of Greenvjlle.

Health Systems Agency To Meet

The East Carolina Health Systems Agency will meet Wednesday at 7:15 p.m. at the Ramada Inn. The agencys project review committee will meet at 5:30 p.m.

Persons interested in the meetings may call 758-1372 for additional information.

By JAMES H. RUBIN Associated Press Writer

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -John W Hinckley Jr., who shot President Reagan and three other men, probably would have been found guilty r under a new insanity standard endorsed by the American Bar Associajtipn, a legal expert says. *

The new policy, backed by the Reagan administration and adopted by the ABAs House of Delegates on Wednesday, says a criminal defendant will be judged insane only if he or she was unable to appreciate the wrongfulness of his or her conduct at the time of the alleged offense."

Hinckley was foibuMnno-cent by reason of insanity. The criterion used in his trial and iBed in most states permits such a verdict if q, jury decides that a defendant was unable to control himself even though he kn^ what he was doing was wrong.

Its my opinion that under this (new) test Hinckley would have been convicted, said Briice J. Ennis Jr. of Washington,' i).C., who headed an ABA panel that drafted thp measure.

The ABAs 587 delegates, by voice vote, decided to recommend eliminating the so-called "irresistible im-

pulse' defense. Some members said it was a rec-ogniflUHbat the outcry over Hinckleys acquittal could notbeignored.

The ABA, representing about half the nation's 600,000 lawyers, has no direct contrqjl over state laws. But its gyid^ are often used as mijdels for state lawmakers and the new policy may spur additional states to toughen handling of insanity pleas.

Hinckley was found innocent by a Washington, D.C., jury last June of on attack on March 30, 1981, that left Reagan and three other people wounded. Hinckley has been confined at St. ElizabetBs mental hospital in Washington.'

Since the verdict, at least 21 state legislatures have considered proposals to revise the insanity defense and more than 40 bills have been introduced in Congress.

Idaho abolished its special defense of insanity and eight other states adq)ted verdicts of guilty but mentally ill, which some experts say also effectively eliminates the defense of insanity.

Before ending its winter convention, the ABA also went on record Oj^ing any blanket changing of not guilty by reason of insanity

tg Frelke Served As Page

Bg Fi^ke 0 Greenville served as a page in Gov. Jim is office during the week of Feb. 7-11. Fi^e, the son of llfr. and Mrs. Cliff Frelke' of 208 Williamtwg Drive, is a , sophomore at J.H. Rose High School.    x# t

6i

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PCC Offers Two New Courses

Pitt Community College will offer two new courses this > wee, starting at 7 p.m. tonight with a six-week introductory course entitled Fundamentals of Investing. Areas covered include basic investment strategy, analyzing and buying stocks, planning a financial future, tax-saving investments, and fixed income investments for a guaranteed income.

Registration will begin today at 6:55 pjn. in room 220, Humber Building, PCC campus. A full class seson will follow.

A fundamental of real estate review cou^ will begin Saturday at 9 a.m. in room 105 of the Whichard Building. The course is designed for individuals who have completed the fundamentals of real estate course.

The cost for each course is $8. For further information contact the PCC Division of Continuing Education at 756-3130, extension238.    .v

verdicts to guilty but mentally ill.

Professor William W. Greenhalgh of Georgetown University Law School' in Washington warned that the Hinckley verdict may be causing legislatures to eliminate an important protection for criminal defendants. You cant tell me the rush is not on because of one trial, he said. Of course it is. Assistant Attorney General Lowell Jensen, he^ of the Justice Departments Criminal Division, urged the ABA to adopt the stricter standard. But he said it was not a response solely to the Hinckley case.

However, ABA delegates rejected a move by Jensen to make it even tougher on defendants in insanity cases, by voting to retain the current standard requiring the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is sane.

The Reagan administration favored shifting the burden to the defense to show the accused is insane.

The delegates also went on record again in si^port of gun controls. Despite some heated (^position, the delegates agi^ by voice vote to support gun control as a matter of the highest priority-

Richard L. Gerstein, former prosecutor in Miami and head of an ABA task force on crime, said the policy was not intended to prevent citizens from legitimately owning guns to protect themselves.

The policy supported by the delegates favors gun registration and accurate record-keeping for gun dealers.

The delegates also urged Congress not to weaken a 1968 law, the only federal ^ control statute, by easing record-keeping regulations.

VISITING ISRAEL TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Zaires minister of defense, Lumpunda Wa Botanda, has begun a five-day visit to Israel aimed at working out details of a new defense cooperation agreement.

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Priority To A Lottery

WALLA WALLA, Wash. (AP) A bill collector who says the states new lottery takes too big a bite out of family food budgets has an idea to make the cost more palatable - edible tickets.

People change their priorities when they have a chance to win a fortune. The whole concept of the lottery is a pie in the sky and people who can least afford it are the ones trying to strike it rich, Joe Fletcher said Wednesday.

Fletcher proposed manufacturing lottery tickets from pressed'beef, pressed fruit or protein wafers similar to those used for communion.

You could lick off the numbers, he said.

But some ticket manufacturers found the idea hard to swallow.

Maybe (Fletcher) would like to tell us how to go about making edible tickets, said Steve Greenfield, a representative of Scientific Games Co., of Atva, Ga., ticket makers for the lottery, which began last fall.

Ticket materials cost less than one-tenth of 1 cent per chit, he said, whereas edible tickets could cost up to 10 cents each and eat into state profits.

Weve had people say that blind people cant use the tickets because they cant see the numbers. Theyve asked us to put fruit flavors behind each number so they could smell if theyve won, he added.

REQUEST APPROVED Police Chief Glenn Cannon announced the approval of a request by the American Legion Auxiliary to conduct a sidewalk solicitation, the annual Poppy Sale, May 20-21 to raise funds for military veterans programs.

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Powerful Families, Not Parties, Dominate Scene

1

FATHERS AND SONS - Former Lebanese Prime Minister Saeb Salam sits at a desk as his son Tammam Salam stands by. Powerful families rather than organized parties dominate the political scene in Lebanon. (AP Laserphoto)

ByEARLEENF.TATRO Associated Press Writer

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Powerful families rather than organized parties dominate the political scene in Lebanon, where candidates are often groomed from the cradle.

Sometimes reluctantly, sometimes eagerly, the sons of the political godfathers pick up the reins of power and perpetuate a system of feudal fiefdoms.

They run for office or play kingmaker for others. Ensconced in mountaintop fortresses, ancestral mansions and modern apartments, they wheel and deal with each other over endless cups of bitter coffee and sometimes with guns and bombs.

Built-in power bases rooted in a religious sect are passed from father to son, sometimes with a political party that revolves more around family ties and personal loyalties than ideolo^.

My father was involved in politics, my grandfather was involved in politics, and my sons are going to be involved in politics, said Camille Chamoun, an 82-year-old former president of Lebanon who wears thick, tinted glasses but can still knock down more clay pigeons than

his 48-year-old son, Dany, when they go skeet shooting.

Dany Chamoun, like other s(Mis of the powerful fathers, p(dished his political credentials as a militia commander in the 1975-76 civil war when Christians led by the Chamoun, Gemayel and Fran-jieh families fou^t a coalition of mostly Moslem, Lebanese leftists and Palestinians.

Admitting to little interwt in politics before the war, Dany Chamoun, a British-educated civil engineer, was a natural choice to lead the Tigers militia of his fathers National Liberal Party.

"I want him to go into politics because its the tradition of the family, said Camille Chamoun, seated beside his son in a small parlor in the elder Cha-mouns apartment in Christian east Beirut.

I dont have much (^tion. I really want to be involved in the future of Lebanon, said the son, whose casual but imposing manner and sandy-haired good looks give him the appearance of a man Hollywood would cast to play a bright young senator.

On the Moslem side of the city, Tammam Salam, the 37-year-old son of two-time

Skeleton Indicates

DUI Charge Found Not For A Pusher

Apparent Murder

MONROE, N.C. (AP) -The charge was driving under the influence, not pushing under the influence - and Larry Crowder was found innocent.

I didnt drive it, because it wouldnt say nothing, said Crowder, acquitted Tuesday in Superior Court.

Crowder said he was pushing his 1973 Toyota down a Monroe street when policemen put the siren and the blue lights on him. The officers helped him push his car to his house.

1 hadnt had too very much, he said. Maybe about a six-pack and a couple of drinks of liquor.

Automation Will Hit Bluecollars

The police said Crowder blew a .27 on the breathalyzer test. North Carolina considers .10 legal intoxication.

His attorney, Larry Harrington, said Crowder would have to have operated the car to be found guilty.

A motor vehicle is self-propelled or pulled by. a self-propelled vehicle, Harrington said. You dont have to push it or hook a horse up to it.

Harrington said Crowder couldnt have been going more than 1 mph, so he couldnt have been speeding. He said Crowder didnt weave in the highway while pushing the car, nor did he push recklessly.

Policemen said they ar-, rested Crowder because the car was coasting, with Crowder steering, when they first saw him.

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) The skeleton of an apparent murder victim believed to have been a woman 16 to 19 years old was found Wednesday afternoon in an isolated wooded area of in Greensboro, Guilford County Sheriffs Department investigators reported.

Sheriff Jim Proffitt said the victim, obviously dead for several months, apparently was killed by being struck on the head.

'The remains were discovered at about 1:30 p.m. by two men who were walking over the 12.6-acre tract preparing an estimate on excavation work.

Detective Capt. Bill Hobbs said the remains were about 50 feet from a narrow, rutted driveway that extends more than one-fourth mile from Burnt Poplar Road to two abandoned shacks.

Proffitt said there were indications that members of motorcycle gangs had congregated at the old houses.

State Medical Examiner Dr. Page Hudson of (^pel Hill, who had been in

Greensboro for a court case earlier Wednesday, was stopped on 1-85 by a deputy sheriff and asked to assist in collecting the remains at the scene. Hudson transported them to his lab for examination, Proffitt said.

Proffitt said the victims skull had been caved in by a substantial blow.

Indict Man On

Extortion Count

PERQUIMANS, N.C. (AP) -MidudAIlai Walter,, of Durants, was indicted Monday on three counts of extortion, authorities said.

He is accused of threatening to blow up his estranged wife, her attorney and a district court judge if he didnt get his way in a child support hearing.

The SBI is-investigating the case and additional charges are expected, Perquimans County Sheriff Julian Brou^ton said.

NEW YORK (UPI) -Automation will hit blue-collar workers harder than professionals, say psychplogists Shoshana Zuboff nd Daniel Goleman.

A survey article by Goleman in the February issue of Psychology Today quotes Zuboff as saying, The center of gravity in the work place has shifted from jobs that require bodily involvement to those that require cerebral involvement.

Goleman says automation confronts blue-collar workers with an entirely new set of demands, while its business usual for professionals.

Rob King, a University of California computer scientist, compares reactions to computers to a mass Rorschach test. Resistance often is the first reaction to such new technologies, he adds.

Would

Broaden Use

NEW YORK (AP) - The head of the Rabbinical Council of America says the synagogue must be broadened from being only a house of worship to being a true house of learning, social service and action.

We will have to convert our synagogues into schools for adults with the same energy and imagination that we once built our religious schools for our children, says Rabbi Gilbert Klaplerman, president of the council.

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Prime Ministor Saeb Salam, said he had been poking my nose into prriitics- since childhood.

I must have been naturally inclined to this kind of world, and I started getting more and more interested in it, said Tanunam Salam, who la^ year succeeded his father, uncle and grandfather as president of the Makassed Islamic Philan-thn^ic Association in Beirut, a traditional power base of the citys Sunni Moslems.

He works out of a chrome and velour-furnished office, overseeing Makasseds 53 schools and other social projects. A few blocks away in the family mansion, Saeb

Police Cor

Hit Youth

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - A teen-ager was struck and killed Wednesday night by a Durham public safety patrol car driven by an officer en route to assist in a chase, police said.

The victim was identified by police as Larry Eugene Cole, 17, of Durham.

Public Safety Lt. Eddie Sarvis said Cole, his brother and two others were walking in the eastbound lane of a street when Cole was struck by the patrol car about 10 p.m. Coles brother and the other two people were not hurt.

Public Safety Officer Grayling Dawson was driving west and had pulled into the eastbound lane to pass a car when the'accident occurred, Sarvis said.

Dawson, who was not injured, was on his way to help other officers who were running after a shoplifter, police said.

Sarvis said the emergency lights on Dawsons patrol car were on when Cole was struck, but that be didnt know if the siren was on.

Sarvis said Officers would have to measure skid marks to determine how fast Dawson was driving.

No charges have been filed. The d^[>artment is investigating.

Salam, 78-year-old dean of Sunni p(diticians and mentor of Prime Mister Shafik Wazzi^ holds court in a book-lii^ study under a photograph of his father, Selim Salam, who served in the parliament of the old Ottoman empire.

It wasnt my helping Tammam that made him. He made himself, Saeb Salam said between telephone calls from ambassadors. Cabinet ministers and political cronies. And now, perhaps, he is more pq)ular than me. While the sons climb the p(ditical ladders, the aging fathers do not relinquish their grip.

When Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon wanted to complain about President Amin Gemayels unwillingn^ to negotiate a normalization agreement, he went to see the 41-year-old presidents 77-year-old father, Pierre, who is founder and head of the ruling Phalange Party.

The elder Gemayel was disappointed in his own bids for the presidency in 1964 and 1970 but lived to see both his sons elected head of state -and one of them assassinated before he could take office, the 34-year-old militia commander Bashir.

It was after that assassination, last September, that Israeli military forces allowed Lebanese Christian militiamen into Palestianian refu^ camps in Beirut, resulting in the massacre of hundreds of refugees.

The Gemayels are the focus of some notorious Lebanese feuds, most notably with the Franjieh clan based h: the northern mountain region of Zghorta and headed by 72-year-old . former Christian President Suleiman Franjidi.

Franjiehs son, Tony, who had taken over his fathers parliament seat, was massacred along with his wife, baby and 31 bodyguards and servants in 1978. The elder Franjieh blamed the Gemayels and vowed not to rest until Pierre Gemayel had seen his own sons die.

The Moslems have their own family feuds. The moderate Salams wage a bloodless political (xmtest with the leftists grouped under Walid

Jumblatt, leader of the secretive Druse sed.

Inside the Druse com-miBiity, the Jumblatts and the Arslans have vied for powM* in between uniting to fight their traditional Manmite Qiristian foes.

In an attempt to sh^ the Druse power struggle. May Arslan was married to Kamal Jumblatt in 1948. Not only did the union fail to sU^ clan squabbles, the coiq)le separated soon after the birth of their only child, Walid.

But in the Lebanese tradition, Walid Jumblatt succeeded his father as clan leader and head of the leftist coalitkm when his father was assassinated in 1977.

Walid Jumblatt has confided to friends and reporters that he took the reins reluctantly. Nonetheless, the skeleton-thin Jumblatt in his black leather jacket and blue jeans sits down as a political equal with the sep-tuagenarians and octogenarians who head Lebanons other political dynasties.

The Shiite Moslem Khalil family, in a country where

tradition reserves the presidency for a Maronite Christian and the premiership for a Sunni Moslem, does not play a big role on the national scene. But for decades the Khalils have dominated their own bailiwick, the so(Ahern port of Tyre.

Kazem Al-Khalil, 82, has been a parliament deputy from Tyre since 1937. His eider son, Khalil, has been ambassador to Iran and West Germany. His younger son, Karim, rec^tly set up an Israeli-backed militia in southern Lebanon.

I belong to a traditional political family, the ailing Kazem Al-Khalil said in a bedside interview where he kept a cane at his left side and a Swiss-made machine gun at his right. It was just natural for us to be involved when Lebanon started having a political life.

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Waste Board Defends Actions

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -Members of the Governors Waste Management Board tried to fend off legislative criticism Wednesday that theyve been lax in" their duties.    "    

Spokesmen told the joint House-Senate Appropriations* Subcommittee on Human Resources that the board is making progress as reflected in recommendations on liability for hazardous waste accidents and talks about a low-level radioactive waste disposal site for the Southeast.

Meanwhile, the House Water and Air Resources Committee heard testimony from a Washington, DC., chemist about the suitability

DOWNHILL RACER - Wes Black of Reno, Nevada, rides an innertube as he flies down a snow-packed hill at Galena Creek Park near

Reno. A new, wet storm was bringing more snow to the area. (AP Laserphoto)

Expect Recover

Agree Expand Scope Of

From Deadbeats

Toy Chest Regulation

By CAROLE FELDMAN

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON ^AP) -The Consumer Product Safety Commission, moving to prevent further strangulations of young children, has agreed to expand the scope of a proposed regulation that would require safety hinges on toy chests.

We have a lethal weapon in some of these toy chests, said Commissioner Edith Barksdale Sloan.

The commission told its staff on Wednesday to make the proposed regulation apply to toy chests sold after the rules effective date. The draft rule prepared by the CPSC staff would have applied only to those manufactured after the proposal became effective.

Its outrageous, worse than that, its unconscionable, that any manufacturer

DUI Judge

I

Is Sentenced

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -A municipal judge who admitted drinking a half-gallon of wine in his chambers before a car accident has been sentenced to pick up litter from city parks on weekends.

After pleading no contest^ Wednesday to a drunken' driving charge. Judge Gerard J. Kettman also was fined $600, placed on three years probation and ordered to replace the $143 street sign that his car snapped in half Jan. 24.

Police found Kettman, 56, slumped over the wheel of his car, parked at a gas station near the street sign. The windshield was smashed and a hubcap had been knocked off.

Ofticers said Kettmans eyes were bloodshot and his speech was slurred.

The policemen couldnt prove that Kettman had been drunk when he was actually driving, so they decided to take him home. Along the way, the judge told them he had drunk a half-gallon of

wine in his chambers.

He was charged after a security guard told police he had seen Kettman driving erratically.

Kettman, who has been on the bench 14 years, must enroll in a program for drunken drivers if he wants to keep his drivers license.

DIE IN RESCUE TRY JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - A white supervisor of a gold mine and seven black miners have died of heatstroke underground while searching for a missing black miner, a spokesman for the Barlow Rand company said.

would continue to make toy chests without the elemental safety device on them, said Commissioner Stuart M. Statler. Toy chests are meant to be innocuous, not a killer of children.

When the commission issued an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking last April, it had documented 21 deaths and one case of permanent brain damage caused by falling toy chest lids.

Since that time, the CPSC staff said, a 20-month-old child was blinded and suffered partial paralysis when a toy chest lid fell on his head or neck. In addition, there were three cases of near misses in which a toy chest lid fell on a child who was rescued and escaped permanent injury, the staff said.

Its terribly important to make toy chests safe for all present and future generations, said Commissioner Sam Zagoria. Were talking

Innocent Plea In

AnotherCharge

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -Richard Bowen, charged with trying to murder his wife and blame it on cyanide-laced medicine, has pleaded innocent to insurance fraud and grand theft in an unrelated case.

Bowen, 29, is accused of filing an insurance claim for stereo equipment he had hidden with a friend, and possessing radios stolen from a security company he once worked for. The charges arose from the investigation of the attempted murder of his 30-year-old wife, Susan.

Last month Bowen pleaded innocent to charges of attempted murder in the cyanide poisoning of his wife on Nov. 26. He is free on bail and that trial was set for May 3.

about a $1 fix. 1 dont think thats a high price to pay to ensure safety.

Under the proposed rule, safety devices would be required on all hinged containers marketed for storing childrens toys that have a volume of more than 1.1 cubic feet and whose smallest internal dimension is at least six inches.

The toy chests would be banned from sale if their lids, when opened, fell more than one-quarter of an inch.

Martin H. Katz, the commissions general counsel, estimated that the proposed regulation could be published in the Federal Register in a couple of weeks. It will then -be subject to public comment for 60 days, after which time the commission will decide whether to make it final. Either house of Congress would then have 90 days to veto the rule.

Chairman Nancy Harvey Steorts, an advocate of voluntary standards, said she has not seen sufficient cooperation from the toy chest industry to negate the need for a mandatory rule.

The burden on industry of a mandatory rule is slight, she added.

She urged the industry and the commission staff to launch a strong public outreach program to inform consumers of the potential danger of toy chests already in their homes.

The staff advised consumers who already own hinged toy chests to remove the lid if it is freely falling. As an alternative, the staff said, consumers can install support devices that will hold the lid open in any position.

Although the support devices are not available in hardware stores, the staff said they can be obtained from Weber-Knapp Co., 441 Chandler St., Jamestown, N.Y. 14701, or Carlson Capitol Manufacturing Co., P.O. Box 6165, Rockford, 111. 61125.

BLEW UP TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) -Two attempted plane hijackings in China last April ended with explosions destroying each plane and killing all on board, Taiwans official central news agency reported today.

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CHICAGO (AP) - The federal government expects to get back $147,600 by docking the wages of up to 33 federal workers and 50 other northern Illinois residents in a crackdown on government loan deadbeats.

U.S. Attorney Dan K. Webb told a news conference Wednesday that one complaint filed in federal court was against a lawyer with the Federal Tra(le commission earning up to $30,000 a year who has defaulted on student loans totaling over $11,000.

He said his office was instructing seven federal agencies to begin deducting 25 percent from the pay of 16 federal employees, and will file similar complaints against 17 others, as well as about 50 non-federal workers.

of landfills for disposing hazardous wastes.

Reva Rubenstein, director of the Institute of Chemical Waste Ma.nagement, said that although wastes are detoxified, incinerated or reduced there are ^ remains that must be disposed somewhere.

'The panel then referred to subcommittee a bill ba'nning landfills for the most'hazardous wastes, including PCBs

At least six members of the waste board and two department secretaries appeared before the Appropriations Subcommittee, whose members last week criticized the board for failing to accomplish more during its first year of existence.

We want to prove the Waste Management Board is on track and doing what the legislature called for, said Charles Holt, a former representative from Fayetteville and current board member.

Holt said the board is recommending strict liability be applied to those who generate, transport, treat, store or dispose of hazardous wastes. It also recommends that generators be liable for the waste until jt is accepted by a treatment, storage or disposal facility.

The recommendations would do away with current requirements that people injured by hazardous wastes

prove the waste generator or darrier was negligent before they can recover damages.

"A lot of time and pain would be taken out of it. Holt said of the process for recovering damages.

Another sign of progress by the board were negotiations with seven other Southeastern states to establish a compact for disposing low level radioactive wastes, said Capt. William Briner, a board member and associate professor of radiology at Duke Universi-, ty.

"It was a major step toward assuring that North Carolina, in concert with neighboring states, can safely dispose of low-level radioactive waste. Briner said.

The compact may go before the 1983 General Assembly for approval.

Spokesmen in both committees pleaded for authority to make state laws more stringent than federal laws - something now forbidden in clean water and air laws and hazardous waste laws.

Briner said the federal government is no longer requiring hazardous waste generators to list with the state each year .and the board would like state authority to require such inventories.

"We cannot in this state wait for the future development of a body of regula

tions in so important an area as hazardous waste." Briner said.

Rep. Joe Mavretic. D-Edgecombe. told the Water and Air Resources Committee that It should prohibit landfilling of certain wastes although there is no comparable federal law. Con gress'now is considering similar legislation.

Ms Rubenstein, who was invited to speak to the committee by Mavretic. suggested the committee make its bill conform to the one before Congress.

She said she believes landfills can be made safe but the facilities are needed more urgently for residues from wastes that have been treated or incinerated It still needs a resting place after you treat it, she said. "One should not assume that landfilling in andofitslf is wrong."

Ms. Rubenstein noted that the Environmental Protection Agency rules already forbid disposing of certain wastes in landfills On the motion of Rep Dan

Lilley, D-Lenoir, the bill was referred to a subcommittee Lilley said he approved of the bills philosophy but wanted it to be reviewed by experts Mavretic said he couldn't understand why the bill should be in subcommittee but said he was confident it would be sent to the House floor intact.

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Stock And

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Market Reports Ransom Deal For Stolen Horse

Obituaries

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly steady to 50 cents higher Kinston

58.00, Clinton. Elizabethtown. Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden. Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 57.75, Wilson 57.50, Salisbury 57.00, Rowland

57.00, Spiveys Comer 56.25. Sows, all weights 500 pounds up, Wilson 56.00, Fayetteville

57.00, Whiteville 54.00, Wallace 57.00, Spiveys Corner 58.00, Rowland 56.00, Durham 55.00.

Poultry RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f o b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 46.00 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2'/2 to 3 pound birds. Too few loads have been offered for a preliminary weighted average. The market is steady to firm and the live supply is light to ^ moderate for a good demand. Weights mostly desirable. Estimated slau^ter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was

1.713.000, compared to 1,681,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices rallied in active trading today, aided by declining interest rates in the credit markets.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, off 19.68 points Tuesday and Wednesday, recovered 8.65 to 1,076.07 by noon time today.

Gainers o,utnumbered losers by almost 2 to 1 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues Interest rates, which have recently been moving up. turned downward in the credit markets today.

Prices of long-term government bonds, which move in the opposite direction from interest rates, showed gains of about $5 to $10 for every $1,000 in face value this morning.

Concerns have mounted lately on Wall Street that rising rates could stall the economic recovery that just now appears to be gathering momentum.

Owens-Coming Fiberglas led the active list, up at 36 >4 in trading that included an 846,400-share block at that price

Oil issues were mixed following a comment by Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, Saudi Arabias oil minister, that his nation sees no way out of a price reduction for its oil.

The NYSEs composite index rose .54 to 84.33. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 3.24 at 373.77.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 37.88 million shares at noontime, against 33.95 million at the same point Wednesday.

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By PADDY CLANCY Associated Press Writer DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -Police and owners of the Aga Khans stolen stallion Shergar today refused to deal with a gang of thieves, demanding a meeting in a Belfast hotel to discuss a $2.76 million ransom for the prize stud.

But experts also expressed concern that the longer the $18 million horse is missing, the greater the chances are that it will lose interest in

siring foals encounters that bring the owi^rs im to $110,000.

The 5-year-old white-blazed bay, winner of both the English and Irish derbies in 1981, was stolen Tuesday night from a stud farm 30 miles from Dublin. The six masked, armed thieves told the ^oom they wanted $2.76 million.

A caller called a Belfast radio station today and asked that racing correspondents Lord Oaksey of the Sunday

Telegraph, Peter Campling of The Sun, and Derek Thompson of Ind^ndent Television go to Belfasts Forum Hotel for a negotiation session tonight.

The three agreed and quickly flew from London to Belfast.

The caller told the Belfast station, Downtown Radio: We have the horse Shergar. The animal is in no danger. It is being well looked after.

Asked by the station if he was a member of a terrorist organization, the caller said;

Following are selected market quotations; .Ashland pr C Burroughs

Carolina Power & Light

Collins & Aikman

Connor

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

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Hatteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

Lowe's

McDonald's

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OVER THE COUNTER

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Branch

Little Mint

Planters Bank

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Cool Reaction ToCop Smooch'

MIDDLE TOWNSHIP, N J. (AP) - Township police arent sweet on Mayor Michael Volls designation of Valentine's Day as "Kiss a Cop Day.

Voll said he wants female residents to offer a kiss to any of the 32 policemen on the force. Men may peck the cheek of the town^ips only female officer.

It gives our people a chance to give the policemen a smooch on the cheek to say Thank you,said Voll.

But Police Chief Ed Hanson said he would not condone the plan. And one officer, who asked not to be identified, said the married members of the force were not looking forward to the day.

Weve got wives. Whats the point? he said.

The single guys without wives, they are the ones who probably like the idea, said another officer.

ORDERED TO RETURN

PALERMO, Sicily (AP) -Nearly 1,000 doctors from the major Sicilian hospitals were ordered back to work on the first day of their total general strike demanding a new contract and better working conditions.

Bush Says Zero Option Still Firm NATO Goal

By DAVID MASON Chief European Correspondent

LONDON (AP) - Vice President George Bush said today the zero option proposal to eliminate U.S. and Soviet medium-range missiles in Europe remains a firm NATO objective even though the Soviets may never accept it.

Bush, who left London after a 12-day, seven-nation tour of Western Europe, indicated before departing that he would report to President Reagan on fresh su^estions made to him by allied leaders.

But he told a news conference there should be no misunderstanding about the resolve of the NATO alliance to start deploying Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in Western Europe later this year if arms negotiations with the Soviets are unsuccessful.

Reagan has proposed canceling the deployment if the Soviet Union dismantles its missiles already targeted at Western Europe. The Soviets have rejected this zero option proposal, and Bush has acknowledged it is not a take-it-or-leave-it offer.

When a reporter asked

Reagan Will Seek Lower Wage Floor

WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan, who believes the minimum wage never should have been applied to young people, will not try to abolish the wage floor although he does hope to lower it for teenagers, a spokesman said to^y.

The president told interviewers Wednesday that eliminating application of the minimum wage, now $3.35 an hour, to youngsters looking for after-school and summer work would be the right thing to do.

But Larry Speakes, the chief deputy \^ite House press secretary, said today that the administrations proposal for a sub-minimum wage of $2.50 an hour, as proposed in the presidents State of the Union address, would stand.

As for doing away entirely with the minimum wage for young people, Speakes said Reagan indicated it would never fly, but, nevertheless, its his idea.

The president said Wednesday that many of the jobs filled by youngsters are for unskilled workers. If you make them too expensive, the employer just does without the job being filled, Reagan said.

This never should have been applied to young people that are going to school, that are looking for summer jobs, that are looking for afterschool jobs and so forth, he said.

Meanwhile, the president was meeting today with economic and labor advisers to consider a response to a court, injunction that blocks new rules that would allow workers on government construction projects to be paid at a lower rate than workers on other construction jobs in the same area.

In another section of the jobs front, Speakes said Wednesday that speeding up planned government building projects - an idea Reagan

THURSDAY

6:30 p.m. - Jaycees me^t at Rotary Bldg 6:30 p.m - Exchange Club meets

6:30 p m. BPW Club meets 7:00 p.m. - Greenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m - DAV and Auxiliary meets at VFW Home 7:30 p m - Overeaters Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church

8 00 p m - Chapter 1308 of the Women of the Moose

FRIDAY

10:00 a.m. Greenville Woman's Club meets at club house 7 :J0p m. - Red Men meet

LONDON (AP) - Lagos, the capital of Nidria, is the worlds most expensive city for visiting businesmen, according to an annual survey published here today.

Employment Conditions Abroad Ltd. reported that the cost of a business stay ih Lagos is $197 a day.

The survey covered the cost of a four-star hotel room and incidental expenses.

Manama, Bahrain, in the Persian Gulf, came in second in the list at $169 a day, followed by nearby Dubai at $163 and Jidda, Saudi Arabia, $152.

Next was New York City at $150, London $139, Hong Kong $135, and Sydney, Australia at $129, according to Employment Conditions Abroad Ltd.

Singapore was put at $119, Paris $113, Rio de Janeiro $107 and Madrid $85.

Business travelers for 500 international companies contributed to the survey.

says is being studied to help remedy unemployment -will not increase the federal budget deficit.

The spokesman also said no decision had been made on whether to proceed with a speedup.

The same day, Reagan said, We are looking at the proposal. Thiffie comments followed remarks ^the president made Tuesday, indicating an order had already gone out to government offices to speed up the work.

The president didnt mean what you thought he said, Speakes said of Reagans initial remark. The correct interpretation is he was authorizing a study. The president has not made a decision whether to go or no go, he said.

The spokesman added that he did not krow how many jobs would be created by accelerating work on government projects, but he said it would not affect the federal budget deficit because no additional money would be spent.

Money that would be spent in fiscal 1984, which begins on Oct. 1, instead would be spent in the current fiscal year.

Reagan is under pressure from members of Congress to propose a government program to ease unemployment, which dropped last month to 10.2 percent from 10.8 percent. The 10.2 percent reprints a new government formula that includes military as well as civilian workers. The January rate would be 10.4 percent if calculated under the old formula.

The president has balked repeatedly at backing what le calls make-work jobs, 3ut there are some indica-:ions he may opt for speeding up government projects.

Meeting Wednesday with editors and broadcasters from around the country, Reagan was asked at a luncheon question-and-answer session about the jobs program.

He replied;

What we do have in our budget already ... is that we are looking at all the agencies and departments of government that have already built into the budget pro-, grams of construction, of maintwiance, of upkeep and so forth that they need and with the idea of accelerating those and wherever they have them scheduled, doing them now.

He said that it was pretty hard for a president to say when the specifics of the program would be determined, but stated that his representatives were talking to members of Congress about it.

whether, in view of this, the zero option was dead as a dodo, Bush replied:

No, not as an objective. Certainly not. Now, I cant speak on the Soviet side whether theyre ever willing to come that far forward. Bush said he had asked allied leaders to suggest ways to break the apparent impasse at the Geneva arms talks.

Are we missing something? That was the question that I had in my mind as I came around and talked to these various leaders, Bush said.

He said there are no new proposals in our pockets. But he also said British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher had spoken' recently of a solution that establishes a missile balance without going as far as the U.S. proposal.

Bush called on Soviet Communist Party chief Yuri V. Andropov, who has been trying to convince us he is a man of peace, to match his words with deeds.

Join us in Geneva, Bush challenged. Join us in negotiating in earnest - if not our pnqx)sal, then one of your own ... Men and women who seek peace are waiting for a Soviet answer that finally says yes.

On Wednesday, Bush forcefully insisted that Reagans policies will prevent a U.S.-Soviet nuclear holocaust.

Ive got grandkids. Ive got children. Do you think we dont want peace? Bush said after he was pressed by one persistent questioner.

Do you think we care less than others about nuclear war? We are trying to deter aggression. We are trying to keep balance. We are not trying to seek out conquest. The vice president, speaking to the Royal Institute of International Affairs, said he found Western alliance leaders united on behalf of the NATO alliance.

He was asked by Roman Catholic Monsignor Bruce Kent, head of Britains Campaign for Nuclear Dis-aramament, how the United States could oppose a worldwide freeze on nuclear arms when East and West have more than enough weapons to kill everybody so many times now.

Bush said the United States seeks to deter aggression and is not trying to seek out conquest.

If you could only help me get that across to those people, he told Kent. We should be toother on this. We feel the way to deter is through balance, Bush added. We do not believe that for one side to have 1,200 warheads and for NATO to have zero is the way to deter war and keep the peace . Bushs trip, which began Jan. 30, tooli him to West Germany, th^etherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, France and Britain.

In West Germany, the missiles have become a key issue in campaigning for the March 6 elections, and there is intensified nuclear debate in Britain, where Mrs. Thatcher is widely expected to call elections later this year.

Opinion polls in both countries show a substantial majority opposed to deployment of the new NATO missiles*

But Bush told reporters, One thing I learned in politics public opinion polls change.

It is not the public opinion polls that are going to make the determination as to whether the alliance keeps its commitments.

We are not political. We are notte^rists.

One police theory was that the abduction was,to raise money to buy arms for the Irish Republican Any.

The officer in charge of the search, Oiief Superintendent James Murphy, said: I will not be going to Belfast. In my view, it would be wrong, illegal and unlawful to take part in negotiations of that kind.

Members of the 3S-member syndicate that bought shares in Shergar said they would refuse to join in paying any ransom.

If ransom is paid for this horse, there is a danger that other horses would be abducted in the future, said one of the owners. Lord Derby.

The official breeding season starts next week and the stallion, who became a father for the first time last week and has 42 of his first 44 mares in foal, had a full order book.

There is a danger that If Shergar misses a whole season of serving his mares, he will lose his enthusiasm for the job, said Dick Francis, a former jockey and author of best-selling thrillers with plots from the racing world.

The Aga Khan is the 44-year-old leader of the worlds 15 million Ismailian Moslems and runs an international business and horse-breeding empire from his chateau in France.

The horse-breeding industry in the Irish Republic is worth an estimated $138 million in foreign earnings each year and employs 25,000 people.

Ireland is famed for horse raising and training and has some 300 stud farms. But the theft of Shergar has raised fears that horse owners may become reluctant to send valuable mares to Ireland to stud.

Said Michael Stoute, trainer of the stolen horse, Shergar was the best horse I have ever trained, and I only hope to God that nothing happens to him.*

SHRINE NOTICE Greenville Area Nobles of Rofelt Pasha Shrine Temple will treat their wives or guests to a pre-Valentine steak dinner at the Western Steer on Tenth Street Frdiay at 7 p.m. Nobles are to wear fezes.

F.R. Sanders, area coordinator

Anninias C. Smith,

Hoggard

WILLIAMSTON - John R. Hoggard of Williamston died at the Veterans Ho^ital in Durham Wednesday nigjit.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mildred Hoggard; two daughters, Mrs. Bonnie H. Fergus of Greensboro and Mrs. Betsy H. Leech of Greenville, and two sons, John William Hoggard of Winston-Salem and Robert R. Hoggard of Williamston.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete.

Newtim

FARMVILLE - Funeral services for the Rev. Bert W. Newton, who died in Philadelphia Feb. 3, will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church by Elder Warren Cooper and Elder Alexander Darden. Burial will follow in Sunset Memorial Park.

Mr. Newton was bom and reared in Pitt County where he attended the area schools. He was a member of the Art Willow Primitive Baptist Church near Falkland.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Maggie Ray Cobb Newton of the home; two sons, Joseph Newton of Philadelphia and Bert Douglas Newton of New

Parking Space Is Tiireatened

WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., wants to keep his convenient Senate parking space, and those of 24 colleagues, now threatened by a new fast-food shop.

Dole appealed last week to Senate Rules Chairman Charles McD. Mathias, R-Md., to halt construction, and followed that up with a letter to all 99 Senate colleagues asking for their support.

The Architect of the Capitol plans to build a carry-out food shop in the basement of the Dirksen Senate office building to serve staff members. It would wipe out the spots, just steps from an elevator, in an underground garage. Work had started on the project, but was stopped when the senator objected.

Jersey; two daughters, Ms. Gloria J. Newton of Philadelphia and Ms. Letha Newton of New Jersey; one brother, the Rev. Wam Gorham of Sanford; four sisters, Mrs. Leona Moore, Mrs. Retha I^dy and Mrs. Sally N. Edwards, all of Farmville, and Mrs. Mattie McKenzie of Stanford, Conn., and several grandchildren.

The body will be taken by Joyners Mortuary to Maced<iia Missionary Baptist church for viewing after 5 p.m. Friday and will remain there until 8:15 p.m. Family visittaion will be Friday from 7-8 p.m. The family will meet at the home of Mrs. Retha Dildy, 1308 S. Main St., Farmville at 1 p.m. Saturday.

Rawls

Mrs. Mary Strickland Rawls, 65, died Thursday. Her funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Leon Morris. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

A native of Halifax County, Mrs. Rawls had beoi a resident of Greenville for the past 30 years.

Surviving are her husband, William Albert Rawls; a son, Donnie Rawls of GreenvUle; two sisters, Mrs. Lou Della Umphlett of Greenville and Mrs. Jodie Lee Baker of Scotland Neck; two grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home Friday from 7; 30 to 9 p.m.

Speight

Mrs. Annie P. Speight of Greenville died Wednesday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was the mother of Samuel Speight Jr. and Jimmy Lee Speight, both of Greenville.

Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Home.

Williams V

Mrs. Lula Mae Williams of 723 Venters St., A.yden, died Wednesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was the wife of Jasper Williams of the home.

Funeral arrangements will be announced later .by Flanagan Funeral Home.

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MASONIC NOTICE The Wintervle Masonic Lodge No. 232 announces a communication at the Masonic Hall Friday at 7:30 p.m. All members are urged to be present.

William Elbert,

master

Anninias C. Smith,

secy

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THE DAILY REFLECTORTHURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 10, 1983

Indians Keep Lead, Top ECU, 70-54

By WOODY PEELE ReflecUff Sports Editor WiaiAMSBURG, Va. - If there was any doubt in East Carolinas mind about the abilities of William & Mary and the Indians claims to first place in the ECAC-South, those were erased last night.

The Pirates, who have won but once in seven ECAC games, fell to the Indians, 70-54 last night in a game that turned into a foul shooting event in the second half with the Indians doing most of the shooting.

The Tribes Tony Traver

scored as many free throws as East Carolina shot during the contest, with neariy- all of the free throws coming in the second half. Traver was 15 of 16 from the stripe, and the Indians finished with 28 of 35.

East Carolina, which scored as many field goals as did the Indians, made good on 12 of 15 tries from the line but the margin between the two teams trips to tlw foul line was too great for the Pirates to overcome.

We had the chance to win, East Carolinas Charlie Harrison said, until things

stopped going our way Harrison praised the play of the Indians, giving them plenty of credit. Barry (Parkhill) does a great job with. them. They shoot well, they play defense well and they read defenses very well. Harrison said that W&Ms zone defense gave the Pirates a number of problems. "We had scoring opportunities, but we just didnt connect on enough of them.

The Pirates, with 21 field goals, put up 53 shots, hitting 39.6 percent. William & Mary, with an equal number of

successes, only fired the ball up 39 times, for 53.8 percent.

The Indians also held a slim rebounding edge, 31-28, al-thou^ the seemed more since the Pirates seldom got an offensive rebound, thanks mainly to W&Ms tightly packed zone that didnt let the Pirates get inside many times.

The game was very close over the first ten minutes of play, with East Carolina leading three times during that period. The Indians got the first basket after 1:15 but ECU countered the next three times, and then gained the

Hosting Conley Among Leaders For Sectional Wrestling Tourney

ByRICKSCOPPE Reflector Sports Writer HOLLYWOOD - Fourth-ranked D.H. Conley heads a list of five teams ranked among the top 20 in North Carolina into its share of the Eastern Sectional Wrestling Tournament here beginning Friday afternoon.

There are eight sectionals in all, two each in the east, mideast, midwest and west. The other Eastern Sectional is in Fayetteville.

Our sectional, D.H. Conley coach Milt Sherman said, should be one of the toughest this year.

Sherman knows of what he speaks. Not only are there five ranked teams in DHCs sectional, but there are five

wrestlers who are past state champions, including three who won titles a year ago.

Heading the list is D.H. Conleys Mike Long, who is 20-0 this season and was a state champ at 188 pounds last year. Long is the seventh wrestler to be a state champion under Sherman.

Wilson Beddingfields Paul Smith, 10-1-1 this year, and Tarboros Mike Stokes, 15-0, are also returning state champions. Smith won the state title at 141 and Stokes at 108.

Smith, who was out with a broken collarbone early in the year, won the Big East conference title at 158 but will drop down to 148 for the sectional.

I Eastern Sectional |

Top Seeds

! L V Wrestler (School)

Record

lof Danny Iwanicki (West Carteret) .

....(16-1)

108Carl Moody (Wilson Fike)........

,...(16-1)

115Mike Stokes (Tarboro)...........

,...(15-0)

122Joel Shackleford (Farmville) ....

....(15-1)

129 Keith Gray (Cape Hatteras) .....

....(23-0)

135 Roy Heverly (West Carteret) ....

....(17-0)

141 D.J. Fleming (Havelock).......

....(19-0)

148 Marvin Andrews (Tarboro) ......

..(14-0-1)

158 - William Bridgett (D.H. Conley) ..

....(23-0)

170 Tracy Parker (Rocky Mount)....

....(15-0)

188 Mike Long (D.H. Conley)........

....(23-0)

198 Butch Tyndall (New Bern).......

....(18-0)

HWT Barry Lyons (Rose)...........

....(14-0)

Area Seeds

101 - 6. Todd Cochran (D.H. Conley).................(13-6-1)

108 14. Alex Mobley (Roanoke)...........   (5-5)

115- 7. Reginald Moore (D.H. Conley)................(19^)

115 - 9. Harvey Rodgers (Farmville)............  (5-2)

122-9. Mark Brewington (Rose).......................(8-4)

122 -13. Joel Maye (D.H. Conley)...................... 9-9-1

129 -11. ClvinTyson (Farmville)............. (11-5)

129 -15. Kerry Farris (D.H. Conley)...................(10-7)

135- 2. Jerry Foreman (Farmville)...................ilM)

135 -12. John Anderson (Roanoke) ..... ,............(9-6)

135 -13. Shawn Hardy (D.H. Conley) ..........(13-9-1)

135 -15. Hardy Jones (Rose) .......................(7-9)

141 - 5. Andy Majette (D.H. Conley) ..........(18-4)

141 -11. Tony Brady (Williamston)....................(10-5)

141-12. Amos Edwards (Rose).......................(9-5-1)

u

148 - 4. Donnell Lawrence (Williamston)...........    (12-2)

148- 6. John Maye (Rose)...........................(134-1)

148- 7. Connie Streeter (Farmville) .........(8-3)

148 -15. Dwayne Morning (Roanoke)........'..........(4-6-1)

158 - 8. Ben Williams (Farmville)    !..........(10-7)

158-11. Walter Wheeler (Williamston).................(5-5)

170 - 6. Willie Greene (D.H. Conley).................(14-4-1)

170 - 8. Bryan Strange (Roanoke)....................(6-3-0)

170 - 9. Frank Corey (Rose)  .........(10-6-1)

170 -16. Andy Eure (Williamston)...............  (2-6-0)

188-None.

198 - 5. Marvin Fleming (Rose) ,  ..............(13-2)

198- 8.PaulMenichelli(D.H.Conley) .......(16-7)

HWT- 5. Stacy McCarter (D.H. Conley)  ......(15-7)

Two ether wrestlers Plymouths Thermas Biggs and West Carterets Roy Heverly won state titles two and three years ago, respectively.

Biggs was ineligible during the first semester and is just 2-0 at 188. Heverly is 170 at 135 pounds. Biggs is seeded ninth at 188 and will battle Long in the quartefinals if both vn their opening-round matches.

Twenty-six teams will vie for the sectional championship, which was won a year ago by Beddingfield. Five teams figure to fight it out for the title this year: Conley,- West Carteret, Plymouth, Beddingfield and Havelock.

West Carteret, which was second to Conley in the Coastal Conference during the regular season but .won the league tournament, is ranked 10th in the state while Plymouth is 11th, Beddingfield 14th and Havelock 17th.

We consider ourselves one of the contenders, along with those other (ranked) teams, Sherman said.

The Vikings finished second in the sectional last year, and won it two seasons ago.

Said Sherman: I think they realize that if were going to win it were going to have to get hot. Two years ago, we won it with six place winners. Last year, we were second with seven place winners.

Its going to take somewhere around six or seven place winners for a team to win the team title, and most teams dont have that many (good) wrestlers, the coach said.

D.H. Conley does not h'ave a returning sectional champ, but does have three who

Sports Colendor

Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.

Todays Sports Basketball North Lenoir 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 TheWiz vs. TRW Attic vs. Empire Brushes Bobs TV vs. Grady-White Rockers vs. Hooker

Fridays Sports Basketball Jamesville at Mattamuskeet Bear Grass at Chocowinity Beddingfield at Rose (6:30 p.m.) Greene Central at C.B. Aycock Springfield at Greenville Christian (8p.m.)

' Farmville Central at Ayden-Grifton (6:30p.m.)

E.B. Aycock at Beddingfield (3:30p.m.)

Williamston at Roanoke Pee Wee Division Cavaliers vs. Terrapins Midget Division Blue Devils vs. Pirates Junior Division Blue Devils vs. Pirates Adult Division Hustlers vs. Flamingo Integon vs. Greenville Villa Swimming AUantic Seaboard Meet at East Carolina

WresUing Sectionals at Conley

finished second and one who finished third.

Reginald Moore, Paul Menichelli and Long finished second in the sectional last year and Willie Greene was third. Moore is 194 this season at 115 pounds while Menichelli is 16-7 at 198 pounds.

Greene is 14-1-1 this year at 170 pounds.

Sherman pointed to three other wrestlers - all of whom won conference titles a week ago - as giving the Vikings seven possible place winners. Those three are: Andy Majette (184 at 141), William Bridgett (m at 158) and Stacey McCarter (154 at heavjweight).

Those (seven) would be our most-favored wrestlers, Sherman said.

Farmville Central carries six wrestlers into the tournament, led by undefeated Jerry Foreman (16-0 at 135), who was fourth in the sectional last season and is seeded second this season.

Other Jaguar wrestlers competing are: Joel Shackleford (16-1 at 122), Connie Streeter (9-3 at 148), Calvin Tyson (11-5 at 129), Ben WUliams (10-7 at 158) and Harvey Rodgers (5-2 at 115).

Rose, second in the Big East Conference tournament a week ago, is led by Barry Lyons (14-0 at heavyweight), Marvin Fleming (13-2 at 198) and John Maye. Lyons is the No. 1 seed at heavyweij^t while Fleming is seeded fifth atl98 and Maye is sixth at 148.

Maye finished second in the sectionals last season.

Other Rose wrestlers competing are: Mark Brewington (84 at 122 pounds). Hardy Jones (7-9 at 135), Amos Edwards (9-5-1 at 141) and Frank Corey (10-6-1) at 170.

Williamston and Roanoke will both have four wrestlers in the tournament. From Williamston are fourth-seeded Donnell Lawrence (12-2 at 148), Tony Brady (10-5 at 141), Walter Wheeler (5-5) and Andy Eure (2-6 at 170).

From Roanoke are Bryan Strange (6-3 at 170), John Anderson (9-6 at 135), Alex Mobley (5-5 at 108) and Dwayne Morning (4-6-1 at 148).

lead at 8-6 on a baseline jumper by Barry Wright with 15:21 left.

The Indians tied it up three times before taking tte lead for good on an Alley Oop basket off an out-of-bounds play by Mike Strayhorn at 14-12, with 11:27 left.

Over the remaining ten minutes of play, the Indians slowly stretched the lead out to as much as ten points, 29-19, and settled for a 29-21 lead at halftime.

In cwitrast to the foul-filled second half, only ei^t fouls were called in the first half, three on W&M and five on ECU. Not one was called until after ten full minutes had been played.

East Carolina came back at the half and quickly got back into the game, scoring the first six points to cut the lead back to two, 29-27. Tony Robinson hit on a jumper and Wri^t and Johnny Edwards both followed from underneath.

But then, then whistles began. Over the final 17:44, a total of 33 fouls were called, 21 of them on the Pirates and 12 on the Indians.

William & Mary made just nine field goals in the second half, as compared to 11 for the Pirates.

After Edwards had closed it to two, Traver made the first of his free throws, and Wright missed on the second of a two-shot foul that could have cut it to two again.

Strayhorn then hit a short jumper and Kevin Richardson followed with a three-point

play that sent Edwards to the bench with his fourth foul with 16:02 left in the game, Traver followed less than a minute later with two more free throws, running the Indian lead back to ten, 38-28.

The Pirates were never successful in mounting another comeback, as the lead bounced back and fourth between eight and 14 over the next few minutes. Only once in the final 17 minutes did the Pirates put together as many as four points at one time.

Harrison was disappointed in the number of fouls called on the Pirates, too. It wasnt that we were in the situation where we were being forced to foul to try and get the ball. We were chasing them, but 1 knew that we couldnt be fouling them because theyre such good free throw shooters.

Ive complained to the league office about it. and 1 guess 1 will again, but they call these little picky fouls and let that moving screen go time after time. They called it one time tonight. But how can 1 teach my kids to play good defense when they let this go on everywhere. Can 1 tell my kids to just run through em* Can you see Johnny Edwards doing that? Hed be out quicker than he was tonight. Its just not good basketball, and 1 just cant keep my kids

busting their tails to get the job done when they keep allowing it.

"Ive been in this business longer than these officials and I see it every game Its the only thing I dont like. They called these little picky fouls and let screens and holding by the offense go The rules say that holding should be called when it impedes the flow of the game. But the defense deserves the same rule too Both Wright and Edwards (Please turn to Pa^ 18)

EastCaroUiu(M)

MPFGFT RbFAP

Robinson Williams Brown Wright Edwards McLeod Peartree Vanderhorst Team Totals

3 3 3 2 0 0

4 4 4 5

8 5

0 3 3 4

1 2 3

200 21-53 12-15 28 26

33    1-5    2-2

11    0-1    (M)

35    2-3    1-2

36    4-9    34

32    5-12    34

16    2-3    2-2

26    6-18    1-1

11    1-2    04)

7 54

Of the 13 weight classes, four have less than the maximum 16 competing for the title - 115f 188, 198 and heavyweight. There are 199 wrestlers in all competing in the two-day tournament.

The tournament is scheduled to begin Friday with the first round at 2 p.m. and the quarterfinals at 7 oclock. The semifinals will begin at noon Saturday with the consolation rounds at 2 p.m.

The finals and consolation finals will be held at 6:30 Saturday night.

Tickets for the tournament are $2 per session or $6 for all sessions.

The top four wrestlers from each weight class in sectional competition advance to the Eastern Regionals set for next weekend in Goldsboro.

Kick-Boxing

Monday Night: February 14th Carolina Opry House Fights Start: 8:00 P.M.

Tickets Available At:

Bill McDonald Insurance Agency East 10th Street-Greenville. N.C Phone 752-5192 For Information Tickets: Advance S5.00 At Door S7.00

Strayliom Richardson Weidner Traver Ciepiicki Bland Coval Brooks Team Totals

William It Mary (70)

40 4-5 26 4-9 39 4-7

6-2    7    3    4

34    4    1    1

2-5    7    3    0

33    34    15-16    8    4    1

37    5-11    66    2    4

(M)

2-2 04)

3 16

12 0-2 12 1-1 1 64)

70

2    0 1

0    1 1

0    0 0

0

___200    21-3    28-35    31    16 11

EastCaroUna.............21    33-54

WUliamkMary............2    41-70

Turnovers: ECU 16. WM16.

Technical fouls: ECU - Wright Officials: Scott and Pugliese Attendance: 4,150.

Ten More Sign With Pirates

Leon Hall, a 6-5, 240-pound defensive tackle from Bayside Hi^ School in Flushing, N.Y., heads the second list of new signees by East Carolina Universitys football staff.

Nine players were announced yesterday morning.

Hall was listed in Blue Chip magazine as one of the most outstanding defensive linemen in the country. He led his high school track team to the Queens Championship, winning the shot and discus.

Medrick Rainbow, a 5-11, 220-pound linebacker who attended Conway High School in Conway, S.C., was one of the most sought-after players in the state of South Carolina. As well as being a fine student, his credentials for football show he was the co-captain of the South Carolina Shrine Bowl team. He was an all-state, all-region 4-A conference, all-Horry-Georgetown area, and all-Lower State.

Ron Jones, a 5-10,180-pound quarterback from Norcom High School in Portsmouth, Va., was a second team allstarter in Virginia and first team Eastern Region, All-Tidewater and the Portsmouth Sport Club Player of the Year.

Dave Skenadore, a 6-3, 260-pound offensive lineman, comes to ECU from Granby, Va. High School. He was a first team Eastern Region selection, All-Tidewater, honorable mention All-State.

Essray Taliafero, a 6-2, 200-pound linebacker is from Smithfield, Va., High School. He was all-district, and his teams MVP.

Ron Lundy, a 6-5,235-pound offensive lineman is from Havelock High School. He was an all-East honorable mention, all-Coastal Omference, and team captain.

Vinson Smith, a 6-1, 210-pound linebacker from Statesville, was an all-State selection and a pre-season All-America, all-Piedmont, all-conference, and team MVP.

Joe Grinage, a 6-3, 235-pound defensive lineman, comes from Brooklyn, N.Y. where he attended 'Thomas Jefferson High School. He was captain of his team in the Senior Bowl of New York, All-City offensive lineman, and named to the Big 44, (top 44 players in the city).

Henry Ferraro, a 6-4, 220-pound defensive tackle, is from Inwood, N.Y., where he attended Lawrence High School. He was an all-county, all-Long Island, and was Hicksville Most Valuable Player. He was also the MVP of the Farmingdale Championship Game. His team was conference champs four times.

Winding up the list is Glenn Geist, a 6-4, 222-pound defensive tackle from North Schuykill High School in Ashland, Pa. He was all-East, all-county and all-Anthracite. He also played in the Two-County All-Star game.

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Closely Guarded

William & Marys Brant Weidner (40) tries to get past East Carolinas Thom Brown during first half action between the two in Williamsburg, Va., last night. William & Mary won the ECAC-South game, 70-54, to hold onto first place in the league standings. (APLaserphoto) i

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Wake, State, Ga. Tech Win

By The Associated Press Wake Forest coach Carl Tacy, with an eye on postseason play, chose to attack

DUKE

Henderson

Bilas

Alarie

Dawkins

Emma

Jackman

Engelland

Meagher

Tissaw

Wendt

Totals

GATECH

Pearson

Harvey

Salley

Thomas

Pnce

Bradford

Byrd

Totals

Duke

Georgia Tech

MP EG FT RAFPt

33    0-    4    1-    3    8    2    5    1

18    1    4    0-    1    1    0    5    6

38    7-12    5- 6    13    2    4    19

29    8-14    2 - 4    4    0    4    14

33    1-6    1    2    2    2    5    3

19    0-    5    0-    0    3    0    2    0

24 9-15 0- 0 1 I 4 23

1    0    1    0- 0    2    0    1    0

1    0-    0    0- 0    0    0    0    0

1    0-    0    0- 0    0    0    1    0

aoo 2881 9-16 38 7 31 86 MP FG FT RAFPl 35    3-    6    2 4    9    I    2    8

16    0-    0    0- 0    2    1    4    0

31    3-    5    7 12    6    2    5    13

40    814    2 - 2    6    2    2    14

40    816    3- 3    7    3    2    13

28    4-    9    7 11    6    0    1    15

10 II 2-2 2 0 2 4 200 22-51 23-34 40 9 18 67

29 37-66 29 38-87

Marylands front line last night and his strategy paid off in a 79-66 Atlantic Coast conference victory in Greensboro.

N.C.

Threepoint goals Duke 815 Dawkins 0-2. Emma 83. Jackman 81. Engelland 89 Georgia Tech 85 Thomas 81, Price 0-4

Turnovers Duke 14. Georgia Tech 13 Officiais Burch. Lembo. Wooldndge Alt: 4,160

MARYLAND

Fothergill

Veal

Coleman

Adkins

Branch

Rivers

Farmer

Baxter

Bias

Totals

W FOREST

Toms

Rogers

Teachey

Rudd

Young

Garber .

Green

Kepley

Davis

Warden

Karasek

Totals

3 12

3    10

4    9

5    16 0 0

2    4 0 5

3    8

MP FG FT RAFPt

712800002

29 4- 5 4 - 5 10 0 36 814 8 0 7 1 36 4-12 8 0 5 7 33 819 4- 4 3 I 10 8 3 8 0 0 0 9 1- 3 2- 2 4 0 18 1- 4 2- 2 0 2 22 8 9 1-2 4 1

200 25-71 1815 39 12 10 66 MP FG FT RAFPt 27 812 2- 2 2 0 2 18 32 810 1- 5 10 X 1812 1- 2 It

30 4 6 8 4 1 36 2 6 1-2 1 10 8 I 8 0 1 15 2 4 1- 2 3 10 2- 3 8 0 2 2 8 2 2-2 2 1 80 1-2 0 I 80800

4 II

1 21 2 12 1 5 I 0 3 5 0 4 0 2 0 1 0 0

200 3858 12-21 36 17 14 79

Kick-Box On Monday

Kick-boxing returns to Greenville Monday night when a host of fighters -including world-ranked Curtis Crandall - get in the ring at the Carolina Opry House.

The opening fight is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m.

Tickets are $5 in advance, $7 at the door.

Crandall, who is ranked eighth in the world, heads the fight card, which also includes a number of East Carolina students and Greenville residents.

On the card from ECU are Chuck Johnson, Orlando Dowdy and Jerry Parker. Also, Greenvilles Scott Francis is also slated to fight.

All five fighters are trained by Greenvilles BUI McDonald.

Maryland......................2145-66

Wake Forest....................40 39-79

Three-point goals Maryland 814: Adkins 1-6. Branch 81, Rivers 82, Baxter 1-2, Bias 1-3 Wake Forest 1-3; Rudd 1-1, Young 81, Kepley 81 Turnovers Maryland 13, Wake Forest

14

Officials; Wirti, Fraim, Rice.

Alt; 7.875.

In other ACC basketball action, North Carolina State outshot Clemson 90-83 and Georgia Tech squeaked by Duke 67-66.

Although the Terrapins held a 39-36 rebounding edge, they suffered from poor shooting, hitting 28.6 percent in the first half and 35.2 percent overall, as their seven-game winning streak came to an end.

Anthony Teachey scored 21 points as Wake Forest raised its record to 15-5 over all and 5-2 in the ACC.

Every conference win pushes us one step closer' to the post-season tournament which is one of our bigger goals, Tacy said. But we have to earn it.

After Marylands Adrian Branch tied it with two first-half free throws, Delaney Rudd hit a 3-point field goal to give Wake Forest an edge, with 15:27 left and the Demon

Deacons never trailed again.

The first half was horrible, Maryland coach Lefty Driesell said of the opening period which ended with his club traUing 40-21. It was the worst half I have ever seen as a player or coach.

In Atlanta, Duke held h<^-shooting freshman Mark Price of Georgia Tech to 13 points, but the Blue Devils didnt count on the - shooting of Maurice Bradford.

The Blue DevUs repeatedly fouled Bradford in the final minutes and the senior forward sank five of nine free throws as Tech held on for a 67-66 ACC victory.

Dukes last chance to win vanished when a 15-foot jumper by Johnny Dawkins bounced off the rim as time ran out.

Duke used a switching man-to-man defense to stop Price, who was the ACCs No.

2 scorer at 19.2 points per

game going into the contest.

We played man-to-man defense and I thought the men around him did a good job of guarding him, Duke Coach Mike Knyewski said. You just dont do it with one guy. I thought our defensive effort was good.

It was Techs second ACC victory of the season and only the Yellow Jackets sixth in four years in the conference. Both Tech and Duke are 2-7. in the ACC. Tech is 9-10 overall and Duke is 9-11.

Bradford led Tech scorers with 15 points and George Thomas added 14. Chip Engelland scored 23 for Duke, Mark Alarie added 19 and Dawkins wound up with 14.

Ernie Meyers hit 27 points to lead North Carolina State to a 90-83 victory over Gemson in Raleigh.

Ernie

nomenal

Meyers

scorer,

is a phe-Wolfpack

coach Jim Valano said. Meyers had help from Sidney Lowe, who tied his career best with 21 points, Terry Gannon had 17 and Thurl Bailey 10.

N.C. State, now 13-7 over all and 5-4 in the ACC, hit 10 of 19 from beyond the 19-foot, 3-point field goal line. Gannon hit 5 of 8, Lowe hit 3 of 6 and Myers 2 of 5.

Clemson rallied to within 23-19 on Chris Michaels field goal, but the Wolfpack responded with a scoring blitz to take a 51-33 halftime edge.

Leading 67-52 with 10:22 left, Valvano inserted four substitutes into the lineupm but an easy Clemson basket followed and Valvano went back to the regular lineup 15 seconds later.

It was another one of those games where we played well in spurts and not so well at other times, Gemson coach Bill Forster said.

CLEMSON

Michael

Shaffer

Jones

Jarman

Campbell

Jenkins

Gilliam

Bynum

McCanls

Tofals

N.C. ST

Bailey

Charles

McQueen

Myers

Lowe

Gannon

Proctor

BatUe

McClain

Thompson

Densmore

Warren

Totals

MP FG FT RAFPt

23 2- 7    8 0    6    2    2    5

16 2- 7    2- 2    8

21 811    8 5    6

31 4-52-20 19 > 7    8 0    3

28 815    8 4    8

30 811    2- 2    4

23 8 5    8 0    0

481800 281801 3 1-1    8    0    1

200 32-71 12-15 40    22    29    S3

MP FG    FT    R    A    F    Pt

38 811    8    6    9    5    3    10

19 1- I    4-    5    5    0    1    6

26 4- 6    8    0    5    0    3    8

39 12-18    1-    4    3    2    2    27

39    811    810    7    13    3    21

23    8    9    2- 2    0    2    3    17

5    8    I    80    1        0    0

481800000 3    8    18 0    0    0    1    0

18 0    8    0    0    0    1    0

2 8 0    1-    2    0    0    0    1

180800000

200 3858 2829 33 a 17 90

Clemson........................33 50-83

N.C. sute......................5130-90

Three-point goals. Clemson 7-16: Michael 1-4, Eppley I-I, Wallace 2-2, Campbell 86, Jenkins 83. N.C. SUte 1819: Myers2-5, Lowe86, Gannon88. Turnovers: Oemson 10, N.C. SUte 11. Technical fouls: Clemson bench. Officials: Moser. Russell. Vacca.

Att: 9,300.

Area T rio Holds Spots

By The Associated Press

For the second consecutive week the Associated Press North Carolina high school basketball poll looks much the same, with only one change in the six top spots.

In the 4-A Boys, Greensboro Page, with a 14-0 mark, continues to lead, while in the 3-As Brevard holds its top spot and East Montgomery heads the 2-A.l-A list.

In the 4-A and 2-A, 1-A girls poll the leaders remain Gastonia Huss and Bandys, respectively, but there is a new 3-A leader,

For the second straight-week the top team has dropped, this time replaced by East Bladen,

Indians Keep......

(Continued from page 17) eventually fouled out, Wright getting a technical when he questioned his fifth foul.

Traver finished the game with 21 points, while Cieplicki had 16, Richardson had 11 and Brant Weidner had 10.

East Carolina was led by Edwards and Bruce Peartree with 13 each, while Wright added 11.

East Carolina falls to 10-11 overall, while the Indians are now 13-6.

ECU travels to Charleston, S.C., on Saturday to face Baptist, seeking revenge for an earlier upset in Minges Coliseum.

o asuma Asnonmii i4-z. eu Fayetteville Pine Forest 182,47 Wiimiiuton Laney 12-2,33 Rocky Aunt 84, S

Here is The Associated Press North Carolina High School girls and boys prep basketball polls

4ABoys

1. Greensboro 110114-6.100

2. Chapel Hill 17-2,80

2 Charlotte Independence 181,80 4 Gastonia Huss 181.76

3. Gastonia Ashbrook 14-2.60 6 Fa5

9 Winsm-Salem f^arHland 12-5,10

10 McDowell 12-5.9

3ABoyt

1. Brevard (10) 180.100

2. West Craven 18^73

3 Fast Bladen 182.64

4 North Sur^ 181,80

5 AshevUle Reynolds 182,57

6. GreenviUe Conley 183,51

7. North Pitt 14-4, iS

8 Shelby Crest 183,42

9 Northeast Guilford 17-2,23

10. RobmonvUle Roanoke 183,17

2A-UBoys

1. West Montgomery ('f1180,93

2. Mattamusfeet (1)180,77

3. Fairmont (11180,75

4 Monroe Parkwood 181,61

5 Neweton Foard 17-1,60

6 Sampson Union 181.47

7 WhitevUlel7-l,37

8 Sylva-Webster(l)183,33

9.Nakina282,25

10, Bandys 14-4,9

10 CuJlowhee8ll.9

4A Girls

1 Gastonia Huss (9) 17-0,92

2 Raleigh Broughton 19-0,89

3 Fayetteville Pine Forest (1) 17-0,81

4 Goldsboro 14-3.63

5 McDowell 14-3,57

6 Gastonia Ashbrook 12-2.51

7 Hoke 10-4,42

8 Jacksonville 183.30

9 Wilmington Hoggard 11 2.27

10 SouthCaldweini-6.11

3A Girls

1 East Bladen (1114-0,78

2. Southwest Edgecombe (3) 17-2,72

3 Burlington Cummings 181.67

4 Kannapolis Brown (2) 13-0,58

5 Madison-Mayodan 18-0,54

6 Lincolnton(f) 12-1.36

7 Davie 17-2,33

8 GrSham 181,24

8 Madison (2114-1.24 10 Thomasville 182,21

2A-1A Girls

1 Bandys (7) 18-0,95

2 BelhavenWilklnaoo(i)i7-0,83 ii

3, East Carteret 180,7l    |

4 Southwest Guilford 180.57

5 Orrum (1) 180,55

6 Monroe Parkwood 181,39

7 Sylva-Webster (I) 17-1,36

8 Hiwassee Dam 183.31

9 Sampson Union 14-1, 39 jlO Albemarle 181,19

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ACC Action

Wake Forests John Toms (3) tries to pass the ball inside to fellow teammate Alvis Rogers (left) as Marylands Herman Veal (42) guards during first half action last night in Greensboro (left picture).

Wake won the game, 79-66. At right, N.C. States Sidney Lowe (35) shoots a jumper over Qemsons David Shafffer during action in their ACC game at Raleigh. (AP Laserphotos)

St. John's Clips Hoyas

By The Associated Press It was a battle in more ways than one when seventh-ranked St. Johns beat back No. 14 Georgetown.

Its a great game for us to win. said St. Johns Coach Lou Camesecca, whose Re-dmen took a 75-69 Big East Conference victory Wednesday night. Weve got our edge back. You can never rest against Georgetown. They come at you in waves.

The game also included two bench-clearing incidents. In the first, Georgetowns David Wingate pushed St. Johns Billy Goodwin, who was ejected when he took a punch at Wingate.

The benches emptied again moments later when Georgetowns Michael Jackson ran into Kevin Williams on a rebound attempt.

"I like what I saw in my

kids tonight, Camesecca said. They showed a lot of guts. After a good start, everything went against them. In the second half, they took control.

In other games involving Top Twenty teams, sixth-ranked Houston crushed Southern Methodist 85-68, No. 11 Louisville clobbered Tulane 73-56 and No.15 Syracuse rolled over Utica 99-71.

Chris Mullen scored 25 points - 16 in the second half as St. Johns, 20-2 overall and 9-2 in the Big East, downed Georgetown for the second time this season. Georgetowns record dropped to 16-6 overall and 6-3 in the conference despite center Patrick Ewings 21 points and 13 rebounds.

The Redmen were trailing 4945 with 16:37 left in the game when they ran off a 14-3

spurt, holding Georgetown scoreless from the field in a nine-minute span.

Top Twenty Making a bid for their first Southwest Conference basketball title, the Houston Cougars overwhelmed Southern Methodist behind a 26-point performance by forward Michael Young - 20 in the second half.

Young really hurt us in the stretch when they pulled away, said SMU Coach Dave Bliss. Once Houston gets the lead, they make it tough on you. They have the experience to know how to deal with it. Houston is now 19-2 overall and 10-0 in league play.

Scooter McCray scored 15 points and his brother, Rodney, added 14 to lead Louisville as the Cardinals increased their season record to 20-3. The victory also gave Louisville an 8-0 Metro Con

ference mark.

The Cardinals jumped out to a 10-2 lead, had a 35-22 margin at halftime and enjoyed leads of up to 21 points in the second half.

Leo Rautins scored a career-high 27 points to lead Syracuse over Utica in a non-conference game. Johnathan Carter the losers with 27 points.

IVa/fon Seen As Jets Top Pick

NEW YORK (AP) - Joe Walton, passed over by the Kansas City Chiefs and Atlanta Falams, was expected to find a NatkMial Football League head coaching job right at home.

The offensive coordinator of the New York Jets is considered the leading candidate to replace Walt Michaels, who retired as head coach of the ' Jets in a surprise move Wednesday.

I have spit 32 years in this game and I have enjoyed them all, Michaels said in a prepared statement. But in that time I have never taken a vacation and never spent enough time with my family. Now I think it is time that 1 should.

The resignation, which caught the players by surprise, made the Jets the eighth NFL team to lose a coach since the start of the 1982 season, with Seattle changing head coaches twice.

I am proud to say that I leave a much better team than the one I took over six years ago, Michaels ^ said in his statement, rhe Jets are a team that I am proud to have personally chosen and developed.

The move came amid speculation that Michaels was forced to resign by Jets President Jim Kensil. Neither Michaels nor Kensil was available for comment on Wednesday,

...His statement speaks for itself, Kensil said in a prepared statement. Our priority now is to fill the vacancy created by his decision. Walton, considered the man responsible for developing the Jets offense, had been interviewed for head coaching jobs at Kansas City, Atlanta and the Los Angeles Rams. However, Kansas City selected John Mackovic and Atlanta named Dan Henning.

A source close to the Jets front office said the hierarchy in the club felt Walton was the coach of New Yorks future and was concerned about the possibility of losing him to another club as head coach.

I want to be a head coach;

I hope it happens, Walton said Sunday after he and other members of the Jets staff coached the American Conference in the Pro Bowl.

Quarterback Richard Todd, who has blossomed under Waltons coaching the last two years, said he would like to

see somebody from within the organization (get the job) because they know the per-snality and the players. Its not like were a 4-12 team that has to be built. We have the people. Weve been in the playoffs for the pa^ two years and I think were beadied in the right direction.

The fewer changes you have, the better youll be. Several sources said heated words were exchan^ between Michaels and Kensil on the airplane trip back from from the American Conference championsh^ game, which the Jets lost to the Miami Dolphins 14-0, and sources said that the coach had been forced to r^ire and talked of recent friction between Michaels and Kensil.

The day following the Miami loss, Michaels refused to attend the final team meeting, which was mandatory for the players, and also refused to attend the traditional end-of-season news conference.

I really couldnt see why he decided to retire rigit now, with the team in a position where we could be Super Bowl champions in a coiq)le of years or next year, said cornerback Bobby Jackson. Its surprising that he reached this level of success and all of a sudden, he retires.

Todd said he was surprised by Michaels move, but noted: he took a lot of heat. We both took heat. But I dont think he was burned out.

I dont understand it, said strong safety Ken Schroy. He brou^t this team a long way.

I guess the pressure can get to you after awhile. But it seems strange he would retire.

But offensive line coach Bob Frey said, I had heard rumors from other clubs that he might leave.

Michaels was the Jets defensive coach when the team won Super Bowl III in 1969 and remained with the club as an assistant until 1973 when Gharley Winner was named head coach, succeeding Weeb Ewbank. Michaels then moved to Philadelphia for three years. "

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C

CACHES'

ORNER

By CHARLIE HARRISON ECU Mens BasketbaU Coach

There have been many questions asked on who will be coming to Greenville to play in the Pirate Pit, better known as Minges Coliseum. Scheduling has a gr^t deal to do with a teams success and also a^teams notoriety. Here at ECU, scheduling has been very difficult. There are reasons this.

First of all, the independent status that ECU had fw several years makes it very difficult to get teams to make a trip to Greenville even if a game (i the road is part of the package.

Second, for a team to I play only one game in Greenville, a very sub-1 stantial monetary guarantee must be awaixM and j until Minges is sold outj such a guarantee would! not be a solid business! venture for the athletic department or for the basketball budget.

Third, ECU is still a relative unknown in basketball. Well-known universities want to play in front of a great crowd -1 against competition that will flavor their sched-! ule. Were close to this but not there yet.

So here are some! reasons why our ECU basketball schedule has been mainly on the road and somewhat lacking with a good many home games. So whats the answer, you may ask.

The first step in the right direction was taken by joining the ECAC. By being a member of a conference home games are guarenteed. This positive move has been demonstrated by the competitive and entertaining games against James Madison and George Mason. There are still four more games in Minges this season as Richmond, Navy, UNC-Wilmington and Penn State-Behrend visit the Pirate Pit.

The second step that needs to be taken is securing other quality teams to play both at home and away on alternating years. We have started this by having signed contracts and working to secure contracts of this nature with Iona, Boston University, UNC-Charlotte, UNC-Wilmington, Armerican University and other reputable programs in the Atlantic Coast Region.

The third step is to eliminate those games that will not be returned to Greenville. We still would enjoy playing against the ACC schools but these schools must realize that its very difficult to play each year on their home floor, with their officials and wantingly by their rules. I have decided to play these ACC universities only should they make it financially rewarding to ECU to venture onto their home floors and play according to NCAA rules. I feel this is only fair.

We don not want to schedule a winning year - we want to play a competitive schedule and have a winning team and tradition. We want to play an equally divided schedule of road games and home games in addition to taking the team to one prestigious tournament. We have started doing this by the future schedule of appearances at Kentucky, Indiana, and hopefully, Vanderbilts tournaments. We also hope to play in the Great Alaskan Shoot-Out in the very near future. Such tournaments give our players the chance to see other areas of the country and will also give them an opportunity to gain soraMational reco^tion s^d they perform well.

Stledling is usually done three to four years in advance but knowing the problems that have existed we have now tried to find some solutions to give you, the fans, a better home schedule and by giving the team - players and coaches a more representative home and away variance.

It will take some time but as I said earlier - first the baby must cr3wl....

By the way - thanks to the ECU sixth man (our crowd) who seems to have quickly and effectively awakened. Keep on coming in - youre all appreciated.

Motives Abound In Second Game

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer CHAPEL HILL (AP) -Virginia coach Terry Holland says theres not need to tag it as a Game of the Century, but there are plenty of motivtes for revenge tonight when top-ranked North Carolina hosts the third-ranked Cavaliers.

Both teams appear headed for the NCAA playoffs, and Virginias home-court winning streak was snapped last month when they were defeated by the Tar Heels at Charlottesville.

Weve been in so many showdowns the last three seasons, I think its going to be hard to think of it in those terms, Holland said.

But Tar Heels Coach Dean Smith is preparing his team for a real fight.

Theyre on a roll. I dont think anybody could have done to Louisville what they did to them, Smith said of the Cavaliers 98-81 thrashing of the Cardinals last month. It will be a battle. We have a chance.

The Cavaliers, 19-2 and 7-1 in the Atlantic Coast Conference, are riding a seven-game winning streak which began following a 101-95 loss to the Tar Heels in Charlottesville. Virginia still remembers last seasons 47-45 loss to Carolina in the finals of the ACC tournament.

While 7-foot-4 Ralph Sampson has been at Virginia, the Tar Heels have beaten the Cavaliers five of nine times. Virginia has a 9-1 record when Sampson scored 30 points or more. The blemish on that slate is his 30-point effort in a 65-60 loss to the Tar Heels last s6dson

North Carolina was at the .500 mark in its first six games and the reigning national

SCOREBOARD

Bowthg

nxmdayNtgMOiria

W    L

Teainll...............t    31

HighRoUers...........43    33

UttleDq^ :...m    33^4

Ck>n)weU Biniden 31

TeamlS.;.............42    34

TheE.T.i..........32    44

nureeStoers...........31^    44V4

Strikeout.............26    50

Womens high series h game Sharon MatUiews, 5611216; Men's hi^ series Kevin Williams, St3; Mens high game - Tommy Tripp,

218.    n

Roc Boskttboli

PeeWeeDiviak

Pirates............4 4 12    0-20

BlueDevils........2 8 4    12-26

Leading scorers: P-Mitchell Brown 6, Leo Lee 6; BD-Jonathan Powers 12, Jason Adams 6.

Midget Division

Wolfpack............7    0    6    2-15

Pirates..............4    7    7    8-26

Leading scorers: WChris Christopher 12, Jamie Br 3; P-Wesley Jackson 15, N GaUoway7.

Wildcate  .....2    6    0    2-10

Cavaliers............7    8    8    4-27

Leading scorers: WBiake Stallings 6, Tommy Baker 4; C Paul Powers 13, Richard Lewis 4.

Junior Division

Terrapins..........4    8    3    621

Cavaliers....:.....10    5    12    5-30

Leading scorers: TScott Davis 10, Bob Ahlers 6; C-Jimmie Hall

12,To*Moyell.

Wolfpack...........2    8    3    8-21

Pirates............13    5    4    12-34

Leading scorers: WPaul Kelly

13. Travis King 4; P-Skip Pascaslo 12, Greg Jones 7.

AA Division

Taff ..... ............20    31-51

PCC...................28 '42-70

Leadinv scorers: T-Terry

BnuMlI It, Dallas Pugh 10; PC-Prank White 18, Byron Tyson 18.

TANKIFNAMARA    by    Jeff    Millar    &    Bill    Hinds

imnon.

E&P..

A Division

36-78 11-45

Leathng scorers: I-Tom Gatlin 29, Ken StaUings It; SCf-Howle Shaiefl 19, Dennis Nate 12.

Fergusons............28    4fr-68

Cherrys...............3t 5S-t4

Lea^ scorers: F-M. Belle 16, D. Hinds 15; C-Terry Sheiton 46, Ayrrey Wynn 14.

West Greenville Pee Wee

Tigers..............4    6 1- 10-21

Irish  .............0    2 5 7-14

Leading    scorers:    T-Lemuel

Gilbert 12,    Terrance Smith 4;

I-DalantaTed 11.

NBA Stondinflt

BvTteAaodatedPreM EASTE31N CONFERENCE Atlantic DMiioa W LPct OB PhUadeipUa    42    7    857    -

BoataT    38    U    .780    4^

NewJeney    33    U    .S47    10

Washington    23    25    47    I8Mi

NewYocfc    22    28    440    2^

AlfliaC 'CO BECCUtTS? WMO OO0EP l,CDPlAVl0Hli>WiEljalWR?    ^

MUwaukee

Atlanta

Detroit

Chicago

Indiana

Clevdand

7

38 U 33 U 25 22 28 Central DMiiaa 32 18 24 28 24 27 17 33 15 34

' WESTERN COmWnCX UidweatDlvUaa SanAntonio    30    21    .

Dallas    25    24

KmsasCHy    25    25

Denver    25    27

Utah    18    33

Houston    10    31

PaeUlcDlvisian LosAngeics    38    10

Portland    29    20

Phoenix    30    21

SestUe    27    23

GoidenSUte    20    29

SanDiego    16    35

Weihiesday'tGamei Boston 106, New York 96 PhilaiWphia 106, AUanU93 New Jersey 105, Indiana 90 Clevdand 104, MUwaukee >4 DaUas 122, Detroit 113 Kansas City 103, Golden SUte96 Denver 134, SeatUe 125

.640 -.480    8

.471 8Mi .340 15 306 16>/{i .220 21

588 -

.510    4

.500    4M>

.481    5i^

.353 12 IM 19

.782 -.582 9Mi .588 Ml .540 12 .406 1845 314 234

Loe Angeles 113, Utah 99

TtaidayiOaMa

Cleveland at Indiana, (n)

Houston at Washington, (B)

PbUadelphU at Ciago. (n)

Poctlanoat Milwaukee, (n)

Golden State at San Antonio. (n)

Seattle at Utah, (n)

Phoenix at San Dieg^ (n) PhdaysdaBM No games schediied

NHL Stondings

ByTheABSodatedPrea WMei Conference Patrick Divisin W L    T GF GA    PU

PhUadelphia 35    13    7    226    152    77

NY Isles    29    18    9    208    162    67

Washington 27    16    13    221    193    67

NYRangers 23    24    8    201    196    54

New Jersey 11    34    12    158    237    34

Pittsbur0l 12 37    7    171    272    31

Adams DIvMao Boston    36    10    8    218    142    SO

Montreal    29    16    10    251    198    68

Buffalo    25    18    11    202    172    61

Quebec    25    22    I    236    223    58

HarUord 13    36    6 179    275    32

CamobellCaafereooe No^DhrWoo Chicago    36    14    7    245.    195    79

MinneaoU    27    15    13    224    196    67

St. Louis    17    28    II    193    217    45

Detroit    14    30    12    175    232    40

Toromo 14    29    10 197    231    38

SmytheDlvisiao Edmonton    30    16    10    300    227    70

Calgary    23    25    6    231    234    54

Winnipeg    21    27    7    206    229    49

Vancouver    18    26    It    201    218    47

LosAngeles 17    28    8    190    234    42

-   /I Games

champions soon found themselves out of The Associated Press college basketball poll.

Following an 84-74 loss to Tulsa, the Tar Heels ran off 17 straight victories to give Smith his 13th straight 20-win season, an NCAA record. North Carolina is undefeated in seven league contests.

Enhancing North Carolinas 20-3 record was last weekends sweep of the Furman and Citadel, but Smith has reminded his team that they arent exactly in Virginias class.

Smith said its too early to put any special emphasis on this game, although berths in the NCAA regional competition could be determined by the game.

Weve got too many tou^ games ieft to put special emphasis on this one, Smith added.

The last time the two teams met, junior forward Sam Perkins scored 36 points, including four of four baskets from beyond the ACCs experimental three-point field goal semicircle.

Perkins is a great inside player, but he also hit his three-point shots against us, said Holland. Its very tough to stop those. Well have to try to keep him from getting a lot of baskets inside.

Perkins leads the ACC in three-point fieid goal accuracy, hitting 10 of 16 for 62.5 percent. He thinks his performance against Sampson last time will pump ,up Sampsrai even moreThursdy.

There are people getting on him all the time about somebody showing him up, said Perkins. Ralph is a talented guy. Some coaches , can pin him down and sometimes he makes up his mind and goes all out and carries the load on his shoulders.

Buck:Jusf Makin'A Livin'

Detroit 6, Hartford:

Vancouver 6, Pittsburgh 2 Chicago SJiew Jersey 4

Tbundays Garnet PittstNirgh at Boston St Louis at Philadel|Aia Winnipeg at Montreal Washinj^ at New York Islanders New York Rangers at MtiuieaoU Quebec at Calgary Buffalo at Lot Angeles

Friday* G>m<s

Vancouver at Washington Qw^ at Edmonton

By The Associated Press Buck Williams considers himself a virtual bhie-ctlar working man among National Basketball Association players.

Im just a man trying to make a living, says the New Jersey Nets rugged forward.

The most important part of his job is rebounding. When he produces a high point total, as he did in Wednesday ni^ts 105-90 victory over the Indiana Pacers, why, thats just a bonus.

Along with his 16 rebounds, Williams scored 26 points on 10 of 11 shooting to help the surging Nets win for the 20th time in the last 25 games. Coupled with a fine performance against Atlanta the previous night, that gave Williams 55 points and 32 rebounds in two nights.

I know how important it is for me to rebound, said Williams. I know its my responsibility to rebound. It bothers me when I dont have a good night, because I really feel Im letting the club down. Thats my role.

Michael Ray Richardson, acquired by the Nets Sunday ni^it in a trade that sent forward Mickey Johnson and guard Eric Sleepy Floyd to Golden State, scored ei^t of his 13 points in the fourth quarter and finished with eight assists.

Indiana pulled within 81-80 with 8:47 left, but Richardson tipped in Otis Birdsongs missed shot, Albert King saiik two free throws and Williams made a layup to give New Jersey a seven-point lead. The Pacers got no closer than five the rest of the way.

Celtics 106, Knicks%

Larry Bird scored 33 points, including nine in a two-minute span late in the third quarter, to lead Boston over New York. Boston snapped a two-game losing streak while New York had its five-game winning streak broken.

Boston opened a 68-55 lead midway through the third quarter, but the Knicks scored Uie next six points to ci(^ the gap to seven with 3:54 left in the period.However, the Celtics then erupted for a IW spurt, led by Birds nine points, to create an 83-65 advantage, their biggest of the game.

76ersl06, Hawks 93 Julius Erving scored 27 points, made nine assists and had nine rebounds to lead Philadelphia over Atlanta.Moses Malone scored 18 points and collected 13 rebounds for the 76ers, who never trailed in racking up their 42nd victory against seven losses.

Hawks Coach Kevin Loughery was thrown out of the game on his second technical foul with 6:26 remaining. Loughery now leads the leagues coaches with 18 technicals.

Cavaliers 104, Bucks 94 World B. Free scored 12 of his 32 points in the fourth quarter and Cliff Robinson tossed in 30 as Cleveland beat Milwaukee. The victory was Clevelands second straight only the second time the

Cavaliers, 11-39, have won two in a row this season.

Mavericks 122, Pistons 113 Jay Vincent scored 29 points to lead Dallas over Detroit for the Mavericks lOth victory in 12 games.Mark Aguirre added 24 pmnts for Dallas and Brad Davis hit a season-high 21 points as the Mavericks raised their record to 25-24. ^

Denver 134, Seattle 125 Kiki Vandeweghe scored 37 points and Dan Issel had 31 to lead Denver over Seattle, continuing the Sonics woes on the road.After winning Ifi of their first 12 games onthe road, the Sonics have now lo^t 12 of their last 13, and are 27-23 after opening the season with a dozen straight victories.

Lakers 113, Jazz 99 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 16 points, including the 29,000th point of his NBA career, as Los Angeles routed Utah. Abdul-Jabbar, the second-leading scorer in NBA history, needed only four points to reach the 29,000-mark.

Transaction!

ByTbcAiiodatedPreH BASEBALL Amcrtcan Leaoic

BALTIMORE ORIOlES-Signed Sammy Stewart, pitcher, to a three-year contract. Signed Ken Dixon, pitcher, and John Shelby, oidfielder.

CLEVELAND INDIANS-Announced

one-year contracts KANSAS

agreed i afyROYALS-Signed Steve

Renko, pitcher, to a one-vear contract.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Annoimced that Alfredo Griffin, shortstm; Dave Shipanoff, Mike Morgu, Dave Geisei and Dennis Howard, pitchnrs; Ken Kinnard, outfielder, and Geno PetraUi, catcher, had agreed to terms.

NaUaoalLeafue MONTREAL EXPOS-Slgned Mike Gates, infielder, and Mike Stenhouse, outfielder, to one-year contracts. Named Rene Guiroond vice-president for marketing and public affairs.

BASKETBALL CooUnenUd Baaki^ Association ALBUQUERQUE SILVERS-Named Norm Ellenberger head coach.

FOOTBALL Natkmal Football League HOUSTON OILERS-Naihed Bill Walsh offensive line coach.

NEW YORK JETS-Announced the retirement of Walt Michaels, head coach.

HOCKEY National I

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BoBtonOoU.tLSelaaHaUTt

BostonU 57,MaineSl

Bridgeport 58, LoweU 56

Bridoemter. Maas 76. Curry 56

BrtKk^St 87,GenemSt 65

BrooU^CoU 82.DeUwareSt 56

Bucknell 73.LehigiS8

CanlsHis 58. Detroit 55. OT

Colby 72. Bates 57

Concord 61, Bluefidd 80

C W PQat95.DowtinB74

Delaware Valley 88TPDU-Madisoo 75

DickinMNi 83, Gettysburg6l

Dist o(ColuinhiaM,NewYorkTech75

Edinhoro86, Lock Haven

Fairleigh Dickinson 91. Siena 85 Fayetteville St 103, Bowie St C FredonUSt W. HouM^S3 Gannon 64, Penn St^Behrend 59 Hartwk*72,Unloii,N Y 70 Haverford 74. Wartiington. Md 57 Hofstra M. Towson St 71 Johns Hopkins 76, Swarthmore 67 Keenest 70. PlynMMghSt 63 KuUtown St. 5?, E Stroudsburg St 53,

53

OT

77

Lafayette 70, Delaware , OT Lehman 68. SUN Y-Purchaae 49 Loyola, Md 82, Baltiroore 75 Mansfield St 97. Mercyhurst 91.2 OT Md -E Shore, Co^St M Mass -Boston 81, Lyndon St

Mercy 85, Pace 83, OT

Monmouth 78, Southampton 74

Morgan St K. Lincoln U 77

Mt srMary's6S, Md -Balt County 63

NavySl, American U 74

New Hamp^lre Coll , St Michaels

Phila. Textile 71, EJizabethtown 47 Queens Coil 56. York, N Y 53 Sacred Heart 96, New Haven 83 St Johns 75, Georgetown 69 St Peter's M, St Francis, Pa 78 Scranton 77. Wilkes

ShippentourgSt. Ill, MiUersville St , Spring Garden 74, Ffenn St -Capitol 42 Staten Island W, Hunter

Stockton St 78. Kean 73 ^racuse99, Utica 71 Temple 61, Penn 53,2 OT Trimly 84, Brandis 61 Vermont 71, Middlebury 61

Waynesburg . Davis A Elkins 71 W Connecticut 57, Coast Guard 48 Westminster 72, Alliance 54 West Virginia 93,^St. Josephs64 W Virginia Tech l65, Alderson-Broaddus 79 Williams 79, Worcester Tech 70 SOUTH Alabama St 82, Southern U

Baptist 106, S. Carolina St 73 Bir Southern 82. Uvln^

Campbell 72. Howard U 65 E Tennessee St M.VM163 Florida 85, St Leo 49 Fort Valley St 90. Morehouse 67 Ga. Southern 67. Mercer 55

MONTREAL CANftlES-Assigned Dwight Schofield, defenseman, to Nova Scotia of the American Hockey League

College Baskatbail

ByTheAaaocUtedPreas

EAST

Albany St., N Y 59, Plattsburgh St. 57 Albrimt 51. Lycoming SO Army 57, Fairfield 55, OT Baruch 65. Kings Point

Bethany, W Va. 87, Camegie-Mellon 76 Bloomstiwg 70, Cheynev St M, OT

Big East

Boys Standings

Conf.

Overall

W L

W

L

Northern Nash

6 3

12

4

Rocky Mount

6 3

11

4

Fike

6 3

10

7

Hunt

5 4

12

5

Kinston

4 5

12

6

Northeastern

3 6

11

6

Beddingfield

3 6

7

10

Rose

3 6

4

11

Girls Standings

Conf,

Overall

W L

W

L

Rocky Mount

9 0

10

3

Fike

6 3

12

5

Hunt

6 3

7

10

Rose

5 4

7

9

Kinston

4 5

8

7

Northeastern ,

3 6

10

7

Beddingfield

3 6

7

10

Northern Nash

0 9

0

16

Ga Southwestern 75. Berry 63 Georgia Tech 67, Duke

Guilford93,Atl Christian 87 LaGrange 69. Southern Tech 62 Louisiana Tech 70. NE Louisiana 55 Louisville 73, TuianeM NichoUsSt 57. Jackson St 56 N.C-Greensboro 58, Appalachian St 54 North Carolina St 90. Clemson83 N C.-WeslevM 67. Greensboro Coll 57 N Georgia 73, Shorter 70 Richmond 59. Randolph-Macon 49 SW, Tennessee, Fisk 71 Tennessee St 72, Gramblmg 69 Va Commonwealth 59 James Madison

J

Virginia Tech N Carolina AAT 67 Va Union79,NC Central75 Wake Forest 79. Maryland

W Carolina62, Furman 54. OT William k Mary 70, East Carolina 54 Winthrop 61. Limestone 59 MIDWEST Augsburg 74. St Mary's, Mmn 61 Augustana W. Elmhurst 62 Baldwin-Wallace S3. Otterbein

Ball St 72, E Michigan 58 Bethany. Kan , Sterling 63 Calvin 89. Adnan O Case Western. Wash A Jeff 58 Cent. .Missouri 76. Iincoln 65 Dayton 75. Butler 57 Defiance 71 Bluf Ron 64 DePaul 83. Evansville 82 Dickinson St . Masille Si 64 Doane76, Hastings 61 Oordt 103, Dakota St

E Illinois 64. Valparaiso 62 Franklin, Manan 56 Gustav-Adolphus. St Thomas 70 Hope 77, Albion 74 John Carroll 73, Allegbeny 65 Kalamazoo 78. Atkinas 65 Loras 71, Mount Mercy 62 Manchester 101, Wilmington 96 2 OT ManetU77.0herlm

Maryitwunt 77, Kansas Newman 65 Miami 72. W Michigan 52 Midland 106, Concordia. Neb 70 Minn Morns . Moorhead St

Mo -St Louis Mo Rolla67 Monmouth 104. Illinois Coll 85 Mount Union M, Denison

Muskingum 47, Ke^on 43 Neb Wesleyan 65, Dana 53 North Central 74, Carthage 64 N Illinois.Cent Michigan65 Northern St 83. SW. Minnesota 75 NW.Iowa, Briar am 71 NW Missouri 62, NE Missoun 59 Ohio Northern 78, Heidelberg 70 Ohio St.. Wisconsin 65 OhwU 73. Kent St 71 Oklahoma 64. Kansas St. 62 Olivet 76. Aima75 Pa)ckford75. Ul Benedictine

St Mary's, Kan 72, McPherson

St Xavier 71. Roosevelt 61 SW Kansas. Bethel. Kan . OT Tabor 67, Kansas Wesleyan 61 Toledo M. Bowling Green 79 Transylvania 74, indiana-SE 67 Trinity, 111 , Concordia, HI 72 Wis MUwaukee 78. Rosary Wittenberg 53. Wooster

Xavier. Ohio I09J^ Salle 85 SOUTHWEST

Cameron 75, Cent. St. Okla 71 E Cent Okla NE Oklahoma 54

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Hines Agency, Inc.

758 - 1177

Houston 85. Southern Methodist Umar 62. Arkansas St 47 N W Oklahoma 73. SW Oklahoma Oklahoma St 71. Nebraska 63.20T SE Oklahoma 8l. Dallas Baptist

S Mississippi. Pan American 45

Texas AAM51, Rice 45

Texas Tech 67, Texas Christian 61

Far WEST

Montana Tech 72. W MonUna

Pomona Pitier, Caltech 33 San Diego St 63. Utah 61

NX. Scora^ard

ByTheAsaocUtedPreH

Men'iBaakethaU

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Tennis Club Sets Tourney

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Bourbon-Makers Fighting

V

slump; Market is Down

By BILL BERGSTROM

Associated Press Writer

LORETT, Ky lAP) -Good times and bad times have been part of corn-whiskey making since Revolutionary War settlers moved west to farm the rolling central Kentucky hills and fire up their small pot-and-worm" stills.

Today, the times are more bad than good. With more people drinking wine and beer, Kentucky bourbon makers are fighting a slump.

The industry in Kentucky has gone up, its gone down, and it's not had a steady development, said Bill Samuels Jr.. whose family has made whiskey for four generations near Bardstown.

State distillers sell about 50 million gallons of bourbon a year, about 75 percent of the nations total, says Frank Dailey, president of the Kentucky Distillers Association

But bourbon consumption nationwide has been dropping. According to Impact, a trade newsletter for the wine and liquor industry, the distilled spirits market was down 6.9 percent for the first nine months of 1982. Whiskeys as a group dropped 9.2 percent and. bourbon was down 10.4 percent, it said.

The economy may be a cause as well as the growth of the wine market. said Michael Moaba, managing editor of the New York-based publication.

The bourbon industry in Kentucky employs about 5,550 people during peak spring and fall bottling periods, but that drops to about 1,500 during the summer when manv com-

DUI Killer Is Ordered ToPay

C.WT0NI.4. .M,C. (API -A Belmont man. whose truck hit a car head-on. killing a J-month-old girl last November, was sentenced Monday to six months in jail on work release.

Judge Forrest A. Ferrell of Hickpry sentenced Roger A. Hawkins to two years in the Gaston County Jail but suspended 1'2 years of the sentence for three years. During the active six-month term. Hawkins will participate in a work-release program.

He also ordered Hawkins to pay restitution of $4,000 for medical bills and $400 for burial fees to the family of Crystal Benfield.

The baby died Nov. 4 from injuries she suffered Nov. 1 when a truck driven by Hawkins crashed head-on into her parents car in Belmont.

A Gaston County Superior Court jury last week convicted Hawkins of death by motor vehicle, driving under the influence of alcohol, driving left of the center line and transporting an open bottle of liquor in a motor vehicle.

panies shut down for maintenance. says Dailey.

Joseph E Seagram & Sons, citing excess distilling capacity nationwide, recently confirmed plans to close its Louisville plant where it makes Calvert whiskey, Crown Royal vodka and Benchmark bourbon.

"The basic problem that led to our tentative decision in the first place remains -that is, diminishing demand for certain kinds of distilled spirits and the excess production capacity we have among our several plants nationwide, said William E. W'under, Seagram vice president for production and engineering.

About 400 employees will lose their jobs at the Louisville plant which plans to close by July.

However, companies such as Louisvilles Glenmore Distilleries Co. and Brown-Forman Distillers Corp., have premium bourbon brands that do well.

Glenmores Kentucky Tavern bourbon registered a 15 percent increase in sales in the past fiscal year, and Brown-Formans Jack Daniels whiskey posted a 13 percent gain.

Hopes Ban New 'Hoovervilles'

HOUSTON (,AP) - As workmen were tearing down Tent City, a rest stop which for six months housed about 200 homeless people, a state legislator proposed a bill to prevent such communities from springing up again.

State employees with axes and heavy equipment on Tuesday began teanng into the tents and lean-tos at the modern-day Hooverville, which had been barricaded Monday by order of the Harris County fire marshal after the death of a resident in a fire.

In Austin, meanwhile, state Rep. Tony Palumbo introduced a bill outlawing such communities, saying Tent City residents had refused offers of jobs or housing at centers where alcohol was prohibited.

"They had no intention of working, he said. That was not their lifestyle.

LONGER LIFE SPAN?

LONDON (AP) - The average life-span in Britain could rise to 85 or 90 years as medical knowledge advances and people take more preventive measures against disease, a British medical statistician. Sir Richard Doll, says.

BREAKING RANKS TOKYO (AP) - Japan broke ranks with the United States and became the 119th country to sign the Law of the Sea Convention in Jamaica, Foreign Ministry officials said Tuesday.

JAWS - Artist Craig Yanek prepares an exhibit on prehistoric times at the Milwaukee Public Museum while a tyranosaurus rex model stands guard. The exhibit, due to open in October, will feature several dinosaur models. (AP Laserphoto)

Some distillers change their approach during slack sales periods and a lot of them are buying wineries, said,Dailey.    

The larger companies, recognizing the problem of competition, own Scotch distilleries and wineries and produce vodka and gin because they see where the competition is so they acquire a product in that area, he said.

Others, like Samuels, stick to bourbon. Samuels manages the Makers Mark distillery at Loretto, whose premium bourbon is one of the states smallest sellers at about 125,000 cases. But he said, We sell out of whiskey every year, and you can hardly beat that when everybodys wringing their hands.

Concentrating on bourbon also works for James B. Beam Distilling Co., said marketing director Victor Zast. "Weve had record sales for four years back-to-back now, in a period when its been the toughest sledding for bourbon. Beams Clermont and Boston. Ky., distilleries make the worlds largest selling bourbon at some four million cases a year.

Samuels family has been making bourbon since Robert Samuels, a junior officer in the Revoiutkmary War, mustered out in 1793 and moved to Kentucky. Land was offered to anyone who would settle, raise com, and stay three years.

This was most attractive to people who knew what to do with the com ... They started making whiskey and that was the first money of the West, Samuels said.

While concerned about changing tastes, distillers have no industrywide plan to combat the switch to wine and other spirits.

Every time a product takes hold, its taking way our bourbon customers, Dailey said. People who drink rum are not going to get bourbon like they should.

But Robert C. Baranaskas.the Schenley Industries distillery in Frankfort, Ky., said his surveys indicate college students are returning to bourbon. Zast predicted a similar trend.

Six years ago vodka was hot. Then people started drinking rum, which has a little more flavor. The trend IS to more taste, Zast said.

MASTER DISTILLER - Baker Beam, a distiller at James B. Beam Distilling Co.s Clermont, Ky., plant and a sixth-generation

member of the founding family, watches com mash bubble and ferment in a vat in preparation for the still. (AP Laserphoto)

Bourbon-making is not simple, whether at Beams big steel buildings or tiny Makers Mark with its hardwood floors and hewn rafters.

Corn mash bubbles and ferments in huge stainless

steel or wood vats, turning into distillers beer. That is distilled into new bourbon, a clear liquor with a strong corn flavor and sharp bite. Then it goes into new, charred oak barrels.

The barrels sit four years

or more, as the liquor expands and contracts with the seasons, penetrating the charred inner surface. The whiskey turns amber, and loses its bite.

Aging takes time, a terrific problem, Dailey said.

They have to make a product today that they cant sell for four years. And during that four years theyre paying taxes, tteyre paying storage charges, theyre having the whiskey evaporate.

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German Elections Center On AAissiles, Economy

By SUSAN J. SMITH Associated Press Writer

BONN, West Germany (AP) - West Germanys election campaign has evolved into a hot debate over the twin issues of U.S. nuclear missiles and the nations worst unemployment since World War II Both Moscow and Washington have high stakes in the March 6 election, and both superpowers have sent high-ranking emissaries to court the West German electorate.

The campaign pits incumbent Chancellor Helmut Kohl, the leader of the center-right Christian Democrat coalition, against Hans-Jochen Vogel, heading the worker-oriented Social Democrat Party,

Kohl, 52, said he wants to begin deploying 204 new Pershing II and Cruise missfles in West Germany this year unless the Soviets give in and dismantle similar weapons already in Europe.

Kohl, an affable, professional politician who has been making pro-West, an-ti-Communist speeches for a decade on the floor of the West German parliament, says the missiles are needed

to balance the Soviet nuclear arsenal.

The 53-year-old Vogel, a soft-spoken lawyer who is the former mayor of both Munich and West Berlin, says missile deployment may not be necessary and that his party will do everything possible to avoid it. He has urged the United States to reach a compromise with the Soviets on the missiles.

Leaders from both Moscow and Washington have come to West Germany in recent weeks, hoping to persuade the voters to see their respective governments as the true seekers of disarmament.

Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, during a visit to Bonn in January, repeated Soviet disarmament proposals and encouraged West Germany to be guided by its own interests in deciding whether to station the new American-built missiles here.

And U.S. Vice President George Bush was in Bonn and Berlin last week, carrying an open letter to the people of Europe from Ronald Reagan, who dared the Soviets to meet with him and sign a ban on all U.S.

MISSING MOZART - Jens Peter Larsen, an intema-" tionally known expert on Joseph Haydn, holds a musical score discovered in the basement of the town hall of Odense, Denmark, and believed to be a symphony written by Amadeus Wolfgang Mozart when he was 12 years old and missing for almost two hundred years. Larsen, in Copenhagen, says that he has no doubt Mozart wrote the score. (APLaserphoto)

Misfortune For Inflafable Dam

ByALWALENTIS Reading Eagle SUNBURY, Pa. (AP) -When most people think of a dam, chances are they picture a mighty, concrete structure braced dgainst the rhpids - something like Hoover Dam, maybe. Stretching nearly half a mile across the Su^uehanna River, the Sunbury dam hardly presents such a breathtaking image. This dam, in fact, looks more like a fat rubber hose snaking through the currents.

Actually, the Sunbury dam is made of seven cylindrical fiber bags bolted to a concrete base. The bags inflate - like balloons - when pumped with water or air.

That elevates the water level upriver about six feet, thus creating an artificial lake that everyone hoped would be ideal for boating.

The Sunbury dam has one more thing in common with a balloon.

It bursts.

The most recent blowout, said William Lotz, founder of the Lake Augusta Boaters Association, came last summer. Whenever a bag pops, its great news for anglers, who can row their rowboats downstream and hook into hungry schools of bass and walleye cascading over the breach.

The aftermath isnt as dandy for sportsmen who park their boats upriver.

In last summers incident.

and Soviet land-based, medi-um-range missiles.

Kohl leads in the polls and, in fact, engineered the election in hopes of getting a grass roots mandate to continue as chancellor. He took over as chancellor in October after former Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, a Social Den\ocrat, lost a vote of confidence in Parliament.

But Vogels party has moved up sharply in recent weeks, campaigning for the German interests and capitalizing on growing public reaction against new U.S. missiles.

Kohl accused Vogel of weakening West Germanys security with his stand on the missiles, but it is clear the missile issue has helped the Social Democrats.

Polls by the Senus and Infratest institutes said a clear majority of West Germans prefer not to deploy the missiles this year if there is no progress in the disarmament talks between the United States and the Soviet Union at Geneva.

We have to judge on the situation in Geneva at the end of 1983. We are not convinced that the situation demands deployment, Vogel said recently.

Anti-missile feelings may also help a small third party, the anti-nuclear, environmentalist Greens, get into the West German Parliament for the first time. They could even wind up holding the balance of power beteen the two larger parties.

The Greens have been

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Lotz said, the river depth plummeted to knee level, capsizing several vessels, running others aground and causing thousands of dollars worth of damage. He said boat owners had no warning beyond radio announcements.

That was only the latest accident involving the Susquehanna River Inflatable Dam, which has been jinxed almost since the day it was installed for $1.2 million back in 1969.

In 1972, Tropical Storm Agnes destroyed both the dam - a cement truck was among the debris that came floating down the river, said the resident engineer - and a marina at nearby Shikellamy State Park.

The marina had been dedicated only four days earlier.

Repairs on the dam dragged on until August 1974. Since then, misfortune has plagued the dam almost every season.

Lotz, a 33-year-old salesman, wants the state Department of Environmental Resources to admit the dam is a lemon and replace it with something more reliable.

The Lake Augusta Boaters Association, Lotz said, represents 300 boaters, picnickers, hikers, joggers, fishermen and other out-doorsmen. The group plans to incorporate as a non-profit agency.

Our daughter is 19 years old. We have known for a long time that she is unhappy about the shape of her nose. Like most parents, we ttiink she is pretty and talented and really do not see anything wrong with her nose and would prefer not to do anything ahout it. Before we get involved with doctors, I would like to know more about the dangers of a nose operation. - Mr. & Mrs. M.P., R.I. DearMr.&Mrs. P.;

Who really does not believe that their child is good-looking and talented? Despite such enthusiasm for our children, some parents fail to recognize that the self-image that a young person has may vary from that of their parents.

All young people are aware (rf the impmtance of good looks and spend an enormous amount of time in making themselves attractive. With such effort comes a better sense of security and a feeling of well-being.

The nose is a particular target for self-criticism. No matter how lovely the other features are, when the nose is misshapen, the problem seems to be devastating to young people.

When they see the dramatic and beautiful results of nose operations, it is understandable that they, too, want to enjoy the benefit (tf cosmetic surgery.

There are numy questions that parents want to ask about a nasal plastic operation. Is it a safe one? (rf course, dominates all other questions. The operation is remarkably safe and usually free frwn any complications. Almost always the peration is d(Hie under local" anesthesia. In some instances, general anesthesia is chosen if the threshold for pain is low or if special anxieties exist.

The next most common question is Can the surgeon always predict what shape the nose will be after surgery? In most instances the surgeon can fulfill many of the expectations and desires of his patient. It must be remembered, however, that the healing process varies with each person.

The duration of the

High Pay Scale In Major Cities

WASHINGTON (AP) -How does $100,000 a year sound? According to a survey by the Radio Television News Directors Association, one out of every four lead anchormen or anchorwomen at local TV stations in the nations 25 largest cities was paid that much or more last year.

Another 37 percent of the anchors in those largest markets made at least $1,000 a week or $52,000 a year, according to the survey released Tuesday.

Anchors at those big-city stations were among the only category of local radio and TV journalists who managed to chalk up a double-digit increase in salary from 1981 to 1982, the survey shows. The median salary for all anchors, including backup talent, ranked in the top-25 markets climbed 12 percent in 1982, from $1,200 a week to $1,350 a week, which is $70,200 per year.

postoperative swelling, for example, depends on the patient rather than on the surgeon. The exact shape of the nose is not always predictable.

Dr. Andrew Ganz, a prestigious New York surgeai, is particularly interested in the psychological implications of nasal surgery. He says, Before young patients and their parents undertake the important step of plastic surgery, they should make sure that they understand all the psychological reasons for the operation. For sometimes p^ pie expect a complete social rebirth with a new and improved nose. If this does not hai^n, the disappointment can be very great even though the outward anatomical appearance (rf the nose is excellent.

It is such wisdom that can prevent the heartache of those who are disappointed in the emoti(mal and social aftermaths of plastic surgery.

May I suggest that you have a frank and open discussion with your family doctor and then with a plastic surge<xi. Your daughter may then reveal s(ne of her intimate emotional stresses about her nasal condition.

Says Integrity Is Threatened

WASHINOTON (AP) -The head of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching says college accrediting practices have gotten out of hand and threaten the integrity of the campus.

But in a sharply differing view. Education Secretary T.H. Bell defended the current system and aid, I wish everything in the Department of Education was functioning as well as this is.

Tjiey testified before the House Education and Labor Committees subcommittee on post-secondary education, which is conducting oversight hearings on the accreditation process.

In order for an institution or its students to participate in federal assistance programs, the school generally must be accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency. The Education I^partment publishes a list of recognized agencies, and Ernest L, Boyer, president of the private foundation, said it was inappropriate for the federal government to be involved in accreditation.

Committee Has Life Extended

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Select House Committee on Narcotics Abuse! and Control will operate for at least another two years despite opposition from critics who say it is a powerless waste of money.

The House has voted to continue the special antinarcotics panel, which was created in 1976 to study the problems of narcotics and drugs and their trafficking from foreign countries.

Without the new approval, the committee would have died next month.

elected to the parliaments of five of West (Germanys 10 states and the Berlin Parliament since 1979 and appear likely to make it Into the federal Parliament or Bunrtestag this year for the first time,

The Social Democrats could then join forces with the Greens to elect Vogel chancellor if no party emerges from the election with a clear majority of seats. Vogel has not said Ife will cooperate with the Greens, but neither has he ruled out the possibility.

The tiny Free Democrat

Party, which precipitated Schmidts downfall last fall when it deserted its coalition with him in favor of Kohl, is struggling to remain in Parliament

West German election law requires that a party poll at least 5 percent of the vote to stay in Parliament. The latest polls show the Free Democrats hovering at 5, percenter just below.

West Germans will be voting during the worst economic slump their country has seen since the war. Unemployment is at 10.2 percent and no economic

growth is expected this year Small business bankruptcies were up a startling 43 4 percent in the first nine months of 1982

Kohl's party has made no bones about blaming the Social Democrats, who headed the governing coalition for 13 years, for these economic calamities "Job-lessness. debts, bankruptcies. Not the SPD again, proclaim the Uhris-tian Democrat campaign posters.

Kohl has borrowed a chapter from early Reaganomics to remedy the

situation. He says getting the West German deficit down should spur recovery-creating investment. He has made cuts in the elaborate and costly German social benefits system.

Vogel, playing to the workingman, said he would abolish tax advantages for high-income earners to restore the social benefits cut by Kohl.

We resist the elbow society." in which different economic classes must push each other out of the way to survive. Vogels campaign billboards declare

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Knape & Vogt Shelving Hardware

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BIG BEAR

(AP Laserphofos)

THE GOOD LIFE - Hercules    who brought him to the United States

relaxes in the Jacuzzi of his Newhall,    where he enjoys swimming, eating

Calif, home. Here was adopted by    boiled ham and prawns, and drinking

Maggie and Andy Robin of Scotland    chocolate milk

HAPPY FAMILY - Andy and Maggie Robin get a bear hug from their pet grizzly. Raised by Andy Robin since he was adopted seven

years ago, the Robins never leave him alone and Here goes almost everywhere with them.

A BEAR SMOOCH Maggie Robin and her pet aggressivie and sometimes violent nature. When exchange a kiss outside their trailer home.' Here strayed into the wild for three weeks he Experts have been baffled at the harmlessness of almost starved because he would not kill for food. Hercules, since grizzlies are known for their        -    _

HIS MORNING JAVA - Hercules sips on his morning coffee in the company of "his adoptive parents in their trailer home. The grizzly insists

on a cup of coffee each morning when he gets up, and a bowl of ice cream before he retires at night.

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FROZEN FALLS - A solitary hiker enjoys the view of High Shoal Falls located in the South Mountain State Park. The falls are frozen after the recent cold weather and offer

a ^tacidar sight to Qiose hardy enou^ to make the hike back to them. South Mountain State Park is located about 25 miles south of Morganton, N.C. (AP Laserphoto)

Mexico Fights Impact On Spanish Language By'Gringoism' Tide

MEXICO CITY (UPI) -Mexico has declared open warfare on the Americanization of the Spanish language, battling the use of gringoisms.

Officials of Mexicos Commission for the Defense of the Spanish Language say that the first year of a $300 million ad campaign made great strides in wiping away American expressions such as hello, darling, and honey.

The officials complain that such words had become so popular they threaten to convert Mexicans into Americans.

The same thing could happen here as in Puerto Rico, which many say is about to end up as another star on the American flag, said Arrigo Coen, one of the commissions team of directors.

The Mexican government formed the commission in 1981 to prevent the Spanish language from gradually absorbing English expressions from ^e United States^ said another director, Gerardo Ocampo.

Despite their efforts, Coen said, the commission faces a tough challenge from its 1,900-mile border with the United States.

Poorly translated, U.S. television programs and American rock-and-roll music broadcast by many Mexican stations helps spread English expressions, he said.

But Mexico has begun to fight back. In the past year, the commission has unleashed an publicity blitz throughout the country, using 830 radio stations and 140 television channels to give the 72 million Mexicans the message.

Hi, dear, murmers a youthful feminine voice on one radio commercial, before launching into an imaginary conversation replete with gringoisms -American expressions adopted by many Mexicans.

Another commercial shows two peasants trying to pronounce English words on a billboard announcing cars for rent, then looking mystified at each other.

How sad it is that many believe that by deforming our language with useless foreign expressions they make themselves appear more interesting, intones a

convincing feminine voice.

Remember, its you that makes the difference. Dont let your words speak badly of you.

Coen said the commission fears that the gradual infiltration of English will lead to an even more serious problem - the adoption of American values, perhaps imperiling Mexicos cultural sovereignity.

A discovery that surprised the commission was that it was not poor Mexicans or those living along the border with the United States who had lost their national identity and become unwitting perpetrators of Americanization, Ocampo said.

On the contrary, Mexican border residents are the most nationalist and most on guard against foreign infiltration, he said, because they have developed defense mechanisms against foreign influence.

It is the wealthier social classes who are most guilty of using foreign expressions, because they wish to live outside Mexico and admire American culture, Ocampo

said.

While they admit it is impossible for them to measure the results of their campaign, Coen and Ocampo say they are satisfied it has made a difference.

There are many who now ask u$ questions about some point of spech, said Coen, referring to a weekly call-in program broadcast on government television.

He said he was also interested in helping Hispanics in United States to improve or retain their Spanish.

Outside of the commissions sphere entirely are some 7 million Mexican Indians about a tenth of the peculation who speak no Spanish at all.

Spanish conquistadors brought Spanish to Mexico in the 16th century.

In the 400 years since then, Spanish has become the most commonly used language in Mexico.

Still, many Mexican Indians living in remote regions have resisted the use of Spanish and can speak only their native language.

Would Revise Garbage Rule

WASHINGTON (AP) - An advisory panel wants the Agriculture Department to reconsider is regiilatory recipe for cooking garbage fed to swine.

The Swine Health Protection Advisory Committee has recommended exempting certain food waste products from federal requirements that garbage be cooked before feeding it to pigs. The intent is to prevent the spread of swine diseases.

Kenneth Hook of the departments Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service said Wednesday the committee recommended exempting such items as rendering plant products, dairy wastes, bakery products, candy, peltry and fish originating from waters other than the Pacific Ocean.

Hook said the Pacific Ocean restriction was included

because of the presence of San Miguel sea lion virus, which is

virtually identical with the virus of a serious disease of swine, vesicular exanthama.

The committee agreed that the proposed exemptions would not result in transmitting contagious diseases that would threaten the swine industry.    '

A further recommendation was made to change the current requirement that garbage be cooked a minimum of 30 minutes at 212 degrees Fahrenheit to kill disease organisms. The panel proposed that cooking at 180 degrees for one hour would be sufficient, provided a one-hour cool-down period is required.

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17-Year*0ld Workaholic

1

Runs Radio News Dept.

By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN Associated Press Writer SAFFORD, Ariz. (AP) -At age 17, Robert Johnson would be only a cub reporter at many newspapers, but he already heads the news department at a radio station -- and still finds time to go to high school.

DONOR - This is a 1982 photo of IS-year-old Anthony Pennington of Kilgore, Texas, who was so moved by a television movie last week that he told his brother he wanted to donate his organs to help others live. The youth was struck and killed by a pickup truck as he rode his bicycle Sunday evening. His heart was transplanted into a patient in St. Louis. Mo. Two Dallas patients received his kidneys, and his corneas were donated to patients in Tyler, Texas. (AP Laserphoto)

Tooth Fairy

Can't Talk

.ASHLAND, Ky. (AP) -Kentucky residents who get an urge to call the tooth fairy can hang it up; shes got laryngitis and isnt answering the phone.

On Feb. 1, the Kentucky Dental Association launched a Tooth Fairy Hotline that was so popular thousands of calls overloaded the phone company's circuits. j

Records show there wei'e 9,663 unsuccessful calls to the hotline on the first night, association spokesman De-tlef Moore said Tuesday.

From now on, callers who dial the Tooth Fairys number hear a recorded message: 'Help the Tooth Fairy and please do not call this number again." The recording adds that the Tooth Fairy has come down with a case of laryngitis.

We decided to discontinue the service in cooperation with the telephone company," Moore said.

But why the line about the tooth Fairy's losing her voice?

The Tooth Fairy is like Santa Claus,'he said. You have to be careful how you handle it."

The project, which featured 30-second messages about dental care, was part of the associations promotion of February as Dental Health .Month.

S&Ls Enjoy A

Business Surge

By The Associated Press

Deposits at savings and loan associations in North Carolina tripled in December from the same month of 1981 and mortgage lending activity more than doubled, according to the Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta.

S&L deposits in the state grew by $271.1 million in December, up from $82.8 million growth in December 1981. In December 1982. de-, posits and interest credited to accounts totaled $1.66 billion, which was offset by $1.39 billion in withdrawals.

Mortgage loans closed by the S&Ls in December totaled $122 million in the state, up from from $54.9 million in mortgaged loans closed in December 1981.

In the seven Southeastern states and the District of Columbia, savings deposits grew by $2 billion in December, more than double the $818.9 million growth in December 1981. Mortgage lending in the region totald $1.6 billion, up from $940.3 million a year earlier.

Johnson is the news director and news staff of KFMM, a 50,000-waU FM station in Safford serving a three-county area in eastern Arizj^a.

His first interview was a 22-minute session with Gov. Bruce Babbitt last spring in Clifton, shortly after the Phelps Dodge Corp. shut down its massive Morenci copper works. "Thats something Ill probably remember for some timei he said recently.

Babbitt, he said, good-naturedly asked, "Dont you think youre starting a little young?

"I said, Maybe so, but 1 dont like waiting for everyone else," Johnson said.

Johnson covered the 1982 Arizona election campaign -including congressional and state office candidates. One candidate was very appalled by the whole idea, Johnson said, adding that he told him, Well learn together. Dont worry about my age.

Johnson, who turns 18 later this month, works under a special program for high

school seniors, taking four morning courses and working from 2 p.m. until 10 p.m. daily. Hes off on weekends but is usually found at the station on Sunday, prerecording newscasts for Monday, he said. Johnson is , also co^itor of the Safford High School newspaper, the Bulldog.

Johnson said he loves the work. Covering the elections put him in touch with a lot of people no one my age gets a chance to meet. He had taken one journalism course in eighth grade - and had written for the high school paper.

Johnson worked for nearly two years at rival station KATO shortly after his family moved to Safford from Springfield, Mo. He learned all aspects of radio, though principally the non-news end. His parents didnt object, as long as he did his homework.

Then, in September 1981, he talked to John W. Payne, vice president of Payne Broadcasting inc., who was about to put KFMM on the air. Payne offered him a job as assistant news director.

He didnt even listen to an

audition tape, said Johnson, who two months later began reading morning headlines and doing two evening newscsts.

Johnson said his parents are happy for me but they just want me to be home a little more. Overall, theyve been supportive of me.

In March. Payne named him news director, orderj^ng him to restructure and improve the news coverage. Johnson expanded to eight daily newscasts, six of them strictly local.

I told him we wanted things lively here, said Payne.

Johnson said he likes "the tension and the excitement of being there and of getting the story first. Its been very exciting and I intend to stay in it till the day 1 rot.

And he said he favors broadcast journalism over print I like actualities, voices... buttons and lights. I like getting the news now and putting it on now.

Hes unsure where in Arizona hell attend college but wants to go to a medium radio market, adding, I dont know how much effect

ON THE AIR Robert Johnson of Safford, Ariz. had a fast introduction into the radio news business. Johnson, who will turn 18 on Feb. 20, is

my age is going to have on He said eventually he my going to a bigger would like to be a radio market.    newsman    in    a    major    market

news director of KFMM Radio, in eastern Arizona. His first interview was with Gov. Bruce Babbitt of Arizona last spring. (AP Laserphoto)

and ultimately attain a network reporting job, but thats a little way down the

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The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C -Thursday, February 10. iSKS-s

Pitt County Schools' Honor Lists Are Announced

The following students made the honor roll or principals list at Pitt County Schools for the third marking period:

sss aj5iir22 S2&. Has 'fjr.irutarc35

Rollins Usa    Ross    Greg    Spain, ' Pittman, Susan White. Lynn Allen,    McLawhom. Ryan    Mitchell Amy    H^ldWo^iijf^    n^c^t Tracy

sS    H^ry    Triw    Alvin Baker, Tina Byrd, Wade    Owens. Jacquie    Posey, Erika    Principal's    Uat: Tiffany    Buck,

r^rbetl, Gary Hobgood. Melanie Puryear, Chad Suggs, Charlie Shawna Chance. Alesla Wilku?-    Wynn

. Scott UtUe, Donna Medlin.    Tripp. Rae Troiano, Richie Allen,    McLawhom,    Darnell Parker, Til-    Whitehurst    PACTOLUS ELEMENTARY

lantha Nanney, Steve Norville,    Sonya Atkinson,    Kris Banks,    lany Gatlin,    Aleiia Hardy,    PatU    ^athy Cym,    Jeffen^ Bell,    Honor    Roll:    Sherry    Dyson, John

ia Worthington. Mary Stoddard Melanie Becton, Jennifer Behr, Jeff Jones, Lamont Ennis, Ltecia Spell, "y. "ardison lami let paul Corey. Sabrina Cobum. De-

Bell, Sandra' Braxton, Robert Corbett, 9a7H<*good. Mel^

Briley, Usa Campbell, Ann Hamm, Hue. Scot* '    *    **            **

AYDEN-GRIFTON HIGH Shonda Johnson. Trudy Oakley, pmantha .    ,

SCHOOL    Sheila    Russell,    Dana    Warren,    April    Lydia    Worthington.    Mary    Stoddard

STOKES ELEMENTARY Honor Roll; Cameron Crisp, niecutt,    Tracy    Palmer,    David    Smith, Buddy Vandiford, Wendy    Cynthia Hines, Tina King, JoAnn

    - -    Whitehurst. Melissa Brown, Dawn    l>a,ngley. Carlton Taylor, James

Leigh    Greene    Roundtree Tawanda Willis, Kim

Roberson ,\nla Taylor Principal's List: Terence Burney,

Caressa Brooks Salina Barnhill, Jimm Grimes. Laytona Little. Myra Locklear. Kenric McNair,

Roberts, Nicole terton, Jiina Perkins. Susan porah Adams

S

Principal's Ust: Karen Cannon, Michele Halbv. Roy Lewis. Lenor Melgan, Ken Meyers, Je^ Jones, l^lie Jones, Chns Lindy,

ivery, Mike tuts, r leios, nouis uunn, .^iwic nc^i, nimau.. rwc....    Trri    AnffPla Caoillarv Hunter Gardner -----    Renee Crawford. Dionne Griffin,

by. Roy Lewis, ifCrinK Tiiter U S Amy Mills M?anie Hardee, Joey BELVOIR ELEMENTARY    Scott Page. Rhonda Davis, Michael

Carla Gray, Shelia Mann. Angela Michelle Waters, Kim Briley    Nelson Jennifer Panictelli, Kely    ?urnev tL rSs Ro^ JohLon Rhonda Mills. Christy Honor Roll: Natasha Johnson, Holloman, Reginald Howard -

Mewbom, Stelena Rountree. Dsa Principal'^ List: Robin Mills, Seamster Julie Smith, Maria McLawhom, Shannon    K/uah    Shivm    I>eAnne Parker. Crystal Ross    Principals    List:    David    Baker.

Teal, Curtis Tucker, Ma^oleln Jane Mellon. Betty Staten, Glenn Smith. Jason Watson, Pa^ ck ^ ""y    PrinciMls    List-    Karen    Cook    Principals    List:    Wendy Dixon, Principal's Ust: Greg Barrow. Jaki Brown, Zeke Cobb, Bobbie Lou

Wilson, Brian Heath, Sharon Jolly. Clemons, Mindy Fisher, Kerry Winstead, /^y Wwla^ ^tsy    Harkrader    Carl    Rouse'    Brittl&ock, Gina Halstead, Tracey Jenkins, Tonya Johnson. Joyner Timmy Joyner Angela

Wendy Rouse. Uurie Vandiford,    Caruso. Darlene Ca^ t^ty    SLcton ?e Wil2^^    J^^ Suggs Jl Bulow Belinda    Stephanie    Mills. Angie    Jones,    Allison Manning, Joey Barrow,    McLamb, Al    Wooten,    Angela

Cathy Tyndall, Eddie Stokes, tlsa Riggs. ReneeRice.ChrisHadttek Dickerson John Dunn Anna Wea ^ingtom    Jamie    ^    Stacy dark, Kosha Edwards, Eva Atkinson. Jeffery Boberg, Vanessa

Boykin. Rusty Hairis, Tyrone Hart,    Vicki. High, Judy Boyd, Keith    GaskiH, Dawn Haddock, Julie    Shelia Woolard, Catherine    nn/.ir    Harris, Renee Jacobs, Caredwyn    Corbitt, Dawn    Croiser,    Jennifer

Lori Mooney  ._    .    .

Springer,

'SSSS    SSSS    EilivS'ss:    sa'SasJs    esSs'^s?    as    S5- -     --

Willoughby

W ayne Braxton.

Stocks. Adrien Williams.

NORTH PITT HIGH SCHOOL    Karen

Honor RoU: Renee Briley, Keith Snow

Valei-ie Iones Gwen Sherrod    Fulford,    Misty Jones, Donna    Sneed, Denise Sumeriin, Andy    Sellars,    Eric    Blount, Donna

n Credle Ragan Spain Carla    Woods. Mystie Becton, Paul Bred-    .Tetterton. Jerry Tucker, Stefani    Hardee,    Angela    Wilson, Meredith    Rhonda Jackon

, Windy'Jones. Janet Little,    derman,    Ed Daughtridge. Jennifer    Unverferth, Stephanie Watfn.    WFLLCOMEI

Garril Dannette Braxton,    Hardee.    Lyn Hazelton, Becky    Mark WMehead, ^nnie Binkley,

Leary, Lorayne

WELLCOME MIDDLE SCHOOL

SS:;rRS,nj."S:;Ly.r.y,J* H.r ^    Us.,

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rr'B""cSy cVrJi:    Lynn    E,U    ^

iT.S..5e''rSSl: Meliia'^ns^ Michael Owe    SgtJIl;    Sr'shaSKSy;    SwtJ.a7,K:    WILLIAMSTON    -    Ap-

Kenneth Harris, Mark James, Jennifer Walston. ^      nil*    a,.L,.fcan    viaauiaa    wiic    c.    iris    .Sheoherd.    Leticia    McCotter.    Eric    Tarsha    Daniels,    Shonda    Bullock,    proval    for    the    leasing    Of    an

-house at

MCReii, Jackie wicnois, naroia    V    Pnv' ~Mpr<:a F^'^kes Anoela Scott Strickland Missv Young. Niki Honor Roll: Kelly Andrews, Cherry, Patricia Bland, Tommy

Northern, Renee Oakley, Michelle    ^    fanf    rpo/U    Evenhuis Gina Grubbs Cvnthia Vandiford Coleman Bailey Usa Charles Lewis, Melissa Whitaker, Flynn, Tina Harris, Sandra

Staton. Ken Whitehurst, Teresa Fields, Fran Little, Regina Even^is, Gina    Sanf MelisiSJns Sa ^    Willie Little, Al Roberson, Sandy McMillion, Christy Oakley

WhitehuiM. Chris Ayer. Patricih Moimeo Oina Pennell. Cmdy Haddock Healter Hadd.,^ St l2^hS'<>3 S Andri.ws,AhgelaBell.    FAUtUNDELEMENTARY

Ser^a?^,'vir$SrHS!:    S'.    BethrS,    H^rheri    Hiis. Chrislopher Holland. Krislen Page, MlcheileCrawlord,    Principal's    Ual;    Virginia    Har;    Honor    Roll: Tracy Lawrenc,-.

Martin General Hospital was voted by Martin County Commissioners at their February meeting on Monday

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Under terms of the agreement approved, the county will act as a backing agency for the hospital; however, funding for the unit will be handled by the hospitals board of directors. Joe Griffin and Henry Winslow both stressed the advantages of the IBM system, noting it offers the best in-house security for a negligible difference in cost. Through the leasing arrangement, the hospital will be paying aout $12,000 less for the term of agreement than it would under current rates.

A report on hospital operations shows that currently the bad debts rate runs at about 8 to 9 percent. To alleviate this, the hospital is now taking 15 percent of charges to take care of bad debts and adjustments to income.

A public hearing was held on the proposed new application for CD Block Grant funds to improve the status of the water system along U.S 64 west of Williamston. Mary Lilley, Martin County Economic Developer, told the board a letter needs to be signed agreeing to donate an acre of land for a new deep well and tank. Lilley also recommended a change in the amount of funds to be requested - from $293,470 to $313,977 - to compensate for the hospital loops having been removed from the project, with the possibility these loops can be picked up in the future.

Another point mentioned by Lilley is that state officials have said there is a possibility the county can be held liable for funds spent on the project in the event it goes into a default situation.

A set of lithograph prints, the Martin County Collection created by Jamesville artist Bailey Phelps, was presented to commissioners. The prints will be hung in the new Martin County Courthouse when lihe move is made into the new facility.

An agreement was approved to allow Greenville Cable TV, Inc. to run its service through .Martin County from Robersonville to Bethel, subject to legal research. The board also wants to study the situation further due to rapid growth of Cable TV and what the board feels is a need for some control over the industry.

Seeks Limit On

Energy Taxes

The (}ne-Stop Shop for Sizes, Widths, Selection & Service^

Carolina East Mall Greenville 756-8944 Twin Rivers Mall New Bern 633-2141 Mon.-Sat. 10 am to 9 am

WASHINGTON (APi - An Illinois senator is sponsoring legislation that would limit the severance taxes levied by energy-rich states on their coal, oil and natural gas

Sen. Alan J. Dixon, a Democrat, would limit the state taxes using 1978 levels as a benchmark of reasonable rates. His bill, introduced last week, is similar in concept to bills introduced for several years and blocked by Western congressmen and senators.

Although Dixons bill includes oil and natural gas, most of the dispute has involved high severance taxes imposed by Montana and Wyoming on coal mined within their borders.

States with large severance lax revenues have a real advantage over other stales in competing for new businesses and future economic growth." he said.





The Dally Raflector, GreonriUe. N.C.Thuraday, Febniary 10,19S3

CroMMWOtd By Eugene Shtfftr

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY. FEB. 11,1983

41 Famous orphan 41 Leave 47 Stint 4IB^inn SI Actress Gardner SZ Is sick

ACROSS 1 Wanes S Slalom needs ISomeDrs.

12 Bi^

U Confiscate

14 Puerto Rkan export

15 Envious

17 Flightless bird

18 Actress Meryl SS Upper

19 Skillful

21 Perform

22 Rsd Square name

24 Marshes 27 Craze 28NYCteam

31 Com spike

32 Corroded

33 S. Amer. resort

34 Forest iton 31 Family 37Sometx-eads 38 Actress

Burstyn 40 Teutonic yes

DOWN

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23 Blissful place

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floor    9 Foliage    39Callfor

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41 Open, somewhat

42 Exploding star

43 Suit piece 44Topotch 45 Singing

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2-10 49Grande Answer to yesterdays puzzle. sOSprite

Avg. lolntioa time: 27 mln.

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Yesterdays Cryploquip - A KNOW-IT-ALL PILOT LOOKED DOWN ON PEOPLE.

Todays Oyptoquip clue: Dequals P.

TV CryplsqMp is a simpM substitution dptar in whkfa each letter used stands for another. R you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, abort words, anckwords using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

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Superior Court Report

The following cases were disposed of during the January 4 term of Pitt County Superior Court

Terry Tyrone Brock, RouU 2, Vancetwro, armed robbery, asuult with deadly weapon, (2 counts), breaking i-nterlng and larceny, dlamiaaal by prnsctutor.

.himes Everett Edwards, Route 4, OriYnville, poaaesaion of stolen property,,! years jail.

Bobby Ray Forbes, FarmvUle, conspiracy to commit armed robbery, I year jail

g John Louis Fomville, 1013 Chestnut St possession o( stolen property, 2 years jail.

Gladys Ganis, Ayden, disposal of securen property dismissal by prosecutor ,

Jamei Lelano Jones. Ayden, uttering forged (heck (Scountsl, lOyears Jail.

I'eter Vincent Morrison, 106 West .Moore .St. breaking and entering auto, breaking and entering (2 counts) 10 years jail,

Julius Nobles, 1013 West Third St., assault on female, not guilty.

Thurman Earl Perkins, 1414 Allen St tireaking, entering and larceny, 8 years Jail, burglary, dlimlasal by prosee ulor

Robert Lee Reddick. 406 Deck St. armed robbery, 16 years jail

James Edward Starkle, Route 3, Greenville, armed robbery, 20 years jail.

Carol Regina Valentine. 422A Tyson St., larceny, remanded to district court

Chariei W Vest, Farrovllle. wor-' thless check, pay coeU and check.

Rutble Lynn Watson, S06B Dartlen Dr, ptiaeeiilon of stolen property. 1 year jail.

ArveletU Maxine WUllama, Winter ville. possession of stolen property, 1 ye^irjaU.

UNDERWATER

ROCHESTER, N,Y. (AP) - A team of four aquanauts, directed by University of Rochester geologist Carlton Brett, recently spent a week underwater investigating several largely unexplored reef caves near St. Croix in the Virgin Islands.

Based in the worlds only active hydroiab, a roomsized cylinder anchored 50 feet below the oceans surface, the team studied conmiunities of deep-water animals encrusting the caves as deep as 130 feet.

By comparing the living communities with their fossU ancestors, the geologists sought clues that would help them reconstruct the environment in which the fossils were formed.

The following cases were disposed of during the January 10 term of Pitt County Superior Court.

Charles Ray Adams, Route , Greenville, possession of stolen property, 2 years jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, attorney fees, 3 years probation.

Bobby Lee Avery, Grifton, fail to see safe move. 60 da^ jail suspended on payment of fine, costs Harold Lloyd Barnes, Ayden, assault on officer, dismissal by prosecutor.

William Earl Braswell, 111 Vance St., breaking, entering and larceny (auto), not guilty Frederick Dupree, Route 1, Greenville, breaking and entering coin machine, I year jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, attorney fee, 3 years probation Markouette L Dupree, Route 1, Greenville, breaking Into coin machine, 1 year jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, attorney fee, 3 years proba-

**^Snothy Grant, Route 4, Greenville, larceny, dismissal by prosecutor; breaking and entering (auto), (2 counts), dismissal by prosecutor; breaking and entering (auto) (3 counts), 5 years jail Llnwood Earl Joyner, FarmvUle, safe movement violation, 30 days jaU suspended on payment of fine and costs. 2 years uitrorvised probation.

Robert Jamie McLawhom, Route 1, WlntervUle, driving under the Influence, dismissal by prosecutor Archibald Carter Mage. Pactoius, assault with deadly weapon, not guUty by reason of Insanity; assault with deadly weapon on law enforcement officer (3 counts), damage to real property. not ^Ity by reason of Insanity.

Lyndon Todd Moye, Route 1, Ayden, breaking and entering. 2 years jaU suspended on payment of fine, costs, restitution, 3 years probatloa.

Jesse Ruffin, 1006 Melody Lane, assault with deadly weapon, dismissal by prosecutor.

John Thomas Sheppard, Route I, GreenvUle, Insurance fraud, dismissal by prosecutor Michael Jerome Smith, IlOlA North Washington St., breaking and entering, larceny. S years jaU, su^ended on pay ment of fine, costs, restitution, 3 years

ftrobatloo; breaking, entering and arceny, possession of stolen property, dismissal by phisecutor Mark David Tripp, 401 Dudley St., aid and abet larceny, dislmlasal by prosecutor.

Graham K Stokes. Route 3, GreenvUle, bastardy and non-support, 6 months jaU suspended on payment of costs, restitution. $130 per month support.

SENTENCE COUPLE RERUN, (AP) - Prison sentences have been imposed by an East Berlin military court on a West German couple convicted of spying for the United States, according to East Germanys official ADN news agency.

from the Cerroll Righter Institute

GENERAL TENDENCIES: A day and evening to do something thoughtful for loved ones. Also, a good time to make plans that could give your more abundance in the future. Take positive steps to gain your aims.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Being with friends and improving the association is fine today. Take pains to handle roikine tasks in an efficient manner.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Show appreciation to those who have power over our affairs and gain further goodwill. Use mf^em methods to improve your work.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) See what you can do about enlarging your vision so that you can advance in your line of endeavor. Be wise.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Take no risks with your health at this time. Handle responsibilities more efficiently and they become easier.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Support those associates who need your assistance at this time. Listen to complaints of family members and give help where needed.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) You have to be more enthused if you are to get all that work done that is important to you. Strive for increased happiness.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Take time to put your business and financial affairs in better order. Be sure to keep promises you have made to others.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Be more considerate of the needs of family members and establish more harmony at home. Avoid one who gossips too much.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Discuss your views with associates and improve regular routines. Plan how to gain your most cherished aims.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Study your financial position and then confer with experts in order to improve it. Take no risks in motion at this time.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Use tact with others and they soon will give you the favors you desire. The evening is fine for social pleasures.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) You are able to communicate well with associates and can advance in career matters. Sidestep a troublemaker.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wiU be one who will quickly adopt to new methods and systems, so send to the finest modem schools you can afford for best results in lifetime. Theres a fine balance of mind and athletic activity in this chart.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Ihc.

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

C19e3 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc.

PLAY FOB THE ONLY CHANCE

Both vulnerable. North deals.

NORTH

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10 4 3 <7 A 92

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North Eaot    South    West

1 Paao    1 0    Dble

RdUe 1 ^    1 NT    2 7    '

2* Paao    3 0    Paos

3 <7 Dble    Rdble    Pass

6 0 Paaa    Pasa    Paaa

Opening lead: King of *.

Sometimes you have to take certain risks to make your contract. That is not a time for the faint of heart or for playing safe.

Declarer was Esteban Casian of Chile. His redouble of three hearts, by agreement, showed first-round control of the suit, and his partner displayed touching faith when he leaped to the small slam in diamonds.

West led the king of clubs, taken by the ace in dummy. Declarer cashed the ace of diamonds and learned about the bad trump break. He finessed the ten of diamonds and then made the key play of surrendering a club.

West shifted to the queen

of hearts. Declarer took the ace and ruffed heart, then hoped for the best as.he cashed dummys three high spades. When those tricks stood up, declarer was home. He ruffed a club in hand and a heart in dummy.

Everyone was down to two cards and the lead was on the table. Declarer simply led club from the table and East was trapped in a trump coup. Declarer held the K-J of trumps behind his queen and, no matter what East did, the last two tricks, and the slam, were in the bag. ,

Note that declarer must cash the high spades before he ruffs a club. If he does not. East will shed a spade on the third club and then ruff the third spade to defeat the slam.

NO CIGAR EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) - When the Columbia astronauts, encountering difficulty with their spacesuits,- had to scrub a planned space walk, mission control piped word about the failed attempt, concluding with, Thanks, fellas, but no cigar.

However, the Friends of the Cigar, an organization of cigar fanciers, decided the effort deserved some regard, and sent a box of cigars to each of the four astronauts soon after their return to earth.

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Ranks Of New Poor In France Grow At Emborassing Rate

By BRENDAN MURPHY

Associated Press Writer

PARIS (AP)-Men gather each night on a sidewalk behind the Beaubourg > museum in the center of Paris, waiting for the 10 p.m. arrival of the Salvation Army soup van.

They are part of, the new poor, the growing number of people who are slqqting through the elaborate safety net of Frances social welfare system, landing on the streets of Paris and other cities.

Its gotten a lot worse, said a 32-year-old iron worker from Clermont-Ferrand, who declined to give his name. When I came to Paris six years ago, there were far fewer people on the street than there arenow.

Its becoming very hard now, very hard, he said, finishing the last of his plastic bowl of soiq) and stowing a chunk of bread and apple into a vinyl flight bag that contained his possessions.

The new poor have been an embarrassment for the Socialist government of Francois Mitterrand, which came to power on promises to fight unemployment and which faces nationwide municipal elections in a few weeks.

Government officials estimate that there are between 6,000 and 8,000 homeless in the Paris area. Many of these are men under 30 who have been out of work so long they no longer qualify for unemployment benefits.

They have joined the ranks of the clochards, or tramps, who have traditionally haunted the Paris Metro system, lounging in groups to pass around a bottle of cheap wine or stretching out on benches to catch a few bours sleep

before tbey are thrown out by tbe Metro police.

Victims of tbe eccmomic crisis tbat bas idled 9 percent of tbe Froicb labor force, tbey are straining tbe resources of traditional last refuges like tbe Salvation Army and CattioUc Aid.

Ilie situation is already ur^nt, said Capt. Jacques Pierquin, spc^esman for tbe French Salvation Army. He said tbe charity now is providing beds for about 4,000 homeless across France -2,000 in the Paris area and its soup vans have fed 300 nightly since tbey began their rounds in December.

Pierquin said large cities like Marseille and Lyon also have their homeless, but the problem ^is worse in Paris. They come from the provinces to look for work, iMit dont find anything, be said.

One official of tbe Ministry of Social Security said the French social welfare system has provra inadequate to meet tbe heavy demands put upon it by high, sustained unemployment.

There are limits to the safety net, said Dominique Charvet, the administrator handling the program launched Jan. 28 to counter the increase in the number of poor and homeless.

The French Social Security and Social Aid (welfare) systems assure benefits for people like tbe aged, the ill, the handicapped and single mothers with young children, Charvet said. Monthly payments average 2,200 francs^ell below tbe national fn^^um wage of 3,200

A iilajor problem iS un-employme^ benefits. Tbey can last fw^to five years, but can nm oub^r as little as six months worker hasnt acciupulated much time on the job.

Single men who have

exhausted their unemployment benefits can find themselves with no recourse other than living on the street or seeking the aid of charitaUe organizatkms.

Government worries about the unemployed does not mean an ou^rurng of funds into new programs, officials say. Instead, Charvet said, ways will be sought to direct the indigent into existing programs.

Administrators in tbe often intimidating social welfare system will be urged to cut red tape and maintain closer contact with their clients -particularly the long-term

CLEAN COMMERCIALS NEW YORK (AP) - To get on tbe air, tdevision commercials mist pass the muster of network censors.

Up to 1,000 commercials a week are screaied by each of the three major networiis. The censors are instructed to reject any commercial that contains too much sex, violence, vice or ethnic stereotyping. They also decide whether an advertisers claims are truthful.

Rejected commercials are requested to be redone.

unemployed and single nughers.

But all this raised few expectations among tbe crowd of 75 men who gathered at the Beaubourg to wait for the soup van.

Im disgusted, said 2S-yev-oId Youssif, who was boro in Morocco but grew iqi in France. Ive beoi unemployed for two years, since I left the army. He said he is no longer looking for work.

Others ctecribed their life in the subterranean worid of the homeless, known in Parisian argot as the zone. The inhabitants of this world, called zonards, find shelter in the Metro, at tbe SalvaUim Army, in haUways, in the warmth of sidewalk subway vents and in abandoned buildings taken over by squatters.

One offered a stranger the last swig in the groiqis txAtle of wine, before inquiring whether he could five francs to buy another at a nearby 24-hour supermarket.

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See Inaccuracy fn Hired Farm Worker Stereotype

By DON KENDALL AP Farm Writer WASHINGTON (AP) A new reptHi by the Agriculture Department says that it is ntrt accurate to stereotype hired farm workers as made up of poor, minority group migrants. Althou)di some certainly fit this ima^, the typical farm

worker is more likdy to be white, a non-migrant, and part of a family with an annual income of $10,000 or more," the r^rtsaid.

iased on 1979 cenis information, only 8 percent of the hired farm work force consisted of migrants and family incomes of migrant woiters actually were higher than those

Rural Economy Upswing Seen

By Sec. Block; Possibly For 1983

ByBOBFICK Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Agriculture Secretary John Block is cautiously optimistic that after more than three ' years of depression the rural ' economy will begin an upswing in 1983.

But he says the immediate recovery probably wont be enough to avert hundreds of more farmers being fmx%d out of business through loan foreclosures.

We must recognize that maybe not all farmer will be able to stay in business in 1983, Block said Wednesday in his first appearance of the year before .the House Agriculture Committee.

He said the Farmers Home Administration, the federal credit agency for the highest risk farmers, is doing all it can to keep struggling pro

ducers in business this year but that it will probaUy be forced for foreclose on another 800 to 900 borrowers, as it did during 1982.

Last year, FmHA foreclosed on 844 of its 270,000 farm borrowers, nearly three times the number of foreclosures posted in 1981, and Block said an additional 6,000 FmHA borrowers left farming during 1982 for a variety of reasons, not (mly because they failed.

Foreclosures are being made on hundreds of other farmers who have credit with commercial lenders as well.

But Block also told the committee that the FmHA, which provides about 14 percent of all farm credit to producers no lon^r qualified for commercial loans, has rescheduled, reamortized or

At Conference Of Educators

Four faculty members and VO students of the school of lusic. East Carolina Uni-ersity, attended the outhem Division In-Service onference of the Music Ed-cators National Conference eld in Louisville Feb. 2-5. Faculty members attend-ig the conference were: Rhonda Fleming, assis-int professor of music edu-ation. She presented a clinic n The Young Adult inger on two days, and k parti with' other'ttai-ians in a panel diRbssion. George Knight, professor f music education and hairman of music educa-ion, presided at a session on Innovative Propams for tudents Who Do Not Fit Into

Hail Product Of New Satellite

WASHINGTON (AP) -The nations newest Earth resources satellite is producing some spectacular images that may improve harvest forecasting, mineral location and water management, a space agency official says.

The pictures are relayed by a device called a thermal mapper on the Landsat 4 satellite launched last July.

It charts farm land, mountains, deserts, water and other features at seven places in the electromagnetic spectrum that are formed by computer into high-resolution photographs, said Samuel W. Keller of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Traditional Music Education Offerings."

Ralph Shumaker, associate presidoit of music education. Shumaker presided at a session on Evaluating the Music Student.

Charles E. Stevens, associate dean of the school of music, was coordinator of the ECU School of Musics exhibit. The exhibit included pictures of facilities and activities, information on , schol^m^ips antf auditions, and a slide display.

Richard Crane, a soiior from Woodbridge, Va., and Celeste Heath, a junior from Portsmouth, Va., were the two students accompanying the faculty members to the conference.

The divisional meetings are held every other year for the purpose of sharing trends, information and ideas among music educators in a 10-state area.

Death Penalty

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)

- A military court on Wednesday gave Cpl. Fenwicks Odera Obedi the death sentence for leading the attempt by rebellious airmen to overthrow President Daniel Arap Moi last , August 1.

Witnesses testified that Obedi put (H) a captains uniform and was driven around Nairobi in^ a commandeered ptdice car during the seven4KMir uprising. He pleaded innocent but refused to testify.

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deferred loan repayments for 40,000 of the most financially strapped borrowers to keep them operating this year.

Every effort will be made to stay with borrowers who can truly be helped through FmHA loan assistance and supervision,he said.

Those efforts, he argued, prove that the government is fulfilling its promise to go the extra mile to provide f^ credit to any producer with a reasonable chance of surviving the current extended slump in market prices. They also should di^l the need ^ for .the kind of moratorium on FmHA loan repayment that is being proposed by farmbelt congressmen, Block added.

But Rep. Ed Jones, * D-Tenn., chairmen of the farm credit subcommittee, said he has seen no evidence to support Blocks claim that

the FmHA is helping the number of farmers cited.

Both Jones and Rep. Thomas Coleman, R-Mo., said they would pursue their proposed moratorium legislation requiring FmHA to defer loan repayments for a year if the farmer asking for a deferral shows hes a good manager and has a reasonable chance of ultimately meeting the debt.

Block contended that reports of farm foreclosures and credit problems have been blown out of proportion by the news media and that most producers are paying their debts. Half the nations 2.4 million farm families have no debt at all and another 37 percent have debts totaling less than 40 percent of tteir assets. Only 13 percent of the farmers are financially vulnerable, he said.    I

of non-migrant workers.

The report, written by Susan Pollack of USDAs Economic Research Service, was included Wednesday in the latest issue of Farmline. which is published by the agency.

As for ethnic and racial characteristics, only 25 percent of all farm workers were black or Hispanic, the report said.

But some parts of the stereotype are close to the truth in other respects, it said.

In 1979, average annual earnings for a farm worker were $4,185, compared with $11,435 for all U.S. private sector production workers.

The report said that some of the difference may be explained by the relatively large proportion of students, housewives and other part-time wage earners in the farm work force. However, family incomes the combined incomes of all family members - also reflect a lower-income status.

In 1979, it said, the median family income of farm workers was $13,384 per year, which was only 68 percent of the U.S.

Alcohol Spill No Threat To Area

GREENSBORO, N.C.(AP) - About 2,000 gallons of isopropyl alcohol leaked from a tank at a Burlington Industries plant overnight, but poses no threat to area

drinking water, officials said. The spill, discovered early Wednesday, leaked across a parking lot and into a dry ditch, with much of the alcohol evaporating.

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median for all families of $19,587.

Median income means that half of the income were more than those amounts and half less.

The family incomes of hired' farm workers varied significantly according to racial and ethnic, occiqiational. and household characteristics, the report said. For example, whites, household heads and students who did farm work to supplement other income sources had somewhat hight^r family incomes than others

Looking at the category of migrant workers atone, the report said that the stereotype of low-income migrant farm worker families is not supported by the income figures.

"Roughly the same* percentage of migrant families - 62 percent - had annual incomes of $10,00() or more as non-migrant families, it s^id. Nearly one-third of both migrant and non-migrant families has annual incwnes of $15,000 or more.

Migrants - which made up 8 percent of the 1979 hired farm workers are defined' as those who travel across state or county lines and stay overnight to do farm work They averaged $4.582 a year in individual earnings from all sources, compared with $4,126 a year for non-migrant workers. the report said. About 47 percent of migrant workers pay came from farm earnings, compared with 60 percent for non-migrant workers.

E.C.U. Opera Theater Scenes

A.J. Fletcher 8:00 P.M.

February 18 & 19.1983

r- -

The Whopper beat the Big Mac and Wendy's* Single ^

In a cx)ast-to-coast test among cxDnsumers of both burgers, the Whopper beat the Big Mac for best taste overall. In a simil^ test, the Whopper beat Wendy's Single*

Broiling beat frying.

In another survey, broiling beat frying almost two to one.

Burger King broils. McDonald's and Wendy's fry.

They say winning isn't everything. Sure is fun. though.

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y

28-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, February 10,1983

Only The Laughs Aren't Bogus

OFF TO MAKE A NEW MOVIE - Actress Bo Derek with her husband, director John Derek, at Londons Heathrow Airport Wednesday before their d^arture for Spain to

Lawmakers Give Up On 'Backward Messages'

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)

- Reeling backward until arguments ended the issue, the Arkansas Legislature has abandoned efforts to require warning labels on music that may have hidden messages

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recorded in reverse.

The measure, which opponents called silly but supporters described it as a safeguard to listeners, would have required a warning label on records and tapes with socalled backward masking - where a sinister message supposedly is audible when the recording is played backwards.

The measure once sailed through the House on an vote and squeaked out of the Senate. But the Senate amended it last week to say manufacturers producing backward masked records without a warning would be guilty only of a misdemeanor.

And on a 40-35 vote Wednesday, the House refused to accept the amendment, therefore killing the bill, after debate that was sometimes backwards - literally. Record manufacturers and performers have denied all

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alorig that their productions havenny hidden, backward messages.    ^

Were you aware thakxsy', nartie in reverse is NIdrah Noel? Rep. Leon Hardin asked his colleagues Wednesday.

Rep. Donald Hawkins, a veteran pipe-puffer who apparently is still pertufbed. that the House bannexfd^r ing in the chamber, asked one point if he could go andhaveanekoms. , , ;v

The bill, written by ^ Rev. Don Hutchings, 25^'of Hot Springs, was introd^ Jan. 20 by Rep. Jack Mc(%. Hutchings argued tha^^me backward-masked rofi' n roll recordings contain hidden messages deifying Satan and marijuana. He claimed that the mind sub-liminally Ravels the messages ahTmay be" influenced by them.

For example, Hutchings says Led Zeppelins rock classic Stairway to Heaven contains a hidden message saying, There Is power in Satan.

Leading the movement to kill the bill. Rep. Mike Wilson told representatives Wednesday it was making a mockery of the legislative process.

"Its our jdb ... to kill or stop silly, nonsensical bills," he said. The idea that the mintl can subliminally interpret a backward message is preposterous, he added.

Sen. Wayne Dowd, who opposed the bill all along, sardonically credited the Legislatures turnabout to subliminal perception of a speech he made.

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By FRED ROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - The scotch bottles are filled with water, the beer is zero proof, and the cheese crunchies are nailed down and arent edible anyway. Even the bathrooms are bogus, except for the sexual philosophy on the walls.

Only the lau^ at the Cheers bar are real. Dur-

TV Log

Fof complot* TV programming Information, conault your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Roftoctor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

make another film, Bolero. The couple has been in London for the past few days to finish casting for the film, including a male lead to play opposite Miss Derek. (AP Laserphoto)

WEDNESDAY

7 :00 Joker s wild 7. 30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Seven Brides 9:00 Movie

IT:00 News9 11:30 Movie

THURSDAY

S:bO Jim Bakkir 0:00 Carolina 8:00 News

8 :23 News 9:25 News

10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11.00 Price is

11:57 Newsbreak 12:00 News )2:30 Young and T :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 AAagnum 9:00 Basketball 11:00 News 11:30 Movie

WITN-TV-.Ch.7

WEDNESDAY 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Real People 9 :00 Facts of Lite 9:30 Family Ties 10:00 Quincy 11:00 News H: Tonight 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnloht 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 Todiy 9:00 R. Simmons 9:39 All in the 10:00 Facts Of Lite

10:X Sale of the 11:00 Wheel of 11: HlfMan 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:W 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 Jeffersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Fame 9:00 GimmkA 9:36 Cheers 10 :10 Hill Street 11:00 News * 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2 30 News

wai-Tv-aw

WEDNESDAY 7:00 S'S Company 7: Alice

8 :00 Gold Monkey 9:00 Herman's 11:00 Action News s 11:30 ABC News 12:00 HarryO

1:00 Mission 2:00 Early Edition THURSDAY _ 5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J.Swaggart 6:00 AGOay 6;X News 7:00 GoodAAorning 6:13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News

9 :00 Phil Donahue

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 2:0Q Early Edition

WUNK-TV-?Ch.25

WEDNESDAY 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Geographic 9:00 Worldof 10:00 AAark Russell 10:30 It's Your 11:00 Hitchcock 11:30 AAorecambe THURSDAY 7:45 AAA Weather 8:00 Adult Basic 8:35 Special 8:50 Readaiongr 9:00 Sasame Street 10:00 TipTopTen 10 :10 Special to 30 Trade offs 10:50 Parlei AAoi 11:00 19th Century 11:30 Thinkabout 11:45 WriteOn 11:50 Readalong2

12:00 Advocates 12:30 Readit 12:45 Electric Co. 1:15 Footsteps .1:45 Poetry 'i-M Case Studies 2 :X Give and Take 2:45 Inside/Out 3:00 Over Eisy 3:30 Gen. Ed.

4:00SisMSt.

5:M Mr.Rpgtrs

5:39>MGMItKt 6:00 Or.Vfho 6:30 Fast Forward 7:00 Repoft 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Previews 1:30 Enterprise 9:00 Natureot 10:00 AdStlnCity 11:00 Hitchcock 11:30 AAorecambe

ing the filming of NBCs classy comedy each week, well-earned belly laughs come from the live audience in the balcony overlooking theset.

"Qiers is doing a brisk , walk-in business. On Siqxer Bowl Sunday, Pete Axthelm, NBC ^rts in-lH>use tout, stopped by for a pregame brew and balljlwo. Next week. Tip ONeill, the con-gressman from Massachusetts, gets to park himself on the stool next to the bars fixture. Norm.

In mid-January, even the Keeper of This Column, paid a visit to watch the taping of tonights episode.

'The Cheers set, at Paramount Studios in Los Angeles, is modeled after an actual bar in Boston and manages to maintain a homey, inviting ambience. The horseshoe-^aped bar is authentic. The walls are filled with athletic pennants and pictures of Boston ^rts personalities.

Like the bars owner, Sam Malone (Ted Danson), most of the mug shots are of former Red Sox players, including Luis Tiant, Bill Campbell and Fred Lynn. The Red Sox team photo is from five years ago.

One wall plaque advertises the nights specials as inflation fighters. Tuesday is ladies night, tonights

Danny Kaye In Hospital Care

LOS ANGELES (API -Veteran actor and comedian Danny Kaye, who was lKpi-talized for back and heart problems, has been strolling down halls and eating solid food.

Kaye, 70, was admitted to Cedars-Sinai Medical Centers intensive care unit Monday, but has since been moved to a private room for observation, spokeswoman Elizabeth Miller said Wednesday.

"His doctor is investigating back pains and irregdar heart rhythms, Ms. Miller said. "He is in good condition.

Kaye, who has performed on sta^, in movies and on television, also has served for the past 25 years as international am-baasador-at-large for UNICEF, the United Nations ctdldrens aid program.

In addition to starring in such film classics as White Christmas, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty and "A Saig is Bom. Kaye won an Emmy in 1964 for his long-running Danny Kaye Show. He won a special Tony in 1953 and a special Oscar in 1954.

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You can bet Norm, a regular with a reserved comer seat, is there on Fridays. If any cult figure has surfaced from the new TV season, its Norm, a beer-guzzler who was bom to belly iq> to a bar. Played delightfully by George Wendt, Norms entrai^ lines are classics.

Norm patronizes Cheers for camaraderie and suds, not in that order. Hows it going Norm? "Cut the small talk, and give me a beer, he says.

During a rehearsal, Wendt is yawning on his stool, while Danson and Shelly Long, who plays waitress Diane Chambers, are going over their lines. Wendt isnt allowed to drink beer (hi the set. Its a union thing, and (director) Jim Burrows doesnt want us to get sluggish, Wendt says.

On-camera, he drinks near-beer, a non alcoholic concoction of beers less lingering ingredients, plus some salt to keep the head foamy. It tastes like gosh-awful beer, says Wendt, who trained for the role by drinking his way out of Notre Dame in the late 1960s.

I got a letter from the dean tellling me not to think about coming back, says Wendt.

Les and Glen Charles, ex-ecutive producers of "Cheers, saw Wendt in some bit parts in other sitcoms and figured hed be perfect for the Everyman role. Thats why we named him Norm. Hes the norm, says Glen.

The night of the filming, Norm is introduced to the studio audience and receives a loud reco^itkm from the shows afficiandos. Some female squeals welcome

Danson. The mail on me being a sex symbol is trickling in, says Danson. It's an acknowledgment that Im doing my job.

To warm up the audiepet, a four-piece band plays, while one of the shows writers provides a steady patter of jokes and explanations. When the filming actually begins, it punmfully moves quickly from one scene to the next. Burrows wants to keep the actors enthusiasm and energy level high.

Tonights typically funny episode, in which Sam and Diane agree to find perfect blind dates for each other, moves the two antagonists closer to their inevitable romance. We cant tease the audience forever, says Danson.

Glen Charles assures that this barroom affair wont change the chemistry of Cheers. Whatever their relationship, he says, they still wont like each other.

1M,1:1,S:10,7:15,1:25

TOOTSIE

DUSTIN HOFFMAN [JESSICA LANGE PQ

WITHOUT

^    7:00

TRACE TO 9:40

1:11,1:11,S;1l,7:1t 1:16

HOMEWORK JOAN COLLINS R

EVERY MOTHERS NIGHTMARE

One morning, Alex Sell^ got dressed, waved goodbye to his mother, set off, for school and disappeared.

KATC NELUGAN JDD HIRSCH

WITHOUT A THAI

1:40-4:20

7:00-9:40

20th CENTURY-FOX FILMS

Linda Kelsey To Be A Mother

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actress Linda Kelsey, who played reporter Billie Newman on the Lou Grant television series, is preparing for the most important role of my career motherhood.

Miss Kelsey, 34, is expecting her first child in August, her press" agent, Esme Chandlee, said Wednesday, i.

Shes thrilled to death! This is something that Linda really has wailted, Ms, Chandlee said.

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A Bilingual State yed

ByMARYSCHLANGENSTEIN

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Louisiana once turned its back on its rich French heritage and virtually wiped out the language. But the state now bo^ more than a million French-speaking residents and hopes to set a national example as a bilingual state.

In the 1930s students were forbidden to speak French in school. Many parents whose native tongue was French refused to pass it on to their children. The language was associated with being Cajun, which at the time was equated with ignorance and poverty.

But today French-is being encouraged in the schools and Lafayette already has the only French-English bilingual radio station in the U.S..

The state and individuals have joined to push for a resurgence of French to preserve a unique heritage. A leader in the fi^t is the state-funded Council for the Development of French in Louisiana.

The first objective of CODOFIL when it was created was to try to correct the belief that French was a handicap, said council Director Philippe Gustin of Lafayette.

We have succeeded in many ways, and the pride of the people is coming up again. A lot of people are proud to be Cajuns today.

But reversing the anti-Cajun prejudice and reviving French has not been easy.

The work was done well when they tried to stamp out French in Louisiana, said Glen Pitre of Cut Off, La. Parents had it forced upon them that to teach their children French was to condemn them to poverty and ignorance.

Set $15 Million in Funds Drive

-WASIBNOTON (AP) -The Nature Conservancy, a national conservation organization, hopes to raise $13 million to buy and protect land that is home to as many as 150 ^ies of endangered plants and animals.

The 156,000-member organization said the money would be raised over the next three years for purchase of land at 75 to 150 sites nationwide.

It said the Goodhill Foundation of New York had promised to contribute $5 million if the conservancy could raise the other $10 million.

A new City Services brochure is available. If interested, contact the Public Information Office, 752-4137, Ext. 224.

Pitre is founder of Cote Blanche Productkms, an independent film company that specializes in Cajun French films, books and radio programs. The companys best-selling catalog item is a book and tape recording on learning Cajun French.

The move to restore French is wide^read, but largely unorganized, Pitre said. It was aided greatly by creation of a state pro^am that brought to Louisina schools native French speakers from. Canada, Belgium and France.

Last year, 260elementary schools participated in the program. The classes were in 31 of the states 64 parips and involved 51,000 students.

Althou^ a similar program is available for Spanish, only three or four parishes teach it.

Some businesses, particularly in Lafayette, advertise in both French and English, and the practice is spreading to other cities.

Restoration of the language is seen as the only way to preserve Louisianas French and Cajun cultures. There is little written history, and traditions were passed orally from generation to generation.

I personally feel it would be almost a genocide, a killing of the spirit of the people, killing over 200 years of history, to neglect the survival of the French language and culture of Louisiana, Gustin said. There were no books and nothing was done in writing. Its a miracle French was able to survive in the Anglo Saxon context.

CODOFIL also encourages use of written French and has produced French books and cartoons for children. It sponsors an exchange program in which about 300 high school and colle^ students and teachers spend a summer in France, Belgium or Quebec.

The agency recently joined with KRVS, a Lafayette radio station owned by the University of Southwestern Louisiana, to forni the only French bilingual station in

Heres to the Dreamers Everyone knows that Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb. But most inventors are unsung heroes, even though it would be impossible to imagine our modem world without their creations. And yet who ever gives a thought to William Painter, the inventor of the modem bottle cap? How many cheering fans at the ball park know of Benjamin F. Shibe, who invented the cork center baseball? And what about William Finley Semple, who patented chewing gum in 1869? This weekend, the Inventors Hall of Fame in Arlington, Virginia plans to induct new members to its ranks in tribute to the contributions pioneers like these have made to our lives.

DO YOU KNOW - Who inaugurated the age of communications by inventing the wireless radio?

WEDNESDAYS ANSWER - The United States has the most man-made devices in Earth orbit more than 2,500.

2-10-83    '    VEC,    Inc.    1983

the United Stat^, Gustih said.

The station has about.50 hours a week of French programming and has a broadcast range of 75 miles, stretching west to Lake Charles, north to Alexandria and east to Baton Rouge.

But Gustin said the surface barely has been scratched.

Its a very long and slow process, he said. It took

over 5) years to almost kill the French language jin Louisiana. Were not going to return it in a few years. You dont change a society in a few years either.

But the most positive sign is that the pride is coming up again. I believe if we can make the people proud enough, French will be spoken again in the homes of south Louisiana.

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30- The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C,-Thursday, February 10,1963

7

CAN SEE AGAIN - Howard Walters of Hinesville, Ga now 82, said the last time I saw myself, I was middle aged and had dark hair. Walters lost his sight in 1949 and didnt see anything for 33 years, until a simple operation performed in Savannah in January gave sight to the sightless man. (AP Laserphoto)

Plan Recalling 240,000 Cars

DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp.. which faced a federal hearing next week on the safety of its X-cars, has announced it is recalling 240.000 of the vehicles because of the possibility that locking brakes could make them spinout.

The company said Wednesday that recall letters will be sent to owners of - - 000 Chevrolet Citation. Pontiac Phoenix. Oldsmobile Omega and Buick Skylark cars with manual transmissions built through the 1980 model year.

GM also will recall 32.000 1980 models with automatic transmissions built in the early 1980 model year run. ;statementsaid. fliK National Highway Traffic^fefety Administration and OM hav^eceived several hundrecTcomplaints during the last three years about locking brakes, which could cause the cars to spin out of control.

We took the action voluntarily to go to a recall," said GM spokesman Harold Jackson However, the government did issue an initial determination of a safety-related defect, and I guess it would be fair to say that we agree with them."

It is the 12th recall for the X-cars, which were Detroits first front-wheel-drive compacts They were introduced in early 1979, just as gasoline prices began to skyrocket, and the X-cars were good sellers.

A highway safety administration hearing on the cars, scheduled for Monay. is no longer is needed. Jackson said A spokesman for the agency, Hal Paris in W ashington, said the hearing is indefinitely postponed.

The investigation remains open because there are other cars we are looking

Find Computer Game Careers

VANCOl'VKK. British Columbia lAP) - Some youngsters today are combining their arcade video game experience with technology learned in school to carve out careers and earn money in the computer game busine.ss.

This new breed Includes an 18-year-old Californian who sol'd his creation to .Atari last year, a pair of Chicago youngsters who ^invented a video game, then created their own software company to market it. and another California teen hired as a special consultant to a major electronic games company.

Latest on the list, according to Tarnie'M Williams, president of Sydney Development Corp., a software manufacturer here, are Jeff Sember, 16, and Don Mat-trick. 18. who have just sold his company the game of Evolution," which traces the progress of man from his Darwinian beginning.

at," he said, adding NHTSA is 'probing whether there might be brake problems on other 1980-model X-cars not being recalled and later-model X-cars.

Jackson said GM dealers will repair the recalled cars free. He said he hoped, that letters about the recall would be sent to owners within the next few weeks.

A smaller number of cars is being recalled than the 320.000 initially under investigation by NHTSA because the larger number was based on wrong production data GM gave the agency, he said.

GM initially believed the cars affected involved vehicles built from January to May 1979, he said. But a close look at records showed the cars affected were built at two plants from January to March 1979 and in a third plant from January until late April 1979, Jackson said.

Better Storage For Lean Fish

NEW YORK (UPI) - The fatter the fish, the shorter its storage life in the freezer, says Linda ODierno, of Cornell Universitys Cooperative Extension service.

She says fatty fish such as mackerel, salmon and fresh tuna have a storage life of three months at zero degrees F, while leaner fish such as haddock, cod and swordfish can be kept up to 6 months at the same temperature.

Ms. ODiemo says fish and seafood may be frozen safely for longer periods, but flavor and texture will deteriorate.

Quality loss also occurs when fish and seafood are not packaged in moisture-proof, air-tight wrappings. Leaky packaging leads to freezer burn, or white spots and white edges on the fish or seafood.

Air, or oxygen, that reaches the oil or fat in fish can turn it rancid.

See Continued 'Limitations'

NEW YORK (AP) - The Womens Ordination Conference,' which seeks admission of women to the Roman Catholic priesthood, says the church's newly issued code of canon law eliminates some discrimination against women but not .enough of it.

Besides the priesthood still being closed to women, the conference said other limitations based on sex are imposed, such as prohibiting women from being installed as parish lectors (readers) or acolytes (altar assistants).

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Personal.........

InMemoriam Card Of Thank* Special Notice

Travel 4 Toor

Automotive

Child Care

Day Nursery

Healthcare

Employment .,.

For Sale

Instruction

Lost And Found

Loans And Morl jages

Business Servil.es

Opportunity

Professional

Real Estate

Appraisals

Rentals

WANTED

Help Wanted.....

Work Wanted . Wanted

Roommate Wanted

Wanted To Buy ----

Wanted To Lease .. Wanted To Rent

003

003

OOS

007

009

010

040

041 043 OSO 040 OM 017

oas

091

093

095

100

101

1?0

051 .059 140 . 142 . 144 144 148

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent...........121

Business Rentals................122

Campers For Rent..............124

Condominiums lor Rent ........125

Farms For Lease    ...,..........107

Houses For Rent................127

Lots For Rent ................129

Merchandise Rentals ...........131

Mobile Homes For Rent.........133

Office Space For Rent '.....135

Resort Property For Rent 137

Rooms For Rent................138

SALE

Autos for Sale...........

Bicycles for Sale.......

Boats for Sale...........

Campers for Sale.....

Cycles for Sale

Trucks tor Sale........

Pets....................

Antiques ................

Auctions................

Building Supplies........

Fuel. Wood, Coal.........

Farm Equipment........

Garage Yard Sales.......

Heavy Equipment .......

Household Goods.........

Insurance................

Livestock................

Miscellaneous...........

Mobile Homes tor Sale ... Mobile Home InsurarKe ..

Musical Instruments.....

Sporting Goods..........

Commercial Property----

Condominiums tor Sale...

Farms for Sale...........

Houses for Sale..........

Investment Property.....

Land For Sale............

Lots For Sale............

Resort Property for Sale .

,011 029

030

032

034

034

039

. . .'. 044

041

042

043

044

.... 045 .047 048 .... 049

071

... 072 .... 074 .... 075 ...074 ...077 ...078 .... 102 .... 104 .... 104 .... 109 ... Ill ...113 .... 115 .... 117

PUBLIC NOTICES

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS The undersigned having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Mavis Parker Lupton late of Pitt County,

North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the Estate of said decedent to present them to the undersigned Executor or attorney on or before the 8th day of August 1983 or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the estate will please make immediate payment.

This the 31st day of January, 1983. CARLYLE L LUPTON Executor, Estate of Mavis Parker Lupton 1800 East Fifth Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 OFFICE OF FRANK M WOOTEN BY; FrankM. Wooten, Jr.,

Attorney

February 3, 10, 17, 24, 1983

" NOfiCE

Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Jack Andrews late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administrator on or before August 3, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 1st, day of February, 1983. W.H Dawson. Jr.

P.O. Box 53

Washington, N.C. 27889 Administrator of the estate of Jack Andrews, deceased.

Feb. 3 10, 17, 24 1983

NOTICE OF SALE NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY Take notice that pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 44A the General Statutes of North Carolina, NCNB National Bank, as Executor of the Estate of Dr, James AAorris Curfman, late of Greene County, North Carolina will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at 410 Paris Avenue, Green ville North Carolina at 12:00 noon on the 17th day of February, 1983 various' articles of household fur niture, furnishings and personal ef fects belonging to Roman Nickens and John Nickens and more par

ticularly describd as follows:

1 Black ring 1 pair of Pearl earrings i Opal ring 1 Gold flower ring 1 Gold Pearl flower ring 1 Imperial camera 1 Tussy cream deodorant 1 Armetron watch 3 Keys on keyring 3 Keys on goio key ring 5 Brown keys on key ring 1 Sharp pockefknife

1 Green key ring

2 Black ashtrays 2 Coaster wheels

1 Box of assorted magazines 1 Cassette tape I Milk crate Assorted books 1 Gray coat 1 Dustpan 1 Silver key 1 Mop 1 Broom 1 Wine Crafe

1 Portable "RCA " Television I Large "RCA" Television 1 Jarrad Turntable

PUBLIC NOTICES

1 Bicycle Rim

2 Bicycle Tires 1 Heat Bulb l2x4Woodstand 1 bottle of cologne

1 Chrome frame chair

2 251b. weights 2WoodcabVts 1 Baseball

1 Green ink pen I Redbookend 1 pair of black dress shoes I Mefal bedframe I Brown free stump table I Kitchen chair J Box of assorted clothes Bic lighter Pillows , Brown trashcan Gold ink pen I Lufkin power tape I Roll of lape I Blue cup 4 Small keys

I Elegance jewelry collecfion in eluding necklace, stickpen, one pair of earrings and bracelel 4 Keys on gold key ring wifh white fag

I Solid State AM FM Radio, Tuner, and Amplifer with Eight Track tape deck 1 Certificate from Agnes Fullilove

School

I Box ot assorted clothes hangers I Large foam rubber mat with pillows

Roman Nickens and John Nickens, tenants of Dr. James AAor ris Curfman prior to his death, and as tenants of NCNB National Bank as Executor of the Estate of Dr. James AAorris Curfman following the death of Dr. James AAorris Curf man. vacated the leased premises at 2505B Dickinson Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina leaving said household furniture, furnishing and rsonal effects, and said property as remained at the leased premises for more than 21 days after the paid rental period has expired. NCNB National Bank, as Executor of the Estate of Dr. James AAorris Curf man. and as Lessor of said leased premises has a lawful claim for damages totalling $774.(XI against Roman Nickens and John Nickens as tenants of the premises of 2505B Dickinson Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina. Proceeds from this sale shall be applied to satisfy said claim for damans.

The above articles may be inspected at any time prior to the sale ^ contacting Duffus Realty, Inc., 2(31 Commerce Street, Greenville, North Carolina by telephone at (919) 754 5395.

This the 1st day of February, 1983. NCNB NATIONAL BANK Executor of the Estate of Dr. James Morris Curfman, Deceased

c/o Dixon, Horne, Duffus & Doub

Attorneys at Law NCNB Building P. 0. Drawer 1785 Greenville, NC 27834 February 3,10,1983

NOTICE OF EXECUTRIX X? creditors and DE BTORS OF ESTER AAARIE AAcGOWAN STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT Having qualified as Executrix of the Esfafe ot ESTER AAARIE McGOWAN, late of Pitt County, N.C,, all persons, firms, and cor porations having claims against the said estate are notified to exhibit them to Doro% M. Nichols, Executrix of the Estate on or before August 10th, 1983 or be barred from their recovery. Debtors of Mrs. McGowan are asked to make immediate payment to the Executrix.

This the 10th day of February, 1983

Dorothy M Nichols Route 1, Box 521 Greenville, N.C.

DeLyleM. Evans Attorney at Law now. Second St.

Ayden, N.C.

February 10,17, 24, AAarch 3,1983

ADVERTISEAAENT FORBID PROPOSAL

Sealed proposals will be received

by the Purchasing Department of Pitt County AAemoriaf Hospital until and publicly opened at 2:00 p.m., AAarch 4, IW in the 1 West Con ference Room of Pitt County AAemorial Hospital, Stantonsburg Road, Greenville, N.C. on the pur chase of a Complete Radiographic and Fluoroscopic Room System wifh compatible Digital Fluoroscopy System for Dedicated Room and In ferface to Existing G.E. MS I 1250 Generator in Room #9 for the Department of Radiology.

Specifications and bid proposal forms are on file in the office of the Purchasing Department, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, and may be obtained upon request between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., AAonday through Friday.

No proposal will be considered

propose > accomp of not less than five

unless accompanied by a bid deposit > (5) percent of

the proposal. Bid deposits may be in the form of cash, cashier's check, or bid bond.

Pitt County AAemorial Hospital reserves the right to reject any and all proposals.

Jack w. Richardson President

February 10,14, 23,1983

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

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

010

AUTOMOTIVE

011 Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 754 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay too dollar.

CARS AND TRUCKS AUCTION every Friday from 7 p.m. until. You bring them, we will sell them. Dealers welcomed. At the Onslow County Fairgrounds. 347 2424.

CARS sell for S117.9S (average). Also Jeeps, Pickups. Available at local Government Auctions. For directory call 805 487 6000, extension 8752, Call refundable.

JEEPS, CARS, TRUCKS

Under 5100. Available at local government sales. Call (refunda ble) 1 419 549 0241. extension 1504 for your 1983 directory. 24 hours.

SELL YOUR CAR the National Aulofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758-0114.

013

Buick

1977 BUICK Electra Limited. door. 754 0489 after 5 p.m.

1978 ELECTRA LIMITED, 4 door, loaded. Must sell $4500. Cali 754 8740 after a p.m.

1979 REGAL, blue and white, fully loaded. $4850. 758 4178._-

1980 ELECTRA LIMITED, 4 door, 50,000 miles. $4800 Call 758 1427

015

Chevrolet

CAAAARO 1981. Sports Coi^. Good condition, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 744-3141.

CASH FOR your car. Berwick Auto Sales 754 7765.

CHEVROLET, 1973 Monte Carlo, bucket seats, tilt steering, silver and maroon. $450. Call 754 (38 IMPALA 1979.    4 door. Fully

equipped including power windows and seats. Low mileage. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 744-3141. 1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA, medium red metallic, 4 door, excellent condition, 350 V 8 engine, air. power steering and brakes, 80,000 miles. $1495. 744-4451._

1980 CITATION, straight drive, air. AM FM $3995    758 9157. After 5,

752 5554._

1981 CHEVROLET El Camino, excellent condition. 12.000 miles. air, stereo cassette $5800. 758 8140.

016

Chrysler

1982 CHRYSLER LeBaron Medallion, possible assumption with approved credit. 758 1121, 9 to

017

Dodge

1981 IXJDGE Ari^ K Car. 29.000 miles $4300. Good condition 758 4911__________

1981 DODGE K, ExceUjent condition, 4 door, air, cruise, dolby stereo'radio, 1 owner, $4295 Call 754 7829,

018

Ford

I97S FORD ELITE Good condition. 754-8J97aHerS._

051

Help Wanted

1974 FORD PINTO Automatic. Excellent condition, for Information call 754 4843.

1977 GRENADA Ford. $2400. Call

754 5859._

1977 THUNDERBIRD, Good condl tion. $3000. 744-3085 nWt

21949 Thunderbird; 1-1949 Thun derbird parts only. Call 744-4843 after 4 p.m. or 744-3141 anyflnte, ask

Lorpc___

021

Oldsmobile

1973 CUTLASS SUPREME Good condition. 355 2733

023

Pontiac

1973 CATALINA, 4 door, hardtop, power steering and power brakes, air, with stereo. After 4 and weekends, 754-3517.

1974 PONTIAC CATALINA New

paint job. Very good condition for mforrrtaflon call 7a4-4843._

1900 GRAND PRIX Black, sunroof, tilt, cruise, AM/FM stero, air con difion. Assume monthly payments. very small equity. 355 2^_

1980 LJ PHOENIX wifh half vinyl top. 40,000 - miles, good condition. $4500. 754 4733._

1981 TURBO TRANS AM, low mileage. Many extras. Call weekdays after 4 pm, anytime Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 754-9780.

024

Foreign

DATSUN 240Z, new tires, new paint, excellent condition, $3,895. Days 758 5907, extension 350, 753 4756 or 753 5500 after 4._

MUST SELL 1981 Toyota Corolla, 2 door, air. Will sacrifice at only $4,995. Call 757 3444 after 5.

TOYOTA Clica GT Sport Coupe, loaded, excellent condition, $4,^5. 753 4 750 or 753 5500 after 4._

1974 TOYOTA CORONA Mark II, 4 door, automatic, air, $995 firm. Call 752 5450.__

1975 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT, 4 speed, air, AM/FM stereo. 754-8281 or 758 9090.

1978 TOYOTA Corolla SR5 liftback

$1800. Call 754-9740.

1980 HONDA ACCORD, hatchback, loaded, excellent condition, $4400. 754 8042 after 5.

1980 TOYOTA CELICA, AM/FM, air, 33,000 miles, excellent condi-tion. Need to sell. 757 1387 after 4.

1981 HONDA CIVIC. 4 door. AM/FM stereo, excellent condition. $5,995. Call after 4:30. 754 3434.

1981 TOYOTA COROLLA Wagon, 5 speed. AM/FM, air, cruise control.

Call after 4, 758 9740. _

1981 VOLVO GL, low mi lew, excellent condition, white. Call 754 4508 after 7p.m._

029 Auto Parts & Service

1974 MAZDA PARTS for sale. 5 speed transmission. Call after 5 p m. 792 4027.__

032

Boats For Sale

1979 JOHNSON 9.9 horsepower outboard motor with gas tank. Like new. Call 752-4058 after 5:30.

034 Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units In stock. O'Brlants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774._

036

Cycles For Sale

XL350. 1975. new back tire, $450. 752 2357or 754 4019.

1979 HARLEY LOW RIDER Call 944 5042.

1980 KAWASAKI 1300 grand tour ing, 4,000 miles, full dresser. Call 744 4843 after 4 p.m. or 744 3141 anytime, ask for Larry._

039 Trucks For Sale

FARM OR WORK TRUCK 1981, Ford F100. 4 cylinder. 21,000 miles. Very clean. $5500. 355 4349.

1944 OOOGE PICKUP TRUCK, 318 V8, manual transmission, like new tires, runs but needs water pump and brake shoes. $450. 744-3103.

1947 FORD VAN Econoline, 4 cylinder, $400. Call 754 7165._

1971 OOOGE pickup. Limited Edition. Automatic, air, power steering. Good condition. Mags, yellow and black, two tool boxes included. 754 7971 after 4. _

1972 FORD VAN, 6 cylinder, good running condition. 744 2313._

1975 BLAZER 4x4. New paint. Rebuilt motor. New exhaust system, new carpet, AM/FM stereo cassette. $3500 firm. 752 7341; After 6, 758 0027.__

1975 SCOUT, V 8, automatic, air, 125,000 miles. $2500. 754 9847after 4. 1978 F0.7D Econoline 150 Van, fully equipped and completely customized. 752 3920 after 5.

1979 CHEVROLET TRUCK Straight shift. 4 cylinder. $2450. Call 758 0185.

1981 DATSUN KING CAB, 5 ipeeH. rail, tool box. Call 754-7453 after 4 p.m

1982 TOYOTA LONGBED, diesel, air, AM/FM, and camper shell. Call after 6, 524 5414.    _

040

Child Care

BABYSITTER needed 6:30 p.m. to 3:30 a.m. References required. Call 752 5377.

I HAVE 3 OPENINGS for days only to keep children in my home. Call 758 9341

046

PETS

AKC Boxer puppies, 9 weeks old. $75. 926 5044.    _

AKC DOBERAAAN PUPS, 7 weeks, black and rust, wormed and shots. $75 and $100.524 3114.

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 GOLDEN RETRIEVER Dies, good hunting stock. Phone's? 3524.      ^

AKC MINIATURE Schnauzer pups, I female, 2 males. $200. 758-3482, Grimesland.__

SEALPOINT SIAMESE kittens. Three males, two females. $50. Call 744-2501,_ _

UKC White Eskimo Spitz. 4 weeks, Ideal Valentine glH.SlSO. 754-1297.

051

Help Wanted

Gals Guys Over U

National Firm has openings for several neat people to assist me in my

Nationwide

Travel

Program

No special qualifications needed. Must be tree to travel and leave immediately. All transportation and expenses furnished. This position extremely desirable tor the younger set. Call between 5-9 evenings. 753-3145, Miss Dolata

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON Experience helpful but not necessary. Individual must have sue cessful background and the willingness to advance quickly. Only those settled, responsible and da siring to earn top commissions need to apply! All replies held confiden tial. Apply to:    Automotive

Salesperson. P O Box 1947, Greanvllle. N C 27834._

AVON Wanted sales repra

sentatives. Earn 50% Call 744-3494 or 758-3159.    _

BODY SHOP MECHANIC neadad. Excellant working conditions and company benefits. Apply to: Body Shop A^hanic, P 0 Box 1947, Graanvllla, N C 27834._

COLOR SEPARATION TECHNICIAN

Gravure or otfsat experience in four color camera separation or a de-

Xree In photography or Graphic Tts. A 30 year old Southeasiern company with wages and benefits among the top In industry. An EqualOpportunity Employer.

Mall resume to Technician', P O Box 1947, Greenville, N C 27834.

CCX3K, WAITRESSES, bus persons '    '        n    person

Seafood,

Lunch hours only. Apply In person J ETs Is/aml S '    '

trg;

loth sr.

after 4 pm. _

Rivergale Shopping Center, East

DRUMMER F0R.A8iA Band 944-

0302a(ter5:30P.m.___

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY Large corporation has outstanding tales opening for a sales representative. Individual mutt be local resident with ntenegerial ability, ambition and show progress tor age. Business or sales background helpful. In requesting personal interview. please submit resume stating persortal history, aducetion and business experience. Write: P O Box 404, Greenville, N C

FANTASTIC opportunity tor dynamic salesperson. No competition, calling on businesses. We train. 757 3497. 8 IQa.m.and5 9p m.

FULL ALTERATIONS One Hour Koretlzlno. 754-0545

HOMEWORKERS Wirecratt duction. We train housa dw

For full details writa: Wirecratt, P O Box 223. Norfolk. Va. 23501

iKS:

IF YOU ARE A HIGHLY motivated dental hygenist 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 ot challenge or change need apply. Send resume to Dental Hygenist, PO Box 1947. Greenville, NC 7834.

IMMEDIATE OPENING GM Technician. Kinston area dealership has Immediate opening tor qualified GM Technician, salary commensurate wifh experience. NAISE certification given special consideration. Send resume to GM Technician, PO Box 1967, Greenville, N 27834.____

JOB INFORMATION: Overseas. Cruise Ships, Houston, Dallas, Alaska. $20,000 to $40.000/year possible. Call 805-487-4000, extension J 8752. Call refundable._

KWICK WILSON'S now accepting applications for full and part time convenience work. Mature, re-onsible individuals apply at, Patolus Highway and Ramhorn Road._

LADIES AND Children's Shoe De partment AAanager Trainee wanted. Good opportunity for career minded. If you are mature, honest, like people and like retail work, this may be for you. Start at $10,000 yearly; advance upward. Apply Brody's, Pitt Plaza,_

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 1145 AAonday through Friday, 9 AM to 5 PAA    _

MANAGEMENT Large corpora tion looking for management potential. Must start In sales. 40 hour week. Some door to door. Salary and benefits. Conner AAobile Homes, 754-0333._

AAANAGER FOR NEW alterations shop. Experience required. Call 754 7891.__

MATURE LADY wanted to spend nights with lady in Ayden. Phone 744 3654.    _

MECHANIC WANTED Good reli able mechanic with good working habits. Excellent pay and benefit Prefer Ford experience

package. Apply in I

person to: J C Jones, East Carolina Llncoln-Mercury-GMC, Greenville. _

MECHANIC NEEDED Experience necessary. Most have own tools. Excellent company benefits. Apply to: Jesse Boyd, Grant Buick, Inc., 603 Greenville Blvd., 754 1877.

NEED 3 PEOPLE to install Energy Management Equipment. $15 per hour or paid per installation. Can be done part time (low voltage). Some heating and air background helpful. Call Mr. Brown, 1-800-241-0354.

NEW BUSINESS seeking qualified

rsrsons. Cash Investment required. or details call 758 9132 after 4 p.m.

PART TIME WAITRESS Tarheel Tavern, 744-2269.____

PARTS COUNTER PERSON needed. Possible management op

portunity depending, on experience. Excellent pay and benefit package. Prefer Ford experience. Apply to: Parts Counter Person, P 0 Box 1947, Greenville._

PAY PROGRESS PROMINENT PRESTIGE

Three openings now for 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.

TOQUALIFY YOU NEED:

A positive mental attitude 21 or over preferred Have self-confidence and pleas-antpersonallty Free to begin work immediately after acceptance Good car Sportsminded

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 $24.500 a year. Only those who sincerely want to get ahead need apply.

Call now for an appointment:

757-m6

AAON-FRI    10:00 AM-4:00 PM

SATURDAY    10:00 AM-1:00 PM

PROFESSIONAL DOG GROOMER for veterinary hospital in Washington, NC. 944-2834.

PROGRAAAMER Minimum 1 year experience in RPG programming on IBM System 34 or 38. Send resume to Programmer, PO Box

1947, Greenville,^C 27834._

REAL ESTATE AAANAGEMENT

Established small Raleigh real estate company is expanding. Owner needs N C licensed broker to manage company and train salespeople. Excellent potential opportunity. Must be experienced, self-starter, career minded, good character. Commission position. Send resume to Box 31174, Raleigh, N C 27422.__

SALES REPRESENTATIVE to sell lines of lawn and garden power equipment 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 i.alem, NC 27115.    __

SECRETARIES, word processors and typists needed immediately for ig and short term temporary

jTgnments. Must have at least one

year work experience. Call for an appointment - 757-3300.

MANPOWER TEMPORARY SERVICE 1 IB Reade Streat

TEXAS OIL COMPANY urgently needs mature person for Greenville area business sales representative. Sales experience not necessary. We train. Write T B Dickerson, Southwestern Petroleum, Box 789, Forth Worth, Texas 76101.

TRAINED DENTAL assistant for work in multi-assistant office. Send resume and references to Dental, PO Box 1947. Greenville, NC 27834.

TUTOR WANTED (BA/MSC de gree) to help in computer science course. $10 hour. Call Sherry 758-8886 after 2:30 p.m. or Chris 758 8059 after 3 p.m._

CLASSIFIED AOS will go to work tor you to find cash buyers tor your unused items. To place your ad, phone 752 4144.

WANTED PART TIME secre tary-bookkeeper. Call Dr. Love, 754 9209.    _

WANTED: German instructor to teach beginning German course at Martin Community College. AAasters degree in German preferred Baccalaureate required. Send resume to Martin Community College, Kehukee Park Road, Willlamsfon, NC 27892. Equal Opportunity/Atflrmaf ive Action Employer.____

WE NEED 2 REPRESENTATIVES NOWTOOFFEROUR 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 marvy other new plans. ot protection. Mutual ot Omaha immediately needs two new sates representatives In this area. This i$ an outstanding opportunity for the right person with no limit on your income or chances tor advancement. Call tor a personal interview:

LeeW Weever

1-754-1150 Greenville. N C Life Insurance Affiliate: United of Omaha Equal Opportunity Companies M^F

059 Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

Trimming,

Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming cutting and removal. F estlmafes. J P Stancll, 752-4331

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK Carpentry, masonry and roofing^ 35 years experience in building Call James Harrington after 4 pm. 752 7765.    _

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping in the Classified Ads.

for bargains I

t

059 Work Wanted

074 Miscellaneous

CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO

' Quality construction and renova tion. Pnooe 757 0799 after 4 pm

CASH REGISTER, Victor 511,

4 months. $400 new, now $350 Call 757 1534 attar 4

CLARK I. COMPANY

Stihl Echo Sachs Dolmar Snapper Toro Lawn Boy

FOR TUTORING K 3 N C Qualified Teacher available to tutor In her home. 754-1927.

CONSOLE STEREO Like new. $150. Gun cabinet. $50. 752 4*47

HANDYMAN: Painting, well

DURST ENLARGER $100 or best otter. After 5. 758-3827.

whatever. 20 yMrs exwience. References 752 3581 after 4. ask tor Don.

FOR THE NEXT 2 weeks Courlstan roll back the clock sale on Oriental rugs. Save 30% at Larry's Carpetland. X10 East 10th Street Greenville. '

JOHNSON&THIELE CO

Residential and commercial re modeling, repair and construction. Call 757-1843 tor estimates. We otter a complete design service. 1304 N Greene Street.

FRUIT TREES, nut trees, berry plants, grape vines, landscaping plant material ottered by one ot Virginia's largest growers Free copy 48 page Planting Guide Catalog in color, on request. Waynesboro Nurseries Inc.. Waynesboro. Virginia 2290. FURNITURE CLEARANCE SALE Mar Js and Westbrook, 1211 South Evans Street. AAonday through Sat urday, 12 until 4o.m.

MATURE LADY, dependable, with reference* to live-in full tirre as housekeeoer. 752-3090, ask for Jean. PAINTERS INC , recently moved to Greenville. Special rates ot $25 per room regardless ot size. Com marcial anzT residential painting, interior or exterior, also drywell and plaster. Free estimates Real tors, please feel tree to cell. 754 4955. 24 hour answering service, ask tor Jerome.

GAS WALL FURNACE 45,000 BTU, $150. (Sood condition. Call 753 5544.

H 0 TRAINS and accessories, good condition. $140. 355 4538

SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, remodeling burnt-out trailers. Jack Baker Floor Service. 754 2848 anytime,it no an swer call back.

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 754 7829.

WOULD LIKE TO TEAR DOWN

old tobacco barns in and around Avdbn. Call 744 2182 after 6p.m.

HOME ENTERTAINMENT

Center/Stereo/Radio and TV $250 758 1702.

WOULD LIKE babysitting, housekeeping and staying with the elderly during the day. Call 758 2851 before 5 p.m., ask tor Pat.

KING COIL bedding. Sale prices starting at $49.95 each piece. Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade ins.

060 FOR SALE

061 Antiques

LOVESEAT - Colonial style, like new, gold upholstery. $150. Three sturdy wood chairs with gold vinyl padded seats, like new, $30 eacn. One Early American painted block wood chair with cherry wood arms, eagle emblem, very good condition, iSO. One solid mapfe straight chair, excellent condition. $35. 754-5249.

HOME PLACE ANTIQUES Large selection ot oak, depression glass, collectibles. Open everyday 10-5; Sunday 1-5, 14 miles east ot Greenville, Highway 33.

LUGGAGE: Red Samsonite -Saturn II, 21"-$25, 24"-$35, both $55 Silhoutte 25" $35. 758-1358,

064 Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAOTOROLA PULSAR II mobile phone for sale or lease. Call 754 7891.

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood tor sale. J P StanciL 752-4331.

ALL OAK $40, Mixed $35. 752 4286.

AAOVING SALEI Sofa and chair, $125. I Sony 4 channel stero $225. 1 complete new pine bedroom suite, $350. 1 maple single bed and chest of drawers. $90. 1 bed $25. t dinnette set, $100. Plus odds and ends. 758 2872 or 758-4028.

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

$40 FOR PICKUP

CALL 757-3548 or 758-5043

FIREWOOD, $30 a load. Call 758 4411 anytime for delivery.

OFFICE FURNITURE for sale; desk, executive chairs, bookcase, typewriter stand. 744-2313. OLIVETTI LEXICON 90C ball ele ment typewriter with correction feature. Includes elite and script elements. Good condition. $395. Call 753 4260.

OAK FIREWOOD tor sale Ready tooo. Call 752 4420.

OAK FIREWOOD for sale Call 752 8847.

OAK FIREWCX3D, $45 pickup load Call 758 3190.

PLAYHOUSE Adorable 8x8 not including front porch. Well built, 3 windows, shingled roof. Cost $800 to build. Moved and it will not tit In backyard $500 or best otter. Call 752 9278.

OAK FIREWOOD 754 7159,

OAK WOOD $45 a load, or $80 tor 2 loads. $35 If you pick up. 754-2913 after 5 and weekends, 754-5977, 8 to 5.

OAKWCX)D BY JAMES All oak $40 load. 758 2840 or 754-9193 anytime. SEASONED WOOD tor sale $40 pick up truck load. 90% oak. 10% maple. Phone 752 3236.

PROMOTED! Must sell, 1977 VW Van, $4095; 1974 Fiat 131. $1795; GE washer and dryer, $195. Call 752 4809.

RECLINER FOR SALE $198. Call 758-2818.

100% OAK FIREWOOD: Green $50; seasoned $55 per ',3 cord. Guaran teed full measure. Reliable delivery. 752 0091.

REFRIGERATOR, 17 cubic fool, Kenmore, excellent condition. $200. 754 5649 after 5

100% OAK FIREWOOD tor sale. $45 a load if we deliver; $40 a load it you pick UP. 758 3797 or 752-5488.

RENT A STEAMEX Best method for cleaning carpets. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street. Greenville.

065 Farm Equipment

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS and Shamoooers. Call Dealer, 756-4711. SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent shampnoers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.

AUGER FEED WAGONS 90 bushel capacity, front or rear mounted 8' vertical unloading auger $1,185.49 unassembled. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752 3W.

SKI BOOTS, men's size 10<3 Like new.SX. 758-1774.

SOFA, soft shade of green. $200 795 4848.

FARM /MACHINERY Auction Sale. Tuesday. February 15th at 10 a.m. 150 tractors. 500 implements. We buy and sell used equipment daily. Wayne Implement Auction Corporation, PO Box 233, Highway 117 South, (Soldsboro, NC 27530. N C #188. Phone 734 4234.

SOFA, 90" Early American wingback, light brown and beige tweed. Asking $100. 754 7943after 4.

THE CABINET SHOP

Residential and commercial cabinet work. Design, construction, finishing and installation. Bring your plans or let us design tor you Call for appointment. 757 1843. 1304 N Greene Street.

067 Garage-Yard Sale

FLEA /MARKET Business, home and personal items. 211 West 9th Street. Betv^n Morgan Printers and Edwards Auto Supply. Saturday, February 12, 8-4.

TIMBERLAKE PRINT signed and numbered, framed. "AAorning Sun". $400. Ward Nickols Print, signed and numbered, framed. The Legacy". $300. White wicker sofa, $1C. 756-6440.

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market, Greenville Boulevard. Open Saturday and Sunday 8 til 5. Crafts, tools, furniture and antiques. Displays ot old postcards, buttons and antique pistols. Come join us. A super flea market. Outside dealer spaces Free! Call Bill 744 3S41. Mike 744-3550, Fair Grounds 758-4914.

TOP SOIL, field sand, mortar sand and rock. Call 744 3296 or 744^19.

USED 15.1 cubic toot refrigerator in excellent condition, $300. Call 758 1)98.

WE TAKE TRADE-INS Pick \jp the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, 757 0451.

RAYNOR FORBESANDCUiRK

Flea AAarket open Saturdays 7 til 1, across from Moose Lodoe. /S4-4090.

19" COLOR TV Take over pay ments ot $27,48 tor 24 months. Furniture World, 757-0451. We fake trad6 ins.

YARD SALE Saturday. Feb. 12. corner of Juanita -and West 7th St., Ayden. Rain date, Feb. 19.

1941 World Book Encylopedias, $80. Call 758 8844 after 5 0.m.

2 WHEELCHAIRS from $50 to $150 1 walker for $10. Call 754-7398.

072 Livestock

4 MONTH OLD brown floral velour couch with matching swivel rocker. Retailed for $1749, asking $450 firm. 746 3857.

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752 5237.

PEANUT HAY $1 to $1 40 per bale. Call after 7 p.m. 752 9225.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

074 Miscellaneous

BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors plywood counter tops, total electric, ran^, refrigerator. Regular price.

Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up includecf Hours, 8 am to6 pm.

AAOBILE HOME BROKERS 4X West Greenville Boulevard 754-0191

AMERICAN DREW oak bedroom suite. $400. 7 piece living room suite. $625. 754 5859.

ASHLEY WOOD AND COAL

combination. Used 2 years. $300. 744 3085 night.

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $37.92. 3 piece living room suite; sofa, chair, loveseat. Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade ins.

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $49,44. 7 piece Western living room suite; sofa, chair, rocker, 3 tables, ottoman. Furniture World, 757-0451, We take trade ins.

BRAND NEW 1983 t< ot the line double wide. 52 X 24, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof, bay windows, frost tree refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much more. Regular price, $24,995

Limited Time Only

$19,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up includecT Hours, 0 AM to 6 pm.

MOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Bouleverd 754-0191

ASSUME PAYMENTS ot $43.12. 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 ot only $14.82 month. Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, 757 0451. We take trade ins.

ATARI VIDEO GAMES repaired We buy used ataris, any condition. 758 9513.

AUTO/MOTIVE SHOP equipment including valve machine, air com pressor, boring bar, jacks and jack stands. Call 744-4863 after 6 p.m. or 744-3141 anytime, ask for Larry.

CLEAR 12x40, 2 bedroom, )< z bath, set on private lot, financing avalla ble. $5,500. Call days 752-3000, nights 756-1997 or 758 4821.

BATTERY POWERED electronic games. "Donkey Kong" and "Space Invaders". 758-1739 after 4 p.m.

OOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances. Central air Underpinned. Barn attached. Set up on 1 acre of lend. 944-8434.

BEDDING AND WATERBEDS Save up to ' 3 and more. Factory Mattress And Waterbeds. 730 Greenville Blvd. next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2624.

USED HOMES: 1971 2 bedroom, 1 bath, 12x65; 1-12x55, 2 bedroom, 1 bath; 1-12x40, 2 bedroom, 1j bath. All can be seen at Art (Tellano Homes. Call Lawrence or Tim at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841.

12X40, fully furnished. 2 bedroom, washer/dryer, front porch. $4,000. Call 758 3169.

BEIGE ALUMINUM storage shed. 12 X 16 feet. Excellent condition. $850. 758 7140.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery

anH incAllAlAM 010 71.07U

ana insTaiiaiion. t it- /oj'T/

CABBAGE AND COLLARD plants tor sale. Call 752 7140.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, tor small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.

SPECIAL Executive Desks

p- 60x30 beautiful walnut (iniah. " Ideal for home

Reg. Price Special Price $25.ofl $|7goo

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 s. Evans St. 752-2175

CHICKENS FOR SALE 7Sc each. Humbles Cage Farm, 2 miles west of Ayden, Highway 102 to County Ro^a 1111. Please bring something to put chickens in.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & Z' WNINGS

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton. Co.

7,')Z hi Ih

WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD!

W

WE GUARANTEE that, if you buy any home n

furnishings item from us and within 30 days find the iden- tical item for less we will, upon verification. Cheerfully Re- |j fund The Difference!    H

Check us out at 2808 E. 10th St. or pick up the phone and ^ give us a call. 757-0451. We Have Instant Credit!

SHOP & SAVE - SHOP & SAVE - SHOP & SAVE





The Daily Renector, Greenville. N C.-Thursday, February 10,1983- 31

075 Mobife Homes For Sale 107 Farms For Lease

1970 NORRIS, I2x*s. 2 bedroom, central air, appliances good shape. tSOOO Call 7St *020 after 5 p.m.

1972 ALL AMERICAN 12*70 Good condition. iSSOO 752 6245.

1973 HOLIDAY, 12*45. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer Windoiw air condi tioner, 2 baths, tS850 Set up in Hollvbrook Estates. 758 4541,

1973 12X45 STAR Mobile Home 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, large living room with wood heater, electric heat and central air. Call after 4:00. 754 0205

1975 CELEBRITY 12X40,    2

bedrooms, 1 bath, furnished

central air underpinied, set up in nice park, 10X12 storage barn, 752 4124 days. 754 3141 nights

1974, 2 BEDROOM Mobile Home Completely set up with washer/dryer, and furniture 55200 Call 753 24.    _

1974 TRAILER Two bedrooms, 1 bath 55,900, Call 355 2727 or 752 7054    __

1981 BRIGIDIER trailer tor sale 14 X 44. Call atter 5:30 pm. 792 5488

1982 DOUBLE WIDE with fireplace    Call    758

and assume loan.

1983, 14*54, 2 bedroom, 1 bath washer and dryer, central air, total electric, underpinning, storm win dows. already set up, some equity and assume loan. Call Lawrence at Art Dellano Homes, 754 9841._

24X52 DOUBLEWIDE and lot 135*74. Set up as a home, brick underpinned, large and small back porch. Central air and heat. 514,900 Possible 119% loan assumption. Meadowbrook area 752-4984 after 4.

3 BEDROOM, 1'2 bath mobile home 5500 down and assume payments. Call 758 5374 between 9 and 12a.m._____

076 AAobi le Home I nsurance

AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance at competitive rates. Smith Insur ance and Realty, 752 2754.    __

077 AAusical Instruments

BEGINNERS AND Advanced piano lessons by ECU honor student, Debra Russ, Piano & Organ DIs tribufors, Arlington Boulevard, Greenville,355    -

MAHOGANY UPRIGNT PIANO, 5450. Call 744 4525.__

OLD UPRIGHT piano. 5250. Call 752 1030 atter 5 pm

OLD UPRIGHT PIANO, new ivories and felts, 5200. You pick up. Armstrong tiute, e*cellent condi tion, 5175.744-4577 after 4 p.m._

TOBACCO POUNDS FOR SALE at

53 SO per pound. Call 752-5547 atter

4.    ._

WANTTO BUY

CORN

Top Prices Paid tor your corn. Worthington Farms- Inc., 754 3827 Days. 754 3732 Nights

WANT TO LEASE peanut pourtds. any amount. Call 758-2859._

109

Houses For Sale

NICE, COZY contemporary house in Twin Oaks, excellent financing. F L Garner, 355 2428 or 754 32l7.

Owner, 758 2520

WANTEDTORENT TOBACCO POUNDS for 1983

Call

752-0310 or 758-4353

SETTLE IN THIS NEAT Starter home for about 51.800 including closing # BR's in country deck central heat- wood stove also In cheerful and cory den 537.500. Davis Realty 752 00, 754 2904 or

754 1997. _

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 intormation, call Alita Carroll Aldridge & Southerland. 754    754-8278.    C    7.

109 Houses For Sale

attractive loan Assumption

3. bedroom brick, very attractive interior, large detached work shop. Assumable at 97-'% Ray M Spears. 758 4342. Aldridge 8, Southerland Realty, 754 3500

UNIVERSITY AREA Duple* that looks like a home. One side has three bedrooms, with a fireplace in the master, and a fireplace In the living room. Rent out the other side to help with payments. 540's. *432. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 754 4444

ATTRACTIVE Brick Vineer Ranch Idel for a couple well planned and cheerful kitchen with dishwasher kitchen bar glass sliding doors utility room good size breakfast room cozy den and exciting master bedroom deci well landscaped lawn good neighborhood- Reduced to 538,500. Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 2904 or 754 1997

BABY IT'S COLD OUTSIDE, but you can be cozy by the fire In this wacious contemporary In Camelot. Cfreatroom, dining room, garage, and lots of storage make this a home to fit the entire family. Mid 540's    #393.    CENTURY 21 Bass

Realty, 754 5848

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 Alita Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland, 754 3500, 754 8278. C 4.

DRASTICALLY REDUCEDIl New

log home features 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs. 1950 square feet on a 1 acre wooded lot. For additional in formation call Aldridge and Southerland 754 3500, Nites, Myra Day 524 5004. D 1

VA LOAN ASSUMPTION This three bedroom home will win your heart. Located In convenient, quiet neighborhood on lovely wooded lot. 532 500 *454 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 754 4444._

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, 1>} baths, great room. 540's. Farmers Home financing available. I'll be most happy to show you this ideal starter home. Alita Carroll, Aldridae & Southerland. 754 3500 or 754 82. C 8. _ _

WHO COULD want more than a nice house, reasonably priced, In a good location. Come see this 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch. It hs living room, dining room, eat In kitchen, and family room with woodstove. A total of 1850 square foot of living area for 574,500 in Tucker Estates. You really should see it! C 3. Alita Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland. 754 3500, 754 8278.

PRIVATE GUITAR LESSONS Call 754 2253 or 752 4049.___

END YOUR SEARCH! This elegant four bedroom home in Lynndale features den with fireplace, all formal areas and many extras What more could you ask for? $139,900. *407. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 754 5848.

VIOLIN, CASE and bow $200. Phone 752 4482.___

078 Sporting Goods

HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion repairs. Specializing in marine products . 758 0441.1104 Clark Street.

082 LOST AND FOUND

LOST Gray, long haired cat. Trinity Free Will Baptist area. No collar, stomach shaved 1' 2 months ago, needs her pills. If you have seen her, please call 752-0024, you could help answer my prayers. Lost February 4, 1983.

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Three bedroom, 2 ceramic bath brick home, fireplace, central heat and air on 1.4 acres with 300 ft. frontage on Highway II near Griffon. Horse stables, fenced pasture. Shown by appointment only . 524 5218.

GRIFTON 3 bedrooms, sunken living room with fireplace. Excellent condition. Large lol. Must see this one. $51,000. Financing available. Call 524 5244._

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.

LOST Black and white male Pomeranian wearing a blue rhinestone collar. Lost in Country Squire Estates north of Tar River. Re ward. 752-4033.

$40's. For your showing, call Alita Carroll, Aldridge 8, St "    '

756 3500, 754 827C C 5.

[fridge 8. Southerland.

lost VICINITY OF Greenville Boulevard and Dellwood Drive a young male orange tabby cat named Baby. 754-4757.

MISSING -Male chocolate point Siamese Cat, neutered. Answers to Tigger Reward. 756 2044 or 752-71

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

P.ftl.________

085 Loans And Mortgages

NEED CASH, get a second mortgage fast by phone, we also buy mortgages; make commercial loans, cairtreel 800 845 3929.

091 Business Services

INCOME TAX SERVICES Hilton Bovd. Call 754 3264

INCOME TAX SERVICE Doug Reynolds 757 1009 or 758 0135.

093 OPPORTUNITY

FOR SALE: Established Jewelry and Gift Store, in Eastern Carolina. Write Gift Store, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

IF YOU ARE INTERESTED in weight control, enjoy working with people and would like to own your own business. Diet Center could offer the career for you. Washlngfon area now available. 919 438 4923    _

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 8, Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, NC 757 0001, nights 753 4015

SERVICEMASTER professional home and office cleaning 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, Raleigh 27403, 833-2802.

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 on day

ep. 25 years experience working cnimneys and fireplaces. Cad or night, 753 3503, Farmville.

104 Condominiums For Saie

BY OWNER Quail Ridge Condo, 3 bedrooms. 2'2 baths, large living room with fireplace, and dining room. Pool and tennis court. Call 355 6053

CONDOMINIUM PRICED to sell! I! Hard to find - a 3 bedroom flat in a lovely setting. The real plus is price of $49,500. Foyer, 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 Condomimiorq, enipy the fireplace, the fenced in

need more RCXJM? This 2600 square foot ranch has it! Family room with . fireplace, recreation room, craft room and three spacious bedrooms. Large lot with fenced in backyard. 580's. #404. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666.

NEEDS FIXING UP older home converted into dupluex-needs Ipve

and tender care-over 1600 square shopping

Uner $20,000 No reasonable offi

feet near schools and

refused! Call Davis Realty 752-3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997.

NEW LISTING:    Spacious white

brick home, located on over an acre. Approximately 2,000 square feet. Greatroom with fireplace, 3 bedroom, 2'/2 bath. Plus formal living/dining room. Approximately 2 adioining acres available. Possible Federal Land Bank Financing. W 12. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge Southerland. 756 3S00or 758 7744.

551,900. Price Reduction. Windy Ridge, 3 bedroom, 2',2 bath condominium, family room with fireplace, separate dining room, heal pump. Excellent investment at this price. Seller will consider FHA, VA, or conventional financing. W 10. Call June Wyrick at Aldrld^ & Southerland Realty, 754-3500 or 758 7744.______

$59,900. Price reduction. Centrally located. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath

brick ranch features family room with fireplace, plus formal area. Attractive neighborhood, conve

nient to schools and shopping. Seller will consider FHA, VA, or Conventional financing. Make your appointment now to see It. W-14. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge 8. Southerland Realty, 756 3500 or 758 7744.__

564.900. Spacious brick ranch. 3 bedroom, office, 2 baths, greatroom, large sunroom or playroom, 2 car garage. New carpet throughout. Seller will consider FHA, VA, or conventional financing. Convenient location. W-11. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland. 754-3500 or 758-7744.

593,900. NEW LISTING

Exceptional location. 2 story Williamsburg. First class decor. 4 bedroom, 2'2 baths. Less than 1 year old, heat pump, deck, custom kitchen, built-in microwave. W-13. Call June Wyrick Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500 or 758 774.

Ill Investment Property

GOOD INVESTMENT FOR TAX SHELTER

Office building with government agency lease. Assumable loan or new financing. For Information call toll free 1-800-443 2781, ext. C-14.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY for sale. 2 bedroom house adjacent to ECU 544,000. Call 756-9820, ask for Mike Weaver._

113

Land For Sale

NEW LISTING - Attractive brick ranch located on a wooded lot close to Winterville- Central heat and air with dishwasher 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths new woodstove. $56,900. Davis Realty 752-3000, 756-2904 or 756 1997.

NEW LISTING Ayden. Ideal ranch home with three bedrooms and two baths, living room, dining area, family room, breakfast area. Two car garage, fencing, garden and grape vine. 555,000. Duffus Realty Tnc., 756 5395.

NEW LISTING

Come preview this 3---------- -    .

bath condominium. Family ropm

Windy Ridge, becfroom, 2'2

with fireplace, separate dining room, heat pump. Excllent condition. Recreational facilities available. W 15. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500 or 758 7744.      -_

NICE 5 room house. Enclosed back porch, carport, new paint in and out. Very good condition. In the county. Good pecan trees. 534,000. By owner. 758-3218,

756 4199.

By owner.

call after 6,

NO CREDIT CHECK- Assume FHA loan neat brick starter home with carport- detached block building wMh 1'2 bath 2 or 3 bedrooms fenced in yard- $33,500. Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997.

OLDER HOME REDUCED to

$30,000 Assume loan plus equity-over 2800 square feet divided into 3 apartments some possible owner financing Possible rental income $525. Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997.

OLDER HOME IN GRIFTON

Features 2 bedrooms, carpet over hard wood floors, remodeled kitchen, and new heating system. 530's For more details call Aldridge and Southerland 756-3500, Nites, Myra Day 524 5004, D-3.__

OWNER BEING TRANSFERRED, Immaculate throughout. Excellent location, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, beautiful landsc^ing. 210 Crestline Blvd. Call Ray Spears at Aldridge and Southerland, 756-3500 or 758 4362,__

OWNER HAVE MOVED to Virginia and want to sale their 3 bedroom, 2 full bath ranch. Features large living area with fireplace plus seperate dining area. Large lot, nice neighborhood. Call Aldridge and Southerland 756 3500, Nites, Myra Day 524 5004. D-2.

n oy me iirepiace, me tencea in alio, 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 of our brokers today to discuss our affordable alternative to rent.

MOORE & SAUTE R '    110    South    Evans

758-6050

# 106

Farms For Sale

' 13 acres all cleared with 2'2 acres " tobacco allotment, 8 miles North of Greenville. Aldridge 8. Southferland ' Realty, 754 3500, nights Don Southerland, 756 5260._

37 acres with 21 cleared and Z acres of tobacco. Located near Stokes For more information con , tact Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland, 756-} 5260    _

58 ACRE FARM Good road fron-. tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 s acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco ^ allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full deta.i?_

OWNERS HAVE spruced up this one and it's ready to sell! Four bedrooms, just outside city. $47,500. #274. CENtURY' 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868.    ___

LAND FOR SALE 14 plus acres off Stanstonburg Road- 5.7 cleared- No allotments- $20,000- Call Davis Re altv 752 3000 Nights754 1997._

115

Lots For Sale

BAYWOOD, TWO ACRE lot. Fi nancing available. Call 756-7711.

LOT QUAIL Ridge Mobile Home Estates. Phone 756-5532._

2 DUPLEX LOTS off Hooker Road. Priced to sell. 756-7473.

58200. lot in Winterville- Resi dential only- 1650 square feet home only. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997.     ,

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 size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Open AAon-dav Fridav9 5. Call 756-9933.

121 Apartments For Rent

121 Apartments For Rent

A BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED I bath. I bedroom townhousa with loft bedroom Totally energy efficient. $240 After 5 30 or anytime wMkends 752 89*9    __

EASTBROOK

AND

VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three -bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat ar>d air condi tioning. clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS Fully furnished Including linens, maid service all utilities, cable. Newly renovated 1 or 2 beds. Starting at $105 week or $300 month Olde London Inn, 2710 South Memo rial Drive. Call 754 5555___

EXTRA LARGE 1 bedroom furnished apartment, close to ECU uptown, carpet, 5175. 752 3804.___

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpefed. dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and poof Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 754 4669

IN FARMVILLE 2 bedroom apartment with wall to wall carpel. C^ll 753 3101 day._______

IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment, appliances furnished, no children, no pets. Deposit and lease. $195 a month. Call 754-5007 Available end of December.

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re_ frigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently locaM to shopping center and schools. Located just off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

121 Apartmant For Rnt

TWO BEDROOM apartment. River Bluff Road. 5240 per month. No pets. Call Smith Insurance A Real ty. 752 2759    _

TWO BEDROOM apartment carpeted appliar>ces. central air ancT heat 804 Apt 2 Willow SI $250 758 3311

WEDGE WOOD ARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom I' bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups pool tennis court

756 0987

WILSON ACRES ' APARTMENTS

New 2 and 3 bedroom, washer dryer hook up, dishwasher heat pump tennis, pool, sauna self cleaning ovens, Iroit free retrjgerator 3 blocks Irom ECU Call 752 0277 day or night Equal Housing Opportuni YL

127

Houses For Rent

135 Office Space For Rent

1, 2. AND 3 bedroom houses lor

rent. 752 3311________

3

142 Roommate Wanted

112 NORTH SUMMIT 3 bedroom house within walkir>g distance of the university S310 month CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 756 2121__

2 BEDROOM HOUSE with wall to ' wall carpel in Farmville Call ; 753 3101 day_ 1

3 BE0RCX3M ranch style home { Carport storage quiet subdivision , Call 757 0001 or nights 753 4015 ' 756 9004

3 BEDROOM, 1'3 bath locafed near hospital Central air, fenced in |

yard. $335 Call 752 6047________

3 8EORCX3M. 108 North Elm \ Fireplace stove refriagerator I dishwasher, washer and dryer No i pets 754 9526

1 AND 2 BEDRCX3M apartments

Available immediately 7S2 3311 ____

1 BEDROOM energy efficient apartment. 754 5389 or 754 0025.

1 BEDROOM. 2 blocks from downtown and ECU Convenient to hospital 5195. 754 7473 or 754 7265

2 BEDROOM FURNISHED Apartment tor rent. Call 754 0407 anytime

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT with sun deck. 5285 oer month Pets allowed 756 9175 before noon AAonday Friday

2 BEDRCX3AAS, 1'3 bath. Ridge Place 5290 Available March 1

756,7310    __

2 BEDRCX3M Duplex on Brownlea Drive Range and refrigerator hookups, energy efficient. No f>ets 5245 756 7480._____

LARGE 2 BEDROOM Duplex. 707 A Hooker Road Stove and refrigera tor, washer, dryer hookups, air condition, heat pump. Deposit and lease required, No pets. 5250. After 5pm. 754 5717 7S4-4M2, or 754 0489.

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-free refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club, Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact JT or Tommy Williams 756-7815 _

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1'2 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, tree cable TV, wasner-dryer hookups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752-1557

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 Agency, 754 1322.__

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CYPRESS GARDENS APARTMENTS

2308 E TentfyStreet

Available immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal. Call days 758-6061, nights/weekends

Professionally managed by Remco East, Inc._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

^300 REWARD

For information leading to the arrest of person or persons responsible for 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.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

PHOTO

TYPESETTER

High school graduate plus two years experience at a photo typeeetter. Will be required to opralo an AM U10 Cotnp Edit syetem In medium size |ob printing plant.

Salary range; $9,264 to $13,644. Apply el

East Carolina University Personnel Office East 5th Street Qreenvilla, N.C. 27834 919-7S7-6352

An MvU OpvnnunHy Empleyw nvougk *-NnMtm Action

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

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Qualify construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable TV.wall fo-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    1    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

MODERN two bedroom with living room, kitchen, bath and utilitiy area, storage, paved private drive, refrigerator and range, adjacent to Wellcome Middle School. $215 per month. Call J L Harris 8. Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758 4711._

MODERN 2 BEDROOM duplex with electric heat near ECU Pre fere couple with references. 752 5529.    __

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom fownhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available

756 4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.    __

ONE BEDRCX)M apartment Near campus. No pets. $215 a month. 756 3923.    __

ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, appliances, central air ana heal. 802. Apt. 2, Willow St, $195.758 3311.    _

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, central heal and air. lease and deposit, 5245 per month No pets Call Jon Day a1 Moore & Sauter, 752 1010, nights

752 0345._______

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT for rent Reasonable price Near campus Pets allowed. Call 756 4 767 after 5.    _

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX apartment Appliances furnished. Located in /Vfeadowbrook. $130 month Call 756 1900. _    _

3 BEDROOM Duplex on Meade Street near ECU Central air range and refrigerator hookups S26S 756 /48^__

122

Business Rentals

15<X) SQUARE FOOT commercial space for rent on Greenville Boulevard Call Echo Realty, Inc at 756 6040; nights 524 5042

5,000 SQUARE FOOT building lor rent About 1 mile west from Pitf Memorial HospifAI. Phone 753 2016 days; 758 4296 nights_

125 Condominiums For Rent

FOR RENT WITIH OPTION to buy Large 3 bedroom Condomimium, enjoy the fireplace the fenced in palio, the formal dining room Call 752 1263 or 756 4 244 after 7 pm and ask for Richard.

TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah $300 per month, 12 month lease Young couple preferred Call Clark Branch

Realtors, 756 6336.___________________

2 BEDROOM, I'v bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished, No Pets, married couple prefered 825 7321 after 5 p.m__

127 Houses For Rent

FOUR BEDRROM houser 405 West Fourth Street? $300 per month Call 757 0688.    _

HOUSE FOR RENT 1l3Westhaven Road. 3 bedrooms, large fenced in yard, $475. May rent with option to )uy Call 756

HOUSE IN TWIN OAKES, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, $425 per month Call 756 7711, 9 fo 5, Monday Friday

IN FARMVILLE 3 bedrooms, nice neighborhood. $275 a month plus deposit. 753 4214

4 BEDROOM HOUSE in Farmville with wall to wall carpet. 2 baths, and new modern kitchen with stove and refrigerator Call 753 3101 day 4 ROOM HOUSE with bath for rent 8 miles south on 43 746 6741

MODERN, attractive eftice space for lease Approximately 1500 square feel Located 2007 Evans Street beside Moseley Brothers Call 756 3374 ___

OFFICE FOR LEASE 1203 West Ufh Street 758 3743 or 355 4458 Available irnmediafely    !

OFFICES FOR LEASE Cpniact JT or Tommy Williams 756 7815 SINGLE OFFICES or suites with utilities and lanilorial Chapm Little building 3l06 S Memorial Dr i ve Ca[L756 7799 TWO ROOM or toor room oltice suite Highway 264 Business Eco I nomical Private parking Some , storage available Call Connally Branch at Clark Branch Realtors 756 63^

THREE ROOM downtown office at l

219 Cotanche Street 440 square leet. Parking available Call Jim Lamer at 752 5505    ,

Help fight inflation by buying and selling through the Classitiecf ads Call 752 6166

FEMALE ROOAAAAATE wanted . rent $112 50    .    utilities,    deposit

required 2 bedroom duplex 4 blocks Irom campus Come by 510 Apartment F E ast First Street FEMALE R<i)OAAMATE needed immediately to share nice 2 bedroom apartment Reasonable For more information call 758 1 547

attir 1pm    ______

MALE ROOAAMATE needed to share new home in Stokes $115 month and juhhties 757 IJ)50_ MALE ROOMMATE fIdR 2 bedroom duplex 758 0240 before 8

or alter 5    _ _____

ROOMMATE WANTED immedi alely 2 bedroom apartment Share bath I . miles Irom ECU Female $170 per month utilities $120

de^sit 752 3076 after 4pm_

VERY NICE lully furnished 2 bedroom apartmenf at Eastbrook Apartments $125 rent plus ' j utilities Must be responsible Call 758 8556

129

Lots For Rent

TRAILER LOT for rent. 100x200 Located at Lot 33 Quail Ridge Trader Estates 752 0038 after 5 30

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

COLONIAL PARK, 2 bedroom air underpinned furnished 756 3377 alter5 pm__

LARGE 3 BEDROOM Brick home 2 baths, fprmal living room, dining room, kitchen with dishwasher,

spacious den with fireplace, central heat and air. Small apartment attached to back Available imme

ONE bedroom duplex located on 2nd Street in Ayden. All appliances furnished. Energy efficient with heat pump. Judy 756-6336 before 5.

REDWOOD APARTMENTS 806 E

3rd Street. I bedroom furnished apartment, heat, air, water furnished. 2 blocks from campus. No pets. 758 3781 or 756 0889.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live

lappy Kia CABLE

TV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedroonns, washer dryer

hook-ups. cable TV, pool, house, playground, Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."

' 1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT 2 bedrooms, I'z baths, energy effi cienf. Convenient location. 757 0001 or nights 753 4015. __

diately. $350 per month. Serious only call collect 919 791 2559 nights, or 9l9 799 9373 days. Ask for Mr. or

Mrs. Mayo.__

TWO-BEDROOM house. 3 blocks from university, convenient to shopping area, perfect for students sharing! $250 per month. Call J L Harris & Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758 4711.

UNIVERSITY AREA, 110 East 12fh Street. 3 bedrooms, appliances furnished, washer/dryer connec tion, fireplace, just insulated. $275. Call 756 0765.______

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton Co. ,

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TOBACCO ALLOTMENT FOR SALE

14,317 lbs. of Tobacco In Pitt County for sale at $3.25 pertb.

TERMS CASH

Call 752-7101

During Business Hours

KOEHRING HEATER CLOSEOUT SALE

Prices Below Cost Starting At ^65.00

Wynne Chevrolet

Bethel, N.C.

825-3521

Both Locations Now Open Saturdays Til 5 P.M.

3-DAY COUPON SPECIALS

FRIDAY SATURDAY & MONDAY

vV X

OIL, LUBE & FILTER

CENTER

West End Shopping Center 729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 756-9371    Phone 752-4417

I Open 8 to 6 Mon.-Fri. Sat, 8 to I Open 8 to 6 Mon.-Fri Sat, 8 to<

FURNISHED 2 bedrooms and 3 bedrooms $150 and $185 month

Colonial Park 758 0174._______

FURNISHED 2 bedroom near lour lane, deposit negotiable. 746 9470 or 524 4349. 5 to 7p m

SPECIAL RATES for students 2 bedroom with carpet $115 No pets no children 758 4541 or 756 9491

12 X 65 TWO BEDRDQM. 2 bath, new carpel $150 per month 5 miles south of Greenville. Call 746 657$.

12X65 central heat and air. 3 miles north of city Call 758 2347 or 752 6068.

12X70 FULLY FURNISHED Good condition Must have references No Married couples only 752 6245. 2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent. Call 756 4687.

2 BEDRCXJMS, partially furnished, air good location, no pets, no

children, 758 4857______

2 BEDR(X)M TRAILER tor rent Carpet air no pets, 1'j baths

756 6005_____________

2 BEDROOM, completely furnished, no pets 756 7381

2 BEDROOMS, furnished, washer dryer air conditioner, excellent condition, good location Couples only no pets 756 0801 after 5pm _ .

2 BEDRCXJMS with carpel, washer Located at Azalea Gardens $150 month. Call 756 1900._

2 BEDROOM trailer, $135 month. $100 deposit Call 752 1623.___

2 BEDROOMS, washer, carpet, air, completely furnished. No pets Call

756_ 0792 ________________

2 BEDROOMS, completely furnished, washer/dryer No pets

144

Wanted To Buy

138

Rooms For Rent

1 LARGE ROOM tor reni $25 per week I medium size room $23 per week Light cookmg neai and hot water 758 7904

BUYING ALUMINUM CANS. 21c per pound Glisson Enterprises

i Stokes Highway 758 2546_

WANT TO BUY Older home in I country with 3 lo 5 acres ot larxL in Greenville Washington area Call colled 79 5 3459 after 6 p m

142 Roommate Wanted wanted Smger sewmg machirte

i nreter style 503A or 500A Call

FEMALE, nice 3 bedroom home $95 per month and ' i utilities Call 758 0966

I^EMAl'e ROOAAMATE needed 2 bedroom lurnished trailer depos It, > J rent Call after 6 752 7589

1 973 OR NEWER wrecked

Chevrolet ton pickup lor parts Call 752 2657

FEAAALE ROOAAMATE wanted to share duplex with fireplace l 2 | rent and utilities Furmsned except

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

bedroom Prefer graduate student or professional Must like tats Phone 758 7884

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted professional person to share 2 bedroom, 1'; bath townhouse no lease Available February 20 756 7179

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

RemodelingRoom Additions.

C.L. Lupton. Co,

7S? hi Ih

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furnltura Raflnlshlng and rapalrt. Suparktr caning for alt type chaira, largor toioclion of cuatom pictura framing, aunroy atakoa-any longfh, all typo* of palloti, hand<raflod ropo hom-mockt. aoloclod framod roproductiona.

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Induatrlal Park, Hwy. 13 7M,41U    S    A.M.-4:30 P.M.

Qroonvlllo, N.C.

135 Office Space For Rent

FOR RENT Approximately 8(X) square feet. $250 per month 10th Street, Colonial Height Shopping Center 758 4257

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TIRES

NEW, USED, and RECAPS

Unbeatable Prices and Quality

QUALITY TIRE SERVICE 752-7177

WANTED

GOOD

CLEAN

CARDBOARD

Paying 1 V2= per lb.

TARHEEL RECYCLING CORP.

Williamston, N,C. 792-1016

PROFESSIONAL SALES REPRESENTATIVE

The Opportunity For Men And Women

Major copier machine dealer looking for a career-oriented sales representative with business products sales experience or similar to sell our complete line of copier supplies.

Unlimited potential with liberal benefits including car allowance and the opportunity for personal and professional growth. Send resume and call Diane Hill, for confidential interview.

Creech & Jones Business Machines 103 Trade Street, Greenville 756-3175

Equal Opportunity Employer

IMPORTANT VALENTINE MESSAGE FROM COX FLORAL SERVICE 117 W. 4th ST. DOWNTOWN

I

VALENTINE DAY COMES ON MONDAY THIS YEAR, WE WILL BE DELIVERING VALENTINE FLOWERS ON SATURDAY 12. SUNDAY 13 and MONDAY 14.

1

Please place your orders early to ensure delivery. Send an extra day early to en|oy.

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 (or love...Please order early.

Cox Floral Service, Inc.

1937-1983

758-2183

WERE USA-1

AND TAKING CHARGE

Now Thru March 31,1983 Were Offering

0 ^

GMAC Financing

On All 1982 And 1983 Chevrolets

FREE CUSTOM INTERIOR Value S452 00 On Special Equipped Caprice Classics

FREE AIR CONDITION Value $725 00 On Special Equippd C-10 Pickups

Come In Now And Take Advantage Of This Special Financing

See One Of Us In 1983 We At Phelps Want Your Business

Waverly Phelps Norman VanHorne James Phelps

Darrell Phelps Clyn Barber Ed Briley

Mike Phelps Mike Outlaw Rod Moore

Rex Wainwright

Dwight Myers

Remember: We re USA-1 And Taking Charge!

TAlMlU/

GM QUALITY SERVICE PARTS

Keep That Great GM Feeling With Genuine GM Part*

GXNERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION





32-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, February 10,1983Aims Bill To Reduce Number Of Runoff Elections

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - AJmost all of North Carolinas runoff primary elections in 1982 would not have been needed under a bill introduced Wednesday in the state House.

Rep. Kenneth Spaulding, I>Durham, introduced the bill, which would prohibit runoffs when candidates receive at least 40 percent of the primary vte. Current laws prohibit runoffs when candidates receive 50 percent of the vote.

The bill applies to races for governor, lieutenant governor, state executive officers, judges, district attorneys. U.S. senators or representatives and state legislators.

The main purpose and objective of this legislation is to help save the taxpayers of North Carolina the hi^ cost of unnecessary second primary elections, Spaulding said, noting that a runoff costs $500,000.

State Elections Director Alex Brock said that 80 percent of the primary runoffs in 1982 could have been avoided if the state allowed candidates with 42 percent of the vote to be declared winners.

Only nine states, most in the Southeast, still allow primary runoffs. The law dates back to 1915, when North Carolinas voter registration was more heavily Democratic and primary victories were tantamount to election.

Opponents of the law say primary runoffs seldom attract

many voters and often work against election of minorities.

In the 1982 election, Democrat H.M. "Mickey Michaux lost his bid to become the states first black U.S. representative since Reconstruction when he was forced into a runoff with Rep. IT. Tim.Ventine, D-N.C.

In the June 27 primary, Michaux had 44 percent of the vote compared to Valentines 33 percent.

Spaulding, leader of the black legislative caucus, said racial considerations are a concern although he introduced the bill to save the state money.

1 would prefer to do away with the second primary altogether, Spaulding said. "But the chances of its passage in 'the General .Assembly are not very good. I think this is reasonable and realistic legislation to address the problem

In other legislative action:

Computers

Labor Commissioner John Brooks said a bill moving authority for government computers from the Council of State to a new commission is not needed because computer productivity already has been increased The bill is a slap on the wrist to the Council of State, or a kick in the butt, depending on your perspective, Brooks told the Senate State Government Committee.

Sen. Dallas Alford, D-Nash, defended the bill, saying the commission to govern the states nine computer centers

Muscle For Child Support Law

'V

Introduced In House And Senate

By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C (AP) -Fathers behind on child support payments would automatically be in contempt of court under legislation being considered in the state House and Senate.

Sen. Helen Rhyne Marvin, D-Gaston, and Rep Joe Hackney, D-Orange, filed identical bills to each house seeking laws to make it easier for mothers to get support for children At any one time in North Carolina about 60 percent of all child support payments are in arrears, Mrs. Marvin said. Most district attorneys give it a very low priority.

She said the bill could affect thousands of families across the state and might involve as much as $70 million.

We feel the most urgent need of children and women in North Carolina is better enforcement of child support orders, Mrs. Marvin said. Under the proposed legis

lation, clerks of court would administer all court-ordered child support payments. As soon as a payment was late, a contempt of court citation' would be issued, and the district attorney would automatically bring charges, she said.

Mrs. Marvin admitted the law would be hard to enforce if absent fathers continued to balk at making payments, but she said the law. would have a deterrent effect.

Simply the threat of going to jail will force them to behave more responsibly, she said.

Under current laws, mothers must notify the courts when payments are late.

Often the wife must hire an attorney for $300 to $500, Mrs. Marvin said. Then the judge may just give him (the husband) a slap on the wrist.

The moment she files suit for nonsupport, his (her husbands) attorney may threaten a countersuit for custody of the child, she added. That can frighten

See 'Stifling' By Regulation

ByJOHNFLESHER

Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The insurance industry in North Carolina is regulated to the point that competition is stifled and efficiency discouraged. say industry representatives.

N.C. Rate Bureau Chairman Donald Zim-^ merman and Bernard Parker, chairman of the N.C. Reinsurance Facility, told the state House Insurance Committee on Wednesday their agencies are among the industrys biggest problems.

If the state's insurance laws were rewritten to promote competition, there would be no need for either the rate bureau or the reinsurance facility, they said later in interviews, adding that they were speaking on their own behalf.

"As long as we operate with excessive regulatory involvement and an antiquated rate-setting mechanism that is not viable in todays market, we will continue to face problems year after year. Parker said.

The N.C, Rate Bureau is a government-mandated, unincorporated association that sets industry-wide, insurance rates. Companies wishing to charge different prices for their policies must seek approval of the bureau and the state Department of Insurance

The N.C Reinsurance Facility is a mechanism through which companies provide automobile insurance to customers they consider high-risk drivers and dont want to insure.

The Reinsurance Facility has been an expensive and cumbersome way to deal with undesirable drivers, said Parker, vice president and regional manager of Nationwide Insurance Companies.

Zimmerman, regional vice president of the eastern office of State Farm Insurance Companies based in Charlottesville, Va., said the rate bureau has performed well since the Legislature created it in 1977. But he said by nature it imposes excessive regulations that work against a truly com-

the mother out of filing her suit.

If passed,- the law would require state funds for administration. But Mrs. Marvin said she had the support of the Administrative Office of the Courts and Gov. Jim Hunt for the proposal.

Franklin Freeman (of the AOC) says once the clerks office statewide is com

puterized, he will mandate the system," she said. He said he will implement it as counties become ready,

Rep. Ruth Easterling, D-Mecklenburg, a co-sponsor of the bill, said Hunt indicated his approval at a reception at the Governors Mansion,

He said its . definitely something we need, Ms, Easterling said.

would be more efficient.

"This year you will sf^nd $25.5 million, and that exp)se will be more than $92 million in 10 years. That is more than enough reason to be concerned, he said.

The committee referred the bill to a subcommittee.

BulkMaU

The State Government Committee also approved a bill that would let the Secretary of Revenue make contracts to handle bulk mail.

We mail out tax refunds, putting a 20 cent stamp on them, said Sen. Marshall Rauch, D-Gaston. "If we pass this bill, the department can address the enveh^, put a 17 cent stamp on it and send it out.

Rauch said tt^ state would save $60,000 a year in mail costs, but another $15,000 would have to be spent for having the mail sorted, making the actual savings about $45,000 a year.

Education

Thomas C. King Jr. of the Department of Community Colleges urged the Joint House-Senate impropriations Subcommittee on Education to consider eliminating the $5 exam fee for those seeking high school equivalent diplomas.

King said there are more than 1.5 million North Carolinians who sUll do not have high school diplomas.

Senate

The Senate adopted and sent to the House a bill that would make the theft of dogs and cats valued at more than $400 a felony. It already is a felony to steal horses and larger animals but is a misdemeanor to steal dogs and cats regardless of their value.

The Senate amended and sent to the Finance Committee a bill that would let married couples decide how to distribute income or losses from jointly held property for the purpose of paying income taxes.

Current laws automatically assign such income to the husband.

Spotlighting

The House approved and sent to the Senate a bill to extend the hours when it is illegal to use spotlights to hunt deer in certain counties.

The bill would make it illegal to use spotlights from one-half hour after sunset until one-half hour before sunrise. It is now illegal to spotlight from 11 p.m. to one-half hour before sunrise.    .

Counties affected by the bill are Alamance, Iredell, Randolph, Rockingham, Rowan, Wilkes, Alexander, Alleghany, Anson, Ashe, Catawba, Cumberland, Guilford, Stokes, Surry, Watauga, Yadkin, Cabarrus, Richmond,

ScotlaiKl, Stanly and Union counties.

Housing

House Speaker LisUm Ramsey appointed a new Housing Committee and named R^. George Brannan, D-Johnston, as chairman.

Contracts

Rep. David Bumgardner, D-Gaston, introduced a bill that would allow the Department of Transportation to contract for highway work without receiving bids in emergencies or unusual cases.

Sometimes only one person is qualified to do the work and you have to n^tiate the best price you can with them, Bumgardner said.

Ranking

A resolution asking Congress to repeal the 10 percent withholding tax on interest and dividmcls was introduced by Rep. Robert Brawley, R-Iredell. The tax takes effect July 1.

Brawiey said the new withholding imposes an undue burden on payors of interest and dividends and on the recipients of these payments as well.

Crime Victims

A House bill introduced by Rep. Tom Womble, D-Forsyth, and others would raise court costs by $5 on everything but non-moving traffic violations to raise money to compensate crime victims for injuries.

The money also would go for a Crime Victims Compensation Commission that would determine how much each victim would receive.

Video Tax

Rep. Herman Gist, D-Guilford, introduced a bill that would require video game operators to pay a $200 tax on each machine they own.

We need to get that money theyre getting from the kids and put it into education, he said, adding that counties and cities could add $20 assessments of their own if they wished.

FarmExmnption

Reps. John Bond Gillam III, D-Bertie, and Vernon James, D-Pasquotank, filed legislation that would give an additional tax exemption to a farmer whose spouse works on the farm but earns no reportable income.

New Bills

A bill introduced by Rep. George Miller Jr., D-Durham, ,would create the offense of misdemeanor embezzlement to cover the misappropriation of less than $400.

Also introduced was legislation to exempt some volunteer fire departments from the Occupational Safety and Health Act of North Carolina and to amend the death benefits act for police, firemen and civil air patrol members.    \

petitive q\arket.

In interviews. Zimmerman and Parker said they didnt want to give the impression that doing away with the regulatory agencies would keep rates from rising. But they said competition and deregulation were more conducive to stable rates than the present system.

Were going to do our best to persuade the Legislature to promote open competition, Parker said. We expect a bill to be introduced to that effect.

Meanwhile, Insurance Commissioner John Ingram said Wednesday he supports a bill introduced by Rep. Gerald Anderson, D-Craven, that would allow companies to seek lower rates for workers compensation than the rate bureau allows.-

Presently, workers compensation is the only type of insurance for which there can be no deviation from standard rates.

This bill is a good first step in our fight to abolish monopolistic practices of the rate bureau and get some real competition to benefit employers in workers compensation rates, Ingram said in a news conference.

Zimmerman said he would not object to the Anderson bill. 1

Say Lab Report A Fabrication

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -Charges against three Hoke County defendants accused of selling marijuana to a former undercover SBI agent have been dismissed after the agent was indicted on ^ charges of fabricating lab reports.

District Attorney Edward Grannis Jr. said the charges were dismissed because the agent, Arnett Andrew Dove, would not make a credible witness.

Dove was indicted Jan. 10 on charges that he fabricated . and altered chemical analysis reports of marijuana he had bought from four defendants while working under cover.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

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Title
Daily Reflector, February 10, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.)
Date
February 10, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
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Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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