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THE DAILY REFLECTOR
INSIDE READING
Page 12-Obituaries Page 17 - .\rea items Page 24-In the legislature
102NDYEAR NO. 36TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 11, 1983
24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTSOK Absentee Votes In Local Elections
By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer
The City Council breezed through a four-page agenda Thursday night, taking action on a variety of items that ranged from authorization for absentee balloting in city elections to consideration of rezoning requests.
The board, taking less than an hour to dispense with the long list of business material, voted unanimously to adopt a resolution permitting absentee voting in local elections, including primary or general elections, or referendums.
Mayor Percy Cox said the city had received a l(rt of requests to permit absentee voting and while providing the service will be expensive, he feels it is something that should be offered to the citizens.
Commenting on the suggested additional cost to the city of between $700 and $1,000 for absentee voting, Councilman
Williapi Hadden called it an expensive proposition but one he considered well worth it for Greenville residents.
City Manager Gail Meeks, in a memorandum to the mayor and council on the matter, pointed out that state Elections Director Alex Brock indicated that Greenville is probably the largest municipality in the state which does not allow absentee ballots.
Mrs. Meeks said the provision of absentee voting will require additional time and recordkeeping on the part of the Pitt Board of Elections staff and will require that the board conduct two meetings each week in the mont^^efore the election and four more meetings in Ujr^ght days immediately proceeding election day in or% to consider and approve ballot applications.
The city manager said the additional co involves staff time required for elections board recorategping and compensation for board members for the requiredm^tings.
Council members voted to continue until the March meeting action on a request by James H. Ward III to rezone two acres, located south of Sedgefield Park Subdivision, Section III, and Pinehurst Drive, north of Greenville Church of God property, west of St. Andrews Drive, and east of Memorial Drive. The petitioners are seeking rezoning from R-15 (residential) to office and institutional.
The board continued the item after John Williams, who resides on St. Andrews Drive, reported that residents of the neighborhood had expressed concern about the Ward proposal but had met with him and reached an agreement on the rezoning, contingent upon a portion of Sedgefield Drive between St. Andrews Drive and Memorial Drive being closed.
Council members voted to adopt a resolution of intent to close the Sedgefield Drive segment and scheduled a public hearing on matter for the March meeting. In continuing the Ward request, the council will be able to consider both the
rezoning and street closing at next months session.
Following a public hearing during which no opposition was expressed, the board voted to approve a request by) Phillip, Joseph, and William Goodson to rezone, from R-6 (residential) to unoffensive industry, .82 acres situated north of 12th Street, south of the Walter Perkins property, west of Clark Street, and east of the William Taft Jr. and Seaboard Coast Line Railroad property f
Approval wa'^ given to an ordinance establishing the 1982-83 Small Cities/South Evans grant project budget amounting to $999,500. The budget includes $1,505 for acquisition in the project area, $202,000 for rehabilitation of privately owned dwellings, and $192,972 for relocation assistance.
The council adopted a resolution designating and approving the boundaries of the Heart of the City revitalization area. The resolution noted that the Comprehensive Plan Committee (Please turn to Page 19)
Accord NearOn Recession Relief Bill
By MIKE SHANAHAN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan has changed course and is near agreement with Democratic House leaders on a $4.3 billion recession relief bill that includes federally
funded jobs and help for the homeless.
Two of the presidents chief advisers, Budget Director David Stockman and White House chief of staff James Baker, offered the plan to House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. and
other Democratic leaders late Thursday. '
Republican and Democratic leaders in the Senate, plus some other key House members, must also agree to the plan, but for the moment it appears that a logjam ha's been broken over jobs legis
lation to offset the nations 10.4 percent unemployment rate.
Its an excellent beginning, said House Majority Leader Jim Wright of Tex-as.Itgoesalongway,
At the White House, deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes said today there would be no specific comment on the content of the package until the administration hears back from the Democrats.
He said Thursdays meeting was arranged hastily
after a member of ONeills staff called to suggest it.
We had been in discussions with them (the Democrats), Speakes said, adding, It was not anticipated that we would move this quickly.
Wholesale Prices Down One Percent
WASHINGTON (AP) - Wholesale prices plummeted a record 1 percent last month, the government said today. Sharpest-ever drops in natural gas and home heating oil costs, plus plunging gasoline prices, led the way.
Food prices also fell, although at a more modest rate. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes called the new
report a striking confirmation of the progress that has been made in reducing the underlying rate of inflation. This is good news and indicates that the administration and the Federal Reserve, working on the same wavelength, achieved these results. <
As for energy prices, which declined a record 4.2 percent \ ,
Independent Truckers Call Off Strike; Some Still Protesting
WASHINGTON (AP) -Leaders of an independent truckers strike are cidling on drivers to return to work and
REFLECTOR
end a violence-marred protest that tried to force Congress into rolling back new truck taxes and fees.
(iOTLIff
752-1336
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell youi 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.-
GIFTS FOR TRIPLETS The session of Falkland Presbyterian Church would like Hotline readers to know that the church will be a collection point for gifts for the family of Bennie and Tammy Whitley, new parents of triplets. Anyone wishing to give them good new or used baby equipment or clothing may contact any meml^r of the church or take items to the church fellowship hall.
Whitley, an employee of Black and Decker Manufacturing Co. in Tarboro, and his wife, Tammy, are bringing the babies, their first children, home to a two-room apartment on Route 1, Fountain.
A shower for the family will be held Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. at the church by members of the Young Adult Sunday School Class.
Inquiries may be made by calling Mrs. Marie Dunn, 752-9968.
FRIENDSHIP FORCE PARTICIPANTS SOUGHT Thirty ambassadors and 25 hosts for the Friendship Force project are being sought. Anyone interested in either going abroad June 111-20 to represent the Greenville area in a selected foreign city or anyone willing to host an individual or group from that city is invited to arrange for an interview. Interviews will be conducted Sunday and Feb. 20 from 1 to 3 p.m. at First American Savings, comer of Evans Street and Arlington Boulevard, and Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Willis Building, comer of First and Reade streets. For more information, call 752-1784.
PHONE NUMBER WRONG The home phone number of Eugene Davis, father of children burned out of their home in Tarboro and appealed for in Hotline Tuesday, was incorrect. It is 757-^71.
While many protesting truckers say theyre ready to pull their 18-wheelers back onto the highways, others accused strike leaders of caving into the government and said they may ignore the back-to-work call.
We are officially asking independent truckers ... to get back to work as soon as possible, declared Mike Parkhurst, president of the Independent Truckers Association.
In a raucous news conference interrupted by truckers who demanded that the strike- continue, Parkhurst announced he was ending the protest after winning assurances from at least 35 congressmen that the truckers complaints would be examined.
But that was far short of Parkhursts earlier promise that the strike would continue until Congress pulled back the new taxes and fees that truckers say will force many drivers out of business.
Even before the announcement, however, the shutdown that began Jan. 31, was losing steam. Authorities reported a sharp drop in violence in recent days and officials around the country said truck traffic was on the upturn with minimal interruption of commerce.
Parkhurst, the trucking magazine publisher who called the strike, said the informal commitmentby the congressmen to examine the complaints about new truck fees and taxes was the best that could be obtained.
You have to be realistic, said Parkhurst, whose group claims to represent 30,000 truckers.
But that didnt set well with some truckers who attended Parkhursts news conference.
Rising for the audience, George Sullivan, head of a rival truckers group, shouted at Parkhurst that many truckers want to continue the strike and that the congressmens promise is not worth the paper its written on.
Sullivan later said his Independent Truckers Unity Committee, which he claims has the support of thousands of independent drivers, plans to hold meetings this weekend to decide whether to
continue the strike.
Other truckers said they were ready to return to work.
1 think weve reached the conclusion that we no longer will be ignored, said Bill Osgerhoudt, a leader of striking drivers in Arizona. John Jarnecke, a trucker in LaCrosse, Ind., said he was prepared to strike longer but that others are not in that good a position and need to return to work.
Parkhurst was accompanied at the news conference by several congressmen including Rep. Peter Kostmayer, D-Pa., who called the letter signed by the congressmen a commitment of a willingness to listen to the truckers problems. U does not bind Congress to any specific action.
While Parkhurst said he was more than pleased at obtaining support from more than 35 congressmen, the number represented less than 9 percent of the House members.
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., chairman of the Finance Committee, rejected any hearings on the truckers complaints about the taxes. Even before Parkhursts announcement Dole said he considered the strike over.
The federal government estimated that in the early days of the strike as many as 20,000 of the nations 100,000 independent owner-operators parked their trucks - some because of the. protest and others because of fear of violence.
During the strike there were more than 1,700 reports of trucks being damaged, including 560 hit by gunfire. One trucker was killed by gunfire during the first day of the shutdown, and 66 others have been injured. Police have arrested 95 people in connection with the strike.
The truckers anger'*'stems from sharp increases in truck fees voted in by Congress just before Christmas as part of the 5-cent motor fuel tax increase. The annual highway use fees for the large trucks is to increase from $240 to $1,900 over the next six years with the steepest jump,^. to $1,600, coming in 1985.
overall at wholesale. Labor Department analysts said in releasing todays report that the mild winter was largely responsible for the surprising 2.7 percent fall in natural gas prices and the 9.7 percent drop in home heating oil costs.
Fuel oil costs have also been restrained by the worldwide oil glut, as have gasoline prices, which were off 3.3 percent. The departments energy price calculations actually lag a month behind the rest of the index.
Food prices, as reflected in today's Producer Price Index for finished goods, fell 0.2 percent. Pacing the drop were declines in the wholesale cost of vegetables, fish and poultry.
The new report gave a big boost to economists predictions that inflation at the wholesale level this year might be as low or even lower than - the 3.5 percent clip posted for all of 1982.
That was the smallest rise since the 3.2 percent of 1971, when wage and price controls were in effect for part of the year. Wholesale prices rose 7.1 percent in 1981.
Besides the oil glut, the lingering recesion and abundant crops have also been credited with improving the inflation picture.
Wholesale prices rose a revised 0.2 percent in December and 0.6 percent in November. All the monthly calculations are adjusted for normal seasonal variations.
Not since the wholesale price index was first compiled in 1947 have prices dropped a full 1 percent in one month. If that rate held for 12 straight months, the yearly decline would be 11.9 percent. For the last 12 months, wholesale prices, after seasonal adjustment, rose a scant 2.1 percent, the smallest 12-month rise since the period ending with January 1968.
In reporting its inflation figures, the department bases its compounded annual rate on a more precise calculation of monthly changes than the monthly figure the department makes public.
Januarys declines in energy prices overall, in natural gas costs andl in fuel oil prices were the sharpest since those prices were first recorded in 1974. The 2.7 percent drop in natural gas prices compared to a 20.7 percent jump for all of last year.
That gain had been attributed in part to congressional decontrol of new-gas costs. Earlier this winter, congressional investigators said residential natural gas bills have more thandoubled since decontrol began in 1978.
In all, the unadjusted Producer Price Index stood at 283 6 in January, meaning that goods costing $10 at wholesale in 1967 would have cost $28.36 last month.
REPORTING - Dr. Fred Ng, a Raleigh surgeon, reports on North Carolina Jim Hunts condition at a news conference at Wake Medical Center. Dr. Ng said the Governor suffered an acute gall bladder attack. (AP Laserphoto)
Undecided Yet As To Surgery
For Gov. Hunt
By JAMES GOGEK Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N C (AP- -Gov, Jim Hunts personal physician said no decision has yet been made on whether surgery will be needed right away following
, t
Storm Lashes Eastern Seaboard; Brings Snow
By KIM MILLS Associated Press Writer A Dixie storm plastered the Eastern Seaboard with more than a foot of snow in places today, closing schools, leaving thousands without power and snarling traffic from North Carolina through Washington to New Jersey.
A pedestrian was killed late Thursday When he stepped into the path of a pickup truck during a heavy snowfall on U.S. 11 in southwest Virginia. Elsewhere, 35-foot waves in the highest surf in 14 years slammed into Hawaii beaches, forcing 1,(X)0 people to evacuate their homes on Oahus north shore and injuring six tourists. Thunderstorms and tornadoes rolled through South Florida.
In West Virginia, where up to 16 inches of snow had accumulated in the southeastern part of the state, snow-laden tree limbs falling on power lines knocked out the power to about 22,000 homes and businesses, mostly in the
Charleston rea.
In Virginia, up to 18 inches of snow was on the ground in the southwestern part of the state, with 16 inches at Roanoke, 14 inches in Richmond, 13 inches in Lynchburg and 12 inches in Charlottesville.
A truck carrying drums of a toxic chemical overturned on a snow-covered mountain road in Bland County near the West Virginia line.
Two ruptured drums of a flammable resin used to make plastics tumbled down a mountainside, but Trooper L F. Warden said the chemical did not pose a danger because the area was so sparsely populated.
What we got is generally a mess, said A1 Coates, a spokesman for the State Department of Highways and Transportation. If you dont need to drive, dont drive
He said many secondary roads were blocked by snowdrifts and chains or snow tires were needed in most of the state.
Residents of Philadelphia
and Baltimore rushed to markets to stock up with food as the National Weather Service forecast up to 20 inches of snow in Pennsylvania and 12 inches in Maryland by Saturday.
Fourteen inches of snow had fallen in Alleghany Copnty in northwest North Carolina, where the weather service said roads were practically impassable. Beckley, W Va.. had 10 inches
In Washington, where the weather service was predicting accumulations of 12 to 18 inches by evening, with additional accumulations possible during the night, the snow whipped by stiff winds created blizzard-like conditions. By mid-morning the weather service said up to 7 inches had fallen in the Washington area with temperatures in the ^s.
National Airport opened 15 minutes late because of drifting snow and some flights were postponed. It closed again at 9; 15 a.m. to allow plows to clear the runways.
the governor s acute gall bladder attack Thursday.
Dr. Larry Tyree and staff surgeon Dr Fred Ng at Wake Medical Center, where Hunt is expected to stay for another day or two, said Thursday they would make a decision on surgery in 48 to 72 hours.
Tyree said the governor was still in a little pain when he saw him at 7:30 a.m. this morning, the governors press aides report The doctor said Hunt will be sitting up and eating solid food today after being on intravenous fluids Thursday.
Hunt was hospitalized for the gall bladder attack, commonly known as gall stones, after he collapsed while giving a speech at the Holiday Inn North in Raleigh.
Tyree said Thursday that Hunt was in good condition. He and Ng said they would recommend the gall bladder be removed eventually
Tyree said it was not unusual that the governor fainted, because of the great pain involved in such an attack
The governor is a very brve man, Tyree said, adding that Hunt apparently had continued his days activities after the severe pain had begun, which resulted in his fainting.
Aides said the governor had complained about stomach pains early Thursday morning before his weekly press conference. His collapse came at a speech after the press conference.
'The governor can probably resume his schedule in a week or so if all goes well. Tyree said.
iff
iffm.
2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, February 11,1983
Business Started To Aid Larger Women
Abby Strikes Out With Her Readers
By Abigail Van Buren
1983 bv Umiprsji Press Syndicate
DKAH AMMV "One ot Six ' wnrte: -Twt marricti couples and two singles are going in on a gilt The married couples think the cost should he divided lour wavs The singles think it should he divided six wavs Which is the laiiest wav'*"
Ahhv 1 couldn't believe vour answer Married couples are usually (onsidered 'one,' so in my opinuiii. the cost shodld be divided tour ways ",
A married couple is nut considered "one It onlv one is working, the working spouse should kick in tor the mate who isn't
Kveryoiie, married or single, should cariw the same load If they both attend the wedding reception, they aren t expected to divide refreshments to serve one Come on He sensible
THKKK MAKRIKl) AND ONK SINCI.K
DKAR ABBY: Here's the situation: The woman is Tl. She's also a 'grandmother who dyes her hair jet black, uses too much makeup and wears skirts with big slits up the sides because her hairdresser, Bruce, told her she had nice legs. Anyway, according to her, she is constantly being approached by strange men trying to pick her up in the street, in stores' everywhere she goes.
She said that at a holiday cocktail party, a very attrac- gentleman she had never seen before very politely .ed her if she fooled around." She said she just smiled ,ind pretended not to take him seriously, whereupon he gave her his business card and told her to give him a call if she ever wanted to .see his arrowhead collection.
I contend that no real gentleman would ask a lady such a question And if the lady was really a lady, why did she accept his business card? ,
WONDKRING
DEAR WONDERING: Youre right. No real gentleman would ask a lady if she fooled around. (Thats not a question, its a proposition.)
And only the lady knows why she accepted his business card. Maybe shes never seen an arrowhead collection.
DEAR ABBY: As a single person I am tired of being at a. financial disadvantage. (Oh, he's single, he can afford
it'") *
We bachelors get stuck with more than our share all the
time.
In mv book, two couples and two singles divide by six not four When I entertain them in my home. I don't buy groceries for four I buy for six!
I'll bet vou get a ton of mail on this one,
BACHKI.OR
DKAR ABBY: Boo! Hi.s.sl For shame' Isn't it had enough that we single people are discriminated against in legal matters (income taxes, etc,)'. Why should we be penalized because we're not married'.
Bah, humbug' Ten jashes tor you with a wet copy ot Ms .Magazine,. . ' "
, MAD IN FDRTI.AND
DEAR MAI): I could fi^l this page with letters from readers who wrote to disagree with my answer. Score (to date, and theyre still coming in): Readers, 226; Abby, ().
All right, individuals are individuals, married or single, so a couple should spend twice as much on a gift as a single per.son. But lets face it: They rarely do.
Do you put off w riting letters because you dont know w hat to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (.37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box .3892.3, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
Marriage
Announced
The marriage of Gloria Jean Oakley and Kenneth .Allen Owens took place Jan. 9 in South Carolina in a double ring ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Archie Lee Oakley of Greenville. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W W Owens of Greenville.
By GAY PAULEY UPI Senior Editor NEW YORK (UPI) -Larger Americans are in style and demanding the styles to fit their needs.
No one realizes better than Pat Swift and Maggie Mulhern that not every woman is a size 8. There are / a heck of a lot of 16s, 18s oir up opt there.
Miss Swift built a business on the basis of that fact and her own size as an 18 or 20. Five years ago she quit modeling and established her own agency featuring big, beautiful people, and catering to every facet of fashion advertising and promotion.
Maggie Mulhern was a big girl, and a top talent with Miss Swifts agency. Then, she said, "my metabolism changed. Thats what two
doctors told me. She began a steady weight decline no matter what I ate. She started padding beneath her clothing to keep the appearance of a large model - she was always booked as a size 18 or 20.
At stake was a job in which her earnings averaged $150 an hour.
The padding didnt work for long. The brown-eyed blonde with bone structure that is a photographers dream went from 185-190 pounds, with measurements of 44-3444, to a size 10, weighing 132 pounds and a well-proportioned 35-25-36.
But only pounds were lost. She went on to a career as beauty editor of Modern Salon magazine.
Then she and Miss Swift, both still in their 20s, com-
By CECILY BROWNSTONE
Associated Press Food Editor SATURDAY LUNCH Spinach Tuna & Roils Fruit Compote & Coffee SPINACH TUNA
Satisfying and attractive.
10-ounce package frozen leaf spinach
Two 7-ounce cans tuna in olive oil
3 tablespoons flour teaspoon salt
1 pint half-and-half
2 ounces , grated cup loosely packed) Swiss cheese
2 tablespoons butter
3 slices (each 'Vinch thick) bread, decrusted and finely crumbled (1 cup)
Cook spinach according to package directions, omitting salt; drain. With kitchen scissors cut spinach into short lengths: arrange over the bottom of a buttered shallow round I'rquart broiler-proof baking dish. Drain oil from tuna, re-
Card Party Is Planned
Plans for a benefit card party have been announced by the St. Peters Womens Club. It will be held Feb. 17 beginning at 8 p.m. in the Parish Hall.
The tickets are $2.00 each and may be obtained by calling Eleanor Close at 758-8629 or Fanny Farmer at 756-1678.
Friendship Sunday will be observed Sunday. The renewal of marriage vows will beheld at the 5:30 p.m. mass Saturday.
A seder meal will be held Palm Sunday at 5 p.m. Tickets will be $4.50 for the dinner and special service.
serving 2 tablespoons. Make a white sauce of the reserved tuna oil, flour, salt and half-and-half; stir in cheese until melted, then tuna. Pour sauce over spinach. Melt butter and mix with crumbs; sprinkle over sauce. Broil until heated through and browned. Serve at once. Makes 4 servings.
SUPPER FOR FOUR Cream Of Mushroom Soup Steak Sandwiches & Salad Jamaica Sundae & Coffee
JAMAICA SUNDAE Unusual and made at the last minute.
Divide 1 pint fine-quality coffee ice cream among 4 sherbet glasses. Pour 1 to 2 tablespoons brown creme de cacao over each. Top with shaved semi-sweet chocolate. Makes 4 servings.
bined their knowledge of the larger womans problems with dress, and with self-image, to write the new Great Looks, a Full-figured Womans Guide to Beauty (Doubleday).
Their timing was perfect. Some fashion resources long had recognized ^>ecial needs of big people. The rest of the world of retailers, manufacturers* and advertisers started catching on to the fact there were profits galore in the big person market for both sexes - and that statistics from the government and insurance companies show Americans are growing bigger.
Miss Swift established Plus Models Management, Inc.. and now similar agencies are springing up ail over the country.
Pat Swift, bom in Des Moines, grew up in Hempstead, N.Y., and holds a degree n criminal justice from the University of Southern Florida.
She was a store detective in the Garden City, N.Y., branch of Bloomingdales, the retail chain, when her large-size modeling career materialized
The Swift-Mulhern book advises the large woman to thumb her nose at relatives, friends, even strangers who comment on her size. Their advice: Say to yourself, Hey, Im not going to be what you want. Im going to be me.
Deep down, she said in an interview, Ive always wanted to be a Twiggy, like the British model who became an international symbol of the thinny, thin, thin. But Ive been plump
since I was 12. In college I got up to 220 pounds.
I diet all the time, she said. I can gain 5 pounds just looking at a chocolate sundae.
The Misses Swift and Mulhern have found that many large people go on the defensive; societys attitude does that to them, despite the fact that large women (and men) are far from alone.
They cite government statistics and a private study' done by Celanese and the Fashion Group, whose members are in some phase of the industry.
Of the estimated 65 million large-size people in America, 30 million are women. One of every three women wears a size 16 or larger and 10 million of those women are a size 22 or larger.
Miss Swift said the demand for larger men models is on the increase, too. Shes added two to her roster -one 6-feet-4, the other 6-2.
Her women models range from 5-feet-7 to 5-11, with a few wearing 18-20 size, and some half-sizes to show fashions for the shorter, plumper figure.
Im thinking of branching into petites, said Miss Swift. iTheyre another fashion-iwglected group.
The key in modeling, said Miss Swift, are the three Ps - pretty face, personality, and proportionate measurement. Big
eyes, good legs, and a long neck also are requisites. Most of Plus Models models do photo work for prin-tadvertising, catalogs and television because runway work is so seasonal. Miss Swift just booked two of her woman on an assignment of two days for $8,(KX).
Both women say keeping fit is essential, no matter what your size. Miss Swift and two of her models take three hours of jazz dance lessons every week. Miss
Mulhern plays golf and tennis and jogs. I still eat as if I were a biggie, she said. But I dont put on pounds. People who knew me then and now tell me, "Whatever-you have, let me catch it. Miss Mulhern, from Ridgewood. N.J., holds a*, degree in communciatiohs. from Boston College and; previously worked for The* Record in Hackensack, N.J.;, -
Fresh Rolls Daily
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Grifton, N.C.
Announces 2 Grand Sale Days
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FEBRUARY 11,12 & 14
Clearance Prices Of Up To 30-50% Off Entire Stock
Birth
Speight
Born, to .Mr. and .Mrs. Charles Ray Speight. '2305 K. Fourth St.. a son. Andrew Martin, on Feb. 5, 1983. in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Sale Days; Saturday, February 12; 10-5 Sunday. February 13; 1-4
Regular Hours; Tues-Sat; 10-5
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756-0200
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.1 '
Fashions For The Leisure Life
LUXURIOUS LOUNGING - Gently gathered cap sleeves, empire waistline and lace inserts add charm to this gown, left; styled in nylon tricot, the silhouette flatters full figures. A dramatic pleated jumpsuit with matching draped jacket, right, is also in nylon tricot; the at-home
fashion, suitable for evening entertaining, features a braided sash which can be crisscrossed around the waist for figure flattery. (Gown, by SLC in Captiva nylon; jumpsuit and jacket, by Cinema Etoile in Caprolan nylon.)
Births
Woodai Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Earl Wooden, 311-B Paige Drive, a daughter. Keesha Lavone, on Feb. 5, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Lee
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Carl Arnold Lee. Lewiston, a son, Carl Arnold Jr., on Feb. 6, 1983, In Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Marriage
Announced
Mrs. Ada G. Smith* of Greenville announces the marriage of her daughter, SharLean, to Martin Jerome Cox, son of Mrs. Doris W. Cox of Greenville, on Feb. 7.
^ Pegram
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Garry Thomas Pegram, 202 Jamestown Road, a son. Stanley Walker, on Feb. 6, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Bond
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. James Madison Bond Jr., 215-G Stancill Driv e, a daughter, Sarah Caroline, on Feb. 6,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Johnson Born to Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Ernest Johnson Jr., Grimesland, a son. Melvin Ernest III, on Feb. 6, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Eastern Electrolysis
133 OAKMONT DRIVE, SUITE 6 PHONE 756^, GREENVILLE, N.C. PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST
^ The Altrusa Club of Kinston
would like to invite pitifessipnal working women to a social on Sunday, February 1.3, 198.3 at 3 p.m. in the parlor at St. James United Methodist Church, 2000 E. 6th Street,
A
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Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9p.m.-Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9p.m. -Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
4 The aily Reflector, Greenvle, N.C -Friday, February II, 1983
EditorialsIsrael Acts Properly
A state commission with the Israel Supreme Court chief justice as its head has concluded that the nations top military and civilian leaders bore some responsibility for the Palestinian massacre in Lebanon.
The massacre was done by Christian Phalangist militia who passed through Israeli lines.
The removal of Defense Minister Ariel Sharon and three generals was recommended and Prime Minister Menachem Begin, Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir and others were criticized.
The report was considered a bombshell in Israel and it could bring down the Begin government.
The committees report seems appropriate to us. It might have never been made since Prime Minister Begin originally opposed such a commission. Only a public outcry forced him to order the study.
The Jewish people have suffered attrocities that are unparalleled throughout history, with the acts of Nazi Germany in World War II being the ones that are most remembered at present.
It is not appropriate for a people who have properly denounced attrocities of the past to condone inhuman acts against others today.
The people of Israel have shown their revulsion for the terrible acts committed in Lebanon. The study commission has recommended that strong action be taken and the government seems to be following through. Israel will be a better nation for it.
/More Doors Opened
The successful transplant of genetically mismatched bone marrow in humans has a potential for even greater things.
Doctors accomplished their medical miracle at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, and they see in it the wider use of bone marrow transplants to cure leukemia, some blood diseases, immune deficiencies and some congenital defects that together afflict about 14,000 people a year.
Laymen can look for more wonders.
The work of research centers is broadly distributed and among recipients are other researchers who can contribute refinements and related findings that add immeasurably to the basic breakthrough already acomplished.
New doors are opened; new hopes are raised. Another step for all mankind.
James Gersfenzang
Steven Rosenfeld
Earning Can Be Hard
NEW YORK (AP) - Playing the bond market has become hard work again.
As interest rates plunged late last year, investors scrambled to buy any bond in their rush to cash in on the rally.
But the steepest rally in more than a decade ran out of gas in November as interest rates leveled off at two-year lows. Bonds, which rise in price as interest rates fall, were no longer a sure thing.
In the last three months, as rates crept higher, investors still enamored with bonds had to return to old-fashioned trading skills to get by.
Its harder to make money^ says Maury Harris, a money-market economist at Paine Webber Inc. He says traders are once more shopping around to pick the bond with the most attractive maturity and yield.
For example, traders might compare the interest rate on a corporate bond with the interest on a Treasury bond and with historical "yield spreads between the issues to see if the corporate bond was more attractive than usual.
Lehman Bros. Kuhn Loeb Inc. says corporate bonds outperformed governments in January and yield spreads between the issues have narrowed considerably since the end of 1982.
It says the total return on its Treasury bond index fell 0.19 percent in January while the total return on \is corporate bond index rose 0.5 percent, total return includes price change and interest income.
Meanwhile, Lehman Bros. index of more than 5,000 government and corporate bonds provides evidence of how the market has slowed
The Daily Reflector
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UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request Member Audit Bureau of CirculationA Change In Rhetoric On Economy
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan seems to have shifted in recent days from emphasizing a bipartisan approach to the nations economic pro-Nems to claiming full credit for the signs of economic improvement.
But administration officials say the president has no intention of taking a party-line approach on controversial economic issues and will be careful not to kick our bipartisan mood.
For two years, the president insisted that his pr^am was the only way the nation would pull itself out of an economic slump that became the worst recessi(Hi since World War II.
Cut the budget, cut taxes, and the rates of inflation and interest will tumble, prompting business to expand and unemployment to drop, he argued.
But on Jan. 25 - at midterm and two months after the Democrats gained 26
%ats in the House Reagan softened his rhetoric if not his j^prowdi.
Gting the efforts of a Republican and Democratic commission to solve the problems of the Social Security system, Reagan said in his State of the Union address; I hope and pray the bipartisan spirit that guided you in this endeavor will inspire all of us as we face the challenges of the year ahead.
The presidents aides insisted this was more than a friendly gesture to the Democrats he had whipped in 1981 and who suddenly appeared to have an upper hand.
Thi came a rash of good economic news bulletins, and the president asked the audience of his weekly radio address last Saturday: What has happened in those 16 months of Reaganomics?
He answered his own question;
Well, with the help of the Federal Reserve Board, inflation has dropped to
(ly 3.9 patent for all of 1982, the lowest its been in 10 years. Interest rates are about half of what they were. The effect of that is a 40 percent increase in housing starts. Automobile sales are up, as are ell retail sales. Factory orders have begun to increase.
Unemployment dn^)ped 0.4 percent, by (M count, and 0.5 percent by the government new count, which considers both the civilian and military workforce.
Bipartisanship may be the q>proach to take when addressing a joint session of the House and Senate, but with new figures bolstering his argument, R^ganomics even if the president doeait care for the shorthand coined to describe his program - started looking mighty good.
In the weeks ahead therell be debates as to \8liat course we should follow, the presidoit said in the radio ^>eech.
The choice that will be offered is to
turn away from our economic recovery program and go back to what was being done befwe, he said, atWing in a referoKe to the rosy ecomomic reports of recent days:
May I point out, all of the good things Ive mentioned didnt begin until after our program, Reaganomics, if you will, was put in place. Prior to that everything had been a mess for three years or more.
Still, said one White House official who i^e under the comlition that he would not be identified by name, debite some occasional crowing about the recent signs of progress, we want everything to look bipartisan. When we do take credit for everything working, we dont want to do it in a terribly partisan tone
Our polls have always shown the public does not want confrontation with Congress. They feel a lot better when the president and Congress work together.
flHWIW'lle.nfxtIH
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Between July and October of last year, the total return of 19.62 percent was the best performance ever recorded over four consecutive months in the 10-year history of the index. In that period, the interest rate on a 30-year Treasury bond fell from about 14 percent to under 11 percent.
In the three months since October, the broad bond market index provided a total return of 3.16 percent, including a meager 0.17 percent return in January, as the long-term Treasury bond climbed back above 11 percent.
Harris says bond-narket investors have become wary, demanding higher returns for the long-term use of their money, because of concern over Federal Reserve Board policy. Recent rapid growth in the nations money supply has raised fears the Fed will have no choice later this year but to drive interest rates higher or run the risk of rekindling inflation, he says.
He also cites trader worries over the impact of huge federal deficits on interest rates during an economic recovery. If the economy stages a strong comeback from recession, private demand for credit will increase, colliding with the Treasurys massive borrowing needs and pushing rates higher, it is feared.
"Bond investors will not finance a $200 billion deficit and a recovery, says Edward Yardeni, director of economics at Prudential-Bache Securities Inc.
But Yardeni predicts long-term interest rates could fall as low as 8 percent by years end.
Yardeni says he believes that inflation will be held down by falling oil prices and that Congress and the Reagan administration will reduce the deficit.
We concede that in the very near term a temporary blip in long-term rates is possible, says Yardeni.^"But such a spike would weaken the recovery and ultimately allow interest rates to fall much lower.
Unavoidable Collision Ahead
WASHINGTON - A new campaign by the Israeli lobby to turn its friends in Congress against President Reaganjs peace plan while convincing them that protracted occupation of Lebanon is necessary began on Feb. 4, coinciding with the escalating blasts against the U.S. in Israel by Defense Minister Ariel Sharon.
Senior aides of about 50 prominent members of the Senate and House from
both parties, chosen because of their seats on committees influential in Mideast affairs, listened behind closed doors for two hours to an Israeli government specialist on Lebanon. He explained why Israel may have to keep troops across the border between five and 10 years a situation fatal to Reagans proposed Israeli-Arab political solution.
That resonated with what Gen. Sharon was saying in Israel a few days earlier.
Public Forum
To the editor:
I, along with many other citizens of Pitt and Greene counties, enthusiastically endorse the selection of Walter B. Jones Jr. as the Democrat to fill the legislative seat left vacant by the death of the late Rep. Sam D. Bundy.
Throu^ut his adult life, Mr. Jones Jr. has been active in politics at the local, county, state and national levels. He was a salaried employee in Governor Jim Hunts initial campaign for governor of North Carolina, and from 1977-1980 he served as a full-time salaried representative of the governors office for the entire eastern section of our state.
In 1976 Mr. Jones Jr. served as a salaried member of President Jimmy Carters original North Carolina Presidential Campaign Committee; According to a written memo from one of President Carters campaign coordinators, Walter B. Jones Jr. was the essential ingredient to President Carters success in the First District of North Carolina.
Mr. Jones Jr. has worked in the North Carolina General Assembly as a full-time legislative assistant and, in his college days,, he was elected president of the North Carolina State Young Democrats
Oub. He currently serves as Farmville precinct chairman for the Democratic Party.
In a Feb. 2, 1983, editorial in your newspaper, you criticized the selection of Mr. Jones Jr., using phrases such as shoddy use of the democratic process and political nepotism at its worst. However, the public, not the editors of The DaUy Reflector, will ultimately be the judge of the propriety of this appointment.
Congressman Walter B. Jones has served the First District of North Carolina well and should be applauded for his efforts on our behalf. And, while the editors of your newspaper sit and hold Uieir noses, I stand and applaud the selection of his son as our new legislative representative.
Walter B. Jones Jr. has the experience, initiative, energy and desire to be an excellent representative of the people of Pitt and Greene counties. He deserves our congratulations and, above all, he deserves the chance to prove that he can get the job done.
J.Y. Monk III "
104 Pinecrest Road Farmville
He accused the Reagan administration of exploiting incidents in Lebanon between the U.S. Marines and Israeli forces to tarnish Israels reputation. Israels will cannot be bent, Sharon declared.
The two events point to a seemingly unavoidable collision course between the U.S. and Israel. Such a confrontation surely will be followed by punitive U.S. action against Israel, no matter what Reagans advisers say publicly. That punishment could be cutting off or reducing U.S. aid, but it is not yet decided just what the president will do to ensure an American Mideast policy independent of Israel.
The Feb. 4 briefing on Capitol Hill marked the reentry of the American-Israel Public Affairs Commission (AIPAC) into aggressive lobbying in behalf of Israel. A period of unusual quiescence by AIPAC began when its executive director, Thomas A. Dine, publicly applauded Reagans Mideast peace plan unveiled Sept. 1. Taken in conjunction with Sharons attacks on the administration, the presidents foreign policy advisers regard the renewal of operations on the Hill by Dine as bad news for Reagan.
In the opinion of one congressional insider who attended the Feb. 4 briefing, AIPAC never moves without testing the water in Israel. Thus, Dines re-emergence reinforces white House concern that Sharon and Prime Minister Menachem Begin will not make life easy for Reagan in the crucial weeks just ahead.
The president himself had been coming to that conclusion, with rising anger. When Reagan heard about the first checkpoint incident between Israel and the Marines, he told aides that the Israelis must have threatened the Marines intentionally - like they did with the Liberty.
Elisha Douglas -Strength For Today
All of us, at one time or another, have come in contact with braggarts who make much of whatever success they have had in life, no matter how little it is, and deride everyone who h^s criticised them or not acknowledged their eminence.
In order to succeed, one has to have self-confidence; but the people who think that this consists in throwing their weight around and treating with contempt everyone who disagrees with them, will soon find themselves alone and friendless.
All knowledge begins in the capacity for self-criticism. Nothing is so productive of real values in our lives as to be able to stand off and take a good look at ourselves. The old statement about seeing ourselves as others see us has been worked thin and smooth by much use, but it still remains one of lifes essential truths. If we can look, and see, and evaluate; and do something on the basis of what we have learned, we have really started toward success.
Paul T. O'Connor
In A Boat, YouVe Got To Be 'Down And Gone' Drunk
RALEIGH - It is a hot summer Saturday at the B. Everett Jordan Lake in Chatham County. It seems that half of the population of the Triangle has decided to escape the heat and lounge on the newly opened beaches there. Hundreds of others are in motorboats that race across the reservoir.
In these crowded conditions, Jordan, and many other lakes in North Carolina, may be a lot more dangerous than youd think. The danger comes from that 18-foot motorboat you see skimming the waves. The guy driving it is flat out , drunk.
The attention which the drunken driving package has received in the General , Assembly this year has prompted two western senators to begin thinking about drunken boating. There are 180,000 regis
tered boats 28 feet and shorter in North Carolina. Most of them are probably motorboats. The two senators. Bill Redman, R-Iredell, and Charles Hipps, D-Haywood, say theyve seen too many of those boats being driven by drunks. Theyre considering a bipartisan piece of legislation to help the state Wildlife Commission stop it. I
At a recent meeting of the Senate Committee of Natural Resources,
' western senators reported that many wildlife officers are very concerned about drunken boaters. On these crowded lakes, drunken boaters often cut in front of other boats, swamp smaller boats and endanger water skiers.
Yet theres little you can do to stop these people. Hipps, a Waynesville lawyer, says state law concerning drunk
en boating is very hard to enforce. The legal test for a drunken boater is not the same as for a drunken automobile driver. You cant convict someone for operating a boat while under the influcne of alcohol. You must convict him of being intoxicated. The difference, in legal dries, is enormous.
A drunken driver can be convicted for blowing a .010 on a Breathalyzer. But, you cant submit Breathalyzer results into evidence when trying a drunken boater. Even if you could, under current state law, the conviction mark would probably be much higher than .010. In drunken boating cases, Hipps explains, you must prove through an officers observations that the boater was intoxicated. And the courts have interpreted that test to mean that the boater must by
really blasted. No convictions for just being onver the line. The man must be down and gone.
A wildlife official in Raleigh said that only four boaters were convicted of boating while intoxicated during 1982.
Anyone whos been on the water lately knows theres a lot more drunks out there than that. 'The wildlife official said it is practically impossible to convict someone under current laws. Although he didnt check the files of the four convicted, he said they were probably cases in which an accident occurred. Otherwise, they wouldnt have been caught.
Redman says hes working with the Wildlife Commission and planning legislation that hell introduce later on in the session.
Both senators said a new drunk boating act should impose the same standards for boatinfe that we have for driving. That is, boating under the influence of alcohol should be prohibited. The boater shouldnt be allowed to be on the water when hes drinking heavily. Breathalyzers should be available to wildlife officers and their results should be admissable in court. Penalties for drunken boating should be brought into line with those for driving under the influeiKe.
Redman says he asked sponsors of the proposed Safe Roads Act to add a section on boating. It was decided that might muddy the waters for the drunk driving bill. So, Redman says hell have to come up with a seperate piece of legislaion and hell call it the Safe Waterways Act.
India Bandit Queen Said in Custody
, By GENE KRAMER Associated Press Writer
NEW DELHI. India (API - A bandit queen who gunned down 20 men to avenge her lovers death was reportedly in custody today after eluding police in the twisted ravines and jungles of central India for more than two years.
m.
I
PHOOLAN DEVI
A formal surrender ceremony for Phooian Devi, described as an illiterate with a pock-marked complexion and close cropped hair, was set for Saturday, authorities said.
Phoolan was born to a family of boatmen 27 years ago. She reportedly was wed by the age of 12 to an older farmer who beat her, fled back to her family which scorned her for leaving her husband, then grew up a notorious criminal.
She is wanted for about 70 murders, armed robberies and kidnappings.
Press reports said Phoolan' planned to turn herself in because she feared police forces from the neighboring states of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh were closing in on her.
Authorities originally said the female outlaw would give herself up today, but they announced that her scheduled surrender had been postponed 24 hours until Saturday without giving any reason for the delay.
The United News of India reported that the gang leader, accompanied by^ five male followers, emerged from hiding Thursday near Jakmoli village of Bindh district in Madhya Pradesh and contacted police.
The group was taken to another village at her request for a Hindu religious ceremony before the formal surrender at the local college campus at Bindh, 180 miles southeast of here, the agency said.
She has been in police custody since then, the United News of India said.
Police Deputy Inspector Gen. M.D. Sharma had' told The Associated Press by telephone from Bind Thursday that except for a few details, the surrender ceremony was certain for today. He declined to elaborate.
Phoolan, described as a short, stout woman who usually wears blue, jeans, became the areas most feared desperado in 1981 when she and her gang massacred 20 men in the Uttar Pradesh village of Behmai. She claimed the village was harboring two landlords who reportedly trapped and raped her after killing her lover, Vikram Mallah, on Aug. 13.1980.
Police from the two states clashed over the bandit queen this week, with authorities of Uttar Pradesh arresting six police from Bhind and accusing them of kidnapping relatives of Phoolan and her current lover.-Man Singh.
Apparently the surrender terms included giving Phoolans relatives police protection in Madhya Pradesh.
Phoolan reportedly put out feelers about her surrender in Madhya Pradesh because 'Of its easy surrender terms compared with Uttar Pradesh, where police are known for a dead men tell no tales shoot-to-kill policy against outlaws.
Local officials said in a statement that the chief minister of Madhya Pradesh, Arjun Singh; would personally accept Phoolans surrender on a specially built rostrum at the college.
Some members of her gang were expected to accompany ' her and local police said they were negotiating with another outlaw leader, known only as Rhanshyam, to give himself up as well.
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wmm
6-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, Fet>niary 11,1983
FDA Says Sweetener At Raleigh Store Poisoned
ByTOMMINEHART Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials said Thursday it took nearly a month to discover that artificial sweetener at a Raleigh grocery store was contaminated with lethal sodium fluoride.
> An unidentified Raleigh man reported on Jan. 5 that the Equal sweetener from a Food Lion store turned' his
ice tea dark and would not dissolve, said Sander Bellman, director of chemistry for the FDAs regional laboratory in Atlanta.
Bellman said FDA chemists did not open the sample until Jan. 26.
We concluded that it was sodium fluoride Monday morning, he said. We were surpised to find out that the sample was 80 to 85 percent pure sodium fluoride.
The day after the Jan. 5
complaint, investigators went to the store and found another box containing two packets that had been contaminated with the chemical, which is used in water fluoridation.
FDA investigator" Dan Sitko said one package contained four grams of the chemical. Five grams can be lethal; and four grams could cause severe nausea and mental confusion, Ik said.
The boxes had apparently
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been bought and the packets were slit (^n with a razor blade, resealed, and put back on the shelves. Sitko said the procedure was too elaborate to have been (tone in the store.
No one ate the poison and no illnesses connected with tampering were repcMted.
No stores except Food Lion were notified of the con-
Next Workday As A Co-Piiot
i
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Gov. Bob Graham, known for taking odd jobs to work shoulder-to-shoulder with his constituents, is setting his sights higher for his next workday.
The 46-year-old governor is scheduled to fly ^turday in the back seat of an F-106B Delta Dagger jet fighter.
Graham will be co-pilot to Col. Dean Biggerstaff, commander of the Florida Air National Guards 125th Fighter Intercepter Group based at Jacksonville International Airport.
Although Graham has an active private pilots license, he is not licensed to fly military jets, said Steve Hull, Grahams press secretary.
But once they are off the ground, If he decides to fly the plane a little bit. Ill let him, Biggerstaff said. i
TEST-TUBE BABY TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)-Israels first test-tube baby was bom on television Wednesday ni^t, and both he and his, 35-year-old mother were doing well Thursday, doctors at the Sheba Medical Center said.
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taminatton until Wednesday, Sitko said. No general recall order on the product was issued, but Food Uon took all boxes of the sweet)er off the shelf.
Bellman said Atlanta lab technicians, who received the sample Jan. 13, origiiu^y believed the contamination was caused by the degradation of its main ingredient, aspartame.
He said chemists asked the Bureau of Foods in Washington for a methodology to test for degradation, which it received Jan. 25.
"When we opened the sample on the 26th, we realized we were dealing with with a tampered product, not simple decomposition, he said. We had no reason to suspect that it was as toxic as sodium fluoride.
Chemists thought it might be an organic product, such as stpichnine. Spectrosci^ic, physical and chemical tests ruled that out, and by Feb. 2, they suited stron^y the chemical was sodium fluoride, Bellman said.
Not until the beginning of this week did we realize it was very dangerous, he said. Its a detective equation ... a conqilicated analytical scheme. The vast majority of complaints we get are nothing.
Bellman said the lab was testing another tampered sample of Equal from Knoxville, Tin. It does not appear to be the same type of thing, he said.
Equal is produced by Searle Phameceuticals, Inc. in Chicago. The contaminated boxes carried the serial number 2E03P.
Richard McGraw, vice president of public affairs for Searle, said the company was told of the lab r^ts Thursday.
He said the company plans no recall because K tampering is more than a month old, and no one has become sick.
He blamed the tampering on people trying to copy the Tylenol poisonings between Sept. 29 and Oct. 1 last year that resulted in seven deaths
intbeCbica^area.
Following the Tylenol case, we had many complaints. There are some running around out there, he said.
Tune Ups - Brake Jobs General Repairs
Auto Specialty Co.
5th St
758-1131
r
Has Assembletd All,Sale Coats, Shoes, Dresses, Sportswear & Lingerie Together At Our Pitt Plaza Store...Consolidating Both Stocks Into One! Our Stock Is Limited...Our Prices Ridiculously Low For Our...
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That Sure-Fire One-Day
t
Training Is For Others
nally did remove his wet pants and flushed them.
I endured four variations of this episode in one day. By evening I was on my hands and imees begging him to do the ri0it thing.
1 wonder if tomorrow will be as bad, I sighed after I had put my recalcitrant toddler to bed.
Phillip was as reassuring as usual. It will probaUy be worse. I wont be here.
1 gave him the evil eye. Theres no need to rub Mlt into the wound.
Well, you know what they say about salt and little boys. he said with a smirk. \^n it rains it pours.
ii
1
II
a
?1
By GAIL MICHAELS i
Several months ago Zacharys pediatrician told me that he bad developed a surefire method for potty-training toddlers in one day. Im afraid I was a bit skeptical. After all, we had used a one-day method to train Meg, and it had taken us four years.
But the doctor assured me that his method was different. You simply tell Zachary that youre tired of changing diapers and that you expect him to use the toilet from nowon.
1 looked around his office to make sure that the man had a bonafide diploma. And hell do it just like that.
Of course not.
I was comforted to know that the good doctor had not completely lost touch with reality.
But when he does have an accident, the doctor continued, you send him into the bathroom and make him clean himself up. You refuse to do it for him no matter how hard or how long he protests. Eventually hell give in.
I was not as confident as the doctor. Compared to Zachary, a goat is the epitome of cooperation. So naturally, I was in no hurry
to test the method.
But Zach^ finally got tired of waiting for me to be a dutiful mother. Last Saturday he announced that he was not only ready but eager for training.
Wouldnt you rather wait a few more years?
No, he said. I dont like diapers no more.
With the greatest reluctance I cleaned up the potty chair and dragged out a stack of training pants. All right, I told him with a lot more bravado than confidence, this is it. I dont intend to change any more pants. If youre big enough to wear these pants, then youre big enough to keep them dry.
Then Phillip and I sat down to await the deluge.
It didnt come. All Saturday he stayed dry. I was in shock. It cant be this easy, I told Phillip, not after all the terror Ive felt at the prospect. Something has to go wrong.
And it did. By Sunday the novelty had worn off. Whether he had tired of Interrupting his play or was bored with the literature we had thoughtfully placed beside his plastic throne, I dont know, but he announced at the breakfast table that he preferred his diapers to training pants
NASA Finds Another Leak
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - The space agency is facing another delay in the launch of its troubled new shuttle, unless technicians can show that a replacement engine is not defective.
A management conference concluded Thursday that two days of tests indicated a leak in the liquid oxygen heat exchanger of the $30 million engine, brought here to replace the cracked No. 1 engine on the spaceship Challenger.
Testing was to continue for another day or two, but senior officials were already mulling over two options -bringing in another new engine or using one from the first space shuttle, Columbia.
Either way, it would mean that an early March target launch date would have to be set back another week or two, officials said.
Unless something else shows up, we will have to take one of those two options, said spokesman Jim Ball at Kennedy Space Center. We do feel weve got a probable leak.
Columbias three main engines are at the Canoga Park, Calif., plant of their manufacturer, Rocketdyne. They are being overhauled for later flights. The spaceplane, which flew five missions, is being refurbished at the space center.
Problems first cropped up
when Challengers No. 1 engine was found to have a hairline crack that permitted gaseous hydrogen to escape from it into the shuttle engine compartment. Officials feared this could have caused a flash fire during launch.
Thursdays conclusion on the probability of a defect in the spare en'ne came after a lengthy' telephone conference between NASA managers at the space center and officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in Washington.
The leak in the second engines heat exchangerwas detected by a pressurization test with helium and measured with special instruments.
SHOP-EZE
West End Shopping Center Phone 756-0960
llOOOLANl
Saturday Luncheon Special BBQ
2.49
Fried Chicken
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t -1
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Write or call for more Information on these and other tours available. Our NEW 1983 catalog Is available: Ask for yours todaylll
after all.
I was all to ready to acquiesce. But Phillip pointed out that, if I did, I might be sending him tp college in monogrammed Luvs. So I held my ground.
' And Zachary held his. Within minutes after he donned his training pants, he wet them.
Go to the bathroom and change them, I said.
He plastered his chin with his lower lip. No.
I was firm. Yes. No one likes to be around a wet boy. When you have on dry pants you can come out.
He came out anyway.
Stay in the bathroom. 1 said as I ushered him back into it.
He did not.
1 was finally reduced to holding the door closed. He kicked and screamed and begged for his mommy. Then he crawled up in the sink and turned on the water.
Under circumstances like these, remembering the doctors warning to stay calm was not easy, especially when Zachary fi-
Say something loving on February 14.
Valentine's Dav Cards
REEDS
Fine Jewelers and Diamond Importers Carolina East Mall, Greenville
Diamond
Earrings
From $24 To $2000
.06 Ct...........$99
.08 Ct...........$125
.20 Ct..........$290
.33 Ct..........$490
VzCt.........$1040
SALE
$65
$79
$199
$319
$599
Diamonij ,
Penijants
From $79 To $4000
Reg. SALE
.08 Ct
$150 $99
.15Ct
$290 $199
.25 Ct......
$490 $349
.33 Ct
$640 $419
V2Ct
$1450 $799
Cloisonne
Pendants
$3
Gold Ball Earrings
3mm. 4mm..
$ 9.95 $11.95
Heart Shaped Diamond Solitaires
Reg. Sale
V4 Ct.. .$1200 $799 .72 Ct...$2995 $1980
Anniversary Rings & Diamond Wedding Bands
20% 0.1
Diamond
Clusters
From $79 To $4500
Reg. SALE
.08 ct........$215 $159
.12Ct. ..I#...$280 ' $199
V4Ct.........$460 $299
V2Ct.........$690 $499
1.00Ct........$1670 $950
Diamond
Solitaires
From $69 To $12,000
.10 Gt........$290
V4Ct.........$690
V3 Ct.........$980
VaCt........$1450
1.00 Ct........$4500
SALE
$199
$499
$699
$990
$2750
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carohria east mall ^^gnenviUe
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BUDGET STORE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY!
All Items In Limited Amount and Sizes
Group of Mens 3-Piece Suits Up to a Handsome M7 Savings! Shop Early!
20%
Off
Regular 88.00
Choose from a group of mens 3-piece suits in a variety of solids and checks. Coat with center vent & contrasting buttons. Sizes 38 to 44.
Mens Briefs and T-Shirts
Regular
4.27
and 5.27.
20%
Fruit-of-the-Loom solid while, 100% cotton briefs. T-shirts and boxer shorts. Hurry!
Mens Plaid Flannel Shirts
Regular 4.88 ...
3.00
Group of mens plaid flannel shirts of 100% cotton. S.M.L. Supply limited!
Up to M4 Off Ladies Dresses
Regular I / A
19.88 to 29.88........................ I / AaOf
Ladies solid and print polyester dresses in a variety of styles. Supply limited.
Trim-Line' Bras & Girdles
Regular \ 3 99 to 6.49
25%
Solid black or white strapless or padded bras plus more' Girdles, too. Great buys!
Ladies Thermal Underwear
2.90
Tops & bottoms 50% cotton and 50% polyester. Long sleeve tops and ankle length pants. Limited amount & sizes.
Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9p.m.-Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355}
8-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, February 11,1983
Inventory Tax kelief Is Offered In Legislature
3*
ROSE MARIE SHERMAN
GARYNIKLASON
ROBERT LEE GUY
WILLIAM WHITEFORD
Greenville Jaycees Honored Four At Thursday Night Program Here
The Greenville Jaycees have honored four area citizens as recipients of awards presented annually by the chapter in the fields of education, corrections and firefighting.
Cited by the chapter as award recipients were: Rose Marie Sherman, outstanding young educator from Pitt County schools; Gary Nikiason, outstanding young educator from Greenville city schools; Robert Lee Guy, outstanding young correctional officer, and William (Bill) Whiteford, outstanding young firefighter.
The awards were presented at the Jaycees regular meeting Thursday night.
Ms. Sherman has taught at D.H. Conley High School since 1976. A Rose High School graduate, she eam^ her bachelors and masters degrees in English at East
Expelled
COPENHAGEN, Den-mark (AP) - The government has given a Soviet diplomat two weeks to leave Denmark, accusing him of spying for Moscow by gathering technological data from manufacturers of military equipment.
The Foreign Ministry identified the official as Yevgeni L. Motorov, a science attache at the Soviet Embassy.
Foreign Ministry spokesmen said ministry official Eigil Joergensen summoned Soviet Ambassador Nikolai Egaritgchev to his office Thursday and told hi^ Motorov had engaged in illegal espionage during his posting in Denmark. Joergensen specifically accu^ Motorov of collecting military-related technological information, the spokesman said.
Carter Might Borrow Ideas
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) - Former President Jimmy Carter, helping plan his presidential library, museum and study center in Atlanta, says he may borrow a few ideas from his predecessor, Gerald Ford.
I think theres a good homey atmosphere here -an openness and beauty, Carter said after touring the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum on Thursday.
Carolina University.
She was recently selected as teacher of the year from D.H. Conley and also from the Pitt County school system. For the past three years, she has been named a regional judge for the National Council of Teachers of English Achievement Awards in Writing
Ms. Sherman and her husband. Milt, reside at 128 Harrell St. in Greenville.
Nikiason, who taught at Chapel Hill High School for two years, has taught drafting at Rose High School since 1979 and also sponsors the Vocational Industrial Clubs of America chapter at Rose.
Anything To Avoid Exams
HURON, Ohio (AP) -Some kids will do anything to avoid exams - even go to school.
Thats what Huron School Superintendent Jeffrey Weaver learned with an experiment that gave high school students with perfect attendance the option of skipping semester exams.
Attendance did improve under the experiment, which began in September, but parents and some teachers complained that students went to school even when sick so they wouldnt have to take exams.
And local physicians complained to Weaver that students were reluctant to miss school for doctor and dentist appointments because of the new policy.
Under the experimental policy, students with perfect attendance in any class could skip the exam for that class as long as they were passing. A student with perfect attendance could take an exam to raise a grade. Semester exams make lip 20 percent of a students final grade.
The experiment was ended Wednesday by a unanimous vote of the Huron Board of Education.
Average attendance at the school last year was 96,4 percent. We thought we could make a good thing better, Weaver said. During the experiment, attendance went up to 97.5 percent.
Have pets to sell? Reach more people with an economical Classified ad. Call 752-6166.
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INDEPENDENT JEWELERS
FLOYD G.
ROBINSON JEWELERS
'am
He attended the U.S. Naval Academy after graduating from Flint Hill Preparatory School in Fairfax, Va. and then entered ECU on a full football scholarship. He attained the honor roll and deans list while completing requirements for his bachelors degree in industrial education with a drafting concentration, graduating in 1975.
Nikiason and his wife, Karen, have one child, Kelly, and reside in Winterville.
Guy, who joined the N.C. Department of Corrections in 1978 as a trainee in Cumberland County, is currently a probation-parole officer II with the department. He received his certification from the N.C. Criminal Justice Training & Standards Council.
Guy, who is single, graduated from Terry Sanford Senior High School in Fayetteville before earning a bachelors degree in 1977 at ECU. While in college, he was selected to serve on the student council.
He is currently serving as head basketball coach at Aycock Junior High School and also is a member of the staff of Lenoir Community College in the correction science degree program.
Guy resides at 221 Britt Road in Greenville.
Whiteford, a resident of Route 7, Greenville, is a member of the Eastern Pines Fire Department, having joined the unit in 1977. He presently serves as secretary for the department.
Whiteford was selected as Fireman of the Year for both the Pitt County Firemens Association and the Eastern
Pines Fire Department for 1982.
The recipient and his wife, Carol, have two children. Brooks Lee and Paige Lynn.
By MARY ANNE RHYNE
Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Merchants and manufacturers think they may have come up with a way to have their cake and share it with the state.
The plan, introduced Thursday in the state Rouse and Senate, would allow businesses to recover part of the tax they pay on inventories. But it would replace the lost revenue to the state with a three-year windfall from accelerating corporate tax payments.
The net result would be an almost $5 million gain for the General Fund in 1983-84, a $3 million increase the next year and $5 million in 1985-86.
The bills were introduced by Rep. Dan Lilley, D-Lenoir, and Sen. Aaron Plyler, D-Union.
For many years, merchants and manufacturers have sought a reduction or elimination of the tax on inventories but the loss of
FORCED TO RESIGN - Marina Verola, the E.F. Hutton stockbroker who posed semi-nude for Playboy magazine to prove beauty and brains can go together resigned under fire from the brokerage firm. Mrs. Verola is shown in her home office in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Thursday evening. (AP Laserphoto)
407 Evans On The Mall
Downtown Greenville
II It doesnt tick, tock to us.
Downtown Pitt Plaza
Send a Ha ston Valentine..
For Great Beginnings
Great Beginnings
$1600
Includes 1 oz. cologne spray and 4 oz. body lotion. Both in the original HALSTON fragrance...a sophisticated blend of green, woodsy and floral essences with a subtle Oriental note;
Everyone is flattered by a gift that is. selected to be as beautiful to look at ^ as it is to use. The HALSTON fragrance set Great Beginnings is designed to be a pleasure to all the senses... and a constant, happy reminder of the giver.
revenue to the state has blocked approval.
Businesses say the tax discourages companies from locating in North Carolina .and note that only 20 states avean inventory tax.
We are concerned with trying to create an economic climate that will lead to further industrial development and stren^hen our economy,Lilley said.
Business will come out ahead, the state will come out ahead and the people will come out ahead because it will create jobs, said Bill Rustin of the North Carolina Merchants Association.
Businesses now pay ad valorem taxes to cities and counties based on their inventories. like homeowners pay taxes on their belongings. The tax rates vary from city to city and county to county.
Under the bill, businesses would get a credit on their state income taxes for part of the ad valorem taxes paid on inventories.
That credit would be equal to 10 percent of the inventory tax in 1982-83, 20 percent in 1983-84 and 25 percent after that. During the next three years, the change would cost the state $107 million, according to merchants.
At the same time,the bills would begin speeding up payment of state income taxes for corporations with estimated tax liabilities of at least $5,000. That would generate an additional $120 million over the next three years.
The existing law requires corporations with estimated tax liabilities of at least $100,000 to estimate their state income taxes and pay in installments.
Lilley and Rustin would not speculate about the bills chances.
Rustin and the Permanent Task Force on Inventory Taxes said in a prepared statement that, The unique combination of the factors in this bill ... offers a special
FLOOD DISASTER
QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -At least 65 people have died from flooding in five coastal provinces, and damage is estimated at $350 million so far, the government says.
opportunity to rearrange corporate income taxes by neither a tax break nor a tax
increase with a net effect of stimulating eciMiomic growth and jobs without a decrease in state revenues.
Complete Radiator Service
Auto Specialty Co.
917 W. 5th St.
COUPON
758-1131
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We May Save You ^200 A Year On Your Auto Liability Insurance If You Have A DUI Or Equivalent In Insurance Points.
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Edward Stokes Insurance Ageiicy
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405 New Circle Drive Ayden, N.C.
746-3301
Best of Harbor Sweets
3 tiered gift assortment (25 plus pieces) sweet sloops, marblehead mints and sanddollars all tied up with satin and heartsorder today.
Well UPS anywhere!
Jefferson Florist
West 5th St.
Save 25%onall our ^ cotton sweaters
Sale *8 to 22.40
Reg, $12 to $28. For work or play, all cotton sweaters are natural basic. And all of ours are now 25% off. Choose from assorted styles and colors to match any skirt, any pair of ' pants. Like our short sleeve scoop , neck pullover with crochet trim. Our crew neck Hunt Club^ pullover and lots, lots more.
Save 20% on all our car seats and strollers.
From strolls in the park to rides in the car, these sturdy strollers and comfortable car seats will make any outing safer and more enjoyable for infants and toddlers.
Reg. Sale
One Step car seat.......... 49.99 39.99
Umbrella stroller..................40.00 32.00
Save 55% to 75% on winter sportswear.
Sale 7.99
Orlg. $18 to $32. Group of womens winter skirts, pants, sweaters, and blouses. Assorted styles and colors.
Limited sizes and quantities.
i
/ -
Save 50% to 59%
Sale #
10.99
Orlg. $22 to $27. Group of womens winter pants, skirts and blouses. Assorted styles. Limited sizes and quantities.
Save 25% on all our girls dresses, and all our boys suits.
Sale 7.49 to 24.75
Reg. 9.99 to 33.00. Get ready for Easter parading with savings on all our dresses for girls, toddlers and infants. In easy-care poly/cotton blends.
Sale 18.74 to $60
Reg. 24.99 to $80. Dashing three-piece suits and vest sets with grown-up details. In easy-care poly for infants, toddlers and boy's sizes.
Save 25% on all Priscilla Curtains..
Sale 13.50
100x45
Reg. $18. For rainbow ruffles, these solid color Priscilla cur-tainsofcotton/Kodel'polyester.
Reg. Sale
100x63 .......................................... 22.00 16.50
100x84 .......................................... 24.00 18.00
140x84 ...... 37.00 27.75
Save 25% on our Novelty curtains____
Sale 4.49 to 11.25
Reg. 5.99 to $15. All novelty tier, cape cods, valances, swags and cafes.
Save 20% on all window shades
Save 20%
on all our work shoes
Sale
28.80
Reg. $36. 8-in. leather work boot with moc toe, oil-resistant crepe sole and heel.
Save 50% to 68% on ski-jackets.
Sale15.99
Orig. $32 to $50. Group of junior ski-jackets. Assorted colors. Sizes S,M,L.
Save 64% to 68% on winter jackets.
Sale
26.99
Orig. $75 to $85. Group of misses and junior jackets. Assorted styles and colors. Limited sizes and quantities.
Save 50% on mens nylon jacket.
Sale
24.99
Orig. $50. Mens nylon jacket with snap front and pockets. Zip-away hood comes in blue, grey, tan and wine. Sizes S,M,L,XL.
Save 65% on velour sweater.
Sale
5.99
Orig. 17.99. Mens poly/cotton V-neck velour sweaters in solid colors. Tall sizes only.
VISA'
UenneyShop 10 a.m. 9 p.m. Phone 756-1190 Pitt Plaza
10-The DaUy Renector, Greenville. N.C.-Friday, February 11,1983
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JOHN LEHT
JETHROS FORESISHT!
When jEnnoo, moses rwer-in-law, was visitinS the camp of Tve Israelites he cautioned MOSES WITH A BIT OF ADVICE. AND BECAUSE OF HIS ADVICE PEOPLE EVEN TOCW DELESAIE AUTUORITV IN A LIKE MANNER. WHAT JETHRO SAW, THAT CAUSED HIM OONCERN, WAS THE PACT THAT/MOSES SPENT FROM .MORNINS TILL NISHT LISTENING TO THE TROUPES OF MB FaLOWERS AND STRAIGHTENING OUT SQUABBLES AMONG FAMILIES, ETC.,TO THE EXTENT THAT MORE IMPORTANT NEEDS WERE NEGLECTED. HE RECOMMENDED ASSIGNING MEN TO SPECIFIC DUTIES TO RELIEVE MOSES OF PETTY DETAILS.".. .MEN OF TRUTH.. .TO BE RULERS OF THOUSANDS, AND RULERS OF HUNDREDS, rulers OF FIFTIES, AND RULERS OF TENS: AND LET THEM JUDGE THE PEOPLE AT ALL SEASONS..." (EXODUS 10:21,22) AND TO THIS DAY JETHRO'S ADVICE IS POTENTLY PRACTICAL!
JETHITO WATCHES AND LISTENS, WITH GITEAT INTEeeST,
BT IT IS ONLY A gEGINNING! SOON, A LONG LINE OF MEN HAS FO0MER all SEEKING JUDGEMENTS! WHO IS THE f?IGMTFUL OWNE? OF A JA{?
OF WILC7 HONEY? THE OWNEi^ OF THE JAK-Of^THE AAAN WHO GATHE^EPTHE HONEY TO WMOAA COES A CEtTTAlN GOAT BELONG? WHICH fWAN INHERITS HIS FATHEt^S GOOPS? IT 15 05VI0DS TMAT THIS IS A OAILV C7UTY FOR ^^OSES'
SAVE THilS POQ VOUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAPBOOK
Copyricflit 1980 John A Lehfi Distributed by Unage-Plus P 0 Box 884 Middletown, N Y 10940, through Hutchinson Associates, 18)10 Village 18, Camoril!.
, I'lSponsors Of This Page, Along With Ministers of All Faiths, Urge You to Attend Your House of Worship This Week, To
Believe In God and to Trust In His Guidance For Your life.
A
3i'
jj)
'-3'^
'1'
:2
m
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m
liA'D
COZART'S AUTO SUPPLY, INC.
4 Dickinson Ave.
752-3194
Banks Cozarli Employees
PARKERS BARBEQUE RESTAURANT Ph. 756-2388 S Memorial Dr.
Doug Parker And Employees
Compliments of
PITT MOTOR PARTS, INC.
Ph: 758-4171
911 S. Washington St.
NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE CO. Wayne Adams Ph: 75&39X 1801 Charles Blvd.
Don McGlohon INSURANCE
Hines Agency. Inc.
Ph. 758-1177
Compliments of PITT TILE CO., INC.
Carpet. Vinyl and Formica Ph. 752-4998 2735 E. 10th St.
STATE FARM INSURANCE
Mack Beale, Agent
3205 S. Memorial Dr.. Ph: 756-7280
Greenville
EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE
2721 E. 10th St.
Ph: 752-432.
Compliments of LOVEJOY AGENCY Daybreak Records Ph: 756-4774 118 OakmonI Dr Larry Whittington
ELECTROLUX Sales and Service
' Known lor Quality For Over 55 Years ' "Free Estimates"Free Pick-up & Delivery 104 Trade St. Ph: 756-6711
Compliments of HEILIG-MEYERSCO.
518 E. Greenville Blvd.
Ph: 756-4145
GREENVILLE FLOWER SHOP and
RUDY'S PHOTOGRAPHY 1025-27S. Evans St.
Ph: 758-2774 752-5167
GREENVILLE MARINE & SPORT CENTER
Greenville Blvd. N.E
758-5938
Joe Vernelson. Owner
GRANT BUICK.INC.
Greenville Blvd.
756-1877
Bill Grant & Employees
INA'S HOUSE OF FLOWERS
N. Memorial Dr.. Ext.
752-5656
Management & Staff
OVERTON'S SUPERMARKET, INC.
211 S. Jarvis
752-5025
All Employees
HENDRIX-BARNHILLCO.
Memorial Dr.
752-4122 All Employees
BUCKS GULF STATION & EMPLOYEES E 10th St. Ext 752-3228 "Road& Wrecker Service Jartran Truck & Trailer Rentals
COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN 2905E. 5th
Take Out Only 752-5184 600 S. W. Greenville Blvd "
Eat in or Take out 756-6434
INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.
W M Scales. Jr. General Agent Weighty Scales, Rep Clarke Stokes. Rep
756-3738
EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS
Ph. 758-3568 1514 N Greene St.
A complete restaurant i office coffee service'
Compliments of FRED WEBB, INC.
TOM'S RElTAURANT
"The very best in home cooking"
Ph 756-1012
Maxwell St^. West End Area
RIGGAN SHOE SHOP Open Mon. thru Fri. 9-6. Sat 9-3 Ph. 756-0204
113 W. 4th St., Greenville
Compliments of QUALITY TIRE SERVICE and Employees Ph. 752-7177N Greenest.
WHITTINGTON, INC Charles Street. Greenville. N C Ray Whittington Phone 756-8537
ySAM STEWARTS PAINT & BODY SHOP
Specializing in front-end alignment and brake work
Ph. 756-75253012 S. Memorial Dr.
Compliments of '
THOMAS W. RIVERS
Compliments Of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY Ph. 752-0876
1506 N. Greene. Greenville
G.B. ELECTRIC CO., INC.
Gerald Buck. Owner Ph. 758-4688 Farmville Hwy.
BARWICKS HOUSE OF MEATS, INC. Ph. 758-2277
100 Pollard St.. Greenville Allen Berwick. Owner
^ DAUGHTRIDGEOIL&GASCO.
2102 Dickinson Ave.
Phone 756-1345 Bobby Tripp A Employees
PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING CO.
Ph. 758-2113 Greenville
RAY'S BODY SHOP Owned Operated By Ray Evans Ph. 756JXI70
16(X3 N. Greene, Greenville
CAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE
i405Dickinson Ave.
752-3776
Jerry Creech, Owner
HARGETTS DRUG STORE 2500 S. Charles Ext 756-3344
PAIR ELECTRONICS, INC.
Electronics Suppliers
Ph. 756-2291
107 Trade, Greenville
Compliments of HOLLOWELLS DRUG STORE No. 1911 Dickinson Ave.
No. 2 Memorial Dr. A 6th SI.
No. 3 Stantonsburg Fid. at Doctors Park
BONDS SPORTING GOODS 218 Arlington Blvd. 756-8001
H.L. HODGES CO.
210 E. 5th St 752-4156
TAPSCOTT DESIGNS 222 E. 5th St
757-3558
Kale Phillips, Interior Designer Associate Member ASID
PIGGLY-WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE 2105 Dickinson Ave. 756-2444 Ricky Jackson A Employees "Open 24 Hours"
D.D. BRIGHTELECTRICALCONTR. Ph. 752-2315
P.O Box2837,[Greenville, N.C.
JA-LYN SPORT SHOP Hwy. 33, Chicod Creek Bridge Ph. 752-2676, Grimesland James and Lynda Faulkner
LAUTARES JEWELERS
414 Evans
752-3831
ANNES TEMPORARIES, INC.
Ph. 758-6610
120 Reade St, Greenville
ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS Ph. 756-3500
226 Commerce St, Greenville
HARVEY BOWEN MOTORS Complete Line Of Used Cars Ph. 7485475 or 746-3003 Hwy. 102 West of Ayden
EARLS CONVENIENCE MART
Route 1
7565278
Earl Faulkner A Employees
PUGHS TIRE & SERVICE CENTER Ph. 7525125
Corner of 5th A Greene, Greenville
P^A GULF SERVICE ok 756-7616 701 E. Greenville Blvd. Ryecjruck Rentals 7585045 Wrecker Service day 756-7516 nite 7585479
WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY Ph. 7585317
123 S. Railroad. WInterville
FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, INC. Oakmont Professional Plaza Greenville, N.C. Ph. 7585000 Jim Whittington
If You Have a Habit Of Following The Crowd, We Suggest, The Best Crowd to Follow is the Crowd Boiae To Church
Come To CHURCH
GLORUDEI LUTHERAH CHURCH The Woman's Club. 2306 Green Springs Park Rd.
The Rev Richard A Miller Ptwne 758-038
0:00 a m. Sun - Sunday School 10 :15 a m ^ The Morning Worship Service
4.00p m Mon. - Sr Conf. Class 7:30p m Tue. - LWML Meeting 8:fl0p.m.-AdultConf Class 7:30 p m Wed Worship at Hospital Chapel
7,:w p m Thur - Bible Class
FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOUNESS CHURCH Corner Brinkley Road & Plaza Drive. Greenville, N C 27834 Rev Frank Gentry
9:45 a m Sun - Sunday. School, Dickie Rook
11:00 a m. - Worship Service 6:00p m. - Choir Practice 7:00 p.m. - Prayer and Praise Service 7:30p.m Mon - Women's Auxiliary 7;30p m. Wed. - BibleStudy/Lileliners 7;30 p.m. - Children's/Teen Choir 7:00 p.m Thur - Nursing Home Chocowinity 7; 30 p m.-Violin Class 9:30 a m. Fri. - Sunday School Lesson WBZy
7:00 p.m. - University Nursing Home
EVANGEUSTIC TABERNACLE Full Gospel Church
264 Bypass West at Laughinghouse Drive
5. J. Williams. Minister
Mike Pollard, Minister of Music 10:00 a m Sun - Sunday School Lin-wood Lawson. Supt 11.00 a.m. - Morning Worship 5-45 p.m. - Adult Choir Practice 7HK) p.m. - Celebration of Praise 7:30pm Wed.-PrayeriShare 7:30 p.m.-Youth Service 7:00 p.m. Sat. - INTERCESSORY PRAYER TIME
ARLINGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH 1007 W. Arlington Blvd.
Pastor, Rev Harold Greene :45a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00a.m. - Morning Worship 7:30p m.-BusinessMeeting ,
7 ;00 p m.-Mission Friends 7;00p.m Mon. -Sweetheart Banquet 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Church Council 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Service 8:30p.m.-AdultChoir
7:30 p.m. Fr. - Adult Bible Study Hosteil Ralph Baker, 1305 E Wright Rd.
Sat . - Youth Ski Trip
CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 9 Cherry Oaks Subdivision Greenville, N C,
Pastor: Rev, James Wright 7^30p.m. Fri. - General Conference 10:00a,m.Sun. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship, Sermon by the Pastor. Music will be rendered by the Senior Choir 6:00 p.m. - The Senior Choir will be sponsoring a concert. Music by Bro. Roger Ingram and Warrens Chapel Gospel Chorus
7:30 p.m. Tue, Male Chorus will have rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Christian Aide will meet 10:00 a,m.-2:00 p.m Wed - Clothes Closet will be open 756-7517 7:30pm. - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p m. Fri. Gospel Chorus will meet at the home of Mrs. Villa Jordon
ST, PAUL'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street The Rev. Lawrence P. Houston, Jr, Rector
The Rev. J. Dana Pecheles, Asst. Rector The Last Sunday after the Epiphany 7:30 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist 9:00 a.m. Morning Prayer 10:00 a.m. Christian Education and Young Peoples Confirmation Class 11:00a.m.-MorningPrayer
6.;00p m. - Jr. EYC, Parish Hall 6:00p m. - Sr. EYC, Hunter Bests 1713
Rosewood Drive 7:30 p m. - Inquirers Class, Friendly Hall
7:30 p.m. - Al-anon, Jr. High Classromm. Upstairs 7:30 pm. Mon. - Vestry Meeting, Friendly Hall 5:30 p.m. Tue. Holy Eucharist, Canterbury 5:30 p.m. - Shrove Tuesday, Pancake Supper, Parish Hall 7:00 a.m. Wed. - Ash Wednesday Service, Holy Eucharist & Imposition of : Ashes
10:00 a.m. - Ash Wednesday Service, Holy Eucharist & Imposition of Ashes 3:30 p m. - Holy Eucharist, Nursing Home
5:30 p.m. Ash Wednesday Service, Holy Eucharist & Imposition of Ashes 7::W p.m. - Choir Rehearsal. Chapel W:UO a.m. Thur. - Town & Country Senior Citizens Mtg., Parish Hall 7:30 p.m Thur. -TEEX, Friendly Hall 7:30 pm. - Visitation Group Mtg., Guild Room 4:00 p.m. Fri. - Childrens Chair Rehearsal, Chapel 5:00 p m. Jr. Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 9:00 a m Sat. - Yard Sale: Sponsored by St Lydias Chapter. Parish Hall 8:00 p.m - AA Open Group Discu.sslon, Friendly Hall
ST. TIMOTHYS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 107 Louis Street, Cherry Oaks The Rev. John Randolph Price, Hector 8:00 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist, Rite I. 9::S0a m, - Christian Education tO::iO a.m. - Holy. Eucharist Rite 11, with Holy Baptism 5:00 p.m - Episcopal Young Churchmen-St. Timothys 7:30 p.m Confirmation Class 7:00 a m Mon. Mens Fellow.ship Breakfast-Three Streets Restaurant 7:.30 p.m. - Vestry Meeting 7::iO p m. Wed. - Ash Wednesday Services St Timothys 7:30 p.m Thur Needlework Class St Timothys
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SR 1727 (Formerly the Eastern Pines Community BIdg.)
Minister Mr Melvin Rawls 10:00 a.m Sun. - Bible School 11:00 a.m. Worship Service and Congregation Meeting 6:00 p m. Fellowship Supper 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship 7:30pm Wed PrayerMeeting
SAINT PETERS CATHOLIC CHURCH -
2700 E. 4th Street Greenville, N.C.
757-3259
Rev W illiam E. Frost 5:30 pm Sat.-Vigil 8:00a.m.Sun. Liturgy 10;30a.m.-Liturgy
GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST
264 By Pass & Emerson Road Brian Whelchel. Community Evangelist Carl Etchison. Campus Evangelist This is for 2 weeks
8 IK) a m. Sun. - "Amazing Grace TV Bible School Channel 12
10 :110 a m. - Bible Study Classes for all ages
11 00 a m. - Morning Worship Mitch Mitchell. Guest Speaker from Chapel Hill. N.C
5;00pm. -Spiritual Maturity Class 6:00 p m. - Evening Worship, "Be Imitators of Christ iPhil 2:1-11)
7:00 p m. Wed. Bible Study Classes for all ages
ECU Bible Study Opportunities:
Tuesday 7:30 p.m Mens Bible .Study Belk Dorm 110
Thursday 7:30 p.m Ladies' Bible Study 212 Mendenhall
For Further Information and or Tran,spor-talion please call 752-5991 or 752-6376
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Fourth and Meade Streets 11:00 a m Sun - Sunday School 11:00 a m. - Sunday Service 7 45 p m. Wed. - Wed Evening .Meeting 2:00 to 4:00 p m. Reading Room 400S. Meade Street
PEOPI JlS BAPTIST TEMPLE
Rev J M. Bragg, Pastor 2001 W Greenville Blvd . Greenville. NX, 278:14
7 :10 a m Sun Laymens Prayer Breakfast (ThreeSteersi
10 ooa m Sunday School
11 OOa.m -MorningWorship 5: :W p m. - Choir Practice
6 : p.m. Focus on the Family Film The Lonely Housewife
7 15 a m .Mon -Fri. - Radio Program -"Together Again WBZQ 6 30 p.m Wed - CHURCH VISITATION
7:45 pm Wed - S.S Teachers A Wdrkers Meeting 8:00 p m. - Hour of Power
i
THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
1206 Mumford Road
James C Brown Pastor
10:00 a m. Sun - Sunday School
11 00a m -Morning WorshipService
6:30 p m.-Young People Service
7:00 p. m . - Evangelistic Service
7:30pm Wed -PrayerMeeting
UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST 100 Crestline Blvd.
756-6.545
Rick Townsend, Minister 10:00 a.m. Sun - Sunday School II :00a.m - Worship Service II :00 a m. - Junior Church o 5:30p.m.-Choir Rehearsal
7:00 p.m. Sun. - Evening Worship and Youth Meetings
OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 1100 Red Banks Road E. Gordon Conklin, Pastor NeilD. Booth. Jr . Min of Education Treva Fidler, Min of Music 9:45 a m. Sun - Library Open -10:00 am,
9:45a m. - Sunday School 10:45 a m. - Library Open 11:00 a.m.
11:00 a m - MORNING WORSHIP, Childrens Church 5.00 p m - Carol Choir Rehearsal.
B Y.F/Chapel Choir 6:00 p.m - GAs, 4th and6th Grades Choir
9:15 a.m. Wed. - Staff Devotional 8:00p.m. - Prayer Meeting 8:00 pm Thur - Chancel Choir Rehearsal
THE MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH (Southern Baptist)
1510 Greenville Boulevard E T Vinson, Senior Minister; Hal Melton, Minister with Education/Youth 7:45 a.m. Sun. - Mens Prayer Breakfast 9:45a.m Sun - Sunday School 11:00 a. m. - Morning Worship 6:30 p.m. - Couples Valentine Banquet
2:30 p.m. Mon. - Afternoon Bible Study Group with Mrs. L.L. Overton, 1805 Drewry Lane 7:00 p.m. - Associational Seminary Extension Course Arlington St.
7:.30 p.m. Evening Bible Study Group
7:00 p.m Tue. - Associational Seminary Extension Course-Memorial 7:30pm. -New Bible Study Group 5:45 p m. Wed. - Family Night Supper
6:30 p.m. - Devotion: Mission Friends. Cherub & Carol Choirs 7:00 p.m. - GAs, RAs, Ste.wardshlp Committee 8:00 p. m. Chancel Choir 6:00 p.m. Thur. - Leave for Doctrine Biblical Authority at Spilman Memorial, Kinston 6:30 p.m. Fri. Mens Fellowship Class .Supper
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS (MORMONS)
307 Martinsborough Road, Greenville, N.C Bishop Danny Brew 9:00a.m. Sun, - Sacrament Meeting 10:20 a.m. - Sunday SOhool & Primary
11:15 a m - Priesthood, Relief Society, Young Men & Young Women
SAINT JAMES CHURCH UNITED METHODIST 200 East Sixth at Forest Hill Circle Greenville, North Carolina 27834 (919 ) 752-6154 M. Dewey Tyson, Minister Ralph A. Brown, Associate Minister Stephen W Vaughn. DiJconal Minister
7:: p.m .Sun, - Methodist Mens Breakfast 9:40 a.m. - Church School 10:30a,m.-ChancelChoir 11:00 a.m. Worship of God Mr Tyson 2:00 p.m. - Evangelism Explosion 4:15p.m -Youth Handbells 5:00p.m.-Youth Choir 6:00 p.m - UMYF Supper A Meetings 7:00 p.m. - Finance Committee, Evangelism Work Area, Eduction Work Area
8:00 p. m. Administrative Board 9:00 a.m. -12 p m, Mon-Fri. - Weekday School 5:30p.m. Mon -Lay Rally Supper 6:30 p m, - Cub Pack 385 Blue A Gold Banquet 7:00p.m -I)ist Lay Rally 7:30pm.- Bible Study Groups:
*1 (Brown i with the Picketts 2 (Tyson) with Blanche Smith 4:30 p.m. Tue. - Chapel Choir, Merry Music Makers 7:30 p.m. - Bible Study Group *3 (Moore) with Brad Moore 7:15 pm Wed.-St James Ringers 7:30 p m. - Boy Scout Troop K340 8:00 p.m. -(hancel Choir 6:30 p m Thur. - Evangelism Expol-sion Banquet 3:00pm Fri.-CubDen((3 4:15 p.m.- Confirmation Class
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Corner 14th and Elm Streets Richard R. Gammon and Gerald M. Anders, Ministers; Brett Watson. Director o( Music. E Robert Irwin, Organi.st 9:00a.m Sun.-Worship 9:45 a m. - Church School 11 00 a m - Worship 6:(K)p.m. -YouthGroups 7:(X)p m. - Deacons 10:00 a m. Mon. - Circles 1,2,3 12:00p.m. -Circle9 2:(K)pm. Circle5 6::i0p m. - Brownies 7:00 p m. - Boy Scouts 7:(K)p m -GiriScouts 7:()0pm SierraClub 8:(K)p m. -Circle4 9:00a m Tue - Park-A Tot 10:00 a m -Circle 7 12:00p m. - Newslelter Deadline 1 :(K)p m - Presbytery-Farmville 6:30pm Cub Scouts 7:00 p.m. - Family Support Group 7::)p.m, -TRCivitan 8:00 pm Circles 7:00a m Wed.-Men of the Church 12:30pm. -Kate Lewis Luncheon 2:30 p. m - Address Angels 5:00p m - Choristers 5:00p.m. -RainbowChoir 7 :00 p.m. - Evangelism Explosion 7:(K)p m. - GiriScouts 7:30 p ni. - Outreach Committee 7:30 p m. - Gallery Choir 7:30 p.m. lenten Service 9:00 a ih Thur - Park A-Tot 11:00a m, -CPGroup 5:00p.m. - BulletineDeadline 7:30 p m. Overeaters Anonymous IO.(K)a m Fri -PandorasBox 10:00 a.m. Sat. - Pandoras Box
GREENVILLE SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 2611 East lOlh Street Roberf H Kerr 757.3082 or 758-5717
7:00 p.m Fri. - Campus Ministry at the Student Center 9 ;iOa m Sat. - The Church at study, topic: "TheGod Man"
10:45 a .m. - Concerns of the church 11:00 a m - Church at Worship, Elder Herman Davis, Carolina Conference of Seventh-day Avendtist Church Development 2:00 p.m. - Share Your Faith 3:30 p m. - (Question. Answers, and Spiritual Session, Herman Davis 6:00 pm, Progressive Party Church starting point 7:30 a m Sun - T V Ministry Cable
3
2:00 pm. - Sabbath School Workshop Wilson
. 9:00 a m Sun. - TV Ministry Cable 16
6:30p m Tue - Pathfinders 7:(K) p m Wed. - "Studies in Revelation" at Church 8:00 p.m - .School Committee Meeting
HOLY TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
14IK) Red Bank Road Greenville. N .C Rev Don Pauline 9:45 a in. Sun. Sunday School 11:00 a m Worship Service 6 .30 p.m. - United Methodist Youth Fellowship
6 00pm Tue -Troop 19Browiues
7 30 p m - Women s Bible Study 7 30pm Thur -ChoirPractice
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 520 East Greenville Boulevard 756-3138
Dr Will R Wallace. Minister Rev Joanne L, Ver Brug, Associate Minister 9:45 a m. - Church School U:00am.-Worsh4>
3:45 p m - CYF A Chi Rho Nursing Homes Visits 4:00p.m J. Y F.. Primary Choir 5:00 p m Snack Supper lor all youth groups 5:30 p m - Junior Choir. Youth Choir
to 45 a m Mon. - Circle* 1.4,5,7,8. 9,Clairch 7:30 p m - CWF Valentine's Gather ing/General Meeting, Church 10:30 a m Tue - Bible Study, Conference Room 6:3# pm Wed - CMF Meeting, Youth Lounge 7:30 p.m.' Chancel Chou Rehearsal. Choir Room
HOLY TEMPLE A F C.O.G (SalntsvUle)
Route 6, Greenville. N.C.
Elder I. J Robinson 7:30 pm Fri - Bible Studies (Teacher Missionary L. Oebrew)
10:00 am. Sun Sunday School (Supt DeaconLomell Whitaker)
11:30 am Sun. Deacon Day (Speaker Elder I.J. Robinson)
7:00 p m Sun - Guest Speaker Elder Abraham Smith, Portsmouth Va. 7:30 p m. Tue - Midweek Service
BROWNS CHAPEL APOSTOUC FAITH CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST
BelviorHwy
Route 4, Greenville. North Carolina Bishop R. S. Griswould Feb 12 Sal. - Prison Camp Ministry (Maury) (7:00P.M.)
Feb 13 2nd Sim - Missionary A Youth Day (Evang Mozell, Virginia) Feb 13 2nd Sun. - Prison Camp Ministry iMauryl (Miss. Mary Sheppard)
Feb 14 Mon. - Pastor Aide Meeting (8:00PM.)
Feb. 17 Thur. - Bible Studies (8:00 P M.) (SisterStaton,Teacher)
Feb. 18 Fri. - Prayer Meeting (8:00 PM)
Feb. 26 4th Sat. - Business Meeting (3:00p.m. ) (8:00P.M.)
Feb, 26 4th Sat. - 1 Hour Prayer (Bishop R.A Griswould)
Feb 27 4lh Sun - Pastoral Day 111:30A.M.)
Feb 27 4th Sun. - Pastoral Day (8:00 PM )
HOOKER MEMORIAL CHRISTAIN CHURCH
1111 Greenville Blvd.
Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Ralph G Messick, Minister Phone 756-2275
9:45 a.m. Sun. - Coffee Fellowship 10:00 a.m. - Church School 11 DO a.m. - Church at Worship 5:30 p.m. Senior Citizens Valentine Party 8:00 p.m. Tue. - Circle i5 Eva Jenkins
8:00p.m. Wed. -ChoirRehearsal
IMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 1101 S. Elm Street, Greenville, NC Hugh Burlington. Pastor Minister of Education A Youth Lynwood Walters 9:45 a.m. Sun. Sunday School 11:00 a m - Morning Worship, Communion
4:30 p.m. - Youth Choir, College Choir
5:30 p.m. - Youth Supper 6:00 p.m. Youth Church Training 7:00 p m. - Film 04 Focus on the Family Film Series 8:00 p m. Church Conference 9:45 a.m. Mon. Dr. Sallie Pence Bible Study
7:30 p.m. - College Bible Study at 212-A Lewis Street 12.00 p.m. Tue. - Golden Age Fellowship Luncheon 5:30 p.m BSU Supper A Fellowship 5:15 p.m. Grades 1-3,4-6 Childrens Choir, Library Open 5:45 p.m. Fellowship Supper Line Opens
6:45 p.m. Mission Friends, RAs, GA's, Acteens, Preschool Music 7:40 p.m. Adult Choir, Nominating Committee Meeting 7:00 p m Thur. BSU Pause Worship
10:00 a.m. Fri. - Prayer-BibleStudy
SELVIA CHAPEL FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 1701 South Green Street Rev Clifton Gardner. Pastor 3:00 p.m. Sat. - Young Adult Choir Rehearsal 9:45 a.m. Sun. ^Sunday School 11:00 a m - WorshipService 4:00 p.m. - The Gospel Chorus will meet with Ms Ernestine Willimas 7:30 p.m. We will render service at Moye's Chapel FWB Church 7:00 p.m Mon. Junior Choir Rehearsal 7:30 pm. Tue - Gospel Chorus Rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting
ST. JOHN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH
P. 0. Box 134 Falkland, NC 27827 Rev. Anton T. Wesley, Pastor 6:30 p.m. Fri. Mission Meeting 7:30p.m. - Conference 10:00 a m Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a m. - Morning Worship and Holy Communion 5:00 p.m. Pastor A Congr^ation will worship with Mt Calvery PW B Church of Greenville, N C.
7:00 p.m. Tue. - Prayer Meeting A Bible Study 7:00 p.m. Wed. Young Adult Choir Rehearsal
CHURCH OF GOD Corner of Spruce and Skinner Streets, Greenville, NC Rev Paul Lanier, Jr Pastor 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Worship Service 7:00pm. Evangelistic Service 7:00 p.m Tue. - Worship Service-University Nursing Home 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Family Training Hour
7:0 p m. Thur. Worship Service-Greenville Villa Nursing Home Dial-A-Prayer 752-1362
GUIDING UGHT TEMPLE OF FAITH
Friday Night (Quarterly Conference with members being present Saturday Night Holy Communion 11:00 a m. Sun. - Eldress Rhindehart and Guiding Light Temple of Faith in Charge Dinner will be served at 2:00 p.m.
3:00 p m. Elder Robert Phillips and Crisp Chapel
UNITARIAN-UNIVERSALIST
FELLOWSHIP
Planters Banker, 3rd A Washington
St
Long Felker, President, 752-0787 10:30 a m Sun. Social Time 11:00 a m. Informal discussion " With th ePeace Corpos in Peru, led by Charlotte Purrington 12:00p m. - Covered-dishLunch
PHILIPPI CHURCH OF CHRIST
1610 Farmville Boulevard Rev Randy Royal
10 OOa m .Sal Garden Club Meet 2:00 p m - Senior (Tir Meet 9:45a in Sun. - Sunday School
11:00 a m - Morning Worship l:00p n, Wed.-JoyHour 8:00pm Bible Study
FIRST FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 2600 South Charles Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Harry Grubbs Pastor 9:45a.m. Sup, - Sunday School 11:00a m.-MorningWorship 7:00 p.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Ladies Auxiliary A Laymen's l^eaM ' 8:!5pm-Choir Rehearsal
CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Statonburg at Allen Chaple Road Reverend Arlee Griffin, Jr . Pastor 2:00 p m Sat - Rehearsal for Youth Choir
9:15 a.m. Sun. Church School (Klndergarten-12th grade)
9:30a.m. New members will meet
11 00 a m - Divine Worship Service, Youth in Charge
6 :10 p m - Baptist Training Session (BTl"(
3::w p m Tue. University Nursing Home, Praise Service 7:30 p.m - Pastor meets with Deacons and Trustees
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, February li, iW-n
Flak Flies On Church Councils
By GEORGE W. CORNELL APR^igk Writer The flak still is flying thickly, and from many quarters, about recent criticisms of interdenominational church councils by articles in the Readers Digest and on the CBS show 60 Minutes.
The magazine and TV show examined the National Council of Churches, a cooperative organization of most major Protestant and Orthodox denominations, and the World Council of Churches, a counterpart on the intemational level.
The articles and the TV show singled out a^ts of each organization that portrayed them as support
ing leftist or pro-Marxist id)logues. Thats what ignited the denials and counterclaims.
Strong protests have come from a succession of church leaders, in one case by top officials of 23 Protestant denominations, calling the charges slanted, sensationalized and misleading.
Reaction from the pews also has been hot and heavy. Its the biggest mail campaign Ive ever seen, says Don Hewitt, executive producer of 60 Minutes. He says some of the letters, accusing the program of McCarthyism and a poisoned message, were quoted on a subsequent 60 Minutes.
Area Church News
Hollywood Youth
To Hove Outing
Youth of Hollywood Presbyterian Church will have an outing at the church Sunday afternoon.
The church will have its school at 10 a.m. Sunday and worship service at 11 a.m., followed by the play ball with youth session at a time to be announced.
Other activities next week will include a meeting of circles Monday at 7:30 p.m.; Rowley Circle, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday; McGowan Circle at 10 a.m. Tuesday; Bible study at 7 p.m. Wednesday and choir practice at 8 p.m. Wednesday.
Clothes Closet
Offering Help
The clothes closet for the needy of Cedar Grove Missionary Baptist Church will give away clothes Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The clothing is avialable to anyone in need. Call 756-7517.
GUEST SPEAKER Elder Abraham Smith of Portsmouth, Va., will be the guest speaker Sunday at Holy Temple Church on Route 6, Greenville. The service will begin at 7 p.m.
SERVICE SCHEDULED Elder Willie L. Barnes will conduct services at the Church of God in Christ Jesus at 11:30 a.m. Sunday. The church is located at 1515 S. Pitt St. in Greenville.
JOY NIGHT
The Pastors Aide Club of Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Church will sponsor a joy night service Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The speaker will be 8-year-old Patricia Phillips from St. Matthews Church.
REVIVAL PLANNED The Church of God in Jesus Christ, 1515 S, Pitt St., will hold a revival March 6-11 at 7:30 p.m. nightly. The speaker will be Charles Flowers of New Haven, Conn.
7:30 pm Wed Kebeai^l for Senior Choir 7:30 p m Thur Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 7:30 pm Fri. Membership business meeting 4:00 p m Sat. Deaconess Bard will meet
10:00 a m 12:00 p.m. - Special Interest and Tutorial Sessions
GREENVILLE BIBLE CHURCH
Rotary Club Bldg.
D.B.Schulmeier (758-1894)
10:00-11 ."Wa rn Sun. - Worship 6:00-7:00pm - Worship 7:30-8:30 pm Wed 1st and 3rd Wed Prayer 5 .30-7 30 p m - 2nd and 4th Wed Growth Group 9:30-11:00 a m. Thur. - Womens Bible Study
JARVIS MEMORIAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 510 South Washington Street Greenville. North Carolina 27834 Mnisters Jim Bailey. Susan Pate. Martin Armstrong. Adian Brown Minister of Music: Jerry JoUey ' Organist : Mark Gansor
8:45am.Sun Morning Worship 9:15 a m - Church Library Open 9:40 a m. - Church School-N ursery 11:00 a m. - Morning Worship 12:15 pm Holy Communion-Chapel
12:00 p.m. New Members Luncheon
3:30 pm. - Conlirmation Class-CR 5:00pm. - Youth Choir 6:00p m -UMYFSupper 6:30p.m-UMYF Programs 6:45p.m -Children'sHandbeUs 7:30 p.m. Young Adults-Parlor II :00 a.m. Mon. Adult Handbells 5:30 p.m. - Lay Rally Dinner 7:00 p.m. - Lay Rally Program 5;00 p m Tue - UMYF Pancake Supper
10:00 a m - 12:00 p m Wed -Clothesline 10 30 a.m. - Prayer GroupX:R 4:30 p m. - Pre-School Music Act Younger Children's Choir, Older Children's Choir 7:00 p.m.-Chancel Choir 10:00a.m 'Thur - Adult Bible Study 7:30 p.m - Lenten Bible Study. Teacher Training CR 8:00 p m Martin Armstrong s Bible Study
6:30 am Fri - Men's Prayer Breakfast at Tom s Restaurant 10:00 a.m. -12:00 p.m. Sat -Clothesline
Youth Day
Eldress Shirley Braxton will preach during Youth Day services to be held Sunday at 11 a.m. by St. Luke Free Will Baptist Church at St. Matthew FWB Church. Music will be rendered by the Junior Choir of St. Luke.
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Eldress Phillis Thomas wili preach during building fund service to be held at St. Matthew.
Services Planned
The Morning Glory Apostolic Faith Holiness Church at 1012 W. 5th St., has scheduled several services during the coming week. Worship services will be held at noon and 7:30 p.m. Sunday, and at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Church school will be held at 10 a.m. Sunday.
GOSPEL PROGRAM Glory Hope Church near Bethel will" present a gospel program Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The Edward Singers, the Junior Consolator and the Golden Jubilees, all of Greenville, will perform.
ARTHUR CONCERT Arthur Chapel Free Will Baptist Church at Bell Arthur will have a concert Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The Golden Jubilees of Greenville will perform and the Rev. Billy Anderson of Greenville is the speaker.
SATURDAY CONCERT The Brothers of Faith of Saint Augustine College in Raleigh will be in concert Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at Christs Temple Church, located on the Bethel Highway. The Junoir Choir of Morning Star Holiness Church will also perform.
ANNIVERSARY The Junior Choir of Holly Hill Free Will Baptist Church will celebrate its 12th an-nirversary Sunday. Registration will b^gin at 2:30 p.m., followed by a program at 3 p.m.
CONCERTSATURDAY Harold Allen of Pilgrim Baptist Church of Brooklyn. N.Y., will be in concert Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church. The service isopen to the public.
SUNDAY WORSHIP The Rev. Roy Ennis Jr., pastor, will speak Sunday at 11 a.m. at Miracle Temple Full Gospel Holiness Church
INSTALLATION
The Lillies of Calvary of Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church will have an installation service Sunday at 5 p.m. The Rev. Anton Wesley of St. John Church in Falkland will be the guest speaker. His choir and congregation will also be present.
GUEST SPEAKER Father Jerry Sherba, pastor of St. Gabriels Church, will be the guest speaker at White Oak Missionary Baptist Church in Grimesland Sunday at 11 a.m. for the ninth annual interracial service.
SERVICES The Anointed Ones evangelistic team will present the service tonight at 7:30 at Holy Mission Holy Church. The Greene Singers and a guest speaker will be in charge of the 11:30 a.m. service Sunday and a junior missionary service will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Others defending the "60 Minutes se^ent - The Go^l Accoring to Whom? - "are beginning to come in, Hewitt says. More than two weeks after the showing of that segment, Hewitt says, I think were going to put this thing to bed now.
Morley Safer, the moderator and on-camera interviewer for the segment, says he standson what it said. Leaders of five denominations demanded air time from CBS under the Federal Communications Commission fairness doctrine to reply to the shows content. They charged errors and exaggerations have raised doubts among members that could do irreparable damage to the churches.
The National Council has issued two lengthy rebuttals while the writer of Do You Know Where Your Church Offerings Go in the January 1983 edition of Readers Digest, Rael Jean Isaac, has issued her own seven-page rebuttal tc flie rebuttals.
Resolutions By Record Number
NEW YORK (AP) - A record number of religious organizations - 115 of them - have filed shareholder resolutions asking 19 major U.S. corporations to reconsider their activities related to nuclear and chemical weapons.
The Roman CAtholic and Protestant agencies, acting through the Inferfaith.Center on Corporate Responsibility of the National Council of Churches, hold more than 850,000 shares worth about $42.2 million in the companies.
This is the largest number of church-related agencies ever to sponsor resolutions on any one issue, says Valerie Heinonen, director of the centerls militarism program. She attibuted the broad concern to the moral imperative of halting the arms race.
That article and another that appeared in August 1982. Karl Marx or Jesus Christ? by Joseph Harris, were meticulously researched and we stand by everything in them, says Charles Pintchman of the Digest, but he declined comment on specific objections raised.
Some of the allegations raised by the magazine articles and the TV show are old, while others are about relatively recent but minor activities.
Much of the broadcast and magazine criticism focused on the World Councils Fund to Combat Racism, which has made grants specified for humanitarian purposes to black groups that were formerly guerrilla organizations, such as those whose leaders now are the elected administration of Zimbabwe (formerly Rhodesia).
However, the World Council points out that denominational allocations caniF' be used by that fund whiCi) IS made up only of gifts specifically designated for it, largely by West European governments.
Meanwhile, in Epworth-by-the-Sea. Ga., 133 district superintendents of Southeastern jurisdiction of the United Methodist Church called on its bishops to appoint a blue-ribbon panel to examine the allegations.
The superintendents said in their resolution that they affirm the worldwide ministry and work of the national and world church councils, but need clarification to cope with the resentment stirred among members.
The religious press was
loaded with the controversy - articles, letters and editorials, mostly chiding CBS and the Digest for their handling of the material Headquarters of some denominations, including the Episcopal (hiurch and the United 'Methodist Church, turned out special reports for inquiring members about their role in the councils and challenging attacks on them Also getting prominently into the act was a recently formed group called the Institute for Religion and Democracy, run by a board of about 30, which accuses the mainline churches of leftist. pro-Marxist tendencies. Its charges were featured both by the TV show and the magazine articles.
The National Council of Churches and the World Council of Churches carry on a host of projects and programs, ranging from joint missionary work and food for the hungry to producing Christian literature and Bibles.
Policies and programs of the councils are determined by boards representing member denominations and elected by those denominations. including 32 in this country with about 40 million members and 301 in the World Council with 400 million members.
An average of about 80 percent of their contributions stay in local congregational budgets. The rest of the money goes mostly to regional and national denominational operations, From U.S. churches, only two-tenths of 1 percent goes to the National Council, it reports, and a tinier fraction to the World Council.
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SUNDAY SCHOOL......9.45 A M
Will Microfilm Luther's Books
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A project to microfilm all known books and papers "associated with 16th century 'Protestant reformer Martin Luther has been launched in connection with observance this year of th' 500th anniversary of his birth.
The project is being underwritten by Lutheran Brotherhood, a fraternal insurance society, which says a facility will be established for reearch in the microfilmed records. They are to cover all known papers concerning Luther himself, his colleagues, the Protestant Reformation and the counterreformation by the Roman Catholic Church.
WORSHIP.............11,00AM
\!Bafiit Ckaxck 1510 Greenville Blvd S.E. f
I
GREENVILLE'S FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
I
ORGANIZED 1827
Greenvilie Church Of The Nazarene
Presently Meeting In The First Federal Building, Community Room, Greenville Boulevard.
Cliff Jones, Pastor
Sunday School ...................9:45 A.M.
MorningWorship.....................11:00 A.M.
Sunday Evening Service................6:00 P.M.
SomctliTMt Th Church la Accused 01 Being More Concerned About Program Than Purpose, Prestige Than Principle, Popularity Than Power. When Priorities Become Mora Selfish Than Spiritual, Often All That Is Seen Are Petty Programs And Apathetic Attitudes. No Denomination Or Congregation Is Long Immune From This Danger Without A Frequent Visitation Of Qod Upon Human Elforts. WHh Qods Hetp, Your Local Church Of The Nazarene Plans To Prvida A Place Of Worship And Fellowship Thst Is Sensitiva To Human Need.
355-6329 or 756-5872
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Valentine's Sale
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LOCATED BESIDE SUNSHINE OABDEN CENTER
OPEN JT til 6 IDAVSA V/EEK
PHONE 756-0879
12-The DaUy Reflector, Greivle, N.C.-Friday, February 11,1983
Stock And Market Reports
Obituary Column
Hogs
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 50 cents to $1 higher, Kinston 58.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 58.25, Wilson 58.50, Salisbury 58.00, Rowland
58.00, Spivey's Corner 58.00. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 56.00, Fayetteville
57.00, Whitevill.e 54.00, Wallace 57.00, Spiveys Corner 58.00, Rowland 57.00, Durham unreported.
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 2j to 3 pound birds. 39 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed, with a preliminary weighted average of 46.42 cents f o b * dock or equivalent. The market is steady with some plant operations in the northwestern area of the state curtailed due to adverse weather. The live supply is light to moderate for a good demand. Weights mostly desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina 'Friday was 1,346,000, compared to 1,891,000 last Friday,
Hens
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was steady ' with a firm undertone. Supplies adequate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over seven pounds at farm for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday slaughter was 16 cents.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market pushed ahead in active trading today.
The Dow Jones industrial average of 30 blue chips climbed 5.44 to 1,093.19 by noontime.
Gainers outnumbered losers by about 9 to 5 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Interest rates tumbled in the credit markets Thursday, and continued their decline in early activity today.
The government reported this morning that the producer price index of finished goods fell 1 percent last month. It was the largest decline for that measure of inflationary pressures since its introduction in 1947 GTE Corp. led the active list, up \ at 40 4. A 413,600-share block traded at 40-S,. \
The NYSEs composite index, which closed Thursday at a record high, added .40 to 85.50. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 2.19 at 378.25.
Volume on the Big Board totaled 46.61 million shares at noontime, against 37.88 million at thee same point Thursday.
Pollowmg are selected 11 a m stock market quotations
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FRIDAY
7:30pm Red Men meet
SATURDAY )
1:30 pm - Duplicate bridge meets at Planters Bank 8:00 p m. AA open discussion group meets at St Paul's Episcopal Church
MASONICNOTICE Mount Hermon Masonic Lodge No. 35 will have a communication Monday at 7:30 p.m. All Master Masons are invited.
Benjamin Braswell, Worshipful Master
S.E. Hemby, Secretary
SUNDAY SERVICE Missionary Ethel Bryant will conduct services at Clemons Grove church at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Idella Scott and Daniel R Ward are sponsors of the service.
Corbett Mr. William Ernest Corbett, 76 a resident of Forest Village Apartments, died Friday morning in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The funeral service will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chape) by the Rev, C.T. Wells and the Rev. Walter Kirkihan. Burial will follow in Crestlawn Memorial Gardens.
Mr. Corbett was a native of Pitt County and a member of Faith Baptist Church. He was a retired farmer.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mary Jones Corbett; three sons, Adam Corbett of Farmville, Bobby C. Corbett of Greenville and Ernest Corbett Jr.; one brother, Benjamin Curtis Owens of Ethrick, Va.; one sister, Mrs. Nancy Smith of Petersburg, Va.; five grandchildren and one greatgrandchild The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Saturday night.
Eatman Mrs. Ethel Carney Eatman, 85, died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 4 p.m. at St. Mary Missionary Baptist Church, Route 11, Greenville, by the Rev. F.R. Peterson. Burial will follow in Brown Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Eatman attended the county schools here and was a member of St. Mary MB Church.
Surviving are a sistef, Mrs. Willie B. Wilson of the home and two brothers, Oscar Carney Jr. of the home and John Carney of Greenville.
The family will receive friends Saturday from 9-10 p.m. at Hardees Funeral Chapel and other timnes at the home, 302 Hudson St. The body will be placed in the church one hour prior to the funeral service.
Guion
Mr. William Isaac Guion of the Calico community on Route 1, Grimesland, died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. His funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 3 p.m. at Joseph Branch Free Will Baptist Church on Route 1. Van-ceboro, by Elder J.W Randolph. Interment will be in the Joseph Branch Cemetery.
Mr. Guion was a member of Joseph Branch Church.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Janie Pollard Guion of the home; three sons, Charles Guion, Johnny Guion and William A. Guion, all of the home; a stepson, Sp4 Jasper J. Whithurst III of Fort Benning, Ga.; three stepdaughters, Mrs. Mattie Green of the home and Mrs. Elizabeth Rogers and Mrs. Gloria Williams, both of Washington, DC.; five sisters. Mrs. Louise Whitehurst . of Route 2, Ayden. Mrs. Irene Edwards and Miss Eva Guion, both of Route 3, Greenville, Mrs. Virginia Buck of Route 1, Vanceboro, and Mrs. Gladys Rouse of Greenville, and seven grandchildren.
The body will be at the Norcott Memorial Chapel in Ayden from 6 p.m. Friday until it is carried to the church one hour before the funeral. Family visitation at the chapel will be held 8-9 p.m. tonight.
Little
Funeral services for Mr. Ezekiel Little, who died Tuesday, will be conducted Saturday at 1 p.m. at Triumph Missionary Baptist Church by Dr. C.B. Gray. Burial will be in the Tet-terton Cemetery. Rout 3, Washington.
Mr. Little was a ntive of Pitt Couhty and spent most
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DR. ROBERT L. CAPPS
DR.QUALLIOTINE DR.Q
DR. GARY E MICHELS
Practice of Family Dentistry
1012CharlM Blvd. Located Behind Crowt Nct Phone 752-1337
8A.M.-9P.M. Mon.-Thur. 8A.M.-5PM.Frlday 8 A.M. l 1:30 A.M. Saturday
All Aspects Of Dentistry Provided Children's Dentistry Surgical Removal Of Wisdom Teeth Modern Pain Control Including Nitrous Oxide Sedation Laughing Gas Root Canals
of his life in the Simpson community. He was a member of Triumph Missionary Baptist Church.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Sophie Braxton of Baltimore; one foster daughter, Mrs., Josephine Gatlin of Greenville; seven sisters, Mrs. Rosa Tetterton of Washington, Mrs, Luvenia Harris and Mrs. Sudie Atkins, both of Greenville, Mrs. Lucie Little and Mrs. Flossie Harris, both of Baltimore, Mrs. Ada Price of Philadelphia and Mrs. Roena Johnson of Grimesland; two brothers, William L. Little of Greenville and Doctor Little of Baltimore; nine grandchildren; 13 greatgrandchildren and two foster grandchildren.
Family visitaton will be today at the church from 8-9 p.m.
Moore
Mr. Walter David Moore, 65. died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Jack Weathersby, in Winterville early Friday morning. Funeral services will be conducted in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel Monday at 2 p.m. by the Rev. Ed C. Taylor. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery, Tarboro.
Mr. Moore, a native of Greene County, had spent rnost of his life in the Farmville community and for the past 10 years had been a resident of Tarboro. He was a member of the Kings Crossroads Free Will Baptist Church and the Walstonburg Red Men Tribe.
Surviving are a son, Walter David Moore Jr. of Greenville; three daughters, Mrs. Dick Baker of Goldsboro, Ms. Sadie Daniels of Greenville and Mrs. Jack Weathersby of Winterville; a brother, Alfred H, Moore of Chicago; three sisters, Mrs. Heber Strickland of Little Orleans, Md., Mrs. Willie Campbell of Hampton, Va., and Mrs. Howard Creech of Greenville; seven grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Sunday and at other times will be at the home of Doris and Jack Weathersby, 832 E. Main St., Winterville.
Spei^t Funeral services for Mrs. Annie T, Speight of Greenville will be conducted Sunday at 3:30 p.m. at Flanagan Funeral Chapel by the Rev. David Hammond. Burial will be in the Brown Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Spei^it was a native of Muscogee County, Ga., but had made her home in Pitt County in the Bethel and Greenville communities. She was a member of Reddick Chapel Missionary Baptist Church.
Surviving are her husband, Samuel Speight of Philadelphia; two sons, Samuel Speight Jr. of Greenville and Jimmie Lee Speight of Ayden; four brothers, Dock Thomas of Bethel, Pat Thomas of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Charlie Thomas and Jessie Thomas, both of Norfolk, and one grandson.
The family will receive friends Saturday from 7-8 p.m. at Flanagan Funeral Chapel and at other times will be at the home of Samuel Speight Jr., 1221-A Battle St.
Spencer BROOKLYN, N.Y. -Funeral services for Mr. Willie Payton Spencer will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at Conetoe Missionary Baptist Chruch in Conetoe by the Rev. T.R. Vines. Burial will be in the Conetoe Cemetery.
He is survived by two daughters. Miss Varlie Spencer and Miss Thelma Spencer, both of New York; one son, Willie Spencer Jr. of Brooklyn, N.Y.; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Sam Spencer of Conetoe; two brothers, Walter Clayton Spencer of Brooklyn, N.Y., and John S. Spencer Jr. of Conetoe; four sisters, Mrs. Margaret Ward and Mrs. Olivia Scott, both of New York, Miss Odell Spencer of Greenville and Mrs. Cor-eatha Bellamy of Tarboro.
The body will be at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary after 5 p.m. today and until one hour prior to the funeral. Family visitation will be held tonight from 7 to 8 p.m. at the chapel.
Ward
Mr. John Ashley Ward, 58, died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 1 p.m. at Whichard Holy Church of Power, Stokes, by Bishop Mott Ebron. Burial jvill follow in Brown Hill Cemetrey.
Mr. Ward attended the county schools here. He was a member of Whichard Holy Church and the Beautiful Valley Lodge No. 435.
Surviving are his wife, Arcennie Ward of the home; three sons, James Ward of Greenville, Herman Ray Ward of Philadelphia and James Ray Howard of Plainfield, N.J.; six daughters, Ms. Glenette Ward of the home, Mrs. Geraldine Langley and Mrs. Arcennie Hopkins, both of Greenville, and Mrs. Carrie Dean Ward, Mrs. Winnie Jones and Mrs. Irene Langley, all of
Philadelphia; five brothers, James Ward Jr. of Simpson, Joe Dallas Ward and George Henry Ward, both of
Greenville, Jessie James Ward of Halifax and Herman Ward of New York; three sisters, Mrs. Winnie V.
Wilkins, Mrs. Dicie Chapman and Mrs. Letha Lois Scott, all of New York; 18 grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren.
The family will receive friends Saturday from 7-8
p.m. at Hardees Funeral Chapel and other times at the home. Route 10, Greenville.
Weaver
MACCLESFIELD - Mrs. Rosa Pitt Weaver, 82, died Thursday in Edgecombe General Hospital in Tarboro. She was the mother of Charlie Mack Weaver of Greenville and Willie Weaver of Macclesfield. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hemby Funeral Home, Fountain.
Williams
Funeral services for Mrs. Callie Mae Doward Williams of Bethel will be conducted Sunday at 3:45 p.m. in Bethel Chapel Free Will Baptist Church by the Rev. Ed Bryant. Burial will be in the Pine Lawn Cemetery, Bethel.
Mrs. Williams was a Pitt County native who spent most of her life in the Bethel community. She
member of Bethel Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.
Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Bessie Doward of Bethel; two sons, Willie James and Jesse Ray Williams, both of Brooklyn, N.Y.; a sister, Mrs. Lula Mae Lewis of Greenville; four brothers. Johnny Doward and Frank Moore, both of New Haven, Conn., Robert Doward of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Nathaniel Doward of Rocky Mount, and 10 grandchildren.
The body will be taken from Flanagan Funeral Home to the church Saturday from 7 to 8 p.m.
WUliams AYDEN - Funeral services for Mrs. Lula Fields Williams will be conducted Sunday at 1:30 p.m. in Zion Chapel Free Will Baptist Church by Bishop W L. Jones. Burial will be in the Ayden Cemetery.
Mrs. Williams died Wednesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was a member of Zion Chapel Church. She was a native of Greene County but had spent most of her life in Ayden.
Surviving are her husband, Jasper Williams of the home; a son, Clyde Harper of Long Branch, N.J.; a sister, Mrs. Mattie Graham of Newark, N.J.; a brother, Raymond Fields; four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
The body will be taken Saturday from Flanagan Funeral Home to the church, where the family will receive friends Saturday from 8 to 9 p.m. At other times they will be at the home, 723 Venters St., Ayden.
Wynne
Amy Nicole Wynne, 18-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William M. Wynne
of the Leggetts Crossroads community, died early Thursday morning. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday in Rehoboth Pentecostal Holiness Church by the Rev. T.H. Godwin and the Rev. Mickey Baysden. Burial will be in the Cratt Family Cemetery.
Surviving are the parents; a brother, Billy Wynne Jr. of the home; paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Willie Mack Wynne of Leggetts Crossroads; maternal grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. W.J, Wynne of
Robersonvtlle, and great-grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Geor Wynne of Everetts.
Arc you oxporlonclng.
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FAMILY (MIRPRACTIC HEALTH A ACCIDENT SERVICES .
756-8160
MHI Siroot WlniarvHIa, N.C
Attention Greenville Citizens
PUBLIC NOTICE
CountyolPMl
CyofOr*wwl
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF OREENVILLf
A public haarlng will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adiuslments upon a request for a special use permit by Mr. Lacy Streeter and Mr. Bruce A Rogers whereby the petitioner desires to obtsin a special use permit, under the provisions of Section 32-56 (1) (j) of the City Code, In order lo operate a game room/billlsrd parlor at 800 Pamlico Avenue. This property Is zoned lor "Downtown Commercial Fringe" (CDF) usage The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, February 24,1983. in tha City Council Chambers ol the Municipal Building
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board ol Adiuslments upon a request lor s variance by Wachovia Bank and Trust Company NA whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a variance Irom Sections 32-22 (a) and 32-80 of the City Code In order to place an addition on the structure located at t012 North Greene Street This property is zoned lor "Highway commercial'' (CH) usage.
The time. date, and place ol the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, February 24,1963, In the City Council Chambers ol the Municipal Building
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Greenville Investors No, 1 whereby the petitioner desires to obUIn a special use permit under the provisions ol Section 32-56 (f) ol the City Code In order to construct a dormitory on the property fronting on Reade Circle behind and adjacent to the Marathon Restaurant and Margaux This property Is zoned for "Downtown Commercial Fringe (CDF) usage.
The time, date, and place ol the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, February 24,1983, In the OtV Council Chambers ol the Municipal Building.
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board ol Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Mr. William H. Clark whereby the petitioner desires lo obtain a special use permit, under the provisions ol Section 32-42.3 (h) of the City Ckxle, In order to construct multKamlly dwellings at a LUI rating of 50 on the southwest corner ol East Third Street and Woodlawn Avenue. This property Is zoned for "R-6 usage.
The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, February 24,1983, In the Cfty Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.
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Sports the daily reflectorClassified
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 1 1, 1983 'Heels Pull Off Miracle Rally, 64-63
On The Move
Virginias Othell Wilson (11) tries to drive on North Carolinas Jim Braddock (24) during first half action in Thursday nights ACC game
being played at Carmichael Auditorium in Chapel Hill. Carolina rallied for a 63-62 victory in the game. (AP Laserphoto)
By The Associated Press With nine minutes left and his team trailing third-ranked Virginia 56-40, North Carolina Coach Dean Smith figured there was little need for him to start diagramming plays for his top-ranked Tar Heels.
Instead, he relied on his teams determination and some more heroics from sophomore Michael Jordan to pull out a 64-63 come-from-behind victory over the Cavaliers.
Jordan, whose late jumper against Georgetown led the Tar Heels to the national championship last season, tapped in a Jim Braddock miss with 1:07 left. He then converted a steal into a dunk with 52 seconds left to lead North Carolina to its 18th straight victory, an 8-0 Atlantic Coast Conference mark and a 21-3 record overall.
This wasnt a game of strategy, Smith said. The players just decided to go out and win it.
Craig Robinson, whose 16 points led the Cavaliers, sparked a 17-0 spree that lifted Virginia from a 28-25 deficit late in the first half to a 42-28 lead with 17 minutes left. His jumper at the 9:45 mark opened the 16-point gap that looked insurmountable.
At the nine-minute mark, we said forget any special defense, said Smith. Treat Sampson like he was anybody else and lets go at them. Our defense was aggressive.
Settle down, keep your poise, dont let it be a runaway game,*"Jordan said were his thoughts as the Tar Heels stared at the deficit.
Virginia opted for a semi
delay offense, but put the ball into a deep freeze which saw them score nine points in the last 10 minutes.
We got too laid back. We didnt attack them, said 7-foot-4 center Ralph Sampson, who added 15 points. We didnt take the ball at them. We had a few mistakes and they eased back into the game.
A 9-2 North Carolina spurt cut the Virginia lead to 58-51 with6:25 left. Braddock had five of those points on a layup and a threeiwint field goal. After falling back by 63-53 on Jim Millers three-point play. North Carolina ran off seven unanswered points and trailed only 63-60 with 2:54 left.
Sampson missed the front end of a boniis with 1:20 left and Sam Perkins grabbed the rebound for the Tar Heels. After Braddock missed a three-point attempt, Jordan sneaked inside for the tap with 1:07 left.
Rick Carlisle then started up the floor, only to have Jordan pick his pocket for the game-winning basket. Once again, the Wilmington, N.C., native was the herd.
Its just opportunity, Jordan said. 1 dont know why it keeps happening to me, but I guess thats the way things go.
Braddock finished with 14 points, while Matt Doherty had 11 and Perkins added 10.
Actually, Thursday nights game was one that the Tar Heels had every right to lose. They trailed the Cavaliers by as many as 16 points, 56-40, late in the second half and Coach Dean Smith had very few positive thoughts at that
point.
1 thought it was a real possibility we might lose tonight, Smith said. We were very fortunate to win.
Sampson said earlier that hed intended to come away from Chapel Hill a victor. Instead, the 7-foot-4 senior lost for the third time in Chapel Hill and for the sixth time in 10 games against North Carolina.
Its another loss in our loss column. Sampson said. It hurts, but we're going back, look at the game and see what we did wrong. Hopefully, well get them again in Atlanta (at the ACC tournament).
In other games involving the nation's ranked teams. No. 2 Nevada-Las Vegas whipped the University of Pacific 79-62; No. 4 Indiana edged No. 19 Minnesota 63-59; No. 5 UCLA turned back Oregon 67-56; Creighton upset No. 17 Illinois State 53^1 and 20th-ranked Iowa whipped No. 18 Purdue 5546.
Top Ten
Sidney Green scored 34
points and powered a second-half surge that paced Nevada-Las Vegas over the University of Pacific. It was the Rebels 21st consecutive victory of an unbeaten season.
Although the Rebels led 42-39 at the half. UNLV Coach Jerry Tarkanian said he was embarrassed the lead was so narrow because Pacific played shorthanded with only eight players due to academic problems.
Obviously we played a lot better in the second half, but thats because we went to Sid a lot, he said.
Pacific Coach Tom ONeill: We were able to generate good shots in both halves, but they didnt go down in the second half, and I think a lot of that was caused by fatigue.
Indianas Ted Kitchel scored 26 points, including two crucial free throws in the final minute, to lead the Hoosiers over Minnesota. The victory gave Indiana, 8-2 in the Big Ten and 18-2 overall, a two-game lead in conference play. Minnesota Coach Jim Dutcher
thought that might be important.
With their (Indianas) schedule, if they don't sustain an injury, theyll be tough to catch. Not impossible, but real tough. Dutcher said Michael Holton and Darren Daye triggered a second-half raliy that propelled UCLA over Oregon The Bruins trailed 41-34 with 14:09 left But they outscored the Ducks 20-4 over the next 10'? minutes to take command
Second Ten Benoit Benjamin and Gregory Brandon had 14 points each to lead Oeighton over Illinois State.
im very proud of the great play of (Mark) Jones and (Vernon) Moore, Creighton Coach Willis Reed said of his guards. We werent making our outside shots so they played smart ball and helped us get the ball inside. I felt we had to win on the inside and we beat them there.
Greg Stokes had 18 points and 10 rebounds to lead Iowa over Purdue.
(Please Turn ToPa^ 14)
Pirates Seek Revenge Against Baptist Five
Lady Pirate Classic Set To Open
East Carolina University hosts an outstanding field of womens teams in the Second Annual Converse-Lady Pirate Classic this Saturday and Sunday, with Cheyney State, ranked fifth in the country in the latest poll, reigning as the favorite.
Play will get underway on Saturday at 6 p.m. in Minges Coliseum, with Cheyney State meeting Clemson. East Carolina faces Detroit in the second game, set for 8 p.m.
Sunday, the consolations will be held at 6 p.m., with the championship game at 8 p.m.
Cheyney State brings an 18-1 record into the game, losing only to Louisiana Tech, currently ranked number one in the nation.
Clemson, foe for the Lady Wolves in the opener, were
8-12 following an Atlantic Coast Conference meeting with N.C. State on Wednesday. They were to play St. Josephs last night.
Detroit, which meets the Lady Pirates, is 6-14, while ECU is currently 9-9.
East Carolina beat Western Kentucky, 108-54, in the finals of the tournament last year, for the inaugural title. Michigan State downed Norfolk State for the consolation crown.
This years field is great for East Carolina, ECU Coach Cathy Andruzzi said. We are honored to be associated with Converse and to have the opportunity to hold (the tournament)i.Converse is a well-known supporter of womks athletics.
Cheyney State is led by
Sports Calendar
Editors Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays 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.)
Farmvie Central at Ayden-Grifton (6:.30pm.)
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
Swimming Atlantic Seaboard Meet at East
Atlantic Seaboard Meet at East Carolina
WresUing Sectionals at Conley
Saturdays Sports WresUing
Sectionals at Conley
1
Carolina
Basketball East Carolina at Baptist (7:30 p.m.)
Lady Pirate Classic Clemson vs, Chaney State (6 p.m.)
Detroit vs. East Carolina (8p.m.)
Pee Wee Division Pirates vs. Wolfpack Blue Devils vs. Wildcats Indoor Track East Carolina at West Virginia Invitational
Sundays Sports Baetball Lady Pirate Classic (6 p.m. & 8 p.m.)
5-10-junior forward Rosetta Guilford, who is averaging 20.1 points per game, but shes not all the Lady Wolves have by any rate.
Three of the other four starters are in double figures also, paced by 5-10 junior guard Yolanda Laney, hitting 16.8 points per game. Shes also the teams second leading rebounder with a 6.6 average. Theres also 5-10 senior forward Debra Walker, hitting 12.3 points and leading the team in rebounding with an
11.5 average. The center, 6-4>2 junior Sharon Taylor is scoring 10.2 points a game. Rounding out the starting five is 5-7 junior guard Sandra Giddings, scoring 7.1 points a game.
Clemson will put three starters onto the court scoring in double figures, led by 5-9 senior guard Mary Anne Cubelic, scoring 15.6 points a game. Theres also Jacqui Jones, a 6-0 freshman forward, hitting 12.9, and 6-4 sophomore center Peggy Ca-ple, scoring at an 11.4 clip.
Other prospective starters for the Lady Tigers are 5-8 junior guard Cynthia Austin, hitting 7.6, and 5-11 freshman forward Janet Knight, scoring
3.5 per game. The leading rebounder is Knight with a 9.1 average, while Caple is pulling 8.2.
Detroit, in contrast, has only one starter in double figures. 5-8 junior forward Davida
Boozer, scoring 10,1, Other starters include 5-7 freshman guard Clarice Pearce, 4.8; 6-0 junior guard Pat Nealy, 6.9; 6-0 sophomore center Nancy Gumbert, 6.9; and 6-0 freshman forward Allison Geatches, hitting 5.5.
The leading rebounders are Nealy at 7.5 and Gumbert at 7.5.
East Carolinas Mary De-nkler comes into the field with the leading scoring average. The 6-0 senior foward is hitting 21.2 points a game, and pulling 6.7 rebounds.
However, in recent games, 6-2 sophomore center Darlene Chaney has come on strong. Shes had four straight double figure games in both scoring and rebounding, including 12 points and 13 rebounds against taller and nationally ranked Old Dominion. Chaney is currently averaging 9.5 points and 8.2 rebounds.
The other starters on the Lady Pirate roster are 5-8 freshman forward Sylvia Bragg, 7.5 points per* game; 5-8 senior guard Fran Hooks, 4.7; and 5-6 senior guard Caren Truske, 2.9.
The biggest problem facing the Lady Pirates is depth. There are only eight players on the team, and one of them only recently joined the injury-plagued teams, playing only briefly in one game. The Pirates miss two former
starters in point guard Loraine Foster, averaging 14.5 points a game when she suffered a knee injury several weeks ago, and ^ard De-Iphine Mabry, out with a hand injury for the rest of the season.
All coaches are faced with all kinds of adversity, Andruzzi said of the injuries. Our situation is a big challenge to the coaches and the players. We dont want to encounter this every year. We hope it will bring our players close together to win. Right now we are not basing things on wins or losses, but how hard the players are working. Theyve got to have it in the heart. Athletics pose many challenges. What our girls have faced could be the biggest challenge in their lives. Success will come in whatever way it comes.
East Carolina Universitys. Pirates will be out for a little revenge Saturday night when they travel to Charleston, S.C.,to face Baptist College
The Buccaneers pulled off a 64-56 victory over East Carolina as the Pirates lost their third straight game after the loss of Charles Green to a dislocated shoulder.
Now, the Pirates' are riding another two-game losing streak and Baptist has the chance to hand them only their second three-loss string with another victory. That win back in January, by the way, was the only one for Baptist in seven meetings between the two schools.
East Carolina comes into the game with a 10-11 record following back-to-back ECAC-South losses to George Mason and William & Mary, the former in double overtime in Minges Coliseum, 59-58. William '& Mary took a 70-64 win Wednesday at W&M Hall.
Baptist is 10-10 with a game tonight against Georgia State, Their latest outing was Wednesday when they romped to a 106-73 win over South Carolina State.
In the opening game between the two, East Carolina shot its worst field goal percentage of the year, 35.6 percent.
Johnny Edwards led the Pirate scoring with 18 points and also had ten rebounds, Barry Wright added 17 points and five rebounds.
Jack Avent, a 6-5,210-pound senior center and Marcus Beasley, a 5-11, 150-pound sophomre guard, led Baptist with ten points each
Oddly enough following that game, the Pirates won four of their next five before bowing in their last two outings. Baptist lost five in a row before snapping that against College of Charleston on February 2. Theyve now won t\vo of their last three.
Reggie Walker, a 64, 175-pound senior swing man, leads the Baptist scoring with a 13.5 average, while Avent is hitting 11.6 per game John Battle, a 6-8, 205-pound junior forward, is hitting 8^5 points and pulling 6, 8 rebounds a game
Were going to have to play smart basketball, Coach Charlie Harrison said of the upcoming game. Right now. were not playing very smart basketball, either,
Edwards continues to lead the Pirate scoring with an 18.0 average and an 8.3 rebound mark. Wright is hitting 11.9 per game while Bruce Peartree is scoring at a 10.1 clip.
The game is the next-to-last on the road for the Pirates, who have only an ECAC league game with James Madison left on their road schedule before the conference tournament in Richmond starting March 10.
They return home on Wednesday hosting Richmond in a league game, and have three other home contests to wind up the season. Those are with Navy, UNC-Wilmington and Penn State-Behrend.
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Seven N^ore Are Added To Pirate Crew
The Pirates added an additional seven signees to their total of incoming football players for the fall, bringing them to 26 so far this week Leading the third days announcements is Anthony
Simpson, a 5-10, 210-pound fullback from Brooklyn, N.Y., where he attended Thomas Jefferson High School The same school produced John Brockington of Ohio State and the Green Bay Packers, and
the coach there said that Simpson is the most physical fullback to play at Thomas Jefferson since Brockington. Many believe Simpson is better.
He was all-Scholastic by the
New York Daily News for two seasons, playing as a linebacker as a junior. He opened his senior year at linebacker, but after returning an interception almost 100 yards in an early game, was
Gatlin Leads Conley Victory; \^alkyries Win, Tie For CC Lead
HOLLYWOOD - Keith Gatlin scored 28 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead
hot-shooting D.H. Conley to a 76-62 victory over North Lenoir Thursday night in a
He Lost It
Virginias Tim Mullen (45) loses the ball as he drives past North Carolinas Matt Doherty, lower right, and Brad Daugherty, upper right, during first action ction in their ACC game in Chapel Hill, won by UNC, 63-62. (AP Laserphoto)
Heels Pull...
(Continued From Page 131
Ten rebounds was a big statistic for Stokes, said Iowa Coach Lute 01son,l thought our intensity was the big thing in the game. Eyen though we werent hitting the basket well, we went to the boards hard and played yery tough defense.
Other Results
In other action, Brian Reale scored 15 of his 21 points in the second half as Holy Cross held off Manhattan 84-73; Gaddis Rathels 15 points paced Northwestern to a 58-55 victory over Illinois; Roy Hinson tied a career-high with 23 points and had nine rebounds and six blocked shots to lead Rutgers to a 78-66 victory over St. Bonaventure; John Gullickson scored 20 points and Melvin Johnson 18 as North Carolina-Charlotte posted an 80-72 victory over Old Dominion; James Jackson scored 16 points and recorded 15 assists to lead West Texas State to a 108-87 win over Indiana State and ' Charlie Bradleys 29 points led South Florida to a 94-83 victory over South Alabapia.
Others
In other action. Brian Reale scored 15 of his 21 points in the second half as Holy Cross held off Manhattan 84-73; Gaddis Rathels 15 points paced Northwestern to a 58-55 victory over Illinois; Roy Hinson tied a career-high with 23 points and had nine rebounds and six blocked shots to lead Rutgers to a 78-66 victory over St. Bonaventure; John Gullickson scored 20 points and Melvin Johnson 18 as North Carolina-Charlotte posted an 80-72 victory over Old Dominion; James Jackson
scored 16 points and recorded 15 assists to lead West Texas State to a 108-87 win over Indiana State and Charlie Bradleys 29 points led South Florida to a 94-83 victory over South Alabama.
Also. Billy Houstons 20-foot jump shot wjth 18 seconds left carried Colorado to a 75-74 victory over Kansas; Alfrederick Hughes posted 24 points to help Loyola (111.) coast to an 86-53 win over Oklahoma City; Jay McHugh and Troy Williams hit 12 points each to lead Youngstown State over Austin Peay 73-72; Ernest Patterson scored 20 points to lift New Mexico State to a 63-61 victory over Bradley and Walt Stone poured in 21 points and Byron Scott added 20 as Arizona State routed Washington 70-54.
VIRGINIA MP FG FT RAF Pt
.Mullen 19 3- 7 0- 0 4 3 2 8
Robinson '29 6- 9 4- 4 5 0 0 16
Sampson 34 7-12 1- 3 12 0 1 15
Carlisle 24 l- 7 I- 2 2 3 4 3
Wilson 32 3- 8 0-0 3 2
Edelin 20 2- 5 0- 0 2 3
Stokes 18 0- 0 0- 0 2 3 2 0
Miller 23 4- 7 1-2 2 0 0 9
Merrrfield 1 0- 0 0- 0 1 0 0 0
Totals 200 26-55 7-11 33 14 15 63
N CAROUNAMP FG FT R A F Pt
3 8 3 4
Doherty
Perkins
Daugherty
Jordan
Braddock
Martin
Hale
Peterson
Brownlee
Exum
Totals
Virginia N Carolina
37 3- 7 4- 5 1 5 1 11
37 3-11 4 - 4 9 1 1 10
28 4- 8 0- 0 4 0 3 8
38 8-18 0- 0 7 2 4 16 30 4-10 3- 4 1 3 2 14 8 0- 1 0- 0 3 0 3 0
12 1- I 0-0 1 2 1 2
5 1-10-01003 2 0- 0 0- 0 0 0 0 0
3 0- 1 0- 0 1 0 0 0
200 24-58 11-13 29 13 15 64
31 32-63 28 J&-M
Three-point goals: Virginia 4-5: Mullen 2-3, Wilson 2-2. North Carolina 5-18: Doherty 1-2, Perkins 0-3, Jordan (M, Braddock :i-8, Peterson 1-1 Turnovers: Virginia 14. N Carolina 10 Technical fouls: N Carolina bench Officials: Nichols, Housman, Cloughertv .\tt 10.000
VALENTINE SPECIAL!
Coastal Conference basketball
game.
Earlier, in the girls -game, D H Conley defeated North Lenoir, 49-27, to move into a tie for first place.
We got off to a real slow start, especially on defense. It was the firet bad half of defense weve played in our last five ballgames, Conley coach Shelley Marsh said.
But we got it together in the second half.
The Vikings, who now lead the league with an 8-0 mark and can clinch the title with a win at West Craven Tuesday, fell behind, 17-12, after the first quarter. But, Conley rallied with a 20-14 second period to take a 32-31 lead at the half - and give hints of what was to come.
The Vikings .upped their lead to 46-43 after three quarters and then turned it on in the final period, outscoring the Hawks, 30-19, to win their seven game in a row and 10th in.their last 11 outings.
Our defense just went to work, said Marsh, whose team used a man-to-man in the third period and then went to a 2-1-2 trapping defense in the final period. "We forced them into some turnovers and turned them into easy baskets (in the fourth period).
The Vikings, now 17-3 overall, shot 61% (35 of 57) from the floor and had a 26 to 20 edge on the boards, led by Gatlin and Leon Cox, who grabbed five rebounds and scored 13 points.
Gatlin, who hit 13 of 17 (77%) from the field, dished out five assists and had two steals while turning the ball over just once. Cox hit six of eight from the floor.
The Hawks, now 2-6 in the
Jr. High Basketball
Farmville.........45
Chicod...........35
FARMVILLE - Farmville Middle School gained a 45-35 victory over Chicod in a junior high school basketball game yesterday.
Kenny Williams led Farmville with ten points. Chicod was led by Otis Brinkley with 17 points while Kevin Smith added 10.
Farmville is now 7-2 on the year, while Chicod is 1-8.
In the girls game, Chicod took a 26-25 win. Theresa Stancill led Chicod with ten points, with Rhonda Jackson adding seven. Lisa Lang was high for Farmville with nine.
Both of the girls teams are 6-3.
A.G. Cox.........31
Wellcome........30
WINTERVILLE-A.G.Cox slipped past Wellcome Middle School, 31-30, yesterday in a junior high school basketball game.
Ricky Farrow and Brian Joyner each had 11 points to pace Cox. Wellcome, which is now 2-7, was led by Russell Williams with 10.
The Cox girls also came away a victor, taking a 32-16 win. Jill Seawell led Cox with 12 points. No one scored in double figures for Cox, which falls to 3-6.
league and 6-14 overall, were led by Maurice^ Thorbes with 28 points and Larry Johnson with 15. Thorbes canned 12 of 13 foul shots as the Hawks hit 24 of 29 from the line.
In the girls game, D.H. Conley turned a battle of the top teams in the league into a rout as the Valkyries held North Lenoir to under 10 points in all but the third period.
The win left Conley and North Lenoir tied atop the CC at 7-1. The Valkyries, who had now won five straight since losing to the Lady Hawks, 49-44, are now 19-2 overall. North Lenoir falls to 16-4.
The Valkyries started quickly, jumping out to a 17-9 lead at the end of the first period. Conley upped its lead to 33-15 at the half. ,
North Lenoir cut the lead to 39-25 after three periods, but the Lady Hawks scored just two points in the final period to 10 for DHC as the Valkyries won by 22,
Darlene Cannon led DHC with 13 points and Mechio Kornegay added 11. North Lenoir did not have anyone in double figures.
JV Game D H. Conley 71, North Lenoir 38
Girls Game North Lenoir (27) Phillippe 3 2-2 8; Chapman 3 0-0 6; Wooten 2 3-6 7; Hemby 1-1 2; Cratch 2 0-0 4; Totals 115-827.
D.H. Conley (49) Cannon 4 5-6 13; Barnhill 1 6-6 8; Kornegay 4 3-6 11; Mills 4 0-1 8; Barrett 4 1-2 9; Totals 1715-2149.
NorthLenoir .... 9 6 10 227
D.H. Conley 17 16 6 10-49
Boys Game North Lenotr (62) Thorbes 8 12-13 28; Fisher 3 1-2 7; Johnson 5 5-6 15; Core 12-2 4; Hobbs 2 4-6 8; Totals 19 24-29 62.
D H. Conley (76) - Gatlin 13 2-2 28; Payton 3 1-1 7; L.Cox 6 1-3 13; Anderson 0 0-0 0; Clemons 3 0-0 6; Smith 0 0-() 0; M.Cox 3 0-0 6; Dawson 1 2-2 4; Ruffin 4 0-0 8; Reddrick 0 0-0 0; Coward 10-0 2; Holloman 00-00; Totals 35 6-8 76. NorthLenoir ....17 14 12 19-62 D.H. Conley 12 20 14 30-76
49ers Trip Monarchs
' CHARLOTTE (AP) - John Gullickson scored 20 points and Melvin Johnson 18 as North Carolina-Charlotte posted an 80-72 upset Sun Belt Conference basketball victory over Old Dominion Thursday.
Outrebounded early by a taller Old Dominion front line, the 49ers trailed 35-23 midway through the first half before three 3-point field goals by Gullickson sparked a 49er comeback.
Old Dominion, which led 41-40 at halftime, went scoreless over three minutes while Charlotte built a lead which reached 67-58 with 5:17 left.
The 49ers then went to a ball control game in the final four minutes and sank 10 of 12 free throws in the final 1:25.
Rocky Mount Left Off List
In listing the teams ranked among the top 20 in the state taking part in the Eastern Wrestling Sectional at D.H. Conley, No. 19 Rocky Mount was left out of a story yesterday. '
There are six teams ranked in the top 20 competing in the two-day tournament, not five as listed.
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switched to fullback, finishing the year with close to 1,000 yards In the wishbone backfield. He was also a member of the Big 44 (top 44 in New York), all-City, played in and was the MVP in the Senior Bowl, and is a nominee for the June-awarded Iron Horse Award, annually presented to the best player in New York City. He joins teammate Joe Grinage, a defensive lineman, whos signing by ECU was announced yesterday.
Simpson was also considering Michigan and Syracuse for his collegiate career.
Tyrone Johnson is a 6-0, 230-pound linebacker from Vicksburg, Miss., where he attended Vicksburg High School, and Hines Junior College. He was honorable mention all-America at Hines, playing in the Mississippi Junior College all-star game. He was all-state and all-region at Hines. He led Hines in tackles as a sophomore, and was all-Warren County, all-Delta Zone and all-Big Ei^t while a prepster, leading Vicksburg in tackles. He was also an all-county baseball player.
Greg Sokolohorsky, a 6-5, 290-pound offensive lineman, is from Garnerville, N.Y. He attended North Rockland High School, and comes in from West Chester Junior College. He was an all-league choice there, winning the Coaches Award, and the Most Aggressive Spirit Award. At North Rockland, he was allleague for two seasons as a lacrosse player and also lettered in track. He played in the area junior college all-star game.
Ricky HUburn is a 6-5, 273-pound offensive lineman. He is from Chadbourn, and transfers in from Chowan Junior College. He played his high school ball at West Columbus. He played in the Coastal National Junior College All-Star game, was hon
orable mention all-American as a JC, and was first team all-region and all-conference, and was the MVP on the offensive line. At West Columbus, he won seven letters in football and track. Oklahoma and N.C. State were among his final choices.
Henry Williams, a 5-6, 176-pound wide receiver and kick return specialist. He transfers from Northwest Junior College in Senatobia, Miss. He is from Tunica, Miss., where he attended Rosa Fort High School. Widely recruited for his pass-catching and punt returning talents, his team defeated Ferrum for the national junior college championship. He was selected to the National Junior College
All-Star team, but missed the all-star game because of the championship game. He was named Most Outstanding Special team player at Northwest. Hes also a track standout, and is already running track for the Pirates. He was the MVP of the Northwest track squad last year. He holds the Mississippi state junior college record in the 220 with a time of 21.6. He placed third in the JC nationals In the event in 20.9. At Rosa Fort, he also set a state record in the long jump with a leap of 24 feet, 5 inches. He was their MVP and placed third in the ^tate in each the 100 and 200 meter dashes. He was voted his high schools best all-around athlete.
Prep Swimmers Test At AAinges
East Carolina University plays host to some 300 high school swimmers in the annual Atlantic Seaboard Swimming and Diving Championships, which begin tonight in Minges Natatorium.
The bulk of the meet, however, will be held on Saturday.
Teams representing some 50 high schools are expected to participate in the meet, making it perhaps a little larger than last years meet according to Rick Kobe, ECU swim coach. There wont be any Florida teams this year, since theyve changed their swimming season this year, but weve picked up more teams from up north.
Twelve events will be held for boys and a like number for girls in the meet, which gets underway at 6:30 p.m. with the diving preliminaries.
'Saturday, preliminary swimming events will get underway at 8:30 p.m., with the finals starting at 5:30 p.m.
Calvert Hall School of Towson, Md., is the defending champion among the boys teams and is expected to defend its title successfully, .although Kobe feels that Mercersburg (Pa.) School could challenge.
Among the girls, defending champ Preddy School of Hightstown, N.J., is seen as the likely winner again.
Ed Vames, a 64), 192-pound defensive back, comes from Lees-McRae Junior College. He is a native of Lake Butler, Fla., where he went to Union County High School. He was all-region and all-conference at Le^-McRae, playing in the Coastal Junior College All-Star game. At Union County, he was all-conference and all-area. He was MVP his final two years and Most Improved his sophomore year. He was the most valuable offensive back in 1^, and most dicated in 1981. He lettered in track and baseball also at -Union County.
Cornell Brockington is a 5-11, 188-pound fullback from Elizabeth, N.J., where he attended Elizabeth High School. He played in the New Jersy state all-star game, and was all-county, all-conference, and all-metropolitan area. He captained the team, winning three letters in football and two in track. He was also recruited by Minnesota f Memphis State and Syracuse.
Other signees are expected to be announced on Sunday.
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Bye, Bye, Dick and Jane.
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Children may outgrow textbooks, but the strongly in promoting the usp of newspapers in the newspaper will be there then. And If they have learn- schools, as well as carrying the habit over to in-home ed the proper newspaper-reading habit, it will be one use.
that will stay with them for a lifetime. * Because you never outgrow education. The
Tu -rur- u I- ...... newspaper SllfestextbooK.
That is why THE DAILY REFLECTOR believes so ^
t ''
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
TEACHERS AND PARENTS - For more Information on Newspaper In Education contact THE DAILY REFLECTOR, 752-6166.
S
Ace Helps Don Pohl Gain Title
The DaUy Reflector. Greenville, N C -Friday. February 11.1983-15
HONOLULU (AP) - Dan Pohl characterized his effort as ' a good ball-striking round.
That may have been something of an understatement.At least one swing was not only good, it was perfect.
That one, with a 5-iron on the 191-yard, par-317th hole at the Waialae Country Gub, produced a hole-in-one, the third of Pohls career.
Pohl. one of the longest
hitters on the PGA Tour, followed iq> with a birdie-4 on the final hole, coming from three shots off the pace to gain a tie for the first-round lead in the (325,000 Hawaiian Open with Isao Aoki of Japan and Vance Heafner. All had 6-under-par 66s.
Defending champion Wayne Levi had a solid, no-bogey 67 in his first competitive round of the year. Im happy, very happy, Levi said. I had no
idea what Id shoot. After a layoff like that, sevoi weeks without touching a club, a 67 is great.
Also at 67, five under par, were Pat Lindsey, Leonard Thompson and local pro David Ishii.
Of the leaders, Heafner, Aoki, Pohl, Lindsey and Levi all played in the morning half of th field, before brisk trade winds kicked up in the afternoon and produced some gen
erally higher scoring.
Arnold Palmer, trailed by the biggest gallery on the course, was subjected to the worst of the winds and could do no better than a fat 77, Gil Morgan, a two-time winner already this season, also played in the afternoon winds and shot 73. He must improve today if he is to qualify for the final two rounds.
Only 140 players teed off.
four short of the standard starting field of 144. It marked the first time in many years that the PGA Tour had faded to fill the field for one of its tournaments.
Aoki, generally regarded as Japans finest player, has won 39 tournaments in his homeland and gained national recognition in the United States when he chased winner Jack Nicklaus in the 1980 U.S. Open.
SCOREBOARD
Bowling_
HUlcrest Ladies
W L
Thorpe Music............58 30
Team/m ......56 32
H. A, White............55>i! 32W
Haddocks Tires 51 37
Cliff's Seafood 50'i 37V
Team #2................50-2 37'/i
Peppis................48 40
Aroys............,....48 40
T-Shirts Plus..........42 46
A Taste of Honey 42 46
Bricks Clothing 40 48
Daily Reflector 37t: 50/s.
Merry Five............36*; 514
IPCCC................34 54
Rolling Pins...........31 57
Team #16..............234 644
High game, Mary Wade. 246; high series, Pat Cannon, 596.
' Thursday Night Mixed
Western Sizzlin .......584 294
High Hopes............58 30
Dew Crew ....57 31
High Timers...........56 32
Jacks Steakhouse 544 334
Home Cleaners........53 35
Team#l...............48 40
Deadly Hits............48 40
Pin Hunters...........46 42
Hohey Bees...........46 42
Hang Ten..............45 4 42 4
Untouchables..........45 43 *
Team #13 ..............43 45
Pizza Inn..............42 4 454
Mixed Familys 414 464
ConV . Food Mart.......41 47
M&Ms ..........40 48
Slo Starters............384 494
Outsiders..............384 494
Bud Lights............38 50
Spotlight Records......36 52
Hanging Gang.........31 57
Pair Electronics.......30 58
Alley Cats.............28 60
Mens high game and series, Doyle Matthews, 243, 683; womens high game and series, Susan
Puryear, 224,553.
Rec Bosketboll
^ Midget Division
Terrapins..........2 8 3 417
Woifpack ...........8 6 6 12322
Leading scorers: T Pierre
Nelson 10, Talbot Greene 6; W Chris Christopher 18, Jamie Brewington 8.
' ' Junior Division
Wildcats 10 2 8 6 2-28
Cavaliers........4 6 6 10 6-32
Leading scorers: W-Eric Jarman 16, Greg Hallow 6; C-Tom Moye 12, Jim Hall 10, Damon Smith 10.
AAA Division
Pirates................37 4077
PCMH............... 31 42-73
Leading scorers: PiMickey Hines 27, Floyd Sneed 16; PC-Paul Taylor 30, James Dupree 29.
Hustlers ......29 46-75
Coke..................22 29-51
Leading scorers: H-Moses Joyner
16, James Baker 16; CBob Coogan 17, Tony Lindsey 12.
The Wiz won by forfeit over TRW.
AA Division
Attic................42 33-75
Empire Brushes 34 2458
Leading scorers: AGene Evans 21, Mike Smith 21; EB-James Tyson 22, Brady Cobb 16.
Bobs TV..............22 14-36
Grady-White..........21 40-61
Leading scorers: BT-Butch Talbot 10, Gene Rackley 10; GW-David Ward 19, Willie Green 12.
Rockers...............24 32-56
Hooker................31 40-71
Leading scorers: RDavid White
17, David Wooten 12; H-Dennis White 22, Art Gaskins 20.
West Greenville Junior League
Irish ............. 12 8 2 10-32
Tigers............11 6 10 6-33
Leading scorers: 1Melvin Jenkins 20, Wyatt Whichad 10; TEric Short 14, Gergory Richardson 7.
TANK HFNANARA
Mwepcfwg MusriWE
by Jeff Millar & BUI Hinds
:ff-vaji^of '4N-WE6(?Efii6CRS, wiMMee,NOTtjpDiT A
s
v(xi ceaPE,
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Deacons..........4 14 15 17-50
Warriors 12 17 11 1151
Leading scorers: D-Timothy Hines 23, Melvin Taylor 12; W Linwood GiOiter 23, Clifton Davis 16.
NBA Standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W LPct. GB Philadelphia 43 7 860 -
Boston 38 12 760 5
New Jersey 33 18 .647 lO'^,
Washington 24 25 .490 IO'a.-
New York 22 28 .440 21
Central Division Milwaukee 33 18 .647 -
Atlanta 24 28 480 8Vi
Detroit 24 27 .471 9
Chicago 17 34 .333 16
Indiana 15 35 .300 VV
Cleveland 12 39 .235 21
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Divlsloa San Antonio 31 21 .5% --
Dallas 25 24 .510 A'n
Kansas City 25 25 . 500 5
Denver 25 27 481 6
Utah 18 34 .346 13
Houston 10 40 .200 20
Pacific Division Los Angeles 38 10 .792
Portland 29 21 .580 10
Phoenix 30 22 .577 10
Seattle 28 23 .549 lU/ii
Golden State 20 30 .400 19
San Diego 17 35 . 327 23
Thursdays Games Cleveland 99, Indiana 95 Washington 104, Houston 100 Philadelphia 11^ Chicago 110 Milwaukee 102, Portland 92 San Antonio 128, Golden State 109 Seattle 105, Utah 99 San Diego 101, Phoenix 100 Fridays Games No games scheduled
Saturdays Games No games scheduled
Sundays Game All-Star Game at Inglewood, Calif.
NHL Stondings
Wales Conference Patrick Division W L T GF GA Pts
Philadelphia 36 13 NY Isles 30 18 Washington 27 17 NY Rangers 23 25 New Jersey 11 34 Pittsburgh 12 38
Boston
Montreal
Buffalo
Quebec
Hartford
7 231 154
9 216 165
13 224 201
8 206 203
12 159 237
7 174 279
Adams Division 37 10 8 225 145
30 16 10 256 201
11 204 179
9 6
25 19 25 22 13 36
239 226 179 275
Campbell Conference Norris Division
Chicago 36 14 7 245 195
Minnesota 28 15 13 231 200
St. Louis 17 29 11 195 222
Detroit 14 30 12 175 232
Toronto 14 29 10 197 231
Smythe Division Edmonton 30 16 10 300 227
Calgary 23 25 9 234 237
Winnipeg 21 28 7 209 234
Vancouver 18 26 11 201 218
Los Angeles 18 28 8 197 236
Thursdays Games
Philadelphia 5, St.1 ai 5. Winnip
Montreal
Boston 7, Pittsburgh 3
lia 5, St.Louis 2 i, Winnipeg 3 New York Islanders 8. Washington 3 Minnesota 7. New York Rangers 5 Quebec 3, Calgary 3, tie Los Angeles 7, Buffalo 2
Fridays Games Vancouver at Washington, (n) Quebec at Edmonton, (n
Saturdays Games Toronto at Boston Winnipeg at Detroit Buffalo at Calgary, (n)
New York Rangers at Montreal, (n) Hartford at New York islanders, in) Los Angeles at Pittsburgh. I n I Chicago at Minnesota, (n)
New JierseyatSt.Louis, (n) Sundays Games Vancouver at Boston Winnipeg at Washington
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Toronto at Hartford
Quebec at Chicago
Los Angeles at Fmiladelphia, (n)
College Bosketboll
EAST
Assumption 84, Hartford 74 Athens St. 70, Aub.-Mont 65 Bentley 8LAIC 79 CCN Y 60, Manhattanville 59 Citadel 79, Georgia St. 63 Eastern 85, Philadelphia Pharmacy 60 Fairmont St. 60. W Virginia St. 55 Fordham 75, Notre Dame 69 Franklin Pierce 94, New England Coll
Stetson 52, Samford 50 Tarleton St. 65, LeToumeau Coll 64 Tuskegee 76, Talladega CoU. 72 Wofford 87, Presbyterian 82 Youngstown St. 73, Austin Peav 72
MIDWEST
Ashland 73, Indiana Central 72 Cent Methodist 71, Mid-Amer Nazarene61 Colorado 75, Kansas 74 Creighton 53, Illinois St. 41 Culver-Stockton 75, Graceland 74
Hawaiian Golf
HONOLULU (AP) - First-round scores Thursday in the 1325,000 Hawaiian Open Golf Tournament on the 6,881-yard, par 36-36-72 Waialae Country Club course:
Eui
George Washington 68, Massachusetts
Drury 54, Missouri K C 52 ireka 91, Principia 55 Ferris St . 75, Oakland 67 Huron 67, Black Hills St 62 Indiana 63, Minnesota 59 Iowa 55, Purdue 46
Grove City 71, Geneva 59
Hamilton 85, Hobart 51
Holy Cross 84. ManhatUn 73
Kings Pa 68, Misericordia 53
Marist69, Rider 59
Merrimack 80, St. Anselm 54
New Hampshire 87, Niagara 64
Nichols 71, W. New England 64
Point Park 65, St. Vincent 61
Pitt-Bradford88, LaRoche73
Rutgers 78, St. Bo'naventure 66
S. Connecticut 102, Keene St. 88
St. John Fisher 74, RIT 72
St, Francis. NY 76. Wagner 68
St. Thomas Aquinas 82, Rutgers-
Newark 54 Salem St. 89, Worcester St. 75 Union 68, Thomas More 61 :
Salisbury St 95. Gallaudet 69 Stonehill68. Springfield 57 W.Va Wesleyan 84, Shepherd 80, OT Western Maryland 82. Ursinus 58
sourk
Belmont Ab^ 76, Gardner-Webb 66 Charleston, S.C. 63, Newberry 61 Citadel 79, Georgia St. 63 Clinch Valley 75, Pikeville 63 Cumberland, Ky 85, Georgetown, Ky.
79
E. Texas Baptist 81, Louisiana Coll. 73 Francis Marion 58, SC-Spartanburg 54 Hampton Inst. 90. Bowie St 63 Kentucky St. 62, Campbellsville61 Kentucky Wesleyan 60, Lewis, III. 59 NC-Chariotte 80, Old Dominion 72 N Kentucky 74, Ohio Dominican 40 NW Louisiana 81. Mississippi Coll. 63 North Carolina 64, Virginia 63 S. Florida 94, S. Alabama 83 St. Andrews 99, Coker 96, OT Shaw 69, Livingstone 64 Shenandoah 82, Wash. 4 Lee 66 Southern N O. 92, Xavier La. 89
Iowa Wesleyan 113, Marycrest 100 Loyola 86, Oklahoma City 53 Morris Brown 68, Columbus Coll. 61
Nebraska Weslyn 80, Peru St. 66 Northwestern 58. Illinois 55 Northwood 83, Lake Superior 78 Saginaw Valley 73, Michigan Tech 60 Vincennes 102, Ivy Tech-fndianapolis61 Wayne St. 79, Grand Valley 52 West Texas 108 Indiana Sf 87
SOUTHWEST Ark.-Monticello 61 Arkansas Tech 50 Arkansas Coll. 70, Harding 57 Cent. Arkansas 69 S. Arkansas 61 Henderson St. 66, OuachiU 59 Hendrix 61, Coll of the Ozarks 56 Howard Payne 6S East Texas 63 N Texas St. 105, Texas-Arlington 98 Phillips 79, John Brown 75 Tulsa 61, Drake 59 Yankton 71. Mount Martv 68
FAR WEST
Air Force 61, New Mexico 52 Arizona St. 70, Washington 54 Cal-Davis 85. Sonoma St 62 E. Montana 93, Puget Sound 79 E. Washington 87, Seattle Pacific 77 Fullerton St. 98, Cal-Irvine 74 Hawaii 80, Bri^am Young 69 Hawaii Pacific 83, Sacramento St. 69 Idaho 73. Montana St. 69 Long Beach St. 80, Fresno St. 69 q N Arizona 57, Idaho St. 55 New Mexico St 63, Bradley 61 Nev-Las Vegas 79, Pacific U 62 Nev-Reno 69. Weber St 67,2 OT Texas-EI Paso 46, Colorado St 45 UCLA67, Oregon 56 Utah St , 76, San Jose St. 65 Washington St. 75, Arizona 65 Willamette 81, George Fox 68
Isao Aoki Dan Pohl Vance Heafner Pat Lindsey Wayne Levi Leonard Thompson David Ishii Lindy Miller Rod Nuckolls Rafael Alarcon Masahiro Kuramoto Ed Fiori Mark Lye Thomas Gray Gary Hallberg Scott Simpson Ben Crenshaw Mike Donald Jodie Mudd Buddy Gardner
N.C. Scoreboord
By The Associated Press Men
Shaw 69, LivinKtone64
Belmont Abby TO, Gardner-Webb 66
N Carolina-Charlotte 80, Old Dominion
2
St. Andrews 99, Coker 96 (OT)
N Carolina 64, Virginia 63
Womens BasketbaU
St. Andrews86, Coker 49 E. Tennessee St 67, Appalachian St 46 Shaw 47, Livingstone 44
Only two National Basketball Association arenas still in use were built before 1950 - the Chicago Stadium in 1935 and the Boston Garden in 1928.
SEMI
ANNUAL
MEN;S
CLEARANCE
OFF
Group Of Mens Suits Group Of Mens Sportcoats Group Of Dress Shirts Group Of Sportshirts Group Of Dress Slacks Entire Stock Of Corduroy Slacks Group Of Mens Neckwear Group Of Mens Sweatrs
Entire Stock Mens Outerwear Group Of Mens Shoes
PIJT PLAZA
for noen
I
Bad Choice Does Little To Help Houston's Case
By The Associated Press The Houston Rockets road record of 2-22 is the worst in the National Basketball Association, and-jts not goufg to get much bettenif they keep pulling stunts similar to t^ir latest. y /
The hapless RockW^ailed Washington 101-100 with 21 seconds remaining and had to foul. And whom did they choose to foul? Ricky Sobers, who has made 27 of 29 free throws since joining Washington, was fouled away from the ball with seven seconds left and made the foul shot.
Then, with four seconds left after Washington retained possession on the rare call. Walker again fouled Sobers, This time, he canned two more free throws, giving the Bullets a 104-100 victory Thursday night.
Certainly we were trying, to get him the ball,
36-30-66
33-33-66
34-32-66
34-33-67 33-34-67 33-34-67 33-34 -67 36-32-68
35-33 -68 33-35-68 35-33 -68
33-35-68 35-33-68
34-34-68 33-35-68
33-35-68
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Northeastern
Boys Standings
Conf
Overall
W L
W
L
Roanoke
12 2
14
3
Plymouth
11 2
16
3
Bertie
8 5
12
5
Tarboro
8 5
9
8
R. Rapids
8 6 ,
8
8
Washington
4 9
6
13
Edenton
4 9
9
9
Williamston
2 11
4
13
Ahoskie
2 12
4
14
Girls Standings
Conf.
Overall
W L
W
L
Roanoke
13 1
14
3
Tarboro
11 2
14
3
Edenton
9 4
14
4
Plymouth
9 4
13
4
Bertie
6 7
8
9
Williamston
4 9
4
13
Ahoskie
4 10
4
12
Washington
2 11
3
14
R. Rapids
0 14
0
16
ECAC'South
Conf
Overall
W L
W
L
.William & Mary
5 0
13
6
Navy
2 1
13
8
James Madison
2 2
11
9
George Mason
3 3
13
7
Richmond
2 3
11
10
East Carolina
1 6
10
11
Washington Coach Gene Shue said of Sobers, who was signed as a free agent Jan.24 after ^ifllng-mit the first three months of the season.Sobers, who led Washington with 22 points, had connected on 18 consecutive foul shots before missing early in the fourth quarter.
Wally made a move to foul Sobers while Ricky still had the ball, Houston Coach Del Harris explained. "But by the time he made contact, it was too late.
Don Collins scored 10 of his 17 points and Jeff Ruland nine of his 19 in the fourth quarter as the Bullets rallied to defeat the Rockets.Washington, which has won seven of its last nine games, trailed most of the way before taking the lead for gooid on a five-point run for a 96-91 advanta^
It was definitely a question of the bench. Shue said of the 48 points scored by reserves Charles Davis, Collins and Ruland.
The Rockets had defeated the Bullets in Houston during a nine-game Washington losing streak.
That was before they made their key acquisition of Sobers, said Harris.
76ers 116, Bulls 110 At Chicago, Philadelphias Julius Erving scored 34 points and Moses Malone added 26 in helping the 76ers boost their record to 43-7.Erving, held to 10 points for the first 2'? periods, connected on two alley-oop baskets, a slam dunk and a drive through the lane in a three-minute span of the third quarter to give the 76ers a 79-67 lead.
Bucks 102, Trail Blazers 92 At Milwaukee, Sidney Moncrief scored 28 points and Marques Johnson added 20 for the Bucks.Junior Bridgeman added 13 points and Steve Mix, who scored 12, came off the bench and sank three shots in a row to help the Bucks to a
39-28 lead.
In addition, Harvey Cat-chings, one of the few players in the NBA with more rebounds than field goals in his career, led the Bucks with a season-high 15 rebounds Spurs 128, Warriors 109 ^
At San Antonio, George Gervin scored 38 points, six during a pivotal 18-4 third-quarter run, to lead the Spurs over Golden State.Gervin, who sat out the fourth period, started the deluge with six straight points as the Spurs opened a 98-80 lead.
Clippers 101, Suns 100 At San Diego, Michael Brooks free throw with 11 seconds left gave San Diego a dramatic come-from-behind victory.With the game tied at 100, the Clippers missed three shots before Brooks was fouled by Larry Nance. San Diego trailed 90-78 with 10:30 left before Brooks and a stifling defense shut down the Suns with only two field goals and 10 points the rest of the way.Terry Cummings had 26 points and 15 rebounds to lead the Clippers
SuperSonics 105, Jazz 99 At Salt Lake City, Jack Sikma scored 31 points and pulled down 25 rebounds as Seattle snapped a three-game losing streak and handed Utah its ninth consecutive setback. Seattle, which trailed most of the game, first pulled ahead 86-85 with 9:40 to play on Mark Radfords jumper After Utah briefly regained the lead 89-88, Sikma knotted the score at 90-all and Seattle took control of the game.The Sonics biggest lead came late at 103-95 after two Sikma free throws.
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On Saturday, February 12th from 10a.m. Until9p.m., you are cordially invited to attend our Spring Trunk Showing of elegant Society Brand, Ltd. sui,ts, slacks, and sport coats. Come and choose from our tropical polyester/wool blend and silk spring fashions. You can select from our many swatches...we can fit anyone from our custom box. As an added incentive, we will allow you $35.00 off the regular retail price on sport coats and $50.00 off the regular price of a suit. Refreshments will be served, so come and join us! Allow 6 to 10 weeks for delivery please.
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Teen-Age Boy Shoots Himself As Dad Confiscates Television Set
OAKLEY, Calif. (AP) -l cant stand another day of school and especially another minute without television, the scribbled note said.
It was found next to the body of Genaro Garcia, a lonely, overweight 13-year-old who shot himself with his fathers revolver rather than give up the safe world of television for a troubled life at a new school, his family says.
"1 know Ive been a lot of trouble and Im sorry, the youth wrote in the note, which was translated and read to his Spanish-speaking parents by a coroners investigator.
"Please tell my classmates what happened and watch if they are sad or if they laugh. But thats obvious. 1 never really had any friends.
The boy left the note and killed himself with a single shot to the head on Jan. 26, according to a Contra Costa County coroners report.
Genaro shot himself just hours after his father had removed the television from his sons room, according to family members interviewed by the San Francisco Examiner.
Genaro Garcia Sr. recalled telling his son to quit complaining about imaginary ailments and go back to school if he wanted the television back.
Garcia said his son was concerned about his appearance - the youngster was 5-foot-6 and weighed 225 pounds.
Before enrolling at his new school after the family moved to Northern
California three months ago, Genaro sent his father to see whether students were required to shower together after physical education classes. They were.
GENARO GARCIA Jr.
After that, Garcia said, the boy complained of aches m his back and legs and said he couldnt go to school.
Genaro shut himself in his room, not letting anyone in without permission. He would watch TV, play video games or read.
id say What are your problems? and hed say, I dont have any problems, Garcia said.
His father, an unemployed janitor who moved his family north from Southern California three months ago at the invitation of a relative, prized a good education for Genaro and his three other children, Maria, 12, David, 10, and 6-year-old Nancy.
Ironically, he had presented the TV to his son as a reward for earning almost an A average at his previous school in Los Angeles County.
I used to tell him, Mi hijo (my son), I want As, and I will buy you this and that, said Garcia. Then hed ^t those grades.
Although his teachers described him as a bright, capable student, the Examiner said, Genaro detested going to his new school, Edna Hill Intermediate School in the community of Brentwood, east of San Francisco.
The family has had hard times lately - Garcia couldnt find a job, the family went on welfare and moved out of his relatives house to a small trailer on a dirt lot. But Garcia doesnt believe poverty played any part his sons suicide.
We were always poor, said Garcia. I was always a poor kid ... even now Im depending on help. But weve always worked for everything we had. Weve even peddled oranges.
Genaros handwritten will, found by his father and mother, Gregoria, left his family the possessions he had most cherished.
Last will: To whole family. I leave my stereo to Maria, I leave my Atari games to David and Nancy and I leave everything to my parents.
In my heart I will take my TV with me. I love you.
i i
Cabinet Tours
Art Museum
BUSH'S RETURN - Vice president and Mrs. Bush are greeted on deplaning at Andrews Air Force base, Maryland, Thursday as they returned from a 12-day, seven nation tour of Western Europe intended to encourage unity on NATO missile policies. (APLaserphoto)
PHOTO WINNER AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) - U.S. photographer Robin Moyer won the 26th World Press Photo competition Thursday with a picture of the massacre of Palestinians in a Beirut refugee camp last September.
RALEIGH - Members of Sir Walter Cabinet got a preview of the new N.C. Museum of Art Tuesday when Dr. E. Peter Bowron, director, gave a talk on plans for programs and events to be a part of the opening in April.
The new museum will display works of art which have never been seen by the public due to lack of exhibition
space.
Cabinet Members present included Mrs. Vernon White of Winterville. Mrs. Ed Warren of Greenville is secretary to the cabinet. '
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PATTERNS OF WINTER - Stripped of leaves and fruit, an blanketing most parts of Missouri and Kansas with up to 15
orchardeastofLexington, Mo., forms a stark pattern against a feet of snow. (APLaserphoto)
blanket of snow. Two winter storms moved through the area
Elk Herd Grows To Thining-Out Size
LANSING, Mich. (AP) -A once-threatened elk herd in a Michigan state forest has come back so strongly that a special hunt may be needed next year to kill some of the animals, officials say.
Trapping and moving them is too expensive and theres really no other place for them, Bob Strong, wildlife hiolo|ist for the Department of Natural Resources, said Thursday.
A three-day census in the Pigeon River Country State Forest showed the herd now has 750 elk - about the size envisioned when the DNR began efforts to preserve it, he said.
The DNR last authorized
hunts in the mid-1960s when the elk population was estimated at up to 1,600. Their numbers had dropped to about 200 by 1975.
The elk, which can weigh up to 1,000 pounds, are competing for food with deer in the 96,000-acre Lower Peninsula forest, damaging crops on nearby farms and destroying new trees, he said.
Strong said a tightly controlled hunt probably would be held in the fall of 1984.
The Pigeon River herd is one of only two east of the
Mississippi Jliver. A smaller herd is in Pennsylvania.
The Michigan herd began as seven animals placed in the forest in 1918.
Fire Prevention Exhibit Slated
BUS TRIP
Allen Chapel Free Will Baptist Church will sponsor a bus trip to St. Luke Church in Kinston Sunday. The bus will leave Bells Shell Station at 3 p.m. Roundtrip fare will be $2.
Could you and your family safely evacuate your house in event of fire? You can learn how to devise a Home Escape Plan and what type and size fire extinguisher best fits your home during Fire Prevention Awareness Week to be held at Carolina East Mall Monday through Saturday.
Twenty volunteer fire de
partments from, throughout the county will present exhibits on everything from woodstoves and portable kerosene heaters to a history of the fire-fighting service.
The exhibit is sponsored by the Pitt County Firemens Association, the Pitt County Fire Marshals Office, and the Independent Insurance Agents of Pitt County.
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In The Area jDark Sky Observatory Is Ideally Sited
Jones Named To Committees
House Speaker Liston Ramsey has announced the appointment of Rep. Walter L. Jones Jr. of Farmville to eight legislative committees.
Jones was appointed last week by Gov. Jim Hunt as a state representative to complete the terra bi the late Sam Bundy of Farmville. Bundy died Jan. 18 in Raleigh.
Jones new committee memberships include Constitutional Amendments, Education, Election Laws, Finance, Higher Education, Local Government II, State Personnel, and the University Board of Governors. Bundy was serving on the committees at the time of his death.
Support Group Being Formed
An organizational meeting for persons in eastern Ninth Carolina interested in forming a group affiliated with the Parkinsons Support Group of America will be held Thursday at 11 a.m. in the parlor of the First Presbyterian Churchy corner of Elm and 14th streets.
There are now nine such groups in the Carolinas. The purpose is education and encouragement for persons with Parkinsons disease to participate actively in all walks of life -and public education to promote a better understanding of Parkinsonism. It is estimated that there are 1 million persons in the United States with Parkinsons disease.
For further information, contact K. King,. 521 Longmeadow Road, Greenville, N.C. 752-3662.
Club Makes Two Donations
The Winterville Ruritan Club has agreed to donate $150 to a school safety and drug program and $250 to the Boy Scouts.
The safety-drug program at W.H. Robinson and A.G. Cox schools will be headed by Police Chief Keith Knox, who is a member of the Ruritan Club.
The clubs Ladies Night program will be held March 15 at 7 p.m at D.H. Conley High School.
Retirees To Hear DUI Talk
Greenville Chapter 2016 of the American Association of Retired Persons will meet at the Memorial Baptist Church at 2:30 p.m. Monday.
Highway Patrol Sgt. Glenn Swanson will speak on Gov. Jim Hunts proposed legislation dealing with driving under the influence. He will also show a film on the subject.
Citizens age 55 or over may attend Mondays meeting, and further information on the chapter may be obtained by i calling Lee Willilams at 756-2459.
Pregnancy Exercise Class Scheduled
The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department and Margy Maira will sponsor a new session of pregnancy excercises beginning Monday. The class will meet on Mondays and Thursdays from 5:30-6:15 p.m. in the Jaycee Park Auditorium. The fee for five weeks is ^5.
The class is open to any expectant mother. The exercises will include relaxation, general muscle toning and aerobics tailored to the pregnant woman. Participants should wear comfortable clothing and bring a pillow to class.
Ms. Maira is a licensed physical therapist and a certified childbirth educator. To preregister call 752-4137, ext. 200,
Student Attends Seminar .
Lynn Calder of Greenville was one of seven Campbell University students who attended a two-day seminar entitled Definitions: Dead or Deadly in Southern Pines recently. Miss Calder, a second-year law student, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jospeh Calder of 2012 Sherwood Dr.
Winterville Board To Meet
Wintervilles Board of Aldermen will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the Town Hall.
Agenda items include: consideration of a second request from Sunnyside Eggs for waste water disposal, an application to the Family Lines System Railroad for construction of two walkways, a service contract for maintaining the towns police radios, a request for funds by the Rescue Department and the setting up of bids for proposed paving and resurfacing projects.
Bike-A-Thon Chairman Named
Gene Tripp of Ayden has been appointed chairman of the annual Wheels for Life Bike-a-thon to benefit St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. The event is scheduled for April 9, with a rain date of April 16.
Juvenile Task Force To Meet
The Pitt County Juvenile Task Force will hold its regular monthly meeting Feb. 28 at 3 p.m. in the third floor conference room of the Pitt County adminstrative offices, located at 1717 W. 5th St. The meeting will be open to the .public.
Author Conducts Workshops
Childrens author Richard Cooper held writing workshops for second and third grade students at Bundy School in Farmville this week.
, Students explored the process of writing, illustrating, printing and publishing. Demonstrations conducted by Cooper showed the use of primary color overlays in color print -reproduction. Coopers published books were also exhibited.
^The workshop was arranged by Hariet Rood, media .'coordinator.
Police Report Collision
j Cars driven by Emily Louise Flynt of Route 1, Germanton, and Susan Stewart Rhodes of Route 2, Greenville, collided about 1:55 p.m. Thursday at the intersection of Greene and Fifth streets.
Police estimated damage from the collision at $800 to the Flynt car and $3,000 to the Rhodes vehicle.
Nava/'o Medical Officer To Speak
Dr. Thomas Lowe, chief medical officer of the Navajo Area Indian Health Service, will be the speaker at the East Carolina University School of Medicine Friday. Lowe will discuss health care problems on the Navajo reservation and career opportunities in the Navajo Health Service.
The lecture, sponsored by the humanities section, will be held at 12:30 p.m. in the Pitt County Memorial Hospital cafeteria in the upstairs conference room.
Theft Investigation Continues
Chief Glenn Cannon said today that police were continuing their investigation of a break-in at 2905 South Memorial Drive that occurred Monday.
He said thieves entered the home by breaking a glass and unlocking a door, then took a watch valued at $1,000, a pearl necklace valued at $2,000 and 24 items of silver flatware.
i
Firm Draws Suspended Penalty
The State ABC Board has ordered beer permits issued to Lindburg Joyner for Birdland at 804 W. Fifth St. suspended for 30 days for ABC law violations, but suspended the penalty on condition that no further violations occur for a one-year period.
The suspension was ordered because the permittees employee did sell malt beverages between the hours of 1 a,m.-l p.m., Sunday, upon his licensed premises on or about Nov. 7,1982.
ByEUSSAMcCRARY Associated Press Writer BOONE, N.C. (AP) -When Dr. Bruce Rafert goes to work, he likes to oprate in the dark. *
Rafert is the director of Appalachian State Univsi-tys Dark Sky Observatory, He says the Isolation of the observatorys mountain setting provides the darkest
Tentatively OK Dram Shop Bill
ByJOHNFLESHER
Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A dram shop statute closely resembling the one proposed by Gov. Jim Hunt has cleared an initial hurdle but still has a long way to go before becoming law.
A state Senate subcommittee tentatively agreed Thursday on a compromise version of the statute, the most controversial portion of Gov. Jim Hunts legislative crackdown on drunken driving.
However, the subcommittee scheduled another meeting for next Tuesday and indicated it might make changes before submitting its version to the full Senate Judiciary III committee.
Were on our way, said Sen. Tony Rand, D-Cumberland. It seems to me that what weve done is necessary if the bill is to have the effect Its intended to have.
As originally submitted, the Hunt bill proposed making any restaurant, tavern, store or other 'establishme^nt liable to civil lawsuits if they sell to minors or to already drunken customers who later cause traffic accidents. The liability would apply equally regardless of where the beverages are consumed.
' The amended version, hammered out by lawmakers and Hunt administration officials earlier this week, would retain liability in all cases involving sales to minors. There also would be liability for sales to those already intoxicated - but only if they do their drinking on the premises.
In another major change, the compromise statute would shift burden of proof of negligence from the defendant to the plaintiff, or from the dealer to the person suing
Over An Inch Of Rainfall
Over an inch of rain pelted Pitt County Thursday night and early today as a winter storm that dumped six inches of snow in the North Carolina mountains and four inches in the Piedmont moved through the area.
Greenville Utilities weather station recorded 1.11 inches of precipitation from 8 a.m. Thursday through 8 a.m. today. Rain continued to fall this morning.
The downfall pumped the level of the Tar River up nearly a foot during the night. According to GUC, the river stood at 9.7 feet on the National Weather Servcie Gauge at 8 a.m. Thursday but by 8 a.m. today measured 10.2 feet.
Greenville Public Works Director Mayo Allen said his department had not received any complaints about flooding. We had no calls this morning concerning any problems, he said. Weve got crews out looking as usual and checking catch basins to make sure theyre clear, but (theres) nothing unusual.
Allen said most of the inch of rain was running off.
The ground is so wet it cant soak in, he said.
. The temperature at 8 a.m. today was 45 degrees Fahrenheit. The low during the night dipped to 35 degrees F.
Partly cloudy and cool conditions are forecast for the weekend, with highs in the 50s and lows in the high 20s.
HONOR STUDENTS The following students made the honor roll and principals list at Greenville Christian Academy for the third marking period: Honor roll, Stuart Fleming; Principals list, C^s Todd Little.
for damage.
Under the Hunt bill, if its established in court that a sale to a minor or intoxicated patron was made, the burden would be on the defendant to prove that the sale wasnt ne^igent. The version tentatively accepted by the subcommittee would shift the burden, making the plaintiff prove that it was negligent.
The new version also would require that, once the sale has been established in court, the jury would rule on whether it was negligent. The judge would be unable to throw out the suit even if hes convinced theres not enough evidence to prove negligence.
and therefore the best -observatory site east of the Mississippi.
There is a very low sky background, no city lights to be seen, and that makes it a very good site for an observatory, says Rafert. We may have the most excellent location for an observatory of any place in the United States.
Astronomers say man-made lights ruin observatories by making it more difficult to train telescopes on distant stars.
The metal-domed Dark Sky Observatory sits high on a ridge at Phillips Gap halfway between Boone and North Wilkesboro. Four Appalachian faculty members take turns manning the observatory.
It Is also a classroom of sorts for the colleges astronomy students, who use the observatory to conduct individual projects. .
Next month, the observatory will be open for the first time to students from other colleges who want to do study projects.
Dark Sky, which formally opened last May, is funded by Appalachian and federal grants.
The observatory Is un
heated, which is a mixed blessing for the astronomers who work in the building. Astronomers at some other obser\ atories have to use dry ice to keep sensitive telescope components cool.
Dark Skys 18-inch telescope is hooked up to two computers, which keep it aimed at a star that is being studied 'The computers in the observatory are shrouded in sleeping bags to protect them from the cold.
Astronomers at Dark Sky have to work in the cold since it is one of the few observatories in the country where the telescope is operated on site. Most big-budget observatories are completely computerized and astronomers operate them from nearby computer stations.
The cold can get to you
JAILED FOR UFE BELFAST. Northern Ireland (AP) - Two men who received a total of $14 for helping murder a Catholic were jailed for life by a judge who described the killing as old-blooded and brutal.
when the temperature goes into the teens or below. Rafert said. You get kind of numb.
Rafert said the observatory is unheated because hot air escaping from the dome roof through which the telescope peers would distort its vision.
It would be about the same as heat waves shimmering on a highway on a hot summer day, Rafert said.
When it gets too cold to work in the observatory, astronomers can warm up in a small house down the ridge. The house was donated by Lowes Cos. Inc. of North Wilkesboro.
Meanwhile. Rafert is trying to get a larger telescope for Dark Sky He said the observatory is on a federal
list for a surplus 32-mch telescope The state Board of Science and Technology is assisting in the search for a bigger telescope and has agreed to help develop Phillips Gap as a regional astronomy center that would serve astronomers from other colleges
But Rafert said no more modernization is planned for a while at Dark Sky.
We dont plan to go completely to computers because part of our plan is to provide a place for students to get training and experience. he said Besides, its a shame for astronomy to no longer mean working with the telescope, actually doing the work outside looking at the sky. That's what astronomy means.
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Women's Television Image Is Gradually Improving
By JERRY BUCK AP Television Writer LOS .A.NGELES i,\P) -Beautiful and self-assured Jennifer Hart of "Hart to Hart " Groping and insecure Gloria Bunker Stivic in Gloria, Gullible and troubled Sue Ellen Ewing on 'Dallas. Tough-minded and ambitious Chris Cagney of "Cagney and Lacey
Women on television have come a long way since they took their cues from "Hi, Mom, I'm home' What's for dinner'." But the image of today's prime-time female .still seems, at times, to be a reflection in a fun house mirror, .Many industry ob-.servers feel tlie picture needs further tuning toward reality
TV Log
For complete TV programming information, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday s Dally Reflector.
Series like "The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Hill Street Blues" and "Cagney and Lacey" have done much to adjust the image, as have movies like "Eleanor, First Lady of the World, "Games Mother .Never Taught You" and "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman.
But a recent study by the National Commission on Working Women found that women on television are more likely to be younger than in real life, white, a professional, and either upper middle class or wealthy.
How do women actually working in the television industry viewthe issue'
The image on Hart to Hart' is one people want to .see," said Susan Baerwald,. NBC's vice president for
miniseries and novels for television; Is it real? I dont know Im not sure that people want reality.
Ann Beatts, creator and producer of the CBS comedy Square Pegs, said, "Gloria is about a woman finding herself. Id like to see a show about a woman whos already found herself. Others were notso optimistic.
"We have done some good things in television, but the majority of women on television are victims and harlots, said Virginia Carter, senior vice president for creative affairs at Embassy Television. "I think its outrageous.
Deanne Barkley, producer of the NBC series The Family Tree, worries that
Disney Going Off The Air
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Walt Disney. the most enduring prime-time series in television history that enchanted a generation of viewers with fantasy, animation and nature, is going off the air.
The last show of the series, which has been telecast on all three networks since 1954 under various titles, will be broadcast on CBS next Tuesday.
CBS announced the shows end Thursday and said it was also taking M-A-S-H off the air after a 2'2-hour episode Monday, Feb. 28. The popular comedy will end its 11-year run, but reruns will be telecast on CBS later in the spring until September.
The hour-long Disney show,' at first called Disneyland, made its debut in September 1954.
It was the first major Hollywood movie studio venture into television, which at the time was seen as a threat to filmmakers. The struggling ABC network snared Walt Disney by agreeing to help finance his dream, the Disneyland park at Anaheim, Calif.
Both the show and the park were enormous successes. Almost every American child who grew up in the 1950s waited eagerly for the program and dreamed of visiting the amusement park, which was featured prominently in many, segments and in opening footage showing Tinkerbell swooping in front of Sleeping Beautys Castle.
The show rotated among four segments mirroring the parks divisions: Fron-tierland, Fantasyland, To-morrowland and Adven-tureland.
An early Frontierland presentation, the three-part Davy Crockett saga, was the first big hit, skyrocketing Fess Parker to stardom, spawning a hit record and
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triggering the coonskin hat craze.
Other American heros followed: The Saga of Andy Burnett, Texas John Slaughter (starring Tom Tryon) and Swamp Fox (StarringLeslie Nielson).
There were also adaptations of such classics as Alice in Wonderland. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (narrated by Bing Crosby), Robin Hood and Treasure Island.
Documentaries dealt with everything from space travel to animation. And of course there were cartoon features starring such Disney oldtimers as Mickey Mouse whose voice came from Disney himself Donald Duck. Pluto and Goofy. -
In later years the shows turned increasingly to nature and wildlife: Sammy, the Way Out Seal, Greta, the Misfit Greyhound, Joker, the Amiable Ocelot and a menagerie of talented animals, some with child sidekicks.
The series survived several name changes, to Walt Disney Presents in 1958; Walt Disneys Wonderful World of Color in 1961 when it went to NBC and became a showcase for the color TV sets manufactured by NBCs parent, RCA; The Wonderful World of Disney in 1969 and Disneys Underfill World in 1979.
The show continued to be popular after the 1966 death of Disney, original host of the program.
Barbara Bel Geddes -Ellie Ewing on the television series Dallas - was nominated for an Academy Award for her role in the 1948 film I Remember Mama.
the image of women projected by television makes them vulnerable to violence.
Who gets beat up on television? she asks. Its usually women. I know when Im on the street I worry that 1 may be seen as a victim. It unnerves me.
A 1978 University of Pennsylvania study concluded that women were outnumbered 3-1 by men in prime-time television, more likely to be a victim of violence and were usually shown in roles subordinate to men.
Lillian Gallo, a producer and former network executive, feels that the influx of women into decision-making roles within the industry is improving the situation.
Its getting stronger. Women have more roles, she said. More women are becoming network executives and they tend to do more stories with women.
NBCs Susan Baerwald said, I think we get a little bit of everything. For instance, a realistic image such as Joyce Davenport on Hill Street Blues is still idolized. I think shes somewhat of a mans view of the perfect woman. The hookers
on Hill Street Blues are gorgeous. Theyre a mans fantasy.
She said, however, she liked the image portrayed by Jaclyn Smith in the upcoming miniseries Rage of Angels.
I think she combines a vulnerability with a sense of strength, Ms. Baerwald said. It is idolized, but I think its an accurate picture of the modern woman.
Sidney Sheldon, who wrote the novel on which Rage of Angels is based, said, Whats needed is a series with a woman in control and who is good at what she does.
I didnt realize until about 15 years ago how chauvinistic we are. Society is slanted against women fulfilling themselves.
I like to write about women who are talented and capable, but most important, ^ retain their femininity,' Sheldon said. Women have enormous power - their femininity - because men cant do without it.
One of the most seen women on television is Maj. Margaret Houlihan of CBS M-A-S-H. In the beginning,
II years ago, she was Hot Lips, a shrill woman of easy
morals. In recent years she evolved into a warm and caring person.
It wasnt so much as how she was behaving as how they treated her, said her alter ego, actress Loretta Swit. I never tried to lose her passion. The promiscuity never bothered me as much as the fact that they couldnt see her as a human being... I was able to show some of her feelings in the later years.
Cheryl Ladd, who was one of Charlies Angels, takes a different view of the show that was criticized as the epitome of jiggle, a 1970s phenomenon that shoved televisions woman out of the kitchen and into a bikini.
Charlies Angels was one of the first TV series where the women were the stars, she said. Up to that time they were mostly wives and sidekicks. I think in that sense it was a breakthrough.
But the battle is never-ending.
In the 1930s we had Carole Lombard, Myrna Loy, Katharine Hepburn and Bette Davis playing strong women. Look at The Thin Man. They were equal partners, said Ms. Beatts.
When the men came back the kitchen and bedroom from World War II they Were still climbing out of pushed the women back into the hole.
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PRIME TIME FEMALES - Women on television have come a long way over the years in terms of their image, but many industry observers feel their image is still distorted. Some current prime time females are: Sally Struthers, upper left, Veronica Hamel, upper right, Sharon Gless, lower left and Linda Gray. (AP Laserphoto)
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The Daily ReHector, Greenville, N.C -Friday. February li. 1983-19
he thought the Soviets withdrew because they would have found it difficult to have coped with the possibility of a humiliating defeat in the full glare of public debate at the congress.
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INSERVICE COMPUTER TRAINING FX)R TEACHERS ... . Mitzi Waterside and ITiomas Council (left to right) get tutoring on the use of microcomputers during an all-day in-service : training session attended by four teachers from each of Pitt
City Council...
(Continued from Pagel)
has identified as one of its primary objectives the revitalization of the Heart of the City areas, including downtown, East Carolina University, the Tar River neighborhood, the West Fifth Street area, the Higgs neighborhood, the South Evans area, and the Dickinson Avenue area.
According to the resolution, revitalization of the area is vitally important to the economic well-being of Greenville and will encourage re-use of properties in the area.
The council appointed the committee to provide advice and assistance in addressing community concerns and in guiding the city toward future growth and physical development.
Board members endorsed a recommendation by the committee that the city and county planning staffs work together on the development of an area-wide land use policy. The policy would address development in and just beyond the extraterritorial jurisdiction of the city, utility services, annexationa, extraterritorial zoning, refuse generation and disposal, and other issues of mutual concern.
The council also endorsed a committee recommendation in adopting a resolution requesting the N.C. Department of Transportation to improve the intersection of Memorial Drive and Stantonsburg Road. It was noted that the local D.O.T. office has developed a proposal to improve the intersection by providing dual left turn lanes from Memorial Drive onto Stantonsburg Road. Funding will be considered by the Raleigh D.O.T. office.
In other business, the council:
- Approved an application by Carolina Precious Metals Inc. for a privilege license to operate a pawn shop at 405 Evans Mall;
Reappointed Dr. Herbert M. Hadley to a seven-year term on the Greenville Foundation;
- Adopted a resolution endorsing and supporting the establishment of a Recreation and Parks Department Trust with the Greenville Foundation;
Adopted a resolution requesting the Department of Transportation to improve S.R. 1534 in the vicinity of the new wastewater treatment plant;
- Endorsed a recommendation by the Traffic Commission in approving a request from Harry F. Kelly, 305 Lewis St., to establish a controlled residential parking area on the west side of Lewis Street from East Third Street to East Fourth Street;
Adopted a resolution authorizing the execution of an agreement with Southern Railway Co. holding them harmless for any claims for injuries or loss to property resulting from any claim which may arise from the citys placement of the water level marking on the railroads bridge on Dickinson Avenue;
- Adopted a resolution requesting the General Assembly to dissolve the Tar River Port Commission (dissolution of the commission requires mutual agreement by the city and county - the county has not yet taken official action); and
Adopted a resolution endorsing and supporting the Carolinas Association of Passenger Train Advocates in an effort to promote and secure Amtrak senile from Greenville to Raleigh and Charlotte.
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Countys middle schools. Computers will be housed for student use in the media center of each of the middle schools. (Barry Gaskins Photo)
VIENNA, Austria (AP) -The Soviet Union quit the World Psychiatric Association five months before the organization was to discuss resolutions to su^nd or expel the Communist country for abuse of psychiatry to suppress dissidents, the association announced.
The Soviet move aroused speculation that Soviet Communist Party leader Yuri V. Andropov, who has made no statements on human rights since he came to power in November, was indicating his resistence to foreign pressure to make reforms.
The world association announced Thursday that a five-page letter of withdrawal was received from Moscow on Tuesday.
In Washington, the American Psychiatric Association issued a statement saying it would seem the Soviet action was a political rather than a scientific decision.
Ellen Mercer, director of international affairs of the U.S. group, said the Soviet All-Union Society of Psychiatrists and
Neuropathologists had called the world organization too political.
Some world association sources thought the Kremlin might have ordered the withdrawal to save face because the Soviet society had said it would try to arrange for* a foreign panel to visit the Soviet Union and investigate long-standing charges that psychiatry is being used to stifle political dissent.
Ms. Mercer said she believed when the psychiatrists went to the government to arrange for the foreigners trip, the government vetoed the visit and decided withdrawal from the association was the least embarrassing way to cancel the psychiatrists offer.
The Soviet withdrawal letter, sent by the association to 77 national member
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^ups, was not available in Vienna because the secretary-general of the organization, Dr. Peter Berner, was out of town until Friday.
The Soviet move came five months in advance of an association meeting in Vienna next July that had been expected to take up American and British resolutions to suspend or expel the Soviet organization for abuse of psychiatry to suppress dissidents.
Professor Kenneth Rawnsley, the president of Britains Royal College of Psychiatry, told The Associated Press in London
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LANSING, Mich. (AP) -It would cost up to $15 million to destroy about 275 farm silos contaminated with toxic PCBs under a program tentatively adopted by the state Agriculture Commission.
Polychlorinated biphenyls, suspected of causing cancer, have been found in Michigan milk, although in amounts below federal safety levels, and the problem has been traced to the silos, which were coated with a sealant tainted with the substance.
178 Pints High Cost For
A bloodmobile Wednesday at Rose High School netted 178 pints of blood,
Pitt Ck)unty Red Cross spokeswoman Ruth Taylor said.
She said that 26 deferrals were recorded during the school visit, \\iiich was sponsored by the Juniorettes Club. Phyllis Hurt is the club adviver.
Club members also made sandwiches to serve to donors.
The Rose visit was the first high school blood drive in the area for 1983, she reported.
The next bloodmobile visit will be Tuesday at Pitt Community College, followed by a Feb. 28 visit at the Moose Lodge. Mrs.
Taylor said the Feb. 28 drive will mark the first time that donors have the opportunity to call in advance and schedule specific times for, giving blood. She said donors are not required to schedule in advance.
SUNDAY SERVICE Missionary Ethel Bryant will conduct services at Clemons Grove church at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Idella Scott and Daniel R. Ward are sponsors of the service.
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ALSO.TERIGARR,
BILL MURRAY, DABNEY COLEMAN, CHARLES DURNING
STARTS FRIDAY, FEB. 18TH GANDHI (PG)
CtOBBWOtd By Eugeru Sheffer
ACROSS 41 Creature
1 Saloon 45 Garden name
4 Small store 48 of iodine 8 George Ruth SO Brownish
12 Aussie bird purple
13 Coloring SlTomJoad,
14 Remote for one
15 Early photos 52 Swamp
17 Give in 53 Foot
18 Sock type features
19 Self 54 Corrals
21 Conducted 55 Corpulent
DOWN
2 Eastern title
3 Step
4 Fashion designer
5 Aspired
6 Unity
7 planish coins
8 Breakfast strip
16 U.S. president 20 Card players word
23 Foreteller
24 At any time
25 Damsel
26 Assist
27 Son of > Jacob
28 Adolescent
22 Yule trim
26 Change
29 Newsman Rather
30 ZsaZsas sister
31 Stem contents
32 Towel word
33 listen to
34 Night before
35 Sack
36 Unite
37 Fire starter
39 Poke fun at
40 Peculiar
1 Greek consonant
9 Reverence 29 Excavate
10 Unpleasant 32 Auto,.of
11 Needle hole
Avg. solution time; 23 min.
mm
2-11
Answer to yesterday's puzzle.
sorts
33 Nuns garb
35 Flower garden
36 Chops up
38 Rotunda tops
39 Arrested
42 Hand warmer
43 Region
44 Spring time
45 Fitting
46 Twosome
47 Top card
49 Presidential nickname
CRYPTOQUIP . 2-11
BG YQ-BXZZSJSQ JDBSD SIHDJWSQ MGI
WMSXWSJ QXWSI CU WMS CXYHDZU.
Yesterdays Cryptoqnip - PRESIDENTS RECOVERY PLAN VETOED; IT REALLY ISNT A CAPITOL IDEA.
Tpdays Cryptoquip clue: S equals E.
The Cryptoqnip is a simple substitution cipho* in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, It will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
lKinqFeilurM Syndicate. Inc
FORECAST FOR SATURDAY, FEB. 12.1983
GENERAL TENDENCIES: An unusually good day to contact persons who have been difficult to reach during busy workweek. Be sure you understand what others expect of you at this time.
ARIES (Mar, 21 to Apr 19) Find out how you stand with others and do whatever is needed to improve relations. Try to understand views of loved one.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 201 Make new acquaintances who can help to enrich your life in many ways. Attend a group meeting that is worthwhile.
GEMl.NT (May 21 to June 21) Study your surroundings and make plans for improvement Allow time to engage in favorite hobby with congeniis.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Take part in new activities that are fine for you but first know all the facts concerning them Think constructively
LEO (July 22 to Aug 21) Your mate may have a change of attitude, so go along with new ideas for best results. Take it easy tonight and express happiness
VIRGO (Aug 22 to Sept. 22) Show more interest in civic affairs and gain the respect of others. You can make this a most productive day.
LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) Improve your environment so that it is more inspiring and brings you greater comfort. Strive for increased happiness.
SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) Listen to what a good friend has to suggest for greater pleasure ahead Take health treatments and improve your appearance.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21) Get rid of whatever is causing disharmony at home and be happier in the future. Put your talents to work.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 to Jan 2U) Be sure to study a new project well before you put it in operation Don t take any risks that could prove costly
AQUARIUS iJan 21 to Feb. 19) Make long range plans that could give you added income in the future. Come to a better understanding with family members.
PISCES (Feb 2U to Mar 20) You are likely to be upset about matters you can t change, so concentrate on what ever brings you inner peace.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY he or she will be one who can understand both sides of a situation, so teach to stand up for what is right. Success and happiness will surely follow Be sure to give ethical and religious training early in life.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel. " What you make of your life is largely up to you'
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc
Wine Contest On February 19
ROSE HILL, N.C. -Duplin Wine Cellars second annual homemade wine contest will take place Saturday, February 19, beginning at 2:00 p.m.
Deadline for entries will be 5:00 p.m., Feb. 18.
The event is open to the public, and the program will
include a lecture on homemade winemaking by winemaker David Fussell, a winestasting and tour of the facilities; and the actual competition at 3:00 p.m The contest will take place at Duplin Wine Cellars, halfway between Goldsboro and Wilmington on Highway 117.
The Tiniest Nation
Today marks the 54th independence anniversary of Vatican City. In 1929, the Treaty of the Lateran recognized the Vatican as a separate nation within Italy, making it the smallest independent state in the world, with a total area of only 109 acres (about 1/6 square mile) and a population of 1,000. Still this tiny nation issues its own postage stamps, coins, and automobile license plates. It has its own telephone system, water supply, and lighting and street-cleaning services. There is even a Vatican Bank, printing plant, and jail, as well as a railroad station with 300 yards of track. Despite its size, however, Vatican City is the spiritual and governmental center for millions of Roman Catholics all over the world.
DO YOU KNOW - What is the name of the Vaticans armed forces?
THURSDAY'S ANSWER -invented the wireless radio.
211-8.'l
Guglielmo Marconi
VEC, Inc. 1983
Fever Is the Body's Defense
results have been exceedingly . dangerous. EHabetics have been pushed into shock and have run into a great many complications b^use they themselves have departed from the programs established for them by their doctors.
A vast amount of information is known about the scientific asp^ of diabetes, pancreatic disturbances, and supplementation with insulih. Along with so much valid scientific information always comes myths and fancies that have no solid basis in fact.
It is essential, therefore, that before a diabetic departs frwn any established pattern treatment, full discussion with the do(^r should take place. It may well be that the doctor may acknowledge a change of regime. If indeed this does occur, the patient should be kept under observation to be certain that no complication occurs during the trial period.
* * *
The relationship between doctors and their patients often is a a-easured one. It takes months and sometimes years for this relationship, based on mutual trust and respect, to develop. It is sad therefore when lines of communication between doctors and their patients are destroyed because of a petty, uninqwrtant experience. How much wiser it is to maintain that valuable relationship by a forthright and open discussion of a problem or a situation that seems to be far more significant than it really is.
It is well established that fever is the bodys defense mechanism against illness. It is believed that associated with fever comes the release of white blood cells that act as a protective force against the invasion of bacteria.
It has been speculated that exercise raises the body temperature and may also serve a function as an added resistance to body infection and to increase immunity.
On the basis of this, some people unwisely force themselves to exercise when they are not in the best physical CMKlition. Ardent sports enthusiasts have gone overboard and have forced their bodies to continue the exercise even though they have been devitalized by impending illness.
Young people especially should be warned against further devitalizing themselves by overactivity during illness.
* * *
Diabetics who are on a well-established regime (rf treat-moit are sometimes tempted to depart frnn their prc^ram because of highly touted special riHitines. A number of people who successfully balance their diabetic status with insulin and diet have been tempted to stq) this regime because d reports that exercise and special diets can eliminate that need.
A great number of anecdotal experiences \enthusiastically reported in the lay literature have been accepted as gospel by diabetics. Some of the
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1983 Tribune Company Syndicate. Inc
WATCH THAT SIGNAL
Both vulnerable. West deals. NORTH
Q6
-7 10 3 2 OKQ95 4 J 10 3 2 WEST EAST
5 J1097432
K 9 8 4 ^ lb
0 A 10 8 6 2 0 Void
9 86 AQ75
SOUTH
A K 8 ^ AQ J6 0 J743
K 4 The bidding;
West North East South
Pass Pass 3 3 NT
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead: Five of .
Tomorrow is the 78th birth day of Richard L. Frey, chair man of the Goren Editorial Board. Editor Emeritus of the ACBL Bulletin, Life .Master #8 and one of the world's great player writers. After suffering a mild stroke at the end of last ^ear, Frey is back at the typewriter-and the bridge table.
Purists might quibble with Freys three spade preempt
because of his ace outside the trump suit and the void. But chances of game opposite a flassed hand were remote, and the preempt might have made life difficult for the opponents.
The star of this hand is ac tually Freys wife, Mabel. Like a' good spouse, she dutifully led . her singleton spade. Declarer won in dummy and Frey followed suit with the two. Declarer oould not come to nine tricks without setting up both red suits, so at trick two he ran the ten of hearts to Wests king. '
Mindful of her partners signal at the first trick. West shifted to the nine of clubs. Declarer carelessly played the ten from dummy. East won the ace and continued 'with a low club. West unblocked the eight!
West still had to gain the lead with the ace of diamonds. When she did, she persevered with the six of clubs, and the defenders took two more club tricks for a total of five-three clubs, and a trick in each red suit.
PEANUTS
PIP YOU SEE MY' SWEET 6AB60C"5TANPIN6 THERE?
HE'S mme arounp
THE CANPY store TRYINSTOPECIPE UIHAT TO GET ME FOR VALENTINE'S PAY...
B.C.
iolYoo y
^i^^TAPLe<i
/ riso'sixsAOSi^ FlAJR, 2 Jas Of vWei?,
4 ffcTAToeSA^lDATW|Mf:|
speaking of Your Health...
Lester LColenan,N.H.
BLONDIE
i I'/V\30QRV &UT U HE'S TAKING A NAP DiGHT NOW
PEOPLE MIGHT GET ^ THE IDEA I'M A LAZYOOOD-COP-NOTHING LOAPER
BETTLE BAILEY
FRANK & ERNEST
UNEMPLOYMENT OFFICE
X'M IN LiN^, $ox 3u^$S
I'M A /-Pacing inp/caToP.
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
OFFICE AIDE -
IN 5PITE OF WHAT QO m IHINK , OFFICE AIDE 15 NCT THE NAME OF THE DRINK THAT THE PRINCIPAL KEEPS IN THE BonOM DRAWER OF HIS DESK.
OFFICE AIDES ARE STUDENTS WHO WORK IN THE OFFICE HELPING THE SECRETARIES AND STAFF. THESE 0DB5 5UAL1V GO TD THE SCHOOL'S OUER-ACHIEVERS; BUT DONT LET THAT BOTHER QO. ANOONE WHO CAN BE CONNED INTD WORKING FOR FREE CANT BE THAT SMART/
MONEY In Your Pocket!
When you need money, cash in on the items that are laying around the houseItems that you no longer use.
Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To R|in Under The Miscellaneous For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Per Ad With Sate Vatue Of $200 Or Less. Commerciat Ads Exctuded. All Ads Cash With Order. No Refund For Earty Cancetta-tion.
Use Your VISA or MASTER CARD
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THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.
people read classified
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE
Under and by virtue of the power ot sale contained in a certain aeed ot trust made by ROBERT LEE CLARK and wife, DOROTHY CLARK to Josephine A/l. Brown, Trustee(s), dated the 7th day of August, 1981, and recorded in Book F 50, Page 110, Pitt Couhty Registry, North Carolina, Default having been made in the payment ot the note thereby secured by the said Deed ot trust and the undersigned, H TERRY HUTCHENS, having been substituted as Trustee in said deed of trust by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North Carolina and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Subtitute Trustee will offer for sale at the Courthouse Door, in the City of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina at Two (2:00) o'clock P. M. on Friday, the 18th day of February, 1983 and will sell to th highest bid der for cash the following real estate situate in the Township of Pactolus, Pitt County, North Carolina, and be ing more particularly described as follows:
BEGINNING at a point on the western right of way line of S.R. 1564, said point of beginning being located south 14 degrees 27 minutes east 420 feet from the point of intersection of the western right ot way line ot S.R 1564 and the eastern right of way line ot S.R. 1565, and from said point ot beginning, run thence south 14 degrees 27 minutes east 100 feet along fhe western right of way of S.R. 1564 to an iron stake set; thence south 75 degrees 33 minutes 0 seconds west 234.42 feet to an iron stake set; thence north 4 degrees 32 minutes 4l seconds east 105.76 feet to an iron stake set; thence north 75 degrees 33 minutes 0 seconds east 200 feet to the point ot beginning; being a lot or parcel ot land located on fhe west sioe ot S.R. 1564. Including the single family dwelling located thereon; said pro perty being located Route 3, Box 447 G. Washington, North Carolina.
This sale is made subject to all taxes and prior liens or en cumbrances of record against the said property and any recorded releases
A cash deposit ot ten percent (10%) of the purchase price will be required at the time ot the sale.
This 28th day of Janaury, 1983.
H. Terry Hutchens.
Substitute Trustee HUTCHENS&WAPLE.P A Attorneys at Law TV 40 Building 230 Donaldson Street P.O. Box650
Fayetteville North Carolina 28302 February 4, 11,1983
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE
Under and by virtue ot the power of sale contained in a certain a^d of trust made by JOHNNIE M MAYE, JR and wife, MARTHA S MAYE AND WILLIE RAY MAYE to TIM, INC., Trustee(s), dated the 22nd day of November, 1978, and recorded in Book J47, Page 364, Pitt County Registry, Norm Carolina, Default having been made in the payment of fhe note thereby secured by the said Deed of trust and the undersigned, H TERRY HUTCHENS, having been substituted as Trustee in said deed ot trust by an instrument duly recorded in the. Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North Carolina and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the deed of frust be foreclosed, the undersigned Subtitute Trustee will offer for sale af the Courthouse Door, in the City of Greenville, Pitf County, North Carolina at Two (2:00) o'clock P. M. on Friday, the 18th day of February, 1983 and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate situate in the Township of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows:
Beginning at an iron pipe located in the northern right of way line of North Village Drive, said iron pipe also being located N. 85 38 W. 371.0 feet, more or less, from the western right of way line of Line Avenue where if intersects the northern right of way line ot North Village Drive, and running from said beginning point along and with fhe nor them right of way line ot North Village Drive N. 85-38 W 60.00 feet to
PUBLIC NOTICES
a comer, thence N
feet to an iron pipe, a 40.00 feet
an iron pi|
04 22 E ft
corner thence S 15 31 E to an iron pipe a corner, thence S 04 22 W 110 00 feet to an iron pipe, the point of beginning, and beir all 13 X and a portion of Lot No. 13 in Block "0", Village Grove
of Lot No 13 X and a port
"0", Vill^ Subdivision, Frist Addition, as
shown in AAap Book 5 at page 98 of the Pitt County Registry Includirtg the single family dwelling located thereon; said property being located 2110 N Village Drive. Greenville, North Carolina This sale is made subject to all taxes and prior liens or en cumbrances of record against the said property and any recorded releases.
A cash deposit of ten percent (10%) of the purchase price will be required at the time of tne sale.
This28th day of Janaury, 1983 H Terry Hutchens.
Substitute Trustee HUTCHENS&WAPLE.P A Attorneys at Law TV 40 Building 230 Donaldson Street P 0 Box 650
Fayetteville North Carolina 28302 February4, 11,1983
NOTICE TOCREDITORS
Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of KATHLEENS SPAIN, late of Pitf County North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against saio Estate to present them to the undersigned whose mailing address is 1802 S. Elm Street, Greenville North Carolina, 27834, on or before the 8th day of August, 1983, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make im mediate payment to the undersign ed
This the 8th day of February, 1983. Alton 0. Spain 1802 S. Elm Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Michael A. Colombo JAMES, HITE, CAVENDISH & BLOUNT Attorney at Law Post Otnce Drawer 15 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 February 11, 18, 25, March 4,1983
A RESOLUTION DECLARING A 1965 INTERNATIONAL BULLDOZER TD-9 SURPLUS TOTHE COMMISSIONER'S NEEDS WHEREAS, the Greenville Utilities Commission ot the City of Greenville North Carolina, has determined that a 1965 International Bulldozer TD 9, Serial No. 11543, is surplus to its needs; and, WHEREAS, it is the desire of fhe Greenville Utilities Commission to sell the said bulldozer; and, WHEREAS, General Statute 160A 267 allows the Commission to designate an official to dispose of said bulldozer by private sale at a negotiated price;
NOW, THERFORE, be IT RESOLVED by the Greenville Utilities Commission of the City of Greenville, North Carolina, that the Director of Utilities is hereby authorized to dispose of above referenced bulldozer by private sale at a negotiated price BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED by the Greenville Utilities Commission of fhe City of Greenville that no sale be consummated until ten (10) days after the publication of this resolu tion in the local newspaper.
RESOLVED this the 8th day of Februai^, 1983.
GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION February 11,1983
NOTICE TO SALE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENTOF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE READVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS NOTICE is hereby given that the Community Development Depart ment of fhe City of Greenville will until 11:00 A.M., E.S.T., on the 8th day of March, 1983, af Cify Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina, receive sealed bids for the purchase and development ot the ollowing described property located
ilop
Pr
roject
North
in the Southside Redevelopment Project Area known as NCR 134, Greenville,
Carolina, Pitt County:
Disposal Parcel D5: Located in Greenville Township, Pitt County, Greenville, North Carolina; beginn ing at a point in the southern proper ty line ot Griffin Streef, 150.00 feet east of the intersection of fhe southern property line of Griffin Street and the eastern property line of Perkins Street as measured along the southern property line of Griffin Streef, from the beginning point runs then N 86 deg. 00 min. East
50.00 feet to an iron stake set; runs then S 4 deg. 00 min. E. 150.00 feet to an iron stake set; runs then S 86 deg. 00 min. W 50.00 feet to an iron stake set; runs then N 4 deg. 00 min. W
150.00 feet to an iron stake set; the point of beginning, containing 7,500 square feet, more or less, by actual survey made by William R. Purvis, R.L.S., dated December 14, 1981, Southside Project N.C.R 134.
The above described land is sub ject to the land use emulations and controls as contained in the Redevelopment Plan for said pro ject and the covenants as contained in the declaration on file at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina.
Bidder may be any person, firm or corporation who agrees to conform in all respectes with the provisions of bidding documents including Redeveloper's Statement for Public Disclosure, Form HUD 6004, and Redeveloper's Statemenf for Quatificafions and Financial Responsibility, Form HUD6004A, copies ot which may be obtained upon request at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North
Carolina. Any further information or ed line )pei
opi
toPlows: Disposal Parcel D 5, R 6
V ti
copies of the
enf
g ...
sold for redevelopment as
proposed disposal agreement may be obtained at City Hall. In general the property is be
Residential. Bids shall be ac companied by cash, cashier's check, or certified check payable to the Community Development Depart ment of the City of Greenville in an amount equal to five (5%) percent of the bid price Bids shall be opened at 11:00 A.M., E.S.T.,onthe8thdayofMarch, 1983, at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville North Carolina. The Department reserves the right to waiver any irregularities in bidding and the right to reject any or all bids submitted. All sales or other transfers of land shall be subject to fhe approval ot the Cify Council ot the City ot Greenville.
Contact the Office of the Com munity [Development Department ot the City ot Greenville for further details. '
Community Development Department of the City of Greenville February 11. 28, 1983
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY BESSIE INEZ BEARD,
Plaintiff,
EARLG BEARD,
Defendant
AFFIDAVITOF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION The plaintiff in the above entitled action, being duly sworn says:
ThedefendarM, EarlG. Beard:
1 Cannot after due diligence be served within this State in the manner prescribed in Rule 4(j) of the Rules of Civil Procedure, and 2. Said defendant's address, whereabouts, dwelling house or usual place of abode is unknown and cannot with due diligence be ascer tained;
3 Notice ot service of process has been gi.ven by publication as shown by the attached publisher's at fadavit. A copy of fhe Complaint and Summons has been mailed to the defendant at the last known address set out below:
This the 8fh day of February. 1983.
BESSIE INEZ BEARD Sworn to and subsribed before me this the 8 day of Feb., 1983 Stella S. Worthington Notary Public
My commission expires: 1 15 85 February 11,18, 25, March 4,1983
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Having this day qualified as AO ministrator of the estate of Joe Reginald Wilson. Deceased, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Administrator or his attorney on or before July 21 1983 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate settlement This the 18th day ot January, 1983 Joe Michael Wilson P 0 Box 594
Apex N .C. 27502 W I Wooten, Jr.. Attorney 111 W Third Street Greenville, N C. 27834 January 21,28, February 4,11,1983
FILENO 82CVD1722 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY COUNTY OF PITT TOWNOFGRIFTON,
Plaintiffs
KNOWN & UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OR DEVISEES OF LOUISE BROWN, DECEASED, TOGETHER WITH ALL THEIR CREDITORS 8, LIEN HOLDERS REGARDLESS OF HOW OR THROUGH WHOM THEY CLAIM, AND ANY 8. ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF LOUISE BROWN, DECEASED; ELAINE BROWN; JOE RALPH BROWN and wife, MRS JOE RALPH BROWN, if there be any; AND STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA (lien holder), Defendants
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: Known and unknown heirs af law and/or devisees of Louise Brown, deceased, together with all their creditors and lien holders regardless of how or through whom they claim and any and all other per sons claiming an interest in the estate of Louise Brown, deceased. TO: Elaine Brown TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of fhe relief being sought is as follows: foreclosure of fax liens for delinquenf faxes ovxed to the plaintiffs You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than
March )(), 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for The relief soughf.
This the 20 day ot January, 1983 RUSSELL HOUSTON, III Attorney for the Plaintiffs P.O. Box939 Griffon, NC 28530 Telephone: (919) 524 4521 January 28, February 4,11,1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Samuel R^ Cherry late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against tne estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before July 28, 1983 or this notice or same will be plead ed in bar of fheir recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.
This 26th day of January, 1983. Della Cherry Evans 302 N. Sylvan Drive Greenville, Norfh Carolina 27834 E xecutrix of the estate of Samuel Ray Cherry, deceased,
Jan. 28; Feb. 4,11,18,1983
NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Having this day qualified as Ex ecufor of fhe Estafe of Hannah C. Brown, lafe of Pift County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before the 4th. day of August, 1983 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of fheir recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate settlement.
This the 1st day of February, 1983. William I. Wooten, Jr.,
Executor
111 W. Third Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 William I. Wooten Jr.,
Attorney
Greenville, North Carolina 27834 February 4, 11,18, 25,1983
WANT
ADS
bb
010
AUTOMOTIVE
WANTED nice, clean used cars, reasonably priced. Phone 756 6 783.
Oil
Autos For Sale
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. 34 7 2424
JEEPS,CARS,TRUCKS
Under SIOO. Available at local government sales Call (retunda ble) 1 619 569 0241, extension 1504 tor your 1983 directory 24 hours
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114.
013
Buick
1977 BUICK Electra Limited door. 756 0489after 5 p.m._
1978 ELECTRA LIMITED, 4 door, loaded. Must sell $4.500. Call 756 8760 atter6p.m. j__
1979 REGAL, blue and white, fully loaded, $4850. 758 4178.__
1980 ELECTRA LIMITED, 4 door, 50,000 miles $6800. Call 758 1427.
015
Chevrolet
CAA6AR0 1981. Sports Coupe Good condition, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Ayden, 746 3141.
CHEVROLET, 1973 Monte Carlo, bucket seats, tilt steering, silver and maroon $650. Call 756 0638.
IMPALA 1979 . 4 door Fully equipped Including power windows and seats. Low mileage. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Ayden, 746 3141
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA, medium red metallic, 4 door, excellent condition. 350 V-8 engine, air, power steering and brakes. 80.000 miles. $1695. 746 6451_
1980 CITATION, straight drive, air. AM FM $3995 758 9157 After 5,
752 5556.
1981 CAAAARO, red, excellent con dition Take up payments. 752 3563 1981 CHEVROLET El Camino, excellent condition. 12.000 miles, air, stereo cassette. $5800. 758 8160.
016
Chrysler
1973 CHRYSLER NEWPORT, low mileage, extra clean, $700. 753 2381
1982 CHRYSLER LeBaron Medallion, possible assumption with approved credit, 758 1121. 9 to
017
Dodge
1976 DODGE ASPEN Stationwagon, Special Edition Power steering, power brakes, autorrtatic. air con dition, AM/FM Red with wood
finish siding Economy slant 6 cylirtder Retail pri sell $1450 746-6m
rice. $2200. Must
1981 DODGE Aries K Car 29,000 miles. $6300. Good condition. 758 6911.
1981 DODGE K, Excellent condi tion. 4 door, air, cruise, dolby stereo/radio. 1 owner. $6295 Call 756 7829._The Daily ReOeclor, Greenville. N C -Friday, February 11,1983-21
018
Ford
FOR SALE 1977 Grenada Automatic transmission, air condi tioning. 4 door good condition $1.795 Phone day. 756 7815. night
355 2161. Ask tor Lin___
1969 FORD GALAXY, clean good coftdltion 756 8604after 6p.m.
1974 LTD. 4 door, all options, like new radiais, askino $1295 756 6284. 1977 GRENADA Ford $2600 Call
756 5859 __
1977 MUSTANG, power steering, power brakes. 4 speed. 68.000 miles
11800 758 6321 ._
1977 THUNDERBIRD, Good condi
tion $3000. 74A 3085 nioKt__
21969 ThunderbIrd, 1 1969 Thun derbird parts only Call 746 4863 after 6 p.m or 746 3141 anytime ask for Larry _
019
Lincoln
1977 MARK V by owner Bought new Clean. White with burgandy interior $4.800 Call anytime.
_
1979 LINCOLN VERSAILLES Excellent condition All accessories including moon root Call 946 1687
021
Otdsmobile
1973 CUTLASS SUPREME Good condition 355 2733
022
Plymouth
1973 PLYMOUTH FURY, 4 door extra clean $650 758 0272
023
Pontiac
1973 CATALINA, 4 door hardtop, power steering and power brakes, air, with stereo After 6 and
weekends, 756 3517________
1980 LJ PHOENIX with half vinyl top, 40,000 miles, good condition. }4500. 756 6733
1981 PONTIAC Bonneville Brougham Loaded Like new Call 946 ^66^.
1981 TURBO TRANS AM, low mileage Many extras Call weekdays after 6 pm. anytime Friday. Saturday, Sunday. 756 9780
024
Foreign
DATSUN 240Z, new tires new paint, excellent condition $3,895 Days 758 5907, extension 350, 753
4756 or 753 5500 after 6____________
FOR SALE: 1979 Fiat Xl/9 Con vertible, good condition Call Branch Banking and Trust Com ^anj^onsumer Loan Department
MUST SELL 1981 Toyota Corolla. 2 door, air. Will sacrifice at only $4,995. Call 757 3646 after 5 TOYOTA, 1979, Clica GT Sport Coupe, loaded, excellent condition. $4,595 753 4750 or 753 5500 after 6 1969 MGB GT Black, AM/FM cassette, steel belted radiais Excellent mechanical condition Rebuilt engine No rust, paint interior fair condition $1750 753
2628____________
1974 OPEL, good running condition $850 753 2381
1974 TOYOTA CORONA Mark 11,4 door, automatic, air. $995 tirm Call 752 5650
1975 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT, 4 speed, air. AM/FM stereo. 756 8281 or 758 9090
1978 DATSUN 280Z, AM/FM cassette, cruise control, air, excellent condition. $5800 or best offer. 752 1931.
1978 TOYOTA Corolla SR5 liftback $1800, Call 756 9760.
1980 HONDA ACCORD, hatchback, loaded, excellent condition, $4600. 756 8062 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, 756 3636.
1981 TOYOTA COROLLA Wagon, 5 speed, AM/FM, air, cruise control Call after 6, 758 9760.
1981 VOLVO GL, low mileMe, excellent condition, white. Call 756 4508 after 7 p m.
029 Auto Parts & Service
1976 MAZDA PARTS for sale 5 speed transmission. Call after 5 p.m. 792 4027__
WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy, they turn to the Classified Ads Place your Ad today for quick results
032
Boats For Sale
1979 JOHNSON 99 horsepower outboard motor with gas tank Like new Call 752 4058atter 5:30.
034 Campers For Sale
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774
VOLUNTEER 17' camper, fully loaded, sleeps 6. Can be seen by calling 756 1953._____
036
Cycles For Sale
XL350, 1975, new back tire, $650 752 2357 or 756 4019 _
1979 HARLEY LOW RIDER Call 946 5062.
1980 KAWASAKI 1300 grand tour ing, 6,000 miles, full dresser. Call 746 4863 after 6 p m. or 746 3141 anytime, ask tor Larry. __
039
Trucks For Sale
DUMP TRUCK, 1959 Ford, short bed. good condition $600 Call 758 0246
FARM OR WORK TRUCK 1981 Ford F100. 6 cylinder, 21,000 miles Very clean. $5500. 355 6349.
1964 DODGE PICKUP TRUCK, 318 VB, manual transmission, like new tires, runs but needs water pump and brake shoes $450 746 3103.
1967 FORD VAN Econoline, 6 cylinder, $400. Call 756 7185._
1971 DODGE pickup Limited Edi tion. Automatic, air, power steer ing. Good condition Mags yellow and black, two tool boxes included 756 7971 after 6
1972 FORD VAN, 6 cylinder gopd
running condition 7^ 2313__________
1975 BLAZER 4x4 New paint Rebuilt motor New exhaust system, new carpel, AM'FM stereo cassette $3500 firm. 752 7341, After 6, 758 0027,
1975 SCOUT, V 8, automatic, air 125.000 miles. $2500 756 9847 after 6 1978 FORD Econoline 150 Van, fully equipped and completely customized 752 3920 after 5
1981 DATSUN KING CAB, 5 speed rail, tool box Call 756 7453 after 6
p.m_______
1981 DODGE RAM TRUCK V6 power steering power brakes, de luxe interior, heavy suspension new tires. AM FM radio, 21,000 miles Call 746 2678__
1982 MAZDA Sundowner Deluxe, long bed, equipped with 5 speed transmission, body liner, tool box, rear step bumper, radial tires 10,500 miles One owner 758 0374
040
Child Care
BABYSITTER needed 6 30 p m to 3:30 a m in my home References required Call 752 5377 after 3 p.m
I HAVE 3 OPENINGS tor days only to keep children in my home. Call 758 9361___
WOULD LIKE TO babysit in my home in Farmville area Will pick up from school 753 2438
WOULD LIKE to keep children in my home Winterville area Call 756 7344, _
046
PETS
ADOPT A PUPPY Need good homes tor 3 six week old mixed
puppies 757 3876.____ ________
AKC Boxer puppies 9 weeks old $75 926 5046_
AKC CHIHUAHUAS, 1 female born January 30, 1981, 1 male born May
1. 1980 $75 each. 756 0061___
AKC DOBERAAAN PUPS, 7 weeks, black and rust, wormed and shots $75 and $100 524 3116.__
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 ^u^
pies, good hunting Phone 757 3524.
stock
051
Help Wanted
AUTOAAOTIVE SALESPERSON E xperierKe helpful but not neces sary Individual must have sue cessful background and the will ir>gness to advance quickly Only those settled, responsible and de siring to earn top commissions need to appiyi All replies held contiden tial. Apply to Automotive Salesperson, P O Box 1967
Greenville, N C 27834_
AUTOMOTIVE MACHINE Shop Foreman Ability to work help, Good background Apply The Auto Equip Co. 115 N Washington
Street. Rocky Mount, N C__
AVON Wanted sales repre sentatives Earn 50% Call 7x6 3x94
or 758 3159_-
BODY SHOP MECHANIC needed Excellent workir^ conditions and company benefits Apply to Body Shop Mechanic. P O Box 1967, Greenville N C 27834_
051
Help Wanted
074
Miscellaneous
sales REPRESENTATIVE to sell lines ot lawn and garden power equipment in Eastern North Caro lina Wholesale sales experierKe in this or related fields preferred Salary plus commission and expenses negotiable Send resume to Ms Gerry Little PO Box 4193, Winston Salem. NC 27115 FULL ALTERATIONS One Hour
Koretizinq 756 0545 ________
TEXAS OIL COMPANY urgently needs mature person tor Greenville area business sales representative Sales experience not necessary We train Write T B Dickerson South western Petroleum Box 789 Forth Worth Texas 76101 _
TRAINED DENTAL assisfani tor work in multi assistant office Send resume and references to Dental PO Box 1967 Greenville NC 27834 TUTOR WANTED (BA MSC de
COLOR SEPARATION . TECHNICIAN
Gravure or offset experience In four color camera separation or a de gree in photography or Graphic Arts A 30 year old Southeastern company with wages and benefits among the top in industry An EqualOpporlunity Employer,
Mail resume to Technician', P O
Box 1967, Greenville N C 27834 _
CCXOK. WAITRESSES, bus persons
greel to help in computer science course $10 hour Call Sherry 758 8886 after 2 30 p m or Chris 758 8059
Lunch hours only Apply in person J B's Island Seafood.
liverg, lOth St
after 4 pm. _
Rivergafe Shopping Center East
DRUAAMER FOR A&A Band 946 0302 alter 5 30 p m
ESTABLISHED LAW FIRM in Kinston. NC seeks experienced legal secretary or paralegal to work in estates and civil litigation Salary commensurate with ei^rience Send resume to PO Box 3321. Kinston NC 28501
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales repre sentative Individual must be local resident with managerial ability ambition and show progress lor age Business or sales background helplul In requesting personal in terview. please submit resume stating personal history education and business experience Write
-P Q 406. Greenville, N^ _
FULL TIME secretary needed. Monday through Friday 8 30 am to 5 pm Two to three years experi ence excellent typing skills(60 65 words per minute minimum) good telephone mannerisms Downtown Greenville area Call 752 1010 and ask for Jane between 2 and 4 pm Monday___
Gals
Over 17
Guys
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 for the younger set Call between 5 9 evenings. 753 3145. MissDolata
HAIRDRESSER WANTED Guar anteed salary Call Georges Coil ture, 756 6200
HOMEWORKERS Wirecraft pro duction We train house dwellers For full details write Wirecraft. P O Box 223, Norfolk, Va 23501
HOMEWORKERS Wirecraft pro duction We train house dwellers For full details write: Wirecraft, P O Box 223, Nortolk, Va 23501.
IBM DISPLAYWRITER' Greenville law firm needs someone to operate displaywriter Tempo rary position Experience required. Send resume to PO Box 8188,
Greenville, NC__________
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 of challenge or change need apply Send resume to Dental Hygenist, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC }7B3X
$10 tr 2 after 3p m
WANTED PART TIME tary bookkeeper Call Dr
756 9209____
WANTED: German instructor to teach beginning German course at Martin Community College Masters degree in German pre tarred Baccalaureate required Send resume to Martin Community College Kehukee Park Road Williamston NC 27892 Equal Op portunily Atlirmalive Action Employer
BEDROOM itr. large dresser mirror double bed 2 bookcases end table arnl chair E xcellent condition Drapes antique satin shears 756 8143 BEIGE ALUMINUM storage shed 12 X 16 teet Excellent condition 50 .758 nxo . _
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables Cash discounts Delivery and installation 919 7M 9734___
CABBAGE AND COLLARD plants tor sale Call 752 7140_
CALL CHARLES TICE. 758 3013 tor small loads of sand topsoil artd stone Also driveway work CAMERA EQUIPMENT vWifar 28mm f2 8 lens and 2X tele con verter for Nikon Excellent condi tion $85 Yashicamat 635 uses 35mm or 120 roll film Collectors item works perfectly JIOO Nikon camera body $160 758 7820 after
5 30
CASH REGISTER, Victor 511 used
6 months $600 new now $350 Call 757 1534 after 6
CHAIN SAW. 16 inch like new $125 Call 758 02X6_
of Ayden H-ighway Road 1111 Please or
CHICKENS FOR SALE 75< each Humbles Cage Farm 2 miles west Highway 102 to County ing something topiut chickansjri
CLARK 81 COMPANY Slihl Echo Sachs Dolmar
Snapper Toro Lawn Boy _
CLEARANCE SALE oti Sony lelevi .sions Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center West End Sh
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons Trimming cutting and removal Free estimates J P Stancil 752 6331 ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK Carpentry, masonry and roofing 35 years experience in building Call James Harrington after 6 pm
Center and Greeny^ijle
'console stereo
Dickinson Ave
ng
----__ __ Like new
$150 Gun cabinet $50 752 66X7
752 7765____ _
CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO
Quality construction and rertova
tion Phone 75 7 0 799 after 6 pm__
FOR TUTORING K 3 N C OuaTitied Teacher available to tutor in her home 756 1927
JOHNSON &THELE CO
Residential and commercial re modeling, repair and construction Call 757 18x3 lor estimates We otter a complete design service 1306 N
Greene Street_______,_
AAATURE LADY, dependable with references to live in full lime as housekeeper. 752 3090, ask lor Jean^^ SANDING and finishing floors Small carpenter jobs, remodeling burnt out trailers Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 2868 anytime.it no an
swer call back _____
WOULD LIKE TO TEAR DOWN otd tobacco barns in and around Ayden Call 7X6 2182 alter 6pm WOULD LIKE babysitting housekeeping and staying with the elderly during the day Call 758 2851 beloreSp m , ask tor Pat
DIAMOND AND SAPPHIRE wed
lered each side point sai
h 30 point sapphiers on Wedciirtg bang with 7 06 res AM IX carat yellow
band with 7 06
djng rim 40 point diamond cen wifi te
ipphii
gold 752 921__
DURST ENLARGER $100 or best pller Alter 5_7M 3827 FISHER FREE standing wood stove Phone 752 6117 or 756 3807 FOR THE* NEXT 2 weeks Couristan roll back the clock sale on Oriental rugs Save 30% at Larry s Carpetland 3010 East lOth Street GrwnviMe^
FREEZER AND 2 door relrigera tor $150 each Washer and dryer set like new $300 30' gas and electric range $125 each All g anieed 30 days. CajI t46 24X6 I F U R NIT U R E *C L E*AR ANC E SAL E Mar Js and Westbrook 1211 Sooth Evans Street Monday through Sal urt^y 12unti|6pm
FURNITURE FURNITURE Living Room Dining Room Bedroom Many styles to choose from' We GUARANTEE lo have the lowest prices'll Factory Mat tress Waterbed 8. Furniture Outlet 730 Greenville Blvd. 355 2626 HO TRAINS and accessories good condition $1X0 35 5 6 538 __
HOME COMPUTER Word Pre cesser TRS8 AAodel 3 2 drives,
guar
daisy wheel printer super scripsit soft ware with word processer and 5000 word dictionary Used less than
soft ware
060
FOR SALE
061
Antiques
HOME PLACE ANTIQUES Large selection of oak. depression glass, collectibles Open everyday .10 5, Sunday 15. 1x miles east ot Greenville, Highway 33
064 Fuel, Wood, Coal
100 hours by one person $4150 Call 756 7829
KING COIL bedding Sale prices starting at 5X9 95 each piece Pick m the phone and give us a call at Furniture World /57 0451 We lake trade ins
LOVESEAT Colonial style, like new gold upholstery $156 Three sturdy wood chairs with gold vinyl padded seats, like new, $30 each One Early American painted block wood chair with cherry wood arms.
eagle emblem, very good condition tSO One solid maple straight ch excellent condition, $35 7 56 5269
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale J P Stancil, 752 6331
IMMEDIATE OPENING GM
Technician Kinston area dealership has immediate opening for qualified GM Technician Salary comnoensurate with experience. NAISE certification given special consideration Send resume to GM Technician, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834
KWICK WILSON'S now accepting applications for full and part time convenience work Mature, re ^onsible individuals apply at, Patolus Highway and Ramhorn
LADIES AND Children's Shoe De parfment Manager Trainee wanted Good opportunity for career minded. If you are mature, honest, like people and like retail work, this may be tor you. Start at $10,(XX) yearly, advance upward Apply Brody's, Pitt Plaza.
LIKE TOTRAVEL AND MEETNEWPEOPLE?
Wilson Bus Co. is seeking an enthusiastic person to work with groups in the Greenville area For information call 1 800 682 1 165 Monday through Friday 9 AM to 5 PM _
ALL OAK $40, Mixed $35 752 6286
FIREWOOD FOR SAlE
$40 FOR PICKUP
CALL 757-3568 or 758-5063
FIREWOOD, $30 a load Call 758
4611 anytime for delivery ____
OAK FIREWOOD tor sale Ready to00 Call 752 6420
OAK FIREWOOD lor sale Call 752 8847
QAK FIREWOOD _756 7159._____
OAK FIREWOOD, $40 pickup load Call 758 3190____________ _ ________
OAK WOOD $45 a load or $80 lor 2 loads. t3S it you pick up 756 2913 after 5 and weekends 756 5977. 8 to
OAKWOOD BY JAMES All oak $40
load 758 2840 or 756 9193 anytime SEASONED WOOD lor sale $40 pick up Iruck load 90% oak 10% maple Phone 752 3236 100% OAK FIREWOOD: Green $50, seasoned $55 per - . cord Guaran teed lull measure Reliable de
livery 752 0091 _
100% OAK FIREWOOD lor sale $45 a load If we deliver, $40 a load it you pick up 758 3797 or 752 5488 ___
WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy, they turn to the Classified Ads Place your Ad today tor quick results
LUGGAGE: Red Samsonite
Saturn II. 21 " $25, 26 " $35 both $55 Silhoutte 25 $ 35 758 1358 MADAME ALEXANDER new dolls and new Shirley Temples lor sale I 823 7732. Tarboro . _
CLEARANCE SALE on Kero Sun portable heaters at below 1982
trices Goodyear Tire Center West nd Shopping Center and Dickinson A^e_ Greenville _ . _
MOTOROLA PULSAR II mobile phone tor sale or lease Call 756 '891
AAOVING 25" console color TV, in a beautiful cabinet sharp picture. only $185 756 0492
065 Farm Equipment
MANAGEMENT Large corpora tion looking for management potential Must start in sales. 60 hour week. Some door to door Salary and benefits Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333, _
MANAGER FOR NEW alterations shop Experience required Call 756 7891 __
ipacity, front or rear mounted 8' rtical unloading auger $1.185.49
MATURE LADY wanted to spend nights with lady in Ayden Phone 746 3654_
MECHANIC WANTED Good reli able mechanic with good working habits Excellent pay and benefit package. Prefer Ford experience Apply in person to J C Jones. East Carolina Lincoln Mercury GMC,
Greenville._ ______
MLT OR CLA Lab Technician wanted tor full time work in physicians office. Experience de sirable. Reply to Lab Technician, PO Box 196T (Jreenville, NC 27834.
AUGER FEED WAGONS 90 bushel vertical
unassembled. Agri Supply.
Greenville. NC. 752 3W _____
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 Cor poration, PO Box 233, Highway 117 South Goldsboro, NC 27530 N C XI88. Phone 734 4234 __
A80VING SALE! Sola and chair, $125 1 Sony 4 channel slero $225 1 complete new pine bedroom suite, $350 1 maple single bed and chest of drawers. $90 1 bed $25 I dinnette set, $100. Plus odds and ends
758 2872 or 758 6028___
OFFICE FURNITURE tor sale" desk, executive chairs bookcase
typewriter stand 7X6 2313_
OLIVETTI LEXICON 90C ball ele men! typewriter with correction feature includes elite and script elements Good condition $395 Call
753 4260__
ONE SCREEN DOOR, wood trim One paneled oulside door $40, or $25 each One standard window set. $15 One large box fresh dug asparagus plants 756 6007 PLAYHOUSE Adorable 8x8 nt including front porch Well built. 3 windows, shingled root Cost $800 to build Moved and it will not tit in backyard $500 or best otter Call
752 978
PRO/WOTED! Must sell, 1977 VW Van $4095, 1976 Fiat 131, $1795. GE washer and dryer $195 Call 752 4809 __
RECLINER FOR SALE $198 Call
758 2818_______
Help fight inflation by buying and selling through the Classilied ads ' 752 I
Call
' 6166
WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them tor cash with a Classified Ad
NEW BUSINESS seeking qualified persons. Cash investment required. For details call 758 9132 alter 6 p.m. PART TIME WAITRESS Tarheel Tavern, 746 2269
PARTS COUNTER PERSON
needed Possible management op portunity depending on experience. Excellent pay and benefit package Prefer Ford experience Apply 10-Parts Counter Person P O Box 1967, Greenville__
PAY
PROGRESS
PROMINENT
PRESTIGE
Three openings now tor smart minded person in the local branch of a lar^ International Firm This is an Impressive opportunity tor an ambitious person wno wants to get ahead
TOQUALIFY YOU NEED:
A positive mental attitude 21 or over preferred Have self confidence and pleas ant personality Free to begin work immediately after acceptance Good car 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 $26,500 a year Only those who sincerely want to get ahead need apply
Call now for ah appointment
757-066
MON FRI 10:00 AM-6.00 PM
SATURDAY 10 00 AM 1:00 PM
AKC MINIATURE Schnauzer pups 1 female. 2 males. $200 758 3482, Grimesland.
DALMATIANS AKC, black white liver white 1 237 7210. Wilson FEMALE PITT BULLDOG, 4 months ot age $25 746 2370
JUST IN TIME lor Valentines day. 6 week old black puppies. AAother full blooded cocker spaniel Price negotiable. 756 2338 _
UKC While Eskimo Spitz 6 weeks, ideal Valentine gift $150 756 1297
2 AKC REGISTERED Boxer pup pies, 9 weeks old, 1 male $125, 1 female, $100. 752 8510.__
PROFESSIONAL DOG GR(X)MER tor veterinary hospital in
Washington, NC, 946 2834__________
PROGRAMMER Minimurh I year experience in RPG programming on IBM System 34 or 38 Send resume to Programmer PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834 REAL ESTATE AAANAGEMENT *
Established small Raleigh real estate company is expanding Owner needs N C licensed broker to manage company and train salespeople Excellenf potential op portunity Must be experienced, sell starter, career minded, good character Commission position Send resume to Box 31174, Raleigh,
N C 27622._______
REAL ESTATE SECRETARY Busy, established real estate office needs a secrealary Interesting work requires meeting people, making appointments typing tiling and maintaining records LordiaL pleasing atmosphere Mail resume )o Real Estate Secreatry P O Box 1967. Greenville. NC 27834 SALES REPRESENTATIVE Ma |or national company has an open ing for a Sales Associate in the Greenville area Prior sales experience not as important as ability and willingness to learn Salary negotiable Excellent benefit package For a confidential in lerview send resume to MANAG ER, PO Box 1985 Greenville, NC 2 78 3 5 Equal Opporlunity Employer__________ ____________
067 Garage-Yard Sale
FLEA MARKET Tice Drive In Open every Saturday For more
intormation. call 756 3(33____
FLEA MARKET Business, home and personal items 211 West 9th Street Between Morgan Printers and Edwards Auto Supply Salur
day. February 12. 8 4__
AAOVING SALE! Saturday Febru ary 12 7 30 till 1 00, 302 Ravenwood Drive, (Westhaven Subdivision) Baby furniture and clothes retrig erator firewood 10 000 BTU air conditioner (used only 6 weeks) bar stools sofa chairs tables and
much morel ____
NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market Greenville Boulevard Open Saturday and Sunday 8 til 5 Crafts tools furniture and an tiques Displays of old postcards buttons and antique pistols Come lOin us A super flea market. Oulside dealer spaces Free! Call Bill 746 3541 Mi)(e 746 3550 Fair Grounds 758 6916 _
P<X)R AAAN'S FLEA Market Buy or sell yard sale items and produce Open Wednesday thru Saturday 7 ! am 6 pm, Sunday 8 am 6 pm 264 East ot Greenville Pactolus Hwy Reserve space now Oulside spaces treej 752 1x00 1
RAYNOR FORBES AND CLARK
Flea Market open Saturdays 7 til 1, ; across trom AAoose Lodge 756 4090 TV AND TWO STANDS.Ttoaster j ovens, push truck, tires, oil healer, sprayers, gas cans, motorbike and ! helmet and more Saturday 8 to 12, ' 3()08 Maryland Drive ,off Cedar j Lane ___ j
; RENT A STEAMEX Best method [ lor cleaning carpels. Larry's ! Carpetland. 3010 East lOth Street,
j Greenville._____
REPOSSESSED VACUUMSand Shampooers Call Dealer, 756 6711 RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT lor sale Hoods freezers, refrigerators. 1 drink boxes, fryers heaters tables , chairs, much more 746 2607 SEWING MACHINE Singer , Styles! model 834 with pecan cabinet Seldom used Excellent
condition. $250. 756 7698 __
SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company _
SKI BCOTS, men's size 10'; Like
I new $30 758 1774 _________________
' SOFA, soft shade ot green $200 795 4848___
SOFA, 90' Early American wingback. light brown and beige tweed Asking $100 756 79x3 after 4'_ sound SYSTEM tor sale Sony STR V55 receiver Technics SL 02 ' turn table Altec Lansirtg 1012 speakers $8502.57 18^
THE CABINET SHOP
Residential and commercial i cabinet work Design construction, ffntshinq and installation Bring zour plaps or let us design tor you tor appointment 75/ 1
N Greene Street
1843 1306
Looking for an apartment? You'll find a wide range of available units listed in the Classified columns o( to day 's paper
ay, F
corner of Juanita and West 7th St Ayden Rain date, Feb 19 t_
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman
Stables, 752 5237 _
PEANUT HAY $1 to $1 40 per bale Call alter 7pm 752 9225
SOMEONE IS looking lor your unus ed power mower Why not advertise it with a low cost Classified Ad'
074
Miscellaneous
ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, freezers ranges washers and dryers are reduced tor quick sale Call B J Mills Authorized Appli ance Service. 746 2x46 at Black
Jk_ ____________
AMERICAN DREW oak bedroom suite $600 7 piece living room
suite $625 756 5859 ASHLEY WOOD AND COAL combination Used 2 years $300 7^ 308 5 night___
ASSUME PAYMENT on all wood 5 piece dining room lable and chairs ot only $16 82 month Pick up the phorte and give US a call at Furniture World 757 0x51 We take
tracie ms_________
ATARI VIDEO GAMES repaired We buy used ataris any condition
7M 9513_______________________
AUTOMOTIVE SHOP equipment including valve machine, air com pressor, boring bar lacks and lacli stands Call 746 4863 after 6 p m or 746 J141 anytime ask tor Larry BATTERY POWERED electronic
?iames "Donkey Kong ' and "Space nvaders " 758 173? after 6_p m______
yo ,
Call for appointment
Stre __
TOP SOIL, field sand morlar sand and rock^ Call 746 3296 or 7x6 3829 TRS80MODEL II Business computer 3 drive system, all business printer 132 column (Software General ledger ac counts receivable accounts pay able inventory mailing )ist. scripsit Over $2,000 value! Free) Price $5400 Call 753 5256 757 3309 TWIN SIZE MATTRESS, box springs with bookcase headboard $90 Queen size mattress and box spnngs_^00 7 56 6449 UPRIGHT Epworth Piano Approx imately 76 years old Call 753 5454
after 6_ ______
USED HEADQUARTERS: Used
building materials Lumber win dows doors brick, cement blocks, storm windows and doors etc Used heaters, furnaces plumbing artd electrical items tools furniture, appliances household items, plus some new items at used pricesi W L Dunn 8, Sons Antique barn & Swap Shop Pinetops NC 27864 USED 15 1 cubic foot refrigerator in excellent condition $300 Call 758
1198 _ ________
WE TAKE TRADE INS Pick up the phone and give us a call at
Furniture World 757 0451 ___
WOULD LIKE to buy used retrig erafors. freezers dryers and ranges
that need repair 746 2X46 ___
ZENITH 25 inch color TV, good color $165 Sears 12 inch Black and White TV, like new $45 Gold fabric sofa like new SIOO Large swivel and rocker chair $40 2 gas heaters with tan and thermostat. $75 and $125 Double dresser with mirror $45 3 beds $25 each 26 inch girls
bike $25 lib 69-29_
NEED EXTRA MONEY? Earn up to 50% as sales representative in Winterville and Ayden areas Call
1961 World Book Encylopedias $80
Call 758 8844dtter 5p m__
2 WHEELCHAIRS trom $50 to $150
1 walker tor $10 Call 756 7398_
30 SQUARE YARDS multi colored carpeting in two room sized bound
pieces with pads $75 _758 Hx?___
4 MONTH OLD brown tioral velour couch with matching swivel rocker Retailed lor $17x9 asking $650 tirm
746 3857____
7' X 7' TWO WHEEL trailer lor hauling livestock or equipment $200 Phone 756 2956
075 AAobile Homes For Sale
1976 TRAILER Two bedrooms, I bath $5 900 Call 355 2727 or 752 7056.
22-'nie Daily Reflector. GreenvUle, N.C.-Friday. February 11,1983
075 AAobile Homes For Sale
BRAND NEW 1M3 top quality 14 aiicte 2 bedroom mobile home
loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors plywood counter tops, total electric, range refrigerator. Regular price, 112.995
Limited Time Only
$9,995
VA FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up included. Hours, 8 am to6 pm AAOBILE HOAAE BROKERS A30 West Greenville Etoulevard 7540191
075 AAobile Homes For Sale
BRAND NEW 19*3 top of the line Dcvxirtncna nu ovanceu piorx double wide 52 X 24,Tbedrooms, 2 ECU h^r student
077 AAusical Instruments
BEGINNERS AND Advanced piano
1981 BRIGIDIER trailer tor sale U X 64 Call alter 5 30pm. 792 5488 1983, 14x54 2 bedroom, I bath
washer and dryer, central air totai eiectric, underpinning storm win dows already set up, some equity and assume loan Call Lawrence at Art Oellano Hornes^ 756 9841_
24X52 DOBLEWIDE and lot 135 x 76 Set up as a home brick underpinned large and smail back porch Central air and heat 116.900 Possible 119% loan assumption AAeadowbrook area 752 6986 after 4 3 bedroom. I', bath mobile home 1500 down and assume
full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof bay windows frost free refrigerator, garden tub. cathedral ceiling and much, much more Regular price, 124 995
Limited TimeOnly
$19,995
VA, FHA and conventional On lot financing Delivery and set up included Hours, 8 AM to6pm AAOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191
CLEAR 12x60, 2 bedroom, 1' i bath set on private lot, financing avalla ble 15.500, Call days 752 3000 nights 756 1997 or 758 4821
Debra Russ Piano & Organ Dis tributors Arlington Boulevard. 12
Greeny 11 le. 355 600z
MAHOGANY UPRtGNT PIANO, 1650 Call 746 6525
WURLITZER ORGAN Funmaker Super Strife, built in cassette Sold for 11700, will sell for $800 758 8296.
078
Sporting Goods
HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion re pairs Specialiiing in marine pro ducts 758 0641 1104 Clark Street.
104 Condominiums For Saie
WIN HER HEART
100 Houses For Sale
In a Twin Oaks, Brookhill Cannon Court Condominium
townhome Low down payment, closing costs ^nthly payment
could be less than your present rent
7M 6050^ Warren or Wil Reid at
DOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedrooms, . __
baths, all appliances Central air I LOST Qnderpinnea Barn attached. Set up
on I acre of land 946 84:^___________
USED HOMES 1971 2 bedroom 1 bath. 12x65, I 12x55, 2 bedroom, I bath; 1 12x60, 2 bedroom, P , bath All can be seen at -Art Oellano Homes Call Lawrence or Tim at Art Oellano Homes, 756 9841
082 LOST AND FOUND
Gray, longhaired Trinity Free Will Baptist area No
cat.
collar stomach shaved 1' j months
MCX)RE& SAUTE R
110 South Evans 758-6050
ago needs her pills If you have seen her. please call 752 0024 you
could help answer my prayers Lost
^ebr uary 4^ I9J3___
LOST Black and white male
payments Call 758 5376 between 9 and 12 am
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
12X60, fully furnished, 2 bedroom washer'dryer front porch 16.000 Call 758 3169.
1970 NORRIS, central air. ap 15000 Call 756 '
12x65 2 bedroom
central air^ appliances, good shape 320 after 5o.m
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS & A WNINGS
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton. Co.
752 6116
1973 HOLIDAY, 12x65 2 bedrooms washer dryer Window air condi tioner, 2 bafhs, 15850 Set up in
Hollybrook Estates 758 4541 ______
1973 12X65 STAR AAobile Home 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, large living room
Pomeranian wearing a blue rhine stone collar Lost in Country Squire Estates north of Tar River. Re
ward 752 6033 _______________________
MISSING Small female deer hound. Light brown with dark brown blanket back and white feet. Tato in ear no collar. Call 752 6051 after 6 pm___
085 Loans And AAortgages
^ . NEED CASH, get a second
with wood heater, electric heat and i mortgage fast by phone, we also central air Call after 6:00, 756 0205 puy mortgages, make commercial
1975 CELEBRITY 12X60 2
bedrooms. 1 bath, furnished central air. underpined, set up m nice park, 10X12 storage barn 752 416d
loans, call free I 800 845 3929
106
Farms For Sale
108 acres with 60 cleared and 9700 pounds of tobacco allotment located 5 miles southeast of Winterville Contact Don Southertand at Aldri^e & Southerland Realty.
BUILDERS CHOICE That's right, he built it for himself but we've talked him into selling it. AAany extras marvelous floor plan. The one you've been dreaming about, txade that smaller home for this spacious beauty surrounded by trees 190's. *434. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868._
PRICE REDUCED! Westhaven, 10% assumable financing 3 bedrooms, fenced backyard and garage Very attractive home In one of Greenville's most desirable areas $57.900 Call Jeff Aldridge. Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500 or 756 2807 A2_
PRICE REDUCED -Just in time for
you to see this home in B.l /ediere N. ---"
eat as a pin and has personality lus 160's *361 Century 21 Bass ealfy. 756 6666_
100 Housm For Sale
FmHA LOAN assumption bedroom home only 7 yaars old Family room and carport. 136.500 CENTURY 21 B Forties 756 2121 or 758 9549
Forbes Agency
FOGGY, COLD NIGHTS GOTCHA?
Experience the delight of a cracki [ng fire shared by all in the family
room of this three bedroom home Features formal araas, eat In kitchen, and a garage. Owners liter .....
transferred and can't make two payments. Owner will consider re
nting with an option to buy. $50' #462 century 21 Bass Realty,
756 5868
CLUB PINES Plant lovers! Greenhouse off large greatroom. fireplace, 4 bedrooms, jenn aire, built in microwave, skylights, large deck. For appointment, 756 6799.
756
lights 756 5260.
152 ACRES with 31 cleared and 8000 pounds tobacco allotment located 3 miles west of Winterville Contact Don Southerland at Aldridge & Realty. 756 3500, nights
/bo jZoO.
'T'*.* Cleared. Near Chicod School IS miles Southeast of Greenville Owner financing more information call Aldridge & Southerland Realty 7M 5260 Southerland:
CLUB PINES- Sparkling new Cape Cod with a bay window in the dining room, greatroom with french doors leading to a spacious deck Buy now and choose your decor 180'i. *424. Century 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.
CLUB PINES New two story
home with wrap around porch. Over 2100 square feet featuring four
bedrooms, all formal areas, den with a fireplace leading to a deck.
PHOTO
TYPESETTER
High school graduate plua two yaars exporience as a photo typesatter Will b raquirad to oparale an AM 5810 Comp Edit systam in madium sua job printing plant
Salary ranga: *9,264 to *13,644. Apply at
Eaat Carolina Unlvaralty Parsonnal Offica Eaat sth Straat Graanvllla, N.C. 27634 919-757-6352
An EqiMl Opeortunlty Emplarw Throuah At-rmiM* Action
I days, 756 3161 night^___
QUICK ACTION Classified Ads are the answer to passing on your extras ' who wants to
091
Business Services
to someone \
buy
076 AAobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance at competitive rates. Smith Insur anceand Realty, 752 2 754_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
INCOME TAX SERVICES Hilton Bovd Call 756 3264
INCOME TAX SERVICE
Re^nojds 757 1009 or 758 0135.
Doug
093
OPPORTUNITY
FOR SALE. Established Jewelry and Gift Stor, in Eastern Carolina. Write Gift Store PO Box 1967, Greenville NC 27834________
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton Co.
SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS
1982 Mazda RX-7GSL
5 speed, silver with burgundy leather interior, loaded.
1982 Datsun Maxima Wagon
Diesel. Light blue with blue velour interior, loaded.
1981 Datsun 280-ZX
5 speed, GL, blue with blue velour interior, loaded.
1981 Datsun 280-ZX
2 plus 2. 5 speed, GL, burgundy with burgundy velour interior, loaded.
1981 Olds 98 Regency
4 door, beige with beige velour interior, loaded.
1981 Datsun 210 Hatchback
2 door. Light blue with blue cloth interior, 5 speed, air.
1981 Chevrolet Chevette
4 door, beige, automatic, air, AM-FM stereo
1981 Datsun 210 Coupe
2 door. 5 speed, AM-FM radio, silver with black interior.
1981 Datsun 4X4 Truck
Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.
1981 Chevrolet El Camino
Blue with blue vinyl interior, tilt wheel, cruise, stereo.
1981 CMC Jimmy
Loaded. Blue with white top, blue interior.
1981 Chevrolet Chevette
4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, 12,000 miles. Red with buckskin interior.
1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Automatic, air, AM-FM, silver with burgundy interior.
1980 Volvo 265 GLE Wagon
Diesel. Loaded, silver with black leather interior.
1979 Olds Cutlass Supreme
2 door, yellow with white landau roof, buckskin interior. Nice car.
1979 Ford Mustang
Black with buckskin interior, automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo.
1979 Mercury Marquis
4 door, loaded. Silver with burgundy vinyl interior.
1978 Dodge Aspen
4 door, automatic, air, AM-FM, power windows, tilt wheel, dark green with green vinyl interior, 39,000 actual miles
1978 Ford Customized Van
Air, cruise, two tone blue, one owner, local trade, sharp
1977 Datsun 710 Wagon
5 soeed, air, AM-FM, green with buckskin interior.
1976 Lincoln Town Car
Loaded, 43,000 miles, silver with burgundy velour interior.
1976 Ford LTD
4 door, yellow,,with tan vinyl interior, 55,000 actual miles.
1976 Alfa Romeo Alfetta
4 door, 5 speed, air, AM-FM, black with tan interior
1975 Olds 98 Regency
4 door. Loaded. Light green with green velour interior. Low mileage.
These Cars Are Former Driver Education Cars
Save1000s
1983 Olds Cutlass Supreme Brougham
Fully equipped, dark blue
1983 Olds Delta 88
Fully loaded, white with blue top
1983 Olds Delta 88
Fully loaded, triple white
1983 Olds Cutlass Supreme
2 door, automatic, air, stereo
HOLT OLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
INVESTOR SEEKS profitable bus! ness to invest in or buy Up to 1100,000 cash available Send pro posal to. Investor PO Box 1355 Washington NC 27889. _
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants Serving the Soulheastern United Slates Greenville NC 757 0001,
753 4015 _
58 ACRE FARM Good road tron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110 51 acres cleared 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment pood and 2 bedroom house St. Johns Community Call for more details. Call AAoseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details
107
Farms For Lease
TOBACCO POUNDS FOR SALE at $3 50 per pound Call 752 5567 after 6.
WANTTO BUY
CORN
Buy now and choose your own decor 190's *350 CENTuRY 21
Bass Realty. 756 5868
CONTEMPORARY STYLE, don
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, 756 3500, 756 8278. C 6.
CONTENTED CHARM I love it! Roomy three bedroom ranch in desirable Tucker Estates. Formal entry foyer, living and dining room, huge, family room with co/y fireplace, convenient utility room, double carport, only $73,900. Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, nights Mike Aldridge 756 7871
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 11 near Griffon Horse stables, fenced pasture. Shown^ by appointment only 524 5218
FOR THE SELECT female- Out of the pages of your better decorating magazines comes this two story home In Club Pines. Spacious greatroom with french doors lead mg to a deck Designer kitchen with custom cabinets and deck lor plan ning. Located on a shaded wooded
lot 1102.500 *256 Century 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666
FOUR BEDROOMS, carpeted liv ing room, dining room, kitchen.
pantry, large toye'r, 2 baths, confrai heat, basement, lar
Insurance Co, 103 E 746 3761 or 746 6474.
Good
location $42,500. A^^n*^oan 8.
rd St., Ayden.
FOUR BEDROOMS can be yours on one of the most beautiful lots in the city Features den with fireplace, a garage, an office area in basement and even has a below market assumable loan. $70's. *428 Century 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.
NICE, COZY contemporary house in Twin Oaks, excellent financing F L Garner, 355 2628 or 756 321? Owner, 758 2520.
NICE 5 room house. Enclosed back
COUNTRY LIVING can be yours! Three bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace, plus large wooded lot. Jus! minutes from city. 140s. *464. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666
Yv corn.
Worthington Farms Inc , 756 3827 Days, 756 3732 Nights
WANT TO LEASE peanut pounds. any amount. Call 758 2859
lights
095
PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep 25 years experience working on cnimneys and fireplaces. Cafl day or night 753 3503 Farmville.
102 Commercial Property
FOR SALE or lease Two com mercial buildings on main thor oughfare Call 758 1131 After 6 pm, 756 1463
104 Condominiums For Sale
BY OWNER Ouail Ridge Condo. 3 large liv|ng
bedrooms. 2' i baths, room with fireplace. an8 dinin room Pool and tennis court 355 6053.
"c'a"3
WANTEDTORENT TOBACCO POUNDS for T983
COUNTRY SETTING! Lovely 3 bedroom home, approximately ' j acre lot , Possible 12% FHA tinanc ing CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549._
Call
752-0310 or 758-4353
109
Houses For Sale
A BOX OF CANDY and this home will surely make her your Valen tine. The country kitchen with large eat in area will tempt you to linger in the morning, all formats with deck off dini
fireplace arc
room, cozy den with . , insert, 3 spacious
bedrooms. I': baths, fenced backyard. Up to 95% conventional financing available at 13'.x% fixed rate. 159.900. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655 or Elaine Troiano 756 6346.
A SAAART START for your first home. Three bedrooms located in
CONDO BY OWNER Atlantic Beach ocean front. 2 bedrooms, 1' 3 bath furnished. $68,500 919 447
2448
CONDOMINIUM PRICED to sell 111 Hard to find a 3 bedroom flat in a lovely setting The real plus is price ot $49,500 Foyer living room with fireplace, kitchen, dining area, 3 bedroom 2 full baths, patio. Con tact D G Nichols Agency for information 752 4012 or nighf 752 7666
convenient neighborhood on lovely wooded lot Low rate VA loan assumption $32,500. *454 CEN
TURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868
ANTIQUE LOVERS, complement your collection with pine floors, high ceilings, and tour ceramic fireplaces Remodeled older home
COUNTRY SETTING This brick ranch offers a Texas size yard, lots of garden space, three bedrooms, den with a fireplace. FHA assuma ble loan. Pay approximately 13000 and move in. $40 s. *384. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 5868.
CUL-DE-SAC special! Spacious 3 bedroom. 2' j bath home. Well landscaped large lot. 8'/*% FhA loan assumption. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549.
DELLWOOD It's perfect - neat and trim, 3 bedroom ranch in a picture book setting Warm earthtoneS accent the sunny kitchen while a cozy fireplace warms the family room. Bring the fami ly. .They'll never want to leave! 159 900. Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500 or Jett Aldridge. 756 2807.
porch, carport, new paint in and :ondil
peci 58 3218,
...w p.
out Very good condition In the Good
county By owner 756 4199
an trees. 134;000 call after 6.
NO MONEY DOWN except tor closing costs That's right! Farm ers Homes loan can Be assumed with payments less than rent. Located only 15 minutes from
109
Houses For Sale
LOAN ASSUMPTION - FHA 2j;> financing 00 this spotless 2 bedroom
townhome. Owner must move fast due to job transfer 143,500. Call Ball & Lane, 752 0025 or Lee Ball 752-1646
LYNNDALE Unique rustic home Offers superb living areas plus study, playroom. 2 fireplaces and screened porch. Listed at 1117,500 but take a look and make an otter I Call Ball & Lane. 752 0025 or Lee Ball. 752 1646.
LYNNDALE Owners transferred. Hate to leave this plush home All
formal araas. Den with a fireplace Wet bar Will consider a trade
Don't miss your chance to move ui to the fop. $135,900. *341. CENTUR5 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868.__
NEW J.ISTING 8'3% VA loan assumption. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, and over 1500 square feet of living area, conveniently locatt in Eastwood. Low ISO's. Call Jett Aldridge, Aldridge & Southerland, 35( or 756 2807
756
or 756 2807 A7
NEW LISTING y Windy Ridge. Come preview this 3 bedroom, 2' 1
bath condominium. Family room with fireplace, s^arate dining room, heat pump. Excellent condh tion. Recreational facilities available. W 15. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500 or 758 7744.
NEWLISTINGS
HORSESHOE ACRES 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, large dining area and carport. 163.500.
UNIVERSITY AREA 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas plus den, library and office. Assumable 9' 3% loan 172,900.
BROOK VALLEY 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, formal areas, den and garage 1109,000.
CHERRY OAKS 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, dining room, garage and fenced in yard. $77,500.
WESTHAVEN 3 bedrooms. 2'? baths, great room, dining room, kitchen and study 168.500.
Greenville 21 Bass
Realty,
ily 15 130s. *
*460 CENTURY 756 6666.
OAKDALE: 3 bedroom home with
large kitchen, stm down kni'livig room, 1' 3 baths. Located on a large WG
corner iot. Only *37,500. Blount & Associates, 756 3000
OLDER HOME IN GRIFTON Features 2 bedrooms, carpet over hard wood floors, remodeled kitchen, and new heating system. 130'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,
DELLWOOD Excellent family neighborhood ottering, a spacious
brick ranch home over" 1640 square teet Features all formats, kitchen
beautiful landscaping. 210 Crestline Spears at Aldridge
Blvd. Call Ray _ and Southerland, 756 3500 or 4362
OWNER FINANCING is a posslbili ty. Located In Belvedere and features fenced in yard workshop, den with fireplace, formal areas, and a loan assumption too. Take
CLUB PINES baths, formal garage $101,900
4 bedrooms, 2' 3 areas, den and
YORKTOWN TOWNHOUSE 3
bedrooms, 2' 2 baths, great room, dining room and patio. 149,900,
JEANNEHE COX AGENCY
756-1322
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$40'S
^ssMSion immediately;. $60's. *379.
:ENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868.
complete with range and refrigera tor. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, carport
and fenced backyard. Fireplace in den. Assumable 13'2% fixed rate loan to qualified buyer; new conventional financing up to 95% at 13'*% $59,900. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655 or Jane Butts, 756 2851.
FOR RENT WITH OPTION to buy Large 3 bedroom Condomimium, enloy the fireplace the fenced in patio, the formal dining room Call 752 1263 or 756 4244 after 7 pm and ask tor Richard
TWO DUPLEXES available! Owner occupancy Buy entire building or single side. Mid Eastern Realty, 2739 E 10th St., 757 3540.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
TOBACCO ALLOTMENT FOR SALE
14,317 lbs. of Tobacco In Pitt County tor sale at
$3.25 per lb.
TERMS CASH
Call 752-7101
During Business Hours
has the charm ot the old and the comfort of the new Must be seen to acrecate. Low $60's. *373. CEN
lY 21 Bass Realty, 756-5868.
ASSUMABLE 1I'/2% FHA 245 loan on this lovely 3 bedroom home. Family room, fireplace, garage, and deck. CENTURY 21 B Torbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549._
ATTRACTIVE LOAN Assumption. 3 bedroom brick, very attractive inferior, large detached work shop. Assumable at 9''a% Ray M Spears. 758 4362, Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 3500.
BROOK VALLEY By owner, bedrooms, 2 baths. 756-9097 758 3568.
BROOKGREENREDUCED $25,000. This one ot a kind home will
never again be ottered at this low price. Texas size rooms
gigantic lot Lots of privacy arid class. 1102,500's. *256. Century 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.__
SAVE MONEY this winter shop day!^^ the Classified Ads every
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FLEMING FURNITURE
& APPLIANCE
NowServlcM Crosby Appliancss Kslvlnator ^>pNancss Spssd OiMsn Laundry Fsddsfs Air CondHionsrs 1012 Olcklnton Ava. 752-3601
DRASTICALLY REDUCED!! New log home features 3 bedrooms, 2 baThs, 1950 square teet on a I acre wooded lot. For additional information call Aldridge and Southerland 756-3500, Nites, Myra Day 524 5004. D 1.
DRASTICALLY REDUCED!! Three bedroom ranch with over 2000 square teet. All formal areas, great neighborhood. 160's. *157.
Century 21 "Bass Realty, 756 6666.
ELMHURST, 1619 Longwood. im maculate brick 3 bedroom home, large tamil and carpor ble Reduced Williams Real Estate, 752 2615, home 756 2862.
OWNER HAS spruced up this one and it's ready to sell! Freshly painted outside -redecorated on inside. Four bedrooms. Just outside city S40s. *274. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.
OWNER HAVE AAOVED to Virginia and want to sale their 3 bedroom. 2 full bath ranch. Features large liWuig area with fireplace plus
rate dining area. Large lot,
' 'Jc'
nice neighborhood. Call Afdridge and Southerland 756 3500. Nites, Myra Day 524 5004. D-2
GET OUT OF TOWN, but not too tar with this three bedroom home located on approximately one acre ot land. 140,000. *314. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868.
GRAYLEIGH Fastest
astest growing prestigious areas. Beautiful Cape Cod under construction. Greatroom
uriLR j oearoom nome. ly room, deck, workshop, rt. 12% financing avalla uced to 152.500. Bill
END YOUR SEARCH it y<
elegant tour
^ - ,ou ve
been looking tor an elegant bedroom home in Lynndale. Den with fireplace, walk-ins, all formal areas, and many extras to add the finishing touch. $139,900. *407. Cen tury 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666._
ESTATE REALTY CO
752-5058
NEW LISTING: Tastefully deco rated four bedroom home in the University area on large wooded, corner lot; formal areas, country kitchen, full basement many extra features
LOT befwwen Winterville and Ayden; 212 toot road frontage Excellent building site $14,500.
EXCELLENT STARTER HOME or ideal for a small family; two
bedrooms, living/dining room with fireplace; central heat and air
only $42,900.
KOEHRING HEATER CLOSEOUT SALE
Prices Below Cost
Starting At ^65.00
Wynne Chevrolet
Bethel, N.C.
825-3521
A GREAT BUY! Three bedroom home with fireplace in spacious family room; heat pump and 1425 square feet for only $32,900.
ON CALL: Billy Wilson 758-4476
with fireplace, french doors leading to a spacious deck. Trade that modest home of yours tor this elegant one today. $90's. $433. Bass Realty. 756-6666.
GREENWOOD FOREST. New home featuring 3 bedrooms, I' j baths, kitchen with dining area, living room, central heat and air. Located on a beautiful corner lot. $53,500. W G Blount & Associates, 756 3000.
LOOKING A DEAL Just listed in Ayden. $5000 and assume loan of 93u% with low payments. This VA assumption offers an $8000 backayrd pool 1400 square feet, brick heatilator fireplace, wallpaper and more. 12 month warranty on home. Paved drive and large coTner lot. New carpet In living room. Offered in Iowl40's.
100 HouMS For Sale
CHERRY OAKS Fantastic 4 bedro^, in this dasirabla area Carpet, wallpaper, Intarior decor, brand new, family room with Fish er woodstova, 3 bathi, split heat mp. 18,900. Aldridge &
purr
SoufI
Jth^land, 756 3500; nights Alita Carroll 756-8278
CHERRY OAKS Custom built on sloping wooded lot wnat more could you want tor your rf" Over 2000 square feet.
All formal araas and a dan with a replace. *80 . *426. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868 _
Jell your used television the _lassified way Call 752 6166
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
SO'S & 160's
BEST BUY per square toot In Greenville. Quail Ridge under construction to be completed late March. Nearly 1425 square feet. Select your own decor. Many extras. Builder pays closing costs.
NEW LISTING now available in Sedgefield. This 2 story home features 3 bedrooms. 2' j baths, fireplace with woodstove and built in bookcases In family room. Located on a quiet street In a nice neighborhood. 163,500. Fixed rate 13 j% loan assumption too! Call today
NEW OFFERING Quiet country living with nearly 4acres of wooded land. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths with almost 1600 square teet of heated
squa
^ace. C^ner is financing at 12%
ve in 30 days. Near Simpson, just minutes from town. Call now. Low 160's.
REDUCED PRICE Immaculate split level. May just be what you're searching lor. Features 4 bedrooms, formal areas, fireplace in den, fenced back yard, wooded lot. Close to Aycock Junior High School. Good neighborhood. Loan can be assumed with 111.000 equity. Call for your showing today. 162,200.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC
REALTORS 7M-4336
Ray Holloman.. ON CALL.. 753^5147
Mary Chapin........... ... 756 8431
(JeneOuinn ................756-6037
Tim Smith .................752-9811
Sharon Lewis ..............756 9987
John Jackson ..............756 4360
Toll Freeil 800 525-8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
8% FmHA LOAN assumption on this brick ranch located iust minutes from the hospital. Tall
p^nes to k^p you cool and priced in
the low 140's to fit your budget. Call today for exclusive showing of this well kept 3 bedroom home.
NEW HOME never occupied. FHA 235 loan with payments as low as 1280 if your income does not exceed $20,105.00 with two in the family. Three bedrooms, I'z baths, large lot. Call today. Ottered at 142,300
FIXED LOAN assumption. Custom contemporary ranch with double
garage and deck. Energy efficient and custom features Throughout.
Includes study loft area and private wooded lot.,, 10% equity and the seller will finance rhe equity at 10':% plus assume original loan at 13%% 171,000.
FHA 235 ASSUMPTION Oak Grove. Excellent condition. Wooded lot, 3 bedrooms. I'/i baths. Offered at $41.500. Carport. Hurry, It won't last long. Assume if your income is less than 122,000 per year Total payments less than 1250 per month.
WANT TO MOVE in with little equity? How about less than 12000 on this home in the low 140's. Let the builder pay your closing costs and points. Payments around 1300 per month on FHA 245. East of Greenville. Call today and get the custom features you want.
GRIFTON 3 bedrooms, sunken living room with fireplace. Excellent condition. Large lor. Must see this one. 151,000. Financing available. Call 524-5266.
IF YOU'RE looking for something in the University area, this could be it! In this Eastern St. home you'll find three bedrooms, I bath, living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, patio and fenced backyard, not to mention tremendous storage space. 140's. For your showing, call Alita Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500, 756 8278. C 5,
INVESTORS! Two houses, one duplex, with rental income of 1750 per month. Possibility of some owner financing. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549.
LET THE Cold wind BLOW;
you'll never notice as you snuggle beside the fireplace in the den of this 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch home. This home has been tenderly cared for and offers foyer, formal living room, lovely kitchen with separate dining area, heat pump system, quiet neighborhood with wooded setting. Assumable 13':% fixed rate loan to qualified buyer. 153,900. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655or ElaineTroiano, 756-6346.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
^300 REWARD
For information leading to the arrest of person or persons responsible tor the break in at Club Reflections, Highway 64 East, Bethel, N. C. on Monday, Jan. 31, between 6 and 10 pm.
PHONE 752-1092 or notify the Sheriffs Dept.
AT
HOLT OLDSMOBILEDATSUN
We Are Overstocked With The Sporty
Datsun 280-ZX T-Top And 2 Plus 2
Save Up To '2600.00
During Our Pre-Spring Clearance Sale Over 25 In Stock To Choose From
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC
REALTORS
756-6336
FARMVILLE Lovely 2 story Colonial. This home was completly restored in 1973 and has formal areas, 4 bedrooms, plus a rustic den. Fireplace in den and dining room, 2 car carport with lots of storage. Beautifully landscaped yard. Home must* be seen Inside. Call today. 176.500.
NEW OFFERING in Club Pines. Get in Club Pines for 173,000. This Williamsburg decor may suit your needs with hardwood floors, brick patios, cozy den with fireplace, lots of extra trim and bullt ins. Double garage or playroom is offered. 1 year warranty Call today and move in January.
Ray Holloman. .ON CALL.. 753 5147
Mary Chapin...............756-8431
Gene Quinn................756-6037
Tim Smith................. 752-9811
Sharon Lewis .......... 756-9987
John Jackson..............756-4360
Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
100's
LUXURY ABOUNDS in this col onial style two story home. All formal areas open for easy living Double garage otters easy access
with energy efficiency exceeding 300 standards. Located in pre-
foi
E ______
stigious Grayleigh. This tour bedroom with many extras is available for occupancy and builder will consider financing. Call today 11% fixed .rate loan available 1119,000.
THIS 2900 SQUARE FOOT home is within walking distance to pool and
?olf course. Custom built home with bedrooms, great room with fireplace, game room, 3',: baths,
plus 2 car garage. To fop it off - fixed rate loan assumption of
assumption
13'2% Offered at 1110,000.
BROOK VALLEY Now it may be within your reach. Price drastically reduced to 1115,500. Owner says he must sell. Choice location in Brook Valley. Assumable 11% VA loan Beautiful Williamsburg. Only 2
|,^rs old. Beautiful rear view. Call
day.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC
REALTORS 75-33
Ray Holloman. Mary Chapin .. Gene Quinn ... Tim Smith .... Sharon Lewis John Jackson
ON CALL . .753 5147
............756 8431
............756-6037
............ 752-9811
............756 9987
756 4360
Toll Free: 1 800-525 8910, ext, AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
130's &140'S
SELECT YOUR OWN lot in convenient Lindbeth. 1020 square feet. 2 bedrooms, 1' 2 baths. Cape Cod style duplex. Builder pays closing costs and discount points. Move, in tor under 11400. Energy efficient heat
under 11400. energy efficient heat pump. Call today for this unusual opportunity. Beat the rent racket with low payments.
FARMERS HOME loan assumption in Ayden. This 3 bedroom home is
priced just right tor you and is located in an excellent
neighborhood near the park. Call today fc Mid *30'!
AYDEN Approximately 1300 square feet with classic quality. Fireplace, hardwood floors - the choice is yours. Central heat and air system Is only five years old and a fenced in back yard for those kids and/or pets. Ottered at 138,500. 13' 2% loan assumption.
NEW LISTING 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. New construction. Townhouse with 12% fixed rate tinanc^. Less than $2000 equity
required: Available In April. Select
|iOur ^own decor .__^Off Hwy 43 near
COUNTRY ESTATE Contractors combine business and home with this residence and warehouse on 3' 2 acres of land located less than 2 miles from Pitt Plaza. Opportunities are limitless. Reduced to;
)*185,000.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC
REALTORS
7H433
ON CALL.
Ray Holloman.. ON CALL .. 753-5147
Mary Chapin............... 756-8431
Gene Quinn ........... 756-6037
Tim Smith ................. 752-9811
Sharon Lewis ..............756-9987
John Jackson .............. 756-4360
Toll Free: 1-800 525-8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
le Med school. Offered in the mid 130's.
NEW LISTING Save time and money and assume this FHA loan of 8'2% with payments of 1292.87 on this 1500 square feet home conveniently located to the university. Spacious great room with fireplace, dining room, fenced-in back yard with a garage. Offered In the $40s.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC
REALTORS
756-6336
Ray Holloman.. ON CALL,. 753-5147
Mary Chapin...............756-8431
Gene Quinn ................756 6037
Tim Smith .................752-9811
Sharon Lewis ..............756-9987
John Jackson ..............756-4360
Toll Free: 1-800 525-8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY i CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Rent To Own
CURTIS
756-8990
No Credit Check
FRANK M. SUTTON
Certified Pubiic Accountant
ACCOUNTING AND
INCOME TAX SERVICES 757-1807
Monday-Friday 9 to 5 796-9000 Saturday 9101
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
I
twi
if
I ne Lauy tM*iiecior. orecnviae, .> t -c riday, February 11. W83-23
109
Houses For Sale
RENT OR BUY this three bedroom brick ranch Owners have moved and need some help on the pay ments iSO's *382 Century 21 Bass Realty^M 6660
sloping
rare gem just outside v >reenville Greatroom with tireplace Downstairs untinished room tor the handyman Three bedrooms, deck and lots ot goodies tSO's 446
Century 21 Bass Realty 756 6666 __
STATELY OLDER HOME' in Bethel 2V00 square feet ot luxury Three bedrooms huge spacious tormal areas Sun porch garage and huge lot with circular drive Priced to sell! Call today S70's .455 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty
756 5868.___________ _ _ _
STOKES: Stately Southern
mansion, completely renovated, featuring 4 bedrooms 3'baths, living room. den. dining room, welfequipped kitchen with breakfast nook Must see to appre elate $140,000 W G Blount &
Associates. 756 3000 _
TEXAS ma1ch
SIZE lot with house to This brick ranch features three bedrcxtms. recreation room, craft room and detached workshop Seeing is believing! ISO's 404 Century 21 Bass Realfv 756 6666 _ 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 launory/mud room
The 2 car detached garage provides maximum of storage space.
For more inTormation.
c^aT^
Alita Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500, 756 8278. C 7. UNBELIEVABLE VALUE is what you've been waiting for Wait no longer See this home today Three bedrooms, family room with fireplace, and an assumable VA loan with below market rate $50's MOO. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty,
756-6666. ______^ ___
University Take advantage of fhe greaf location near campus and tha great price of $35,000 Three bedrooms. I' / baths, living room with fireplace Call Ball & Lane
752 0025 or Lee Ball, 752 1646______
WANT TO BE in the middle of thinqs? Great location for ECU dwellers Three bedrooms nice living area with fireplace, new heat pump Charming older home. $35,000 M52 CENTURY 21 Bass
Realty. 756 5868. _____
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 $40's Farm ers. Home financing available. I'll be mosl happy to show you this ideal starter home Alita Carroll, Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500 or
756 8278 C 8_
WHATTA BARGAIN! Located on SR 1334 about 20 minutes from j Greenville Home is unfinished but is just right for the handyman looking for a deal $11,500 4 204 For | more informafion call Eddie Pate | at CENTURY 21 Bass Realty | 756 5868 I
111 Investment Property
INVESTMENT PROPERTY for
sale. 2 bedroom house adjacent to ECU $44 000 Call 758 9820. ask for Mike Weaver
REDUCED TO $56,000 and owner will finance part of the equity for you to assume the loan Only 5 years old and in the University area. Let our investment specialist, Donny Hemby show you how to get this one *207 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty 756 5868_
113
Land For Sale
APPROXIMATELY 7 AC\ES.
suitable lor 14 lot subdivision, yhis desirable property is located to Cherry Oaks $49,000 /47 CENTURY2I Bass Realty. 75^^^5868 BACK ON THE AAARKE/T and reduced!! Wooded acre/lot in country Approximately p miles northeast o) hospital, buitable for mobile home Owner hK been transferred and must sell! 8Mke an offer $7,500 *42 CENTURY 21
Bass Realty. 756 5868
115
Lots For Sale
BA YTREE SUBDIVISION
Attractive wooded lots within the city. 90% financing available. Call 758 3421
EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY
121 Apartments For Rent
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments Carpeted, range, re frigerator. dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located
to shopping center and ' schools Located just oft 10th Street
Call 752-3519
LARGE 2 BEDROOM Duplex 707 A Hooker Road. Stove and retrigera tor, washer, dryer hookups, air ccmdition. heat pump Deposit and lease required No pets $250 After 5pm. 756 5217, 756-6M2. or 756 0489.
BAYWOOD, two acre lot Fi nancinq available Call 756-7711.
HUNTINGRIDGE
Large residential lots near hospital Restricted FHA and VA approved. Call 752 4139, Millie Lilley,
Owner Broker.
LOT QUAIL Ridge Mobile Home Estates Phone 758 5532 _
2 DUPLEX LOTS off Hooker Road Priced to sell. 756 7473.
Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day.
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets Call 75 4413 between 8 and 5.
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Opei Friday? 5 Call 756 9933
n Mon
121 Apartments For Rent
A BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED 1
bath I bedroom townhouse with lott bedroom. Totally energy efficient $240 After 5:30 or anytime weekends 752 8949.
WHO COULD want more than a nice house, reasonably priced, in a good location. Come see this 3 bedroom 2 bath, brick ranch. It has living room dining room, eat .in kitchen and family room with woodsfove A total of 1850 square foot of living area for $74,500 in Tucker Estafes You really should see it! C 3 Alita Carroll, Aldridge
& Southerland. 756 3500. 756 8276.__
YOUNG COUPLES Make your rent $$ work for you in buying a home and building equity. This starter home features large living room cozy eat in kitchen with warmth ot pine paneling and cabinets, den area, 2 spacious bedrooms, I bath attic storage and additional outside storage, $25,900. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655 or Jane Butts, 756 2851. __
10'j% APR FHA or VA You can have a home built at this low interest, fixed rate, thirty years. Homes to be built in Edwards Acres, Country Squire, Greenwood Forest, Pleasant Ridge or on your lot. Closing costs and points paid Call us for details. Duffus Realty Inc., 756 5395.
Ill RIPLEY DRIVE, 4 bedroom, 2' 2 baths double garage, workshop, hardwood floors, assumable loan. Large second mortgage available. $105 OOP. 355 6269.__
3 BEDRCX)M, 2 bath house in Twin Oaks. $49,500. 5% down. Call 756 7711, 9 to 5, Monday Friday.
$51,900. Price Reduction. Windy Ridge, 3 bedroom, 2'2 bath con dominium, family room with fireplace, separate dining room, heat pump. Excellent investment at this price. Seller will consider FHA, VA, or conventional financing. W 10. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge 8. Southerland Realty, 756 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, convenient to schools and shopping. Seller will consider FHA, VA, or Conven tional financing. Make your ap pointmenf now to see it. W 14. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge 8. Southerland Realty, 756 3500 or
758 7744._______
$66.900. 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 financ ing. Convenient location. W II Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 758 7744.
8% FHA loan assumption no qualifaction necessary 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, workshop, and patio CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549._________
111 Investment Property
FOR SALE STATION IN AYDEN
(N C 203) Lee & Hart St. Will Finance. 752-4717 GOOD INVESTMENT FOR TAX SHELTER
Otfice building with government agency lease. Assumable loan or new financing. For information call toll free 1 800 443 2781, ext C 14.
AZALEAGARDENS
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 J T or Tommy Williams 756 7815
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I' . baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752 1557
CYPRESS GARDENS APARTMENTS
2308 E Tenth Street Available immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal. Call days 758 6061, nights/weekends 758 5661.
Professionally managed by Remco East, Inc.
DUPLEX FOR RENT 300 A Cemetery Road. $250 a month.
752 0180
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air conditioning, 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 756 5555. _
EXTRA LARGE 1 bedroom furnished apartment, close to ECU uptown, carpet. $375. 752 3804.__
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and pool. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 756 6669
IN FARMVILLE 2 bedroom apartment with wall to wall carpet Call 753 3101 day._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING
RemodelingRoom Additions.
C.L. Lupton, Co
LOVE TREES?
Experience fhe unique in apartment living with nature outside your door
COURTNEYSQUARE
APARTMENTS,
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs S()% less than comparable units), dishwash er. washer/dryer hook ups. cable TV,wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9 5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday 15 Sunday
AAerry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
AAODERN 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 & Sons. Inc . Reailors, 758-4711.
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
T wo bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pift 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 BEDROOM apartment. Near campus. No pts. $215 a month. 756 3923
ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, appliances, central air and heat. 802, Apt. 2, Willow St. $195. 758 3311. . _
ONE bedroom duplex located on 2nd Street in Ayden. All appliances furnished. Energy etflaient with heat pump. Judy T56-6336 before S.
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 .4 CABLE TV
Office hours 10a.m. toSp.m. Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
75-4800
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2. and 3 bedrooms., washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm 8. Willow
752-4225
TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT 2
bedrooms, I'z baths, energy effi cient. Convenient location. 757 0001 or nights 753-4015
TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT 2 bedroom. $275 per month. Call 756 8436 alter 5 p.m. _
TWIN OAKES Luxury townhouse. End unit, 2 bedroom, I'z baths, No pets. $295. 756 9006after 6p.m.
TWO BEDROOM apartment, River Bluff Road. $240 per month. No pets. Call Smith Insurance & Real tv, 752 2759._
TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX
Carpeted, all appliances including dishwasher. Heat pump, storm windows and doors. Located off 10th Street near university. $260 per month. Call 758 2558or 756 7677.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WANTED
GOOD
CLEAN,
CARDBOARD
Paying 1 Va'perlb.
TARHEEL RECYCLING CORP.
Williamston, N. C. 792-1016
Save At
Holt Oldsmobile-Datsun
With This 1983 Olds Delta 88
4 door, fully equipped with air condition, automatic transmission, AM-FM stereo, styled wheel covers, tinted glass.
All For Only
9328
Plus Freight and Sales Tax
HOLTOLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
121 Apartment For Rnt
TWO BEDROOM apartment, carpated. appliances, central air and heat io. Apt 2. Willow St
$250.758 3311. _
UNFURNISHED 310 Eastern Street 2 blocks to campus. 3 bedrooms, living room. I bath AAarried couple desired No pets $165 752 5508 _
WEDGE WOOD ARMS
NOW AVAILABLE
2 bedroom, t'.i bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups pool, tennis court.
756-0987
I AND 3 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately 752 3311.
1 BEDROOM energy efficient apartment. 756 5389or 756-<X)25.
1 BEDROOM, 2 blocks from downtown and ECU Convenient to hospital. $195. 7473 or 756 7285
2 BEDROOM FURNISHED Apartment for rent. Call 756CM7 anytime.
2 BEDROOMS, V i bath. Ridge Place, $290. Available March 1 756 73)0._ _
2 BEDROOM Duplex on Brownlea
Drive Range and refrigerator hookups, energy efficient. No $265. 756 7480.
pets
3 BEDROOM, I bath, central heat and air, lease and deposit. $245 per month. No pets. Call Jon Day at Moore & Sauter. 752 1010, nights 752 0345^__L
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT for rent. Reasonable price. Near campus. Pets allowed Call 756 4767 after 5.
MODERN 2 BEDROOM duplex , with electric heat near ECU Pre fere couple with references 752 5529.
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX apartment Appliances furnished Located in Meadowbrook $130 month. Call
756 1900____
211 RIVER BLUFF Road Greenville. 2 bedroom $230 per month. 825-2091 anytime______
3 BEDROOM Duplex on Meade Street, near ECU Central air, range and refrigerator hookups
$265^ 756 7480._
5 ROOM APARTMENT, East 14th Street. Call 756 1651___
127
Houses For Rent
DEN, 3 bedrooms, t'z baths carport, lease and deposit required $285 month Call 756 4439 after 6 or weekpnd$
FOUR BE OR ROM house 405 West Fourth Street $300 per month Call 757 0M
HOUSE IN TWIN OAKES, 3 bedrooms. 3 baths. $425 per month Call 756 7711, 9 to 5, Monday Fridsx
IN FARMVILLE 3 bedrooms nice neighborhood $27$ a niooth plus deposit. 753 42i4
TWO BEDROOM house 3 blocks from ' university, convenient to shopping area, perfect for students sharing! $250 per month Call J L Harris & Sons Inc Reailors. 758 4711
UNIVERSITY AREA. 110 East 12th Street 3 bedrooms, appliances furnished, washer/dryer connec tion. tireplace. just insulated. S275. Call 756 0765_ _
1, 2, AND 3 bedroom houses for rent 752 3311.
112 NORTH SUAAMIT 3 bedroom house within walking distance of the university $310 month CENTURY 21 B Forbes Aoencv. 756 2121.
2 BE DROOM HOUSE with wall to wall carpet in Farmvllle Call 753 3101 day
3 BEDROOM ranch style home Carport, storage, quiet subdivision Call 757 0001 or nights. 753 4015,
756 9006.
129
Lots For Rent
TRAILER LOT for rent. 100x200 Located at Lot 33 Quail Ridge Trailer Estates. 752 003> alter 5 30
133 AAobile Homes For Rent
COLONIAL PARK, 2 bedroom air, underpinned furnished 756 3377 after 5p.m. _
FOR RENT 12X50 Colonial Park $100 deposit and $160 rent Call 756 6230.
122
Business Rentals
1500 SQUARE F(X>T commercial space for rent on Greenville Boulevard. Call Echo Realty. Inc
at 756 6040; nights 524 5042___
5,000 SQUARE F(X)T building for rent. About 1 mile west from Pift Memorial Hospital Phone 753 2016 days, 758 4296 nights_'
125 Condominiums For Rent
FOR RENT WITH OPTION to buy Large 3 bedroom Condomimium, enioy the fireplace, the fenced in palio, the formal dining room Call 752 1263 or 756 4244 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 BEDRX3M, t'z bath carpeted, major appliances furnished No Pets, married couple prefered 825 7321 after 5 p.m_
127
Houses For Rent
3 BEDROOM, 108 North Elm Fireplace, stove, refriagerator, dishwasher, washer and dryer No pets. 756 9526.
4 BEDROOM HOUSE in Farmville with wall to wall carpet. 2 baths, and new modern kitchen with stove and refrigerator. Call 753 3101 day.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR SALE or rent. 40 X 12 two bedroom, partially furnished trail er Electric heat 752 2807._
FURNISHED 2 bedrooms and 3 bedrooms, $150 and $185 month Colonial Park 758 0174. _
FURNISHED TRAILERS for rent 3 bdroom, $160, 2 bedroom, $120 Behind Venters Grill Call 756 4982
after 1._______
FURNISHED 2 bedroom near four lane, deposit negotiable 746 9470 or 524 4349 5 to 7 p.m
SPECIAL RATES for students 2 bedroom with carpet $115. No pets no children 758 4541 or 756 9491
12 X 44 TWO bedroom mobile home on private lot, 2 miles south of Pitt Community College No children, no pets $100 per month plus $90 deposit Call 756 3003 after 5 pm 12 X 65 TWO BEDROOM, 2 bath! new carpet $150 per month. 5 miles south ot Greenville Call 746 6575.
12X65, central heal and air, 3 miles north ot city Call 758 2347 or 752 6068___ _
2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent Call 756 4687
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
TIRES
NEW, USED and RECAPS Unbeatable Prices and Quality
GOODYEAR TIRE CENTIR
133 AAobile Homes For Rent
2 BEOROOAAS. pertially furnished air. good locelion no pets, no children. 7S8 aeS7
BEDROOM TRAILER for rent Carpet, air no pets. )' baths
756 6005 __
2 BEOROOM. completely
turnished, rw pets. 756 7381 _
2 BEDROOMS, turnished washer/dryer, air conditioner excellent condition, good location Couples only, no pets 756 0801 after Sp.m
2 BEDROOMS with carpet, washer Located at Azalea Gardens $150
month Call 756 1900__
2 BEDROOM trailer. $135 month
SlOOdtpOSit Call 752 1623_
2 BEDROOMS, washer, carpel air, coxy^Mely turnished. No pels Call
135 Office Space For Rent
Contact
7815
OFFICES FOR LEASE (
JT or Tommy Williams 756 THREE ROOM downtown office at 219 Cotanche Street 440 square feel Parking available Call Jim Lamer at 752 5505_
142 Roommate Wanted
138 Rooms For Rent
1 LARGE ROOM tor rent $25 per week I medium size room $23 per week Light cooking heat and hot water 758 7904
ROOAAAAATE WANTED immedi ately 2 bedroom apartment Share bath I . miles Irom ECU Female $120 per month . utilities $120
deposit 752 3076 alter 4pm__
VERY NICE lully turnished 2 bedroom apartment at Eastbrook Apartments $125 renr plus utilities Must be responsible Call 758 8556
144
Wanted To Buy
2 BEDROOMS, completely furnished, washer/dryer No pets 752 0196
135 Office Space For Rent
FOR RENT teproximately 8(X> square feet $25() per month 10th Street. Colonial Height Shopping Center. 758 4257 ' .
AAODERN, attractive office space lor lease Approximately 1500 square feet Located 2007 Evans Street beside Moseley Brothers Call 756 3374
OFFICE FOR LEASE 1203 West 14th Street, 758 3743 or 355 6458 Available Immediately_
SINGLE OFFICES or suites, with utilities and janitorial Chapin Little building 3106 S AAemorial Drive. Call 756 7799
TWO RCX3M or four room office suite. Highway 264 Business Eco nomical Private parking^ Some storage available Call Connally Branch at Clark Branch Realtors. 756 6336
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
143 Roommate Wanted
FEAAALE, nice 3 bedroom home 19$ month and i utilities Call
FEAAALr ROOMMAf^ needed 2 bedroom furnished trailer . depos ' it, ' 1 rent Call after 6 752 7589 FEMALE ROOAAAAATE wanted . rent $112 50. utilities deposit required 2 bedroom duplex 4 blocks from campus Come by 510 Apartment Fa^ First Sl^r^t FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted immediately lor 2 bedroom apartment , rent and utilities
752 2142 alter 4 p m __
MALE RCXJAAMATE needed to share new home in Stokes $115 month and ' z utilities 75^J05^ MALE ROOMMATE FOR 2 bedroom duplex 758 0240 before 8 or after 5
BUYING ALUMINUM CANS. 21c per pound Glisson Enterprises
Stokes Htflhway 758 2548 ____
WANT TO BUY Older home' m country with 3 to 5 acres ot land in Greenville Washington area Call collect 79 5 3459 alter 6pm WANTED Singer sewmo machine prefer style 503A or sOOA Call
2 316J____
1973 OR NEWER wrecked ' Chevrolet . ton pickup loc parts Call 752 2657
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
TIRES
NEW, USED, and RECAPS
Unbeatable Prices and Quality
QUALITY TIRE SERVICE 752-7177
PINE FURNITURE
%
Quality Pine Furniture at Wholesale Prices Seen Something You Want?
I can buUd It for a lot lots. Anything custom built
Bookcases * Dressers
Gun Cabinets Computer Tables
Shelves Night Stands
Piestfes T V Hutch
Jelly Cupboard Stereo Cabinets
Drop Leafs PencH Post Bed
Anything can be built from a sketch or picture, stained any color. Many Items finished and ready to sell
355-2720 Alter 5:30 -QreenvHle ' -
Get in the jUobile Home Business
(hvnan(IOi)cra(ca Conner Mobile Home Sales Lot
Be a part of the only feasible answer to this country's housing shortage. Own and operate your own Mobile Home Sales Center. Become an excluaive dealer for Conner, the recognized leader In mobile homes. Conner requires no contract or franchise fee.
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The Real Estate Corner
^^exi^tonSquar^^ Phase III
Sear The Greenville Athletic Club
Customize Your Own Townhouse
J.R. Yorke Construction Co., inc.
355 2286
, , MAVIS BUTTS REALTY
A'A 105 West Third Street
758-0655
NEW LISTING
1811 Sulgrave Road, Stratford Subdivision
EXCELLENT 10% FIXED RATE LOAN ASSUMPTION to
qualified buyer; total monthly payments of $359. You'll enjoy the cozy charm of this lovely family home. Features include living & dining rooms, fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, carport & attractive neighborhood & yard. The heat pump system will save SS on heating & cooling bills too! $51,500.
Jane Butts 756-2851
ElaineTroiano ...756-6346
Mavis Butts, GRI.CRS Listing Agent 752-7073
JARMAN
AUTO SALES
1982 Ford EXP Sports Coupe,
air, power steering and brakes, AM-FM. automatic, appearance package $5050
1982 Ford Futura. 4 door, vinyl top. air condition, automatic, power steering, power brakes, AM-FM stereo, wire wheel covers, appearance package 1500 miles $6950
1981 Toyota Corolla LIftback,
2 door, automatic, air condition $5950
1981 GMC Sierra Pickup,
straight drive, AM-FM radio, power steering, long wheel base $5350
1981 Pontiac LeMans, 4 door, 6 cylinder, automatic, power steering and brakes, AM-FM. $5595
1979 AMC Spirit, 4 speed, sunroof, loaded $3250
1978 Dodge Aspen, 2 door, air condition, AM-FM radio, automatic $2850
1978 Toyota Corolla Wagon, 5
speed, air condition $3950
1977 Datsun B-210, 2 door lift-back Automatic, air condition $2950
1975 Toyota Wagon, 5 speed, air condition. $1650
1974 Ford Van, straight drive, 6 cylinder $1450
1973 Ford Torino, good clean transportation $795
1971 Chevrolet El Camino. $1250
1969 Chevrolet Impala, 2
door $550
12 Months. 12.000 Milas Warranty Aviiltbla Flntnctng AttHMt WWi Approntd CrMH Hwy43 North 752-S237 Buslnosi
Grant Jsrman.......758-9542
Edgar Denton.......758-2921
Donald Garris.......758-0929
YOUVE GOT TO SEE THESE TWO NEW HOMES TO BELIEVE THEM
Unique floor plan takes advantage ot all available space which features great room with fireplace, separate dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, very convenient kitchen, extra large heated storage and utility area. Large vvooded back yards with lots of privacy.
FHA-VA FINANCING AVAILABLE SELLER PAYS ALL DISCOUNT POINTS AND CLOSING COSTS
Located at 210 and 212 Freestone Road Orchard Hill Subdivision
Sales price $53,500 Call for an appointment and more details
THED.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
752-7666
756-5395
GREENVILLE, N.C.
FARMVILLE
Corner ranch home with three bedrooms, 1'^ baths, loyer, living room, dining area, family room with wood stove, carport $47,900
WINDY RIDGE
One of those hard to find two bedroom and bath flats Living room, dining area, bay windows, refrigerator, patio. Perfect for the young or old $51.000
CHARLES ST.
Very convenient to the University, Four bedrooms., two baths, living room, dining roorti Rool only one year old. Possible FHA loan assumption and possible owneHfinancing . Some furnishings Only $55,000
A COUNTRY PLACE
Impressive older home. Lots of room with approximately three acres of land. Three bedrooms, two baths, living room with fireplace, dining room, family room, country kitchen, carport. Assumable VA loan $56,900.
CHOICE AREA RANCH
This adorable and comfortable ranch home in Belvedere has three bedrooms and two baths Living room, pine paneled family room, carport, wood deck, new furnace and air, fenced yard $59,900
CAMELOT
The qualified buyer can pay the equity and assume the loan on this pretty two story home Entrance foyer great room with fireplace dining room, three bedrooms. 2'/2 baths, garage, deck, fencing $59,900
ENGLEWOOD
This ranch has it all! Three bedrooms two baths, living room with tireplace, dining area family room with fireplace Glass enclosed patio double carport, separate building has office and storage Beaulifully landscaped rear yard $69.900
OALEBROOK CIRCLE
A prestigious address and a pretty ranch Four bedrooms, three baths, stale foyer, kitchen and family room, living room, dining room, cathedral ceilings, double garage Large unfinished area in basement. $83,000. ,
BROOK VALLEY
Comfortable Ckjioniai on a quiet circle and a lovely wooded lot Four, bedrooms, two baths, loyer, living room, tormal dining room, family room with fireplace, recreation room Perfect for the family $89.900
OFFICE OPEN 9-12 Saturday, 1-5 Sunday
, Kay Davis On Duty Call 758-8968 Non-office Hours
24The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, February 11,1983Consider Big Changes In Interest Rate On Loans
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A Senate subcommittee will consider bills that could result in major changes in interest rates on loans
Sen. Robert Swain, D-Buncombe, introduced a complex bill that would let lenders increase interest charged on some loans while reducing interest on others.
Currently companies can charge 36 percent interest on loans up to $600 and 15 percent on loans between $600 and $5,000. Under Swains bill companies could lend up to $10,000, with 30 percent interest on the first $1,000 and 18 percent above $1,000.
Swain said there is no company in the state using the law now because it is not profitable.
Chuck Harkey, representing the North Carolina Consumer Finance Association, said 75 percent of the loans now made by smaller finance companies are between $600 and $3,000.
Sen. Cecil Jenkins, D-Cabarrus, introduced a bill to maintain current interest rates at 36 percent on loans up to $600 and 15 percent on loans between $600 and $3,000.
Unless the bill is enacted, the rates charged by small finance companies will revert June 30 to their 1975 levels - 36 percent on loans up to $300 and 18 percent on loans between $300 and $3,000
"It would revert and mean no rate increase in eight years. Jenkins said.
In other legislative action:
Utilities
Sen Conrad Duncan, D-Rockingham. said he will introduce a bill today calling for the election of state Utilities Commission members. The board members now are appointed.Allow Dumping
Treated Sewage
RALEIGH, NC (.AP) -The N.C. Environmental Management Commission has voted to allow treated sewage to be dumped in ocean waters along the North Carolina coast despite opposition from conservationists.
The N C. Division of Parks and Recreation, the state Marine Fisheries Commission, the Sierra Club and officials of several beach communities had opposed ocean disposal, which previously had been banned in the state.
Critics fear that dumping off the coast would spark a building boom along the Outer Banks since the current shortage of sewage connections would be alleviated.
They also say the sewage could contaminate swimming and fishing areas and threaten some ocean species. But the environmental-commission gave its approval Thursday after Duke University oceanographer Dr. Richard Barber had held a public hearing on the issue.
Barber says using the
oceans instead of inland waters will help conditions in North Carolinas estuaries, where shellfishing is sometimes banned because of pollution.
It is an optimal alternative compared to estuarine and ground water discharge. said Barber, who is a member of the
Doubt Officer Was Speeding
DURHAM. N.C. (API -Durham police say they do not believe an officer was speeding when he struck and killed a pedestrian Wednesday night on East Club Boulevard.
The pedestrian, Larry Eugene Cole, 17, was killed by a patrol car driven by Public Safety Officer Grayling Dawson. Dawson was not injured.
Police said Thursday that Dawson did not have his siren on while driving to a store to help in a chase for a shoplifter. He was using his emergency lights and flashers, police said.
The accident occurred as Dawson was passing another car while driving west on East Club Boulevard near the city limits. Cole was in the eastbound lane and had. bent over to pick up some coins when he was struck.
commission,
"We could very well open up large segments of North Carolina estuarine waters, he said. "There could be some ecological benefits.
The new regulation does not limit the distance from the shoreline where effluent could be dumped. R. Paul Wilms, the N.C. Division of Environmental Managements assistant director of programs, says the dumping usually occur more than a mile off shore.
"I would expect with the environmental work they would have to do before they lay one of those things it would go out a ways, Wilms said in an interview. He said the decision probably would go into effect about April 1.
Barber said discharge regulations are not intended as a means to regulate development. But he recommended afterward that the commission explore the concept of treating waste to the point where it could be recycled as drinking water.
I dont think you need to put the waste in the estuaries, in the ground or in the ocean at all, he said. "I believe (beach communities) could easily support (recycling) through some taxes on the people who go there.
Fined And Jail
Time In Mishap
Consider 'Free Ride Home'
CHARLOTTE, NC i.AIi Charlotte officials are considering a plan in which drunken teen-agers would be given a free ride home to avoid the risk of accident'or jail,
"There is a lot of interest in the community about having such a program, and it just needs to be coordinated, said city council member Ed Peacock, who is asking the council to approve it.
A city-backed program, called Drive-A-Teen. has been successful in Chapel Hill, where teen-agers can call a number 24 hours a day to ask for a ride home if they or their friends have been J-inking.
FORT BRAGG, N.C. (AP) - A Fort Bragg soldier has been sentenced to spend eight weekends in jail after pleading guilty to drunken driving and involuntary manslaugher in the Aug. 31 death of another soldier in his unit.
Sgt. Curtis Wendell Mack, 24, of Headquarters Company, 4th Battalion, 68th Armor, was fined $1,000 and sentenced to perform four weekends of public service work at the emergency room of Womack Army Hospital. |
Superior Court Judge E. Lynn Johnson gave Mack a three-year-suspended sentence and probation under terms of a sentencing plan presented by assistant public defedner Paul Herzog.
The plan called for the service at Womack Army Hospital in lieu of prison time.
Mack was charged in an accident in which Steven Cass, 20, was killed, and two others were injured
EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.
Partly cloudy Sunday through tuesday. Highs during period mostly in the 50s with some 40s in west. Lows Sunday in 20s, mostly in the 30s on Monday and Tuesday
Under Duncans bill, a commission member would be elected in each of the states 11 congressional districts for a two-year term.
Duncan said he preferred elected board members because "they might yield to the people more than some appointees. He said he was not satisfied that the commission is keeping rates aslowas they should be.
BulkMa
The Senate gave final approval to a House bill letting the Revenue Department contract out some mail to outside firms a move expected to save the department $60,000 a year.
Sen. Marshall Rauch, D-Gaston, said the bill would let the state ship mailing labels out of state to the firm that prints income tax forms for the state instead of shipping tons of forms into North Carolina to be mailed. He said that would save $15,000.
In addition, he said the state could save $60,000 by bulk mailing refund checks for 17 cents each instead of 20 cents. However, $15,000 of those savings would be paid to a firm hired to sort the mail.
Video Games
Three percent of video game receipts would go to the states General Fund under a bill introduced by Rep. D R. Mauney, D-Gaston. He said the idea is to place a kind of sales tax on the games to raise an estimated $2.5 million to $4 million a year.
Other bills introduced this session would place a license tax on each video game. Mauney said his idea is fairer because, "If you make it (money) you pay it (the tax).
Lottery
A Senate subcommittee studying the feasibility of a state lottery met for the first time to outline the scope of its investigation.
Chairman Sen. Robert Swain, D-Bumcombe, said the panel would look at how other states use lotteries, how much money they bring in. what expenses lotteries entail and whether lotteries are associated with increasing crime.
Sen. Cass Ballenger, RrCatawba, suggested that the question of a lottery go before the voters.
"Id sure like to get the monkey off our back and let them
decide, he said.
Sen. Rachel Gray, D-Guilford, echoed the sentiments of the entire panel when she said, I would hope we could stay out of any moral issues if we can.
Armed Robbery
Rep. William Clark, D-Cumberland, introduced a bill clarifying the crime of armed robbery.
Clark said the previous law did not make it clear that the mere possession of a weapon during a robbery would constitute armed robbery. ,
Under the bill, even if a weapon is concealed during a robbery, the law would apply, Clark said.
Elderly Tran^rtatkm
' Local school boards could let senior citizens use school buses for transportation under a bill approved by the House Aging Committee.
Weve been wrestling with this thing since 1977, said Rep. Gus Economos, I>Mecklenburg, who originated the bill.
The bill would allow bus use within a 50 mile radius of the school district without regard to state and county boundaries.
Economos said only a half dozen districts in rural counties were likely to use the provision.
Adt^tion
The Senate Judiciary II Committee approved and sent to the full Senate a bill that would require parties adopting children to sign notarized consent forms, effective Oct. 1.
The state Department of Human Resources sought the added provision of notarization because of problems with people denying that they had consented to the adoption.
Revoked Licenses
The punishment for driving under a revoked drivers license will become uniform under a bill approved by the Senate Judiciary II Committee.
Sen. Dennis Winner, D-Buncombe, said most judges interpreted current law to require a mandatory one-year prison term without the possibility of suspension or parole.
I propose that the punishment be from 30 days to two years, that 30 days of it cannot be suspended and, at the discretion of the court, a fine of up to $1,000, he said, adding that he saw no reason why the state should spend $8,000 a
year imprisoning violators of that law.
The bill was approved and sent to the full Senate.
Courts
The House voted 79-32 to delay consideration of a bill that would allow enforcement of child support, child custody and alimony decisions while they are being appealed in the courts.
Bill sponsor Rep. Paul Pulley, D-Durham, said the appeals may take up to a year and during the interim severe hardship can occur. ,
But Rep. William Watkins, D-Granville, said he was worried about people who may pay alimony or child support and then have those payments ruled unnecessary. Watkins asked how they could recover that money.
Annexation
Rep. Brad Ligon, R-Rowan, introduced a bill to repeal the 1959 involuntary annexation laws. The existing law allows cities to annex areas without the consent of the people living in those areas.
They look at the rich fertile soil of the suburbs to harvest in dollars for their lavish spending, Ligon said, adding that it appears to be almost taxation without representation.
New Bills
Rep. Gus Economos, D-Mecklenburg, introduced a bill to set up a fund too pay for the injuries of armed robbery victims.
Sen. Cary Allred, R-Allamance, introduced a measure that would permit disabled veterans to use parking spaces marked for the handicapped.
Rep. Bertha Holt, D-Allamance, filed a bill that would allow referenda on proposed constitutional amendments to be held only on the dates of statewide elections.
A bill by Sen. W. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, would provide that all occupational licensing boards receive interest on funds deposited by them with the state Treasury for investment.
Sen. Charles Hipps, D-Haywood, introduced a bill that would authorize local law enforcement officers to inspect all premises for which Alcohol Board of Control permits have been issued.
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