Daily Reflector, February 15, 1983


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Fair Unigbt, low in the mki-aos. Increasing doudi-ness Wednesday with higb in ttK upper SOs.

102ND YEAR

THE

REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 5-Courtreforms Page 7 - Mardl Gras Page 13-Easy prey

NO. 39

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FiaiON GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 15, 1983

16 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

City School Board'Reduction In Force' Policies Discussed

By JERRY RAYNOR ReflectorStaffWriter

A proposed Reduction in Force (RIF) policy enc(Hnpassmg four points, prepared by a teadiers Ua^ Conunittee, was pres^i^ to numbers of the Greenville Board of Educatkm Monday night.

The proposal is part d a continuing effort to fashion an instrument to be used, if it becomes necessary because of

declining enrollment in the dty schools and cutbacks in funding, to reduce the staff of the school s^m. The proposal presented Monday night was not for action, but for considoration by the board.

Fay Creegan, in the role of spokesman for the Uaskm Committee, presented the four-point prt^Msal.

UtKier the stoucture of the pn^Msal, each of the four points will carry a maximum determining allocation of 25 points in a

Any Way You Can

THE BEST WAY - Some determined travelers hit the road in Charlottesville, Va. while horseless carriages still sat under coatings of ice and stow in the wake of Fridays 18-inch

snowstorm. Schools were still closed Monday, and traveling by horseback lo(dred like the best way to get around. (AP Laserphoto)

By MIKE SHANAHAN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) Emergency jobs legation recommended by President Reagan and modified by Democrats is speeding toward quick congressimal action, and is likely to clearthe House within two weeks.

House Democratic leaders agreed Monday to accept the recession relief measure propped by President Reagans senior advisers last week.

Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr. said House Democrats will likely add about $1 billion to the $4.3 billion Reagan jobs proposal, and then later approve a long-term employment measure the president is almost sure to oppose.

For now, however, there was broad agreement among Republicans and Democrats in Congress and at the White House that some form of quick aid should be signed into law within the next several weeks to help the jobless and those unable to pay for food or lodging.

REFLECTOR

OTUtf

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.

BEAGLE RECIPIENT PLEASE CALL The Pitt County Humane Society has asked that the man who got a beagle from a foster home of the society call Barbara Haddock, 752-9922. The dog, which had been in veterinary and foster care for over a month, was thought to be a stray, but since Sunday a possible owner has come forth.

TAX FORM SOURCES I work at the Greenville Post Office and would like to save the public some trouble by pointing out that tax forms are NOT available at the post office. I hate to see people stand in line a long time only to find out that the forms cant be obtained here. Federal tax forms are available at the IRS ofce across from the courthouse on Evans Street; state forms from the state tax office located on the second floor of the N.C. sute Employees Credit Union, 300 W. First St. R.H. i

Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said today that presidential aides were expecting a formal reply on Uie package Wedn^y from cohgressionid Democrats.

He would not say wheth^ any items in the package fall into the category of make-work, dead-end jobs that Reagan has repeatedly said he opposes.

Lets wait until we have an agreement... and then we can analyze it, Speakes said.

ONeill said House Democratic leaders agreed it was necessary to move the measure quickly, in order that we bring relief to those mUlions of Americans who must suffer throu^ this winter without the basics of food and shelter.

We are making good progress (toward an agreement), said Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee.

Baker, House Minority Leader Bob Michel of Illinois and other R^ublican leaders were to meet with Reagan today to discuss specifics of the measure.

Aides said House Republicans have already agreed to accept the proposal in general.

Among the items in Reagans proposal were many he had threatened to veto when a jobs bill was aw>roved by House during last years lame<luck session of Congress.

Conceding that a majority of Democrats in the House want a broader, more ex^nsive j<rt)s package, ONeill said Monday, This is not the best bill we Democrats could write, but it may be the best bill we can enact into law.

Among the relief measures in the proposal arer

-$250 million for food and shelter for the homeless.

-$1 billion in grants to local ^vernments which they would be expected to use to hire the unemployed.

-The remaining $3 billion would go to ^)eed up federal purchases or construction projects planned for later years.

More ^ifically, the money would include $300 million for military housing, $100 million to repair Veterans Administration facilities and $400 million for buses and subways.

There would also be money to upgrade parks, airports, highways, Indian reservations and feiteral health facilities. Some $50 millk would be earmarked for ^vernment purchases of cars and trucks, an idea designed to give a slight boost to the auto imhistry.

Another $3 bUlion would extend by nine months the eligibility of workers for unemployment benefits at a time when 10.2 per cent of the woit force is utKmployed.

Last year, Reagan labeled almost half of the $4.3 billion as pork barrel. But pressures frnn congresskHud Republicans changed his mind, and te is now suppmting the same projects threatened to veto three months ago.

plan to reach a decision m which staff members (basically teachers) would be dro(^ from the ranks if reduction must be made.

The proposed ^ructure is:

Years of service in the teaching professkm one point per year for service to a maximum of 25 points.

Years of service in Greenville schools one point po* year for service to a maximum of 25 points.

Gertiflcation based on North Candina teaching certificate - A certification, 14 points; G cetification, 17 points; advanced certification, 20 points; I%D degree, 23 points; plus 2 points for each additional area shown (hi N.C. Certification, for a maximum of 25 points.

Performance ^e worked out by a computer based on the 33 weighted indicators, maximum of 25 points.

Ms. Creegan said the proposal represents the majority conseisus of our teachers who voted for an objective RIF policy based on seniority and certification. She said that seven of the schods v(Aed in the majority for the Liaskm Committee proposal, two voted against the proposal, and one sdxxd absUned because of a tie vote situation.

Ms. Creegan also said that after the Liaison Committee became aware of the administrative teams philosq)hy, which is based (hi performance being the decisive predominant variaNe, we went back to the teachers and devised a second proposal (The four-point presented Monday night).

She called the proposal a c(Mnproroise.

Two teachers, Mena Lassiter and Leveta Wealherington, presented o[^ing views of teachers on the four-point proposal, bakng their concern primarily on their conviction that performance and seniority are separate entities and should not be used together in one instrument, or policy paper for reduction in force.

An equitable Reduction in Force policy should be based on seniority, Ms. Lassiter commented. When performance is included in such a p(rficy, it becomes a teacher performance appraisal instrument.

We ask you not to place us in a position of being competitive among ourselves as teachers when faced with implementing a Reduction in Force policy. A RIF-ed teacher should be able to walk away from the Greenville city schools system with dignity and perception that he is a qualified, competent professional having met the standards provided by the Teacher Performance Appraisal. This would not be possible if performance is an indicator within the Reduction in Force policy, Ms. Lassiter concluded.

' Ms. Weatherington, saying she represented the NCAE, stressed that the opinion among many teachers is that competence is dealt with effectively in the state tenure regulations and in the mandated evaluation process.

When RIF is in any way based on performance, serious (Please turn to Page 6)

Hefty Education Cuts In North Carolina Expected

Job Legislation Speeds Toward House Approval

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - State education officials say Presidrat Reagans proposed budget would be extremely destructive to North Carolina costing the ^te as much as $23 mUlion in federal funds by the 1984-85 school year.

In a budget analysis announced Monday by the Dq;)artment of Public Instruction, officials said the state could lose 900 teachers and 400 teacher aides if Congress approves the budget for fiscal 1984.

Most losses would come in child nutiltion, special instruction for poor ^u^nts, migrant education, Indian education and vocation^ education, the report said.

It would be extremely destructive to North Carolina if this budget were enacted, said Joseph B. Webb, special assistant for federal programs to state Superintendent A. Craig PhUlips.

Webb predicted the state would be unable to make up the funding cuts if Reagans budget is approved as proposed. Webbs says he is hoping (fongress will reject some of the recommended cuts.

For the 1980-81 school year. North Carolina received $285.8 million in federal aid for major educational programs, Webb said. That dropped to $254.4 million in 1981-% and increased to $257.2 milli(Hi in 1982-83, when Congress did not fdlow Reagans budget, he said.

Under the present plan, the state would get about $239.8 million for the 1983-84 school year, Webb said. That would be a loss of $17.4 million in major programs, in addition to $5.6 million lost under the propo^ budget for other programs.

Ihe state would lose $7 million in school year 1983-84 and an additional $10 million in 1984-85 in funds for the federal program intended to help students who come from low

incomes home under Chapter 1 of the Education Consolidation Act.

The cuts would be based on census data about which Webb said he was skeptical. According to 1980 census data, there were about 30 percent fewer children from low-income families in North Carolina than in 1970.

The programs cut would mean a reduciton of 1,208 teachers and teacher aides and elimination of services to more than 40,000 students'over the two-year period.

The child nutrition pn^am, which also benefits children from low-income'families, would sustain substantial cuts under the Reagan biKlget.

The school breakfast, child care and summer food services program would be lumped into a block grant, the report said.

The breakfast program would be cut 43 percent in the 1983-84 school year compared to 1982-83.

The child-care feeding program would undergo a 40 percent cut and the summer food program a 49 percent cut.

The Reagan budget also would reduce impact aid to the states, which has been an important element of budgets for^ school systems near military installations.

Webb said the exact number of students, teachers and services that would be involved in cuts in the impact aid program cannot be determined yet.

Programs aimed at the children of migrant farm workers would be cut by half by the 1984-85 school year, eliminating serivces to more than 6,000 migrant children and 150 teaching positions.

Reagan proposes to rescind 37 percent of funds appropriated for Indian education fro 1983-84 ands to end all funding in 1984-85.

Plants In Greene And Wayne Preparing To End Operations

By TOM BAINES Reflect-Staff Writer The scheduled closing late next month of Young Squire apparel plants in Mount Olive and Hookerton will result in a total layoff of over 700 employees in Wayne and Greene counties, officials report.

Philip Talerico, manager of the Mount Olive facility, said today that the 375 employees in production and management there are being laid off in phases and the closing should be complete probably sometime the latter part of March. Talerico said the Young Squire, a subsidiary of U.S. Industries, received advanced word about 18 months ago that USI was going to divest itself of certain of its divisions. He said it was known at that time that Young Sq^re was one of the tar^t^ subsidiaries but we were hoping maybe it

wouldnt hiq)pen.

'Die facility at Hookerton, (grating under the name of Togs as a manufacturing plant for Young Squire, has had an employee roster of

some 300 production workers and about 30 salaried personnel, according to manager Mack Stocks.

Stocks said a phased layoff at his plant has already cut

back the employment roster about 75 percent and the employees still working will probably be maintained until the close-out aftencomple-(PleaseturntoPage6)

Ayden Bd. Wants Keep ABC Store Downtown

ByMARYSCHULKEN

ReflectorStaffWriter

AYDEN - The Town Board of Commissioners wants the ABC Store to remain downtown, members said Monday.

A resolution stating that the town board is desirous that the (ABC) ste remain in the central business dis

trict or in the fringe areas was approved by commissioners at their meeting Monday night.

The ABC Store is now located downtown but its current lease will expire April 1. A new site at the West Third Street shopping center has been sought by the ABC Board.

The Ayden Commissioners resolution, which suggests that the ABC Board strongly consider downtown sites, will be sent to the State (^airman of the ABC Board and the Pitt Cbunty O)mmissioners The resolution states that the proposed West Third (Please turn to Page 8)

WintervHle Tables New Plea By Sunnyside Eggs

Winterville Aldermen tabled a request Monday ni^t from L E. Wooten and Co. to discharge wastewater from Sunnyside Eggs through the (dd Winterville treatment plant site.

The board last month rejected a similar request, saying the towns main lift station was already operating at capacity. The Wooten

company, an engineering firm, said Sunnysides average daily watewater dischar^ would be approximately 3,000 to 5,000 galloos of water.

The board said Monday that more study is needed.

In oth business beard by the board, an appUcatioo was submitted to Seaboard

Coastline Railroad for six crossings over the tracks from Boyd Street to Sylvania Street.

In new business, David Whitley, representing Coastal Electronics, made a proposal to the board for a service contract on the towns police communications eqiiipment. The total cost for the contract would

be $84 a month. The board said this probably would be included in next years budget. No action was takoi.

Winterville Rescue S<piad members Wayne Nobles and Ashley Dail asked the board to approve the towns paying the insurance, totaling $875 a year on the two rescue vdiicles in use by the scpiad. This would be under the f

countys policy.

The board approved the request.

The board authorized Town Clerk Elwood Nobles to advertise for bids for the paving and resurfacing of Jones, Knox, Acadmey, Church, South Railroad, North Railroad and Depot streets. The recommended date for the bid opening was

slated for March 4,1983, at 1 p.m.

The board also approved a municipal maintenance agreement with the state for a traffic control device located at the intersection of Mill am^Main streets.

A bill m the amount of $362 with Wynns Chevrolet in Bethel for repairs to the town fire truck was also approvpd.

/





2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Tueaday, February 15,13

Esther Snyder Still Waits For Call After One .Year

By ALAN L. ADLER Associated Press Writer

CLEVELAND (AP) - A year ago, 62-year-old Esther Snyder signed up to take the written police exam - and passed with flying colors. .Now shes awaiting the next step - the physical test.

im in that age group that people think are too old to do anything," Ms. Snyder said. Everything is against me as far as the police department is concerned."

Ms. Snyder scored 99.47 percent on the written test, 194th among the 2,378 applicants who took the test last March.

Although shes not sure whether she could pass the physical exam. Ms. Snyder said she wants to try.

Ms Snyder said she understands the city has budget limitations, but she believes she was discriminated against because of her age and sex.

-They have desk jobs filled by men with thejf bellies hanging over their desks." she said.

But she admits it would be a miracle" if she was hired.

The two-minute test requires an applicant to run 100 yards, climb a 6-foot fence, walk a 12-foot-long balance beam, run another 100 yards, and grip a dynamometer to show 75 pounds of strength in each hand. After a 30-second break: candtdalesmust run -50 feet while dragging a .145-pound (iummy, then

place it on a 2-foot high . platform.

' Although a test date hasnt' ^J)een scheduled, Ms. Snyder 'said she is prparirig by s doing calisthenics, squeezing

* rubber balls and jogging.

STILL WANTS TO BE A COP...Esther Snyder, 62, still wants to be a Cleveland police officer but

says her time is getting short.(AP Laserphoto)

*Tm not a crusader," she said. But I think theres something radically wrong with our society. Im not trying to run down the Cleveland police department, but I want to strike a blow for all these older people.

Bridal Shower

! By Abigal Van Buren

   *    *\    .    ' by^Uniiir! Pfess Syndicate    '    .

; ^    1, ..

DEAR ABBY:    Yesterday I received    an    invitation    to    a

bridal .shower. It    statni. Anything for    the    kitchen or    bath

will appreciated." A "P.S. was included: Check with one of the hostes.se.s to avoid duplicates."

In the first place. I am not a close friend of the bride-to-be In fact. 1 barely know her. And the three hostesses are total strangers to me! .    -    .

1 luivc no interest in attending thrs shower but was told that I am oliligated to send a gift whether I attend or not.

('an that be What is the object of such a shower'.*

APPAl.LKl) IN OHIO

DEAR APPALLED: The object of such a shower is to soak as many people as possible. Since you barely know the bride, and the hostesses are strangers to you, your only obligation is to send your regrets.

DEAR ARBY: Three years ago. my .O-yegr-old husband of '20 years had a one-night romance with a co-worker jhalf his aj{e..on .thji, nigh't be{Qre,she was to move to an-"other shite.    t

' I thogigm w,e!Ea2ithe-'pcrfect.4narriage. but evidently we didnt. Ahby, the pain was terrible. ! cant understand why he did it. 1 thought if we talked openly about it and I knew exactly what happened between them in detail i! might he able to see things from his poiiTt of view, but ^he refu.ses to discu.ss it.

' He said he was sorry and it would never happen again, .so m time I forgave him. The problem is, I cant forget.

Not one day goes by that I am not reminded of this girl .and what went on between them. I feel her presence constantly between us especially at night. Its a? though she IS always lying in lied between us. 1 keep telling ,my.self that if this happened once, it could happen again with .siimeliody else,

I lan't live the rest of my life feeling this way. Please help me

DESPERATE

DEAR DFISPERATE: People who say they can for-.(give but cant forget have not really forgiven. Dont press your husband for a more detailed account of 'what happened"; it would only give you more to agonize about.

Your inability (or unwillingness) to let go of this punishing incident indicates that you need profes-'sional help to put these destructive feelings to rest onee and for all.

. DEAR AHHY Keep liammering away in ynur campaign id encourage adults as well as children to expose anyone who attempts to sexually molest them.

My sister s husband .sexually assaulted women and children for 3(1 .vears before I got enough information to present to my sister. His victims included two of my sisters, my daughter, Uiree cousing, two nieces, a sister-in-law, his own d.iughter, an well as his daughter in-law.

Only one cKild reportinl it to her mother. Then her mother kept it a secret without even confronting the molester! My daughter told me only after she had grown up. I began asking women in the family, and only then -did the victims tell. Im sure there are many other cases where the victims dont tell because they think theirs is just one isolated incident, and they dont want to cause *^trouble in the family.

It wasnt easy to get the facts about my hrother-in-law. 1 " felt like a gossip and tattletale, even though I knew I was ;;doing the right thing.

Secrecy is on the side of the molester.

   WITH YOU AI!, THE WAY

like myself, who are being wasted.

Cleveland has hired no new officers in the last year, according to personnel department records. The department recently laid off 30 cadets because of a city budget deficit.

I havent talked to anyone lately because its plain that no one is being hired, she said. From everything Ive heard, read and seen, if I get on (the force), it will be a miracle.

Ms. Snyder said that after she and her husband were divorced, she raised the couples four children alone. She has a masters degree in elementary education and taught for 13 years in Cleveland schools.

I think I could hold my own in any type of situation,

Valentines Day Told

A program on the origin of Valentines Day was given by Jo Perrin at the meeting of Eta Delta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi.

Barbara McMillian, chairman of ways and means, discussed preparations toward the sororitys fund raising project, casino night, set for March 26 at the Elks Lodge.

Mary Ellen Joyce tolds of final plans for the groups cocktail party.

Libby Kinley announced that Anne Pfeifer was their sweetheart and Xi Gamma Xi Chapters sweetheart is Kay Galloway. Both were given a long-stemmed red rose and a sweetheart pin.

Mrs. Perrin was hostess for the meeting, which was conducted by Mrs. Pfeifer, president.

Ms. Snyder said. I live in the neighborhood with the second-highest crime rate in the city. 1 walk at all times by myself.

Ms. Snyder lives on her savings and $267 a month that she gets from early Social Security benefits. Although she said she would like more money, her sense of self-worth is more important.

I dont intend to ever get old-timers disease, she said. Im frustrated. I can always talk myself out of discouragement.

Club Has Slide Show

Linda Harrington was speaker at the meeting of the Lakewood Pines Garden Club held at the home of Mrs. N.C. Pierce.

She narrated a slide show of her trip to Hong Kong, China and Taiwan.

Assisting hostesses were Mrs. Frank Rabey and Mrs. J.K. Proctor.

Mrs. E.H. Brunelle was welcomed as a new member.

It was decided to donate $100 to the Pitt County Department of Social Services fuel emergency fund.

Mrs. W.C. Taylor will be the hostess for March.

Wedding

Invitation

Mr. and Mrs. Haywood E. White of Bayboro announce the engagement of their daughter, Bunny, to John Joseph Simoneau III, son of Mrs. Lorraine Simoneau of Hendersonville and John Joseph Simoneau II of San Ramon, Calif. The wedding will take place April 23.

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Cooking Is Fun

CHERRY CAKE Fun to serve for a party on Feb. 22, Washingtons Birthday.

ByCECILYBROWNSTONE Assodated Press Food Editor Every once in a while a cook has asked me how to bake a German pound-type cake made with tart red cherries. I was familiar with recces for Black Forest Cherry Tortai, but not with the sought-after cherry cake.

Then recently I tasted it at a frieiKis house and discovoed she had made it from a recipe in Chef Tells (Juick Cuisine by Chef Tell Erhardt with Rosalyn T. Badalamenti (Warner Books).

Chef Tells knowledge of German cooking can be trusted. After woriung in restaurants in Eun^, he became, at 24, the youngest man in West Germany to earn the title of Master Chef. And for a dozen years before he made his home in America and became a television star, he served as the executive chef at a fanuHJS hotel in Germanys Black Forest region.

Our adaptatkm of his Cherry Cake recipe follows. You may want to serve it as is at a brunch or with whi[^ cream for a dinner dessert. In either case, we agree with Chef Tell that the cake should be offered warm.

CHERRYCAKE Streusel, recipe follows 2>/i cip all-purpose flour '/2 cup cornstarch

2 teaspooiK baking powder Two V4-pound st^ (1 cup) txitto-

l>/2 cups sugar

3 large eggs

3 tableaus kirsch (clear cherry brandy)

1-pound can tart red pitted cherries (packed in water), well drained

Grease and flour a 9-inch springform pan. Prepare' Streusel.

On wax paper or in a bowl sift together flour, cornstarch and baking powder.

In the large bowl of an electric mixer, at medium speed cream butter and sugar; beat in eggs, one at a time, until blended. Beat in kirsch. Add flour mixture; fdd in with a rubber spatula. Turn into prepared pan.

Cover batter with cherries, leaving a V4-inch ^>ace at the

edge. Sprinkle Streusel over top.

Bake in a preheated 375^)egree ovm until a cake te^ iimted in the center comes out clean -IV4 hours. With a small metal spatula, loosen edges and ranove band. Serve warm with whqi^ cream flavored with vanilla and sweetened to taste. Makes 12 servings.

STREUSEL

In a small bond stir together V4 cup all-purpose flour, V4 C19 granulated sugar and 1 teaspoon cinnamon. With a pastry Mender cut in V4 cup butter until coarse crumbs form.

Dr. Hammett To Speak

Dr. Wilma Hammett, N.C. State University extension housing and house furnishings ^ialist, wUl discuss accessorizing the home at the Pitt County . Extension Office.

Included will be selection and placement of pictures and lamps as well as other accessories. Jane Parrish of Sunshine Gardens will demonstrate selection and care of plants for accessorizing.

The first session will be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday and will be r^ted Thursday at 9; 30 a.m.

The sessions are (qpoi to the public.

The flannel from worn nightgowns can be made into baby kimonos, bibs or washcloths.

Junior Women Name Scholarship Recipient

The naming M the Sallie Southall ScbMarshq) recipient was made at the February meeting of the Junior W(nans Qub (rf Greenville.

Education chairpersons foenda Jarman and Patty Hogan said that Lisa Lyrai Wai^ a senior at Rose had bei given the schol-arsh^. She dll be honored club members afto* district competitk and will be evaluated as a district winnef as part of the iq>-coming District 15 Arts Festival.

President Cathy Crawford called for a rqxxt by Sandra Gamer tdling of the tnidge boieft to be held FM). 22 at 7:30 p.m.^at the Womans Gub building. Ihe benefit is to tables of four at $12 a table.

Gayle Sterfcm, chairperson of the Arts Festival, Udd (d the display of high school art woit and dub members craft entries. The fedival competition will take place Feb.26inWiUiamston.

Becky Taylor, home life chairperson, announced ttmt she will ac(^ dikhes to be takm to the Flynn Htnne until the March meeting. The winners of the super coiqxxi (XHitest was Ms. Gamer. Phyllis Hurt, Juniorette advisor, reported the girls sponsored tte Bloodmobile at Rose High. The dub will sponsor a dance at the Elks Gub March 7.

President Crawford recognized Lynn Forbes, Patty Hogan, Brmda Jarman and Barbara Mallory as meeting hostesses. The next meeting

will be dosed for the election of officers for the new year. The board meeting will be hosted by Jackie Carson Feb. 16 at 7:30 p.m.

Bridal

Policy

A Mack and white _ five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements. For pubUcatfoo in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be rMeased at least three weeks iior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcemont will be printed.

Wedding writeHips will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-iq> giving less description and after the se-c(d week, just as an an-nouncemoit. Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All informatioD should be typed or written neatly.

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ROLLING TEACHER...Mike Murphy, science teacher at the University of Alabama, takes his motorcycle into classroom of high schools and junior high schools and uses it to demonstrate

scientific principles. At Tuscaloosa Middle School, he also used an airplane to teach aerodynamics. (AP Laserphoto)

See Correlation With Growth In Abuse Due To Joblessness

By MARCELLA s. KREITER United Press International The dismal state of the economy is apparently having a cruel side effect - an increase in deaths of children as a result of child abuse.

Specific figures are few. Authorities in the field, however, agree there is a significant increase in such deaths.

Individual cases usually are attributed to other causes. But, based on the overall increase in child .abuse which can be more easily tracked, authorities believe the pressures of unemployment are an underlying factor. They say cutbacks in funds for social services to prevent child abuse also are a factor.

We do know the unemployment rate has skyrocketed this year as has the number of child deaths, said Anne Cohn, executive director of the National Committee for the Prevention of Child Abuse.

Jim Harrel, a spokesman for the National Center on Child Abuse and Ne^ect in Washington, estimates there are now 1.1 million cases of neglect and abuse annually. He says as many as 5,000 of the victims die.

Richard B. Krugman, director of the C. Henry Kempe National Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Child Abuse and Neglect in Denver, cites Colorado as an example.

There has been a 67 percent increase in unemployment in Colorado in the past four years, he says. At the same time, there has been a 100 percent increase in the number of cases of child abuse and a five-fold increase in the number of deaths as a result.

Krugman, as do other experts, points to a lack of national statistics and study that would verify a direct relationship.

But, he says, we here in our center and our child protection team at University Hospital have noticed a dramatic increase in both abuse and child deaths this past year.

Krugman said 175 cases of child neglect and abuse were investigated by the center in 1979. In 1980, the figure rose to 180. In 1981, the number jumped to 221. In the first 11 months of 1982, the number of cases passed 350.

There was one child abuse de^th in Colorado in each of 1979,1980 and 1981, Krugman said. At the end of ^November, the number stood at five for 1982.

Unemployment was 3 percent in 1979. Now its 5.1 percent, Krugman said. That doesnt seem dramatic when you compare us to Toledo or Michigan, but its a 50 percent increase in unemployment in this state.

We are seeing not just more deaths, but it is our impression that the physical abuse were seeing is more severe.

Baby killing Both Krugman and Dr. David Chadwick, medical director of San Diego Childrens Hospital, said most of deaths from child abuse are of infants and toddlers.

Most of our deaths are under three, Chadwick said. Infants, he said are more

vulnerable. Theyre easier to hurt and easier to kill.

Infants and pre-schoolers, in our experience, are usually injured with the hands. Babies are shaken to stq) them from crying a shaken so hard they sidfer brain injuries. Weve seen three or four this year who suffered bums. Thiese were toilet training non-accidents where the diild is immersed in hot water. They suffered severe bums to the buttocks and feet.

In 1979, Chadwick said, there were no child abuse deaths at Childrens Recital, largely due to county prevention programs.

We thou^t we were doing something right, he said. But there were four in 1980, six in 1981 and in 1982 well wind up with six again.

I think there is more physical abuse. Mostly it has to do with those services that were beginning to team to prevent some of it. They were in the county Department of Social Services. But county governments have been broke. Theyve cut back the services rather significantly.

The real impact has been in the last year and a half. Impact of cutbacks A study conducted in South Carolina fcdlowing a mill closing revealed that in the first five months of this year, five youngsters died of child abuse - more than double the rate in 1981.

What this means is that unemployment is causing stress on families and their inability to deal with it is causing many parents to abuse their children, said Thomas Birch of the National Child Abuse Coalition, an umbrella for 15 organizations concerned about children and their families.

Ms. Cohn said a nationwide survey found 33 states reporting more severe incidents of child abuse and 14 states reporting an increased number of deaths as a result of abuse. Only five states said no increases had been noted.

Unemployment puts families in a double bind, Ms. Cohn said. And the cutbacks on services food stamps, job-'training, health services, day care have taken their toll.

Many cas^ unreported Harrell said an estimated 2,000 to 5,000 children die each year as a result child abuse and neglect.

The numter of deaths are up 50 percent to 100 percent above a year ago in some states, Harrell said. In those places where they do a careful tie-in with medical examiners, theyre finding there are a lot more than ever get reported anywhere (else). Weve heard of figures as high as 90 from Los Angeles County alone.

Harrell said there nearly 850,000 cases of abuse and neglect reported in 1981, an increase of 70,000 over 1980.

But for every r^rted case, two go unreported, Harrell said. However, we find that 50 percent of all reported cases are unfounded, so we estimate there are 1.1 million cases a year.

Like animals?

Little research has been done on infanticide because its a repulsive subject, said Dr. Glenn Hausfater, a Cornell ethologist and coorganizer of a 1982 conference on the subject.

Many people regard it as reprehensible to even think about it, but were trying to see if theres any connection between animal infanticide and child abuse, neglect and killing by humans.

Killing offspring is not a trait unique to humans. It is widely practiced among other animals and often animal behavior parallels human behavior, he said.

William Irons, associate professor of anthropology at Northwestern University, cited infanticide among humans throu^out history. He said societies have cast off their deformed, controlled their populations and altered the male-female ratio by killing undesired infants at birth.

Infanticide also is committed as a result of economics or illegitimacy, he said.

Among hunting and gathering people, having babies too closely together would overburden the mother, Irons said. She often can go into the fields with one infant, but carrying two would make it impossible for her to gather food.

In those cases, the father often is away, the woman has her baby alone. There are no witnesses. She kills it at birth.

In child abuse cases, step-parents are more likely to abuse, he said after earlier noting that animals are more likely to kill offspring of others than their own.

It is more likely to be the mother than the father who is the abuser. In most societies, the overwhelming proportion of people v^o kill are male. When women do kill somebody else, it is most often their young children. Cases in point

Along with the other experts, Chicago Police Sergeant Robert Dart says he believes child abuse goes up in hard economic times, just like crime in general.

But, in recently recorded instances of infanticide, other factors were invariably cited.

Dart reviewed 15 infanticide. cases recorded in Chicago in the past three ears. The mother was the_

alleged killer in 10 cases, he said. In most of the cases, the babies were beaten because they were crying and the wails got on their parents nerves.

A Chicago woman, Vera Webb, 33, is facing murder charges in the early tember death of her 4-week-old dau^ter, Traci. Ms. Webb allegedly dropped Traci into the Little Calumet River from a bridge in suburban Dolton and then attempted to commit suicide by jumping in after her.

A few days later, Norma Moran, 45, despondent over loss of a limb to diabetes, and her three children, ages 11 to 16, got into the family car, \it1iich was parked in thie garage of their Aurora, DI., home. Mrs. Moran turned on the ignition and the four died of carbon monoxide poisoning.

Dale Mifflin, 29, a former Champaign, ni., resident, said he hit his young son, Sean, on top of the head and threw him against his crib because the 14-month-old boy had pulled figurines and smoking pipes off a coffee table.

I was very upset, Mifflin testified at his November trial. He was found guilty of murder.

A Minnesota college student, who gave birth in her dorm room without assistance, was convicted in late September of second-degree murder in the stranguation death of her newborn daughter. Margret Kinsky, 20, of St. Paul, was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Killers often psychotic

DePaul University psychologist Sheila Ribordy said studies back up the observations the mother kills her child more often than does any other family member.

Sometimes its an attempted suicide-homicide la woman who is extremely depressed, often psychotic, Ms. Ribordy said. She is feeling helpless and has no hope things will improve in the future.

She is out of touch with reality. She is not deliberately thinking about the implications for the child. She sees the child as an extension of herself. To kill herself, she must kill her children.

Ms. Ribordy said a woman in that situation often sees the world as hostile, alien and harmful and sees death as a way of protecting her children.

She would feel better about killing the child than leaving it to be raised in that kind of environment, she said.

Bad economic times compound the problems. The child abuse rate shoots up. Its displaced anger, particularly if the child was

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Teacher Uses Motorcycle To Interest Kids

The Daily Reflector, GrwnviUc. N.C.Tuetday, February 15, lfO-3

At Wits End

By Krtnu Hoinlx-i k

By HOYT HARWELL Associated Press Writer TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) - Mike Murjrfiy rolled his motorcycle into a seventh grade classroom, cranked it up and said, ^This is what science is all about.

He had the immediate attention of the 29 studits, 12 and 13 years old.

Many folks think science is worthless. Im going to show you theyre wrong, said Murphy, a science teacher at the University of Alabama who was visiting Tuscaloosa Middle School.

I wish I was in your class all the time, one of the youngsters said.

The school was the fifth on Murphys list of 40 in Tuscaloosa, Hale, Pickens and Greene counties that he plans to visit as the weather allows him to ride his cycle.

I try not to be scientifically ri^rous, he said before taking his vehicle into the classroom. I just want to get them interested in science. Many of them dont like science and dont think they need it.

I do this for fun. I talk about the science of motorcycles.

As the kids crowded around, he pulled a spray gun, a toy airplane and a carburetor from a basket attached to the cycle and handed out diagrams of the three.

They all work on the same principle, he said. As air moves faster, air pressure goes down.

Muiphy then showed them how air pressure forces gaso-line up and out of a carburetor and paint from a spray gun; how it helps an

not planned.

Birth defects

Deformed children are victims of infanticide more often than their peers, she said, because the deformities set the child apart.

Thomas Murray, a member of the Association for Social and Behavioral Studies at the Hastings Center in Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y., said medical treatment sometimes is withheld from infants with severe birth defects but the cases are few.

If you talk about the killing of a baby, that ought to make you very angry, Murray said. It ought to arouse moral indignation.

There have been a few highly publicized cases of babies bom with one or another birth defects or problems of illness at birth and medical treatment is withheld. I thought weve made moral progress since the days of Abraham and Isaac. We condemn any taking of innocent life. We no longer condone the practice of infanticide.

airplane take off and stay aloft.

He was demonstrating Bernoullis Principle. Murphy at other times deals with combustion, gases, batteries, light and lenses, ma^tism, polymers and motion.

Several of the student helped in his demonstrations, when they could ke^ their eyes off tlie motorcycle.

Murphy then showed them a chart of various jobs, pointing out that the hi^r paying ones invariably require some knowledge of science.

That's the point of all this stuff, he said. If you cant read specs, you cant be a mechanic. If you dont know anything about scientific principles, you cant be a doctor, a systems analyst, an electrical engineer, a computer programmer. But ybu can be a garbage collector.

If you make something of your time now, you can get a better job later. When your teacher asks you to read something a little technical, do it, because when you get to college youll be asked to read the same type things.

Murphy said he decided on his motorcycle lectures as a service to the community and because it doesnt cost any money.

Whenever theres a chance to share a little bit of science, 1 cant resist.

Most schools, he said, have a high degree of scientific illiteracy. We will continue to have shortages of trained professionals in technical fields if this trend isnt reversed.

Every modern, westernized country has better math and science training than the United States.

Science is for everyone.

At the end of his hour with the students, few if any could spell Bernoulli.

But they knew a motorcycle will not run without gas and that gas will not get where it is needed without air pressure.

Ive been following the m^ (^ties of women for years.

The salary differences, the tax laws. Social Security benefits and appropriations for womens sports in schools. The list ^ on.

But what it comes down to. .. the thing that people seem to get hung up on the most is the restroom facilities. Mai-tion unisex bathrooms and everyone goes crazy.

Believe it or not, it was one of the major points in the election of Bartua Jordan in 1966 as the first con-gresswomain to join the allmale body of the Texas legislature.

The question wasnt what can she do, but where will she go to the bathroom? (They built one. Its done all the time.)

Ive bei associated with unisex bathrooms all my life. Ive cleaned them, coaxed kids out of them and barricaded myself in them for a little peace and quiet and frankly 1 dont know what the flap is all about.

In fact, Ive bei wondering how the women made out in the Bass Club competition in Tallahassee, Fla. It seems every year, male and female anglers pair up in a boat to see who can outsmart the local bass. This year, the men announced the competition would be restricted to men only. Their reason was some wives might object to their husbands spending the day with another woman and -you got it - the old where-would-they-go-to-the-you-know-what.

The first complaint seemed rather invalid when you tried to figure out what you could do in a boat on a lake bobbing with other boats and fisherpersons.

The response to the second reason came from the women anglers themselves who said, The men are just afraid the women will show them up.

The association finally compromised by letting each entrant check off whe^ or not he was willing to fish with a member of the opposite sex.

What the critics dont realize is that these thin^ have a way of working themselves out. Women who have traveled with men before are well aware of the problems. I am married to a man who has bkmic kidneys and has been known to trawd an entire day on the road without stopping for so much as a chili dog or a gallon of gas. And I have sat beside him in a boat all day long waiting f(MT the six most beautiful words in the English language, Theyre not hitting. Lets go in.

As for unisex bathrooms: Theyre not so bad. They work real simple. First the man goes in and locks the door and comes out . Then the woman goes in, locks the do(^ and comes out.

Smart people, these aiiline companies.

Over the past decade, Americans have added an average of about three years to their life expectancy, according to the American Council of Ufe Insurance.

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4-The DUy Reflector. GreenvUle, N C.-Tuesday, February 15, i3EditorialsWas It Really A Surprise

As a footnote to history, the FDR memo of Aug. 10,1936, to the chief of naval operations is of more than passing interest to those who endured the 1941-45 years of war.    >

We would venture to guess there are many letters and notes tucked away in the National Archives that would be equally illuminating.

The Roosevelt note released to the public last week made clear the president and the Navy were equally convinced of Japanese espionage activity in the Hawaiian Islands. The counter-mesures in the event of trouble (including a concentration camp) suggests a carefully thought-out response to what (in 1936) appeared to be indicators of future conflict; all this five and one-half years before the surprise at Pearl Harbor.

This foresight, augmented by Adolf Hitlers rearming of Germany and war in Europe, provided President Roosevelt with needed time to mold American public opinion into an understanding of the stakes and a sense of purpose in the years of ordeal that were to follow.

It makes one wonder, under the circumstances of the latter-half of 1941 with a very bellicose government in Japan, how the events of Dec. 7 came as such a surprise.

Perhaps future disclosures will shed more light on that eventful period.

Donald Rofhberg

'Super Tuesday' May Yield Nominee

WASfflNGTON (AP) - Presidential candidates already are referring to March 13,1984, as Sig)er Tuesday and suggesting that may be the date the Democratic presictential nominee is determined.

At least 10 ^tes are likely to hdd Democratic presidential primaries or caucuses on that day.

They ran^ from Florida, Alabama and Georgia in the South, Maine and Massachusetts in the Northea^, Minnesota and Oklahoma in the Midwest and Washington, Alaska and Hawaii in the West.

And there are rumbles from California and Ohio that those two states may decide to Join the Sig)er Tuesday bandwagon.

Thats a lineup that is spawning a lot of anguish among the strategists for Democratic presidential a^irants and endless qpeculatton about who will benefit from the early crush of delegate selection.

Here are some of the possibilities:

Former Vice President Walter F. Mndale generally is given the ed^ over

his rivals in organization and fund raising and those two f actors could prove the most In^xntant to anyones ho^ of a ^)0d showing in a sin^e day in which 10 or nwre states are choosing delegotes.

Another factm* in Mondales favor is nan recognition. Sen. John Glenn of Ohio is the only (kher candidate who is as weU known as Mndale.

If Mndale also ent^ the early primaries and caucuses with the organizational boost of an endorsement from the AFL-CIO, that could be another plus ( a crowded schedule.

But theres hope for others in the delegate distributkm.

Florida chooses 123 delegates and former Gov. Reubin Askew eq)ects to get most of them.

Glenn is hopeful of running well in states like Alabama with S2 delegates, Georgia with 70, Oklahoma, 43, Washington 61 and Alaska 11.

Two (kher Southern states, Mississippi and S(Mith Carolina, will choose their delegates the following Saturday. And even if Glenn is nearly as popular in the South as he thinks he is, hell have tough

competition for si^port in the region.

Sen. Ernest F. HoUings of South Carolina should have most (k his states 41 ddegates and con^)ete fw backing in other Southern states. There also are whispers from Alabama that Gov. George Wallt^ would like to ^ to the, convention as his states fav(1te son.

If (^ moves up to March IS, to choose 154 delegates, thats another big tdock fm* Glenn.

But if Ohio moves, what will California do?

Sen. Alan Cranstons presidential strategy dq)ends heavily on s(kid backing from the California delegation, which will be the largest at the Democratic National Convmtion.

State party officials are agonizing now over how and when to sdect their delegation. 11)0% is talk of moving the priinary, but thats consided unlikely. An alternative would be to choose all or part of the 345-member delegation in caucuses with the assumption that CransUm would get most of them.

But life is con^)licated, especially in California. The states primary tradi

tionally is held the first Tuesday in June and that's when H will be held in 1984 to dwose Reputklcan National Convention delegates as well as nominees for state and congresskmal offices. ^

That primary ballot (kten contains a long list of controversial profwsitions that attract mwe attention than the candidates. For example, the tax-limiting Proposition 13, was on the Jime 1978, primary election ballot.

That raises concern among CaliftMnia Democrats that If they choose their pretidential convention delegates in March, fi Denmcratlc turnout tar the Jime primary will be low and Re-ptd)licans might take advantage at the ofkwrtunity to push through consovaUve propositions.

There is a good dumce that when all factors are consida:ed neithor (Xiio nor California will move 19.

The most tantalizing possibility of all is that after all the votes are counted aa Mardi 13, no Democrat will have bitkcen from the pack and be able to daim the presidential nonmination.

Sick Calls Are Infrequent

Gov. Jim Hunt is clearly a man who drives himself. Consequently, it is not surprising that he carried on last Wednesday even as painful gallbladder and appendicitis attacks were plaguing him.

The condition caught up with him as he made a talk during the day and the governor was taken to a Wake County hospital where his physician diagnosed a gallstone condition and, later, the appendicitis. His' physicians said that, other than the gallstones and the now-absent appendbc, the governor is in excellent condition.

We hope Gov. Hunt will take care of himself. Governors rarely call in sick as most of us must do. No one will blame any high public official, however, for taking the rest of the day off in the event of something as serious as a gall bladder attack.

axwoll Glen and Cody Shearer

Percy Is At Crossroads

WASHINGTON - Illinois Sen. Charles Percys six-month run-around with the White House is about to end. At Percys urging, the administration is expected next week to suggest modifications for two treaties which limit nuclear weapons testing.

Since hearings on U.S. nuclear policy last September, Percy has pressed the administration for its stand on the two unratified treaties, the Threshold Test Ban Treaty (TTB) and the Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty (PNE). He was originally promised a reply by last Oct. 1; when that date passed, the White House gave him a Dec. 10 absikute deadline.

Late last month, with 00 word from the White House, Percy announced that he would withhold the confirmation of Kenneth Actelman, director-designate of the Arms Contnk and Disarmament Agency pending the administrations response. Then, on Friday, Fdb. 4, Adelman himself told the Foreign Relations Committee that Reagan would decide the fate of the treaties by next Tuesday (Feb. 15).

Today, as last year, the choice is simple: Either ratify the treaties as they are, or seek modifications in consultation with the Soviets. The two U.S.-Soviet agreements, signed by former presidents Ford and Nixon, would limit underground nuclear tests for non-military purposes to yields of no more than 150 kilotons (kt).

Since Reagan backed off last summer from two decades of bilateral negotiations on a comprehensive test ban (CTB), speculation about the administrations proposed modifications has centered on reports that the White House favored onsite inspection in the aftermath of tests of more than 70 kt. Recently, proposals to require stricter verification or to raise the threshold above 150 kt have been reported. These modifications would scuttle the existing agreements.

Percy believes ratification of or or both treaties would be a painless way to assure Europeans and the Soviets of the

The Daily Reflector

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sincerity of American arms control efforts. Percy knows, moreover, that Reagan if he so desired could have the treaties ratified within a week.

If the administration makes yet another bad-faith proposal next week, it may not only jeqiardize relations with the patient senator but lose the Adelman nomination as well.

Footnote: Some congressional staff members fear that the forthcoming Reagan proposals could undercut an effort on behalf of a Comprehensive Test Ban. Since last month, 70 House members and 36 senators have cosponsored a resolution urging Reagan to resume negotiations on a CTB; House hearings on the meaire are schieduled to begin in mid-March,

Rita Lavelles departure from the Environmental Protection Agency has precipitated cheers on both sides of the aisle in Congress. Her abrasive administrative style and go-slow approach to hazardous-waste clean-up, which she supervised, had antagonized most of the legislators and aides with whom she had to deal. Conceded a former aide to Rep. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), who saw a waste site in his district made a test case by the EPA: There were extraordinary efforts made on our behalf that werent extended, eVen to the nth degree, to other members.

North Carolinas conservative leader, Republican Sen. Jesse A. Helms, undoubtedly senses political trouble back home, where he faces a tou^ re-election battle next year. Last week, he attended a Capitol Hill reception, sponsored by the University of North Carolina Alumni Association and UNC student newspaper veterans for one of their own, firstterm representative James Cooper. Not only is Cooper a Democrat from Tennessee, but Helms has traditionally criticized the Chapel Hill campus as a bastion of liberalism.

Despite Congress enthusiastic new commitment to science and mathematics training in public schools, improvement may be long in coming. Only one state requires three years of math for a high school diploma; only nine demand two years of the subject for graduation.Public Forum

TotheedihM*:

I am a high school student driving a sclMwl bus fm* elementary students. There is a man on my route vlio likes to complain about bus drivers blowing their herns at the bus stops. One of my stops is in his area. He calls the schofk complaining aU the time about my blowing my bus horn.

I dont blow unless its absolikely necessary. On occasion vlien the fog is heavy and/or it is real cold, I have to alert the children. I can understand why the children wait in their homes and not outside by the road due to weather conditions.

This nei^bor of theirs evidoitly does not understand this. If he did, he wouldnt con^)lain that the horn wakes him and his children iq>. At 7:30 in the morning, you would think he wcHild be getting ready for woik. As for his chdren, what if it were his kids I picked 19, and didnt blow my horn and the kids were left? Then he, along with other parmts, would start con^)laining that I leave their kids.

If peqjle would just consider for a minute if the ^ were on the other foot, they might have different feelings about the situatkm. My first concern is getting my chfidrai on and off my bus safely, and I am sorry if it inconveniences other people.

LvnnSUto

Art Buchwald

Beware Of Nouveau Oil During Turmoil

You cant believe what disarray the oil-producing nations are in until you visit an open market oil bazaar and see for yourself. I went to one last week to buy a barrel for Valentines Day.

A sheik from Kuwait was singing, Oil for sale, oil for sale. Sweet crude oil for sale.

How much is it? I asked.

Thirty-four dollars a barrel. But since its Valentines Day Ill let you have it for 32.

I, was about to taste it, when a man grabbed my arm, and pulled me into his tent. That man is a thief. Here, try this delicious Libyan oil. He handed me a tin cup.

Very tasty I said. How much for a barrel?

He smiled. Thirty dollars. Were having a Kaddafi Day Founders Sale.

Ill be back, I promised him.

I walked along the dusty streets of the bazaar as Nigerians, Saudi Arabians and oil merchants from Qatar all implored me to buy their products.

A man wearing a sombrero said, Senor, please, would you like to buy this 1983 vintage which just came out of an offshore well off Venezuela?

Is 1983 a good year for oil? I asked him.

Its nouveau oil. The weather was just right for pumping it out of the sea. You can refine it today.

How much is it? I asked.

If you promise not to tell anyone I will sell you a barrel for $29, he said.

Thats $5 below the OPEC price.

I spit on OPEC. They are all double-crossers, and are undercutting me all over the bazaar. I have a family to feed

apd that is why I am sacrificing my oil at cost.

Id like to think about it, I said.

As I walked farther down a man in a sombrero standing in an alley called to me. Psst, amigo, are you looking for some fast action?

Elisha Douglas

Strength For Today

There is a story in II Kings about a Hebrew woman, pov-eVty-stricken and about to be sold with her family into slavery. And the prophet Elisha said to her, Tell me, what hast thee in the house; and she said, Thy handmaid hath not anything in the house save a pot of oil.

Then Elisha told her to go and borrow from her neighbors all the vessels they would let her have. After that, she was to shut the door upon herself and her sons and pour some of the oil into each of these vessels.

And as she did so, the oil in each vessel increased until the vessels were all full to the brim.

The moral of this story is similar to that contained in the story of our Lords feeding of the five thousand.

There is scarcely a Christian believer who is not aware that at some place in his life God touched the little and it became much. He laid his finger on something insufficient and it became adequate to change a life and bring peace and happiness.

It all d^nds on what you have to offer.

He showed me a photograph of a barrel of Mexican oil.

I give you her for $27 and will throw in the transportation for free.

I say, old chap, a f^ow in a morning coat who looked like a floorwalker at Har-rads said, Id be very careful of those Latin cutthroats. Could I interest you in some very fine British Petroleum from the North Sea? Its certified by the Royal Family.

How much?

The British never haggle over price when it comes to oil. Twenty-five dollars take it or leave it.    ,    '

Twenty-three dollars, I said.

Ill make it $24 and arrange to have your picture taken with Princess Dianas baby.

1 guess I cant do better than that. Yes, you can, an Iranian oil merchant said, pulling me into his hut.

Whats your Price?

Are you an American?

Of course, I said.

Then I w^l give you this barrel for

$20.

Why so cheap? I asked.

He put his arm around my shoulder and whispered, We Iranians and Americans have to stick together.

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

John Cunniff-

Annual Reports Come In Muted Grays This Year

NEW YORK (AP) - The latest in corporate fashion is done in black and white and muted grays, reflecting, as one designer put it, nuure subdued feelings appropriate in these rough times.

Directness, frankness and clarity of conununication are among the qualities sought this year, said William Dunk, who advises corporations on how best to style and produce their annual reports.

Annual reports have grown more sophisticated in the past 20 years, after having spent many years as nothing but drab collections of financial data prefaced by the chairmans letter and promise of better days to come.

Their importance now cannot be underestimated, since they are used to impress shareholders, financial analysts, investors, media pecle, graduates of the"^ best business schools and the general public.

They convey an image as well as numbers, and if you study the image projected you learn much aboik the aura

corporatkms seek to present. In years past it was growth, the space age, research and develi^ment, environment

Nothing pertiaps was more clearly, more earnestly, more aggressively portrayed than envirtMimental matters.

A review of cover pages from the late 1960s seems like a review of old National Geographies, with factories only faintly visible behind pictures of daisies, butterflies and crystal streams.

And in the recession of 1974-1975 there appeared a notable example of what corporations sou^t mX to stress. Absent from some reports was the familiar chart of sales and earnings, with the growth line sweeping northeast from the lower left corner. Many companies, it seems, disliked showing a little downward jiggle on the end.

And this year, says Dunk, who founded Willliam Dunk Partners Inc. after a decade at the presidency of Corporate Annual Reports Inc., the signal revealed

by the reports is one of great somberness.

C^lor is greatly reduced. In a word, this years cn^ is black and white, and red all over, he says. The purpose isnt to avoid using red ink to show losses clever officials long ago decided it was better to merely put brackets around lossesbut to cut costs.

Annual report budgets have been slashed, says Dunk, who estimates that small-company reports might cost up to $3 each, and those for larger companies with big press runs about $1.50.

Even companies that are still using full color photos have sliced photo bud^ts or cut the number of pages in half, he says. Even companies with record earnings, he says, believe they should display restraint.

Notable among the latter is COMSAT, the communications satellite company, which Ls producing a black-white report even Ukx;^ last year was its best ever. Dunk calls it elegant but restrained.

The reports this year deal with the hard realities rather than with a nebu-Imis future. Dunk said.

Earlier, he said, connpanies had been telling readers about grand strate^ and how the company would surge when the recession ended. That (^timism has been shaken.

Now theyre taking the steps which will either get results or insure survival today closing down losers, cutting expenses, chopping divisions or capital programs, he reports.

Many books feature research and development, the purpose being to assure readers that ways will be found to deal with high costs. They are saying they will innovate their way out. says Dunk.

Growth isnt publicized the way it used tobe.

Too many companies have been forced to divest themselves of units acquired only a few years before. Growth, therefore, no longer impresses. Besides,

because of U recession, it is difficult to achieve.

Profits, rather than growth, are being stressed.

Air Products and Chonicals Inc., a growth conq)any, emphasizes profitaUe growth thte year. And smoke^ack companies. Dunk observes, are portraying their efforts to obtain profits even thou^ their Industries may be shrinking.

Financials are probatXy more understandable this year.

Financials are the numbers the balance sheet and statennt of incmne, most notably, and pertup the footnotes that accompany them too. Some companies are trying to put the footnotes in English, Dunks survey reveals.

' Overall, Dunk feels that greater effort might be going into fine writing, wbldi be considers an intelligent direction to pursue.

Fine writing always impresses annual report readors; Its always in style, he says.





The Dey Reflector, GraenvUie. N.C.-TueUy. Fehruery 15. im~i

Sen. East Sets March Hearings On Court Reform

WASHINGTON - Sen. John East has scheduled three days of coogresskna] bearings in Blardi to consider legislatk that would sbarplv limit the pow- of federal JudkUiry.

East, a critic of the federal judiciary, said the prc^iosed

legislation is designed to relce the heavy wo^oad of the federal courts and at the same time to limit their power.

Among other things, the proposed legislation would reverse federal court rulings that the states are subject to

Gov. Hunt Cuts Travel Schedule

, RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -* Gov. Jim Hunt is expected to remain hospitalized for sev-. eral more days ami then will spend more time resting at home while recuperating from last weeks appen-

> dectomy,aqx)kesmansays.

Hes in good spirits. His ' parents visited him Sunday, Hunt spokesman Brent Hackney said Monday.

Hunt has canceled his travel schedule for the next I two weeks and issued writtm instructions to his staff Monday.

, Hunt was able to take a ' short stroll around Wake Medical Center and also

> watched a basketball game on television. Hackney said Hunt will continue to handle

the duties of governor.

Hunts personal physician. Dr. Larry A. Tyi^, said , patients normally will be ho^italized for a week to 10 da^ after surgery.

Hackney said Hunt will require surgery later to remove his gall bladder, but a decisimi on when to perform that surgery has not been

Fire Shut Down' Duke Power Unit

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (API Unit III of Duke Power Co.s Marshall Steam Station went off line Monday afternoon when a transformer ^ providing power to the units auxiliary systems caught fire, a Duke ^eswoman ' said.

The fire at the 1.9 million kilowatt coal-fired plant on "Lake Norman was quickly extingui^ed and ttere were . no injuries, said Mary Boyd.

She said no further interruptions of power were expected.

made.

He said Hunt, whi was elected governor in 19p and reelected in 1980, is co^inu-ing to, handle the duties'oi governor.

Hackney said Hunts primary concern is handling legislative strategy, including his good roads package that he wants to get Uie Legislature to pass.

Hunt, 45, was taken to Wake Medical Center on Thursday after he fainted during a speech before a group of mental health officials.

Doctors at first diagnosed his ailment as an intestinal virus. Physical examinations and X-rays showed that Hunt had gallstones, and doctors decided to keep him at the iK^pital for observation.

However, when Hunts surgeon. Dr. Fred Ng (pronounced Nong) visited Hunt on Friday, Hunts pains had moved to the lower ri^t side of his abdomen, indicating that his appendix had become inflamed. He was taken to surgery for an operation that lasted 45 minutes.

Ng said he, Tyree and press aides to Hunt decided to keep the surgery secret for more than five hours until after Hunt was in the recovery room, to make sure Hunt had entered a normal recovery.

Gary Pearce, a spokesman for Hunt, said he decided to withhold news of the surgery because it could have led to all sorts of rumors and information.

He also said there were security considerations.

Hackney said the decision to keep the surgery secret was primarily medical, to let doctors determine during surgery what was bothering Hunt and to be able to make a complete statement.

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the Bill of Rights and transfer those guarantees of individual rights to state courts; repeal the exdiBionary rule, which allows criminals to be set free when evidmce of their guilt has been obtained through illegal seardi and seizure, and allow judges to punish law enforcemrat officers for contempt of the Constitution, if they obtain evidence illegally, and sh^ly restrict the ability of prison inmates to flle habeas corpus petitioos for their release by first requiring them to exhaust their appeals in state courts.

The proposed legislation would also allow (tongress to review the*conduct and de-^cisions of feitoral judges every 10 years and recommend impeachn^t if it is determined they have failed to meet standards of good behavior.

East first introduced the proposed legislation late last year. The legislation will be introduced following the hearings.

The senator, who chairo the Senate Separation of Powers Subcommittee, said some change or modification seems to be in (xrda* since the courts have beoi projecting themselves into

the policy-making process. Accor^ to Eak, the federal courts have become, in the judgment oi many, too actively involved in issues that have historically been left to state and local gov

ernment or state and local courts.

East acknowledged that there is little chance the ontire bill will become law, but suggested that the proposal will help focus pifolic

WASHINGTON, N.C. Authorities arrested five more people on drug trafficking charges Monday, bringing to 12 the number apprehended after a plane carrying marijuana and cocaine was seized at a dirt airstrip ea^ ofChocowinity.

Beaufort County Sheriff Nelson She(^)ard identified the five arrested as: Tommy Glenn Styron, 43, Harkers Island; Stanley Arnold Ferrell, 34, Atlantic Beach; Benjamin Michael Forbes, 37, and Robert Talmadge Weatherington, 38, both of Morehead City, and Robert Edward Calhoun, 45, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

^i^pard said that bond for the 12 was set at $1 million each and first a[^)earance bearings were scheduled for today in Beaufort County District Court.

County, state and federal authorities seized

the four-engine DC-4 aircraft after it landed around 5 a.m. Sunday at the airstrip located off N.C. 33 about eight miles east of Qiocowinity, Sheppard said. He said the plane had a cargo of from 12,000 to 15,000 pounds of bundled marijuana and 10 to 12 pounds of cocaine.

Six people were arrested Sunday following the plane seizure and a seventh suspect was apprehended around 7 a.m. Monday, the sheriff reported. He said the other arrests took place throughout Monday, including some in Craven (founty. All of the suspects were on foot when they were apprehended, said Shei^pard.

He said that investigation by the sheriffs department. State Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Customs office and federal Drug Enforcement Agency is continuing.

attention on the (piestion of judicial reform.

The proposal having the most support in Congress is the repeal of the exclusionary rule, which has allowed sicpects in serious crimes to be set free becaise of technical errors made by pice officers during arrests.

The profxisal to abolish the , federal courts power to enforce the Bill of Rights in cases involving local and state governmrats is the most controversial part of Easts bUl.

East, who said the courts ' are using the Bill of Rights as an extension of federal power, said the the Bill of Rights was only intended to be a check on the powers of the federal governmoit.

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Constitutional law experts, law enforcement officers, Reagan administration officials and federal judges are expected to testify at the subcommittee bearings.

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mm

6 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, February 15,1983

In The Area iCor Struck Officer Directing Traffic

Hospice Launches Fund Drive

A month long fund-raising drive for East Carolina Hospice, a non-profit volunteer organization dedicated to helping the terminally ill, has been announced by Beverly Burnette, director of the organization.

The goal of the drive is $70,000, the amount Hospice needs to operate for one year. All contributions are tax-deductible.

Hospice is funded solely through charitable gifts. Hospice helps the terminally ill and aids families with the in-home treatment of these patients. Ed Carter of Burroughs-Wellcome Co. and Richard McKee of Procter and Gamble are co-chairmen of Hospices finance committee. Mike Messick of Home Security Life Insurance is chairman of the fund-raising campaign, which will continue through the remainder of February.

For information on how to assist contact Beverly Burnette,

7.58^622.

ECU Alumni Contributed

C Phone calls to East Carolina University ,alumni in four North Carolina and Vir^nia areas netted pledges totaling approximately $28,500 during January.

According to Phil Herrington, annual support director for the ECU Alumni and Development office, the campaigns purpose was to raise funds for scholarships, faculty enrichment programs and alumni programs. Local alumni volunteers worked in four areas: Fayetteville-Cumberland County, Tidewater Virginia, Durham and Raleigh-Wake County.

.All four telefund campigns raised record highs in pledges, he noted. Pledge totals were: Fayetteville-Cumberland County - $3,082; Tidewater Virginia - $8,286; Durham - $4,334, and Raleigh-Wake County - $12,792.

Diabetes Association To Meet

The Pitt County Diabetes Association will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Willis Building, comer of First and Reade streets.

The speaker will be Dr. Jose Carr of the East Carolina University School of Medicine. He will discuss Type II diabetes.

MYF To Sponsor Supper

Members of the Methodist Youth Fellowship of Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church will hold a benefit supper tonight to help raise funds for a continuing church project.

A pancake supper will be served by MYF members at 5 p.m. Price for adults is $3.50, and for those 12 and under, $1.50.

Proceeds from the supper will be used for a transportation fund that the church has established to raise money to buy a van for a handicapped member of the church. Additionally, the loose offering taken at the church on Feb. 20 will be contributed to the transportation fund.

Two More Scholarships Awarded

East Carolina University has awarded alumni honors scholarships to two additional freshmen.

Each year, the ECU Alumni Association provides funds equal lo^g. full in-state tuition and fees scholarships for incoming fi^hmen based on academic potential. The scholarships are renewable for four years.

Additional funding this year made possible the awards of scholarships amsunts somewhat greater than the annual tuition and fees rates for two freshmen academic achievers.

The scholarships were awarded to Cynthia Lou Johnson of Four Oaks, a nursing major and 1^ honor graduate of South Johnston High Schwl, and Laura Danielle Grimsely of Wilmington, a 1982 honor graduate of E.A. Laney High School.

City Manager Ta Speak

The Pitt County Associatioi of Life Underwriters will hold its regular meeting Thursday at 8 a.m. at the Three Steers Restaurant on Memorial Drive. City Manager Gail Meeks will be the guest speaker for the breakfast session.

Gospel Concert Planned Wednesday

Bill Moss and the Celestials of Detroit will present a gospel concert at Little Creek Free Will Baptist Church Wednesday

at7:30p.m.

Also on the program will be George McAllister and the D.C. Knights of Washington, DC., the Macedonia Singers of Albany, La., and the Rev. Billy Bowers, formerly of the Five Blind Boys.

Musical Program Scheduled Friday

Quintori Mills and Deliverance of Hollister will be featured in a singing at Hopewell Pentecostal Holiness Church near Greenville Friday at 7:30 p.m. The program is open to the public.

Best Chapel Plans Services

Four nights of services will be held at Best Chapel Free Will Baptist Church beginning Tuesday.

Bishop Matthew Best, the pastor, said guest ministers will be the Rev. E. Boyd of Burning Bush Holiness Church of Stokes on Tuesday, Elder Roger Hooks of Holly Hill Church on Wednesday, Eldress Shirley Atkinson of Holly Mission Church on Thursday and Elder James L. Snuggs, along with the Last Generation Choir of Saint Matthews FWB Church, on Friday. All services start at 7:30 p.m. The Pastors Aid Club will be In charge.

Friendship Meetings Are Planned

Two more meetings for interviews to seek ambassadors and hosts for the Greenville Friendship Force are scheuled.

One is to take place from 7 to 9 tonight at the Willis Building at the corner of First and Reade streets. The other will be from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday at First American Savings, corner of Evans Street and Arlington Boulevard.

The meetings are open to anyone interested in the possibility of being a host for a foreign visiting family or as an ambassador in visiting a foreign country/

Lenten Series Scheduled

A series of Lenten services will begin at the First Presbyterian Church on Ash Wednesday and continue through March 31.

The services will begin at 8 p.m. Guest minister for the first service will be the Rev. James McKinnon, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Wilson. The sacrament of the Lords Supper will be celebrated.

On March 2 the Rev. Rod Pinder, pastor of Falkland Presbyterian Church, will be the visiting minister; March 16, the Rev. Richard Boyd, pastor of the First Presgbyterian Church of New Bern. The final service March 31 will be led by the local pastors, the Rev. Richard Gammon and the Rev. Gerald Anders. Members of the confirmation class will make their professions of faith and the sacrament of the Lords Supper will be celebrated.

All these services are open to the public.

A Greenville police officer, directing traffic at the scene of a collision on Greenville Boulevard, was struck by a

car and injured about 10:35 p.m Monday.

Cars driven by Kelly Lenora Butler of 104

Greenwood Drive, James Walter Carter of 417 South Longmeadow Road, Dennis Martin Symons of Route 4,

Hertford, and Qiristopher Ferrell Bryant of Riegelwood collided about 10:30 p.m. on Greenville Boulevard at the

OFFICER INJURED WHILE DIRECTING TRAFFIC ... Officials look over the scene where a Greenville police officer, Frederick Royce Frye,

J

School Board...

(Continued from Pagel) questions arise, exist. Any RIF based on a policy with performance as a criteria is going to leave a stigma,

Ron Hochmuth, saying at 30 he is in the younger contingent of teachers, remarked that, I am comfortable with the Liaison Committee proposal. I have been assured that it is legal, within the letter of the law, and I feel it is only fair to recognize seniority in the system.

Hochmuth mentioned that he prefers the one-year trial period recommended for the four-point Liaison Committee proposal as opposed to the three-year period recommended by the administrative teams proposal. That teams proposal opts for increasing the weight given to performance at 25 points for the first year, increasing the weight given performance by 15 points for the second and third years until at the end of the third year performance would carry a predominant 55 points.

Another spokesman, Walter Morehead, representing the communitys Affirmative Action Advisory Committee, said he believes the goals in the Liaison Committee proposal are based on community support and are legally defensible. We feel it is a good decision, a policy based on needs.

We look on it not as a matter of competence, but as an instrument to be used in case RIF is necessary. Its a matter of supply and demand.

Plants Closing...

(Continued from Pagel)

tion of the spring production season.

Stocks said the Greene County plant, which has operated for approximately 20 years, has employees from several neighorlng counties, including Pitt, . Duplin and Lenoir. He said USI has owned the plant since the early 1970s.

According to Stocks, the manufacturing operations are located in three buildings and comprise approximately 26,800 ^uare feet.

Talerico said that Young Squire has been a member of the Wayne County industrial community for 20 years. He U.S. Industries is attempting to sell the 130,000-square-foot facility as well as the Hookerton plant.

CABINET SHAKEUP SANTIAGO, Che (AP) -President Augusta Pinochet has dismissed his economics and finance minister in an unexpected Cabinet shakeup that included four other posts held by civilians in Chiles military government.

He cited economic troubles as underlying factors that attributed to the plant closings and he noted that market saturation resulting from import pressures have also had an impact.

Talerico said there are no plans regarding relocations for employees to other plants within the USI network but he said he would do what he could to help his workers, some of them longtime employees. Stocks also said he would assist workers at his plant but he knew of no possibilities for relocations since USI has no other facilities in this area.

Young Squire makes boys suits and sportswear, mens coats and womens blazers for department stores.

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was struck by a car on Greenville Boulevard while directing traffic. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

In other actions, the board;

Approved the revised proposal of a form to be sent to area banks for bids on handling the bank accounts of the city schools. With this approval, the forms will now be sent to banks to seek bids for a two-year contract to handle school accounts. After the bids are received, recommendations will be brought to the board on approving bids.

Ann Harrison presetted an iqxlate report on the situation of funding for programs for gifted children in North Carolina schools. Noting that the public has been subjected to the confusion of five ^finition changes of talented and gifted since 1961, she said the most recent recommendation is to drop talented from the definition. This may have an adverse eHect, particularly in the number of students who may qualify to attend Governors School since talent is a strong factor in eli^bility.

Mrs. Harriscm e}q)lained that under current funding procedures, total allocations for programs for gifted children amounts to $363 per child, based on a 3.9 percent of the total school pcpdation although 14 percent of tot^ students in grades 4-12 have been identified as gifted. For handicapped programs, the per ptq)il allocation (local, state and federal mcHiies) amounts to about $2,5()0 per pupil based on 12.5 per cent of the total school enrollment. A total of 19 percent of the student population has been identified as handicapped -ranging form minor to extreme handicaps.

One of the major needs indicated by Mrs. Harrison is that of having state authorities take a more serious look at the pressing need for funds to carry out programs for gifted children. A push is meded to have the gifted children come out from funding under the Creech Bill, she said.

Rosewood Drive intersection.

Hi^way Patrolman Fred Davis said Officer Frederick Royce Frye of Route 1,

Ordered To Finish Term

MONROE, N.C. (AP) - A Waxhaw man who was mistakenly released from jail after a driving under the influence conviction was ordered back to finish his sentence yesterday.

' Leroy Funderburk, 55, was ordered to serve the rest of his six-month sentence by Union County Siqierior Court Judge William Helms. Funderburk had been freed during Gtov. Jim Hunts traditional Christmas communta-tion after spending 17 days in jail.

Funderburk was rearrested last week, but he challenged the arrests legality.

The case attracted statewide attention because of Hunts outspoken support for new laws to crack down on drunken drivers.

Helms, allowing news cameras to fU court proceedings for the first time in Union County, ruled that Funderburk was lawfully jailed last week and that the mistake that freed him was a good faith error.

Funderburks lawyer argued the state has not been fair to his client and that Funderburk should be given credit on his sentence for the time he was out of jail between Dec. 15 and Feb. 2.

Winterville,- who bad been called to the scene to help direct traffic, was struck by a car driven by Sharyn Elaine Pugh of 1017 W. Wright Road.

Davis, who estimated damage to the Pugh car at $500, said Frye was thrown about 40 feet by the force of the impact and was taken to Pitt Ck)unty Memorial Ho^i-tal for treatment.

Clhief Glenn Cannon said Frye, who suffered head injuries, remained hospitalized this morning for observation.

Police estimated other damage from the four-vehicle collision at $400 to the Carter car and $4,500 to the Symons vehicle. No damage resulted to the Butler car, officers said, and no damage was reported for the Bryant auto.

Investigators charged Larry Earl Green of Route 2, Farmville, with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of a third collision Monday.

Police said cars driven by Green and Edward William Caldwell Jr. of Newton collided about 1:50 p.m. on Memorial Drive, 50 feet south of the Fifth Street intersection, causing an estimated $500 damage to the Green car.

No damage resulted to the Caldwell vehicle, officers said.

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The Daily Reflector, GreenvJe. ,N C -Tuesday, FebTuarv 15. iSKi 7Recession Is Making Mardi Gras 'Nicer' This Year

By BILL CRIDER-Associated Press Writer

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Early celebrants cruised the streets of the French Quarter with painted faces and drinks in hand for todays Mardi Gras revels, but officials said rainy skies and a poor economy could dampen this year's fun-making.

Arrests were down leading up to the annual Shrove Tuesday debauch, there were empty rooms at city hotels and rain was forecast for todays parades, authorities said.

Police spokeswoman Ruth Asher said Monday there had been 1.6M Carnival-related arrests - down sharply from last year, when the total reached 3,467.

People are being good this year, she said.

Mardi Gras, French for Fat Tuesday, is a festival with origins tracing back to pagan times. In predominantly Catholic New Orleans, it is the climax of Carnival - a long season of parties and formal balls that begins shortly after Christmas and ends at midnight Tuesday with the beginning of Lent and its 40 days of penance before Easter.

Before midnight tonight, Carnival will have seen 54 gaudy, noisy parades of papier mache floats and brass bands that social krewes, a cute spelling of crews, put on in the New Orleans area. To the east, officials in Mobile, Ala., said 50,000 people would attend that citys festivities.

In New Orleans, each krewe has its own royalty, but the

two undisputed leaders are Rex and the masked King of Comus, who close the festivities at midnight by toasting each other at a gala in the municipal auditorium.

Longtime residents steeled themselves for the annual party.

At ao years of age, I cant have much of a good time but 1 am happy to see it, said M. G. (Baron) deBaroncelli, who lugged groceries to his apartment in the Quarter on Monday.

I never miss Mardi Gras, though its not as much fun as it was when I was a young man and we danced in the street. Too many people now and they are all excited, agitated.

Cemmercially, this Mardi Gras has been a disappointment. Sidewalk vendors said profits were down. Tourists were less plentiful. The recession hurt hotels long accustomed to boosting prices and refusing to accept less than four-day reservations.

Most of the hotels dropped their packages, trying to pick up whate%r business is interested in coming in. said Ralph Nogal, director of the Greater New Orleans Hotel-Motel Association.    '

The Mardi Gras Cloalition 300 medical and legal volunteers from Tulane University were doing their bit to aid the celebration Monday.

Coalition medics in teams of four, equipped with walkie-talkie radio, patrol the crowd looking for casualties. Law students and lawyers work in shifts getting people out of

jails that were crowded before Carnival began.

"If we didnt do that. wiUi the number of people getting arrested every day the system would bog doviTi. said law student Steve Miller.

Jim Rich of Amarillo. Texas, said he came to Mardi Gras to save souls.

Toting a 4 by 4-foot sign reading Jesus Heals, Rich said he and about 95 Christians from Texas were in New Orleans not to protest the celebrations but to make an impression on observers.

Mardi Gras is strictly a pagan type of holiday. There are a lot of people who are just observing here. Its the observers, not the participants, who were primarily interested in, Rich said.

Mobile, Ala., a port city about 150 miles east of New Orleans on the Gulf Coast, claims to have started Mardi Gras in 1830 with mystic societies made up of young men. and passed the idea on to New Orleans in 1857.

We arent anti-New Orleans, said David Cooper, head of Mobiles carnival association. They dont want a Mardi Gras like ours. We dont want one like theirs. ^

Mobiles celebration is more family-oriented. Cooper said, but it didnt start out that way.

Now .Mobile celebrates with parades and souvenir trinkets, which draw about 50.000 people, most of them Mobile residents. Cooper said

Undecided Over A Probe Of Sfiil^ng

MARDI GRAS PERFORMANCE - A magician performs before a crowd outside Jackson Square in the New Orleans French Quarter. Hundreds of

thousands of fun-seekers are expected to jam the streets for the final celebrations on Fat Tuesday. (APLaserphoto)

CARNIVAL OBSERVER These construction workers dont seem to mind this giant ape looking over their shoulders at a job site in downtown New Orleans Tuesday afternoon. The lady gorilla is just part of a carnival fleet that rolled through the city. (AP Laserphoto)

W.ASHINGTO.N lAPi -The chairman of the Hou.se Merchant Marine and Fi.sh-eries Committee has not yet decided whether to order a congressional investigation into the weekend sinking of a ves.sel.

Rep. Walter B Jones of North Carolina told his staff Monday to compile all the data available about the sinking of the coal-laden ship about 30 miles off the Virginia coast.

Only three men survived after the vessel, .Marine Electric, capsized and the crew abandoned ship at 4:13 a.m. Saturday in 20-foot seas and 40 mph winds There were conflicting reports as to whether there were 34 or 36 men on board Massachusetts Rep Brian J, Donnelly wrote to Jones on Monday, calling for an investigation into the sinking of the vessel which was bound for Somerset, .Mass from Norfolk. Va.

Two survivors were from Massachusetts; Eugene S. Kelly, 31, of Norwell, and Robert .M. Cusick, 59, of Scituate The third survivor was Paul C. Dewey, 28, of Norfolk, Va.

Investigations into the tragedy are already planned for later this week by the Coast Guards Marine safety Office in Norfolk. Va. and the National Transportation Safety Board in Washington Gerry Seifert, general counsel for marine affairs for the House .Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, said Jones will review the data the staff compiles before deciding whether to order hearings and if so, where and when they should beheld He said among the ques-

tion.s the staff will try to answer are these: when was the ves.sel last inspected, when was it refitted, was it the appropriate ship for carrying coal and were all its papers in order.

In addition. Seifert said, the staff will focus on the response time of the Coast Guard and whether there should be any changes in reporting requirements for ships plying waters just off the coast A Coast Guard helicopter did not arrive until shortly after 5 a.m., almost an hour after the crew abandoned the .Marine Electric.

Lawyer Letters HeldAcceptable

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C lAFi - Utters to Port Bragg military personnel designed to drum up business for a local attorney are acceptable under a December state Supreme Court ruling, the N.C. State Bar ruled.

Attorney Ed Brady mailed 4,000 letters to the base, including some addressed to every first sergeant and captain at Fort Bragg. In some of the letters he offered to represent troops charged with driving under the influence or to provide debt relief for those with financial problems through bankruptcy proceedings.

It looks like the practice of law has turned into active comrfiercial pursuit, said Joe McLeod, chairman of the local ethics committee, which passed the question to the bar.

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8-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, February 15,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Sunshine Aids Drying Process

Obituaries

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly steady to 25 cents lower. Kinston 57.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 57.25, Wson 57.25, Salisbury 56.50, Rowland

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

57.00, Whiteville unreported, Wallace 57.00, Spiveys Corner 58.00, Rowland 57.00, Durham 55.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 46.00 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 24 to 3 pound birds. The final weighted average of 46.33 cents f.o.b dock or equivalent. The market tone for next weeks trading is steady to weak. Average weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Tuesday was 1,809,000,

' compared to 1,793,000 last Tuesday.

Hens

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was higher. Supplies adequate. Demand moderate to good. Prices paid per pound for hens over seven pounds at farm for Monday and 'Tuesday slaughter was 17 cents.

NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices showed some scattered gains today at the threshold of the 1,100 level in the Dow Jones industrial average.

The average of 30 blue chips, which climbed 10.60 points Monday to a record high, edged up .18 to 1,097.28 by noontime today.

, Gainers outnumbered losers by about 4 to 3 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Analysts said investors continued to respond enthusiastically to signs that the economy is beginning a recovery from the recession.

But they said it remained to be seen whether the market could climb past the Dow 1,100 level without a struggle.

When the average reached that point for the first time last month, it quickly turned back as traders cashed in profits from the markets sharp rally since last summer.

Many Wall Street observers have also expressed concern lately over the recent upswing in interest rates.

Among iactively traded blue chips. International Business Machines rose 4 to 994, and Eastman Kodak gained % to 88=^, but American Telephone & Telegraph dropped % to 67%.

The NYSEs composite index added .08 to 85.97. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 3.14 at 383.34.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 38.74 million shares, against 27.34 million at the same point Monday.

NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks:

High Low Last

Am Motors AmStand Amer TiT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX 0)rp CaroPwU Celanese

TUESDAY 7:00 p.m. Parent.s Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church 7.00 p.m. Post No 39 of American Legion meets at Post Home

7:30 p.m. - Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbyterian Church 7:30 p.m. Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 8'00 p.m. - Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous at AA BIdg, Farmvillehwy

WEDNESDAY 9:30 a.m. - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 12 Noon - Pitt County Chapter No. 1530 of the National Association of Retired Federal Employees meet at Three Steers 1:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m. - REAL Crisis Intervention meets 6:.30p.m. KiwanisClub meets 7:30 p.m. Winterville Jaycees meet at Jaycee Hut 8:00 p.m. Pitt County AJ-Anon Group meets at AA Bldg. on Farmvillehwy.

8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg., Farmvillehwy.

Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conll Group DeltaAirl DowChem duPonl Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress FordMot For McKess Fuqua Ind GTE Corp Uen Elec Gen Food Gen MIUs Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacit Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf OU Herculesinc Honeywell HospfCp s Ing Rand IBM

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ByMARYSCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer

Sunshine peq^ out today and began slowly drying tlie rain-soaked sponge-of-a-ground that absorbed its limit of water during Mondays rain.

Nearly an inch of rain fell on Pitt Countys already-drenched ground Monday and sent the Tar River five inches above flood stage. At 8 a.m. today, the Tar measured 13.5 feet on the National Weather Service gauge. Flood ^age is 13 feet.

Greenville Utilities weather station recorded .79 inch between midnight Sunday and 8 a.m. today. Winds Upping 30 mph were clocked throu^^t the day by the Pitt-Greenville Airport.

The scoping fields in the county shoildDt cause farmers any unusual hardship in the upcoming planting season, said Sam Uzzell, Pitt County agricultural extension agent.

We still have some acres of soybeans and com that have not been harvested and will not be harvested, he said. Other than these, and possibly slowing down some folks seeding tobacfX) plant beds, the rain isnt holding

Following are selected 11 a.m. stock market quotatkMia:

Ashland prC    2%

Burroughs    49%

Carolina Power 4 Ught    2%

Collins 4 Alkman    23%

Connor    12%

Duke    22%

Eaton    31%

Eckerds    2%

Exxon    29%

Fieldcrest    31%

Halteras    15%

Hilton    43%

Jefferson    28%

Deere    34%

Lowes    2%

McDonald's    80%

McGraw    43%

Piedmont    33%

Pizza Inn    8%

P4G    113%

TRW, Inc    67%

United Tel.    21%

Virginia Electric    15%

Wachovia    31%

OVER THE COUNTER Aviation    %-2%

Branch    18%-15%

Little Mint    1%-%

Planters Bank    27%-27%

GROWING AWARENESS GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar says the threat of nuclear appears to have heightened, but that there is also increasing awareness throughout the world that it would be a conflict in which there will be no winners.

Ayden Bd...

(Continued from Pagel) Street location of the store would not be in the best interest of the town and citizens because of its proximity to the two schools.

The Pitt County Board of Education passed a similar resolution in January opposing the location of the ABC Store at the shopping center (i West Third Street.

A plan for continuous electrical billing was also approved by the Board of Commissioners. The plan will allow utility bills to be mailed as soon as electrical meters are read. Currwitly, meters are read in the middle of the month and bills are held until the first of the next month.

Under this plan, the bill will be going into the customers hand immediately, said Mark Sugg, Aydens utility director. Now, 30 days elapses sometimes before the bills go out.

Bills will now go out as soon as the meter is read, he said. The billing and the payment is stagger^.

The continuous billing procedure will begin July 1.

Issac Allen of Ayden requested that the board c(hi-sider installing curb and gutter on Allen Drive, a project he said had been promised for some time and that town officials say is too expensive to undertake.

Weve signed petitions and weve always been told to wait for some reason or another, said Allen. For several years weve been told the sewer has to be finished. Now its finished and the last petition is no longer valid.

Im here to ask you once again to consider this project, he added.

According to Town Manager Don Russell, the entire street would have to be dug up to meet curb and gutter specifications. He estimated the cost at $70,000 - close to the average amount the town spends on all street maintenance in one budget year.

up anything.

Uzzell said February and March are normally wet months and predicted it may get evoi damper. Evoi though its wet now it will be wetter before it gets drier, be said. But it will dry outit always does. Despite the wind and the water, Greenville Public Works Director Mayo Allen reported no serious problems from the weather.

We had no problem as far as the water, he said. It ran on off. We did have some debris problems due to the wind.

Allen said many dead limbs landed in streets and at least one tree was t0K>led by winds. But we had nothing unusual at all, he added.

John Ferrer, assistant director at Greenville Utiltiies, reported no electrical difficulties from the storm.

At 11 a.m. today the temperature was 48 degrees, with highs expected to reach the 50s this afternoon and again Wednesday. The forecast calls for increasing cloudiness on Wednesday with a chance of rain again by Thursday.

The assessment, or curb and gutter fee each resident of the street would be required to pay, would be $15-120 per square yard, Russell said.

Allen agreed to resubmit a valid petition backing the project.

In other Iciness;

Board members approved a $9 per KWH electrical refund scheduled for March billing.

Mercer & Son Construction Co. received the contract for the installation of a wet well and water line that will serve a proposed apartment complex adjacent to Ayden Elementary. Mercer & Sons was low bidder with a bid of $16,765 for the wet well and a bid of $1,675 for the water extension.

The towns tax lein sale was set for May 9 and the begining date for tax advertisements was set for April 14.

Aim Legislation At Fat Lawmen

CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - Fat police officers and firefighters would get a stern lecture and an exercise program under a new state Assembly bill.

The bill introduced Monday would require a doctor to counsel officers or firefighters who show up for annual physical examinations regarding ways of living which are detrimental to his health.

'The doctor also would have to provide the employee with a program to develop his physical fitness.

The bill was introduced by Assemblyman Dave Nicholas of Incline Villa^. It was referred to the Labor and Mana^ment Committee.

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BuUock Mrs. Cora Wagner Bullock, 76, of the Belvoir community died Monday in Kinston. Her funeral service will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the WUkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Willie E. Bell. Burial will be in the Leggett Family Cemetery near Belvoir.

A Pitt County native who spent most of her life in the Belvoir community, si was a member of Gum Swamp Free Will Baptist Church.

Surviving are a son, James Robert Bullock of Belvoir; four daughters, Mrs. Parker Grant and Mrs. Richard Winchell, both of Route 1, Dover, Mrs. Bobby Godwin of Grifton and Mrs. Earl Faulkner of Route 1, Greenville; two sisters, Mrs. Essie Mayo and Mrs. Fannie Vick, both of Tarboro; 13 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home tonight from 7 to 9 p.m. At other times they will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Faulkner, Route 1, Box 610, Greenville.

Cates

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. -Funeral services for Mr. James Cates, who died here, will be (KHiducted Wednesday at 1 p.m. from the Lewis Chapel Free WUl Baptist Chiux^ near Farmville, N.C. Burial will follow in Sunset Memorial Park.

Coward Mr. Curman Coward,

Jones' Panel

Approves Report

WASHINGTON - Rep. Walter B. Jones, chairman of the House Mer^ant Marine and Fisheries Committee, has announced the committees approval of a report examining the need for changes in the cargo preference laws as they affect cargoes ^nerated by U.S. government action.

The committee report suggested that the cargo preference laws for government-impelled cargoes are iK)t as effective as they should be and that the evasion of compliance by government agencies may be attributed to ambiguities in the laws.

The cargo preference laws are designed to promote and maintain a vigorous U.S. merchant marine by requiring certain cargoes to be transported by U.S. flag vessels.

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

Durward Wayne Adams, Worshipful Master

Thurston Wynne, Secretary

formeriy of Vanceboro, died Friday in WashingUm, D.C. He was the husband of Mrs. Annie Corord. Funeral ar-rangeipents will be announced lata* by Flanagans Funeral Home.

Edwards Mr. Robert Edwards of 519 Ford St. died Monday in County Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Mrs. Rosa Edwards of the home. Funeral arrangemoits will be announced later by Flanagans Funeral Home.

Harrism TARBORO - Funeral services for Mrs. Precious D. Harrison will be (xmducted Friday at 3 p.m. in White Chapd Baptist Giurdi in Speed by the Rev. Robert Rick. Burial will be in the Dancey Memorial Centery.

Surviving are her husband, Jessie Hai^n of the home; two daughters. Miss Jluby Harrison and Miss Priscilla Harrison, both of the home; two sons, Carl Harrison and David Harristm, both of the home; two grandchildren; her mother, Mrs. Estella Debrew Harris of Hobgood; two sisters, Mrs. Edith Barnes of Robersonville and Mrs. Caletha Smith of Norfolk, Va.; three brothers, Cimmie Harris and Andrew Harris, both of ^ed, and William Harris of

Obituary

Flanagan

Mrs. Charlotte Foxhall Flanagan 84, died Saturday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She resided at 318 Memorial Drive.

Funeral services will be held Thursday, 3 P.M. at Saint Gabriel Auditorium by Father Jerry M. Sherba. Burial will be in the Brown Hill Cemetery.

Mrs. Flanagan was born and reared in WashingUm, N.C. and attended the elementary and High School. She was a graduate of St. Augustine College, Raleigh, N.C. where she received her R.N. She was employed by the late Dr. J.A. Battle until she joined in Funeral Business with her husband.

Surviving are her husband, Mr. Walter E. Flanagan of the home, 8 nephews, Eli, Henry and Robert Tyner of Atlantic City, N.J. Louis Credle of New York, N.Y. RusseU and Fred Credle of Philadelphia, Pa. and Henry Foye of Philadelphia, Pa. Four nieces, Mrs. Eva Wynn and Mrs. Julia Davis of Atlantic City, N.J., Mrs. Kathleen Jackson of East Orange, N.J. arid Mrs. Cervan Ringgold of Philadelphia, Pa.

Family will receive friends Wednesday 8 to 9 P.M. at Flanagan Funeral Chapel at other times at the home 318 Memorial Drive.

PaidAnoouncement

Robersonville.

The family will receive friends at White Cbapd in Speed Thursday from 7 to 8 p.m. Hemby-Willoughby Funeral Home, Tarboro, is in charge of arrangements.

PdenoD Mrs. Smithie Edwards Peterscm of the Ormondsville community of Greene County, Route 1, Box 436, Ayden, died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The family will be at the home of her dua^ter, Mrs. Fannie P. Malolne, 303 Wilson Drive, Ayden. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Norcott and Company Funeral Home inAydoi.

Perkins Mrs. Doris May Perkins of Greenville died Monday in Washington, D.C. She was the wife of Mr. Willie Walter Perkins of Greenville. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagans Funeral Home.

Rouse

AYDEN - Mr. Daniel Elmer Rouse Sr., SO, died today. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. at Farmer Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Cedric Pierce officiating. Burial will follow in the Walstonburg Cemetery.

Mr. Rouse was a member of the Black Jack Free WUl Baptist Church.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Pauline Rouse of the home; five sons, Daniel Rouse Jr., Donald Rouse, Ronald Rouse, BUly Earl Rouse and Frankie Lee

Rouse, all of Ayden; two daughters, Mrs. Carolyn Beamon of Wiikervflle and Mrs. Patsy Faulkner of Ayden; three brothers, Marvin Rouse of WintervUIe and Jimmy Ray Rouse and WUbert Earl Rouse, both of Vanceboro; five sisters, Mrs. Alice Moore of Cove Gty, Mrs. Juanita FUlingame of Vanceboro, Mrs. Dora McLawiMMTi and Mrs. Bettie Lou Hassell, both of Grimesland, and Mrs. NeUie McLawhorn of Ayden,, and. fourgrandchUdren. ^

The famtty wUl be at Fanner Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. today.

Williams TARBORO Funeral services for Mr. Jesse Lee WUliams, 85, wiU be conducted Thurs^y at 3:30 p.m. at St. Stephen Baptist Church in Tarboro by the Rev. WUey Parker. Burial wUl be in U Community Cemetery, Princeville.

Surviving him are a son, Wilbert F. Williams of Bethel; three dau^ters, Ms. Lucy Harper, Mrs. Katherine Sherrod and Mrs. FYances Vicks, all of Taii^; a sister, Mrs. Louvenia Lane of Princeville, and five grand-chUdren.

The famUy wUl receive friends in the chq! of Hemby-Willoughby Funeral Home Wednesday frwn 7 to 8 p.m.

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Attention Greenville Citizens**

Resolution No.

RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE, NC, DECLARING ITS INTENT TO CLOSE A PORTION OF SEDGEFIELD DRIVE FROM SAINT ANDREWS DRIVE TO MEMORIAL DRIVE

Council has received a petition that a portion of Sedgefield Drive be closed; and WHEREAS, the City Council intends to close the aforesaid portion of Sedgefield Drive In accordance with the provisions of Q.S. 160A-299;

BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL that it is the intent of the CHy Council to close the following described portion of Sedgefieid Drive a distance of approximately 860 foot, said portion being more particularly described as follows:

General Description: Located in Greenville Township, Pitt County, North Carolina; from Momoriai Drive to Saint Andrews Drive on the southern side of Sedgefield Park Subdivision, Section III. and lying wHhin the corporate limits of the City of Greenville.

Metes and Bounds Description: BEGINNING at the intersection of the oestem right-of-way line of MenK>rial Drivo and the northern right-of-way line of Sedgefield Drive; thence, S. 73* 05 E., 588.32 feet along said northern right-of-way line to the point of curve of a curve having a central angle of 27* 36 and. a radius of 250 feet; thonco, 120.43 foot along the curved right-of-way to its point of tangent; thence, N. 79* 19 E., 119.65 foot to the western right-of-way line of Saint Andrews Drive; thence, S. 10*41 E., 70.00 feet along said right-of-way line to the southern right-of-way line of Sedgefield Drive; theiKe, S. 79* 19 W., 119.65 feet along said right-of-way to the point of curve having a central angle of 27* 36 and a radius of 320 feet; thence, 154.15 feet along the curved right-of-way lino to its point of tangent; thence, N. 73* 05 W., 588.32 feet along said right-of-way lina to the eastern right-of-way line of Memorial Drive; thence, N. 16* 55 E., 70.00 along said right-of-way line to the point of BEGINNING.

This being the unopened portion of Sedgefield Drive between Memorial Drive end Saint Andrews Drive recorded in Map Book 15, page 41-41 A, F*itt County Registry.

This description prepared by Vlfilliam W. Shaw, R.L.S., Engineer, from Rivera and Associates Drawing No. 2981.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a public heariim will be held In the Council Chamber, Municipai BuNding, Greenville. North Carolina, on March 10,1983, at 7:30 p.m. to coneldor the advisabNHy of closing the aforesaid portion of Sedgefield Drivo. At such pubic hearing, all obiectkms and suggestions wHI bo duly considered.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this rasoiutlon be published once a week for four (4) auccoeaive weeks in the Daily Reflector; that a copy of this rosoiutlon bo sent by certified maN to the owners of property adjoining the aforesaid portion of Sedgefield Drive as shown on the County tax records; and that a copy of thla rasoiutlon be prominently posted In at least two (2) placoa along the aforesaid portion of Sedgefield Drive.

Duly adopted thla 10th day of February, 1903.

ATTEST:

LOIS D. WORTHINGTON, CITY CLERK

PERCY R.COX, MAYOR





Sports the daely reflectorClassifiedTUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 15, 1983

East Carolina Hosts Spiders

East Carolina Universitys Pirates hope - for the first time this year - to put more than two victories toother this week as they play host to two ECAC-South opponents, both of whom have claimed earlier wins over them.

Wednesday night, at 7:30 p.m. in Minges Coliseum, the Pirates play host to Richmond, while on Saturday night, the U.S. Naval Academy comes to town for the first time ever.

It is the Spiders, of course, that will occupy the attention of the Pirates until late Wednesday night, and a victory over Richmond could do a lot toward aiming East Carolina into the ECAC-South tournament, just over three weeks away.

In their first meeting this

year, Richmond gained a 68-56 victory over the Pirates, giving the Spiders their fourth straight win over East Carolina over the past two years.

That first meeting this year was the first full game fw the Pirates without senior forward Charles Green, who had dislocated his shoulder in the previous game against William & Mary, and the Pirates were in the midst of a three-game losing streak trying to adjust to that loss.

Green returned to action on Saturday ni^t for the first time, coming off the. bench to score ten points and direct the Pirates to a 73-59 victory over Baptist avenging an earlier loss to that team.

In that first meeting, Johnny Edwards led the Pirates with 18 points and six

rebounds, while Barry Wright scored 13 points and Tony Robinson had 11.

RichmMid, which hit 59 percent of its shots fnmi the floor in the first game, was led by their big 6-10, 22(H)ound senior center,. Jeff Pehl, and 64, 195-pound senior guard Tom Bethea, each with 14 points.

A big difference in that game too was the free throw shooting, where Richmond scored 16 points and the Pirates got only four. Richmond also held a definite rebounding edge with a 32-19 margin.

Since that game, 6-7, 185-pound freshman forward John Newman has come on strong and has replaced Bill Flye in the starting lineup for the Spiders. Hes started the last

five gam^ for the Spiders and has been in double figures for the last eight games -averaging 19.2 points over that ^an.

And right now, hes the leading scorer for the Spiders, who have three starters in double figures. For the year, Newman is averaging 12.2 points.

Pehl is next at 11.8 followed closely by Bethea at 11.7. Pehl is also tte leading rebounder with a 6.6 average.

The other two expected starters are 6-2, 175-pound sophomore Kelvin Johnson, averaging 9.4 points a game, and 6-6, 210-pound senior forward Bill Dodey, hitting 3.1 points a game.

Richmond comes into the game with an 11-11 record and a 2-4 ECAC-South mark. The

Allison Comes Apart

Bobby Allison impacts off the infield retaining wall at Daytona Beach Monday during the Busch

Clash of *83 race at Daytona International Speedway. Allison was unhurt but out of the race. (AP Laserphoto)

Farmville Central Out To Wrap Up Regular Season ECC Title

ByRICKSCOPPE Reflector Sports Writer FARMVILLE - FarmvUle Central, the ECC regular-season championship within its grasp, will try not to lose its grip this week as the Jaguars face a team that has yet to win and another that has won just five games.

Farmville is at Charles B. Aycock (0-19,0-11) tonight and is home Friday for its season-finale against Southern Nash (5-13, 4-6). Farmville can, by winning both games, clinch no worse than a tie for the title.

Farmville and North Pitt are tied for first in the conference at 8-2, but the Jaguars

Sports Colendor

Editors Note: . Schedules are supplied by schools or ^msoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.

Todays Sports BasketbaU JamesvilleatBaUi Roanoke at Roanoke Rapids Creswell at Bear Grass (7 p.m.) Washington at Williamston <6;30 p.m.)

Southern Nash at Greene Central (6:30p.m.)

Kinston at Rose (6:30 p.m. ) Farmville Central at C.B. Aycock Faith at Greenville Christian (6:30p.m.)

Southwest Edgecombe at North Pitt (6:30p.m.)

E.B Aycock at Kinston (4 p.m.) Conley at West Craven Adult Division Bobs TV vs. PCC Empire Brushes vs. Hooker Memorial Rockers vs. Taff Office Womens League Pitt Memorial Hospital vs. Johns Florist

Dazzle vs. Burroughs-Wellcome Junior Division Pirates vs. Cavaliers Terrapins vs. Wolfpack Wi    

have beaten the Panthers twice this season and if the two teams end up tied, Farmville would receive the top seed for the Eastern Carolina Conference post-season tournament.

North Pitt (15-5) entertains Southwest Edgecombe (13-7, 5-5) tonight and ends the regular season Friday at home against Ayden-Grifton (12-8,7-4).

Its going to be a tough week, Farmville Central coach Mike Terrell said, whose team defeated North Pitt and A-G - its two principal challengers for the title last week.

Weve really got to approach this week like we did last week. The two teams are not as strong as North Pitt or Ayden-Grifton, but theyre conference games and weve got to have the right mental attitude.

Thats the key: weve got to have the same, mental attitude that we had last week, he said. Last week we were playing for a chance. 'This week weve got a golden opportunity to win it.

TIk Jaguars, who whipped North Pitt, 42-37, last 'Tuesday and came back to nip A-G, 59-58, Friday, are led by forward Terrance Pettway, who is averaging 14.0 points and 6.4 rebounds a game. Pettway also is averaging 49% from the floor - tops on the team.

Center Andrew Edwards is averaging 11 points and 6.6 rebounds a game. Forward Tony Hargrove is averaging 8.3 points and 5.3 rebounds a game.

Completing the starting lineup are guards Reggie Gorham and Gary Hobgood, who is averaging nearly three assists a game.

The Jaguars whipped Aycock, 74-33, earlier this season, but Terrell said this is a different Falcon team.

Aycock has improved quite a bit. Weve got to execute well both offensively and defensively, he said. Weve got to respect that (C.B. Aycock) can beat us.

I just hope, Terrell added, that the opportunity to win the conference championship is enough motivation for us.

C.B. Aycock, which is being outscored on average by 28.9 points a contest, is led by Mark Radford, who is averaging 11.4 points.

Southern Nash is led by David Spivey, who is averaging 12.6 points an outing. Terry Battle leads the Firebirds on the boards with a 7.6 average. Jimmy PuUy is averagings.! rebounds.

Farmville, 14-6 overall, defeated Southern Nash, 50-44, in the teams initial meeting. The Firebirds have won two of their last three and upset the Chargers 53-51 earlier this season.

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Spiders are on the verge of being maUunatically eliminated from the title race, and a win by ECU would knock them out of any chance at the title.

The Pirates, meanwhile, are also 11-11 overall and have a 1-6 ECAC-South record. Their only victory of the year in the conference came in early

January when they defeated defending champ James Madison, 4541. East Carolina has already been diminated from any chance at the regular season title.

Navy, which comes in for Saturdays game, downed the Pirates in their first meeting, 66-64, on a rebound shot at the buzzer.

Bonnett Wins Busch 'Crash'

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Its called the Busch Gash, but tha fifth edition of the 50-mile ^rint race for a $50,000 first prize could have been more appropriately called the Busch Crash or Busch Bash.

Nell Bonnett, who started 15th in the 16<iar field, barely avoided crashing his Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS halfway through the event but went on to pass Darrell WaJtrip two turns from the end for a half-length victory at Daytona International Speedway.

Bobby Allison, Terry Labonte, Dale Earnhardt and Buddy Baker werent as lucky, all of them winding iqi sitting uphappily in the infield grass in badly damaged cars. None of them was injuied.

Bonnett moved all the way up to fori place by the third lap when Allison slid through

Eostern Corolino

Boys Standings

(]onf. Overall

In tonights only other ECC game. Southern Nash travels to Snow Hill to battle Greene Central (6-14,4-6).

In the Coastal Conference D.H. Conley, \riiich clinched a tie for the regular-season title last week, is at West Craven (16-3,6-2) and can wrap up the crown with a win. DHC is 17-3 and 8^.

Kinston (4-5, 8-7) is at Greenville Rose (4-12, 3-7) in the Big East, while in Northeastern Conference Roanoke (15-3, 13-2) goes to Roanoke Rapids (8-8, 8-6) and Washington (6-14,4-10) travels toWilliamston (4-14,2-12).

In the Tobacco Belt, Jamesville (0-18, 0-14) travels to Bath (5-9, 5-10) whUe Creswell (10-8, 7-7) travels to BearGrass (7-10,6-8).

Also Tuesday, Greenville Christian entertains Faith.

t

' The 1982-83 regular season ends on Friday for the ECC, CC, NEAC and TBC. In action Friday, Greene Central plays host to Southwest Edgecombe, Williamston is on the road against Edenton, Bear Grass is at Jamesville and D.H. Conley plays host to Havelock.

Also Friday, Rose is at Wilson Fike. The Big East ends its regular season next week.

GCA is at Mount Calvary for its conference tournament Friday and Saturday.

W L

W

L

North Pitt

8 2

15

5

Farmville C.

8 2

14

6

Ayden-Grifton

7 4

12

8

SW Edgecombe

5 5

13

7

Greene C.

4 6

6

14

Southern Nash

4 6

5

13

C.B. Aycock

0 11

0

19

Girls Standings

Conf.

Overall

W L

W

L

SW Edgecombe

9 1

18

2

C.B. Aycock

9 2

16

4

Southern Nash

5 5

11

7

Greene C.

4 6

12

8

North Pitt

3 7

8

13

Farmville C.

3 7

4

17

Ayden-Grifton

3 8

6

14

Coastal Conference

Boys Standings

Conf

Overall

W L

W

L

Conley

8 0

17

3

West Craven

6 2

16

3

West Carteret

5 3

13

6

Havelock

2 6

10

10

North Lenoir

2 6

6

14

White Oak

1 7

5

15

Girls Standings

Conf.

Overall

W L

W

L

Conley

7 1

19

2

North Lenoir

7 1

16

4

Havelock

6 2

13

7

West Carteret

3 5

8

11

West Craven

1 7

2

18

White Oak

0 8

2

18

some oil in the fourth turn. He slammed into the outside retaining wall, then slid down the banking, across the grass and into another fence near the entrance to pit road.

That crash brought out the first caution flag in the history of the rich race for the previous seasons pole winners.

Bonnett still was running fourth, behind the 1982 Ford 'Thunderbird of Bill Elliott, when the leader suddenly slowed near the end of the 10th lap and slipped bac into the pack, tapping both the Monte Carlo of Waltrip, who grabbed the lead, and the 1983 Thunderbird of Earnhardt.

I had the car as far out of control at that point as I ever have at Daytona without losing it,Bonnett said.

Bonnett, the only member of the Clash field to make it on the basis of a wild card draw among the fastest second-day qualifiers of 1982, fell in behind Waltrip two laps later.

Thats the way it stayed until the backstretch of the final trip around the 2.5-mile, high-banked trioval.

At that point, Bonnett dived low and beat Waltrip into the third turn. 'The two tapp^ fenders, but both stayed in control. Bonnett managed to fend off the defending Winston Cup champion the rest of the way.

I cant think of a better way to start with a new team, said Bonnett, who is driving for the combined team of Warner Hodgdon and Rahmoc Racing in 1983.

I got down as low as I could in the backstretch, right down on the apron, and shot up the track into the comer. It was just enough to get by him, and I knew at that point I could stay ahead.

Terry Labonte, whose Monte Carlo had been running third, tried to get around Waltrip on the high side of the track as Bonnett went underneath. But Waltrip moved up toward the outside wall and Labonte suddenly skidded sideways and hit the wall.

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Wake Unhappy With Crowds

WINSTON-SALEM (AP) -Two years after the marriage of Wake Forest University basketball and the Greensboro Coliseum, the relationship is on shaky ground with rumblings that new arrangements could be made.

The Demon Deacons abandoned Winston-Salem Memorial Coliseum, which seats approximately 8,200, because of its dilapidated status and chose to play its games in the 15,600-seat Greensboro Coliseum. Rarely, however, have all the seats in the coliseum been filled for Wake Forest games.

Officials at Wake Forest have said theyve sold 12,000 season tickets for the nine-game Greensboro package.

In beating Maryland last week. Wake Forest played before less than 8,000 peqile. 'The only time Wake Forest has exceeded that total is when theyve entertained North Carolina, which also calls the coliseum home several times a season.

After seven of its nine homes games. Wake Forest is averaging 8,654 fans, a 33 percent decline from its first year of occupancy. Subtract the Tar Heel game last month and the average falls to 7,513, almost 700 short of the capacity of Memorial Coliseum.

Well just have to wait until the end of the year and take a good hard look and see what the final figures are, said Wake Forest athletic director (Jene Hooks. Well have TV' for eight of the nine games here, and I think weve tested our people pretty hard.    i

Wake Forest basketball coach Carl Tacy, who has never favored the move from the schools home town to an arena 30 miles away, said the situation is like walking a ti^trope.

Were the only nomadic team in cdlege basketball, said Tacy. We play everywhere and everywhere we go, we never have a homecourt advantage.

Crowds have also been kept down by television coverage as well as inclimate weather several times this season. Tacy admits that television is the key to, drawing top athletes to Winston-Salem.

Television and national ranking are two of the most important things in recruiting a player, he said.

Also upset with the attendance is Greensboro Coliseum manager Jim Oshust, who said the weak attendance has been costly to his arena

1 think its a case where we would like tu see them do better so we could sell more hot dogs and parking. Oshust said. "Wake Forest happens to be as good a school as any. It just happens to be suffering the problems of being the smallest school in the ACC.

Both Tacy and Hooks would like to see Winston-Salem officials build a new arena, but voters twice have overwhelmingly defeated a bond issue which would have provided a new home for^ the Demon Deacons.

I cant bang the door too hard on something like that, but Id very much like to have a new arena, Tacy said. It would be an advantage to the program.

Oshust has suggested that Wake Forest begin a sales campaign for the 1983-84 season, which is the final year of the three-year contract between the two parties. He also said he would like to amend the contract so that Wake Forest would compensate the coliseum for no-shows and crowds reduced by television and inconvenient starting times.

Were not going to adjust the contract, Hooks replied.

There has also been talk that Wake Forest might split its schedule between Greensboro and Winston-Salem, providing just another dilemma for a program trying to find a suitable home.

There is not a day that goes by that 1 dont wonder if were doing the right thing, Hooks said. "Once 1 do something I dont second guess myself, but Im also hard-headed. Were between a rock and a hard place,

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l





CH.-^RLOTTESyiLLE, Va. (.-VP). - Junior guard Othell Wilson scored 20 points and led four players in double figures as Virginias fifth-ranked Cavaliers rolled to a 92-69 Atlantic Coast Conference basketball victory Monday night over Georgia Tech and Coach Terry Holland said defense was the key.

We made them take the tough shots," Holland said of the Yellow Jackets, 1 think they normally shoot a better percentage than that."

For the game, Georgia Tech hit only 32 percent.

Virginia, rebounding from its 64-63 setback last Thursday at North Carolina, clinched its fourth consecutive 20-victory season. The Cavaliers now are 20-3 overall and 8-2 in the ACC.

"We came out Saturday and had an excellent practice, the kind of response you need after a game like that," Holland said of the North Carolina defeat.

Georgia Tech Coach Bobby Cremins said obviously we

didnt play well. We have such a young team. If we dont play well, we really dont have a chance. Virginia is a fantastic basketball team "

Craig Robinson scored a season-high 17 points for Virginia. Ralph Sampson added 14 points and Jim Miller 11.

Sampson, now three points shy of becoming the third Virginia player to score 2,000 points in his career, had only two points in the first half. He did not take a shot from the floor in the first 20 minutes.

Georgia Tech, 10-11 and 3-8 in the ACC, got a game-high 31 points from freshman guard Mark Price and 13 points from reserve Anthony Byrd.

Following four early lead changes, Virginia ran off 12 unanswered points to open up an 18-7 lead. Robinson started the run with a short hook, Wilson converted a three-point play. Miller hit a sbc-footer, Kenton Edelin made two free throws and Wilson added a three-point basket.

After Price got a fast-break layup, Georgia Techs first points in more than five minutes, Virginia outscored the Jackets 8-2 to expand its lead to 15 points at 26-11 with 7:08 left in the half. The Cavaliers led by 41-27 at intermission.

Georgia Tech, which had beaten Duke and Wake Forest in ite last two ACC starts, failed to score on 14 of its first 17 possessions in the game. The Jackets shot a miserable 20.7 percent, six of 29, and turned the ball over nine times in the first half.

Sampson got his first field goal to open the second half and'' Rick Carlisle hit four straight free throws to boost Virginia to a 47-27 lead with 18:03 to play. Georgia Tech got no closer than 15 points the rest of the way, a three-point goal by Price bringing the Jackets within 69-54 with 7:20 left.

Virginias largest lead was 27 points at 87-60.

Wilson Sparks Virginia Rebels Run To Poll Top

H.ARLOTTESyiLLE, Va. didnt play well. We have such After Price got a fast-break Georgia tech    ^    1^

GEORGIA TECH HP

Pearson Salley Harvey Price Thomas Bradford Byrd Mansell Wilson MilU Totals

FG FT RAF Pt

14 H 0^0 2 0 5 2 2S    !    S-t    SO    5    7

30    0-5    3- 4    2 2    4    3

39 9-20 8-9 3 3 2 31 27    Ml    0- 0    5 0    4    6

25    0:1    0 -0    0 1    5    0

20    5-12    1- 2    0 3    5    13

6    0-1    0-0    3 0    2    0

3    04)    0-0    0 0    0    0

3    2-2    1- 2    0 0    0    7

100 3082 U-25 27 0 32 M

VIRGINIA

Mullen

Robinson

Sampson

Wilson

Carlisle

Edelin

Stokes

Miller

Merrifjeld

Lambiotte

SmiUi

Newburg

Johnson

Totals

MP FG PT RAF Pt

25    1- 6    2- 3    0 2< 1    4

30    4- 6    9-11    7 0    3    17

27    4- 6    6- 6    13 0    2    14

32    7-11    4- 4    2 4    3    20

14    1- 6    4- 4    1 2    2    6

19    1- 1    2- 2    8 1

16    2- 2    4- 4    3 0

18    4- 9    2- 4    4 0

10    0- 2    1- 3    2 0

3    1-1    0-0    0 0

2    0- 0    0- 0    0 0

2 1-2 2-2 10 2 0- 0 0- 0 1 1

5 4

3 8 3 11 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 5 0

200 28S2 3M3 44 10 24 92

GeorgUTech..................27    42-68

Virginia.......................41    51-92

Threeiint goals: Georgia Tech 11-20: Price 5-13, Thomas 2-3, Byrd 2-5, Mills 2-2. Virgmia 4-10: Mullen 0-2, Wilson 2-4, CarlislwO-1, Miller 1-2, Newburg 1-1 Turnovers: Georgia Tech 13, Virginia 14.

Technical fouls: Wilson, Georga Tech bench    j

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -In this hype-happy town, where superlatives reign supreme. No. 1 has a new meaning.

The University of Nevada-Las Vegas Runnin Rebels were perched atop the Associated Press college basketball poll today for the first time in their 2S-year history.

The Rebels, 22-0, and the only unbeaten team in the nation, took over first place after Villanova iqiset last weeks leader. North Carolina. The Tar Heels fell to third place while Indiana slipped into second.

For Rebel guard Danny Tarkanian, the rating was particularly sweet. He had watched his father, UNLV Coach Jerry Tarkanian, roll up 12 straight 20-victory seasons en route to becoming the winningest active coach in college basketball.

Yet until last weeks No. 2 rating, a Tarkanian club had never been ranked higher than No. 3.

When youre ranked second, third or fourth, youre always behind somebody, the younger Tarkanian said. In 10 or 15 or 20 years from now.

I can say to my kids that 1 was on the No. 1-ranked team in the country.

If they ever dreamed of not making us No. 1, itd be the biggest ripoff ever. EveiTbody else has lost, and some nxm than (mce,* the fiery guard said.

They havent been giving us the justice we deserve, chimed in forward Larry Anderson after Mondays practice. I didnt think theyd give it to us. I really didnt think this wcHild ha|^.

The news of the latest poll by a panel of ^rts writers had hardly cleared the AP wires when signs began popping on Strip marquees proclaiming the Rebels as the nations best colle^ basketball team.

Coach Tartmnian held something of a different view.

Gotting to the Final Four is more important, he said Monday. The best part of this season is that were winning. Being No. 1 is great, but its something you cant really sit back and enjoy, because you have to go out and play again.

Tarkanian has said since last Spring that his 1982-83 edition didnt have the raw

talent of last years team, and certainly not the power of the 197S-76 clii) that went 234) before finishing in the elite Final Four.

But Tarkanian says he has always liked the way this years team worked together. What they lacked in talmt, they made up in hustle and determination, he said.

Now the Rebels are sneaking up on that old victory string, and could break it with wins over San Jose State and Utah State at home this weekoid.

And, in a cty where who-you-know is more important than what-you-know, clout is now being exercised to extricate Final Four tickets.

Detractors ask if the Rebels are for real in light of their schedule. Defenders note the club has beatra the nations top offei^ve club, Oklahoma, and twice whipped Fresno, the cotffltrys top defensive team.

The ranking was hardly a runaway, with UNLV gaining 31 of 54 first place ballots, finishing with 1,031 points, just 19 ahead of Indiana. The Hoosiers, 19-2, received 13 first place ballots.

Following North Carolina,

21-4, was Houston, 20-2 - now riding a 15-game winning streak. Virginia. 19-3, slipped from No. 3 to No. 5.

Sixth place went to St. Johns, 20-2, followed by Arkansas, 20-1, and Villanova. Louisville was rated No. 9 and UCLA slipped from No. 5 to No. 10 after its loss to Oregon State.

Kentucky was ranked 11, followed by Missouri, Memphis State and Geor^town. Wichita State was 15, followed by Iowa, Syracuse, Boston Ctdlege, Oklahoma and Ohio State.

APTop20

.    Twentv    teimi    In    the

biaketbtdl poll.

l.Nev.-LatVaisn    33-4)

2.Indiana(13T  i-2

S.NorthCiUna(4).Jl8

4.Houston(S )...... M.2

5.Vlritat a...........MW

6.St. John's(1)...    20-2

7Art*nai  20-1

8. Villanova.......

9.LouitviU e  21-3

10.UC U  17-3

11.Kentucl w..........im

12.Mlssour r..........iM

13.Memphis State .... ig-3

H.Georgetown.......ie4t

IS.WichlUsuu......18-3

16.Iowa..............iM

17.Syracuae..........i*-5

IS.BMton College.....17-4

lO.Oklahoina.........i84

ao.Ohk) State.........ive

1,031

1,012

931

918

113

809

731

676

673

602

521

513

445

271

260

175

125

85

78

UPlTop 20

Lady Terrapins Move Up 5 w On Women's Cage Poll

BvTheAs.sociatedPiwffii    k.j    i.n.

Volleyball Teams

Two volleyball teams have recently been formed in Pitt County to take part in four Saturday tournaments. Team members include: (front row, 1 to r) Juanita Murphy, Lynn Keeter, Faye Kite,

Rhonda Mills, Rhonda Jackson; (second row) Martha Rollins, Melanie Robinson, Trellaney Boyd, Vonda Stokes, Rose Matthews, Patti Jean Keeter; (third row) Penny Corey, Karen Barrett, Lisa Mills, Melissa Gamer.

Cale Yarborough's Misfortune Is Lucky Break For Rudd, Bodine

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Cale Yarboroughs misfortune in qualifying for the Daytona 500 was a stroke of good fortune for Ricky Rudd and Geoff Bodine.

Although they both were considerably slower than Yarborough on the 2.5-mile, high-banked track Monday, it will be Rudd and Bodine who will start from the front row positions Sunday jji, the $J, million race the 2^ edition of the ptj^giQus Daytona 500.

Moments after Yarborough appeared to win the pole with the first 200 mph lap recorded at Daytona by a -Stock car, the three-time Winston Cup champion found himself upside down in his new Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, sliding into the outside retaining wall in turn four.

"Theres no question it (the second lap) was going to be better, the uninjured Yarborough said dejectedly, T think a gust of wind got the car coming off turn three. When that first gust hit it, it just took the traction right off the rear tire?,"

Yarboroughs first lap average of 200.503 mph, accomplished despite winds gusting from M to 25 mph, will go into the Daytona record books. But it will not be counted as the race qualifyihg record since the car will not start Sunday.

( Although Yarborough was not injured, the wild crash damaged the frame of the car

so badly that the Ranier team was forced to withdraw the entry.

Yarborough now will have to qualify another car to get in the race. The team immediately sent their transporter on the 18-hour roundtrip to the Ranier shop in Charlotte, N.C., to bring back their Pontiac LeMans backup car in time for practice today,

Tbe (backup) car was all ready to*^go, and we were going to bring two cars, but we just didnt have a second truck available, Yarborough eveTfc. said.

Rudds fast lap was 198.864 in another Monte Cario, followed by Bodines 197.139 in a Pontiac Grand Prix.

Only the top two official qualifiers clinched places in the starting lineup for the race, with the next 28 positions to be decided in two 125-mile qualifying races Thursday. The rest of the 42-car grid will be filled through further time trials today and Wednesday.

Yarborough still must establish a qualifying speed in the LeMans in order to qualify for one of Thursdays races.

The 43-year-old driver said his car was running smoothly when it suddenly began to slide.

It didnt drag or anything, he said. The rear tires just came off the ground.

The car got sideways at about 190 mph and winds that had hampered other qualifiers

appeared to pick up the car, flipping it onto its roof. It slid rear-end first into the outside wall, then whipped around, striking the front end on the wall and bouncing back onto its wheels before spinning down the banking and into the

Doytono Quolifying

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - The top 25 q^lifying speeds turned in' Mon-dav during pole qualifying for the $I million Daytona 500, with type of car and qualifying speed in mph (Only top two qualifiers locked up positions in Sunday's race):

1 Cale Yarborough, Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, 200 S03 (breaks previous track qualifyinfi record of 196.317 set in Feb. 1982 by Benny Parsons) Yarborough s car later withdrawn because of damage suffered in crash following record lap, with second and third cars moving up.

2 Ricky Rudd, Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, 198 864.

3. Geoff Elodine. Pontiac Grand Prix, 197 920,

4 Joe Ruttman, Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 197 139.

5 Neil Bonnett, Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 196 648

6 Darrell Waltrip C'hevrolet Monte Carlo, 196.271.

7 Richard Petty, Pontiac Grand Prix, 196.108.

8 Kyle Petty, Pontiac Grand Prix, 195.771.

9. Terry Labonte. Chevrolet Monte Cario, 195.143

10. Dick Brooks. Ford Thunderbird, 195 109

11. Bill Elliott, Ford Thunderbird. 195.029.

12. Tim Richmond, Pontiac LeMans, 194 881

13. Phil Parsons. Buick Regal, 194.763

14. Lake Speed. Chevrolet Monte Carlo. 194 532

15 Bobby Allison, Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 194.242

16 A J Foyt, Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 194.259,

17 Rusty Wallace. Buick Regal, 193,844

18 Buddy Baker. Ford Thunderbird, 193 790

19 Sterling Marlin. Chevrolet Monte Carlo. 193.628

20. Dae Earnhardt. Ford Thunderbird. 192 914

21    Benny Parsons. Buick Regal. 192 753

22 David Pearson, Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 192.513

23 Jody Ridley, Buick Regal, 192.443

24 Harry Gam. Buick Regal, 192.291.

23 Mark Martin. Buick Regal, 191.857

infield grass.

That crash ended the reign of Ranier team manager and engine builder Waddell Wilson, whose cars had won four straight Daytona 500 poles.

Its really too bad, Wilson said. But thats the way this sport goes. The car was running great.

Rudd, who drives for former Grand National competitor Richard Childress, said, Im sorry to see Cale have that misfortune, but the pole position means a lot of money and a lot of prestige, so Im glad we won it. The crew got a real mental boost from it.

Yarboroughs fast lap broke the absolute Daytona record of 199.093 mph set Friday by Rick Roland in a 1977 Pontiac LeMans ARCA stock car. The ARCA cars are allowed to run larger engines than the NASCAR Grand National cars.

By The Associated Press Maryland, which enjoyed one of its biggest victories in history by upsetting Old Dominion, 82-66, last week, reversed its slide and jumped from eighth to sixth in tbe weekly major womens

Volleyball Teams Set

Two Pitt County Junior Volleyball teams, which have recently been formed, will participate in four Saturday tournaments, the first being this Saturday in Raleii.

The squads are made up of girls from across Pitt County in grades 6 though 12. Both teams are members of tbe United States Volleyball Association, recognized by the USOC (United States Olympic Committee) as the national governing body for volleyball.

Team members include: Patti Jean Keeter, Lisa Mills, Penny Corey, Lynn Keeter, Karen Barrett, Terri Spencer, Vonda Stokes, Martha Rollins, Rose Matthews, Faye Kite, Melanie Robinson, Rhonda Wallace, Rhonda Jackson, Juanita Murphy, Melissa Gamer, Rhonda Mills and Trellaney Boyd.

The junior volleyball program is coordinated by Pitt County Community Schools. For more information, call 752-6106.

basketbaUpoU.

This is the KXtth weekly poll since its start seven years ago and the Terr^qiins are tbe only team to have appeared in every one of them, plus the seven preseason ballots.

I think the key for us has been our pride as a team, said Maryland coach C!hris Weller. No (me thinks about individual statistics. We really have a lot of balance.

The Terrapins, vrim wit to tbe final four of tbe first NCAA womens tournament last year, visit No. 18 North Carolina State, Saturday, in an important Atlantic Coast Conference game.

When Maryland ai^peared in the first poll, the three names were Delta State, Wayland Baptist and Im-maculata. This week, the trio continues to be led by Louisiana Tech, which received all 50 first-place votes and 1,000 points from tbe national panel of coaches.

Southern California and Texas held the secimd and third spots.

Tennessee rolled past three nationally-ranked teams -N.C. State, Kentucky and Georgia last week to leap from sixth to fourth. But that position, which tbe VoLs held in this years preseason vote, may be short-lived after being upset by Old Dominion, 90-66, Monday night.

Tbe Monarchs had fallen from seventh to ninth after losing to Maryland last week.

Cheyney State held fifth with 806 points, (mly five behind Tennessee, while Kentucky dropped from fourth to seventh, receiving 742 points, three fewer than Maryland.

Kansas State moved one spot to eighth with 624 points, three more than Old Dominions total. Long Beach State had two victories to move back into tbe Top Ten 10 at the bottom of tbe group.

Georgias two losses to unranked Vanderbilt and Tennessee dropped it from 10th to 12th.

The Second Ten included, in order, Arizona State, Georgia, Rutgers, Auburn, Penn State, Mississippi, Louisiana State, North Carolina State, and Missouri. North Carolina and Ohio State tied for 20th.

NEW YOM (UPI) - The United Press Internatioiud Bosrd o Coaches Top 30 college basketball ratings (flrstiSace votes and records thitwtfi Feb. 13 in parwitheses):

1. Indiana (3)...............(im)    557

2.Nev.-LsVgB(2S ) .........(224))    552

INottlrCai^(S).........(2m>    ^

4. Houston (4).............(20-2)    465

5.VlMliila(l) ...............(iM)    JA

6. St. Johns (1).............(20-2)

7. Arkansas .......(20-1)

8. Louisville.................(21-3)

.Villanova .......... (l7^

10. Missouri................ (iM

11. UCLA...................am

.Kentucky  ..........{I6-5

13. Memphis St.,  .....(i8-3)

14. Georgetomi..............(im)

!S:a=::::::::::::::::!!l!

W. Teon.-Cauttuig...........{i7-3)

20. Oklahoma St. ...........(nm

By agmment with the National Asaociatkm of Basketball Coaches of the U^M Sutes, teams on probation by the NCAA and ineUgible Tor the NCAA Tournament are ineligible for Top 20 and nati^ c^ionship consideration by the UPI Board of Coadies. niose sucn for the 1982-83 season are; OMahoma aty, St. Louis and WichiU

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Carr Paces Wichita State To Victory

By Tbe Associated Press Antoine Carr could was operating as snux^ as a Rolls Royce.

Wichita States 6-foot-9 forward was running ot all cyfnders Monday ni^t as be paced the 15th-ranked Shockers to an 80^ Missouri Valley Conference victory over Drake,

Carr scored a season-high 31

points, 21 in tbe second half, blocked fve shots and intimidated Drakes shooters on several other attempts.

"He was outstanding, Wichita State Coach Gene SmithscH) said. He was terrific on defmse, phoimnaial on offoise. He was so good on internal defmse be took away everything that they bad on the inside.

Five others members of The Associated Press Top Twenty also were in actkm and all came through without too much sweat. Fifth-ranked Virginia breezed past Georgia Tedb 92-69, N0.7 Arkansas defeated Soutb^n Methodic 71-61, llth-ranked Knitucky downed Florida 73^1, No.l3 Meihphis State trimmed North Texas State 80-63 and

No.14 Georgetown trmnced Connecticut 77-60.

Carr hit on 10 of 12 shots and 11 of 12 free throws as the MVC-leading Shockers, 19-3 overall and 11-1 in tbe conference, beat Drake for tbe nth straight time.Aubrey Sherrod contributed 14 pmnts for Wichita and Xavier McDaniel added 13 to go with his 17 rebounds.

N.C. State Gets ACC Reprimand In Football Recruiting Incident

RALEIGH (AP) - The Atlantic Coast Conference has publicly reprimanded North Carolina State for violating rules in recruiting a football player, the league announced Monday.

ACC Commissioner Robert C. James said in a letter to the university that "tbe ctm-ference voted unanimously to publicly reprimand North Carolina State Univo^ity for vidations of tbe NCAA Con

tact Rule and for providing more than the allowable number of campus visits to a prospective studoit-athlete.

Clauston Jenkins, university (XHuisel, said tbe investigation

Crandall Wins Bout; Oaktree Will Refire

World-ranked Curtis Crandall overcame early first-round problems to knock out Larry McPhadden in the third round last night in main event of the Anheuser Busch Kick Assocation (KICK) kickboxing tournament here Tuesday evening at the Carolina Opry House. *

Crandall, ranked ei^t in the world and fighting out of Bill McDonalds Karate School, was in trouble in the first round, but then came on in the second round before

knocking out McPhadden in the third round.

McPhadden fights out of Wilmington.

Earlier, Demetrius "Oaktree" Edwards announced his retirement. Edwards, from Ayden, is a former PKA heavyweight champ. Edwards will help McDonald train kick boxers.

In other bouts last ni^t: Roosevelt Moss downed Junior Bowden by unanimous decision to'capture tbe N.C. middlewei^t crown. Moss is from Greenville and trains

with McDonald. Bowden is from Goldsboro.

Jerry Parker, also of McDonalds school, defeated Darryl Hubbard by unanimous decision. Hitobard is from Goldsboro.

Hashim Razzak, from Greensboro but fighting out of McDonalds school, scored a third-round knockout over James Lee of Goldsboro.

Chuck Johnson, also fighting out of McDonalds school, downed Tony Hester by majority decision. Hester is from Fairmont.

established that N.C. State violated tbe rules in the recruitment of one football player who enrolled at the university.

The player had been idai-tified as defensive lineman Reggie Singletary, a freshman from West Columbus High School.

Dr. Bruce Poulton, N.C. State chancellor, said he was not surprised by the reprimand.

To be truthful, we were expecting that, Poulton said Monday. I am obviously unhappy with it because it is an embarrassment to an otherwise outstanding un-iveristy.

But Poulton added that he thought it was a fair decision.

Jenkins said N.C. State must appear before the National Collegiate Athletic Association Committee on Infractions later this month on the matter, and could not comment further.

, Drake, playing at home, trailed 39-33 at balftime and kept pace with tbe Shockers until Carr took charge midway through tbe second half .Two baskets by Cot and a jump ^ by McDaniel gave Wichita sute a 5M3 lead with 11:49 left. Cot later contributed two baskets and a free throw during a run of seven straight points that expanded tbe lead to 66-49.

Drake Coach Gary Gamer caUed Carr the best player weve played against in my two years hwe. Tonight we were manhandled. Weve been in just about every game here, but not this one.

Top Ten

At Charlottesville, Va., Othell Wilson scored 20 points and four other Virginia players also hit in double figures in the Cavaliers rout

of Georgia Tech.Virginia, re^ bounding from its 64-63 setback last TtHirsday at North Carolina in which it blew a 16-point le^ down the stretch, clinched its fourth consecutive 20-victory season. The CavaliOT are 20-3 overall and 8-2 in tbe Atlantic Coast Conference.

Craig Robinson scored a season-high 17 points for Virginia, while Ralph Sampson added 14 points and Jim Miller had ILSampson, three points away from becoming tbe third Virginia player to score 2,000 points in a career, had only two in the first half, both on free throws. He did not take a shot from the floor in the first 20 minutes.

We came out Saturday and had an excdlrat practice, the kind of response you need

Junior High Basketball

'rANK HFNANARA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

OJI?-P06NP&BiXIMlDlJPO(J 'H/iFMWWTWJEX-PI?E&IP6MT,

Will ^ FAOMMEP B-Y tte UUGG , UEAPUNE& ABOUT Ml?. 66A1? SJWr'S

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A.G.Cox.........41

Chkod...........30

CHICOD - A.G. Cox Junior High of Winterville rolled ^ a pair of victories over Chicod yesterday.

In the girls game, Cox took a 38-17 victory. Bridgette Knox led Cox with 13 points with Trellany Boyd adding 12. Teresa Stancill led Chicod withei^t.

Cox boys gained a 41-30 victory over Chicod. Ricky Farrow had 14 points to pace Cox with Major Best adding ten. Otis Brinkley had 13 and Mike Mills, nine, to lead Chicod.

Wellcome........41

Whitfield.........28

GRIMESLAND-Wellcome and G.R. Whitfield split a pair of junior high school ba^et-ball games yesterday.

Wellcome won the boys game, 41-28. Ashley Sheppard led Wellcome with 14 points, while Shelton Boyd had 10 for Whitfield.

In the girls game, Whitfield came away with a 35-15 win. Linda Hardy led Whitfield with 12 points, while Clinunie Harris had eight to pace Wellcome.

Formvillo.........S8

Bethol...........44

FARMVILLE - Farmville, led by Kennedy Williams with 18 points, defeated Bethel, 5844, Monday.

In the girls game, Farmville defeated Bethel, 35-17.

after a game like that (North Carolina), said Virginia Coach Terry HoUand.

At Fayetteville, Ark., Alvin Robertson scored 21 points and DarreU Walker added 17 as Arkansas downed SoUhon Methodist aiKl boosted its Southwest Conference to 10-1, one game behind Houston The Razorbacks, 21-1 overall, pulled away in the second half when Robertson scored 12 points, Walker 10 and Joe KleinelOofhislS.

, SecoodTen

At Gainesville, Fla., Jim Master and reserve Kenny Walker scored 18 points each to lead Kentucky to a Southeastern Conference victory ov- Florida, whidi has have lost nine consecutive games to Kmtucky, dating back to 1979.0tber doubl^ figure scorers for the Wildcats were Derrick Hord with 14 points and Melvin Turpin with 12.

Florida Coach Norm 9oan called Kentucky the best team weve played in the Southeastern Conference all year, without a doubt.

At Denton, Texas, Keith Lee scored 24 points to lead Memphis State over North Texas State.Tbe 'Dgers, who led 36-29 at halftime, saw thdr lead dwindle to 4441 with 15:55 remaining and it was only 6541 with 5:02 remaining.

But a run of eight straigirt points put the game out of reach. Lee scored 18 poii4s to the second half and BoU^ Parks added 23 for the Hfters.

At Hartford, Dm., Pat Ewing, David Wingate and Mkbad Jackson each scored 15 points as Georgetown defeated Big East rival Coo-necUcut Ewings stuff with 9:03 left capped a streak that gave the Hoyas a 5646 lead after Connecticut bad pulled within 4946. Jackson then scored 11 points to tbe final three minutes.

In other SEC games, Odell MosteU^-s free throw with six seconds left iced Auburns 72-71 victory over Vanderbilt, while Bobby Lee Hurt scored 28 points and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead Alabama over Tennessee 90-78.

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SCOREBOARD

WAKH THE CBS EYENMG NEWS MITN DAN RATHER AT *:30RM

Rec Bosketboll

Midget Division

Pirates ..............7    8    4    222

Cavaliers............4    3    4    314

Leading scorers: PWesley Jackson 7, Nelson Galloway 5; C-Paul Powers 5, Mitch Mitchum 3.

Tarheels............4    4    3    2-13

Wildcats.............2    3    4    1-10

Leading scorers; TPatrick Joynet- 5; W-Blake Stallings 4.

A Division

Integon................35    5792

Cherrys...............43    44-87

Leading scorers: 1-Tony Gatlin 42, George Wilkerson 18; C Gordon Dunn 29, Richard Heller 22.

GVilla...............26    25-51

Fergusons............26    2955

Leading scorers: GDexter Owens 16, Ronald Coggins 15; F-Marty Belle 14, ron Redman 14.

AA Division

Attic  ...... 32    2961

Grady-White    .......30    23-55

Leading scorers; AGene Evans i 19, Mike Smith 13; GW-David Ward 15, WUlie Green 12.

AAA Division

Hustlers.............38    26-64

PCMH.................27    38-65

Leading scorers; HLonnie Payton 16, Danny Cannon 15; PC-James Dupree 21, Sirloin Daniels 15.    ;

TRW..................40    56-96

Pirates.................42    5597

Leading scorers: TRJames Brewington 30, Haywood Montgomery 25; PJesse Harris 38, Micky Hines 21.

Flamingo  ......16    5167

Wiz....................33    50-83

Leading scorers: FDKeno Farrow 23, Ben Daniels 10; W Andy Roberson 40, Vince Parker 18.

Bowliwg_

Burroughs Wdlcome

W L

High Hopes............50    30

Anns Angels..........48    32

The Fritos.............46    34

Carolina Cowboys 45    35

b:t,.................39    41

Unicorn Four......... 38    42

Ebony and Ivory ......37'.^    42W

Strike Force...........35    45

Pin Wreckers..........33ti    46V

Lolly Pops..............28    52

Men's high wme, BUI Hardison, 200; men? nigh series. Herb Kallweit, 516; womens high game, Mary Baker, 179; womens high series, JaneToothman, 451.

NHlStondiiifli

Wales CcBfemn Patrick Divisk

W L T OF GA PU

Philadelphia    36    14    7    235    15*    W

NY Isles    30    19    9    218    169    66

Washington    28    17    13    230    202    M

NY Rangers    24    25    8    209    205    56

New Jersey    11    35    12    160    ^    34

Pittsburgh    13    38    7    180    283    S3

Adams Dlviak

Boston    38    10    8    2    146    M

Montreal    31    i7    10    2B    266    72

26 23    9    247    237    61

_jffalo    25    21    11    210    1    61

Hartford    15    36    6    188    280    36

CampbeU Conference iMnlaDlvisiaa Chicago    36    16    7    253    205    79

Minn^U    29    15    13    236    204    71

St. Loills    19    '    11    206    227    49

Detroit    14    31    12    177    236    40

Toronto    14    30    10    200    236    38

SmyUKDtvUoa Edmonton    31    17    10    309    234    72

Calgary    24    25    9    238    239    57

Wliwpeg    22    29    7    214    242    51

Vancouver    18    27    11    202    221    47

Los Angeles    19    29    8    206    246    46

Mondays Games Montreal 4, Edmonton 2 St. Louise Birffak>4

Tuesdays Games Los Angeles at Hartford New York Islanders at Quebec Detroit at Pittsburgh MinnesoU at New Jersey Vancouver at Winnipeg

Wednesday iGamea Boston at Buffalo Washington at NY Rangers St. Louis at Toronto Calgary at Chicago

NBAStondinfls

EASTERN CONFERENCE AUantk Divisin

W LPct. GB PhUadelphU    43    7    .860    -

Boston    38    U

1 New Jersey

Washington    -

NewY^    22    28    .440    21

Central Division Milwaukee    33    18

Atlanta Detroit

Chicago    17    34    .333    16

Indiana    15    35    .300    171^

WESTERN OONFERENi^ MidwatDlvtalon

SanAntonio    31    21

Dallas Kansas City

Denver    25    27

Utah

Houston    -    -

Padflc Dtvisioii

Los Angeles    38    10

PorUand    29    21

Phoenix SeatUe

Golden sute    20    30    .400    19

SanDiego    17    35    .327    23

Monday s Games No gam^ scheduled

TiMdays Games Indiana at Chicago AUanU at Houston San Antonio at Los Angeles San Dk at Portland Washlnlkio at GoMrn SUU a Games

DENVER BRONCOS-Announced the of Bob Znan, linebacker

LOS ANGELES RAMS-Named John Robinson head coach.

NEW YORK GIANTS-Named Bob Ledbetter as offensive backiield coach United States FooUmU LMgue

ARIZONA WRANGLERS-^leased Kevin McLee,^runningback

BOSTON BREAlffiRS-Signed Dick Jauron, defensive back.

DENVER GOLD-Waived Chris Hobbs, running back, and A1 HiU,wide receiver.

LOS ANGLES EXPRES^Released Chuck Foreman, running back; Tim Lins and Ron Howard, tight ends; and Steve Johnson and Herman Parker, offensive guards.

HOCKEY    '

NattonMHockjw League

WASHINGTON CAPTTALS-Recalled Darren Veltch, defenseman, from Hershey of the American Hockey League

College Basketball

EAST

Boston U 82, New Hampshire 73

.760    5

33 18    .647    lOti

24 25    490    18Vi

___.647    -

24 26    .480    8tii

24 27    .471    9

_

S M    !510    4W

25    25    .500    5

.481    6

18    34    .346    13

10    40    .200    20

.792 -580 10 30    22    .577    10

28 23    .549    11'^

93

Duquesne 65, George Washington 62

Fairletgh Dickinson 85. Baltimore 74

Fordham70.Siena54

Georgetown 77, Connecticut 60

Hofstra74,Drexel58

Iona 81, Army 72

Manhattan 81, Lafayette 58

Navy 65, Loyola, Md. SO

Noruieakem 78, Niagara 74

Robert Morris 70, Wagner 68

Utica74,aevelaiidSt.59

West Vi^nia 108, Massachusetts 90

W Virginia St. 96, AMerson-Broaddus

Wheeling 72, W. Virginia Tech 63 Youngstown St.^B^Maware St. 86

Alabama 90, Tennessee 78 Appalachian St . 65, VMI61 Auburn 72.VandbUt 71 Campbell 83, Elon 68 Davidson 63, W. Carolina 61 E. Kentucky 67, Delaware 48 E. Tennessee St. 84, Furman 79 James Madison 46. American U 44 Kentucky 73, Florida 81 Livingston 62, DdU St. 57 Louisiana Tech 88, Lamar 79

Morehead St. 10^ Charleston, W. v a. m N Carolina A4T 73, Bethime-Cookman

68

S. Carolina St. 105, Florida A&M 104 Southern Tech 51, Ga. Southwestern 46 Southern U. 90. Miss. Valley 78 SW Louisiana 79, NE Louisiana 77.2 OT SW. Tennessee 85. Sewanee 63 Tn.-Chattano(^ 85, Citadel Tenn. Martin a, Troy St . 52, or Tulane 80,Florida St. 79,2 OT VaklosU . 81. N Alabama 76 Virola 92. GeorgU Tech 69 Va T^monweafih 68, JacksonvUle 61

MIDWEST

Chicago St. 68. S III.-EdwardsvUle51 Detroit 59, Oral Roberts 57 E. Illinois 60, Howard U. 59 Evansvilie74,St.Louis64 0hioU.63,DePaiil62.20T W Illinois 68, SW Mi^ouri 67 WichiUSt.80.Drake65 SOUTHWEST Angelo St. 61, Sam Houston St. 59 Arkansas 71. Southern Methodist 61 Memphis St . 80. N Texas St. 63 Praine View 71, Grambling69 Texas-Arlington 78, Texas-San Antonio

7

Texas-EI Paso 61, Air Force 55 Texas Southern 68, Alcorn St. 67, OT FAR WEST Boise St. 62, Montana 59 Oregon St. 62, Southern Cal 50 Wyoming 64, New Mexico 58

N.C. Scarebaord

Men's Basketball

Hampton Institute 71, J.C. Smith 67 Catawba 109, Atlantic Christian 82 N Carolina AAT 73, Bethune-Cookman

68

Gardner-Webb 95, N. Carolina-AshevUle82 Campbell 83, Elon 68 Belmont Abbey 92. Mars Hill 82 (3 OT) Coker 98, Methodist 94 St. Andrews 76, Greensboro Coll. 59 Livingstone 86, Fayetteville St. 80

Womens Basketball

N Carofina-Asheville 79. Gardner-Webb 49 Catawba 71. Davidson 46

Can Timothy save the tiserf

Hes a runaway rcx;k star on an island with a 400 lb. tiger and a ruthless huntert

THE HUNTER AND A w

THEROCKSTAR OPM|

Starring TIMOTHY HUTTON

(Ordinary People" and "Taps)

77

ANDY GRIFFITH JOHNNY CASH

The Kingijom. a backwoo(js dynasty of r moonshine and murder I This is the story    \

of the man who ran it.    |

and the man who crushed it.

IIHI

Wrestling

N. Carolina 27. Virginia 10

Denver at PUMdeiphia Dallas at Ctovciand Detroit at Milwaukee ChicagD St Indiana Phooin vs. Kansas City, at St. Louis San Antonio at UUdi Borton at Seattle

_i__

Tronxoctions

BASEBALL American Laagw

BOSTON RED SOX-Signed Glen Hoffman. Julio Valdez, Jackie Gutirrez, shorUtopa; Steve Crawford. John Tudor. Brian Denman, Brian Kingman, pitchen

^"'Ti35riu5iie

CHICAGO CUBS-Slffwd Lee Smtth, pitcher, to a one-year contract. MONTREAL EXPOS-Slgned Jeff

METS-Sliged Rick Owribey, Walt TorreU and^cott Dye,

NaOoud BaafeatbaO AandaUon

SAN DIEGO CLIPPERS-Slined Bobby Grom, forward, to a l(May contract, and Lowes Moore, fsard, to a standard player contract for the remainder of the aei^

FOOtBAU.

BUFFAWMllS5!ame?Eb Zcman drienaivecoardtaator.

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12-The DikUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C -Tuesday. February 15,1983

QUAD SQUAD - Cheryl Goldman shows her quadnqilets, from left, Arianna, David, Joshua and Rachel. The New York quadruplets were bom last September, and provided inspiration for a script idea for the CBS soap opera As The World

Turns. When an attempt was made to find a set of cpiads for the part, an agent suggested the Goldmans. Weeks later, CBS realized that the quadnqilets who had inspired their own parts were in fact acting them out. (AP Laserphoto)

Producer-Director Curtis Is Basking In Success Of 'Winds

TV Log

For complete TV programming In-formetton. coneuH your laeeMy TV SHOWTIME from Sundays DaHy Reflector.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

TUESDAY 7 00 Jokers Wild

7 30 Tic Tac Dough

8 00 Walt Disney

9 00 Artovie M OO News9

II X Late/Movie WEDNESDAY

5 00 Jim Bakker

6 00 Carolina 8 00 Morning

8 35 News

9 25 News 10.00 Pyramid 10: X Child's Play II M Price Is

WITN-TY-Ch.7

TUESDAY

7 00 Jefferson 7,X Family Feud

8 X A Team

9 X Bare E ssence

10 X St. Elsewhere

11 X News

11 X Tonight Show

12 ;X Letterman WEDNESDAY

5:X Addams X Early Today

6 25 Almanac 7:X Today 7:25 News

7 X Today

8 25 News a X Today

9 X R Simmons 9:X All in the

10 X Facts Of Lite 10 X Sale of the

II X Wheel of

11 X Hit A/Ian

12 X News

12 X Search For I X Days Of Our 3:X Another WId. 3:X Fantasy 4:X Dark Shadows

4 X Wild West

5 X Lie Detector i:X News

A X NBC News 7.x Jefterson

7 X Family Feud

8 X Real People

9 X Facts of Life

9 X Family Ties

10 X Quincy

11 X News H:X Tonight

12 X Letterman I: X Overnight

WCn-TV-Ch.12

TUESDAY 7 X 3's Company

7 X Alice

8 X Happy Days

8 X Laverne

9 X 3's Company

9 X 9to5

10 X Hart to Hart

11 X Action News n X Nightllne

12 X Harry 0 I X Mission

WEDNESDAY 5 X Bewitched 5 X J Swaggart A X AG Day A X News 7:X GoodAAorning A: 13 Action News A: 55-Action News 7:25 Action News 8 25 Action News 9:X Phil Donahue

IO:X Good Times

10 X Laverne

11 X Love Boat

12 X Family Feud 12 X Ryan's Hope

I X My Children 3:X One Life

3 X Gen. Hospital

4 X Carnival

4 30 BJ.'LOBO

5 X People's A:X Action News A:X ABC News 7:X 3's Company 7:X Alice

8 X GoldAAonkey 9:X Fall Guy

10 X Dynasty il:X Action News

11 X ABC News 12:X HarryO

I X Mission 2:X EarlyEdition

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

TUESDAY 7:X Report 7:X Almanac l:X Nova 9:X Playhowe IO:X Prlie Winners . IO:X Neighbors 11 :X A. Hitchcock II X AAorecambe WEDNESDAY

7 :45 AM Weather 8:K Gen. Ed. '

8 :35 Music Box 1:50 Readalongl 9:X Sesame Stree lO X Thinkabouf 10:15 Terra

10:35 Solutions

10 55 NASA

11 X Footsteps

II X On the Level II 45 Write On

1I:X Readalong2 I2:X Cents 12:15 Animal 12:45 Electric Co.n 1:15 All About You l:X Raisin'Up 1:45 Music &AAe 2:X Fast Forward 2:X Nutrition 3:X Adult Basic 4:X Sesame St 5:X AAr Rogers 5:X 32 iContact A X Dr . Who A:X Fast Forward 7:X Report 7:X Stateline 8:X Creatures 9:X Titanic

10 X Soundstage

11 X Hitchcock II X AAorecambe

ALL SEATS V SO FIRST SHOW EVERYDAY INSTRUCTORS OF DEATH (R)

. SHOWS T-9

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a true prison story!

CBisKTtjmilLE

SHOWS 3-7-9

riTT.riAZ* SHorriNC cintc*

ENDS THUR!

THEMAN kifik

SHOWS 3-7:15-9:15

N-O-W SHOWING

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SHOWS 3-7:10-9

By JERRY BUCK AP Television Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) -Producer-direCtor Dan Curtis spent four years and spent million shaping Herman Wouks The Winds of War Into a one-week prime-time blitz, but he says

it all paid off when the ratings came in.

The 18-hour, seven-part ABC miniseries about the coming of World War II appeared certain Monday to run second only to Roots as the highest-rated TV miniseries.

I2:X News9 12 X Young and

1 X As The World

2 X Capilol

3 X Guiding Light

4 X Waltons

5 X Hillbillies

5 X Andy Griffith A X News 9 A X News 7 X Joker'sWild

7 X Tic Tac Dough

8 X Basketball 10 X TBA IIXNews9

II:X AAovie

MICHAEL LANDON WEDS Actor-producer Michael Landon and his bride Cindy Clerico are shown at their wedding Monday at Landons Malibu home. The couple met three years ago when Clerico worked as a makeup artist mi Little House on the Prairie. It is Landons third marriage, Clericos first. About 30 relatives and friends attended the ceremony. (AP Laserphoto)

Wednesday Night

Shtimp & Chablis"

All CM The Tender, Succulent Shrimp That You Can Eat. Its Your Choice; Broiled. Boiled Or Fried. As If That Is Not Enough. Well Also Give You AH The Chablis You Care To Drink. Treat Yourself To Our 40 Item Salad Bar. Choice Of Potato. And A

VegetableFor The Low Price Of 8.95A Deal Too Good To Let Slip By.

While At The Ramada, Dont Forget To Visit The Veranda Lounge, Where You Can Dance The Night Away To The Finest In Live Entertainment.

756-2792

Dinner HounS P.M.. 10 P.M.

I said at one point I knew more people would see this than if it was a (theatrical) feature but that didnt mean anything to me, Curtis said Monday. The thought that it would be seen for one week and then be gone was a very depressing thought.

But there is no way in the world the experience of the past week can be matched. I was absolutely wrong. It was a week when everybody was watching it and talking about it. That was a kick! That was an experience! No feature film In the world can match that.

The historic epic stared Robert Mitchum, Ali Mac-Graw and Jan-Michael Vincent and told the story of one Navy family in the years leading lip to war.

ABC said the Sunday overnights from six monitored cities gave the concluding episode a rating of 47.4 and a share of 60, the highest for the seven nights. The national ratings, which closely parallel the overnights, gave the series an average rating of 38.6 and a share of 54 for the chapters through Thursday night.

Roots, telecast by ABC in 1977, had an average rating of 51.1 and a 71 share. NBCs Shogun, telecast in ,1980, had a rating of 32.6 and a share of 51. It apparently will drop to third place.

A rating measures the percentage of all TV sets that are tuned in to the show, while a share reflects the percentage of sets in use that are tuned in to the program.

The Winds of War could give ABC a record network victory.

Johnny Cash Emerging As Right

Hombre For Gary Cooper's Roles

By FRED ROTHENBERG AP Television Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - His voice sounds like its bounced .along too many dusty roads. His movements are like a hound dog who, found the shade on a lazy summer day. His acting is a ci^ between sleeping and telling campfire' yams.

Still, Johnny Cash is a Presence, and, untU somebody more true blue comes along, hes the right hombre to be Gary Cooper. Proof comes tonight in CBS Murder in Coweta County, a relentlessly captivating story (based on a 1948 killing in Georgia) and framed by rich, drawling Southern atmosphere.

Cash plays Sheriff Lamar Potts of Coweta County, a laconic man with neon ties who has a preachers devotion to law and justice. There arent too many men who can get away with knocking on a door and saying, Its the law. Cash does. But barely.

The dialogue, you see, is the weakest link in this tight,

tense drama. When Cash tells a crooked sheriff -You sold that badge, the same badge I stand behind you think this might be a lyric from a Johnny Cash ballad.

On the other side of the

law, and in the next county, is John Wallace. Hes a vile man man with a toothy smile. Cross him, and hell pull the gun from his belt without any thought or cons-^ cience. He owns Meriwether 'County. ,

Andy Griffith, who once

Night Exercise Killed Soldier

FORT BRAGG, N.C. (AP) - A 25-year-old soldier participating in a night training exercise in Panama drowned after he jumped from a helicopter into the CTiagres River, officials at Fort Bragg said Monday.

The body of Spec. 4 Ronald A. Nelson was found Simday near where he jumped into the river on Saturday.

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played the folksy sheriff of Mayberry on The Andy Griffith Show, is oh so delectably nasty. The man can act, and he seems to relish his new black-hat career. He was the vengeful father in Murder in Texas several years ago.

Its John Wallaces misfortune and miscalculation to have done his latest killing across the border in Coweta (Cash pronounces it like a Japanese city, Kyeeda).

Potts is a tracker, says a Wallace henchman.

He cant find a body if theres no body, says Wallace, who disposed of the corpse in a state that requires an evidentiary stiff to make a murder charge stick.

Its a great battle of will and wits, culminated by a crackling courtroom scene, with real Georgian townfolk hanging inside and outside the building. The film, shot in Georgia, sets out to be simple entertfiinment - and succeeds.

scares Carl and causes friction. Hie hardest part about being married to a black man is being married, says Sheila.

But, in week three, the story gets strange. Years later, it returns to En^and and fociifies excludvriy (i Jill. Carl and Sheilas rebellious dau^ter. At this

point, the entire project takes a disjointed, dissatisfying turn.

The disn^ted flow could stem from this being the first true co-productkMi between the BBC and pikilic television. Both organizations contributed equally in resources, staff and artistic control.

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This weeks American Playhouse is not so sure what it wants to be. The File on Jill Hatch, a three-part miniseries, works well the first two weeks as a story about an interracial couple who meet and marry in England during World Warn.

Carl Hatch (Joe Morton) is a sophisticated black American soldier. Sheila (Frances Tomelty) is white, from a blue-collar family. When the war ends, their war against discrimination is just beginning.

Tonights episode traces the reactions of Sheilas family and countrymen. Next week, in the strongest segment, the couple comes to the United States, where miscegenation laws in the South force Carl to don a chauffers uniform when they travel in public.

Carls mother (Gloria Foster) is cold, not because of race but because of Sheilas limited reach. She has no wings, Carls mother tells him. Shes not up to you.

The story then moves north, where Carl furthers his education and Sheila gets a job. This Independence

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Jobless, Hungry Drifters Said Easy Prey For The Predators

PEANUTS

SALLV, eerup.'WRE 60NNA8E LATE FOR SCHOOL!

UNUSPIONTSeCMEA \ALBniN,ANP HE BROKE W HEART AHPfM NEVER 60M6 TO SCHOOL A6A1N!

ANP IF YOU SEE MV suer AN'SOUR 6ABB00, PUNCH HIM IN THE NOSE!

By MARK S. SMITH Aswdated Pres Writer

LONDON (AP) - Jobless.

' homeless, hungry and down to his last shilling, a young man is shown a little kindness by a chap in the ptR) who offm him a place to kip for the ni^t. Laughiiw and joking, the two leave^ together.

And the youth is never seen again.

For this citys estimated 90.000 homeless, the discovery of hacked-iq> human remains at two north London addresses last week was a Jarring reminder of something they already knew; to be destitute and alwie in London makes one the easiest of easy prey.

Police say its just this kind of young drifter who was lured to the houses in Cricklewood and Muswell Hill districts. There the victims were strangled and their cori^ cut up, the pieces either boiled or burred. According to the pdice, as many as 17 youths met their end this way during eight years.

A 37-year-old civil servant, Dennis Nilsen, has been charged with the murder of the only victim yet identified - Stephen Sincjair, 20, who moved to the big city after growing restless at his foster parents home in rural Perthshire, Scotland.

We dossed together wj and off for about two years, the Daily Star quoted 22-year-old Jack Galler as sajdng.

Galler left his home in Milton Keynes, 45 miles northwest of Londmi, at age 17, the Star said, and he and

lig Sayings flan Fails

r BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) ' - When the city bought garbage trucks thpt could be

> (grated by one man instead I of four, it seemed a sure bet ' theyd save money.

But now Uie idea has been ; trashed and Birmingham is looking for a way to dispose r of the trucks.

. Mayor David Arrington ' plans to ask the City Council . today to approve a contract ' with a bndter who will try to unload them.

- The city has been trying for months to sell the two . trucks, which it has come to regard as white elephants. ^The trucks are so big they

> cant negotiate hilly, narrow "alleys.

The equipment was bought ;;;two years ago for $242,000 after an aide to the mayor estimated the new system .could pick up garbage 33 -percent more cheaply, mainly by reducing each .route from four workers to one.

Now the city would be happy to sell the trucks for $150,000.

Originally, the councils staff recommended against buying the trucks. At the time. Bill Baker, the cmincU administrator, said the citys garbage coUection system was efficient.

If its not broke, dont fix it, he said.

Sinclair used to bump into each other in hostds, sotq) kitchens, alleyways.

I didnt mind kipping down alongsi(te Stephen, it quoted Galler as saying. He was a quiet bloke, innocent if you like.

Sinclairs d^th shocked the informal community of drifters, Galler said. Everyone at all the regular homeless places is talking about it. For the first time since Ive been sleeping rough, I feel bloody scared. Sleeping rough is what vagrants do when they cant even afford their kip, m-place to sle^.

CHAR, the Campaign for Homeless and Rootless, estimates that two of every three drifters spend eaph night on part benches, in subway statkuis, along the River Thames Embanlunent wherever they can find a ^ce to curl up.

In the last few years, the recession has led to a substantial increase in the number of people with nowhere to live, says CHARS director, Chris Holmes.

The national unemployment rate is 13.8 percent and worse in the central and northern industrial parts of England. So many youngsters pull up what few stakes they have and move on in search of jobs. Most find their way eventually to London.

London is a mecca, said Lisa Powell, a worker at the Piccadilly Advice Center in the sleazy Soho district.

The vast majority come from stable backgrounds and are seriously looking for work. The problem is that they are unrealistic about it. They expect to find a job with a good wage and to get cheap accommodation without any trouble.

But food and money run out, kips at scarcer, and

colds, bronchitis and sores plague those who sleq> out in the dank night. The drifters lose ties to family and friends.

Last year, Scotland Yard, the Lon(fa)n police headquarters, handled 5,948 reports of missing people.

London p^nts a vast problem by virtue of its size and by virtue of the sort of anonymity everybody has in the city and the sort of attractions that exist, said Roy Ellis, who heads the missing persons bureau.

Though Ellis said his department clears up 80 percent of the cases, many people disappear into Londons seedy underbelly forever, it seems. Ellis has unsolved cases dating to 1959.

After years as a busker, or street musician, Ralj^ McTell wrote about su^ blind triKt in bis song, Streets of London.

Part of it goes;

How can you teU roe youre lonely And say for you that the sun ckm't shine?

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H-The Daily Renector. Greenville. N.C -Tuesday. Febniary 15.19S3

PUBLIC NOTICES

NOTICE

Havino qualified as Executor of the estate of Mamie Williams Sim pkins late of Piff Countv North ' Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased fo present them to the undersigned Executor on or before

July 25. 13 or this notice or same ____________________

will be pleaded in bar of t^ir To LARRY ALFONZA HOOKS

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed on the 1st day of February 1983, in the above entitled special pro ceeding The nature of the relief be ing sought is the adaption of the minor child above referenced You are reouired fo make defense to such pleading not later than the 27th day of /March. 1983 whkh said date IS forty days after the date of this first publication of notice herein and upon your failure fo do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought This the 3rd day of February, 1983 AAATTOX& DAVIS, P A Gary B Davis Attorney for Petitioners P O Box 686

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Tel No (919 ) 758 3430 February 15. 22. Akarch 1,1983

FILENO 81 CvD 1770 FILM NO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON Director Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel DIANNES LLOYD VS

LARRY ALFONZA HOOKS NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION

recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate

payment

f h IS 21 St day of January 1983 Hilton E Boyd 1501 Brownlea Drive Greenville North Carolina 27834 E xecutor of the estate of Mamie Williams Simpkins, deceased

Jan 25 Feb I 8 15 1983

FILE NO 82SP436 FILM NO

IN THE GENE RAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN RE Foreclosureof Deedot Trust executed by James A. McMahon and wife Karen B McAAahon dafed November 2. 1978, and of record in Book I 47 page 47 Pitt CounW Public Registry by Kenneth E Haigler Subsituted Trustee (by in strument recorded in Book H 51 page 155 Pitt County Public i Registry)

Notice of sale of land

UNDER DEEDOF TRUST Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that cer tain deed of trust dated November 2, 1978 executed by James A. McMahon and wife Karen B McAAahon, and duly recorded in the Offibe of the Register of Deeds for Pitt County North Carolina, in Book I 47 page 47, in which E. Hoover Taft Jr was named Trustee. (Ken neth E Haigler having been duly substituted as successor trustee by instrument recorded in Book H 51, page 155 Pitt County Registry), default having been made in the pay ment of the indebtedness thereby secured and pursuant to the de mand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured thereby and after notice and hearing and order authoriiing foreclosure to proceed by the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County dated January 26, 1983, and done in accordance with Section 45 21 16 of the General Statutes of North Carolina, the undersigned Substituted Trustee will, at 12:00 Noon on February 17, 1983 at the front door of the Pitt County Cour fhouse offer for sale fo the highest bidder tor cash at public auction, that certain real property and the improvements, if any located thereon described as lying and being in Pitt County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows

BEGINNING t a point in the southern right of way of Tupper Drive said point beir^ the northeast corner of that certain lot conveyed by deed from D. G Nichols, ef als, fo James A McMahon and wife. Karen B McAAahon dated October 24, 1977, and running thence S 23-33 E. 311.90 feet to the center line of Vepco right of way, thence S 89-08 E. and with the said centerline of the V^o right of way 228 72 feet to the Taft line; thence with the Taft line N. 11 05-04 E 75 68 feet to a corner, thence N 47 36 25 W (N.R.) 404.39 feet to the right of way of Tupper Drive, fhence with the southern and eastern right of way line of Tupper Drive S.

50 15 35 W. 90feet (achorddisfance) to the point of BE(jlNNING. and being all of Tract 5 B as shown on map prepared by Rivers and Associates, Inc C. E entitled "Property of Northside Commercial Center," containing 1.50 acres.

The above described property be mg subject to a 12 foot wide ease ment reserved for drainage and underground utilities and being located along the southern right of way line of the aforementioned pav ed road Tupper Drive This con veyance is also made subject to all right of way easements to Virginia Electric and Power Company of record in the office of the Register of Deieds of Piff County which relate to the property above conveyed.

Reference is hereby made fo deed dated October 10 1978 from D. G. Nichols et als to James A. McMahon and wife. Karen B. McMahon The improvemenfs if any on said property are included in the sale. Said sale will be made subject to all ad valorem taxes and any oufstan ding governmental assessments, building restrictions and easements of record The last and highest bidder at the sale will be required to make a cash deposit of ten percent (10%) of the hrst one thousand dollars of the bid price and five percent (5%) of the balance of the bid price at said sale. This the 26th day of January. 1982.

Kennefh E Haigler

Substituted Trustee Tatt Taft & Haigler Attorneys at Law P O Box 588

Greenville North Carolina 27834 Phone (919) 752 2000 February 8, 15 1983

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seekir^ relief against you has been filed in the above enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) fo establish your paternity of the minor child Donfa Sharpe, (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance fo or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of iudgement, (3) to obtain an order for prospective support tor such child, and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than /March 28. 1983. and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will af^ly to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983

EVERETT & CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 Soutn Washington Street P O Box 1220 Greenville. N.C 27835 1220 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 February 15. 22; March 1, 1983

FILE NO.82CvD 1233 FILM NO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON.

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

MINNIE PEARL FRANK VS.

CHARLIE FRANK, JR.

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION ToCHARLIE FRANK, JR TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seekir^ relief against you has been filed in the above enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of the minor children Jessie Earl Frank and Willie Junior Frank up to the time of entry of judgment, (2) to obtain an order for prospective support for such children; and (3) to recover the costs (including reasonable at torney's tees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than AAarch 28    1983, and upon your

failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apjsly to the Court for The relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 February 15,22; March 1,1983

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION FILENO 83SP49 IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK northcarolina

PITT COUNTY IN RE

S , a Minor Child TO JOHN LLOYD or JOHN DOE, the biological father of a female child born on or abouf December 26, 1980 in Greensboro, Guilford Coun ty Norfh Carolina TAKE NOTICE thaf a pleading seeking relief againsf you has been filed on the 1st day of February 1983, in the above enfitled special pro ceeding The nature of the relief be inq sought is the adoption of the mirwr child above referenced You are reguired to make defense to such pleaoing not later than the 20th day of March, 1983 which said date IS forty days after the date of this first publication of notice herein and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought This the 3rd day of February 1983 /MATTOX & DAVIS, P A Gary B. Davis Attorney for Petitioners P O Box 686

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Tel. No. (919 ) 758 3430 February 8,15, 22,1983 ______

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION FILE NO 83-SP 48 IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION before THE CLERK

NORTHCAROLINA

pittcounty IN RE.

J , a Minor Child TO JOHN LLOYD or JOHN DOE, the biological father of a male child born on or bouf July 1, 1979, in Greensboro. Guilford County. North Carolina

FILE N0.82CvD1229 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON.

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

SHIRLEY STATON VS

WILLIE J. WILLIAMS

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: WILLIE J. WILLIAMS TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in' the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Monique Staton; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to 6r for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make detense to such pleading not later than March 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT 8i CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 Soofn Washington Street P O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C..27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 4257 February 15.22, AAarch 1,1983

FILE NO. 82CvD 1065 FILM NO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION

northcarolina

PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

ALICE VENA WIGGINS VS.

ARTHUR LEE PARKER

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PRfXESS BY PUBLICATION To: ARTHUR LEE PARKER TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief againsf you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Latoya Michelle Wig gins; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such chi la; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading nof later than March 28, 1983. and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for The relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983

EVERETT&CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper. II Attorneys (or Plaintiff 2(X) Soutn Washington Street P.O Box 1220 Greenville, N.C 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 February 15, 22, AAarch 1,1983

/

FILE NO. 82CvD852 FILM NO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON. Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex relPUBLIC NOTICES

GERALDINE EDWARDS VS

ROGER LEE BUNCH

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To ROGER LEE BUNCH TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child (Jominko Lashiette Ed wards, (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child im to the tirne of entry of judgment. (3) fo obtain an order for prospective support for such child, and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable at torney's fees) of such action You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than AAarcb 2 1983 and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for The relief sought This the fifteenth day of February 1983;

EVERETT & CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P 0 Box 1220 Greenville. N.C 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 4257 February 15, 22. AAarch 1, 19^

FILE N0.82CvD855 FILM NO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION northcarolina

PITTCOUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON,

Director Pitt County Department of Social Ser -ex rel.

CA NDELOISWHICHARDv:

JO. I HOAAAS TAFT

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To JOHN THOAAAS TAFT TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Thomas Johtrell \A/hichard, (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or tor the benefit of such child up fo the time of

entry of judgment, (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable at torney's fees) of such action You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than /March 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so. the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT & CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys tor Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 4257 February 15, 22, AAarch 1,1983

FILE N0.82CvD760 FILM NO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Ser vices ex rel.

BRENDA L.CRANDELL VS.

DARRYL BUSH

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: DARRYL BUSH TAKE NOTICE |feaf a pleading seeking relief agaiim you has been filed in the above-entitled action The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Shoneka Nechelle Crandell; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable at torney's fees) of such action.

You are required to makdetense to such pleading not later than AAarch 28, 1983. and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVE RETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harj>er, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 2(X) Soutn Washington Street P 0 Box 1220 Greenville. N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 4257 February 15, 22; AAarch 1, 1983

FILE NO. 82CvD 758 FILM NO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON.

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Servicesexrel.

MARY LEE McCarter VS.

JOHNNIE RAY FOX

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: JOHNNIE RAY FOX TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action The nature of the relief sought is (l) to establish your paternity of the minor child Charlemagne Raykista McCarter; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the Benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable at torney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading nof later than AAarch 28 1983. and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P 0. Box 1220 Greenville, N C, 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 4257 February 15, 22; AAarch 1,1983

FILE NO. 82CvD739 FILM NO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

GLORIA JEAN EVANS VS.

FRANK JEROME STREETER NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: FRANK JEROME STREETER TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the aboveentitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Charquata AAonique Evans; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or tor the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child, and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than /March 28, 1983. and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for The rellef sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper II Attorneys for Plaintiff    I

200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N C 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 4257 February 15, 22, AAarch 1,1983

PUBLIC NOTICES FILE NO.82CvD586

Pit A AIA IN THE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

ZELDA DENISE FARMER VS

FRANKLIN EUGENE EPPS NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: FRANKLIN EUGENE EPPS TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief againsf you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Tamika Joy Farmer; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entrf of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) fo recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense fo such pleading nof later than AAarch 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for The relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P 0 Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 4257 February 15, 22, March 1,1983

FILENO 81 CvD64 FILMNO IN THE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

SAVANNAHP BARRETT VS

TIMOTHY BARRETT

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: TIMOTHY BARRETT

TAKE NOTICE thaf a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of the minor child Chianti Antwan Barrett up to the time of entry of judgment;

(i) to obtain an order tor prospec five support for such child; and (3) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense fo such pleading not later than AAarch 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Han>er, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 February 15,22, AAarch 1,1983

FILENO 81 CvD333 FILMNO IN THE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Servicesexrel.

BRENDAR JOYNER VS

KENNETHR JOHNSON

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: KENNTHR JOHNSON TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Alkiwann Tyrone Johnson; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child to the time of entry of judgment, (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child, and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than AAarch 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the rel lef sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983

EVERETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P 0. Box 1220 Greenville. N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919)758-4257 February 15,22, AAarch 1,1983

FILENO 81 CvD330 FILM NO IN THE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON, . Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

ARLINDAPARKER

VS

KENNETHR JOHNSON

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: KENNETH R JOHNSON TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Angela V. Parker; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit iSf such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than March 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you wilt apply to the Court for the rel lef sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919)758 4257 February 15, 22; AAarch 1,1983

FILE NO.82CvD471 FILMNO.

IN THE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County (Department of Social Services ex rel CARRIS JEAN HARRIS VS.

ROBERT HARRIS. Ill

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: ROBERT HARRIS, III TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-enfifled action. The nature of the relief sought is (I) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of the minor child Robert Harris, IV up to the time of entry of judgment; (2) to obtain an order for prospective support tor such child; and (3) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than March 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor The relief sought.

PUBLIC NOTICES

This the fifteenth day ef FebrtMry, 1983.

EVE RETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper. II Aftorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 37834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 February 15.33. AAarch 1.1983

FILE NO. nCvD3 FILMNO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRiaCOURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON,

Director, Piff County Department of Social Servicesexrel.

LAVERNE CHAMBERLAIN VS.

CURTIS RAY BRIGHT

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: CURTIS RAY BRIGHT TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the abpve-enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Tamara Yvette Chamberlain; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child to the time of enfry of judgment; (3) fo obtain an order for prospecfive support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's foes) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than March 28, 1983. and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Haiper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 2(X) Soutn Washington Street P.O Box 12

Greenville. N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 February 15,22, AAarch 1,1983

FILEN0.82CvD234

FILMNO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Servicesexrel.

LINDA FAYE WALSTON VS.

HER/MAN STREETER

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To:HERAAAN STREETER TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief againsf you has been filed in the above-enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Tanisha Lynette Walston; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable at torney's fees) of such action. ,

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than /March 24 1983. and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVE RETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Haroer, II Aftorneys for Rainfiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 37834 Telephone; (919) 758-4257 February 15,22; AAarch 1,1983

FILEN0.82CVvD182

FILMNO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICTCOURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Servicesexrel.

JUDY LOVITT ROACH VS.

RONNIE NELSON

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To; RONNIE NELSON TAKE NOTICE thaf a pleading seekir^ relief against you has been filed in the above-enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to esfabiish your paternity of the minor child Shawn Felica Lovitt; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than AAarch 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February,

EVERETT 4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Rainflff 2(X) South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 February 15,22, AAarch L 1983

FILEN0.82CvDl81 FILMNO.

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRia COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON, , Director, Pitt County Department of Social Servicesexrel.

MILDRED L. HUNTER VS.

LENNON EARL SMITH

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: LENNON EARL SMITH TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Travis Sentel Hunter; (2) to recover all sums paid in pubic assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospecfive support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than March 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT 4 CHEATHAM. ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II-Attorneys for Raintlff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 February 15,22: AAarch 1,1983

FILE NO,81 CvD 1867 FILMNO.

IN THE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Piff County Department of Social Servicesexrel.

TAAAMA LEE WILKES VS.

HENRY LEE MILLER, JR. NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION

To: HENRYLEEMILLER, JR.

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor children Donna Faye Wilkes and James Henry Wilkes; (2) to recover all sums paid in pubicPUBLIC NOTICES

assistance to or tor the benefit of such children up to the time of entry of judgment, (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such children; and (4) fo recover the costs (including reasonable at torney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading nof later than AAarch 28, 1983. and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you wnl apply to the Court for the relwf sought.

This the fifteenth day of February. 1983.

EVERETT 4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Raintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 February 15. 22; March 1,1983

FILE NO. II CvD 1304 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRia COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Departnwnt of Social Servicesexrel.

AAARILYNK. WILLIAMS VS.

JOSEPH WILLIAMS, JR.

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: JOSEPH WILLIAMS, JR.

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action The nature of rhe relief sought is (1) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of the minor children Kevin Kennedy, Jeremy Wendell Williams, (Suinton Montez Williams, and Yolanda Nicole Williams up to the time of en try of judgment. (2) to obtain an order for prospective support for such children, and (3) to recover the costs (including reasonable at torney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than AAarch 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for The rel lef sought. ,

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Raintiff 200 Sioutn Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 February 15,22, March 1,1983

FILE NO. 81 CvD 1864 FILMNO.

INTHE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

OPHELIA S. CLARK VS.

HENRY JOHNSON

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: HENRY JOHNSON

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seekitig relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of the minor child /Margie Teresa Johnson up to the time of entry of judgment;

(i)to obtain an order tor prospective support for such child; and (3) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such acfion.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than /March 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 Soutn Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758-4257 February 15,22; AAarch 1,1983

FILE NO. 81 CvD 1863 FILMNO.

INTHE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Servicesexrel.

BRENDA COREY VS.

WILLIAM McKINLEYSTANCIL NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: WILLIAM McKINLEY STAN-CIL

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the rel ief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Lakisha AAonique Corey; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order tor prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than AAarch 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Haiper, II Aftorneys for Raintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 February 15,22; AAarch 1,1983

FILE NO.81 CvD 1752

C11 AA MA

INTHE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICTCOURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

BRENDIA KAY BRYANT VS.

GREGORY TYRONE TAYLOR NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: GREGORY TYRONE TAYLOR TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Erik (Jernard Bryant;

(2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than March 28, 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 fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT 4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 2( South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone; (919) 758-4257 February 15,22; AAarch 1,1983

FILE NO. 81 CvD 1611 FILMNO.

IN THE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICTCOURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON. Director, Pitt County Department of Social Servicesexrel.PUBLIC NOTICES

AAARY ANN FAULKNER

VS.

BILLY LYNN FAULKNER NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: BILLY LYNN FAULKNER TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of the minor child Elmer Eugene Faulkner up to the time of entry of judgment;

(i) to obtain an order for prospec five support for such child, and (3) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than AAarch 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, (I Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 sioutn Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N C. 27834 Telephone; (919 ) 758 4257 February 15,22, AAarch 1,1983PUBLIC NOTICES

FILE NO.81 CvD 1579 FILMNO.

INTHE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department ot Social Servicesexrel. DELORISSHACKLEFORD VS.

RAYAAOND WILTON SMITH NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: RAYAAOND WILTON SMITH TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Angela Marie Shackleford; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than March 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVE RETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 2(X) South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758-4257 February 15, 22, AAarch 1,1983

FILE NO. 81 CvD 1577 FILMNO.

INTHE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

DELORESM. BURNEY VS.

RONALD WILLIAMS

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: RONALDWILLIAMS TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish" your paternity of the minor child Kesha Lavett Burney;

(2) to recover all sumspaid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than March 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983:

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Hanjer, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257    '

February 15, 22; March 1,1983

FILE NO, 81 CvD 1574 FILMNO.

I N THE GENE RAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICTCOURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

ANNIE BELL EDWARDS VS.,

LARRYALPHONZOHOOKS NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: LARRY ALPHONZO HOOKS TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Tammie Michelle Hunter; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than March 28, 1983, upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service againsf you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758-4257 February 15, 22; /March 1,1983

FILE NO.81 CvD 1214 FILM NO.

INTHE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARD L. GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

GLORIA EVANS VS.

LARRY ALPHONZOHOOKS NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION Tc: LARRY ALPHONZO HOOKS TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-enfitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Laionya LeVette Evans; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (5) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.

You are required to make defense to such pleading nof later than AAarch 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983,

EVERETT4CHEATHAM. ATTORNEYS Edward J Hayjer II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758-4257 February 15, 22; March 1,1983

FILENO IICvO401 FILMNO i IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON,

Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.

VIRGINIAM HARPER VS

RAY CHARLES BARNES NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: RAY CHARLES BARNES TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seekig relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Antomo Lament /May,

(2) to recover all sumspaid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of judgment; (3) to obtain an order for prospecfive support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than March 28, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the fifteenth day of February, 1983.

EVERETT4CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS EdwardJ.Harper.il Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street P. O Box 12

Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (9)9 ) 758 4257 February 15, 22, March 1,1983007 SPECIAL NOTICES

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

010

AUTOMOTIVE

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay top dollar.__CARS$I00!TRUCKS$75!

Available at local government sales. Call (refundable) 1-619-569 0241, extension 1504 tor your direc tory on how to purchase. 24 hours. CARS AND TRUCKS AUCTION every Friday from 7 p.m until. You bring them, we will sell them. Deaters welcomed. At the Onslow

County Fairgrounds. 347 2424.    _

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authoriyed Dealer in Pitt -County Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114,

013Buick

1977 BUICK Electra Limited. door. 756-0489after 5p.m._

015Chevrolet

CA/WARO 1981. Sports Coupe. Good condition, extra clean Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141.

CHEVROLET, 1973 /Vtonte Carlo, bucket seats, tilt steering, silver and maroon. $650. Call 756 0638.

lAAPALA 1979.    4    door.    Fully

equipped including power windows and seats. Low mileage. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 314T.

1972 CORVETTE. STINGRAY Fully loaded. Excellent condition. Low mileage. 756 8895.____

1974 CHEVROLET I/1APALA, medium red. metallic, 4 door, excellent condition, 350 V 8 engine, air. power steering and brakes, 80,000 miles. $1695. 746-6451.

Help fight Inflation by buying selling through the Classified Call 752 6166.

and

ads

018Ford

1976 FORD COBRA, $700' 355 6921 after 4 p.m. weekdays. __

1977 GRENADA Ford $2600. Call 756 5859.

1977 THUNDERBIRD, Good condi tion. $3000. 746 3085 night.

1980 PINTO Pony $1500 Call 746 2277 after 6 p.m.

019Lincoln

1977 MARK V by owner. Bought new. Clean. White with burgandy interior. $4,800. Call anytime, 756-6447._

1979 LINCOLN VERSAILLES Excellent condition. All accessories including moon roof. Call 946 1687._

022Plymouth

1973 PLYMOUTH FURY, 4 door, extra clean, $650. 758 0272.

1974 PLYAAOUTH Valiant, 81 K, power steering, power brakes, automatic, air, AAA FAA Great shape. $1250._

023Pontiac

FOR SALE: 1978 Pontiac Sunbird, ^ood condition, $1600 749-2691 after

1981 PONTIAC Bonneville Brougham. Loaded. Like new. Call 946 1687.

1981 TURBO TRANS AAA, low mileage. Many extras. Call weekdays after 6 pm. anytime Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 756 9780.

024Foreign

FOR SALE, 1976 MGB, yellow, new top, good condition. 758-9620.___

TOYOTA, 1979, Clica GT Sport Coupe, loaded, excellent condition, $4,595. 753 4750 or 753 5500 after 6.

VOLVO, 1982 GLT, 2 door, red, 4 speed with overdrive, sunroff with air deflector, air dam, AM'FM cassette, Dunlop radials, trailer hitch, 26 miles per gallon city/highway, extended transfer rabie warranty, immaculate, $1Z500flrm. 757 1945after 6:30.

1974 DATSUN, 610 radials, guaran teed battery, $1300. Call 758 9368 after 5 pm. Ask for Stu____

1975 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT, 4 speed, air, AM/FM stereo. 756-8281 or 758 9090.___

If that vacant apartment is losing you money, remedy the situation quickly with a result getting Classified ad. Call 752 6166.

1978 TOYOTA Corolla SR5 liftback $1800. Call 756 9760.

1981 HONDA CIVIC, 4 door, AM/FM stereo, excellent condition, $5,995, Call aHer 4:30, 756 3636.

1982 HONDA PRELUDE, AM FM cassette, air, automatic. Low mile; aoe. Call 757 1505.________

032Boats For Sale

1979 JOHNSON 9.9 horsepower outboard motor with gas tank. Like new. Call 752 4058 after 5:30.    _034 Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Brlants. Raleloh. N C 834 2774.__

036Cycles For Sale

1979 HARLEY LOW RIDER Call 946 5062.    _ _

039Trucks For Sale

DUMP TRUCK, 1959 Ford, short ^ood condition, $600 Call

bed,

758-02,

FARM OR WORK TRUCK 1981, Ford F100 6 cylinder, 21 000 miles. Very clean. $5500. 355 6349

XOUT 1973. 4 X 4 40,000 miles. Extra good condition. $1700. Call 746 4901.

1967 FORD VAN Econoline cylinder, $400. Call 756 7185

1974 JEEP CHEROKEE S Excellent Condition Call 758 7803 nights.

1975 BLAZER 4x4, New paint Rebuilt motor. New exhaust system, new carpet AM/FM stereo cassette. $3500 firm, 752 7341, After 6, 758-0027.

1979 CHEVROLET Luv, straight drive, air condition, low mileage, good condition. $3,595. Price negotiable Phone 758 4006 atter 5 pm.

1981 CX1DGE RAM TiiUCK V 6. power steering, power Drakes de luxe interior, heavy suspension, new tires, AM.'FM radio. 21,000 miles. Call 746 2678.    _

1981 TOYOTA SR 5 sports truck AM/FM stereo, air, red with gray stripes. $5800. Call 753 4905_______





040

Child Cart

BABYSITTER needed t:X p m to

3.30 e.m. in my home. Reterence* required Call 75? S3T7etter3p.m.

1 HAVE 3 OPENINGS for deys only to koM children in my home. Cell 754 3^.____

A40THER NEEDS someone to keep

2 Children 2 days a week Cherry

2 children 2 days a Oaks a^ 75* 4W

04

PETS

051

Help Wanted

SALES REPRESENTATIVE Me jor nalional company has an opening 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 terview send resume to AAANAG-ER, PO Box 194S. Greenville. NC 27835. Equal Opportunity Emolover. _ _

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pies, good hunting stock Pbone tS7l524.

AKC MINIATURE Sctinauier pups. 1 temale. 2 males *200 758 3482. Grimesland.

AKC REGISTERED Irish Setter. 5 years old Very friendly House included. *50. 756 2045.

JUST IN TIME for Valentines day. 6 week old black puppies. Mother full blooded cocker spaniel. Price negotiable. 756 2338

SIBERIAN HUSKIES for sale AKC registered. Born January 19. beautiful markings. Call after 6 pm. 753 2731

2 AKC REGISTERED Boxer pup

iiies. 9 weeks old, I male. *125, 1 emale. *100. 752 8510._

051

Help Wanted

ALL GIRL ROCK

group er. Fo

seeks or more

?|uitar and bass plavel nformation contact Teresa after 5

at 758 9969    __

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON Experience helpful but not neces sary. Individual must have sue cessful background and the will ingness to advance quickly Only those settled, responsible and de siring to earn top conimissions need to apply! All replies held confidential. Apply to:    Automotive

Salesperson. P O Box 1967. Greenville. N C 27834.

SECRETARIES, word processors and typists needed immediately for long and short term temporary assignments. Must have at least ore

year work exper appointment 757

ience

3300

all -for an

MANPOWER TEMFOftARY SERVICE il8ReadeStreet

SECRETARY Position requires contact with public. Sales account management and taking rental orders Must have good telephone voice and ability to type 40 to 50 words per minute. Hours 9 to 6. Monday Saturday. Closed most Wedr>esdays. Will be Interviewing Tuesday February 15. Wednesday February 16. Thursday February 17 from 9 to 6. Apply in person. Colortyme TV Rental. Greenville Square Shopping Center. (Former Shoe Show location beside KAAart)

THE ROANOKE Developmental Center is now accepting resumes tor the position of Assistant Manag er of a group home for 5 mentalfy

retarded adults Associate Degree experience.

Send resume: P

r

19, 1983 For further call 793 5269._

Must have or equivalent

O Box ly Febi information

AVON Wanted sales repre sentatives. Earn 50% Call 746 3494 or 758 3159.

BODY SHOP MECHANIC needed. Excellent working conditions and company benefits. Apply to: Body Shop AAechanic, P O Box 1967, Greenville, N C 27834.

BOOKKEEPER full time position open. Some experience In bookkeep ing a necessity. Good personality and telephone voice a plus. Hours 8-5. Full company benefits. Apply in

rirson from 12-5 p.m. Monday-riday and 9-12 Saturday, Efird's/Spencer Pest Control, Highway 264 West, Greenville, NC

DISPATCHER- Dock Supervisor. Local growing carrier desires dependable person to run daily opera tions. Experience necessary. If in-trested In growth and opportunity. Send resume and salary requirements to:    Dispatcher-Dock

Supervisor, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834,

DRUAAMER FOR Rock and Band. 946 0302 after 5:30 p.m.

Roll

ESTABLISHED LAW FIRM in

Kinston, NC seeks experienced legal secretary or paralegal to work in estates and civil litigation. Salary commensurate with eimerience. 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 manageriai ability, ambition and show progress for age. Business or sales background hplpful. In requesting personai in terview, please submit resume stating personal history, education and business experience. Write: P O Box 406, Greenviiie, N C

TIRED OF WORKING for someone else We can help you find and own a business of your own. We have many from which to choose. For details, call Harold Creech and/or J T Snowden, Jr. with The AAarketplace, Inc. 752 3666.    _

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy, they turn to the Classified

Place your results

Ad today tor

Ads.

quick

WANTED PERSON to assume

responsibiiities as counter manager in a food reiated business. Must be cheerful and friendly with customers. Will be responsible for product finishing and consumer oriented as far as quaiity controi. Must be bondabie. 40 hour week Monday thru Friday, 8 to 4. Saiary negotiabie according to experience. Repiy in confidence to: Manager. PO Box 3775, Greenviiie, N C

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimafes. J P Stancll, 752 6331

074

AAisceiianeous

CLARK B COMPANY

Stihl Echo Sachs Dolmar Snacoer Tero Lawn Bov

FURNITURE WORLD entertain rnenl package. This week only, take honfte a sharp ir color TV for *21.85 per month for 24 months. For iust W9, buy a AAelvllle stereo AM/FM casMtte. turntable with 2 speakers. Pick up the phone and give us a call at 7sf0451._

GREEN diner. *100 D.m

VINYL ROCKER, re Call 756-4472 after 5:30

H O TRAINS and accessories, good condition. 140.355 6531._

KING COIL bedding. Sale prices starting at *49.95 each piece. Pick w the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, w-OaSl. We take trade Ins. __

MOTOROLA PULSAR II mobile for sale or lease. Call 756

_ IG MUST SELL Refrigera tor, riOO; d^r, *40, stove, %k; 2

bar stools. il5 each, sofa. *35; 2 large wall to wall rugs, *10 each, wan desk, *15 Can 758 4918

Vickie at

AAOVING SALE, sofa, chair, refrig-erator and draperies. Call 758 2105.

PEAVEY T 15 GUITAR and Peavey classic VT series amp, *300 Call 756 1057.

093

OPPORTUNITY

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 4 Co.. Inc Financial 4 AAarketlng Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, N C 757-0001. nights 753 4015._

100

HousmFotSbIb

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMN North

25 years exper

P Gid Holloman.

ina's original chimney rience

mneys

day or night, 753 3503, Farmville

and fireplaces

worMnii

102 Commercial Property

FOR

merciaf

SALE

II bui

ouph^e. Call 7S* 1131. After 6 pm,

uiidl

Ings 7ft I

Two com main thor

104 Condominiums For Sale

BY OWNER Quail Ridge Condo. 3 bedrooms. baths, large living room with fireplace, and dining room. Pool and tennis court. Can 355 6053.

PUTTMAN HOUSE 2 Enjoy the elegance of this beautifully craft^ 5 piece bedroom suite plus nightstand for only *40.42 per month for 24 months. Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furnil World. 757-0451.

RENT A STEAMEX Best method for cleaning carpets. Larry's Carpefland, 3010 East lOth Street, Greenville.__

_ ----- a    3    pi<

living room suite. Sola, chair and love seat. *21.47 a month. Pick up the phone and give us a call at F urniture World. 757-0451

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS and Shampooers. Call Dealer, 756 6711

DON'T THROW IT away! Sell It for cash with a fast action Classified Ad!

SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.

TEMPWOOD

old. Good condition Call 746 4901

HEATER 2 years Asking *250

THE CABINET SHOP

Residential and commercial cabinet work. Design, construction, finishing and installation. Bring your plans or let us design for you. Call for appointment. 757 1843. 1306 N Greene Street.

r yo

I. 13

TOP SOlU field sand, mortar sand and rock. Call 746 3296 or 746 3819

USED, washers, refrigerators and TV's. Call 753 3074.

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and rooflna 35 years experience in building. Call James Harring.'on after 6 pm. 752 7765^_

COMPLETE REAAODELING to residential and farm building construction. Specializing in unusual design to fop quality furniture and millwork. 752 2?57 After 6 756-8895.

FULL ALTERATIONS One Hour Koretizlno. 756 0545._

HAIRDRESSER WANTED Guar anteed salary. Call Georges Coif-fure, 756-6200.

HOMEWORKERS WirecraH pro duction. We train house dwellers. For full details write: Wirecratt, PO Box 223, Nortolk.Va. 23501.

IMMEDIATE

Technician.

OPENING GM

Kinston area

dealership has immediate opening for qualified GM Technician. Salary commensurate with experience. NAISE certification given special consideration. Send resume to GM Technician, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

JOB OPPORTUNITIES 1-919 638-1186 trom 9 to 5, AAon day Friday._

KEY PUNCH OPERATOR AND PURCHASING EXPEDITOR

Person must have experience in IBM System 34 and office experience , preferably in purchasing. Apply to Personnel Manager, Electrical Utilities Co., 309 Anderson Avenue, Farmville. N C 27828. An Equal Opportunity Employer

AAAID-JANITOR needed for com mercial building. Above minimum wage. Refirement benefits. Hours 8-11, 6 days a week and 4-5:30, 5 days a week. Contact Wllkerson Funeral Home, 752-2101.

MAINTENANCE Superintendent. Extensive experience in chemical plant maintenance. Familiar with all types of welding and insulating. Send resume to John E VanDyke. c/o Hall Contracting Corp., PO Box 37270, Louisville, Kentucky 40232. Equal Opportunity Employer._

AAANAGEMENT Large corporation looking for management potential. Must start in sales. 60 hour week. Some door to door. Salary and benefits. Conner AAobile Homes, 756 0333

AAANAGEMENT Personnel needed. Must have restaurant experience. Possibility of relocation in New Bern. Send resume to PO Box 687, Greenville, NC 27834.

AAANAGER FOR NEW alterations shop. Experience required. Call 756 7891.

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.

CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO

Quality construction and renovi tion. Phone 757-0799 after 6pm

DANCER AVAILABLE down East area. Call 752-1780.    _

DEPENDABLE subcontractor. Specializing in roofing and gutter. No Job to small. Pickup for hire.

AAATURE LADY, dependable, with references to live-in full time as housekeeper. 752 3090, ask for Jean.

PUBLISHED WRITER will help with writing tasks. Call 752 830, from 11 to 4 p.m., AAonday thro Friday

SANDING and finishing . floors. Small carpenter jobs, remodeling burnt-out trailers. Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 2868 anytime,lf no an-swer call back._

SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as *59.95. Call Steve Atkins for all your sign needs. 756-9117.

WANTED ANY ty

window washing.

! of cleaning or 7647.

WOAAAN WILL SIT with elderly, shutins, or babysit at anytime. Reference. Call 752-8305, from 11 fo 4 p.m., Monday thru Friday,_

WOULD LIKE babysitting, housekeeping and staying with the elderly during the day. Call 758-2851 before 5 p.m., ask for Pat._

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

FORAAAL ANTIQUE dining room suite, *700. Call 752 1418.

HOME PLACE ANTIQUES Large selection of oak, depression glass, collectibles. Open everyday 10-5; Sunday 1-5.    14    miles east of

Greenville, Highway 33.____

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

USED PIANO Best offer. Call 753 2270 or 753 3074.

USED 15.1 cubic foot refrigerator in excellent condition, *300. Call 758 1198

WE TAKE TRADE-INS the phone and give us Furniture World, 757-0451.

Rick up I call at

WHITE 17 CUBIC FOOT refrigerator freezer. Frost free. Ice maker. White electric stove, table and 4 chairs. 756 8083 or 756 1459.

WOULD LIKE to buy used wooden or wicker changing table. Call 756-9741.

7' X 7' TWO WHEEL trailer for hauling livestock or equipment. *200. Phone 756 9256

075 AAobile Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors, plywood counter tops, total electric, ran^^ refrigerator. Regular price,

Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up includedTHours, 8am to6pm.

AAOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756^1191

BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide. 52 X 24, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including

masonite siding, shingle roof, bay windows, frost free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and

much, much more. Regular price, *24,995

Limited Time Only

$19,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up included. Hours, 8 AM to 6 pm. AAOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191

CLEAN 12x60, 2 bedroom, IV2 bath, set on private lot, financing avalla ble. *5,500. Call days 752 3000; nights 756 1997 or 758 4821._

1970 NORRIS, 12x65, 2 bedroom, central air, appliances, good shape, *5000 or best offer. Call 756-9020 after 5 p.m.

1972 STYLETTE 12 x 60. baths. Excellent condition. 756-1057.

2 full *6,000.

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J P Stancil, 752 6331.

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

*40 FOR PICKUP

CALL 757-358 or 758-5063

FIREWOOD, *30 a load. Call 758 4611 anytime for delivery._

OAK FIREWOOD for sale. Ready togo. Call 752 6420

OAK FIREWOOD

752 8847._

for sale. Call

OAK FIREWOOD 756 7159.

OAK FIREWOOD, *40 pickup load. Call 758 3190.

NEED AAATURE person to baby sit with 6 month old trom 7 to 5. Must have transportation. Call 355-2188

NEW BUSINESS seekin qualified persons. Cash investmenT required. For details call 758-9132 after 6 p.m.

NOW TAKING applications tor part time counter help and doughnut makers. Apply In person to Jerry's Sweet Shop, Pitt Plaza._

OWNER OPERATORS

Due to expansion we need help! We have Eastern U S authority-national accounts company trailers vans and flats. Low cost main tenance through company shop. Company fuel program available. Low cost insurance available. Weekly settlements. 14 CPM tuel. Call Old Dominion Freight Lines. Barnes Division, Wilson, N C 1 8(X) 334 7206, out of state 1 800 682 2277, in N C 1 919 291 9111 collect _EOE

P E TEACHER/TRACK COACH needed to bMln March 16. Write to Goldsboro City Schools PO Box Drawer 1797 Goldsboro, NC 27530.

PARTS COUNTER PERSON needed. Possible management opportunity depending on experience. Excellent pay and benefit package. Prefer Ford experience. Apply to: Parts Counter Person', P <5 Box . 1967, Greenville._

PERAAANENT PART time position ailable in small oftice. Morning afternoon hours. Call 758-2525

available in small office.

between 11 am and 1 pm tor interview.

PROGRAAAMER Minimum 1 year experience in RPG programming on IBM System 34 or 38. Send resume to Programmer, PO Box le?VlC

ROOM AT THE TOP

OAKWOOD BY JAMES All oak *40

load. 758-2840 or 756-9193 anytime.

065 Farm Equipment

MAKE YOUR COLD mornings eas space

for *289.95 or a 40,000 BTU heater

ier with a 97,000 BTU space heater

for *159.95. ThernfMistats *30.49. Repair parts and service available. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752-

072

Livestock

1973 HOLIDAY, 12x65. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer. Window air conditioner, 2 baths, *5850. Set up in Hollybrook Estates. 758 4541._

1973 12X65 STAR AAobile Home. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, large living room with wood heater, electric heat and central air. Call after 6:00, 756 0205.

CONDOMINIUM PRICED to sell!!! Hard to find - a 3 bedroom flat in a lovely setting. The real plus Is price of *49.500. Foyer, living room with fireplace, kitchen, dimrtg area, 3 bedroom. 2 full baths, patio. Con tact D G Nichols Agency for information. 752 4012 or night, 752 66.

TWO DUPLEXES ^

Owner occupancy. Buy entire build

available!

ing or single side. Realty, 2739E lOth St

Mid-Eastern 757 3540.

WIN HER HEART

In a Twin Oaks, Brookhill or Cannon Court Condominium or townhome. Low down payment, no closing costs. AAonthly payment could be less than your present rent

Call Jane Warren or WII Reid at 758 6050.

MOORE & SAUTE R 110 South Evans 758-6050

NEW LISTINGS

HORSESHOE ACRES 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, large dining area and carport *63.500

UNIVERSITY AREA 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal areas plus den, library and office Assumable 9'i% loan. *72,900

BROOK VALLEY 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal areas, den and garage *109.003.

CHERRY OAKS 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, dining room, garage and fenced In yard *77.500.

WESTHAVEN 3 bedrooms. Tt baths, great room, dining room, kitchen and study *68,500.

CLUB PINES 4 bedrooms. 2' > baths, formal areas, dan and garage. *101.900

YORKTOWN TOWNHOUSE 3 bedrooms. 2'j baths, groat room, dining room and patio. *49.900.

JEANNETTE COXAGENCY 756-1322

NEW LISTING 8% loan assump tion on cul-da sac lot, 3 bedrooms. 1': bath, heat pump, garage For only *39.900. Call bfeve Evans 8, Associates, 355 2727 or 758 3338

NEW LISTING AHractlvc brick ranch located on a wooded lot close to Wlnterville- Central heat and air with dishwasher 3 bedrooms. 1'a baths new woodstove. *56.900 Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997

NEW LISTING 8> a% VA loan assumption, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, and over MOO square feet of living area, conveniently located in Eastwood. Low *50'$. Call Jeff Aldridge, Aldridge & Southerland, 35Sor 756 2807./

756 :

ior 756 2807. A7

NICE, COZY contemporary house in Twin Oaks, excellent financing. F L Garner, 355 2628 or 756 32tr Owner. 758 2520._

121 Aprtmnts For Rant

A BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED I bath. I bedroom townhouse with loft bedroom Totally energy efficient *240. Alter 5:30 or anytime weekends 752-8949_

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 neer 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'j baths Also 1 bedroom

IheUayKeflcctof.Greenvlf ,V C -Tuesday. February 15.1W3-15

121 Apartments For Rent

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

TWO BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, appliances central air and heal. 804 Apt 2 Willow St

8250. 758 3311.______

TWO BE DROOM duplex 9 miles out on 43 South *200 per month Call 746 2291.

WEDGEWOOOARMS

NOWAVAILABLE 2 bedroom, 1'j bath lownhouses Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

WILSON ACRES APARTMENTS

New 2 and 3 bedroom washer dryer hook up, dishwasher, heat pump tennis, pool, sauna, self cleaning ovens trost tree refrigerator 3 blocks from ECU Call 752 0277 day or night Equal Housing Opportuni 3L_^__

apartments Carpet, dishwashei

       le    T

y

room, sauna, tennis court, club

compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundr

housa and pool. 752 1557

CYPRESS GARDENS APARTMENTS

2308 E Tenth Street Available immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump, trost free retrigerator. dishwasher, disposal Call days 758 6061, nights/weekends 758 5661

Professionally managed by Remco East, Inc.

NICE 5 room house. Enclosed back porch, carport, new paint in and out Very good condition. In the county Good pecan trees *34.000 By owner 758 321U; call after 6,

I 4199,

106

Farms For Sale

NEW FARM 70 acres with 12,300 pounds and 6.6 peanuts. About 3> 3 miles from Greenville, Very inter 758 1983. 2230.

IIIIC9 iiwiri cviivilie. V

esting, Darden Realty. Nights and weekends. 758-:

13 ACRES all cleared with 2' 2 acres tobacco allotment, 8 miles North of Greenville. Aldridge & Southerland Realty. 756 350(1; nights Don Southerland, 756 5260.

58 ACRE FARM Good road fron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110 51 acres cleared. 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Calt AAoseley Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details.

107

Farms For Lease

WANTTOBUY

CORN

Top Prices Paid tor your corn. Worthington Farms Inc., 756-3827 Days. 756 3732 Nights._

109

Houses For Sale

ATTRACTIVE Brick Vineer Ranch - Idel for a couple well planned and cheerful kitchen with dishwasher kitchen bar glass sliding doors-utility room good size breakfast room- cozy den and exciting masteri bedroom deci- well landscaped lawn- good neighborhood Reduced to $38,500. Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756-1997.

BELVEDERE - Traditional two story hone encircled by trees and located in great neighborhood that's hard to top at M9,500. Call Ball & Lane, 752 0025 or Lee Ball. 752-1646.

BUY THAT TOWNHOUSE YOU'VE BEEN WANTING ATA BIG REDUCTION

lAAAAACULATE TOWNHOUSE - 5

rooms and IV2 baths, central heat and air, possible loan assumption. Reduced fo *41,900.

SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE - 1422 square feet includes 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen and T 2 baths. Reduced to *54,900.

REAL ESTATE BROKERS 2723 East Tenth Street 752-4348,756-4619 or 757-3278

NO CREDIT CHECK Assume FHA loan neat brick starter home with carport detached block building with 1'2 bath 2 or 3 bedrooms fenced in yard *33,500. Davis Realty 752 3(W0, 756 2904 or 756 1997.

OLDER HOME REDUCED to *30,000 Assume loan plus equity over 2800 square feet divided into 3 apartments some possible owner financing Possible rental income *525. Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997.

OWNER BEING TRANSFERRED, Immaculate throughout. Excellent location, 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, beautiful landscaping. 210 Crestline Blvd. Call Ray Spears at Aldridge and Southerland, 756 3500 or 758 4362.

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.

SETTLE IN this NEAT Starter home for about *1.800 including closing / BR's in country deck central heat wood stove also in cheerful and cozy den *37,500. Davis Realty 752-3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997.

UNIVERSITY Take advantage of the great location near campus and the great price of *35,000. Three bedrooms, 1'2 baths, living room with fireplace. Call Ball & Lane. 752 0025or Lee Ball, 752 1646.

3 BEDROOM, 2 bath house in Twin Oak*. *49,500. 5% down. Call 756 7711, 9 to 5, AAonday Friday.

*51,900. Price Reduction. Windy Ridge, 3 bedroom, 2'2 bath condominium, 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 & Southerland Realty, 756 3500 or 758 7744,

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

J27 one, garden an featuring

327 one. two and three bedroom zarden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appll anees, central heat and air condt tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS Fully furnished Including linens, maid service, all uflllfles, cable. Newly renovated 1 or 2 beds. Starfing at *105 week or %300 month. Olde London Inn, 2710 S<kith Memo rial Drive. Call 756 5555.

EXTRA LARGE 1 bedroom furnished apartment, close to ECU uptown, carpet, *175 752 3804.

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable Tv, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and poof Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869

IN FARMVILLE 2 bedroom apartment with wall to wall carpel. Call 753 3101 day_

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments Carpeted, range, re frigerafor, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located fo shopping center and schools. Located jusfoff 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

*59,900. Price reduction. Centrally located. This 3 bedroom, 2 batn brick ranch features family room with fireplace, plus formal area. Attractive neignborhood, convenient to schools and shopping. Seller will consider FHA, VA, or Conven tional financing. Make your ap pointment 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 finane ing. Convenient location. W 11. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500 or 758 7744

BY OWNER 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, university area, *27,000. 756 4645.

CHOICE HOME In Brookgreen. 5 bedrooms, three baths, for sale by owner. Shown by appointment. 752 3021.

1975 CELEBRITY 12X60,    2

bedrooms, 1 bath, furnished, central air, underpined, set up in nice park, 10X12 storage barn, 752 4126 days, 756 3161 nights.

1975 CELEBRITY 12X60, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, furnished, central air, underpined, set up in nice park, 10X12 storage barn. *7500 negotiable. 756 3161

1976 MOBILE HOME, partially furnished. *7500.

central air unit. 756-8431 after S.

12x65, 3 fon

2 BEDROOMS, ? baths. Central heat and air. 12x65. Set up in country. Pay equity. Assume $130.25 per month. Call days 752-3000, nights 756-1997 or 753-4282.

076 AAobi le Home I nsurance

AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance at competitive rates. Smith Insur-ance and Realty, 752-2754.

HORSEBACK RIDING

Stables, 752-5237.

Jarman

074

Miscellaneous

AMERICAN DREW oak bedroom suite. $600. 7 piece living room suite. *625. 756 5859.

ASHLEY WOOD AND COAL combination. Used 2 years. *300. 746 3085 night

ASSUME PAYMENT on all wood 5 piece dining room table and chairs of only *16.82 month. Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, 757 0451, We take trade ins.

ATARI VIDEO GAMES repaired. We buy used ataris, any condition. 758 9513.

BEGINNERS AND Advanced piano lessons by ECU honor student, Debra Russ. Plano & Organ Distributors, Arlington Boulevard, Greenvllle,355 6002._

BROWN GE side by-side refrigerator, ice and water in door, 23.6 cubic feet, excellent condition. *450. Call 756 5716.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919-763-9734.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work._

Due to the oromotions in this area, two openings exist now for young minded persons in the local brancn of a large corporation. If selected.

you will receive complete training. We provide good company benefits, major medical, profit sharing, de

ntal care and retirement pi Starting pay will be *260 *350 depending on your ability. All promotions are based on merit, not seniority.

We are particularly'' interested in those with leadership ability who are looking for a career opportunl-

y

CALL757-IX8 9:00AM -6:00 P M

ROUTE DRIVER Heavy lilting required 40 plus hours per week. Knowledge of Greenville area a plus. Excellent chance for advancement and company benefits. Must have excellent driving record. Dates, Tuesday February 15. Wednesday February 16, Thursday February 17 from 9 to 6. Apply in person. Colortyme TV Rental, Greenville Square Shopping Center. (Fomer Shoe Show location beside KAAart)._

SALES PERSON wanted for Farmville and surrounding areas. Starting salary, *300 a week If qualified. Good company benefits. Excellent opportunity for person willing to work. Call 753 4482 Tuesday and Thursday nights trom 7 to9pm. _

CHICKENS FOR SALE 754 each. Humbles Cage Farm, 2 miles west of Ay den. Highway 102 to County Road 1111. Please bring something to put chickens in. _

COAAMERCIAL TYPE ceiling gas heater. *175. 756-7417._

DAY CARE EQUIPMENT Thousands of dollars worth of almost new day care equipment; reduced to ' 3 price. Includes cots, cribs, play pens, chairs, mat tresses, sheets, blankets, and much more. Call 752-4348 between 5 p.m. and 6p.m. or 756-4619after 7p.m. ERIC 800 Woodheater. *200. Odd

and end furniture. 758-6919._

EXTRA LARGE DESK for sale (48"x60">; 7 drawers and 2 pull outs on both sides of desk; lots of utility and a real conversation piece. Call 752 4348 between 5 p.m. and6p.m. or 756-46t9 after 7p.m. FANTASTIC This week only.

19" color TV for only *99 with the purchase of any 6 piece all wood den set at a mere *53.90 a month for

FURNITURE deal f. Take home a share

Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, 757

0451.

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 Carpefland, 3010 East 10th Street,

Greenville._

FURNITURE FURNITURE Living Room Dining Room Bedroom AAany styles to choose trom! We GUARANTEE to have the lowest prices! H Factory AAat tress, Waterbed & Furniture Outlet. 730 Greenvdle Blvd, 355 2626.

077 Musical Instruments

A NEW SPINET PIANO with 10 year warranty. Pecan finish only. *895. Plano & Organ Distributors, Arlington Boulevard, Greenville, 355-6002.

COUNTRY HOME 3 bedrooms, large lot, carport, lots of privacy, a beginners dream, *32,500. Call Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727 or 758 3338.

DUFFS REALTY, INC

13th Street Farmville... University ..

Country.....

Condo.......

Condo.......

4th Street ... Hillsdale.... Farmville...

.... *23.000 ..    *24,900

..*..*27,500 ....*31,900 . . *32,500 ....*32,900 . . *33,000 ... . *39,900 .... *39,900

756-5395

"FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY" on this 2 story Williamsburg home in Cherry Oaks, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2'3 baths, SSO's. Owner will sacrifice. Must sell. Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc. 756 1322.

FARMERS HOME, Are you looking for a house where payments v/ould be based on your income? We have several listings that you can choose from. Hurry, call today! Call Steve

Evans 8, 758 3338

Associates, 355-2727 or

AN EVENING OF FREE music starring Richard Giglis on the Yamaha Electone Keyboard, Thursday, February 17 at 7 p.m. Piano and Organ Distributors, Arlington Boulevard, Greenville, 3S5 6W2.

078

Sporting Goods

HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion repairs. Specializing in marine products. 758-0641.1104 Clark Street.

082    LOST AND FOUND

LOST Black and white male Pomeranian wearing a blue rhinestone collar. Lest 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

p.m.______

085 Loans And AAortgages

NEED CASH, get a second mortgage fast by phone, we also buy mortgages; make commercial loans, cairtree 1 800 845-3929.

091

Business Services

INCOME TAX SERVICES Bovd. Call 756 3264.__

093

OPPORTUNiTY

FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY to ioln one of the fastest growing Multi-level Marketing Company In the US Be the first in your area with this product. Income potential unlimited. Write Hudson 8, Associates. PO Box 12324, Research Triangle Park. NC 27709 or call I 596 3746._

FOR SALE seafood market. Good income, good business and location, call between 6-9, 756-10]

good

050.

INVESTOR SEEKS profitable bus! ness to Invest In or buy. Up to S100.000 cash available, send proposal to; Investor, PO Box 1355, Washington, NC 27889._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Di    756-6221

For Sale By Owner

3 bedrciom, 1'3 bath, brick, 9'2% assume FHA with payments of *366 month. 758 0999.

GOOD STARTER home, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, kitchen, carport plus lot beside house. *26,000. Price negotiable. Phone 758-4006 after 5 pm

HOUSE FOR SALE, Hardee Acres. 1950 square feet, 700 foot den with fireplace, Brunswick pool table. *57,900. 758 0144, 752 7663._

LOAN ASSUMPTION - FHA 235 financing on this spotless 2 bedroom townhome. Owner must move fast due to job transfer. *43,500. Call Ball & Lane. 752-0025 or Lee Ball. 752 1646.

LYNNDALE - Unique rustic home offers superb llvino areas plus study, playroom. 2 fireplaces and screened porch. Listed at *117,500 but take a look and make an otter! Call Ball 81 Lane. 752 0025 or Lee Ball. 752 1646._

MUST SELL FAST owner moving. Pay $15,000 equity, assume 7?ii% loan of *38,700 with total payment *372.23 PITI Owner will finance balance at 10% on this 6 year old brick. 4 bedroom, 2' 3 bath, all formal areas, den with fireplace, carpet, heat pump, 2 car garage, in mint condition. Price slashed to $89.900 Call today. Lily Richardson Realty, 752 6535.     -

NEEDS FIXING UP older home converted info dupluex-needs love and tender care-over 1600 square feet- near schools and shopping . Uner *20,000- No reasonable offer refused! Call Davis Realty 752-3000. 756 2904 or 756 1997.

NEW LISTING Windy Ridge. Come preview this 3 beoroom, 2' 3 bath condominium. Family room with fireplace, s^arate dining room, heat pump. Excellent condT tion. Recreational facilities available. W 15. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 758 7744.

YO'J CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains in the Classified Ads.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

111 I nvestment Property

ONE ACRE zoned for apartments. Accomodates up fo 17. West of hospital. Water, diagonal sewer. *22.000. 756 7417.

113

Land For Sale

LAND FOR SALE 14 plus acres off g R(

allotments *20.000 Call Davis Re

Stanstonburg Road 5.7 cleared No

alty 752 3000 Nights 756 1997.

115

Lots For Sale

APPROXIMATELY ^/4 of acres wooded lot with well and septic tank, in Homestead Mobile Estates. *8,000. 756 5348.

BAYWfXID, TWO ACRE lot. Fi nancinq available Call 756 7711.

BAYWOOD

BUILDINGSITE

Priced for immediate sale. 2 acres, heavily wooded. Rolling terrain, near Racquet Club. Restrictive covenants. *22,500.

Aldridge & Southerland 756-3500

_Nights    756-7871_

LARGE 2 BEOROOM Duplex. 707 A Hooker Road. Stove and refrigera tor, washer, dryer hookups, air condition, heat pump. Deposit and lease reguired No pets. *250 After    56    6382,    or    756

5 pm. 756 5217, 756 I

S-0489.

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique In apartment fiving with nature outside your door.

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heaf pumps (heating costs 5o% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups. cable TV.wall fo wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    15    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd,

756-5067

NEAR UNIVERSITY, 3 bedrooms, recently renovated. No pets 726 7615.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable Tv Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes lor rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815

ONE BEOROOM apartment Near campus No pets *215 a month 756 3923

ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, appliances, central air and heaf. 802, Apt. 2, Willow St *195. 758 3311.

ONE bedroom duplex located on 2nd Street in Ayden. All appliances furnished. Energy efficient with heat pump, Judy 756-6336 before S.

PARTIALLY WCXIDED Cherry Oaks Subdivision. Priced to self. Days 758 7687; after 6, 756 7227.

2 DUPLEX LOTS off Hooker Road. Priced to sell. 756-7473.

*8200. lot in Winterville Resi dential only 1650 square feet- home only. Call Davis Realty 752-3000. 756 2904 or 756 1997._

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Cafl 758-4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage. Open Mon day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933.

121 Apartments For Rent

TAR RIVER E.STATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, cli house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex"

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

classified display

Safe

Model S-1

Special Price

S-|2250i

Reg. Price $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S. Evans St. 752-2175

ONE BEDROOM available now. Convenient to downtown and campus 756 7473 or 756 7285

ONE BRICK veneer duplex apartment, 2 bedrooms, un furnished, no appliances. Automatic heat. 2411 East 4th St. *200 per month. Call 752 2977.__

REDWCXJD 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 CABLE TV

Office hours lOa.mfoSp.m Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT 2

bedrooms, 1'3 baths, energy effi cienf Convenient location. 757 0001 or nights 753 4015

,.v,Hury t_ .....

End unit, 2 bedroom, I's baths. No pets. *295 756 9006after6D.m

TWO BEDROOM apartment, River Bluff Road. *240 per month. No pets Call Smith Insurance & Real ty, 752 2759__

CLASSIFIED display

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton Co.

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 EqiMl OpponuiWly Empk>yr

1 AND 2 BEOROOM apartments Available Immediately 752 3311 _

1 BEOROOM energy efficient apartment. 756 5389or 7ft 0025

1 BEOROOM. 2 blocks from downtown and ECU Convenient to hospital *195. 756 7473 or 756 7285

1 BEDROOM apartment partially furnished Call 753 7581 ___

2 BEDROOMS, 1', bath Ridge Place *290 Available March 1 756 7310

2 BEDROOM Duplex on Brownlea Drive Range and refrigerator hookups, energy efiicient No pets. *265 fS6 7480

2 BEDROOM. 1 bath, central heal and air. lease and deposit. *245 per month No pets Call Jon Day at Moore & Saufer, 752 1010, nights 7.52 0345

2 BEDR(X)M APARTMENT for rent Reasonable price Near campus Pets allovyed Call 756 4767 after 5.

2 BEDROOM duplex apartment Central heal and air I4lh Street Convenient to schools and shoppirw No pets Lease and deposit Available April 1. 756 6834 a tier 5 211 RIVER BLUFF Road. Greenville 2 bedroom *230 p>er month. 825 2091 anytime.

I FURNISHED 7 bedroom near four : lane deposit negotiable 746 9*70 or I i?4 4349 5 to 7 p m

1 special rate's lor "students^ 2 bedroom with carpet *115 No pets

I no children 758 4541 or 756 949_l_

Three bedroom mobile home

j tor rent near Meadowbrook area

1 Call 756 8948 after 5pm

'TWO BEDROOMS completely ,    washer dryer No pets

TWO BEDROOMS, lumisbed on 264 I Highway 175 deposit *150 per j 'TOft*?. 35SJ928 alter 4pm , 12 X 65 TWO BEDROOM. 2 bath I new carpel 1150 per month 5 miles south pfjGrpenyjlle Call 746 6575 _ 12X65 central heal and air, 3 miles

^"Y    or

/J/ 606B

2 BE DROOM Mobile Home for rent CaiL756 4687

2 BEDR<XMS. partially furnished air good location no pets no children 758 4857

2 BEDRODM TRAILER lor r^l Carpet air no pets I' . baths 756 6005

2 BEDROOM, tompletelv tvf.0lhed, nopels 7SA 7181 2 BEDROOMS lurni Shed

washer dryer air conditioner excellent condition good location Couples only, no pets 7S6 0801 after ipm___________

2 BEDROOMS with carpel washer Located at Azalea Gardens *liO month Call 756 JOOO    _

2 BEDROOM trailer S135 month

*100deposit Call 7521023____

2 BE0RCX3MS. washer carpet air completely furnished. No pets Call 756 0 792____

2 BEDROOM, air Branches Estates. r>o children no pels 756 8843 or 756 0783^

2 BEDRCX3MS2 Baths Rent *190 Close in No pets Deposit Required Call days 752 3000, njghts 756 J^W7

3 BEDR<X)M, 2 baths washer and dryer, private lot Call 756 7317 anytime on weekends and between 5 30 9 .30 weekdays

TO PLACE YOUR Classllled Ad. lust call 757 6166 ar>d let a friendly Ad Visor help you word your Ad

122

Business Rentals

1500 SQUARE FOOT commercial ^ace for rent on 'Greenville Boulevard Call Echo Realty. Inc at 756 6040; nights 524 5042

125 Condominiums For Rent

TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah *300 per month, 12 month lease Young couple preferred. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 756 6336__

carpe

major appliances furnisheci No Pets, married couple prefered 825 7321 after 5p m._____

127

Houses For Rent

FOUR BE DR ROM house. 405 West Fourth Street. *300 per month Call 757 0688.

135 Office Space For Rent

FOR RENT Approximately 800 square feet *250 per month lOth Street Colonial Height Shopping Center 758 4257 ___

MODERN, attractive office space for lease Approximately 1500 square leet Located 2007 Evans Street beside AAoseley Brothers

Call 756 3374 _____

OFFICE BUILDING tor rent 1100 square feet *250 per month with one year lease plus first month s rent free 1203 W 14th St 758 3743 or 757 0027.    ______

OFFICE FOR LEASE 1203 West I4th Street 758 3743 or 355 6458

Available immediately_

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815 SINGLE OFFICES or suites, with utilities and janitorial. Chapin Little building. 3106 S AAemorial

Drive Call 756 7799     ^___

TWO ROOM"or four room office suite Highway 264 Business Eco nomical Private parking Some storage available Call Connally Branch at Clark Branch Realtors ' 756 6336.

HOUSE IN TWIN OAKES, 1 I at? i bedrooms, 2 baths, *425 per month Call 756 7711, 9 to 5. AAonday Friday

THREE ROOM downtown office at 219 Cotanrhe Street 440 square feet Parking available Call Jim Lanier >505

HOUSE IN Farmville. 8 rooms, 2 bafhs. Central heaf and air Call 753 3730.

HOUSE in counfry. 3 bedrooms, 2 bafhs. *175 monthly. 756 2715. HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in town and country Call 746 3284 or 524 3180

QUICK ACTION Classified Ads are the answer

to someone wno wants to buy

to passing on y who wants to o

on your extras

UNIVERSITY AREA, 110 East 12th Street. 3 bedrooms, appliances furnished, washer/dryer connec tion, fireplace, just insulated. *275

Call 756 0765.________

UNIVERSITY AREA 3 bedrooms! 2 baths, dining room, living room, den, eat in kitchen, fireplace, appli anees, central air, *400. 756 3057,

1, 2, AND 3 bedroom houses for rent. 752 3311._______

112 NORTH SUAAAIT 3 bedroom house within walking distance of the university *310 month CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 756 2121.

2 BEDRCX3M HOUSE with wall to wall carpet in Farmville. Call 753 3101 day.    ____

2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, university area. *27,000 756 4645    ____

3 BEDROOM ranch style home Carport, storage, quiet subdivision Call 757 0001 or nights, 753 4015, 756 9006

3 BEOROOM, 108 North Elm Fireplace, stove, refriagerator, dishwasher, washer and dryer. No pets. 756 9526_

3 BEDROOM HOME, lovely kitch en, garden plot, near Simpson, *215

month. 1 787 0479.    _

3 BEDROOMS, 2 bafhs, living room, dining, kitchen and carporV Wooded corner lot. No pets 1425

107 Dupont Circle, 756 8700______

3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, fireplace, garage Convenient to Mall and Pitt Community College Winterville    Teposit    and    refer

*350 month

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted immediately for 2 bedroom apartment . rent and utilities 752 7l42alter4p m

FEAAALE ROOAAMATE wanted 2

bedroom duplex. 4 blocks from campus ' z rent *112 50, ' ? utilities

Deposit required. 752 1047__

MALE Completely lurnished two bedroom condominium *165 In eludes utilities Mature working person preferred Non smoker specially welcome 756 5330 or after 7 pm, 756 9969

MALE ROOMAAAT rteeded' to share new home in Stokes *115 month and ' utilities 757 1050. ROO^ATE WANTED to share country house *55 per month plus utilities Non smokers, professional preterred Phone 752 2994

RCXJAAMATE WANTED to share 2

bedroom, 2 bath mobile home *150 per month Halt utilities    Pro

tessional person preterred Call 756 6900

144 Wanted To Buy

BUYING ALUMINUM CANS, 21 per pound Glisson Enterprises,

Stokes Highway, 758 2548    ___

WANTED. Singer sewing machine, prefer style 503A or 500A Call 752 3167__

Searching for the right townhouse^ Watch ClAssif led every day

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

enees required 2330 '

756

4 BEOROOM HOUSE in Farmville with wall fo wall carpet, 2 bafhs, and new modern kitchen with stove and retrigerator. Call 753 3101 day

129

Lots For Rent

TRT^^^O^^o!weTf^ioOx20^

Located at Lot 33 Quail Ridge ! Trailer Estates. 752 0038 after 5 30,    1

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS D00RS4 /'WNINGS

Remodeling-Room Additions

C.L. Lupton, Co.

752 6116

TIRES

NEW. USED and RECAPS Unbeatable Prices and Quality

BOODtEiUITIIKCOmil

133 AAobile Homes For Rent

m DKhitfton Av

FOR RENT 12X50 Colonial Park *100 deposit and *160 rent Call

756 6230.___

FURNISHED 2 bedrooms and 3 bedrooms, *150 and *185 month Colonial Park, 758 0174

SAVE AAONEY this winter shop and use the Classified Ads every day!    

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

Remodeling-Room Additions.

C.L. Lupton, Co.

75? 61 16

FRANK M. SUTTON

Certified Public Accountant

ACCOUNTING AND INCOME TAX SERVICES 757-1807

Monday-Friday 9 to S 756-MOO Saturday 9 to 1

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furniture Retlnlshing and repairs. Superior caning for all type chaira, larger Miectlon of custom pklure framing, survey stakesany length, all types of pallets, hand-crafted rope hammocks, selected framed reproductions.

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Industrial Park. Hwy. 13 7S8-41U    IA.M.-4:30P.M.

Qreenvllie. N.C.

INCOME TAX . PREPARATION

Students - V2 Price

Mid - Eastern Business Services

2739 E. 10th St. 757-3540

Employment Opportunity

Control Systems Technician I

Position available for person to perform tasks in the installation, maintenance and repair of various electrical and electronic control devices, transformers, substation wiring, and traffic control. Must have previous experience in electrical maintenance and repair. Must be familiar with the use of an oscilloscope and be abie to understand schematic designs. Excellent benefits. Saiary S12,002-$16,099.

Apply In person at Personnel Office. 3rd Floor, Greenville Utilities Commission Office Building. 200 W 'ifh Street, Greenville, NC 27834.

"An Equal Oppoclunlty Employar"





Croaaword By Eugnu Sheffer

across    40    Treat with

1 It's grand, contempt in bridge    43    liOwly GI

5 Bar-fly    47    He outranks

8 I Remember 43 Across -    49    Redact

12 Ibsens doll

13 Altar promise

14 Actor Richard

15 Of an epoch

50 Domini

51 Indian

52 Rave

53 Numerical suffix

54 Cyst

sheep

9 Turkish officers

10 Brewers need

11 Handle

16 Patton, et al. 55 Bntail duck 17 The - eye

18 Naval officers

20 View

21 Fuel

22 Bowlers target

23 Pigment 26 Majors

superior

30 Fortify

31 Turf square

32 Flying hero

33 Hook, for one 36 Dispute a

point

38 brcle segment

39 Gold, in Barcelona

DOWN

1 Dagger

2 Bereft

3 Macaws

Avg. solution time: 24 min

ElBe

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m'A' OIN AN _ e^e:n gAlDE

maKa^&oM' A R.ANMARI

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4 Calumniate 23 Man

5 Portents (videogame)

6 Pindaric 24 Constellation works 25 Mischievous

7 Weight unit child

8 Variety of 26 Prisoner: slang

27 Annoy pettily

28 Old French coin

29 Famous ^ general

31 Thus: Latin

34 Game fish

35 River in Italy

36 Mr. Onassis

37 Wanderers

39 Synthetic fiber

40 Begone!

41 Icecream holder

42 French river

43 Liver paste

44 Furniture designer

rNOfTlAl 45 Prong

46 Diminutive suffix

19 Narrow passage 22 School of whales

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2-15

Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 48 Petty quarrel

CRYPTOQUIP    2-15

JLV EGJAVTJ ATBGJV GNJLKCVR

WJKCAVW; NWVR EVT TGBV.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip THE WISE MONARCHS DENTIST MADE HIS CROWNS.

Todays Cryptoquipclue; TequalsN.

'The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout Uie puzzle. Single letters, short wiMtls, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

)9t3 King FeatureSyfHiicl, Inc

Burley Growers

Approach Vote

By The Associated Press Burley tobacco growers, facing a cut in this years quota and an increase in fees, will vote Feb. 28-March 3 on whether to continue the government marketing-quota and price-support program for the next three crop years.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced on Feb. 1 that the basic marketing quota for the 1983 burley crop will be 5 percent less than for 1982.

And with adjustments for over- and under-marketings, effective farm quotas for 1983 are expected to total 677 million pounds, a reduction of about 13 percent from last years effective quota, the department said.

Meanwhile, burley growers can expect to pay a higher rate of assessment on their 1983 crop to help finance the government program. The fee, required by the new tobacco law passed by Congress last year, was only a penny a pound for the 1982 burley crop.

The 1983 assessment probably will not be known before the referendum or before quota leasing begins, said Jim Davis, director of the Tobacco and Peanut Division of the U.S Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service.

Davis said the assessment shouldn't cause any problems in burley quota leasing.

The new law does not require holders of burley allotments to pay the assessment on the quota pounds they lease to growers, as does the law on flue-cured allotments, Davis said For burley tobacCo, the new law requires only that the grower pay an annual assessment as he sells his

will be based on the interest cost on tobacco received under government loan.

More than 250 million pounds about 31 percent of the seasons burley volume so far - has already gone under government loan. The total loans on the burley crop - $500 million - will be slightly higher than the loans on the 1982 flue-cured tobacco crop.

Almost all the burley loan stocks from previous crops have been sold. Less than 1 percent of the 1981 cn^ was received under government loan.

The growers will vote in a mail referendum to be conducted in the eight burley-producing states. In North Carolina, the crop is grown mostly in mountain counties.

Not Against A

Friendly Hand

crop,

The 1983 assessment will be determined after sales of the 1982 burley crop are completed by the end of this ntonth, Davis said The rate

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - Gov. George C. Wallace, who once warned Americans not to turn your back on a communist," has shown he isnt against stretching out a friendly hand to the mainland Chinese.

Wallace met with Wu Xiaoba, the consul general of the Peoples Republic of China, on Monday to discuss ways to improve relations between mainland China and Alabama.

Wallace said he favors any contact with mainland China that is aimed at improving trade and cultural relations. But such contact must not compromise political principles," he said,

Wallace, long a supporter of Taiwan, once paid a visit to Chiang Kai-shek, the late leader of the Taiwan government.

FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY. FEB. 16.1963

from the Carroll Rightar Inatltuta

GENERAL TENDENCIES: UnkM you get carried away from present goals by a new course of action, you can achieve much of value today. Stick to proven methods for best results at this time.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Find a better way of handling your responsibilities and they are soon behind you. Meet expectations of loved one.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Avoid an outside foe and ^ ihore concerned with improving business affairs. Study every angle of a new project.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Take time to confer with associates and exchange clever ideas. They can be of help to you at this time. Be poised.    ,

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Take steps to improve the relationship with loved one. A new contact can bring many benefits your way.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Take a little time for amusement so that you relieve possible tensions you are under. Co-workefs are more cooperative now.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Plan a new course of activity that will help you gain personal and business aims that are important to you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Pursue goals of an idealistic nature and you can easily gain them. Take time to visit close ties in the evening.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Be sure to keep promises made to family members. A new project needs more study before going ahead with it.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Study the changes that need to be made so that you can command a greater abundance. Make right decisions in the evening.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Good day to obtain data you need for a personal project. Good organizational work is the key to success now.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Important civic affairs can be handled wisely now. Make sure you carry through with promises at this time.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Look over your environment and make plans for improvement in the future. A good friend could be helpful to you now.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be one who can envision large projects and can make them

Mardi Gras in New Orleans

Its Mardi Gras a time for celebration, parades, and general craziness in New Orleans. The festival takes place each year on Shrove Tuesday, the day before the beginning of Lent, a traditional period of fasting for Christians. French colonists introduced Mardi Gras in Louisiana in 1766, and the celebration still includes many of the original French customs. Societies called Krewes organize and pay for most of the special events. On Shrove Tuesday, members of the Krewes and anyone else who wants to join the fun parade in the streets in masks and fancy outfits. Presiding over the festivities is Rex, the King of the Carnival, who is the only one to parade unmasked.

DO YOU KNOW What is the meaning of the French expression Mardi Gras?

MONDAY'S ANSWER - Juno was ths ancient Romsn goddess of love.

2-1&S3        VEC,    Inc.    1983

GOREN BRIDGE

lY CHAllLEt OOREM AMD OMAR MLUUF

CIW ThSun* Companr SyndicM*. (nc

BEWARE OF SWEET YOUNG SHARKS!

North-South vulnerable. South deals.

NORTH

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KQ WEST    EAST

J2    KQIOS

^7    <?A8652

OQJ109764O A3

964    #87

SOUTH

87 '7KJ9 052

AJ10532

The bidding:

Sosth West' North East

Pass Pass

1 NT 3 0 Dble Pass

3 Pass Pass Pass

4 Pass Pass Pass

1 Pass Pass Pass

3 <7 Dble Pass Dble 3 NT Dble Pass Dble Pass

Opening lead: Seven of 'v'.

work efficiently, so be sure to give your progeny as fine an education as you can to prepare for an important position in life. Give fine ethical training.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983. McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

Californians Barry Crane and Kerri Shuman were unable to defend tKeir World Mixed Pair title at the recent Olympiad in Biarritz, France. But the title stayed on this continent when Canadians Dianna Gordon and George Mittelman waltzed off with the crown.

^Dianna sat South on this deal. Her double of three diamonds simply showed a maximum no trump response. East let the world know that

'his doubles of the major suits were sound. He was in the swing of things, so when South wriggled out of three no trump into four clubs, he felt obliged to make one more double, on general principles.

When West led her singleton heart, two down seemed certain. After getting a heart ruff, West could shift to the queen of diamonds, and the defenders would collect the ace of hearts and two ruffs, and two diamond tricks.

That is certainly how the play would have gone were it not for one hitch - Dianna dropped the king of hearts under the ace! That sent East into a stew for a while. Finally, he decided that it was unlikely that such an at tractive young lady was trying to pull the wool over his eyes. So he shifted to a club, and Dianna quickly cashed her ten tricks for a top score.

Have you been nmning into doable trouble? Let Charles Goren help you find your way through the maze of DOUBLES for penalties and for takeout. For a copy of his DOUBLES booklet, send 11.85 to Goren-Doubles,* care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 259, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make checks payable to Newspaperbooks.

< l3M J RfVWOlOS foeaccoco

Here comes

A fresh new taste experience

that outshines menthol.

It not only tastes fresher while you smoke. It even leaves you with a clean, fresh taste.





HARDWARE STORESIktM'Daxder.Tkoiumle^^

3M0.S|ifqrBanie

Spiay zzte is adjitaMe for fine mst stream. Fi W Mter, cteaners, etc. 01

AMOMHcMgllt Light

RMoceR setises tim aMoiit of darkness iri tte room, lims OR andoff amMeOca% 01/NL300

l^-lneh Vhmish Bnnh

^ed pHyester brusli for applying oH and lam paM. vamish, stieNac;, stain. 01/0007

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Mi on/off switdi. QBtery not inci. Ol/lillO^    Solid-brass cylinder and pins. Ot/340-22-01    insert into soU. 20 spikes per pack. 01./5001

AH-akimlnum thenRometer cant rust. BiOi botk F and C? scales, m in. long. 01/5135

SEE BACK COVER FOR LOCATION OF YOUR NEAREST TRUE VALUE HARDWARE STORE





TB

2-piy plastic baps m econooMcai. practical. Gboose twelve 44<p bags widi term sent, ten 2&pallQe baps, V SMR 33^^ bags. Twist ties inchideiL 02mH12LK12AVH24T810/TVM24TL7

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LeakiioQfsealantforpipe,alves.eb;.    MHwrpose adbesbw fastens wttbout

Mftdi leflonr </^ in. 02/0171%    nails. Resealable tube. 02/LN^

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secure doors, gates. 02/V8344)B    cusMoned steel, m ig. 02/6240    enters dralB.Qaafis easlly;02/7534C





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poitzen,naketties. 8 OL 03/04181    lkAiQ.lledhM or targe. 03/98/7    leiWilK 14x18 jKhes. 03/0001    ylene. Can be ix)iled. frozen. 03/113    Secure grip design. 03/5502

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OaiMteCaldilMironroart-iMKs and atowl bar. 04/2320-25

StacUilBilt

OiiraMe, HgMwelgbt plastic biRS in a cboice of colors. 04/230

Bteycti Wttift

HeaqHMy steel hook Is tbreaded for screwing Moraflers. 04/1A48

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300 feel of mediiiiiHieigtit parcel-    Affiirofornnufe ro prerant scratching

post" tlne.llatum color. 04/14299    and sMng. 4/pack. 04/444XC

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95 .

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41.200

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ciai.WMte. Hand crafted. 06/380011    70 or 95 watts. 06/55/70/96AW/M    tip. 25.40 or 60 watts. 2-pack.

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start seeds, bulbs and cunings in ready-tolant pots. 2iMn. diameter.

lecially for

Formulated especially for Howering plants. Just insert into soil. 05/6201Sf^mdd^Bte^

packed seeds for spring planting.

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yow choice

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Double cut on bodi sides for fast hot)-    Warns against faulty wiring. Easy-to-    Quality. carbide4ipped %, Vk % and    Creates storage space in cabinets.    Extrudsd-aiuHiinum bracket orooor-

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       "    Foq|Bd,springiefflpered8i0Bl.l1/B2l5    various    taUes.    Coppered.    11/10218





CREENVILLE

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CREENVIIU SQUARE

PHONEi 75M9i(l

GREENVILLE. N.C

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cowtars. Also for taUeteps. 12/2^-25

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b Hems. Wa8Hers.icraB^ etc. 12/7Klj6C ' let foam work, vipeoff. 16 oz. net t1^0t38 Iwidieandstaiit-fraeetoel blade. 12/663    your    fluoresGMt    fixtone.    12/280663

inlycfndii

wonleeiailEidwoetull, ^_________


Title
Daily Reflector, February 15, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.)
Date
February 15, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95297
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