Daily Reflector, February 24, 1983


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





Wsother

Goudy tooi^t (diaoce of rain) with lovs in mid-aos; mostly cloudy Friday, highs in 40s, 30 percent chance (tf morning showers.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 10-Obituaries Page 14 - The Legislature Pa^ 16 - Grammy awards

102NDYEAR NO 47

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FiaiON

GREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 24, 1983

20 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

.....

SEARCH FOR BODY ... Rescue Squads from Ray Herring of Goldsboro, was found late Farmville, Falkland and Greenville search the Wednesday. A second body was found this Tar River Wednesday for one of two men missing morning. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest) since last Saturday. The body of one of the men,

Second

Victim

Found

ByMARYSCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer

A second body whose identity was not yet certain was pulled from the Tar River shortly before noon today, according to the Pitt County sheriffs office.

A Goldsboro man whose weighted body was found in the river Wednesday died from gunshot wounds to the head, Medical Examiner Stan Harris said this morning.

The second body was found by officers and rescue squad personnel who had searched the Tar River since midday Wednesday for a Grifton minister and a man believed to be his friend. The two men had been reported missing since Saturday.

The body found Wednesday was identified as that of Ray Herring. Officers said they believed he and the minister, the Rev. Leslie Thorbes, had been robbed, murdered and deposited in the Tar River. Herrings body was found with a concrete block tied to a leg.

Dr. Harris said a Grifton police officer identified Herrings body today. He said a preliminary investigation indicated the man had been dead since sometime Friday night.

He (Herring) has been in the water also since about that time, Dr. Harris said.

Harris had no information

REFLECTOR

LOOK OVER SCENE ... Pitt County Sheriff Ralph Tyson (center, pointing) talks with officials as they look over the scene of a search Wednesday afternoon for the Rev. Leslie Thorbes of Grifton, who has

been missing since Saturday. A body that may be that of Thorbes was found this morning. Officers said positive identification had not been made as of noon. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

on the type of gun used in the shooting. Anything now would be a guess, he said.

Herrings body, which had no identification, was re-

moved from the Tar River near the Falkland bridge around 3 p.m. Tuesday.

Sheriff Tyson said blood stains found on the bridge are being analyzed by the State Bureau of Investigation.

Tyson also said rumors of an eyewitness in the investigation are something we cant talk about.

'Thorbes and Herring were

reported missing Saturday and Thorbes wallet was found Saturday, officers said, in the area behind the Pitt-Greenville Airport. Thorbes drivers license was also found Tuesday in the same area, which is near the Tar River.

Herrings car was found in Lenoir County Saturday, said authorities, who believe the two men were friends.

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 wUl be used.

BENCHES FOR BUS STOPS?

I rode past a Greenville bus stop yesterday and saw an elderly lady with a walker there waiting. I would like to see the city install some park-type benches to accommodate people who need seating while waiting for the bus. L.M.

Nancy Harrington, city transit coordinator, said your question couldnt be more well-timed for a positive answer. After having seen the need for a long time, the transit office has within the past two weeks received shipment of 20 benches to be used at bus stops. These have now been stained for beauty and weatherproofing and installation will begin next week. Not every stop in the city will be covered by the 20, but the ones observed as being most used by the elderly and disabled will soon have benches, she said.

Dunn Resigning

Robert J. Dunn, executive director of the Pitt County Development Commission, has submitted his resignation, according to Bruce Beasley Jr., development commi^ion chairman.

Iteasley said IXmns resignation is effective March 31. He has served as the commissions, director since June 1,1981.

We wish the very best * for Robert Dunn and his family, Beasley said. He has worked hard to promote the goals and objectives of wn* commission, and has accomplished these things in a highly professional manner.

Beasley said a committee has been named to secure applicants for the position.

During Dunns tenure, Simpson Industries Inc. and Package Craft Inc. located in Pitt County.

Dunn is currently presi

dent of the Gold Leaf Urban Area marketing organization.

More Firings Hit EPA's Leadership

By ROBERT PARRY Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan, moving to clean house at the troubled Environmental Protection Agency, has fired two more of its administrators and, according to one congressman, more may be on the way out.

As many as a half dozoi agency officials might be targeted for removal, says R^. James H. Scheuer, D-N.Y., who heads one of the congressional investigations into alleged mismanagement and wrongdoing at EPA.

Larry Speakcs, the chief deputy White House press secretary, confirmed that the two officials were leaving and said that at Reagans initiative, we will now proceed with a number of personnel changes designed to strengthen the management of the environmental agency.

But, he said, the changes were not likely to take the form of more dismissals or resignations over there.

Speakes said that Reagan absolutely retained confience in Anne Burford, the a^ncy administrator, and that she has not offered to resign.

Were starting with a new slate, a new team, that we think we need to do the job, Speakes said.

Reagan demanded and ^t the resignations Wednesday from EPA Inspector (Jeneral Matthew Novick and Assistant

Administrator John P. Horton both of whom were under investigation for allegedly assigning EPA secretaries personal work to do for them on government time.

On Feb. 7, Reagan fired another assistant EPA administrator, Rita M. Lavelle, who headed the $1.6 billion superfund program to clean up the nations worst toxic waste dumps.

The formal announcement of the Horton and Novick firings and their replacements were expected today.

A White House official, yaking on condition he be granted anonymity, characterized Novicks and Hortons departures Wednesday night as "part of an effort to strengthen middle-level management at EPA, particularly in the superfund area.

He said Mrs. Burford, traveling in Arizona and California, was fully consulted throughout... and is totally on board. 'The EPAs superfund program has been the center of growing allegations that the administration granted the chemical industry sweetheart deals on costs and manipulated the funds cleanup schedule for political purposes.

However, Ms. Lavelle denied suggestions Wednesday that she had made sweetheart deals with industrial polluters. Ms. Lavelle told Congress that her firing resulted from Mrs-Burfords mismanagement and suspicions.

Quife A Blow To ECU If UNC Budget Trimmed

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer

It would be quite a blow if a report prepared by legislative fiscal analysts, which proposes to trim $18 million from the the University of North Carolina systems base budget, were enacted into law. East Carolina University Chancellor John Howell said this morning.

The report suggested that the $18 million could be cut system-wide by eliminating 427 teaching positions, reducing the number of physician residencies at Area Health Education Centers, triming support for health and science programs and reductions in other areas.

'The suggestions by the analysts were part of an effort to target 3 percent of

the budget of each state agency if reductions are needed later to balance the budget for the coming biennium.

As far as Im concerned, Howell said, I dont want to talk about where Id pick to cut 3 percent. I cant comprehend that. Its really too hypothetical. Id rather contemplate the economy improving so no cuts would be necessary.

Howell said that, speaking from experience, we were cut 6 percent of our operating budget after the appropriations were enacted last year. We had a hard time adapting to that. It got to the point we said we were not going to spend any money unless it was essential to the instructional program.

The chancellor said, too, that 32 staff (not faculty) positions were cut last year from ECUs budget. That was a difficult cut for us, and the proposed cut in faculty system-wide would be in addition to those 32 positions, he said.

When they begin talking about a 3 percent cut in budget, the only way that we could adapt is to a cut like that is to cut faculty. Its hard for us to even contemplate that. It would make the quality of instructional services go down.

Howell said, Were talking about something more than the situation on campus.

We are providing service that is very essential to a viable economy. When we get these sorts of reductions, its not just a reduction in

positions, but in services we supply to the people in the re^on; or supply them not quite as well as we need to.

Howell explained, What were talking about here Is a staff paper... presented as a talking piece (that) the legislative committees accepted for information purp^. It isnt a proposal or bill before the committees.

Well do what we can from keeping it from happening.

Dr. William Laupus, dean of the medical school at ECU, said that, from my standpoint, the base budget committee is looking at the worst possible scenario which the state mi^t have to face up to should income not increase. This is speculative

(Please turn to Page 10)

Saudi Arabia Pressing 'Last Chance' Oil Pricing Strategy

ROBERT DUNN

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) - Saudi Arabia pressed its last chance oil pricing strategy today with Libya, a key contact with OPEC hard-liners. But signs of dissension appeared among the Saudi-led Arab oil states.

Meanwhile, Venezuelas oil minister planned separate meetings in Paris with the ministers of Algeria, Kuwait and non-OPEC member Mexico in hopes of unifying positions on a price cut to avert chaos in the marketplace.

Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamni, the Saudi oil minister, met with Libyan Oil Minister Kamel Hassan Maghur in Riyadh. Neither official commented publicly.

It was Yamanis third day of extensive contacts with oU producers and his second meeting in as many days with Maghur, who is in contact with the leading opponents of the Saudi line: Iran, Nigeria, Algeria and South American producers.

The current negotiations in Riyadh are the last chance to save what can be saved for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and the world economy, said the leading Saudi newspaper Al-Riyadh.

The paper said the first wave of recession in a price war would inundate all oil producers.

Britain and Norway slashed $3 off the price of their North Sea crude last week, and Nigeria, whose oil minister is the current OPEC

head, cut its price Sunday $5.50 to $30 a barrel. Mexico has Indicated it will cut its price Friday, delivering another blow to the $34 OPEC base price.

Experts say every $1 decrease in the per-barrel price could mean a 2'/i-cent saving at the pump.

Yamani announced Wednesday that Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar, Iraq and Indonesia had agr^ on a unified pricing strategy. He would give no figures, but well-informed sources said Saudi Arabia

was advocating a $4 cut if all other OPEC states agreed, and deeper cuts if OPEC did not accept.

An emergency meeting is reported scheduled next week either in Geneva or Vienna for ministers of OPEC, which produces about 40 percent of the worlds 52 million barrels of oil daily. Saudi Arabia and its Persian Gulf oil allies - the biggest producing bloc in the world - account for about 10 million barrels daily.

The official United Arab Emirates news agency

quoted an editorial by the newspaper Al-Wahda that called for lowering (gulf) crude production substan-tially, or even halting it completely as a practical means of redressing the world oil glut that has led to a spiral of price cuts.

'This was directly opposed by the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Watan, which said gulf production cuts would not revive the sagging market. The newspaper added, however, that the Arab gulf states still had the final say in any move toward a price war.

Sen. East's Free Mail Said To Hit $961,000

WASHINGTON (AP) - In the six weeks before last falls general election. Sen. John East, R-N.C., blanketed the state with about 6.2 million copies of tax-paid newsletters that attacked liberals, national Democratic leaders and the news media.

East used his Senate franking privilege to mail the newsletters at an estimated r^t of $961,000 . A confidential Senate survey on how much each senator used the free mailing privilege last year ranked East as seventh among the

senators, according to several sources.    

A congressional report says East mailed 8.5 million letters last year-3.89 letters for every mail box in North Carolina.

In an interview Tuesday, East said the newsletters last fall were not connected to hard-fought congressional elections. East said he would not face election until 1986, so it would require a large leap of faith to tie the mailings to the elections.

He also defended the use of tax monev for such mailings.

The purpose ui the mailings, in a representative democracy, is to allow us to communicate with our constituents, East said'. Often, the local press is unable to cover the range of activities we are involved in.

Democrats interpreted the mailings differently.

It is obvious that the newsletters that were sent out during that time, just prior to the election, were blatantly political, said June E. Milby, communications director for the state Democratic Party.





J-The D*Uy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Thursday, February J4.1983

An Invitation From Queen: Meeting Family

ByGREGORYJENSEN

LONDON (UPI) - Queen Elizabeth invites you to Buckingham Palace to meet her royal ancestors.

True, the Queens Gallery is isolated from the rest of the palace. True, none of her ancestors is there in the flesh.

But the new show called Kings and Queens is ,a family snapshot album on the grandest possible scale -a procession of every British monarch for more than 500 years, from before the first Elizabeth to the^one who reigns now.

Its a short course on the British royal line, told in paintings which are sometimes artistic masterpieces. Its also a chance for a satisfying gossip about the

Family

Life

Topic Set

ECU News Bureau

A Poignant Pause in the Sexual Revolution is the topic of East Carolina Universitys 23rd annual Family Life Conference set for March 1-2.

Featured speakers are Dr. Carol Cassell, author and president-elect of the American Association of Sex Educators, Counselors and Therapists and past director of the Princeton University Health Center Sexual Counseling Services; and Karen Gordon, M.P.H., director of Princeton University Health Center ahd Sexual Counseling Services.

Ms. Gordon will speak March 1 at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. on Princetons campus needs assessment and pro^am-ming. The program will be held in Room 244 of Mendenhall Student Center.

Dr. Cassell will present an address on the symposium theme March 1 at 9 p.m. in Hendrix Theater. Her presentation will examine the forces that led to the sexual revolution, how we know its over and how it has affected men and women. She^ will speak again at 10 a.m. on March 2 in room 244 of Mendenhall.

Dr. Cassell is the author of a forthcoming book (Simon and Schuster) about womens relationships with men and an article on sexuality scheduled for publication in Parents magazine. She is also co-author of a book on adolescent sexuality and recently appeared on the Today and Tomorrow programs on NBC-TV and on a cable TV special for adolescents.

The Family Life Conference is sponsored by an interdisciplinary committee. This years coordinators are Dr. Susan McCammon of the psychology faculty and Martin McGuire of the campus Alcoholism Training Project.

All sessions are free and open to interested persons.

Lordy, Lordy, Dianthasi Forty

kind of people who wear crowns.

Queen Elizabeth I, for instance. Some portraits here match the popular legend of the Virgin Queen, the dazzling monarch of subjects like Shakespeare and Marlowe, Raleigh and Drake.

But there also is a portrait of an unsmiling girl, solemn despite her bejewelled gown, no more impressive than any other girl of 14. This, too, is the first Elizabeth, in 1547.

Just beneath hangs the mature queen, crowned and sceptered, striding in all her majesty onto meadows below Windsor Castle - and finding there the goddesses Juno, P^las and Venus with Cupid.

Clearly Elizabeth is about to rout these pagans with the lash of her tongue.

You might call it a propaganda portrait. But as Sir Oliver Millar, Surveyor of the Queens Pictures, notes in the shows catalogue, propaganda was one main point of royal portraits until photography came along.

It was less important to catch a good likeness of a king or queen than to build the royal image, boost the myth of, rule by divine right,

' strengthen royal power.

Such portraits were mass produced for embassies abroad, governors of subject territories, for swapping with fellow monarchs. Some also were used to arrange marriages sometimes with disastrous results.

Since travel was difficult. King George IV when Prince of Wales exchanged portraits with his intended bride, Caroline of Brunswick. When they finally met, George instantly called for a large brandy and Caroline, appalled that George was very fat, declared him nothing like as handsome as his portrait.

There is a painting of their 1795 wedding in this show. The marriage lasted less than a year.

Photography came into its

own durinig the reign of Queen Victoria - the most-painted monarch of all. One book tallies 130 portraits painted after she became queen, and this list could certainly be expanded.

The 15 on display show Victoria literally from the cradle to the grave - a gurgling infant painted in 1819 to a charcoal sketch on the flower-strewn bed where she died in 1901.

Queen Elizabeth II is giving Victoria a run for the most-painted title. Since 1937, Millar said, the queen has given sittings for nearly 100 portraits.

The one shown here belongs to her eldest son. Prince Charles.

In quality, royal portraits fall off after Victorias time. There is nothing to match the glory of earlier Van Dycks, Holbeins or the miniaturists Hilliard and Oliver.

Even so, Millar said, this is a display of royal portraits which for quality, variety and range of mood could not be matched from the resources of any other collection.

He refers to the British monarchs collection, one of the biggest and most valuable in the world. Most of it is unseen by ordinary people.

Some years ago, with her own funds. Queen Elizabeth converted a World War II bomlHlamaged chapel attached to Buckingham Palace into an easy-on-the-feet gallery, a single room plus balcony.

It shows only the priceless royal hoard, in tantalizing one-theme glimpses.

The gallery has been closed for 10 months to install new air conditioning.

. All the famous names are grouped to re-open it -Henry VIII, humpbacked Richard III (Crookback), Mary Queen of Scots, King George III seemingly watching the American colonies melt away, down to telling sketches of Queen Mother Elizabeth and Prince Philip.

At Wits End

Bv Krma Bomlnrk

Wheii you move to a new house you try to anticipate everything. I had it all together until I picked up the ptmne to call Mother. An operator intercepted and said, That is a long distance call from your exchange. A mile and a half was destined to change my entire life.

You have to understand. I oall my mother every day of my life. I dont know why. I just know if I dont something terrible will happen to me. She told me that.

Since that day weve been talking in a strange language, limited before only to want ads and commercials. We use no verbs or adjectives, abbreviate whenever possible and never ask a question we know the other doesnt have a quick answer for.

A typical conversation sounds something like this;

Mother: Hows...

Me: Fevers down, cold gone. Instant relief. You?

Mother: One bdrm, l.r. to go. Dinner tonight?

Me: Yes.

Mother: Pis. bring dessert. See files, pastry, apple.

Me; Receive and acknowledge. Dad?

Mother: One birdie, one bogey, two beers. Serviceman arrive?

Me: Negative.

Mother; Heard from B.R. Tues.

QuUters Hear Vickie Berger

Vkdbe Berger presented a lecture and slide presentation on American Quilts Old and New Tuesday f(Hr the Greenville Quilters Guild at the Ccunmifflity Building.

She is an East Carolina Univmity home economics textiles professes.

QuUt blocks roUing star were givoi to guild mn-bers.

A list of upcoming events was discussed including a pot luck limcbeon March 22 for guild members. Women attending are mcouraged to bring their quilt projects to work on. The deadlioe for all entries in the Pitt County Quilt Block Contest is March 25. Entries may be submitted to Greenville Quilters Guijd or Greenville Recreation and Parks Department.

MedallHHi Quilts. She was one of the instructors for the Quilt Symposium held here last May. The class be limited in numbers. Interested persons are ask to call ^-4137, ext)sion2S0.

The 1983 N.C. Quilt Symposium will be held June 2-4 at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem.

Birth

Juanita Metcalf will returned here April 5 to con-duct a workshop on

Smltti

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Lee Smith, Grimesland, a son, Ricky Lee, on Feb. 18,1983, in Pitt Memorial Ho^ital.

Looking To The Future

SPACE-AGE FASHION - A futuristic outfit designed by Benedetti is modeled by Roxanna at the Fashions from Florence and Tuscany Show at the Italian Trade Center in London. The outfit is in washable silk.( AP Laserphoto)

Me: Whos B.R.?

Mother: Letter to follow.

Me: Love you and out.

Mother: Ditto.

I miss knowing what she had for breakfast every Monday on the first day of her diet.

I miss trying to imagine what she is doing when she used to put me on top of the bread box for ten minutes to answer the door.

The other day I had enough. I dialed her number. She grabbed it on the first ring and said breathlessly, Hello.

Mother, I said, you dont have to rush to answer the phone. They dont charge you until you start talking. Besides, I cant stand the pressure anymore. Were going to take our time and carry on a leisurely conversation!

We talked for 26 minutes! It cost $2.08, but what the heck. Shes worth it.

Musical Program Given Cabinet

RALEIGH - The Louisburg College Ensemble presented the program at the meeting of the Sir Walter Cabinet held recently. The groups director is Sarah Foster.

Mrs. J. Allen Norris, wife of the president of Louisburg College, and Mrs. Robert Jordan of Mt. Gilead, wife of Sen. Jordan, were special ^ests for the luncheon meeting.

Mrs. Ed Warren of Greenville and Mrs. Vernon White of Winterville are members of the group.

Moliere, the French playwright, was bom in 1662.

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Skinny Lady Wants To Gain

By Abigail Van Buren

<983 by UiMertal Press SyixhcM

DEAR ABBY: Were always hearing about peo|de who want to lose weight. Well, what about those of us who would love to gain a little?

I dont know whaLto do, Abby. Im a 25-year-old woman, stand 5 feet 3 and weigh 95 pounds. People tell me I am very pretty, but Im too skinny. Ive tried everything imaginable to gain weight, but I cant seem to put on a pound no matter what I eat.

Can you help me? And please dont tell me how lucky 1 am. 1 feel cheated.

BIRD LEGS

DEAR BIRD LEGS: Please concentrate on your health instead of your weight. See a doctor for a complete physical, and if he or she thinks you should weigh more for your frame, he or she will give you a diet.

DEAR ABBY: A salesman of religious books was at my house the other day when my sister stopped by. The salesman had a beautiful display of The Bible Story set up on my dining room table. I happen to like beer, so I had a can of beer in my hand at the time. After the salesman left, my sister really took me apart. She said, At least you should have ditched the beer when the salesman was here!

I told her that I had a right to look at Bible books and drink beer at the same time, and she said I didnt. Sjc said, Let me out of here, and dont ever tell anyone that I am your sister! I agreed to that.

I am 52 and she is 53, and this is the frst time we have gone for five days without speaking.

Please give me your views.

SISTERLY FIGHT

DEAR FIGHT: Refer your sister to Matthew 7:1: Judge not, that ye be not judged.

, DEAR ABBY; I need some answers fast because I feel like Im sinking in quicksand.

Im involved with a married man. We have tried to be truthful from the start. He has never promised to leave his wife, nor has he told me any of the lies most married men tell their mistresses. We live one day at a time. 'This has been going on for 12 years. His wife has caught us together twice, but shes never offered to leave him, knowing he sees me daily.

I know he loves me, but Im no fool. I know he loves her, too. So why doesnt he leave one of us alone?

I am 31 and would like a ntan to call my own, but hes got me under his spell. I know I must sound like a mental

case, but Im really a smart girl. Im just not strong enough to make the break. Can you help ne?

SOUTHERN FOOL

DEAR POOL: You ask, Why doesnt he leave one of us alone?" Why should he? Hes been eating his cake and having it, too. And should he ever run out of cake, bea got two bakeries going for him.

If you^ really want a man to call your own, put as much distance between yourself and this 12-year habit as possible. Make a clean break. Move and leave no forwarding address. I dont know how far south you ar now, but head north until you reach Alaska. Happy hunting, or fishing. Its great for both.

DEAR ABBY; Heres one for you. We have a new minister who quotes Romans I&16 Greet your neighbor with a kiss. He instructs the entire congregation to stand up and hug and kiss everyone standing near enough to reach. TTien there is a lot of hugging and kissing.

Now the problem; My husband and 1 and some of our best friends have herpes. What do we do now? My husband says we should tell our pastor to stop instructing everyone to hug and kiss one another. Or should we call a meeting for all members?

DISTRESSED IN INDIANA

DEAR DISTRESSED: Tell your pastor of your concern. Ask him to suggest that instead of the traditional kiss, a token" kiss (kissing the air) while embracing will suffice owing to the danger of spreading contagious diseases.

DEAR ABBY; The Texans who wear their hats all the time do so for a good reason. The hat covers the holes in their heads and keeps the macho from leaking out.

GEORGE GILKESON, CONROE. TEXAS

If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

Youre never too old (or too young) to learn how to make friends and be popular. 'or Abbys booklet on Popularity, send $1, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

Do you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, sUmped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

Questions? Comments? For a personal reply, write to Abby, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

The Daily Reflector. GreeaviUe. N.C.-Thuraday, Pcbruaiy >l, UB-3

ASHORTBLAST

SAN FRANCISCO (AP -A developrnog called aseptic packaging keeps juice products fresh for several months without refrigeration according to Del Monte, which uses the technique to package fruit juices and punch.

In aseptic packaging, juices are sterilized for a few

seconds, then are herroeticalJy sealed in sterilised paperboard cartons.

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4The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Thursday, February 24,1183

Editorials

James KilpatrickFloraboard Bill Typifies How Matters GoPerformance Does Count

Former Labor Secretary Ray Marshall paints a thought-provoking image of the Souths industrial outlook for the next decade. Gone are the boom days of the 1950s and 60s, when the South shared in and in some cases led a national expansion in industry.

Marshall says policies utilized by Southern states and communities in those glory days wUl not necessarily work now, and will be even less successful in coming years. By the year 2000, he predicts, the South may even have fallen slightly behind the rest of the nation.

To counteract this anticipated decline, Marshall encourages greater emphasis on education true education that presents a diploma for knowledge gained, not persistence in attending class.

To quote Marshall: It doesnt do a lot of good for someone who is functionally illiterate, with a high school diploma, to be sent back to the same system they came out of. We need to find innovative ways to train and educate people and pay more attention to the development of people

As a start. North Carolina and that includes the local public school systems and the rest of the nation need to emphasize the necessity of having teachers trained for a certain area of instruction assigned to that area. And, before that, they need to assure that quality students receive quality training to become quality teachers.

Dr. Ernest L. Boyer, former U.S. commissioner of education and now head of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, says in a recent report that It is clear ... that today the teaching profession is imperiled. Rewards are few, morale is low, the best teachers are bailing out and the supply of good instructors is drying up.

He cited these statistics in science and mathematics to support his contention:

Nationally, since 1972, the number of math teachers emerging from college training programs has plunged 79 percent. In science, there has been a drop of 64 percent.

In 1982, 32,000 classes in science and math which were planned and needed involving 640,000 students could not be scheduled for lack of teachers and resources.

In 1981, half of all newly employed science and mathematics teachers were not qualified to teach science and math.

The Greenville Board of Education took a step in the right direction when it made performance one of the criteria to be used if a reduction is needed in personnel because of budgetary cuts. There had been a call for seniority alone as a determining factor; the school board wisely included performance.

Seniority in the form of tenure has been one of the reasons cited for the number of teachers assigned to areas of instruction outside of their training. Certainly seniority should be recognized and considered, but by itself, it is not enough if we are to have quality education regardless of the availability of funding.

WASHINGTON - A rose by any other name, said Juliet, would smell as sweet. And railroaded legislation in Congress, no matter how it may be called, ou^t to be identified by another smell entirely. Consider, if you please, the Floraboard Checkoff Bill. It provides a textbook example of some of the ills that afflict the Republic.

If you never heard of the Floraboard bill, you have plenty of company. Probably 99 percent of the U.S. Congress never hea^ of it either, but the bill is now law. The measure began as a seedling in the hotbeds of the American Society of Florists, and it now is flowering in the pages of the Federal Register. This is one more melancholy story of the willingness of private enterprise to abandon voluntarism in favor of federal rules and regulations.

The chronology is Instructive. In the spring of 1981, at the request of the Society of American Florists (SAF), a bill was introduced in the House. The object of the bill was to allow the growers of floral material cut flowers, potted plants and foliage plants - to set up their own promotional and marketing board under

federal auspices. At least flve other such boards are in existence, to promote the sale of wool, wheat, potatoes, cotton and eggs.

The SAFs membership, according to House records, is comprised roughly of 900 grower members, 600 whol^e members and about 6,200 retail members. The bill was to affect growers only. It is estimated that 26,000 growers are producing plant materials commercially, but 23,000 of them are thought to have gross sales of less than $100,000 a year. Anyhow, the idea of the bill was that the large growers would be assessed under federal order, so as to finance the promotional and marketing board.

On Sept. 15, the original House bUl was discarded in favor of a rewritten bill sponsored chiefly by Rep. Tony Coelho of California. There were 25 other sponsors. On Sept. 17, a House subcommittee held a two-hour hearing on the Coelho bill. Five friendly witnesses, equipped with neatly prepared testimony, had been lined iq). Among them were the president and a I last president of the S^. They thought he Floraboard bill was wonderful. Three opposition witnesses, plainly unprepared.

did what they could over Coelhos badgering. Eight letters of (qiposition were entered in the record.

By astounding coincidence, the Senate that very evening was considering the 1981 farm bill. Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas was managing the after-dinner debate. Only a handful of members were on the floor. Dole nodded toward Sen. S.I. Hayakawa of California: The senator has an amendment that will take about 30 seoMids, Dole said. Hayakawa then offered Uiqirinted Amendment No. 378; its text ran to 10 (xdumns of fine print in the Record. I think this has been agreed upon by both sides, said Hayakawa. Behold, it was the Coelhobill.

Dole was a little uneasy, but not for long. There is some concern, he said, that hearings have not been held on the Senate side. But never mind. With not another word of debate or explanation, the bill was passed by voice vote. The bill went to conference; the House without debate concurred. You will find it as Title 17 of Public Law 97-98, approved by the president on Dec. 22.

Pursuant to the act, the Department of

Agriculture has held four hearings on a proposed Federal Research and Consumer Information Order. Under the proqx)sal, a 75-member Floraboard would be created. Growers with sales of more than $100,000 in a 12-month period would be assessed a tax of one-half of 1 percent on their sales. The tax would produce a promotional fund of about $6 million a year. Any assessed grower who wanted a refimd could ^t a refund in 60 to 90 days. The order will be subject to a referendum of eligible growers, though no one seems to know who the eligible growers are.

One of the most vehement opponents of the pending order is Col. William D. Morrison of Atlanta. He is the prime mover behind Growers United to Oppose Floraboard, whose broadside includes a statement for all a^: We have all been surprised at the depth of the shallowness of the entire Floraboard proposal. Morrison calls the plan a bud for nipping, and in the overgrown gardens of the federal government, the gentleman is exactly ri^t.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press SyndicateFigures Tell The Story

A set of figures on a chrt used by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger tells much about why the administration so strongly defends its budget so heavily oriented to defense.

Some of the production figures for the years from 1974 through 1982:

Tanks: Soviets, 17,350; U.S., 6,400;

Other armored vehicles: Soviets, 36,650; U.S., 4,800;

Artillery and rocket launchers: Soviets, 13,350; U.S., 350;

ICBMs: Soviets, 2,035; U.S., 346;    -

Paul T, O'Connor-

Attack submarines: Soviets, 61; U.S., 217;

Theater nuclear missiles: Soviets, 5,850; U.S., 3,550.

If those figures are correct, anybody would have cause for concern. You can bet it isnt all intended for combatting crime on the domestic front.

Simple Proposal Has Contested Facets

RALEIGH - On the surface, the proposal to have the voters elect members of the N.C. Utility Commission looks like an idea any real Democrat would

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

Videotapes Are The 'In' Thing

WASHINGTON - Mick Jagger and his Rolling Stones have probably been doing the usual at a theater near you recently in their latest concert film, "Lets Spend the Night Together.

The films title is no accidental come-on. As the Stones surely know, their professions future rests on video. Cable hook-ups and Betamaxes have become the new wave in pop music and are slowly merging the two biggest chunks of American culture.

We bring up this subject because of a visual barrage of rock and celluloid thats intensified over the last 18 months. Videotapes of rock performers seem to be rolling everywhere particularly on

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television. Rock groups and singers, who once avoided publicity to the point of reclusion, are now as visible as Gary Coleman and, unfortunately, as childishly theatrical.

A video-rock sampler: Billy Joel dresses in work clothes and hard hat and strume his guitar to the background of his latest hit, "Allentown. To the dub of "Loves Been a Little Bit Hard on Me, directors run country-rock singer Jiiice Newton through a sadistic routine that eventually puts her in a body cast. The Go-Gos, those pixie-faced idols of millions, are transformed into clay figurl and transported into space. Wheee!

Why are they doing it? Thats easy: to sell records. Anyone whos taken the temperature of the recording industry recently knows that rock stars and their backers are hard-up for business. More than older standbys of nationwide tours and fan clubs, videotapes are the newest way to lure a mass market.

Produced at a cost of anywhere from $15,000 to $150,000, tapes are distributed to record stores, night clubs and television systems free of charge. Of course, of these outlets, cable TV provides the biggest splash. A number of cable firms (Home Box Office, for example) offer regularly-scheduled programs built around industry-produced video tapes.

One in particular, however, Warner Amexs MTV (that means Music TV), seems to be setting the standard. Around the clock, seven days per week, the New York-based service broadcasts at least 250 different tapes, of groups ranging from Fleetwood Mac to Squeeze.

For MTVs 9.5 million viewers, who on the average are about 23 years old, nonstop rock is dream come true. For depressed record companies, its a life saver - at least temporarily. Since August 1981, according to a Billboard magazine survey last fall, theres been a 15-20 percent boost in sales of albums by acts featured on MTV.

WTiether video can spawn a lasting turnaround is unclear. For its part, MTV has its eye on another 5 million subscribers by years end, but such projections are hard

to verify. At 29.3 million subscribers, the nations cable systems have already linked 35 percent of Americas television-owning households but have undergone a slump. Meanwhile, says Michael Greene, who runs the Video Music Channel in Atlanta, the costs of production and broadcasting keep many interested parties on the sidelines.

But for now, the most important element of the rock video explosion may be its effect on the direction of music itself. Traditionally, company promotional policies and big-city tastes have dictated whats available to the rest of the country. Distance and local radio broadcasting were other factors: Cody, Wyo., always seemed five years behind the New York or Los Angeles markets in everything, particularly its music.

have to support. Let the people pick the commissioners who decide on rate increases.

But the proposal put forth by Sen. Conrad Duncan, D-Rockingbam, to make the Utilities Commission an elected body has plenty of (q)position. Gov. Jim Hunt, a representative of Duke Power and severai consumer advocate legislators all say they dont like the idea.

Under Duncans bill, the state would have 11 Utilities commissioners. One would run from each congressional district. Terms would be four years long with half the cqmmission being elected every two years.

Dimcan says the change will make the conunissioners more accountable to the public. When a citizen has problems, hell call the commissioner from his district. If commissioners must face the public, theyll also be less likely to approve big rate increases.

Thats exactly why the utilities will oppose the bill, says John Hicks, vice president for public affairs of Duke Power. I think that bill would be an absolute, utter disaster, he says. Elected commissions have a bad record in the states which already have them. One commissioner in Georgia ran on the platform that he would vote for no

increases at all, and thats what hes done.

Hunt will also oppose the bill, says Gary Pearce, his press aide, for reasons exactly opposite those of Hicks. The danger is that to run a campaign, you

have to have campaign contributions. And where do they come from? You could end iq) with a commission thats behcdden to the utility companies. So, it would not necessarily end up with a more consumer oriented commission. It would lead to just the opposite.

Elisha Douglas

Strength For Today

Bishop Berkeley, a philosopher who worked out a philosophical system which has challenged mens minds for nearly 250 years, once wrote about his reaction to seing a fly move on one of the pillars of St. Pauls Cathedral.

The insect was so small and its comprehension so limited that it could see only a minute part of the great pillar. To the flys limited view, the roughness and iregularity of the hewn stone seemed to be only so many rocks and precipices. The fly could, of

course, not appreciate the beauty of the pillar.

That much of life is mean, unworthy and low, no one can deny. There is about it a shocking amount of coarseness, selfishness and sin. But God evidently believes it is worthwhile, else he would not allow it to exist. This is because he sees the whole of it.

We, like the fly, see only a little area of the beautiful pillar which is a noble part of the great structure.

John Cunniff

Recession Has Brought Some Changes With It

NEW YORK (AP) - The recession has had its impact in obvious ways, such as throwing people out of jobs, but it has also changed their habits in many more subtle, less noticeable ways.

More than a nllion households, for example, disappeared at one time or another during the recession, as parents moved in with children and children with parents and singles with other singles.

They cut their spending and they rq^aired their old cars and they ate less red meat and they took vacations closer to home, if at all, and they forced economies on their local governments.

In business, the recession tau^t companies how to pare their inventories and otherwise run a tight operation, and it made them aware of the need for quality and of the necessity to serve rather than exploit.

It also reminded business that the latest theories out of the business schools wouldnt save any company if its management continued to violate the old-

fashioned rules of common sense and practicality.

It made non-profit organizations more aggressive in their pursuit of contributions, congressmen more attentive to the money they ^nt, local governments more aware of their dependence on the federal government.

An attitude was changed. In the 1960s everything seemed possible, and that feeling was so real that pecqile went out and tried the impossible. Individuals, businesses, academic institutions, charities and governments all got the idea they could do more than ever before, and do it effortlessly and perpetually.

All have withdrawn to their shells, overwhelmed by inflation and economic shrinkage, and shocked by the realization that everything isnt possible that, for example, a government cannot provide social services without charging for them or else running a deficit or forcing inflation on the economy.

The recession forced managements to

make the hard decisions. Subsidiaries acquired during the great growth days of the last 1960s and 1970s were sold off or abandoned in the 1980s for the simple reason they were unprofitable.

It forced unions to accept the hard realities. Collective bargaining settle-moits in 1982 provided the snudlest average wage increases since the late 1960s, when such data were first collected systematically.

Anyone can make a list of what the great recession did to them, and if there is any conunon theme it is probably that people are less assured than before, which may be another way of saying they have lost confidence.

People have learned to stay home, say the executives of a company that keeps a check on such things. The development of a variety of tdevlsion channels has helped, but so, ^q)arently, has the recession.

Albert Sindlinger. whose Media, Pa.,

research firm telqrtMmes hundreds of homes each day, has found that he reaches most homes on the first telephone call. It wasnt always so, especially a decade or so ago.

Presoitly, we are reaching more than 70 percent of our respondoits on the first shot, he says. During normal economic times, vre typically reached less than 60 percent on the first try, even during the xcdd winter months.

In fact, says Sindlinger, the only people difficult to reach, and therefore going out, are those in the iqqier income ' brackets and stockholders.

And speaking of stockholders, you probably have observed how they too have changed. Theyre back to the blue chips they had abandoned during the 1970s, when the go-go stocks attracted so much attratimi and money.

The go-g(s and their unlimited futures are gone. Stockhcdders today deal with the realities, with the cold numbers rather than the hot dreams.

I '

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Pravda Prints Letters To Yuri

PARKING LOT SALE

WEST HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - Two Americans who wrote to Soviet leader Yuri Andropov say they never expected their letters to become fodder in a propaganda campaign by the Soviet Unkm.

Joseph Dubitzky, 82, of West Hartford, said Wednesday be was pleased his letter was read by Soviet officials, although he said its point aj^par^itly was distorted from A to Z in the Communist Party newspaper Pravda.

And Niles Stansfield, a farmer from Yuma, Colo., said he was astounded to learn how his letter was used, but did not believe he was misquoted.

Pravda mentioned the letters and those purportedly written by several other Americans in a recent issue.

saying Dubita^ had pleaded for a summit meeting between Andropov and Presi-doit Reagan.

move to create a sympathetic image for Andropov.

Stansfield, 41, told the Denver Post his letter was simply a message from one human being to another about the need for peace.

Nevr in my wildest dream did I iink this would happen, he said Tuesday.

the New York Times said Wednesday it was not able to locate seven of the letter writers cited in the article. The letters purportedly came from Americans concerned about peace, and sotne were critical of the Reagan administration. The use of the letters appeared to be a

Dubitzky, a retired pharmacist, said Pravdas interpretation of his letter was incorrect. A Russian native who fled his country 62 years ago, Dubitzky said he sent a registered letter to Andropov last Dec. 14, seeking hlp in reuniting a Soviet family.

He wrote on behalf of 44-year-old Adel Chuprovsky, asking Andropovs help in reuniting the woman with her husband in Connecticut. Soviet officials have refused to allow the man to join his wife and daughter.

Dubitzky said he became

3 Auto ~ lies

Clarification Of RIF Policy

AUTO SALES - Chart shows Big 3 auto sales every ten days from Jan. 1 through F^. 20. New car sales by the major domestic automakers declined 12.7 percent in mid-February compared with the period a year ago - maridng the worst daily selling rate for the period lin 22 years. (AP Laserphoto)

The article in Tuesdays paper on the adoption of a Reduction in Force (RIF) Policy by the Greenville Board of Education on Monday night contained a misinterpretation of the policy adopted by the board.

In the article, it was stated that the policy adopted is based on the four-point policy recommended by the Liaison Committee and presented to the board on Feb. 14, which called for an RIF policy with determination based equaily on the four factors of seniority in teaching, seniority in the city school system, certification qualifications, and performance.

In the policy adopted by the board, entitled Reduction In Force - Certified Personnel, the basic points are spelled out in the following statement:

When... it is necessary to reduce the number of certified positions, the superintendent is authorized and directed to do in so in such a manner as to minimize the negative effects on student welfare as the chief criteria. Due consideration shall also be given to: providing security to personnel who have provided competent and dedicated service to Greenville City Schools and to education in general; as well as preparation and training, provided, however, that demonstrated competence and performance shall be given predominant weight and consideration.

Thus, the major determination, the predominant weight factor, in the adopted policy is that of demonstrated competence and performance.

aware of the familys troubles while working with Soviet immigrants who have settled in Uk Hartford area.

So ... I spilled out my heart to him Andropov man to man. Lets sit down, lets talk things over. What good would this broken family do to the U.S.S.R.? What good? Certainly theres no harm done by reuniting this family, he recalled writing to Andropov.

Pravda claimed Dubitzky said a meeting between Reagan and Andropov would be a reasonable step. The Communist Party new^aper also claimed the letter called for a restoration of good relations, all of which Dubitzky denied.

Stansfieids letter complimented Andropov for his comments on peace and the necessity of joint efforts toward peace.

I hope that our countries

- the U.S.S.R. and the U.S.

can coexist, maintaining friendly relations, Stansfield wrote.

He also wrote that his children must live without fear of nuclear catastrophe and concluded:    Please,

Yuri, help us all in this world! Let peace be a priority for you.

Dubitzky said he had no copy of his typed letter.

I wish Id known that it would raise such interest. I would certainly have made a copy, but if I were to keep a

copy of all the correspondence I did during my 82 years of life Id need a big warehouse, Dubitzky said.

Believe you me, I didnt commit anything wrong. I didnt commit a crime. My conscience is clear and free,* Dubitzky said. He said he was seeking to obtain a o^y of the Pravda article so that he could read it himself.

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Between 1975 and 1980, North Carolina ranked second among the nations 10 largest states in the rate of growth of high technology manufacturing jobs, according to the state Department of Commerce.

During that period, North Carolinas grov^ rate of 58.4 percent was second only to Texas at 65 percent, he said.

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Everybody

By JAMES GOGEK Associated Press Writer Wages for county workers across North Carolina rose up to 6 percent this fiscal year, but state employees, whose pay remained frozen to help balance the state budget, arent happy about it.

Mecklenburg and Guilford counties spent over $2 million each this fiscal year to boost their employees salaries. The 2,200 Mecklenburg County workers received an average 3.8 percent raise on Jan. 5, while Guilford County workers got a 2.5 percent raise Jan. 1.

We dont want to take bread out of anybody's mouths, said Chuck Mooney of the North Carolina Association of Educators. But teachers have been underpaid over the last several years and we are asking the Gojeral Assembly to rectify that

Last year was the first year since 1949 that automatic merit increases for state emph^ees were not granted, said Dr. Donald Hayman, assistant director of the Institute of Government at the University of North Carolina.

I know that per capita incomes in North Carolina grew last year, so somebody got a raise, said Arthur Padilla,- associate vice president for academic affairs for the University of North Carolina. As a state onployee, Padilla said his salary has been frozen.

Raises for the more than 37,000 county em|doyees in the state this fiscal year ranged from across-the-board percental increases to merit raises for certain employees and cash bonuses.

Forsyth County employees received $400 each, for a total of more than 1550,000 last year in lieu of a general wage increase, said Ken Brennan, county direch- of finance.

By contrast, only about 200 of the approximately 1,000 Buncombe County employees received 4 to 5 percent merit raises. Budget director William Taylor said he didnt know how much the county spent on the raises

Dare, Cumberland, and New Hanover County employees all received 5 percent increases this fiscal year, while Geveland County employees receiveda 6 percent increase.

A Cumberland County payroll official said the county ^t $758,731 on raises for their 1,200 employees. The Cleveland County financial director said his county spoit approximately $250,000 in wage increase for 375 workers.

W^e County employees received no across-the-board this year, but about two-thiF(k of the employees got 5 percent merit raises, costing the county about $370,529, payroll official Stan Wood said.

In Pitt County, about 80 of 400 employees received merit raises and 300 received longevity pay of between 2 and 5 percent of their salaries, assistant county manager Don Davenport said. Longevity pay is a bonus given to en^yees after a certain amount of time working for an employer.

Of the more than 170,000 full-time state employees, about 8,000 of them are instructors in nentary, secondary and higher education.

Padilla said because of the state pay freeze, we have alreadv lost good teachers.

Tlie longer the freeze lasts, the worse it will get.

Mooney said pUWic scfaod teachers in the state ranked 28th in the natkm in wages five years ago while this year they rank 38th.

Teachers in Nwth Carolina are employed tqr city and county school districts but are paid by the state because of an education financing reorganization law pas^ during the Great Depresskm whoi many schocri systems were in danger of going under, Mooney said.

Since 1933, the state has paid operating expaises for schocds while the county cm-city systems pay capital outlays. There are 143 sdiool systems in the state.

He said 93 of the 143 public school sy^ms pay their teachers a supplement to state salaries which is allowed under state law. Mecklenburg County teachers are the higher paid in the state with an additional $2,760 a year paid as a supplement for teachers with maximum experience, Mooney said. Warren County pays the lowest siqiplement of $75 per teachers a year.

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Team To Seek WWII Planes

WINSTON.SALEM, N.C. (AP) - R.J, Reynolds Industries announced Wednesday that it plans to back a team of 15 men who will attempt to recover ei^t airplanes which crash-landed in Greenland during Worid Warn.

Reynolds spokesman David Fishel said the dans are covered with about 40 feet of snow and are believed to be in good condition.

The six P-38S and two B-17s were attempting to opoi an air route to Europe whoi they ran into bad weather and then ran out of fuel, Fishel said.

A Republic Airline pilot is organizing the recovery ef-f<Ml and Fishel said the planes would be brought to the United States and restored.

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Fifty counties pay no si^iplement. ,

We think that every county should pay a supplraiait, Mooney said. State employees salaries

Jury Rules Themes Used

CHICAGO (AP) - A federal court jury ruled Wednesday that the Bee Gees musical g^ infringed on the copyright work of a suburban amateur songwriter to create their hit How Deep is Your Love.

Barry Gibb, the Bee Gees lead singer, shouted Lies! as the four-man, four-woman jury found fw Robert Selle, who claimed the Australian groiq) used themes from his 1975 song Let It End for their love song from the soundtrack to the film Saturday Night Fever.

Selle, a Hazd Crest antique dealer, hailed the jurys finding.

I think it is the correct verdict, be said. What can I say? Im very pleased.

U.S. District Judge George Leighton said he \n^d refer the matter of damages to a magistrate.

Well have to see, said Leighton. That will be determined in the second part of the trial.

A visibly angered Rotnn Gibb shouted that verdict was a lie after the jury and the judge left the courtroom.

Another member of the group, Maurice Gibb, was reported in Los Angeles for the 1983 Grammy Awards presentation.

FIRST SUMBOT BANGKOK, ThaUand (AP) The Communist Party chiefs of Vietnam, Cambodia and L)s are holding their first summit meeting since the Communists triumphed in Indochina neariy eight years ago.

nationwide have been increasing at the rate of about 7 percent In the past five years, according to statistics from the Assembly of Gdv-emmental Employees.

But last year, state workers in ei^t states, including North (Carolina, received no pay increase.

The ls^ pay raise for North Carolinas state employees and teachers was a 5 parent increase Jan. 1, 1982, in the 1981-82 fiscal year.

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Snail Darter Is Proliferating

The Daily Reflector, GreenvilJe, N.C.-Thunday, February M, lNS-7

By DAVID GOELLER Associated Press Writa-WASHINGTON (AP) -The snail darter, the three-inch minnow that prompted a court to tempra^y block constructk of a $130 millkui dam, is thriving and about to lose its status as an endangered species, Interior Secretary James Watt says.

The darter, which became an environmental symbol of the 1970s, is in the process of being downgraded from an endangered to a threatened species and eventually could be left without any federal protection, according to Watt.

He said that Fish and Wildlife Service biologists have found darter populations in at least six east Tennessee waterways.

They found it was not endangered, he told the House Appropriations energy and water subcommittee Tuesday.

With further biological research and evaluation, its conceivable they would take it clear off the (protected) list, Watt added.

Asked afterward if the snail darter is thriving. Watt replied, Oh, yeh.

Ten years ago, the snail darter was discovered in the Little Tennessee River above

the site of the Tellico Dam proposed by the Tennessee Valley Authority.

Envinnimoitalists feared destruction of what was believed to be the minnows only natural habitat. They succeeded in convincing a federal court in 1977 that the darters endangered status mandated a halt to work on the nearly completed dam.

Work was stopped until 1979, when Congress and President Carter agreed on legislation exempting the Tellico Dam from the endangered species law. In the process, some Little Tennessee darters were moved to the Hiwassee River.

Megan Durham, a spokesman for the Fish and Wildlife Service, said the

Hiwassee population is ju^ one of six found in eai Tennessee by federal scientists.

The other waterways are Chickamauga and Sewee creeks and the Sequatchie, Paint Rock and Little Tennessee rivers, according to Ms. Durham. The darters in the Little Tennessee are

downstream of the dam, she added.

Ms. Durham said these populations are doing better than the one in the Hiwassee and are believed to be natural p(^ulations, not the result of dam-related relocations.

She said scientists would not estimate the number of darters.

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NO LONGER ENDANGERED construction of a TVA dam for two Two preserved specimens of the years is now found inhabiting six snail darter fit easily in the palm of a tributaries of the Tennessee River, hand. This minnow that stopped (AP Laserphoto)

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BY CHARLES (OREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1983 Tribune Company Syndicate. Inc.

MAKING THE SIMPLE LOOK DIFFICULT

Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH

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AQ76 The bidding:

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2 NT Pass 3 NT Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: Six of .

Making a contract can be hard work if you go it alone. Enlisting the aid of the enemy can simplify matters greatly.

The bidding was straight out of our textbook. South showed his 19 points by jum ping in no trump and, since that tended to deny a four card major suit, North saw no point in introducing his heart suit.

West led the fourth-best of his long suit. Declarer saw that he would be home if either red siiit broke 3-3 or if the jack of hearts was only guarded once or, should all that fail, if the club finesse succeeded - a combined chance of about 80 percent.

Declarer won the ace of spades and tried three rounds of hearts. When that suit didnt break he turned his attention to diamonds. Unlucky again. Next came

the club finesse-down one. He complained bitterly to the gods.

North also complained-but to his partner, and with justification. Basic technique was all that was required to bring home the game.

Declarer should allow the defenders to win the first spade trick and then take the ace on the second round of the suit. Now declarer can try the red suits, and when it turns out that East has both suits stopped, the contract is virtually assured. Instead of trying the club finesse, declarer should simply exit with a spade.

Almost surely. West will in the trick, and he can cash two more spades to complete the defensive book. But West is stripped of all suits except clubs, and he is now forced to give declarer his ninth trick by leading into declarers major tenace in that suit.

BLIND DUE INACTION FRANKFURT, West Germany (AP) - Professor Vjenceslav Cizek, an imprisoned 54-year-old Yugoslav dissident, has gone blind because Yugoslav officials ignored a doctors recommendation that he undergo surgery for glaucoma, the International Human Rights Society says.

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8-TheDUyftenector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, Februiry 24,1M3

mM

New Laws Pinch N. C. Utilities

By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Investors have turned their backs on stock offered by North Carolina utilities since the General Assembly passed laws making it harder to raise rates, utility officials say.

Despite Duke Power Co.s efficiency record, which has led the nation in 10 of the last 12 years, its stock has failed to keep pace with the New York Stock Exchange Utility Index, said William S. Lee,

chairman of Duke Powers board of directors.

The index "is up 22.2 percent because of the general reduction in interest rates, he told the House Public Utilities Commission Wednesday. Duke Powers common stock, however, is up only 4.5 percent since June. If our stock had increased at just the average rate, wed have $375 million more value. That would mean $700 million more capital we could have raised.

Band Clinic Had Many Attending

The General Assembly last June adopted laws that reduced the number of times utilities (XNild nie to recover fuel costs from three times a year to once or twice.

"That means $170 million came directly out of our investors pockets, Lee said.

In addition, the N.C. Utilities Commission was given di^retion over letting utilities charge customers for construction work in progress - charges that were once automatic.

Lee said that change did not directly affect Duke

about the adequacy of power su{^ies in the future.

Rep. Richard Wright, D-Columbus, who supported the 1981 legislation, questioned whether the decline was entirely due to changes in the ^ laws, saying the changes ^"Were more perceived than real.

But Lee maintained the laws introduced risk where none had existed before.

"That risk led investors to value less the securities, he said.

Lee and Berry said current

cmstniction would keep up with projected economic development through 1990, but they were concerned about further expansion.

In 1992 we expect to have the exact oiergy reserves we should have, Lee said. Weve had to slow down the two projects designed to provide power thereafter.

Beyond 1990 we are very C(Micemed about our ability to meet demand, said Berry. "We need to act now if were going to avoid (the problem).

GETTING READY TO CLOSE - Dr. Edward B Diethrich cleanses the chest cavity preparatory to ciosing chest following a triple coronan, bypass on Bernard Schuler, 62, of Eltnwood. Wis. in a Phoenix hospital last

night The open heart surgery was televised live. The patient was termed in stable condition today and doctors anticipate total rehabilitation with no post-operative complications. (APLaserphoto)

GreenvilleCounted 4 Traffic Mishaps

An estimated $5.200 damage resulted from a series of four traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Wednesday.

Officers reorted heaviest damage resulted from a 7:20 a m. collision at the intersection of Fifth Street and

Memorial Drive, involving cars driven by Jesse Brown Johnson of Bethel and Donnie Ray Hines of A36 Glendale Court Apartments.

Johnson was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety by investigators who

Sculpture Show Entirely Edible

CIMBERLAND, Md. (API - Visitors to a sculpture exhibit here Friday night will f>e encouraged to show up with fork in hand.

After judging oi entries in the second annual Entirely Esculent Sculpture Exhibit at Allegany Community College. the entries will be eaten.

"The exhibit is sculpture pieces made entirely of food, so it has to be entirely edible. except for the base or tray, said Anne South of the Allegany Arts Council, which is sponsoring the unusual exhibit.

"Everything has to be pretty, too, she said. "The pieces are judged and then the people who come to see the exhibit and the exhibitors eat the exhibit.

Last year. 24 entries included faces carved out of bread and cheese, sculptured vegetable flower arrangements, a port wine cheese bust and liver pate nudes reclining around a cream cheese fish pond filled with a sauce.

Ms. South cautioned that the exhibits need not be as tasty as they are eyecatching.

estimated damage from the mishap at $1,000 to the Johnson car and $900 to the Hines vehicle.

Dwayne Douglas Speight of 1718 S. Pitt St. was charged with failing to stop for a stop light following investigation of a 4:05 p.m. collision at the intersection of Greene and Fourth streets.

Police said the Speight car collided with an auto driven by Sally Reeves Ebron of 413 Nash St., causing an estimated $1,500 damage to the Ebron car and $200 damage to the Speight vehicle.

Cars vdriven by Frank Leslie Derebery of Win-terville and William Carlton Byrd of Route 3, Greenville, collided about 4:39 p.m. on Greenville Boulevard, 700 feet West of the Granville' Drive intersection.

Damage from the collision was estimated at $800 to the Derebery car and $300 to the Byrd car.

Police said a truck driven by Roy Wayne Grimes of 1108 E. 14th St. and a car operated by Willie Montana Jones (rf 1813A Hopkins Drive cdlided about 10:35 a.m. at the intersection of Greene and Fifth streets, causing an estimated $300 damage to the truck and $200 damage to the car.

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ECU News Bureau More than 40 eastern North Carolina high schools were represented at the Eastern All-District Senior High School Band Clinic at East Carolina University.

The senoir high clinic, hosted by the ECU School of Music, featured sessions with band clinicians A1 Ascersion of Norfolk, a retired Navy

Parents Sue In Shooting Death

MIAMI (AP) - The parents of Nevell Johnson Jr., a young black man whose death in a video arcade prompted two days of violence in the Overtown slum, have sued Miami, its police chief and another officer for $2 million.

The suit accuses the defendants of civil rights violations, assault and battery, ne^igence and failure to stop a history of law enforcement actions that blacks consider abusive.

Policeman Luis Alvarez, the Hispanic officer who allegedly fired the shot that killed Johnson, was charged with manslaughter last week and freed on his own recognizance.

A city attorney said he had not read the complaint, and Alvarez lawyer said he did not believe his client acted improperly.

band director; Otis Strother, Holmes High School, Edenton, band director; Haroid Jones, faculty percussionist at ECU, and John Davis, Henderson Junior High School band director.

Similar events were held for junior high school band musicians at Rose High School and Wahl Coates Elementary School.

After two says of rehear-als conducted by ECU faculty and ECU music alumnus Terry Mizesko of the N.C. Symphony, the students presented a public concert.

The students also attended a concert featuring the ECU Symphonic Wind Ensemble and the University Jazz Ensemble. .

Names of area participants and their high schools follow: Greene Central High School, Snow Hill - Lisa Ginn and Tommy Stalls.

Roanoke High school, Robersonville Thomas Council.

Williamston High School, Williamston Maria Whitley and Wyndi Roberson.

Ayden-Grifon High School, Ayden - Adrien Williannfi.

D.H. Conley High School, Greenville Dallas Braxton, Guy Buck, Glenn Buck and Todd Hudson.

Rose High School, Greenville - Celeste Pickett, Ginny Close, Rena Meteye, Beth Parham, Chris Love, Bruce Thompson, Evan House and Lewis Roberson.

Powers collections.

But the investors {rceived that North Carolinas commitment to developing power has changed, he said. Under present circumstances, it is doubtful that they will be willing to loan the billions of dollars required to continue needed construction.

William Berry, president and chief executive officer of Virginia Electric and Power Co., agreed with Lee that utilities must provide favorable investments in order to raise capital.

We need to improve both the quantity and the quality of our earnings if we are to keep the cost of capital down, he said.

Lee said North Carolina has already lost industrial prospects that would have brought thousands of jobs to the state because of concerns

ATTENDED SYMPOSIUM Winterville chiropractor Dr. Steven I. Cohen recently attended a symposium on the temporal mandibular (jaw) joint in Chapel Hill. The meeting presented research relating jaw joint dysfunctions to chronic head, neck and shoulder pain.

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Reports Persist Infanticide G>ntinuing In China

By VICrORIA GRAHAM Associated Press Writer PEKING (AP) - The murder of female babies, a frequent practice long ago in rural areas, is on the rise

again in China, where government pticy rertricts families to having one child.

Chinas new family ptriicy - aimed at keepi^ the population under 1.2 billion in

the year 2000 - is enfrnx^ by fines as high as $2,000 f-an extra child.

Although no government rustics on infanticide are availaUe,tbe officiai press is

fitted with 0rtely tales of the killing of tumdreds of girls by paroits determined to have a

son.

Sons wmt in the helds, take care of their paroUs in old age, inholt {fft^ety and bring wives home to work. Dau^ters cost money to feed, need dowries and are married off inte other mras families.

Giri babies are drowned.

strangled, tossed down pdblic toilets and left to die in the wilderness, according to the news reports, which say some local authorities look the other way if a' little girl toddles off, trips into a well or dies of exposure.

Such reports reveal that the feudal preference for sons was not swept away by socialism. They also reveal a widespread disregard for

Planning Expand Special Forces

THE BETTER TO SEEEM WITH - Shawn Winter, a technician at Hughes Aircraft Co. in El Segundo, Calif., tests devices that enable crews of the U.S. Armys new Aorams lanx lo see targets at ni^t. Hures says the device, called a thermal imaging system, also enables the crews to see throuj^ battlefield smoke and

haze. Hughes also produces the laser rangefinder for the tank. The two systems are being buUt at the rate of more than 60 a month under contracts with M-1 prime contractor General Dynmnics Corp. and the Army. (AP Laserphoto)

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Reagan administration is planning to expand the Armys Special Forces for the first time since the Vietnam War, boosting the number of Green Berets by one-third.

The expansion is part of a plan to bolster U.S. ability to operate behind battle lines, including those of Soviet and Warsaw Pact tro(^.

The Army proposal would add 1,200 men to the Green Beret forces, known for their characteristic headgear, to their current 3,600 troops.

In their annual report to Congress, Army leaders say their plans call for creating two new Special Forces battalions, an additional company and a new group headquarters, staffed by the new men.

The Green Berets were glamorized in the early 1960s as military supermen who underwent rigorous training for guerrilla-style warfare.

The special Forces reached a peak of 11,500 men during the Vietnam War. They recruited, taught and led Vietnamese irregidars in reconnoitering and harassing

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North Vietnamese infiltrators. Special Forces teams also made forays into Cambodia and Laos.

The Special Forces, most based at Fort Bragg, N.C:^, declined in numbers as the countrys disenchantment with the Vietnam War grew.

The expansion coincides with a secret guidance paper circulated among the armed services, which calls for bolstered ability to disrupt enemy rear area operations in Eastern Europe and elsewhere.

In it. Pentagon leaders laid out an objective of ensuring that Special Operations Forces be sized, structured and specially trained and equippkl to bie able to exploit Soviet and surrogate vulnerability in Europe, northeast Asia, southwest Asia and Latin America.

Among other things, the paper said, the forces should be able to disrupt enemy rear area operations within the Warsaw Pact area of eastern Europe, as well as in northern and southern NATO regions.

Communist Chinas legal syston.

More than 210 girl babies were murdered diortly aftar birth by their parents last year In two cittes in southern Guangdong province alone, according to the Feb. 13 edition of the Canton newspaper Nanfang^y.

In some inllages, the newspapa- said, a bucket of water is kept ready by the mothers bed as she gives birth. If the baby is a girl, she is plunged into the bucket and drowned. If it is a son, she nurses him and the family rejoices.

Because of centuries of female infanticide, catain rural areas, like Anhui province, fafce a serious imbalance in the sex ratio. In some places men have difficulty finding brides.

In their keai desire to have sons, some men still torment their wives who bear dau^ters and worse still, they kill the baby girls through neglect or outright murder, the English-language Peking Review said last January.

Chinese reports say the problem is relatively small in a country of 1 billion people, but foreign observers say it is probably larger than acknowled^.

Premier Zhao Ziyang thought the problem of female Infanticide was severe enough to denounce it in his report to the National

Peoples Congress last December.

We must protect in particular infant girls and their mothers, Qiao said. The whole society should resolutely condemn the criminal activities of female infanticide and maltreatment of mothers. The judicial apparatus should resolutely punish the offenders according to law.

Mothers suffer if they bear dau^ters because many of Chinas 800 million peasants still believe the mother determines the sex of the child. The official press also is filled with stories of women who are persecuted, beaten or driven to suicide because they bear girls, despite the governments effort to publicize the fact that the father determines a childs sex.

In northeast Shandong province, Liu Chunshan threw his 4-year-old dau^ter down a well last December, smoked a cigarette as she struggled and screamed baba!-father!

He had planned the murder after his pregnant wife was told by a sorcerer that their next child would be a son.

Liu was sentenced to 15 years in jail in one of the few publicized cases in which prison terms were imposed for infanticide.

The Communist Youth League newspaper reported this conversation with Liu;

Q: Did you have any feelings toward your daugth ter?

A: Oh. yes, I loved her. But sooner or later she would marry and go to another family. She couldnt always be with me. At the least I would be supporting her for 20 years for nothing.

Q: "Didnt you think about being punished by the law?

A: "At first I thought the government couldnt catch me. Besides, the daughter was mine What 1 say goes. Some regulations permit a second child if the first is deformed or disfigured. Last month the Tianjin Daily reported a man bit off part of his 8-month-old daughters nose so that he could declare her disfigured and try for a son.

In an effort to stop infanticide. authorities have begun a massive education effort. Some communes even give material incentives for having only one daughter. In Pingling commune in Shandong province, families with only one daughter get a double grain ration of 440 pounds for her each year. Families with one son get 220 pounds.

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Ifr-The Daily Rdlector, GreenvUle. N.C.-Thuraday, February 34, 83

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 50 cents to 75 cents tower. Kinston 53.75, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 53.00, Wilson 53.50, Salisbury 52.50, Rowland

53.00, Spiveys Comer unreported. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 52.00, Fayetteville 52.00, Whiteville

52.00, Wallace 51.00, Spiveys Corner unreported, Rowland

52.00, Durham 52.00.

Poultry RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 44.00 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2',^ to 3 pound birds. The market is steady two weak and the live supply is moderate for a light to moderate demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was 1,843,000, compared to 1,691,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market staged an assault on another milestone today as the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials pierc^ the 1,100 mark for only the third time in trading history.

The stock markets best-known indicator was up 8.61 points at 1,105.55 after 30 minutes of trading. Five stocks rose in price for every two that fell in the early tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

On Wednesday, the Dow Jones industrials jumped 16.54 points to 1,0%.94, lifting the measure to just short of its record close of 1,097.10 on Feb. 14,

While the blue-chip average has never closed above 1,100, it has surpassed that level (luring trading on two previous occasions this year - Feb. 15 and Jan. 12 -before retreating.

The latest rally gained momentum late Wednesday after the Commerce Department reported a 4.5 percent rise in January orders to factories on items such as appliances and automobiles.

Some financial analysts had been expecting a decline in durable goods orders following sharp gains in December, and government and private economists viewed the latest report as another sign of an improving economy.

President Reagan, meanwhile, said today that recent declines in oil prices provide "more good news for the world economy despite raising some short-term concerns over international finances.

And the Labor Department said first-time claims for unemployment benefits fell below 500,000 in the week ended Feb. 12.

Utilities dominated the NYSE active list in the early going, Including American Electric Power, down '.4 at 18; Southern, unchanged at 15^; Com- monwealth Edison, unchanged at W!%\ Gulf States Utilities, up at 13V4; and American Natural Resources, up at 34^^,.

In trading Wednesday, three stocks rose for each two falling on the NYSE.

Big Board volume was 84.10 million shares, compared with 84.04 million Tuesday.

The NYSE composite index of all its listed common stocks rose 0.67 to 84.74. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 0.85 to 374.89.

Folluwing are selected II am stuck market (luotalions:

Burroughs    47

Carolina Power & Light    22'j

Collins & Aikman    24 si

Connor    17

Duke    22'4

Eaton    IMS.

Eckerds    27's.

Exxon    29'h

Fieldcrest

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

Lowe's    ^

McDonald's

Mctraw

Piedmont

PiKa Inn

P4(;

TRW, Inc United Tel Virginia Electric Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER

Aviation

Branch

Little Mint

Planters Bank

NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks

High Low Last 2241.    224.

40'i,    40>/4

12 12 13

AMR Corp AbbtUbs Allis Cbalm Am Baker Am Brands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmStand Amer T&T Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSXi^oro CaroPwLt Celanese Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAIrl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAIrL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress FordMot For McKess

40'i

12>4.

13

13

444.    44    444,

32'

38

17'^    17'4.

74.

31%    32

3644    38

17'4 7>4.

Fuqt GTE CoiTP GnDynam Geh Elec Gen Food Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich (ioodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculeslnc Honeywell HosptCp s Ing Rand IBM

Intl Harv

Int Paper

Int Rectif

Int T4T

K mart

KaisrAlum

KanebSvc

KrogerCo

Lockheed

Loews Corp

Masonite n

McDermott

Mead Corp

MinnMM

Mobil

Monsanto

NCNB Cp

NabiscoBrd

Nat DistUI

NorflkSou n

OlinCp

Owenslll

Pennev JC

Pepsifjo

Phelps Dod

PhilipMorr

PhillpsPet

Polaroid

ProctGamb s

Quaker Oat

RCA

RalstnPur RepubAir Republic SU Revlon Reynldind Rockwellnt RoyCrown StRegis Pap Scott Paper SealdPow SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co Sperry Cp sfdOilCaf StdOilInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide UnOilCal Uniroyal US Steel Wachov Cp WalMart s WestPtPro Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp

7'41

33'i    33V4    33'/4

68>.4    744    68

244.    24'/.    24'v

21    2044    20%

374.    364.    J7'/4

39    39

5244    52

29'i    29%    29%

5644    56''4    56'/.

22    21%    22

54%    53%    54

15%    15%    15%

24%    24'4    24%

154.    16

49    49',i

19'.^    19%

26%    26%    26%

30    29%    30

37%    374.    374'4

45%    44%    45

30%    30'/4    304,

39'*,    38%    39%

22%    22

94,    94.

89'/*    88%    89%

34'*    34    34%

57%    56(%    57%

29%    28%    29

18%    18%    18%

37%    37

19    19

39%    39%    39%

41%    41%    41%

35%    35%    35%

38%    38%

42%    43

107'*    106%    106%

384,    38 %    38%

48%    48%    48%

61%    61'*    61%

32%    324,    324,

41%    41%    41%

26    25%    26

33%    33%    33%

29%    29%    29%

40'*    394,

16

49'*

19%

384,

43

39

52%

22%

9%

37%

19

40% 43'*    44

22% 22%

160

18>*

17%

33%    32'*    33%

31%    31%    31%

95'*    94'*    95%

42    41%    42

46%    46    46%

99%    96%    99%

6%    6'*    6%

56%    55%    56%

13'*    13%    13%

32'*    32%    32%

27%    26%    27

18'*    18

17%    17

35%    35'*    35%

86%    86%    864,

159    159%

45%    45%    45%

18'*    18%    18'*

20%    20%    20'*

77%    76%    77%

22%    26%    26%

83%    83    83%

22'*    22%    22'*

34%    34    34

24%    24%    24%

54'*    54%    54%

26'*    26%    26'*

26%    26%    26%

56%    55%    55%

34%    34    34%

30%    30%    30%

61%    6(P>4    61

30%    30%    30%

28    27%    28

57%    57    57%

45%    44%    45%

23 20

9%    9

20'*    20%    29%

31%    31    31%

46%    45%    46

48%    48%    48%

21%    21%    21%

27'*    27    27'*

20%    20%    20%

44'*    44'*    44'*

29%    29A,    29%

45%    45%    45%

21%    21%    21%

13%    13%    13%

15'*    15%

35%    35%

35%    34%    35%

40'*    40%    40%

40    3914    39%

22%    22%    22%

68%    68    68

31'*    31%    31%

50%    50%    50%

IOA4    10%    KP-,

67'%    66%    67%

60%    59%    60

30'*    30

12%    12%    12%

22'*    22%    22'*

34%    34%    34%

47%    47%    47%

43%    43%    43%

47    45%    46%

37%    37%    37',

42%    42    42%

27%    27%    27%

45%    45'*    45%

38%    38%

22%    23

19%    20

15%

36

30'%

39

Semi-Finalist For Scholarship

DAVIDSON - Lisa L. Wang, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Alfred S. Wang and a senior at J.H. Rose High School, is a semi-finalist for the Edward Crosland Stuart Scholarship program at Davidson College.

A selection committee will choose four recipients from 12 semi-finalists to receive scholarshps for the 1983-84 academic year. The semifinalists will be on campus March 8 for a final interview, with the choices to be announced about April 1.

The four selected will receive full scholarships, each valued in excess of $32,000.

OES MEETING Bright Star Chapter No. 313, Order of Eastern Star, will have a meeting Saturday at2p.m.

Obituaries

'I i

EXTRA BONUS OF ROWING WATER ... The recent high water levels around Greenville changed the face of many familiar water formations. At River Parii North, for example, the rise in water level resulted in the parks five ponds becoming one lake with roads covered over and hi^ ground

Chrysler And GM Claim 1982 Profit

HIGHUND PARK, Mich. (AP) - Chrysler Corp. announced today it earned $170.1 million last year, the automakers first annual profit in five years.

However, Chrysler lost $96.1 million in the fourth quarter of 1982 because of the strike by some 10,000 Canadian autoworkers during contract talks.

The annual profit was largely due to the sale of its

Say Pipeline 1$ Advancing

MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet workers have laid two-thirds of a pipeline that will carry natural gas from Siberia to Western Europe next year, says Tass, the government news agency.

Construction has moved more quickly in the last few weeks, as 20 miles of pipeline are put down each day, Tass said Thursday.

The pipeline from western Siberia to the western border of the Soviet Union is to be 2,782 miles long, and so far, 1,875 miles have been finished, Tass said.

Testing on completed sec- tions in the Ural Mountains and in central Soviet Union would begin soon, Tass added.

The pipeline project caused a major rift last year between Washington and its NATO allies. President Reagan imposed and then lifted a ban on West European companies delivering U.S. technology as part of their role in the pipeline project.

Washington argues that the pipeline will make Western Europe dependent on Soviet energy and give the Russians millions in foreign exchange they can use to build up their defense machine.

EASTERN STAR Order of Eastern Star Susanna Chapter 161 will hold a regular meeting Friday at 7:30 p.m. All members are asked to be present.

Bessie Hyman, Worthy Matron

Joan Smith, Secretary

MASONIC NOTICE Winterville Masonic Lodge No. 232 will have a communication at the Masonic Hall Friday at 7:30 p.m.,

William Elbert,

Master

Anninias Smith,

Secv

defense subsidiary.

The No. 3 U.S. automaker said the earnings, amounting to $1.84 per share, compares with a loss of $475.6 million, or $7.18 per share, in 1981.

The last time Chrysler had a yearly profit was 1977, when it earned $163.2 million.

In a statement, Chrysler Chairman Lee lacocca noted 1982 also was the first year since 1977 that the automaker had three straight profitable quarters.

Chrysler lost $66.9 million in the fourth quarter of 1981.

The No. 3 automaker was the last major domestic automaker to report earnings for 1982.

General Motors Corp. made $962.7 million. Ford Motor Co. lost $657.8 million and American Motors Corp. lost $153.5 million.

That puts the domestic industry in the black for 1982 by $321.5 million. It is the first profitable year for the carmakers since 1979, when they earned $3.03 billion.

Chrysler gained $239 million last year by selling its subsidiary, Chrysler Defense Inc., to General Dynamics Corp. of St. Louis in March.

lacocca pointed out the automaker also has a dramatically reduced breakeven point because of cost-cutting and productivity increases.

Chrysler lost money on the business of making and selling cars and trucks in 1982. The company reported an operating loss of $M 9 million compared with a loss of $555.1 million in 1981 operations.

The company reported worldwide vehicle sales last year of 1.18 million compared with 1.28 million in 1981.

Chrysler had reported the worst loss in corporate history in 1980, losing $1.7 billion, and received about $1.2 billion in federal loan guarantees.

Budget...

(Continued from Pagel)

at this point.

But, he said, I agree with Dr. Howell, it woid be a very devastating blow to higher education and have a significant effect upon the continued growth of the school of medicine. Its a thing we are concerned with and will continue to be concerned with until the question is resolved.

Laupus noted, 1 certainly hope (the proposal) will not have to be carried out at the expense of a very outstanding program of higher education in the state.

THURSDAY

7:00 p.m. - Greenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers

7:30 p.m. Overeaters Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church

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

8:00 p.m. - VFW Auxiliry meets at Post Home

FRIDAY

7:30 p.m. - Red Men meet

Cash In On The Value Of Your Home With A Second Mortgage

First FederaVs Equity Loan

^ FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS

**    Sovirigi    iftfl    LM'*    Aiiocitia"0^'ilC6urH9

(iircRvillc. Hinmlllc. (irUmn. Avdcn

along banks becoming islands. Here Gary Klink, left, and Km Sullivan aiMl his dau^ter, Amy, get ready to take a rowing tour of the expanded body of water. (Reflector Hioto by Jerry Raynor)

Carr

WINTERVILLE - Mr. Oscar Carr, 67, of Route 1, Winterville, died in Pitt County Memorial Ho^ital Wednesday.

He was the husband of Mrs. Neomi Carr of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Mitchells Funeral Home.

Faulkner

LEXINGTON - Mrs. Swannell Cranford Faulkmr, 58, died Wednesday in Lex-ingUm Memorial Hospital. Her funeral service will be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. in the First United Methodist Church, Lexington, by Dr. Earle Haire and the Rev. Joe Fulk. Burial will be in Forest Hill Memorial Park here.

Surviving are her husband. Bill Faidkner of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Gary Miller of Greenville and Mrs. Buddy Collins of Kemersville; two brothers, J. Earvin Cranford and Bobby Cranford, both of Lexington; three sistem, Mrs. Glenn Conrad and Mrs. William Everhart, both of

Piffsburgh Plans Limit Pac-Man For Children

By MARCIA DUNN Associated Press Writer PITTSBURGH (AP) -City officials trying to battle truancy have ven preliminary approval to a measure that would outlawing childrens use of Pac-Man and other video games at certain businesses during

Oppose Use Of Landfills

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Recycle, bum and detoxify chemical wastes but dont bury them in landfills was the common theme of speakers Wednesday night at a public hearing before the Governors Waste Management Board.

Many Anson County speakers painted grim pictures if the state licenses a landfill there. It is temporarily held up because of a moratorium on new landfills imposed by Gov. Jim Hunt in December.

While the Anson people want a ban. Chairman Claud Buck OShields of Wilmington said the board doesnt have power to enforce a ban and that any such action would have to come from the legislature. He said the board wont make that recommendation because it sees a need for landfills to handle dangerous waste that cant be completely burned or recycled.

OShields denied charges that Hunfs moratorium will end June 30, saying it will be lifted after the state adopts land-disposal regulations, which could come as early as June or could take several months.

Conservation groups urged the board to put emphasis on preventing the creation of two billion pounds of waste a year, using above-ground storage and repealing existing laws to do so.

school hours.

Councilwoman Michelle Madoff presented the measure after parents complained that their children were skipping school to play the video games.

Were just adding teeth to (school) laws that arent enforced, Ms. Madoff said after Wednesdays 6-3 vote in favor of the measure.

The ordinance applies only to businesses with six or more video games. Under the measure, the business owners cannot allow youngsters 18 and under to play the games between 7 a.m. and 3 p.m. on school days.

Violators could be fined, according to the councilwoman.

Ms. Madoff said she wants to amrad the bill by Monday, when the council takes a final vote, to include businesses having any number of videogames.

The amended bill would be expanded to include all types of electronic games, including pinball.

District Magistrate Dennis Schatzman of the citys Homewood section, who supported an ordinance banning children from playing video games during school hours, criticized the measure that was passed Wednesday.

Its not worth having at all, he said. The vast

SPECIAL SERVICE The Rev. Mitch Lewis will preach at St. Matthew Free Will Baptist Church for the benefit of the St. Luke building fund Friday at 7:30 p.m. Music will be presented by the St. Luke Junior Choir.

BABY CONTEST The baby contest scheduled for Rock Spring Free Will Baptist Church on Sunday night has been canceled.

Get to know your neighbor. Hes a

National Leader

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This specially trained Woodmen Reid Representative has earned national recognition for excellence, providing outstanding service for his Woodmen members.

7he FAMILY Fntemifr^9

WOODMEN OF THE WORLD UFE INSURANCE SOCIEH

Homa Offlca: Woodniaii Toiwr Omaha

majority of these machines are located in facilities which have just one or two machines, like pizza parlors. If youre going to exclude these places, its like having nobUlataU.

Last tnonth, two mothers asked the council to adopt an ordinance forcing businesses to report or evict children who attempt to play video games during school hours.

Something has to be done. You go by different shops and you see all these children in there when they should be in school, said Mae Norris, whose 7-year-old son, Darnell, was caught playing Pac-Man and Donkey Kong during school hours.

Some of these children are very good, added Patty Martin, whose children also were caught playing the games. All it tak^ is a quarter and they can be going for hours.

Three weeks ago, the council unanimously approved a bill restricting the location of video arcades and expanding the citys regulation of the facilities.

Lexington, and Mrs. Clyde Snyder of Sdfner, Fla., and two grandchildren.

Arrangements are being made by Davidson Funeral Home of Lexington. The family will receive friends tonight from 7 to 9 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be directed to the First United Methodist Church of Lexington, the family suggests.

Glovwr

Mr. Lehmon Glover of Greenville died Wednesday at his home. He was the husband of Mrs. Bertha Mooring Glover of the home and the father of Bernard Glover.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Phillips Brothers Mortuary.

Pcdlard

Mrs. Gladys Pollard, 66, wife of Hick Pollard, died at her home on Route 8, Greenville, Wednesday. Fimeral arrangements will be announced by Wilkerson Funeral Home.

Stocks

AYDEN Mrs. Cornelia (Comey) Stocks, 74, died early today. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 4 p.m. at Farmer Funeral Chapel in Ayden by the Rev. C.F. Bowen and the Rev. Cedric Pierce. Burial will follow in the Dennis-Smith Cemetery.

Mrs. Stocks was a member of the Pleasant Hill Free Will Baptist Church.

Surviving are her husband, Herman H. Stocks of Middlesex; three sons, J.B. Stocks and Alton P. Stocks, both of Greenville, and Joe Rogers of Ayden; one daughter, Mrs. Maggie Lee Stokes of Edenton; one brother, Dan Mayo of Washington; four sisteris, Mrs. Henrietta Mills of Chocowinity, Mrs. An-nabell Heath of Grimesland, Mrs. Maybelle Hall of Greenville and Mrs. Lizzie Colbille of Pactolus; seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

The family will be at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Friday.

Tripp

Mrs. Vernice Petty Tripp, 72, died in Pitt Memorial Hospital Wednesday.

The funeral service will be held Saturday at 2:00 p.m. at Farmer Funeral Home, Ayden, by the Rev. David Ricks. Burial will follow in Ayden Cemetery.

Mrs. Tripp was a member of Ayden Free Will Baptist Church. Surviving are her husband, Elmer (Kelly) of the home; a son, Elmer H. Tripp of Ayden; a daughter, Mrs. Louella Thomas of Ayden; a sister, Mrs. Loma Hodges, Jasper Fla.; four grandchildren, Karen Sugg of Snow Hill; Wilner Tripp of Greenville; Timmy Tripp of Ayden; Vicky Mills of Ayden; two great granddaugters, Krystal Mills of Ayden and Brandy Sugg of SnOw Hill.

The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. Friday at Farmer Funeral Home and at other times will be at the home of Elmer H." Tripp, 304 North Lee St., Ayden.

Paid Announconent

EF Hutton & Company Inc

Is Pleased To Announce The Association Of

D. Wayne Adams

Life Insurance Specialist Formerly Of New York Life Ins. Co.

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Sports THE DAILY REFLECTORClassified

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 24, 1983'Emotionless' Bucs Fall To Dukes, 76-56

By WOODY PEELE Reflector ^rts Editor

HARRISONBURG, Va. -Leading by only one point with 6:30 to play in the first half, James Madison outscored East Carolina, 16-5, the rest of the half and romped to a 76-56 victory in the ECAC-South game.

The contest was the final ECAC-South game of the regular season for the Pirates, and finished them at 3-7 in the conference. The Pirates are now 13-12 overall, as the loss broke a three-game winning streak.

James Madison climbs to 5-3 in the conference and 15-10 overall. The Dukes have one game left "in the league, against Richmond on March 5. The win insured no worse than a tie for the Dukes for second place, and either a win over the Spiders, or a loss by George Mason to William & Mary on Saturday or to Navy on March 5 would wrap up that important ^t for James Madison. First place, already

clinched by William & Mary, and second both carry byes in the first round of the ECAC-South Tournament, set March 10-12 at Richmonds Robins Center.

East Carolina, which fell behind early by eight, battled back to pull within one point of the Dukes, 20-19, on a jumper by Bruce Peartree with 6:44 left in the first half.

But East Carolina failed to score from the floor during the remaining six and a half minutes of the period, and got only five free throws to its credit, while JMU was pouring in 16 points and pushing out into a 36-24 halftime lead.

The Dukes quickly pushed their lead out to 17 points in the first four minutes of play in the second half, and were never in any danger, running out to as much as a 25 point lead at times.

The victory avenged an earlier 43-41 win over the Dukes by the Pirates in Greenville. We executed a lot better than we did when we lost down

there, Coach Lou Campanelli said. Weve improved a lot since then.

We really wanted this one, said guard Charles Fisher, who sparked the Dukes with several early points. We wanted to beat them by 40 points.

It never really got that bad but it was bad enough.

It was not so much what they did, but what we did not do, ECU Coach Charlie Harrison said. Early in the ball game we did what we had to and got some great shots. But some of them would not fall for us.

Those shots falling, however, were not what disappointed Harrison.

The thing that irritates the hell out of me is that we played with no emotion. We got into a hole and couldnt get out of it and they wore our butts out, Harrison continued.

I could see it coming yesterday. I dont know why, and I know we cant let it

happen again. Weve got two games left in the regular

Wright Green Edwards Robinson Peartree Gilchrist Vanderhorst Williams McLeod Brown Harris Reicheneker Team Totals

East Carolina (SO

MPFXFT RbFAP

21    2-1    2-3

37    M    4-5

31    7-13    3-S

27    Q-1    (H)

25    4-10    2-2

6    0-1    (HI

10    (M)

4    1-2

5    0-1

27    1-2

4    2-3

3    (H)

(M)

0-1

0-1

3-4

2-2

(M)

Mosten

Donohoe

Ruland

Fisher

Dupont

Masloff

Jackson

Hughes

Steele

Williams

Bradley

Boler

Banks

Esch

Team

Totals

1 2 1

3 2 0

4 2 0

0 5 0 0 2 1 2 I 0

1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 4 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 2

230 IMS M-23 10 11 James Madison (70

22    4-7    (HI    5    4

19    2-4    08    7    2

24    6-13    68

24    4-5    4-1

26    28

11    0-1

14    2-3

4    08

18    2-3

3 56

4 2-2 11 2-2 7 0-2 4 08 12 1-5

38

2-2

2-2

08

38

08

08

1-2

1-2

08

2    3

3    2 1 6 3 1

1    3 0

2    0 1 0 2 0 0 1 4

0 8 0 4 0 18

1 0 2 1

1    I

2    0

4 1 0 3

200 27-53 22-26 39 23 9

EastCarollna.............24    32    -    56

James Madison............36    40    -    76

Turnovers: ECTJ15, JMU 11.

, Technical fouls: None Officials: Fraira and Forte. Attendance: 3,500.

1/

Walker Got Too Close To Fire; Got Burned With Pro Contract

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) -Coach Vince Dooley says Herschel Walker got too close to the fire and got burned, leaving his star tailback little choice other than to sign the richest contract in professional football history.

Walker, foregoing a senior season at the University of Georgia that probably would have made him college footballs all-time rushing king, signed Wednesday with the New Jersey Generals of the United States Football League only hours after the university declared him ineligible.

The three-year contract was estimated to be worth $5 million.-

Hes a millionaire right now, said Jack Mantn, the Heisman Trophy winners attorney. He received a check today that contained seven figures, endorsed it, then gave it to his mother and told her to put it in the bank.

Its the highest contract ever in pro football, highest by far, Mantn sdid.

Mantn said the check included a bonus and his entire first-year salary, and added that the contract was guaranteed personally by J. Walter^ Duncan, the Oklahoma oil'^ tycoon who owns the Generals.

Mantn broke the news of the signing to a . handful of reporters gathered in a hallway outside Walkers off-campus apartment. Walker was whisked away from the apartment about 45 minutes later when Mantn conducted a news conference with about 75 media members on the lawn in front of the apartment building.

The attorney said Walker did not wish to speak to the media, but that he had a prepared statement from the three-time All-American tailback.

The Atlanta Constitution reported in its late editions that Walker spent Wednesday evening in his apartment with

Sports Colendor

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

Todays Spt8 Basketball Eastern Carolina Tournament at Ayden85rifton Coastal Conference Tourney at Havelock Northeastern Conference Tourney at Roanoke Tobacco Belt Conference Tourney at Washington

Adult Division Grady-White vs. Empire Brushes Hooker vs. Bobs TV PCC vs. Rockers

Fridays Sports Basketball Eastern Carolina Tourney at Ayden-Grifton Coastal Conference Tourney at Havelock Northeastern Conference Toumey at Roanoke Rose at Northeastern (6:30 p.m.) District Christian Tournament at Friendship Northeastern at E.B. Aycock (4 p.m.)

Tobacco Belt Tournament at Washington

, Adult Division The Wiz vs. Pirates E.C.F.Pvs. Integon WresUlng State Tournament at Winston-Salem

Swimming

State Meet

a few friends and, when asked if he regretted the way things turned out, replied, Yes, but thats behind me now, and I just look to the future.

'The newspaper said Walker would return to his home in Wrightsville, Ga., today and depart for the Generals training camp in Orlando, Fla., the first of next week.

In the prepared statement, Walker said: I wish to clarify my signing of a contract with the New Jersey Generals of the United States Football League. In denying I signed a contract, I made a mistake. No one realizes more than I that I am a human being.

I wish to apolo^ze to Coach Dooley, the University of Georgia and all the people that have been my loyal friends. I ask for your forgiveness and ask God for his forgiveness.

The signing ended five days of controversy in which Walker denied reports that he had signed a contract with the Generals last Thursday night, but exercised an oral agreement with Duncan two hours later to get out of the deal.

Walker had declared repeatedly that he had signed nothing and Dooley said he was convinced his star remained eligible because Herschels never lied to me. Dooley, who invited an NCAA investigation into the matter, was in Colorado Tuesday when he was told by assistant coach Mike Cavan that Walker had actually signed a contract in violation of NCAA rules. i Dooley, who also is athletic director at Georgia, issued a statement Wednesday morning saying the university was declaring Walker ineli^ble based on two points - the negotiation of an agreement and the involvement of Walkers attorney in the matter.

Its a sad day for college football and its a sad day for professional football, Dooley said Wednesday night after arriving at the Atlanta airport .on a fli^t from Denver.

Dooley said he would not place the blame on any one person because theres enough blame to be shared by many.

I cant say he did the wrong thing, Dooley said. I believe in Herschels case he didnt do what he wanted to do. He wanted to set some records that might stand for several decades. He wanted to run in the Olympics. He wanted to run in the SEC track meet this weekend and later in the NCAA (meet).

A world class sprinter. Walker has often said he prefers track to football and has expressed a desire to compete in the Olympic Games in Los Angeles next year.

Once a pro, always a pro, said U.S. Olympic Committee spokesman Bob Paul, Walker is not eligible for the Olympics.

Mantn said the Generals gave Walker permission to participate in the Olympics if

(Please Turn To Page 131

Herschel Walker

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season and then the tournament, and weve got to be ready to play. But we played like we practiced these last two days.

Harrison said he was at a loss to explain the lack of emotion. Thats been a characteristic of this team -playing with emotion. But they didnt have it tonight.

And we have to. Were not that big a team that we can get by without it. We had the opportunity but we didnt take advantage of it. Instead we got lethargic. Usually when our shots dont go in they bounce back. And I think we played hard in the first half, but with no emotion. Its all completely mental.

Part of that was shown in the rebounding. The Pirates were beaten on the boards, 39-19, better than two to one. Bob Donohoe led JMU with

seven while Fisher had six. Johnny Edwards and Thom Brown each had four to pace ECU.

ECU never held the lead, but twice tied it eariy. Dan Ruland put JMU into the initial lead after ECU had controlled the tap, but missed its first shot. Charles Green tied it up at 2-2, and after a Fisher jumper, Bruce Peartree tied it at 44.

Fisher then scored six straight points on two field goals and two free throws and Ruland added two more free throws for a 12-4 lead with 14:53 left in the period. East Carolina got five in a row after that on two jumpers by Johnny Edwards and a free throw by Thom Brown, cutting it back to 12-9.

The two teams traded shots after that until Edwards slammed through a dunk and

Peatree hit a jumper with 6:44 left to cut the JMU lead to 20-19.

But the bottom fell out then. The Pirates failed to hit from the floor and made only five of eight free throws during the final 6:30. Meanwhile JMU pushed in 16 points, including a jumper by David Dupont and two free throws by Ruland that gave the Dukes a 34-22 lead, and they held that margin, 36-24, at the half.

Ruland started the scoring in the second half, and after Barry Wright hit for ECU, he added another basket, followed by one by Greg Mosten and a Dupont free throw to up the lead to 43-26.

From there on, it was only a question of margin, as JMU stretched it to as much as 25, 6540 with 6:54 left, then went to its bench.

Ruland led the Dukes with

18 points, while Fisher finished with 12. JMU played 14 players in the contest, and all but one of those scored.

ECU was paced by Edwards with 17 points while Green and Peartree each had 10. Edwards was held to only four points in the second half.

1 had a good feeling about tonight, Campanelli said. 1 just wanted to come back against ECU (following a loss to William & Mary on Saturday). We asserted ourselves on defense and executed the offense well When we play with intensity on defense and execute the offense, we can play with anybody.

The game was the final road game of the regular season for East Carolina. The Pirates return home on Saturday to host UNC-Wilmington.

Lady Pirates Top UNCW

WILMINGTON - Mary Denkler scored 25 points and Darlene Chaney added,^22 to pace East Carolina Un-iveristys Lady Pirates to a 74-67 victory over UNC-Wilmington yesterday.

Wilmingtons Lady Seahawks outscored the Pirates, 35-30, in the second half of the contest, but were never able to overtake the ECU women who had built up a 44-32 lead at the half.

Denkler scored on 11 of 20 field goal attempts and added three of five free throws for her total. And when Denkler did miss, Chaney was there to throw them back, putting in nine of 12 attempts from the floor and four of five at the line. Chaney finished the game with 13 rebounds, while Denkler had 11. ECU held a lop-sided 45-32 rebounding edge in the contest.

UNC-W took the initial lead at 2-0 but ECU tied it up on a shot by Sylvia firagg. She was fouled on the play and made

the free throw for a 3-2 lead, and the Pirates were never headed again.

The Lady Seahawks hung close through the first ten minutes of the half, but then the Lady Pirates began a pull away that led to their 14-point lead by halftime. Denker scored 16 of her points in the first half, while Chaney added 15 during the 20-minute period. That accounted for 31 of the 44 points in the first half.

In the second half, Wilmington began its comeback, using the foul line - in reverse. ECU was the team being fouled, but hit just six of 12 at the stripe, and the Lady Seahawks took advantage to make a slow comeback. The Lady Pirates missed the front end of four one-and-one opportunities to help the Seahawks along.

ECU shot only 45.6 percent for that half, while Wilmington hit on 49.2. The Seahawks were hurt, however.

losing one starter. Sue Dean, and non starter Susie Puma, on fouls.

Sylvia Bragg added 13 points for the Lady Pirates. Sharon McMillan led Wilmington with 19, while Jill Amos and Sonya Pickard each had 16 and Gwen Austin had 12.

Squirewell Braga Denkler Hooks Tniske Chaney Team ToUls

EaM Carolina (74)

FGFT RbFAP

3 114 8 4 3 13 11 1 0 25

2 14 8

3 3 5 2 13 4 1 22

5

3188 12-22 45 14 14 74

2-3 0-3 4-13 5-7 11-20 3-5 4-11 0-2 1-9 08 9-12 4-5

McMillan

Dean

Austin

Amos

Pickard

Juma

Reid

Wilson

Team

Totals

UNC Wilmington (67)

8-15 38 0-2 08 5-13 2-3

7-13 2-3

8-11 02 1-5 08 01 08, 1-1 08

2 5

1 5 1 8 1 1 6 3 2 6 2 1

2 5 1 1 4 1 0 1 0

0

It was a win on the road. ECU Coach Cathy Andruzzi exulted. Wilmington came but really fired up. We had to work for everything we got. The gymnasium was very hot and our kids tired. Their faces were a red color after the game. They were winded.

We controlled the boards, but we had a hard time getting our offense started. Fran (Hooks) has been sick with coughing and a head cold, but she did a good job, getting eight points for us.

We came into this game knowing that a win would bring up back over .500, Andruzzi continued. We got a lead, but Wilmington came

Please Turn To Page 13)

3681 7-12 32 23 12 67

East Carolina............ 44    30    -    74

UNC-WUmington..........32    35    -    67

Turnovers: ECU 14. UNCW 14,

Technical fouls. CTianey, ECU bench Officials. Finch and Burke Attendance: 200.

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U-Ttie Dily Reflector. GreenviUe. N.C.-'imiroay, t ^uary M, 1M3

Cougars Stun Jaguars, 60-51

By ALAN WOOTEN Reflector Sports Writer LITTLEFIELD -Farmville Central may have beat the top seed for this week's Eastern Carolina Conference Tournament but the Jaguars looked like anything but champions Wednesday night.

Southwest Edgecombe, which tied for third in the conference in the regular season, won its eighth straight by whipping the Ja^ars, 60-51, to advance to Fridays finals.

The Cougars (17-7) play the winner of tonights North Pit-t-Ayden-Gifton semifinal.

The Ja^rs, by virtue of a top-four finish in the regular season, will still be in next weeks District II Tournament at D.H. Conley. The Jaguars, now 16-7, face North Lenoir, which they beat twice this season, Tuesday in the first round.

They wanted it a lot more than we did, Farmville Central coach Mike Terrell said. Southwest Edgecombe played real well. It was not a good tourney game for us

The Cougars eased into the lead after the first quarter, 12-8. Farmville came back, 15-10, in the second quarter to take a 28-22 halftime lead.

The Jaguars built iq> a five-point lead during the third quarter, but a rally gave the Cougars a 42-37 lead after three periods. Farmville grabbed a brief lead in the fourth quarter but the Cougars were simply too much for Farmville as they rolled into the finals with the nine-point win.

We got beat on the offensive and defensive boards, Terrell said. They scrapped for the loose balls and we missed a lot of easy shots. Wed have one shot and they would have three or four.

Terrence Pettway hit two jumpers from 15 feet in the first minute to give FC a 4-0 lead. The Cougars used a 10-2 rally in the final five minutes tobaba 12-8 lead.

A three-point play by Darryl Clark with 5:14 left in the half gave SWE a 17-14 lead. Tony Hargroves jumper in the lane with 3:54 left gave Farmville the lead, 20-19, and the Jaguars matched baskets with the Cougars from there out to lead at the half, 23-22.

In the third period, Farmville looked as though it had regrouped and was ready to put Southwest out of it. The

Jaguars jumped out to a five-point lead, 27-22, on a jumper by Andrew Edwards and a layi^ by Pettway. Farmville maintained the lead for a few minutes before Southwest rallied.

Tim Walker fired in two 25-footers within 20 sectmds to cut the margin to one, 33-32, with 2:52 left. LeMonte Johnson hit from the lane and Qark made good on a follow shot with 1:41 remaining to give Southwest a 36-33 lead.

Hargrove hit a basket for' FC, but Johnson and Clark scored to finish the 12-2 run and give SWE a 40-35 lead. Both teams scored a bucket each and the Cougars took a 42-37 lead into the final period.

Consecutive baskets from Hargrove, Gary Hobgood and Edwards gave the Jaguars a 45-44 lead with 4:23 left. The margin was short-lived.

Qark hit three jumpers from short range and Johnson added a turnaround jumper to send the Cougars a seven-point advantage, 52-45, with two minutes left.

From there, the Jaguars could get no closer than five as the Cougars advanced into the finals.

The Jaguars played the majority of the fourth quarter without the services of reserve Bobby Carraway. Carraway injured his ankle on an attempted rebound an was forced to leave the game.

Farmville also played the third quarter with Edwards on the bench, having picked up his fourth foul with 7:19 to go.

We lost Carraway ai^ it changed the way we played, Terrell said. We were not able to substitute the way we usually do. Things just wouldnt go our way.

They scored when they had to and we didnt, Terrell continued. It was not a very good tournament game for us.

Gark led the Cougars in scoring with 19 points. Johnson turned in a 16-point performance and Walker tallied 15.

Farmville was led by Pettway and Hargrove with 14 points each.

Cavs Hold Off Clemson

Blue Devil Save

Dukes Todd Anderson (44) saves the ball from going out of bounds as North Carolina States Walter Proctor (15) looks on during first half action Wednesday night in their ACC game at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham. State downed Duke, 96-79. (AP Laserphoto)

Conley Nips North Lenoir

HAVEL(X)K - Tire team of coverage on Keith Gatlin and Cox and Cox didnt post the Artell Ruffin, who had scored

Southwest Edgecombe (60) -Bess 0 0-0 0; Johi^ 7 2-316; Gark 8 3^ 19; Savage 00-00; Walker 7 1-2 15; Forbes 2 2-3 6; Wooten 2 0-1 4; Totals 26 8-13 00.

Farmville Central (51) Hargove 6 2-2 14; Hobgood 2 2-2 6; Edwards 3 1-2 7; Gorham 4 04) 8; Pettway 7 0-2 14; Carraway 0 00 0; WiUou^by 1 0-0 2; Tyson 0 OO 0; Totals 23 SO 51.

SW.Edgec(Hnbe..l3 10 20 18-60 F.Central 8 15 14 14-51

Five Seeking State Mat Titles

A staff Report

D.H. Conleys Mike Long will be out to defend his 188-pound state championship and DHCs William Bridgett and Farmville Centrals Joel Shackleford will try to win their first state title this weekend at the N.C. State Wrestling Tournament at Parkland High School in Winston-Salem.

Long, Bridgett and Shackleford are among five area wrestlers set to compete in the two-day tournament which gets started Friday morning at 10 oclock with tire first round.

The quarterfinals are set for 7 p.m. Friday. The consolations begin at 10 a.m. Saturday, with the semifinals slated for 12 oclock. The consolation finals and championship finals are scheduled for 7 p.m.

Joining Long and Bridgett from DHC at the tournament the final step for high school wrestlers - are Willie Greene and Paul Menichelli. Conley, which won the Eastern Regional Title a week ago, is ranked third in the North Carolina in the latest News poll.

DHC is one of three Coastal Conference teams with wrestlers in the state meet. West Carteret carries in five wrestlers and Havelock one. The Patriots are No.6 in the latest poll.

Sanderson, ranked second. West Carteret and Plymouth are among the teams DHCs Milt Sherman said have a chance at winning the state title.

Im going to looking hard at Sanderson, Sherman said. Plymouth has got a chance and West Carteret has the potential to win it.

So, too, does Conley, but Sherman downplayed his teams chances.

Based on their records, its apparent that William and Mike had outstanding seasons. Sherman said this morning. Theyd have to be

our two most-favored wrestlers.

Bridgett is 30-0 this season and tied a school mark a week ago wdien he scored his 27th first-period takedown, tying former DHC three-time state champ Gary Harris.

Long, a defending state champ at 188-pounds, is 26-2 this year. A week ago he broke Harris career-pin record when he recorded his 69th pin.

Greene is 19-6-1 this season and Menichelli is 21-11.

Shackleford is 22-1 this season and won the regional title at 122 pounds last week. Bridgett won the regional title at 158 pounds while Greene was second at 170. Long was third at 188 and Menichelli was fourth at 198.

In opening-round matches Friday:

122 - The named of Joel Shacklefords first-round opponent was unavailable.

158 - William Bridgett faces Mark Horton of Eden Morehead. Horton was 4th at the Mideast Regional.

170 - Willie Greene battles Steve Sytz of Gatonia Mat * Ashbrook. Sytz was third at last weks Mideast Regional.

188 - Mike Long meets Darryl Grier of West Mechlenburg. Grier was second in the Midwest Regional a week ago.

198 Paul Menichelli faces Terry Wray of Crest High School. Wray won the 198 title at the Midwest Regional last week.

In the latest Mat News top 20 poll, Brevard is No. 1, Sanderson No. 2, Conley third. Southern Guilford fourth and South Rowan fifth. West Carteret heads the second five followed by Cary, Pine Forest, Beddingfield and Plymouth.

The second 20 includes: High Point Andrews, Ashbrook, Watauga, Thom-asville, Statesville, Hickory, Morganton Freedom, Northern Durham, Cape Fear and Hillsborough Orange.

points that Gatlin and Ruffin did, but it was their combination at the buzzer that allowed D.H. Conleys Vikings to survive North Lenoir, 70-68, last ni^t.

The Coastal Conference Tournament game went right to the wire before Leon Cox capped the win with a shot at the horn.

Earlier, North Lenoirs girls downed West Carteret, 55-35, to advance to the girls finals.

The contest between the regular season champ and the fourth-seeded Hawks was close all the way. North Lenoir held a slim 24-23 lead after one period, but Ck>nley came back to outscore the Hawks, 16-10, in the second period. That left Conley in the lead, 39-34, at intermission.

North Lenoir refused to bow, however, coming back with a 20-16 margin in the third quarter, cutting it to 55-54 as the final period got underway.

With ten seconds to go. North Lenoir had the ball with the score tied at 6868, on an out-of-bounds play at midcourt, but four seconds into the play, the Hawks traveled, turning it back to Conley.

The Hawks put man-to-man

53 of the Conley points between then, and the ball went to Mitchell Cox who dribbled around and prepared to take a jump shot. But going up, he spotted Leon Cox ^ alone under the basket and dished off to him for a layup at the horn, giving the Vikings the victory.

Gatlin finished the game with 27 points, while Ruffin had 26. Maurice Thorbes led North Lenoir with 25 points, while James Fisher had 23 and Jimmy Core added 10.

Conley shot 71 percent from the floor in the game, while North Lenoirs shooting was also hot. The Hawks also enjoyed a 22-16 rebounding advantage over the Vikings.

Conley will now face, the winner of tonights West Carteret-West Craven game, while North Lenoirs girls face the winner of tonights Havelock-Conley game in Friday ni^ts finals.

North Lenoir (68) - Thorbes 10 5^ 25. Fisher 11 1-2 23, Johnson 4 04) 8, McPhail 1 0-1 2, Core 5 04) 10. Totals 316-9 68.

Conley (70) - GaUin 13 1-1 27, Payton 01-2 1, L. Cox 2 04) 4, Smith 3 04) 6, Ruffin 13 04) 26, M. Cox 3 04) 6, Gemons 0 04) 0, Daniels 0 04) 0. Totals 34 2-3 70.

North Lenoir ....24 10 20 14-68 D.H. Conley 23 16 16 15-70

Aycock Downs korth Piti Girls

By ALAN WOOTEN Reflector Sports Writer

LITTLEFIELD - C.B. Aycock overcame a slow start and went on to defeat North Pitt, 53-34, Wednesday night in the semifinals of the Eastern Carolina Conference Tournament.

The Lady Falcons will face the winner of tonights game between Southwest Edgecombe and Southern Nash for the title Friday.

We just ran out of gas in the fourth quarter, North Pitt coach Randy Avery said afterward. (Aycock) didnt let the ball inside and when they didnt, they did a good job of getting pressure on our guards.

They also rebounded well, Avery continued. We were flat-footed on the boards. We didnt get but one shot on offense and its hard to win like that.

The Lady Falcons grabbed the early lead, 12-10, after one period. Aycock rallied, 7-5, in the second quarter to take a 19-15 lead at intermission. The Lady Falcons continued to pull away in the third quarter, 126, to take a 31-21 lead into the final quarter. In that, the Lady Falcons cryised to the win with a 22-13 advantage.

The first quarter saw neither team lead by more than four points. The quarter ended with Aycock holding a 12-10 lead.

In the second quarter, Aycock slowly pulled away. It led 17-12 with 3:17 to play on a jumper by Zina Jones. Peggy Latham hit a jumper from the

lane to cut the gap to 18-15. Aycock got a finS free throw to make it 19-15 at the half.

Aycock scored the first six points of the third quarter to take a 25-15 lead. The two teams alternated baskets till the final period as the Lady Falcons took a 31-21 lead into the fourth quarter.

Aycock outscored North Pitt 12-5 to take a 43-26 lead with 3:53 left in the fourth quarter. From there, the Lady Falcons used their delay tactics and free throws to win.

"When youre only getting one shot, its hard to win, Avery said. We were not getting our scratch baskets like we usually do.

Another reason we didnt win was that we didnt take as many shots. They did a good job on defense for that. You know, C.B. Aycock does not always do a lot, but everything they do is usually done right, Avery said.

Sherri Williams had 17 points to lead Aycock. Marsha Hester totaled 13 and Jones added 12 as the Lady Falcons upped their overall record to 196.

No one scored in double figures for North Pitt, which is 11-14 heading into the District II tournament next week at D.H. Conley.

North PIU (34) - HarreU 2 1-3 3; Pittman 4 04) 8; ()ox 3 04) 6; Latham 4 04) 8; Purvis 0 04) 0; Bradley 3 1-1 7; Daniels 0 04) 0; Brown 0 04) 0; Jenkins 0 04) 0; Farmer 0 04) 0; Corey 0 04) 0; Totals 2111-15 53.

C.B. Aycock (53) - Williams 6 54 17; Z.Jones 6 0-1 12; Bunn 1 1-2 3; Mantague 12-2 4; Hester 5 3-4 13; L. Jones 2 04) 4; Totals 2111-15 53.

N.Pitt............10    5    6    15-34

Aycock...........12    7    12    22-53

By The Associated Press Gemson, winner of jist one of 12 games in the Atlantic (toast Conierence this season, almost took the long-shot route to vict(M7 ovw third-ranked Virginia. In the end, however, they were too short to stop 7-foot-4 Ralph Sampson.

The Tigers, 9-18 overall, led for much of Wednesday ni^ts game by hitting 12 ol 18 three-point shots, including seven in a row by Mark Campbell, who finished with 26 points and now has connected on 14 straight three-pointers.

But Virginia finally prevailed 85-83 in overtime as Sampson, wdio was guarded for much of the game by 66 Clemson center Murray Jarman, scored 29 points for the Cavaliers.

It was tough playing against a team shorter than we were because they can get underneath you a little and throw your balance off so you cant control the ball, Sampson said. We came out flat. I dont know why, but its a fact. We didnt get over it the whole game, but we just played well enough to win.

We knew that the three-point goals were an important part of Clemsons offense because they can either shoot or if they have an opening, they can pass inside, Virginia Coach Terry Holland said.

In other games involving Top Twenty teams, No. 6 Arkansas beat Texas 8467, No. 9 St. Johns bested 13th-ranked Syracuse 8569, 15th-ranked Missouri bombed Colorado 88-53 and No. 18 Georgetown ripped Providence 86-62.

Othell Wilson, who cost Virginia the victory in regulation, hit a 12-footer for the game-winning basket with two seconds left in overtime after the Cavaliers held the ball for more than three minutes. Wilsons basket, the only points in the five-minute overtime, gave him 27 for the game.

I saw the dock was down to eight seconds and the ball was still out at half court, Sampson said. When I saw that, 1 signaled to Othell and he drove the ball (HI in.

Before the extra period, the game was tied 8161 when the Cavaliers Rick Carlisle

seemingly gave Virginia the victory with two free throws with two sec(M)ds to go. But Wilson unaccotmtably fouled Anthony Jenkins with one second left, and the Gemson freshman sent the game into

N.CAROUNASr.

HP re FT SAF R Bailey 3513-11 0-1 I 1 3 31 Chariet    3S    H    1- 1    5    6    4 13'

Mcquea    31    36    0- 1    10    0    4 6

Myen    33    4-13    5 5    1    1    4 11

Loe    40    7-11    5    6    S    12    1    23

Proctor    6    1-3    0-01112

GanDon    31    34    4- 4 2 3 3 13

Battle    4    1-2    0-11102

MtGaln    1    H    0- 0    0    0    0 0

ThonqMOO    5    04    0- 0    0    0    0 0

Totali    200 1747 1348 31 21 n 16

DUKE

MP re FT RAF R

24 511    0- 0    6    1    5    11

23 34    4- 4    5    0    5    8

33 511    4- 5    10    2    1    20

24 513    5 0    1    5    3    13

36 14    5 2    2    6    1    4

50 1 2 1 6 1- 2    4    0    2    3

5 4    2    1    3    14

5 0    0    1    0    0

5 0    0    0    0    0

5 0    0    0    0    0

16 24

14 1-3 22 44 4 50 3 54 1 54

Henderson

Bllas

Alarle

Engelland

Dawkins

Jackman

Anderson

Emma

Meagher

WiUiams

Wendt

Totab

N.C. state.....................46

Duke..........................41    28-7

Threefoint goals: N.C. SUte 516: Bailey 2-2, Myers 53, Lowe 57, Gannon 34. Duke 516: Henderson 1-2, Alarie 51, Engelland 34, Dawkins 51, Jacknun 2-2, Emma 34.

Turnovers: N.C. State 11, Duke 19. Officials: Wlr, Clougherty, Dodge.

Att: 8,564.

200 2846 1517 32 20 21 71

MARYLAND

MP re FT RAF R

Fothergill

15

2-3

2-2

0

0 4 6

Veal

28

1-5

1-1

7

0 3 3

Coleman

3

57

5 611

1 4 17

Adkins

32

510

50

1

3 5 9

Branch

39

1-10

1-2

3

4 4 4

Bias

23

24

1-1

4

0 0 5

Baxter

14

55

50

0

1 3 7

Rivers

13

56

50

1

0 2 9

Holbnt

1

50

50

1

0 1 0

Dreisell

1

50

50

0

0 1 0

Totals

200 -60 1512 28

9 27 00

GEORGIA TECH

MP

FG

FT

RAF R

Pearson

38

59

5 7

9

1 2 16

Harvey

24

1-3

52

2

0 3 2

Salley

38

4-5

7-8

9

3 3 15

Thomas

39

58

56

4

5 112

Price

38 516 5 2 2 2 0 19

Bradford

14

51

56

2

1 4 6

Byrd

9

53

50

0

0 0 0

Totals

200 2545 25 28 12 IS 70

Maryland..

29 32-60-

Geo^Tech .............28    42-70

Threefoint goals: Maryland 520: Adkins 55, Branch 1-7, Bias 51, Baxter 1-2, Rivers 55. Georgia Tech 58: Thomas 1-2, Price 34, Byrd5l Turnovers: Maryland 18, Georgia Tech

9.

Technical fouls: Bradford.

Officials: Vacca, Smith, Housman.

Att: 5,617.

Net Scrimmage

The East Carolina mens tennis team will scrimmage a groig) of former EC!U players on Sunday. The scrimmage will be held at 12:30 p.m. on the ECU courts beside Minges (toliseum.

The graduate group includes Jim Akers, Allen Farfour, Dan Weant, Randy Bailey, Henry Hostetler, Cecil Martin, Norman Bryant and Kevin Burke.

VIRGINIA

Robinson

Mullen

Sampson

Wilson

Carliste

Miller

Stokes

Edelin

Merrifield

Totals

CLEMSON

Shaffer

Jones

Jarman

Campbell

Wallace

Michael

Jenkins

McCants

Totals

Virginia.

MP FG FT RAF R

32    44    34    6    2    111

6    52    50    0    1    1    0

44    512    11-12    13    1    3    29

44    1513    55    2    5    3    37

40    511    54

17    1-5    04

22    1-2    2-2

14    1-2    51

6    52    54

4 8 3 10 12 2 2 113 4

9 0 3 2

10 10

200 246 3528 37 29 20 85 MP FG R RAF R

35 52 58 18 2-7 04 37 511 510 43 514 1-2 26 57 51 32 54 50 26 511 52 8 51 00

6 4 4 6

12 5 4 8 3 4 18 3 5 2 26 6 3 3 5 2 0 5 13 1 2 111 10 10

200 27-59 17-23 28 19 25 83

.32 2-45

overtinoe by making both ends ofai-and-lfoulsituatkH).

This is one of the best games weve played all year," Clemson Coach Bill Foster said. We know we can play with anybody. If we could just ^ what was coming to us and nothing extra, we would be fine.    ;    '

Gemson led 5^ with 14:13 remaining, but a ISO run by Virginia te the game with 10:11 left. Camptrells long-range shooting rebuilt a 7466 margin for the Tigers, but another 13-4 spurt by the Cavaliers made the game close until the end.

Other ACC Games Thuri Bailey said a team meeting was all North Carolina State needed to forget last weekends victory over North Carolina ahd prepare for Duke.

Bailey scored 26 points and Sidney Lowe added 23 as the Wol^ack downed the Blue Devils 96-79 in Atlantic Coast (inference basketball Wednesday ni^t.

In Atlanta, league-leading scorer Mark Price tallied 19 points to lead Gtoorgia Tech to a 7060 victory over Maryland.

Bailey scored 15 of his points in the secimd half as the Wol^ack raised their record to 166 and 7-4 in the ACC.

The guys got together and discussed the fact that we beat North Carolina, Bailey said. Then we said its time to get back to serious business.

Lowe dished out 12 assists to raise his league-leading total to 192, an N.C. State record which eclipses his own best of 184 set two years ago.

Price broke a 28-28 intermission deadlock by scoring the first five points of the second half.

I thought we played our best game of the year, said Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremins, whose team climbed to 12-12 and 46.

Ben Coleman led Maryland, 17-7 and 6-5, with 17 points.

Top Twenty Darrell Walker scored 22 points and Alvin Robertson 20 as Arkansas beat Texas for its 23rd victory in 24 games this season. Although the Longhorns hit 82 percent of its shots in the first half, the Arkansas still led 38-32 at halftime by forcing 16 turnovers. Texas, which got 21 points on 9-of-ll shooting by Carlton Cooper, finished with 29 turnovers.

St. Johns set iq) its Saturday showdown a^inst No. 7 Villanova by easily handling Syracuse, Billy Goodwin scored 24 points, David. Russell 21 and Chris Mullin 19 for the Redmen. Syracuse trailed only 4563 midway

OemaoD..............^.......21    44 0-83

Three-point goals: Virginia 57: Miller 51, Wilson 55, Carlisle 51. Clemson 1518: CampbeO 7-7, Walla(X) 1-2, Michael 54, Jenkins 1-5.

Turiwvers: Virgiola 12, Clemson 12. Technical fouls: Virginia bench. Officials: Wooldridge, Brown, Buicfa. Att: 11,000.

STIHL015 CHAIN SAW

r190

Mwmorial Dr. 752-4122

through the second half, but a 13-2 spurt by St. Johns put the Rednien comfcxtably ahead.

Missouri gave its starters a re^ for much oi the game against Colorado, giving reserve guard Micbad Walker a chance to dne with 19 p<^ts. The Tigers jumped ahead ^11 in the opening minutes, led 49-17 at halftime and didnt have less than a 27-point advantage in the second half.

Patrick Ewing scored 28 points and Georgetown hit 68 percent of its shots in its triumph over Providence.

Otho'Games

Harry Machine Gun KeUy, the NCAAs leading scorer, sc(Hred 60 points as Texas Southern outlasted Jarvis Christian College 11463.

Elsewhere, it was West Virginia 99, George Washington 76; Georgia Southern 66, South Carolina 64; James Madison 76, East Carolina 56; Virginia Tech 72, Virginia Military 54; Dayton 65, Marquette 63; Kansas 74, Iowa State 60; LaSalle 79, Lafayette 61; Oklahoma State 76, Kansas State 58; Purdue 56, lUinois 54; Southern Methodist 76, Texas A&M 66 and Texas Tech 69, Rice 67 in overtime.

Northeastern Loop Play

ROBERSONVILLE-Atrio of Plymouth players combined for 54 points to lead the lead the Vikings to an easy 87-59 victory over Edenton Wednesday evening in the first round of the Northeastern Conference basketball tournament.

In the girls contest, Pam Long scored 20 points to lead Tarboro past Ahoskie, 6462.

Lonnie Ford scored 19 points, Maron Bell added 18 and Tony Brown chipped in 17 to lead second-seeded Plymouth (14-3).

In action toni^t, Roanoke (18-3) faces Tarboro (12-9) in the boys semifinals at 8 p.m. while in the girls semifinals Roanoke (18-3) meets Edenton (166) at 6:30.

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I

I





SCOREBOARD

DOWWIg

I

W L

AnniAiels..........51    32

HijhHapes  ......51    33

TheFim*.............7    37

CaroUaaOnrboys    31

UoiconiPaur.......,..40    44

E.T...................40    44

EboayAIvory.........mt    44H

StrikeForoe...........31    40

PinWreckm..........HVk    47H

LoUyPrat.............SI    53

Mcai Mgh leries Roy Beiterl. 508, Mens high gune Stewart Brown, 215; Womens hi^ aeries Mary Baher, 4M; Womens hi^ game-Ann Bntler, 184.

Tssir*

BaatamAPn^

NiteRiders............33    0

Midalts................17    a

Thel.TJs.............17    a

Smurfs................11    a

Boys high series k game Garth Archer, XK A lU; Girls series A game - Sheila Ktte, 74 A

a.

JuMorDlTlMan

W    L

TheStrlkers...........40    U

BadNewsBears.......a    19

Family................    a

SBalls.................    a

Ten Pins...............34    a

TheSpares............S    a

Playrnates      a    8

UditningBdts........It    a

Boyshigh series A game Steve laboni, 461 A 170; Girls high snies A game - Weny Crisp, 471A187.

Rk BoikftboM

Greenville Rec League AAADMshm

Hustlers...............31    31-82

Wiz....................a 35-88

Leading scorers: H Lorniie Payton 21, Danny Carmen 14; W Andy Roberson , Bobby Fleming 18.

TRW................a 38-a

Flamingo. ............S 3570

Leading scorers: T James Brewington 27, Haywood Montgomery 18; F Dennis Pitt 14, Sam Smith 14.

PCMH.................a 42-75

Coke..................44    30-74

Leading scorers; P - Mike Adams a, Sirloin Daniels 10; C RusseU Eaves 22, Craig Smith 15.

Taft...................m    -

Leading soorers; A Gene EvamM. Rkfc Iteray tt; T -Mitton aemmoas 23, DaAm Pu^ 8.

ADMMh Cherrys won by forfeit over

GviUa    I

BCFP.................12    lA-a

Fergusons............a    28-88

Leadtam scorers: E Rick Cote 11; F-tWBarnes22,KevinBdte 13.

NHlSluiidhigg

TANK IPNANARA

^lPAMaZCAR30i46A5BCOMP me SOMET wm.BesRmp wtm

PteitcfcDlvWm

W L T GF QA i-PhiTiAU        U    7    85    m

s-Nvda am II Ml wama^    a    M    H    le    87

NYRwaen    W    *    I        81

Ptbaburgi    M        7    Hi    312

NewJeney    11    8    U    Ml    82

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

IK)    viucKiL^

AADWMoo    kansMCltv

Attic..................28    40-88    Sto

s-boMmi    8    u        aa    mi

Moatnwl    a    M    M        M

Buffalo    8    a    12    28    in

Quebec    8    8    M    81    2M

M 8 I 2H 81

CiwalirnOiMwisri iSiSDtvhIm

CMcag    8    M    I    28    84

lUm^    a    17    U    2    as

a . Loom    m    a    u    2m    m

tmmto    n    8    M    28    28

Delnil    M    a    U    Ml    28

SsqrtheDhMm Edmanhn    8    II    M    28    28

Calgary    8    8    I    28    255

WilSpM    8    8    I    28    28

Us Al^    a    8    M    28    28

Vanm^    8    8    11    2U    28

x-cUndiedpbqfoaaat

Wednnd^r^Ow

New York Raiaen 11, Hvtfard 3 Bidfalo4.Pldladd|)iiia3 NY Ulaiider*TMa84. tie PKtSburgil.WiBtepeg4 EdnMoMoi, WaahintfnB2 Taranto 2Jfta^^2 ASmSiy*B Montreal at Qnteec PMMburgi 8 PbiadelpMa DetroMaTNew Jersey WitedngtonatCalgKy Vancouver 8 Us Angeles FrtdqrsOMS Boston8BufMo Hartford 8 Wtanlpeg St. Uuis 8 Edmonton Toronto 8 Vanoonver

NRAStowdiiigg

EASTERN OOimRENCK AllanlkDivWan

W LPet    GB

PhUadeliiiiia    8    7    81    -

Boaton    8    14    .81    7

NewJeroey    8    8    .    12Vk

NewYork    8    8    .473

Waotiiihw    8    8    .40    a

OonMDIvWan Milwaukee    8    12    .65    -

Detroit    8    8    .473    M

AUanU    8    8    .40    lOVi

Chicago    a    8    .38    lIVi

II a 211 8 Cleveland    14    41    255    8

WESTERN OONVniBNCE

San Antonio

8 Denve. 8 Utah M Houalon

8 8

N a

N 8

4M I

28 IS

.18 mt

8    13    .78    -

M    n    m    v/t

a    a    sn    iH

a    8    84    M

8    a    .411    UVk

M    a    28    ati

34 a .87 -a 8 81 5

8 a .473 7H

UaAieies Portland Pboeniz Seattle Golden SUIe SaciOlefi

WodMteayaGamai

NewJeraeylM.ChfcaaBM PI8adelpWo US, OaOao Ml deveinad .Golden Stale M New Yoffc 131, Detroit M7 San AflSono 121, Partland 114 Kanoat CKy 113. Waflhk^ M7 BoetanlllUsAMeleilM Ihmdi^iSEBOi Detroit at AUmta Milwaukee at Houcton Phoenix at Utah Seattle at Denver BoMon at Sm Diego

Frui^Gnmoi Golden State atNew Jeroey ChictatPhBadei|ihia NewYork at Indiana PortlaadatDalbn San Antonio at Kanaas City Phoenix at Seattle

Tronsoctions

BASEBALL Amrrtrmfeomor BOSTON RED SOX-Amounced the retirement of DMnyParka. pitcher.

POCnnALL^

Canwlan FoelhnB Leofpe MONTREAL CONCORDES-Signed Ricky Floyd and Errol Nctan, raoaing bac^ Kqmy Smtth, comerhack; Greg WrlAi, defcimveend.

riMioMiroalhiilii^ CHICAGO BEARS-Named Johnny

BnlMiHnflin> hffcthilil rnarti

CLEVELAND BROWNS-Named Howard Mnd(Ljffen8ve Une coach.

SEATnZSEAHAWKS-Named Ken Meyer quarterback coach.

I Imliol Tt Min riinthill I imw ARIZONA WRANGLERS-Placed Bobby Carter, wide receiver: deveiand ' ' ght ^ and Mark Diamond, r, on wMven. SIgMd Tommy

NEW JERSEY Herechd Walker, three-yew contrad

BASKETBALL

Vilcox. free safety. Traded Mike Weilman, center, to Uk Loi Angeles BxprMior past cnnshieraUaos.

NEW YORK KNICKS-Ptaosd VhKC Taytor, guard, sn the Wured IW. Sl^ Mfte Dmrli, center, a tolMay contract UTAH JAZZ-Stawd Kenny Natt. forward.

OOLLKS MINNESOTA-Named Lsnia West asststant footbsD ooadi.

CENTRAL MISSOURI STATE Named Terry Nolaad head isothaU coach.

CollggtBoskwlbaU

EAST

BaIUniorelI,Towsaa8.8 BostooU.SZ,Mahw8 Canisius tTm Franda. Pa. 8 Delaware 17, Lehigi 8 Drexel72,Buchadl

Georgetownte Piwidencen MariS^8yermant8 Niagara^, deveiand 8.75, or aTFrandi, NY 93, Siena 8 W. Virgiiila 8,'Georne WasMiwMn 8 WagmrM, BloomfiAOaa.8 West CheMer 75, MiUersvillea. 8 YouUown8GanasnM

sot^ro

Georgia Tech 8, Mwybnd 8 Georgia Southern8,S. CaraiinaM James Madiaan 8, E. Carolina 8 UraiMen.N.GMt]8a MhUin^meaaee 8. xTceorna St 8 NC-Wihnhw^ 6, CampbeO tT N. CaroUna^ll. Di*^ NKentuc^n,Indiana SE8 S. ora*. Aia.-Birmii^ittn M StetaonnStUo8 Tulane 8, SE UuiBiaaa a Va. Commonweailh6, JackaoaviDe8 Virginia 8, dcmaon^ or Virginia Tech 73. VMI 54 MIDWBST BaUStlLN.Illhioian Bowling Green 8, W. MkMgaa M BuUwa, ValpwBiao

Dayton f^Mwmiette 6 E MidiiganS5,Miainia EvansvfeKAknna Kansas74,iownSt

Kent St 75, Toledo 8 LaSalle 8. Lafayetten MiseouriMOolamdoa

Oklahoma a . 8, Kmam 8 8 Purdne8 UhMteM

SOUTHWEST

AikMHasM,Texaa8

SMU7l,TesaaAAM

TexmSonthem 114. Jarvh Christiana TexmTechn^ltoi^OT

cent. WmhiaWan 8, SeaOle PacMc 8

ACCStotistici

ThrsngiGemm8Fab.n

^OORWO

FT Pte Avg 18    8    48    122

38    8    534    12.4

157    8    423    112

18    M    427    M l

18    8    412    M2

18    16    447    11.1

Thuri Bailey, NCS......144    6    38    15.7

BcnOolenian,Md    141    8    38    15.7

Enhe Myers. NCS......137

Danny Young, WF.....US

OtheUWUaonTVa......U2

Mark Price, GaT Michatl Jordan, UNC AdriM Branch, Md . J Dawkins Duke Ralph Sampson, Vs . SamPetSeTlikc ..

8 38 15.3 M 327 14.0 8 333 13.2 8 327 13.3 8 38 U.4 8 81 U.4 8 277 III 8 3M 112 8 18 10.1 8 38 10.1 SOM 102 8 38 102 37 38 10.7 8 38 02 8 225 92

John Toms, WF IS

Mark Alarte, Duke IM

AlviaRo^WF M

Delaney Ru&tWF 111 RaymondJoiKkClem lU

John Salley, Gat 8

RlckCartUe,Va n

Jeff Adkins, ikd n SidnmLowc,NCS.......n

d^Egjgiand,Duke 8

Jim Miller.

George Thomas GsT .8 8 211 22

Anthony Byi^aT 8 8 215 22

Anthony Teahbey.WF...8 8 223 2.7

D.Heiidenon.Dme 8 -------

David Shaffer, Clem . . . 8 Danny Pearson. GaT.... 8

Jay Hlas,Duke 8

Marc CampbeL dem... 8

FredGUlbun,dem 8

JimnvBraddDCk.UNC .8

Tom Emma, Duke 8

Waiilifaiiace.Clem . a

,TimMidien,Va 8

Craig Rohtaaoa,Va 8

B^Dai^iertyAmc .8

Ricky Stahea,Va........8    a Ml    A7

ChriiMichaci,dcm    M    U 18    A4

M Bradford, GaT    8    8 121    14

UfemoChartes.NCS    51    8    141    1.1

LeoBlat.Md...........8    8    18    II

Tim Harvey. GaT.......    41 U3    5 7

Dan Meawiw, Duke    41    8 U2    5.7

Steve fUvrt,Md 8    4    B    52

FIELD GOAL PERCENTAfa

FGM FGA Pet. Ralph Sampaon,Va    18    28    .84

Ben Coleman. Md.........141    28    .58

,UNC    28    38    SO

ill nf 237 ^    18    2M    28

JabnToms.WF...........IS    217    .522

J Dawkina,D8w.........18    28    2U

OthellWiiaoii.Va.........IS    26    48

Thuri Briley, NCS.........iri    28    417

Adrian Bruch, Md    IS    3S    .48

FREE THROWPBRCSNTAOE

FTM FTA Pet. MarkPrice.GaT    8    77    2N

U5 IS 28 8 16 2M a 8 727 8 8 773 M a TB .8 8 .7 II 11 7S 8 8 78 8 18 .744

Sam Perkins, UNC. Mark Alarte, Didte .. Ricky Stokes, Va . Thiri Briley. NCS Matt Doherty. UNC OlheUWUson.Va HenawiVeri,Md

Jim Miller. Va......

Adrian Branch, Md

BunPetoarsonJJNC

Herman V^JM.......S

Terry Gannen NCS......43

Mart Pother^ Md ...8 Anthony JeriS. dem.. 42 Murray Jarman, dem . .a

8 SI 2.4

8 82 2.1 8 38 12

a 18 1.1 8 18 1.1 8 18 12

51 38 12 8 18 1.3 12 38 1.0

a 18 1.0

8 18 72 49 81 7.7 11 18 72 II 16 72 8 16 7.0 6 18 12 It 137 12 8 18 12

REBOUNDING

C No Avg.

RriphSampooiLVa.........S    277    alt

SasaMPeriSruhc SM 12

AnthortyTeachm.WF.......8    38    12

BencSeman,!...........8    18    11

Raymond JoaesJ^    8    IM    72

Thuri BrileyiNCS...........8    18    72

Herman Veal JU...........8    18    12

Mark Alarle, Duke    8    18    10

JayBttas.Duke    8    134    52

Jota Salley, GaT    8    18    5.7

ASSBTS

G No Avg

SidneyUwe.NCS............8    MO    7l

Doimy Young, WF...........8    113    5.1

J DawUmlW............8    1U    4.2

Marc Canmbeil, dem........8    8    42

JimBndSclUNC..........8    IM    4 1

JeHAAjrfid..............8    6    4.1

OtheUWUaan.Va............8    8    42

Matt Doherty, UNC..........8    16    3.2

Mark Price, daT ........8    8    3.5

DeUneyRiidiLWF...........8    8    3 4

FSU Upsets Virginia Union

NORFOLK, Va.(AP)-The Central Intercollegiate Athletic Associatk basketball tournament moved into its second round today on the heels of a major upsrt.

In an t^iaiing round shocker Wednesday ni^it, Fayetteville States unbmHlded Brtmcos spotted heavily favored Virginia Union the first two points of the ame, thm reeled off nine straight and never trailed again in (treating the Panth^ 77-68.

In earlier first round games.

Nwfolk State waltzed past Livingstone 92-62, Virginia State downed Shaw 87-80, Elizabeth Qty State beat Johnson C. Smith l0^90, Winston-Salon State dimi-nated Bowie State 76^6 and N(th Carolina Cotral ousted St. Pauls 104-84.

The pairings fw today sot Virginia State against Winston-Salem State, St. Augustines against Fayetteville State, NtKldk State against Elizabeth City State and Hampton Institute against

North Cardina Cotral.

Leading the Fayetteville attack were Douglas Singleton with 21 points ftdlowed by Marvin Hardy with 18, William Poson with 14 and John S^vester with 13.

The victwry inqiroved the Bronces recti to 9-18 while Virginia Unkm dn^^ to 20-8.

The Panthers closed to within three at 37-34 with 15:25 left in the game but nevo got any cloOer. The Broncos biggest lead was 6662 with

4:14 to go.

Fayetteville shot 53 percot from the field to 33 percent for Virginia Union.

Phillip Brown led Virginia Unkm with 15 points while Tony Sin^eto and Charles OaUeybadl2each.

Dwayne Wood, Julius NtHinan, Darrdl Stitb and Kevin Bush were the key ^ as Virginia ^States Trojans shot 65.3 pocot from the floor in their victory over Shaw.

Wood led the Trojans, m,

Walker,..

(Cmtmued From Page 11)

he is aUe to make the UJS. team.

The attorney said the contract should not ban Walkm* from Olympic conqietition, saying the International Olympic Committee was using a douUe standard because European basketball players and dciers were some of the highest paid athletes in the worid and still particqiated in the Games.

Walker completed his three-year career at Georgia with 5,259 yards, only 823 shy of the NCAA-career standard held by Tony Dorsett. He led the Bulldogs to a 33-3 record, including the scbotris only national chanqiion^ in 1980.

Reaction to the signing of an underclassman ra^ed from disgust among many cdl^ coaches to giving the ISFL, which opens its first season on March 6, instant crethbOity.

Doc^ said he believed the American Foottmfl Coaches Association mi^t have something to say about the matter, but he refied to be critical at this time.

It seems to me the USFL was willing to gamble in this one instance to get creditolity, Dooley said. I

think the league is smart enou^ to know they cant go on doing this."

USFL Commissioner Qiet Simmons said the signing did not bm'ald the b^inniiig trf a raid on college undergraduates because it was a qiecial circumstance. We did not go after the young man. They came to us. indicated that the New York area was where be wanted to i^y."

The USFL has just slammed tiie door in our face, and it tttirts, said former Louisiana State Coadi Charlie McClendon, the director of the AFCA.

Alan Hannon, president and ctHiwnar trf the USFLs Los Angles Express, was not enthusiastic about Walkers signing. It is not the intent of the LA Express nm- the USFL to go in and change the system and raid file undo^aduates."

The announcement that Walker had signed qwrred ticket sales at the Generals offices, where Itmg lines waited at the ticket window.

Its unbelievable. Ive never seen anything like it in a dozen years of spo^ said C3iai1es Ilieokas, vice president of bu^ness affairs for the New Jersey franchise.

NFL: Signing Isn't Credibility

By The Associated Press The consmisus is that the signing of Heisman Trophy-winning tailback Herscbel Walker by the New Jersey Genmnls has given the United States Football League a healthy dose of instant ciedibUity.

I dont think so, countered Mike Lynn, the vice (HesideiA and general manag-O of the Natiooal Football

I

Lady Pirates...

(CdatinuedFtom Page 11) back in the second half. Thats lidien we played with poise. What hurt us was our free throw shooting. We only bad 14 turnovers.

We allowed them to get too mudi mommRum, however, and the girls are not too {deased with the game. Dmiiig the second half they were down by five as they hit a cotqde of baskets, then they started fouling us and we missed the one-and-ones, but we managed to stay in oootrol. UNCW is very scrappy; this is the best game Ive ever seen them play.

East Carolina is now 56 against the Seahawks and this brings the overall record for

the Pirates for the year to 12-11.

It seems like any team is always fired up to play ECU anymore. For UNCW it was tbeir biggest ganw of the year," Andruzzi said. Mary, Syl (Bragg), Caren (Tniske) and Fran all played 40 minutes. There was a lot of presmreoDthem."

The Lady Pirates return to action on Saturday, travding to Fairfax, Va., to face George Mason at 2 p.m. They then close out the road schedule oo Sunday at George Washington at 2 p.m. The final re^ar season game of the year is March 5, at home against UNC Charlotte.

credibility comes from bow many fails you put in the stands, be said Lynn. One great player in the league doesnt make its games competitive. Highly competitive games attract fans.

During the idayers strike, those all-star teams had stMne great players and they couldnt attract the fans, added Lynn. The two so-called Players League games each drew less than 5,000 fans.

H the USFL has, in fact, gained credibility with the fans, it has lost it with the coUc^ and the people who scour the campuses for talent. Evy reaction by a college coadi to the signing was a native one, as were the comments by Jack Butlv, the director of BLESTO, an NFL scouting combine for seven teams.

I would imagme the NCAA and coOege football is going to be very leery of the USFI from now on, said Butler, i know if I was a bead, football coadi and I bad good players I would be.

Said Bobby Beathard, general manager of the NFLs Washington Redskins: If I ran the NCAA, Id see to it that no scouts from the USFL got onto any campuses.

Butler noted that the NFL has steadfastly refused to draft undergraduates, even l^ym who have dropped out of college but whose dasses have not been graduated. 1 look at this as a form of caimibalism,liesaid.

A league is tmly as good as any of its teams. What I wtmdo' is, if you cant control your teams, what kind of league have you got? Beardless of vliatever type of business youre ninnie you have to have a code of ethics. If you dont have rules, you have anarchy.

The USFL had said it, too, wtHild not draft undo^rathi-ates, but its commismoner, Cbet Simmons, im{^ be was concerned Walker and his atUMney, Jack Madon, might institute led octkm against the new league ft- prevoitie Walker from i^ayie

NFL Commisskmer Pete Rozdle didnt view that as a legitimate reason for the USFL chan^ its stated pd-icy. A year ago, we were directly confronted with the same challenge, Rozelle said. Madon md with Jay Moyer (the NFL commissioners legal counsd) and with me. He suggested Herschd might cootonqriate aditrust action. We told him then, Well accept the case. Well defend the case. Later, Herschd deckled to go back to sdiod.

He also said the NFL remains committed to its policy of nd drafting undergraduates - although he said be expected it woiM be discussed next month in Palm Springs, Calif., at the NFL owners wider meetings.

Ed Garvey, the executive director of the NFL Players Association and actively involved in attempting to unionize the idayers in the new league, said he expects Walkers signing to be^ all NFL free agents in bargatoing with their dubs. I think youre gdng to see a tot more flexibility on the part of NFL owners. There are a tot of nervous peo|rie in the NFL right now.

with 21 points, Norman added 19,Stithl8,andBushl4.

Shaws Victor Blakey led all scorers with 27 points, and teammate Isaac Pitts added 25.

Lawrence Hayes tossed in 16 points and David Pope added 14 and pulled down 14 rebounds as Norfolk States Spartans beat Livingstones Bears.

Livlngstone scmed the first bucket before Norfolk State reded off eight unanswered points to^ decide the issue early. The Spartans led by as many as 36 points twice in the second half.

The victory improved Norfdk States record to 166 while Livingstooe ended its season at 9-16.

Willie Jmiette keyed a second-half flurry and David Bi-nion sctHHd 27 points as North Carolina Centrals Ea^es put five players in dodrie figures in breng past St. Pauls Tigers. ^

The Eagles are now 11-13. St. Pauls dosed out its season at 11-17.

The Tigers were led by

Charles Bdls 27 pofots.

Boijamin Brown poured in a gaine-hi^ 26 points to lead Elizabeth City State over JdinstmC. Smith.

Elizabeth City, 620, led most of the way and piled up an 8263 \ea with 7:49 to go, largdy on the strength of de^y shooting from the line. The Vikings hit on 21 of 27 foul shots in the second half and 21 of 26 in the first.

The loss evened Smiths record at 13-13.

Danny Womack and Cliff WhlUieid^ combined for 47 points and Whitfield added 11 rebounds as Winston-Salons Rams beat up oo Bowie States Bulldogs.

The Bulldogs, who lost their 25tb straight game and finished the season at 1-25, led early at 106 but the last ei^t minutes of the first half' without scoring and trailed 40-18 at halftime.

ITie win for Winston-Salem, 14-10, was the 698th career victory for Coach Qarence Gaines.

Womack finished with 24 points and Whitfidd had 23.

Chocowinity Rips Bears

CHOCOWINITY -Chocowinity Hi^ Schools third seeded boys ousted Bear Grass frwn the Tobacco Belt Cfonference tournament last night, ending the year for the Bears, 6647.

In other first round action last night, top-seeded Mat-tamuskeet beat Bath, 74-50; number two Aurora took Columbia, 85-75, and number five Belbaven upset Oeswell, 5649.

Tonight, action moves to Washington High School, where Belhavens girls, the regular season champs, take on Bath at 7 p.m., and Mat-tamuskeets boys face Belhaven. Fridays other semifinals pits the Chocowinity girls against Bear Grass and the Aurora boys against Chocowinity.

Chocowinity jumped out into a 176 lead in the first period of the game, and was never in trouble after that. The Indians outhit the Bears, 14-13, in the second pmod and took a 31-19 lead into intermission.

The third period saw Chocowinity build its lead out to 44-29. The Indians finished off Bear Grass, 22-18, in the final period.

Reggie Ross led Chocowinity with 14 points while Mark Gorham bad 13 and Kevin Tyree and Terry Moore each had 10. The Bears,

who finish the season with toe loss, were led by Phil Peele with 12 and Timmy Williams and James Williams with 10 each.

Bear Grass (47) Watson 20-0 4, T. WUIiams 5 0-110, Gardner 21-3 5, Peeie 6 00 12, J WiUiams S OO 10. Tayior 1 00 2, HanUaon 2 OO 4, Price 0 OO 0, Hanisoa 0 OO 0, Leggett 0 OO 0. Total! 231-4 7.

Chocowinity (86) - Bowen 130 5, Gorham 61-213. Ron 5 4014, Tripp 1 OO 2, Langley 2 O-14, Warren 100 2. Tyree 4 ^7 10, Moore 4 2-2 10, Hooker 1 OO 2, Harris 1 OO 2, Pritchard 0 20 2. Totab X1401.

BearGraaa 8 13 18 11-07

Chocowinity 17 14 13 22-86

NoHhtflitfw

Boys standing Final Standtegi

Coni OveraU W L W L *Roanofce    14    2    17    3

PlymouUi    13    3    18    4

Bertie    11    5    15    5

Tarboro    10    6    11    9

R. Rapids    8    8    8    10

Washington    7    9    9    13

Edenton    5    11    10    11

Ahoskie    2    14    5    18

-hWlUiamston 2    14    4    17

Hlinched Championship +Does not qualify (or tournaiilent

Girts StaiKttngs

Final Standings

Conf

Overall

W L

W

L

*Roanoke

IS 1

17

3

TartxNX}

14 2

17

3

PtymouUi

Eiieiiton

10 6 10 6

14

15

8

8

Bertie

9 7

11

9

WiUiamston

0 10

6

13

Ahoskie

4 12

4

14

WashiiUm

4 12

5

IS

+R Rapids

0 16

0

18

*Ginched Champkmsnip +Does not qualify (or UHirney

The Daily Reflector, GreenvUte. N.C.-Thuriday. Fctmiary 24.1913-13

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Vote Exception In Application Of N. C Sales Tax

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) - A bill eliminating sales tax^ on printed materials sold to out-of-state customers won approval Wednesday in the state House despite opponents charges that the bill shows favoritism to one industry.

After almost an hour of debate, two unsuccessful attempts to amend the bill and a third effort to return it to committee, the House voted 8&-22 to approve the bill and send it to the Senate.

The* state would lose about J450,000 a year by giving the printing industry the sales tax break, said Rep. Dan Lilley, D-Lenoir, the bills sponsor.

But Lilley argued that specific companies are considering expanding or building in North Carolina if the law is changed. He said those companies would generate enough money to make up for the loss.

It will encourage local industry to expand and attract industries with the highest wages, Lilley said.

Other representatives objected to passing a law for what they said were a handful of companies.

We are singling out one particular industry and saying we" will create an industrial climate for that industry that is superior to others, said Rep. Martin Nesbitt, D-Buncombe.

Lilley said there already are similar exemptions for companies selling seed and fertilizer.

Rep. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, unsuccessfully tried to amend the bill to make it effective Jan. 1,1984, instead of this July 1.

Nesbitt unsuccessfully tried to amend the bill to exempt sales to in-state customers and Rep. Foyle Hightower, D-Anson, tried without success to send the bill back to committee.

/More Scrutiny For DUI Bill

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Gov. Jim Hunts drunken driving package, already approved by two state Senate committees, may face scrutiny by two more before reaching the Senate floor -but a Hunt spokesman says hes not worried.

The bill, which rewrites drunken driving laws to boost the conviction rate and lengthen sentences and raises the drinking age to 19, was approved by the Senate Finance Committee on Wednesday.

Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green said last week that if the Finance Committee took only one day to look at the bill, it could reach the Senate floor Thursday or Friday. But Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, called for the bill to be sent

N.C. Record In Benefits

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A record $56.3 million in weekly unemployment insurance benefits was paid out in January, according to officials of the Employment Security Commission.

Guilford and Mecklenburg counties each received more than $2 million in January, while 11 other counties received more than $1 million in benefits.

Counties receiving more than $1 million included Alamance, Buncombe, Catawba, Cleveland, Davidson, Forsyth, Gaston, Randolph, Robeson, Rockingham and Wake.

ESC officials say North Carolinas Unemployment Insurance Fund is the third most solvent in the country, with a January balance of more than $340 million. Funds in 23 states are bankrupt, with forecasts that funds in 35 states will be bankrupt by the end of this year.

Conservative fiscal policies have maintained North Carolinas solvency," said ESC chairman Glenn R. Jernigan, but the U1 Fund is being depleted at an average rate of $10 million each week. We are very concerned about the sustained high unemployment rates and the drain it produces on the U1 Fund

Jernigan said he hopes the improving weather conditions and economic recovery will help ease the pressure on the fund.

Superintendent Is Appointed

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -George Nathen Lee, the coordinator of the multihandicapped programs at the Governor Morehead School for the Blind, was named superintendent of the school Wednesday officials said.

Dr. Sarah T. Morrow, secretary of the Department of Human Resources, said Lee, who will be paid $29,880 per year, will become superintendent effective April 1.

to the Senate Appropriations Committee and said it might need to go to the Ways and Means Committee.

There was no indication when the Finance Committee would begin work on the bill.

Zeb Alley, Hunts legislative liaison, said the delay wouldnt hurt the bills chances.

Its just part of their careful consideration of the bill, said Alley. It doesnt take effect until Oct. 1, anyway. The bill will move along in good time.

The bill, an amended version of the one Hunt originally backed, was approved last week by the Senate Judiciary III Committee after a month-long probe.

It eliminates plea bargaining, allows impounding of cars in extreme cases, requires prosecutors to explain in writing when they dismiss charges, and imposes; civil liability on shopkeepers or bar operators who sell to people already drunk or under age who later cause accidents.

Hardison, Appropriations Committee chairman, said legislative analysts had predicted the bill would cost $1 million more than it would produce.

Weve got to (meet) the costs of the son of a gun, he said. Theres no use kidding ourselves this bill is going to cost us.

Hardison said the Legislature should have no trouble coming up with money to fund the bill, although the budget is so tight that spending cuts are being considered to keep it balanced.

Well just have to find out how much its going to cost and appropriate the money, he said. The people of North Carolina cant expect us to pass a bill without appropriating the money to pay for it.

Franklin Freeman, director of the Administrative Office of the Courts, recommended an additional $500,000 be appropriated to pay attorneys fees for sentencing hearings. The bill also would require more court personnel, prosecutors and judges, he said.

The Finance Committee approved the bill after questioning its sponsor, Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne, about fees it imposes. They include:

- $15 for drivers license revocation when a person blows at least a .10 on the Breathalyzer.

- $15 if a law enforcement officer is .required to pick up the license at a later date.

- $23 if the defendant requests a revocation hearing before a magistrate.

- $100 to attend a drunken driving school, the cost of which could not be waived as is sometimes done under existing law.

The Finance Committee heeded the request of its chairman. Sen. Marshall Rauch, D-Gaston, that it confine itself to examining the monetary aspects of the drunken driving bill instead of delving into other parts such as the controversial dram shop and drinking age provisions.

In other legislative action:

Elections

Sen. Cass Ballenger, R-Catawba, introduced a bill to allow North Carolinians to vote a straight party ticket and cast ballots for individual candidates from other parties.

The bill would do away with the current law requiring only straight party ballots be counted while additional selections for individual candidates of anbther party are discarded.

Former U.S. Rep. Bill Hendon, a Republican from western North Carolina, amtends he lost his seat last year because of the law.

As it stands, our present ballot is confusing and is obviously designed to subvert the intention of the voter, Ballenger said.

But Sen. Russell Walker, D-Randolph, chairman of the state Democratic Party, said the bill represents a little bit of sour grapes. He said there has been very little confusion over the law, which he argues has not helped Democrats or Republicans.

Education

The Joint House-Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Education rejected several proposals for identifying ways to cut 3 percent from the University of North Carolina budget.

One budget-cutting plan accepted for consideration Tuesday would eliminate hundreds of teaching positions in an effort to cut up to $18 million.

The committee rejected plans Wednesday to cut up to 3 percent without naming specific programs to be reduced or to delete certain spending increases, like those for utilities, and eliminate some teaching jobs.

Water

Jay Langfelder, assistant secretary of Natural Resources and Community Development, urged the Senate Natural and Economic Resources Committee to consider banning phosphate detergents to fight pollution in several North Carolina rivers.

He said phosphorous in the water led to proliferation of blue-green algae that clogs the Chowan River. The algae causes a decline in the number of fish.

About 40 percoit of the phosphorous in rivers comes from sewage, and a ban on phosphate detergents would remove only about 40 pm;rat of that, he said.

(hanging sewage treatment plants to remove the material would cost about $6.16 per person per year, while a ban would save the consumer an average of 45 cents.

Langfelder also discussed the proposal to pipe water from Lake Gaston to Virginia Beach, Va., saying it would entail $180.5 million in construction costs and $1.1 million a year in pumping costs.

The state has asked Virginia to help clean up the Chowan River and preserve groundwater reserves between the states in exchange for North Carolinas support of the plan.

Nuclear Freeze

Four senators who signed a resolution calling for a freeze on nuclear weapons by the United States and Soviet Union have asked to have their names removed from the bill.

Sen. Dallas Alford, D-Nash, said he had been led to believe the resolution would not jeopardize the United States military position, but changed his mind after reading it.

Also dropping their support were Sens. George Marion Jr., D-Surry, Conrad Duncan Jr., D-Rockingham, and William Staton, D-Lee.

Social Workers

A bill that would require certification of social workers was returned to subcommittee after it met unexpected opposition from the N.C. Association of Black Social Workers.

Bob Wells of the association said his group objected to provisions that would give some certification for experience that could not be obtained in college. The group also opposed plans to let those certified in other states practice in North Carolina without being recertified.

New Bills

Rep. Parks Helms, D-Mecklenburg, introduced a bill to implement an already approved constitutional amendment that permits retired state Supreme Court justices to return and sit on the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals temporarily.

Sen. Rachel Gray, IHiuilford, introduced a resolution urging the state community college system and other

agencies to concentrate on lowering unemployment in North Carolina.

Parties

Despite objections by Sen. Cary Allred, R-Alamance, a Senate committee approved a bill removing party affiliation from the space on income tax forms where peqile can make a $1 donation to pditical campaigns.

Under the bill, ^introduced by Sen. Wilma Woodard, D-Wake, money collected throu^i the tax form checkoff would be distributed to political parties on the basis of the number of registered voters each party has.

Ms. Woodard said that in 1982, only 8 percent of the states taxpayers donated $1 to a political party. She said many failed to do so because they were afraid their party affiliation would become known.

But Allred said the bill was an attempt to hurt the Republican Party, which he said would lose money under the new arrangement.

'This would destroy the principles on which democracy is founded the right to independent choice of which party we choose to support, he said.

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In The Area |Midwest's Natural Gas Prices Rising

ECU Names Admissions Director

Charles F. Sedey, director of admissions and scholarships at Michigan State University for the past 11 years, will beoHne direcUM* of admissions at Cast Cardina Univemty effective March 14.

Seeley, 55, a Michigan native and MSU graduate, comes to ECU after 20 years of experience in the field of student recruitment, anissk>ns, retention, financial assistance to students, orientation and advising. He served as counselor and a^istant and associate director at MSU before becoming director in 1972.

Previoisly he had served for 15 years in {Mdilic schod systems in Michigan as a high school teacher, princ^ and

j succeeds Walter Bortz who resigned in January 1M2,

to accept a post at a Connecticut university. The appointment of Seeley was recommended by a committee which cmiducted a nationwide search.

PSG Employees Are Cited

Pam Gariier and Ervin Hardee of Procter & Gamble Co. here received a certificate of ai^reciation recently for their participation in the 1982 Governors Award for Fitness and Health in Busines and Industry.

The award, designed to recognize the North Carolina employer doing the most to iMomote health and fitness at the worksite, is sponsored annuidly by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina and the Governors Council on Physical Fitness and Health.

The Equitable Ufe Assurance Society of the United States, Southern Service Center in Charlotte, was named winner of the 1983 award.

Blood Qrive Appointments Available

Mike Colombo, chairman of the county blood program, reminded potential donors of Mondays scheduled blood-mobUe visit at the Moose Lodge.

Colombo said the new effort aimed at securing donor appointments for the 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. drive has had some success but he urged area citizens who would like to schedule a time to give blood to call Ruth Taylor at the Red Cross office here, 752-4222.

The spokesman said Mondays activities mark the first time that area donors have had the opportunity to call in advance for bloodmobile appointments. He said it is hopeful there will be enou^i response to make the scheduling system successful.

Hospital Names Church Chairman

Sister Helen Shondell has been named church group chairman of the Hospice of East Carolina fund-raising drive.

Hospice, a volunteer non-profit organization formed to help the terminally ill and their families, is attempting to raise more than $70,000 for its operational expenses. All contribu-' tions are tax-deductible, she pointed out.

SlstCi .Helen, who has lived in Greenville for the past m years, works full-time with the Catholic campus ministry. She is a past officer of the Greenville Ministerial Assocaiton.

' Those wishing to contribute to the drive or to Hospice in any way may call 7584622.

Prayer Day Is March 4 In Bethel

'The United Methodist Women of the Bethel United Methodist Church in Bethel will hold their annual prayer and self-denial observance at 9:30 a.m. March 4 at the church.

The date was listed incorrectly in The Daily Reflector Wednesday.

Board Session Opens Meeting

Burneys Chapel Free Will Baptist Church will open its tjuarteriy meeting weekend with a board meeting Friday at 6 p.m.

A quarterly meeting service will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m., with the message by the Rev. Johnnie Taylor, accompanied by the Coreys Chapel choir and ushers. Sunday 11 a.m. services will be led by the pastor; Sunday 3 p.m. services by members of St. Monicas Church.

Energy Panel Meets Tonight

The Greenville Energy Commission meeting regularly sc^uled for Monday has been rescheduled for toni^t at 7:30. The commission will meet in the third floor board room of the Greenville Utilities building, Fifth and Washington streets.

Seek Tax Help Early

Those wanting assistance through the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program, which is made up of volunteers trained by the Internal Revenue Service, have been urged to seek the assistance early.

Earl W. Deal, examination group manager for the IRS for this area, said the service will be offered until April 14. The hours are 2-4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday at the Community Center, and at the White building, Pitt Community College 10-11 a.m. on Tuesday and Thursday and 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Wednesday and Friday.

Deal urged those wanting the service to go well before the April 15 filing deadline so that adequate time will be available.

Social Worker Speaks To Group

Patricia Oswalt, day care social worker of the Pitt County Departenmt of Social Services, was the speaker at the first monthly meeting of the Greater Greenville Black Child Care Association.

She spoke on Suspected Child Abuse and Neglect and showed a film on the subject. Approximately 20 persons attended the meeting, which was held in FarmvUle.

According to Margie F. Smith of the Bishop Payton Child Learning Center in Stokes, president of the association, membership in the organization is (^n to every race, creed and color. The next mating is scheduled for March 21 at 7 p.m. at Fa,ily Day Care Center, 1710 W. Sixth St. For information call 752-9329 or 757-1197.

Social Service Board To Meet

The Pitt County Board of Social Services will meet Monday at noon at the Three Steers Restaurant on Memorial Drive. 'The meeting is open to the public.

. Mayes Cited In 1982 Book

Two former Pitt County residents have been selected for inclusion in the 1982 edition of Outstanding Young Women of America.

They are Mamie Ellene Maye of Kansas City, Mo., dau^iter of Mrs. J.W. Maye Sr. of Greenville, and Jeanette Wilson Maye of Durham, dau^ter of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Albritton of Route 1, Bethel, and the wife of John Maye Jr., formerly of Greenville.

Mamie Maye is enrolled in a doctoral program in music at the University of Missouri in Kansas City. Mrs. Maye is a nurse at Durham General Hospital.

   puted by I

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- I

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area Wednesday, as com-luted by the East Carolina Department of

By MATT YANCEY Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Wholesale prices for natural gas in five states of the Midwest are expected to rise

sharply next month when a major pipdioe begins billing distributors for high-priced liquified gas impcK^ from Algeria.

In a move sharply

DOCUMENTS DELIVERED Rq>. James Florio, D-NJ, left, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee, watches as an unidentified courier unloads boxes sent to his Washington office Wednesday from the Environmental Protection Agency. Florio said the EPA delivered 12 boxes containing the documents his subcommittee subpoenaed. (AP Laserphoto)

Engineer Talks Bridge Project

WILLIAMSTON - Construction should begin in about ^wo years on a larger bridge to replace the two-lane drawbridge span over the Roanoke River between Williamston and Bertie County, a state highway engineer said today.

Wayne Elliott, a planning engineer with the State Department of Transportation, said it would take an additional two years to complete construction of the bridge.

Estimated costs of the project range from $5 to $15 million. F^eral funds are expected to provide 70 percent of the cost, with the state to provide the remainder of funds.

Elliott, one of three DOT personnel who conducted a hearing in Williamston earlier this week, said it has not been decided what type of bridge will be approved. The exact location of the bridge also is undecided.

Several types of bridges are being considered, ranging from various drawbridge types to a medium-level fixed span. Elliott said that at one time there was little river traffic passing under the existing bridge, but that in the past couple of years river traffic, including larger barges, has been on the increase. This will have to be considered in plans for a bridge.

The two-lane swing drawbridge currently spanning the Roanoke, constructed in 1921 and repaired in 1948, connects two sections of four-lane road - the U.S. 17 bypass around

Williamston, and a stretch of approximately two miles in Bertie County. The road north of the bridge for a distance of about half a mile is two-lane over swampy low ground in Tlertie County.

Elliott said a decision by DOT. for a design recommendation would probably be made- within the next eight months. Following adoption of a design, construction would likely begin within two years.

Area residents attending the meeting Tuesday night expressed concern about maintaining a roadway leading from the bridge area to Main Street in Williamston. They were assured that whatever plan is adopted will provide for inclusion of such a road.

The Williamston project is one of three bridge replacements being considered in eastern North Carolina. The others are the N.C. 32 bridge over Albemarle Sound and the bridge between Morehead City and Atlantic Beach.

Estimated cost of a new Albemarle Sound bridge is for about $40 million, and that at Morehead'Atlantic Beach at about $12 million.

CITRUS LOSSES TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Israeli citrus growers say they expect to lose $20 million this year because of rough winter weather that damaged crops and delayed cargo ships.

Physics, was 18. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 18 percent of your hot water needs.

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752-3952

Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.

criticized by consumer advocates and some congressmen, the Federal Energy Regulatory Coni-mission refused Wednesday to stop Tnmkline LNG Co. and its parent. Panhandle Easter Pipeline Co., from importing the gas even though its current cost is more than twice the level of domestic prices.

The commission voted unanimously to allow Panhandle, effective March 1, to roll in the price of the Algerian gas with less expensive domestic gas still under government price controls to distributors in 11 states.

A consumer group, the Citizen-Labor Energy Cloali-tion, estimated that the $994 million price jump will increase natural gas rates to residential and industrial customers in five stat Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Missouri by 15 to 40 percent.

Over the next six months, that translates into a $70 increase in utility bills over the average residential consumer, said Ed Rothschild,

an analyst with the coalitk.

' Opponents of the deal contended that the K.65 price per thousand cubic feet being paid to Algeria is unjustified at a time when domestic producers are charging only $2.50 and many wells are closed because of oversuw)ly.

Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo., accised the commission of shirking its responsibilities. The benefit will ^ to the Algerians who will make off like bandits and to the pipelines who lined up this ridiculous deal, he said Wednesday.

Tliere also was immediate action in the Middle West. Midwest Solvents Co. announced it will temporarily close its alcohol and wheat gluten plant in Pekin, 111., and lay off 100 workers because of the price increase.

Daniel Lord, the plants vice president and neral manager, said the commissions action would raise Midwest Solvents energy bill $100,000.

The commissimi affirmed a ruling last month by an

administrative law judge that q;)ponents of the deal -local utilities, manufacturers. consuiner groups, several congressmen and state officials failed to show any violation of the 1977 contract between Panhandle and Sonatrach, the Algerian company.

It supported Panhandles contention that the current glut in domestic gas is only temporary and that the 20-year contract will assure a long-term supply for the pipeline companys customers.

But it cited an article in the government-approved contract requiring Panhandle and Sonatrach to renegotiate the price based on current economic conditions of the market" before March 31 and said refunds might be ordered later.

FERC Chairman Charles M. Butler 111 said the commission would not tolerate any foot-dragging" on those negotiations.

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Paul Taylor, a spokesman for Panhandle, said talks between the pipeline and Sonatrach were >ing on this week We have no idea at this time how successful those negotiations will be. he said

Panhandle also supplies relatively small amounts of gas to distributors in Texas. Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky and Kansas

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ItThe Daily Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.Hwraday, February M1183

Toto' Paced Grammy Pack With 7 Awards

Y PLITT TMIATttt

ByYARDENAARAR Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) -Members of Toto, who rose from a high school band to soft-rock stardom, led the pack with seven awards -including album of the year in a glittering 25th anniversary Grammy show filled with nostalgic glimpses of past ceremonies.

Another big winner Wednesday ni^t was composer John Williams, who won three Grammys for his music to the box-office smash movie E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.

Willie Nelsons wistful Always on My Mind also garnered three awards, and Marvin Gaye picked up two gramophone-shaped trophies for his comeback hit, Sexual Healing.

Also taking home awards from the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences extravaganza at the Shrine Auditorium were the Australian new wave group

Men at Work, Melissa Manchester, LhmwI Richie, Joe Cocker and Jennifer Wames, Pat Benatar, J<^ Cougar, Jennifer Holliday and Alabama.

Totos Grammy haul included album of the year for "Toto IV and record of the year for their meilow hit, Rosanna, which also won two arranging awards.

The band was also named producer of the year. Toto IV earned best engineered recording honors and Toto guitarist Steve Lukather shared the best rhythm blu^ song award with Jay Graydon and BUI Giamplin for writing the George Benson hit, Turn Your Love Around.

Totos Grammys were the first for the 4-year-old Los Angeles band, marking a triumph over sometimes uncomplimentary reviews.

If it were up to the critics, we wouldnt have won, Lukather said.

The nationally televised

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awards show ran more than three hours. Althot^ the record iiMhistry has fallen on hard times lately, the academy pulled oirt all the stops fOT its 25th ceremony..

There were a few unexpected touches to the evening: chanteuse Grace Jones presented an award in new wave garb that featured a hat resembling a stripped umbrella, and comedian Eddie Mun^iy made a mad dash from the wings to snatch away Lionel Richies best male pop vocal Grammy f(M'Tndy."

Who was that masked man? Richie joked before Murphy came iKKk with the tit^y.

Gaye performed Sexual Healing before winning the best r&b male vocal Grammy. Earlier he had collected the best r&b instrumental award for the instrumental version of the

same song.

Ive waited a very long time 2(Fsome years - to win this, Gaye said of his first Grammy.

Cocker an.1 Miss Warnes performed and then won the best group pop vocal Grammy for Up Where We Belong, the Oscar-nominated tlieme to the movie An Officer and a Gentleman.

Nelson, who performed via

TV Log

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

THURSDAY 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tec 0:00 AAagnum :00 Besketttell 11:00 News 11:30 Movie FRIDAY S:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8:75 News 9:25 News 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11:00 Price Is 11:57 Newsbreak

12:00

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1:30

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4:00

5:00

5:30

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11:30

Young and As the World Capitol Guiding L. Waltons Hillbillies A. Griffith News9 CBS News Jokers Wild Tic Tac Dukes Dallas Falcon C. News9 Movie

WITN-TV-ai.7

THURSDAY 7:00 Jeffersons 7. Family Feud S:llO Fame 9:00 Gimme A 9;M Cheers 10:00 Hill Street 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Leflerman 1:30 Overnight 2 News

FRIDAY

5:00 Jimmy S. 6:00 Early Today 6:25 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 News 7: Today 8:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R Simmons 9:30 All in the

10:00 FacfsOfLife 10:30 Saleofihe 11:00 Wheelof 11:30 HitMan . 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 DavsofOur 2:00 Another Wor. 3:00 FMtasy 4:00 Dark Shadows 4:30 Wild West 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 News 6:30 News 7:00 Jefferson 7:K Family Feud 8:00 PowersOf 9:00 Knight R. 10:00 Remingtons. 11.00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Comedy 1 00 Overnight 3:00 News

WCn-TV-Ch.l2

THURSDAY 7.00 3'sCompany 7:30 Alice 8:00 Condo 8:W Amanda's 9:00 TooClose 9:30 ItTakesTwo 10:00 20/20 11:00 Actions News 11:30 Nightline 12:00 HarryO 1:00 Mission 2:00 Early Edition

FRIDAY 5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7 00 Good Morning 6:13 Action Mevrs 6:55 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News

9:00 Phil Donahue 10:00 Good Times 10:30 Laverne 11:00 Love Boat 12:00 FamilyF. 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 All My 2:00 One Lite 3:00 G. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 BJ/LOBO 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 3'sCompany 7:30 Alice 8:00 Benson 8:30 Odd Couple 9:00 Movie 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12)00 HarryO 1:30 An Evening 2:30 Early Edition

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

THURSDAY 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Previews 8:30 Enterprise 9 :00 Nature of 10:00 AustinCity 11:00 Hitchcock 11:30 Aterecambe

FRIDAY

7:45 AM Weather i 8:00 Pre Gen 8:35 WriteOn 8:40 Parlei AAoi 8:50 Readalongl

9 :00 Sesame Street 10:00 Jobs

10:20 WordShop

10 :35 Matter of 10:55 WriteOn 11:00 High Feather 11:30 Carousel 11:50 Readah>ng2

12:00 Waysol the 12:20 Tip Top Ten 12:30 WordShop 12:45 Electric Co 1:15 High Feather 1:45 Give and Take 2:00 Tuned In 2:15 Animal 2:30 Advocates 3:00 Over Easy 3 :30 Adult Basic 4:00 Sesame St 5:00 Mr. Rogers 5:30 3 2 1Contact 6:00 Dr. Who 6:30 Fast Forward 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline.

8:00 Washington 8:30 Wall St.

9.00 I, Claudius 10 00 LiteOn 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 AAorecambe

satellite from Texas, won best country male vocal honors for Always on My Mind, which won song of the year and best country song awards.

Men at Work walked off with the best new artist LP after singing their reggae-tinged hit Down Undo-.

u|>-tempo hit, You Should Hear How She Talks About You,"

Alabama, a country quartet that has amassed numerous awards from country groigjs, picked up its first Grammy for Mountain Music." Miles Davis picked up his third career Grammy in the best jazz solo instrumental category for the LP We Want MUes.

Jennifer Holliday, whose first solo album will be released shortly, won the r&b female vocal award for And I Am Telling You Im Not Going," a song fnn the Broadway musical, Dreamgiris.

Pat Benatar took her third female rock vocal award in as many years for Shadows oftheNi^t."

Ernie Watts performance of the Oiariots of Fire" theme was named best pop instrumental.

Fool. Survivors Eye of the Ti^, the theme to Rocky HI," picked up the rock ^oig) vocal award, and D.N.A." by A Flock of Seagulls got the nod for best rock instrumental.

Melissa Manchester was a first-time winner as best female pop vocalist for her

John Cougar won the male rock vocal Grammy for Hurt So Good," his No. 1 hit fttHn the album American

In a rare Grammy tie, the Dazz Bands Let It Whip and Earth, Wind & Fires Wanna Be With You" split the r&b group vocal award.

Juice Newton won the country female vocal Grammy for Break It To Me Gitly, while Roy Qark took the country instrumental prize for Alabama JubUee."

The late pianist Glenn Goulds recording o Johann Sebastian Bachs The Gddbei^ Variations won best classical album and

instrumental soloist Grammys. Goidds 1956 recording of the same works also won a Hall of Fame award given Iqr the aclemy to honm* recoitte made befwe the Grammys were first awarded in 1959.

Grammy award winners were determined secret ballot anoong the record academys noore than 5,000 members in sevoi citi. eligibUity year ran from Oct. 1,1981, to Sept. 30,1962.

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RUNNING WITH IT - Uonel Ritchie, right, named top male vocalist in the 2Sth annual Grammy Award presentation reacts with surprise as comedian Eddie Murphy, left, who earlier vowed I aint leaving without a Grammy, runs

away with Ritchies during ceremonies Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Also watching the antics are presenters Henry Mancini and Melissa Manchester. (AP Laserphoto)

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DOUBLE-WINNER AI Green is all smiles after winning best contemporary soul gospel honors for Higher Plane and won a soul traditional gospel award for Precious Soul. (AP Laserphoto)

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Styron To Head Cannes Jury

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PARIS (AP) - The 36th Cannes Film Festival will be held from May 7 to May 18 with American author William Styron heading the jury that awards prizes to movies entered in the competition, organizers said today.

Styrons. best-selling novel Sophies Choice was made ipto a successful movie. .

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Crossword By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS    44Phasesof

1 Wane    growth

4 Mutts    4SAspengarb

partner    SI Frost

8 Eternal Qty SI Ocean

12 Lubricate    . movement

13 Garden    S2 Certain

DOWN M Carpet 1 Dawn goddess 20 One Dwarf

vegetable

14 Diabolical

15 Caviar source

17 Decline

18 Elxcavated

19 Mechanical GO Songstress units    Home

211fenpecked G1 Piggery

24 Negative word

25 Bravo!

28 Abrade 28 Gave in 32 Andys

partner 34 Sandy or Benji

36 Positive

37 Bits of hair 39 Used to be

41 Writer Anais

42 Shoe width

2 Iota

3 Nightstick

4 Track user S-out (supplement)

8 Out of

7 Pontiffs cape

8 Denies

9 Track shape

10 Track distance

11 Building wings

Avg. solutioa time: 25 min.

doctors 58 Pitcher

57 Dutch cheese

58 Siesta 59FaU

short of

2-24

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

21 Biblical boatsman

22 mater

23 Umon 27 Ribbon

feature

29 .Castle areas

30 American lake

31 Lairs '

33 Kebab

holders 35 Neon, e.g.

38 Picture 40 Stain

43Artstand ,

45 Fighter pilot

46 Flower feature

47 Fuzzy fruit

48 March time

49 Discourteous

53 (Campaigned

54 Singer Cole

55 Agent

F

O

C

U

s

Uncle Oscar Its time again to start speculating about the new Academy Award nominations and who will win the coveted Oscars in April. This tiny statue is only seven pounds of gold-plated bronze and stands just ten inches high, but winning one can mean the difference between stardom and oblivion. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences began its annual presentation of these awards in 1928, and the award itself was designed by artist Cedric Gibbons. When Margaret Harrick, then executive director of the Academy, first saw the statue, she said it reminded her of her Uncle Oscar. The name caught on, and today the little Oscar is the most sought after film award in the world.

PEANUTS

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Yesterdays Cryptoquip - OUR CATCHER CANT GET TO FIRST BASE WITH WOULD-BE GIRLFRIEND.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: E equals A.

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 the puzzle. Sii^le letters, short wor^, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

1983 King Features Syndicate, Inc

Greyhound Asks To Drop Routes

RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) -Greyhound Bus Lines has filed a petition with the N.C. Utilities Commission to abandon 17 unprofitable rural routes in North Carolina.

A decision is due by May 1, but the public will be able to comment on the proposal at nine public hearings around the state next month.

Utility Commission officials say Greyhound filed its petition Dec. about a month after the Bus Regulatory Reform Act of 1982 took effect.

The act allows the bus company to appeal any decision by the state Utilities Commission to the Interstate Commerce Commission. If the state has not decided on the petition within 120 days, the company can take its case directly to the ICC.

Four of the routes proposed to be cut by Greyhound run through Winston-Salem. Officials of the city-county planning staff say they are looking for evidence that would justify canceling the routes and are preparing a response to the company petition'.

Jackson Rated As Statesman

NEW YORK (AP) - Sen. Henry M. Scoop Jackson (D-Wash.) has been named Energy Statesman of the Decade, according to an energy oriented journal.

Energy User News reports Jackson has won the Americans for Energy Independence award in recognition of his foreseeing the need to increase energy conser\ation and reduce American dependence on imported oil.

Jackson is the ranking minority member on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.

PUftRFECT PURRTECTION - With the neighborhood watch program in effect in suburban Sacramento, Misty, a curious feline belonging to the Martin Bomstein family, sits on the fence and does her part by keeping her eyes open for cat burglars or any other suspicious activities in the area. (APLaserphoto)

In Education SpecialSeries

BUtENTS&TE^HERS:

se Newspapers In Making Decisions

PHANTOM

^ vou'Re \-/oPFoN.A V'^here WeecAuse WE

/VWRRIEP

TO THE L'\ I MU$T / WHY BE5T SAwANPt-6 7 DOdB SECURITY V/ TMIS.^A WAITS ON EARTH. H/VAVBELF.

WHAT ABOUT,

HIM

{This public service ad l8 one In a series publtohed for national Newspaper In

Education Week, sponsored by the International Reading Association.)

What kinds of decisions do newspapers help you make? The ones that immediately come to mind are consumer related choices of what to wear, where to live and work, where to find entertainment and how to invest your money.

To help your children make economic decisions, give them real life situations like those you and they face each day. For example:

Ask them to select a gift for a friend that costs $5 or less. Have them use newspaper advertisements.

Ask them to plan an evenings entertainment using TV and movie guides and schedules of events In the area.

t Ask them to find out how much It would cost to replace their bedroom furniture. Have them compare prices In retail and classified ads.

A second type of decision-making does not deal with the way you spend time and money, but rather with what you think about your community and the world.

To interest students or children in social/political issues, select > items in the newspaper that are likely to stimulate thought and debate. For example;

Select for discussion a letter to the editor or an advice column like Ann Landers or Dear Abby. Ask your children or students If they agree or disagree with the advice given.

Identify values found in news stories, features, editorials and columns. Discuss the Importance of the values to the persona involved and to your children and students.

t Follow a story that deals with some aspect of community life. Use what you read In discussion, and debate with your children or students. Discuss any opinions they express, and see if these change as they gather more information.

If you want more information abcxjt the Newspaper In    |

Education program or the International Reading Association. write to; NEWSPAPERS IN EDUCATION, N.C. NIE    

FOUNDATION. P.O. BOX 2019, RALEIGH. N.C. 27602.    |

FRANK & ERNEST

Name

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Tht' Daily Kenector. Greenville. N C.-Thursday, February 24,1983

SELL GUILLOTINES - Larry Lawrence and his wife, Lon, pose with a model of the guillotine they build and sell from their Galveston home: In the five years they have been selling the guillotines, models varying from the 20-foot Robespierre to the popular six-foot Antoinette have been used as hat racks, business signs or conversation pieces. (AP La.serphoto)

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY. FEB. 25.1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES; Its advisable that you attend lo personal tasks despite the obstacles. Don't put yourself in a position in which delays occur. Unexpected benefits come your way later in the day.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19| Buckie down to the work I hat needs to be done and handle it efficiently. Be alert to a new a opportunity at this time.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Dont expect much from friends who are busy with own affairs right now. Make plans to have more abundance in the future.

GE.M INI (May 21 to June 21) Show more courtesy and thoughtfulness to higher-ups who are under a heavy strain qow Don't neglect any payments.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Meet new and interesting persons who can help you in career matters. New situations should be studied with care.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Knowing what higher-ups expert of you makes the going easier and you stay on the right track. Think constructively.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Listen to views and complaints of associates and come to a better accord. Sidestep a foe who is jealous of you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Avoid a co-worker who is in a bad mood right now. Take more time for rest and build up your energies. Be logical,

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Not a good day to take any risks You must use tact to gain acceptance of others at this time. Show others you have wisdom.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Make sure you choose your words well with others or there could be a gross misunderstanding. Be more optimistic.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Much care should be exercised in motion today to avoid possible accident. Try not to get drawn into arguments with others.

AQU.ARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Exercise extreme care where monetary affairs are concerned or you could find yourself m a financial bind.

PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar. 20) Take care of a troublesome siiiiaiion without delay. Make the effort to improve health and appearance. Be wise.

IF VOUK CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will K A what to do in difficult situations, so direct the d i .iuon along troubleshooting lines for best results. A uiinpa.s.sionate nature in this chart. Give ethical and -p r.tual training early in life.

The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make J . ;ur life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

.\ ^CHKSE, \C. (,AP) -i.,, ;.hal ran aground in

lured four other ' t I'l to 'he same fate for iiuig ;i.' 47 hours until they v.ere I reed Wednesday, the ; S Coast Guard said,

I'wo I'oasI Guard rescue : o Its. an \rmy dredge and a ; were lured aground by :ie 1 'arana R, which became tiiek onto a sandbar Monday w ith E) tons of fish B> late Wednesday morning he tug and the dredge afloat again in waters : a^ of'he Bonner Bridge.

ihere's a lot of shoaling i:, the area here You have to (u; back to the left when you p,,s under the bridge. Weve I'o? big shoal there now," ;.t ! .limeI, McQueen, coiiimander of the Coast Guard s Oregon Inlet station, winch IS near the three grounded boats.

The Hi) f(H)t Darana R was pulled free by an Army drt'dge and five local fishing txiais. While Atlantic Strike. Team divers removed taiiglod lines from the two ('oast Guard fKiats.

Capt. Jimmy Ruhle said his boat apparently suffered some steering damage and was being towed to Wan-chese by a Coast Guard boat.

The Coast Guard cutter Point Arena from the Oregon Inlet station had unsuccessfully tried to pull the Darana R free.

The Point Arenas towline got snagged early Tuesday in the left screw, forcing the cutter to go aground 150 yards east of the Bonner Bridge, which crosses Oregon Inlet.

A 44-foot Coat Guard motor lifeboat was dispatched to free the cutter, but it got snagged in the same towline and went aground, u.

The Army Corps of Engineers sent Hs dredge Schweitzer lo the fishing boat, but it got stuck in the sand early Wednesday.

The fifth boat, the tug Lookout out of Manteo became mired itaelf after ft was called In to pull the Darana R off the sandbar.

Later, the I^ookout freed itself and returned to port.

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Personal............

In Mamoriam CardOf Thanks Spacial Notices

Travel & Tours......

Automotive Child Care Day Nursery Health Care

E mployment..........

For Sale ...........

Instruction Lost And Found Loans And AAortgages Business Services Opportunity

Professional..........

Real Estate.........

Appraisals...........

Rentals    .......

002

003

005

007

009

010

040

041 043 050 040 080 082 085 091 093 095

. 100 . 101 120

WANTED

Help Wanted Work Wanted ..... Wanted

Roommate Wanted Wanted To Buy .. Wanted To Lease Wanted To Rent

051 059 . 140 142 . 144 . 144 148

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent.....

Business Rentals..........

Campers For Rent........

Condominiums for Rent ...

Farms For Lease.........

Houses For Rent..........

Lots For Rent Merchandise Rentals Mobile Homes For Rent ...

Office Space For Rent.....

Resort Property For Rent. Rooms For Rent..........

.121 ...122 ...124 ...125 .107 ...127 ...129 ...131 ,133 .135 ,,.137 .138

SALE'

Autos for Sale...........

Bicycles for Sale.........

Boats for Sale............

Campers for Sale ........

Cycles for Sale...........

Trucks for Sale ..........

Pefs.....................

Antiques.................

Auctions.................

Building Supplies........

Fuel, Wood, Coal.........

Farm Equipment........

Garage Yard Sales.......

Heavy Equipment .......

Household Goods.........

Insurance................

Livestock................

Miscellaneous...........

Mobile Homes for Sale ... Mobile Home Insurance ..

Musical Instruments.....

Sporting Goods .........,

Commercial Property:... Condominiums for Sale...

Farms for Sale.  ........

Houses for Sale..........

Investment Property.....

Land For Sale............

Lots For Sale  .....

Resort Property for Sale .

.011 029

030

032

034

034

039

044

041

042

043

044

045

047

048

049

071

072

074

075

074

077

078

102

104

104

109

Ill

113

115

117

YOUR AD COULD BE WORKING FOR YOU IN THIS SPACE

ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED

north CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS

The undersigned havii^ qualified

Grounded Ships Are Pulled Free

Tavi

said

as Executor ot the Estate ot Mavis Parker Lupton, late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all irsons, firms and corpprafions claims against the Estate ot ,.^cedent to present them to the undersigned Executor or attorney on or before the 8th day of August 1983, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All arsons indebted to the estate will please make immediate payment.

This the 31st day of January, 1983. CARLYLE L LUPTON Executor, Estate of Mavis Parker Lupton 1800 East Fifth Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 OFFICE OF FRANKM WOOTEN BY; Frank M. Wooten, Jr.,

Attorney

February 3,10,17,24,1983

Havin ot the es

NOTICE ig qualified as Administrator state ot Jack Andrews late ot

Pitt Coontv, North Carolina, this is to notify ail persons having claims against the estate ot said deceased

to present them to the undersigned Administrator on or before August 3, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 1st. day ot February, 1983.

W H Dawson, Jr P 0 Box 53

Washington, N.C 27889 Administrator of the estate ot Jack Andrews, deceased.

Feb 3,10,17, 24,1983

PUBLIC NOTICES

NOTICE north CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

Having this day qualified as Ex

..... "    lb        '    '    

ecutrix ot the Estate of Hope Ross Anderson, late ot Pitt County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before the 17th. day of August, 1983, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make Immediate settlement.

This the 11th. day ot February, 1983

Susan B Haines, Executrix 235 Windsor Road Greenville, N. C. 27834 William I. Wooten, Jr.,

Attorney

Greenvitle, North Carolina 27834 February 17, 24, AAarch 3,10,1983

LEGAL NOTICE The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill will tile an application with the Public Telecommunications Facilities Program and the Federal Communications Commission to construct a new. noncommercial, educational FM radio station. The application will be filed on February

25th. 1983. a copy of which may be examined by the public at WUNC Radio in Swain Hall at Chapel Hill,

North Carolina during regular business hours

The application will request an _ jsignment of 88.3 Mhr., with an ef tectlve radiated power of 31.4 Kw

The antenna will be located two (2) miles south of Farmvllle, North Carolina on US 258. at height ot five hundred titty (550) feet above average terrain.

The transmitter will broadcast programming originating from the Chapel Hill studios of WuNC Radio. A request for the call letters WENC will be made

Commenting parties should send their comments to: Public Telecom

munications Facilities Program, NTIA/DOC, Room 4425, Washington, DC 20230.

February 17, 24. 1983

NOTICE OF SALE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

Under and by virtue ot the power ...... I    deed    of

ot sale contained in a certain trust executed by Charles H. Jones to Gary B Davis. Trustee, dated the 14th day ot August, 1981, and record ed in Book F-50. Page 504, In the Office of the Register ot Deeds of Pitt County. North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of the Indebtedness thereby secured and the said deed ot tryst being by the terms thereof subject to foreclosure, and the holder ot the Indebtedness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof tor the purpose

of satisfying said indebtedness, and k of

the Clerk of the Court granting per mission for the foreclosure, the undersigned trustee will offer for

sale at public auction to the highest tc

bidder tor cash at the Courthouse Door In Greenville, North Carolina, at 12:(X), Noon, on the 4th day of March, 1983, the land, as improved, conveyed in said deed ot trust, the

conveyed in said deed of trust, me same lying and being in Pitt County, North Carolina, and being more par ticularly described as follows:

rularly described as follows: BEGINNING at an Iron pipe 27 feet, more or less, from the centerline of N. C. Highway No. 33

(formerly U.S. Highway 244), a cor ner with Charles W. O'Rear, said

beginning point being further iferenced

I as being 771 feet, more or

less, In a southeasterly direction from the centerline of SR 1533, and

running thence with the Charles W O'Rear tine N. 49 48 30 E., 140 feet to

a Iron    running thence S.

S '34 2

Iron pIm, said pipe being located 24.7 feet easterly of the centerline of

30 58-03 _      -    ^

running S. 34 23-45 W., 184 feet to an

feet to an iron pipe, 3-45 W., 184 feet to ar d pipe being lo rly of the ceriferl highway 33; running then 20 20 W^, 175 feet to the Point of

N.C. Highway 35; running thence N.

ing, and containing 0.427

acres and being |>art of the property

described in thaf certain deed dated June 1, 1981, from Weldon Elbert Wart, Jr, and wife, Carolyn P. Wart, to Weldon Elbert Wart, Sr. and wife,

Ruby Murphy Wart, as recorded In Boqk A 50, Page 284, of the Pitt Couh^ R^stry.

SUBEJCrr, however, to taxes.

special assessments and prior en cumbrances of record. If any.

Five percent (5%) of the amount

of the highest bid must be deposited

I II

with the Trustee pending confirmation of the sale.

Dated this 1st day of February, 1983

Gary B Davis, Trustee February 24, March 3. 1983

NOTICE

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA :OUNTYOF PITT

Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain iJeed of Trust executed by George E. Ward and wife Lou F. ward, to James O. Buchanan, Trustee, dated the 20th day of February, 1979, and recorded in Book Q 47, Page 557, in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Pitt County, North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and the said Deed of Trust being by the terms thereof subejct to foreclosure, and the holder of the indebtedness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said indebtedness, and the Clerk of the Court granting per mission for the foreclosure, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door in Greenville, North Carolina, at 12:00 Noon, on the 4th day of March, 1983, the land, as improved, conveyed in said Deed of Trust, the same lying and being in Carolina Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, and being more par ticularly described as follows:

BEGINNING at an Iron pipe located in the eastern right of way line of N.C.S.R. 1588, said iron pipe also lying and being at the southwest corner of the Lot No. 4 of the H.

as shown on 198 of

Reginald Gray property as sho map in AAap Book 24 at page the Pitt Cunty Registry, andrunni^

from said beginning point N. 80-18 200.00 feet along the southern line of Lot 4 to an iron, a corner; thence S. 09 42 E, 100.00 feet to an iron, a cor ner; thence S. 80 18 W 200.00 feet to an iron on the eastern right of way line of S. R. 1588, a corner; thence along said right o( way N 09-42 W 100.( feet to an iron, the point of

Five percent (5%) of the amount of the highest bid must be deposited with the Trustee pending con tirmaton of the sale.

Dated this 1 day of February, 1983. THURMAN BURNETTE, Trustee, substituted by that instrument recorded in Book D 51, Page 723, Pitt County Registry, North Carolina. February 24; March 3, 1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix of the estate ot Alfred McLawhorn late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this

is to notify all persons having claims against tfie estate ot said deceased

to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or, before August 24, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment

this 22nd day of February, 1983.

*    /5<ci

Ada Gould McLawhorn Route 1, Box 281 Winterville, N.C.

E xecutri X ot the estate ot Alfred McLawhorn, deceased Feb. 24; March 3,10,17,1983

NOTICE

Having qualified ^s Ad ministratrix of the estate ot Brian Alan Berkey late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trjde vo^

79 82 modol cor, coM 754-1877, Grant

SELL YQUR CAR tho Notiona Autoflndors Wayl Authorliac Dealer in Pitt County. Haitlngt

Ford. Call 758 0114.

013

Buick

SHARP RED BUICK Spacial. wtiita vinyl roof. V-4, 1977, runs wall; tZeOO or best Offer. 754 77M.

1977 BUICK Electro Limited. 4 door. 754 0489 aHer5p.m_,

1977 BUICK Electro Limited. 52,000 miles. 754 3^or 752 4641.

1979 R

vinyl

REGAL BUICK, novy/white, top. Fully looded.752-4i?8

1982 SKYHAWK Limited, 4 door

Sedon. 4000 miles. Like new. Fully equipped; S7SOO. 752 5444 before S. ofter 5355 4585._^

ty

persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present

them to the undersigned Ad ministratrix on or before Aug. 24, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment This 21st day ot February, 1983.

Anne Berkey

tfe St.

513 Jeannetf Winterville. N.C. 28540 Administratrix ot the estate ot Brian Alan Berkey, deceased. Feb. 24; March 3,10,17,1983

015

Chevrolet

CASH FOR^^r car. Barwick Auto

Sales 756

CHEVETTE 1980. 4 door. clean, low mileage. Call Ra> Chevrolet. Avden, 744-3141.

Extra

Smith

CITATION 1980. 4 doc^. Extra clean, good condition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Avden, 744-3141.

1949 CHEVY IMPALA $700. Call 756 0831 after 5 p.m.

1973 AAONTE CARLO, very clean. $700. Call 744-4044.

1973 VEGA with new rebuilt motor and new tires. $800 negotiable. 756 1287._

1975 OLOSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme. Air, AM/FM stereo, $1500 or best otter. Good condition. Days 757 7185, nlohts 758-1941

1976 CAMERO LT Low mileage, new paint ob. Excellent condition. Call ^2 2006 after 6._

1978 CHEVY CHEVETTE Most sell. Good condition. 752-0241 before 5; 746 6895 after 5.

1981 CHEVROLET CITATION .........    ille

Excellent condition. 22,000 miles. $5300 firm. 758-3159.

1981 EL CAMINO, excellent cqpdi tion, 12,500 miles, air, cassatta FM 3 speed In floor. $5800. 758-8160.

017

Dodge

1976 DODGE Van. 6 cylin^r, automatic; $1650. Call 758-4559 after

sta

1976 DODGE ASPEN .    ^

tionwagon. Fully equipped, slant 6 cylinder engine. Sacrifice $1450 or best offer. 746 6929.__

best offer. 746-6929.

1978 DODGE OMNI 56,000 miles. Take over payments of $110 a month. 758 70foafter4:30._

018

Ford

1976 FORD Grenada. $1600. Call 756-4387 anytime._

021

Oldsmobile

1980 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass

Supreme Brougham. Loaded; excellent condition. $6500. Call

756 4281 after 6 pm.

022

Plymouth

VOLARE WAGON 1978. Deluxe. Loaded. Runs good. $2750. Call 758 8987._

1981 RELIANT K Special edition. Air, automatic, Am/Fm 8 track. Excellent condition; $6395. Call 355 2130 after 6 pm.

68 PLYMOUTH FURY 318. Automatic, air, power steering, brakes. 78,5(10 miles. 756-771?.

power I

023

Pontiac

CATALINA, 1973, 4 door, hardtop, power steering, power brakes, air 756-3517 after 6 and on weekends.

FOR SALE 1976 Pontiac Bon

neville. 2 door hard top. Loaded.

,. 757-*-

Only 46,000 actual miles. 757-3121.

1980 PHOENIX,

good condition. $4500 after 7 p.m

1981 TURBO TRANS AM. low ileage. Many extras. Call

weekdays after 6 pm. anytime Friday, Saturday, Sunday, 756-9780.

024

Foreign

DATSUN 1981, 310. 2 door hatchback, original owner. 14,000 miles. Mint condition. 752-3866 from 9:30 5;    752 2775 Sunday and

evenings

DATSUN 240Z, 1971, new tires, new paint, $2500or best offer. 752-1322. FOR SALE: 1981 Honda Civic. Good condition. $4500.927 3327

GENUINE TOYOTA oil filters $3.75, Spark plugs 99e, Antifreeie $3.99. Call 756-3228, 8-5 weekdays.

9 1 Saturdays.

IMPORTED CAR Parts, 105 Trade St. beside Todd's Stereo, carries a

complete line of parts and ac cessorles for all Imports. 756-7114,

1973 DATSUN 240Z (Sood condition. $2700. 756 9617 after 5._

1973 TOYOTA truck. Good running condition, $700. Call 746-4425._

NOTICE OF EXECUTRIX TO CREDITORS AND DE BTORS OF E STE R MAR IE AAcGOWAN STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT Having qualified a$ Executrix of the Esfati of ESTER MARIE McGOWAN, late ot PItt County, N C., all persons, firms, and corporations naving claims against the said estate are notified to exhibit

them to Dorothy A. Nichols, Ex ecutrix ot the Estate on or before

August 10th, 1983 or be hatred from their recovery. Debtors ot AArs.

McGowan are asked to make Im mediate payment to the E xecutr ix.

This the 10th day of February, 1913

Dorothy AA. Nichols

SSSJThI! #

OeLyteAA. vm Attorney at Law now Second St.

Ayden, N C.

February 10,17,24; March 3,1983

WANT

ADS

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

TAXES, TAXES,Taxes. Accountlnj major will prepare your forms a very low rates. Call 752 2612

WE PAY CASH for diamonds Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans AAall, Downtown Greenville^

010

AUTOMOTIVE

JEEPS, CARS, TRUCKS

Under $100. Available at local government sales. Call (refunda Ble) 1 619 569 0241, extension 1504 for vour 1983 directory. 24 hours.

1974 DATSUN 610 statlonwagon, 4 door, manual transmission, excellent condition. $1,000. Call 758 5616 anytime, ask for Joseph.

1975 TOYOTA COROLLA Reasonably priced. Call 946-3882 after a p.m. _

1975 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT, 4 speed, air, AM/FM stereo. 756-8281 or 758 9090

1976 TOYOTA COROLLA SR5. New engine. Very dependable. AAake an offer. 756 4913._

1977 DATSUN B 210. 2 door hat

chback, 5 speed, air conditioning, Am/Fm, Radlals, 1 owner. CaT

after 6 pm 752-8927.

1978 DATSUN 280Z AM/FM cassette, cruise control, air. Good tires. Excellent condition. Must sell. $5650. 752 1931._

1979 DATSUN 280ZX 49,000 miles. Air, new tires, excellent condition; $8295. Serious inquiries only. 756-9970 or 752 7556

1980 TR 7 convertible. Limited edition, all options. Day 757-6214; Night 752 0606

1981 DATSUN 210 Sport Lux. Air *afl758

condition. 5 speed. Cafi 758 0492.

032

Boats For Sale

COM-PAC 16 Sailboat with cabin, 4 Horsepower Evlnrude- Galvanized Trailer. Main, Jib, Genoa Sails. $3.600. Bethel, 825-9811

DIXIE 18 FCXDT, 200 horse power Mercury Outboard, Cox galvonized drive on trailer. Excellent condi-t ion. Cal I 355 6780 atter 6 pm.

FOR SALE 14 foot Sea A^th Catamarapd with trailer. Good condition; $1,000 or best offer. Call 946 4947 after 5._

HAVE 2 75 horsepower EviBrudes. Would like to sell or trade for larger engines. Call Tim, 756-5797after 5.

034 iCampers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors.

Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units In stock. O'Brlants,

Raleioh, N C 834 2774.

TWO TRAILER CAMPERS 12', IB'. Both nice. $750 each. Call for details, 758 9342after 5P.m

1979 CONCORD motor home. Class

A 25', sleeps 8, roof air, ^nerator.

2 dinettes, 10,850 miles. . $17        758    1993    or    756-6212.

036

Cycles For Sale

HONDA ATC, 3 wheeler, runs good

----

$600 firm. Call 758 4578or 752-03 1981 HARLEY SLT Good condition; $5000 or trade for late model FX in same condition. 223 4129_

1982 HONDA Aspencade, full loaded. 350 miles. Value $10,000, sej

for $7,500 See anytime at 408 S Harding St

1982 SUZUKI GS8S0L Black and silver 1,800 miles. Still under war ranty. Excellent condition. 2 helmets, rain and cold weather gear included. $3,000 negotiable. Call 756 1643.__

250 YAAAAHA street bike. 1981 model Like new. $700. 752 6647.

039 Trucks For Sale

046

PETS

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER puo-pies, good hunting stock. slOD. Phone 757lS74.    _

AKC MINI/kTURE Schnauzer pup pies. $125. Cill 753 4659.

EXPERT DOG OBEDIENCE

i

trlning. Call 758 S3W.

GREAT DANE PUPS Full bioodad. Shots and dawormad. $50.746-2005.

RAT TERRIER PUPPIES for sala.

40. 3 malas; 3 ftmalas. Raady

AAarch 10. '/S-aTO, 746-6679 or 746 4746.__

(}51

ALL GIRL ROCK grow saoks jultar and bass playv. For more nformation contact Tarasa attar 5 at 758-9969.

ARE YgU AN EDUCATION or

ctiv

CD-^U unit who have a pro

iflcal

iontod RN with above average objectives in your profession? We are saaking additional staff for our ecu u

pansity for dovalopmont of critical care skills and who are capable of carrying out their responsibilities with compassion. At present we are instituting primary nursing as well

as

com ACLS

vou wish to join our staff and to earn and grow with us. Ours Is an environment where your motivation unl-and

environment where your motiva will provide, you with the opport ty to expand your knowledge skills and be truly proud of y irofession. Excellent benefits of Hospital Corpoiration ot America. Call collect, Robin Ptgg, Director of Nursing, Edgecombe General Hos-pltal. Tarboro. NC, 919-641 7111

l>and. Call after 5:30 pm at946-0302.

BEAUTICIAN wanted. Styling liooth for rent. Call Shady knoll ieautv Shop 752 3705 or 752-7642.

CARPET and floor coverlnp

CONCRETE FINISHING machine, 3'5 horsepower gas engine. $200. Call 758 0246.___

1969 GMC Good condition. $1,000 746 3341 after 8 p.m.; 758-5828 be tween 2 8 p.m

salesman wanted. Previous exper ence desired. Send resume to Carpet Salesman PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834.

responsible person to work with children. Apply In person after 11 ., AAonMy-Thursday, 313 East th Street. No phone calls please.

1974 FORD VAN Heavy duty spring

package and brakes^ 6 cylinder, straight '

straight shift, $1500. 758 4419 after S.

HelpWantMl

tituting primary nursing as well providing the opportunity for ifinuing education including LS and AACN certification, (I

BASS.PLAYER for rock and roll

ill

DAYCARE CENTER needs mature

DELIVERY DRIVERS WANTED

35 per hour. 6% commission

Ings for full and part time lUSt have car and driver's license, 18 years old. Apply at 1403 Dickinson Avenue, Aland's Pizza.

DENTAL ASSISTANT WANTED Part or full time. Training helpful. Please send resume and photo to PO Box 2683, Greenville, NC 27834.

EARN 50% as an Avon repre-

.....

sentatlve. Call 756-6610.

FULL ALTERATIONS One Hour Koretlzlng. 756-0545

HAIRDRESSER WANTED Guaranteed salary. Call Georges Colt-ture. 756-6200._

HOME STYLE COOK wanted. Res taurant experience necessary. Call 752 1188

HOMEWORKERS WlrecraH pro

far

duction. We train house dwellers For full details write: WlrecraH, O Box 223. Norfolk, Va. 23501

IF YOU'RE 17 to 26, a high school senior or graduate and of good moral fiber, you could be of AAarine Corp Caliber. The Marines offer 30 days paid vacation, regular promotions If qualified, the pride ot being a AAarine and other prized benefits. Call Sargeant Etherldge at 752 3965 or 1-800-682-USMC AAaybe you can be a AAarine._

INTERIOR DECORATOR with ex ience and a desire to excel. __.ary and commission. Send resume to Decorator, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834.

JOB OPPORTUNITIES 1 919-638-1186 from 9 to 5, AAon day Friday.

AAANAGEMENT Large corpora tion looking for management Hential. Must start in sales. 60 ..jur week. Some door to door. Salary and benefits. Conner AAoblle Homes, 756-0333

AAATURE LADY to live in with

elderly couple. Call aHer 3 at

756-(

MECHANIC WANTED Good reli

able mechanic with good working , Excellent pay and benefit ge. Prefer Ford experience. Apply In person to: J C Jones, East Carolina Lincoln-Mercury-GMC,

Greenville.

NEED - Full and part time RNs. 7 to 3. Contact Becky Hasting. Call 758-4121.    _

NEED DIRECTOR ot nurses. Excellent benefits, salary negotia ble. Contanct Dr. Carolyn Harrell, 758-4121, Greenville Villa. >

OFFICE SKILLS NEEDED

SENIOR TYPISTS BOOKKEEPERS DATA ENTRY WORD PROCESSORS

Manpower has a temporary assignment for you! Work when you want, stay at home when you want.

temi

We offer vacations, holidays, acci dent, and cash bonus plans. Not a

fee agency. Call us for an ap nent t<

pointment today!

AAANPOWER

TEMPORARY

SERVICES

118 Reade Street

757-3300

PART TIME morning sales help needed. Experience preferred.

Apply in person only, AAonday Friday at Leather 'N Wood, Caro

lina East Mall. No phone calls.

PART TIME HELP WANTED for

telephone survey. Hourly wages. Call 757-1200 for appointment be-tween 9-5._

REAL ESTATE SALES Full or part time position open. Experi enced preferred. Call Ball 8, Lane

between 5-6 p.m , AAonday Friday for Interview appointment, 752-0025.

RNS NEEDED Are you an experi enced professional individual who enjoys total patient care? We are seeking RNs for full time and part time positions, as we strive toward our oWective of an all licensed staff. Positions available in Labor and Delivery, New Born Nursery,

OB-GYN and AAedical Surgical and rit

Pediatric units. Excellent salary and benefits, including tuition reimbursement and a stock purchase

plan through the world's largest health care company, Hospital

Corporation of America. Call col lect, Robin Pigg, Director of Nurs Ing, EdgecomBe General Hospital, Tarboro, NC, 919-641-7111._

ROOAAAT THE TOP

Due to the promotions In this area,

two openings exist now for young            'iranch

minded persons in the local brand of a large corporation. If selected, you will receive complete training. We provide good company benefits, major medical, profit sharing, de ntai care and retirement plan. Starting pay will be $260-$35 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 opportuni

ty

CALL 757-0686 ' 9:00AM -6:00PM

ROUTE SALES position open. Must

be 25 years of age and Have good driving record. Guaranteed salary

with commission. Good company benefits. Experience preferred. Cafl 752 2830 for appointment from 9 to 5

SALES SALES AAANAGEMENT

051

Help Wanted

WANTED- PEKMJN to attume responsibllitlM as counter manager

In a food raiatad business. AAust'ba chaarful and friandly with

customars. Will ba ratponslbla for consunsar

_____    raiponsll

product finishing and eon,, _ orientad as far as quality control. AAust ba bo^bla. 40 hour weak AAonday thru Friday. 8 to 4. Salary negotlabta according to axparlanca. Reply In confidence to: Manager, P O Box 3775. Greenville, N C 27834._

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming,

cutting and removal estimates. J P Stancll, 752-6331

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and rooting 35 axparlanca in building. Call James Harrington ahar 6 pm.

years

752 7765.

BY DESIGN 25% off papar hanging thro^h Fa^uarv.^Affordabla quaP

COMPLETE REMODELING to residential and farm building con

structlon. Spaclallzing in unusual design to top quality furniture and mlllwork. 752 2t57 AHer 6 756 8895.

SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, remodeling burnt-out trailers. Jack Baker Floor Service. 756-2868 anytime. If no an-swer call back

060

Large national Insurance company has several openings in a fast track management development program. We are In the daytime market ot the supplemental fringe benefit Industry. Send resume to:

4GREGGOOARD

Marketing Director

Wilson, N C 2

2331 Alyson Drive

Alys

17893

SEWING MACHINE operators Tom Togs. Conetoe. Profit Sharing-Vacation-Holidays-Blue through

Sharing --------- ,

Cross. Apply Monday Thursday. 10 am to 12

STARTING A 9 month Secretarial course February 28th. Greenville School Ot Commerce. 752-3177.

WANTED secretary with legal,

A^nlnn *vn*rinr.

wiki

filing, bookkeeping experience Send resume with salary require

F 150 Super Cab. 351 engine. A C , power steering, A M F M stereo. Automatic, cruise control with camper $3800 negotiable. Phone 753 4379.

1978 FORD PICKUP Automatic. air, power. $3TO0 758 0246.

1981    F100    FORD    21,000    miles.

Radlals No rust Well kept $5500 355 6349

1981 JEEP CJ7 Renegade. 6 cylinder Excellent condition; $7400. 7MZ71----

OtVIIU    Wltll    9WIWI    r    *

ments to Tamco Invtstments. 311 South Evans. Greenville, NC 27834.

WANTED: Assistant Director ot Nursing, RN's and LPn's. Are you erestt

itfesTd Tn' giving' real ^*1^* cara to those who ar# In need? We

have a

yfflt    ________

pac^atje. we have .9^ '-Y

employee benefit

_r.. .. Interested contact Director of Nursing, 792 1616. AAonday -riday

WANTED: Dependable person to babysit 2 children Wednesdays and

Free

Hv dacoratlna. 758-7165.

PAINTING, interior and axtarlor =rae astlmatas. Work guarantaad. Retarancas. 11 years exparianca. 756 6878aHar6p.m.

SHIRLEY'S CLEANING Hava your home cleaned once a week or monthly. 753-5908.

SIGN PAINTING^ Truck lettarlng as low as $59.95. Call Stave Atklnt tor all your sign naad$. 756 9117.

WASH

car$.

H, WAX AND CLEAN In: $25. Call Rlckv. 758 7965.

WILL CARE FOR SICK or elderly person in their home nights. Salary and hours negotiable, call 753-2351

or 753-4151.

FOR SALE

064 Fuel, W(xxl, Coal

quired 355 2063.

L

AAA ALL TYPES of tirevraod for sala.J P Stancll. 752-6331._

ALL OAK $40. Mixed $35. 752-6286.

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

$40 FOR PICKUP

CALL 757-3568 or 758-5063

FIREWOOD, $30 a load. Call 758 4611 anytime tor delivery.

FIREWOOD for sale. Good price. Call 758-4745.

OAKWOOO BY JAMES Season

oak, $45 per load; green oak. $40 per

-   -------

load. Call 758-2840 or 756-9193.

100%OAK FIREWOOD for sale. $45 a load if we deliver; $40 a load If you pick UP. 758-3797 or 752-5488.

065 Farm Equipment

ACREAGE MEASURING WHEEL designed for agricultural field

measuring In 6.6 lengths $41.95. All

.. T|

weather Terrain measuring wheel. Measures In feet and inches. Ideal tor contractors, $55.95. AgrI Supply, Greenville, NC. 752-3999

FARM MACHINERY Auction Sale, Tuesday, March 1st at 10 a.m. 150 tractors, 400 implements. We boy and sell used equipment daily

Wayne Implement Auction Corp., PO Box m Highway 117 South, Goldsboro, NC 27530. NC (1188.

Phone 734-4234.

SAVE $2.00 a baa on Delta Pine pure line, certified, soy bean seed, highest yielder in N C State official variety test last 4 years

Grown locally. Supply limited. Call Gene Carden, 355-W64._

1971 FORD I'/j ton truck. Dum

body, grain sides. Very good tion; $3.200. Call 756-2750._____

Dump

condr

067 Garage-Yard Sale '

FLEA AAARKET Tice Drive In. Open every Saturd^^ For more

Information, call 756-:

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea AAarket, Greenville Boulevard

Open Saturday and Sunday 8 til 5. Crafts, tools, furniture and an

tiques. Displays of old postcards, and an"

J

spa__ _    ____

Bill 746 3541, Mike 746-3550, Fair

buttons [pin us Outside dealer

antique pistols. Come A super ilea market

aces Free! Call

Grounds 758-6916.

RAYNOR FORBESANDCLARK

Flea AAarket open Saturdays 7 til 1: across from AAoose Lodoe. 756-4090.

074

MIscellMWOus

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL tables. Cash discounts. Dalivary

BUMPER POOL TABLE Lika now.

Idaat racraation for smallor ipacas. $150 or bast oHer Call 7lr7408

CALL CHARLES TICE, 75A3013, for small loads of sand, fopsoil and stooa. Also t^ivewav work.

CHICKENS FOR SALE 75< aach. Humbles Cage Farm. 2 milas west of Aydan. Highway 102 to County Road 1111. Plaasa lying something to put chickens In.

COMPUTER FOR SALE ^le II Plus. Call teth before 5 at 7S-2141; attar 5. 756-2106.

DRESSER WITH mirror, $35. Bluo carpet, $40. Drapes. Refrigeratar, $150. 756-8761 aHar 4.____

baautifully era

ENJOY THE tieganct of

aHad all fa tor onl month for 24 months. Pick up all

________, __________wood    4    placa

badrpom suite tor onli^ $n.54 ^

phona and give us Furniture World. 757 0451

FOR. SALE:_ Stove^^ /etrlperalor.

dinette set. $20Ch. 758-;

FOR SALE: Cabbage and collard plants and also wht straw. C G BiSiaryn; 7-?9W.

FRUIT TREES, not traes, berry plants, grapa vinas, landscaping plant matarial offered by one or Virginia's largest growers. Fr

copy 48 page Planting Guide-Catal--           *

Catalog in color, on raquast. Waynesboro Nurseries ir

Waynesboro. Virolnie 22980.

FURNITURE FURNITURE Living Room Dining Room Bedroom. AAany styles to choose from! We GUARANTEE to have

the lowest prices!!! Factory AAat-tress, Watarbad 8, Furniture Outlet, 730 Grnvllla Blvd. 355-2626.

FURNITURE I FURNITURE I We have it all. Living room, dining room, bedroom. We taka trade-ins.

Financing and delivery arran^.

We will not be undersold. All' and more at Furniture World. 2808 East 10th Strt, 757-0451.

GIGANTIC TRUCKLOAD CARPETSALE Indoor, outdoor and waterproof. Great for kitchens, bathrooms, bedrooms, apartments, dorms, etc. All colors and sizes. Average $12

per roM. On sale this v^k^ onl^^

Alpha Phi House parking lot, Street (bottomotthehlll).

HIDE A BED sofa, $75. Call 752 4921._

MOVING Must sell. Excellent condition. Chair and ottoman, $150. Hand-bevelad scrolled antique

mirror about 3' lonj^and 2' wide.

$125. Call aHer 5. 756-4122.

PHOTOGRAPHIC EIWIPMENT I

Cannon AE1 body only. 100 to 200 zoom lens. Beseler color analyzer.

Custom built dark rpom sink. 753 2723.

RENT A STEAMEX Best method for cleaning carpets. Larry s

Carpetland, 3010  .......

Greenville. ,c*

East 10th Strt,

RENT A VIDEO recorder and movie - $15. Complete selection of all titles. AAottltts AAagnavox 756-8444.__

REPOSSESSED _VACUUMS and Shampooers. Call

Shampooers. Call Dealer, 756-6711. SEARS COPPERTONE refrigera

tor. $125. Call 756-8739.

SHAMP(X> FOR FALLI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company._

SOFA for sale. Excellent condition. Recllner. Call 746-6620._

SWEAT CLOTHES As low as $10 per set. Plaid Giraffe. Main Street, Farmvllle._

TOP SOlU field sand, mortar sand Ca

and rock. Call 746-3296or 746 3819. USED REFRIGERATOR, $100. Call 756-4905 aHer 6.

WE TAKE TRADE-INS Pick up

the phone and give us a call at F urniture World, 757-0451.

1 WHEELCHAIR $50. Call 756-7398.

19" COLOR TV tor only $23.11 per    ice.

month. Buy or rent same price. Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furniture World. 757^1.

19 CUBIC FOOT refrigerator. Good ing condition. $175. after 4 :X).

756-8228

2 CAR SEATS for sale plus baby clothes. Call 756-3278 anytime.

2 TWIN BEDS, $20 and $30. Full Bell Stare helmet, $60. 758-6004 aHer

5:30._

35mm Minolta MC II SLR complete

with mm t^^hoto lens plus

extras. Call 752-i

4 PIECE FORAAAL mahogany din ing room suite, good condition.

$l0OO. See at 313 Street, Bethel

'est Washington

6 PIECE LIVING ROOM GROUP:

SATURDAY, February 26. 8 a.m. ' Ipha XI Delta Sorority. 508 East 11th Street. Clothes, odds and ends.

Watch for slons.

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752-5237._

074 Miscellaneous

ASSUME PAYMENT on all wood 5 piece dining room table and chairs ot only $16.82 month. Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade ins._

ASSUME PAYMENTS OF $37.92 on 3 piece living room suite: sofa, chair and foveseat. Furniture World, 757 0451. We take trade-ins.

ASSUME PAYMENTS OF $49.48 on

a 7 piece Western living room suite sofa, chair, rocker and 3 tables and

ottoman. Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade-ins.

ASSUME PAYMENTS OF $63.12 on 3 complete rooms of furniture. Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade-ins._

BEGINNERS AND Advanced piano lessons by ECU honor student, Debra Russ. Plano & Organ Dis

tributors, Arlington Boulevard,

)i_

Greenville,355 6002

BROCCOLI LETTUCE CAULIFLOWER CABBAGE COLLARDS SEEDS For Early Gardens

Kittrell's Greenhouses

2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT 9AM-5:30PM    Mon.-Sat.

CALL 756-7373 Support American Cancer Society

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

black vinyl sofa and 2 matching chairs, coffee table, lamp and round table. Priced $268. AAany other

items priced to sell. Mar Js & Westbrook, 1211 South Evans Street. AAonday Friday, 12-6._

075 Mobi le 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, range, refrigerator. Regular price, $12,995

Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756^191_'

BRAND NEW 1983 tw ot 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 includedT Hours, 8 AM to 6 pm. AAOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard

756-0191_

DOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances. Central air. Underpinned. Barn attached. Set up on 1 acre of land. 946-6436._

YOU CAN SAVE money b' for bargains in the Classit'

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & /^ WNINGS

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton, Co.

SHOP & SAVE - SHOP & SAVE - SHOP & SAVE

FURNITURE WORLD WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD!

WE GUARANTEE that, if you buy any home

furnishings item from us and within .30 days find the identical item for less we will, upon verification. Cheerfully Refund The Difference!

Check us out at 2808 E. 10th St. or pick up the phone and give us a call. 757-0451. We Have Instant Credit!

SHOP & SAVE-SHOP & SAVE-SHOP & SAVE

Thurtdays' Must be able to drive child to school. References re

BANKRUPTCY AUCTION

FEBRUARY 28,1983 3:00 P.M.

LOCATION: Highway 264 West, beside Lamar Mech. Contractors, Greenviile, N.C.

1975 John Deere 310 Backhoe, front and rear buckets.

TERMS-CASH OR GOOD CHECK Sale Conducted By

BOYETTE AUCTION CO.

Llc.472

291-1508

Wilson, N.C.

-a





075 AAobilc Homes For Sale

jSED HOMES; 12 btOroom, I bafh 12xS; 2-2 bMtroom. 1    12x0;

112x50. Cn b Mn at Art Dallano Homas. Call Tim or Lawranca at AftpttafH>Homw.7iM4l

Call 750 3211.

12XM moblla homa. Prica naootla-bleToll75a-350aftfrf_

IMS Town A Country, 12x55. Cnj|hfO.S6,?W..?^-*5?f

1973 CHAMPION 12x00 2 badroom, 1 bath, i^^ially furniohad, cantral air, undarplnad, porch, sat up In nica Dark; SSOOO unfurnishad or $5300 farnlshad. 750 5350 Qftar 0.

1973 HOLIDAY, 12x05. 2 badrooms, washar/dryar. Window air condl tionar. 2 baths, tet up In Hollybrook Estatas. 756 4541

1975 CELEBRITY 12X00, 2 badrooms. I bath, (urnishad, cantral air, undarplnad, sat up in nica park, 10X12 storaga barn, S7500naaottabla.750 3l0l

1970 BOANZA. 12 X 05. 2 badrooms. 2 baths with gardan tub, cantral haat and air soma furnltura. Park in country. Pay aqutty and assuma paymant ot $130.25 par month. Call days, 752 3000, nlgfih, 750 1997 or 753:470?.____

1977 OAKWOOO moblla homo, 12x00. good condition. All rooms ara closad off. Call 706-0077 from 0-9.

1978 CONNOR for sala. 2 badrooms, 1 bath. SOOO assui

oHL5:3S,

assuma loan. 752 7982

1978 24X00 4 badroom. 2 bath, lap siding, shingla roof, disnwashar, air conditioning, sliding glass doors. Call Art at Art OalTano Homas, 750-9841._ _

1981 BRIGIOIER frailar. 14x04. 2 badrooms, I' s baths. Call aftar o p.m., 792 5400.

1983 14 x 54. Total alactrlc. Storm windows, air condition, washar and dryar, underpinning. Already sat up. Soma equity and assuma loan. Call Lawrence at Art Dallano Homas. 750-9841

24X52 LAP SIDING, shingle roof. 3 badroom, 2 bath, dishwasher, sat up and dallverad. $14,995. Call

droom, 2 bath, dlshw.

Lawranca or Tim at Art Dallano nomas, 750-9841

076 Mobile Home Insurance

AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-2754^__

077 AAusical Instruments

A NEW SPINET PIANO with 10 year warranty. Pecan finish only. $895. Plano & Organ Distributors, Arlington Boulevard, Greenville, 355 0002._ _

PEAVEY CS-800 PA amp, $400. Peavay T 40 bass guitar, $300. Paavay 400 series bass amp, $350. 2 Custom Stage monitors, $150 . 757 0218._

LOWRY ORGAN with Genie. Bench and music Included. New. Call 750 8200.    _

STUDIO PIANO Properly reconditioned and guaranteed with bench. Day 757 6069; night 355 2830._

078

Sporting Goods

HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion re pairs. Specializing in marine pro ducts. 758-0041. IIMCIark Street

ONE SET of ladies' Power Bilt golf clubs, used 3 times. $125. call 758-0199.    _

WILDLIFE HUNTING CLUB wants you to be a member. Location i< Pender Co. Daily, weekly, or per manent membership. Send self addressed stamped 'envelop to: Meeks Associates, 430 W Friendly Avenue, Greensboro, NC 27401. (919)274 5393.    _

082 LOST AND FOUND

FOUND: Pocket calculator on East 8th Street. 752-5041.

085    Loans And AAortgages

NEED CASH, get a second mortgage fast by phone, we also buy mortgages, make commercial iinree 1

loans, calf

11 800-845-3929.

091

Business Services

^NC^E TAX SERVICES Hilton

. Call 756 3264.

093 OPPORTUNITY

BE YOUR own Boss. Join Interna tional Service Company. Full training with management assistance. Earn $30.000 to $100,000 annually. Exclusive territory. Unlimited opportunity available. Ambitious individuals only. Call Jerry Arthur. 1-800-433-3322._

FOR SALE seafood market. Good Income, good business and good location. Call between6-9. 756-1050

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial 8, AAarketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757-0001, nights 753-4015

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Can day or night, 753-3503, Farmville.

102 G>mmercial Property

FOR SALE or lease. Two com merclal buildings on main thor oughfare. Call 758 1131. After 6 pm 7561463.__

104 Condominiums For Sale

BY OWNER Quail Ridge Condo, 3 bedrooms, 21: baths, large living room with fireplace, and dining room. Pool and tennis court. Call 355 6053._

COLD WINTER NIGHTS?

And a cold apartment to go home to? Cuddle by your own fireplace with the warmth ot ownership in

your condominium or townhome. Only 5% dow Call us today

5% down and no closing costs!

MOORE 8f SAUTE R

110 South Evans 758-6050

YORKTOWN SQUARE con dominium with two bedrooms, I'/j baths, foyer, living room, kitchen with dining area, privacy fence. Refrigerator, washer, dryer. Convenient area. $39,900. Duffus Realty Inc. 756-5395.___

106 Farms For Sale

FOR SALE tobacco. $3.50 per pound. Call 752-5567 after 6 pm

FOR SALE: Tobacco pounds, Pitt County. 20,000 pounds plus or minus. $5 pound. All or part. 753 2777

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

106

Farms For Sale

FORTY ACRE FARM and house. 24 acres ctearad. 3.28 acres tobacco, 6,623 pcvnit- Pitt County Road 41232. Tield Cross Roads area. 752 4661 or 756 4013.

TOBACCO ALLOTMENT in Greene County wanted. Will pay $3 iier pound for 1,000 15,000 pounds, (fall W. Lvon collect at 213 gr3707.

13 ACRES all cleared with T/i acres tobacco allotment, 8 miles North of Greenville. Aldrlt^ A Southerland Realty. 756-3500) nights ^n Southerland, 756 5260.

58 ACRE.FARM Good road fron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotmant, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at, 746-2166 for full details._^_

107

Farms For Lease

STABLES FOR LEASE 6 to 8 stalls. 8 acres of pasture, riding ring, running water and elsctricity. Completely fenced in. Price neooflable. Call Ginoer at 756-9175.

WANT TO BUY

CORN

Top Prices Paid for your corn. Worthington Farms Inc., 7563827 Days. 7g 3732 Nights.

WANT TO LEASE PEANUTS

Any amount. Call 758-2859._

109 Houses For Sale

BY OWNER, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths with fireplace, game room. New septic tank and deep well. Industrial side of town. Call 752-4850 after 5 or anytime weekends.

BY OWNER 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, 2500 square feet, nice yard. In Farmville. $59,500. (fall aHer5p.m.. 753 3030or 1 847 7213.

CAME LOT    Spacious contem

porary home with greatroom, din ing room, garage, and lots ot extras to please the whole family. $60's. 4393. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666._____

CLUB PINES New two story home with wrap around porch for summer fun. Four bedrooms, all formal areas, den with fireplace and a deck put back. $90's. 4350. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868.

FARMVILLE - Exceptional brick traditional offers formal areas, 4 bedrooms, 3'/2 baths, private study. $100,000. (fall Ball A Lane, 752-005 or Lee Ball. 752 1646.

GREENWOOD FOREST New home teaturing 3 bedrooms, V: baths, kitchen with dining area, living room, central heat and air. Located on a beautiful corner lot. $53,500. w. g. blount A associates, 756 3000. Betty Beacham, listing agent. 756-3880.

SATU

HARDEE ACRES 1950 square foot heated. Large den with pool table and fireplace. Newly carpeted with garage. Less than $30 per square foot. $57,900.758-0144or 72-7663.

HAVE a full house? See this 4 bedroom home with living room, family room, fireplace, and patio. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758-9549.

HAVE a full house? See this 4 bedroom home with living room, family room, fireplace, and patio. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756-2121 or 758-9549._

HOUSE FOR SALE, Hardee Acres. 1950 square feet, 700 foot den with fireplace, Brunswick pool table. $57,900. 758-0144, 752 7663._

LCXJK AT thi$ homel You'll love living on this quiet cul-de-sac. E-300 energy-efficient home with heat pump. Tastefully decorated, 1,260

square feet. Living room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, kitchen-dining combination with

sliding glass door onto wood deck. Attached storage room plus sepa rate storage house in back yard. The Evans Company of Greenville, Inc., 701 W 14th St., 752 2814._

NEED FOUR BEDROOMS? Then this is the home for you. Desirabie neighborhood, pretty wooded lot, convenient location and low rate FHA loan assumption. $SO's. 4449. CENTURY 21 Bass Realtv,-756 5868.

NEW LISTING:    Spacious white

brick home, located on over an acre. Approximately 2,000 square feet. Greatroom with fireplace, 3 bedroom, 2'/j bath. Plus formal living/dining room. Approximately 2 admining acres available. Possible Federal Land Bank Financing. W-12. Call June Wvrick. Aldridge A Southerland. 756-3S00or 758-7744.

NEW LISTING Windv Ridge. Come preview this 3 bedroom, 2' 2 bath condominium. Family room with fireplace, separate dining room, heat pump. Excellent condition. Recreational facilities availa

bie. W 15. Call June Wvrick, Aldridge A Southerland, 756-3500 or 758 7744.____

NEW LISTING $57,900. Eastwood, 4 bedroom, 2 baths, fenced yard, dead end street. Excellent for children. Call Peggy, Aldridge A Southerland. 756-3a0 or 756-0942.

NICE, COZY contemporary house in Twin Oaks, excellent financing F L Garner, 355-2628 or 756-3217

Owner, 758-2520.

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. 75-3218, call after 6, 7S6-4199

county.

SEEING IS BELIEVINGI You'll agree after seeing this immaculate four bedroom home that It has much to offer that you can't find In the average house; more than 2700 square feet of heated area with large foyer, formal rooms, spacious music/study room, country kitchen, two spacious baths, plus full basement with fireplace in recre ation room. Centrally located near university, schools, and shopping; situated on corner, wooded lot. Call and let's talk about many other attractive features. Estate Realty Company, 752-5058, nights 752-3647 or 758-4476._

STARTER HOME 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, carport, V2 acre lot, detached storage area, only 2 miles from Greenville. $31,900. Steve Evans A Associates, 355 2727 or 758 3338.

TERRIFIC BUYI 3 bedroom brick

ranch, living room, kitchen, utility Large lot. Possible FHA financing. CENTURY 21 B Forbes AgencyThe By Refleinor. Greenvilk. .N.C -Thursday, February M, UBJ-19

109

Houbbb For Sale

3 BEDROOM, I bath house m Twin Oaks $49,500. 5% down. Call 756 77il,9to5,Manday^Wy,

$51,900. Price Reduction. Windy Ridge. 3 bedroom, >*'2 bath condominium, family room with fireplace, separate dining room, heat pump. Exceflent Invenmant at this price. Seller wilt consider FHA, VA, or conventional financing W 10. Call June Wyrick at Aldrld^ A Southerland Realty, 756 3500 or 758-7744.

$59,900. Price reduction. Centrally l^ated. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch features family room with fireplace, plus formal area. Attractive neighborhood, convenient to schools and shoppinq. Seller will consider FHA, VA, or conventional financing. AAake your appointment now ro see it. W 14. Call Juno Wyrick at Aldridge A Southerland Realty, 756-3% or 758-7744

866,900. 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-ll. Call June Wyrick. Aldridge A Southerland, 756 3500 or 758-7744.

93,900. NEW LISTING Exceptional location. 2 story Wilfiamsburg. First class decor. 4 bedroom, 2*2 baths. Less than 1

ift*c

r old, heat pump, deck, custom Itchen, built in microwave. W 13. Call June Wyrick Aldridge A Southerland. 7M-3500or 758 7744.

111 Investment Property

WEST FOURTH STREET 4 bedrooms, 1 bath. Good rental. Financing. $20,500. Speight Realty, 756 3220; night 758 7741._

115

Lots For Sale

BAYWOOD, TWO ACRE lot. Fi nancino available. Call 756-7711. BELVOIR HIGHWAY Mobile home lots. Speight Realty, 756-3220; night 758-7741._

BURROUGHS WELLCOME area. V4 acre lots in subdivision. Restricted, $7.000. Also 3 acre lots, $13,500. Speight Realty, 756-3220, nloht 758 7741.

CHARLES STREET and TwelHh Street. Duplex lot. Good location. Owner financing. $12,500. Speight Realty, 756 3220; nioht 758 774L

FARMVILLE 2 acres, wooded, rolling hills. Owner financing $15,000. Sbeight Realty, 756 3220, nioht 758-7741._______

HIGHWAY 33 EAST Acre lot. Wooded. Beautiful building site. $9,000. Speight Realty, 76 3220, nloht 758 f74f____

LOT for sale in Washington. Beautiful wooded lot with hardwoods and pines, 250 foot frontage on private road located .1 mile from Country Club and Marinas. Priced to sale. Call 946-7978.    __

PARTIALLY WOODED Cherry Oaks Subdivision. Priced to sell. Days 758 7687, after 6. 756-7227.

TWO ACRES, 10 miles east of Greenville. $13,000' Call 752-0824.

.8 ACRE with a 12x54 Connor mobile home. Also a 14 horse power Massey Furgeson lawn tractor. Will sale together or seperately. Call after 5 at 752 6761._

120

RENTALS

756 2121 or 758 9549.

UNIVERSITY AREA Cape Cod charmer for the perfect starter home for newly weds. Offers step saving kitchen, three bedrooms, living room with fireplace, and formal dining room. $40's. *475. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

sa

SPECIAL Executive Desks

60*3fl bautiful walnut finish. Ideal (or home or office

Reg. Price $259.00

Special Price $17001

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 s. Evans St.    752-2175

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 7M 4413 between 8 and 5._

NEED STORAGE? We have ^n^

gton Self Stora< day Friday 9 5. Call!

size to meet your storage need. Arlington Self Storage, Open AAon-756 ^.

121 Apartment For Rent

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, dis :al included. We also have Cable I T Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756 7815

ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near campus. No pets. $215 a month. 756 3923.____

ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, appliances, central air ana heat. 802, Apt. 2, Willow St. $195. 758 3311._

ONE BEDROOM unfurnished apartment located 2 blocks from campus. Appliances and water furnished. Energy efficient with heat pump. No pets. Call Judy 756-6336 betore 5._

REDWOOD APARTMENTS 806 E 3rd Street. I bedroom furnished apartment, heat, air, water furnished. 2 blocks from campus. No pets. 758 3781 or 756-0889

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours lOa.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-1

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartmcnts For Renf

ALMOST NEW 2 bedroom duplex, Oulet location. L^ of privacy. $300 month^ENTUIY 21 B Forbes

AfljtHY.7i9^?l2.L_

AYOEN Nice and roomy 2 bedroom duplex. Carpet, stove, and refrigerator. Central heat, nice yard; $170 per month. 746-48M or

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most' uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost free refrigerators.

Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact J T or Tommy Williams

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1W baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752 1557

CYPRESSGARDENS APARTMENTS

2308 E Tenth Street Available Immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal. Call days 758-6061, nights/weekends

Professionally managed by Remco East. Inc.

DUPLEX FOR RENT 2 badrooms, fenced in backyard, air conditioning and heat pumps. Colonial Village. $230. 756 4249.    _

EASTBRODK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, - two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, teaturing Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Otfice 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS Fully furnished    ,

maid service, all utilities, cable.

Including linens.

Newly renovated 1 or 2 beds. Starting at $105 week or $300 month. Olde London Inn, 2710 South Memo-rial Drive. Call 756-5555.

FOR RENT 2 bedroom townhouse, l'/3 bath, central air and heat, fully carpeted, sundeck, pets allowed, 110 BRIdoe Place, 756 9133.

FOR RENT Furnished apartment. 4 men or girl students, or couple. Near college. Call 758-2201

FOURTH ST West, 2 bedroom duplex, wall to wall carpeting, washer and dryer Included. $z30 per month. Call after 6. 756-0942.

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpefed, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with

121 Aparfmcnts For Rtnf

TAR RIVER ESTATES

I, 1, and 3 badrooms, washar dryer hook ups, cabta TV, oool, club housaT^ayground. Near E^

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Comptax.'

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm A Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, appliances, central air and seat. 804, Apt. 2. Willow St

S2S0 . 738 3311._

TW<3 BEDROOM agartments avalTable. No pats. Call Smith Insurance A Realrv, 7S2-27S4._

WEDGEWOODARMS

NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom. 1>3 both townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

WILSON ACRES APARTMENTS

New 2 and 3 bedroom, washer dryer hook up, dishwasher, heat pump, tennis, pool, sauna, self cleaning ovens, frost free retrigerator. 3 blocks from ECU Call 7n 0277 day or night. Equal Housing Opportuni ilL__

   _______ apartr

Available immediately. 7^3311.

1 BEDROOM energy efficient apartment. 756-5389 or 7A 0025

1 BEDROOM energy efficient, spacious. Dishwasher end alt appliances. Free cable, maintenance end extermination services. $220 month, $220deposlt. 757 3817

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnishad. 201 North Woodlawn. $215. 756 0545 or 758-0635

1,200 SQUARE FEET Furnished or unfurnished, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths on Hljjhway 13. $225. Call 753-4151 or

1201 EAST 2ND STREET 1 bedroom, furnished, upstairs with separate outside entrance. Suitable for 2_people, 3 blocks from ECU S165. Call ?56 1888.___

2 BEDROOMS, I'j bath. Ridge Place. $290. Available AAarch 1.

756 7310.

2 BEDROOM Duplex on Brownlee Drive. Range and refrigerator hookugs, energy efficient. No pets. $265. 7^ 7480

2 BEDROOM apartments for rent: Verdant Street - $290 per month; Brytop Hills $235 per month; Village East $300per month. All require lease and deposit. Duffus Realty, Inc. 756-0811.

3 BEDROOMS, living room, kitchen and bath. Located at Forbes and East 8th Street. Call after 6 pm at 919-792

- BEDROOM pyPLEX on Meade Street near ECU Central air, range, refrigerator, hookups. $270. 756 7480,_

122

Business Rentals

127

Houses For Ront

112 NORTH SUMMIT 3 badroom house within Mlkino distence of the unlversiyJc^TURY 21 B Forbes

ARIQEXl

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Jarvis Streot. $248 par menfh. Call 757-

om

bedroom house In the county. r#9ulrwi. tISO ptf iitonwi.

. bedroom rench style home. CarMrt, storeoe. quiet subdivision. Cair7S7 000l or nights, 7S3 4815, 756-9008.

3 bedrooms, 2 boft^ living room, dining, kitchen and carporf Wooded corner lot. Ho ts. S43S.

i87pvggfitC|rti.7}f-9WZ.

jL5r'rB5s^a."Ts-5a?*^

757-6739

3 BEDROOM WUSE,^flrgplam. carport, (fenced In becfcyard. E xcellent location and neighborhood. S375. Call Lyle^ Rhesa at Davis Raalty 7S2'3000. 355 2574or7Mff9A

DESIRABLE STORE or office space for rent. Excellent parking facilities. H4 Evans Street. 756 7500.

abundant parking, ' economical utilities and pool) Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869

utilities and

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located |ust off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

Large 1 bedroom furnished apartment. Part utilities, laundry and drink machines, central vacuum. Across from campus. Available last of May. Call 752 2691.

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique In apartment living with nature outside your door.

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable TV,wall-to-wan carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    1-5    Sunday

A/terry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedrooms, recently renovated. No pets. 726-7615.

NEAR UNIVERSITY, 2 bedrooms, nopets.S175. -726-765.

NEW DUPLEX, conveniently located. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, appliances furnished with washer-dryer

hookup, heat pump. Beautifully decorated. $300 and ^5 per montn plus months deposit. No pets. Call d^s, AAary, 7-3000, nights, 756-

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1DAY

ONLY

Both Greenville Locations Open Saturday Til 5 P.M.

"r

OIL&

LUBE

S099

Multi-grade Quaker Stat6l0W-40 Filter $3.00 extra Coupon Expkros Sat.. Fob. 26

FRONT DISC OR

REAR DRUM BRAKES

$4288

Warranty 12 Months or 12,000 Miles Coupon Expkot Sat., Ftb. 26

WHOOD^EAK

TIRE

B Watt End Shopping Center I Phone 756-9:

|OpBnlto6llon.-Frl

CENTERI

729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 756-9371    Phone 752-4417

.-Fri. Set. 8 to Open 9 to 6 Mon.-Frl., Sat. 9 to^

5,0(W SQUARE F(X)T building for rent. About 1 mile west from Pitt Memorial Hospital. Phone 753-2016 days; 758-4296 nights._

125 Condominiums For Rtmt

TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah. $3(X) per month, 12 month lease. Young couple preferred. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 756-6336._

127 Houses For Rent

COUNTRY HOUSE near Greenville. 2 bedrooms. No pets. S175. 756 2236.___

EXCLUSIVE RENTAL property near University. Neat 2 bedroom home with kitchen and family, utility area, front porch, walking distances of the university. Home has all of appliances furnished. Married's only. One year lease

required. $275 per month. Call Al or Lyle Davis at 756-2904 or at office 752 3000 or Rhesa, 355 2574. Davis Realty._

HOUSE IN TWIN OAKES, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, $425 per month. Call 756 7711, 9 to 5, AAonday -Friday._

HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in town and country. Call 746-3284 or 524 3180._

TWO OR THREE bedroom homes in Griffon. $200 monthly. Call i^x Waters, Jr. at Unity Inc. Call 524 4147 days. 524-4007 nights

UNIVERSITY AREA, 110 East 12th Street. 3 bedrooms, appliances furnished, washer/dryer connection, fireplace, just insulated. $275. Call 756 0765.__

1, 2, AND 3 bedroom houses for rent. 752 3311._

CLASSiFiED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR

SCREENS & DOORS

RemodelinqRoom Aadilions

C.L. Lupton Co.

1982 Chevrolet Chevette Diesel

Stock no. 143. 4 door hatchback. Automatic, AM-FM radio and more.

6895

DELIVERED

Plus

11.9% APR FINANCING

Available On All New Cars And Trucks

Bethels Finest Used Cars

1980 Ford LTD-4 Door

1980 Ford Mustang 6 cylinder,

automatic, silver

1980 Ford Fiesta Light blue

1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Landau

Brown, loaded

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Silver 1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Landau -Gold

1978 Pontiac Trans AM Silver 1977 Chevrolet Caprice Coupe Dark green, loaded

1977 Chevrolet Caprice Wagon Brown, loaded

1977 Datsun 810 Wagon Blue, automatic

1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Green TRUCKS

1981 Chevrolet C-10 Scottsdale Air, automatic, power steering, blue and white

1981 Chevrolet C-10 Custom White 1980 Datsun King Cab Orange, 4 speed

1980 Datsun 5 speed, black, nice 1980 Chevrolet LUV 4 speed, red, nice

1980 Jeep CJ-7 Like new, automatic, air, brown, 14,000 miles 1978 Chevrolet C-10 Diesel - Like new, automatic, power steering 1974 Datsun Truck Orange

WYNNES CHEVROLET

On The Corner, On The Square

Bethel, N.C.    Phone    825-4321

GMQUAUTY

SBMCEMRIS

GENIRi. MOTORS HnSDmSXM

KEEP THAT GREAT CM FEELING WITH GENUINE GM PARTS

3 BEDROOM housgs .for rsnt: Yorktown Squw'* $608, LynjKtato S4S0; Sylvan Drlva - ^5.00; Grimasland - $250.00; Country Squira $325.00; Forbas Straat -S265.IXI par month. All raquira laasa and deposit. Duffus Raalty, Inc. 756 <1811._

135 OffictSpBCtForRtnf

DOWNTOWN lusi ott Mall Conva niam to Courthousa Singlas or mltiplas. 75g(4l. 756 3466_

MOOCRN, attractivs oHlca spaca

for laasa. Approx Imataly 1500 faat Located 2007 Evans ^slda Mosalay Brothers.

OFFtCE BUILDING tor rant IlOO squara laat. S2S0 par month with one year laasa plus tlrsl month's rant (raa. 1203 W I4th St 758 3743 or

fjmi

OFFICE IN OUNN-GRIER building with confarsnce room and copy machina availabta. Contact Griar Rental Aoaocy, 752 5700.

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Wllllamt, 7j6 7ti5

SINGLE OFFICES or swItM. with utilities and ianitorial. Chapin LIHIa bulTdlm, 3106 S Memorial Drlva. Call 75^7799._

136

Rooms For Ront

142 Roommate Wanfed

RCXJMMATE NEEDED pratarably tmala 2 badroom. fully furnishad apartment at Eastbrook $12$ plus '; utllitias Must ba raspons/Ma

Zj8-8M*. ______________

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy. they turn to the (.lassillad Ads Placa your Ad today for quick results

ROOMMATE WANTED to share new 2 badroom mobile home In the country 5 miles from Green villa Non smoker $150 par month plus phone Call 758-7519attar 6 Mom

Hava pats to sail? Reach more peo pie with an economical Classilied

pie

ad Call 752 6166

146

Wanted To Rent

ROOM AVAILABLE March I for studanl of commarcial. With kitch ^^Wlljgy. block from college

133 Mobile Homes For Rtnt

FOR RENT OR SALE, 2 bedrooms, furnished. 758-4679,

FURNISHED 2 badroom near four lana. deposit negotiable. 746-9470 or 524 4349, 5 to 7 p.m

FURNISHED 3 badrooms S18S a month. Colonial Park. 758-0174.

FURNISHED 2 bedrooms; SI60.

Hollvbrook. 758-0174._

IN AYDEN Clean, fully furnishad with cantral air, washar/dryar, 2

bedroom, 2 bath trailer. 746 :

SPECIAL RATES for students. 2 bedroom with carpet, $115. No pats, no children. 758-4541 or 756-9491

THREE BEDROOM mobile honrte for rent. AAeadowbrook area. Call 756 8948 after 5 pm

TWO BEDROOM, 2 baths, clean, conveniently located on bypass. $190 per month plus deposit. No pets. Call AAary, days, 752 3000, niohts, 756 1997

12 X 45 TWO BEDROOM, 2 bath, new carpet. S150per month. 5 miles south ot Greenville. Call 744-4575

12X40. 2 badrooms. 2 baths, furnishad. Mint condition. $175. S^i^ht Realty. 754 3220; night

12x40 2 badroom fully furnishad. Washar, dryar. air, carpet. Vary nice. No pats. CaJi 754 1235.

2 BEDROOM

Call 754-4487.

AAoblla Homa for rant.

. BEOR(X>M TRAILER tor rant Carpet, air, no pats. lVi baths. 754-6005.    _________

2 BEDROOM, completely furnishad. no Pft$. 756 7381.

Sail your used television the Classified wayTCall 752 6146.

2 BEDROOM trailer. $135 month. SlOOdaposlt. Call 752 1623._

2 BEDROOAAS, partially furnishad, air, good location, no pats, no children, 758 4857._

2 BEDROOMS, washar, carpet, air, comj^taly (urnishad. No pats. Call

2 BEDROOMS Completely furnished. Washar and dryar. No pets. 752-0196

. BEDR(X)M, furnished or un-urnished. washer and dryer, air condition. 756-0801 after 5p.m._

3 BEDROOM furnishad trailer, near Parkers Barbecue. 355 2381

135 Office Space For Rent

TWO ROOM or (our room office suite. Highway 264 Business. Economical. Private pin-klng, Some storage available. Call Connelly Branch at Clark Branch Realtors, 756 6336

THREE ROOM downtown office at 219 Cotan -Parking i at 752 5505

219 Cotanche Street, 440 square faat Parking available. Call Jlm Lanier

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TIRES

NEW, USED, and RECAPS Unbeatable Prices and Quality

QUALITY TIRE SERVICE 752-7177

CRAFTED SERVICES

QuaHty (urnHura RaflnfaMne and rapalrt. Superior eaninB (or aN typo chairs, largor aalaction of cuatom pletur# framing, survey 8taka8-any length, aH types of pallota, hand<raftad ropa ham-mocks, sslaclad (ramad reproductions.

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 7SM1M    IA.M.-4:30P.M.

Qraonvlllo, N.C.

142 R(wmmBtBWBntBd

AAALE - Complataly furnished two badroom condominium. $165 includes Utilities. AAatura working parson preferred Non smoker specially welcome 756 5330 or attar 7 pm, 756 9969.    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

' , ii-iinq Moor,, Artfiiiions

C I Lupton. Co.

WANTED TO RENT 3 or 4 bedroom house in or close to Greanvilla Need 2.000 square faat and garage/storage Desire lease for    months    with option to

renew Call 757 4581 days or collect I 742 5844 evenings

SAVE AAONEY this winter shop and use the Classilied Ads every day!

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FRANK M. SUTTON

CBrtlfiqd Public Accountant

ACCOUNTING AND INCOME TAX SERVICES 757-1807

Noftday-Friday 7S84008 Saturday I tot

Call (or ippointmBnt.

AUCTION

RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT WAREHOUSE SALE

Saturday, Feb. 26-10:30 A. M.

North West Street, Cary, N.C.

OIRECnONB: From Raloigh taka Watiarn Blvd. to Cary past Winn Dixla store to North Wost St. Follow signs.

Partial Ustlng ol Equipment Automatle meat allcart    SlsiniaM    steal axhsMl hoods

Qaaandalietrtcgrila    Pass through lood holding unHs

loa Makar    Oaeoratlvo Hght fhturas S

MNk shake maehlnafl    chsndaHart

Salad barfrafrtgaratad)    NUMEROUS MISC. EQUIPMENT

StaMaas steal work oountars    S    SMALL WARES

Pan holdor racks

TIRMt OF 8AU: Caah or good chock. AS equlpmeot eeSe "es Is, where la" with noewfrenUeeWwaid^

Net reepeneWe Iw coeldents

BAILEY AUCTION

Cai.JenphBMey. INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE

iSSS;    269-7459

114 W. Horton Zebuton.N.C NCBLZS3S4

AUCTION!

FARM EQUIPMENT FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 25,1983,10 A.M.

KXIATION: On Hwy M In Aurore, N .C , In lot becide Aurore Pteie

TRACTORS

John Deere 4440 with canopy top. 197

John Dears 4240 with canopy top 1979

John Deere 4A40 with cab and air.

1979

John Deere 4240 with cab and air.

1980

Farmall 140.1979 These Are Low Hour Tractors COMBINES 1977 Massey Ferguson with both heads

2 sweat com harvesters Model FMC with lights, hydraulic etavators ext 35' wagon hitch, 900 X 24 large noatation tires.

EQUIPMENT Hardee Side Boy 4 Row Lllliston Cultivator Johnson Pull type sprayer Planter mulch model 900 4 Row lye drill Grain cart (Hinson 275 Bu.)

12 Ft. Ezeeflow

10 ton Gehl trailer

John Deere loader with 8 ft

bucket

4 Row KMC bedders with hydraulic row markers Ferguson Grain Hoe John Deere 210 Disc ISTInechizel plow (Athens)

Bed shapers No. 80 plateless planters    

SbIb Subject To Court Approval

Sale Cortduciad by

(Ol'SrRY HOYS AUCTION AND RFAl TY CO. I'. O. ('.' l.M) W.ishitKjton, North C.imliti.i I'hntH , tt,    St.itf    l    icfiisi-    No.    'I.    I

Ioouc curkins

Creanvllla, N. C. 751-117$

RALPH RESPESS

HOT BESPONS/BLE BOB ACCIDENTS

USED CAR CLEARANCE

We Absoluteiy Must Reduce Our Used Car Inventory By Monday, February 28,1983. Prices Have Been Lowered On Every Car And Truck In Inventory. Hurry, For Best Selection!

Was

Reduced Price

1982 Honda Prelude...........

..*8395

*7195

1981 Audi 4000 5 Plus 5........

.*10,950

*9495

1981 Volkswagen Scirocco ...

..*7995

*7195

1981 Yamaha 750 Seca........

..*2995

*1995

1979 Pontiac Sunbird.........

..*4295

*3495

1979 Ford Fairmont..........

..*2995

*1995

1979 Olds Cutlass Wagon ....

..*5295

*4595

1978 Plymouth Horizon.......

..*3995

*3195

1978 Olds Cutlass Wagon ....

..*5195

*3995

1978 Mazda GLC.............

..*2995

*1995

1978 Ford F-150 Super Cab ...

..*4395

*3695

1978 Honda Civic ... .SOLIX...

..*2995

*1995

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme SOLD ^5195

*4295

1977 Volkswagen Rabbit.....

..*3995

*3195

1977 Buick Skylark...........

..*3495

*2995

1975 Volkswagen Beetle.....

..*2495

*1995

1974 Volkswagen Beetle.....

..*2595

*1995

1973 Volkswagen Beetle......

..*2395

*1995

1975 MGB Midget Convertible

...*2995

*1995

TRADE-INS ACCEPTED AND SEPCIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE

IDE PECHELES VOLKSWAGEN

264 By-pass

Soi vinq Gioonvillp To The Coast For 18 Years





CANDIDATES FOR MAYOR -Burlington, Vt. Mayor Bernard Sanders, right, is seeking to show his 1981 election was not a fluke. Sanders, an independent who is a social-

Socialist Mayor Aims At Re-Election Mar. 1

By DAVID KARVELAS Associated Press Writer

BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) - Flu-ridden and cranky, Mayor Bernard Sanders shuffled out of his office fumbling with his tie. Does this look good* he asked, showing discomfort and displeasure at having to wear a necktie to a debate with his two challengers.

"No, its not buttoned, replied one of his advisers, who straightened his collar and closed his top shirt button.

Burlingtons socialist mayor has never had much use for ties or most of the traditional trappings that go hand-in-hand with politics and power.

Thats why he believes he will win a second term as mayor of Vermonts largest city in next weeks election.

"I think Im going to win this election and win it big, the 41-year-old Sanders said with the confidence of a veteran politician. Most of the people in Burlington are not distinguished, upper middle-income. Most of them are just hanging in there and they are the ones giving us support.

A Brooklyn, N,Y., transplant whose accent and egalitarian views helped capture the mayors office two years ag, Sanders is now the insider in the March 1 mayoral election.

Running as an independent in 1981, Sanders defeated a five-term Democratic incumbent by 10 votes.

Balancing his radical views against political realities, Sanders has built a reputation as a peoples mayor, creating government programs for women, teen-agers and the elderly.

I am a socialist, of course I am a socialist, he told a Democrat heckler during a recent debate. To hold a vision that society can be fundamentally different, to believe that all people can be equal that is not a new idea.

Sanders say his most radical achievement has been to give the citys 500 employees a say in determining personnel policies, from sick leave to grievance procedures.

"Thats a socialist idea, 1 dont think there are too many mayors that do that, said Sanders, who is running

Seeks To Keep

Client Charged

PUEBLO, Colo. (AP)-An attorney for a critically ill robbery suspect is fighting efforts to drop charges against his client by county officials concerned about the cost of caring for the prisoner.

Christopher Cordova, 19, was stricken by an arterial tumor after being charged in December in the holdup of a travel agency.

He was hospitalized and remains in a coma, and Pueblo County has already been billed for $10,000 in medical expenses. The district attorney said last week he wants to drop the charges before the expenses mount further.

Cordovas attorney, Dave Crockenberg, filed a motion objecting to dismissal of the charges. A judge took the matter under advisement.

as an independent again.

I dont think there is an administration in the country that is more progressive than this one, he said. Weve made thousands of people feel a little bit better about themselves.

Always ready to lecture on the benefits of socialism and the evils of capitalism, Sanders nonetheless applied some capitalist common sense to managing this city of 38,000. He put some city programs out for bid for the first time, lowering the cost of insurance and getting a better return on retirement fund investments.

There was a lot of fear in the beginning but that has kind of mollified, he said. We have not transformed the world. Much of what we do is not radical.

Even so, Sanders new society in Burlington is being challenged by the old guard, and unlike 1981, Democrats and Republicans are ready for him this time. Two years ago, the GOP assumed Democrat Gordon Paquette would win a sixth term and put up no candidate; the Democrats made the same assumption and barely campaigned.

Requests for absentee ballots are at an all-time high and city officials predict more people will vot next week for mayor than cast ballots in last years congressional and state elections. Six seats on the 13-member Board of Aldermen are also being contested.

The Burlington GOP has picked conservative businessman James Gilson as their candidate. Gilson, who owns a chain of pizza parlors, is campaigning on a

pro-business plank and against Sanders proposal for a local tax on hotel rooms and restaurant meals.

A more serious challenge comes from the Democratic contender, former House Mi-.nority Leader Judith Stephany. Mrs. Stephany is a liberal politician who lacks the charisma of the fast-talking Sanders but who has the strong support of her party, which until two years ago ran the city. She argues that her experience in the legislature would bring compromise, rather than confrontation, to city government.

Sanders is considered to be the favorite.

If he wins re-election, city residents can exp^t more of the same: open government, controversial clashes with the Board of Aldermen and frequent tongue-lashings against international atrocities and government indifference.

The board is now split three ways: five members support Sanders, five are Republicans and three are Democrats. It is considered unlikely that any group will claim a majority after the March election.

The mayors goals for the next two years reflect a degree of moderation. He does not speak of building communes, but rather promotes downtown housing projects for middle-income residents.

Instead of calling for city-ownership of Burlington industry, Sanders plans to forge ahead with economic development projects that include loans, to small busi

ness.

THE CHOICE IS YOURS, THE LOW PRICE IS OURS.

Just

$029

Select one of three Great American Favorite entrees available each day such as smothered chicken, baked spaghetti, or chopped steak... plus two delicious vegetables.. .all at the unbelievable low price of just $2.29.

The Great American Favorites... great eating for less at S&S.

S^S

Where Aacrlca Conee Hoae To Eat.

j''i Carolina East Mali

Mon-Fri LUNCH 11 A.M.-2:15 P.M.,

- SUPPER 4:30 P.M.-8 P.M. (8:30 Fri) Sat & Sun 11 A.M.-8 P.M. (continuously)

(8:30 Sat)

(

ist, is being opposed by Democrat Judy Stephany, center, and GOP hopeful James Gilson, left. (AP Laserphoto)

Louie's

^ GETTHE JUMPON a

^ SPRING^

20 Lb. Bag of Weed & Feed

$399

Regular Price $10.97.

Provides complete lawn feeding. Kills growing broadleaf weeds. #92438

3 Cu. Ft. Bag Pine Bark Mulch

$-|99

Regular Price S2.49.

Excellent ground cover. Reduces evaporation. Retards erosion. #92118

Treated Yard & Garden Timbers

S329

Reference Price $4.19.

5" X 3%" X 8'. Use to terrace yard, around plant beds, fences. #04574

Authentic Used Railroad Ties

Reference Price $10.99.

6" X 6" X 8'. Treated with creosote to resist rot, decay. #04575

36'-Cut 11 HP

18 HP 42"-Cut    $-

Riding Tractor.......

Riding Mower

$999^

Reg. $1,849.99. This model has electric start, key ignition lock, triple blades and much more! #95193

Reg. $1,199.99. Rack & pinion steering. 2 year transaxle warranty. 95195

Dump Trailer Great for Hauling!

$14999

Has a 10 cu. ft. capacity. Dump action controlled from drivers seat. #92858

1^1983 Lowes Companies, Inc.

859 5138 IbS 528 I ULL ClltOY

Louie's

Do You Have Your New Lowes Credit Card? It's the Handy Card For Handy People Like Yourself.

Apply today! You may qualify for up to $750.00 instant Lowe's credit when you present your Visa. American Express or MasterCard. Even without these cards, your application will be processed with minimum delay.

Stop by Lowe's today for complete credit details.

Vbur Household word

PricMOood Thru Saturday 2728 Memorial Drive Greenville, N.C. Open Mon. Thru Fri. 7:30Til 6:00 Sat. 8Til 5:00 756^500

Farm Supplies Heating & Cooling Catalog Sales Hardware & Tools

I

r

I r

IL


Title
Daily Reflector, February 24, 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 24, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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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.
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