Daily Reflector, March 11, 1983


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Wothr

Clearing, low in tgH)or 20s tonight. Saturday mostly simny and rather windy, high inthelowSOs.

102ND YEAR

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 8 - The legislature Page 12-Obituaries Page 17A commitment

NO. 60

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 11, 1983

24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

Community Development Hearing Held

By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer The first of two public hearings required as part of the citys third-year application for nearly $1 million in community development funds was conducted Thursday night by the City Council.

Jesse Harris, community relations officer, outlined segments of the program and said that the new application to tte N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development represents the final year of local participation under the current CD format.

Harris said that funding for Greenville has been targeted

for the area designated as the South Evans Neighborhood, a 118-acre section bounded generally by 10th Street on the north, Charles Boulevard on the east, the Seaboard System on the west, and Norfolk-Southern Railroad on the south.

According to Harris, the CD program stipulates that funding must be spent in a defined area and South Evans was targeted by the city for revitalization.

Eima Carr, a home owner in the South Evans section, said she is a member of the areas neighborhood association, which endorses the third year application. Mrs. Carr said residents of the nei^borhood met with CD officials here and shared ideas regarctog the revitalization program.

The neighborhood spokesman said the plans included some home rehabilitation, some relocation for residents and some demolition. She said the first two years of the program here were very encouraging, although painful for some. Mrs. Carr suggested that the completion of the CD plan should insure the quality of life in the neighborhood.

The Rev. Arlee Griffin, pastor of Cornerstone Baptist Church, said he was proud of progress made in the neighbortiood but he suggested that the residential association be kq)t informed of developments, particularly any proposed changes. He said the citizens have not been given the opportunity to assess the performance of the CD plan.

Planning Director Bobby Robei^n said the city can not arbitrarily change the approved CD plan without hearings. He said a question now being addressed is how to develop property on a reuse basis in and around Pitt Street.

Harris said city staff members meet with the neighborhood association when there are progress reports to pass along. He said a meeting is scheduled for Monday nit with South Evans residents.

The second public hearing on the application will be held in April.

The council continued action until a special call meeting on March 21 on a request by James H. Ward III to rezone two acres located south of section three of Sedgefield Park

subdivision, north of the Greenville Church of God property, west of St. Andrews Drive, and east of Memorial Drive, from R-15 (residential) to office and Institutional. The vote to continue the matter followed a public hearing on the rezoning request and on the related closing of a portion of Sedgefield Drive between St. Andr a Drive and Memorial Drive.

The council decided to continue the matter after City Manager Gail Meeks repu ted that the city had received a revised street plan for the property late Thursday morning and the planning staff did not have the opportunity to review the new plan.

Mayor Percy Cox said the city did not have time to draw up a new ordinance after receiving the revised street plan^nd he suggested that the council continue action until a later meeting.

Attorney Fred Mattox, representing Ward, said he understood the citys position regarding the need for a new resolution but he suggested that the public hearing could be held and then the council could vote at the next meeting. Mattox said the matter has been pending for some time and he expressed disappointment at the possibility of another delay.

Council members decided to conduct the hearing and Ken (Please turn to Page 7)

Social Security Bail-Ouf Advances To Fuil Senate

Showing Its Age

NO LONGER RELIABLE - This B-52 bomber was being refueled in preparation for a training flight Thursday when the left wing cracked just inboard of the inboard engine pod. Mather Air Force Base (in California) spokesmen Capt. Louis

Figuroa called it awfully incredible. The cause was not immediately known. The spilled fuel was quickly covered with foam. Officers said they cmildnt immediately determine when the 21-year-old plane had last flown. (AP Laserpboto)

Senate Jobs Legislation Hostage Of Dissidents

ByTOMRAUM Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -Opponents of a new tax law requiring federal tax withholding on interest and dividends are holding a multibillion-dollar jobs bill hostage in an effort to win congressional repeal of the law.

Senate leaders concede they dont know how to stop the drive. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said today that Reagan will veto the jobs legislation if it contains the tax changes.

At issue is the new rule requiring a 10 percent withholding by banks and financial institutions of all interest income, a change adopted in 1982 that takes effect July 1.

Opponents, ted by Sen. Bob Hasten, R-Wis., are seeking to attach an amendment repealing this law to a $3.7 billion jobs package now before the Senate, a move

REFLECTOR

that has brought Senate action on the jobs bill almost to a standstill.

The Senate was due to resume action on the measure today, but earlier hopes by leaders of getting a final version to the president by the weekend had all but evaporated.

In a heated exchange on the Senate floor Thursday, Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., accused colleagues favoring repeal of bowing to the banking industry, which has mounted a vigorous lobbying campaign against the new withholding rule.

' Let the poor people who are looking for jobs wait while we help the bankers, scoffed Dole, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. He accused the American Bankers Association, the prime industry group lobbying for the rules repeal, of spreading misinformation, flooding the. Senate with mail, and frightening con-

HOTune

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752-1336

sumers.

But both Dole and Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn., conceded they didnt have the votes to stop Hasten from winning Senate approval for his amendment. I can count, Dole said.

Baker agreed, telling the Senate, I dont know how to unravel this thing.

Hasten, claiming to have at least 51 senators - a majority - in his comer, vowed to press on with his effort. This is not a banking issue. This is a consumer issue, he said.

In the House, separate legislation to repeal the withholding rule has 242 co-sponsors, well over a majority In that 435-member chamber.

Baker said Reagan told him he would seriously consider vetoing the jobs measure unless the withholding amendment is sidetracked.

I predict the bill will be vetoed, Baker said.

The test of wills between Senate leaders and Hasten was quickly escalating into a high-stakes battle. One section of the jobs legislation contains emergency funds needed to help 29 states make unemployment benefit payments that come due as early as next week.

That section makes prompt passage of the bill mandatory, congressional Izaders claimed.

Once the jobs package passes the Senate, a House-Senate conference committee must go to work reconciling it with a $4.9 billion version approved last week by the House. The House-passed bill does not now contain the withholding-repeal amendment.

The new withholding rules, favored by the administration and adopted by Congress last year, were deigned to reduce cheating t)y persons do not pay taxes on dividend and interest income.

But banks and other financial institutitions have balked at the new rules, calling them cumbersome and expensive.

Dole said the banks have somehow exploited their customers into believing that there is a new tax ... Its not a new tax.

The jobs legislation includes a variety of public works projects, emergency food and shelter help for the long-term unemployed, summer jobs for young people, job retraining programs, and National Park Service programs.

Reagan had threatened to veto an earlier version last December.

ByaiFFHAAS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate tax writers have given the full Senate a bipartisan Social Security rescue plan that closely resembles a $165 billion measure passed by the House, including an increase in the retirement age.

President Reagan, meanwhile, said he is looking forward to a signing ceremony in the very near future.

Following a drafting session that lasted more than 13 hours, the Senate Finance Committee voted 18-1 Thursday night to approve the legislation. Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., the committee chairman, praised the measure and predicted fairly broad support in the full Senate next week.

The lone dissenting vote was cast by Sen. Steve Symms, R-Idaho.

Instead of raising the retirement age by two years in the next century, as the House bill does, the Senate committee provision combined a benefit cut with increasing the retirement age gradually to 66 between 2000 and 2015. It would have some effect on everyone bom in 1938 or later.

All those retiring in the next century would be aL fected by a cut in initial pensions.

The House bill did not touch the payment to new retirees, but would raise the retirement age gradually from 65 to 67 by the year 2027.

The average retiree now gets a Social Security pension check equal to 42 percent of the final wage. The Senate committee would reduce that to 40 percent.

The Senate measure also would phase out over five years restrictions on how much retirees aged 65

through 69 can earn without losing benefits, starting in 1990. And it would liberalize the benefit formula for mothers who dropped out of the work force to raise children.

Although there are some technical differences, the Senate bill closely parallels provisions of the House-passed measure, including:

-A six-month delay in this Julys scheduled cost-of-living increase in benefits.

Increased payroll taxes on employees, employers and the self-employed.

-A levy on the benefits going to higher-income retirees.

Mandatory coverage for new federal workers and employees of non-profit organizations after Jan. 1.

-Up to eight weeks of additional benefits for laid-off workers who have exhausted their unemployment benefits. The House bill

provided 10 weeks.

-A prospective payment system for Medicare to pay hospitals at predetermined, fixed rates.

Legislators offered amendments to drastically alter those provisions or substitute others, but Dole made clear that he wanted to keep intact the recommendations of the National Commission on Social Security Reform.

Edmisten In Greenville To Organize Campaign

ByJANEWELBORN ,, Reflector Staff Writer

State Attorney General Rufus L. Edmisten has not announced his candidacy for the 1984 governors race, but that did not stop him from holding a campaign organizational meeting Wednesday in Greenville.

In an interview, Edmisten said that this meeting was the fifth organizational session he has had so far, and he has been pleased with the results.

About 150 Democrats from the eastern part of the state attended the meeting at the Holiday Inn.

Edmistens candidacy for the governorship came into play recently when he removed the State Bureau of Investigation, which is under his supervision, from an investigation of telephone records for Lt. Gov. Jimmy Greens office. Green is a potential rival for the Democratic nomination for the 1984 race.

To make sure everyone knows that politics has nothing to do with it (the investigation), I

have removed myself from the case, Edmisten said Thursday.

Details of theSBI probe have not been made public, but Justice Department officials have acknowledged they have been conducting a follow-up investigation to the Colcor probe of corruption in southeastern North Carolina. Greenss name was mentioned in testimony at trials resulting from that probe.

Edmisten turned over the SBI investigation to two district attorneys on Monday.

Edmisten said he expects major issues in the 1984 gubernatorial race to include education, tobacco and jobs.

He said le^slation is needed to help the victims of crimes. The people that commit crimes ought to have to pay for the crimes they committed, Edmisten said. Not enough is done about the rights of the victims.

He also mentioned his commitment to stopping the illegal drug traffic in North Carolina.

Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell you> ca J D ^ problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily ^TUCiy KOpOnrS Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.

Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer Qm CLin CflllCdr and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our    viviii v*uiivvi

readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.

SUNDAY SERVICE REDUCTION?

Has there been any reduction in post office box servicing at the Greenvilie Post Offices? In light of discontinuation of Sunday service at so many other post offices around the state, is there likely tobe?T.F.

Yes, there has been a reduction in service, Greenville Postmaster Uoyd Mills said. He said its been policy for about the last eight months to a year to post only newspapers, special delivery letters and express mail on Sundays.

The local post office is going to conduct a count soon to determine the volume of accountable mail being posted on Sundays. Then a decision will be made in the District Section Center in Rocky Mount as to whether Sunday service will becotj^inuedi

LIVERMORE, Calif. (AP) Officials at Livermore National Laboratory are studying the results of a state report that plant workers have a skin cancer rate up to four times higher than the general pqixdation.

We dont pretend to understand it, and were looking into it, said Dr. Lowry Dobson, staff senior scientist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, about 50 miles east of San Francisco.

The state study, released Thursday, was a follow-up to a 1976 investigation that confirmed suspicions by doctors at the federal l^ratory of a hi{^r than usual incidence malignant melanoma.

Commended

The City Council has commended city departments, particulariy the fire-rescue section, for their professionalism in dealing with the March 2 explosion at the Village Green apartment complex.

'The council, at its meeting Thursday night, adopted a resolution commending members of the Fire-Rescue Department for their performance and for their expert use of professional techniques and procedures at the complex.

The resolution also stated that the council recognizes and appreciates the skillful and willing support demonstrated by other departments of the city and by emergency aid units throughout the city and county.

The explosion caused the death of one resident, who attended East Carolina University, and Injuries to several other ECU students who lived at Village Green. The council said in its resolution that without professional, highly skilled emergency personnel, this disaster could have been more costly in the loss of lives, in addition to the extensive loss of property.

The resolution stated, The immediate response, the alert enactment of the disaster plan, the swift transport of the injured, and the impressive provision of emergency medical services demonstrated by the... Fire-Rescue Department and neighboring support agencies were of a highly professional measure.

Mayor Percy Cox, who visited the complex the morning of the explosion, said he saw professionals at work at Village Green. He said Police Chief Glenn Cannon has also received a letter recognizing the work q| police personnel onMarch 2.

ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING ... Attorney Gieral Rufus L. Edmisten hdd a meeting to plan strategy fw his 1984 gubenmtorial campaign Thursday at the Holiday Inn in

Greenville. Before the meeting, Edmisten talked with Marvin Speight of Farmville, chairman of the state ABC Board.

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2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, March 11,1983

Couples Nest Well Feathered

ByFORDTURNER Harrisburg Patriot-News

LOWER ALLEN TWP., Pa. (AP) - Mel Austin and his wife share their Cumberland County home with two true lady-lovers, a clown, and a hyperactive worrier whos had nervous breakdowns.

The Austins, married for 13 years, do not have any children. But they do have four parrots, three macaws and a cockatoo, and sometimes there isnt a lot of difference.

"If your kids are sick, you have to get up in the middle of the night to take care of them, said Austin, a policeman. "Well, its the same with these guys.

The baby that screams and cries in the kitchen is Peppy the Amazon parrot, and between wails he chatters in Spanish.

"Peppy was raised in Mexico. and he seems pretty fluent in Spanish, Austin explained. "We tried to have it translated, but he talks too fast.

Peppy also hates men, and .\ustin cant handle him without wearing gloves because of the claws and a curled beak thats nearly two inches long.

But his wife, Sandy, a nurse, can come as close as she likes without worry.

"Willie is a ladys parrot, too. Austin said of Peppys neighbor across the kitchen. "But Peppy is worse, he gets very upset around men.

In the cage hext to Willie, Jake is perched quietly, eyeing the visitors w'th suspicion. Hes an African Gray parrot and probably the best talker in the house, but his chest is featherless and Austin said hes a very nervous bird.

Hes had nervous

breakdowns, and sometimes he just tears whole bundles of feathers from himself, he said.

In another comer of the kitchen is a cage for Gus, an Amazon parrot who was Austins first real bird.

I had a parakeet when I was a kid, but that doesnt count. Id always wanted a macaw...or a parrot, said Austin, who bought Gus more than three years ago, and the familys been growing ever since.

Daisy, a hyacinth macaw, might be worth $5,000, said Austin, who admitted that keeping these birds has turned into an expensive hobby.

But like someone hooked on potato chips, he added, 1 had one and I just had to have more.

Then theres Maude, a blue and gold colored macaw that is well-named, who Austin said is his favorite. She drinks warm coffee and iced tea from the ^ass and gives him an affectionate peck on the lip whenever he wants it.

And of course theres Jessica, a white cockatoo. Shes kept in the living room, and the three macaws -Maude, Daisy and Crunch -live in a spare bedroom down the hall.

Jessica is in the same flmily as the bird that was seen often on the past Baretta TV series, sitting on the stars shoulder. And Austins pets seems to have just as much personality.

When Daisy comes down the hall on someones shoulder, Jessicas umbrella of long white feathers points straight out from her head, and her feet stomp in a little war dance.

"We dont let them get close bee ise Jessica goes nuts,said Austin.

Homemakers Haven BY EVELYN SPANGLER

Makey It Pay With Life Insurance Families With Gash Problem May Want To Check Insurance Families that are hard pressed financially may want to examine their life insurance policies from two standpoints, says Mrs. Evelyn L, Spangler, Pitt County Home Economics Extension Agent.

Homes Tour Announced

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. The 20th annual St. Lukes Tour of Homes here will be held April 9-10 and will feature contemporary homes.

The tours will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday with seven homes on view and from 1-5 p.m. Sunday with six additional homes shown. A complimentary tea will be served from 4- p.m. at St. Lukes Episcopal Church. Tour maps, home descriptions and tickets will be available at the church.

Proceeds from the event, which is sponsored by the women of St. Lukes Church, benefit the church as well as island chartiies. For information write Tour of Homes, P 0, Box 5101, Hilton Head Island, S.C. 29938.

Antiques Fair Scheduled

BURLINGTON - The Burlington Antiques Fair, sponsored by the Alaman-ce-Caswell Medical Auxiliary will be held March 18-20 at the Elon College Alumni Memorial Gymnasium at Elon College.

Proceeds from ticket sales will bo into the auxiliary loan and scholarship fund and health education purposes in the community.

Thirty-eight dealers will be participating and the fair and will be showing jewelry, watches, linens, porcelain, accessory pieces, old books, Chinese export, brass, wicker, period furniture and china.

The hours will be 10 a.m. to 9 p.riL Friday, 1-6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

They may want to reconsider life insurance on their children and they may want to look at the loan possibilities offered by their policies.

"Both of these suggestions have been called to our extension by Dr. Mike Walden, an economist with the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service, Mrs. Spangler added. We are passing them on as a part of our Make It Pay campaign.

Walten points out that the major purpose of life insurance is to make sure that a persons financial dependents have an income in case of his or her death. Since children ordinarily do not have financial dependents, this purpose does not apply to them.

However, Walden believes some life insurance on children might be justified in order to give them a decent burial or to provide monetary compensation for the emotional loss of a child.

Mrs. Spangler quotes Walden as saying that many older insurance policies might be a source of cheap funds. These are policies that were written before sky high interest rates. Some of them make it possible to borrow up to the cash value of the policy at interest rates as low as 5 to 8 percent.

Walden says a policy owner may come out ahead if they can borrow from their life insurance policies and reinvest the funds at a higher interest rate.

At Wits End

By Erma BomlK'ck

KAREN RITCHIE MCKEITHEN...S the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Muraocn Riicnie McKeithen of Laurinburg, who announce her engagement to Ensign Franklin Lamar Schaede, son of Cmdr. and Mrs; Harry Robert Schaede of Virginia Beach, Va. The wedding planned for June 18.

Births

MARIE IRENE BOYETTE...is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Charles 0. Boyette of Belhaven, who announce her engagement to Christian Eugene Watson, son of Dr. and Mrs. P. Eugene Watson of Arrington, Va. The wedding is planned for April 2.

Cooking Is Fun

Ive never had anything lifted, tucked, snipped, stapled, or melted down in my life, but a year ago I succumbed to vanity. I had the gaping space between my two front teeth filled in.

It wasnt like I was impatient. I gave it 50 years to fill in by itself and ii^en it didnt, I fibred it was time to take things into my own hands.

Face it. This is a caw)ed-teeth world we live in. Maybe there is some place on this earth where a cavern in your mouth is considered an honor or a symbol of royal blood, but not in this country. Here, a smile that looks like a row of piano keys is what gets put in the first row of the class picture and dates during the week.

With some sadness, I said goodbye to a fraternity of individuals who have managed to survive in a straight-teeth world. Goodbye, Pete Rose. So long, Lauren Hutton. Ciao, David Letterman. I was determined to become a member of the orthodontic majority.

You may be wondering just how bad a space between your front teeth can be. Ill tell you how bad. I could eat five rows of com through a picket fence without opening the gate.

I could spit over two sedans and a station wagon through my front teeth and never

dribble. I could put a candle in my mouth and rent mysdf out for Halloween. Why, I was the only person in North America who could floss with a garden hose.

There was no doubt in my mind that with straight teeth, a new me would emerge.

I have been waiting for an entire year to have someone notice my teeth. My husband said, If thats what you wanted, it looks fine. My kids said, I cant remember what they were before. Some friends who have known me for years have said, Did you lose weight? You changed your hair, didnt you? Did you change make-up?

There are three morals to this story.

The first is that we are harder on ourselves than anyone in the world. We dissect our flaws both physically and emotionally, put them under a microscope and never take our eyes off them. We would never dream of judging others with the severity and cruelty with which we judge ourselves.

The second moral is that our friends will live with our imperfections and indeed become blind to them, looking only for the part of us that enriches their lives in some way.

The third moral. A smile doesnt have to be an unbroken line to be... a smile.

OHara Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Emmett OHara Jr., Shady Knoll Trailer Park, a son, Robert Clinton, on March 5,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Bryan

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Randy Musial Bryan, Van-ceboro, a son, Paul William, on March 5, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Peer

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Steven Grant Peer, Robersonville, a son, David Richard, on March 4,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Baker

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Ray Baker, Hamilton, a son, Curtis Ray, on March 5, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Craft Show To Open

ATLANTA, .Ga. Seventy craft professionals will be exhibiting in the Atlanta Market Centers first wholesale craft trade show, Southeastern Craft Show 83.

Handcrafted gift and decorative accessories, ceramics, hand-tied lace, carved wooden bowls, pewter, hand-woven rugs, water color and personalized quilts will be available.

The show will be held Saturday through Tuesday. The show will open to wholesale trade and the public will be allowed to shop from noon to 6 p.m. Tuesday.

We are featuring southeastern artists because they have a nationwide reputation for producing high quality and unique crafts. They are known for the time, dedication and hard work invested in their wares, said John Rosenbert, frade show manager for the Atlanta center.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor

SUPPER FOR FRIENDS

Cornish Hens Squash Romano Salad & Rolls Brownies & Coffee

SQUASH ROMANO

Fine way to treat a comparatively new vegetable.

2'2-pound spaghetti squash rpound stick butter (2 cup)

Personal

Terry L^. Johnson of Falkland, a junior at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, is visiting in Georgia and Texas. He will also visit in Los Angeles with his brother and sister-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. James H. Johnson Jr. He is associate professor of geography at UCLA.

4 small scallions, thinly sliced (V4 cup)

'2 cup grated Romano cheese

In a large saucepot cover the squash with water; bring to a boil; boil gently until tender when pierced with a fork - about 30 minutes. Halve lengthwise; remove seeds and fibrous portions. With a fork scoop out the long strands into a shallow baking dish (9 by 9 by 1 inch); keep hot in a tow oven. In an 8-inch skillet melt butter, stirring in scallions. Spoon over squash; sprinkle with cheese. Pass coarse salt and a pepper mill. Makes 6 servings.

REGULAR PRICE DRY CLEANING

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Fluff & Fold Service '    ^

Open 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. 758-2164 Greenville. N.C.

Fresh Rolls Daily

DIENERS BAKERY

SISDIcklntonAve.

Marriage

Announced

MRS. DAVID LYNN MOSELEY...is the former Betty Underwood, daughter of Eugene Underwood of Ayden, whose marriage to Mr. Moseley, son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Moseley of Greenville, took place March 3.

FREE CAR CARE CLINIC for WOMEN

Wednesday, March 16th 7 P.M. until 9 P.M. GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER, 729 Dickinson Ave.

In a brief two hour session, women can learn more about what makes cars go and keeps them going, What to do when they dont and more.

For registration, please call Carol Clark or Phil Trull at 752-4417 before 1:00 p.m., Saturday March 12th. Additional sessions will be planned as needed. SPONSORED BY TRULL GOODYEAR TIRE CENTERS AND THE PILOT CLUB OF GREENVILLE.

Congratulations

To

Barbara Walker

of The Village Groomer

For Obtaining The Title Of Certified Master Groomer.

Way To Go, Barb!

Love, Holly & Scott

NIGHTTIME-FAMILY DENTISTRY

' FAMILY DENTISTRY

DR. ROBERT L. CAPPS

DR. QUALLI0T1NE DR. Q

,DR. GARY E. MICHELS

Practice of Family Ocntiatry

1012 CbarlM Blvd. Located Behind Crowe Ncet Phono 752-1337

8A.M.-9P.M. Mon.-Thur.

8 A.N.-5 P.M. Friday 8 A.M.-l 1:30 A.M. Saturday

All Aspects Of Dentistry Provided Childrens Dentistry Surgical Removal Of Wisdom Teeth Modern Pain Control Including Nitrous Oxide Sedation "Laughing Gas" .    Root    Canals

THE FABULOUS 5as ARE BACK

"IN THE MOOD" for SPRING FASHION

March 11 at 7 p.m. and March 12 at 2 p.m. Fashion Show At Center Court

CAROLINA AST CNTB

264 By-Pass on Hwy, II, Greenville





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, March 11,1983-3.

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Doctors Dont Accept Their Diagnosis

By Abigail Van Buren

1983 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEAR READERS: Tired of Waiting complained about having to wait for Vk hours for a scheduled 9 oclock doctors appointment. Then she learned that several others (also waiting) had been booked for 9 oclock. She asked if that happened everywhere or only in Pittsburgh.

My reply: It happens almost everywhere. Doctors, whats the Rx for this epidemic?

A sampling of responses:

DEAR ABBY: There are some legitimate reasons for a doctor being late, and they occur often. A doctors office is not a factory where each person can be run through the assembly line on a fixed schedule. Depending on the type of practice, you try to estimate how long each patient will take and schedule patients accordingly.

In our primary-care setting, on the average each patients visit takes about 15 minutes. Some visits are briefer, for example, blood pressure checks or simple infections. Some are longer, especially for older patients with multiple problems. Some patients save up their complaints and come in with a list. Often they present a few of the minor complaints, and after the examination, when theyre almost out the door, they say, "Oh, by the way. Doc, I vomited blood this morning. Does that mean anything? AN M.D. IN WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.

DEAR ABBY: I work in busy ear, nose and throat office, and we try to keep to a schedule, but its not always possible.

Some patients who have no appointments show up with urgent symptoms and cannot be turned away. Others dont cancel, they just dont show up. Some just happened to be in the neighborhood or the building, or they missed their appointment yesterday and are leaving town tomorrow. The list goes on and on.

One mother brought her 3'/2-year-old son in with a but-jton stuck in his ear. After the doctor took care of him, the mother said, Would you mind looking at his twinbrother, too? I think he stuck something up his nose.

ALL IN A DAYS WORK

DEAR ABBY: Ill tell you why doctors run late: The patient calls for a routine checkup, then presents the doctor with a three-page insurance examination form to fill out.

Other patients just love to talk. They are the real schedule-busters. They not only tell the, doctor about iheir symptoms, they babble endlessly about their sister-in-laws symptoms in Scranton.

Then there are telephone calls from patients who insist on talking to the doctor right now!

Doctors are sometimes called to the hospital for emer-gertcies. When this occurs, we always announce it to the patients in the waiting room, telling them the nature of the emergency, how long we estimate the wait will be and offer to reschedule them. For the most part, they are very understanding and appreciate being told.

A DOCTORS NURSE IN SYRACUSE, N.Y.

Storing staple foods such as coffee, flour or raisins in the refrigerator keeps them fresh longer.

When cooking apples to make sauce or fillings, use appte juice or cider instead of water to Intensify the flavor.

Art you oxporlonelno.

NECK. SHOULDER. ARM. LOW BACK OR LEG PAIN

from Mcidont or htfury

Now tlwouotr LOT Thormogriphy wo can dhignota and affoclirty (root your profatonw.

FAMILY CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH UCCIDENT SERVICES

756-8160

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Show-Stoppers In Italy

MISSONI COLLECTION - Included in the Missioni fashions shown in Milan, Italy earlier this week was this blanket plaid

knit cape with a circular knitted skirt. It was part of the fall-winter collection for this year.(AP Laserphoto)

DEAR ABBY: Your recent reply to a woman who waited 2'/j hours to see a doctor with whom she had an appointment indicated you believe that such experiences are very common. I hope they are not.

Delays do occur. Emergencies intervene, babies are born on their own timetables, medical problems cannot be precisely timed, and some medical practices are better organized than others. Our office staffs can help by telling patients when the appointment schedule has been thrown seriously out of kilter. Patients certainly are entitled to know about inordinate delays. Sometimes they may elect to reschedule their appointment for another day.

I believe most doctors would appreciate receiving a factual letter from any patient who feels his or her time was not given basic consideration within their appointment scheduling. If your readers write to the American Academy of Family Physicians about serious problems in this regard, I will look for opportunities to share the information with other practicing physicians, residents and medical students as part of our continuing efforts to meet patients needs.

Improving mutual understanding is certainly worth our best efforts. Sincerely,

GERALD R. GEHRINGER, M.D., PRESIDENT, AMERICAN ACADEMY OF FAMILY PHYSICIANS, 1740 W. 92nd ST., KANSASCITY, MO. 64114

y

DEAR ABBY: When I threw my bridal bouquet at my wedding reception, guess who caught it? My husbands mother!

Abby, I had my bridal bouquet specially made with silk flowers in the color scheme of my wedding, intending to preserve it along with my wedding gown and veil.

Should my mother-in-law have returned the bouquet to me? She has not offered it back.

DISAPPOINTED

DEAR DISAPPOINTED: According to Emily Post, the bridesmaid who catches the brides bouquet keeps it, but Im sure if your mother-in-law knew how much you wanted it, shed return it. Ask her.

Incidentally, traditionally the bride tosses her bouquet to her bridesmaids, and the one who catches it is supposed to be married next, so your mother-in-law really should not have been in the com-petitin.

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.

Bridal Policy

A black and white glossy five by seven photograph Is requested for engagement announcements, For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.

Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second

week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement. Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.

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4-TheDaUyReneclor, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, March 11,1983    ^

Editorials

Hope For The Future

A report ranking among the most significant news stories of the week came Tuesday with announcement by a team of EPA-financed microbiologists they have discovered a bacteria which decomposes PCBs.

Typically, one spokesman for the University of Tennessee researchers was cautious, saying we try to hold down enthusiasm.

Again, typically, work to expand the discovery is continuing.

PCBs, once manufactured for use in electrical transformers. have been often pointed to as a fearful long-lasting chemical compound believed to cause cancer.

North Carolina knows too well the problem of coping with that pollutant. Other states know, too.

A landfill in Warren County, where PCBs were disposed of in a carefully chosen site with elaborate precautions taken to prevent spreading contamination, stirred months of protest by concerned people.

Barring unexpected difficulties, the resolving of how to handle the pollutant is in sight. (Would that all our problems had such a promising rainbow.)

It took something around five years for the University of Tennessee to find an answer, and it may take as long or longer to discover answers to other dangerous chemicals contaminating the land. But the point is, if there was an answer to the PCB problem, there is most likely an answer to other similar problems.

It should make us all feel better about the future.

Proper AAove For EPA

*

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Anne Gorsuch Burford has resigned after strong public criticism of the agencys toxic waste cleanup procedures.

Mrs. Burford was defended to the end by President Reagan who, in accepting her resignation, told her she could leave with your head held high. The president called her resignation an occasion for sorrow. He expressed disappointment that some persons have unjustly attacked you and have made unfair judgments based upon allegations and innuendo alone.

There obviously are problems in the EPA and, even if the president thinks the criticism of Mrs. Burford is unfair, the buck has to stop somewhere.

There is a great interest in a clean environment in our nation. With all the controversy surrounding the EPA, it is clearly logical that new leadership be sought. Mrs. Burfords resignation paves the way for this and, in that sense, it was a proper move.

. James Kilpaftick.

Justke Burger Has A Point

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court of the United States is in deep trouble. For purposes of discussion, I ask you to accept that premise. If something is to be done about the situation - something along the lines recently suggested by Chief Justice Burger - Congress must be prodded by public comment into/emedial action.

Simple statistics tell a part of the story. Thirty years ago the Court had 1,463 cases on its docket; it handed (town 65 signed opinions. Last year the Court had 5,311 cases on its docket; there were 141 signed opinions. The statistics do not tell the whole story. As one who has covered the Court closely for this same period, let me ask you to accept this premise also; the volume of work has gone up, the quality of the Courts output has gone down. Struggling against a flood of paperwork, the Courts nine members simply do not have time for thoughtful reflection and careful writing.

In his speech of Feb. 6 to the American Bar Association, Burger called upon Congress for relief. He proposed that for a period of five years, two judges from each

of the 13 federal circuit courts be named to a ^ial pool. From this pool, seven or nine judges a year would be drawn. This panel would hear and decide all intercircuit conflicts. The Supreme Court would reserve a ri^t to review these decisions, thus preserving the constitutional mandate of one supreme court, but Burger made it implicit that such a final review would rarely be granted.

Just a couple of weeks ago, on Feb. 23, reporters saw a striking example of how the Burger plan might work in practice. Seven signed opinions were handed down that day. Four of them involved the kind of intercircuit conflicts that Burger would give to the new appellate panel.

One of the four cases had to do with a dispute involving rival teachers unions in Perry Township, Ind. A union known as the PEA won exclusive bargaining rights. As part of its victory, the PEA also won exclusive rights to use the teachers mailboxes. The other union, known as the PLEA, insisted on access to the mailboxes. This titanic issue went to court, and the PEA won. Trivial as it all sounds, the litigation raised First Amend-

ment questions that had been decided differently by the several federal circuits.

A sec(M)d case dealt with a kidnapping and rape in Connecticut in 1975. At the defendants trial in 1976, the trial judge instructed the jury that A persons intention may be inferred from his conduct, and every person is conclusively presumed to intend the natural and necessary consequences of his act. Three years later, in what is known as the Sandstrom case, the Supreme Court held that such an instruction violates the 14th Amendment, but the Court left open the question of whether the giving of this instruction may be harmless error. Since then the circuits have divided on the issue. The Supreme Court ruled, 54, that the error was not harmless.

A third opinion on Feb. 23 involved the circumstances under which an applicant may be denied a license to deal in guns Some circuits had ruled one way, some another. The fourth case dealt with a complex situation, of interest almost solely to lawyers, involving litigation under the Federal Employees Compensation Act. Again, the circuits had divided.

Now, none of the four cases was of ear-thshaking importance. The constittional questions raised in Indiana and Connecticut were mcHehills, not mountains. The other two cases involved statutory interpretation of limited application. Nevertheless, the intercircuit conflicts had to be resolved, and under the present setup, only the Supreme Court can resolve them.

Rie proposed new panel would relieve the hi^ court of 35 to 50 such cases a year, and thus might achieve a reduction of more than 25 percent in the laborious work of preparing full-blown, signed opinions. No one can promise that such relief would restore the great, magisterial tone that we expect from the S(^reme Court. A great, magisterial tone is a product of personality, not jurisdiction. Such justices as Harlan, Fortas, Jackson, Frankfurter and Black could speak eloquently for the ages; todays justices speak in dull and desiccated prose for a Wednesday morning. But we have to try something, and 4he Burger plan sounds good to me.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

OK,OK! mi smT Fws kimyRowland Evans and Robert Novak-

Pau\ T. O'Connor

Slow Time In Legislature

RALEIGH - We re coming into the middle of March, a time when the Romans are war>, the Irish are happy and people connected with the General Assembly get sleepy. Were in the March doldrums - a time when all the action in the legislative Building is in the cafeteria where everybod-y's got time for another coffee and another old story.

Every year, legislative reporters get to write one story about how slow things are They compare the flow of legislation this year with that of the last session and they get a few comments from veteran legislators. Something like, 'ive been here 140 terms and this is the slowest since we had to ratify the Bill of Rights.

Theres evidence that this session is moving along more slowly than the 1981 session. As of the first week of March, the assembly had approved only about two-thirds as much legislation as they had at a similar point in the 1981 session. Theyre also filing fewer bills about 95 percent of last sessions total in the House, 75 percent in the Senate.

That may be changing. Gerry Cohen,The Daily Reflector

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head of the assemblys bill drafting operation, says his staff has written 10 percent more bills this session. Sounds like a lot of legislation is about to get dumped in the hopper. But even then, itll be a while before it gets to the floor.

In defense of our legislators, there is a considerable amount of work being done. Its the kind of stuff we in the press dont write about because its very technical and most people wouldnt want to read about it. But, it takes a lot of time.

For example, the House Judiciary IV Committee spent a full hour last week on a one-page bill that tightens the registration requirements for day care homes private homes which hold a half-dozen or less children during the day. Almost everybody on the committee agreed with the principle behind the bUl. But nobody could figure out how to write it. Legislators wanted to close loopholes in current law. But when they tried, they realized they would be requiring people to register even if they just watched after their neighbors kids for a few hours. The committee sent it back to a subcommittee.

Such legislative tooth-gnashing is going on all over the assembly. The child support package has been written and rewritten and rewritten. And it hasnt moved out of the Senate yet. The same committee had to delay for another week its action on a mediation bill. Better to slow it down and get it right. Sen. R.C. Soles, D-(tolumbus, committee chairman, said.

Rep. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, put his hazardous waste bill in the h^per early in the session. But that bill only came out of subcommittee last week. Again, its a highly technical bill that required a lot of nitpicking.

The Appropriations committees are going through their budgets a line at a time. With each line, a bureaucrat has to explain what the moneys being spent for. Legislators ask good questions and the bureaucrats explain how the federal government wont allow us to save money that way.

The Judiciary committees have spent two months trying to understand (5ov. Jim Hunts drunken driving bills and then trying to change them. Regardless of what we end up with, no one will be able to say that Hunt stampeded those bills through the assembly.

Theres a lot going on in the assembly these days. A lot of debating, amending and clarifying. All pretty boring. Some pretty important. And theres not a soft place to snooze ip either building.

Israel Speaks Up For Zaire

WASHINGTON - Israel is using us unmatched influence on Capitol Hill to persuade critics of Zaires President Mobutu to vote the full $20 million in military aid asked by President Reagan, a unique thrust into U.S. politics designed to further Israels diplomatic offensive in Africa but potentially unsettling to U.S. security interests.    

The thrust may rescue Zaires aid package, deeply endangered by years of accumulated congressional resentment toward corruption in the strategic, mineral-rich nation that was the Belgian Congo of colonial days. Why should Israel lobby for another country? Intelligence specialists who deal with Africa told us an Israeli cleanup of Mobutus tarnished

Elisha Douglas

Strength For Today

We live in an age which thinks very little about angels. In fact, most people would dismiss the whole idea of angels with a smile. Yet, the Bible undoubtedly teaches that angels are real.

And they are not all in heaven. They are right here on earth around about us.

Every person has a guardian angel, and hosts of angels (the word means messenger) bear tidings to our hearts from God himself and then go to the very

throne of God carrying our jjeeds, wishes and petitions. They are in the midst of the worlds busy life, definitely carrying on a ministry of helpfulness and protection.

The conviction that there are heavenly messengers surrounding us every minute ought to make even the coldest-hearted person respond with faith and hope. The God who marks the fall of a sparrow is never indifferent to any thing in the lives of his children.

reputation in Congress was the price offered in return for Zaires diplomatic recognition of Israel last May.

Beyond mere reco^ition, Jerusalem has in mind broad political and economic inroads in black Africa, where most diplomatic contacts with Israel ended after the six-day war of 1%7. If successful with its Zaire account, Israel is likely to broker aid favors for other pariahs on the congressional hit list to enhance its influence. Israel has been quietly pressing administration officials particularly in the Pentagon and CIA - to relax present U.S. strictures against Ethiopia, Iran and even the Central African Republic.

The unusual prospect of Israel serving as the secret Washington attorney for such clients makes some high officials in the administration worry that the Begin government may use its influence in ways that threaten President Reagans national security policies. Whether or not such worries are justified, the reality of any foi^eign government with such influence on Capitol Hill can be disquieting.

President Mobutus need for help in getting his embattled aid program through Cdngress was obvious to then Defense Minister Ariel Sharon long before he went to Kinshasa last year to seal the deal for re-establishing diplomatic relations (which includes Israeli training of Mobutus presidential guard.)

Mobutu has been harshly criticized by members of congress acrossthe board

ideologically for personal and official corruption, the criticism coming from such pro-Israeli lawmakers as New Yorks liberal Democratic representative Steven Solarz and conservative Republican representative Jack Kemp. Aid to Zaire has been earmarked for heavy congressional surgery that could prove fatal to Mobutu, considering the importance to him of preserving the American tie both for his international standing and his domestic power. Sharon and Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir undertook to strengthen Zaires bridge to Washington, something beyond Mobutus capability.

In pushing the overall U.S. aid program (including the Zaire packagq), Israel safeguards its own aid interests. Congress again this year intends to raise Israels military grant aid, this time by $300 ' million over Reagans request. Both Israel and its congressional allies have been worried that reducing aid to other countries while the Jewish state gets more could backfire.

But the Zaire connection promises much richer rewards for Israel: an intelligence listening post in the center of black Africa (Zaire borders nine countries); a foothold for economic dealings in strategic minerals of immense value; a break in the anti-Israel chain stretched across black and Moslem Africa 16 years ago.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc

James Gerstenzang.

White House Sees New Controversy

WASHINGTON,.iAP) - Seemingly in tandem with the crocuses that are signaling the arrival of a new season in the nations capital, controversy is fringing back to life around the Reagan White House after a fairly quiet winter.

President Reagan and his aides have been doing battle on at least two major fronte, as they tackle problems at the Environmental Protection Agency and in El Salvador, just as the early signs of recovery are allowing them to relax their attention at least momentarily from the economy.

Throughout the Washington winter, the administrations leaders were preoccupied with the seasonal chore of preparing the budget, less controversial this year'than In winters past because the direction of the presidents program was well known.

But with the budget submitted, and Congress still gearing up for certain battle, the president has been able to shift his attention, albeit not to subjects necessarily of his choosing.

The White House staff has been unable to control the direcon of the EPA controversy; and the presidents sudden, intense focus on El Salvador has been dictated to some extent by developments in the Central American nation, where government troops have had increasing difficulty in stopping the leftist rebels.

While the president headed west last week for a few days at his California ranch ^ a visit with touring Queen Elizabeth II, he was given little respite. In public appearances he was asked about the EPA and El Salvador. In private momits, he met with senior advisers for strategy conferences and to be updated on txrth topics.

But one possible thorn was withdrawn, thanks to the voters In West Germany. They decided to keep Chancellor Helmut Kohl in office, removing the risk that Reagan would come under increasing pressure from a key ally to modify his arms control proposal at talks with the Soviet Union in Geneva.

The storm swirling around the Environmental Protection Agency has been growing for too long, and Involves such a variety of issues, that it is unlikey to dissipate quickly.

After saying little for the past several months about El Salvador, the president and his advisers are anxious about progress made by the insurants there and the SalvadCH-an governments difficulties in containing them. The presi-daits interest in booking military aid by $60 mllli(|n to fight the guerrillas Is

renewing attention paid to the administrations policies in Central America.

The more the president talks about El Salvador, the more he raises questions about the role of U.S. soldiers there. And the more the debate focuses on that topic the hotter it gets.

.Twice in nine days, Reagan has summoned Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and Senate to the White House for consultations on El Salvador and, in particular, on his plan to Increase military aid.

The meetings are apparently Intended to seek the widest possible consensus for his aid effort before he proceeds with it.

At the same time, Reads plans to Increase that aid are generating one more controversy around his White House.





^^    TheDaUyRenector. Greenville, N.C.-Friday. March 11, IW-SSuper Saturday

,. -W.' /

Sale 4.99 _

The JCPenney Towel. Ours alone in 15 rich fashion colors.

Reg. S7. Who'd expect such a light price in a towel that weighs almost a full pouno'^ The JCPenney Towel in super-thick, super-rich cotton polyester terry

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Queen .................... $95    $76

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Matching bedskirts also on sale.    ,    .    ,

Sale $48 pr Reg. $60. Matching priscilla curtains, PO'vester fill; poly/cotton cover 96x84.

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Wicker-lookTextilene Cane'bench

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6The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, March 11,1983

In The Area Ask Relaxing Argentine GovernmentUnhappp

Of Standards Over U. S. Document On Cubans

Fire-Rescue Calls Rported

Greenvilles Fire-Rescue Department responded to 226 calls - 160 rescue calls and 66 fire calls in February, according to Chief Jenness Allen,

The chief said 128 city rescue calls were answered and 32 were from the county. He said 102 city residents, 44 county citizens and 14 non-residents were transported by the rescue units during the month.

Allen said the 66 fire calls involved 22 actual fires, 15 for rescue assistance. 25 false alarms, and four service calls.

PItf Schools Air Viewpoint'

Teachers Make It Happen" will be the topic of this weeks' Pitt County Schools' Viewpoint," a radio show aired on several local stations.

Host Barry Gaskins will talk with Nancy Jessup and Rose Marie Sherman, Pitt Countvs teachers of the year for 1981 and 1982.

The show is scheduled at the following times and stations: Saturday. 7:30 a.m. WITN-FM, 8:30 a.m. WGHB-AM, 8:25 a.m. WOW-AM; Sunday. 8:30 a.m. WRQR-FM; 1:06 p.m. WNCT-AM. and Monday. 3:05p.m. WBZQ-FM.

For further information contact Pitt County Community Schools at 752-6106, e.xtension 249.

Barnes Appointed Chairman

The Rev Charles Barnes of St. James Christian Church, Fountain, has been appointed chairman of the annual Wheels for Life" Rike-a-thon to be held in Fountain to benefit St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital.

Mary Sue Harrell is chairman of the Bethel Bike-a-thon for the same cause. She is dispatcher for the Bethel Police Department.

Both events are scheduled for April 9, with rain dates of April 16.

Sickle Cell Drive Launched

A program to raise funds for the fight against sickle cell anemia in underway in eastern North Carolina.

The Hallow Distributing Co. of Greenville is participating by distributing store poster cans which call attention to sickle cell anemia and' provide opportunity for the public to contribute to the cause Sickle cell is an inherited blood disease that strikes one out of every ,')6i) tilack Americans.

Professor Heads Reserve Unit

Reserve Col. Sheldon C Downes of Greenville has been appointed commanding officer of the Marine Corps Staff Reserve Augmentation Unit at the headquarters of the Atlantic Command, Norfolk. \ a.

Prior to this appointment, he' was executive officer of the Mobilization Training Unit at the Second Marine Aircraft Wing, Cherry Point. In his new command Col. Downes will direct staff officers in intelligence and operations sections that support the commander of the Atlantic Command.

In civilian life. Col. Downes is chairman of the department of rehabilitation studies of the East Carolina University School of .Allied Health.

Davis Named To State Board

Dr. Trenton G, Davis of Greenville has been named a member of the North Carolina Board of Sanitarian Examiners.

Davis is chairman of the department of environmental health of the East Carolina University School of Allied Health. His term on the state board will expire Dec. 15,1985.

Poster, Essay Winners Named

Winners of a '1!ealth> Living' poster contest for grades K-6 and a How Can I Maintain My Health " essay contest for grades 7 and 8 in Greenville and Pitt County schools have been announced.

K-3 winners were Jeremy Williams of Sadie Saulter Schools second grade, first place, and Tracy Downing of Sadie Saulters third grade,- second place.

Four-6 winners were Eric Sparrow of Grifton Elementary Schools sixth grade, first place, and Stacie 'Man of Ayden Middle Schools fifth grade.

The es.say contest winners were Tom Ricks of Ayden Middle Schools seventh grade, first, and Michelle Crawford of Farmville Middle School s eighth grade', second place.

Judges were Lillian Br.'Ilev of the Pitt County schools. Charles Ross of the Greenvillc schoets and Pat Byrd and Barbara Lanford, Dith of Uie Pitt County Health Department.

The winning entries will be forwarded to Raleigh, where a special committee will select the statewide winners,

Cox Class Plans Yard, Bake Sale

The A (L Cox School seventh grade GT class will sponsor a yard and bake sale Saturday from 9 am. until noon. It will be held at the GT trailer at the school, located on Church and Sylvania streets. In cast* oi ram, the sale will be held in the school multipurpo.se ri)im

Gardner Named Society's Historian

Lloyd Gardner of v\ dliaiiiston, a .sophomore in the East Carolina University Schwil of'I'echnoiogy, has been appointed state historian of Phi Beta Lambda honor society.

He fills an iinexpired term and will be responsible for publication of the spring statewide Phi Beta Lambda newsletter He also plans to attend the society's state leadership conference in Greensboro .March 24-27.

His parents are Mr and .Mrs. Stancil Gardner of 902 Hyland Ave., Williamston.

East Says Funding Short

'fhe R.eagan administration'> proposed defense budget leaves North Carolina's five major military installations seriously underfunded," Sen. John East .said this week.

East, in a letter to Senate Armed ,Services Committee Chairman Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, said a preliminary review" of the budget indicates a funding shortfall primarily m military comstructin and operations and maintenance" for the state's facilities.

A member of the subcommittee on military construction of the Armerl .Services Committee. Easts letter was in response to a request by Tower for senators to identify areas in their home states where military spending could be cut.

Galloways Attend Conference

1 Mr. and Nlrs, James N, (ialloway ot Greenville attended the tobacco conference held in Myrtle Beach, S.C., Tuesday and Wednesday.

The educational conference w;as sponored by the colleges of agriculture m the five states th^t produce flue-cured tobacco. Galloway is president of the Pitt County Farm Bureau.

Bloodmobile Visit Successful

Thursdays bloodmobile visit at I) H. Conley High School resulted in the collection of 192 pints of blood, according to local Red Cross spoke.-rwoman Ruth Taylor.

She said that 34 deferrals were recorded during the drive, which was coordinated by school principal Bob Carraway. Mrs. Taylor said there were some first-time donors Thursday among the students and faculty at Conley.

The next school visit will be on Wednesday at Ayden-Grifton High School. Mrs. Taylor said the drive is scheduled for 9 a.m. until 2 p.m.

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Developers of a pn^iosed peat mining and metbanol project in Washington County have asked North Carolina officials to relax state mercury standards at the site.

Meanwhile, the U.S. General Accounting Office is probing a decision to provide a potential $465 million in federal loan guarantees to the project.

The request by Peat Methanol Associates for less stringent requirements follows earlier findings that some mercury masure-ments in waters draining from the site near Creswell exceeded by 40 times the standard for waterways.

The company wants to build a $500 million plant that would convert locally mined peat into methanol, an alcohol motor fuel.

Environmentalists have raised concerns that the project could harm water tables and marine life.

R. Paul Wilms, of the North Carolina Environmental Management Division, said the state standard was being reviewed.

It would be premature at this point to say there is a consensus on the state level that the standards are too stringent, said Wilms. We havent determined that yet,

State officials said Thursday Peat Methanol could have petitioned the state Environmental Management Commission for a variance from the rules.

But the company decided to challenge a state law-passed in 1979 requiring the commission to revise a water quality standard if natural background conditions in the stream segment preclude the attainment of the applicable water standards at reasonable cost.

The law requires, among other things, that petitioners show the revision wouldnt endanger human health or safety.

My understanding is this provision of the law has not been used before, said Jay Langfelder, assistant secre-

Registering For CombinedClass

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department will continue registration for lessons in a combined class of modern jazz, tap, ballet exercise and acrobatics.

The six-week session will be held on Tuesday evenings beginning next week at Jaycee Park. Each class will be one hour long. Three- and 4-year olds will have class from 5:15-6:15 p.m. Some 5-through 9-year olds will be taken in the 6:20-7:20 class if they have previous dance experience.

Class fees are $10 for six weeks. Preregistration is a must and can be made by calling either the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department at 752-4137, ext. 200, or Diane Lamb at 756-7849.

Rehearsal

The Sweet Hope Traveling Choir will celebrate its third anniversary Sunday at 4 p.m. at Sweet Hope Church.

Guest choirs may register beginning at 3:30 p.m. The Sweet Hope singers will meet with the pastor at the church at 4 p.m. Saturday and will then hold a rehearsal.

BUS SERVICE Poplar Hill Free Will Baptist Church will have a bus running from Bells Service Station on 3rd Street in Greenville to the church at 12:30 p.m. Sunday. At 3 p.m., the bus will take the congregation to Cedar Grove Missionary Baptist Church for the quarterly meeting service. There will be a $1 charge to ride the bus.

EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.

Fair Sunday, then partly cloudy through Tuesday. High mostly in 50s Sunday and 50s and 60s Monday and Tuesday. Low mainly in 30s except some 40s Monday and Tuesday.

tary for natural resources.

He said because of the mercury levels, the project would not qualify for required wastewater discharge permits under the existing standard of no more than .05 parts per billion.

Peat Methanol is seeking to loosen the standard to allow yearly average mercury levels of one part per billion or 20 times the current standard and spot sample readings of up to 2.5 parts per billion or 50 times higher.

The commission received the companys petition on Monday.

Critics of Peat Methanols proposed plant say theyre concerned about the effect the mining might have on mercuryb levels in waterways. However, a Peat Methanol official said Thursday that mining may have no effect on the volume of water that drains from the peat fields or on mercury levels.

Investigators from the U.S. General Accounting Office have begun making contacts in North Carolina after Rep. John D. Dingell, D-Mich., in January requested a review of the decision of the U.S. Synthetic Fuels Corp.

The corporation, which is a federal agency, provides loans and loan guarantees to encourage alternativei energy sources.

GAO spokesman Laura Kopelson in Washington said Dingell had asked the agency to investigate the legality of Synfuels Corp.s letter of intent guaranteeing a minimum price for the methanol fuel the plant would produce and backing part of the developers debt.

She said the review would take months to complete.

Usher's Week At Burney's

An Ushers Week of Services will be held Monday through Friday at Burneys Chapel Free Will Baptist Church. The services will begin each night at 7:30. The speaker for the week will be Rev, C.R, Parker.

The choir Monday night will be the Coreys Chapel combined choir. Music will be provided by the St. Monica senior choir Tuesday night. Wednesday, White Oak senior choir No. 2 will render music. Cedar Grove male chorus will- participate Thursday night and the music Friday will be performed by the Cherry Grove senior choir.

Correction

The Farmville Area Chamber of Commerce will hold its annual dinner March 22 at 7 p.m. The $7.50 tickets must be purchased in advance and the deadline for ticket purchase is March 16.

The Daily Reflector erroneously reported Thursday that the dinner would be held Tuesday.

FIRED AT STRIKERS

LIMA, Peru (AP) - Police firing submachine guns killed three people and wounded four others during a strike by tens of thousands of workers protesting the governments economic policies, authorities said.

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) - President Gen. Reynaldo Bi^ne has accused the United States of interfering in Argentinas internal affairs by distributing a State Department document on Cuban support for Argentine revolutionaries.

Bignone made the accusation Thursday in New Delhi, India, where he was attending the summit of non-aligned nations. He was quoted here by the official

MIG Base

TOKYO (AP) - The Japanese government believes Soviet MiG-21 fighters are stationed on Etorofu, one of the four Kurile islands off northern Japan which the Soviets occupied in World War II, the Defense Agency told the Diet (Parliament) Thursday.

Hirokazu Arai, the agencys director-general for foreign relations, said the agency reached this conclusion because 11 MG-21S landed at a base on Etorofu in December, and MG-21S scrambled three times this year against Japanese aircraft off Hokkaido, Japans northern island.

Defense Ministry officials also said about 10,000 Soviet troops are stationed on the four islands, which Japan owned from 1875 to 1945 and still claims. The Soviet refusal to give them up and the Soviet military presence there are a constant irritant to Japanese-Soviet relations.

First Timothy Plans Services

Services will be held Monday through Friday of next week at First Timothy Church, 710 Dickinson Ave.

Monday Eldress Ernestine Vines and the St. James Senior Choir will lead the service. Other services and their leaders include: Tuesday, Eldress Mary Jo Atkinson and the Spiritual Singers of Greenville; Wednesday, Eldress (Jladys Worthington and the St. James Gospel Choir; Thursday, Eldress Leccie Edwards and the Jubilee Gospel Choir, and Friday, Eldress Phillis Watts and the English Chapel Gospel Chorus.

Prayer service will be held at 7 p.m. daily. The regular service will be at 7:30 p.m.

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Argentine news agency Telam.

The diplomatic flap began with the publication Wednesday on the front page of the Buenos Aires Daily La Nacin of excerpts from a United States Information Service document distributed here the previous day by the U.S. Embassy.

The document described Cuban government aid to leftist guerrillas who tried to take power here during the mid-1970s. The guerrilla violence was cited by the military as a key reason for its 1976 coup, and the ruling generals were openly anticommunist and anti-Cuban until last year.

The U.S. document was released a day after Bignones New Delhi speech thanking Cuba and its leader, Fidel Castro, for moral and diplomatic support of Argentina in last years war with Britain over the Falkland Islands.

The foreign ministry Wednesday demanded an explanation of the document from U.S. Ambassador Harry Shlaudeman, who met for an hour with Argentine authorities at the ministry. He told journalists following ' the session the distribution of the document had no political connotations.

He described the timing of the documents distribution as an unfortunate coincidence.

Bignone said in New Delhi the incident was an episode of bad taste.

The United States, in making this reference to

Fidel Castros stqiport for terrorist movements in Latin America and particularly in Argentina at the moment when the Argentine president is taking part in this (non-aligned) conference, evidently in some way is interfering in the internal affairs of the Argentine r^lic, he said.

U.S.-Argentine relations, which in 1981 were flourishing because of the.

two govemmentss common anti-communist committment, declined sharply afto* WashingUm backed BriUin in the Falklands conflict. ' Cubas support for Ar^ tina in the war resulted in the restoration of full diplomatic relations betwera the two nations. TIk Cuban Embassy here and the Argentine Embassy in Havana bad been without ambassadors since 1981.

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City Council...

*    The    r^HMnvilU    ITHKH.

(Cootmied (ran Pagel)

' Barnes o St. Andrewa Drive said his nrigbi)orhood had no objections to Wards pian at the present time.

The board, with councU member Judy Greene casting an opposing vote, adopted an ordinance amending the city code to authorize the Board of Adjustments to issue ^ial use permits (or nighbclubs and other similar activities The council has been considering the nightclub permits.

Cox said the action takes the matter out of the hands of the

council and he expressed reservations in that he felt the council had a responsibility to help ke^ Greenville a good ; clm town. Cox said, however, that the Board of Adjustments is a judicial body that can handle the requests.

Councilman Louis Gark said he considered it a wise move to give the adjustments board the authwlty to consider the nightclub permits. Gark said he felt it would be m the best interest of the city to take politics out of the permit process.

Coimcilman Shiart Shinn said he wished there could be a moratorium cm nightclubs.

In other action, the council ;

- Continued action on a request for a public hearing on a petition for satellite annexation of the Carolina Opry House;

; - Awarded a proposal submitted by Branch Ranking & Trust Co. for city banking services for two years;

- Awarded a bid for pdice ^ring-summer uniforms to Franks Uniforms of Savannah, Ga., for $10,733;

- Adopted an ordinance amending the citys personnel wliciesvordinance relative to employment of relatives, group

' ife insurance, longevity, cretitable service retirement, and hew discliplinary procedures.

- Adopted a Greenville Utilities resolution authorizing the abandonment of an easement and authorizing the execution of a deed of release for the new radiation therapy unit located between Pitt County Memorial Hospital and the Brodv Building;

- Continued action on scheduling a public hearing on the proposed noise ordinance;

Adopted a resolution declaring approximately 500 parking meters as surplus property and authorized disposal by private sale at a negotiated price;

- Adopted a resolution establishing a policy regarding the citys unappn^riated fund balance, resolving that the cash on hand as of June 30 of each year will be used to establish such a balance which would equal 8 percent of the annual city budget;    j

- Approved a contract with Pitt County relative to ^lumishing data processing services for the city;

- Adopted of an ordinance providing for the voluntary use of roll-out carts for garbage collection in the city

^ - Adopted a resolution establishing a petty cash fund in -purchasing, with a maxumum limit of s;

- Adopted a resolution requesting the Legislature to repeal the citys cemetery fund; and

- Reappointed WUliam H. Taft Jr. to a five-year term on the Greenville Utilities Commission. Taft had filled an unexpired term on the board.

Hie Greenville Utilities Commisskm, at the request of the dty, is installing U new bi^ressure sodium street ll^ts on Fifth Street, between Memorial Drive and the Pitt County Memorial Hospital emergency entrance.

Malcolm Green, siqierio-tendent of GUCs Electric Department, said eight less-efficient mercury vapor lights were replaced with hi^^ressure sodium units and 10 additkmal lights added along the stretch of roadway.

Installation of the new lights cost about $4,000, which will be paid for by theGUC.

However, the city will pay a monthly fee of $11.96 for each light to offset the cost of electricity used by the 2S0-watt units.

The monthly fee for the less-efficient mercury vapor lights that were removed was $12.50.

Donor Again Helps Fund

Student Paper 1$ Suspended

Won $15,000 But

i

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I

To Lose Welfare

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) - A dispute about confidentiality and counseling at Calvin College has led to suspension of the schools student newspaper. Chimes, until a new staff and editor are named.

The newspaper was suspended this week by ad-minstrators of the 3,800-student college operated by the Christian Reformed Church of North America.. It came after the Chftnes staff voted to print and distribute an editorial asking for information on a rumor that a college chaplain or counselor had disclosed information given in confidence.

Rod Ludema, the papers editor, said he had been ordered by the schools Communications Board not to print the editorial.

MIDLAND, Pa. (AP) -Mrs. Calabash, the mysterious benefactress of Beaver County food banks for the unemployed, has struck again, this time with a $2,000 St. Patricks Day gift.

It kind of renews your faith in people when she p<^s in here, said Jack Conway, manager of the Preservation Food Bank at Local 1212 of the United Steelworkers union in Midland.

She kind of pulls it off at the right time, iriien youre at your lowest, he said today.

Mrs. Calabash is a gray-haired woman who has donated $16,000 to two Beaver County food funds during the past seven months. She ke^s her identity a secret, and has contributed all but $3,000 in cash.

Thursday evening she walked into the Preservation Food Bank and handed an envelope marked Happy St. Patricks Day to the union local secretary, Conway said.

The envelope contained $2,000 in $50 and $20 bills, he said. The money helps the food fund feed 1,600 families a month, most of them the victims of Steel industry layoffs.

She caught everybody off guard, he said. We thank her the best way we can without calling any attention to her.

A food bank run by the county United Way agency received a $3,000 check recently, and while United Way Executive Director T.R. Graham says he knows who Mrs. Calabash is, hes not telling.

The late comedian Jimmy Durante used to sign off his radio and television shows with Good night, Mrs. Calabash, wherever you are, and he used to call his first wife, Maude Jean Olson, by that name.

Support Appeal For Negotiation

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) - A blind, one-legged diabetic who receiv^ a $15,00 settlement in a fals&arrest and assault suit says hell lose welfare benefits when he accepts it.

I cant even win by win-ningl said Ronald Ehler, 38.

Eliler sued the Orange Couirty Sheriffs Department after he was arrested Aug. 30, 1979, outside the Dana Trader Restaurant in Dana Poiijt.

H won the cash settlement e<^sda

Wet^sday. But Thursday he

fo^ out that accepting the

cash will cut him off from Me(i-Cal, which pays for his dail^ insulin injection, and Supplemental Security In-corm, a federal benefit he recaves because he is blind.

Eiler lost his leg in 1973, whep an old surfing wound caui^ an infection. A year later, diabetes, which he suffered for 20 years, claiiied his sight. In 1977 the Dank Point resident started treatment for cancer of the colop.

A psychology student at SadAeback (follege, Ehler livet on $528 in Social Security If nefits he receives each moiM. He will lose $74 a monui in those benefits when he Receives his settlement awa^d.

Uflder Medi-Cal and Social Secmty, a recipient loses benlfits if he finds himself, as Ehler would, with more than $1,500.

^^feel like Ive lost my cas if I dont retain my mescal benefits, Ehler said! ive been punished by our system. It (me ill. I have to say, I I litUe bitter. ording to his suit, Ehler en leaving the restau-ranj*at 1 a.m. with a friend, wh| two women attacked theririend in an apparent roblery attempt in the ^ jlot.

$er tried to aid his friend lie screamed ^Tor help, Gary WeUC Ehleris ey.

later, he heard, voices order him to, halts The voices were those ^

suit said. One shoved him over the patrol car, slamming his face on the hood, and one deputy, reaching for Ehlers ri^t leg, pulled off the artificial leg, according to the suit.

It was not until a deputy told Ehler he was under arrest that Ehler realized the men were officers, the suit said, adding that the handcuffs were so tight Ehler lost the movement in his right hand.

Ehler was booked into Orange County Jail that morning on charges of drunk > and disorderly conduct. He spent 10 hours in jail, die first two houn, in< a hiding tank without his, false'leg, before he was released, he said.

According to court documents, the deputies said. Ehler first violently and viciously assaiflted them. They contendwl they uSed force to defend themselVes.

NEW YORK CAP) -Twenty-five Protestant and Roman Catholic leaders have cabled a message to the new Archbishop of San Salvador, Rivera y Damas, pledging support to his advocacy of negotiatons among warring factions in that country.

Such dialogue is an essential step toward solution of the armed conflict there, they said. However, the alternative U.S. proposal to intensify attempts to impose a military solution is, to our mind, irresponsible and inhumane.

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claimed, however, they did not Identify' the^ves as officers and be , belied they were attacking lend.    ^

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Marriage 'King' Plans For His 25th Divorce-

BLYTHE, Calif. (AP) - A 74-year-old who holds the worlds record for most marriages has decided to end No. 25 after just three weeks, because his latest wife wants to drink and have fun like these young ones.

If evei^ing goes right Im going fo get a divorce on April Fools Day, Glynn H. Scotty Wolfe said Thursday. Theres no fool like an^ old fool, but Id rather be an^* old fool than a dirty old man.

The certified marriage king, listed in the 1983 Guinness Book of World Records, took his most recent wedding march last Dec. 22, when he and Eileen Sheila Shelton, 23, pledged endless love in Las Vegas. After honeymooning there they set up house in their hometown of Blythe, 200 miles east of Los Angeles on the Arizona border.

The two signed iqi for classes at Palo Verde College along with 18-year-old Glynn Jr. one of Wolfes 40 children.

Wolfe carried his wifes books across campus and they helped each other with homework until the magic faded. They filed for divorce after three weeks of marriage.

We thought it was better if we cut it off. It was a lot of fun but we agreed to disagree, Wolfe said in a telephone interview. She likes to drink and have fun like these young ones ... I knew that before but its pretty hard when youre not Used to that,

These young ones have a lot of new things going, he added, new actions, new songs, new lies.

The 25th Mrs. Wolfe has moved to Hollywood and

there was no answer Thursday at the telephone number Wolfe gave for her.

Ilie latest split sets a new record for Wolfe, whose shortest previous marriage lasted 38 days until divorce papers were filed. The longest survived five years. The Guinness book says he has long kept two wedding dresses - in different sizes in his closet for ready us.

Wolfes nuptial exploits, which began in 1931, won him an all-expense-paid trip to Japan for a world record television special last year.

At that time he had his eye on an Oriental bride, figuring a geisha would know how to make a husband happy. She backed out by letter, saying she thought she should marry another Japanese.

Hes handling his own divorce in Riverside County Superior Court. The April 1 hearing date is fitting, he says, given that Ive been married on Valentines Day, the Fourth of July, Christmas, New Years, Easter and Washingtons birthday. Marriage is fun.

Wolfe said he already has in mind wife No. 26: a

The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, Much il, 1983-7

age of live-in love?

I dont Uke to live in sin, said Wolfe, who claims he was ordained a Baptist minister. Who likes to play marbles for fun? I like to play for keeps. Everybody thinks its fun to shack up

I think its fun to get married.

His advice for those contemplating marriage; Get along with them and let them do what they want. When you get tired of that, let em go.

N.J.

26-year-old Clinton, actress hes known for several years. He said she plans to visit Blythe, where he owns a small motel, once his latest divorce is final.

Why marry at all in the

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END TRADE BAN AMMAN, Jortan (AP) -The government has decided to end a 4-year ban on trade with Egypt and allow private companies to resume business with private Egyptian firms, the Jordan Times reported Tuesday.

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In a brief two hour session, women can learn more about what makes cars go and keeps them going, what to do when they dont and more.

For registration, please call 756-9371 or 752-4417 before 6 P.M. Tuesday, March 15th. Sponsored By

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Winery Legislafion Wins Approval In N.C. House

By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer R.\LEIGH, N.C. (AP) - California wineries, faced with state House approval of a bill that would make their franchise contracts more binding, may leave North Carolina in droves, the bill's leading House opponent says.

"Tills will discourage business." Rep. Bertha Holt, D-.\lamance, told the House during a two-hour debate on the bill Thursday. "This is the wlwlesalers license to steal. Its against fair competition.

The bill, approved 70-35, would let wineries assign one wholesaler to a designated territory, where once there were unlimited dealerships. Distributors could sell outside that territory, however.

In addition,~wineries could not cancel franchise agreements unless the wholesaler lost his license, went bankrupt or failed to maintain adequate sales.

Minor House changes in the bill must be approved by the Senate before it becomes law.

During debate, Rep. Martin Nesbitt, D-Buncombe, successfully argued that the wineries were unfairly manipulating distributors.

"WTiolesalers have been threatened with losing their franchises if they support this bill, he said. There is evidence of price setting, suppressing other wines from coming into the stale (and) shipping types (of wines) not marketable or profitable to distributors. 1 dont know of anybody thats denied this is going on.

He said since the bill was introduced Feb. 24, several wineries had terminated franchises because they supported the bill.

But Holt said wineries were cutting their ties to North Carolina because they wanted to leave the restrictive business climate the bill would bring.

She said the bill would set up a monopoly and questioned the states right to intervene in contracts between private parties. The result would be reduced competition and higher prices to consumers, Mrs. Holt said.

Nesbitt said the bill would result in lower prices when the California wines dont suppress the other wines coming into the state.

Mrs. Holt introduced an amendment that would let wineries establish unlimited dealerships in a given area a move Nesbitt said would undercut the intent of the bill. The amendment failed, 67-38.

Opponents continued delaying tactics, with Rep. Billy Clark, D-Cumberland, suggesting it go back to his Alcoholic Beverage Control Committee to consider 10 amendments proposed by Mrs. Holt.

But Nesbitt and Rep. Parks Helms, D-Mecklenburg, spoke against the proposal and it failed. 61-46.

The House approved an amendment asking wineries to make efforts to give franchises to minorities and women. Also approved was a technical amendment to clarify language saying a winery may have more than one distributor as long as they do not sell the same product. For example, one distributor could sell a winerys white wine while another sold red.    ,

In other legislative action;

WUdlife

The House Wildlife Resources Committee approved a bill allowing the state to charge $5 for each application to join state-managed deer hunts. The money would pay for the

Senator Offers N.C Ridge Law

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -State Sen. R.P. Bo Thomas. D-Henderson, introduced a bill Thursday for keeping high-rise buildings off mountain ridges, but at least one legislator is considering another approach to the problem.

Thomas bill would prohibit construction of buildings taller than three stories atop mountain ridges in 24 counties.

It would affect ridges at altitudes of more than 2,750 feet above sea level and would consider ridges to be any land within 100 feet below the mountain top.

Violation of the bill would be a misdemeanor and subject to a civil penalty of $50 per day.

He said he introduced the bill because he has received many telephone calls saying, somebody ought to have the courage to save the North Carolina mountains that belong to all of us in this state,

But Rep. Margaret Pinky Hayden, D-Alleghany, was circulating another bill among county officials in the western part of the state. She said she doesnt plan on introducing the bill until she receives comment from local officials.

Her bill would allow any county to adopt and enforce an ordinance regulating construction of tall buildings on mountain ridges.

It lists criteria that may be considered in denying permits, including danger to life or property from high winds, hazards to air travel, feasibility of supplying water or disposing of sewage, feasibility of providing fire service and impairment of natural beauty of the mountains.

It would apply to ridges with an elevation of 2,500 feet or more above sea level and ridges 500 feet or more above the adjacent valley floor.

computer drawing of participants.

Currently there is no charge to. apply to participate in the hunts, which are conducted at the end of the regular season. The number of participants is determined by the population of the deer herd on the game land.

The bill, introduced by Rep. Jim Lambeth, D-Davidson, also would allow the state to charge $5 to apply to join state-managed duck or goose hunts. The state Wilife Resources Commission hopes to start the hunts soon.

The bill would allow the state to charge $25 a day to hunt from each three-man blind. The fee could be split by the hunters using the blind.

Lambeth said the fees would pay for processing applications and maintaining blinds.

Volunteer Firemen

The House tentatively approved and sent to the Senate a bill that would exempt some small, rural volunteer fire departments from safety standards set up by the North Carolina Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

The bill, which brought dozens of firemen to the House galleries, had generated controversy in the House Judiciary IV Committee because of concerns that volunteers would not be adequately protected.

The bills sponsor. Rep. Billy Watkins, D-Granville, said such concerns were misplaced, since the state had no way of enforcing safety standards for the volunteer departments.

Under the bill, towns with populations below 10,000 could exempt themselves with the approval of the appropriate local officials, Watkins said.

Separation of Powers

The House Judiciary I Committee adopted a subcommittees recommendation giving the Legislature power to set salaries for several high government officials.

, Among the positions affected are commissioner of the Department of Motor Vehicles, banking commissioner. Employment Security Commission chairman and highway administrator.

Tom Gilmore, chairman of the Committee on Constitutional Integrity, told the committee to be careful in taking on such duties.

That could cripple the management of government, he said. I do not think you want to meet to manage state government on a day-to-day basis.

Gilmore, who was among those behind efforts to have legislators removed from the powerful Advisory Budget Commission, urged the committee to oppose efforts to let the Legislature or its members choose any ABC members.

But Rep. George Miller, D-Durham, chairman of the committee and a former ABC member, said that would be going too far.

If we dont watch out, were going to delegate the duties the legislatures been elected to perform, he said.

Willie M

Joint Base Budget Appropriations Committees on Education and Human Resources both considered funding for North Carolinas Wilke M program, which serves children who are emotionally disturbed and sometimes violent.

Discussions in the Human Resources budgetary committee centered around the possibility of easing a federal court order that set up the programs. That order resulted from a suit filed by four children, including Willie M., from which the program derives its name.

Officials told the committee "that in light of the states compliance with the order, more time might be allocated to extend services to all Willie M children. The state now funds programs that fully serve about 60 percent of them.

Members of the Education committee heard descriptions of the programs funded for the special children.

Credit

The House Banking Committee delayed voting on a bill that would let North Carolina police credit institutions in the state instead of the federal government.

Discussion on the bill bogged down over a provision that would let banks and lending institutions charge up to $20 for credit cards, provided a court case rules such charges are legal in North Carolina.

Human Resources

A bill that would use day care licensing money to help educate the public about day care in North Carolina was approved by the House Human Resources Committee.

The bill would shift about $95,000 a year from the General Fund to an account in the Department of Adminstration, with both collections and distributions managed by the DOA.

Since that would mean a loss to general government, the bill will be sent to the House Appropriations Committee for consideration.

Equipment Fees

The House Finance Committee approved a bill authorizing the commissioner of motor vehicles to collect a fee covering the costs of approving vehicle equipment.

The fees would cover the costs of verifying that the equipment complies with either federal or state standards, Confidential Information

Representatives of two professional organizations urged the Senate Judiciary II Committee to change a House bill making it easier for confidential information to be used as court evidence.

Under existing'law, the presiding judge of a superior court case may order that the discussions between a client and his doctor, psychologist, school counselor or therapist be disclosed if the information is considered vital to the case.

The bill, introduced by Rep. Paul Pulley, D-Durham, would allow any judge to issue such an order.

Tom Walking, a psychologist, said if confidential conversations must be made public the order should come from a judge closely involved with the case.

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Ron Anderson, president of the N.C. Personnel and Guidance Association, said many school guidance counselors were worried about the effect of the bill on their relations with students.

They feel that any breagh of confidence undermines their ability to help students, said Anderson.

The committee took no action on the bill but scheduled further discussions for its next meeting.

Banking Commission

The Senate Banking Committee approved a bill to add three members to the 13-member State Banking Commission.

Bill sponsor Sen. Conrad Duncan, D-Rockingham, acknowledged under questioning that there was no great need for the additional members.

But theres only been one member from my area for years, and hespassed away. sqid Duncan.

The bill was amended to provide that the Senate president and House speaker, instead of appointing members, would suggest appointees to their respective chambers. The names then would be sent to the governor for official appointment.

The change was made to avoid possible separation of powers conflicts.

Coastal Commissions

The House Natural and Economic Resources Committee voted to approve two bills dealing with membership in the Coastal Resources Commission and the Coastal Advisory Council, but then recanted the votes when Rep. Chancy Edwards, D-Cumberland, raised questions about minority representation.

Farm Vehicles

Sen. Melvin Daniels, D-Pasquotank, filed a bill to allow farm vehicles carrying produce to market to shift loads without penalty when the weight doesnt exceed its licensed limit.

Daniels said many farmers have been penalized for accidentally exceeding axle weight when their trucks are loaded with crops, even though the weight is below the limit for the truck itself.

Farmers have complained that theyre unable to weigh accurately a truckload in the field.

I believe this (bill) will save North Carolina farmers thousands of dollars each year in avoiding penalties or fines, said Daniels.

Felony Murder

Reps. Frank Redding and Harold Brubaker, both R-Randolph, filed a bill that would allow juries to impose the death penalty for murder committed during a break-in.

The bill would add felonious breaking and entering to a list of crimes punishable by death if, in the process of committing the crime, the criminal also murders.

Engineer Fees

Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, filed a bill increasing licensing fees charged by the N.C. State Board of . Registration for Professsional Engineers and Land Surveyors from $70 to $100,

Critical Care

A bill to authorize construction of a self-liquidating, $18.6 million critical care unit at N.C. Memorial Hospital was filed by Hardison.

The capital improvements project would be financed with gifts, grants, receipts, special funds, self-liquidating indebtedness and other sources. But there would be no state funding.    ,

Equitable Distribution

Rep, Joe Hackney, D-Orange, filed a bill amending the Equitable Distribution Act and allowing court injunctions to stop one spouse from quickly disposing of property to avoid sharing proceeds with the other spouse after separation.

Comparative Fault Measure Stalls; Debate Is Postponed

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A state Senate vote on a bill setting up a comparative fault negligence system was delayed Thursday by charges that the bill would cost the state $1 million a year.

Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green postponed debate until Thursday to give Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne, and Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, time to determine the actual cost involved in the bill.

If the consensus is that it will cost the state 50 cents that is not in the appropriations act I am going to send it to appropriations and it will take 34 senators to keep me from doing it, Green said.

Hardison offered the Senate a memo from the state Office of Budget and Management showing that comparative fault would cost the state $1 million in insurance claims and premiums each year.

But Barnes, the bills

sponsor, offered notes from the legislative staff showing that the costs of comparative fault legislation could not be , calculated.

If a bill is determined to cost the state money, it must be examined by the Appropriations Committee. Barnes said the bill would be sorely wounded if it is sent to the budget panel.

He said supporters believed they had a majority of votes Thursday but he was unsure whether that margin could be maintained through next week.

Two years ago, the Senate rejected the bill by about three votes.

Comparative fault allows an injured person to collect damages if they are less than half to blame for the accident. The damages they collect are reduced in proportion to their share of the blame for the accident.

North Carolina now has a contributory nbgligence system under which an injured person may collect no damages if they contributed

in any way to the accident.

Barnes said the current system is harsh and noted that only 11 states maintain that system.

People are not on one side pure and one side wrong in most cases, he said, rhis is an idea whose time has come.

Barnes said a survey of 35 state insurance commissioners indicated no insurance cost increases associated with the change to comparative fault except in Alaska, where the commissioner speculated that insurance prices had increased 5 percent.

He rejected a study commissioned by utilities, railroads and other industries showing insurance prices might rise between 16 percent and 28 percent under comparative fault. Barnes

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Then Hardison presented the memo from the state Office of Budget and Management and moved to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee.

Before the motion was voted on, Barnes tried to get the Senate to adjourn. His effort was rejected, 19-25,

Barnes then offered an amendment that would rewrite the bill so it didnt apply to state government. But after a conference with Green and Hardison, he withdrew the amendment.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, March 11,19639

Non-Aligned Summit Wrangles

ByGENEKRAMEK Associated Press Writer NEW DELHI, India (AP) Battlefield enemies Iran and Iraq sparred today at the conference table as they and other non-aligned nations stru^ed toward the conclusion of a week-long summit.

The delegates, for example, could not decide where the summit, heid every three years, would next take place.

The lack of consensus threatened to delay todays scheduled end of the seventh non-aligned summit, which formally began Monday with 100 of the 101 members attending.

Today, sources saidlran was demanding that the final summit declaration label Iraq as the aggressor in their 30-month-old war. The

20-year-old association of non-aligned nations has never called one of its members an aggressor.

Iraq also was pressing delegates to select Bagdad, its capital, to'host the next summit. Baghdad was to be the site of the seventh summit but, because of the war between the two neighbors. New Delhi was chosen.

Meanwhile, Morocco threatened to organize a new crippling boycott of the planned summit of the Organization of African Unity unless the Polisario guerrilla movement is clearly and explicitly excluded.

Thursday, on the sidelines of the summit, the leaders of 12 African states agreed to try once again to reconvene the twice-collapsed African summit in the Ethiopian

capital of Addis Aoaba in June.

Moroccan Foreign Minister Mohamed Bmicetta told The Associated Press that more than one-third of the African organizations 50 members have assured Morocco they will join the boycott, thus depriving the OAUs 19th summit of its

legal quorum for the third time in seven months.

The Algerian-based Polisario movement immediately announced its determination to take part in the summit.

The OAU, the worlds largest regional body, has* been paralyzed since its secretary-general, Edem Kodjo,

BATTLE OF BENTONVILLE - Volunteers from last years march celebrating the anniversary of the Battle of Bentonville are shown in action as they marched in a gusty wind. The march this year will be held on

Saturday and Sunday, and will be open to the public invited at no charge. Bentonville Battleground is located a short distance north of Newton Grove, and is about 80 miles southeast of GreenvUle. (AP Laserphoto)

Postponement On Sentencing Judge

More Than Cookies To Girl Scout Coordinator

By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer

Cheerful, red-cheeked faces, pig tails, camping and cookies are what most people think of when Girl Scouting is mentioned.

But Mrs. Wyatt Brown, one of the many long-time girl Scout workers in Pitt County who is celebrating Girl Scout Week March 6-12, says there is much more to Scouting.

I never was a Girl Scout myself, but I became involved when my daughter joined the Brownies in the second grade. That was in 1956, so I have been in Scouting in one way or another for 27 years, Mrs. Brown said.

Mrs. Brown said she has been everything from Brownie leader to neighborhood chairwoman. She is now 75 and is still working for the Scouts as Brownie coordinator in Pitt County.

One or two experiences stand out in Mrs. Brownes memories of Scputing. "What I really enjoyed the most was being down at Camp Hardee on the Pamlico. We used to have a day camp down there and had a marvelous time, she said.

Two Convicted On Tax Counts

SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) Jimmy and Elizabeth Chagra, who underwent separate trials in the assassination of a federal judge in Texas, face sentencing March 18 on a federal tax evasion conviction.

After waiving their right to a jury Thursday, the two were found guilty of tax evasion in a 2',^-hour trial.

Each summer the county schools let us use their buses for two weeks. Each day for those two weeks I would ride with the children back and forth from camp. The girls sang songs until they were coming out of my ears. We would always stop the bus at a filling station in Chocowinity and the girls would open the bus windows and scream, We are the girls from Camp Hardee. I felt so sorry for that gas station attendant, she said.

We had to stop day camp one year because we couldnt get transportation for the girls and I miss it dreadfully, she said.

Mrs. Brown said the only event she recalls with both pleasure and a churning stomach was the time her daughters senior troop wanted to go to New York over Easter. Oh, they went to various places and took in the shows and got teased about being green berets by all the men. 1 did not get to go on that trip, but we all pitched in at home to help raise the money. We made chicken salad until it was coming out of our ears and sold it so the girls could go, she said.

Camping is perhaps the highlight of Scouting to many of the girls and Mrs. Brown said she particularly enjoyed sleeping out herself.

One time we took all the little Brownies down to Camp Hardee right before camping season actually began to sleep under the stars. But before we went to bed we had to sprinkle a three- to four-inch line of sulphur all-around our site to keep the snakes away. You sort of have to do those things because if youve ever seen or heard a bunch of screaming girls running around in their pajamas you'd know why.

Girl Scouting is not only for

having fun. The girls are supposed to develop a good moral code of behavior. Briefly, the principles set down by Juliette Gordon Lowe, who founded Girl Scouts in 1912, are belief in God, service, responsible character, high ideals of character and conduct and appreciation of the worth of all people.

Today there are more than three million Girl Scouts and volunteers in the United States. The Coastal Council, which includes Pitt County, is one of 336 councils with a membership of more than 10,000 girls, aged 6-17, and adults.

WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) - Sentencing for former District Court Judge J. Wilton Hunt Sr., convicted on federal bribery charges, has been pqstponed until at least March 21.

The sentencing hearing, which had been set for Monday, was delayed because of a conflict in presiding Judge James C. Cacheris schedule, said U.S. Attorney Sam Currin of North Carolinas Eastern District.

Hunt faces a maximum sentence of up to 35 years in prison and fines of $35,000.

Last month. Hunt was convicted of federal bribery and gambling violations that stemmed from the FBIs investigation of corruption in southeastern North Carolina, nicknamed Colcor.

He recently resigned as judge in the I3th Judicial District, which includes Bladen, Brunswick and Columbus counties.

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dards Commission, which investigates allegations against judges, had recommended Hunt be removed from the bench, but the N.C. Supreme Court must make the final decision.

Despite the resignation, the court will still have to make a decision. Without court action. Hunt would be eligible for retirement benefits.

Under state law, if the Supreme Court removes Hunt from office, hewould be stripped of benefits, said Franklin Freeman, director of the Administrative Office of the Courts.

Hunt also faces prosecution on state bribery charges. That trial has not been scheduled.

'82 Farm Sales Seen Below '81

ByRICKSCOPPE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Total farm sales in 1982 are expected to fall below their record-breaking level of 1981 when figures are released later this year, an agricultural official said Thursday.

Cash receipts from 1981 totaled a record $4.2 billion, eclipsing the old figure of $3.6 billion set in 1980, according to the North Carolina Farm Income Report of 1981 just released The figures represent gross income.

The 1982 report is expected this fall. Carl Cross, a statistician with the North Carolina Crop and Livesti)ck Reporting Service, said the figures will be down because of an off-year in tobacco sales.

Were expecting tobacco (receipts) to be much lower, Cross said. The actual income for the 1982 tobacco crop will be a couple million dollars less than 1981.

The reason. Cross said, was that in 1982 production was down and acreage was cut in half.

Tobacco revenues made up 30.6 percent of all sales for 1981 - tops among all crops in the state.

Cross attributed the 81 increase of 17.7 percent in total farm sales to a doubling of peanut sales. He also said com, soybean and tobacco sales rose in 1981.

The report is trend-wise, a good measure from year to year of the strength of the farm economy, said Cross. He said there were no surprises in the report, adding that 1981 was a pretty good year.

Duplin County was the top county in cash receipts, which include poultry, dairy and livestock sales as well as crops. Robeson County led all counties in crop sales.

Duplin had a toUl sales of $211,411,000 up slightly from its $208,053,000 total in 1980. Wilkes County was second with $133,332,000 and Union third with $133,064,000.

Robeson had a total crops sale of $106,847,000 followed by Sampson County, $99,650,000 and Pitt, $99,556,000.

Total crop sales were $2,650,855,000 for 1981 while total livestock, dairy and poulty sales were $1,585,435,000 for a total of $4,236,290,000 for the sale of all farm goods.

proclaimed Polisario a member in February 1982, saying that 26 of the 50 members recognized the movement.

Morocco and most of the moderate, Westem-oriented members vigorously protested Kodjos action, asserting that only a two-thirds majority can legally admit a controversial member.

The Manist-led Polisario movement has waged a bitter and costly guerrilla war against Moroccan forces from bases in Algeria and neighboring Mauritania for the past seven years.

The non-aligned summits final declaration was expected to follow lines of Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, who as leader of the host nation, chaired the conference.

The final declaration will include an appeal to the great powers to urgently work for nuclear disarmament. Speaker after speaker here warned that economic ' collapse threatened the worlds poorest countries, and the declaration includes a call for negotiations to avert such disaster.

Cambodias place at this summit was vacant because participants at a preliminary meeting couldnt resolve rival claims of Cambodias Vietnamese-sponsored regime and opponents of the rulers.

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QUALITY TIRE SERVICE and Employees at N. Greenest, and2900E lOlhSt. 752-7177    757-3762

COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN 2905E. 5th

Take out only 752-5184 600 S. W. Greenville Blvd Eat in or take out 756-6434

BOND-HODGES SPORTING GOODS 218 Arlington Blvd. ioth St. Greenville 7566001    752-4156

PLAZA GULF SERVICE 756-7616 701E. Greenville Blvd.

Ryder Truck Rentals 7566045 Wrecker Service day 7567616 nite 7566479

AaCTKDN MOVING & STORAGE 1007Cheanul St. 756/000

ANNE'S TEMPORARIES. INC. 7566610120 Raade St. Greenville

BARWICK'S HOUSE OF MEATS. INC. 7562277 JOO Pollard St. Greenville Allen Berwick, owner

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC

2201 Dickinson Ave. 756-4267

EARL'S CONVENIENCE MART

Route 1 7566278

Earl Faulkner S Employees

ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS

7563500

226 Commerce SI. Greenville

EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS

75635681514 N. Greene St.

"A complete restaurants office coffee service

ROBERTO. DUNN CO 301 Ridgeway 7565278

HENDRIX-BARNHILLCO. Memorial Dr. 752-4122 All employees

Compliments of LOVEJOY AGENCY Daybreak records 7564774118 Oakmont Dr. Larry Whittington

PARKERS BARBEQUE RESTAURANT 7562388 S. Memorial Dr.

Doug Parkers Employees

C.H. EDWARDS, INC. Hwy. 11 S. 7568500

Compliments of FRED WEBB, INC.

Compliments of

Pin MOTOR PARTS, INC.

7564171911 s. WiahlngtonSl.

TOMS RESTAURANT "The Very Beal In Home Cooking" 7S61011 Maxwell St. Weat End Area

qraWbuick.inc.

7561877Greenville Blvd.

Bill Grant S Emptoyeea

OVERTONS supermarkets, INC.

211 S. Jarvis 752-5025 All Employees

TAPSCOTT DESIGNS 222 E. 5th St. 757-3558 Kate Phillips, Interior Designer Associate member ASID

Compliments of HOLLOWELLS DRUG STORE

no.1 911 Dickinson Ave. no. 2 Memorial Dr. S 6th St.

no. 3 Stantonsburg Rd. at Doctors Park    |

PIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE 2105Dickinson Ave. 7562444 Ricky Jacksons Employees

FARRIOR& SONS, INC.

General Contractors

7562005 Hwy. 264 By Pass Farmvllle

LAUTARES JEWELERS 414 Evans 752-3831

ELECTROLUX Sales and Service

"Known For Duality For Over 55 Years."

Free Estimates Free Pick-Up <1 Delivery 104 Trade SI. 7566711

INAS HOUSE OF FLOWERS

N. Memorial Dr. Ext. 752-5656

Management S Staff        -j,

PITT-GREENE PCA & FEDERAL LAND BANK ASSOCIATION "Short, intermedate S Long Term Credit"

100 E. 1st St. 7561512

BUCKS GULF STATION & EMPLOYEES E 10th St: Ext. 752-3228 "RoadS Wrecker Service"

Jartran Truck S Trailer Rntala

INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.

W.M. Scales, Jr. General Agent Weighty Scales, Rep.

Clarke Stokes, Rep.

7563738

PUGHS TIRE & SERVICE CENTER 7526125

Comer of 5th S Greene, Greenville

HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO. Residential S Commercial Building 6N. lOlhSt 752-1553

FOUNTAIN OF UFE, INC. Oakmont Profeaaktnal Plaza Qreenvllle, N.C. 7566000

PAIR ELECTRONICS, INC. Electrnica SuppUera 7562201107Trade St. Greenville, N.C.

Compliments of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY 752-08761506N. Greene St.

Greenville, N.C.

HARGETTS DRUG STORE I 2500 S. Charles Ext. 7563344

DAUGHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO. 2102 Dickinson Ave. 7561345 Bobby Tripp 8 Employees

CAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE

1405 Dickinson Ave. 7526778 Jerry Creech. Owner

PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO.

7562113Greenvllle

EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. 2739 E. 10th St. P. 0. Box 3785 752-4323Greenville

REDI SUPPLY, INC.

Industrial 8 Construction SuppHea 1002Cheanut 7563200

HARRIS SUPERMARKETS, INC.

"Where Shopping la A Pleasure" no.1 Memorial Dr. 7560110 no. 2 2612 E 10th Ext. 757-1860 no. 4 Bethel no. 5 N. Greene 752-4110 no. 8 Ayden no. 7 Tarboro

HOLT OLDSMOBILE-OATSUN 101 Hooker Rd. 7563115

JOHNNYS MOBILE HOME SALES, INC. "The Finest In Manufactured Housing"

316 W. Greenville Blvd. 7566687 Johnny L. Jackaon8 Employees

WESTERN SIZZLIN STEAK HOUSE "We put It on the plate"

500 W. Greenville Blvd. 7560040 2903 E. 10th St. 7562712

JIMMYS PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE All Types Minor Repair Work Wreckar Sarvke Comer 14th St 8 264 ByPaas J.F. Baker, omer7561445

EASTERN INSULATION, INC.

Owens Coming Flbergkua Phone Day or Night 752-1154

CompllmentBof THOMAS W. RIVERS

ESTATE REALTY CO. 1304 Charlas St. GreenvtUe 7526058    V

JarvlaorOorllaMIHa

FAITH is your haven of refuge in a troubled world

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Come To CHURCH

GLORUOEl LUTHERAN CHURCH The Womani CJub, 23M Green Sprina Park Rd.

The Rev. Richard A. Miller Phone: 75M038 9:00 a.m. Sun, - Sunday School 10:15 a.m. The Morning Worship Service

4:00p.m Mon. -Sr Con! Class 7:00 p.m Tue - Adult Conf. Class 7:30 p m. Wed. - Midweek Service 7:30 p.m. Thur, - Adult Bible Class

OUR REIKEMER LUTHERAN

1800 S. Elm R. Graham Nahouse 9:00 a.m. Sun. Holy Communione 9:45 a.m. Sunday School 11:00 a. m. Worship Service 5:30 p.m. Youth Choir Rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Church Council 8:00 p.m. Mon. - L.C.W. Joan Rohs-208 Lee St.

1:00 pm. Tues. - L.C.W. eunice Morgan - 5 Dogwood Ct.

4:15 p.m. 2nd Yr. Confirmation 7:30 p,m. Wed. - Lenten Devotions 8:00 p.m. - Senior Choir Rehearsal

FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Corner Brinkley Road & Plaza Drive, Greenville, N.C. 27834 Rev Frank Gentry

9:45 a.m. Sun. Sunday School, Dickie Rook, Supt 11:00 a.m. Worship Service 6:00p.m. Choir Practice 7:00 p.m. W.A. Day & Communion Service

7:00pm. Mon. - Women's Auxiliary 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Girl's Auxiliary 7:30 p.m . Wed. - Bible Study/Lileliners 7:30p.m. Children's/Teen Choir 7:00 p.m. Thur. - Nursing Home Chocowinity 7:30 pm.-Violin Class 9:30 a.m. Fri. - Sunday School Lesson WBZQ

7:00p.m. University Nursing Home

EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE Full Gospel Church

264 Bypass West at Laughinghouse Drive

SJ. Williams, Minister Mike Pollard, Minister of Music 10:00 a.m. Sun - Sunday School Lin-wood Lawson, Supt.

11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 5:45p.m. Adult Choir Practice 7:00p.m. Celebration of Praise 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer & Share 7:30 p.m.-Youth Service 7:00 p.m. Sat - INTERCESSORY PRAYER TIME

ARUNGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH 100W. Arlington Blvd.

Pastor, Rev. Harold Greene 9:45 a. m. Sun.-Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. - Mission Friends 7:30 p.m. Business Meeting 7:30p.m. Mon. - Building A Grounds 7:00-9:00 p.m. Mon. Adult Growth Workshop Hathaway 7:30 p.m. Tues. Bible Study-Gene Baker Hostess 7:30p.m. Wed. ^PrayerService 8:30 p.m. Choir 7:30 p.m. Thur. Visitation

CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH

Rt. 9 Cherry Oaks Subdivision Greenville, N.C.

Pastor: Rev. James Wright 7:30 p.m Fri. - Quarterly Conference 10:00 a. m. Sun. ^ Sunda V School 11:00 a m - Morning Worship, Sermon by the Pastor. Music will be rendered by the Senior Choir 2:00p.m. -Dinner will be served 3:00 p.m. Rev. .jasper Tyson, Choir, ushers, and congregration of Poplar Hill FWB Church will close out our Quarterly meeting services.

7:30 p.m. Tue Male Chorus will have rehearsal 7:30 p.m Christian Aid will meet.

ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street

The Rev. Lawrence P Houston. Jr., Rector

The Rev. J. Dana Pecheles, Asst. Rector The Third Sunday in Lent 7:30 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist 9:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist A Confirmation, The Rt, Rev. B Sidney Sanders, Bishop-Coadjutor. Diocese of East Carolina, presiding 10:00 a.m. Reception for Confirmands, Parish Hall 11:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist A Confirmation, The Rt. Rev, B. Sidney Sanders. Bishop-Coadjutor, Diocese of East Carolina, presiding 6:00 p.m. - Jr. EYC, Parish Hall 6:00 p.m. Sr. EYC, Bridget A Gina Branchs 986 Greenville Blvd.

7:30 p.m. - Al anon, Jr. Friendly Hall 12:00 p.m. Mon. - Churchwomen's Lenten Bible Study

7:30 p.m. Vestry Meeting, Friendly Hail

5:30 p.m. Tue. - Holy Eucharist. Canterbury 7:30 p.m. - Greenville Parents Support Group. Parish Hall 7:00a.m.Wed-HolyEucharist 10:00 a.m.

On of Hands

10:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist A Laying

3:30 p.m. Holy Eucharist, Nursing Home

7:30 p.m. - Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 7:30 p.m. - Lenten Bible Study on the Passion Narrative, Guild Room 10:00 p.m. Thur. - Town A Country Senior Citizens Luncheon A Meeting. Parish Hall 7:30 p.m. Parish Visitation Group, Guild Room 7:30 p. m. - TEEX, Friendly Hall 4:00 p.m. Fri. - Children's Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 5:00 p m - Jr Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 8:00 p m Sat. - AA Open Group Discussion, Friendly Hall

ST. TIMOTHY'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 107 Louis Street, Cherry Oaks The Rev. John Randol^ Price. Rector 8:00 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist, Rite II 9:30 a.m. -Christian Education 10:30 a.m. - Holy Eucharist, Rite I 5:00 p m. - Episcopal Young Churchmen

7:00 a.m. Mon - Three Steers Restaurant-Men's Fellowship Breakfast 7:30pm -VestryMeeting 6:30 p.m. Wed. - Evening Prayer 7:00 p.m. - Dinner at Cherry Oaks Oub House

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SR 1727 (Formerly the Eastern Pines Community BIdg. I Minister Mr. Melvin Rawls 10:00am Sun - Bible School 11:00 a m. - Worship Service by a field preaching team Irom Roanoke Bible College

5:30p.m. - Fellowship supper 7:00 p.m. Evening Worship and Youth Service

7:30p m Wed, - Prayer Meeting

SAINT PETER'S CATHOUC CHURCH 2700 E 4th Street Greenville, N C 757-3259

Rev. William E Frost 5:30 p.m. Sat.-Vigil 8:00 a.m. Sun.-Liturgy 10:30 a.m.-Liturgy

GREENVHAE CHURCH OF CHRIST 264 By Pass A Emerson Road Brian Whelchel, Community Evangelist Carl Etchison, Campus Evannlist 8:00 a.m. Sun. - Amazing Grace" TV Bible School Channel 12 10:00 a.m. - Bible Study Gasses for all ages

11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship "God Over All Leads Successfully "

6:00 p.m. Evening Worship, "Are We All Like The Bereans?(AcU 17:11) 7:30p.m. Tues. - Mens Bible Study 110 Belk Dorm 7:30 pm. - Udies Bible Study 221 Mendenhall 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Bible Study Classes lor all ages

For Further Information and or Transportation please call 752-5091 or 752-6376

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Fourth and Meade Streeu II :00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School II :00h.m. - Sunday Service 7;4Sp.m. Wed. - Wed. Evening Meeting 2:00 lo4:00p.m.-Reading Room 400 S. Meade Street    .

f,t    J

PEOnE'S BAPTIST TEMPLE Rev. J.M. Bragg, Pastor 2001 W. Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N,C.2734 7:30 a.m. Sun. Laymen's Prayer Breakfast (Three Steers)

10:00 a.m.-Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 5:30p.m.-Choir Practice 6:30 p.m. - Evening Worship 8:00p.m.-Teens-Fireside 7:15 a.m. Mon.-Fri. Radio Program -Together/Uain"-WBZQ 7:00p.m. Wed,-Hour of Power 8:15p.m. -Choir Practice

THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY 1206 Mumford Road.

James C Brown Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun - Sunday School 11. 00 a.m. Morning Worship Service 6:30 p.m. - Young People Service 7 :00 p.m.- Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m. Wed. Prayer Meeting

OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 1100 Red Banks Road E. Gordon Conklin, Pastor Neil D. Booth, Jr., Min. of Education Treva Fidler, Min of Muic 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Library Open -10:00 a.m.

9:45a.m.-Sunday School 10:45 a.m. Library Open - 11:00 a.m.

11:00 a m - MORNING WORSHIP, Childrens Church 5:00 p.m. Carol Choir Rehearsal, B.Y.F.

6:00 p.m. - GAs, Chapel Choir Rehearsal 9:15 a.m. Wed, - Staff Devotional 8:00p.m. Prayer Meeting 8:00 p.m. Thur. Chancel Choir Rehearsal

THE MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH (Southern Baptist)

1510 Greenville Boulevard E. T. Vinson, Senior Minister; Hal Melton, Minister with Educatkm/Youth 7:45 a.m. Sun. Mens Prayer Breakfast 9:45 a.m. - Sunday School II :00 a.m. - Morning Worship, Mini A Junior Church 6:30 p.m. Christian Adult Training Seminars, Jr. High Youth at Church; Sr. High Youth with the Glenn Duncans, 124 Harrell St.

2:30 p.m. Mon. -- Afternoon Bible Study Group with Mrs L.L. Overton, 1805 Drewry Lane 7:00 p.m. Assoclational Sunday School Adult Workshop at Immanuel; Seminary Extension Course at Arlington St.

7:30 p.m. Mon. Evening Bible Study Group 7:00 a.m. Tue. - Seminary Extension Course, State Adult Choir Festival 5:45 p.m. Wed. - Family Night supper 6:30 p.m. - Home Mission Prayer Service, Mission Friends, (Tienib A Carol Choirs 7:00 p.m. - GAs, RAs, Sunday School Workers *

8:00 pm.-Chancel Choir 5:00 p.m. - Youth Leave for Spring retreat at Caraway

SAINT JAMES CHURCH UNITED METHODIST 200 East Sixth at Forest HiU Circle Greenville, North Carolina 27834 (919 ) 752-6154 M Dewey Tyson, Minister Ralph A. Brown, Associate Minister Stephen W Vaughn, Diaconal Minister 7:30 a.m. Sun. - Men's Breakfast 9:40 a. m.-Church School 10:30 a.m. - Chancel CTwir ll:00a.m.Worship of God 5:00p.m. Youth Choir 6:00p.m.-Sr HiUMYFonly 7:00 p.m. Finance Committee-Education Work Area 8:00p.m. Administrative Board 9:00 a.m. -12 p.m Mon-Fri. - Weekday School 7:30p.m. Mon. - Bible studies (d (Brown) with the Picketts 2 (Tyson) with Blanche Smith 4:30 p.m. Tues- Chapel Choir-Merry Music Makers 6:30 p.m. - St. Patricks Party 7:15 p.m. Wed.-St. James Ringers 7:30p.m, Boy Scout Troup 4340 8:00 p.m.-Chancel Choir 10:90 am. Thur. Church Women United 3:00 p.m. Fri.-Cub Den #3 ueddemann 4:15 p.m. - Confirmation class 11:00 am - MARCH USHERS: Bruce Hudson, Charles Whiteford, Tom Brown, Larry Hough, Bobby Heath 11:00 a.m. ACOLYTES: Shannon Shearin, Jarvis Grome

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Corner 14th and Elm Streets Richard R. Gammon and Gerald M. Anders, Ministers; Brett Watson, Director of Music; E Robert Irwin, Organist 9(00 a m. Sun. - Daniel Cantata 9:45 a. m.-Church School II :00 a.m. - Worship-Daniel Cantata 5:00p.m. Confirmation Class 6.00 p.m. - Youth Fellowships 7:00p.m. - Deacons 10:00a.m. Mon.-Circles 1,2,3 12:00a,m. -Circle9 2:00pm.-Circle5 6:30p.mBrownies 7:00p.m.-Boy Scouts 7:00 p.m.-Girl Scouts 8:00pm.-Circle4 8:00 p.m. - Sierra Club 9:00 a m Tue -Park-A-Tot 10 00-Circles6,7 12:00 p.m. - Newsletter Deadline 7:00 p.m. - Family Simport Group 7:00 p.m.-Cubs Siouts 7:30p,m.-TRClviUn 8:00p.m.-Circles 7:00a.m. Wed - Men of the Church Breakfast 12:30 p.m. Kale Lewis Class Luncheon 1:00 p.m. - Parkinson's Disease Group 2:30 p.m. - Address Angels 5:00 p.m. - Choristers and Rainbow Choir

7:30 p.m. Outreach Committee 7:30p.m -GalleryChoir 8:00p.m. - Lenten Service 9:00 am. Thur. - Park-A-Tot 5:00p.m. - Bulletin Deadline 7:30 p.m. - Overeaters Anonymous 10:00 a.m. Fri. - Pandora's Box 10:00 a m. Sat. - Pandora's Box

GREENVILLE SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 2611 East lOth Street Robert H Kerr 757-3082 or 756-5717 9:30 a.m. Sat. - Church at Study Topic of Study: "It Is Finished"

10:45 a. m.-Concerns of Church 11:00 a m - Church at Worship! Elder Malcolm Gordon, President of the Carolina Seventh-day Adventist Church, Topic: "The Unfinished Reformation To A Finished Work 12:30 p.m. - Fellowship Dinner 2:00 p.m. Musical Program and Church Reports on Missloa Growth and Outreach 3:30 p.m. - Spiritual Message, Elder Malcolm Gordon, Topic: "The Church Triumph" 7:00 p.m. Sun. - T V. Mlnlstry-CableTViB 9:00 p m - T V. Mlnlstty-Cahle TV 416

6:30p.m. Tue.-Pathfinders 7:00 p.m. Wed - Prayer and fellowship 8:00 p.m. Thurs.- Adventist Forum, East Carolina University Coffee House

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 520 East Greenville Boulevaid 756-3138

Dr. WHIR Wallace,Minister Rev. Joanne L. Ver Brug, Associate Minister 9:4Sa.m.Sun -ChurchSchool 11:00 a.m.-Worship 3:00 p.m. - Church Membership Class, SoftbaU Team Meeting 4:00 p.m. - J. Y. F., Primary Choir, YouthChoIr 5:00 p.m. Snack Supper for all youth groups 5:30 p.m. - C.Y.F., Chi Rho, Junior Choir

6:30 p.m, Christian Education Committee 10:45 a.m. Mon.- Circles 1,4,5,7.1,9 11:45 p.m. - CWF Luncheon and General Meeting 7:30 p.m.-ClrclelJ 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Chancel Choir Rehearsal, Choir Room II ;00 a.m. Sat. Youth-sponsored Bar-b-qued Chicken Dinner Sale, ADVANCED TICKETS ONLY

HOLY TEMPLE A.F.C.O.G (SalntsvUle) Route6.GreenvUle,N.C.

EiderlJ. Roblnaon 7:30 pjn. Fri. - Bible Studies, Teacher: Missionary L Dehrew 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School, Supt. Deacon Lomell Whkaker 11:30 a.m. - 2nd Sun. - Deacon Day Speaker: Elder Isaac Robinsoo 7:00 p.m.-Evening Worship 7:30 pm.Tue.-MIdwedc Sendee

BROWNS CHAPEL APQSTWJC FAITH CHURCH (WOt AND CHRIST

BelvlorHwy.

Route 4, GreenviUe, North Carolina Bishop R. A. Griawould 8:00 p.m. Thur. - Bible Studies (Sis. Ida SUton, Teacher)

8:00p.m. Fri. - Prayer Meeting 7:00 p.m. Sat. - Prison Ca Ministry (Maury, N.C.)

7:0P p.m. Sun. - Prison Camp Ministry (Maury. Miss M. Sheppard) 8.00 p.m. Mon. - Pastor Aide Meeting (Deacon Jesse Sheppard, Pres.)

8:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri - Spring Revival (Bishop R. A. Griswould)

3:00 p.m. 4th Sat. - Business MeeUng 8:00p.m. 4thSat. -1 Hour Prayer 10:30 a.m. 4th Sun. - Sunday School (Deacon John Shaipe, Superintendent)

11:30a.m. (Pastoral Day, (Quarterly Meeting)

8:00 p.m. - Pastoral & Communion Service

Camp

SELVIA CHAPEL FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 1701 South Green Street Rev. Clifton Gardner, Pastor 3:00 p m. Sat. - The C.G. Spiritual Singers will have rehearsal.

9:45 a. m. Sun.Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Worship Service 4:00 p.m. The Gospel (^rus will meet with Mrs. Carrie Taylor 7:00 p.m. Moo. Junior Choir Rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Tues. Gospel Chorus rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Wed. Prayer Meeting 3:00 p m. March 19 - No. One Ushers will meet

ST. JOHN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH P 0. Box 134 Falkland, NC 27827 Rev Anton T. Wesley, Pastor 6:30 p.m. Fri. Pastor, Deacons & Trustees Meet 6:30 p.m. - Mission Circle meets 7:30 p.m. Monthly Conference meets

10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11.00 a.m. Morning Worship & Holy Communion 6:00 p.m. Rev. F.R. Petereson & St. Mary M.B. Church will render service

7:00 p.m. Tue. - Prayer Meeting & Bible Study 6:00 p.m. Pastor and Deacons meet 7:00 p.m. Wed. Young Adult Choir Rehearsal

CHURCH OF GOD Corner of Spruce and Skinner Streets, Greenville, NC Rev. Paul Lanier, Jr. Pastor 9:45 a.m. Sun. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Worship Service 7:00 p.m. - Evangelistic Service 7:00 p.m. Tue. - Worship Service-Unlversity Nursing Home 7:30 p.m. Wed. Family Training Hour

7:00 p.m. Thur. - Worship Servlce-Greenville Villa Nursing Home Dial-A-Prayer 752-1362

PHILIPPI CHURCH OF.CHRIST 1610 Farmville Boulevard Rev Randy Royall 8:00 p.m. Fri. (Quarterly Conference 9:00a.m.Sat-Baptism 11:00 a.m. - Mass Choir Rehearsal 2:00 p.m. Communion with the sick 8:00p.m.-QuarterlyCommunion 9:45 a.m. Sun. Sunday School, Mrs, Mary Jones, Simt.

11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 3:00 p.m. Climax of (Quarterly Services- Sermon delivered by the Rev. Johnny Lofton of St. Peter Church of Christ

8:00 Wed. - Prayer Meeting & Bible Study

JARVIS MEMORIAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 510 South Washington Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Ministers: Jim Bailey, Susan Pate, Martin Armstrong, Adrian Brown Minister of Music: Jerry Jolley Organist: MarkGansor 8:45 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship 9:15a.m. -Church Library ()pen 9:40a.m. -Church School-Nursery 11:00a.m. Morning Worship 12:15 p.m. Holy Communion-Chapel

3:30 p.m. - Confirmation Oass-CR 5:00p.m Youth Choir 6:00 pm.-UMYF Supper 6:30 p.m.-UMYF Programs 6:45 p.m. - Childrens Handbells 7:30 p.m. - Lenten Bible Studies 11:00 a m Mon. Adult Handbells 7:00p.m.-GIrlScoutsFH 7:00p.m.-EE IlI-CR 7:30 p.m. Tues. Richard Taylor on Drug Abuse-Sanct.

Wednesday - CLOTHESLINE CLOSED 10:30 a.m, - PrayerGroup-CR 4:30 p.m. - Pre-School Choir, Beginner Choir, Primary Choir, Older Childrens Choir,

7:OOpm.-Chancel Choir 7:00 p.m. Education Chmm.-CR 10:00 a.m. Thur. -Adult Bible Study 7:30 p.m. - Susan Pates Bible Study 8:00 p.m. Martin Armstrongs Bible Study

6:30 a.m. Fri. - Mens Prayer Breakfast at Toms Restaurant 12:00 p.m. - Womens Prayer Luncheon

10:00 -12:00 Noon Sat. - Clothesline

HOLLYWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HWY 43 South Minister-Rev. C. Wesley Jennings S.S. Supt.-Elsie Evans Music Director-Vlvlan MUls A Steve Aslinger Organlst-Leida McGowan Youth Leaders-Debble and Steve Aslinger

10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11 :flO a.m. - Worship Service 10:00 a.m. - Membership Class 7:30 p.m Mon. Circles Meet

10 OOa.m Tues. - MorningClrclo 12:30 p.m. - Pot luck lunch and

quilting 7:30p.m.-Rawley Circle 7:00p.m Wed -BlWeStudy 8:00 p.m.-Choir Practice

MORNING GLORY AP08T0UC FAITH HOLINESS CHURCH 1012 West 5th Street, Greenville, NX! Eldress Irene G. Epps Every Sunday

10:00 a,m.Sun.-Blble School 12:00 p.m. - Worship and Preaching 7:30p,m. - WorshlpServlce 7:30 pm, Tue. - Worship dhd Preaching 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Worship Service

HOLY TRINITY UNITED ' METHODIST CHURCH 1400 Red Bank Road, GreenvUle, N C. Rev . Don Paul Lee 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00a.m. - WorshlpServlce 6:30 p.m. - United Method(st Youth Fellowihip 6:00 p.m. Tue. - Troop 19 Brownies 7:30 p.m. - Womens Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Choir Practice

IMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 1101 S. Elm Street. GreenvUle. NC Hugh Burlington, Pastor Minister of Education A Youth Lynwood Walters 10:00 a.m. Sat. - Interfaith Conference on Jehovah Witnesses at FBC, FarmvUle 9:00 a.m. Sat. - WMU Prayer Breakfast for Week of Prayer 7:30 p.m. - Adidt I Married Sunday School Class Coffeehouse at the Baptist Studeig Union 9:45a.m. Sun.-Sunday School

11 ;00 a.m. - Morning Woi^

4:30 p.m.-YouthChoIr

5:30 p.m. - Youth Supper 6:00 p.m. - Church Training, ParenU of Youth Meethig with Lyih. wood Walters 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. Mon. - Jean Joyner Sim-day School Class Meeting    (

8:00 p.m. Church Conference 9:30 a.m. Mon. - Dr. Sallle Pence Bible Study

7:004:00 - Adult I Sunday School Workshop In NashvUle,TN    v

8:00p.m.-CoUegechoir 12:00 p.m. Tue. - Golden Age Fellowship Luncheon 5:30 p.m. - BSU Supper and Recreation

5:15 p m Wed - Grades 1-5. 4-6 ChUdren's (!holr. Library Open

The Dally Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Friday, March 11,198311

Harmony In Personal Prayers

ByGEORGE W. CORNELL AP Religion Writer Whether they are Protestant or Roman Cathoiic, whether their church services are simple or elaborate, Christians generally are in harmony when it comes to personal prayer.

They do a lot of it and largely in similar ways, times and attitudes.

These are among details brought out in an unusual cross-denominational survey of readers of 10 mainline denominational magazines, probing specifics about how they pray, wdien, where and what for.

Previous national studies have indicated that an overwhelming proportion of Americans, 89 percent of them, pray at times, even if not church members, making prayer by far the most prevelant of all religious activities.

For church members, its even more so, about as much a part of everyday life as eating or sleeping, the new study indicates. All of them, 100 percent of the 1,491 respondents, do it, 92 percent daily, most of them several times daily.

The ordinarily private motives, manners and expectations brought to this most widespread religious process are pciinted up in the study, which indicates close similarities about it among the mainline church people involved.

Whatever small variations showed up in prayer habits, these generally dont reflect denominational patterns, but rather personal preferences.

Differences in our prayer practices do not follow denominational lines, writes church historian Martin Marty of the University of Chicago in summarizing the findings.

While collective prayer historically has been a key note in church life, the study indicates that church members nowadays overwhelmingly prefer to pray alone, 85

percent 01 them.

We are in prayer life alone and do-it-yourselvers, Marty says, noting this may make churches nervous, but it may be Gods wonderful way of breaking open organiza-tionalism ... and subverting formalism.

The poll involved readers of these magazines and denominations;

U.S. Catholic (Roman Catholic), The Episcopalian (Episcopal), The Lutheran (Lutheran Church in America), The Disciple

(Christian Church - Disciples of Christ), The,. Lutheran Standard (American Lutheran), The Messenger

(Church of the Brethren), A.D. (United Presbyterian and United Church of Christ), The Church Herald (Reformed Church) and Presbyterian Survey (Presbyterian Church U.S.(Southern)).

Virtually all of the respondents, 97 percent, also saw the impact of prayer on themselves as causing changes in my own life,

Area Church News-

5:45 p.m. Fellowship Supper Line Opens

6:45 p.m. - GAs RAs, Acteens 7:30 p.m. Nominating C!ommittee, Adult Choir 7:30 p.m. Thur. - BSU "Pause Worship

10:00 a.m. Fri. - Prayer-Bible Study

COREYS CHAPEL F. W.B. CHURCH Route I, Winterville J.B. Taylor, Pastor 7:00 p.m. Fri. Prayer Service 4:00 p.m. Sat. - Home Mission Meeting 9:30 a.m. Sun. Sunday School 10:45 a.m. Devotion It: 00 a. m. Regular Service 3:00 p.m. Rev. Hill, CJioir, congregation, from Union Grove FWB Church, Farmville, N.C., will render service. The program is sponsored by the Pastors Aid Committee 7:30p.m. Wed.-Bible Study

FAITH PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH

Rt. 9, Box 500 City (14th St. Ext., Cherry Oaks)

Rev Paul N. Brafford 9:45 a.m Sun. S.S. Staff Devotions 10:00 a.m. Sunday School (Johnny Jackson, Supt.)

11:00 a.m. - Morning Praise A Worship

6:30 p.m. Adult Choir Practice 7:30 p.m. Evening Hour of Exhortation

7:00 p.m. Tue. Mens Brotherhood Meeting

7:30 p.m. Wed. - Family Night Program (Llddie Anderson, Dir.)

8:15p.m. Youth (Twir Practice

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS 307 Martinsborou^ Rd., Greenville, NC 27834 Bishop Danny Brew 9:00-10:10 a.m. Sun. - Sacrament Meeting 10:20-ll:00a.m.-Sunday School 10:20-12:00 p.m - Primary 11:10-12:00 p.m. Priesthood, Relief Society, Young Men A Young Womens Meeting

6:30-8:00 p.m. Thur. - Institute at the Brewster Building at ECU Room 203-B 5:00 p.m. Fri. Super Saturday in Kinston

10:00-12:00 March 19 - Primary Fun Activity

7:00 p m. Fri. March 18 - Missionary Preparation Banquet in Kinston

UNIVERISTY CHURCH OF CHRIST 100 Crestline Blvd.

Minister, Rick Townsend 756-6545

10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.-Jr. Church 6:00 p.m. - (Tioir Rehearsal 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship A Youth Meetings

HADDOCK CHAPEL

The following services has been scheduled for the weekend 1:00 p.m. Sat. - Lady Home Mission Meeting 2:00 p.m. - Mothers Meeting 9:45 a m. Sun. - Sunday School 7:00 p m. Thur. - Senior Choir and Senior Ushers will meet

CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Statonburg Road at Allen Road Reverend Arlee Griffin, Jr , Pastor 7:30 p m. Fri. - Worship with York Memorial AMEZ Church 12:00 p.m. Sat. - Rehearsal tor Youth (Twir 9:15 a m Sun. - Church School Kindergarten I2th grade 9:30a m New members will meet 11:00 a.m. -Divine Worship Service, Youth in Charge 7:30p.m. Mon-Fri. - Spring Revival Services, Reverend David Morrow of Burlington, will be the evangelist. Selected churches of the area will conduct devotional service each night 3:30 p.m. Tue. - University Nursing Home, Praise Service 4:00 p.m. Sal. - Deaconess Board will meet 10:00-12:00 p.m. Tutorial Session for 4th-l2th Grades

UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH 114 E. 11th Street, GreenvUle, NC 27834 (Corner of 11 th and Forbes)

Ronald Lappin, Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 7:30 p.m. Sunday Night Service, Evangelistic 7:30p.m. Thur. - BiWeStudy

BEST CHAPEL FREE WnX BAPTIST CHURCH Route 6, GreenvUle Bishop Matthew Best 9:30 a.m. 2nd Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. 2nd Sun. Worship service Sr. CAU 3:00 p.m. 2nd Sun. Evening At Nazerene Church of Christ, Best Chapel Pastor, Choir A Usher 7:30 p m. Fri. - Best Chapel Pastor traveling choir and usher at Chaplnon Chapel

7:30 p m Sat. - Pastor Aid Gub serlvce Rev Bryant Warren, Chapel of Chocowinity

SYCAMORE HILL BAPTIST CHURCH 226 West Eiriith Street Rev, H.W. Parker, Jr. Pastor 9:30 a.m. Sun. - Sunday Church School

11:00 a.m. - Our Worship Experience

7:00 p.m. Junior Ladies Auxiliary Program 7:00 p.m. Tue. - Baptist Doctrine Class-Church Parlor 6:30 p.m. Wed. - Youth Prayer Servlce<3)urch Parlor 7:30 p.m. Sycamore Hill at Cornerstone Baptist Church for Revival 10:00 a.m. Thur. - Arts A Gafts Fellowship Gass MeeU Church Partor 6:00 p.m. All ScoiMs Units Meets 4Youth Fello(shlp Center

UNITARIAN-UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP Meeting wUI be in the home of Gene ai^Ka^^ton, 207 Cherrywood Dr.

Lon Felker, President 752-0787 10:30 a.m. Sun. - Social Ume 11:00 a.m. - "Buddhism Joe Norwood of ECU Physics Dept. Speaker , 12:00p.m.-Covered-dlsh lunch

FIRST FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 2600 S. Charles Street Harry Grubbs, Pastor 9:45 a m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. -Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. Wed - Ladles AuxUlary A Laymens League

REV. DAVID MORROW

WeekLong Revival Starts Monday

Annual spring revival services will be held at Cornerstone Missionary Baptist Church March 14-18 with the Rev. David Morrow of Burlington as the guest speaker.

Morrow is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is a candidate for the master of divinity degree from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest.

The following area churches will conduct the nightly devotional services: Monday, Phillips Christian Church; Tuesday, Mount Calvary FWB Church; Wednesday,

Sycamore Hill Baptist Church; Thursday, Holy Trinity United Holy Church, and Friday, York Memorial AME Zion Church.

Services begin at 7:30 p.m. and are open to the public. The church is located at the intersection of Stantonsburg and Allen roads.

Church Plans Quarterly Meeting

Quarterly meeting services will be held Sunday at Mount Shiloh Baptist Church, Winterville. The service will be conducted at 3 p.m. by the pastor and congregation of Spring Garden Baptist Church of Washington, N.C.

Bishop To Lead Service

Bishop Stephen Jones, the senior choir and senior ushers will be in charge of the 11 a.m. worship service Sunday at Haddock Chapel Church. Sunday school will be held at 9:45 a.m.

Simpson Singers To Pdrform

The Simpson Gospel Singers will celebrate their anniversary Sunday at 3:30 p.m. at English Chapel Free Will Baptist Church. Lonnie Lee House of Norfolk, Va., will be the guest.

Joy Night Service Planned

The Rev. Charles Covil will preach a Joy Night service Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Church near Ayden. Covil is pastor of Deliverance Back To God Revival Temple. Joy Night is sponsored by the Pastors Aid Club.

I

Adventists Plan Homecoming

Homecoming will begin Saturday at 9:30 a:m. at the Greenville Seventh-day Adventist Church.

Elder Malcolm Gordon, president of the Carolina Conference of Seventh-day Adventist Churches, will be the guest speaker at the services. He will speak on The Unfinished Reformation to a Finished Work at the 11 a.m. service and The Church Triumph at the 3:30 meeting.

The afternoon programs will include musical presentations and mission reports from the area Adventist churches.

Auxiliary Plans Family Night

Family night will be observed by the Junior Ladies Auxiliai7 of Sycamore Hill Baptist Church Sunday at 7 p.m.

Families representing various churches will be special guests and Eve Rogers will be the guest speaker. The young adult choir will furnish the music.

"Men In Black' Service Set

The board of stewards of St. Stephen AME Zion Church in Farmville will sponsor a 100 Men in Black program Sunday at 3 p.m. at the church.

The Rev. Donnie Jones of the Church of God in Christ of Rocky Mount will deliver the message. The Male Chorus Of St. Paul Baptist Church, Rocky Mount, will present a musical program.

Appreciation Services Scheduled

Elder Jack Richardson will preach an appre(:iation service

LwMa Cf

Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Eldress Louise Phillips will preach an appi^iation service for Eldress Phillis Thomas, also at St Matthew,

Dr. Deitch To Preach

n    W^    Deitch,    who    recently    retired as pastor of Red

Oak Christian Church, will preach Sunday at Mount Plesant Chnstian Church at 11 a.m. Deitch was pastor at Red Oak for seven years.

Musical To Be Presented

A musical. Beginning Again, will be presented at Oakmont Baptist Church by its Chapel Choir Sunday at 11 a.m.

This work was commissioned for the 1982 Youth Ministry National Conference in Nashville, Tenn. The choir is composed of 46 young people ranging in ages from 13 to 24 and is directed by Treva Fidler.

The performance will be the first of li scheduled this spring. A highlight of the tour will be a performance at the First Baptist Church of the City of Washington, D C., on April

Greenville Church Of The Nazarene

Presently Meeting In The First Federal Building, Community Room, Greenville Boulevard.

Cliff Jones, Pastor

Sunday School..............................9:45    A.M.

Morning Worship...........................11:00 A.M.

Sunday Evening Service.....................6:00    P.M.

Come Grow With Us!

Red Oak Christian Church

264 Bypass West * 9:45 a.m. Bible School 11:00 a .m. Laity Sunday 6:00 p.m. Great Youth Program

Nursery Schooi Monday Thru Friday 7:00 a.m. tii 6:00 p.m.

THE END OF YOUR SEARCH FOR A FRIENDLY CHURCH

cM[.moxiai ijou l[[ find a

UJLL

(jjaim

WELCOmE.

SUNDAY SCHOOL

9:45 A M

WORSHIP.............11:00    AM

t

\SafitiAi Cliutcli

1510 Greenville Blvd S E

GREENVILLE'S FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ORGANIZED 1827

^EOPLE'S

^APTIST

^EMPLE





12-The Daily Reflector. GreenviUe, N.C.-Friday, March 11,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 50 cents to $1.25 lower. Kinston 51.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 50.50, Wilson 50.75, Salisbury 50.00, Rowland 50.50, Spivey's Corner 50.00. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 52.00, Fayetteville 52.00, Whiteville 52.00, Wallace 53.00. Spivey's Corner 53.00, Rowland 52.50, Durham 53.00.

Poultry RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) (NCDAI - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 40.75 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2'2 to 3 pound birds. 65 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed, with a preliminary* weighted average of 40.62 cents f.o.b dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was 2,053.000, compared to 1,635,000 last Monday.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market drifted lower today, continuing the indecisive pattern of the past several days.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 12.86 Wednesday and off 11.70 Thursday, slipped 1.84 to 1,119,10 by noontime today.

Losers held a 3-2 lead over gainers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries oil ministers were still struggling today to reach agreement on a unified market strategy.

Mana Saeed Otaiba of the United Arab Emirates said the delegates were far apart on the pivotal question of production quotas for individual members of the group.

The stock market has seesawed erratically all week as traders awaited the outcome of the OPEC talks.

1 G.D, Searle led the active list and tumbled 6's to 37 >h after the company said its earnings from continuing operations would be "significantly lower in the first half of the year.

American Telephone & Telegraph, also heavily traded, was down 4 at 66. On Thursday Moody's Investors Service lowered its rating of the companys debt, and underwriters brought out a new offering of AT&T stock.

The NYSEs composite index fell .28 to 87,37. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was off .87 at 385.96

Volume on the Big Board totaled 30.88 million shares at noontime, against 44.72 million at the same point Thursday.

AMR Corp AbbtLabs Allis Chaltn .Alcoa AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan Am Family Am Motors AmStand Amer TiT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Coro CaroPwLt Celanese Cent Soya . Champ int Chrysler CocCola 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 Fuqua Ind GTE Corp GnDynam Gen Elec Gen Food Gen .Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co Gl.Nor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculesinc Honeywell HospiCp s Ing Rand IBM

Inti Harv Int Paper Int Rectif Int TiT K mart KaisrAlum KanebSve KrogerCo Loc Bleed Ixiews Corp Masonite n McDermott .Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB Cp NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou n OlinCp Owenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid ProclGamb s (Juaker Oat RCA

RalstnPur RppubAir Republic Stl Revlon Reynldind Rockwelint RoyCrown StRegis Pap Scott Paper SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co .Sperry Cp sldOilCal StdOillnd SIdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn CMC Ind On Camp L'n Carbide CnOilCal L'niroyal US Steel Wachov Cp WalMart s WestPtPep Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox (."p

43y<    

13

431-,

I24    13

34A,    34    34

46Vy    46>Vi    461.4

344i    34'ii    34^

4(P4    40'2    40yy

16S.    164s    164s

7>-4    7'6    7'y,

33>.4    33>s    33is

66's    66    66

244s    244s    24*2

23 37^4 414s

544s    544s    544s

31    31

56s    5644    56s

22^4

23'i    23

37s    374s

414s    41'4

16'

50'

19's IS'j

19s 284s    284s

28's    284s    284s

39    384,    381

474s    47    47'4

3Fs    31'2    3144

41's    40s    40'S

2244    224s    2244

8s

85s    85's

35

8's

85s

3444    3444

5944    59*4    59*4

31 19

3744    374;

304s    30S

1844    1844

19'i!    194s

40i

38'.

35'4

40'4

3744

194s

3944    39s

43-S.    434    43i

103    1024s    102's

40's    404,    40I4

48s

594,    59'

34'4    34

484,    484

5944

34

4344    434    434,

26's    26    26

354,    35'-4    354

2944    30

43

30

434    43

46's    4644    4644

25    244    25

314    31.1    314

334,    33I4    33'4

934    927    927

46    45    4544

46's    4544    4544

10044    1004    lOO's,

6'4    6's    6'4

54    53's    54

15's    15    15

35-4    35    35's

291    30',

18    18'2

16',    17'

38'    384,    387

984,    984    98J

1624,    1624,    I624

51    50's    51

19'.,    19    19

24'    23    24

T9'-4    79    79'

28'    28-4

92's

30'-

184

17',

92s    91

22',    214,

3444    34

264,    26'-

554    55

21' 34' 264, 55"s

28'*    28'-    28-4,

29',    29S    29'-

55',    55',    554,

34',    344,    34,

31',    304,    31's

60S    60',    60'-

334    331    334

28',    28S    28

56',    55'

45    444

24    23'

194,    194,    194,

8',    8.4,    8'

224,    22"

56'

45

23"s

22

354    35'/(

50 514,

23S

354 494,    49S

51',    514,

30 20 34 54 26 14

16', 16 35S    351-4

36',

43',

41'-

23'-4    23'-4

30    30',

20',    204,

34't. 34S 534    54

25,    25,

13,    14',

21';

66';

32'-.

16

35'-4 36S    36,

43    43',

41',    41'

21'-.    21'-j

494,    49',

II 11

704,    70',

60', 60",

664,

32'-

49',

II

704

60S

314,

11',

32',    31'-.

II',    11,

23'-.    231,    23S

37',    37's    37

524,    52''4    52'-4

45',    45'

46',    45

37,    374,    .37'

464 ,    46',    464,

30';

44'

394

45'-_.

46',

30"s    30';

44',    44,

:i9'7    :i9'-.

FRIDAY

10:00 a.m. General meeting of Greenville Womans Club meets at club bldg,

7:30 p m. Ked Men meet

SATURDAY

1:30 p.m. - Duplicate bridge game at Planters Baiik 8:00 p.m. - AA open discussion at St Pauls Episcopal Church

Following are selected 11 market quotations Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power i Light

Collins i Aikman

Connor

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

Fieldcrest

Hatteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

lx)we's

McDonald's

McGraw

Piedmont

Pizza Inn

PiG

TRW. Inc.

United Tel Virginia Electric Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER

Aviation

Branch

Little Mint

Planters Bank

The Public Works Department is responsible for site work on all City-owned lands, parking lots, and street rights-of-way. For information, cal 752-4137.

Attmtioii OreMville CHiiem!

PUBLIC NOTICE

County of Pitt City of Greenville

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Morehead Entertainment & Communications, Inc. whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit, under the provisions of Sections 32-65 (c) and (d) of the City Code, In order to operate a retail and wholesale satellite antennas and communications and to allow residential quarters at 2721 S Memorial Drive. This property Is zoned for "Highway Commercial (CH) usage.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7 30 PM, Thursday, March 24,1983. in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Buildirrg.

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Greenville Investors No. 1 whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit, under the provisions of Section 32-56 (f) of the City Code, in order to construct a dormitory on the property fronting on Reade Circle behind and adjacent to the Marathon Restaurant and Margaux. This property is zoned for "Downtown Commercial Fringe" (COh usage.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, March 24,1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

Lois D. Worthington March 11,18,1983    CUyOerK

Senators Okay Hunt DUI Bill

Obituary Column

lAP) -Midday stocks: High Low Last 24\ 24    24V

22'-.    22'4

58    57'-;

144-4    1444

25'-    254    254

57';

1444

164    160

49"4    50'

374

45'

22'4

'25

18',

224

344,

284

31

33'7

154

44'

33',

32",

37

68:5,

46',

36

94

56'-;

66'-

21'.,

15'

37',

19'-4-19'4

17-17'

11'

2744-28'4

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Gov. Jim Hunt praised the state Senate for tentatively passing his drunken driving bill, as supporters of raising the legal age for drinking beer and wine from 18 to 21 vowed to continue the fight.

The Senate voted 48-0 Thursday to pass Hunts bill on its second reading after Sen. Robert Warren, D-Johnston, withdrew his amendment approved Wednesday to raise the drinking age to 21, instead of 19 as Hunt supports,

Warren said he acted in li^t of widespread fears that raising the drinking age so drastically would force the bill off the Senate floor and back to the Appropriations Committee, where it could die.

But he said he immediately would introduce separate legislation to raise the drinking age to 21. At least two amendments dealing with other controversial sections will be introduced Tuesday, when the Senate takes its final vote on the bill.

Can't Afford 3rd Operation

KERNERSVILLE, N.C, (AP) Elizabeth Collins says she doesnt have the money to pay for a third ear operation for her son - but Baptist Hospital says the family is not poor enough to qualify for free care.

Vernon Shawn Collins, 12. has had trouble with his ears all his life and has already had two operations. Doctors say he needs another one, which was scheduled at the Winston-Salem hospital for April 5.

Baptist Hospital spokesman Bill Glance said the operation will not be canceled if Mrs. Collins comes up with a $2,100 deposit by April 4,

Glance said the Collins family income is too high for young Collins to qualify for free care or for government assistance.

Mrs. Collins husband, Vernon, 57, is dying of cancer.

COCAINE SEIZED MARIGOT, French West Indies (AP) - Customs police in the French Caribbean have seized seven pounds of pure South American cocaine with a street value of more than $1 million before it could be shipped to New York City, they said today.

UNRELENTING ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -Authorities in this Persian Gulf sheikdom have confiscated bags of onions appearing on the local market with a Star of David, the national insignia of Israel.

Under Senate rules, each bill must survive three votes before being sent to the House. Thursdays vote was the second on Hunts bill.

The House Finance Committee, meanwhile, approved the House version of Hunts bill. It was referred to the House Appropriations Committee for further consideration of its monetary impact.

Hunts bill would replace driving under the influence and other related charges with a single driving while impaired offense. It woiild eliminate plea bargaining and require sentencing hearings during which evidence would be presented on each cases severity.

The bill also would impose civil liability on ABC permit holders who sell alcoholic beverages to underaged patrons who later cause traffic accidents.

Slept Through Siege By Police

CINCINNATI (AP) -After spending V-k hours staking out a home from which shots had been fired, police finally entered the building and found its occupant sound asleep.

Police assembled 17 cruisers, a 15-man special weapons and tactics team and a fire truck outside Clarence Millers home upon receiving reports of gunfire.

At length, after there was no response to telephone calls or shouts from police, officers climbed a ladder, entered a second-story window and found the 6i-year-old Miller sleeping.

He was awakened, arrested and taken to jail.

It appears it was just a little case of intoxication, said Lt. Col. Larry Whalen, who said Millers family fled the house after Miller fired several shots.

After they left, Miller laid down and fell asleep, and was apparently unaware that police had surrounded his home, officials said. He was charged with inducing panic and using firearms while intoxicated.

TO EXTEND RIGHTS

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) The all-white government will introduce legislation soon giving people of Asian and mixed racial bgackgrounds the right to hold certain seats in Parliament, a South African official says.

Carr

ROBERSONVILLE -Funeral services for Mrs. Mary J. Carr, who died Thursday, will be conducted at Wynns Chapel Missionary Baptist Church Sunday at 2:30 p.m. by the Rev. G.L, Harris. Burial will be in the Pinelawn Cemetery in Bethel.

Surviving are five daughters, Mrs. Virginia Brown of the home, Mrs. Frances Wilkins, Mrs. Clara Wilson and Mrs. Lizzie Sherrod, all of Bethel, and Mrs. Etoris Killebrew of Portsmouth, Va.; five sons, Frank Carr of Plymouth, Vernon Carr of Bethel, Eli Carr of Robersonville, Harvey Carr of Speed and Oaude Carr of Tarboro; 52 grandchildren; 80 great-grandchildren and 10 great-great-grandchildren.

The family will be at Flanagan Funeral Chapel in Robersonville Saturday from 7-8 p.m.

Gark

Mrs. Maggie Louvenla Clark, 68, died Tuesday in the Beaufort County Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Hardees Funeral Chapel by Bishop Matthew Best. Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Cemetery.

Mrs. Clark attended Jones School and was a member of Sycamore Chapel Baptist Church.

She is survived by three foster daughters, Mrs. Essie Wooten and Mrs. Ida Smith, both of Greenville, and Mrs. Pearlie Herbert of Washington, D.C.; three> foster sons, Russell Gray of

Evacuated Due Chemical'Flash'

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) - A metal-plating chemical accidentally spilled at Hughes Aircraft Co. caused a flash that prompted the evacuation of 60 employees while sending 29 others to area hospitals, officials said.

None of those treated or examined for inhalation of fumes from chromic acid was seriously hurt Thursday, officials said. It was an oxidizer flash - like a gunpowder flash, phoomph! -not an explosion, said El Segundo police Lt. Dave Johnson.

Tune-Ups - Brake Jobs General Repairs

Auto Specialty Co.

917 W. 5th St.

758-1131

Chocowinity, George Gray of Greenville and Edward Gray of Alexandria, Va.; and one sister, Mrs. Lossie Briley of Greenville.

The family will receive friends Saturday from 8:30-9:30 at the Hardees Funeral Chapel and at other times at the home of Mrs. Ida Smith, 1901-A Norcott Circle, Greenville.

Gemons

The Rev. Washington Clemons, a native of Stokes, died Monday in Portsmouth, Va. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. in Portsmouth.

He was the brother of the Rev. H.B. Clemons of Greenville and the Rev. Samuel D. Clemons of Goldsboro.

Funeral arrangements are being handled by Fishers Funeral Home of Portsmouth.

Cox

Mrs. Roberta Smith Cox of 509 Venters St., Ayden, died Saturday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Jennie Mae Cox Williams, on Route 3, Ayden. Her funeral service will be conducted Sunday at 4 p.m. at Shiloh Church of Christ, Disciples of Christ, on Route 1, Grifton, by Elder Mark Chapman. Interment will be in the church cemetery.

Mrs. Cox was bom and reared in the Grifton community and had made her home in and around Ayden most of her life. She was a member of Shiloh Church and its senior choir.

Surviving are her husband, Frank David Cox of the home; a daughter, Mrs. Jennie Mae Cox Williams of Route 3, Ayden, and a sister, Mrs. Esther Mae Smith Moore of Ayden.

The family will receive friends at the Norcott Funeral Home Memorial Chapel in Ayden Saturday

from 8 to 9 p.m. They will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Mooi;^, 209 Edge Road, Ayden.

%

Harringtoa

NEWBURGH, N.Y. - Mr. Manning Harrington Jr., 46, died Thursday ni^t while visiting here. He was the son of Helen Louise Harrington of 102-C Lakeview Terrrace, Greenville, N.C. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hardees Funeral Home, Greenville.

Smith

Mr. Willie Lee Smith, 53, died Monday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. FuneraJ services will be conducted Sunday at 3 p.m. at the Selvia Chapel Free Will Baptist Church by the Rev. Clifton Gardner. Burial will follow in the Anderson Cemetery in Greene County.

Mr. Smith attended Eppes High School and was a member of the Selvia Chapel FWBCh|^ch.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Fannie Mae Smith of the home; three daughters, Janice Smith, Glenda Smith and Sharon Smith, all of the home; two sons, Perry Smith of the home and SP4 Willie Smith of West Germany; four sisters, Annie Ruth Smith of New York, Mrs. Shirley Chapman anil Mrs. Dora Bullock, both of Greenville, and Mrs. Venella Taylor of Washington, D.C.; two brothers, Joe Louis Smith and Kisser Smith, both of New York, and three grandchildren.

The family will receive friends Saturday from 7-8 p.m. at Hardees Funeral Chapel and at other times at the home, 1903-B Kennedy Circle.

Whitehead TARBORO - Funeral services for Mr. Charlie Ralph Whitehead will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m.

at Hart Chapel Baptist Church in Leggetts by the Rev. James Dickens. Burial will be to the McDowell Cemetery in Leggetts.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Jessie Ann Whitehead of the home; a dau^ter, Mrs. Bessie Evans of Rocky Mount; one son, Sammy D. Whitehead of Philadel^a; three foster sons, Chariie Whitehead Jr. of Greensboro, Walter Whitehead of Korea and William Henry Whitehead of Philadelphia; 14 grandchildren; a sister, I^iss Margaret Whitehead of kocky Mount; three brothers, Otis Lee Whitehead Falkland, James mitehead of Tarboro and Thomas Ray Whitehead of Greensboro.

The family will receive friends in the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary Chapel Saturday from 7 to8 p.m.

Whitehurst

BETHEL - Mr. Raymond Robert Whitehurst, 78, a retired businessman, died today. His funeral service will be conducted Sunday at ,3 p.m. in the Bethel Pentecostal Holiness Church. Burial will be in the Bethel City Cemetery.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Frances Carson Whitehurst of the home; a daughter, Ms. Trudy Gulley of Bethel; three sisters, Mrs. Floyd Thomas of Bethel, Mrs. Mollie Scott of Washington, N.C., and Mrs. Myrtle Lake of Williamsburg, Va., and one grandchild.

The family will receive friends Saturday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Ayres-Gray Funeral Home here.

Family Acknowledgement

The family of the late James Earnest Foremen, would like for you to know, that the prayers and other acts of kindness and sympathy shown during his illness and the hours of bereavement, were sincerely appreciated.

May God richly bless each of you.

Claude and Annie F. Little

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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH II, 1983Pirates Surprise Mason, Face Indians

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor

RICHMOND, Va. - With nine seconds to go last night in the first round of the ECAC-South tournament, East Carolinas Tony RdJinson was on the verge of being the goat of the game.

But just a couple of seconds later, he turned into a hero, making a steal that gave East Carolina a 68^ upset" over George Mason.

Robinson had been intentionally fouled with nine seconds left by John Niehoff, and Robinson missed both shots with ECU up by just one, 6885.

Mason grabbed the rebound on the second miss and got the ball Co-Player of the Year Carlos Yates just off the ECU foul line. As he turned to go up court, Robinson slapped the ball out of his hands, grabbed it up and laid it in for a 68-65 lead with just four seconds left and it was all over.

The victory, ECUs 16th

against 12 losses, sends the Pirates into tonights semifinals against regular season winner William & Mary, which had a first round bye.

In the second game last night,    Navy    downed

Richmond, 74-69, and will meet number two James Madison in the other game tonight.

The contest between ECU and Mason was close aU the way, with the Pirates opening up a six-point lead behind the scoring of Johnny Edwards and Charles Green with 6:46 left at 55-49.

The Pirates slowed it down over the final five minutes, and got only one field go^, but made nine of 13 at the line to keep the lead. Mason cut the margin back to one on four occasions over the last two minutes, but each time, the Pirates would make their free throws to hold onto the lead.

That is, until Robinson missed and it appeared that Mason might get off the last

Wolfpack Takes ECU Invitational

North Carolina State captured the East Carolina Invitational Golf Tournament at Brook Valley Country Club Thursday with a team total of 879 for the three-day event, nine strokes ahead of Duke.

The Wolfpack held a three-stroke lead over UNC-Chapel Hill going into the final round, but the Tar Heels faltered with a 305 total yesterday while NCSU shot a 298. The Blue Devils moved into second with 294 tally.

Other teams competing and their three-round totals were: William & Mary 895, East Carolina 901, Virginia 914, UNC-Charlotte 914, Temple 915, Campbell 920, Old Dominion 922, UNC-WUmin^n 959 and American University 961.

Nolan Mills of North Caro-

Baseball Career Prompts Surgery

HOUSTON (AP) - Houston Astros pitcher J.R. Richard underwent surgery to improve circulation in his left leg only because of his profession, his surgeon says.

If J.R. Richard was not an athlete, we would not have considered operating, Dr. William S. Fields said Thursday following the six-hour operation.

He could have had an office job, but thats not what he wanted to do. We wanted to get him back throwing again, Fields said.

Thursdays surgery was the latest setback in Richards long comeback road that started in July 1980 when the former All-Star pitcher suffered a stroke.

Richard had rqwrted to the Astros spring training last month in the best shape since his stroke, Fields said, but started sufferinig leg fatigue after running drills.

Doctors discovered that an artificial artery implanted in Richards left leg in 1980 had become clogged. In Thursdays operation, doctors bypassed the blocked artery with another artificial artery.

Fields said Richard would remain hospitalized seven to 10 days and could resume a light exercise program within two weeks. It likely will be six weeks before Richard could

resume full spring tri^g activity, he said.

The only setback Richard had suffered was the lost time in recovering from the surgery. Fields said.

Were still looking at this as a detour, the doctor said. He should be able to resume his career.

Richard, a former All-Star pitcher,    underwent

emergency surgery in July 1980 after suffering a near-fatal stroke during a workout in the Astrodome.

Surgeons at that time removed a piece of artery from Richards leg and used it to repair a damaged artery in his pitching shoulder. Doctors replaced the missing portion of arteiy in Richards leg with an artificial Dacron artery.

Richard, since his stroke, has been seeking a return to the major leagues. He pitched last summer for Tucson in the Class AAA league but was not effective. He had been showing improvement during spring training until his leg problem developed.

The 6-foot-8 right-hander, whose fast ball had been clocked at nearly 100 mph, was the National Leagiws starting pitcher in the 1980 All-Star game. He had a 104 record and a 1.89 earned run average.

Sports Colondor

Ed/tor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.

Todays Sports Baseball

Kinston at Ayden-Grifton (4 p.m.)

East Carolina at Virginia Com-monwealUi (2 p.m.)

North Pitt at Roanoke (4 p.m.)

Williamston at Bear Grass (3:30 p.m.)

BasketbaU

ECAC-South Tournament at Richmond

Indoor Track

NCAA Meet at Detroit Softball

East Carolina at Florida State Invitational

Plymouth at North Pitt

Golf

East Carolina at Iron Duke Classic

Saturdays Sports Baseball

Beddingfield at Parmvllle Central (3;30p.m.)

Havelock at Rose (2 p.m.) ConnecUcut at Ean Carolina (2

p.m.)

Snftbsii

Beddingfield at Parmvllle Central (3:30p.m.)

East Carolina at Flarkla State Invitational

PnrtTTt*** ECAC-South Tournament at Richmond >

IndoorTrack NCAA at Detroit GoU

East Carolina at Iron Duke Classic

r>s!

shot o the game.

Then - Robinson got the fateful steal.

He bricked those two free throws, a relieved ECU Coach Charlie Harrison said of Robinsons final heroics, but he made up for it with the steal.

GMU Coach Joe Harrington didnt (juite agree. They could have called a foul

there, he . told the press afterwards. (Yates) could have gone to Uie line a lot more than he did tonight. It would have taken a lot of guts to make the call, but I think it should have been called.

But both coaches agreed that one of the tug differences in the game was the play of Charles Green, who to^ in 20 points and pulled off a

game high 14 rebounds.

Green makes a lot of difference for us, Harrington said. He gives us a lot more ^ flexibility. We can move Johnny outside at forward some too with (Green) in there, like we did tonight. He had four possessions out there and scored on three of them. Edwards, who was overlooked for Rookie of the

lina State took t^ individual honors with consistant rounds of 72,69 and 70 for a threo<iay total of 211. First round leader David Whitfield of UNC-Chapel Hill suffered through the final two rounds to post a 225 for a tie for 13th place with ECUs Kelly Stimert.

The top individual performers in the tourney were: Mills, Chuck Taylor (Duke) 212, Greg Bales (UVa) 219, Bly Musto (W&M) 219, Kurt Beck (UNO 220, Rick Riddle (Duke) 221, Jeffrey Lankford (NCSU) 221, David Ciiapman (NCSU) 222, Jon Riddle (ECU) 223 and Steve Douglas (ODU)223.

The Pirates will compete in the Iron Duke Classic Golf tourney March 11-13 at the Duke University course in Durham.

Up With The Ball

East Carolina forward, Johnny Edwards (33), steals the ball from George Mason guard Carols Yates (32) during first-half action of the ECU-Mason Eastern College Athletic

Conference South quarterfinal basketball game held in Richmond Thursday. ECU will take on William and Mary tonight in semi-final play. (AP Laserphoto)

ACC Pair In NCAA

ConnecUcut at East Carolina

(1:30p.m.)

Golf

East Canrilna at Iron Duke Classic

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer

ATLANTA (AP) - At least two Atlantic Coast Conference basketball teams have locked up bids to the NCAA tournament, but two more are seeking to earn berths by their performances in todays opening round of the ACC tournament.

Second-ranked Virpnia and No. 5 North Carolina are virtually assured of postseason play because of their 12-2 finish at the top of the conference. Maryland is also mentioned as a possible NCAA participant because of its surprising 19-8 record and an 8-6 conference slate.

One more spot may be available and North Carolina State battles Wake Forest for that berth in todays second game at The Omni.

In the first game, the top-seeded Tar Heels will meet last-place Clemson. In tonights session, second-seedd Virginia takes on No. 7 seed Duke and the third-seeded Terrapins play No. 6 seed Georgia Tech.

Saturdays semifinals are scheduled for 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. Sundays championship starts at 1 p.m.

The reigning " national champion Tar Heels are looking for their third straight league title. N.C. State accomplished the trick in 1954-56 and North Carolina repeated it inl%7-69.

The Wolfpack, 17-10 and 84, cruriied Wake Forest 130-89 in Raleigh last weekend, but N.C. State coach Jim Valvano said his team has to forget that game and concentrate on getting beyond the revenge-minded Demon Deacons.

We wanna win. Wed like to win this tournament, Valvano said. Wed like to go to the NCAA. Our kids have handled so much adversity, I think they have a good perspective on the game.

Forwerd ITiurl Bailey, one of the three starting seniors, predicted that a victory would go a long way toward hdping the Wolfpack become th fourth kCC team to charge to\^ the NCAA tlUe.

To win this one will put us somewhere in the NCAA, Bailey said. If we lose to Wake Forest, were in the (National    Invitation

Tournament).

Wake Forest, 17-10 and 7-7, has been besieged by injuries to its key starters. Alvis Rogers hasnt completely recovered from a knee inju^ and Danny Young is still hobbled by two sprained ankles. Those injuries have been responsible in part for a Demon Deacon losing streak of four games.

Our situation is not desperate, Wake Forest coach Carl Tacy said. We definitely need one good game. We need to get back to the team we were.

The Tar Heels were the first to arrive for practice and followed the workout with the announcement that junior forward Sam Perkins is ques-*tionable for the Gemson game because of a sprained toe. He suffered that injury in last weekends victory over Duke.

I would like to play, said Perkins, but I dont want to reinjure the foot.

Coach Dean Smith said Warren Martin was a likely replacement for Perkins, but Clemson coach Bill Foster was betting on seeing Perkins 4or the opening tap.

I think. heU play, said Foster. Theres about as big a chance of him not playing as there is of me suiting up. North Carolina has beaten Clemson seven times in as many tries in the ACC tournament, but forward Michael Jordan said the Tar Heels arent looking beyond the Tigers to another NCAA bid.

We feel the NCAA is off in the future right liow, Jordan said. "The only thing were concentrating on now is the Gemson game. We wanna win that before we can even think about anything in the future. Duke arrived in Atlanta Thursday afternoon for a brief workout, while the Cavaliers remaineid in Charlottesville. The Blue Devils started four freshmen and paid for the inexperience with a 11-16 and

3-11 records, while Vir^nia was 25-3. Duke has won six of seven tournament meetings with Virginia.

Weve shown that there are no quitters in this program, ' said Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski. They still have the confidence that they're going to be a fine basketball team.

The hos( Yellow Jackets will finish the opening round against a Terrapin team which took Virginia down to the final minute before Ralph Sampsons foul-line jump shot with three seconds left resulted in an 8341 Cavalier victory.

Georgia Tech is paced by freshman Mark Price, who tied Jordan for league scoring honors at 20 points per game. Price also led the ACC in free throw percentage and in number of three-point field goals attempted, made and number of attempts per game.

Marylands Adrian Branch averaged.18.8 points per game although he shot 47 pefcent from the field. Ben Coleman added 15.7 points a contest and trailed only Sampson in field goal percentage at 59.3 percent. '

Year honors in the ECAC despite being picked as the only freshman on the All-Conference team, led the scoring with 21 points.

The two teams bounced the lead back and forth throughout the first half as it changed hands five times in the first 11 minutes before Yates, the fourth leading scorer in the country, popped a three-point play for a 22-20 margin, then added another and Dwayne Grace hit two, running Mason out to a 28-20 lead with 5:35 left in the half.

ECU rallied behind four points by Green to within two, but couldnt take the lead. A three-point play with four seconds left by Green pulled the Pirates back to 35-34 at the half.

The two swapped the lead again early, nine times over the first ten minutes in the second half.

Then, with 9:48 left, Edwards hit from the foul circle and Bany Wright added a baseline jumper. Green

added a free thrown, then scored from underneath on a pass from Tom Brown.

That made it 55:49 with 6:46 to go.

Yates scored for GMU, but Edwards matched that. Then, over the next four minutes, the Patriots slowly chipped away at the lead until Mike Shannon hit with 1:44 to go cutting it to 60-59.

From there on, however the Pirates made their free throws and got the key steal from Robinson when they missed at the stripe.

Yates was held to 20 points by the Pirates for the second time this year. That tied his second lowest total of the year. (The other game saw him score 23 in a double overtime.)

And it was - without a doubt - a typical ECAC game between the two. Four of the five meetings between the two teams have been decided by a total of seven points.

In addition to Yates 20, Ricky Wilson added 18. Wright

added 11 and Robinson, ten, to Edwards and Greens totals.

ECU shot only 44.2 percent while GMU made good on 52.0 percent. The Pirates outre-bounded the Pats, 33-29, with an 8-12 margin in the second half.

East Carolina (68)

MPFGFT

RbF AP

Wriglit

34 U

5<

2 1

4

11

Green

39 6-10

8-9

14 3

3

20

Edwards

34 9-18

3-5

4 2

0

21

Robinson

40 2-8

6-10

3 3

3

10

Peartree

14 2-4

OO

1 4

0

4

Vanderhorst

14 0-2

00

0 2

0

0

Brown

24 1-4

00

6 2

1

2

Harris

1 00

00

0 0

0

0

Team

3

Totals

200 23-52 22-30 33 17 11

68

George Mason (65)

Wilson

34 7-14

4H

4 3

3

18

Shannon

31 1-2

OO

7 4

1

2

Rose

28 2-5

OO

1 4

0

4

Niehoff

30 2-6

1-2

I 5

3

5

Yates

37 8-15

4-7

9 4

5

20

Yohe

17 3-5

00

0 1

0

6

McQueen

3 00

OO

0 1

0

0

Hanlin

7 (HI

2-2

2 1

0

2

Grace

13 3-3

2-2

3 2

0

8

Team

2

Totals

200 26-50 13-17 29 25 12

65

EastCaroUna

34

34

68

George Mason

35

20

-

65

Turnovers: ECU 13, GMU 12. Technical fouls: None.

Officials: Rote, Catanzaro, CuUio.

ECU Rallies For A Pair Over Va. Commonvveahh

By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer A two-run homer by David Wells in the bottom of the seventh inning of the first game and a two-out dropp^ pop fly with the score tied in the seventh frame of the second contest gave the ECU Pirates a pair of victories over Virginia Commonwealth Thursday.

Wells homer, his first of the season, came off reliever Dave Fitzgerald with one out to give the Pirates an 8-6 win in the opener.. With Todd Evans on first base and John Hallow on second, Winfred Johnson hit a pop-up to VCU shortstop Vernon Word, but the ball scooted out of the webbing and Hallow trotting home for a 3-2 come-from-behind win.

(Virginia Commonwealth) really deserved better than what they got toni^t, said ECU coach Hal Baird, whose team improves to 4-2 on the season. The best thing I can see from these two games is that our players didnt quit. We need to get better and quick - before we get into conference games.

The Pirates cjuickly took the lead in the first game, as leadoff hitter Kelly Robinette vyalked and later scored on a single by David Home. The Rams answered in the top of the second, as Rodney Wright drew a base-on-balls and

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scored when John Nowell grounded out.

VCU plated three more runs in the third, with Terry Summerfield rapping a single and scoring on Chuck Hiters base hit. Kenny Grant reached base when Hallow hobbled his grounder at third, and both Hiter and Grant crossed the plate when Wright ripped a ball to right-center.

Horne led off the fourth with a solo homer to right, and Jabo Fulghum scored another run for the Pirates on a Robinette sacrifice to right field with one out.

The Rams added insurance runs in the fifth and sixth innings, but Fulghum, Tony Salmond and Robert Wells crossed the plate for the Pirates in the sixth to set the score at 6-6.

After Evans singled to open the seventh and advanced on a sacrifice bunt by Johnson, VCU coach Tony Guzzo inserted Fitzpatrick who served up D. Wells game-winning blast.

Chubby Butler, who came on for ECU with two out in the fifth, recorded the win to improve his record to 2-0.

In the second game, ECU pitcher Robby McClanahan

walked Wright to lead off the second. He advanced to second on a single by Nowell and scored on subsequent walks to Word and catcher Don Phillips.

The Rams picked up another run in the fourth when Phillips singled and courtesy runner Rick Tomlin stole second and third and scored on a single by Fahmey.

ECU catcher Jack Curlings drew a walk on four pitches to open the seventh. Courtesy runner Robert Langston advanced on Mark Shanks sin^e and scored on Hallows solid drive to right. Shank scored on a single by Evans to knot the score at 2-2 with two out.

Johnsons towering pop fly seemed destined to send the game to extra innings, but Words bobble silenced the Rams hopes of gaining their first win in six outings.

We were really out-played (Please turn to page 14)

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Syracuse Needed Win, Got It

On And Off Balance

Chattanoogas Willie White goes for a jumpshot, catching Appalachian States Bill Nealy off balance as

States Wade Capehart looks on in the quarterfinals of the Southern Conference tournament. (AP Laserphoto)

By KEN RAPPOPORT AP^rts Writer

Jim Bodieim didnt have to say much to his Syracuse basketball players before sending them out to meet Georgetown in the Big East tournament.

If any team needed a win, it was us, said the Syracuse coach.

The 20th-ranked Orangemen had lost two regular-season games to the Hoyas - including one as recently as last Monday ni^t - and a loss Thursday night would not only have bounced them out of the tournament, but quite possibly out of the NCAA playoffs as well.

They made sure that wouldnt happen, beating the 15th-ranked Hoyas convincingly, 79-72.

Syracuse was better than us tonight, said Georgetown Coach John Thompson. Monday night had nothing to do with it.

Rautins and Santifer knew it was their last time around. They did a great job. They beat us.

Thompson referred to two of the Orangemens seniors, Leo Rautins and Erich Santifer. Santifer scored 23 points and Rautins had 18 points, seven rebounds and six assists.

In the other quarterfinal games at Madison Square Garden, No. 8 St. Johns defeated Pitt 64-53 behind Billy Goodwins 16 points; No. 13 Villanova edged Connecticut 69-68 on John Pinones free throw with 23 seconds remaining and No. 14 Boston College hammered Seton Hall 79-56 behind John

Garris 23 points, outscoring the Pirates by a whopping 53-20 in the second half.

Connecticut played inspired basketball. Our patience down the stretch and experience (town the stretch took its toll on them, said Villanova Coach Rollie Massimino.

The Big East tournament was one of several played around the country Thursday night as teams continued to shoot for spots in the NCAAs post-season tourney.

Sidney Green scored 28 points to lead No. 9 Nevada-Las Vegas to 74-67 victoiy over University of the Pacific in an opening round game of the Pacific Coast Athletic Association tournament.

In other first-round games, San Jose State beat Utah State 80-6 behind Chris McNealys 27 points; Fresno State defeated UC Irvine 86-68 as Bernard Thompson scored 24 and Ricky Smith hit a 12-foot bank shot with three seconds to play as Long Beach State upset Fullerton State 61-59.

In the Southern Conference, Willie White had 28 points as 18th-ranked Tennessee-Chattanooga pulled away from scrappy Appalachian State 71-58. George Singleton scored 17 points as Furman stunned Marshall 67-60. Winfred King scored 21 points and pulled down 19 rebounds as East Tennessee State took a 75-65 victory over The Citadel. Kenny Trim^rs 24 points paced Western Carolina to an 86-62 victory over Davidson.

Ennis Whatley hit two free throws with 1:12 remaining to

give sluggish Alabama the lead, and Terry Williams made two clinching free throws with four seconds to play as the Crimson Tide came back in the second half to trim Auburn 62-61 in the opening game of the Southeastern Conference tournament. Dale Ellis tallied 26 points, 19 in the second half, as Tennessee rolled past Florida 78-62.

Alabama Coach Wimp Sanderson said the key to the Crimson Tide victory was its man-to-man defense in the second half after playing mainly a zone defense the first 2C ninutes.

man-to-man defense picked up our intensity and helpeu us play harder, he said.

Rick Lamb scored 22 points to spark Illinois State to a 79-61 victory over Bradley in semifinal action of the Missouri Valley Conference championships. Ricky Ross hit a 15-foot jump shot with four seconds left in the game to lead Tulsa past New Mexico State 49-48 in the nights second game.

Darrell Browders 17 points carried Texas Christian to a 65-53 Southwest Conference quarterfinal victory over cold-shooting Texas A&M. Jon Koncak, hitting 25-footers with as much ease as layups, scored 21 points to pace Southern Methodist to a 76-69 victory over Texas Tech.

Everything was falling for me, said Koncak. I knew in the second half they would come out and front me to stop me and they did but the other guys picked up the slack.

John Devereaux poured in 25 points, pulled down 16 rebounds and blocked six shots as Ohio University whipped Toledo 70-59 to move into the finals of the MidAmerican Conference tournament. Bowling Green was the other semifinal winner, beating Ball State 79-69 as Bill Faine scored 28 points.

The thing I like is that we held Ball State to 47 percent shooting tonight, and they were coming off a 63-percent game against Miami, said Bowling Green Coach John Weinert.

Xavier guards Victor Fleming and Anthony Hicks scored 16 points each and spearheaded a pesky defense that forced Detroit into numerous turnovers on the way to a 90-70 victory in the semifinal round of the Midwestern City Conference tournament. Alfredrick Hughes scored 25 and Andre Battle added 17, as Loyola bounced Evansville 80-66.

Russell Davis scored 20 points and grabbed 12 rebounds and Robert Brown contributed 24 points as Long Island University rallied to defeat Fairleigh Dickinson 101-98 in overtime to gain the finals of the ECAC Metro North playoffs. Chipper Harris scored 32 points to lead Robert Morris to a 106-94 victory over St. Francis in the other Metro North semifinal.

In the ECAC South, Tony Robinson stole the ball and scored on a layup with four seconds left to nail down a 68-65 victory for East Carolina

over George Mason. Also, Navy hit seven of 10 free' throws down the stretch to hold off Richmond 74-69.

Darren Maloney scored 23 points and Chris Logan added 22 as Holy Cross rallied in the second half to defeat New Hampshire 89-77 in an ECAC North Atlantic game. Also, Tony Simms scored 34 points to lead Boston University to a 95-82 victory over Niagara.

Darryl Murphy and James Mitchell scored 14 points each to power Jackson State to a 63-61 victory over Mississippi Valley in the Southwestern Athletic Conference tournament. Alcorn State stopped Prairie View 98-55 as Aaron Brandon, David Clabon and David Williams scored 16 points each. Southern University defeated Grambling 77-68 as Glenn Bridges scored 14 points.

Kenneth Lyons scored a Southland Conference Tournament record 47 points as North Texas State stunned regular-season runnerup Louisiana Tech 87-73 in a first-rdund game. Jay Hansen scored 16 of his 20 points in the second half to lead Arkansas State to a 66-56 come-from-behind victory over Texas-Arlington. Joe Dumars scored 33 points and Kenny Jimerson added 32 to lead McNeese State to a 112-101 double overtime victory over Northeast Louisiana.

In other action, Kenny Fields scored 24 points to lead fourth-ranked UCLA to a 111-58 rout over Arizona to clinch at least a tie for the Pacific 10 Conference championship.

Warriors Rally For Second Half

Houston's Manning Brings Home The Best

By The Associated Press    used to elaborate on the re-    traded to the Saints by the

Houston Oilers quarterback    ported figures.    oilers in exchange for Mann-

.\rchie Manning received the "As 1 said in the cover tetter mg _ vvas second on the highest base salary - $600,000 which accompanied the salary quarterback salary list at - of any player in the Na- directory to the NFLPA $450,000 a year. Joe Ferguson tional Football League last membership, This directory of the Buffalo Bills was third season, according to published is for members only, please at $440,000, Steve Bartkowski reports.    keep it to yourself. 1 have no    of Atlanta fourth at $410,000.

The next two top base    further comment on the accu-    xhe other average base

salaries were paid to    racy of the figures circulating    salaries by position were:

Cleveland Browns linebacker    in the media which are at-    running backs, $95,633; de-

Tom Cousineau, who received    tributed to the directory,    fensive linemen, $89,716; of-

$500,000 and New Orleans    Garvey said.    fensive    linemen! $89,704; re-

Saints quarterback Ken    The players receiving the    ceivers, $88,868; tight ends.

Stabler, who earned $450,000 lowest base salaries were $35,595; linebackers, $84,362; in base salary. The Dallas Atlanta Falcons defensive defensive backs, $78,552; Morning News reported in a back Mike Perko and Cincin- kickers, $70,667; and pun-copyright story today. A simi- nati Bengals linebacker Jeff ters,$65,376. lar story also appeared in the    Roberts, both of whom were

San Diego Union.    both paid the league minimum

Herschel Walker, the    of $22,000, according to the    ODGHS

Heisman trophy-winning run-    reports.    ^

ning back from the University The Denver Broncos had the    IC

of Georgia, signed a contract highest average base salary -    V iCTOris/US

earlier this month with the $118,460, according to the    cmau/ uii i th

New Jersey Generals of the newspapers. ^    11 /

new United States Football    Following the Broncos were    oS ts

League worth an estimated $5 the Los Angeles Rams, with    convincing 4-2 victor

million over three years. It is an average base of $110,470;    f^

the biggest contract ever for a    the Dallas Cowboys, $107,990;    Amann!    cloh    ha    ^

pro Aall player, although it    the Los Angeles Raiclers,

is not known how much of the    $104,470; and the Buffalo Bills,

money is in base salary and    $103,440.    f

how much in bonuses and    The Baltimore Colts, who     P fho fifth

other incentives.    had the worst record in the S'L'" /'

The NFL figures, which    league last year at 0-8-1, were

were compiled by the NFL    last with an average of E thltprnnri^H ^

Flayers Association, do not    $69,465, according to the re-    ,    ,    0

include signing bonuses or port.    pants with three s?n S

performance clauses and were    The figures showed

not adjusted to show what the quarterbacks had the highest ^    ^

players earned for nine games    average base salary at    Greenville    Rose    takes    a

during the strike-shortened    $161,380.    a

1982 season.    Ken Stabler - who was    cSicCertrSFrS

The report, the first under-

taken by the NFLPA, in-

dicates that 23 percent of the    C ^ I I

NFL owners' revenue goes to    t W

player salaries. At the center    (Continued from page 13)

of last seasons strike was a    .

demand by the players that 55    games t()day, Baird    :: :

percent of each teams gross    conceded. They have a young    E-Haiiow, Fuighum LOB-va    comm 6,ecu

income be guaranteed to    program and theyve been

cover player costs salaries,    every game they ve played.    s-johnson,B Wiiis,sF-Rabinetie

pensions and other benefits.    *ot of what has happened

That demand eventually was at East Carolina over the past v.comnwwMiiii 4 r m dropped in negotiations.    15 years helps in games like    Paviovich    3444(0

The complete list of NFL his. It helps win games like    0! 110 S

players salaries have been    that.    ewciwUm

mailed to members of the We knew we are young and NFL Players Association by    ^0 inexperienced pit-

Ed Garvey executive director ching staff, but we did antici-    wp-paviovich. Davwson

of the players union. *    P^^e a better hitting attack.    second Game

In Washington    Garvev ref-    Once we get a few under    our    v.cmn    abriitD    Eacv    abrbrti

belt, well be a lot better off    4 010 Roomett*, 3020

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Fnnm    Trt    Hiua    Commonwealth    again today at    crant,3b    3000 jobnaondh    4000

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At IceaiOnals    necticut Saturday    at    2    p.m.    word,ss    2 0    0 0    .sainmid.2b    2000

and Sunday at 130    2'    ' 1    Hon*,pb    1000

East Carolina    University    ^    2 011    curi^,c    2000

j. A Tw 1    L    Langabtn.cr    0 10 0

diver Scott Eagle will be    pint    Game    sham[,i(    3110

competing Friday and Satur- ^a Comni ab r b a EaUCar    ab r h tb TWih M 2 3 1 Total    2 3 7 J

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day at the NCAA Regional    Fahmey.ii    3100 Haiiow,3b    4000    Vi.ciiMMwdib................ok    100 o- 2

Diving Competition at Col-    'r it    ^ 121 Eaa,ib    110    tMCmua    m    m j- 3

nmhia Iniifh Papnlin!    ranl,3b,p,3b    4 111 Jobnaoa.*    3 0 10    E-Rnbtoett*,Hlter;DP-V.Comm.2,ECUl;

umbla,5)0utn Carolina.    wr,gh,rt    j i i j    , m 2    u-va. coaom 5, ecu i, 28-DWeiia

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4

HOUSTON (AP) - On an night when neither team seemed particularly interested in playing defense. Golden State guard Ron Brewer said Coach A1 Attles made sure the Warriors were ready for the second half.

The Houston Rockets burned up the nets with 60.4 percent shooting in the first half, but only had a 64-60 lead for their effort Thursday night.

Golden State picked up the defensive tempo in the second 24 minutes after some fiery halftime discussion to hand the Rockets a 119-109 defeat, Houstons 13th loss in its last 14 games.

It was the only National Basketball Association game on the schedule.

They were getting a lot of easy baskets in the first half, Brewer said. They were executing their offense, and what youve got to do in this game is get a lot of easy baskets.

Attles fussed out the Warriors at halftime, and they limited the Rockets to 45 second half points on 40 percent shooting, Brewer said.

I probably said a few things at halftime that they responded to, Attles admitted. We came out in the second half and played like we should. I think the Rockets dominated us in the first half, but we played with intensity in the third quarter.

On the other side. Rockets Coach Del Harris was not pleased with his teams play on defense, either.

Were just not exerting enough defensive pressure to keep their field-goal percentage down, Harris said.

He pointed out that Houston opponents have shot more than 50 percent from the field for eight straight games and nine of the last 10.

We just arent getting into it defensively, and thats got to come from the heart, Harris said.

Center Joe Barry Carroll scored eight of his game-high 34 points in the third quarter, as the Warriors quickly evaporated Houstons halftime edge. Carrolls tip-in with 8:49 left in the period put Golden State ahead for good, 70-68.

The Rockets trailed by

three, 89-86, going into the last stanza, but hit only three of their first 12 shots as Golden State built a 101-92 bulge with 7:05 remaining.

The Rockets, 11-53, rallied to

within three points, 103-100, but a string of eight unanswered points, including four by Lewis Lloyd, put the game out of reach.

Lloyd added 25 points for the

Jarman Overcomes Size Barrier

Pampack Outruns Williamston

Washington outran Williamston High School 104-33 in 3-A Conference track action Thursday.

Shotput - While (Wa) 46-10'2, Davenport (Wa) 43-1IV4, Biggs (Wa)39-4.

Discus Davenport (Wa) 146-5'2, Willingham (Wm) 111-2, White (Wa) 107-11'*-.

Pole V ault Bra^ (Wa) 9-6.

Long Jump Everette (Wm) 20-6, Brown (Wm) lO-lOli., Guilford (Wa) 19-9.

Triple Jump Boyd (Wa) 42-1, Guilford (Wa) 41-6, Daniels (Wm) 40-10,

Hi^ Jump - Guilford (Wa) 6-4, Brooks (Wm) 6-1, Everett (Wm) 6-1.

120 Hurdles Holly (Wa) 16.44, Pierce (Wa) 17.26, Everett (Wm)

18.39.

100m Dash Wooten (Wa) 11.28, Boyd (Wa) 11.56, Hagen (Wm) 11.57,

Mile - White (Wa) 5:07, Mclver (Wa)5:17.

400 Relay Washington 46.06.

400 Dash - Manuel (Wa) 52.29, Brown (Wm) 53.2, May (Wa) 54.0. 800 Relay - Washington 1 ;36.

200 Hurdles - Holly (Wa) 43.26, Laws (Wa) 44.62, Cartwright (Wa) 44 73

800m - Corey (Wm) 2:13, Hopkins (Wa) 2:16, White (Wa)

3:00,

200m Manuel (Wa) 22.7, Stevenson (Wa) 22.9, Rogers (Wm)

30.0,

2-Mile Run - Spencer (Wa) 11:56, Pergram (Wa) 11:57, Roberson (Wm) 12:00.

Mile Relay - Williamston (Brooks, Brown, Hudgins, Teele) 3:40.

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer

ATLANTA (AP) - Murray Jarman didnt think his nerves could stand the pressure of being Clemsons starting center, but hes slowly overcome the fear to assume the role with confidence.

Jarman, currently the leagues shortest starting center at 6-foot-6, has enough on his mind trying to battle people like Virginias 7-foot-4 Ralph Sampson. His main concern in todays opening round of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament was North Carolinas 6-foot-ll Brad Daugherty, but there was a time when he didnt think he could do the job regardless of the opponent.

1 never imagined Id be playing center, but it worked gocid for me, said Jarman, the Tigers second leading scorer at 13 points per game.

The move into the pivot took time, Jarman said, because he wasnt convinced he was the man Coach Bill Foster had in mind.

A lot of my problems were mental, Jarman said. I always thou^t I had the physical abilities to play. I

didnt have the confidence needed.

As I started getting more game experience, I gained more confidence, he continued. It sort of snowballed from there and I havent looked back since.

Jarman shot 51 percent from the field and nearly 70 percent from the free throw line while putting in 21 minutes a contest. Hes started in six of Clemsons last seven games.

Youve gotta do it with a little bit of quickness, Jarman said. They dont expect me to go inside and take it to the hole.

He also said youve got to forget that often his opponent may be staring at the top of his head and not straight in the eye.

I try to block it out of my mind, no matter who it is or how tall they are, Jarman said. Height is an overrated thing. A couple of inches here or there wont affect our game that much.

Warriors, now 25-39, and Mickey Johnson had 21 points, 11 rebounds, and 10 assists. James Bailey paced Houston with 22 points and 13 rebounds.

Rose High Downs Bears

The Greenville Rose golf team soundly defeated New. Bern High School Thursday in non-conference action with a total of 329-341.

Brian Hill claimed low medalist honors for the Rampants, as he fired a 77 for the 18-hole round. Craig Davies shot a 78 and Peter McCurdy and Chris Evans 87 for Rose.

Ashley Scott and Trey Honeycutt needed 82 strokes to complete the round for the Bears, while John Stewart shot 87 and Paul Pomoroy 90.

Rose will travel to Northern Nash Monday at 1 p.m. for a Big East 4-A Conference matchup.

Pro basketball star Junior Bridgemans proper name is Ulysses Lee Bridgeman.

Gene Tunney, who was heavyweight champion from 1926 to 1928, was known as the Fighting Marine when he won the light-heavyweight championship of the AEF in World War I.

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Alston, Kell Voted Into Hall

ByWILLGRIMSLEY AP ^lecial Corresptndeot

TAMPA, Fla., (AP) - The doors of baseballs Hall of Fame have opened for Walter Altson and George Kdl, That means another long years wait for the forgotten men of the game - the horstops.

Phil Rizzuto, Marty Marion and the late Glenn Wright were passed over Thursday when the Committee of Veterans voted to induct Alston, 71, who managed the Dodgers over a 23-year span in two cities, and Kell, Detroits flashy, good-field, good-hit third baseman.

For years there has been strong criticism that the Hall of Fame electorate ignored defensive genuises and concentrated on long-ball hitters and strong-armed pitchers. Shortstops compose the least-represented position in the shrine in Cooperstown, N.V.

Alston and Kell, whose credentials are indisputable, will be enshrined July 31, along with Brooks Robinson, the ^eat third baseman of the Baltimore Orioles, and San Franciscos ace pitcher, Juan Marichal. They were elected earlier by the Baseball Writers Association of America.

In recent years there has been a strong campaign for Rizzuto, a member of the New York Yankees in the Joe DiMaggio era, among baseballs all-time outstanding fielders in the 1940s.

That was when Marion was doing outstanding things for the St. Louis Cardinals, a competitive team that won the World Series in 1942 behind the .276 hitting and flawless fielding of their great shortstop.

Oldsters had waged a lobbying campaign for Wright, another sure-handed, shotgun-armed shortstop who played with the Pittsburgh Pirates before World War II.

But all were left wanting.

I think the committee is waiting for next year when Pee Wee Reese (the Brooklyn Dodgers great shortstop) will be eligible for the first time and they can put Rizzuto and

Reese in as a pair, said one prominent baseball personality who serves on the committee.

Sentimentality frequently enters into the Hall of Fame voting proceedure, as in the case of the simultaneous induction of Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford, old Yankee teammates.

A player becomes eligible for the Hall of Fame five years after retirement and remains eligible for selection by the baseball writers for IS years if he can maintain a fixed voting count. Missing this, he must wait an additional five years before he becomes eligible for consideration by the Committee on Veterans.

Kell thus gained admission to the baseball shrine on his first year of eligibility in the veterans class. Alston was chosen in a special category which includes managers and administrators.

Besides Alston and Kell, players given special consideration by the veterans committee were Charlie Grimm, the oldtime Chicago Cubs first baseman and later manager; pitchers Vic Willis and Carl Mays; Ray Dandridge, an outstanding first baseman of the Negro Leagues, and umpire Ai Barlick.

A special committee to make redress for the long ban against black players was disbanded several years ago, blacks falling into the category of the veterans com-ittee.

Alston was one of the most successful and unique managers in baseball history. A school teacher from Dar-rtown, Ohio, his major league playing career spanned one at-bat (a strikeout), but he managed the Dodgers in Brooklyn and then Los Angeles tor 23 years, always on a year-to-year contract.

He explained that he never asked for a long-term contract because, they never said anything about it and I didnt want to bring it up. They treated me well and I was happy.

A tall, mild-mannered man.

New Hall Members

Former Los Angeles Dodgers manager Walter Alston (left) and former Detroit Tigers third baseman George Kell were named to Baseballs Hall

of Fame Thursday by the committee on veterans. They will be inducted July 31 in Cooperstown, N.Y. (AP Laserphoto)

he won seven National League pennants and four World Series championships after succeeding the fiery Charlie Dressen, who had come in the wake of equally volatile Leo Durocher.

It was awfully quiet around there after Durocher and Dressen, said Carl Erskine, one of Brooklyns greatest pitchers.

Alston joined the Dodgers in 1954 and won his first World Series a year later beating the Yankees. It was a feat he called the most satisfying event in my life.

He won three more World Series crowns after the team moved to Los Angeles and retired in 1976, succeeded by Tom Lasorda.

Kell was a 5-foot-9, 175-pound whiz at third base who had good range, a strong arm and set numerous American League records for double plays, fielding percentage, putouts and assists.

But he was equally valuable at the plate, finishing his 15-year career with an average of .306. He batted more than .300 eight times, seven times in a Tiger uniform, once hitting .343 and another time .340.

An automobile dealer in his native Swifton, Ark., he broke in with the Philadelphia Athleti in 1943 at age 20, joined the Tigers early in 1946 and stayed with the Detroit^ team until 1952, when he went* to the Boston Red Sox.

He played two years with the Chicago White Sox and finished his career with the Baltimore Orioles in 1957. He serves as TV commentator for the Tigers games in the summer. He was in Detroit when his election was announced and the news was passed onto his wife in Swifton to be relayed to him there.

He said he was so nervous that he broke two pencils trying to write down telephone numbers, Mrs. Kell said.

I was flying - its great, Kell said later.

Both men were scheduled to fly to St. Petersburg, Fla., to attend a Hall of Fame traveling road show and the traditional governors dinner tonight at the Bayfront Center.

USFL Sets For Second Week

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) -Arizona Wranglers Coach Doug Shively, relying on a gut feeling, says he will start ex-Louisiana State standout Alan Risher at quarterback in Saturday nights United States Football League game here against the Chicago Blitz.

Meanwhile, Michigan plays at Tampa Bay in Saturday nights other USFL game. Both the Panthers and Bandits won their season openers last week. On Sunday, New Jersey is at Philadelphia, Boston plays at Denver and Birmingham is at Oakland with Washington at Los Angeles in a Monday night game.

To combat the Blitz, Shively said he also has several other lineup changes in mind -mainly at cornerback, halfback, punter and

placekicker - as the Wranglers try to recoup and regroup from last Sundays season-opening 24-0 loss to Oakland.

We werent very proud of the way, we played, said Shively. (Right cornerback) Aaron Mitchell and (strong safety) Tommy Willcox played well and thats about it. When you lose like we did, you have to go out and find solutions. Thats what were going to do.

Four free-agent punters were given ti70uts here this week, including former National Football League veteran Rick Partridge.

The Wranglers failed to penetrate beyond Oaklands 17-yard line and Jim Asmus missed both of his field goal attempts, from 34 and 35 yards out. Asmus also punted seven times for a 30.4

average.

Our kicking game left a lot to be desired, Shively said. I promise you well give you a better product this week.

Risher relieved Wrangler starter Todd Krueger midway through the fourth quarter and completed five of 13 passes for 62 yards with one interception. Krueger, a left-hander out of Northern Michigan University making his pro debut, hit on 11 of 21 attempts for 94 yards.

The biggest thing was that we got no points, Shively said. I guess you (switch quarterbacks) on ^t feelings and my gut feeling is that well go with Risher.

Shively also said Lee Wilson and Eddie Ray Walker may replace Lyndell Jones and Admiral Dewey Larry at the cornerback slots. Jones was burned on a 53-yard touchdown pass in the Invader

game and also fumbled a punt.

Curtis Bledsoe, a 'former Kansas City Chief hampered by hemorrhoids last week, should start at halfback as Arizona attempts to revamp a ^ound game which gained just 102 yards on 31 carries.

I dont care what game you go into, you have to develop your running game, Shively said. If you dont, its going to be like what happened to us last week - you get beat.

Chicago is coming off a 28-7 victory at Washington as veteran NFL quarterback Greg Landry completed 19 of 27 passes for 251 yards and two touchdowns.

The Blitz certainly has the best talent of the teams in the league, Shively said. You look at their linebacking corps and they have 26 years of experience and the same thing

on their front four. They have a premier wide receiver in (Trumaine) Johnson and a proven, successful quarterback (Landry). And they have better overall speed at the skill positions. Thats where it counts.

Although his team is favored by 13 points, Chicago Coach George Allen is not shortselling Arizona.

We must be ready for the Wranglers, he said. They bedt Oakland badly in a (controlled) scrimmage several weeks ago. And going into the fourth quarter (Sunday), the score was only 7-0.

But Shively said once we got behind, we didnt have the ability to come back.

A crowd of 30,00040,000 is exp^ted at 70,030-seat Sun Devil Stadium for the game, which will be televised by ESPN a sports cable network.

SCOREBOARD

Bowling

Mens aty

Comedy of Errors......n'/z    32/4

Earls Pearls..........69>/i    m

Sidewinders...........65    47

Hot Dogs...............64    48

D.G. Nichols...........54'^    57'^

Team #5...............53>^    58'^

Dail Music..............51'^    60'.4

TeamtdO..............50    62

Challengers    48    64

Family-I-One..........47'^    64'/i

Chain Reaction........45    67

Honda-Suzuki..........69H

High game, Buddy Henry, 279, 685.

Thursday Night Owls

High Rollers...........55    37

Buddys Bunch........53    39

Cornwell BuUders 51>4    40'^

TeamiH...............51    41

Little Dippers.........44M    47'.^

TheE.T.s..........40H    Sl'/i

Strikeouts............37    55

Three Steers...........35',4    56/i

Mens high game and    series,

Kevin Williams, 216, 565; womens high game, Sharon Matthews, 202; womens high series, Pat Cannon, 551.

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Los Angeles Phoenix Portland Seattle Golden State San Diego XK;llndied^ayolf spot

Thonda/tGame Golden State 119, Houshm 109 Friday's Gamei Boston at New Jersey SeatUe at Indiana Kansas City at MDwaukee Dallas at Utah Chicago at San Diego

Saturday's Garnet Portland at New York PhUadelphia a) Washington Atlanta at Detroit Phoenix at Houston Golden State at San Antonio Chicago at Lot Angeles

SuBdafi Garnet New York at Bosun Cleveland at Milwaukee SeatUe at Kansas City San Diego at DaUas

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x-Waahlnglon33 21    14    263    2    X

x-NYRngrs    X    X    9    264    253    65

NewJeney    13    44    13    191    m    X

Pittabuigh    IS    47    6    221    353    X

Adama qivltlaa x-Boaton    44    16    8    264    IN    M

x-Montreal    X    X    U    302    241    H

X-Buf(alo    X    24    12    2N    234    N

x-Quehec    X    X    11    2M    2W    71

Hartford    17    46    6    2K    349    40

Campbell Conlereoce NmrliDivliloo x-Chicago    41    19    9    2N    2X    91

x-MinnesoU    X    18    15    282    240    67

St. Louis    21    X    14    250    275    X

Toronto    21    34    12    247    2N    54

Detroit    19    X    IS    2:'.7    2N    53

SmytheDlvls*-i x-Edmonton    X    X    11    3    282    H

Calgary    X 31    10    282    XI

Vancouver    XX    It    247    2N

Winnipeg    XX    8    X7    294

LosAnglles    24 X    11    2X    294

x-cllnched playoff spot

TlMiraday'tUamee Montreal 3, Boston 1 Hartford 3, New Jersey 0 NYIslanden4,Ptttat)urgh3 PhUadetohia 6, MinoeaotaS Detroit4;chica0>2 ^

I Game

Exhibition Boseboll

By *0 Anodaled Press ExUbtUon Seaton ThuradayiGtmea Boston 3, PhUadelphia I Chicago (AL) 5, OtKlnnati 1

PhUi

Wi

Saturdays Garnet ^ 1 at Boston at NY Islanders

PltaburA at Hartford MlnnmoUatQuetiec Buffalo at Vancouver New Jersey at Montreal NY Rangers at Calgary Chtcago at Toronto Detroit at St . Loula

SundayaGan BoatonatWaabington Buffalo at Etoonton Toronto at DetnUt

Detroll 13, New York (NL-SS) 6 Pittsburgh vs. Kansas City, cancelled, rain

Minnesota 5, Houston 4 Toronto 8, New York (NL-SS) 5 Montreal 14,AUanU7 St. Louis 8. Los Angeles 6 NY (AL) vs. D of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, Ala., ppd.. rain San Die 4, San Francisco I Callfomla 11. Chica (NL) 3 Cleveland 8, Oakland 5 SeatUe 9, Milwaukee 7 Baltimore II. Texas 6

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Electric Rote Rise Expectable

By MAH YANCEY Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -Americans can expect their electric bills to rise by billions of dollars a year under new regulations approved by an obscure federal agency that most of

them have never heard of.

The regulations, approved Thursday by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, will allow utilities to begin including in their wholesale rates half the construction costs of new power plants as they are

Impressions In Truman Letters

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Winston Churchill was windy, Josef Stalin was. straightforward and Dwight Eisenhower was nice, in a newly released batch of the late President Harry Trumans letters.

Few people outside the Truman Library staff knew about the boxes of letters, newspaper articles, appointment books and other memorabilia found throughout the Truman home in Independence, one historian says.

"Its a very considerable amount of very frank and very personal material, said Robert Ferrell, who is writing a book based on the letters titled Dear Bess. The book will be published this spring.

The boxes, made available to historians this week, contained unpublished material about Trumans early adulthood, and personal letters from'TtlO to 1955 to his wife, Bess Wallace Truman, and in later years to daughter Margaret Truman Daniel.

Mrs. Truma'n died Oct. 18 at the age of 97. Truman died in 1972 at the age of 88.

The letters also included Truman's first impressions of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet

MARRIES - Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan has married his longtime secretary three months after the death of his wife of 54 years. The 76-year-old Brennan informed his fellow justices on Thursday of his marriage to Mary Fowler. (AP Laserphoto)

Quarterly Meeting

Quarterly meeting will be held at Rock Spring Free Will Baptist Church this weekend,

A board meeting will be held loni^t at 7:30. Holy Communion with Rev. Jasper Tyson and the Allen Chapel Free Will Baptist choir, ushers and congregation will take place Saturday at 7;30 p.m. Sunday at 11 a.m.. Bishop W.L. Phillips and the senior ushers and choir will be in charge of the service. Vice Bishop J.H. Vines and the choir, ushers and congregation of Lewis Chapel Church in Farmville will conduct the service at 3 p.m. Sunday.

GUEST SPEAKER Dr. West Shields Jr. will be the guest preacher Sunday at Arthur Chapel Free Will Baptist Church in Bell Arthur. Services will begin at 11

a.m.

MEETING

The 20th Century Club will meet Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in the home of Julius Joyner, 1207 Battle St,

REHEARSAL St. Marys Male Chorus will rehearse tonight at 7 p.m.

Premier Josef Stalin, Jackson County politics and his thoughts on religion, farming and history.

In one letter^ dated 1918, a 33-year-old 1st Lt. Truman jokingly wrote his future wife that he was going to disgrace the service by going AWOL if she didnt write to him.

If I could only see you, Id be all in heaven, the future president wrote from Camp Doniphan in Oklahoma before departing for France and the American Expeditionary Force.

Truman described Churchill, whom he met at the July 1945 Potsdam conference, as windy but said; I did like old Churchill. ... He knew his English language and after hed talk half an hour thered be at least one gem of a sentence and two thoughts maybe which could have been expressed in four minutes.

Truman wrote to his wife after meeting Stalin at the conference; I like Stalin. He is straightforward. Knows what he wants and will compromise when he cant get it.

After three months as president in 1945, Truman thought General Dwight D. Eisenhower was a nice fellow and a good man. ... Theyre running him for president which is OK with me. Id turn it over to him now if 1 could.

Seven years later Eisenhower declared himself a Republican and was elected president. Relations between Truman and Eisenhower reached a low during the former generals two terms.

Services End Special Week

Elder Blake Phillips of Greenville will preach at Little Creek FWB Church today at 7;30 p.m.

The service will climax a week of engathering services at the church and the Heavenly Stars Gospel Choir of Ayden will provide the music.

On Sunday II a.m., regular worship service will be led by the pastor, the Rev, Tyrone Turnage. At 3 p.m., the deacons will celebrate their anniversary with Elder R.A. Hargrove of Rocky Mount as the guest minister and Millie J. Williams and First Timothy FWB Church furnishing the music.

The service is open to the public.

Communion

Quarterly communion services will be held at Nazarene Church of Christ (Disciples of Christ) beginning Saturday at 7 p.m,

An 11 a.m. Sunday service will be led by the Rev. E.B. Williams. A 3 p.m. service will be led by Bishop Matthew Best and the Best Chapel Free Will Baptist Church congregation.

Concert

The New Hope Gospel Ensemble of Chesapeake, Va., will be in concert Sunday at 3 p.m. at York Memorial AME Zion Church. The ^oup is under the supervision of Pete Williams, formerly of Grifton.

York Memorial is located at the comer of West Third and Tyson streets. The concert is open to the public.

A hazardous chemicals team has been organized within the Fire-Rescue Department in order that officers may be better prepared to respond to chemical fires and disasters. For informtico, call 752-4137.

being built.

The new rul^, sought since the mid-1970s by financially strapped utilities, reverse a government policy that consumers should not have to pay for a power plant until after it is completed and the electricity is flowing.

Commission officials estimated that the change will' increase the wholesale rates of the 140 utilities it regulates by an average of 6 percent. But they said the rates of utilities with large construction programs could climb as much as 14 to 17 percent.

If state public utility commissions follow the federal precedent and allow the higher wholesale rates to be passed on to consumers, toe increase would raise retail bills by $6 billion to S6.5 billion a year, according to an analysis by the American Public Power Association.

Ruth Caplan of the Environmental Action Foundation, a consumer group that monitors electric utilities, called the commissions action a disaster for the consumer.

She said it gives utilities a false sipal to build more plants at a time when demand for electricity is decreasing and the industry, because of overbuilding in the past, currently has a 40 percent excess in generating capacity.

The impact of toe Reagan administrations energy poli

cy to promote omstruction of more generating capacity is clear, Ms. Caplan said. Consumers will be forced to loan their utilities money for this unneeded coiKtructHHi and will suffer tblrough hi^er rates.

The Edision Electric In-situte, an organization of privately owned utilities, called the commissions action a consumer victory. Were convinced that this is going to lower the cost of building new plants to meet increased demand or to replace older, less efficient power stations, said Kirk Willison, a spokesman for the institute.

Legislation has been introduced in both houses of Congress that would roll back toe regulations and restrict the commissions authority to approve rate increases based on ongoing construction costs.

The commission said it will allow no more than a 6 percent rate increase in any one year to pay for construction work in progress. FERC Chairman C.M. Butler and Commissioner Anthony Sousa said they actually favored allowing utilities, which now finance their new plants through long-term revenue bonds, to put all of their construction costs into their electric rates.

They were outvoted by Commissioners Georgana Sheldon, John David Hughes and Oliver Richard III.

Ms. I^ldon noted that the regulations were proposed when utilities, which have cancded 117 power plants since 1975, were financially squeezed between double-digit inflation and high interest rates.

With inflation and interest rates down, the timing concerns me, she said. Ultimately, the expense is borne by the consumer, whether you pay as you go or not.

The commissions staff said the new policy should eventually smooth out rate increases and price surges that consumers now experience when a new plant costing $1 billion or more begins generating electricity and is put into the rate base all at once.

Butler said the regulations were long overdue, adding that toe change will require utilities to confront their customers and give inter-, ested parties an opportunity to weigh whether a project is justified.

Since 1975, the commission had allowed utilities to include construction costs for pollution equipment, or for converting their plants from oil or natural gas, in their rates before toe work was completed.

It also had allowed some construction work to be included in toe rates early if a utility could show sp^ific criteria proving its financial distress.

FAMED HIGHWAY GONE - A Big Sur resident. Zeda Snodgrass, creeps out for a peak at a slide that took a large section of Highway 1 toward the ocean far telow. Recent storms devastated the highway in more than 100 places, closing the route between Los

Angeles and San Francisco indefinitely, with airlifts being used periodicaUy to take in food and supplies to Big Sur and other communities. The highway is expected to be closed for at least a year. (AP Laserphoto)

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_IP m    n    -    "nie Daily Reflector, Grteolle.N.C.-Fridy, March 11,1963-17

El Salvador Commitment Broadened By President

By ROBERT PARRY said in askine Coneress for war in th(>m>ar flltlirp iho cifnQinn QpnnnH MnllC on       u-    .

ByROBERTPARRY Assocociated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagans toughly W(Wded speech declaring U.S. deterrainatton to defeat leftist insurgents in El Salvador has put his administration on the road to a larger militarj- commitment in Central America.

In near apocalyptic terms favored by some of his most conservative advisers, Reagan warned that a rebel victory in El Salvador would jeopardize U.S. security interests not just in Latin America, but throughout the world.

Soviet military theorists want to destroy our capacity to resupply Western Euit^ in case of an emergency, he

said in asking Congress for $110 million more in military aid for El Salvador.

They want to tie down our attention and forces on our own southern border and so limit our capacity to act in more distant places such as Europe, the Persian Gulf, the Indian Ocean, the Sea of Japan;

He declared that Central America is simply too close and the strategic stakes are too high, for us to ignore the danger of governments seizing power there with ideological and military ties to the Soviet Union.

The toughness of the rhetoric appears to dash hopes of some administration moderates for a negotiated settlement of the S^vadoran civil

Barney Clark Has Attained Day 100

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Barney Clark marks his 100th day on the permanent artificial heart today - an unexpected three-month gift of life that would have been impossible before his historic implant operation.

On Dec. 2, Clark was a dying man with little hope when he was operated on by Dr. William DeVries.

But now the 62-year-old Seattle-area dentist is an international celebrity, hailed for his stoic struggle for survival.

No celebration was planned by doctors for Clark today at the University of Utah Medical Center, where he was in fair condition and recovering from a recent bout with aspiration pneumonia.

Although doctors are certainly pleased that Dr. Clark has done this well, that he has lived to 100 days, hospital spokeswoman Anne Brillinger said it held no special significance for them.

Even a couple of days is a milestone, she said.

Clarks life with the artificial heart has not been

easy. Depression, disorientation, severe nosebleeds, nausea, pneumonia, seizures, and multiple surgeries have been his lot.

And emphysema is a nagging companion, keeping him locked in an intermittent gasping battle for air.

Still, Clark says the battle been worthwhile.

In his 100 days, Clark has celebrated a Christmas his old heart would have denied him. Hes seen his 62nd birthday. He and his wife, Una Loy, quietly shared their 30th wedding anniversary.

Encouraging letters have come from around the world, including telegrams from President and Mrs. Ronald Reagan and Valentines colored by school children.

.Ive had some wonderful letters and so forth from all parts of the world plus the United States supporting me. Some of it I cant interpret, Clark said last week in his first public comments about his experience.

But all in all it has been a pleasure to help people and then, you folks have learned something.

Demonstrates How To 'Plant' A Pilot

SAN LEANDRO, Calif. (AP) - Gardeners tip for t.he day: How to plant an airplane.

Take one rookie pilot, flying solo in a small plane. Lose power and altitude over northern California, navigate under a string of utility wires, nick a tree, clip a parked pickup and come to rest, nose down, beside the flowers in a San Leandro back yard.

Fay Hadley, the pilot of a rented Cessna-150, wasnt injured in the Thursday accident.

It was a pretty amazing landing, considering shes a rookie pilot, said San Leandro Police Sgt. Del Dehn. Nobody was hurt. She wasnt even scratched. The street didnt even have much damage. The only other damage was to the garden.

Ms. Hadley was flying from PlacervUle to Hayward when she lost power south of Oakland, Police Lt. Robert

Looks To Day Guard Is Gone

PLAINS, Ga. (AP) - Amy Carter has some constant companions she cant wait to lose, but that wont happen until she turns 16 in October.

The 15-year-old daughter of former president Jjmmy Carter says when it comes to getting rid of her Secret Service protection: I cant wait!

In a recent interview, Amy said for entertainment she and those watching out for her often drive to Columbus where she visits with her best frieni, Katie Aumann, 18. Nights out, she said, usually include piiza, movies and a trip to a video arcade.

As for a recent characterization of her and her protectors on "Saturday Night Live, Amy said it was exaggerated - but she still enjoyed the show.

1

Maginnis said. She radioed the control tower at Oakland International Airport and began searching for a landing strip, Maginnis said.

She was real low, said one witness, Norman Goolsby, who was in a teie-phone booth at the time. I thought she would hit me.

Ms. Hadley guided the sputtering plane to a nosedive landing in Jesse James Rays back yard.

Ms. Hadley rented the plane Wednesday from Silver Wings Aviation in Hayward. The companys owner, Hans Hockwarth, said the $12,000 plane is a total loss but is insured. He said Ms. Hadley is a licensed pilot and regular customer.

Air Controllers Perform Well

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Aviation Administration says a spot check of new air traffic controllers finds them well trained and performing professionally. But officials say they plan to tinten evaluation and monitoring proposals later Uiis year.

Robert H. Throne, manager of quality assurance at the agency, said a spot check of 82 randomly selected controllers at 21 facilities showed only one with an unsatisfactory performance. He said that controller was removed for his phraseology.

The National Transportation Safety Board, meanwhile, is due to release a report next week that is expected to be critictd of the way FAA keeps track of errors by controllers, according to a source who asked not to beidentified.

Gas service is available through Greenville Utilities Commission. For installation or Imx^, call 7524137.

war in the near future.

The bitter 3-year-old conflict now seems likely to continue indefinitely and possibly intensify. Already, about 40,000 people have died.

In his Thursday speech, Reagan rejected comprehensive negotiations being demanded by the guerrillas and instead focused on the need to build up the Salvadoran army so it can reverse its sagging fortunes.

Reagan conceded that the military situation is not good, but added that U.S. training and supply can turn

the situation around. No U.S. combat troops nor combat advisers would be sent, he said,

Only Salvadorans can fight this war, just as only Salvadorans can decide El Salvadors future, he said.

Despite the new aid request, he called claims that he is seeking a military victory in El Salvador nonsense and restated administration hopes that social reforms and elections, like the one now planned for December, could lead eventually to peace.

Last week, Ruben Zamora,

an insurgent leader, said the left would only take part in elections if first a political settlement was reached, putting restraints on the security forces and providing safety for leftists who choose to participate.

"We are not interested just in discussing the technicalities of an election, said Zamora, a member of the rebels political arm, the Democratic Revolutionary Front.

If you are going to run an election, it doesnt mean only (protecting) candidates, he said. It means hundreds of

people who have to come out into the open. What is going to happen to these people the day after the election? ... Then will come the time for the paramilitary forces to kill these people.

In his address to the National Association of Manufacturers, Reagan voiced support for talks aimed at expanding participation in democratic institutions but flatly ruled out negotiations that would be used as a cynical device for dividing up power behind peoples backs.

He expressed hope that

with $110 million in new military training and supplies, the Salvadoran army can put the guerrillas on the defensive and gain more time for the countrys beleaguered economic reforms to work.

According to an administration fact slwet, the $110 million would provide the Salvadorans with enough trained manpower to station a 320-man light infantry battalion in each of the 14 provinces in El Salvador.

Currently, the Salvadoran army has three U.S.-trained

quick-reaction battalions, which have been used to respond to guerrilla attacks.

Using the increased aid, the Salvadoran army could be expanded by 8,000 men. The force now numbers about 22,000.

In the past several months, the guerrillas have succeeded in spreading the conflict across the country. U.S. officials have criticized the Salvadoran army for relying too much on large-unit sweep operations and failing to challenge the guerrillas with aggressive, small-unit tactics.

The Best of the Rodaes

OwsslartsmitdeanandheskAndtlienHslaysthatwayi

One ofourseaet ingredients has 18 wheels and weighs 32,000pounds.

Like every other beer in the world, Coors starts with water.

But thats where the similarity ends.

\bu see;we start with pure Rocky Mountain spring water.

Thats because we make our beer in one place and one place only: Golden,

Colorado. And its perfect brewing water is why we started there in the first place.

In the second place, we use a brewing process thats unique to the industry We start with only natural ingredients-absolutely no additives or preservatives -and then we brew Coors more slowly andage it longer than most beers.

Then, we pack- ' age Coors cold. Other Beers are subjected to extreme heat (up to 140) after being put in cans or bottles.

Coors doesnt do that, simply because the less you heat beer, the better it tastes.

This is where our tracks come in. And ^oat.

When Coors Premium and'Coors Light are finally through aging, they have a wonderfully cold,clean,brewery-fresh taste. The last thing in the world wed want to do is put that nice, cold beer on a big, hot truck like other brewers do.    ^

So we dont. '

We use refrigerated trucks. And they take our beer-nice and cold-up to 2,000 miles (give or take a detour) to our

distributors. At this point, it makes no sense to truck cold beer all that distance and let it get warm in some warehouse.

Dont worry It doesnt. Our distributors use refrigerated warehouses for our beer.

(Its more expensive, but we know they like that brewery-fresh taste as much as we do.)

Next, our distributors take that nice, cold Coors and put it in their own refrigerated trucks and take it to where you can finally buy some.

Does Coors have to be refrigerated?

No. Bat everynowand then, the folks who sell Coors to you win have more on hand than they can keep on ice. So, yoa migh t see Coon oat in one of those big tttsplays at yoor store.

Ifyoa do, don't be concerned. Even thoagh we go throogh all the expense and troable to keep Coon Premfaon and Coon Light firesh firn the Rockies toyoa,oor beer is no more affected by heat than any other been

To kind of som it op, we refrigente oar beer because we want to, not because we have to.

Now on tap. Soon in yoor store.

Were getting Coors Premium and Coors Light out to you as fast as we can. Chances are, you might find it first on tap at your favorite tavern. Check around. Its worth it.

And when you do find it. give it a chance. The real beauty of Coors is how it keeps that brewery-fresh taste beer after beer, hour after hour.

Thanks for reading all this, and theres just one more thing:

The Best of the Rodiiesh yours!

Taylor Bov. Co., Inc. 103 North Carolina St. P.O. Box 0, Goldsboro, N.C. 27530 Phono: 734-2751    *

1983 Adolph Coors Company Golden Colorado 80401





NBC Magazine Show 'Monitor' To Debut Saturday

ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - NBC, the network without a magazine show since last July, gets back into the prime-time news field Saturday night with "Monitor, a program

that could give soft news a good name.

Soft has been the blanket putdown for pieces that look at subjects uncritically or superficially. ABC's ''20-20," which can engage in daring and

meaningful journalism, sometimes does stories on pop entertainment figures with the emphasis on the stars performance, rather than personality and psyche.

CBS "60 Minutes does fewer entertainment profiles,

and its pieces tend to be deeper and more classical, like segments on Vladimir Horowitz and Itzhak Perlman. But the programs popularity stems more from its exposes and investigative pieces, the so-called news-

First Lady Returns To Former Profession For TV Acting Role

By JACKIE HYMAN

Associated Press Writer

LOS AN'GELES i.APl When the writers of NBC's 'Diff'rent Strokes" asked Nancy Reagan to help with an episode about drug abuse, all they had in mind was a recorded appearance from her White House office.

But Mrs. Reagan an avid anti-drug crusader wanted to do more, and on Thursday she tfxik up her former profession as actress for the first time in more than 25 years to tape two

TV Log

For complete TV programming information, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Reflector;

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

FRIDAY

II 00

Bugs Bum.,

7 00 Basketbii'i

12 00

SoulTra.n

9 00 Basketball

1 00

C And.-u;.-

II 00 News 9

1 30

B.iskelBail

II 30 Movie

1 30

SpoHs Cen*

SATURDAY

6 00 6 30

News

News

6 30 Kidsworld

7 00

Solid Gold

7 00 Kangaroo

8 00

W.M-d

6 00 Popeyp

9 00

Mo-/ie

8 30 Pan

M 00

News

9 00 Meatballs

II 30

Dan,ef,.v(.

9 30 Bugs Bunnv

2 30

F t-.-.t

10 00 Dukes

1 Ou

Beill tt,e

' scenes before an audience of 250 at L'niversal Studios. The episode is scheduled to air March 19.

"First ladies have a lot of public appearances, but shes fairly excited about this;" said Sheila Tate, Mrs. Reagans press secretary.

Crisp-looking in a red skirt and sweater with black and-red trim and a black tie, the first lady completed each scene in just one take, consulting cue cards beforehand but delivering her lines easily and naturally.

Mrs. Reagan plays herself in the episode, scheduled to air .March 19. The plot centers around a drug abuse story that Arnold - played by "Diff'rent Strokes star (iarv Coleman - writes for a Neu York newspapers journalism contest.

When Arnolds school principal refuses to enter the story because he believes it to be made up, Arnold sends it to the newspaper himself. The story is published and Mrs. Reagan shows up at the family's door.

I'm .sorry. 1 hope I'm not disturbing you. I'm Nancy Reagan. she says to

WITN-TV-Ch.7

FRIDAY

7 00 Jefferson

7 30 F.imily Feud

8 00 Powers Of

9 00 Kntqhf R

10 00 Remington S

11 OC News

n 30 Tonight 30 Comedy 7 00 Overi'ighf 3 00 Npws SATURDAY A 30 Better W,Vy 7 00 Treetiou'.e

7 30 planets

0 00 Fiinfstones

8 30 Sh.rtT.iles

9 00 Smurfs

10 30 GaryColen>an M 00 Hulk

17 00 Jesons

,F lasti Gordof' R V.arfm Portrait H Dance Muppets Hee Ha-w VVrpstlinq Go!!

Rock Star Has Changed Pace

I

; Top 10

H 'X D'

I 00 CiO'ii'"p ' OO Up.-.'.

WCTI-TV-Ch.l2

FRIDAY

7 00 O'sComp.my ; 30 Alicp

8 00 Benson

8 30 AtEJse

9 00 Reneqprtes

10 00 Gold Monkey

11 00 Action News

11 30 Niqhlline

12 00 Harry 0

1 30 An Evenmy

2 30 Early F -!i'ion SATURDAY

i 30 Telestory 6 00 Great Space

6 30 Snuqqies

7 00 Cartoon Time

8 OO Supertnends

8 30

10 00 II OO

'2 on

2 30

30

! 30

4 30

5 00 n 30

7 00

8 OO

9 00

10 00 n OO 11 IS II 30 t 00

Pac 7Aan Srooby Mork K SppClrtI Bandstand

Matinen

Road To C H.irrison Sports Incarehot Wresli-nq J

LOve B-oa'

F Island Actior] News ABC iNeei-end Cinema .diiinn

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

FRIDAY

7 00 Report

7 30 Staleline

8 CO Washinqtoi

8 30 WaOS'

9 00 La Boheme

30 B JO 7A

SATURDAY

7 00 Ger. Ed

8 00 TBA

8 30 TBA

9 00 Finance

9 30 Finance

10 00 Business

00 Gu.e 30 Gove

(it

.1 00 Inaa.f.reel s 10 Le'termen / 20 Kinpslon

9 00 Mysiery

10 20 Wbodunit

11 45 Twiliqht Zone

EA.ST LANSING, Mich. 'AID Rock star Ted Nugent says hes switching this year from the noisy indooi's, where he usually pertorms, to the quiet outdoors

He plans to spend much of his time in hills and wood, instead of concert halls.

In an interview for a public television program this week called "Michigan Outdoors, .Nugent told of growing up in a Detroit suburb where as a boy would hunt along a river near his home. Now he lives in a ranch house alongside 30 acres of woods near Jackson.

"Rock n' roll is about having fun," he said. "Next to a good bird dog and a woodcover, I think It's damn good."

While other rockers turned to drugs, Nugent, 34, said "I got lucky and chose to put a tent in the back of a rent-a-car, borrow my dads rifle and go up north and do a little deer hunting."

Since his wife was killed in a car accident last year, he has been taking care of their two children,

Nugent likes to tell of the lime his 9-year-old daughter bagged a nine-point buck.

News Flash!

We are now serving our super Monday-Friday Lunch specials for Sunday Lunch too!

Sunday

11 A.M. to2P.M.

Your choice of one seafood or meat and two vegetables

^3.00

Meats and Seafood

^ (Includes beverage and tax)

Shrimp Trout Oysters Deviled Crabs Crab Cakes Clam Strips Flounder Fried Chicken BBQ Chicken Country Style Steak Veal Cutlets Hamburger Steak

Vegetables

Beeta

Slaw

Boiled Potatoes Potato Salad French Fries Yams

Black-eyed Peas

Collards

Rice

Mashed Potatoes

String Beans Apple Sauce Brunswick Stew Cabbage

Also: Sunday Only Turkey & Dressing Plus

2 Vegetables^3.00

Seafood

Barbecue^

yscrBar

Arnolds amazed adoptive father, played by Conrad Bain.

Yes, you certainly are. Welcome to our building, Bain replies.

Forgive me for dropping in like this, but sometimes its better if I show up without any fanfare, Mrs. Reagan says.

She then congratulates Arnold for his story, explains her concern about drug abuse, and agrees to accompany Arnold and his father to his school.

The second scene is at the school, where she talks about the dangers of drug abuse and hugs many of Arnolds classmates.

The show is not devoid of light political humor. At one point Mrs. Reagan talks with her husband on the telephone to tell him she wont be home for dinner.

I love you, she says. Then, after a pause, If I can say it in front of strangers, you can say it in front of Tip ONeill, the House speaker and a powerful Democratic opponent of many of President Reagans programs.

Mrs. Reagan felt it was such a good opportunity to reach over 20 million children, said Mrs. Tate when asked why Mrs. Reagan offered to do scenes lasting about five minutes rather than the originally requested cameo.

She felt it was a powerful way to reach them and a dramatic way. She also thought it would be fun, Mrs. Tate added.

Mrs. Reagan met her husband when they both were acting. She gave up her career when they married in 1952, but did appear with him in the 1956 film, Hellcats of the Navy.

Although Betty Ford made a cameo appearance on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Mrs. Tate said she knew of no other first lady who has ever gone on a stage and rolled up her sleeves and worked.

Mrs. Reagan was paid only union scale for her work and is donating the money to the National Foundation of Parents for Drug-Free Youth, a spokeswoman said.

Grand Jury Winds Up Belushi Inquiry

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A grand jury concluded its hearings into the death of comedian John Belushi without handing down an immediate indictment.

The decision has been made not to seek an indictment today. grand jury foreman Joe Healy said Thursday.

Healy said prosecutors would review evidence taken over the past six months and return to the grand jury in a week or two with recommendations on how to proceed. The grand jury was impaneled last September.

"Well review it, he said of the evidence. Well decide what todo.

Belushi, the star of TVs "Saturday Night Live and such films as Animal House, The Blues Brothers and Neighbors was found dead of a drug overdose in a Chateau Marmont Hotel bungalow in Hollywood on'March 5,1982.

Deputy District Attorney Michael Montagna on Thursday denied an earlier news report that he would

seek a drug or murder indictment against Cathy Evelyn Smith, Toronto, a sometime rock singer who was believed to have been the last to see Belushi alive.

If anything like that was picked up, it was taken completely out of context, Montagna said. He said an indictment was only a "possibility at this point.

Ms. Smiths Toronto attorney, Milton Davis, reiterated his opinion Thursday that grand jurors had heard no evidence strong enough to indict his client, that Belushis death had already been ruled accidental and that he would oppose any extradition attempt.

t have no doubt that there is not any evidence that showed Ms. Smith had anything to do with John Belushis death, Davis said.

Ms. Smith refused an invitation to appear before the grand jury but has not been subpoenaed. The inquiry was at least partially triggered by comments attributed to her in an interview with the National Enquirer, prosecutors have said.

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western approach to journalism.

Monitor fits a different category, oriented more toward stories that are too deep in human feeling and foible to be labeled mere people pieces. The program successfully broadens the concept of soft news.

Anchored by Llo/d Dobyns, who is irreverent without sacrificing his credibility, Monitor is gentle, humorous and emotionally meaty. It is not flashy or sensational. Prokofievs Piano Concerto No. P is its dignified theme music. A simple grid serves as Dobyns backdrop.

And one beauty of the opening night stories is that

Youngsters Bring Tears

BERGENFIELD, N.J. (AP) - A group of fourth-and fifth-graders turned the tables on Frank Capra, bringing tears to the eyes of the director famous for his own sentimental movies.

Capra recently wrote the students at Franklin School that after receiving their letters praising his film, Its A Wonderful Life, a faucet inside me began to leak and run out of my eyes,

Nineteen students wrote Capra letters in December after the class watched-the Christmas favorite, which starred Jimmy Stewart as a man on the brink of suicide who is shown by an angel what the world would have been like if he were never born.

Capra wrote back individual letters to the students, and also sent 19 autographed copies of his autobiography, The Name Above the Title.

Ricky Pego, a fourth-grader, wrote Capra that he would like to direct movies someday.

You old 9-year-old, Capra wrote back from his California home. My age is 9X9 (plus) 4. I look like this. Then, in the letters margin, Capra had scrawled a self-caricature complete with a big nose and single hair on his head.

they are explained and explored without resorting to glittery graphics, the hocus-pocus techniques often used to camouflage swiss-cheese reporting.

Correspondent Steve Delaney has a powerful report on harassment, situations that arise when obsessive love or hate causes one person to hunt and haunt another. One example shows an 85-year-old woman whos been hounding a man for 42 years, ever since he was the paper toy and claimed her dog bit him.

The most striking illustration focuses on a man who wont take no for an answer. His one-sided love for a now-terrified woman has taken the form of letters, phone calls, stakeouts and visits to the womans relatives. Ever-so-calmly, he says her resistance is rude and childish behavior.

A psychologist explains that these trackers cant fathom the rejection when all they think they are doing is showing affection. They see themselves as the victims.

Monitor travels for another piece to Tulelake, Calif., formerly an internment center for Japa-nese-Americans in World War II and now the horseradish capital of the world. This funny story, narrated by Dobyns, will make you care about horseradish and the people who grow it more than you ever imagined you could. ^ Correspondent Rebecca Sobels story on skin-white whites, who are judged hv Louisiana law as black because of their ancestry, is interesting from a    ^

psychological standpoint, although more attention could have been given to the    g

practical impact that being legally black has on their lives.

The final segment, about the traveling extended family of 5,000 or so flim-flam operators known as The Williamson Gang, is an offbeat and interesting -although somewhat rambling -investigative piece.

Quick labeling can be deceptive and misleading, but it looks like the objective of Monitor is to touch viewers, not grab headlines.

Sy Pearlman, the shows executive producer, says

Monitor will not engage in the tyiw of ambush or c(-frontational interviews made famous by Geraldo Rivera on 20-20 and Mike WaUaceon 60 Minutes.

I think its an unfair technique, Pearlman says. We have the camera, and all he has is his feet. I told my producis not to chase people down the street, and to find other ways to shoot the subject.

Monitor follows a long line of busted NBC magazine shows, including programs that featured Tom Snyder and David Brinkley. The best of the bunch was the first one, Weekend, which was quirky and clever. Dobyns was host, with Reuven Frank, now president of NBC News, as executive producer.

Saturday night at 10 p.m. EST, a low viewership period, has not been successful at NBC for a long time. But, even if the ratings are low, Monitor is supported by NBC Chairman Grant Tinker, who says he has the same commitment to a magazine show as NBC Nightly News.

Saturdays show indicates the ri^t direction, but it will take time to find audiences.

Remember, says Dobyns, 60 Minutes was on for seven years solely to

answer the question: Whats the lowest-rated show wi

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Lift As It's Lhad

Culiiiary Creaiivity Is Thwarted On All Sides

fBy GAIL MICHAELS Ah mud) as I lite to eat, I am'rardy inspired to great hei|[hts of culinary creativity. In a fit of 0{h timtom I did break down once and buy a Julia Child cookbook, tHit as of yet I havent been able to traate it.

But Im afraid that even an in-^epth knowledge of gouitnd termindogy would do 'lltm to i4>grade my cooking. For son reason both of my children feel it necessary to attach ''theihselves to me like fungi the' moment I enter the kitcheii. At the very least, Zachariy swings from the refrigerator Hk)or while Meg tattoos the floor with two legs of a kltchmi chair. This is not, in other words, an at-mo^here conducive to the

perfect souffle.

Besides, when I do attempt some culinary masterpiece, the most positive response I usually get is , Would you mind teUing us what this is, or do we taste it first and then guess?

The other evening, for instance, in a sudden fit of dementia I prepared curried shrimp au gratin on a bed of spinach noodles. Confident that I had created a nutritious, tasty and colorful crowd-pleaser, I served it with pride to my family.

Green noodles? was the resounding cry.

What did you do to them to make them this color? Meg asked in a low voice.

Its a family secret.

Well, were family so you should tell us.

I bought them that way.

They Wear Gowns For PTA Pageant

On purpose? Phillip asked.

I gave him a nasty glance. Theyre ^inach noodles. Meg recoiled as if from a snake, and Zachary crossed his arms. I hate noogles.

I found their comments rather irritating. This family is so much fun to cook for, I ranted. Meg likes steak, hamburger and milk. Zachary likes chicken, bananas, olives and apple juice. Hardly a balanced diet.

Meg raised her hand. You mentioned three of the four basic food groups.

Youre going to be a well-informed invalid if you keep this up. And you, and I pointed at Phillip, you just encourage them.

He quickly shoveled a forkful into his mouth. Its delicious, kids. Try it.

Meg gingerly filled one prong of her fork with sauce. I have a feeling Im not going to like this.

I hate it,Zachary said.

We finally reached a compromise. I ord^ Meg to eat hers, and I traded Zachary an olive from my salad for every bite of shrimp be took.

Within 20 minutes after the meal was over, his knees and elbows started swelling, and he broke out in hives. Frantic, I called his doctor. Betwera us we decided that

he must have an allergic reaction to the shrimp. Or the curry. Or the au gratin. Then again, it could have been the noodles.

Oh, weU,I told Zachary. I guess the next time the rest of us have that dish, youUgetahptdog.

Meg turned almost noodle green with envy. He sure has all the luck. I wish I had allergies, too.

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HURRICANE, W.Va. (AP) - Theyre being called Tootsies or Hurricane Honeys, but the mayor, police chief and a school principal - all men - are donning evening gowns to raise money for a school PTA.

It is the Mz. Hurricane Pageant, and money raised in t^ie Saturday beauty pageant will benefit Hurricane Middle School.

PTA president Tawney Mangus explained the organizaron has always had rather mundane fundraising activities, and wanted to add some life to thisdne.

I^ere sort of in the Bible belt here, but I think the movie Tootsie has sort of loosned everybody up, she said;Everywhere Ive gone this yveek, people are talking aboifit.

M^r Raymond Peak, a 53-yiar-old schoolteacher.

planHo wear pearls and a yell(^ Empire waist evening gow^. Hes entered in the pageant under the name Rafaona.

Dhe way it was explained to n)e four weeks ago was that; the Hurricane Middle School was having a fundraiser and would I help?

Taxic Agent In Discharge

RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) - A highlv toxic discharge into a small tributary of the Henry River was found near Hickory last month, state officials said'lhursday.

Wastewater discharged by NeuvUle Mobile Sox Inc. of Burke County was toxic to test organisms in concentrations,of less than 3 percent, officiels of the state Division of Environmental Management told the state Envitonmental Management Commission.

Thi division ordered the plant to st(^ discharging on Feb.!?, and the staff began an iivestigation to identify the toxic agent.

Thp company prepared socks washing them in a mixture of chemicals, pressing them and packaging thei The toxic agent was a cheniical used to treat the sockf to prevent foot odor.

.In other actions Thursday, thecmmnission:

-I Granted Abbott Lab'tories Ik. of Nash Chuijty permission to in-create the temperature of a nearby stream up to 10 degita centigrade above its normal temperature. The plan! makes intravenous soluioDS and related medical e^ment.

-(proved $3,983 in extra Environmental Protection Agency funding for Clarkton to ertouate new wastewater treanent alternatives in-yolvn|wamp discharges.

-^^ted the Orange Watfr and Sewer Authority the power to condemn land f(Nr ne preponed I bfllfon-CaK CImek reservoir

(angaContr.

AOS wiU go to you to ftod cash buyers items. To piace

Peak said. I said yes. After that is when they told me what I would have to do.

Also taking part will be Rachel, better known as Police Chief Dick Gillespie; Danielle, who most folks call patrolman Dan Perry; and Elana, otherwise known as Hurricane Middle School Principal Alan Mess-inger.

Local businesses are helping supply the male beauties with dresses, gowns and wigs.

Peak said he doesnt mind making the unusual public appearance at the school, where he teaches business courses.

I always say, anything to help students. Ive been teaching for 33 years so Ive kept a relatively young outlook on life, the mayor said as he adjusted his long, blonde wig. Ive played Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny before, but this is a first for me.

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Croasword By Eugene Sxffa-

ACROSS    39 Crimson

1 Skirt edge    40 Fury

4 Official    41 Actress

deeds    McDaniel

8 Steam engine 45 Eider

DOWN

ICuts 2 Suiter Heiden

20 Mimic

23 Overlook

24 Bar

25 June

3 Trig, or gen. honorees

pioneer

12 Pitching stat

13BaUet dancer, at times

14 Bread spread

15 Keep from

17 Fissure

18 Academy

19 Grain

21 Typesetters measures

22 Support

26 Boutique

29 Mine output

30 Actress Farrow

31 Brewing need

32 Possesses

33 Twist

34 One - time

35 Pro

36 Flying toys '

37 Robbery

product 4 In    2$    Persian

48 Climbers 5 Lowers the    ruler

support    temperature    27 Dorothys

50 Fencing 6-Aviv    d(^

sword    7 Eager feel-    28 Lustrous gem

51 Open    ings.toDi    29 Paddle

52 Avail    8 Merit    32 Aspirant

53 Tavern    9 Tavern order    33 Breadth

order    10 Half a score    35 Ermine

54 Incline    11 Youngster

55 Beach    16 Garden

color    workers

Avg. solution tme: 25 min

or mink

36 Buster or Diane

38 Eatery

39 Valerie Harper role

42 Track tipster

43 Ingrid, in Casablanca

44 Blissful place

45 Society girl

46 Ajar, poetically

47 Minuscule

Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 49 Unity

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

I9d3 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc

LEAD FROM THE RIGHT HAND

Neither vuln'.Table. East deals.

NORTH

9542 7 A973 0 A84

72

WEST    EAST

>J76    A

7 Q1086    7J52

'^2    OQJ10975

98654    KQJ

SOUTH

KQ1083 7K4

:    0 K63

A103 The bidding:

iast    South    West    .North

J    Dble    Pass    I    '

2    2    Pass    4    

Pass    Pass    Pass

Opening lead: Two of 0

but ijow W'est had a second trump-trick and the declarer still had to lose a trick in each minor-down one again!

The successful declarers combined the two methods They won the first trick in hand with the king ol diamonds, then crossed to the ace of hearts in dummy to lead a trump. That protected against a singleton ace in the f]ast hand. If East returned a diamond after, taking the ace of trumps. West would be ruffing declarers loser. In any event, declarer would lose no more than one trick in each suit except hearts.

; You gan never be too tareful when playing a hand. This hand from a recent tour-nament shows what can hap-ipen if you get careless.

South considered himelf too strong for a simple over call, so he started with a takeout double and then introduced his suit at his next turn. We admire the way North took all the strain off his ^partner by jumping to four spades instead of mak ing pusillanimous raise to three spades.

It was obvious that Wests lead of the two of diamonds was a singleton. Some declarers won in dummy and led a trump. East took the ace and returned the queen of diamonds,-and West ruffed away declarer's king. Since declarer still had a loser in each minor suit, that meant down one.

Some declarers did slight ly better technically, but With the same outcome. To protect against having the king of diamonds ruffed, they won the first trick in hand and led the king of spades. East won the ace perforce,

t

Jail To Impose Weekend Rates

HAYWARD, Calif. (API -Weekend inmates at Santa Rita Rehabilitation Center may soon be asked to pick up the tab for their time behind bars under a cost-cutting program,

People must pay for the damage they do, said Joseph Bort, a member of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors, which tentatively approved the idea Tuesday and scheduled a final vote next week.

Offenders would be billed on the basis of their ability to pay.

CRYPTOQUIP    3-11

RZQSJNXWSJ HMDGJ NXZWI KDDQ CXJ-

JXHRQX NMD HXZ IGZK CXII.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - ATTILA TOOK FUR AND FIX)WERSTOWIFE; THANKS,HUN,SHESAID.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: J equals R.

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. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

1913 King Features Syndicate, Inc

The Graying of America

This weekend, delegates to the Conference of the National Council on the Aging plan to meet in Detroit to discuss networking, life enhancement, and economic independence for our 26.3 million elderly citizens. These topics are of vital interest to all Americans, because almost all of us can expect to join the ranks of the elderly someday. In fact, the share of older people in our society is growing rapidly. In 1900, only about 4 percent of the population was over 65. Today, about 12 percent of Americans are elderly. But, by the year 2010, the post-war baby boom babies will be ready for retirement, bringing the number of elderly Americans to more than 41 million.

DO YOU KNOW. What is the average life expectancy for an American?

THURSDAY'S ANSWER The largest religious group in Afghanistan is Islam.

3-11-83    ^    VEC,    Inc.    1983

FORECAST FOR SATURDAY, MAR. 12,1983

from the Carroll Righter Institute

GENERAL TENDENCIES; New arrangements in career matters makes it possible to do a better job at your regular routines. Let others know of your talents and special aptitudes. Think logically.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Find a better system for handling obligations you have assumed and become.more successful. Make plans for the future.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Take the treatments that will improve your appearance. Engage in favorite hobby with congeniis. Use care in travel.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Improve conditions at home so that they are more to your liking. Contact close friends and make mutual plans.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Make plans to surmount any obstacles in the path of success. Take no chances with your reputation.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Look for an ideal way to handle an important monetary matter. Show more devotion to loved one and get excellent response.

VIRGO (Aug, 22 to Sept. 22) Improve your appearance and then go out socially and make a good impression on others. Stay within your budget.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Make the changes that will bring harmony into your life. The evening can be very romantic with loved one.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Try a new attitude where a long-time friend is concerned and get better results in the future. Evening is fine for spciability.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Study your environment and make some improvements. Plan how to make family members happier.'

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Progress now is best achieved by making necessary changes and working in a methodical manner. Guard your reputation.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Be sure to keep any promises you have made to others. Strive for increased happiness. Relax at home tonight.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Come to a better accord with one who opposed you in the past. The .evening is fine for studying and becoming more informed.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will have the ability to whittle down big ideas to a workable level and make a success out of them. Teach to complete whatever has one been started. Be sure to give ethical and religious training early in life.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate. Inc.

Seven Named To New Committee

Seven Pitt County residents have been appointed to the newly formed Citizens Concerned for Higher Education Committee.

They are Dr. Elliott Dixon of Ayden; Mrs. Brinn Cheatham, Dr. Howard G. Dawkins Jr., Richard R. Gammon and E. Hoover Taft Jr., all of Greenville, and Jim Black and Thomas McCaskill, both of Win-terville.

This is a statewide committee of 400 that will work with the General Assembly to assure that the best possible system of higher education is maintained in North Carolina. Members are selected by colleges and universities across the state.

The commmittees priority for the current legislative session is to increase the amount of state aid provided

to the 24,000 North Carolina students attending the states 38 independent colleges and' universities. Currently, the state grants $850 for each state resident attending an independent institution. The General Assembly has been asked to raise that allocation to $1,025 for 1983-84 and to $1200 for 1984-85,

North Carolina taxpayers now provide $2,450 for every out-of-state undergraduate in a public university, committee co-chairman David Britt said.

C.E. Boulware, also a co-chairman, said, "If the 24,000 young North Carolinians in independent institutions enrolled in public universities, it would cost the state an additional $80 million per year, not including new construction needs.

The weekend rate for room and board would be $35 a day, plus a $25 booking fee.

There would be a maximum $100 charge for a public defender, covering up to three court appearnces, and probation supervision would cost $25 a month.

The board said it hopes to recover $175,000 a year from thechargf

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752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Days. 42* per line per day 7 Or More Days 40* per line per day

Classified Display

*2.75 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadllnea

Monday........Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday.....Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday. Tuesday3p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.irv

Friday......Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday.........Friday    noon

Classified Display Deadlines

Monday.........Friday    noon

Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday .. Monday 4p.m.

Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m.

Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.

Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.

ERRORS

Errors must be reported imrsediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.

PUBLIC NOTICES

mtovery.

All persons indsbted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

This the 16th day of February, 19S3.

Mrs.AAarthaJMerritt

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Personals............

In Memoriam.........

Card Of Thanks.......

Special Notices.......

Travel & Tours........

Automotive...........

Child Care............

Day Nursery..........

Health Care..........

Employment..........

For Sale..............

Instruction............

Lost And Found.......

Loans And Mortgages.

Business Services.....

Opportunity...........

Professional..........

Real Estate...........

Appraisals............

Rentals.............

002 .003 .005 .007 009 .010 040 .04) .043 .050 050 080 082 .085 091 093 .095 lOO . 101 . 120

900 Douglas Avenue Greenville, N.C. 273

2734

Administratrix of the Estate George MerriH Robert L. White

PUBLIC NOTICES

SMied oropoMis will be i by the Purcnasing Depart Pitt County Memorial HMpI

received nient of Ital until

Attorney at Law 807 W. 5th Street

Greenville, N.C. 27834 (919) 758-2123 February 18,25; March 4,11.1983

NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT

TAKE NOTICE that the partner novnn as TYSON'S FUR _,.E composed of W. Vernon Tyson and Elizabeth Tripp Steig,

Nl

Ip kr fuRt

lyson and Elizabeth Tripp Steig, partners, has been dissolved and all

asMts thereof are being conv^ed unto W. Vernon Tyson, T/A

TYSON'S FURNITURE. W. Vernon Tyson assumes all debts of Tyson's Furniture and Elizabeth Tripp Steig has no further liability thereunder.

All persons having claims against said parfnerhsip should present them to the undersigned or this notice will be plead in bar of any

recovery.

This the 1st day of January, 1983. TYSON'S FURNITURE

P. O. Box 3247 70) Dickinson Avenue Greenville, NC 27834 February 25; March 4,11, 18,1983

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

WILLIAM THOMAS WRIGHTEN Plaintiff

BETSY GRIFFIN WRIGHTEN Defendant

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: BETSY GRIFFIN WRIGHTEN TAKE NOTICE thal a pleading STOking relief against you has been filed in the aboveenfitled action, wherein the plaintiff is seeking an absolute divorce based on the grounds of a one year separation.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than fort (40) days tollowinq Februar

ays Toi lowing l-ebruary 1983 and upon your failure to do

the plaintili^iTl apply to the Court for the relief sought.

James C. Lanier, Jr. Attorney tor Plaintiff 210Cotanche Street P. O. Box 1505 Greenville, NC 27834 (919 ) 752 5505 February 25; March 4, 1), 1983

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE BEFORE THE CLERK 83SP53 NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE Pursuant to Order of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, North Carolina, dated the 24th day of February, 1983, authorizing foreclosure, and under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed by Neil Williams and Edna Williams to Liberty Financial Planning, Inc., dated the 27th day of March, 1979, a^nd recorded in Book T47 Page 833, ister of Deeds of Pitt County;

County Memorial.. and publicly opened at:

2.00 p.m. torch 28,1983 in the Purchasing Office of Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Stan tonsbyrg Road. Greenville, North Carolina, on the purchase of the following:

^ ONE ELECTROMECHANICAL FILE FOR 4" X 4" MICROFILM JACKETS

020

AAarcury

I^RCURY COUGAR, 1978, XR7, like new. 1 owner, AM/FM stereo 8

track, pqwv steering and brakes, wh^. Electric windows. Cruise

filt

control. 756-1214

021

Oldsmobllc

1974 OLOSMOBILE Cutlass. 756 5225 days; 756 4851 niohts

Call

Specifications and bid proposal forms are on file In the office of the Purchasing Department, Pitt Coun

Purchasing Dt^rtment, Pitt Coi ty Memorial Hospital, and may obtained upon reouest between t

 upon request between the

hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., AAonday through Friday.

Pitt County Memorial Hospital reserves the right to reject any and all proposals.

JackW. Richardson President March 11, 21, 1983

Having quaMfM^s Executrix of the estate of Stella Taylor Jackson

late of Pitt County, North Carolina,

this Is to notify a'll persons havin St the estate of sail

claims agains

deceased to present them to the

undersigned Executrix on or before September 11, 1983 or this notice or same will be plqaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to

said estate please make immmiiate

payment.

irgir  ______

1109 S. Overlook Drive

his 9th day of AAarch, 1983. Virginia J. Tucker

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 . E xecutrix of the estate of Stella Taylor Jackson, deceased. AAarch 11, 18, 25: April I, 1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executor of the estaje of Gladys A. Pollard late

of Pitt County, North Carolina, this ly all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased

to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before September 12, 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 9th day of AAarch, 1983.

Hicks Pollard Rt. 8, Box 185

Greenville. North Carolina 27834 E xecutor of the estate of

Glad) A. Pollard, d^eased.

Ill, 18,35, April I. 1983

COLIFORM BACTERIA FOUND IN DRINKING WATER SAMPLE ^ DURING JANUARY, 1983

Conform bacteria is an environmental bacteria which is found in the soil and intestinal tract of warm blooded animals. The presence of coliform' bacteria in

drinking water indicates that some

ilr

contamination has occurred.

In an attempt to correct the cause of the contamination we have done the following:

Check samples submitted on 2/2 show the water to be tree of coliform bacteria

It you have questions about this notice please contact:

Bobby Lewis, 753-5553 Highland AAobile Home Park 04 74 108 RFD2

Farmvllle, N.C. 27828 AAarch 11, 13, 14, 1983

19^ CUTl^SS, SUPREME Black With red Inter or. Loaded; $5400 752 1057 after 5:30.

Supreme Brougham, AM-FM cassette, cruise, tilt, power windows, locks, seats. Call 757 3618 after 6.

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, March 11, U-2i

051

HdpWanlvd

COMPANY

I^EOS ^son for out ^taollshed accounts, r - --.viA commission. Call Eastway Wholaale. 355 297D.

Uda sales Draw plus

EARN 50% sentatlve. Call 756.6610

Avon ropra-

EXPERIEND HAIRDRESSER wanted. 752-3705^ 752 704?._

TO PLACE YOUR Classified Ad. lusf call 752 6166 and let a friendly Ad-Visor help you word your Ad.

EXPERIENCED salesperson needed for gift and decorative

023

Pontiac

1980 BLACK Grand Prix. Loaded. Low milsffle. Assume loan. 355 2928 after 5. 756 0246 between 10-5

024

Foreign

DATSUN,

condition,

$3290. 756-5555, ask for William

1974,    2602,    excellent

sp^, air. Asking

1971. Rebuilt motor. Paint lOb. $975. Call 946 7881 after 4 p.m. during the week. Anytime Saturday and Sunday.

VOLKSWAGEN, 1972, Super Beetle Good condition, extra clean $1580 Call 946 7881 after 4 p.m. during the week. Anytime Saturday and Sun day

VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT 1981 Automatic transmission, like new Call Leo Venters AAotors, Ayden, 74o-6i7i.

VOLKSWAGON 1968 Beetle. Great motor, fair body. 756 0800 after 5:30.

1963 JAGUAR Mark II $3750 or best offer. Must sell. 752-0151 or 758 0471

1969 MGB-GT Good $1600. Call 753 2628.

1971 DATSUN 2402, new painf, Michelin tires, runs real good.

$2,850. Call 753 2694 before 2 pm

1971 DUNE BUGGY Call 756-4134

1973 AAERCEDES 220 Gas^ Automatic, air, AM/FM, Michelin. L'.t<e, nevv; $5995. Days 752 7148 Nights. 752-0978.

1975 TOYOTA COROLLA New paint job. Excellent shape. $1100.

1976 FIAT 124 roadster, 1656 after 6 pm.

I.. P.^''SUN, 200 SX, 5 speed, air, AMTM st^ereo casseHe, excellent condition. 752-9815._

1981 TOYOTA^ COROLLA Deluxe liftback. Fully equipped. Ai/tomatic, air. Excellent conc^tion. $5900. 756 SSI 1.

1981 VOLKSWAGEN SCIRROCO Air, 5 speed, sunroof, AM/FM tape, low miles. Excellent condition. Price negotiable. 758 0293.

1982 HONDA ACCORD 4 door Sedan. Silver with

default having been made aiid I of Trust being by the

the said Deed _ _____ ,    ....

terms thereof subject to foreclosure and the holder of the indebtedness thereby the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder tor cash at the Courthouse door, PIff County Courthouse, Greenville, N.C., on March

8, 1983, at 12:00 noon, the property

------     St,    the

conveyed in said deed of trust same consisting of a house and 1714 S. Pitt Street, Greenville, in Pitt Co y described as

27834, lying and being in Pitt County, and more particularly '

WANTED

Help Wanted.......

Work Wanted......

Wanted............

Roommate Wanted Wanted To Buy .... Wanted To Lease... Wanted To Rent....

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent...........121

Business Rentals................122

Campers For Rent......... 124

Condominiums tor Rent.........125

Farms For Lease...............107

Houses For Rent..........

Lots For Rent.............

Merchandise Rentals.....

Mobile Homes For Rent ...

Office Space For Rent.....

Resort Property For Rent .

Rooms For Rent..........

follows

BEGINNING at a point in the western boundary line of Pitt Street 120 feet N. 01 00 E. from the nor thwest intersection of Pitt Street and Elks Street, and running thence N. 89-00 W. 100 feet, a corner; thence N 01-00 E. 40 feet, a corner; thence S 89-00 E. 100 feet to the western boun dary line of Pitt Street, a corner; thence along the western boundary line of Pitt Street S. 01 00 W 40 feet to the point of the beginning; and being

a part of the prorrty conveyed to ~    I    A.    M.    Allen    et    al

W. T. Allen from A. M. Allen et al by deed by deed dated December 21, 1922, and recorded in Book 0-14 at

page 241 of the Pitt County Registry; -no further bein^ a part of thi

perty conveyed fo S.' Reynolds' ^y from Wachovia Bank and Trust Co., Trustee, by deed dated January 25; 1972, and recorded In Book 0-40 at

pa^e 315ot the Pitt County Registry

property will be sold subject fo outstanding ad Valorem taxes, assessments, prior Deeds of trust and prior liens and encumbrances of record.

The highest bidder at the sale will be required to make a cash deposit

of ten (10%) per cent of......

and including ONE ($1,000.00) DOLLAS, pU excess over the first $1,000.00 of the bid.

This the 24th day of February, 1983.

Richard M. Pearman. Jr.

f Trustee March 4, H, 1983

SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION

FILE NO 83-SP-60 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

SALE

Autos for Sale...............Oil    029

Bicycles for Sale................030

Boats tor Sale...................032

Campers for Sale...............034

Cycles for Sale..................036

T rucks for Sale  ..............039

Pets............................046

Antiques........................061

Auctions.......................062

Building Supplies.......

Fuel, Wood, Coal........

Farm Equipment.......

Garage-Yard Sales......

Heavy Equipment ......

Household Goods........

Insurance................

Livestock................

Miscellaneous...........

Mobile Homes tor Sale ..

Mobile Home Insurance ..

Musical Instruments.....

Sjjorting Goods.................078

Commercial Property  .....102

Condominiums tor Sale.  .......104

Farms for Sale..................)06

Houses tor Sale.................i09

Investment Property............ni

Land For Sale............

Lots For Sale...........

Resort Property for Sale .

.113

.117

people read classified

PUSLKT

NOTICES

PITT COUNTY

Th undersigned, having qualified as Administratrix ot the Estate ot George Merritt, late ot Pitt County.

This Is to Notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the ^ day ot August, 1983, or this Notice will be pleaded In bar ot their

COUNTY OF PITT In the Matter of the Foreclosure of the Deed of Trust ot Bobby Sherwood Lewis and wife, Dorothy Sue Reel Lewis,

Grantor,

To

W. Russell Duke. Jr.

Trustee,

As recorded in Book R 49 at Page 242 and re recorded In Book W-49 at Page 634 ot the Pitt County Public Reglstr

istry.

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE

Under and by virtue ot the power and authority contained In that cer tain Deed ot Trust executed and

delivered by Bobby Sherwood Lewis and y^ife, Dorothy Sue Rell Lewis,

dated January 27, 1981, and recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds tor Pitt County, North Carolina, In Book R-49 at Page 242 and rerecorded In Book W-49 at Page 634, and because of default In the payment ot the indebtedness thereby secured and failure to carry out or perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained and pursuant fo the demand of the owner and holder ot the Indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, and

pursuant to the Order of the Clerk of Superior Court

-- tor Pitt County, North Carolina, entered In this foreclosure proceeding, the undersigned, W. Russell Duke, Jr., Trustee, will expose for sale at public auction on the 22nd day of March, 1983, at 12:(X) o'clock noon at the door of the Pitt County Courthouse, Greenville, North Carolina, the following described real property (including the house and any other improvements thereon):

All that certain tract of land, containing 109.29 acres, more or less. Including the right-of-way ot N.C.S.R. 1246, known as the "Parker Farm" in Falkland Township, of Pitt County, State ot North Carolina, on the north and south sides ot N.C.S.R.

1246; bounded now or tormerl follows: North by Tyson by the lands of the Fountajn heirs;

^ rly I Creek; East

South by lands ot Howard D. AAoye, Jr.: and West by the lands of Gladys Thompson Parker; said tract of land being more particularly described according to plat prepared by McDavicT Associates, Inc., Land of

Surveyors, on the 5th day December, 1980, as follows:

;>aid tract or land being more particularly described accordlno to a plat of survey prepared by AAcDavId Associates, Inc., Land Surveyors, on the 5th day of December, 1980, which plat Is recorded In Map Book 39, at Pages 57-S7A, public records of said Pitt County, Is by reference In-

III i-uuiiiy, I uy rvivrence incorporated herein as part of this description.

Property Address: Route 1, Box 76 ountain, NC 27829

Fountain, i->w hxt The sale will be made subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, restrictions and easements of record and assessments, If any.

The record owner(s) of the abovedescribed real property as reflected on the records of the PIM County Ister of Deeds not more than ten

bedan biiver with gray interior. Excellent condition. Call 756 5856 after 5:30pm

1983 PEUGEOT 505S Turbo Diesel. Best offer. Call 752-0326 at Mara thon, James Pearce, after 5

032

Boats For Sale

TRADE 5.8 ACRES Blue Ride

mountains (appraised aTw'soorfor power^at in top condition

1979 or later. 919 756 7766 after 7.

WANTED TO BUY 200 or 175 Mercury outboard. Running or in need of repair . Call 757 3636.

16' BONITA BOAT Trihull qalvonized frailer 65 horsepower Johnson motor Ideal for fishing and skiing. Very good condition;

$1950.

L*',NOBIE cat catamaran, California Spec la . Used one season. Call 756 2l5o':lsk tor Mike

16 OPEN BOW 115 horsepower Evinrude. New seats and tilt frail er. For sale or trade tor motorcy cle. 752 0402

19-6 AOUASPORT 140 Evinrude, many extras. Excellent condition. $4800. Call 756 9442.

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

FREE I Stop in and register at Floyd G _ Robinson Jewelers,

Downtown Evans AAall for free gift

to be given away weekly. purchase necessary._

010

AUTOMOTIVE

1975 WINCHESTER with 115 AAer cur^^gged tor fishing. S1950. Call

1978 DIXIE, 18' open bow with Cox trailer, 100 horsepower Evinrude with power tilt. S3500. Call 752-4058.

1981 HOBIE CAT 16' with galvoniied trailer. For sale or trade tor power boat. 756-6834.

21' DIXIE, 150 horsepower Black Max, factory rebuilt powerhead

with 12 months warranty, galva nized Cox drive-on trailer. S7500. 756 6411.

034 Campers For Sale

FOR SALE , camper. Sleeps $1500. Phone 7M 8157

1975 Coleman Pop-Top Good conchtion;

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774._

036    .    Cycles    For    Sale

KAWASAKI KX 80. Perfect runni

condition; 2397

S650. 1982 model.

ysF-

1975 YAMAHA 500. Good condition. New fires and battery. 14,000 miles. Call 756 7005.

1978 HONDA MOTORCYCLE 750 SS RC headers, oil cooler, good

Oil

Autos For Sale

JEEPS, CARS, TRUCKS

Under $100. Available at local government sales in your area. Call (refundable) 1 619 569 0241, extension 1504 for your 1983 directo

ry. 24 hours.

RENT AWRECK 752 CARS Daily-Weekly-Monthly Rates Save on Dependable Used Cars.

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114

012

AMC

1977 PACER stationwagon. Air condition and new tires; $1500. 756-6885 5pm to eom.

013

Buick

l-eSABRE LIMITED 1982 4 Diesel, fully equipped, low mi Call Rex Smith ^evrolet, A

746 3141.

door mileage. Ayden,

1973 BUICK Le Sabre, sir, AM/FM, frame mounted trailer hitch. Extra clean. S700 or best otter. 752-6889 or 758 9089 alter 6

1975 BUICK CENTURY, 4 door, 66,500 miles, air, power steering and brakes, AM/FA leather Infer' or, S1195. 756 0409 after 5:30 p.m.

1977 BUICK Electra Limited. dPOr. 756 0489 after 5 p.m.

1979 REGAL BUICK, navy/white, vinyl top. Fully loaded; S4,995. 752 6528    __

015

Chevrolet

MPALA 1981. 4 door, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden.

746 3141.

1975 AAONTE CARLO AM/FM 8 track, navy with white top. Great Shape. S1506or best otter. 946 6662.

1979 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE 4 door, automatic, low mileage. S2895. Call after 6p.m. 758 1185._

1979 IMPALA, 4 door, power sleer-and brakes, automatic, air,

new brakes; power win dows and door locks. Clean. Below

retail. $4100.524-5832.

1981 CHEVETTE SCOOTER 2 door, 35,800 miles. S300 and assume

loan. 443-3019 tor more Intormatlon.

1M3 CHEVETTE. 4 door, 5 speed, .Price,

AM-FM radio, 2200 miles.  _____

85,400. Call 753-7089 or 756-4376 after &JEL_

018

Ford

MUSTANG 1980. In i

I condition.

eg , _ ..    . ._________________

(10) days prior to the posting of this ire Bobby Sherwood Lewis , Dorothy Sue Reel Lewis.

Notice ai and wife, Pursuant

thy Sue Reel Li_____

to North Carolina

General Statute 45-3).10(b), and the terme pf the Deed of Trust, any sue

cessful bidder may be required to the Trustee Immedlate-upon conclusion of the sale a cash

deposit with I

It of ten (10%) percent of the

bid up to and Including $1,000.00 plus five (5%) percent of any excess over 81,000.00. Any successful bidder shall be required to tender the full balance purchaM price so bid In cash or certlfleircheck at the time the Trustee tenders to him a deed for the property or attempts to tender such deed, and should said successful biclder fall to pay the full sobi

balancepurchase price so bid at that tie, he shall remain liable on his bid

as provided for In North Carolina General Statute45-31.30(d) and (a). This sale will be held open ten (10)

_____ -- jtd open ten (

days (or upset bids as requlrexJ by

law

Trustee

to March. 1983. OUKE.JR.

AAarch 4, 11, IS, 1983

automatic, air condition. Call Rax Smith Chevrolet~Avden, 746-3141

REDUCED $500 for quick sale! 1966 Mustang 389. New paint, carpet, hMdllriir, upholster^ tires, md dual exhaust. Call anytime 758 8366.

19M FORD COUNTRY Sedan sta tionwagon. 289 V8 engine. $300.

tionwagon.

7S8-mT

1975 AAAVERICK, 81)50. Call after 5 P.m 752 7981.____

1974 FORD PINTO Air condition, automatic transmission.

ShMrinQ, power brakas,  .......

Storao. _Excallent mechanical con-

xrAX

condition. 10,500 miles. 2 helments;

$1400 ^otiable. Call 756-2772. After

5, 756 :

1978 KAWASAKI LTD 1000, 10,000 miles, headers, Martek ignition plus lots more. Valve shims and Carb Stix. Garage kep). Excellent condi-tion. 82,600. 746 3798.

1980 CB750 CUSTOM HONDA over 6,000 miles. Clean excellent shape. S1900.752 4161

Just

and

1981 YAMAHA 250 EXCITER Excellent condition. S950. 752 5377.

1982 HONDA 752 7461.

Night Hawk 750.

750 HONDA, black, RC header, Cate fairirig new Goodyear HST, black aluminum rims. Including 2 helmets, rainsuit and cover. S1600 or best otter, 752-2503.

039

Trucks For Sale

1953 FORD PICKUP Flat head V8 Excellent motor, mags; $700 negotiable. 752 8881.

1968 FORD TRUCK- Automatic, power steering, clean; $800 or best otter. Call 752 T705 _

1974 DODGE KARY Van. 6 cylinder, manual, only 34,000 miles, good condition, needs transmission work, S2000. Call 758 1549 anytime.

1976 JEEP Wagoneer, excellent running condition, power steering, power brakes air. Sacrifice, $2,900 or best offer. Call after 5,355-6462.

1976 JEEP J10 pickup. Power steering and brakes, 360 cubic Inch carburetor, $2500. 746 2373

after 5.

1979 DATSUN King Cab. Automatic, air, sterao, 48,000, new paint. 84,000. 756 2971 attar 5.

1979 FORD PICKUP 50,000 miles, m cab.

Air on cab. Extra cooling. Slidii back window. Power steering, 8 track tape, AM/FM stereo, automatic. Good condition. Call 758-6592.

1979 FORD Ranchero GT truck. Air, power steering, cruise control Phone-------

>hone 757 0274.

1981 F100 FORD 31,000 miles. Radials. No rust. Well kept. $5500. 355 6349.

2 L 60x15 RADIALS tires; 815. Good tree

S30. 2 L 60x14

ood tread. 1 tool box for Imports; S45. Call 756-7330._

040

Child Car*

CHILD CARE In my home. Conve-nlent to hospital. Call 754-7(K>5. WOULD LIKE.TO keep jTyear old

WOULD LIKE JO km 3 year Old and up In childproof )iome. Days to hospital. Call

355-2715.

046

PETS

AKC Gorman Shepherd Must sacrifice. SIOO. 756-419) 795-4954 after 6.

AKC AAALE DOBERAAAN Ears and tail ^^to|>ed. All shots. House

trained.

____    - watch dog. 7 nuNiths,

SISO. Call 946-7881 pfter 4 p.m

during the week. Anytime Saturday and Sunday.

BOXER PUPSI 875 (or females; $85 for males. Call

:Tanytime 746-2386:

DOBERAMkN PUPPIES 4 red and 3

black, (iood naturad. Available AAarch 21,19*3. SI25. Cell 524 5294.

ditlon. Call 756-1035 nights ask for

Nflpcy.

1*77 FORD GRANADA Silver with gray vinyl roof. Power steering and

power brakes, air. offer. Call 756 7209.

S2SOO or best

1977 pinto 2 door, light blue sedan. Four spaed,,air conditioning, povrer

sat

ring, A

ESCORT Take up payments of $173.00. Owner deiMrata. Phone 752-0103 days. 746 40^l0hts.

19*1 FORD ESCORT WAGON, red, power brakes, power steering, air, AM radio. 756 7dt3 after 5:30 p.m.

19*1 THUNDERBIRD Navy, vinyl top, AM/f^ cassette, excaimt condition, f^tf sell. Celt 758-5378 or 756 4914 nloht.

GREAT DANE PUPS Full blooded, ihpts and dewormed, $50.746-2005.

MALE

House

!fr?

PUPPY and tall

SCHNAUZ

 rained. E_.. ____

clipped. All shots. 10 months. 875. Call 946-7881 after 4 p.m. during.the week. Anytime Saturday and^un-

Stax

PUPPIES, half (xerman Shepherd and black Labrador, 8 weeks old. $10 each. 752-0612.

WATERFOWLERS, top black labs in NC, best field trial lines, superior

hunters, guaranteed, 946-4924 days, 946-7971 niohts. _____

051

H*lpWant*d

BABYSITTING wanted to sit with

3 days ilth

Older

week. ^^S^erencs and

ler woman ' In my home

health certificate required. Must hav* own transportation. 756 9741

access^y shop. Part time hours f^^^startlng full time In August

Artistic _ _

preferred. Send resume _____

enc^s ^ O Box 4243, Greenville.

creative background ana refer-

experienced SALES person to

call on schools and churches. Send resume to Carolina School Supplies tocorporatei 2619 West Boulevard Charlotte. NC 28208

call on schools and' churcRes resume to Car "

FULL AND PART time help needed by marketing firm distributing designer jeans. Must have trans-portaion. Have fun and make money too! Call 9 a.m. 6 p.m., AAonday Friday. 752-7068

GUITAR player WANTED for

Rock and Roll Band. Call after 5 pm. 946-0302.

HAIRDRESSER WANTED Guar anteed sajary. Call Georges Colt

ture, 756 6200.

HOMEWORKERS WIrecratt pro^ Auction We train house dwellers. For full details write: Wirecraft, PO Box223. Norfolk. Va. 23501.

INTERIOR DECORATOR with ex perience and a desire to excel. Salary and commission. Send resume to Decorator, PO Box 1967 Greenville. NC 27834.

051

HeipWantwi

SALESAAAS^EEDEO National company needs talesmen to sell food ^vice to businesses In Eastern NC Bese salary plus com mission. Good company teneflts. We pfoylde transportation. Cell for appointment trom 9 to 5. 752 2*30.

TEXAS OIL Company needs mature perm tor short trips surrounding Greenville. Confact

customers. We train Write W F Dickerson, Presl^t, Southwestern Petroleum, Box 789, Ft. Worth, Tx 76101._

067 Garage-YardSal*

ATTENTION

Bring your unwanted Items to us Let us do the selling tor you. Red Oak Show and Sell. Ro piece like it anywhere. Location: 264 West on

Farmville Highway, 756-1156. Open Wednesttoy.

AAonday, Tuesday, __________

Friday and Saturday, Sunday 1-6. Closad on Thursdays.___

^AITRESS Daytime, part time or I Experience preferred, ^ly between 3-5, AAonday Friday, 100 East lOto Street. No phone calls please.

059

WorkWant*(j

ABLE BODIED responsible indi vidual would like to do odd jobs yard work, gardening, clean out gutters, etc. In Pitt County. 756-6913

ALL TYPES TREE Licensed free surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free tes. J "  ------------

SERVICE

Trii

estimates. J P Stancll^

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 6 752 7765.

pm.

COMPANION HOME health aide

CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO

Quality construction and renova Phone 757-0799 after 6 om

NO JOB TO SAMLL Free estimate on all repair work. Cabinets, counter tops, lxxk cases, inside

Is Quality Care Your Priority!

teiSsiSrs^ knowledge and

RN'SANDLPN'S NEEDED

Full time and part time, 117 Shift differential available

3 11,11-7 and weekends Competitive salaries Willing to work around

Willing scheduli Interested pei Morgan, DON, Center, 758 7100

rsons call Lydia University Nursing

LADY to spend nights with lady In Ayden. Phone 746 :54.

LOCAL manufacturing company has openings for 1st line Supervisor Salary commensurate with expert

ence. Only those with the minimum ot 1 year s experience supervising sewing operations should apply. Call 975-3133 tor an Interview. E^ai

Opportunity Employment.

A^INTENANCE FOREAAAN Take charge individual needed to assume full responsibility for all areas of maintenance operations. Must be experienced millwright with work ing knowledge in hydrolics, pneumatics, and electrical areas. Ability to supervise required. Salary up to S20,000 (tending upon experience and qualifications. Mason Lumber Company, 1835 West 5th Street Washington, NC 752 4M5.

AAECHANIC WANTED Good reli

able m^hanlc with good working habits. Excellent pay and benefit package. Prefer Ford experience. Apply in person to: J C Jones, East

Carolina Lincoln-Mercury-GMC: Greenville.    ^

NEED DIRECTOR, of nurses. Excellent benefits, salary negotiable. Con^ct Dr. Carolyn Harrell, 758 4121, Greenville Villa

PART TIME morning sales help needed. Experience preferred.

Apply in ,perMn

Friday a) Leather  _____

lina East Mall. No phone calls.

PHYSICAL THERAPIST Salary range $14,760    $20,688.    Wanted

Immediately physical therapist In certified progressive Home Health/Hosplce Program. Work involves administering wide variety ot physical therapy treatments being prescribed by a physician; is expected to exercise (niflatlve and discretion in formulating a sched

uied program of treatments to meet

needs ot individual pai  ..

Contact Craven

atients in

the needs of individual their homes

County Health Department, 2102 Neuse Boulevard, New Bern or call 633 4121.

tops,

trim, outside trim, sliding porches, and painting. Call 758 0779 or 752

1623.

PAINTING, interior and exterior Free estimates. Work guaranteed References. II years experience 756-6873 after 6 p.m.

PORCH ENCLOSED with remov able glass, 12' X 12' X 7' high, and one door. $1,800. Available In white or bronze baked on finish. Prices for other sized available

TOT oTner sizeo available upon request. Precision Glass & Window Co., 355 2978.

SANDING and finishing floors Small carpenter jobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 2868 anytime, it no answer call back.

SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59.95. Call Steve Atkins tor all your slon needs. 756-9117

ORAAAA BOOSTERS YARD SALE Saturday AAarch 12, 8 until 12 a m On the Rose High School lawn.

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea AiAarket, Greenville Boulevard.

Open Saturday and Sunday 8 til 5 Crafts, tools, furniture and antiques. Displays ot old postcards, buttons and antique pistols All church and civic groups free inside

Outside dealer spaces Free! Call Mike 746 3550,

Bill 746-3541,    .

Grounds 758 6916

Fair

RAYNOR FORBESANDCLARK

Flea AAarket open Saturdays 7 til l, across trom AAoose Lodge. 756-4090.

SATURDAY, AAarch 12, 8-1. 107 Windemere Court, Greenville, behind Cherry Oaks, Furniture clothes. Raggedy Ann and Andy, track lights, miscellaneous. 756

urn

YARD SALE Saturday at 1017 A Chestnut Street. Vacuum cleaner, lots ot coats and clothes for women and men, books and records. Time: 9 until. Everything must Qo.

YARD SALE, 115 South Woodlawn Road behind Overtons. 8-1, Satur

YARD SALE, 103 Trade Street Furniture, wallpaper, etc. 8 until

YARD SALE Saturday, 8 am until 402 Pine Street

1402 NORTH PITT STREET, Greenville. Friday noon through

Saturday.

072

LivestcKk

HORSEBACK RIDING

Stables, 752 5237_

Jarman

HORSES Registered TB/QH, black mar^ 9 years, hunter jumper and black Gelding hunter jumper, also ridden Western. 756 2551.

074

Miscellaneous

A GREAT BUSINESS opportunity. For S2.000 you can be owner and manager of the Odds and Ends Merchandise, downtown Ayden 746 2446

TONY BROWN'S lawn and tree service. It it's in a yard we do it Fully insured. Year round. 756-673.5

thesis,

etc. Call 756-/367 before noon_

WANT TO LOOK SAAASHING this Spring but cant afford a new wardrobe? Call 752-8974 to make the clothes you have tit their best Alterations and restyling at reason able rates

060

. FOR SALE

061

Antiques

ANTIQUES Up To 25% Off

Announcing Red Tag Sale Sunday.

through Sunday, AAarch

March 6th 13th, to introduce you to the Antique

Market, Highway 70 W Bypass, Kinston. Choose from our large collection of American antiques in

our 10,000 sq. ft. showroom. Over 150 oak pieces to choose trom, Victorian Walnut cylinder desks, bookcases, bedroom suites, pine and cherry corner cupboards Hours 10-6 Monday -    

on Sunday . 527-8300.

Saturday, 1-6

ONE DOUBLE BED, large posts, very old. AAahogany. sffc. Call 756 5091.

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood tor sale. J P Stancll, 752-6331

ALL OAK FIREWOOD, split, stacked, delivered, $45 full Vi cord. Call 752-0983.

POSITION VACANCY ASSISTANT DIRECTOR

MbbibiANi uiKbCIUK Nursing Activities, Area L AHEC, Health Education Foundation. Maste

degree in nursing preferred; will ate

consider candidates who are near

completion of their MSN Minimum of to

'our years' work experience preferred. Responsibilities include assisting with special activities In nursing and developing continuing education programs for nursing within Area L AAay begin as part-time or full time position. Please submit vita by April 2, 1983, with cover letter, to Deputy Director, Area L AHEC, Post Cifflce Drawer 1319, Tarboro, North Caro lina 27866. Health Education Foundation Is an Equal Op-

fortunitty Affirmative Action mplover.__

PROFESSIONAL DOG groomer for washer or brusher. Call 758-0471

nights.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr    756-6?7'

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

$40 FOR PICKUP

CALL 757-3568 or 758-5063

FIREWOOD, $30 a load. Call 758 4611 anytime for delivery.

OAK FIREW<X>D for sale, $45 tor Vs cord. 757 1637.

SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD $45 per halt cord. Call 752-0091

100% OAK FIREWCX3D tor sale. $45 a load If we deliver; $40 a load if you pick up. 758-3797 or 752-5488.

O&S Farm Equipment

FARM AAACHINERY Auction Sale, Tuesday, March ISth at 10 a.m. 150 tractors, 400 implements. We buy and sell used equipment daily.

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air conditoners. freezers,

conaiToners, rreezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale. Call B J Mills, Authorized Appliance Service. 746 2446 at Blackjack.

AM/FM CASSETTE

negotiable. Call 758 4370

".5

er. Fits

ASPARAGUS ROOT BROCCOLI LETTUCE CAULIFLOWER CABBAGE COLLARDS

SE EDS For Early Gardens

EXCELLENT SELECTION OF

ROSE BUSHES Kittrell's Greenhouses

2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT 9 AM 5:30 PM    AAon, Sat,

CALL 756-7373 Support American Cancer Society

BASEBALL CAPS, painters caps, business or organization names and slogans as few as 1 dozen. Plaid Giraffe, Main Street, Farmville.

BEGINNERS AND Advanced piano lessons by ECU honor student, Debra Russ. Piano & Organ Distributors. Arlington Boulevard, Greenville.355-6002.

BRAND NEW Smith Corona electric typewriter with carrying case, SlOd.OO. Kodak Ektagraphic Slide Projector with carousel tray, $100.00. Kodak Instamatic X 15 camera with case, $10.00. Poloroid Land Camera, super colorpakc with case, $25.00. Call after 756 2509.

:30 p.m.

BROWN Naughahyde sofa b

Kroeller, $150. Deep pinit carp ily

and pad, approximately llVjxL . $75. Both in excellent condition. 355 6425, 5:30 9:30evenings.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 763 9 734

CABBAGE and yellow collard plants. $2.00 per hundred. Call 355-6360.

CRAFTIQUE, solid mahogany din ing room table with 6 chairs, table

is drop leaf, gate leg, good condi tion, $500 firm. Overhead projector, like new, 3M brand. $100 firm. Call

756 5091

Wayne Implement Auction Corp., '    233, Highway 117 South,

PO Box 233, Highway Goldsboro, NC 27530. Phone 734 4234

NC 1(188.

PLOW PARTS - Mouldboards to fit John Deere 16", $31.48; Masse

By

Ferguson $37.22; Ford 14" $37.05.

_ _ Shins $4.32, AiAassey Ferguson shins $4.29; John Deere 14" shins $4.77. Other mouldboards, shins, points and heels to fit most plows in stock. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999.

USED IN GROUND SCALES 756 7209.

Call

4 ROW LILLINGSTON rolling cultivator. Like new. 756 7381.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

DISCOUNT PRICES on new Sharp copiers, sale-lease rent. Large selection of used copiers: Xerox 2600. Xerox 3100, Savin 770, Minolta 510, Sharp 726. Phone tor prices 756 6167.

DROP LEAF dining room set, recliner, fire screen with andirons. Call 752 6513.

EXCELLENT CONDITION dryer, $100. 756 8690._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FURNITURE WORLD

2808 E. 10th St.

OPEN MON . THRU FRI. I AM 10 8 PM SATURDAY 9 AM to (PM 757-0451

WsWIII Not Be Undersold

WHILE YOU LEARN GUARANTEED MONTHLY SALARY FIRST THREE MONTHS

NO iXPiRIINCI NECESSARY

We will teach you...

Do you have a positive mentai attitude

Do you desire to be successf ui

Are you able to follow directions explicitly

Do you desire to earn $2000 to $2500 per month

Hto

Ymi Owe n To Yonrtelf To Give tt A Trye

Apply in person only Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, March 14,15 and 16, between 9:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Absolutely no phone calls. See E.J. Lacoste or Rickie Moore.

H

ASTING

FORD

Tenth Street * 264 By-Pass

Dealer No. 5720

758-0114

S

GreenviHe. N C 27634





. f22-The Daily Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Friday, llircii 11,1983

074

Miscellaneous

CALL CHARLES TICE, 75* 3013. for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work._

CHAINSAW, Sears. Call 75? 0983.

22" Bar, S80.

CHEST FREEZER 110 volt porta ble clothes dryer, *100 each Air conditioner, *150. 74* 2446._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

074

Mllcellaneous

CHILDREN'S CAMPAIGN furniture, like new. Desk, nightstand and chest. *225. Set World Book Encyclof^ias and all year books. Excellent condition Value *595, sell tor *325. Call Mary days, 752 3000. niohts 756 1997

COLONIAL PRINT sofa, *125 Up holstery like new. Phone 756 9025 after Spm.____

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

PINE FURNITURE

%

Quality PbM Furnitura at Whoiaaala PricM Saan Somathing You Want? can build H for a lot laaa. Anything cuatom buMt

Bookcaaas     Oraaaara

QunCabinala     Computar TaMaa

Shalva*    NtahtSUnda

Ptaaafaa    'TV Hutch

Jally Cupboard     Starao CaMnata

Drop Laafa     PancM Poat Bad

Anythlrtg can ba buHt from a akatch or picturo, aialn-ad any color. Many llama finlahad and raady to aall

355-2720 After 5:30

GraanvUla    '    ~

AUCTION

FARM EQUIPMENT Saturday - March 12,198310 A.M.

Location: 1301 West Fifth St. Washington. N.C. Home of Country Boys Auction & Realty Co.

Gale 95 Mix-all

TRACTORS

5000 Ford 1310 Long 2840 John Deere 175 Allis Chambers 3000 Ford 6600 Ford

EQUIPMENT Long Bush-Hog 2 Row Lilliston Rolling Cult, w/ferl, sowers

2 Row Transplanter 10 ft. King Disc. Harrow Middle Buster

3 Bottom M.F. Plows Dirt Scoop 2 Row Cult.

1 Gehl Hammer Mill

4 Bottom M.F. Plow 8 ft. Disc

CONSIGNMENTWILL _

BE ACCEPTED    Sale    Conducted    by

Lilliston 4-row cultivator BulkUme sower 2 Rack T obacco T rucks

1 Powell Topper Roanoke offset Bush-Hog 4 Row Pitt. Cult.

2 Row Int. Cult.

10 ft. Disc.

BARNS 2 Roanoke Gas Fired 126 Rack 1979 Model 1 Long Gas Fired 126 Rack 1975

HARVESTER 1 Long Tobacco (Red)

Long Harvester. Red, late model

Long Harvester. Diesel engine

LUNCH WILL BE AVAILABLE

COUNTRY BOYS AUCTION AND REALTY CO. P. 0. Box 1235 Washington, North Carolina Phone: 946 6007    State    License    No.    765

IDOUC CURKINS Greenville, N. C. 758 1875

SOT RESPOSSIBLE FOR ACCIDEN.TS

RALPH RESPESS Washington, N. C 9*-8l|78

SHOP THE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Chevrolet Camaro Zt28

T-top. Beautiful black finish with gray velour interior. Only 3,000 miles SAVE.

1982 Mazda Truck

Loaded. White with blue interior.

1982 Datsun 2Q0-SX Hatchback

Two tone silver with gray velour interior, SL package, sharp and sporty, 17,000 miles.

1981 Ford Escort

Light blue finish with blue interior, automatic, air, cruise control, cassette tape, local trade.

1981 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel

Beautiful gray metallic with blue velour interior, 4 speed, air condition, low mileage, nice,

1981 Datsun 280-ZX

5 speed, GL, blue with blue velour interior, loaded.

1981 Olds 98 Regency

4! door, beige with beige velour interior, loaded.

1981 Datsun 210 Hatchback

2 door. Light blue with blue cloth interior, 5 speed, air.

1981 Datsun 210 Coupe

2 door, 5 speed, AM-FM radio, silver with black interior.

1981 Datsun 4 XATruck

Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.

1981 Plymouth TC-3    

Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.

1981 Datsun Pickup

Diesel engine, 5 speed transmission, short bed.

1981 Chevrolet Chevette

4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, 12,(XX) miles. Red with buckskin interior.

1981 Honda Accord

4 door. Silver, burgundy interior, loaded.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX Turbo

Gold with tan leather interior. Loaded.

1980 Chevrolet Mallbu Classic %

4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour.

1979 Toyota Clica Liftback

Loaded. Black with black interior. "

1977 Datsun 710 Wagon

5 speed, air, AM-FM, green with buckskin interior.

1977 Olds Delta Royale 88    ^

2 door coupe. White with red velour interior. Loaded, low mileage, local trade.

1976 Alfa Romeo Alfetta

4 door, 5 speed, air, AM-FM, black with tan interior.

These Cars Are Former Driver Education Cars

SaveMOOOs '

1983 Olds CuM^s Supreme Brougham

Fully equipped, Wm blue

1983 Olds Delta 88

Fully loaded, white with blue top

1983 Olds Delta 88

Fully loaded, triple white

1983 Olds    Supreme

2 door, automal%Wlr, stereo

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115

T

074

Miscellaneous

FREE

are

E RUG SHAMPOO Kirby's back in Greenville. As an introductory offer simply preview the 1983 Kirby Heritage Home Care

System and we will shampoo 1 room car(        .....

for details. Homeowners only.

>yf    -    _ ,

if carpet at no cost or oblioation. Call your Greenville representative, Randy Hobbs at 7562464 or 446-1129

FURNITURE FURNITURE Living Room Dining Room Bedroom. Many styles to choose from! We GUARANTEE to have the lowest prices!!! Factory Mattress, Waterbed 8. Furniture Outlet, 730 Greenville Blvd. 355 2626.

HOTPOINT UPRIGHT freezer. 12

cubic feet. Good condition; *125. 524 5420.

IN STOCK WALLPAPER *1.00 roll. Whitehurst Carpets, 103 Trade Street.

074

AMscBllaneous

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS and ^hgrngggari.gfll pgly, 7^4-^711

RV 45

756 3209.

4 beacon redlight. *50.

SCM 135 COPIER Table tc model in excellent condition. Makes varl able sue copies. *350.75>^>428.

SEARS KENAAORE electric white stove. Excellent condition; $200. Call 752-5351 aHerSom

SEWING MACHINE 1st, AAodel 834, with pecan cabin Excellent condition. *250. 756 7698

Singer, Styl--an cabinet

SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent shampooer* and vacuums at Rental

Tog.! Company

SONY WALKAAAN, *80. Call 355 2850.

KING SIZE bed with cane look headboard. Phone 754-7953 after 5 pm_

LARGE SIZE Kelvinator dryer coppertone.

Call 746 6031

ertone. Good condition.

MOFFITT'S MAGNAVOX Greenville's first and largest video tape club Rent movies for only *5 tor three days

MONARCH'S DATA DIAL Marking Machine Electric Model Number 146 Priced new; *1150. Sacrifice for *500. 758 2300 9 to S.

AAOVING 25" console color TV with automatic tine color and tint control, beautiful cabinet, sharp picture, only *185. Automatic washing machine by Maytag, excellent working condition. *125. Automatic clothes dryer, excellent working condition, *100. 756 0492.

AAOVING SALE Trailer 4 X 10 utility, *350. Maple bedroom set, *225, rocking chair, *25. 756-6220 6pm 10pm

16 pound tpoini no frost

GE

MOVING SALE

washer, *100. HotpoinI refrigerator, *150. Sofa sleeper, *150. While couch with matching chair, *150 King size bed, *10(f Queen size mattresses with frame, *75. Kitchen table with 4 chairs, *150. Chairs, *50. Lamps, *25. Antique ice box, *100. Marble-top coffee table, *75. Large chest, *75. Stereo/TV console, *100. Porch furniture, *75. 756 8263 after 5 p.m

NICE USED refrigerator, *150. Two very nice, gold, uoholstered, living room chairs, *100. 756 6066.

OVERHEAD GARAGE DOOR Complete with all hardware. 4 standard size aluminum storm windows Aluminum storm door; triple tracks. 752-0827.

PAIR OF JVC SK-1000 speakers, 2 years old. Good condition. *140 each. 355 6684 after 6 p.m.

PLAYHOUSE *400. Will deliver for *4M. Must see to appreciate. 752-

PLEASURE HORSE, 6 year old mare plus saddle. Good with kids. *350. Call 756-6444.

RENT A STEAMEX Best method for cleaning carpets. Larry's Carpetland, *10 East 10th Street, Greenville. ,

RENT A VIDEO recorder and movie *15. Complete selection of all titles. Mottitts Magnavox 756

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TOOL SHED FOR SALE 17 x15', wood, shingled roof, excellent con ditlon, *600. Cell 756-5883

TOPSOIL, field sand, mortar sand and rock. Call 746 3819or 746-3296

USED JOHN DEERE 210, 42 " cut riding lawnmower. Excellent con dition. Also Bolens 770, 7 horse 36" cut riding lawnmower condition. 752-4122._

WOULD LIKE to buy used refrIg erators, air conditioners, freezers, and ranges that need repair. 746-2446.

YELLOW CHIPPENDALE sofa, 84" long. *175. 753 4620 after 6 p.m

ZENITH 25" color TV, dark wood cabinet, good color, *185. Portable black and white TV, like new, *45. Coke drink machine, good condition, *135. Lawnmower, like new, *50. Bed, *25. 746 6929

12X16 BUILDING, V} bath Be used for office or beauty shop, etc. Well built. *2200 tirm. 746 4426

15 CUBIC FCX)T Kelvinator chest type freezer, *175. 756 2231 after 5 p.m., Mondav-Frldav._

2 AIR CONDITIONERS, 110V window units: 5,000 BTU and 8,500 BTU 3 triple track storm win-dows-cheap. 752-1344after 5p.m.

4 FIBERGLASS bar stools, folk

guitar, hair dryers, numerous small itchen appliances. Call 756-9838 after 6 p.m

8 AUTOAAATIC washing machines. All good working condition. *65 each. 756 2479.    _

075 AAobI le Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW 1983 lop guaflty 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors, plywood counter fops, total electric, range, refrigerator. Regular price, *12,995

Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and spt up inc ludecT Hours, 8 am to 6 pm.

MOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Grenvllle Boulevard 756-0191 _

^    .    J3 top of

double wide. 52 X 24, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras Including

masonite siding, shingle roof, bay windows, trosf free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral celling and

TIRES

NEW, USED and RECAPS Unbeatable Prices and Quality

GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER

much, much more. Regular price, *24,995 Limited Time Only

$19,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up i nc I udecT Hours, 8 AM to 6 pm, MOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard  _756-0191    _

DOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances. Central air. Underpinned. Barn attached. Set up on I acre of land. 946-8436

FOR SALE or rent, Weyhauser area. 2 bedrooms. Fully furnished. *5898. i 244 0553.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

12 X 60 AAOBILE home on Pamlico River. *4500. Call 756-6444.

1M4 2 bedroom, 10x56, furnished, ftew carpet. >2900. Call 752-6245.

197D FRONTIER, 12x60, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, new carpet and furniture. *4995.    756-9874, Country Squire

Mobile Homes, Inc., 264 Bypass, Greenville.

1971 home, New

Call 758

12 X 60 Champion mobile >, almost completely furnished, carpet, air condition. *5,795.. - 7392    -

or 756-4252 anytime.

091

Business Services

BOOKKEEPING done in my home 6 years experience. All phases. Including payroll and related taxes; 355-2344. Atorv, afternoon

INCOME TAX SERVICES Bovd. Call 756-3264._

Hilton

093

OPPORTUNITY

1973 CHICKASAW 12x65. For sale by owner. 18,000 BTU window air conditioner. Cement steps, 250 gallon oil drum, washer and dryer. Mobile home in need of floor repairs. Will negotiate reasonable offer. Phone 758-4551 between 10:30 12:00am.__

1975 CELEBRITY 12X60,    2

bedrooms, 1 bath, furnished, central air, underpinned, 10X12 storage barn, oil drum and steps. Lots of extras. Set up in nice park. Building house must sell. *8000 neaotlable. 756 3161 aterp.m.

1976 MOBILE HOME, 12x65, partially furnished, *7500 . 3 ton central air unit. 355-2334 after 5.

1977 HILLCREST, 12x60,    2

bedrooms, 1 bath, unfurnished, 3 ton central air. Excellent condition. Set up in nice park; *7900. Call 752 3246 after 6 Dm. _

1977 OAKWOOD mobile home, 12x60, good condition. All rooms are closed oft. Call 746 4677 from 4-9.

1977 12x40. 2 bedrooms, all electric. Partially furnished. 18,000 BTU air conditioner. Extra clean. *6,000 tirm. 758-3079.

1978 24X60 4 bedroom, 2 bath, lap siding, shingle roof, dishwasher, air conditioning, sliding glass doors. Call Art at Art OelTano Homes, 756 9841._

1981 24x52, masonite siding with shingle roof, washer/dryer, storm windows, totally furnished, fireplace. Some equity and assume payments of 12% interesf. Call Lawrence at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841,

1982 BRIGADIER 24x48 Repos session. Financed at 12% interest. Call Lawrence or Tim at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841.

1983 GUERDON, 12x50, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, plywood floors, sheetrock wall, *7495, plus set up, plus tax and title. Low down payment. 756 9874, Country Squire AAobile Homes, Inc., '264 Bypass, Greenville

24X52 LAP SIDING, shingle root, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, dishwasher, set up and delivered. *14,995. Call Lawrence or Tim at Art Dellano Homes. 756-9841.

076 AAobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance - the best coverage tor less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-

077 Musical Instruments

A NEW SPINET PIANO with 10 year warranty. Pecan finish only. 5895. Plano & Organ Distributors, Arlington Boulevard, Greenville, 355 6)2.

NEW LOWREY STEREO organs. Only *799. Lowrey Organ Center, 756 6833._

PEDAL STEEL guitar Gibson Les Paul with active electronics, Peavy Session "500" amp, cords and Morley pedal. 919 892 3785 from Sp.m. 8D.m., Dunn. NC

CUCUMBERSII Cucumbersll Cucumbers!! Contracts are limited tor this years harvest. Serious growers should call 753-5164 for Information on how you can make some good money this spring

FOR SALE seafood market. Good income, good business and location. Call between 6-9, 756-1

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 8, Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultant*. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, NC 757-0001, nights 753 4015._

TO BUY OR SELL a business, tor appraisals, for financing, for franchise consulting - contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES In vestment Analysts and Brokers, Greenville. 752 3575._

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.

100

REAL ESTATE

1 ACRE - 2 mobile homes. Set up for small park. Reduced price. 752 3689. _

102 Commercial Property

FOR SALE or lease. Two commercial buildings on main thoroughfare. Call 758-1131. After 6 pm, 756^1463._

104 Condominiums For Sale

WHY PAY RENT

When you can own part of your townhome or condominium for the same or less monthly payment Three locations to choose from Your only expense is 5% down payment! This opportunity available only at AAoore and Sauter. Call today.

AAOORE& SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

106

Farms For Sale

FOR SALE IN Pitt County: 68.74 acre farm with 2.05 acre tobacco allotment, 4,449 pounds tobacco. 35 acres cleared. Farm In Beaufort County:    63.41 acres with 7,375

pounds tobacco, 42.6 acres cleared 919-946 7259.

USED LOWREY 2 keyboard organ. Like new, *695. Call 7.56 8833.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RNS INTENSIVE CARE

Full time rotating day/night positions available. Com* petitive benefits/salary. Enjoy your leisure time on North Carolina coast.

HEAD NURSE - PEDIATRICS

Challenging and rewarding opportunity for management oriented RN. Competitive salary/benefits.

For More Information Contact

CARTERET GENERAL HOSPITAL

Motehead City, N.C. 28557    919-726-5151

_ EOE

Call Our Wrecker At 758-1033 Day Or Night

To Bring Your Wreck In For:

Complete Body And , Mchanical Work And Body Painting

All Work Guaranteed

BROWN-WOOD, INC.

Dicldnson Ave.

752-7111

078

Sporting Goods

HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion re pairs. Specializing in marine pro-ducts. 758 0641. 1104 Clark Street TEAM SHIRTS, uniforms, caps Low prices. Great selection. Plaid Giraffe, Main Street, Farmville

082 LOST AND FOUND

FOUND near Eastern Elementary School. Black and white male cat. A^P^ximately 1 year old. Call

085 Loans And Mortgages

2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans-mortgages bought. Call free 1 800 845 3929.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

STORAGE BUILDINGS

FOR SALE

Wood Construction Painted to Your Preference, A-1 Quality.

756-6733 or 756-2181

TOBACCO ALLOTAAE NT FOR SALE

$3.25 per pound

Contact David Nichols 752-4012or 752 7666

126 ACRE FARM 110 acres cleared. In Craven and Beaufort counties. On the Pitt County line. Call Raleioh, 919 847 0915._

28 ACRES with 12 cleared. Near Chicod School. 15 miles Southeast of Greenville. Owner financing available. For more information call Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756-3500; rflghts Don Southerland. 756 5260.__

58 ACRE FARM Good road fron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110, 51 acres cleared, 6.209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details.

109

Mouses For Sale

HIGH POTENTIAL for small out-lay of fund*. 3 bedroom brick rqrtch.

V, acre lot. PoSlble 12% FHA financlttf. CENTURY 21 BForte*AoKy7S6-2m or 7M

HORSESWE ACRES Country llv-g^at room with

Muipi^ kitchan^ ^ flreplaca, built in

ism.

756 3000, agent, 756-3880

located on 3/4 acre lot '_8- blount a. associates. Batty Beacham, listing

HOUSE FOR sale to be moved. 7 "II** south of Greenville. Phone 756-0461

WUSE FOR RENT 314 East Main |*''eet, ^tervllle *150 per month. Small 2 bedroom*. Contact 752 8877

HOUSE SEEKING NEW HOME

It you have a lot, we may have your house. Due to new construction plans on present site, house must be "709^- For further details, call 746-6827,

I'M IN HEAVENI Is what you'll say when you see this lovely four tedroom home in Cherry Oaks Owners transferred and have to sell now! Custom built with all the extras^^ *90's. 4292. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-5868

END YOUR SEARCHI If you've ^n looking for an eleoanf four bedroom home in Lynndale. Den with fireplace and walk in wet bar, all formal areas, and many extras to add the finishing touch. *139,900 #407. CENTURY 5i Bass Relt>^ 756-5868.

GRACIOUS AND HOMEY! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, family room. Black Bart wood stove, large workshop with utilities century 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549.    

GRACIOUS, IT'S SPACIOUS, over 2900 square feet make this two story home in the country about four miles from city a nice size mansion Custom built on a Texas size yard Owner has changed jobs and must sell at a sacrifice. Reduced to *85,W.J^. CENTURY 21 Bass

Realty, 756 6666.

GREAT LOAN ASSUMPTION Hardee Acres. 3 bedroom, tVj bath brick ranch with garage. Large corner lot with fenced backyard *34,000 loan at 8V,% Payment *309 PITI *49,500. AAoving, must sell fast. 756 5587.

BETTER THAR' NEW! This four bedroom brick home features all formal areas, den with fireplace large master suite. Lower level has playroom with tiryjlaqe, two grooms. *70's. 4468. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868._

109

Houses For Sate

GREENWOOD home featuring

FOREST 3 bedroor

New-

 _________  .    ____ooms, I'/Y-

baths, kitchan with dining area, living room, cantral haat and air. Localad on a baautiful corner lot. *53,500. w. g. blount & assoc ate*. 756-3000. Betty Baacham, listing aoent. 756-3880.

HANG YOUR HEART here In this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Carport, workst^, and patio. 8Vj% FHA loan assumption, no qualification nacessary. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Aoencv 756-2121 or 758-9549

HAVE A "WAIT" Problem? ^ this 3 bedroom, bath brick ranch. Possible rent with option to buy. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Adencv 756-2121 or 758-9549._

BROOK VALLEY By owner. 3 grooms, 2 baths. 756 9097 or

BY OWNER 3 bedroom house on Singletree Drive. Assumable FHA ^n^or^^financing available.

BY OWNER Neat 3 bedroom, IVi bath brick ranch with garage Central air, good location, workshop. *39,900. Good flnancino Moving, must sell fast. 756 5587

BY OWNER 1215 E Wrloht Road 3 bedroom Williamsburg, TVj baths great room with fireplace, dining room, all the extras. Excellent location, 8'/2% loan assumption $69,900. Call 758 8792 aHer 6 for appointment,

BY OWNER in Farmville. Brick Veneer home, 2 or 3 bedrooms, 1 bath living room, dining room, and kitchen. New central heat and air Fully carpeted and Insulated Dishwasher and refrigerator. Utility house In rear. What a steal at *^,000. Call 753 2038.

CEDAR LOG HOMES 1326 square foot package, *11,900. 20 year war ranty. See our model in Griffon. Echo Realty, Inc. 524 4148 or 524-5042.

CHARM OF OLDER HOME, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath downstairs com pletely remodeled. 2 bedroom apartment upstairs rented for *130 month. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549

CLARK-BRANCHSELLb THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$40'*

GREENFIELD Ayden. FHA 235 loan assumption. Not many of this kind left. This home has 2 bedrooms, large master bedroom with IV} baths. Fireplace and carport. Call today. Low *40's

THE CHOICE is yours! Assume the existing loan of 9'/s% with total payments of *314.48 or seller will pay points for a new loan. Conve nient to the hospital. Mid *40's.

FLEXIBILITY This home, conve niently located to the university, qualifies as a single family dwelling or one area can be used as a source of income to assist in making that monthly investment. FHA 8V}% assumotion with total payments of *292.87; Seller will consider points on new financing. Offered in upper *40's.

NEW OFFERING This may be the one you have been waiting for Location: College Court, Financing: 11% VA loan with low equity. 3 bedrooms, one car garage, fireplace, central air condition High forties.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC

REALTORS

756-6336

Gene Quinn ,

Cha

Mary Chapin . Tim With ..

ON CALL

756    6037

756    8431

752    9811

Ray Holloman..............753    5147

Sharon Lewis..............756-9987

John Jackson..............756    4360

Toll Free: 1 800 525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

*20's8.*30's

INVESTMENT POTENTIAL This home has 4-5 bedrooms and two full baths and could easily be converted to a duplex. If you're in need of a good tax shelter, let us show you This one. VA loan assumption. Low Twenties. Breakeven cash flow.

SELECT YOUR OWN lot in conve nient LIndbeth. 1020 square left. 2 bedrooms, tV} baths. Cape Cod style duplex. Builder pays closing costs and discount points. Move In for under *1400. Energy efficient heat pump. Call today tor this unusual opportunity. Beat the rent racket with low payments.

NEED PAYMENTS less than *300 per nrjonth? Try our shared

ownership loan on this duplex near the hospital and get your payments below *300 per month on this two

107

Farms For Lease

FOR SALE Tobacco pounds at *3.40 a pound. Call 752 5567 after 6pm._

WANTED TO LEASE PEANUTS

Call 752 8178.

109

Houses For Sale

JUST WAITING tor you! 3 bedroom home, approximately 1448 square feet. Large lot. Posslbilitv of some owner financing. CENTuRy 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 758 9549.

LAKE ELLSWORTH AREA For

sale by owner. *59,900 assume FHA 11'/} percent loan for *9600. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace in den. Call 756 8804after 6._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MEDICAL

TECHNOLOGISTS

Immediate openings for (ASCP) medical technologists, medical laboratory technicians or equivalent.

Need experienced technicians to work on the evening shifts. Edgecombe General Hospital is an affiliate of Hospital Corporation of America. Enjoy our excellent benefit package including a stock purchase plan and tuition reinbursement. Contact our Personnel Department:

EDGECOMBE GENERAL HOSPITAL

2901 Main Street Tarboro, N. C. 27886 or call Area 919-641-7156 <    EOE

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESA WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

*70'S

FARMVILLE Beautiful 4 bedroom home with 2 bedrooms upstairs, two downstairs, 2 full baths with formal living room and dining room. This home has a rustic den that will make everyone feel at home. 2 car carport with lots of storage. Walk ing distance to all schools Call today. Low *70's.

NEW OFFERING in Club Pines. Sym    73>000. This

Williamsburg decor may suit your needs with hardwood floors, brick patios, cozy den with fireplace, lots of extra trim and builMns. Double garage or playroom Is offered. 1 year warranty. Call today and move in now.

CHERRY OAKS Like traditional exteriors with a modern floor plan Room and more room in this plan with over 1600 square feet. Master bedroom 16 x 12,' walk-in closet, large breakfast area plus dining room. Separate laundry room near the bedrooms. Fully applianced and under construction. Select your own decor. Low*70's.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC

REALTORS

756-6336

Gene Quinn ... ON CALL ... 756-6037

Mary Chapin...............756-8431

Tim Smith.................752 9811

Ray Holloman.............. 753 5147

Sharon Lewis ..............756-9987

John Jackson ..............756 4360

Toll Free: 1-800 525 8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

HdoiM Afln.'i-

( L. Lupton C ,

Its ON NOW AT HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

maamBUU ROU 5Hk

mesmRuv!

lUniES OBIR ES.

Ulith nem raad-loving feel and eleftranii fuel-injefted spirit.

Cutlass Cietfi ES, coupe or sedan, comes with just atxiut everything but the driving gloves Reclining seats Sport console Firm ride/handling package And rpore'

II9

.Riinual peitentage rote finannng nouj on ali neui 83 Oidsmobiies.

Available to qualified retail buyers To take advantage of this financing, delivery must be taken from Olds dealers stock before March 31,1983 Dealer financial

participation may affect the final negotiated price of the vehicle

[UTLRSS SUPREmE

sPEnniEDinon.

[iassif-ujith a designers taudi.

A special edition Cutlass-inside and out From sparkling Firemist exterior to special Regency interior Includes Dual accent stripes Dual sport mirrors Wire wheel discs

HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115

bedroom townhouse. Select your own decor and move in for approx imately *1500. Ottered at S38.00

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC

REALTORS

756-6336

Gene Quinn . ..ON CALI____ 756-6037

Mary Chapin...............756 8431

Tim Smith................. 752-9811

Ray Holloman.............. 753-5147

Sharon Lewis :........756-9987

John Jackson.............. 756-4360

Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910,    ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETiMES FOUR

50's8i*60's

HORSESHOE ACRES 11',% FHA loan assumption just oft Stan tonsburg Highway near hospital. This ranch nas 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths with lots of storage and large lot. Call today tor appoint ment. Mid*50's. Low equity.

JUST MINUTES from the hospital, this well designed 3 bedroom ranch has nearly 1300 square feet plus 16 x 20 outside storage workshop. Wood stove Included. 9'/.% VA loan assumption. Full garage with automatic door opener. Built-In desk in den. Ottered at *60,900.

CAME LOT can be in your future with this new 3 bedroom home including garage, separate utility room, large great room with rear access, bay window and priced to sell with 12% financing. *61,300.

LOOKING A good construction? This

deal In new colonial ranch

has nearly 1500 square feet and spacious rooms. 12% fixed loan available. In Camelot. built by Bill Clark Construction Co. To be com pJet^ by May. Call today Only

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC

REALTORS

7S33

Gene Quinn ... ON CALL .., 756 6037

AAary Chapin...............756-8431

Tim Smith.................752 9811

Ray Holloman..............753-5147

Sharon Lewis..............756 9987

John Jackson.............. 756-4360

Toll Free:1 800 525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLUB PINES This one looks like spring all over. Owners relocated and will rent with an option to boy or help with the closing cost. Beautiful shaded wooded lot. Reduced to *99,900. 1256. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666.

COUNTRY LIVINGI 3 bedrooms, fireplace in great room, large storage building. Over '/, acre lot. 8'/}% FHA loan assumption, no qualification necessary. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or

DUFFUS

BELVOIR HIGHWAY Three bedroom and bath ranch home. Living room, dining area, carport, oil heat. *36,000. .

UNIVERSITY Three bedroom* and two baths within walking distance of the University. Foyer, living room, family room with firtplace, dlnlnq room, fencing. *58,900.

CONTEMPORARY Lake Ellsworth a greet area to live and an imprasslva contem porary Three bedrooms, 2'/, baths, great room with fireplace, dining room, breakfast araa, playroom, garage, two decks, convenient to hospital areas. *89,500.

DUFFUSREALTY INC

756-5395

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR

SCREENSiDOORS

' .i'itiq Mo.jtn

' I I ni)ton ( ()

FRANK M.SUTTON-

CrtHWPuWteAccountrt

ACCOUNTING AND INCOME TAX SERVICES 757-1807

. -Frtday

TIMIM Saturday! lei





100

Houms For Sale

'tiaroMna Bulldw-., |ni!^:

7194.

1    '"Slerred

and hate to eave this plush home. All formal areas, den with fir^ac^v^t tar. Will consider a trade. Don t miss your chance to

move up to the top. tl3S,900 4341 CENTu1bY21 BasSlRsiilto:^-^^-

your DREAMS come true with this 3 bedroom, 2 bath Loo Home. Living room with fireplace over an acre lot. CENTURY^l B Forbes Ageocy 7S* 2121 or 7M-9S4e

115

Loti For Sale

BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT with hardwoods and pines In Washington. 250 foot fmtage on private road. Located 1 mile from country club and marinas. Priced to sell. Ca 94-797B.

NEW LISTING! FmHA loan assumpti^ 3 bedrooms, eat in

Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 754 7424

NEW LISTING, $55,900. This con-tempo^ry home on a wooded lot In '*    decorated

with 3 bedrooms and V/j baths The kitchen, dining area with quarry tile floor opens on to the great room with cathedral celing, clerestory window/s and fireplace. To see this Carroll

or 756 0278. C 11.

NEW LISTING-Cherry Oaks This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home was built with quality in mind. From the slate entryway to the many built in's and beautiful old brick fireplace It's a special houM. Add to this the 9% assumable loan with a balance of $47,000 and you've got a very attractive property. C 10 $76,500 Shown exclusively by Aldridge & .7'' Information call Allta Carroll at 756 3500 or 756 8278.

NEW OFFERING: Four bedroom home with two baths, step-down family room, central air, corner lot with fenced backyard. A lot of house for $56,500, Estate Realty Company, 752 5058, nights 758 4476

NICE, COZY contemporary house in Twin Oaks, excellent financing. F L Garner, 355-2628 or 756-32ir

BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT ON a Sr^vlliS?!. #P50.'?^tji8y

21 Bass Raaltv, 756-6666

121 Apartments For Rent

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

BELVOIR HIGHWAY Mobile hprne lots. %>elght Realty 756-3220, nioht 75a-774r

lot at Ayden Country Club. $5,000. 752-3302. __

COUNTRY LOTS ranging In size from V* acre to almost 2 acres. Two miles from Cherry Oaks. Priced from $11,000 to $15,500. Possible owner financing. iJS3. CENTURY

1r

21 Bass Realty. 7S6-6666.

HUNTINGRIDGE Convenient country living, large restricted residential lots near hospital. Millie Llllev owner broker. 752-4139

LAKE GLENWbOD water front lot, SR 1727. Beautiful,

Estate. Call 752 2615.

choice

Real

LOCATED IN Cherry Oaks. Heavl ly wooded i56' of road frontage

Over Vi

located on Gloria Street. Over acre. $15,900. Call Tommy at 756 7815 days, 758-8733 nights

PARTIALLY WOODED Cherr Oaks Subdivision. Priced to sell Days 758 7687, after 6. 756-7227.

TWO ACRES, 10 miles east Greenville. $13.000. Call 752-0824.

117 Resort Property For Sale

RIVER COTTAGE at Jarvis Land ing on lot with long pier. Good I Darden Realty 75^1983, nights arid weekends 758-2230.

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. $34.000 758 3218,

county By owner 76 4199.

$34,000. call after 6,

OAKDALE: 3 bedroom home with large kitchen, step down den, living room, 1'2 baths. Located on large corner lot. Only $37,500. For addi tional information call Betty Beacham at 756 3880 or W G Blount 8, Associates at 756-3000

OWNER SAYS SELL! Don't miss your chance on this beautiful home in Cherry Oaks. Located only a stones throw from pool and tennis court. $80's. 4360. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756-5868.

OWNER TRANSFERRED and

ready to sell! This beauty in Camelot has been cut to the Done Features family room with brick hearth and woodstove, formal dining, workshop and deck out back. You can even rent until closing $50's. 4430. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666

OWNERS HAVE OUTGROWN this two bedroom home in Coilege Court. Excellent condition! Extra insulation, refinished hardwood floors, knotty pine den and lots more. Low $50's, 4440. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868._

Owner desperate! Must sell! Three bedrooms located just outside city. Make an offeri 40's. 4369, CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 755 5868.

SEE FOR YOURSELF the charm and beauty captured by this 3 bedroom, V2 bath home. Living room with fireplace, extra's in

kitchen, double garage. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or

758 9549.

SEEING IS BELIEVING! You'!l agree after seeing this immaculate lour 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 recreation 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 758 4476.

TWO BEDROOM condominium. Oriental, N C Tennis, boat slip, club house, pool. Good loan assumption. $45.000.527-6442

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and bedroom mobile homes. Securit' deposits required, no pets. Cal 758^^4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Open day Friday 9 5. Call 756-9TO.

Mon

121

Apartments For Rent

Xherrytourt

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IV2 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer dryer

hook-ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club

house and pool. 752-1557

CYPRESSGARDENS APARTMENTS

2308 E Tenth Street Available immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hMk-ups, heat pump, frost tree

Can

758 5960.

'     Of    wiiii waiitrf/uf jrer

k ups, heat pump, frost free igerator, dishwasher, disposal. I days 758-6061, nighfs/weekends

Professionally managed by East, Inc._

Remco I

DUPLEX (two spacious apartments available) upstairs $250;

downstairs $265, 2 large bedrooms, refrigerator, range, carpeted, gas heated. (Water bill paid By owner). Lease and deposit required. Latham and 5th Street. 752 2844 after 6 p.m.__

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

SPRING HAS SPRUNG! Please the whole family with this three bedroom contemporary in Camelot. Greatroom with fireplace, cathedral ceiling with skylight, and much more. $60 s. 4393. (ENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666

SPRING IS BUSTING OUT all around this rustic cedar farm home. Offers superior construction and located in beautiful Tucker Estates. Owners transferred and regret having to sell. Call now Tor

iour private showing. Reduced to 79,500 . 4441. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666__

START THE SUAAMER off right with this spacious ranch in Eastvwood. Even has a swimming pool Three bedrooms, den with fireplace, formal areas and hardwood floors. A must to see! $60's. 4435. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868.    _

STOKES:    Stately Southern

Mansion. Completely renovated. Featuring 4 bedrooms, 3'.-2 baths, living room, den, dining room, well equipped kitchen with breakfast nook. Must see to appreciate; $140,000. For additional Information call Betty Beacham 756 3880 or W G Blount 8, Associates at 756-3000.

TRYING TO START something, a family perhaps? Take a look at this 4 bedroom, 2 bath, home 9Vi%

FHA 245 loan assumption, no quali fication necessary. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 7S6-212I or 758-9549

All utilities Cable TV Telephone (soon) Furnished

With or without maid service

Weekly or monthly rates ifh

Starting $250 month and up

756-5555 Olde London Inn

FORBES AND EAST 8th STREET

2 bedroom, living room, dining room, kitchen and bath. Call after 6 p.m. 919 792 6488._ _

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpefed, dish

washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with economical acent to 6869

Daiconies, spacious grounds abundant parking, econc utilities and pooL Adiace Greenville Country Club. 756-6

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom

apartments. Carpeted, range,

frigerator, dishwasher, dTsp____

nd cable TV Conveniently located

garden |e, re-sposal

to shopping center and' schools. ated|usf(

Located |usf off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

LOVE TREES?

E xperience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

UNIVERSITY AREA This cai cod charmer would make tl perfect starter home for newly weds. It offers step saving kitchen, three bedrooms, living room with

fireplace and formal dining. $40's. 447 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty,

756 6666.

VERY ATTRACTIVE two bedroom home with almost new heating system, fully carpeted; excellent floor plan for formal or casual living. Priced at $42,900 in Ayden. Estate Realty Company, 752 5058; nights 758 4476.    _

112 PARK DRIVE 3 bedroom immaculate home with 1188 square feet, garage. Assumable VA loan. $44,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615.

3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, freshi painted. Excellent shape. Just ol Mumford Road; $40,800. Speight Realty 756 3220, nioht 758 7741.

Ill    I nvestment Property

DUPLEX 2 bedrooms, l bath, central heat, air. 4 years old nf I

Contemporary. Excellent buy. Call John Day, Moore & Sauter; 752-1010. Evenings 752 0345

NEAR DUPONT PLANT 3 houses located on Highway 11.    First unit,    3

bedrooms,    1 baths.    Unit    2,    3

bedrooms.    1 bath.    Unit    3,    2

bedrooms, 1 bath. All presently rented. Excellent investment and return. These properties being sold to settle an estate. $38,500. For further details call W G Blount 8t Associates,    756 3000.    nights    1 975-

3179.______

WEST FOURTH STREET Apartment house. $6S0_per month rent. $31.000. Speight Realty 756-3220. night 758 7741

WEST FOURTH STREET 4

bedrooms, 2 taths. Owner financ ing; $22,000. Sjielght R ^ 32M. nioht 758 7741.

?ealty 756

113

Land For Sale

30 ACRES more or less, cleared land. Call 752 6208 atter6._

115

Lots For Sale

BAYTREE SUBDIVISION

Attractive wooded lots within the city. 90% financing available. Call 758 3421.

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NEW19 COLOR TV

RENT TO OWN

only23.11 FURNITURE WORLD

UN 1180)81.    TIT-tttl

Now!

12.75% Financing

on new 14X68,14X70 14X76 Models

CONNOR HOMES

:56-0333

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 5o% less than comparable units), dishwash

er, washer/dryer hookups, cable TV.wall to-walf carpet, thermopane

windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    1-5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FLEMING FURNITURE & APPLIANCE

Now Services CrotayAppHMiees Ketvlnater AppNancet Speed Queen Uundry FaddeisAlrCondltlonert 1811 OtcklDMn Ave.    782-3181

327 one, two and thrM bedroom oarden and townhousa apartmants, featuring Cabla TV, modern appll ancas, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facllitias, three swimming poofs.

Office - 2IH Eastbrook Orlvt

752-5100

NEAR UNIVERSITY. 3 bedrooms, recently renovated. No pats. 726 7615.

NEAR UNIVERSITY, 2 bedrooms, no pets. $175.1-726-7615.

NEW,- duplex townhouse. Available 1. Approximately 1 mile from ECU AAea School and Pitt County RAamo-rial Hospital. 2 bedroom, IV2 taths.

121 Apartmenfs For Renf

AL^ST NE W 2^^om duplex

Quiet location. L< r'lvcy'.'b month. CENTURY 21 B Portas

Agency. 756-2121

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio

couches.

Washers artd dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frosf-free refrigerators.

Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact JT or Tommy Williams 7Tei5

washer and dryer hookups. $300 per month.Calirei?4931

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two ments washer, retri

bedroom townhouse apart 1212 Redtanks Road. Dish

washer, refrigerator, range, posal included^ We also have 1 Tv Very convenient to Pitt I

dis

__________________Cable

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

can^us. No pets. $215 a month

756:

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

RENT FURNITURE; Living, din

ing, bedroom complete. $79.0 month. Option to Buy. U-REN-i

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10 a.m. to5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedroorns, washer-dryer . pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

hook-ups, cable TV,

Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm 8, Willow

752-4225

TOWNHOUSE Ridge Place. $275. Call 756-8436.__

TWO BEDROOM apartments available. No pets. Call Insurance 8, Realty, 752 2754

Smith

TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX Carpeted, all appliances including dishwasher. Heat pump, storm windows and doors. Located otf 10th Street near university. $260 per month. Call 758 2558 or 756 7677.

WEDGEWOODARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, IVj bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

Available Immediately

apartn

72-331

1 BEDROOM energy efficient apartment. 756 5389 or 0025.

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn; $215. 756-0545or 758 0635

BEDR(X)M DUPLEX Jarvis Street. $240 per month. Call 757-0688.

_ BEDROOM DUPLEX Fully carpeted. Stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups. Economical heat pump. Fireplace.

Economical heat pump. Fireplace. Located 114 B Brookwood Drive. Deposit and lease required. Call 756-2879.__

_ BEDRCX3M duplex apartment. Central heat and air. 14th Street:

Convenient to schools and shopping. No pets. Lease and deposit.

Available April 1.756 6834 after 5.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & A WNINGS

Remodeling Room Additions

C.L. Lupton, Co.

BRAND NEW duplex townhouse available In 30 days. Approximately 1 mile from the ECU Med School and Hospital. 2 bedrooms, V/j

baths, washer and dryer hook ups;

Cafl 7......

-JO p^r    __

752-67TS ask for Bryant or John.

122

Business Rentals

GREENVILLE BOULEVARD 1500 square toot building. Call Echo Realty, Inc. 756-6040or 524 5042.

125 Condominiums For Rent

TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah. $300 per month, 12 month lease. Young couple preferred. Call Clark Branch Realtors. 756-6336.

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2 bedroom, V/3 bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished. No pets. AAarried couple preferred. 827321 after 5 p.m. _

127

Houses For Rent

BRICK RANCH with 3 bedrooms. Large and spacious family room with fireplace. Must see to apprecl--977^6417.

ate.1-

COZY ONE bedroom, in a quite neighborhood. 1 block from tennis courts. 756-8160, 756-7768._

EASTWOOD - 3 bedrooms, two baths, living room, family room.

kitchen with garbage disposal and , fireplace, cenfral heat

dishwasher, . ____ ________ _____

and air condition, garage, fenced in back^rd. $450 per month. Call

756 3391 after 6 p.nfi. and week-ends.

EXCLUSIVE RENTAL property near University. Neat 2 becfroom home with kitchen and family,

utility area, front porch, walking    iTver    

distances of the university. Home has all of appliances furnished. AAarried's only. One year lease

quired. $275 per month. Call Al or Lyle Oavis at 756 2904 or at office 752 3000 or Rhesa, 355-2574. Davis

Realty.

HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in

town and country. Call 746-3284 or 524 3180. ,

NEW TWO bedroom, 1 bath duplex off Hooker Road. Heat pump, beautifully decorated, appliances. $300 plus deposit. Mature couple referred. No pets. Call AAary days, '52-3000, nights 756 1997.

UNIVERSITY AREA, 110 East 12th Street. 3 bedrooms, appliances furnished, washer/dryer connection, fireplace, just insulated. $275. Call 756 0765.

112 NORTH SUAAMIT 3 bedroom house within walking distance of the

house within walking distance of the university. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756-2121.

2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath; $425 month. Call 757-3280.

_ BEDROOM ranch style home. Carport, storage, quiet subdivision. Call 7570001 or nights, 753 4015, 754 9006.

3 BEDROOMS, >2 baths, living trf.

room, dining, kitchen and carport. Wooded corner lot. No pets. $395. 107 Dupont Circle, 756 870().

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

POOLS__

_ Pool Construction And Supplies

rt^villtPoollvpply

2725 E. 1Qth75B-6131

Rent To Own

CURTIS MATHES TV

756-8990

No Credit Check

ATTENTION!

Interested In earning money, either part-time or full time, picking your own hours, owning your own business?,Uniimited earnings potentiai! ideal for professional or non-professional, college students, singles, couples, or families.

For Further Information And Appointment CALL 752-0207 4:00-9:00 PM, MONDAY-FRIDAY

INDEPENDENT DISTRIBUTOR WAREHOUSE

For Yurika Foods    Opening    Within    Next    2    Weeks

Weekly Meetings Tuesdays at 7:00 PM

A-1 Value

Used

Cars

1982 Mercury Lynx GS

4 door. Automatic, power ueering and brakes, air, sunroof alareo, 3782 milea, body aide molding, WSW redlcl tires medium blue. Ford Executive Cer.

1982 Buick Regal

Oerk blue metallic, dark Mue vinyl root, sport wheels, bucket eectc. coneole, stereo, rear defogger.

1982 Mercury Lynx L

3 dwllltbeck. Automatic, power steering end brakes, aterso.

-----------'I    vewwosv^    Mliu wiOTkva, IVIVU,

dark blue metallic, rear defogger end wiper. WSW redials. Ford ExacutlveCsr.

1981 Mercury Grand Marquis

4 door. Dark Mua metallic, 11,032 miles, rear defogger.

tully

1982 Ford Escort GL

4 door. Red, eutomatlc, power ataaring, air condition, apeed control' stereo, body side molding, rear defogger and wiper extra nice. Ford Executive Car.

equipped, elr, tilt wheel, speed control, power windows, power door locks, power seat, Isalhar Interior. WSW tires, vinyl root Ford Executive Car.

1981 Chevrolet Caprice Classic

4 door. White with white vinyl root, aulomatlc, air, povver wln-

1982 Mercury Lynx L

4 door. White, 4 apeed. air condHkm, AM^M stereo, rear wlrv

ilowa, power seat, power door locks, stereo, wire wheel covers, body side molding.

dow delogger, body side molding, WSW radial Urea, 8033 mllaa. Ford Executive Car.

1982 Ford Escort GL Wagon

Cfulee control, stereo, 4 apeed overdrive. luggSta rc

1981 Buick Century

4 door. White, blue vinyl rool. Aulomatlc. power steering, elr, WSW tires, epon mirrors, power door locka, stereo.

side molding. WSW Urea. Pewter. Ford Executive Car.

reck, body

1982 Mercury Lynx GL

4 door. 4 tpeed overdrive, power steering an

1981 Ford Escort

3 door IlftbMk. White. SPECIAL $3716.18.

-------------  T^endbrekee.alrooiv

dlUon. stereo radio, body aide moldlnge, 8131 miles. Ford Executive Car.

1982 Ford Escort GL Wagon

11,aS4 miles, medium fawn, aterso, automatic, power steering.

    pvwwi wwiinu,

air condition, rear defogger, luggage reck, body side moWlnga. Ford Executive Car.

1982 Ford Courier XLT Pickup

Dark ginger metallic, radio, S apeed overdrive, WSW tires, body tWe moldlnga, 2171 miles, rer step bumper. Ford Executtve Car.

1982 Buick Regai

Dark graen matalllc, green vinyl root, sport wheels, bucket eaU. coneole, WSW Urea, aterso, reer defogger.

1981 Volkswagen Rabbit LS

4 door. Oleeel. Privetely own^

1981 Cadillac Coupe De Ville

Fully equipped, whHe. Privately owned

1980 Chevrolet Impala Wagon

Fully equipped, silver. Privatsly owried.

1979 Ford Thunderbird

Dove gray, fully equipped. Privetely owned

1972 Buick Electra

Fully squlppad, beige. Privately owned.

1971 Jeep

Dark blue. Locally owned.

Extended Service Plan Available On Many Of These Units '

ASTIIMG

FORD

Yenth Street & 264 By-Pass

Dealer No. 5720

758-0114

S

Greenville, N. C- 27834Hi

127

Houses For Rent ^ 135 Office Space For Rent

3 BEDROOM hMsc, 2 car garage,

1117 Evans Street, tall 758 2347^ 752 6068._

3 BEDROOMS, 2 full taths. fully

carpeted, woodstove, storage house in back, good location. (Sot

_      ->ood    tor

roommates. Call Paula 758 9137 before 2, 757 4145 after 3.

3 BEDROOM country house near

hospital. Stove and 2 heaters

furnished, washer/dryer hookiips. lit required. 752-5402 or 7M-

291

405 WEST 4th STREET bedroom. $300. Call 757-0688.

4 or 5

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

AAODERN, attractive office space for lease. Approximately 1500 square feet LcKated 2007 Evans |bW^d. AAoslay Brothar.

OFFICE BUILDING tor rent. 1100 square 4eet. $250 per month with Year iMsa plus first month's rent free. 1203 W 14th St. 758 3743 or 757-0027

PPPCE SPACE for rent In Win-tervllle, 600 square feet. 355-6900 or 756-7678.

AVAILABLE MARCH 1. 3 bedrooms with washer/dryer. $IS5.

Also 2 bedroom with cawts, $115 No pets, no children. 758 4541 or

BEHIND VENTERS GRILL 2 bedroom, furnished. $125

oearoom, rurnisned. $125 pe month. Deposit required. 756 4982L

CLEAN 2 bedrooms, furnished. Married couples only. No pets. 752 6245.

MOBILE HOME FOR RENT Washer, dryer, air condition, 2 bedrooms, couple only. No pets Call 752 6522 after 5

DN HIGHWAY 264. Fully carpefed Central heat and air. Washer and

dryer. 758 7616between8:30 5p.m

12 X 65 TWO bedrooms, 2 baths,

m    I    VW    A    UOIII,

new carpet, washer dryer, air condition. 6 miles south of Greenville.

vaivivav, w IIIIIV9 9VVI111 Ul    V

$150 per month. Call 746 657S.

BEDROOM Mobile Home tor rent " 756 4687.

2 BEDROOMS, partially furnished, air, good location, no pets, no

children, 758 4857.

2 BEDROOMS, washer, carpet, air, com^totely furnished. No pets. Call

2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath. Furnished.

Very clean; Vl65.Speight Reairy 756 3220, night 758 774 L

2 BEDROOM TRAILER Furnished; $150 olus $100 deposil. Call 758 0779or 75f1623.

2 BEDROOM TRAILER Furnished. $135 plus $100 deposit. Call 758 0779or 752 1623.

2 BEDROOMS Good for construction site offices or can be fixed for living. Very reasonable. Asking

living. Very StSOtf. 756 4982.

3 BEDROOMS Washer and air. Location Taylor Estates. Call 756-1444 after 3:30._

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756-7815 c TWO ROOM or tour room office suite. Highway 264 Business. Economical. Private parking. Some storage available. Call Connally Branch at Clark Branch Realtors, 756-6336.

THREE ROOM downtown office at

>Cof-----"---- ----

>5,1-*.    uuniiiunn    uilice    OT

219 Cotanche Street, 440 square feet.

Park^ii^avaiiabre. Call ^m Laniw

137 Resort Proprty For Rent

RIVER FRONT CONDOMINIUM

18 miles from Greenville. For rent or sale. 3 bedrooms, 2Vj baths, swimming pool, tennis courts, pier with boat stall. $439 per month. 946 6431 days. 946 2917 nights.

138

Rooms For Rent

PRIVATE ROOM with bath tor rent. Available April 1st. Kitchen

and laundry    *2*    month

plus utilities.

PRIVATE ROOM for rent. Professional person or student. Call 756 7674

ROOM FOR RENT Call 752 6583 day or nioht.__

Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RI66AN SHOE REPAIR

113 W. 4th Street-Phone 75M204 Downtown Greenville Parking In Front & Rear Open 6 Days A Week

The Day Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, March 11,1983-23

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROO^TE n^ded. 2 bedroom furnished trailer. 752 7589

after 6om.

FEA8ALE ROOMMATE WANTED Apartment aveilable April i Com pletely furnished with washer anc drver. Call 752-5640

FEMALE

Tar

ROOMMATE

River Estates,

- wanted.

   r,.    *., 2 bedroom

apartment. $125 a month plus halt utilities. 757 1025.

MATURE FEMALE ROOMMATE to share furnished 2 bedroom apartment. Vi expenses. 756 7509

AAATURE ROOMMATE wanted to share 14x70 trailer. $125 plus utilities. 758-6902 after 6 30

NICE AND NEAT female room mate wanted. $65 a month rent plus 1/3 utilities. Call 756 0288, ask for Gllda.

I OR 2 FEMALES to share house in PIneridoe. 758-5764 after 7p.m.

DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it for cash with a fast-action Classified Adi

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

142 Roommate WBnted

ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom townhouse Professional or responsible person $125 and 'j utilities. 756-8426 between 6 7

2 FEAAALE roommates wanted to share 3 bedroom house 2 blocks from campus. $85 a month plus ' 3 utilities. 7M 7325

148

Wanted To Rent

NEEDED double garage or block house, with utiliTies, for small

wholesale operation Call 758 3470.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TIRES

NEW. USED, and RECAPS

Unbeatable Puces and Quality

QUALITY TIRE SERVICE 752-7177

SALES

PERSON

Needed for well established firm to work the northeastern territory of North Carolina. No overnight travel. High commission paid. Sales experience needed but not necessary.

For confidential interview, call Jill between the hours of 9 and 11:30 AM and between the hours of 2 and 4:30 PM only. Phone 758-3171.

The Real Estate

Corner

MOVING OR

RELOCATING

cm our RatocaUon Oaparlmanl For Information ToH Fraa

1-80O-52J.24S0, Ext. G704

w. g, blount & associates

7S8-3000

ASSUMABLE LOAN

FHA-245 loan assumption, balance approximately $39,840. Possibility of owner financing half of equity. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with fireplace, garage and deck. No qualification neces.sary. $48,000.

756-2121

2717 S. Memorial Dr.

Fust CENTURY21 Location in Gicpnvillp OFFICE OPEN SAT, 9-b

B. FORBES AGENCY    u.c.

Each Office Independently Owned and Opeiated

CUSTOM BUILDING

IS OUR SPECIALTY!

With Inlerest Rales Dropping. Now Is The Time To Build Thai New Home You Have Been Dreaming 01. Consider One 01 Our Locations

Club Pines 80 s

One of Greenville s linesi suiKlivibions

Cherry Oaks 60 s

1600 square (eel minimum with beai.iiiui reueaiior. area

Camelot 50 s

Boin cleared and wooded lots packing up to Br.ook Valley 1300 square leei mmrmum

Arbor Hills 50's

Greal country iivmg directly at ross Irom Lake Gienwocid 1300 square leet rninimum

Candlewick 50's

Near the hospital

Pineridge 40s

Locaied on Slanionsbutg Hodd 2'. miles from hospital

Country Place 30s

All wooded lols located 6 miles on Gnmesiand Miqnw.ay

Farmington 30's

Country living located near Smipson

Oakdale 30's

Wofxled lols With watet sei/ver anij curt; anil guffer

We Also Have These Lots Available

Arbor Hills $7.500 Farmington $6.500 Oakdale.........$7,500

Candlewick .....$8,500    Windermere.... $17,500

We Will Also Custom Build According To Your Plans Call Bill Clark Al 756-6336 For AppoinlmenI Or Eilimates

Bill Clark Construction Co., Inc.

in

1902 s. Charles St. 756-6336 Nights And Weekends - 756-0046

NEW OFFERING

LoU f Extras

Centipede lawn. 2 car garage and a large screened back porch are only a few of the extras this home has to offer. You can also consider the fenced-in back yard and storage galore, not to mention the 3 large bedrooms and 2 ceramic baths. Priced modestly at $54.800. Call today.

Listing Broker John Jackson 756-4360

REALTY WORLD,

CLARK-BRANCH REALTORS 756-6336

PRICE REDUCED

OLD AND NEW:

THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS

Just 12 minutes from downtown Greenville in Stokes, a surprise awaits a special buyer, This historic countryside residence was completely renovated using the finest materials and workmanship available. Nothing has been overlooked - no expense spared and it shows. Please call our office for full details or to schedule your private viewing.

w.g. blount & associates

REALTORS - DEVELOPERS

756-3000

cox

IF YOU LIKE THE OUTSIDE... YOUTl LOVE THE INSIDEI (Yea. It la Expenalve)

ITS NOT EXACTLY BIKINI WEATHER

This 4 bedrcwm, V/i bath home is not only luxurious and elegant but in every feature you will see the care that was employed... Built-in cabinetry and detail work along with the design and layout makes this truly one of the finest homes Greenville has had to offer. From the moment you enter the entry hall and see this lovely staircase It continues throughout the home to be as breathtaking as It has when you drove Into the circular driveway. Successful families are the only ones that can afford this gracious estate. A custom built home with fountain, wrought Iron and full front upstairs porch. (3all for private showing.

but before you know it...summer will be here. Be ready with this lovely POOL HOME 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, loads of storage, super for outdoor enjoyment at the end Of a quiet street. It's only'69,600

THECHARMTHATSAYS

"You have come home" welcomes you to this lovely home. Huge greal room, formal dining, kitchen with breakfast area, 2 car garage. Wooded lot Tucker Estates. $80's.

WERE READY TO SHOW OFF

this like new ranch with magnificent view of the golf course. 4 large bedrooms, plenty of closets, hardwood floors, large den with fireplace and openness to out-of-doors, wet bar, two car garage and much, much more. Truly one of the nicest homes In It's price range offered today.

ROOM TO ROAM

and an outstanding view. This one has 4 or 5 bedrooms, 3 full baths, large family room with fireplace and a bonus room with fireplace. Enjoy the view as you relax or entertain on the large 2 story deck that surrounds the back and sides of this home Owner anxious to sell. Could be bought right' Call lor more details

NO MAN EVER MADE A MISTAKE MAKING HIS WIFE HAPPY

NO MONOPOLY HERE

This lovely home on quiet residential street has a huge great room with exposed beams and fireplace. Formal dining room and 4 large bedrooms, 2 car garage. A must seel

The key words for this home are location, features and the versatile lioor plan allows for many room arrangements, difficult lifestyles, and any size family. Call us and let us tell you about this one.

Jeannette

Agency, Inc.

Thanks A Lot! Jeannette 756-1322Anytime

Or Toll Free 1800-443 2781, Ext C-14

D    Jeannette Cox

CRB. CRS, GRl 756-2521 Home

realtor

Alice Moore, Realtor    Karen Rogers, Realtor

756-3308    758-5871    Home





ThersBeenA

e^ibodiood

WeYe not just changing our business cards; weYe changing what we can do for you.

Vlaybe its a new name in    or even more, on commissions    certificates,we can help you make

when you use our new Discount Brokerage Service.

your neighborhood. Maybe not. 3ut, either way, now that Bank of North Carolina has become a oart 0 NCNB , some things are really going to change.

Then again, a lot of things

wi

De staying the same.

Same Good People; Some Better Services.

TTie same people whoVe made Bank of North Carolina

ssoo $}()() $31K) S2(M) $100 $0

THE MORE YOU TRADE.THE MORE YOU SAVE

INCNF

1 Br( )kerai^e Finns

-$469.(K)-

$31000

$96.(K)

SMO.IKr

$49.00

$11200

$207.(K)

I

20(1 shares at $20

3(X)sf Hires at$25

3(X) shares at$50

UXMIshares

al$35

\ou get the convenience

the most of the money you make.

The Only One In TheNeignborhood.

Finally, we can now offer you what many people call the Dest banking service in North Carolina, maybe anywhere!

WithN

De anywt

CNBD

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1

neighborhood offices.

More Exclusives At TheNewestNCNB.

With NCNB 24, you can get 24 hour banking at over 70 ocations. And, in ^^nl,you can use your card all over the country.

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For $2,500, you can take your choice of NCNB Money Market Accounts, Investment or Checking. Both are insured up to    \bu can get flexibility with

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Find out whats new at the newest name in the neighborhood.

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 _____________-..............    n    .    L

         1    -------

I I- i<4 >  K .,1


Title
Daily Reflector, March 11, 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
March 11, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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