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10The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Monday, MirCh 21,1963
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Chicago Gives USFL Snowy Debut
By BRUCE LOWm AP Sports Writer
Chicago gave George Allen the cold shoulder.
The coach of the Windy Citys entry in the United States Football League brought the Blitz into snowy Soldier Field Sunday, and barely one-third of the 68,000 seats in the ancient edifice were filled
And the Denver Gold left the Blitz with a cold, empty feeling, too. Quarterback Ken Johnson swept into the end zone on a fourth-down, 1-yrd keeper with 18 seconds remaining to defeat Chicago. The 16-13 defeat was the second last-minute loss by the Blitz in two weekends.
It's like a doctor doing a lot of things properly and then the patient dies, said Allen.
In Sundays other games, unbeaten Tampa Bay routed winless New Jersey 32-9 as John Reaves threw three touchdown passes and the Bandits shut down Herschel Walker, and the Boston
Breakers edged winless Washington 19-16 on Tim Mazzettis 29-yard field goal with 27 seconds to play.
On Saturday night, Oakland outlasted Michigan 33-27 and Arizona defeated Los Angeles 21-14. Tonight, Philadelphia visits Birmingham.
Denver Coach Red Miller said he never considered playing it safe, going for the sure three points with a field goal and then hoping for a shot at victory in overtime. We didnt think kick at all, Miller said. "I didnt want to tie. We wanted to win - and it was a big, big win for our young team.
Johnson drove Denver 70 yards to its winning touchdown, passing twice to tight end Bob Niziolek for gains of 14 and 13 yards, the second completion putting the ball at the Chicago 3-yard line. Three plays gained just two yards, setting up the fourth-and-1.
I took a good look at the goal line right before the
play, Johnson said. It looked like a yard and a half away. And with the snow and the wind, the footing was treacherous. But Johson crossed up the defense, sweeping around left end and scooting over a goal line he couldnt see because of the snow.
Greg Landrys 42-yard touchdown pass to Lenny Willis and field goals of 27 and 38 yards by John Roveto accounted for the Blitz scoring. Harry Sydney set up a field goal by Brian Speelman with a 36-yard run, then sprinted 30 yards for the first TD by the Gold.
Bandits 32, Generals 9 Walker had been only mediocre in the Generals first two games, both on the road, by r^ing for 65 and then 60 yards. And in front of a home-opener crowd of 53,370 the largest attedance in the USFLs three-week history -he carried the ball 19 times for
only 39 yards against a Tampa Bay defense that keyed on him all day.
Breakers 19, Federis 16 A tiny homeK^ning crowd of 18,430 in nearly as tiny Nickerson Field (capacity: 20,535) saw Tim Mazzetti continue his sizzling performance for the Breakers with four
Veteran Coach To Be Released?
LAWRENCE. Kan.,(AP) -The University of Kansas was expected to announce that Ted Owens has been fired after 19 years as head basketball coach.
Sources told the Associated Press Sunday night that athletic director Monte Johnson had informed Owens, 53, of his dismissal. The Topeka Capital-Journal also reported in todays editions that Owens had been fired.
Neither Owens nor Johnson could immediately be reached for comment.
Owens' status has constantly been the subject of rumor and speculation throughout his 19 years despite a high degree of success.
His teams won six Big Ei^t championships, made nine post-season appearances and show a record of 348-182 for a winning percentage of .653,
Speculation that Owensjob was on the line heated up last fall when Johnson, who played basketball at Kansas in the 1950s, became athletic director. Johnson and Owens were known to have been at odds when Johnson was active in alumni affairs, and the youthful Jayhawks 13-16 record this past season was the second consecutive sub-.500 year.
Owens twice took teams to the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament, finishing fourth in 1971 and 1974.
Slip Sliding Away
Denver Gold kicker Brian Speelman slips backwards on the snow-covered field after kicking a successful field goal in action Sunday in Chicago
<at the home opener of the Blitz in USFL play. Gold Holder Jeff Knapple (12) watches the football split the uprights. (AP Laserphoto)
Toney Keeps 76ers On Winning Track
By BARRY WILNER AP Sports Writer
With the Doctor in sick bay. Andrew Toney is keeping healthy the 76ers chances of being the winningest team in National Basketball .Association history.
Toney "scored 39 points Sunday night, including 20 in the final period, to bring Philadelphia back from a 12-point deficit to a 121-119 decision over the Detroit Pistons. It was Philadelphias seventh victory in a row and the 76ers are 57-9 on the season. They need to win 13 of their final 16 games to set an NBA record of 70 victories this season.
I figured I was the man who had to get the job done for us tonight said Toney. Ive been the hot guy for us with Julius out.
Indeed, since Julius Dr J Erving was sidelined with a sprained right wrist - hes expected back Tuesday night in New York - Toney has thrown in 42, 33, 24 and 39 points.
I guess Ive been going a little more on offense, said the slick guard.
Until Toney took charge in the final period, the Pistons were in control. Kelly Tripucka scored 28 points, Isiah Thomas added 27 and Bill Laimbeer had 24 as Detroit assumed command through 36 minutes.
Pistons Coach Scotty Robertson thought Reggie and Clemon Johnson were keys to the 76ers continued success.
They give Philadelphia the depth and that was the difference, Robertson said. They kept rotating people on us and we sustained it as long as we could.
But not long enough. Elsewhere, it was Portland 118, Denver 106; Kansas City 128, Golden State 114; Milwaukee 107, New Jersey 92; Los Angeles 117, Dallas 110; Seattle 128, Chicago 116, and Boston 90, Cleveland 79. Trail Blazers 118, Nuggets 106 Portland snapped Denvers nine-game homecourt winning
streak thanks to staunch defense by Mychal Thompson, who held Alex English, the NBAs leading scorer, to 2-foM2 shooting and blanked English in the final period. Thompson also scored 21 points.
1 really didnt hold him scoreless, said Thompson. He got his shots in the position he wanted them but he just didnt make em. In the past Ive played the best defense Im capable of on Alex, doing everything short of hitting him over the head and he still made his shots. So today really had nothing to do with me. Its impossible to block his shot; he just couldnt get em down today.
Portland is 38-30, while Denver is 37-32. The two teams currently hold the final two playoff spots in the Western Conference.
Kingsl28, Warriors 114
Mike Woodsons 30 points and 28 by Eddie Johnson led the Kings, who snapped a five-game skid. Joe Barry Carroll had 31 for Golden
Whitworth Putts To Kemper Open Win
state, which continued its slide - five straight losses and 12 of the last 14.
Their defense was the difference in the game, said Warriors Coach A1 Attles. Their defense improved in the second half and ours didnt.
Lakers 117, Mavericks 110 The Lakers clinched a playoff spot as Kareem Ab-dul-Jabbar scored 23 points. The Lakers grabbed a 17-point halftime lead only to see Dallas rally and take a 101-100 lead with 7:10 to go. But Los Angeles reeled off an 11-2 string to take command.
Earvin Magic Johnson had 18 points and 16 assists after missing one game with a bruised thigh muscle. Dallas was led by Mark Aguirres 33 points.
Bucks 107, Nets 92 Brian Winters scored a season-high 30 points but the Bucks had to rally after blowing a 22-point, third-quarter lead. After trailing 73-51, the Nets scored 15 straight points. Milwaukee led 80-71 entering the final period.
but the Nets scored nine in a row to tie it. Then Charlie Criss came Off the bench to ignite the Bucks.
Albert King led the Nets with 26 points.
Sonics 128, Bulls 116 David Thompson had 29 points, including 16 in the third period to pace the Sonics, who have won six in a row and are one game ahead of fourth-place Portland in the Pacific Division. Gus Williams added 24 points for Seattle. Quintin Dailey led the Bulls with 30.
Celtics 90, Cavaliers 79 Larry Bird scored seven points in the last two minutes and the Celtics survived despite playing poorly.
This is a difficult time and were not playing good basketball, said Bird. Were not worried about Philadelphia or the teams
behind us. We just have to play every game as if were in the playoffs now.
McKinney Wins Slalom
FURANO, Japan (AP) -American skier Tamara McKinney had already achieved the ultimate prize in her sport, but for good meaure she wrapped up the 1983 World Cup season with a com-e-from-behind victory in the final womens slalom race.
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KAANAPALl, Hawaii (AP) - It must have seemed like old times for LPGA veteran Kathy Whitworth as she sank a putt worth $1,000 per foot to birdie the 18th hole and win the Womens Kemper Open.
When I was winning a lot several years ago, I never thought about anything but the shot 1 was taking at the time, the 43-year-old Whitworth said following her victory Sunday.
The Hall of Famer now has won 84 events in 24 years on her way to earning more than $1.2 million in prize money. She has been honored as Player of the Year seven times.
I love playing golf, Whitworth said. 1 think it is so great to compete with younger players. Although my future is limited, 1 still have a few years left.
But actually. Ive suprised myself this year. Its usually hard for me to get started on the tour. I usually do better toward the end.
Whitworth came into the final round tied for third place, three stokes off the pace. She ended the 72-hole, $200,000 tournament at 4-under-par 288, one stroke ahead of Dale Eggeling. Both
fired 4-under-par 69s Sunday.
1 knew that Kathy would make the putt on the 18th, Eggeling said after she saw the 30-footer drop into the hole. Shes a veteran, shes been there. I knew she wasnt going to fold.
Whitworth, who collected $30,000, started the final round with a birdie on the first hole, and added three more before she ran into trouble toward the end and bogeyed the 15th and 16th.
When you bogey, its difficult to regain your composure, Whitworth said. But with me I think its a matter of pride. I just say to myself Im not going to do that again.
Whitworth must have heard what she told herself, because she went on to win the tournament on the strength of back-to-back birdies.
Donna Caponi and Stephanie Farwig tied for third place at 1-under-par 291, while JoAnne Camer, Yuko Moriguchi, and Jan Stephenson had to settle for fourth place at 292.
Lynn Adams, who led after the second and third rounds, shot a 4-over-par 77 Sunday to dropp back into a three-way
tie at 293.
Adams, who was aiming for her first Ladies professional Golf Association victory since joining the tour in 1978, said, The cream always rises to the top, and Whitworth definitely is the cream.
field ^s. Mazzetti had a meteoric rise and fall with AUanta in the NFL a few years back.
But the real hero of the game was Bostons nose tackle, Jeff Gaylord. He lined up opposite Federis center
Dave Pacella, a replacement for regular long-ball aiapper Bruce Byrom. Two of Pacellas snaps one on a field-goal attempt, the other on a punt - were bungled, leading to a touchdown and the game-winning field goal by the Breakers.
Rogers'69 Takes New Orleans Title
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Bill Rogers was concerned when it kind of got close out there, but he wound up with a $72,000 winners check and rediscovered victory on the pro golf tour.
Rogers broke a long dry spell Sunday with a 3-stroke victory in the $400,000 New Orleans Open - his first tournament triumph since 1981 when he was the Professional (Golfers Association Golfer of the Year.
But he had to survive a severe challenge by David Edwards to win.
I had just made bogey on 12, and David Edwards made a great putt on 13, Rogers recalled.
That putt gave Edwards a birdie and cut Rogers lead to a single stroke.
But Edwards missed a putt for par on 14, taking a bogey. Rogers rolled his in for a birdie, then birdied the next hole before taking bogeys on 16 and 17.
If there was anything I was unhappy with, it was the way I finished, Rogers said. But it came out all right.
Rogers shot 69 to finish with a 72-hole total of 274,14 under par.
Edwards shot 70 over the par-72, 7,080-yard Lakewood Country Club course, to wind up tied for second with Jay Haas and Vance Heafner.
Greg Norman, the hottest golfer in the world over the past month, was another stroke back at 278, Norman came off victories in the Australian Masters and Hong Kong Open to finish second at Bay Hill last week.
Ray Floyd, way off the pace at 284, still held on to his first place in the Seiko Grand Prix series the only reason he played the tournament, he said.
New Orleans was the final event on this years grand prix, which is based on points accumulated on the tour - 60 for a tournament victory, 48 for second, then in 2-point steps down to 25th place.
Floyd got only two points for finishing tied for 22nd, but he didnt even need those to clinch his $150,000 first-place money.
Although Tom Watson and Calvin Peete could have unseated him with strong showings, neither finished high enough to do so.
Tom Kite gambled and won, skipping the tournament, but still hanging on to second place grand prix money of $60,000 when neither Watwn nor Peete could place high enough to edge him.
Watson carded a 286 to tie for 38th. But he got $40,000 for his third-place finish in the Seiko series.
Rogers said he was winless in 1982 because of problems he would not discuss. I just couldnt get it together, he said.
He won three tournaments in 1981 and finished fifth on the PGA money standings with earnings of $315,411. He was winless in 1982, and his earnings dropped to a third as much.
I wont repeat a 1982, he said Sunday. If I have a year likeJ had in 1981, I wont make the same mistakes.
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14-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Monday, March 21,1983
Ctosswotd By Eu^fie Sheffer
ACROSS
1 .Ananias 5 One of the Caesars 8 Soft mineral
12 Estrange
14 River of song
15 Fatima locale
IfrNaomis chosen name
17 One - time
18 Kettledrum
20 City of
light
23 Babe's "sultanate"
24 Black
25 Church officers
28 Oolong, for one
29 .Artichoke center
3(1 Wood sorrel
3'2 .Molasses
34 Nail
35 Inlets
36 Watchman
37 Hold motionless; naut.
40 House wing
41 Exclamation
42 Its capital is Asuncion
47 Singer Stevens
48 Data for Holmes
49 Nocturnal creatures
50 River in Scotland
51 Female antelopes
DOWN
1 Fold over 2Labororg.
3 Melody
4 Keep
5 Icelandic tale
6 Call-day
7 First state
8 Love apple
9 Melvilles captain
10 Italian coin
11 Producto! Newcastle
Avg. solution time: 27 min.
3-21
Answer to Saturdays puzzle.
13 Brazils
19 Diplomats skill
20 Favorite
21 Incite 22BeUow 23 Zoo attractions
25 Ran away 26 Ibsen heroine 27Bate memento 29 Salute 31 Append
33 Expunges
34 Swelled out
36 Happy
37 Cutting remark
38 Director Kazan
39 List of players
40 Large lake 43-Maria
44 Numero
45 Hole in one
46 Da" or si
CRYPTOQUIP 3-21
MWMKMR KMR M GVFR AVMW: MF MWW
ITT-WMFIT IMHTTH.
Saturday's Cryptoquip - ATROCIOUS ARSONISTS HAD i H ATED DISCUSSION.
Today's Cryptoquip clue: M equals A.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it '^ilJ 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.
1983 King Features Syndicate, Inc '
GOREN BRIDGE
0.1-Both S'liilh vou hold:
01073 '^OeS . K92 4863
i he bidding has proceeded: North East South West
1 Pass 1 Pass
2 Pass ?
What action do you take?
A.-This is not the time to do anything unusual. Partner has shown a strong hand with his reverse bid but, since you have a minimum, you can do no more than take a simple r-reference to three dia namds. By the way, dont r.iif -your hand as a dead minimum, even though you ; I'. I a fiat distribution. Your -"iiirs in partner's suits be upgraded.
0.2-.As South, vulnerable,
you hold:
K187 K62 : K95 4643
The bidding has proceeded: North East South West 1 4 2 4 2 4 Pass
3 Pass ?
What action do you take?
A.-Even though you raised ireely, you have nothing to be ashamed of. You have ex cellent trump support and your kings are undervalued in the point count. We would raise to four spades unhesitatingly.
0-3-.Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:
AJ63 ^KQ85 0 95 4AJ7 The bidding has proceeded: East South West North
1 0 Dble Pass 1 4
3 .0 ?
What action do you take?
A.-You have a fine hand, but it is not quite good enough to merit another bid, particularly at this level. Bear in mind that you have forced partner to bid and that he might hold little or nothing. If he does have iseful values, he is not bar-rom faking further ac-
.*-EastWest vulnerable, as South you hold;
46 ??5 OKQ1087 4AJ7652 The bidding has proceeded: West North East South 14 Pass 3 4 ?
What action do you take?
A. - The opponents are head-
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1963 Tribune Compeny Syndicate. Inc
ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ
ulnerable, as ed at least for game, and nothing in your hand suggests that they wont make it. However, your distribution suggests that you might have a cheap sacrifice, especially since the vulnerability is favorable. Bid three no trump. That can't be natural-it must be the Unusual No Trump, asking partner to choose between the unbid suits.
Q.5-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:
8 7787642 OK754 4A106 The bidding has proceeded: North East South 1 4 Dble ?
What action do you take?
A.-Don't worry about the fact that partner might have to play one spade doubled. The odds are that the op ponents will remove to another contract But should they leave the double in, you have some useful cards for partner. A pass is clearly indicated. For those of you who felt compelled to "rescue partner by running to one no trump, your most likely ac complishment was to bail your opponents out of a hole.
Q.6-As South, vulnerable, you hold:
4875 77AJ OK 10954 4KJ8
The bidding has proceeded: North East South 17? 3 4 ?
What action do you take?
A.-It is quite possible that you can make three no trump or four hearts, but it is also possible that you have no game. In a situation like this be an arch conservative-double and take any penalty you can get. After all, bridge is not an exact science. You will still be a 3-1 favorite to win the rubber.
Have you been running into double trouble? Let Charles Goren help you find your way through the maze of DOUBLES for penalties and for takeout. For a copy of his DOUBLES booklet, send 11.85 to Goren-Doubles, care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 259, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make cheeks payable to Newspaperbooks.
FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, MAR. 22,1983 At Odds On
Paddling In N.C. Schools
GENERAL TENDENCIES: There are several things you could do to make your environment more pleasant. A few words of encouragment where deserved will be greatly appreciated at this time.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 191 Engage in proper activities that will help you realize your true potentials. Show more devotion to family members.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Study important details of a new project you have in mind. Be careful of one who has selfish motives. Relax tonight.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Discuss new plans with associates and get them to cooperate with you. Be sure to avoid spending money foolishly.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Take time to study new ways to improve your financial status. Talk to money experts for the advice you need.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Study how far you have progressed toward your goals and make needed changes. Avoid one who has an eye on your money.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to ^pt. 22) Be more enthused about expanding your interests so that you have greater success in the future. Think along happy lines.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Ideal day to think over your relationship with others and to do whatever will improve it. Attend social affair with congeniis.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Ana^ze your talents well and do whatever wiU improve it so you can be more successful in career matters.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You should make changes now that could lead to greater success in the future. Take steps to improve your health.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Take time to study your bookkeeping methods so that you know exactly where you stand in financial matters.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Try to meet the expectation of associates and you get ahead much faster. Consider the viewpoint of one who opposes you.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Take time to add more comfort and charm to your sifrroundings. A discussion with co-workers can bring fine results now.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wiU have a fine personality but must learn to be more helpful to others to have the greatest success in life. Ideal chart for any endeavor that requires imagination. Dont neglect ethical training early in Ufe.
The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your Ufe is largely up to you!
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
Symposium Set
Aplha Epsilon Delta, a pre-health professions honor society, will hold a symposium on epilepsy March 25 and 26 at the Brody Medical Sciences Building.
The program, sponsored in conjunction with the Comprehensive Epilepsy Program at Bowman Gray School of Medicine, the ECU School of Medicine, and funded by the ECU Student Government Association, is designed to increase public and professional knowledge about epilepsy.
The March 25 session will begin at 12 a.m. and will be geared toward allied health professionals. Identification, treatment and prevention will be discussed during the early afternoon program. When the group reconvenes for the late afternoon session at 3 p.m., epilepsy in the classroom, counseling and the role of the nurse will be discussed. Friday evening, people with epilepsy, family members and friends are invited to view an informational film and ask questions.
The Saturday program will begin at 8 a.m. and Will be geared to physicians with topics such as pathogenesis and classification of epilepsy, drug therapy, p^udoseizures, and surgical treatment of epilepsy.
A session for allied health professionals will also be held Saturday beginning at 7:45 a.m. Living with epilepsy, social aspects of epilepsy and treatment prospects for the future will be discussed.
To get more information or a pre-registration brochure on the symposium, contact AED President Carla Lee Morgan at 752-3465.
Predators Kill An Eagle In Habitat
GRANDFATHER MOUNTAIN, N.C. (AP) -Predators killed one of two bald eagles in an enclosed habitat atop Grandfather Mountain, officials of the tourist attraction said Sunday.
The female American bald eagle was killed and partially eaten Saturday, one month after nine deer were killed by do^ in an adjacent habitat, said Grandfather Mountain owner Hugh Morton.
Both ea^es in the habitat had been disabled by gunshot wounds before they were brought to the mountain and could not fly, he said.
Steve Miller, a wildlife biologist at the facility, said he was not sure what killed the ea^e, although it was most likely a dog, fox or bobcat. Nine black bears and three cougars enclosed in other habitats on the mountain were not suspected, he said.
Invitation
RALEIGH - Americas Four Hundreth Anniversary Committee has invited any individual or organization interested in contributing ideas or assistance to the upcoming 400th anniversary of the first settlements in North Carolina to contact the committee.
Contacts may be made by writing: Americas Four Hundredth Anniversary Committee, 109 E. Jones St., Raleigh, N.C., 27611, telephone 733-4788.
The remaining male bald eagle was immediately removed to an area enclosed in two separate layers of high fencing, Morton said. The ea^e will be kept there until officials find out what killed its mate and the danger is eliminated.
Morton said he had hoped the pair would mate. He said he will work with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to obtain another pair of mated eagles as soon as possible.
The new eagles probably will be placed on an island in Grandfather Mountain Lake instead of the enclosed habitat, he said.
Trip Planned By Travel Club
Senior citizens are invited to join the Oak City Travel Club and see the United States with friends.
Club members will visit Yellowstone National Park in July by taking a round-about route that will cover 13 states. For more information, call or write, Mrs. Edna I. Nichols, P.O. Box 242, Oak City, N.C., 27857. Phone, 798-6031 after 2 p.m.
ONCEAMEAT-EATER PEKING (AP) - Qiinese scientists say that although the giant panda has survived 600,000 years by, eating bamboo, it originally belonged to the meat-eating class of animals, the Xinhua news agency says.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Some North Carolina educators say paddling is needed to keep order in the classroom, while one state legislator is preparing a measure that would first require a parents consent.
According to state figures, more than 60,000 students are paddled each year in North Carolina.
State law permits principals, teachers, substitute and student teachers and their aides to use reasonable force in the exercise of lawful authority to restrain or correct pupils and maintain order.
State Sen. Helen Marvin, D-Gaston, and the Governors Advocacy Council on Children and Youth, which identifies the needs of children, are drafting a bill to require teachers and principals get the parents consent before paddling a student.
A similar law was introduced in the House in 1975 but it never reached the floor.
Before such a bill is drafted 1 will discuss its contents with educators at all levels, said Mrs. Marvin. I do not anticipate proposing anything the majority of educators cannot live with. Under her measure, schools would be required to tell students the kinds of conduct that warrant discipline, try alternatives to corporal punishment, punish students in the presence of a second school official, give students a chance to object to arbitrary punishment and, if requested, provide the childs parents with a written explanation of the reason for the punishment.
The courts have demanded those guidelines to provide the students their due process rights under the U.S. Constitution.
But a study by the council shows relatively few schools adhere^ to the court guidelines. Of 83 school systems surveyed, 66 percent did not meet legal standards.
John Niblock, council director, said his organization has received several complaints from parents about corporal punishment.
The council felt it was time to take another look at the situation and attempt to prohibit corporal punishment, Niblock said, adding that the council met resistance to abolishing paddling and decided to compromise with the proposed legislation.
But Causby said he hasnt heard of anyone who is dissatisfied with the current law except the council.
I havent heard of any problems, Causby said. The law has been tested in the courts and on numerous occasions has stood that test.
It is my belief that the youngsters in schools who corporal punishment is used on... have those very parents who wouldnt give consent (to paddling), said Gene Causby, executive director of the N.C. School Board Association. That may be the very reason they need discipline.
Glenn Keever, spokesman for the North Carolina Association of Educators, said his ^oup wants to keep the existing law although it does not encourage using corporal punishment.
The present law does offer a measure of protection to teachers that is very necessai7, Keever said.
He said the requirement of notifying parents before administering corporal punishment could present a problem.
"It could certainly cause a considerable amount of time to take place between the actual event and the punishment and may not make it worthwhile to administer the corporal punishment, he said.
But Niblock said the national trend is to do away with corporal punishment.
Four states New Jersey, Maine, Massachusetts and Hawaii - prohibit corporal punishment, while 12 states have no law on the issue. School districts that have banned corporal punishment include Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, New Orleans, New York City, Salt Lake City, San Francisco and Washington, D.C.
North Carolina programs for children with behavioral problems, including training schools and correctional centers, pndiibit corporal punishment.
PUBLIC NOTICES
rr, Jr. prtparad by
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT
Under and by virtue of an Order of the Superior Court of Pitt County, made in a Special Proceedirr therein pending entitled "Odessa P. Myers; Mary M. Brown and husband, Richacd Brown; James H. Myers (Myles) and wife, Doris Laverne Myers (Myles); and Edna Williams and husband, Neil Milton Williams, Petitioners Ex Parte", File No. 83 SP 83, and signed by Her Honor, Eleanor H, Farr, Assistant Clerk, the undersigned, who was by said Order appointed a Commissioner to sell the lands described In the Petition, will on the 29th day of AAarch, 1983, at twelve o'clock noon, at the Courthouse door in Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, offer for sale In public auction to the highest bidder for cash, but subject to confirmation by the Court, that certain real property described as follows:
That certain lot or parcel of land lying and being situate in the City of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, on the east side of Cadillac Street between Third and Fourth Streets, and being Lot No. 8 in Block "M" of the Riverdale Subdivision according to the map of same which is duly of record in Map Book 2 at pa 251 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Pttt County, and being the identical property conveyed by deed from North Side Lumber Company, Inc. to George Meyers and wife, Bessie Meyers, dated July 7, 1956 and recorded in Book E-29, at page 549, Pitt County Registry; the said Bessie AAeyers, sometimes referred to as Bessie Myles or Bessie Myers, having died October 14, 1975 as will appear by reference to Estate File No. 75 E 273 In the office of Clerk of Court of Pitt County, North Carolina; and the slad George Meyers, sometimes referred to as George Mvles or George Myers, having died testate on June 25, 1981 as wiII appear by reference to Estate File No. 81 E 313 in the office of Clerk of Court of Pitt County, North Carolina.
A cash deposit in the amount of ten (10%) percent of the bid shall be made by the highest bidder at the sale pending confirmation or rejection thereof.
The procedure for this sale shall be as provided for public sales in Chapter 1, Article 29A, of the General Statutes of North Carolina.
This the 24th day of February, 1983
D. Michael Strickland.
Commissioner Of Counsel:
GAYLORD, SINGLETON, MCNALLY& STRICKLAND Attorneys at Law 206 S. Washington Street P. O Box 545 Greenville, NC 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758-3116 March 7, 14,21,28, 1983
FILE NO 83CVD318 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
IRENE JONES SC0T7
PIOTROWSKI
VS
JOHN PIOTROWSKI
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION
Take notice that a pleading seek ng relief against you has been tilec n the above entitled action. Tht nature of the relief being sought is as follows:
For an absolute divorce based on the grounds of one (1) year's separa tion.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than April 19, 1983 and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief soqht.
This the 2nd day of March, 1983 EVERETT & CHEATHAM James T. Cheatham P O. Box 1220 Greenville. NC 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 March 7, 14,21, 1983
NOTICE OF SALE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Under and by virtue of an order dated March 2, 1983, of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, made In a special proceedings entitled "Ronald A, Lassiter, Jr., Executor of the Estate of Ronald A. Lassiter, Petitioner, vs. Ronald A. Lassiter Individually, Roy A. Lassiter Dorothy Ellen Lassiter Belles anc Della T. Lassiter, Respondents", the undersinged commissioners duly ap pointed by the Court will on Apri 7th, 1983 at 12:00 o'clock noon at the door of the Court Courthouse, Green ville, Pitt County, North Carolina, otter for sale to the highest bidder for cash thaf certain real property described as follows:
Parcel No. 1: BEGINNING at the bridge across the old road leading from G. W. Venters old place at some chopped black gums and runs with a ditch. W the following courses and distances, viz: S 12 E 8^ links, S 30 E, 3 chains and 16 links, S 56 E, 2 chains and 37 links, S 49 E. 3 chains and 26 links, S 36 1/2 E, 8 chains and 30 links, S 10 1/2 E, 5 chains, S 7 W, 4 chains fo H.C. Venters line; thence with his line the following courses and distances of N 73 i/2 E? 7 chains and 12 links to the head of the ditch at the edge of woods; thence N 49 3/4 E, 5 chains and 45 links to a white oak, a corner of H. C. Venters; thence N 76 E, 10 chains and 70 links to an iron stake, a corner of the dower of Mary E, Venters, about 6 feet north of the wire fence of H. C. Venters, his line; thence with H. C. Venters line, the fence, N 78-40 E, 320 feet, N 76 10 E, 177 feet to fence post, H. C. Venters corner on road; thence along west edge of road and crossing same, N 9-10 fc, 459 feet to point on old road in H. C. Venters line; thence old road, H.C. Venters line, N 14 E, 186 feet to a small pine (chopped) on north side of new road, at old crossroads, in Annie Lassiter line; thence the said road (her line) S 61 50 W, 93 feet to crook, thence again with the said road (her line) N 77 25 W, also with G. W. Venters, Sr., 2015 feet at the homeplace dwelling of G. W. Venters, Sr.; thence on with said road, G, W. Venters, Sr., line and Ed. Venters line, N 89 40 W, 461 feet; thence on with said road, said Ed Venters line, S 79 20 W., 541 feet to the BEGINNING, containing 63 acres of land, more or less.
The interest to be sold in the parcel described above is a reminder interest, subject to the life estate of Esther H. Venters, except that as to a two acre portion of the property described above, the interest to be sold is a one half undivided remainder Interest in said portion of the property described al>ove, subject to the life estate of Esther H. Venters. The said approximately two acre portion Is described as follows:
Beginning at the intersection of Rural Paved Road 1925, known as
the Quinerly Road, and N.C Highway No. 102 and running thenc with the Quinerly Road southwardly to the pasture fence belonging to G.
W. Venters, Jr.; thence the pasture fence in a westerly direction to a ditch; thence with the
esaid ditch In a )N.C.
northerly direction to N. C. Highway No. 102; thence with N.C. Highway No. 102 In an easterly direction to the Quinerly Road, the point of beginning. Containing approximately two acres whereon the G. W. Venters, Jr residence was located.
Parcel No. 2: Located in Chlcod Township and being a part of the said G. w. Venters land adjoining and adjacent to the said G. W. Venters homeplace lot. Beginning In the center of the County Road opposite to a big fence post at the southeast corner of the said G. W.' Venters homeplace lot; thence with said raod S. 77-45 E, 160 feet to the forks of the road; thence with said road N 70-05 E 1526 feet to west edge of the raodway of the Greenville-New Bern road; thence with said road N 29 W 524 feet to George Adams corner; thence with <^rge Adams line N 89 W 394 feet to a pine N 86 15 W 490 feet, N 82 40 W 274 feet, N 88 30 W 223 feet to a pine N 87-45 W 558 feet, N 87 45 W 994 feet, N 74 W 125 feet to a stake on ditch centered by a black gum In George Adams line and at fne corner of the E. A. Venters land; thence with said E. A. Venters line S 27-10 E 408 feet to fork of ditch G. W, Venters corner; thence continuing with ditch S 17-50 E 346 feet, S 21 W 143 feet to the beginning, containing 57-4 acres of
there is specifically ex
CEPTED FROM PARCEL NO 2 THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PARCEL OF LAND: Lying and be Ing situate In Chlcod Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, on the nor therly side of NC Highway 102, and beginning, at a point in the northerly right-of-way line of NC Highway 102, which It determined and located as follows: From the point of intersection formed by the centerline of NC Highway 102 and the centerline of State Road 1925, run in a westerl
Highway 102, 68.80 fee_t to a and run thence N 00-49
Int,
_____ 30.26 feet to
an Iron stake pipe, THE POINT OF BEGINNING; running thence from Mid point of beginning so fixed, N 00-49 t 52 JO feet to a point, running thence N 10-25 W 158.45 feet to an
made and entitled '
Lasslterr, Jr. prep^ -Dickarion Adams & Assoclatai, P.A., dated AAay 17,1*77.
The above described real property will be sold subject to any and ail liens and encumbrances which exist thereon, as well as subject to 1983 Pitt County Ad Valorem faxes.
The highest bidder will deposit with the commissioners fen percent (10%) of the bid price p^ing confirmation of the sale. The Mie of Mid real property is subject to an upset bid and the confirmation of the Court as provided by law for judicial Mies This the 7th day of March, 1983 ROBERTR BROWNING, Commissioner P.O. Box859 200 E. Fourth Street Greenville, NC 27835-0859 Telephone: (9197S8 1403 MICKEY A HERRIN, Commissioner 210 S. Washington Street P. O. Box 552 Greenville, NC 27835-0120 Telephone: (919)752-3104 March 7, 14, 21, 28, 1983
Sealed proposals will be received by the Purchasing Department of Pitt County Memorial Hospital until and pubi Ic [y opened at:
2:00p.m. March 28, 1983 in the Purchasing Office of Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Stan-tonsburg Road, Greenville, North Carolina, on the purchase of the following:
ONE ELECTROMECHANICAL FILE FOR 6" X 4" MICROFILM JACKETS Specifications and bid propoMi forms are on file in the office of the Purchasing Department, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, and may be obtained upon request between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Pitt County Memorial Hospital reserves the right to reject any and all proposals.
Jack w. Richardson President March 11,21, 1983
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT CHERYL L ROSS,
Plaintiff
CARLTON EUGENE BEST; WILLIE E PALMER; and ARTEMUS HAROLD GORDON, Defendants
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: CARLTON EUGENE BEST Take notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows; Pecuniary damages arising )ut of an automobile collision on August 15, 1982 in Martin County, ^orth Carolina.
You are required to make defense o such pleading within forty (40) Jays after March 14, 1983, and upon your failure to do so the party seek-ng service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.
This the 14th day of March, 1983. GAYLORD, SINGLETON, McNALLY 8. STRICKLAND D. Michael Strickland 206 S. Washington Street P.O. Box 545 Greenville, NC 27834 -
(919) 758 31)6 March 14, 21,28, 1983
WANT
ADS
752-6166
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
INCOME TAXES? (April 15!?l) All forms prepared...low rates. Call 752 2612._
NEWCREDITCARD
No one refused. Also information on receiving Visa, MasterCard Card with no credit check. Guaranteed Results. Call 602 949-0276, extension 838._
010
AUTOAAOTIVE
56 TRUCK l7ed,ffiLM-2245.
Oil
Autos For Sale
CARS$100!TRUCKS$75!
Available at local government sales. Call (refundable) 1-619-569 0241, extension 1504 for your direc tory on how to purchase. 24 hours.
RENT A WRECK 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 0H4._
013
Buicit
LeSABRE LIMITED 1982. 4 door. Diesel, fully equipped, low mileage. Call Rex Smith (Chevrolet,
yden,
1977 BUICK Electra Limited. door. 756-0489 after 5 p.m.
1979 BUICK Estate Wagon. Loaded. Real nice. 752 3436.
1979 RIVIERA, charcoal gray. velOur interior, loaded, excellent condition. Good tires. Call 756-7815 day, 758 8733 night.
LEGAL NOTICE
On 28 February 1983, the Board of Trustees of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill tendered for filing with the Federal Communica tions Commission an application for a construction permit to establish a new, noncommerical, educational FM station to operate on Channel 202B on the frequency 88.3 MHz., with a maximum, effective, radiated power of 31.6 KW at a height of 550 feet above the ground, from a site approximately two miles south of Farmville, Norm (Carolina on US 258.
The officers and members of the Board of Trustees of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill are: Robert C. Eubanks, Jr., Bowman Gray, III, Felix Harvey, Maurice J. Koury, Thomas W. Lambeth, J. Clint Newton, Jr., W. Travis Porter, Goerge R. Ragsdale, S. Bobo Tan her, ni, John A. Tate, Jr., Newman A. Townsend, Jr., Walter S. Tucker, Michael P. Vandenbergh. Christoper C. Fordham, III, Susan H. Ehringhaus, Claiborne S. Jones, S. Virginia Dunlap, Donald A Boulton, Harold G. Wallace, W. Far ris Womack, G. P. Manir, Rollie Tillman, John Charles Morrow, and John D. Swotford.
A copy of the application and related materials is on file for public inspection at the Sheppard Memorial Library, 530 Evans Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27834. March 14, 21, 1983
Iron pjM stake; running thence N 83- E 213.60 feet to an iron pIm stake; running thence S 6-40 210
83 E 116 NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT The undersigned, having qualified as Co Executors of the Estate of SALLIE H PARKER, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina,
this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate topresent them to the undersigned Co- Ex
ecutors at either the address of Graham Parker, Route 5, Box 409, Wilson, NC, or at the address of Ralph Parker, 1400 Raleigh Road, Wilson, NC, on or before September 22, 1983, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make payment to the undersigned Co-Executors.
This 17th day of March, 1983. GRAHAM PARKER RALPH PARKER *
Co- E xecutors of E state of Sallie H. Parker Gaylord. Singleton, McNally 8, Strrckland P O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 March 21, 28; April 4, 11, 1983
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPE RIOR COURT DIVISION 83-CvS-236 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPOR TATION Plaintiff,
JOHNJ ERWIN,ETUX.ETAL NOTICE OF SERVltE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: Known and Unknown, Born and Unborn Next of Kin (nearest of kin) of Samuel W. Erwin.
TAKE NOTICE that pleadings seeking relief against you have been filed in the above entitled civil action.
The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: The condemna tIon and appropriation, for highway purposes, of a certain Interest or
estate In that certain parcel of land lying and being in Arthur Township. Pitt County, North Carolina, and be
Ing that tract of land acquired by Oscar Lee Erwin for the life of Samuel W. Erwin by deed dated October 17, 1951, and recorded In Book T 25 at page 289 of the Pitt County Registry and, further, acquired by Helen J. Erwin for life and to John J. Erwin and William G. Erwin as Remaindermen under that Will of Oscar L. Erwin dated March 23, 1973, and recorded in Will File No. 73-E-128 in the office of the Derk of Superior Court of Pitt County, and, also, acquired by John J. Erwin and William G. Erwin under that Will of Helen J. Erwin dated December 25, 1981, and of record in Will File No. 82 E-1 in the office of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt Courtty; said descriptions being specifically Incorporated herein by reference.
You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than the 2nd day of May, 1984, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.
Attorney General Thomas B. Wood Assistant Attorney General N.C. Department of Justice P. O. Box 25201 Raleigh, N.C. 27611 March 21. 28, April 4, 1983
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
Sealed proposals will be received until 3:00 p.m. on April 5, 1983 at Spilman Building (Administrative Building), Room%3, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, for the furnishing of labor, material and equipment entering into the construction of Repairs and Replacement of Roofs Phase I, Fletcher MusJc and Rawls Buildings, at which time and place bids will be opened and read. All work will be under the (^neral Contract.
Complete plans and specifications for this project Can be obtained from Jordan, Snowdon and McVicker, P.A., 600 South Main Street, P.O. Box 1705, Laurinburg, North Carolina 28352 during normal office hours.
Plan Deposit: $50.00 cash or certified check. Full deposit will be returned to those submitting a bona tide proposal provided plans and specitications are returned to the .rchltect in good condition within
ten (10) days after the date set for receiving of bids. Full plan da will be returned to contractor!
feet to an Iron pipe stake and runn iiw thanca In a westarly diraction with tha northarly right-of-way line of NC Highway 102, to tha Mint of baginning, and containing .99 acres, mora or lass: Furthar raferance Is
deiMSIt
_ ors not
submitting bids provldad all documents are returned In good condition at least ten (ten) days prior to the bid date.
The State reserves tha unquallflad right to reject any and all proposals. C.G. Moore, Vice Chancellor for Business Affairs East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina March 21,1983
1980 SKYLARK LIMITED Loaded. Excellent condition. $4500. 756-9520.
014
Cadillac
1977 CADILLAC COUPE Leather interior, all options, excellent con-dition. $4950. 758-4988._
015
Chevrolet
CITATION 1980. 4 door, fjlly equipped, in good condition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746
1965 CHEVROLET, rebuilt motor, reupholstered interior. $350. Call 758 2047.__
1977 IMPALA 305 V8. Clean. Good condition. Below retail. $2600. Call
1979 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE 4 door, automatic, low mileage. $2895. Call atterp.m. 758-1185._
1979 IMPALA 305 V8. Loaded. Good condition. Below retail. $4100. Call 524 5832,_ _
1979 MALIBU WAGON $3400. Call 752 696T___
1979 Z28 CAMARO 70,000 miles. Excellent condition. Can be seen in Kroger's parking lot. $4500. Call 756 6212._
1980 CHEVROLET, white, econom ical, clean. Hundreds below retail. Call 756 3673._
018
Ford
CROWN VICTORIA 1982. 4 door. Fully equipped, like new. Call Leo Venters Motors, Ayden, 746-6171.
FORD, 1979, Thunderbird. Electrjc seats, windows and doors. Cruise control, 302 motor, 1 owner. Must sell. Going overseas. 753-4198.
1966 FORD COUNTRY Sedan sta hOTwagon. 289 V8 engine. $200.
1978 FAIRMONT station wagon. Excellent family car. extra clean, good mileaoe per gallon. 756-6286._
021
Oldsmobile
1982 CUTLASS Supreme Broughism, AM FM cassette, cruise, tilt, power windows, locks, seats. $7500. Call 757 3618 after 6. _
022
Plymouth
1972 PLYMOUTH DUSTER Good condition, automatic. $500 or best otter. 752 1705.__
WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them for cash with a Classified Ad.
024
Foreign
FOR SALE OR TRADE 1970 Fiat Spider convertible. $1200. 355-6441.
TOYOTA CORONA, 1974, 4 speed, air, good mileage. Clean. $1200. 757-1512. _
1974 DATSUN B210. Automatic, excellent condition. $1450 negotia ble. 752 1705. _
1974 VOLKSWAGEN Super Beetle. Call after 6, 524 5436 or 524 5318.
1981 DATSUN 310 GX Hatchback. 4 eed, air, and AM/FM radio. E^xcellent condition. Call 756-9099.
1981 RENAULT LeCar. Deluxe in terior. AM/FM radio. Take up payments. AAovihg, must sell. 752-
032
Boats For Sle
QUACHITA 14Vj' Bass boat. Cox trailer. 25 horsepower Johnson; $1299. 757-3524.
SAN JUAN 28; 5 sails, hot and cold water, loaded, offers. 758-0849.
14' ALUMINUM BOAT with live well. Newly rebuilt Evinrude motor. $650. Call Joe at night 758 3395; days 756-6101.
16' BONITA BOAT Trihull galva nized trailer. 65 horsepower Johnson motor. Ideal for fishing and skling^. Very good condition; * $1950. Call756 1900. _
16' HOBIE CAT catamaran, California Special. Used one season. Call 756 215, ask for Mike; after 6 p.m. 756 2042._
1976 CHECKAAATE ski boat. 15' with 85 horsepower AAercury motor. Trailer and contour vinyl cover. $2900. 756 7496 or Washington 975-2553, extension 260.
HORSEPOWER Sears Game
ler. Exc( '
pfsher. Excellent condition. $275? Call atter 6p.m.. 756-1007.
034 Campers For Sale
TRUCK COVERS AM sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units In stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774._
036
Cycles For Sale
A-1 HONDA CAA400E 1 owner.
Electric start. Mint condition. Priced for quick sale. 752-3866 10 to
5. _
HONDA MT 123. On/off road. Excellent condition. $400.756-9005.
1980 KZ 250 KAWASAKI Less than 4,000 miles. Excellent condition. 756-5856 after 5:30 p.m.
1982 GS SSOL Suzuki. Btack and silver, shaft drive, 2100 miles. Like new. $2500. 756-1643after 5:30p.m.
750 HONDA, black, RC header. Cafe
fairing new Goodyear HST, black inum rims. Including 2 $T600
aluminum rims. Includin helmets, rainsult and cover or best otter. 752-2503._
039
Trueles For Sale
CHEVROLET BONANZA Pickup. 1978, Ful y equipped. In good condi tion. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Avden. 746-3141.
1976 TOYOTA, 4 speed, air, camper shell. Excellent condition. 756-7912
1979 FORD Ranchero GT truck. Air, power steering, cruise control Phone 757-0274.
040
Child Care
AVAILABLE FOR babysitting In my home from 1 p.m. until. Lake Ellsworth, 756-1174.
I WOULD like to tebysit In my home. Sherwood Greens area 752-1080._
WANT TO keen children in mv home. Call 7S2-41M 6 a.m. to io a.m Than from 7:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. the same number. If no answer call
046
PETS
AKC PUPPIES Chows Keeshonds, Bassets, Cockers-purebred Eskimo Spitz Chihuahuas M^-Llna Ktnnals AAorehaad, T726-7T98.
I
I
MORE GOVERNMENT OR MORE PRIVATE ENTERPRISE IN Pin COUNTY?
Can Pitt County afford not to support a new private enterprise or do we want the taxpayers to foot the bill again? Shouldnt we let private industry build and operate a new psychiatric hospital for Pitt County and
Eastern North Carolina rather than the taxpayers of Pitt County?
Why shouldnt we be for a new comprehensive psychiatric hospital employing over 100 people when fully operational, paying county taxes of $100,000 annually, income taxes of $400,000 annually, furnish 65 beds with all needed support facilities without a penny of cost to Pitt County taxpayers?
Position Administration Business Office Medical Records Nursing RN LPN
Nursing Tech.
Program Therapists (Counselors, Unit Directors, etc.) Social Workers Activity Therapists (O.T., R.T., etc.)
Lab
X-ray
Pharmacy
School Teachers
Teachers Aides
Housekeeping
Dietary
Maintenance
TOTAL STAFFFACTS AND FIGURES
. 1
*Will have a Local Advisory Board made up of local community people.
*Will have an Open Medical Staff made up entirely of local physicians.
Will make its facility and programs available for medical education to the East Carolina University School of Medicine.
Will Offer:
Comprehensive Psychiatric Services for Children and Adolescents In-eluding Comprehensive Support Therapy Areas (Occupational Therapy, Recreational Therapy)
State Approved School Teachers & Classrooms, Music Therapy ComprehensiWPsychiatric Services and Drug Addictive Diseases
Comprehensive Adult Psychiatric Services and a Comprehensive Addictive Disease Service including a special Detoxiflcation Program
Services covered by Insurance Plans: Medicare, Medicaid, Champs, Blue Cross Blue Shield, etc.
Close association with Schools, Community, Mental Health Services, Courts
Physician directed Therapy programs (All care will be provided under Physician's direction)
Complete confidentiality
Largest Provider of Psychiatric Services in the World
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospital approved facility
Family Therapy
Why does anyone in Pitt County want Rocky Mount or New Bern to have the facility rather than Pitt County?
Why was the issue not openly debated, aired and discussed during the last three months?
if you are interested in supporting this fine hospital, please plan to attend the . public hearing set for Tuesday, March 22 at 6 p.m. at the Willis Regional Development Center, corner of First
and Reade Streets, or
attend the Eastern Carolina Health Systems Agency meeting on Wed., March 30, at 7:00 p.m. in the Willis Building.
For further information contact:James Bek, Manager Health Facilities Development
Charter Medical Corporation P.O. BOX 209 Macon, Georgia 31298 (912)742 1161
or local no. 756-7462
04
PETS
DOBERMAN PUPPIES Reds and blacks. tIOO. Good natured. Call S2*
gi
_^RADOR RETRIEVER PUPS All black, top field trial lines,
superior hunters. Call Washington, 94 4a4 days, 9e 7971 nights.
MINIATURE POODLES Beautiful kKC puppies, ready now tor
black AKC pupp les, ready now t loving homes. $100. Call 758 0901 758 7jb.
051
Help Wanted
051
Help Wanted
SECRETARY typing required. Sal ary commensurate with experience. Excellent fringe benefits. Send re
sume to Secretary, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 2704. Equal Oppor
tunltv Employer.
WANTED; MATURE ADULT woman to care for 2 children In my home. AAonday-Friday 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Must have own transportation. Call anytime, 758-0653 and 752 7615.
AVON REPRESENTATIVE needed full time or part time. Earn 50% Lakewood Pines. 756 7974.
BAR WAITRESSES WANTED Available to work at night in a bar opening soon In Greenville. Call Sundays 757-1073 from 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; weekdays 946-6030 from 3 to 5 p.m. _
CERTIFIED TEACHER to teach 4 and 5 year old children. 20 hours a week. 9 until 1. Send resume to Little University, 313 East 10th Street Greenville, NC 27834. No phone calls please!_
CLERK-TYPIST for field construe tion office. 25 hours per week. No experience required. Typing must be accurate. Position will be
available about 30 days. Send re-Greenville, C
says. _
sume to Clerk-Typist, TO Box 1303,
CRUISE SHIP JOBS! Great income jpations. For In-(312) 7419780,
potential. All occupations. For Information call: ........
extension 2035.
DAILY HOUSEWORK and/or babysitting. Full time, transportation preferred. References required. Needed mid Candlewick Estates. 752-3599.
July.
ENERGETIC INDIVIDUAL needed for assistant manager trainee. Ex
perience preferred. Apply in person only Monday Friday at Leather 'N Wood, Carolina East Mall. No
phone calls please.
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Tri
Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancll, 752-6331
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 6 752 7765.
pm.
HOUSE NEED REPAIRS? Call T Turnage House Repair Service for roofing, aluminum siding, and all types of repair work. Phone 756 1286 before 9 a.m. or after 5 p.m
NO JOB TO SAMLL Free estimate on alt repair work. Cabinets, counter fops, book cases, inside
trim, outside trim, sliding porches, and painting. Call 758-0779 or 752-
1623
PAINTING, interior and exterior. Free estimates. Work guaranteed. References. 11 years experience. 756 6873after 6p.m.
SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service. 756-2668 anytime, if no answer call back.
SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59.95. Call Steve Atkins (or all vour sign needs. 756-9117.
TONY BROWN'S lawn and free service. If it's in a yard we do it. Fully insured. Year round. 756-6735.
EXECUTONE Telephone Techni cian. Key and PBX Systems, in stallation and service experience required. Must be resident of Greenville area. Call 637 3337.
Help fight inflation by buying and selling through the Classified ads.
Call 752 6166.
FULL TIME PERSON tor frame shop. Experience preferred. Send resume to Frame Shop, PO Box :2783T
1967Greenville, NC;
GRADY WHITE BOATS is now accepting applications for future consideration in production work. Seeking individuals with experience In either wood working, mechanics, or fiberglass. Experience with using hand power tools desirable. By appointment only. Contact Grady White Boats, Personnel Department 752 2U1._
HOMEWORKERS Wirecratt pro illers
duction. We train house dwellers. For full details write: Wirecratt, P O Box 223, Norfolk, Va. 23501.
INTERIOR DECORATOR with ex perience and a desire to excel. Salary and commission. Send re sume to Decorator, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27B34.
Is Quality Care Your Priority!
utilize your knowledge and teaching skills.
RN'SANDLPN'S
NEEDED
wuuLD LIKE to keep children in my home. Evans Trailer Park, Lot 75. Phone 752 5759 or 756 1523.
060
FOR SALE
061
Antiques
ANTIQUES FOR SALE Oak tables (2), buffet, washstand, wardrobe, china cabinet, desk, chest of draw ers, rocking chair. Ice box, and
others. Private home. Call 527 0986, Ki
Cinston.
075 /Mobile Homes For Sale
CONNER MOBILE HOME. 2 bedrooms, 12x50, 1 bath. Good condition. $2600 firm. 752-4845
DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it for cash with a fast-action Classified
Ad!
1969 HIGHLANDER, 3 bedrooms.
1'/3 baths, porch and underpinning, 285 gallon oil drum, fully furnished. $37. 752-1726aHer 3p.m,_
1973 CHICKASAW 12x65. For sale by owner. 18,000 BTU window air
conditioner.
250
10:30 12:00am.
Cement steps, and need of
re_________
between
gallon oil drum, washer and dryer Mobile home In need of floor
repairs. Will negotiate reasonable offer. Phone 758 4551
1974 NEW AAOON, 12x65, 1 bath, 2 bedrooms, unfurnished, excellent, underpinned, underskirted. $6900 negotiable. See at Lot 86A Shady Knoll or call 758-1115 after 5.
1977 OAKWOOD mobile home, 12x60, good condition. Ail rooms are closed off. Call 746-4677 from 4-9.
Have pets to sell? Reach more people with an economical Classified ad. Call 753 6166.
076 /Mobi le Home I nsurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance
the best coverage for less money.
Smith Insurance and Realty 2754
077 /Musical Instruments
ALL THOAAAS ORGANS half price. Includes free lessons, bench. 90 day cash option or monthly terms. Piano & Organ Distributors, Greenville, 355-6D02. _
GIBSON PAUL DELUXE and case. $350 or best otter. Call 756 3404.
MENDEL TRUMPET 6441. _
NEW LOWREY STEREO organs. Only $799. Lowrey Organ Center, 756 6833. _
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST: 2 female dogs near Simpson March 16. SmalT curly biack Cock a-poo, "Katie". Medium reddish brown Doberman, "Dutchess". Reward for return $25 each. Bill Byrd, 758 0198 or 757 6961._
064
Fuel, W(xxJ, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J P Stancil, 752-6331._
FIREWOOD, $30 a load. Call 758 4611 anytime (or delivery._
TONS OF SPLIT un
_ Tony ___
Lawn and Tree Service. 756-6735
..iwllt firewood, all types. Cheap! Tony Brown's
100% OAK FIREWOOD $45 per
haltcord. Call 752 0091.
065 Farm Equipment
FARMALL SUPER A with cultivators. Good condition. Call 756 1687 or 734 3825 after 6 p.m
FOR SALE- tour row Masse
Full time and part time, 11-7
Shift differential available 3-11,11-7 and weekends Competitive salaries
no
schedutes Interested persons call Lydia Morgan, DON, University Nursing Center, 758 7100
LADY TO LIVE IN with elderly gentleman. Must have drivers Rcense. 746 4321.
LEAD NURSE Salary range Mus
$16,320 to $23,556 per year have graduated from a state ac credited school of professional nursing and have one years professional nursing experience or an equivalent combinallon of education and experience. Must be licensed by ihe N C Board of Nursing to practice as a registered nurse in North Carolina. Contact Joyce Radford, N C Dept, of Corrections, P O Box 215, Maury, N C 28554. 747 8101._ _
MAXWELL FURNITURE has immediate opening (or sales person. Excellent benefits, excellent salary potential. Must apply in person. Maxwell Furniture 604 Greenville Boulevard._
MECHANIC WANTED Good reli
able mechanic with good working habits. Excellent pay and benefit package. Prefer Ford experience
Apply in person to: J C Jones, East Carolina Lincoln Mercury GMC,
Greenville.
MEDICAL ASSISTANT wanted for physician's office. Phlebetomy ex perience required. Position is full time. Send resume to Medical Assistant, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834. _ _
NEEDED Full and part time RN's and LPN's. All shifts. Good benefits, salary negotiable. Contact Becky Hastings D O N , 756 4121.
NEEDED FULL TIME HELP Avon. Earn 50% Call 758 3159.
PART TIME morning sales Help needed. Experience preferred.
Apply in person only, Monday Friday at Leather 'N Wood, Caro-
lina East Mall. No phone calls.
PART TIME SECRETARY tor law office. 9-15 hours per week, good typing skills required, light record keeping. Send resume to Part Time Secretary, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.
PART TIME RETAIL SALES HBA to service Eastern NC area.
HBA or grocery experience pi (erred. Automobile required. Send
resume to Retail Sales, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834
Ferguson_cor^|)lanter, 3 years
$700. Call 756
ssey
old.
FOR SALE: Garden tractor. 16 horsepower, Murray with plow, disk, cultivator, $176o. Used 10-12 hours. Health reasons. Phone 758-7874.
TOBACCO TRUCK CURTAINS Less than half dealers price. Hat (eras Canvas Products, 758 0641, 1104 Clark Street._
2 FARMALL 140 tractors with cultivators and fertilizer hopper. Excellent condition. 752-4122.
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING
Stables, 752 5237.
11 YEAR OLD Paint Mare. 15.3 hams. Gentle, good trail horse. Asking $650. Call 758 0258 after 5:30.
074
Miscellaneous
ATARI VIDEO games repaired. ...... lie. "
Reconditioned Atarls tor safe. Call 758 9513.
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL
Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919-763 9734.
CABBAGE and yellow collard
lanfs. $2.00 per hundred. Call 55 6360.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of. sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work._
CLARK & COMPANY
756-2557
Oven Surface Tpp Dorm Size Refrigerator Log Splitter
15 Horse Wisconsin Engine 7 Horse Wisconsin Engine Weed Trimmers -10% Oft Yamaha 650 Maxim Honda Express
Tub Enclosures & Shower Doors Marine & Lawn Mower Batteries Boat Trailer Parts Depth Finders Winches
Litton Microwave Oven Generator (300,500,5000 Watts) Special On Echo Chain Saws
085 Loans And/iAortgages
2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans-mortgages bought. Call free 1-800 845 3929.
100
Houses For Sale
MOUbt FOR SALE $26,000 firm. Overn an acre of land. 5 large rooms, 24x30 garage. 12x12 utility building. 756-2053, ask for Lerov.
LAKE ELLSWORTH AREA For sale by owner. $59,900 assume FHA 11'/2 percent loan tor $9600. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace In den. Call 756-8804 after 6._
neat STARTER country home located on a large lot, 3 bedrooms, cheerful den, central heat, woodstove, deck. Reduced from $37,500-$34,500. Davis Realty, 752 3000, 756-2904, 756-1997.
NEW LISTING Located on a cor ner lot. Established neighborhood. Fenced in back yard, patio, heat
pump, 3 bedrooms, l'/2 baths, good sizekif
itchen, utility, breakfast area, dining room and den. Only $44,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000. 756 2904 orRhesa Davis 756 1997.
NEW LISTING-Starter home. Less
than $1,000 will get you into this house. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, den.
kitchen, located on large lot. House thai
ilty
or Rhesa Davis 7$6-1997.
srge I
payment less than $0 ($25,000). Call Davis Realt
752 3000, 756 2904
NICE 5 room house. Enclosed back porch, carport, new paint in and out. Very good condition. In the county. Good pecan trees. $34,000. ^ owner. 758-3218; call after 6,
764199.
SUPER LOAN ASSUMPTION 3 bedroom, large kitchen, big workshop, fenced yard, 426 Pittman Drive. $47,000. Make us an offer. Aldn^e & Southerland Realty,
121 Apartments For Rent
DUPLEX APARTMENT available at Frog Level on 1 acre wooded lot. 2 t^rooms, 1 bath, kitchen and
dining combination, sundeck. and heat pump. $260 a month. Call 756-4624 before 5 p.m. or 756 5168 after._
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appll anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
All utilities Cable TV Telephone (soon)
Furnished
With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates
weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 month and up
756-5555 Olde London Inn
756:
RayM Spears. 758 4362.
WELL DECORATED home in Brookgreen with large formal din ing room. 5 bedrooms, 3 full baths, den, solarium, living room, recre ation room, 4200 square feet. For sale by owner. 752-3021._
10'/2% APR thirty year, fixed rate FHA or VA on new homes to be built in Edwards Acres, Pleasant
Ridge and Country Squire or will lild on your lot. Seller pays points and closing costs. Take advantage
g _ - ________
of this low interest rate now! Duftus Realty Inc., 756 5395
112 PARK DRIVE 3 bedroom immaculate home with 1188 square feet, garage. Assumable VA loan. $44,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615.
111 Investment Property
duplex 2 bedrooms, 1 bath.
central heat, air, 4 years old. Contemporary. Excelleni buy. Call John Day, Moore 8. Sauter; 752
Day,
1010. Evenings752 0345.
113
Land For Sale
091
Business Services
AAA INCOME TAX SERVICE will check income tax returns at rea-sonable rates. 355 2508._
INCOME TAX SERVICES Boyd. Call 756 3264.__
093
OPPORTUNITY
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 8, Co., Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753-4015.
STEEL BUILDING Dealer By Manufacturer. Double Profit. Construction 8i Sales Benefits. Easy to sell. Steel construction only 2/3 price of masonry. Free engineering quotes. Quick delivery. Make $100,000-$2()0,000 annually in your own business. Call for opening. 1 800-525 9240.
4 ACRES of land. Ideal for house and garden or horses, or can be used for commercial use for shop. Mobile homes allowed. Day 752 1138, Nioht 756 5708._
115
Lots For Sale
BA YTREE SUBDIVISION
Attractive wooded lots within the city. 90% financing available. Call 758 3421.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart-I e fe d, dish
m e n t s , carp _ . . ..
washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and pool. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869
121 Apartments For Rent
2 BEDROOM, carpeted, air, near university. $250 month. 752-0180 or 756-2766.
2 BEDR^C^M duplex apartment.
Central heat and air. 14th Street. Convenient to schools and shopping. No pets. Lease and deposit. Available April l. 756 6834 after 3.
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX 4</} miles West of new hospital. Available March 15 756 8996 or 756 5780
2 BEDROOM townhouse duplex for ..........Call 752
rent
8179
Available April 1.
2 BEDROOM townhouse at Shenandoah. l',2 baths, fireplace, practically new. $330 per month. Call Clark Branch, Realtors, 756 6336
2 BEDROOM townhouse at Shenandoah. IV: baths, available April 1st. $300 per month. Call Clark-Branch, Realtors, 756-6336.
2 BEDROOM downstairs apartment in country. $150 month. Call 756-9132.
BEDROOMS,
epiace, kitchi f r i g e r a 10 r ,
living area fireplace, kitchen wifn stove, re
dishwasher.
washer/dryer area. Energy etfi cient. Available April 1. tin.
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re trigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located just oft lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 5(V% less than comparable units), dishwash
er, washer/dryer hookups, cable TV,wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 15 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
BAYWOOD, TWO ACRE lot. Fi nancino available. Call 756 7711.
BEAUTIFUL LOT Excellent loca tion. Residential only. Restriction 1650 square feet. WInferville School District. $8200. Davis Realty, 752-3000, 756 2904, 756 1997. _
TO BUY OR SELL a business, for appraisals, for financing, (or fran cnise consulting - contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES In vestment Analysts and Brokers, Greenville. 752 3575. _
095
PROFESSIONAL
BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and sheetrock (hanging finish), 10 years experience. Call 757-0678. It no answer 355 6952. _
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimney
sweep. 25 years experience working chimneys__and_ fireplaces. Cafl
II,
day or nighf, 753 3503, Farmville.
100
REAL ESTATE
102 Commercial Property
CLARK 8i COMPANY
Stihl Echo - Sachs Dolmar Snapper Toro - Lawn Boy
CLEARANCE SALE on Sony televi
sions. Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping
Center and Greenville
Dickinson Avenue,
COUCH and chair for sale; $75. 757 1733.
PRESCHOOL COORDINATOR Half time position, academic year BS/MS degrees in Child Devel opment, preschool teaching experi
ence required. By April 1, send vita, transcripts and 3 references to Dr. TelekI, School of Home Economics,
PRODUCT ENGINEER/DESIGNER Immediate opening! New position for the right person in a well established Eastern NC Industry. We're seeking a highly developM Product Engineer/Designer for our proprietary wood heating stoves ana industrial products divisions This Individual must have manufacturing experience as well as design experience. With a minimum of 3 years in a medium steel fabrication Industries. A BS/ME nr equivalent degree a plus but experience will substitute Combustin experience a definite plus. Salary and benefit package commiserate with experience. Send your resume and salary require ments to Plant Manager, PO Box 338 Gritton, NC 28530_
PUBLIC WOR KS-Utllllles Supervisor. Requires knowledge of the principles and practices of public works operations as applies TO development, supervision, and construction. Combination of educa tion-experlence equivalent to college degree. Salary negotiable. Send resume to Town Administrator, P O Box 537, Scotland Neck, N C 27874
SECRETARIAL Administrative. Engineering firm seeks mature.
Engineering tirm seeks mature, settled individual from Farmville or the surrounding areas. Typing, general office and administrative abilities required. Full time with excellent benefits. Send resume to McDavid Associates, PO Drawer 49, Farmville, NC 27828.
STEAKS OF USA now accepting applications for restaurant manager and assistant manager positions tor restaurant to open in Greenville and other locations In North Carolina. Applicants must have restau
rant management experience. Good alary and bonus program. Send resume to Steaks Of USA, 2714
Cashwell Drive, Goldsboro, NC 27530._
STOP!
ASK YOURSELF
"Where will I be and what will I be doing 5 years from today. If I continue what I am doing now?"
We have 3 sales positions to fill in Eastern N C which can develop
Into management for the person.
You can immediately expect to
right
n immediately expeci EARN A LARGE WEEKLY INCOME
Attend expense paid training school
Guaranteed Income to start.
Be given the opportunity to advance into management.
To Qualify;
Must be sports minded Ambitious - Dependable High School graduate or better Own good car
FOR SALE Sharptax SF 810 copy machine with base cabinet. Uses plain bond paper and makes copies in these sizes: 8''2 x 11, 8V2 x 14 and 11 X 17. Machine is 3 years old, in good condition. Call 758 3138.
FORMAL DINING RCX3M suit b *Y
746 6224
Broyhill. Soild oak; $900 tirm.
FREEZER BEEF, grain fed Angus, whole halves or quarters. Delivered to Bethel Cold Storage for process ing. 654 a pound. Live weight. L A
Moye Farms, Maury, NC, 747-3506 after 6 p.m._
GREEN VINYL rocker-recliner Very good condition. $100. Call - "iatte
756 4472atter6p.m.
HAMMOND ORGAN, used. Good condition, $485 with bench. 355-6002.
ICEMAKERS and Reach in Coolers. Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memorial Drive, 756-6417.
JVC AM/FM stereo receiver with built in equalizer. 120 watts per channel; $350. Day 756 9371, Night 756 7887.
MOFFITT'S MAGNAVOX Greenville's first and largest video tape club. Rent movies (or only $5 for three davt.
MOTORS All types of motors available from Ohfe. Call 758-7402. Open dally from 9 to 9.
NEED TO SALE dryer. Good con-dition; $40. Call 756 3536.
OLYMPUS OM-10 camera. 35 mm, like new. Call 756 7972.
RENT A STEAMEX Best method for cleaning carpets. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street, Greenville._
SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental
shamjpooers an Tool Company.
SLEEPER COUCH- queen size, herculon, browns and rust, excellent condition. 2 end tables and coffee table, solid pine, $299. Days 355 2626. Nlohts 758 7114.________
SURVEYOR STAKES
GLissoN Enterprises
7S^-a5a
TOPSOIL, field sand, mortar sand and rock. Call 746-3819 or 746-3296.
WALL MOUNTED bird cage, $20. 1 bird cage, $5. All good condition. 355 6538.
WEDDING DRESS and veil. $100 or best offer. 756-6656 after 5 p.m.
21 CUBIC FOOT G E refrigerator, dispenses Ice thru freezer door. Almond color, 90 day warr.snt^. Call
Azalea AAoblle Homes, 756-:
075 AAobile Homes For Sale
BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home
FOR THE RIGHT P|R|N THLS
IS A LIFETIME 3RTUNITY WITH AN RNATIONAL GROUP APANIES Equal (Opportunity Company M/F
PORI
TERI
COMF
ER OP IN-OF
'u'isssssLr''
CHUC--....... .
Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday 751-3401 10AM-8PM
WANTED: Experienced carpet and vinyl installer with tools and van.
loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors, plywood counter tops, total electric, ran^^ refrigerator. Regular price.
Limited Time Only
$9,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up Included. Hours, 8 am to6 pm. MOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191
____13 top of
double wide. 52 X 24, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including
masonite siding, shingle roof> bay windows, frosf free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and
much, much more. Regular price, $24,995
Limited Time Only
$19,995
VA, FHA and conventlortal on lot financing. Delivery and set up udecTHours,8AM----
Included. Hours, 8 AM to 6 pm. AAOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756-0191_
FOR RENT 7000 square feet of retail office and warehouse space. Expansive showroom, 6 beautifully appointed offices and modern warehouse space. Excellent loca tion, general purpose. High traffic area. C J Harris 8, Co., Inc., Financial And Marketing Consul (ants, 757 0001.
104 Condominiums For Sale
WORKNEARTHE HOSPITAL?
And tired of driving across town? You can live in your own townhome at conveniently located BRCXDKHILL with payments lower than rent! Call Wtl Reid at 758 6050/756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050/758 7029.
EMORY WOOD; $3000. Call for details. The Evans Company 752 2814.
LOT FOR SALE in Tucker Estates. Call for price and location. The Evans Company 752-2814._
YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains in the Classified Ads.
4 ACRES of land. Ideal for house and garden or horses, or can be used for commercial use tor shi Mobile homes allowed. Day 1138, Nioht 756 5708._
117 Resort Property For Sale
1971 LANCELOT 12x65. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. Located at Emerald Isle. Call 756 9670 before 2 p.m._
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets.
758 4413 between 8 and 5._
urity
Call
NEED STORAGE? We have any 3ra
'riday9 5. Calf?M 99'33.
any
size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage. Oi
day
121 Apartments For Rent
ALMOST NEW 2 bedroom duplex. Quiet location. Lots of privacy. $300 month. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 756 2121.
AYDEN 2 bedroom duplex. Stove, refrigerator, carpet, central heat. 746 4474.
AZALEAGARDENS
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.
ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near campus. No pets. $195 a month. 756 3923.
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.
7433 anytime.
756
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX
Approximately 1500 square feet. $350 per month. CENTU1
per ___
Forbes Agency, 756-2121
JRY 21 B
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX Close to university. Lease and deposit re
Suired. 756-4364 after 6, ask for
lonny. _
417 W FOURTH St., two bedroom duplex, country kitchen, living room, washer-dryer included. $2M per month. Call Peoov, 756 0942.
122
Business Rentals
FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Call Donnie Smith at 946-588T_
FOR RENT Prime retail space on
Arlington Boulevard, 4500 square feet.756 5097 or 756 9.15.
GREENVILLE BOULEVARD 1500 square foot building. Call Echo Realty, Inc. 756 6040or 524-5042.
WAREHOUSE AND office space tor lease. Approximately 15,000 square feet, 10th St. area. 756 5097 or 756 9315.
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, 1' 2 bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished. No pets. Married couple preferred. 82V7321 after 5 p.m. _
127
Houses For Rent
ATTRACTIVE ALUMINUM siding starter home, near university, ap pliances furnished. Davis Realty, 752 3000, 756 2904, Rhesa Davis
355 2574.
BRICK RANCH with 3 bedrooms. Large and spacious family room
with fireplace. Must see to appreci
- ''fi."
ate, 1 97/6417.
RENT FURNITURE: Living, ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 month. Option to buy. U REN 756 3862. _
din
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV
Office hours I0a.m.to5p.m Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4800
TAR RIVER ESTATES
I, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground, Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
MOORE & SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050
106
Farms For Sale
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.
107
Farms For Lease
FOR LEASE; tobacco. Beaufort Counfy. 75< pound. Phone 946 6169 after 7 p.m
14,114 pounds Counfy
WANTTOBUY
CORN
Top Prices Paid for your corn. Worthington Farms Inc., 756-3827 Days. 7 3732 Nights._
109
Houses For Sale
ATTENTION INVESTORS PossI ble income, $350 for older home, divided into 2 apartments, needs repairs. Some possible owner financing. Conveniently located. Reduced $15,000. Davis Realty, 752-3000. 756 2904, 756 1997.
BRICK VENEER RANCH situated on a wooded lot. Assume loan and
settle In this 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, I, breakfast area, family room, wood stove; $56,900. Call
Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or s7!
Rhesa Davis 756 1997.
BRICK VENEER DUPLEX 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, heat pump, kitchen, and family room on each side. Assume 9Vt% loan. $49,900. Call Davis Realty 752 3000. 756 2904 or Rhesa Davis 7S6-1997. _
BY OWNER Country living. 2200 square feet. Blue masonite house. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, living room, dining room and foyer, recreation room with fireplace, den with wood heater, 2 heat pumps on nearly 1 acre tot. Wintervllle ^hool District. Storage barn In back with electricity. Near Pitt Plaza on Highway 43 South. $85.000. 756-5356 after 6.
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost free refrigerators.
Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets
Contact J T or Tommy Williams __756 7815_
752-4225
TWO BEDROOM ap available. No pets. Call Insurances. Realty, 752 2754
artments Smith
WEDGEWOODARMS
NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom, V1 bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court
756-0987
CLOSE TO campus, 3 bedrooms, air, fireplace. 406 South Library. $345. 758 0174. _
COZY ONE bedroom, in a quite neighborhood. 1 block from tennis courts. 756 8160, 756 7768,
HOUSE FOR RENT 316 East Main Street, Winterville. $150 per month. Small 2 bedrooms. Contact 752 8877.
HOUSE FOR RENT Located in country near Falkland. $150 per month. Phone 753-2016 day or night or 758 1826 nights only.
HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in town and country. Call 746 3284 or
524 3180.
112 NORTH SUMMIT 3 bedroom house within walking distance of the
house wpthin walking distance of the university. CENTURY 21 B Forbes 756 2121.
Agency,
3 BEDROOM ranch style home
Carport, storage, quiet subdivision Call 757 0001 or nights, 753 4015,
room, dining, kitchen and carport Wooded corner lot. No pets. $395 107 Dupont Circle. 756 8706._
3 BEDROOM, Pz baths, central heat and air, storage, great loca tion, washer/dryer and dishwasher Limit 2 children. Must have vacu um cleaner. No pets. $390. 758 3149.
3 BEDRCX3M house, stove, retrig erator furnished. Call 758 2347 or 752 6068 _ _
405 WEST 4th STREET bedroom. $300. Call 757 0688
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with P j baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.
compactors, patio, free cable TV, wasner-dryer hook-ups, laundr
hook-ups, room, sauna, tennis court, house a nd pool. 752 1557
CYPRESS GARDENS APARTMENTS
2308 E Tenth Street Available immediately two bedroom tiat with washer/dryer hook-ups, heat pump, frost tree refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal. Call days 758 6061, nights/weexends 758 5960.
Professionally managed by " - Inc.
Remco East,
DUPLEX (two spacious apartments available) upstairs $250;
downstairs $265, 2 large bedrooms.
refrigerator, range, carpeted, gas heated. (Water bill paid by owner)
Lease and Latham and 5th Street after 6 p.m._
deposit required. " 752:
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752 6116
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. Utlli-t^housa In rear. What a steal at
. Call 753-2038.
DELLWOOD Possible owner fl
nancing on this deslrabie corner ranch. Tl
hree bedrooms, two baths, living room, dining area, famiiy room with fireplace, woodstove, ), utility s
double garage, ______ ______
$69,900. Durfus Realty Inc., 756-
shed. Fenced.
JL
HARDEE acres 4 bedroom home with step down great room, beautiful old brick fireplace, French doors and Brunswick pool table. Living room, kitchen with breakfast nook and extras. 1,950
^uare jeet ^heat^ plus
Just reduced; $57,900. 758 752-7663
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
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Mid-Eastern Brokers
2719 E. 10th St. 757-3540
YORKTOWN SQUARE 3 bedrooms. Married couple only. Available April 1st. Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500
1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately. 752-3311
1 BEDR(X)M
efficient
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodla'wn; $215. 756 0545 or 758 0635
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FURNITURE WORLD
2808 E. 10th St.
OPEN MON THRUFRI 9AMI0 8PM SATURDAY 9AM to 6PM
757-0451 We Will Not Be Undersold
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton Co.
FRANK M. SUTTON
Certified Public Accountant ACCOUNTING AND
INCOME TAX
SERVICES
757-1807
Monday-Friday 756-9000 Saturday 9 to 1 Call for appointment.
SALES
Local affiliate of international firm Is seeking aggressive salesperson to market our product line to offices in eastern North Carolina. We provide training, salary, commission and travel allowances. Earning potential of $15-$30,000 per year.
Women And Men Applicants Welcome Call Diane Hill For Appointment
CREECH & JONES
103 Trade Street, Greenville 756-3175
SPECIAL Executive Desks
60"x30" beautiful walnut finish Ideal for home or office
Special Price
$17901
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
5HS. EanaSt. 752-2175
WANTED
Good Opportunity for the Career Minded
has an opening for
STORE MANAGER
of ladies' fashion store. Present manager retiring.
Some responsibilities are:
Personnel director of approximately 85 employees.
Motivate and assist In training of personnel to carry out store policies.
Ideal for someone who would enjoy meeting and reacting with people.
Someone whg likes a challenge.
Someone who would enjoy a ladies' retail clothing fashion environment.
Must have leadership qualities.
Excellent company benefits. 45 year old company,
Brodys would like to discuss this special opening with you. Call for appointment, 756-3140, or send resume. Sflary neootlable.
Brodys Pitt Plaza Greenville, N. C.'the uauy neuecior, Ureenvuie, w.t.-Monday, March zi, iuw-15
1 BE0RCX3M apartment. Carpeted, central air and heat. Greenville Manor Apartments. $195. 758 3311.
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Jarvis Street. $240 per month. Cell 757 0688.__
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Fully carpeted. Stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups. Economical heat pump. Fireplace. Located 114 B Brookwood Drive. Deposit and lease required. Call 756 2879^_
133 AAobile Homes For Rent
MOBILE HOME FOR RENT Washer, dryer, air condition. 2 bedrooms, couple only. No pets Call 752 6522 after 5.
MOBILE HOME for rent. 2 bedrooms, central air, rotary an tenna, storage shed, .7 of an acre 756 4874.
12 X 65. TWO bedroom furnished. tiOO per month. Deposit required. No pet. Near Opry House. Call after 6, 746 4164.
12x60. 2 bedrooms, fully carp $150. No children. No pets. 75 or 756 9491.
2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent. Call 756 4687.
2 BEDROOMS, partially furnished, air, good location, no
children, 758 4857
pets.
2 BEDROOM TRAILER
Furnished, $150 plus $100 deposit. Call 758 0779 or 75f 1623.
2 BEDROOMS, furnished. children, no pets. Call 758-6679.
No
2 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, furnished or unfurnished, washer/dryer, air, excellent condition, good location. 756 0601 after 5 p.m.
142 R(X)mmate Wanted
MATURE FEAAALE ROOAAAAATE
to share furnished 2 bedroom apartment.' z expenses. 756 7509.
AAATURE R(X)AAAAATE wanted to share 14x70 trailer $125 plus 'z itilities. 758 6902 after 6:30.
144 Wanted To Buy
WANTED Used moped, automatic transmission, turn indicator lights, any age, any make, good running ...... $150. f52 7772.
condition. Under)
148
Wanted To Rent
QUIET professional would like fo rent mobile home lot on East side of town Preferably private. Call 758 4893
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
135 Office Space For Rent
MODERN, attractive office space for lease. Approximately 1500 square feet. Located 2007 Evans Street beside AAoseley Brothers Call 756 3374.
OFFICE SPACE for rent in Win terville, 600 square feet. 355 6900 or 756 7678.
OFFICES FOR: LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756 7615.
THREE ROOM downtown office at 219 Cotanche Street, 440 square feef
Parking available. Call Jim Lanier 5505.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
NEW 19 COLOR TV
""" only'23.11
TOOWN ' ' MONTH
FURNITURE WORLD
757-8451
2808 E. 10th St.
STORM WINDOWS DOORS 4 AWNINGS
Remodeling-Room Additions
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752 6116
SPECIALS
Old Guns Old Pianos Old Phonographs Old Records Old Radios Old Ice Boxes Old Cheese Box
Old Oak Pedestal Tables Old Ladles English Shoe Chairs Old Hall Stands Old Desks
W.L. Dunn and Sons
Antique Barn and Swap Shop Pinetops, NC
ATTENTION!
LDC FORYURIKA FOODS CORPORATION
New Hours; Tuesday & Thursday 4-9 PM Other Days By Appointment Only 752-0207
HOMES FOR SALE
307 Library Street.
One story brick veneer dwelling. Living room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. *52,000.
306 Summit Street.
One story frame, living room, dining room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms, bath, central heat and air. $28,500
308 Summit Street.
One l|ing din-
1108 Chestnut Street.
One story frame duplex. New roof, 1844 square feet. *17,000,
One Story
Brick veneer dwelling on SR 1415 near Wellcome School 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, kifchen-den with fireplace, 2 car garage. 117 x 180. Reduced to *65,000.
LOT FOR SALE
82'x130' lot on corner of 13th and Greene Streets. *7500.
LOT FOR SALE
111 E. 11th Street. 75x85. Price *8000.00.
NEED HOUSES AND FARMS TO SALE
TURNAGE
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE AGENCY
Get More With Les
Home756-n/a
IB
152-2715
realtor*
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2 bedrooms, 1 1/2 Baths. Low down payment Monthly payments as low as $350.00/month Builders pays points and closing costs.
Now is the time to choose carpet & wallpaper
*41,900.00
Al(lri(li>c tr' Soiillicrland
Realtors
756-3500
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CONVENIENTLY LOCATED brick house in Farmville witnin walking aistance of downtown and all schools. 1948 square feet with extra large den/recreation room (over 27 feet long), 3 bedrooms and 1 112 bath, fully carpeted with central heat and 2 fireplaces Priced to move quickly! For more information, call Susan Williams with Real Estate Brokers, 752-4348 or 757-1798
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REAL ESTATE BROKERS ^
2723 E. 10th Street ^
^ 752-4348 i 756-4619 757-1798 ^
4The Dilly Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Monday, March 21,1983EditorialsSupport Is Needed
Quality and price are continually emphasized as the greatest barrier to the sale of United States tobacco on world markets.
E.J. Pritchard, head of leaf purchasing for the British-American Tobacco Co., said lower quality, increased price supports and higher taxes have been a cause of the decline of American tobacco exports. He cited a drop of almost 40 percent in 10 years.
Gov. Jim Hunt said at the annual meeting of Tobacco Associates that growers need to unite to produce a quality tobacco. But, he said, Tobacco is going to survive.
He cited the employment of 150,000 people in North Carolina directly in tobacco. And he told the growers, You still produce the finest tobacco in the world and can still outwork and out-compete anyone else in the world.
The growers took the challenge and agreed to establish an educational and promotional campaign aimed at improving the quality of flue-cured tobacco.
The effort will involve growers in Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida as well as our state.
Reginald Lester, spokesman for the Tobacco Growers Information Committee, said that, while we still have the highest quality tobacco in the world, that quality has been slipping.
We are trying to re-emphasize the significance of growing top quality tobacco, he said. We command a premium price for premium tobacco, but we need to keep the quality up to j ustify the demands and price.
It is an effort that everyone involved in tobacco must support. We must keep, and even expand, our share of the world market and we will do it by producing a superior product.Two-Way Street
The U.S. Marine Corps commandants disclosures of tension and unpleasant confrontation between the peacekeeping force and Israeli troops in Lebanon underlines a forboding that has accompanied the U.S. relationship with that little country for a number of years.
Gen. Robert Barrow is quoted as saying the incidents between Marines and the Israeli Defense Forces are timed, orchestrated and executed for obtuse Israeli political purposes.
Even from this distance it sounds reasonable.
In terms of political maneuvering, the government in Tel Aviv is quite capable of taking any steps to achieve its purposes; and that capability is not limited to its dealings with adjoining countries.
There is one possible deterrent, and that is an awareness such policies can lose friendships.
Of course, maybe I^enachem Begin does not need the United States anymore. And that is a two-way street.
John Cunniff
Paul T, O'Connor
Legislator Loses Another RoundWhy The Decline?
NEW YORK (AP) ^ The descent of consumer prices from an 11.5 percent rate in 1980-1981 to just 3.9 percent in 1982 brings up as many questions as answers.
Was ie decline due to planning or chance? Was the high interest rate solution to inflation one of the causes instead? Were the benefits of the decline spread widely or concentrated among a relative few?
There are indeed some curiosities revealed in a breakdown of the price slowdown.
A slowing in the rate of energj prices provided 2.2 points of the total 7.7 point-drop in the inflation rate, according to Data Resources Inc., which provides much of the arithmetic for the nations economists.
There is no question that programs to diminish usage and step up domestic production contributed to the slowdown. Gasoline prices plunged. In the earlier period they had risen 26 percent In the latter they fell 6.6 percent.
The Daily Reflector
INCORPORATED
209 CoUnch* Street, Greenville. N C 27834
Established 1882
Publlthed Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning
DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD Chairman of the Board
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(USPS145-400)
SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable In Advance Home Delivery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly 84.00 MAIL RATES (Pricet IfKluda la< vhera appllcabla)
Pitt And Adjoining Counties 84.00 Per Month Elsewhere in North Carolina 84.35 Per Month Outside North Carolina 85.50 Per Month
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But the question that torments infla-tion-fighters is the extent of their contributions in comparison to those of the OPEC nations, which competed with each other, flooded the world with unneeded oil and forced prices lower.
How much of the price improvement was due to domestic planning? How much to poor planning on the part of OPEC and other oil-producing nations?
An even bigger contribution to the slowdown, some 3.6 percentage points, was made by the cost of home ownership.
Home prices and home maintenance and repair costs continued to rise, though more slowly than in the earlier period, but the category called finance-taxes-insurance actually fell by 4 percent -after having risen earlier by 22.8 percent.
Again, the questions. In the conventional thinking of economists, and in the practices of the Federal Reserve Board, rising interest rates are considered a consequence of inflation and an antidote toil
It doesnt take close examination to realize, however, that a rise in interest rates also can be a factor in inflation, and that the removal of those high rates can make a contribution to lessening inflation.
Food and beverages, which lent 0.9 of a percentage point to the overali 7.7 percentage point slowdown, make up the only other significant contributor to the price slowdown, aside from the all other category.
The food-beverage and energy categories involve almost all Americans, but the home ownership grouping, which made the largest contribution to the slowdown, does not. Many people do not own homes.
Even more significantly, most people do not buy homes in any given year, and so are not subjected to existing interest rates, which in both periods had the most significant impact on prices of any item but gasoline.
The question that arises is an obvious one: If relatively few peqile benefitted from the the biggest contributor to disinflation, is the consumer price index really a proper indicator of consumer prices?
The CPI, remember, shows very little contribution to disinflation from the clothing, home furnishings and medical care categories, which are shared by all people. A contribution, in fact, of only two-tenths of one percentage point.
RALEIGH - Bill Friday, president of the University of North Carolina, is no easy debate i^ponent when you catch him off guard. Give the man a chance to prepare and he may eat you alive.
Rq>. John Jordan, D-Alamance, found that out in a recent meeting of the House Higher Education Committee. Jordan has been making noise this year about raising out-of-state tuition in the UNC system. His proposal, and a simlilar bill prqwsed by Rq>. Howard Coble, R-Guilford, have been warmly received on the states editorial pages. At a time of tight budgetting, the atmosphere is just right for increasing fees for out-of-staters.
Jordan and Coble have a good argument. Back in 1971 the General Assembly mandated that out-of-state students pay the full cost of their education at that time, $1,800. Since then, the cost to North Carolina taxpayers of educating these people has steadily risen. But out-of-state
tuition today is only $1,900 to $2,790 a year.
Under Jordans proposal, out-of-state tuition would jump next year to 100 percent of the budgeted state expense about $4,400. Under Cobles bill, it would rise over several years to 90 percent of that expense. Seems fair. These people and their families didnt contribute to the university by paying taxes. Let them pay the full cost of getting an education here. Jordan estimates that the higher fees would bring an additional $40 million into the states coffers.
Then Friday got his chance. His argument was simple. If you raise out-of-state tutition to the degree to which youve proposed - a level which would make it the highest in the Southeast youll scare away the best out-of-state students, hurt the university system and, in the long rqn, cost the state a lot of money.
First he challe*!^ the perception
regarding the size of the out-of-state contingent. Of the 3,200 studoits in the freshman class at Ch^ Hill, 480 come from out-of-state - less than 15 percent. And certainly, during the week of the ACC toumamwit, Mr. Jordan wasnt pitting that we turn away out-of-state athletes like one Sam Perkins from New York. Then there are >all the ROTC students from out-of-state and the Morehead Sctxdars. Cdunt them out, and were talking about 200 students, Friday said.
Then Friday read from a list of distinguished North Carolinians. People wtm rung big corporations. People whove made big gifts to the state, brought jobs here. All were out-of-staters who settled here after attending UNC. He brought on Bruce Poulton, chancellor of N.C. State. Poulton did the same thing. They also listed folks who came to school here and left but who, like pollster Lou Harris, have made large gifts to the university.
Poulton ^mke of N.C. State grads who hold big }dl)8 in the state and pay big taxes. Many of these people came here from out-of-state. North Carolina only invested in their college educations. Other states paid to put them through elementary and high school.
Chancellor John Howell of East Carolina, Dr. Ja^ Memory of State and Dr. Phillip Maneri of Chapel HUl Mowed with other arguments. They spoke of the need to have out-of-staters on campus. They told of the contributions out-ofstaters have made to North Carolina -like the graduate student who developed the process state farmers use to fight witchweed.
In making his presentation, Jordan claimed he was a biblical David fighting a Goliath. But everyone knows that David slew the overconfident Goliath. Friday wasnt overconfident. He was prepared. And Jordans bill was sent to a subcommittee. If it ever re-appears, its certain to look very different.
Art Buchwald-
A Call To The French Embassy
I was very disturbed to read in the newspaper the other day that convicted Nazi war criminal Klaus Altmann-Barbie had to undergo an emergency hernia operation in Lyon, where he is awaiting trial for his role in the deaths of hundreds of Jews and resistance fighters.
I immediately called the French Embassy to find out how he was.
Are you a friend of his? the embassy official wanted to know.
Not exactly, I said. But I am interested in his health. Tell me, was the operation very painful?
It might have been the man said.
Did he scream a lot? Was he in real agony?
I doubt it. Im sure the doctors gave him anesthesia.
Oh thats too bad.
What do you mean, thats too bad? Klaus never believed in anesthesia. He felt a man should be fully conscious when he was worked over. It would have been nice if he was awake when the doctors did it to him.
Barbie is a sick man. He has, besides hernia problems, stomach pain, kidney disease and a nervous disorder.
Poor Klaus. Does his stomach pains make him wretch a lot? You know, double over as if someone kicked him with a boot?.
I have no idea. Why are you interested?
No one likes to be kicked in the stomach. 1 know Klaus liked to kick other people in the stomach, but he never wanted anyone to do it to him.
I dont understand where this conversation is leading.
I told you. Im just interested in Klaus
Barbies health and I want to make sure hes getting the best medical help available. You say he has kidney trouble. He must be very uncomfortable.
The French doctors are taking very good care of him.
Im sure of that. But tell them not to
Elisha Douglas
Strength For Today
The best hamburger in the U.S.A.
Thats what the sign says at this roadside restaurant. Now the hamburger is very good, but we can be pretty sure that there are other places in the country that serve just as tasty hamburger. Does this mean, therefore, that the proprietors of this establishment are consciously lying?
Not at all. Their estimate of the delectable quality of their hamburger is simply a measure
of their enthusiasm and self-confidence.
The result has been that they have conducted a very successful business. This success has been largely due to the confidence they had in their own hamburger and about everything else in their establishment and about their own ability to put things across.
^The lesson is: have faith in yourself. We can do most of the things we set out to do if we go about our efforts in a spirit of confidence and faith.
give Klaus any painkillers.
Why not?
Klaus never believed in painkillers. He said painkillers dulled the mind and senses. Im sure if he wouldnt prescribe them for others, he wouldnt want any for himself. Tell me about the nervous disorder.
From what we know he cant sleep at night.
Poor Klaus. He used to sleep so well in Lyon. Dont let the doctors give him anything to get a good nights rest. Barbie always maintained the less you let a person sleep, the more willing he was to .cooperate with his captors. Be sure and shine a light in his eyes all night long. He likes that.
How do you know what he likes?
He used to do it all the time to the people in his care. He wouldnt have done it if he didnt believe a bright light was good for someone who needed sleep.
Are you a doctor? the man at the embassy asked.
Not exactly. But when someone like Klaus Barbie gets sick, I like to be of help. Have the French doctors hit his kidneys with a night stick?
Im sure they havent.
They might try it. Klaus always said hitting a person in the kidneys was a good way to make him forget his hernia problems.
(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
Owen Ullmann
Volcker's Future Is A Guessing Game
WASHINGTON (AP) - Will he seek another four-year term? Will he get it? No, not Ronald Reagan. Paul Volcker.
One of the biggest guessing games in town, after trying to figure out the presidents own political plans, is whether the chairman of the Federal Reserve Board wants to keep his powerful post, and whether Reagan will reappoint him. when Volckers term expires this August.
Naming a head of the nations central bank will be the most important appointment Reagan will make this year, possibly for the rest of his term unless Reagan gets the chance to name a chief justice to the Supreme Court.
So far, Reagan has refused to signal his intentions about Volcker. And Volcker says he only has confided in his wife as to whether he wants to leave his government job and return to New York, where his family still resides, for a certain fortune as a private consultant or financier.
Until an economic recovery began unfolding this winter, it seemed certain that Reagan would replace Volcker, a man first chosen by a Democrat, Jimmy Carter. After all, this would be Reagans opportunity to put his own man in the crucial Fed job, a leading power base for conducting economic policy.
But signs of an improving economy, an unexpectedly low inflation rate and a gradual decline in Interest rates over the past two years have increased the chances that the 55-year-old Volcker will be asked to stay on.
The probability of his reappointment Increases with each day the economy improves, observes Thomas Thomson, chief economist for Crocker National Bank in San Francisco.
I havent heard a word here about successors, said a Treasury Department official, speaking only on condition that his name not be used. That tells me Volcker may stay.
A year ago, ,wlth the country smarting from both a deep recession and high interest rates, Volcker was'* everyones favorite scapegoat.
Now, most of the brickbats have turned into bouquets.
Within the influential business community, Volcker Is viewed as a towering figure, and not just because of his 6-foot-7 frame. He is respected for his mastery of the nations complex financial policies, and awed as a "macho figure -complete with cigar jutting from jaw -was tough enough to stick to a tight-credlt policy for fighting inflation over the cries from Congress about the high unemplovment and busines.s
bankruptcies that resulted.
Volcker also is winning praise for his early warnings about the worrisome debt problems of developing nations, and for the rescue loan packages he helped negotiate to avert an international financial crisis.
Sen. Jake Garn, R-Utah, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, suggested this month that Volcker be reappointed, and the committees ranking Democrat and former chairman, William Proxmlre of Wisconsin, recently said; I think the country is lucky to have you as chairman of the Federal Reserve. Youve done a remarkable job under very difficult circumstances.
Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan, a periodic critic of Fed policy, has been supportive of Volcker lately, and chief White House economist Martin S. Felds-tein is an admirer of the Fed chairman.
Most Importantly, the president has had nothing but kind words for Volcker over the past few months, supporting the central banks policy and crediting the Fed with helping to lower inflation to below 4 percent - lower than anyone thought would be possible by now.
Volcker still has his critics, but their voices are muted. 'They warn that the Fed is letting the nations money si^ly firow top, rapidly, a course they say will
rekindle inflaticn and high interest rates down the road.
Others, such as Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., whUe pleased that the Fed is fostering a recovery by letting the money si5>ply grow more rapidly, are concerned that Volcker is using too much of his own judgment rather than objective guiddines to conduct monetary policy. Hes got the economy in the palm of his hands. Thats just too much power for one person, Kemp griped in an in-tendew.
Conservatives argue Volckers reappointment would force Reagan to accept blame for the recession, a political liability for the GOP in 1984.
Several possible successors have been ' mentioned, but each has some drawback. Walter B. Wriston, chairman of Citicorp, has effectively taken himself out of the running, sayipg it would be a conflict' for a commercial banker to take the post. Preston Martin, a California savings and loan official who was appointed by Reagan to be vice chairman of the Fed, may lack sufficient qpertlse on monetary policy.
Alan Greeoiqian, chief White House economist in the Ford administration, has the qualifications J)ut is believed to have many political enemies.
2The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Menday, March 21,1963
Junior Cotillion Ball
ANNUAL SPRING BALL - The Junior Cotillion of Greenville, for seventh and eighth graders, had the crowning of Kevin Fisher, king. Leigh Zadiets, queen, Mariam Fulford, runner-up queen and Ed West, runner-up king, left to right. The ball was
sent unless you specify one of the following: gray tones, coral/russet tones or blue
tones.
1 have talked to many people who can crochet beautifully yet claim they cannot follow crochet instructions .:and must, therefore, pass up the opportunities to make many lovely designs. If you fall into this category, promise yourself to try to overcome that difficulty so that you arent limited in design choice.
It has been my experience that most people are intimidated because the directions look so involved and forbidding that they dare not even try to follow them. 1 have found that when 1 write out unabbreviated instructions. much of the mystery of following the directions disappears. You can do the same thing for yourself if you
Slimming vertical stripes in softly blending shades are highlights of this lightweight crocheted vest. The vest is started along one front edge and then is worked around to the other front edge to easily achieve the vertical striping. All seaming, except at the shoulders, is eliminated by working in this fashion. Triple strands of a feather-light yarn allow the subtle shading. Easy to follow directions, written without the usual abbreviations, are for small (8-10). medium (12-14) and large (16-18).
To obtain directions for making the slenderizing vest, send your request for Leaflet No. CL-3208 with $1 and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Pat Trexler (The Daily Reflector"), P.O. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29582.
Or you may order Kit No. CK-3208 by sending a check or money order for $15 to Pat Trexler at the same address. Kit price includes instruction leaflet, Flere Troder yarn in four shades and the shipping costs. Designers choice of beige/brown tones will be
X
DIET CENTER-
LOSE 17 TO 25 POUNOS IN JUST 6 WEEKS!
AND WE'LL TEACH YOU HOW TO KEEP IT OFF
' -4.
LIGHTWEIGHT SWEATER VEST...has slimming vertical stripes and is crocheted so that all seams except those at the shoulders are eliminated.
Chocolate Eggs By Moreau
filled with assorted chocolates, nougats, pralines and truffles.
Jefferson Florist
held at the Moose Lodge Friday night and music for entertainment was provided by Talk of the Town. Ramona VanNortwick directs the cotillion and is assisted by Kay VanNortwick. (Reflector staff photo by Jane Welbom)
have some instructions written in the usual way with abbreviations.
For example, here are some instructions 1 picked at random from a book:
Ch 64 stitches. Rowl: Dcin 3rd ch from hook (counts as 2 do, dc in next ch and in each ch across. Turn each row. Row 2: Ch 3 (always counts as 1 do, sk 1st dc, dc in next dc and in each dc across, end dc in turning ch. Row 3: Ch 3, sk 1st dc, dc in each of next 6 dcs, *ch 1, skip next dc, dc in each of next 11 dc. Repeat from across, end ch 1, sk 1, dc in each of next 6 dcs, dc in top of turning chain.
Now lets spell out those directions and see if they become clearer to you. Make a chain of 64 chain stitches. Row 1: Work a double crochet in the 3rd chain from the hook. The chains you skipped over in doing this count as 1 double crochet, so you now have 2 double crochets. Work 1 double crochet in the next chain and in each remaining chain across to end of row. Turn. This means to turn your work so other side is facing you.
On all following rows, the chain-3 made at the beginning of a row counts as 1 double crochet. Row 2: Chain 3, skip the first double crochet stitch of the previous row; work 1 double crochet in next stitch and in each remaining stitch across to end of row; finish row by working 1 double crochet in the top of the turning chain of previous row. Turn as before.
Row 3: Chain 3, skip first stitch, work ! double crochet in each of the next 6 stitches. (Cham 1, skip next stitch; work 1 double crochet in each of next 11 stitches). Repeat the steps between brackets across row. Your last repeat of these bracketed steps will end with a double crochet in each of next 6 stitches and a double crochet in top of turning chain of previous row. Turn as before.
As you can see, the unab-
London' was astounded in 1821 when Queen Caroline, the wife for 26 years to King George IV when he was the Prince of Wales, was locked out of Westminster Abbey during his coronation and her name omitted from the ceremony. On the kings accession the House of Lords passed a bill to divorce and degrade her, but popular disbelief of her extramarital affairs caused its abandonment. Later, historians found that she and her husband were equally guilty of infidelity. Caroline died within three weeks of the coronation.
breviated instructions take three paragraphs while the shortened version takes only one paragraph. In a book or magazine full of instructions, the cost saving of abbreviated directions is considerable. 1 am sure that is why this system was adopted many years ago.
Within any set of instructions, if you will just read and follow one step at a time, you will usually have no trouble with each following step almost before you know it you will have mastered the complete pattern.
Woodstoves need cleaning after a hard winters usage.
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Cooking Is Fun
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor BRUNCH FARE Com Beef Hash & Chili Sauce Eggs & English Muffins Fruit 4 Coffee CHIU SAUCE
Duplicate
Winners
A club championship was held by the duplicate bridge club Saturday afternoon at Planters Baii. First place winners were Dave Proctor and Gary Bryant. Their percentage was .564.
Others winning were: Mrs. Harold Forbes and George Martin, second; Dr. and Mrs. Charles Duffy, third; Mrs. William McConnell and Lewis Newsome, fourth; Mildred Harker and Dorothy Ritchy, fifth; tied for sixth were Chris Langley and Ed Yauck with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Patterson; Mrs. George Martin and John Sullivan, eighth.
A club championship game was played Wednesday afternoon and Mrs. William Parvin and Mrs. Dot McKemie placed first with .609 percent. Others placing were Mrs. Lacy Harrell and Mrs. J.W.H. Roberts, second; Mrs. Barry Powers and Lee Hastings, third; Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Webb, fourth; Mrs. Tom Lunney and Ms. Estelle Eastwood, fifth; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew de-Sherbinin, sixth; Mrs. M.H. Bynum and Mrs. Eli Bloom, seventh; Mrs. Robert Barnhill and Mrs. E.J. Poindexter, eighth.
Mrs. Charles Mitchell and Mrs. C.D. Elks were first place winners Wednesday morning during the club championship game. Their percentage was .642. John Sullivan Sr. and John Sullivan Jr., second, Mrs. Stuart Page and Mrs. Sidney Skinner, third, Mrs. Eloise Gabbert and Mrs. Warren Maxon, fourth.
We cc^ycatted our favorite summertime chili sauce, made with fresh tomatoes, for this winter version.
28ounce can whole plum tomatoes, undrained
1 cup finely chc^ celery (3 large ribs)
2-3rds ciq) findy chopped onion (6ounce onion)
2-3rds cup finely chopped green pepper (1 medium) C^amon stick 2 inches long
2 whole cloves
1>^ teaspoons dry mustard 2-3rds cup light brown sugar 1 cup cider vinegar 1 tablean salt V4 teaspoon chili powder In a iquart saucepot, bring to a boil tomatoes, celery, onion and green pq)per; boil gently uncovered, sitrring as necessary and adjusting heat as mixture sputters, for li hours. Stir in cinnamon, cloves, mustard.
Engagement
Announced
Mr.' and Mrs. James Stanley Jones of Tallahassee, Fla., formerly of Greenville, N.C., announce the engagement of their daugh-' ter, Cynthia Denise, to Douglas Edward Moore of Crawfordville, Fla. The wedding is planned for April. The bride is the granddaughter of Mrs. Mary Buck Jones of Greenville and the late John G. Jones Sr. of Greenville.
sugar, vinegar and salt and chili powder and return to a boil; simmer, stirring often, until thick - about 1 hour. Remove cinnamon ^ck. Store tightly covered in refrigerator for flavors to blend and mellow -about 1 week. Makes 3>^ cups.
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Beautiful Baby Contest Set
Registration for the Greenville Jay--Ettes March of Dimes Beautiful Baby Contest to be held March 25-26 at Carolina East Mall will be held March 25-24 from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Community Booth at the mall.
Registration may also be accomplished by calling Marilyn Danford, 758-9660, or Laura Jackson, 756-9^, after 6 p.m.
Children from birth tg/24 months may be re^tered by submitting a 5x7 or 8x10 photograph of the child with his or her name, birth date, sex, parents names, telephone number and mailing address on the back. A $1 registration fee will be charged to cover cost of returning photographs.
The baby inspiring the collection of the most money votes will be the trophy winner. First and secmd runners-iq) wiU be recognized. Voting will be held at Carolina East Mall the afternoons of March 25 and 26 until 6 p.m. Winners will be announced the evening of March 26.
Twelve Die In N.C. Traffic
By The Associted Press
Twelve people died in North Carolina traffic accidents over the weekend, including five men killed when the car in which they were riding ran off a road and hit a tree, the state Highway Patrol said.
Aln Dane Jimison, 26, of Marion, was driving at high speed in McDowell County, about 4 miles south of Marion, when his ran off N.C. 226 at about 9:30 p.m. Sunday, troopers said Sunday.
The other victims were Terry Lee Hensley, 31, and Billy H. Hensley, 20, both of Old Fort and DonRay Flynn, 23, and Michael Eugene Woody, 23, both of Marion.
At 1:30 a.m. Sunday, Arthur Roebuck, 20, of Swansboro was killed when he was struck by a car as he was standing in the roadway of N.C. 33 about 5 miles east of Greenville.
Gary Dale Winchester, 18, of High Point, was killed at 2:47 a.m. Sunday in his hometown when a car in which he was a passenger lost control at high sp^, striking a utility poll.
Richard Cartee, 30, of Shelby, died after a go^art he was driving was struck by an car on N.C. 2293 5 miles east of Shelby Saturday afternoon.
Billy Ray Stiller, 44, of Albemarle, was killed at 4:45 p.m. Saturday in Stanley
City School Lunch Menus
Menus for Greenville elementary schools this week as announced are:
Tuesday - breakfast: honeybun, fresh apple and milk; lunch: fish portion, french fries, coleslaw, cor-nbread and milk.
Wednesday - breakfast: cheese toast, fruit juice and milk; lunch; spaghetti and meat sauce, green peas, diced pears, roll and milk.
Thursday - breakfast: hot buttered roll, fruit juice and milk; lunch: chili with bans, chilled peaches, tossed salad, combread and milk.
Friday - breakfast: doughnut, fruit juice and milk; lunch; pizza, chilled prunes, green beans, cookie and milk.
County when he drove his car off N.C. 1549, north of his hometown, and overturned.
Troopers said Horace Wellman, 66, of rural Troutman was killed early Saturday when he was hit by a car as he stood in the center of a country road in Iredell county. Troopers said the driver of the car claimed he couldnt see Wellman because of foggy condition. No charges were filed.
Two Virginia men were killed when their cars collided head-on late Friday night about 2 miles east of Eden on N.C. 770, state troopers said. The victims were identified as Keller Smoak, 33, of Danville, Va., and William Ray, 23, of Cascade, Va.
The deaths raised to 206 the number of people killed in traffic accidents in the state this year, compared to the. same number this time last year.
Camping Tour To Be Offered
MARS HILL - A camping tour of 12 Western states, covering 6,000 miles and limited to 26 persons, is being offered by Mars Hill College for the period July 29-Aug. 14.
Among the sites to be visited ^1 be the Badlands, Wind Cave National Park, Mount Rushmore National Memorial, Devils Tower and the Capulin Mountain National Monument. In all, 11 national parks and recreation sites will be visited.
Fee for the tour is $650 which covers all transportation, meals and fees.
More information is available by writing to; Center for Continuing Education, Mars Hill Colege, Mars HUl, N.C., 28754, telephone (704)689-1166.
EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.
Fair and cold Wednesday with lows in 20s (west) to 30s (east). Highs in 40s (mountains) to upper SOs on coast. Chance of precipitation spreading over state Thursday and ending from the west on Friday with temperatures warming.
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l)li-TKln Ham Slices.
Swiss Cheese. Lemire, Tiimalii and Onr Special Dressing (in a Grecian Bun.
PIUS...ALLYOUCANEAT Homcstyle Soup and Salad Bar.
mm
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IMByPaM
Greenville
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- PUBLICIL__
OCCURRH^^S
AFreePreu
We Americans like to think of our nation as the first to champion freedom of the press, and yet, in 1690, our first colonial newspaper was banned after only one issue. Publick Occurrences was written by Benjamin Harris, who had already been pilloried in Britain for not obeying press restrictions there. Harris four-page newspaper stepped on many prominent colonial toes. And so the British governor banned Publick Occurrences, pointing out that it had not been licensed. This week representatives of the Inter American Press Association are meeting in Manzanillo, Mexico to consider how to maintain freedom of the press in the Western Hemisphere a freedom many of us take for granted.
DO YOU KNOW What British poet called for a fi^ press in his essay Aeropagitica in 1640?
FRIDAYS ANSWER - When It is 10 A.M. In Los Angeles, It Is 7 P.M. In Stockholm.
3-21-83 VEC, Inc. 1983
COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) -It was the case of an ill wind that finally blew soine good.
Harry Lemire had nearly forgotten about his tussle with a neighbor about a tree that fell on his fence 10 years ago until he saw a television program recently that gave him second thoughts.
Lemire, 76, a formr Columbus resident and postal employee now living in Franklin, N.H., was watching The Peoples Court one afternoon when he saw a case that sparked memories of his own dispute with Ray Wright, a Columbus contractor who owned the property behind Lemires house.
When high winds dropped a chinaberry tree on Wrights lot onto Lemires fence, Lemire had his lawyer send Wrighi a letter asking for money to repair the fence. Wrights company responded with $100.
But when Lemire saw a similar case on The Peoples Court, the judge ruled that the defendant not liable for damage. It was an act of God, the judge said.
Lemire decided he had been wrong. So he took into account interest and inflation, and sent Wright a check for $600, along with a letter of apology.
I am writing to you to repay you for what it cost you to repair our fence, and to make restitution for cutting down your trees, cluttering your lot with my branches, stumps and shrubbery, thereby causing you extra exi^nse to clean up, and digging up a< few small trees, maybe 10 or 12, Lemire said.
I am doing this to clear my conscience and to get right with God and with
you, Lemire said. Please forgive me and my late wife.
Wright has decided to give the ^ to a church in memory of Lemires wife, Mayiree. The contractor also plans to name a street after Lemire in one of his new housing developments.
Basketball Games Set
The Wilson Breakfast Optimist Club and Wilson County Schools are sponsoring their fourth annual 1983 High School Basketball Tournament April 2,4 and 5. All games will be played in Fleming Stadium in Wilson.
Eight teams will be in volved including Ayden Grifton, Raleigh-Enloe Green Central, North Lenoir Southwest Edgecombe Wilson-Fike, Wilson Beddingfield and Wilson Hunt.
Four games will be played each day for three days beginning at 11 a.m., 2 p.m., 5 p.m. and 7:45 p.m. Tickets are available from any high school participating and will be available before each game at the stadium door.
For more information, call or write Paul Jump, c/o Thurston Motor Lines, Route 4, Box 533A, WUson, N.C., 27893. Phone, 291-2900.
COMING HOME FEZ, Morocco (AP) -Former President Jimmy Carter left Morocco Sunday for Washington after a two-day private visit with King Hassan II Saturday.
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The Dally Reflector. Greenville. N.C.-Monday. March 21. i-is
OUR TEAM IS THE PELICAN5/'RIGHT?WELL, U)E HAVE THIS COSTUME
Saw Some Good From 'III Wind'
BLONDIE
BEETLE BAILEY
'RANK & ERNEST
MY JrP/KE iONB?...
jomewhEre BerwetN
ZERO AHP lf85,OOo.
FlINKY WINKERBEAN
OOMT roraT,1HE-mflCHR'6 ASSOCIATION IS MEETING IDNIGHT TO DISCUSS THE NEGOTIATIONS,HARRV I
ACTUALLY ,m DOING SOMETHING A UTRE DIFFERENT THIS
I'X \ 'MO'*
3-1,
rUE HIRED IW OJN AGENT TO NEGOTIATE CITH THE BOARD!
SHOE
OFflOURSE.IW f
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WMther
Gearing, windy and colder (low in low 30s) tonight; fair and windy Tuesday with high near 50.
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
INSIDE READING
Page 6-Farmpage Page 8-Obituaries Page 12 - Entertainment
102ND YEAR NO. 68
GREENVILLE, N.C.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FiaiON
MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 21, 1983
32 PAGES3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS
Tentative Approval Given New Tax Bills
The Close-Up Photographer
SOUVENIR PHOTO - With a camera bag heavily dangling from his shoulder, a sailor from USS Enterprise takes snap shot of marching demonstrators near the Sasebo naval base in this western Japanese port. Protestors on a small fleet of
fishing boats met the nuclear aircraff carrier, and ashore thousands of leftists turned out, demanding the vessel leave Japan. (APLaserphoto)
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer
Dr. Charles R. Coble, an 11-year veteran of the East Carolina University faculty, has been named acting dean of the School of Education, ECU. Announcement of the appointment was made by Dr. Angelo Volpe, acting vice-chancellor for academic affairs. Coble will assume duties of the office on May 6. He succeeds Dr. Richard Warner, who is taking a one-year sabbatical beginning in May to attend a seminary. Warner will return to ECU next year as a faculty member. Coble will also serve in the capacity of activity coordinator for teacher education at ECU.
We are very pleased to have Coble in this position, Volpe commented. 1 feel that his background, his experience and his abilities will be very helpful in meeting the challenges of a job that requires skills in a number of complex areas. Were looking forward to working with Dr. Coble.
A native of Oakboro, near Albemarle, Coble graduated from Oakboro High School and Mars Hill Junior College before attending UNC-Chapel Hill. At Chapel Hill he earned the AB, MA and Ed
DR. CHARLES R. COBLE degrees, and taught there one year before coming to ECU in 1972.
For the past couple of years. Coble has directed two major projects that involve grants from the National Science Foundation. One grant was through the state university system to disseminate pants to teachers in the field of elementary science throughout North Carolina, Coble explained. "The other National Science
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan today nominated William D. Ruckelshaus for a second tour as chief of the Environmental Protection Agency and the corporate official said he has a free hand to run the beleaguered agency.
Reagan personally announced the nomination and said of Ruckelshaus: No one could bring more impressive credentials... He is the right man for the right job at the right time...
Anne McGill Burford resigned as EPA administrator on March 9 after half-a-dozen congressional panels had launched investigations into EPA affairs.
Ruckelshaus, now a vice president for Weyerhaeuser, the giant timber firm, was t|ie first director of EPA,
under President Nixon. He stood beside Reagan as the president sang his praises as tough, fair and highly competent.
I guess my immediate task is to stabilize the EPA and reinstill the dedication of the p^ple there... and to get on with the enormous job of protecting the environment, Ruckelshaus said.
Reagan said the attacks on* his EPA have been unwarranted and said all 1 ever proposed is that we be fair, not that there be a tilt to favor the business community.
The White House hopes the Ruckelshaus nomination will bring credibility to the much-investigated EPA, and Ruckelshaus, asked how much independence he was
given, told reporters: have a free hand.
T
REFLECTOR
D (Please turn to Page 8)
ffomnf
f'
752-1336
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mall It to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.
PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS REGROUPING Two local women are seeking to get in touch with persons interested in reestablishing a chapter of Parents Without Partners here. PWP was active here for several years and was never dechartered. However, it has not met in many months. Anyone interested in becoming involved in a support system for single parents is invited to meet tonight at 7:30 at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church or Sunday at 2 p.m. at Jarvis. For additional information, call 757-3510 or 753-5577.
^ ^
Daily Reflector Gets Citation
The Daily Reflector was notified today of having been awarded an Associated Press Managing Editors Instant Citation for its assistance to the AP with coverage of the March 2 explosion which leveled part of the Village Green apartment complex here.
The citation notes that within two hours of the explosion, Reflector photographer Tommy Forrest was on the phone to the AP with three photos to transmit. During the next three hours, the newspaper moved three more photos on the network and made its darkroom facilities available to AP photographer Bob Jordan.
The AP also cited the Reflector for quotes from survivors for same-cycle use.
An accompanying citation saluted Tommy Forrest for outstanding cooperation with the Associated Press. Virtually eve^f member of the Reflector new staff participated in the coverage of the Village Green explosion, managing editor Alvin Taylor said, and he praised the quality of coverage provided Reflector readers and other news services during the few hours between the explosion and press time for the afternoon edition.
By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer
The Pitt County Board of Commissioners today gave tentative approval for the use of new tax bills after tax supervisor Jimmie Hardee and tax collector Bill Smith said the county could save several thousand dollars a year.
Hardee told the board that by using a post card bill similar to bills used by utility companies the county could save 5 cent in postage for each bill mailed out and save 2.4 cents for the form itself.
According to Hardee the cost per bill for the present tax notice is 3.4 cents each and the cost for postage is 17 cents.
The post card type bill costs one cent per notice and postage would cost 12 cents. He reported that if the new bill had been
used in November when tax notices were mailed the county could have saved $2,830.
The board approved the use of the new form subject to a review by the county attorney to be certain of its legality.
Commissioners this morning also approved as resolution to be sent to Pitts representatives in the General Assembly asking them to introduce legislation which will do away with Tar River Port Commission.
The commissioners and the GreenvUle City Council held a public hearing on the proposal several months ago and agreed to have the port body abolished.
In other business, the board named Charles Joyner of Farmville to the Pitt County Memorial Hospital Board of Trustees.
Currency Realignment Is Agreed To By Europeans
Dr. C.B. Coble Ruckelshaus Is Named ECU Nominated
Education Dean
By DAVID MASON Associated Press Writer BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - European finance ministers agreed today on a broad reali^ment of their currencies, including a 5.5 percent upward revaluation of the West German mark and a 2.5 percent devaluation of the French franc.
This will enhance the credibility of the European Monetary System, said
West German Finance Minister Gerhard Stolten-berg, who announced the agreement.
The system was thrown into the worst crisis of its four-year history over the weekend when the ministers failed to agree on realigning their currencies, a move needed to end waves of speculation on the currency markets, which in turn aggravated the world re-
Thunderstorm Roars Through; Little Damage
BvMARv^CHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer
A severe pre-dawn thunderstorm that roared through Pitt County today did little damage despite the high winds and half-inch of rain it brought with it. .
Greenville Utilities Weather Station measured .55 inch of rain this morning, most of it falling in a period of an hour. GUC also monitored winds of 30-40 miles per hour during the storm.
GUC Assistant Director Malcolm Green said this morning no unusual problems occurred as a result of the high winds. We didnt have that much trouble, just some scattered fuses blown by lightning around Renston and a circuit that went out at the Stokestown substation, he said.
Green said the wind blew a tree on a line, interrupting power to a not very big area around Clayroot for 3045 minutes.
Ayden Utilities Director Mark Suggs also reported no serious damage to the towns system from the storm. We had one limb down on a wire, but nothing appreciable, he said.
Greenville Public Works Director Mayo Allen said this morning his department had only one report of damage from the high winds. We had a call first thing this morning about a limb down on the street, but weve taken care of that already, he noted.
There was some washouts here and there from the rain but nothing unusual, Allen added.
At 8 a.m. today the level of the Tar River was 12.7 feet on the National Weather Service Gauge, three inches above flood stage. The temperature was 64 degrees Fahrenheit.
The thunderstorms, which produced targe chunks of hail and damaging winds in several southeastern North Carolina counties, prompted the National Weather Service to post severe thunderstorm warnings in Craven, Beaufort, Jones, Duplin and Pender counties.
A special marine warning also was in effect from the mouth of the Cape Fear River to Bogue Inlet and law enforcement authorities in Hyde County reported a tornado touched down in the county early today.
The storms were preceded by a cold front out of central Canada.
Ahead of the front temperatures were in the 60s with southeasterly winds. Behind the front cooler air moved into the state and winds shifted to the west.
Skies will be clear tonight with brisk westerly winds and temperatures dipping into the 30s, according to the National Weather Service forecast. Tuesday will be sunny but cold and windy.
Press Awards To Local Entrants
Daily Reflector Womans Editor Rosalie Trotman and Greenville free-lance writer Patricia Moore were announced Saturday as winners in the North Carolina Press Gubs annual writing contest.
A second-place award in the newspaper layout division was presented to Mrs. Trotman and a first place in short fiction writing and a first place in photography in publications other than newspapers went to Mrs. Moore during the Pre-sswomens meeting held in Chapel Hill this past weekend.
Mrs. Trotmans winning entry was a feature page layout titled Fashions Through the A^ which focused on dresses displaved in the North Carolina Museum of History. It was published September 12, 1982 in The Daily Reflector. Mrs. Trotman is a past president of the organization.
Mrs. Moores winning short story was titled Legacy of Love published in Ladys Circle magazine in November, 1982. The photography series judged as best illustrated an article on shell flowers crafted by Jeanette Whitehurst of
cession.
France at one point threatened to pull out of the system, which could have made matters even worse for its trading partners, including the United States, because it would have led to additional French trade barriers to U.S. and other exports.
After the Europeans failed to reach agreement over the weekend, their eight currencies were allow^ to float free of mandatory central bank controls when the money markets opened today. There was some confusion on, the markets but very little trading.
Otto Poehl, president of West Germanys central bank, said that markets could return to normal following the realignment agreement.
One U.S. dollar bought 7.17 francs today in Paris; at close of trading Friday, the quote was 6.925 francs to the dollar.
The strong West German mark soared today to a record 2.9925 French francs from Fridays fixing at 2.8985. In todays trading the mark was at 2.3975 to the
U.S. dollar.
France had been refusing the other countries proposal that it devalue the franc for the third time since the French Socialists came to power 22 months ago. The West Germans were reluctant to raise the value of the mark because it means the countrys exports will be more expensive.
French Finance Minister Jacques Delors had threatened to yank France out of the European Monetary System if no agreement is reached. The system was created to stabilize currencies of Common Market members.
All Common Market currencies except the British pound and the Greek drachma are in the system. Besides the French franc and the West German mark they are the Dutch guilder, Belgian and Luxembourg francs, Irish pound, Danish kroner and Italian lira.
A realignment in the system normally affects the U.S. dollar, the British pound, the Japanese yen, and other major currencies.
Greenville which appeared in the April, 1982, i?sue of Ladys Circle.
Mrs. Moore is a frequent contributor of feature stories and interviews to the Daily Reflector. She was installed as secretary of the organization during the awards and installation luncheon held Saturday.
Also attending from Greenville was Marianne Baines of the East Carolina University News Bureau.
The meeting was held in Chapel Hill in conjunction with the UNC School of Journalism. Members heard a panel discussion by Brent Hackney of the Governors Press Office, Ted Bonus, UNC Public Information Director, and Albert Morris, vice president of Corporate Communications for Carolina Power ailb Light Company. Bill Goud of the UNC School of Journalism spoke on possible service projects the club could undertake. N.C. Press Club, formerly Womens Press Club of North Carolina, is an affiliate of the National Federation of Press Women.
Pastoral Care Post Is Filled
The Rev. Lewis E. Lint has joined the staff of Pitt County Memorial Hospital as director of the newly established pastoral care department.
The department provides pastoral services to patients, families, staff and students at Pitt Memorial. The services support the holistic approach to care by addressing the emotional, social and spiritual needs of individuals coping with the stresses associated with acute illness and the needs of those caring for the ill and injured. Hospital President Jack Richardson said.
The pastoral care department, consisting of the the director and a secretary, operates on a referral basis. Patients may be referred by nurses, doctors, ministers and families, or they may personally initiate the request for services. Initiators of the service felt it is needed largely because PCMH has patients from throughout a 29-county regional, many of whom are far from their own clergy, and because the hospital, being a referral center, is now constantly dealing with serious medical conditions that produce traumatic experiences that call for a holistic approach in dealing with them.
Lint says he plans to establish an adjunct chaplaincy program to utilize the services of local clergy and provide pastoral care on a 24-hour-a-day, 7-day-a-week basis.
Prior to his appointment. Lint whs a clinical chaplain with the Cumberland County Hospital System Inc. of Fayetteville. He is an ordained elder in the United Methodist Church and received ecclesiastical endorsement as a chaplain by the Division of Chaplains Board of Higher Education and Related Ministries of the United Methodist Church in February, 1982.
He received his undergraduate degree in psychology and sociology from Iowa Wesleyan College in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, and his masters degree in divinity from Boston University in Boston, Mass. He served as resident chaplain at Duke University Medical Center during 1979-81 while completing his residency in the advanced clinical pastoral education program.
He is a member of the College of Chaplains, the Associatkm for Clinical Pastoral Education, and a member of tte executive board and publicity chairman of the North Carolina Chapji^ins Association.
REV. LEWIS E. LINT
TTT"
The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUJe, N.C.-Monday, March 21,1983-nSimon Popular Baseball Commissioner Choice
ByWHLGRIMSLEY AP Special CoireqioQdeiit
If the winds blowing around basebalis exhibition ramns are whisUing the right tune, super-charged WUiiam E. Simon will be tapped to succeed Bowie Kuhn as commissioner.
The question is: WUI BUI Simon take the job if offered? At the moment, he is too busy to think about it. As president of the U. S. Olympic Committee, he is tidying up for tfc 1984 Games, the summer version of which wUl be sUged in Los Angeles.
But BUI Simon is the man a lot of influential people are talking about in the back rooms. He is not a basebaU man, as such, but neither were Kenesaw Mountain Landis and Happy Chandler, two of the best the game has had.
His credentials are imposing - law-trained. Wall Street hardened, former energy czar and Secretary of the Treasury under two Presidents. He is on close speaking terms with economics and organization, two areas in which the game suffers.
He has a reputation of being tough, outspoken, an innovator, a doer and leader. Throughout his career, he has generated authority. Intimates say he is a guy who is quick to detect flaws in an institution and quicker to effect the cure.
A t(^ basebaU executive, reacting to reports that Simon is high on the list of probables for the commissioners post, commented:
All I know is that they say he has guts. Thats what baseball needs if all these owners with their diverging interests and phUosophies are going to be brought together.
The game is in danger. What we need is not necessarily a basebaU man. We need strong, firm leadership. Thats what were short on.
Another commented:
"Simon sounds like a man who could save the owners from themselves. Otherwise, its going to be disastrous.
Baseball seemed to panic when basebaU lost its precious reserve clause, which had bound a player to a club for life
unless sold or traded.
Since then there has been an explosion of salaries which, some owners say, threatens to eat away the basic structure of the game.
Simon was asked if he would turn down the com-missionership if it were proffered.
I havent been approached by Bug Selig (president of the MUwaukee Brewers and chairman of the committee searching for a new commissioner), he said. I have many public and private interests that keep me busy.
The former cabinet member declined to say whether he had been approached by other baseball executives, as reported.
I am very busy getting ready for the Olympics. he said.
Some baseball men, addressing that point, insisted there should be no conflict. The commissionership is just another barrel that could be balanced on a second shoulder.
Simon is known to be an intimate of Edward Bennett WUliams, president and chairman of the Baltimore Orioles.
and Jack Kent Cooke, majority stockholder in the Washington Redskins football team. He helped orchestrate Williams move from Wa^ington to the Orioles and Cookes abandonment of Los Angeles for the nations capital.
Simon has another admirer and friend in George Steinbrenner, the impulsive owner of the New York Yankees although Steinbrenner has expressed no personal preference for a successor to Kuhn.
Simon is son of an insurance broker and grandson of of a French-immigrant textUcKlying manufacturer. He served with the Army in Japan in 1948, took pre-law at Lafayette CoUege in Pennsylvania, specializing in economics, and ventured into Wall Street upon graduation in 1952.
His political career has been meteoric. He became director of the Federal Energy Office in 1973 after the Arab nations stunned the world by cutting off the oil supply He was appointed Secretary of the Treasury by President Nixon and stayed m the post under President Ford until the inauguration of President Carter. SCOREBOARD
NCAA Tourmonent
MIDWEST REGIONAL Flnt Round Thundny,Mrchl7 At Houston
Maryland 52 Tenn.Chattanooga 51 Lamar 73. Alabama 50
Friday, Morch 18 AtLousivUle,Ky Georgetown a, Alcorn St. 63 Iowa 64, Utah St. 59
Socood Round Saturday, March 19 At Houston
Villanova60,Lamar58 Houston 60, Maryland 50
Sunday, March 10 AtLoulsvlUe,Ky Memphis St. 66, Georgetown 57 lowa^, Missouri 63 At Kansas aty. Mo.
StnHlnl
Friday, March 25 Iowa, 21.9, vs. Vfllanova, 23-7 Memphis St., 23-7, vs. Houston, 28-2 FinaU
Sunday, March 27
Iowa or Villanova vs. Houston or Memphis St.
WEST REGIONAL First Round Thursday, March 17 At Boise, Idaho Washington St. 62. Weber St. 52 Utah 52, Illinois 49
Friday, March 18 At Corvallis, Ore.
Princeton 56, Oklahoma St. 53 North Carolina St. 69, Pepperdlne, 67, 20T
Second Round Saturday, March 19 At Boise, Idaho Virginia 54, Washington St. 49 Utah 67, UCLA 61
Sunday, March 20 At Corvallis, Ore.
North Carolina St. 71, Nev.-Las Vegas
7
Boston College 51, Princeton 42 At Ogden, Utah
Thunday, March 34
North Carolina St., 22-9, vs. Utah, 18-13 Virginia, 284, vs. Boston College, 25-6 Finals Saturday, March 28 Utah or North Carolina St. vs. Virginia or Boston College
Final Four AtAlhuquerque,N.M.
Semifinals Saturday, April 2
Midwest vs. Mideast East vs. West
Boston 46 20 .697 11
New Jersey 42 26 .618 16
New York 36 31 .537 21'^
Washington 30 36 .455 27
Central Division MUwaukee 44 24
AUanta 36 32
Detroit 30 38
Chicago 24 44
Cleveland 17 50
Indiana 17 50
WESTCRNCONFERENCE Midwest Division San Antonio 43 25
Denver 37 32
Dallas 34 35
Kansas City 33 34
Utah 25 43
Houston 12 55
Pacific Division
TANK FM4MARA
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by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
"Sir-^
UK I rotP TMe .
lMPiVlPUAU(3AMK.Afo MU&T-fOSe 9iriiATiOfJe).
Boston 90, Cleveland 79 Philadelphia 121, Detroit 119 Milwaukee 107, New Jersev 92 Los Angeles 117, Dallas 110 SeatUe 128, Chicago 116
Mondays Games No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games Philadelphia at New York Atlanta at Indiana Utah at Washington Boston at Milwaukee Detroit at Chicago Golden State at Dallas Cleveland at Kansas City Phoenix at Denver Houston at San Diego San Antonio at Portland Seattle at Los Angeles
NHL Stondings
By The/ wide
Monday,
NBA Stondings
By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE AUanticDivlsloo
W L Pet. GB x-PhUadelphia 57 9 .864 -
Associated Press rales Conference Patrick Division W L T GF GA
8 296 220
12 279 212 14 281 255
9 279 264 8 240 366
13 203 208 Adams Dlvlaion 46 18 9 300 203
13 325 265 12 289 262 11 315 312 7 234 368 (Conference I Division x-Chicago 44 20 9 307 249
x-Minnesota 38 19 16 297 254
x-PhUphia 45 21
x-NY Isles 38 24
x-Washington37 22 x-NY Rang 31 32
Plttsburi New Jersey
y-Boston
x-Montreal
x-Buffalo
x-Quebec
Hartford
17 49 14 46
38 23 36 27 31 32 17 49 CampbeUC NoStol
Pts
98
St . Louis 23 36 15 281 289
Toronto 23' 37 12 265 302
Detroit 20 39 15 244 305
SmytheDivtsloo y-Edmonton 43 20 II 390 295
Calgary 29 33 12 297 294
Vancouver 28 34 11 274 285
Winnipeg 29 37 8 276 308
LosAngHes 26 35 11 275 313
x-clinchedplayolfspot y-clinched division title
Saturday's Games Calgary2, Boston 2, tie Bllalo 6, Montreal 4 Edmonton 9, Detroit 7 NY Islanders 9, Philadelphia 2 Minnesota 3, St. Louis 3, tie Pittsburgh 7, Los Angeles 4 Sundays Games Winnipeg 3, Quebec 2 Chicago 7, Toronto 3 Montreal 7, Buffalo 4 Washington 3, Philadelphia 2 Calgary 2. Hartford 2, tie Boston 4, New York Rangers 0 Vancouver6. Detroit3
Monday's Games NY Rangers at New Jersey Edmonton at Toronto Chicago at Minnesota Pittsburgh at Vancouver
Tuesdays Games St. Louis at Hartford Boston at NY Islanders Los Angeles at Montreal
USFL Stondings
By The Associated Press AUantIc W L T Pet. PF PA Philadelphia 2 0 0 1.000 38 7
Boston 2 1 0 .667 57 44
Washington 0 3 0 .000 26 67
NewJersey 0 3 0 .000 24 77
Tampa Bay Birmingham Chicago Michigan
Central
3 0 0 1.000 72 33
1 1 0 . 500 27 23
333 70 53
333 43 59
Arizona Los Angeles OaklarS Denver
1 2
1 2 0
Pacific 2 I 0
2 1 0
2 I 0
12 0 SaturdayGames Oakland 33, Michigan 27 Arizona 21, Los Angeles 14 Sunday^ Games Tampa Bay 32, New Jersey 9 Boston 19, Washington 16 Denver 16, Chicago 13
Mondays Game Philadelphia at Birmingham Saturday, March 36 Arizona at Birmin^am
Sifflday,Hiurch27 Boston at New Jersey Los Angeles at Chicago Michigan at Washinrion Tampa Bay at PhUaoelphia Monday, March 28 Oakland at Denver
NAIA Tournament
By The Asaociated Press AU Games at
Mo. 45
Salem, W. Va. 65, Walsh, Ohio63 Wis.-Stevens Point 77, Point Loma, Calif. SO
Tuesday, March IS
Saginaw Valley, Mich. 65, Lincoln, Pa
.667 51 67 59
667 54 39 Charleston, S.C. 67, St. John's, Minn 43
867 71 47 Panhandle St., Okla. 68, Norih Georgia
333 30 47 67J0T
Texas Wesleyan 72, Point Park, Pa. 55
_. .. . .. _ .
71
Kansas a^. Mo. Mondb
i'i
Maine 49
Arena
Round
West Virginia
ly, March 14
Wesleyan 65, Husson,
Carson-Newman, Tenn. 114, Northern St.,S.D.81 College of Santa Fe, N.M. 76, Cumberland, Ky. 65 Liberty Baptist, Va, 77, Catawba, N.C.
67
Chicago St. 76 Tri-State, Ind. 65 St Thomas Aquinas, N Y. 56, Drury,
St, Marys, Texas 81, Kearney St., Neb.
Fort Hays St., Kan. 71, Southern Arkansas 65 Chaminade, Hawaii 90, Ala.-Huntsville
72
Loras, Iowa 85, William Carey, Miss. 78 Second Round Wednesday, March 16 West Virginia Wesleyan 87, Chicago St
70
Liberty Baptist, Va. 64, Wis.-Stevens Point 62
Charleston, S.C. 64, Panhandle St., Okla. 62, OT College of Santa Fe, N.M. 71, Texas Wesleyan 65 Carson-Newman 75, St Marys, Texas
70
Fort Hays St., Kan. 72, St Thomas Aquinas, N.Y. 67 Chaminade, Hawaii 82, Saginaw Valley, Mich, 65 Loras, Iowa 67, Salem, W. Va. 65 Thursday, March 17 Quarterfinals West Virginia Wesleyan 84, Carson-Newman 78 Charleston, S.C., 67, College of Santa
Fe N M.,62 Chaminade, Hawaii 63. Liberty Baptist Va.,60
Fort Hays State 74, Loras, Iowa, 71 Friday, March 18 Semifinals Charleston, S.C. 66, Chaminade Hawaii. 65 W Va Wesleyan 71, Fort Hays St 56 Saturday, March 19 Championship Charleston, S C 57, W Va Wesleyan 53 Third Place Fort Hays St. 85, Chaminade, Hawaii 76
NIT Tournament
Vanderbilt 79, East Tennessee State 74
Wednesday, March 16
South Carolina 100, Old Dominion 90
Iona 90, St. Bonaventure 76
New Orleans 99, Louisiana State 94 OT
Texas Christian 64, Tulsa 62
DePaul 76, Minnesota 73
Oregon SUte 77, Idaho 59
Fresno State 71, Texas-El Paso 64
Thursday, March 17 Virginia Tech 85, William & Mary 79 Wake Forest 87, Murray State 80 Nebraska 72, Tulane 65 Mississippi 87, Alabama State. 75 Northwestern 71, Notre Dame 57
Friday, March 18 Michigan St 72, Bowling Green 71 Arizona St. 87, Fullerton State, 83
Second Round
Monday, March 21
Virginia Tech, 23-10, at South Carolina, 21-8
^^Fresno State, 21-10, at Michigan State,
Wake Forest, 18-11, at Vanderbilt, 19-13 South Florida, 22-10, at Mississippi 19-9 Iona, 22-8, at Nebraska, 20-9 Northwestern, 17-12, vs DePaul 1811 at Rosemont, 111.
Texas Christian, 2M0, at Arizona Slate 18-12
^^.New Orleans. 23^, at Oregon State,
Quarterfinals ^ Thursday, March 24 and Friday, March
Semifinals Monday, March 28
Championship Wednesday, March 30
Transactions
By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Sent Jeff Williams, outfielder, and Ken Dixon and Mark Brown, pitchers, to their minor league camp .NEW yGRK YANKEES-Sent Steve Balboni, first baseman and Ray Fontenot to minor league camp for reassignment TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Snt Colin .McLaughlin, John Cerutti, Don Cooper and Dennis Howard, pitchers. Ron Shepherd. outfielder, to Syracuse of the International League Sent Dave Shipanoff, picther and Ken Kinnard, outlielder, to Knoxville of the Southern League Sent Dave Stenhouse and Jay Schroeder, catchers to the minor league camp for reassignment HOCKEY National Hockey League NEW JERSEY DEVIL?-Recalled Garry Howatt, left wing, from Wichita of the Central Hockey League COLLEGE MARIETTA-Named Michael Hollway head football coach.
By The Associated Press The dates, sites, times and pairings lor the 45th annual National Invitation Tournament;
First Round Tuesday. March 15
South Florida 81, Fordham 69
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When it comes to improving your lifestyle, our First Class Consumer Loans can put you in the drivers seat helping you make those big purchases when you need them. And our rates and terms are easy to live with.
Whats more, were based right here in -Pitt County. So your loan applications are processed quickly, locally. To apply, visit a friendly First Federal loan counselor... because you deserve First Class.
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GREENVILLE: 324 5 Evans St /758-2145 514 E Greenville Blvql /756-652S AYDEN: 107 W 3rd St /746-3043 FARMVILLE: 128 N Mam St '753-4139 GRIFTON: 118 Queen'St '524-4128
BEFSE
In The Area
Doctors Day Is Proclalmod
Mayor Percy R. Cox has proclaimed March 30 to be Doctors Day in the City of Greenvle in appreciation of the outstanding service rendered by the members of this profession.
The Womans Auxiary of the Pitt County Medical Society is ^nsoring an annual observance for doctors and their families.
Beginners Bridge Lessons Offered
The GreenvUle Recreation and Parks Department wUl offer beginner bridge lessons starting Monday, March 28, in the Jaycee Park Administration Building, 2000 Cedar Lane. Cla^s will meet on Monday nights from 8 to 10 oclock for a period of ten weeks. Cost for the course is $25 per person and $40 per couple. Connie Bright will be the instructor. To pre-register, cU 752-4137, extension 202.
Senior Games To Be Staged
The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department will take part in the April 27 Senior Games ^nsored by the Wilmington Parks and Recreation Department in Conjunction with the N.C. Division of Aging Office and the Pitt County Community Schools Program.
There will be a ^ registration fee which includes a T-shirt. Deadline for entries is Tuesday, April 12. Entry forms can be had by contacting Lesley Ball, P.O. Box 202, Greenville, N.C., 27834 or by phone, 752-4137.
Age categories for participants will be: 55-59, 60454, 65-69, 70-74,75-79, and 80 plus. If less than five participants register for each category, categories will be combined. Awards will be presented to first, second, and third place winners in each category.
Four events have been scheduled. These are in swimming, track, tennis and golfing. The swimming event will be held at UNC-Wilmington, the track and tennis events at Legion Stadium, and the golf event at the citys municipal golf course.
Three Sunday Wrecks Reported
An estimated $5,100 damage resulted from a series of three traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Sunday.
Police said heaviest damage resulted when a car driven by Catherine Daniels Johnson of 107 Greenfield Blvd. collided with two parked cars on Woodside Drive, 250 feet south of the Fireside Drive intersection.
Investigators said the Johnson car ran off the road and struck a fence and two cars owned by Herbert Arthur Lee of 108 Woodside Drive.
Damage was estimated at $1,000 to the Johnson car, $600 to each of the Lee cars, and $300 to the fence.
Tmothy Elliott Perkins of Red Bam Trailer Park, was charged with failing to reduce his speed enou^ to avoid an
McMillar car and $2,500 to the Coq>er auto.
A 9:54 a.m. mishap at the intersection of Greene Street and Gum Road, involved a truck driven by Norman Jesse Paramore of 1310 vanDyke St. and a car derated by T wyn Wright of Route 1, Robersonville.
Paramore was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety by officers who estimated damage at $300 to the truck and $700 to the car.
Rape, Assault Is Charged
Greenville police Saturday night arrested a 19-year-old Robert McKinley Crawford of Apartment 4, 2101 Montclair Drive, on rape and assault with a deadly weapon charges.
Chief Glenn Cannon said Crawford allegedly entered the home of a 40-year-old woman about 11 p.m., produced a knife, ordered her to disrobe, then raped her.
Cannon said aftr the attack, Crawford told the woman he would have to kill her, then severely beat her and choked her until she passed out.
The victim knew Crawford, and he was taken into custody shortly after the attack, Cannon said.
Damage Heavy In Collision
An estimated $4,700 damage resulted from a three-vehicle collisions investigated Friday by Greenville police.
Officers identified the drivers of the cars involved as John Michael VanWagenen of 2606 Jackson Drive, Lesley Ann Falconer of 118 Greenwood Drive, and Barry John Cousler of Havelock.
Police, who said the coUlslon occurred about 7:07 p m on Cotanche Street, 50 feet south of the Ninth Street intersection charge(KtousIer with driving under the influence.
Damage from the collision was estimated at $2,800 to the 1 Falconer car, $1,600 to the Cousler velricle and $0 to the VanWagenen car.
Charges Are Made By Police
Greenville police Friday ni^t arrested two 16-year old Route 2, FarmviUe, youths in connection with two break-ins here.
Chief Glenn Cannon said officers charged Tony Frizzell with breaking and entering an auto, after he was picked up on Dickinson Avenue a short time after employees reported a car parked at Margauxs Restaurant at 706 South Evans St.,
The DtUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Monday, March 21.198S-5
broken into about 9:25 p.m.
The chief said after Frizzell was taken into custody, James Gifton Smith, a friend and neighbor of Frizzells, was charged with possession of stolen property when police found seven tepes and a signal equalizer, in a car driven by Smith.
The Items, valued at $139, were allegedly taken earlier in the night from a vehicle parked at Belk Dorm on the East Carolina University campus. Cannon said
Beauty Pageant Set At Conley
The Miss D.H. Conley Beauty Pageant will be held April 1 in the D.H. Conley auditorium.
The pageant is being sponsored by the D.H. Conley National Honor Society and ,will begin at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are being sold in advance and are available at the school office. Tickets will also be sold at the door. Money raised by the pageant will benefit the National Honor Society and its projects.
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NOTICE OF BIDS FOR
RESIDENTIAL REHABILITATION GRANT WORK TOWN OF WINTERVILLE
Notice is hereby given that the Town of Winterville will receive and open bids on March 28, 1983 at 11:00 ajn, in the Winterville Municipal Building for the rehabilitation of 6 dwelling units. This work Is funded through the State of North Carolina FY 1982 Small Cities Community Development Block Grant Program.
Instructions for bidders may be obtained Monday through Friday during normal office hours from the Town Clerk at the Town of Winterville Municipal Building.
The Town of Winterville is an Equal Opportunity Employer and encourages bidding by small and minority businesses.
Mental
Health
Perspectives
ADOLESCENT CHEMICAL DEPENDENCY
by Porter Shaw Subetancc Abuac Program Director
Adolaacenca la. oi coarae. a ama ol aapartmaaUOoB. Maay youBf paoplc may bagia to drink alcohol to (acl vom up and
lot lha thrill ol H. In a laffc number oi adolaacaata the aaparimanuaon may and than. For othara. however. Oiia oparimentatlon rrith alcohol may ptograaa to an lacreaalntly rcgnlai uae. daily preoccupation, and Hnally dfliandaticv. 20X ol tacnapcta who drink, accotdtaig to raceat raporu. have rianWcant ptoblama with alcohol Cbamlcal dopcndeacy may be defined aa lha overwhelming urge- to uae aubatancaa ragardleaa ol the conaeqaencaa. Thia chemical depaadency elfacta die enttn family, which than atdlara from progreaalve iUaaaa much aa a child who miauaea alcohol Of othar druga auHara bom a proyaaaiva IUaaaa. In the early atagea of a chUd-a chemical uae. parenta deny that thato chUd haa a problem (|uat aa the child wUI deny that he or ahe haa a pfoMam). Thia may be deacribed aa amotkmal denial. and liant.l la a
aerloua problam In HaaH. Parenta amy bagin to look lor behavioral or paychologlcal cauaea rathar lhaa auminiag the core oi the problem. Without poaMve intatvaaUou, lha iamiliea' iUnaaa. aa weU aa that oi the child, provaaaaa. Then te gaaatally a ataga of aagar and aaU-plty. Parenta may try to bargain nrith thab child by aaylng. lor example. 'U you atop OUa behavlot. we wlU let you have the car on Saturday night" Theae attempla la exert control can apUt iamUlaa rW down the middle One parent may be in the bargaining mood while the other la In a HghOng mood. At dilo point the family may become fruatntad and depnaaad and reqube treatment. Ufdoctunatcly. moat famUlaa of adoiaacent chemically dependence reach Oila pobit befon t^ aeek outaidcbdp.
Next week our diacuaaioa oi chearical dependency In adolcacenta wUl continue urith a queattonnaln for young people to examine tbeta relatiooahlp with alcohol or other dnige.
If you have a question you would like for us to answer through this column, please submit to Community Services, Pitt County Mental Health Center. 306 Stantonsburg Road, Greenville, or call Community Services. 752-0119.
accident following investigation of a i;15 a.m. collision at the intersection of Tenth and Elm Streets.
Officers said the Perkins car collided with a vehicle driven by Joseph Harold Leonard Jr. of Kings Row Apartments, causing an estimated $1,000 damage to each of the tiiro cars.
Trucks driven by Edward Carol Evans of Route 6, Washington, and Lester Moye of 300 Cadillac St. collided about 3:48 p.m. on Memorial Drive, 50 feet north of the Chestnut Street intersection, causing $400 damage to the Evans vehicle and $200 damage to the Moye truck.
Two Collisions Investigated
An estimated $5,500 damage resulted from two collisions investigated by Greenville police Saturday.
Officers said heaviest damage resulted from a 12:10 a.m. collison on N.C. 11 a quarter-mile north of the Greenfield ? Boulevard intersection, involving cars driven by Donnie McMillar of Route 2, Walstonburg, and Ja^r Cooper Jr. of Route 1, Greenville.
Damage from the collision was estimated at $2,000 to the
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Arrest Trio In Cabbie's Death
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Charlotte police have arrested three men and charged them with murder and armed robbery in the stabbing death of Charlotte cab driver Kenneth Knutson.
Police identified those arrested as Larry L. Sings, 25, Melvin Moore, 29, and Richard Brown, 25. All three are being held without bond in Mecklenburg County Jail.
Police also have signed warrants against a fourth man, 22-year-old Douglas Collins. He is also charged with murder and armed robbery in the case.
Wanted posters bearing Collinss photograph were distributed Sunday, but police were still searching for him.
Views On Dental Health
An IRA, you see, is more than a fast-growing retirement fund. Its a tax shelter.
Now, the tax-wise have been taking advantage of tax shelters for years, contributing money to charity, for example, so they can take big deductions and pay smaller income taxes.
Well, we' think its about time working p^ple got a piece 9! the action. And they can with BB&Ts Individual Retirement Account, a tax shelter thats yours when you make a contribution to the charity closest to your heart: you and your family.
YOU CAN DEDUCT AS MUCH AS $2,000
A YEAR FROM YOUR GROSS INCOME.
Youre allowed to invest as much as $2,000 a year in your IRA ($2,250 if youre married and only one of you is a wage earner, $4,000 if you bom are). And every penny is deductible. Which means big tax savings. If youre in the 25% tax bracket, for example, and you and your working spouse put $4,0(X) into an IRA, your refund check from Uncle Sam will be $1,000 fatter than it would be otherwise.
YOU DONT EVEN PAY TAX ON THE INTEREST YOU EARN UNTIL YOU RETIRE.
Which is nice, because at BB&T, youll be earning at a rate thats tied to money market rates, with a guaranteed minimum of 8%. Whats more, we don t compound that interest annually or quar-
COMPARISON OF INTEREST COMPOUNDING METHODS
Amount
Net Gain
Deposited
Daily
Annua) With Dailv
Years $2,000/Year CompoundiriK* Compoundinu* CompoundinK
10
$20,000
$ 32,097
$ 31,291 $ 806
20
$40,000
$104,323
$ 98,846 $ 5,477
30
$60,000
$266,846
$244,692 $22,153
40
$80,000
$632,553
$559,562 $72,991
Based on 8% interest rale.
Kenneth T. PerkiM, D.D.S.P.A.
ELECTRIC TOOTHBRUSHES
Electric toothbrushes are schedule, It Is well worth
the 20th centurys answer the investment.
to toothbrushers elbow." -p. ^ i ..x.. * ll .
Q X j ^ II The electric toothbrush
But you can do ust as well .
-ru . , definitely a boon to
manually. Their main .. j
I X 1' *u X II handicapped persons who
advantage is that all you . u u xl . l
. X j . , xu cannot brush their teeth
have to do is apply the ... . .
w L X X xL j xu a regu ar hand
brush to your teeth and the ^
brush does all the work.
Another advantage of The late president,
the electric toothbrush if its Lyndon Johnson was sold
novelty value. It Is a on electric toothbrushes,
mechanical dvice and He used to present them
children are more likely to (engraved with the
develop regular brushing presidential seal) as gifts. I
habits because of their give these toothbrushes to
fascination with a brush friends, LBJ told his
that does the work". If an biographer, Doris Kearns, electric toothbrush then I know they will think encourages the hahit of of me every morning, and
brushing teeth on a regular every night."
Frpr*d a public mvlce to promoig batter dental health. From the officei oi: Kenneth T. Perkin, O.D.S.P.A. Evan* St., Phone 752-5126.
OtMBellk 752-5126
Vanceboro 244-1179
terly as some banks do. M compound daily, which can make a difference of thousands of dollars in interest over the years.
no tax I
between 59^^_____.............
probably be in a lower income tax bradet and, therefore, required to pay less.
YOU CAN BUILD UP ENOUGH IN YOUR IRA OVER THE YEARS TO RETIRE RICH.
Kyou start an IRA in your early thirties, a $2,000-a-year investment, with all the interest it earns, will turn into a really tidy sum by the time youre sbcty-five. And even if you were bom too soon to start that early or cant afford an investment that large, youll still pile up a sizeable retirement fund.
Call or visit any BB&T office and get your IRA started before another day goes by. After all, how c^ you pass up a plan that gives you big bucks in the September of your lue and a bigger refund check every April?
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Member Federal Depnil Insurance Corporatnn
Sports the daily reflectorClassified
MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 21, 1983NCSU Advance To Semifinals
By WILLIAM R. BARNARD AP Sports Writer
Utah and North Carolina State meet Thursday night in the final fitting session for this years glass slipper at the NCAA basketball tournament.
The Wolfpack challenged the Utes for the Cinderella tag Sunday with a last-gasp 71-70 victory over sixth-ranked Nevada-Las Vegas. Utah and North Carolina State meet in the West Regional semifinals at Ogden, Utah.
Of the 16 teams remaining in the national championship tournament, 13 are seeded, with Iowa, Utah and North Carolina State the only unseeded teams.
Utah, whose 18-13 record is now the worst in the tournament, beat No. 7 UCLA Saturday after opening the tournament with an upset triumph over Illinois.
In other games Sunday, St. Johns beat Rutgers 66-55 and Ohio State defeated Syracuse 79-74 in the East Regional, Memphis State ousted Georgetown 66-57 and Iowa swamped Missouri 77-63 in the Midwest, Louisville toppled Tennessee 70-57 and Indiana whipped Oklahoma 63-49 in the Mideast and Boston College stopped Princeton 51-42 in the West.
As Atlantic Coast Conference champions. North Carolina State appears to have more solid credentials than Utah, but the Wolfpack was only 17-10 in the regulr season before three straight victories in the ACC tournament gave it an automatic berth in the NCAA.
North Carolina State edged Pepperdine 69^7 in the first round before upsetting Nevada-Las Vegas on 6-foot-ll center Thurl Baileys rebound basket with four seconds left. Bailey tipped in the rebound of a missed 20-footer by Dereck Whittenburg to give North Carolina State its fifth close victory in a row.
When it came off the rim I tried to tip it in the first time, Bailey said. It rolled off and there were a couple of hands on it, so I grabbed it and, as I ,was falling back, I just threw it off the board and it dropped.
V^at can I say? It was a one-pointer. Thats five of those close ones in a row for us, Wolfpack Coach Jim Valvano said. I said it would be'a one-point game and it was. Theres luck involved in this, too. I call it the luck factor. Dont discount it.
Nevada-Las Vegas led 52-40 with 11:40 remaining, but the
Runnin Rebels allowed the Wolfpack to come back by missing several layups and free throws.
We havent been a good free throw team all year and it came back to hurt us in a big game, said UNLV Coach Jerry Tarkanian.
Nevada-Las Vegas, UCLA and No. 10 Missouri are the only seeded teams (and the only ones in the Top Ten) who arent among the 16 who advanced to re^onal semifinals with victories on Saturday and Sunday.
Greg Stokes scored 22 points as Iowa easily handled the Tigers in the Midwest Regional at Louisville to advance to the next round against No. 13 Villanova at Kansas City of Friday.
In the first game of the Midwest doubleheader, Keith Lee hit eight of 11 shots from the field and had 28 points and 15 rebounds to lead 17th-ranked Memphis State past No. 20 Georgetown. Georgetowns sophomore star, Patrick Ewing, had 24 points and nine rebounds, but he was in foul trouble for much of the game and also missed four dunk shots.
Memphis State meets top-ranked Houston in the other Kansas City semifinal.
Third-ranked St. Johns, the top seed in the East, got 24 'points from Chris Mullin to defeat Rutgers despite a shaky first half at Hartford, Conn. The Redmen fell behind 26-19 while shooting only 39.4 percent in the first 15 minutes, but then went ahead 29-28 at halftime despite 74-percent shooting by Rutgers.
Our offense wasnt going, but our defense kept us in there, Mullin said, referring to two steals by Billy Goodwin that led to baskets during the St. Johns comeback.
In Sundays East opener, Tony Campbell scored eight of his 17 points on rebound baskets in a span of 7:11 in the second half to lead Ohio State over Syracuse.
In the East Regional semifinals at Syracuse on Friday, St. Johns meets Georgia and Ohio State faces North Carolina.
In the Mideast doubleheader at Evansville, Ind., Charles Jones and Lancaster Gordon scored 18 points apiece to lead No. 2 Louisville past Tennessee, the 30th victory in 34 games for the Cardinals, including the last 14 in a row. An 11-2 spurt midway throu^ the second half put Louisville in control after Tennessee cut a
seven-point halftime deficit to
45-43.
I thought we did a good job of keeping the ball out of Ellis hands, Louisville Coach Denny Crum said. Dale Ellis, an All-American, was held to 13 points - 10 under his average.
Fifth-ranked Indiana got 22 points on lO-of-17 shooting from Randy Wittman and effectively used delay tactics in the final 14 minutes to beat Oklahoma.
Louisville takes on Arkansas and Indiana meets Kentucky in the Mideast semifinals at Knoxville, Term., on Thursday.
After the North Carolina State upset of Nevada-Las Vegas, Boston College held Princeton without a field goal in the first 14^ minutes of the second half to turn a close game its way. Jay Murphy scored 17 points for the 11th-ranked Ea^es, who led 41-30 after the Tigers missed their first 12 shots from the floor after halftime.
Boston College meets Virginia, the top-seeded team in the West Regional, in the other half of Thursdays doubleheader.
Caught In A Pack
NevaaaXas Vegas guard Sidney Green is caught between North Carolina State defenders Lorenzo
Charles (left) and Cozell McQueen during their NCAA regional game Sunday in Corvallis, Oregon. State won the game 71-70. (AP Lasei-photo)
Bailey's Follow-Shot Lifts Pack
New Orleans Builds Reputation With NIT
By The Associated Press When youre trying to build a basketball reputation at a litUe-known school, you dont complain when the National Invitation Tournament ships you halfway across the country.
We will go anywhere and play anyone at any time, says Don Smith, whose New Orleans team will play Oregon State Monday ni^t in Corvallis, Ore. This is a chance for us to get exposure in another part of the country. Smiths Privateers, 23-6, didnt have to go far for their first victory, traveling up to Baton Rouge to beat Louisiana State, 99-94 in overtime. That gave them some prstige in their home state; now theyre seeking it at a national level.
One coach told me they may be the most underrated club in the country, said Lanny Van Eman, an assistant coach at 19-10 Oregon State, which downed Idaho 77-59 in its first-round game.
They dont have any obvious weakness.
In other NIT quarter-final games Monday night, Iona will be at Nebraska; Virginia Tech at South Carolina, Fresno State at Michigan State, Wake Forest at Vanderbilt, South Florida at Mississippi, Northwestern vs. DePaul at Rosemont, III., and
Texas Christian at Arizona State
Theyre an interesting ballclub and they play under control, Oregon State Coach Ralph Miller says of New Orleans, to which Smith concurs: we do a little bit of everything.
The Privateers are led by Mark Pettaway, a 6-7 senior who averages 17.8 points and 7.6 rebounds a game. Charlie Sitton, one of the few holdovers from last years NCAA quarterfinalists, leads the Beavers with an 19-point average.
But Carl Tacy of Wake Forest isnt as happy to be on the road. He thought the Deacons would get to play at home after going to Murray State.
Wake Forest beat Murray 87-80 while Vanderbilt was downing East Tennessee at home, where it has a 14-2 record this year. But Vandy Coach C.M. Newton says, Well have to play better than we did against East Tennessee.
Theres an interesting local rivalry in Rosemont, where traditional national power DePaul plays traditional Big 10 doormat Northwestern, which won its first post-season game ever last week by trouncing Notre Dame, 71-57 at the Horizon. DePaul, also
playing in Rosemont, Minnesota 76-73.
edged
CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) -Thurl Baileys rebound basket with four seconds left, gave No. 16 North Carolina State a 71-70 upset victory over No. 6 Nevada-Las Vegas Sunday in the second round of the NCAA West Regional basketball tournament.
Bailey, a 6-foot-ll senior, brought the Wolfpack back from a 12-point deficit in the final 11:40 of the game. He scored 17 of his team-high 25
points in the final 11 minutes of the game.
N.C. State, 22-10 and winner of four straight extremely close games, plays Utah in the West Regional semifinals Thursday night in Ogden, Utah.
Boston College met Prin-
Davidson Downs Lady Pirate Netters
Sports Calendar
Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Today's Sports BasebaU
Farmville Central at Bed-dingfield(3;30p.m.) .
East Carolina at N.C. State (3 p.m.)
Edenton at Roanoke
AhoskieatWilliamston
Sonball
Farmville Central at Bed-dingfleld (3:30 p.m.)
AJwskleatWllliamston
Edenton at Roanoke Track
Greene Central at North Lenoir (4 p.m.)
Bertie at Farmville Central (3:30 p.m.)
Rose at Rocky Mount girls (3:30 p.m.)
Bertie at Farmville Central girls (3:30p.m.)
Roanoke, Willlamslon at Ahoskie
Roanoke, Wllllamston at Ahoskie girls
Golf
Rocky Mount, Ayden-Grlfton at Rose (1p.m.)
Tennis
Atlantic Christian at East Carolina (3p.m.)
Wllllamston aiWashlni
Tueaday
(3
maiWashlnAo
sidays^rts
BaMbafi
JamesvUle at Aurora Conley at Ayden-Grlfton (4 p.m.)
Greene Central at North Lenoir (4p.m.)
6)nley at Greene Centra JV (4 p.m.)
East Carolina at Campbell
p.m.)
Roanoke at Plymouth (4 p.m.) Wllllamston at Bertie (3:30 p. m.) Greenville Christian at Bethel (4
p.m.)
North Pitt at West Craven (3:30 p.m.)
Columbia at Bear Grass SoftbaU
Greene Central at North Lenoir East Carolina at North Carolina -2(3p.m.)
Roanoke at Plymouth (4 p.m.) (jonley at Ayden-Grlfton (3:30 p.m.)
Wllllamston at Bertie Greenville Christian at Bethel (4 p.m.)
JamesvUle at Aurora Rocky Mount at North Pitt (4 p.m.)
Columbia at Bear Grass Tennis
East Duplin at Greene Central (4 p.m.)
Hunt at Rose (3:30 p.m.)
Roanoke at WUliamston Mattamuskeet at Bear Grass G<df
Parrott Academy at Ayden-Grtfton (1:30 p.m.)
TrKk
Conley, Greene Central at North Lenoir (3:30 p.m.)
Northern Nash at Rose
For All Your F encing Needs CALL 752-2736
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The East Carolina University womens tennis team suffered its fifth loss in seven outings Sunday as Davidson claimed a 6-3 victory at the Minges Coliseum courts.
ECUs Janet Russell defeated Eleanor Knobloch 6-3, 6-2 in singles and teamed with Laura Radford for a 7-5, 6-3 victory over Sue Hilton and Meg Short.
The Lady Pirate tandem of Katherine Tolson and Debbie Christine defeated Katherine
Frye Takes Super-Light KICK Title
LAS VEGAS Dale Frye of Greenville won t. nine-round unanimous decision over Mexicos Gamma Costa to take the Budweiser Superfights KICK Association super lightwieght title at Caesars Palace. ^
Greenvilles Curtis Crandell stunned light-heavyweight champion Don Wilson twice before a round kick to the head opened a cut over Crandells eye to force the referee to stop the fight in the 11th round. The fight was scheduled for 12 rounds, and Wilson was ahead on points at the time of the TKO.
Smith and Carolyn Barkley 6-3,3-6,64.
The victory lifts Davidsons record to 5-0 on the season.
The ECU mens tennis team will be in action today at 3 p.m. at the Minges courts agaisnt Atlantic Christian College, while the women will have an exhibition at Riverbirch Tennis Club.
Summary:
Katherine Smith (D) def. Debbie Christine 6-3,6-4.
Carolyn Barkley (D) def. Katherine Tolson 3-6,6-2,7-6.
Janet Russell (ECU) def. Eleanor Knobloch 6-3,6-2.
Adelyn Lutz (D) def. Laura Radford 4-6,6-2,6-1.
Sue Hilton (D) def. Lori Reep 6-1, 6^.
Joanna Flemin (D) def. Robin Biel 64), 6-1.
Tolson-Christine def. Smith-Barkley6-3,3-6,6-4.
Russeli-Radford def. Hilton-Meg Short 7-5,6-3.
Fleming-Tricia Ives def. Reep-Biel64),6-1.
N.C. sute Charles McQueen Bailey Whittenburg Lowe McClain Gannon Myers Battle ToUU UNLV Tarkanian Booker Green Anderson Collins Graham Hudson Brozovich Totals
MP FG FT RAF Pt
34 7-13 3- 5 II 0 3 17
20 1- 3 1- 2 3 1 4 3
36 12-21 1- 4 9 1 3 25
40 5-10 :i- 5 3 0 3 13
33 2- 4 2- 2 6 10 4 6
9 1-2 0- 0 0 2 0 2
18 1 4 0- 0 1 1 4 2
4 0- 2 1- 2 0 0 0 1
6 0-1 2-3 2 0 0 2
200 29^ 13-23 43 15 21 71 MP FG IT R A F Pt
38 1- 4 0- 1 3 8 3
18 1-1 1-3 0.0 1
39 9-16 9- 9 10 1 4
37 8-22 0- 0 6 1 3
25 5- 8 2 - 5 1 2 1
2 0- 0 1- 2 0 0 1
30 3-.9 1- 3 9 3 4
11 1-10-0104 200 2661 14-23 38 IS 21
N.C. sute......................27 44-71
Nev.-Las Vegas.................33 3770
Turnovers: N C State 8, Nevada-Las Vegas 5.
/eeasb.
Technical (ouls: None.
Officials: Dibler,Cartotto, Hannon A-9,600(est.)
Hutcherson To Address Sports Club
The Greeneville Sports Club will meet this Thursday, instead of Tuesday, at noon at the Holiday Inn with featured speaker Ken Hutcherson.
Hutcherson is a former East Carolina University assistant football coach under Pat Dye and currently works as an agent for professional athletes withE.F. Hutton.
ceton in the second game of the Corvallis doubleheader Sunday.
Nevada-Las Vegas, 28-3, took a 20-19 lead on a layup by freshman Eldridge Hudson with 8:26 left in the first half. The Runnin Rebels took a 33-27 halftime lead, then with forward Larry Andersons outside shooting, UNLV expanded the lead to 52-40 on Sidney Greens three-point play with 11:40 remaining.
The Rebels missed two straight layups to help the Wolfpack get close. N.C. State pulled within 56-54 on two free
Hallow Sets Pirate RBI Record
East Carolina University third baseman John Hallows grand slam homer, which lifted the Pirates to a 5-0 victory over George Mason aturday, gave him the record for career runs batted in at the school with 91 since the 1980 season.
Hallow surpassed the 90 rbi total set by Billy Best during the 1977-80 seasons with 29 games remaining in the 1983 campaign.
The Pirates have won 101 games while losing just 39 since 1980.
throws by Lorenzo Charles with 7:25 to play.
UNLV led 70-67 when Eric Booker hit one of two free throws with 48 seconds left. Bailey scored on an eight-footer 12 seconds later and Hudson missed the front end of a bonus opportunity withh 32 seconds left to give the Wolfpack a chance.
Dereck Whittenburg missed a 20-footer with nine seconds left, but Bailey grabbed the
rebound twice, scoring on his second attempt.
Green led all scorers with 27, while Anderson added 16. Charles scored 16 and Wit-tenburg 13 for the Wolfpack.
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April 15th is the last day you can open a First American Individual Retirement Account and still get a 1982 tax break. If money is your problem, we'll make you a loan. The interest you'll pay is more than offset by the tax break, plus you can deduct the interest from your 1983 taxes.
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#-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Mooday, March il, 1983
Stock And Market Reports
Following are selected 11 market quotations:
Ashland prC Burrougte
Carolina Power & Light
Collins &Aikman
Connor
Duke
Eaton
Eckerds
Exxon
Fieldcrest
Halteras
Hilton
Jefferson
Deere
Lowe's
McDonald's
McGraw
Piedmont
Pizza Inn
PiG
TRW. Inc United Tel Virginia Electric Wachovia
OVER THE COUNTER
Aviation
Branch
Little Mint
Planters Bank
a m stock
224 2S I8> 22 33 29 30 > 34' 15' 43 33' 33 38 684 424 354^ 9' 584 64' 2H4 14 35
20'-2044
20'-21
1-'
32W-3244
Hogs
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 75 cents higher, mostly 75 cents to $1 higher. Kinston 50.75, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 50.25, Wilson 50.50, Salisbury 50.00, Rowland 49.50, Spiveys Comer 48.00. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson49.00, Fayetteville
51.00, Whiteville 50.00, Wallace 51.00, Spiveys Corner 50.00, Rowland 50.00, Durham 50.00.
Poultry
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 42.75 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2b to 3 pound birds. 92 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed, with a final weighted average of 42.45 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
1.767.000, compared to 1,779,000 last Monday.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market was mixed today in a continuation of
last weeks indecisive showing.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, unchanged in last weeks trading, edged up .20 to 1,117.94 by noontime today.
But declining issues outnumbered advances by about 7 to 5 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Among actively traded blue chips. International Business Machines dropped Vs to 993/4; American Telephone & Telegraph lost Vi to 653'4, and General Motors was unchanged at 60.
The NYSEs composite index was down .02 at 86.35. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index fell 1.36 to 379.77.
Volume on the Big Board totaled 26.76 million shares at noontime, down from 35.29 million at the same point Friday.
Meanwhile, Trading on foreign exchanges was thrown into confusion today after a realignment of European Monetary System currencies that lifted the value of the West German mark 5.5 percent and devalued the French franc 2.5 percent. The dollar rose against all major currencies except the mark and the Canadian dollar.
And in Washington, in the broadest sign yet of economic recovery, the government estimated today that the economy grew at a 4 percent annual rate during the first three month of the year, the strongest performance in two years.
The Commerce Departments so-called flash estimate of inflation-adjusted gross national product showed the largest increase since the first quarter of 1981 and underscored the near-unanimous view of economists that the severe 1981-82 recession ended last December.
NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks
Hie
Low Last 264 26'
424 421 42'
134 13' 134
33 32' 33
464 46' 464
344 34' 34'
404^ 40' 404
164 164 164
7 6 7
3344 3244 33
65 654 654
25' 25 25V4
224 22' 22'
3744 37' 37'
41 414 41
MONDAY
7:30 p.m Parents WithouU Partners meet at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church 7:30 p.m. - Eastern Carolina Chapter of Sweet Adelines meet at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. - Woodmen of the World, Simpson Lodge meets at community bidg 7:30 p.m. - Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Bldg.
8:00 p.m. - Lodge No. 885 Loyal Order of the Moose
TUESDAY 7:00 a.m. Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a.m. - Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 7:00 p.m. - Parents Anowmous meets at First Presbyterian Church 7:30 pm - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 8:00 pm. - Withla Council, [)egree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m. Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy.
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Rockwelint
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524
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39
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38-,
47,
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474,
30
294
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22
224,
224,
9
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9
844
84'/,
844,
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66
654,
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304,
30
30'/,
184
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37'
374
37'
19
184,
18,
39
394,
39,
39
38
39
38
37
37,
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394,
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102
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101
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414
50
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60'
59
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30
304^
304,
434
43'
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264
26'
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36
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364,
284,
284
284,
404
40'
404
45'
444,
444,
24'/,
24
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31
304,
304,
334
33'
334
93
92'-,
924,
47'
464,
47
45
444,
45
994
99'
99'
5
54,
54,
53
534
534,
15'
15
15
35V,
35
35
334
33'
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184
18'
184
17'
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14
144,
144,
39'
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974
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974,
163'
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163
54'
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234,
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774,
774
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26
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864,
864,
86'
21
214,
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34
334
3344
27V,
27
274,
54'
544,
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2*
284
2(4
31'
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31 >
59'
SO
SO
354
35
354
294
284
294
69'
604,
90'
304
304
304
294
204
29'
594
5C
584,
44'
444
444
25
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25
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94
9'
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21
214
21
35
34'
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SO
404,
49
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504
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224
224
224
Coble..*.
(Continued from Page 1) Foundation grant is cmk for handicapp^ students which Ive coordinated through the State Department of Public Instruction as a leadership institute project in elementary sciences.
Coble is the author or co-author of five books in his basic field, science education. Two of them are on mainstreaming science and math, another is on mainstreaming language arts and social studies. The other books deal with science in the junior high level and life and earth sciences.
He is a charter member of the Greenville-Martinsborough Lions Club and enjoys outdoor recreational activities as well as playing basketball. He is married to the former Diana Semke of Enide, Okla. and they have two children, Christopher, 13, and Andrea, 10.
I feel honored being named to this position. Its a challenge, one that will take a lot of cooperation with faculty members in the School of Fducation as well as with faculty in other departments, Coble commented. I have a great deal of respect for faculty in both areas and think weU be able td work well together to encourage growth and improvements.
Coble added One of our major goals is to continue to strengthen the preeminent position that the School of Education has enjoyed over the years.
Report Of Study On Cable TV
Greenville (iable TV will carry the first state government meeting in N.C. history to be sent by satellite to cable television homes across the state at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Sponsored by the Electronic Town Hall Task Force, the meeting will reveal results of a study examining the impact of deregulating the telephone industry and how it will affect consumers, business and the telephone industry itself.
The two-hour video-taped meeting of the Agency for Public Telecommunications Board will be carried on local cable channel 13. Some 51 cable television franchises representing 116 municipalities across the state will air the program. A live one-hour statewide telephone call-in program will follow the meeting at 10 p.m.
The cablecast meeting is part of a demonstration to study the possibility of delivering unedited, impartial coverage of state government meetings to North Carolina citizens.
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30
30
30
19'
194
194
424
424
424
36
354,
354,
54',
25'/,*
54'/,
544
25
25'/,
154
154
154
15
154,
154,
33
334
33
35
34
34V,
394
39'
394
384,
374
374
21'
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214
64,
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32
314,
32
47'
47'/,
47'/,
11
10
10
72'
72'
72'
584
584
58'
29'/,
29
29'/,
H,
114,
114,
21,
214,
214,
36
354,
36
544,
544
544,
4,
48'
484
464
464
464
384
384
384
454
454
45'
344
334,
33,
454
454
454
394,
394
39'
Obituary Column
Bolden FARMVILLE - Funeral services for Mr. Lamont Bolden, who died Friday, will be conducted Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. in the Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church by Dr. J R. Person. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Park.
Mr. Bolden was bom and reared in Farmville wliere he received his education in the public schools. He was an employee of the Recreation and Parks Department of Farmville.
Surviving him are his grandmother, Mrs. Louise Moore of Farmville; five brothers, Walter Bolden, Charles Moore, Lyle Moore, Andrew Rush, and Reuben Rush, all of Farmville; and a sister, Monique Rush of Farmville.
The body will be taken to the church by Joyners Mortuary for viewing from 5 to 8:15 p.m. Tuesday. The family will receive friends Tuesday from 7 to 8 p.m. at the church. They will meet at the home of Louise Moore at 2:30 p.m. for the funeral procession.
Caraway TARBORO - Mrs. LUlie Spain Caraway, 63, died Monday.
Graveside services will be held Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. at the Spain Family Cemetery near Belvoir with the Rev. James Cale and the Rev. Barry House officiating.
Surviving is one daughter, Mrs. Betty Savage of Tarboro; one son, William Earl Caraway of Virginia; and two grandchildren.
The family will be at Carlisle Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. today and at other times will be at the home of Mrs. Betty Savage, Route 4, Tarboro.
If desired, contributions may be made to the Edgecombe County Rescue Squad.
Davenport TARBORO - Mrs. Rose Everett Davenport, 67, died Sunday. Funeral services
Special Meet Held By Club .
Town and Country Senior Citizens Club held a special St. Patricks Day meeting Thursday afternoon to honor Elizabeth Savage of Greenville.
Mrs. Savage was honored at the luncheon for her work with the Pitt County Humane Society and gave a talk on the history of St. Patricks Day.
Other special guests at the meeting were Mrs. Terry Snyder from the Washington Recreation Department; Mrs. Ruth Barrin^on, vice president of Washington Senior Citizens Club and Mrs. Rosemary Fischer from the ECU School of Music.
Club members were tire-minded to help with the March of Dimes scheduled for March 25-26 and to plan to attend the Easter Message in Williamston, April 1. The bus for Williamston will leave the Elm Street Presbyterian Church parking lot atSp.m.
The club is also planning a trip to Disney World May 9, and has two vacancies. Interested members or friends are asked to call 752-2912 for information.
Homicide Ruled
GRIFTON - Dr. Stan Harris, Pitt County medical examiner, has ruled homicide in the death of a Route 2, Grifton, man whose body was discovered by his wife this morning in a machine shop behind the victims home.
Sheriff Ralph Tyson said his department is investigating the death of Booker T. Dixon, about 35.
Tyson said Dixons wife told officers that her husband went to the shop Sunday night and did not return to the house. She reported that she found him lying in a pool of blood on the floor of the shop around 8 a.m. today.
Harris, who said that an autopsy will be conducted, reported that Dixon had apparently been dead since Sunday night. He said that Dixon had suffered gunshot wounds.
BARBECUE
Staton House Fire Dept.
Friday. March 25,1983 11:00 A.M.-7:00 P.M.
At Fir Station
3 par plata Hwy. 11 a 13 N.. Qraamifla
DallvaryofBplatatormora 752-3879
will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Carlisle Fun*al Home with the Rev. Luther Evans officiating. Burial will follow in Edgecombe Memorial Park.
Surviving are her husband, Walter J. Daveiqiort; four daughters, Mrs. Mary C. Claiborne of Rocky Mount, Mrs. Margaret Jennette D. Parker of Tarboro, Mrs. Louise D. Simmons of Greenville and Mrs. Frances D. Murphy of Elm City; 11 sons, James Davenport and Johnny Earl Davenport, both of Hampton, Va., Ja^r Williard Davenport of Nashville, Carl Eugene Davenport of Roanoke, Va., Joseph Matthew Davenport, Jesse Kermit Davenport and Kenneth Davenport, all of Tarboro, Herman Lee Davenport of Sharpesburg, Walter Davenport of Greenville, Jack Davenport of Charleston, S.C., and Thomas Davenport of Newport News, Va.; a sister, Mrs. Doris May Price of Hookerton; three brothers, Linwood Earl Everett and Jarvis Ray Everett, both of Greenville, and Alfred Everett of Augusta, Ga.; 48 grandchildren; and 33 great-grandchildren.
The family will be at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Monday. At other times the family will be at 107 Martin Sasser Drive, Rocky Mount.
Leathers
HOBGOOD - The Rev. Frank Ervin Leathers died Friday at his home.
The funeral service will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Longs Chapel Baptist Church, Hobgood, with the Rev. Hoyt Hammond officiating. Burial will follow in the Hamilton Cemetery.
The Rev. Leathers taught agriculture at South Ayden High School, Swanquarter High School and Clinton High School. He was a Bladen County Farm Agent and an agent for the Federal Home Administration in Wadesboro, New Bern and Fayetteville.
He was minister at Kitchen Branch Baptist Church of Council, New Hope Baptist Church in Elizabethtown, Sandy Plain Baptist Church in Whiteville and Free Union Baptist Church of Lawrence.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Carrie Field Leathers of the home; one son, Terence Leathers of Howard University; his mother, Mrs. Lenora Leathers of the home; one sister, Mrs. Lucille Price of Hodgood; two brothers: Burdess Leathers of Durham and Milton Leathers of Greenville.
The body will be taken from Flanagan Funeral
Home to the church at 4 p.m. Tuesday. Family visitation will be at Lo^s Chapel Baptist Church from 8-9 Tuesday.
Melton
FARMVILLE - Mrs. Susie Ward Melton, 62, of Farmville, died early Sunday in Pitt County Memorial Ho^ital.
Funeral services were conducted today at 2 p.m. from the Church Street Chapel of Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Lee Parker. Graveside services were conducted at 3:30 p.m. from Martin Memorial Park near Williamston.
A retired manager of P.H. Rose Store in Farmville, she was a member of the First Christian Church of Farmville, the Christian Womens Fellowship, and the Order of the Eastern Star Chapter 146 in Farmville.
Surviving are her husband, Joe Melton Jr. of the home; four sisters, Mrs. Thelma Manning of Williamston, Mrs. Geraline Lilley of Virginia Beach, Va., Mrs. Emma Sullivan of New Bern, and Mrs. Mary Harden of Atlantic Beach; and one brother, J.R. Ward of Bear Grass.
Moye
Mr. William Henry Moye, 80, retired farmer and carpenter, died Sunday at Pitt Memorial Hospital. He was a resident of 241W. Main St.inWinterville.
The funeral service will be conducted at' 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. A.C. Morgan, his pastor. Burial will be in the Win-terville Cemetery.
Mr. Moye, a native of Pitt County, had made his home in Winterville for more than 40 years. He was a charter member of Immanuel FWB Church and was a member of the Winterville Tribe of Red Men.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs, Nettie Coggins Moye; two daughters: Mrs. Willie Mae Moye Lupton of Ranoke Rapids and Mrs. Kathryn Ann Moye Woolum of Laurinburg; one sister, Mrs. Linda Moye Sutton of Greenville; five grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Monday.
Roebuck
Mr. William Arthur (Art) Roebuck, 20, was killed in an auto accident near Greenville Sunday.
The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. H.
Man Hit, Killed
A Swansboro man was killed early Sunday morning when he was struck by a car on N.C. 33 four miles east of Greenville.
According to N.C. Highway Patrol reports, a car driven by John Kyle Rouse, of Kinston was headed east on N.C. 33, when he approached a car parked partially on the road. The victim, identified as Arthur Woolard Roebuck of Swansboro, was standing on the roadway when he was struck by the Rouse vehicle. An officer said Roebuck was thrown about 95 feet. Rouse proceeded to a nearby house and summoned help.
Investigators said Rouse was charged with driving under the influence and death by vehcile.
Investigation into the accident is continuing.
FtiE-MIISELF SHOPPE
DO-IT-yOUIISELF 148 HOUR CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING
606 Arlington Blvd Telephone 756-7454
OPEN IONITE UNTIL 9 P.M.
Arthur Phillips, his pastor. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.
Mr. Roebuck, a resident of Swansboro, had lived most of his life there. He attended the Onslow Academy and later graduated from Swansboro High School. He was enrolled in Coastal Carolina Community College and was a member of the Swansboro United Methodist Church and the church choir.
Surviving are his parents: Mr. and Mrs. George H. Roebuck Jr. of Swansboro; a brother, George H. (Hank) Roebuck III of Swansboro; and his grandmother, Mrs. Laurie W. Roebuck of Jacksonville, Fla.
The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. Monday in the funeral home and at other times will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. David Eastwood near Stokes.
AHOSKIE - Funeral services for Mr. James Calhoun Sessoms, 84, vibo died here Saturday in Guardian Care Nursing Home, were held Sunday at Garrett Funeral Home by the Rev. Jim Lan^ord. Burial was in the Ahoskie Cemetery.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ellen Boyette Sessoms of the home; a son, James C. (Chick) Sessoms Jr. of Ahoskie; a daughter, Mrs. Lois Sessoms Young of Ahoskie; a sister Mrs. Ada Belle West of Norfolk, Va.; a brother, C.C. Sessoms Jr. of Ahoskie; two grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Sutton
Mrs. Mary Murphy Sutton died Thursday at her home in Baltimore.
Funeral services will be held toni^t at Veron Bailey Funeral Home in Baltimore.
Mrs. Sutton was formerly of Pitt County.
She is survived by her husband, the Rev. James Sutton of Baltimore.
Messages of sympathy may be sent to Veron Bailey Funeral Home, 1300 Carham St., Baltimore, Md.
Check List:
Compare the features of IRAe currently offered by your bank, S&L or other financial InetMutlon with these advantagee we offer:
*11.1% Current Interest
Rate (Rate may fluctuate)
*Optionel Disability Coverage that provides continuing deposit to your account in the event of total disability.
*Choice at retirement to receive your accumulated cash in a single payment or in a monthly annuity you cannot outlive.
For a no-cost, no-obligation diacuaaion contact:
Jefferson Standard Ufe Insurance Company 110 South Evans Street PO Box 406 Greenville, NC 27834 Bus. Phone 752-2923
NOTICE OF SALE OF 1982 TAX LIENS ON REAL PR5pERTY TOWN OF FOUNTAIN
Under and by virtue of the power vested In me by the State of North Carolina and the Fountain Board of Commissioners, I will on Monday April 11,1983 at 12:00 noon in front of the Municipal Building in Fountain expose for sale to the highest bidder for cash, tax liens on the following real estate for unpaid taxes for the year 1982. Interest in the amount of 3.5 percent has already accumulated on these taxes. A description of name, parcel number, location and tax amount is set out below:
Annie Gray Purvis PounUln Tax CoUector
John David k Susanne Allison
Home Security Corp.
6493, Jefferson Street
,175.67
11241, R. R. St............
$44 92
Henry Bruce Bailey
WIUlamaPattleMltcheU
796, Oiurch Street
$222.61
13332, R.R. St............
$119.96
John Shelton k Mary Brown
Lee Nora Pender
2716,WUaonSt..........
, $147.07
17854, R. R. St............
$26.40
George k Pamela Burnette
Margaret Pitt, Heirs
82S0, Eason St..........
$258.38
18209, Eason ist...........
$14.59
George k Pamela Burnette
Paul a Doris Pittman
14690, Eason St.........
18229, Jefferson St........
$87.04
Frank Dupree, Heirs
Rudcdph a Bertha Reid
64eo,R.R.St...........
,...$7.81
18861, Ser.su a Apt
$56.47
J.B. Eagles, Heirs
James W. Tyson
5495, Bank Bldg........
...$31.60
14892, Jefferson St
$45.44
J.B. Eagles, Heirs
Allen Vines
6496, Jefferson St
...$51.18
23492, Eason St...........
$45.42
J.B. Eagles, Heirs
Ernest Ray Webb
6496, Jefferson St
$49.87
24126, Blount St...........
$84.34
Dorphy Felton
James T. WiUoughby, Jr.
7509, Bank Bldg........
...$39.28
25276, MUl St............
..$57.18
Jesse Foreman
James T. WiUoughby, Jr.
7864, Lynch St..........
25277, Funeral Home ..
$121.77
James E. Forrest
James T. WUloughby, Jr.
7928, Church St.........
$19.97
25278, MUI St............
$382.28
Jtto Fountain, Heirs
James T. WUloughby, Jr.
7986, Wilson St..........
..$12.01
25279, SUUon...........
$9.47
John Fountain, Heirs
James T. WUloughby, Jr.
7967, Store.............
25280, MUl St............
$5.43
John Fountain, Heirs
James T. WUloughby, Jr.
7970, Wilson St..........
$12.58
25019, MUl St............
$5.95
John Fountain, Heirs
James T. WUloughby, Jr.
7971, Vac. Lot..........
. $3.88
1120,EaaonSt...........
...$7.35
Goqiel Unlimited, Inc.
Janice WUloughby
24515, Jefferson St.
..$24.89
17432, Lynch St..........
$206.40
Allen Hahn a Vance Harrington
Mary Jane Gardner
7976, Blount St..........
25459, WUaonSt..........
..$32.58
Annie W. Harrison
33930. MUl St...........
...$29.53
March 14,21,28; April4,1983
THE m HUDSON BUIIMI6 ADVANTAGE:
NO.
smE
SOURCE
arnimntm
r
How can your company get a new building off the ground without getting bogged down in a lot of busy work?
By calling J.H. Hudson, Inc. We're a single-source builder. Which means we can handle every detail, keep things on schedule and simplify your involvement.
This and eight other good ideas are explained in our new booklet, The Building Advantage: 9 Ways To Buy A Better Building."
To get your free copy, just call us today at 919-758-2138, or write Highway 264 East, P.O. Box198j, Greenville,
NC 27834.
ON TARGET, ON TIME. ONBUDET.
16-Tbe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Mooday, March 21,13
Weigh IRA-Type Accounts For The Home-Buyers
District Court
Report
Judge James E. Martin and Judge E. B. Aycock dispo^ of the following cases during the January 24 - 28 term of District Court
Anthony Frank Caputo Jr , Route 6, Greenville, reckless driving, SO days jail suspended on payment of $100 and
cost; attend alcohol workshop
n, Holbert Street, \
.Nancy C. Dillon, Holbert Street, worthless check. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check, probation 2 years
Joel Isler. Roundtree Drive, worthless check. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check Clyde Luther Johnson, Statesville, exce^ing safe speed, dismissed James Earl Parker. Kennedy Circle, driving under influence, 6 months jaii suspended on payment of $200 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license Ernest Eugene Roscoe, Dickinspn Avenue, trespass, 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost-remit.
Sandra Kay White, Jackson Trailer Park, driving under influence, operate left of center, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, attend alcohol workshop.
Kenneth Thomas Ray Jr., Tenth Street, breaking and entering, dismissed.
Vickie Charlene Whitehurst, Winter-ville, safe movement violation, dismissed.
Mark Winfield Black, Washington, driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license.
Helen Flanagan Cayton, Forest Acres, safe movement violation. 10 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost
Danny Ray Cox, Glendale Court, driving under influence, no operators license, dismissed.
Terry Wayne Evans,- Goldsboro, driving under influence, no owrators license. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license.
Thomas Ray Hall, Roundtree Drive, damage real property. 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost-remit, $20 restitution Paul W. Lilley, Washington, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check.
Charles Edward Long. Route 13, Greenville, stop sign violation, cost.
Gary Patrick McBennett, Meade Street, inspection violation, cost James Edward Peirce, Route 6, Greenville, intoxicated and disruptive, 2 days jail Elton Paul Potter, Ayden, 10% blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, surrender operators license
Staniey Pascal Taylor, Kinston, driv-I dui' '
ing wrong way on dual lane highway, reckless driving. 90 days jail sus^nded on payment of $100 and cost, attend alcohol workshop Charles Ellington Thome, Rocky Mount, trespass, dismissed.
Louis Lawrence Tripp, University Towers, restrictive code violation, cost Dennis Earl Ward, Vandyke Street, assault with deadly weapon, 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, probation 2 years. 2 weekends in jail Robert Hans Davis, Cannon Apt possession of schedule II. dismissed Kelvin Clark. Blounts Creek, injury reai properly, dismissed Lee Benjamin Newborn, Kinston, speeding. I days jail suspended on payment of $l and cost, remit cost Willis Ray Allen, Route 2, Greenville, fail comply restnction code, cost.
Esther Degrange Chesson, Cary, speeding, cost Dexter Earl Clemons. Wyatt Street, driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop S G Corbett, Thomas Trailer Park, worthless check, dismissed Danny Ray Cox, Glendale Court, assault, 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost, probation 2 years A1 Turner Haddock Jr, Pinetown, 10% blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license Ronald l,ee Hudson, Vanceboro, larceny, 2 years jail suspended on payment of cost. $25 restitution, probation 2 years
Roger Mann. Ayden. assault on female, not guilty Gloria Annette Mozingo, Farmville, improper passing, dismissed Thomas Ray Pollitt, Raleigh, driving under influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license
Clifton Venable, Bancroft, nonsupport. dismissed John Frederick Warner 111, Woodstock Drive, fail stop at scene of accident. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, surrender operators license Thomas Earl Harris. Route 4, Greenville, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check, remit cost Louis Avery, Route 1, Greenville, worthless check (3 counts 1.60 days jail suspended on payment of cost Kathleen Beetham, Westbrook. Woodlawn Drive, exceeding sale speed, cost
Richard Buron Adams, Kinston, no operators license, inspection violation, $50 and cost Willie Ivory Baker, Tremont, communicating threats. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost Gary Norton Bostic. Route 13, Greenville. exceeding sale speed, cost John William Bright. Ayden. stop sign violation, dismis^
Mark Jeffrey Brown, Ayden, larceny, 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, probation 2 years, $8 restitution Ronald Brown, Grilton, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check Ronald Jerome Brown. Grifton, inspection violation. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost Bill Carmon. Ayden. assault on female, dismissed Sammy Ray Carmon. Ayden, trespass 12 counts), 5 days jail.
Maureen Louise Chauncey. Grilton, safe movement violation, not guilty Mary Sue Cummings, Library Street, exceeding safe speed, cost Laura Vines Daniels. Contentnea Street, worthless check. 30 days jail sumnded on payment of $25 and cost and check.
Floyd Dixon. Grifton, assault inllic-ting serious injury, assault by pointing a gun. 6 months jaii suspended on payment of cost. $141 restitution: attemp
secret property to prevent lien enforce^ It. dismissed
ment,
William Edward DUon, Grifton, fictitious registration plate, cost Ronnie Carson Evans, Route 2,
Greenville, needing, $10 and cost Monica Patricia
Gay, Crestline Blvd . exceeding safe speed, cost Aaron Harper. Ayden, bastardy/non-
4jpport, dismissed. Gerald
aeraldlne Barwick Hill. Deep Run, speeding, dismissed Lenward Earl Horton, Route 2, Greenville, fail surrender registration card. $100 and cost.
Wendall Carlyle Humphrey, Deep Run. 10% blood alcohol content, 90 days jail suspended on pyment of $100 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license, 24 hours tail Rodric Keith Lannton, Grifton, speeding, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and cost, surrender operators license Murphy Lewis Moore. Grifton, speeding, cost Winston Newborn, Grifton, exceeding safe speed not guilty Kenneth Randolph. Ayden. shopllf-, dismissed.
ting, dll
Donna Elaine Redden, Ayden, .10% blood alcohol content, 90 days jail
suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender opierators license, attend . alcohol workshop.
Troy Lee Rice, Maryland, driving under influence, 90 days jail suspended
assault on female, trespass, 30 days jail suspended oiuMyment of $25 and cost.
Keith Lee lyndall, Courtney Square, exceeding safe meed, cost.
Kaisy Lee Whitaker, Ayden, intoxicated and disruptive, 30 days Jail suspended on payment of $10 and cost.
Joseph Whitaker, driving under influence-2nd offense, drivinig while license revoked, not less than or more than 2 years jail
Alphonzo Wilks, Chestnut Street, speeding, cost.
Tracey Lynn Worthington, Winter-ville, exceeding safe speed, cost.
Morman CHis Price, forgery, no probable cause found.
George A. McCarter, Kansas, driving under influence, 90 davs jaU suspended on payment of $100 and cost
By JERRY ESTILL Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Congress is considering a half dozen bills that would let Americans set up tax-deferred savings accounts to buy homes.
Details of the measures vary, but most are patterned after the popular individual retirement accounts - better known as IRAs.
Republican Sen. John
uider influence, 90 davs jaii m payment of $100 and cost Shirley D Roberts, Gri
lirley D Roberts, Grifton. worthless check. 30 days jail.
Darrell Rouse. Ayden, trespass, 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost
Berkley Carrington Skinner, Rocky Mount, speeding, prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost
Louis Earl Smith, Trenton, driving under influence, dismissed.
Margie Payton Smith, Route 11, Greenville, exceeding safe speed, cost.
Billy Gipson Spencer. Route 3, Greenville, reckless driving 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, attend alcohol workshop.
Norman Oscar Stancill, Winterville, exceeding safe speed, cost.
Herbert Joyner Staton, Route 3, Greenv ille, exceeding sa fe speed, cost
Michael Grimes Staton, Colonial Avenue, reckless driving. 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, attend alcohol workshop.
Willie Ray Taft, Ayden, larceny, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost.
George Thomas Tucker, Vanceboro,
Joyce Ellis, Tarboro, worthless check, 10 days jail suspended on pay
ment of cost and check.
Dannie Edward Ford, Stokes, driving under influence-2nd offense, 6 months jail
Delorr Dean Gurley. Route 9, Greenville, improper parking. 5 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost, resist officer, dismissed.
Donna Jackson, Lincoln Drive, assault, dismissed.
Thomas Messenger Peirsel, New Jersey, fail stop blue light, speeding, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost, .10% blood content, 60 days
Daniel Ebron, Farmville Blvd., assault with deadly weapon, assault on female, dismissed.
Carolyn A Franks, Third Street, aid and abet damage personal property, dismissed.
Victor Anthony Parker, Aulander, speeding, cost David Earl Simpkins, Washington, worthless check, dismissed.
Nephia A. Thomas. Norcott Circle, orthle
jail suspended on payment of $100 and It. attend alcohol workshop.
cost, attend alcohol workshop.
Harold White, Lakeview Terrace, nonsupport. 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, $100 month support.
Trent Whitehurst, Trade Street, worthless check, dismissed.
John Eric Kingsbury. Eastern Street, larceny, prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost.
Ricky Slade Chapman. Ayden, inspection violation, fictitious re^stra-tion plate, no financial responsibility, $25 and cost
iless check, $25 and cost and check
Cedric Tyson, Winterville, intoxicated and disruptive. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost.
James Earl Whitehurst, Grimesland, breaking entering and larceny, 90 days jail suspended on payment of cost, $68.09 restitution, probation 2 years.
William F Young, Corbett Street, worthless check, dismissed
Terry Corey, Ayden, larceny, 90 days jail suspended on payment of cost. $22.50 restitution. 3 days jail.
Doris William Faulkner Beasley, Nags Head; obtain property by false pretense, dismissed.
Tower of Texas is among those who have offered proposes, and because of his position as chairman of the Senate housing subcommittee, Towers bill is certain to get a lot of attention.
Towers version would have little adverse impact on federal tax collections - and thus the deficit because it would not allow the same person to have both an IRA and a tax-deferred mortgage savings account.
Some of the other bills contain no such prohibition and are almost certain to draw administration opposition because of their potential adverse impact on the Treasury.
Towers bill would allow people with IRAs to either leave the money in them entil retirement or draw it out without penalty to pay for a home - either for a down payment or to make advance payments on an existing mortgage to save interest.
Towers bill is called the Mortgage Retirement Account Act, emphasizing its approach of essentially considering mortgage savings
accounts and IRAs as being interchangeable.
Just as there is an immediate tax liability for eariy withdrawal from an IRA, a homeowner who used such an account to fmance a home would incur an immediate income tax liability if the home was sold before the buyer reaches age 59>/^. Income taxes on the account become due at age 59>,^ in either case.
As with an IRA, there is no overall limit in the Tower bill on how much could be put into a tax-deferred mortgage account - as long as it does not exceed $2,000 a year per individual, or $2,500 for a joint account set up by a married couple where only one works.
This legislation would simultaneously encourage savings and stimulate the vital housing industry, Tower said in a letter to his colleagues. Young people who may not wish to save for their retirement would have a si^ificant incentive to combine the tax advantages of an IRA with the opportunity to set aside money for a
home.
Rep. Harold S. Sawyer, R-Mich., has introduced a similar bill that would let someone with an IRA con-'vert it to use in buying a home without losing the tax benefits of the retirement fund. The basic restriction is that the IRA would have to exist at least three years before it could be converted.
Reps. Bill Frenzel, R-Minn., Manuel Lujan, R-N.M., Bruce F. Vento, D-Minn., William G. Whitehurst, R-Va., and Larry E. Craig, R-Idaho, all have introduced bills to allow creation of new individual housing accounts.
The maximum annual contribution allowed under the House bills would range from $2,000 in the Vento proposal to $5,000 in the Whitehurst bill and the lifetime inaximum ranges from $4,000 in the Vento version to $20,000 in the Frenzel bill.
Yet another bill aimed at making it easier for people to buy homes comes from Sen. James A. McClure, R-Idaho. It would provide a 25 percent tax credit - up to a $1,500
maximum for an individual or ^,000 for a coiq)le filing a joint-return - for a savings account used to buy a home.
That would mean a couple could take advantage of the tax break to build a mortgage savings account of as much as $12,000. The money would have to stay on deposit at least 12 months before it could be used.
NCNB Awards Scholarships
CHARLOTTE - North Carolina National Bank has awarded two full, one-year scholarships to the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem as part of the banks 1983 Music Competition program.
Winners of the scholarship are Debra Williamson, 16, of Shelby and Joby Bell, 14, of Statesville. Williamson competed on the clarinet, and Beil competed on the piano.
Poster Dresses
FASHION FROM CASTELBAJAC - Poster dresses with hand-painted portraits of the late President John Kennedy and his wife, Jackie, on crepe de chine are shown off by two models
as part of the 1983-84 autumn-winter ready-to-wear collection from French designer, Charles Castelbajac.i AP Laserphoto)
Researchers Find Diet Lacking For The Elderly
Good nutrition is essential for the well-being and health of the elderly, but many senior citizens are malnourished. Women, blacks, persons inside of institutions and those over 75 years of age are most likely to have an inadequate diet, researchers have found.
The nutritional status of American elders was studied in three nationwide surveys: the Household Consumption Survey, the Ten-State Nutrition Survey and the Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, which spanned approximately 12 years, says Dr. Nadine Tope, extension specialist-in-charge, foods and nutrition. North Carolina State University.
Standing in the way of good nutrition for elders are lack of money, the loss of teeth which makes it more difficult to eat many foods, the deterioration of the senses of taste and smell resulting in a loss of interest in foods and general poor health.
Findings included;
- Over half of the women and more than a third of the men had diets deficient in calcium.
- Forty percent of the women and 20 percent of the men were taking in less that 10 to 15 milligrams of iron a day. Iron intake was especially low among blacks and other minorities. Institutionalized men and women also had low iron intakes even when the menus presented to them were high in iron content.
- Only men with good incomes, who were not institutionalized, took in a s many calories as was recommended.
- Many elders eat ur varied diets. They are likely to be deficient in thiamin and riboflavin, found in meat, poultry and fish, bread, cereal, starchy vegetables and whole grain products.
On the positive side, most of the elderly got enough protein, vitamins A and C and niacin.
The fastest growing segment of the American population is the elderly. By the year 2000, they will account for about 12 percent of the total population.
Elderly Americans also comprse one of the poorest segments of the population. The 1978 median income for persons 65 years of age and older was $5,630. IN 1979, 15 percent lived below the pov
erty level. Elderly women and minorities are far more likely to be pwr than white men. The highest poverty level, about 42 percent, is experienced by black women, according to U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census.
It could be wrong to assume that all elderly persons are poor. In 1979, about one out of seven elderly persons had incomes of $10,000 or more and half of these had incomes of $15,000 or more. Elders are also more likely to live in homes
Tell Facts To Talking Aunt
By Abigail Van Buren
* 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: Were a family of talkers. Most of us are also sympathetic listeners with the exception of this one aunt. She calls me and talks for an hour without letting me finish one sentence!
If I call her to tell her something about myself, shell listen for maybe half a minute, then she interrupts with, Not to change the subject, but. . . and she gets back to her favorite subject herself.
Everyone in the family says she does the same thing to them. She uses us only as an audience for her monologues.
Shes really a good person, and I do love her, but she only wants to talk not listen. How can this problem be solved to keep peace in the family?
TIRED OF LISTENING
DEAR TIRED: Tell her the truth that you really do love her, but that you also need to be listened to, and you feel hurt and frustrated when she doesnt allow you to talk. If you cant say this to her, put it in a letter, but do get the message to her. Dont be critical or judgmental - just state the facts. She will respect you for it. And she may talk less and listen more.
DEAR ABBY: We have been married for over 40 years, and I am not happy at the moment. I am a fairly attractive, sports-minded, golf- and tennis-playing male of 69. My wife (Ill call her Bernice) is 60, plays nine holes of golf twice a week while riding in a golf cart and says thats enough exercise for her.
Bernice has premature wrinkling all over her lovely face. I find this repugnant. At my insistence we saw a plastic surgeon who told her she was an ideal candidate for successful cosmetic surgery, but she wants no part of such an operation because she is afraid of surgery. Her mother was a psychotic who refused to stay above the first floor of any hotel, and Im afraid Bernice has inherited some of her mothers irrational fears.
Bernice is a good wife and mother. Its probably top late in our lives to make any changes, and I dont really want to, but I would like her to go to exercise classes and build up her stamina so we could play 18 holes together and enter the club mixers. I also want her to have cosmetic surgery. I almost forgot another unattractive feature. She has a lower stomach protuberance that 1 find physically repugnant. She blames it on having had children, but Ive seen women with figures like teen-agers whove had more children than shes had.
Ive offered to take aerobic dancing or join an exercise club with her to help build up her stamina and improve her figure, but she spurns the idea.
Am I asking to much of her?
NOT CONTENT IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR NOT: Yes. No one should be asked to submit to cosmetic surgery to please another. And although an exercise program would improve your wifes stamina and figure, your reasons for pushing it seem more selfish than loving.
Since you admittedly are not content, I suggest you seek therapy to learn why you find your mate of over 40 years physically repugnant because of a protruding tummy and a lovely time-etched face.
DEAR ABBY: My son, who lives out of town, always sends me the best of everything, so you can imagine my disappointment when I received a puny little half-dead poinsettia plant on Christmas.
I took a Polaroid picture of the plant and sent it to my son along with my thank-you letter.
A few days later, the florist delivered not one but tuo of the most magnificent poinsettia plants I had ever seen!
Sign me . . .
CAMERA-HAPPY MAMMA
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Monday, March 21,198S-3
- An unusual plastic cap for bottles and other containers shows you in plain English whether the container has ever been opened.
On the store shelf, the word Sealed appears in a window on top of the cap. But as soon as the bottle is opened, the word Opened appears. The new message is permanently locked into place, reports Sunbeam Plastics, inventor of the cap.
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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 bie 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 Dally Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should ^ typed or written neatly.
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Take Hwy. 11 toward Kinston to sign that reads W.H. Robinson School, turn right, go to stop sign; 2 story house on left at stop sign.
Happy Belated Birthday To Charlie Simpson
From The Staff Of Renters Helper Magazine
'Ji
DID YOU KNOW. ..-;;^
by Deans Photography EARLY HINDU MARRIAGES
Even today. Hindu marriages in India are elaborate afiairs But in days gone by, the ritual involved much overshadowed the actual wedding
A girl was to he married by the age of 10, hut not younger than eight. She had to be married before she reached puberty
Her father traditionally hired a priest and a barber to go find a suitable groom, three to four years older than his daughter and of the same caste When a potential groom was found, an astrologer was called in to determine whether or not the match was favorable
The astrologer also was asked to choose an auspicious day for the father to send giftsthe bride's dowryto the groom At least one-tenth of the dowry had to he in cash
On the wedding day. the groom and his family made a procession to the bride's house They wore brocade, red turbans, and )ewelry. and music and fireworks accompanied this "parade " The bride's family, not including the bride, would put on a similar parade to go and meet them
they own, pay lower taxes than younger persons with comparable incomes and are able to ase some of the effects of inflation through various "senior citizen discounts.
Prices Effective March 21 - April 10,1983
In Greenville:
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You Should Choose Your Stationery As Carefully As You Choose Your Words
Wedding Invitations, Announcements, Notes, Personal & Business Stationery
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Production Of Sunflowerseed Expected To Slump
ByDONKENDALL Agriculture Department AP Farm Writer analysts.
W.ASHINGTON (AP) - It According to a recent appears sunflowerseed pro- survey, farmers in the four duction will take a sharp major production states -tumble this year, say Minnesota, North Dakota,
South Dakota and Texas -intend to plant about 3.86 million acres of sunflowers this year, down 23 percent from more than 5.01 million acres in 1982.
Fifteen years ago, farmers planted fewer than 100,000 acres of sunflowers a year. Some were grown to produce a high-quality vegetable oil, others, for non-oil purposes.
including seed roasted and marketed as snack foods.
As an oilseed, the crop has a market link to soybeans and cottonseed, and has an important role in world trade.
Beginning in the early 1970s, when world demand exploded for many U.S. farm commodities, sunflowers hit the big time for many pro-
By MIRIAM NANCE Agricultural Extension Agent Ibere have been many questions asked about cover crops for "set aside acres. Fitt County farmers need to look at various alternatives before making a decision about cover crops. Any annual. biennial or perennial grass or legume may be used except for soybeans. Summer cover can be planted but no grazing or harvesting will be allowed April-September. You will be allowed to mow during the no-harvest season to suppress weed growth.
There are several summer cover crops that could be planted in the spring. These covers will help prevent soil erosion from wind and rain. The crops you could plant are sorghum, sudan, pearl millet. German/foxtail millet, annual lespedeza, sericea lespedeza, cowpeas, fescue, pigeon peas and possibly red clover.
The best planting date for many of these is May 1-15. This is too late for several of the above crops except for lespedeza, (mid-March) fescue and red clover. Cover crops must be sown by March 31 according to the set aside rules. .Nitrogen, at least ,50 pounds per acre, will be needed to provide a good stand of any of the grasses mentioned. The soil should be tested to find out if enough residual fertilizer is present to support a crop.
Tnere are two options for a farmer in Pitt County. He can either plant no cover .<Top or plant a summer
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cover. Natural vegetation is allowed on set aside land. Legume covers can be used to an advantage if set aside land is to be rotated with com or sorghum but grasses are probably the best choice on peanut land. This will prevent any carryover of disease and insects to the next peanut crop.
Costs must be studied before a cover crop can be planted. These costs include seed, fertilizer, land preparation, mowing, etc. The Pitt County Extension Service can assist you when preparing forage crop budgets.
For further information contact Miriam Nance at 752-2934.
TOBACCO COURSE - Carl Briley, center, of Pitt County was one of 53 young tobacco farmers who attended a Tobacco Short Course conducted by the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service with assistance of a grant-in-aid from Phillip Morris. 0. Witcher Dudley III, vice president leaf, Phillip Morris, right, and Dr. Chester Black, NCAES dean and director, left, presented certificates to those \riio completed the four-day course.
New Dried Milk Hundrcds At NafI 4-H Session
917 W. 5th St.
758-1131
Standards Set
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Agriculture Department says that revised federal standards for dry whole milk will go into effect on May 13.
Edward T. Coughlin of the departments Agricultural Marketing Service said the revisions will eliminate the U.S. Premium grade standards for the product. The remaining grades - U.S. Extra and U.S. Standard -will "adequately classify the quality of dry whole milk as it is used now, he said.
Coughlin said the revisions were developed in cooperation with the American Dry Milk Institute, an industry association.
Production and sales of dry whole milk have shown a steady increase in recent years, he said, The product is used in the manufacture of ice cream, candy,- soup and baked goods.
WASHINGTON (AP) -More than 300 4-H youths and adult leaders will attend the 53rd annual National 4-H Conference herepext month.
The meeting will be April 9-15 at the National 4-H Center in Chevy Chase, Md., a Washington surburb. The delegates will represent five million 4-H members and 600,000 volunteer leaders.
Eugene Williams, deputy administrator for 4-H in the Agrkulture Departments Extension Service, said the delegates will hold meetings on this years theme, 4-H Pathways to the Future.
Williams said discussion groups will analyze specific 4-H program areas and provide ideas on how to strengthen each. For
example, he said, one group will consider ways 4-H can help create a greater awareness of agriculture in the United States.
Other highlights of the conference will include visits to the Agriculture Department and Capitol Hill.
After the conference ends, the 4-H members and leaders will return to their communities and tell the people back home about the word they did and what it can mean to local groups, Williams said.
The annual conference is sponsored by the Extension Service, in cooperation with the cooperative extension services of the nations land-grant colleges and universities, and the National 4-H Council.
A sicklep(xi in the shade is a pushover.
But since you cant make your soybeans canopy any faster, why not make sicklepod emerge slower?
Thats where Vernam herbicide comes in. Tank-mixed with your Theflan*, Prowl** or Basalint, and applied preplant incorporated, Vernam knocks back first-flush sicklepod. So later-emerging sicklepod has already lost the shade race to your soybeans.
Research also shows Vernam _ applied preplant incorporated
has a unique ability to reduce the foliar waxes on sicklepod. So your postemergence sprays stick better and knock out sicklepod more efficiently.
Cover your fields with Vernam and deny sicklepod its place in the sun.
See your chemical supplier now. And follow the label directions. Stauffer Chemical Company, Agricultural Chemical
Division, Westport, Connecticut 06881.
Stauflbr
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Abrnamt W It sets up sicklepod forcontroL
ducers.
Prices at the farm rose accordingly, from an average of less than $5 per 100 pounds in 1972 to $8.06 in 1973 and to a record $16.70 per hundredweight in 1974. Prices stayed above $10 until the huge crop of 1979 when the season average dropped to $8.93.
The 1979 sunflowerseed harvest was 7.08 billion pounds, which resulted after farmers planted a record 5.33 million acres to the crop.
Sunflowerseed production declined to about 3.55 billion pounds in 1980 - and the price once again rose, to an average of $10.60 per hundredweight.
In the 1981-82 season, when the crop was about 4.63 billion pounds, prices rose to $11.10 per hundredweight.
But last year, with production soaring 27 percent to nearly 5.87 billion pounds, prices dropped sharply and are expected to average about $9 per 100 pounds in the 1982-83 sunflower marketing year which began last Sept. 1.
A recent USDA outlook report for fats and oils said that a major reason for prices declining is the drop in exports, which in recent years have accounted for about three-fourths of the U.S. sunflowerseed crop. The largest single market in 1981-82 was Mexico, which took about 40 percent of the harvtst.
Traditionally, the largest
Board To Meet
llie action meeting of the Greenville City Board of Education will take place at 8 p.m. tonight at Third Street School.
Action items on the agenda include bank bids, budget amendments, a first reading on a policy for student records, and personnel action.
Other items on the agenda include a report on an inspection of Agnes Fullilove School and a rough draft on affirmative action plan.
market has been the European Community, the report said. However, in
1981-82, the community took only 35 percent of the U.S. sunflower seed exports, versus 60 percent a year earlier.
The r^rt said the main reasons for the cutback was increased production of European rapeseed - a major oilseed crop in parts of the world - and a stronger U.S. dollar, which made American products more expensive to buy.
Sunflowerseed exports in
1982-83 are expected to decline slightly from last year, the report said.
However, lower prices should encourage foreign purchases, it said. Also with declining U.S. interest rates, the dollar may weaken, which would improve foreign demand.
On the other hand, the report said, seed supplies in other countries are up by more than 13 percent this year, which dampens the U.S. export outlook.
FOR SALE
House and Lot
Property of George Myers Heirs Lot 8. Block M, Riverdale Subdivision 303 Cadillac Street Greenville, N.C.
J
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3AD STAST
m
-Th strcct
r
l>UBLIC AUCTION
(Subioct to conftrmatlon by Court)
12:00 o'clock noon
Tuesday, March 29,1913
PHt County Courtbouao Door
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT;
D. Michael Strtektand, Commltsloner P.O. Box MS Qroemlllo, N.C. 278M rolophona(9179S4116
Sea Legal Notice In Today s DsHy Reflector
lOOVtt Nitrate Nitrogen, lOOYo Available, 100%) Natural. bx)k Rrr The Bulldog On The Rag. See Your Fertilizer Supplier Today!
50 Lbs. Bags Now Available In North Carolina.
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'Sixty Minutes' And Military Involved In Sniping
A WINNER - Actor Ben Kingsley, who portrayed Ghandhi in the movie of that title, gets a kiss from his wife Alliison at the British Academy of Film and TV Arts presentation ceremony at Londons Grosvenor House Hotel
Sunday ni^t, winning two acting awards for his performance and the film itself winning the best picture citation as well as the best director award for Richard Attenborou^. (APLaserphoto)
yi^oWe Frightened Some Despite TV Campaign
By ROGER GILLOn Associated f^ress Writer One viewer said she was so frightened by NBCs Special Bulletin that she had to take tranquilizers. Others phoned in bomb threats or fears, and some worried that a realistic drama about nuclear weapons threats could inspire real-life terrorists.
A lot of people are scared, said telephone operator Ed Walsh at San Franciscos KRON-TV, which received 50 calls during the two-hour programs first 45 minutes. One woman called and said Why do you give all this time to terrorists on TV?
Both before and during the show, NBC broadcast numerous warnings to viewers that the story was fictional. Even so thousands of worried viewers called TV stations around the country, although some objected to the disclaimers, saying they detracted from the drama.
The movie showed a fictional TV network responding to a threat by an anti-
nuclear group aboard a tugboat in the harbor at Charleston, S.C., to detonate a bomb as powerful as the one that destroyed Hiroshima, Japan.
They demand as ransom that the American government disarm 964 nuclear warheads in the Charleston area.
Charleston viewers bombarded the local affiliate, WCIV-TV, with 250 phone calls during and after the program, and others called the citys police station. Police Cpl. George Volpe said many of the calls were from reporters and only four or five were from concerned citizens.
The Charleston station superimposed the word fiction on the upper left side of TV screens throughout the telecast. That sparked some angry calls from viewers who complained of an eyesore.
1 have got my switchboard going off the hook, said the operator at KING-TV in Seattle just 20 minutes after the show began
Sunday night. One ^y said his son was in Virginia and thought his son was in trouble.
But in Grovers Mill, N.J., - scene of a fictional Martian invasion in Orson Welles 1938 War of the Worlds radio broadcast that resulted in a panic - police dispatcher Cynthia Napolitano said all was quiet.
Chicago TV station WMAQ, which carried the program, received two bomb threats, said station spokesman Nick Aronson. One caller warned that if the program was not taken off the air in five minutes he would blow us up, Aronson said.
A prepared statement was read to about 760 callers Sunday night, Aronson said, and the station dropped its regular news capsules between 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. CST to avoid confusing viewers with the movie.
In New York, NBC spokesman Curt Block said the network received more than 700 calls - nearly two-thirds of them critical.
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NUCLEAR WAR
and the
SECOND COMING
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WNCT-TV7:00P.M Channel 9 Monday
ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP)-Many fans of the top-rated 60 Minutes see the program as a news-western, with Marshal Mike Wallace and his deputies brining the bad guys to journalistic justice.
/ But the shows detractors view 60 Minutes the way the characters did in an old magazine cartoon;
When we find out what youre trying to hide, a psychiatrist says to his patient, well find out why youre running away from an interview with Mike Wallace.
According to 60 Minutes, its no lauding matter that the military heads for the back door whenever the program bangs on the front.
Phil Scheffler, senior producer for 60 Minutes, says military officials have refused to give on-camera interviews or have imposed unacceptable ground rules. For one story on the Maverick missile, the Pentagon insisted on unedided interviews and rebuttal time.
We never impose these rules on anybody else, says Henry Catto, assistant secre
tary of defense for public affairs. He says these rules were imposed on individual stories and do not reflect a militarywide policy.
On the Maverick piece, we were convinced by their approach that they thought it was another Pentagon boondoggle, Catto says.
The perception in this building is that 60 Minutes is a program with a point of view, adds Catto. I agree that the American people have a right to know whats going on in the military. But theres no right to force somebody to go on-air when theyre convinced what will
TV Log
For comploto TV progrimmlnfl Information, consult your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's OaUy Raflactor.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
In Cincinnati, Robin Phillips of NBC affiliate WLWT-TV said about 25 people called.
I dont think anybody thou^t it was real, Ms. Phillips said. Some thought it was realistic and some thou^t it would be the ammunition to get some nut to doit.
In Portland, Ore., a blind woman called the NBC affiliate, station, KGW-TV, because she could not see the disclaimers printed on the screen and was worried, a station spokesman said.
Three or four people were hysterical, crying, said Genie Ostle, a switchboard operation at WCMH-TV in Columbus, Ohio, who got 38 calls during the program. One woman said she took tranquilizers because she was so upset.
In Spokane, staffer Ed Joyce of KHQ-TV said several viewers protested an extra warning the station superimposed on the screen. The viewers said they knew it wasnt real already, said Joyce.
To simulate network coverage of a breaking story, the show cut back and forth between news anchor people in New York City and reporters in Charleston, Congress, the White House and the Pentagon.
It is interspersed that with live feeds from terrorists aboard the tugboat, where a TV news crew was being held hostage.
The shows director and co-producer, Ed Zwick, said he was disappointed at the disclaimers peppered through the projp'am -'including superimposing the word dramatization on the , screen during the most sensational scenes.
I feel they (the use of disclaimers) very much mitigated the impact of the show, not unlike the way in which television often tries to soften or dilute the impact of many programs.
Noting that the disclaimers were added at the last minute after vigorous objections to the program by NBCs News Division, Zwick said there is a certain sanctimonious attitude by broadcast journalists because of the way in which they were portrayed.
Several NBC affiliates chose to ignore the whole thing. In Nashville, Tenn., WSMV-TV, aired a syndicated special, Salute to Rhythm and Blues.
MONDAT
7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 Square Pegs 8:30 Small 8i Frye 9:00 Alice 9:30 One Day Af 10:00 Cagney & 11:00 News9 11:30 Movie TUESDAY
5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8:25 News 9:25 News 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play
11:00 Price is Right 11:57 Newsbreak 12:00 News9 12:30 Young i 1:30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Li. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A. Griffith 6:00 News9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Ace Crawford 8:30 Gun Shy 9:00 Movie 11:00 News9 11 .30 LateAAovie
WITN-TV-Ch.7
aaonday
7:00 Who Will 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Litfle House 9:00 Movie 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News TUESDAY 5:30 Treehouse 6:00 Early Today 6:25 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 ews 7:30 Today ,>:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:30 All in the 10:00 FactsOfLife
10:30 Saleottne 11:00 Wheel of 11:30 HlfMan 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 AnofherWld 3:00 Fanfasy 4:00 Dark Shadows 4:30 Wild West 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 A-Team 9:00 Bare Essence 10:00 St. Elsewhere 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1 30 Overight JO News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
MONDAY 7:00 3's Company 7:30 Rocco'sStar 8:00 Incredible 9:00 Movie 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12:00 Harry0 1:00 Mission 2:00 Early Edition TUESDAY 5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J. Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7 :00 Good Morning 6:13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7:25 Actions News 8:25 Action News 9:00 Phil Donahue 10:00 Good Times 10:30 Laverne
I1:uu Love Boat 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2:00 One Life 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 BJ/LOBO 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6 30 ABC News 7:00 3s Company 7:30 Alice 8:00 Happy Days 8:30 Laverne 9:00 3's Company 9:30 9to5 10:00 Hart to Hart 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12:00 Harry 0 1:00 Mission 2:00 Early Edition
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
MONDAY
7:00 Report 7:30 N.C. People 8:00 Frontline 9:30 Performances 10:30 Viewfromthe 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 Morecambe n no SionOff TUESDAY 7:45 AM Weather 8:00 Adult Basic 8:35 Update 8:50 Readalong 9:00 Sesame St. 10:00 On the Level 10:15 Aatterof 10:35 Parlez Mol 10:45 Bread &
11:00 Living Things 11:15 Cover to 11:30 Thinkabout 11:45 Eureka 11:50 Readalonq7
u:00 inside/Out 12:15 Music Box 12:30 Read All 12:45 Electric Co. 1:15 Cents 1:30 Matters.
1:45 Special 2:00 Special 3:00 Ready or Not 3:30 Gen. Ed.
4:00 Sesame St. 5:00 Mr. Rogers 5:30 3 2 IContact 6:00 Dr. Who 6:30 Fast Forward 7:00 Report 7:30 Almanac 8:00 Nova 9:00 Playhouse 10:00 Prizewinners 10:30 Neighbors 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 Morecambe 12:00 Sign Off
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be used wont portray accurately their feelings.
Catto acknowled^ that many military officials mistakenly hold 60 Minutes re^nsible for The Uncounted Enemy; A Vietnam Deception, a documentary questioning the judgment of Gen. William Westmoreland, which was prepared by the CBS Reports, documentary team, a different unit at CBS News. The program, which is the subject of a libel suit, had Wallace as its narrator.
Wallace says the Pentagon policy is anti-60 Minutes, not anti-Mike Wallace. But Don Hewitt, the shows executive producer, says Catto is knuckling under to a bunch of military guys trying to punish Mike Wallace. Were not anti-military. We practice good journalism and patriotic Americanism. Wallace claims the military obstacles started about the time Caspar Weinberger became secretary of defense. Until the last two years, the military had always been cooperative with us, he says. This is an absolutely new policy established from on high. I think they hurt themselves by not being forthright.
They also hamper the ability of 60 Minutes to do its job. Weve had to kill some stories because we couldnt get the Pentagon to give its side, says Hewitt.
The program wanted to do a piece on the Pentagon reaction to reports of alcohol abuse on American naval bases in Europe. Hewitt says the project was dumped because the Navy would only agree to written questions. We need to be on-air, with a chance of follow-ups, says
'The Mousetrap' Coming To NCSU
RALEIGH - Agatha Christies mystery play, The Mousetrap, now in its 30th year on the London stage, will be presented at 2;30p.m. and agin at 7 p.m. on Saturday at Stewart Theater, N.C. State University, by the Barter Players.
Tickets are on sale and will also be available at the door. For more information and ticket reservations, call 737r3104 between 10 and 6 Mondays through Fridays.
FLOODING
PERTH, Australia (AP) -Two people were listed as missing Sunday and at least 35 homeless in four days of flooding in northwestern Fitzroy Crossing, officials reported.
WHERE NOTHINO IS OFF LIMITS.
B 3:00-7:10-6:00
3RDBIwlEkl
SOPHIE'S
CHOICE
Wallace. Were television. The Maverick piece was broadcast, however, with the notation that the Defense Department wouldnt cwn-ment without imposing unacceptable conditions. While 60 Minutes savors its reputation for aggressive journalism, this controversy isnt helping its credibility, which is under attack in 10 current lawsuits.
And besides limiting access - the programs lifeblood - theres the fear that the Pentagons silent treatment could catch on elsewhere. 60 Minutes does not want to be hoisted on its own petard.
Its a myth, a legend that we are calling miscreants to account all the time, says Wallace. If we do too much of that stuff, no one will talk to us.
CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather says his broadcast hasnt felt any abnormal Pentagon pressure. But the bad blood may be affecting other CBS reporters covered by a broad Pentagon brush. Col. Robert OBrien, director of defense information, recalls how one CBS correspondent tried to open a closed door by saying: This is not for 60 Minutes, its for the Evening News.
The 60 Minutes-Pentagon feud has taken nasty turns, escalating into what CBS considers harassment. On an upcoim-ing story, which Wallace says puts the military in a good light, the correspondent went to the Pentagon and found himself being taped in the interview room.
Wallace was not the least bit happy, says Catto. He made his views vigorously known.
Wallace says 60 Minutes accepts being taped, but our only stricture is that they
tape only when we do, so as not to capture casual conversation. Wallace was embarrassed several years a^ when bis jocular racial remarks were taped and then revealed by an interview subject.
To stop the sniping and improve relations, Hewitt sent a letter to Catto last week, calling for a truce. He asked Catto to disabuse your people of erroneous impressions that 60 Minutes is the bogeyman out to get them, and I would apprise my people of your concerns
Love us or hate us, 60 Minutes is a fact of life. Love you or hate you, so is the Pentagon.
But Catto and Hewitt even disagree on a piece 60 Minutes did on Catto in the early 1970s, when he was President Nixons chief of protocol.
Hewitt calls it a glowing profile.
Says Catto: It was scarcely glowing.
3REVARD - Dr. Martin Mailman, head of compositional studies at North Texas State University, has been appointed to the post of composer-in-residence at Brevard Music Center. During his stay at Brevard, he will deliver a series of open lectures, and a number of his compositions will be performed at the center.
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