Daily Reflector, April 1, 1983


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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

tNSIDE READING

Pagel2-0ituaries Page 18 > The legislature Page 24 - Marcoscfaihtan

I02NOYEAR NO. 78

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL I, 1983

24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

Greenville's Crime

Rate Soared In '82

The city of Greenville experienced a 16-percent increase in crime during 1982 - the largest increase among 15 cities listed in the preliminary annual report of crime published by the North Carolina Police Information Network.

But Police Chief Glenn Cannon and state officials suggested that the reason Greenville showed the largest.increase might be because the department is more accurate in Its rqwrting.

Following Greenville in the preliminary report was Gastonia, with a 13 percent increase; Charlotte with an 11 percent hike, and Goldsboro with an 8 percent jump.

Durham showed no increase in crime during 1982, the report said, while Rocky Mount and Raleii listed a 1 percent increase and Wilson a 5 percent decrease.

Greenville was used as a model city when PIN began collecting the crime data several years ago. Cannon said. We turn in everything, he said.

While the local department reports thefts from $1 up, Cannon said Kinston doesnt report anything under $200 and other cities dont report "anything under $500.

Weve checked and if we didnt report anything under $200, Greenvilles increase in 1982 over 1981 would be about 4 percent. Cannon said.

PIN Director William Corley said Greenville is one of 32

VIA DOLOROSA Pilgrims carrying a cross (right) take the via Dolorosa in Jerusalem ahead of other pilgrims and another cross during the

incident base cities out of 440 law enforcement agencies which provide the network with more accurate data.

Corley said we get to look at all investigative r^rts that come m to the Greenville department, whereas agencies not on the incident base reporting system only give us a summary of data. There is no way of verifying whether they

are giving all of it to us or not.

He said only a few of the 15 cities listed in the preliminary report are incident base cities.

The report showed that total index crimes in GreenvUle in 19ffi totaled 2,984 as compared with 2,577 in 1981. Pn^rty crimes totaled 2,770 last year, compared with 2,448 in 1981, while violent crimes totaled 214 as compared to 129 in 1981.

The report showd five murders and 16 rapes last year, as compared with two murders and 10 rape cases in 1981; 1,801 larcenies and 855 burglaries last year as compared with 1626 larcenies and 750 burglaries in 1981; and 114 motor vehicle thefts andU7 robberies in 1982 as compared with 72 motor vehicle thefts and 39 robberies the year before.    '    ^

The preliminary report indicated that, state-wide, crime rose only 2 percent during 1982. The largest increase was in robberies, Mdiich increased 9 percent, followed by a 3 percent increase in larcenies.'

Good Friday procession Laserphoto)

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ByARTHURMAX Associated Press Writer JERUSALEM (AP) - In the walled Old City where Jesus died 1,950 years ago, Franciscan monks led a solenm procession along the Via Dolorosa on Good Friday, following the path that Jesus is believed to have walked to his prucifixion.

Protestants held a service at the Garden Tomb, a tranquil park a few hundred yards north of the city walls.

Only a handful of police could be seen guarding the pilgrims along the 1,000-yard-long Via Dolorosa, the Street of Sorrows. There was no si^ of the fully armed border police who used to escort the pilgrims and watch from rooftops to guard against violence.

nie streets of the OW City were crowded with pilgrims and tourists. Outside the walls the roads were congested with visitors spending Easter and the coinciding Jewish Passover holiday in Jerusalem.

Nevertheless, there was a noticeable drop in the number of pilgrims. The Tourism Ministry expected 70,000 visitors for

Easter and Passover, a drop of at least 10 percent from last year. The Middle Easts tensions and the Wests recession were believed to be keeping pilgrims away.

The procession set out from the first Station of the Cross; where Jesus was tried, and wound along the narrow street to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which Roman Catholic and Orthodox tradition hold to be the site of Calvary, where Jesus died.

Many of the pilgrims in the groups shouldered wooden crosses supplied by a Franciscan monastery.

Inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, followers of various Christian denominations chanted prayers around the grotto of Jesus' tomb in the wide diversity of languages and Christian rites.

By MERRILL HARTSON AP Labor Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -The nations civilian unemployment rate declined to 10.3 percent in March as hundreds of thousands of the

Shuttle

Within a radius of 200 yards, Moslems, who worship every Friday, piped prayers over loudspeakers, while hundreds of Jews clustered at the Wailing Wall to celebrate the fourth day of the Passover week commemorating the Israelite exodus from the pharaohs Egypt.

Poised For Lift

Authorities Confirm At Least

200 Dead in Cobmbin Quake

POPAYAN, Colombia (AP) - Authorities today confirmed at least 200 dead from a powerful earthquake

and the provincial governor appealed for help for this shattered city, where tourists and religious pilgrims joined

hOTLIfK

752-1336

Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to HotUoe, 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.

EAR OPERATION APPEAL

With Hotlines help Bill Moore of Bethel did some research on the plight of a family written of in a recent Associated Press article as needing an ear operation for a 12-year-old son and being just over the legal limit for public assistance to have the surgery done at Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem.

Arrangements have now been made to have the surgery done at Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill and Moore has set up a fund administered through his church to help foot the hospital bill and other related expenses. Vernon Shawn Collins, 12, of Kernersville, near Winston-Salem, will have the operation in the near future if the funds are generated. His father, Vernon Collins, 57, is said by his wife, Elizabeth, also 57, to be tfrminally ill with cancer. He is a patient in Baptist Hospital. There is a 15-year-old daughter and Mrs. Collins has recently been laid off from 8er job in a Ifigh Point embroidery firm.

Anyone wishing to assist this family may send a tax-deductible check to the Vernon Shawn Collins Fund of Kings Crossroad Free Will Baptist Church, c/o Roy C. Jones, treasurer, ;Route 2, Box 345C, Farmville, N.C. 27828. Anyone having inquiries may call Moore, 825-7111, after 6 p.m. any evening.

in a de^rate search for survivors.

In a nationwide radio broadcast. Provincial Governor Ainalia de Salazar said the most urgent needs for Popayand the surrounding area were for drinking water or water purification drugs, tents, portable stoves and large pots for cooking collective meals for the many homeless.

Doctors appealed for drugs - especially pain killers -and also for rat poison because many of the destroyed buildings, some dating back to the 17th century, were infested with vermin.

.First aid shipments, organized by the International Red Cross, arrived at the airport in Cali, 92 miles north of here, from Canada, according to Radio Caracol.

The United States, France, Spain, Ecuador, Panama and Venezuela mobilized a massive aid effort, but the transfer of supplies from the airport was very difficult, officials said.

Local authorities said 132 dead had so far been identified and that there were about 70 unidentified bodies. At least 500 were iqjured, authorities said. A hundred buildings were destroyed in the neighboring towns of Cajibio, Piendamo and Mondomo, where 15 of the dead and SO of the injured were found. More than a dozen villages in the area also were hard hit but details of the devastation were not immediatdy available.

In Popayan, 235 miles southwest of Bogota, more than 3,000 homes and other buildings, including the Roman Ctbolk cathedral, were destroyed, officials said. Many families spoit the night in the streets in makeshift shelters of plastic and sticks.

The 18-second trenoor, maasurlng Si on the Richter

scale, hit at approximately 8.15 a.m. local time, col-, lapsing buildings throughout this provincial capital of 200,000 people and sending panicked residents into the streets.

The entire ceiling of the cathedral, which dates to Spanish colonial times, col-lapsed on some 200 worshipers, killing at least 15 people and trapping about 100 others until rescue teams dug them out. More victims were expected to be found under, the debris, which was piled 15 feet high in some places.

The citys sewage system and water purifying plants were badly damaged. The telephone exchange was knocked out and telephone company officials said they doubted it could be repaired.

President Belisario Betancur, who toured the stricken area two hours later, called the earthquake a terrible catastrophe. The cathedral, the churches, the convents and the university have been left in ruins, he told reporters. There is no water, there is no electricity. Many sections of the city have been partially destroyed and many homes damaged. Betancur placed the city under military control, and army troops and police patrolled the streets all night to prevent looting.

Rescue efforts centered on the demolished cathedral. Lines of people, including children, passed masonry and timbers hand to hand outside while men inside dug throu^ the wreckage. Some wept openly as they worked.

Nearby, a pile of rubble marked the ^ where a two-story house had stood. As rescue workers dug feverishly into the mound, a child was heard crying; Mommy. Mommy. Help me. I cant see. It hurts Mommy.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - The shuttle Challenger, poised for Mondays takeoff, is a safer spacecraft because of lessons lamed from engine leaks that delayed its inaugural launch for months, say space agency officials.

We have stubbed our toe, but we have not broken our leg, said Air Force Lt. Gen. James A. Abrahamson, who heads the shuttle program.

The faulty engines have been fixed and improved, and quality control and management have been tightened throughout the shuttle program, Abrahamson said Thursday.

The price that were paying for this - a 2>,;2-month slip - is small compared to the real gain in efficiency and operational capability that well have later on when well be operating at high launch rates, he said.

The long launch countdown, which began Wednesday, continued to progress smoothly toward a liftoff of Americas second shuttle, scheduled at 1:30 p.m. EST Monday.

Essentially everything is going smoothly, and were very pleased, test director Stan Gross told reporters today.

The spaceships fuel lines were purged, its tanks pre-surized and its computers checked Thursday. Main tasks today were servicing the power-producing fuel cells and checking the communcations satellite in the cargo bay.

The four astronauts assigned to Challengers debut were winding up their simulator training at the Johnson Space Center in Houston and were to fly here late today to make final flight preparations.

They are Paul J. Weitz, commander; Air Force Col. Karol J. Bobko, pilot; and mission specialists Story Musgrave and Donald H. Peterson. Their main task during five days in orbit will be to deploy the worlds largest, most complex communications satellite. Musgrave and Peterson plan a' 3'/i-hour space walk in the ships open cargo bay on Thursday.

discouraged jobless - not counted in the rate apparently waited for stronger signals they would find work before renewing their search for a job, the government reported today.

The seasonally adjusted rate fell for only the second time since the economy plunged into a deep recession in the summer of 1981. The 0.1 percentage point decline in unemployment followed two months of standstill 10.4 percent civilian joblessness.

Nonetheless, nearty 11.4 million people remained on the unemployment rolls.

The department recorded an additional 1.8 million discouraged workers, Americanswho have given up their search for a job and are thus not counted as unemployed members of the labor force. The figure matched the previous calculation of discouraged

workers.

An alternate unemployment rate that includes the 1.7 million military personnel stationed in the United States fell an identical 0.1 percentage point - from 10.2 percent to 10.1 percent.

There were several bright signs of improving job prospects in the March statistics reported today.

The number of discouraged workers, for instance, heW steady after rising for the last six consecutive quarters.

In addition, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported, the number of p^le forced to accept part-time work last month for lack of anything better fell by nearly 500,000, to 6.2 million. Most of that decline, the bureau noted, was among workers who usually work full-time but ex^rienced a reduction in their weekly hours.

And the average workweek rose by 30 minutes to a seasonally adjusted 34.9 hours, following a decline in working hours in February.

rUnemployment-

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Just For Today

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j-The Dafl|^rtlector, GreMNflte, N.C.-rtWy, April 1,1913

CAREER DEVELOPMENT SEMI- around a mirror to spruce up for the NAR...was held for members of projects fashion show.(AP Latino street gangs. Here they crowd Laserphoto)

Young Gang Girls Attend Seminar To Dress For Success

PICO RIVERA, Calif. (AP) - A polka dot miniskirt and outsized black shoes were among the fashions donned by unlikely models -female gang members hoping to leave behind their often jobless street life.

The fashion show attracted about 65 teen-age girls, many of them mmbers of Hispanic gangs, who listened to tips on applying makeup, dressing for interviews and finding information about entry-level work in data processing and hospital service.

They (Los Angeles County) asked me to put on a softball league and I said no, said Carmen Ybarra, 24, a former gang member who set up the project through the Los Angeles County Youth Q^g Services project. They wont benefit from that. Theyll go home and their kidsll still be hungry and they wont have a job.

The seminar last week was geared to combat the tough gang image which often offends employers, Ms. Ybarra said.

A public park building in this Los Angeles suburb was decked out with pink paper garlands and balloons. A professional makeup man touched up eyes and lips while girls traded jeans for dresses.

Im going to wear a

miniskirt? asked Yvette Hinojos, 17. I dont know how they talked me into it! A small audience applauded as she modeled a polka dot dress, parading in the only matching black pumps available - three sizes too large.

The seminar was geared to provide an alternative help the teens improve their image, Ms.Ybarpisaid.

Some of iese girls are proud of being cholas (female Hispanic gang members), Ms. Ybarra said, but added that inside they want to get out of the gang life. You stick a label on yourself and then you cant change it.

The counselor said ^e herself has changed her style, and old friends sometimes dont recognize her in her tailored suits and subdued makeup.

If I can do it, they can do it, she said.

Deidre Curtis, 17, modeling a gauzy gown, said her drug counselor told her about the seminar.

Maybe its a start for me. I dont know, she said. Thats what were here for to show that theres more than getting high or whatever.

Participants received a comb and mirror, an emery board, a small sewing kit and a notebook entitled Live Today and Dream of Tomorrow.

A lot of the girls told me they started throwing away their drugs, Ms. Ybarra said the morning after the seminar. They said, You know what? Youre right... I gotta grow up, I gotta get my act together. If we could reach at least 10 out of 65, it was worth it.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor When 1 was in my early teens, growing up in Canada, -my mother used to keep a big jar of Olive Cheese Spread in the refrigerator for various uses.

Spread on thin slices of homemade bread, it made delectable sandwiches for teatime.

Or sometimes it would be spread on whole wheat bread and layered with lettuce and cri^ slices of bacon for sandwiches to enjoy with hot tomato soup for lunch.

It was also used as a stuffing for the tender inner ribs of celery. The stuffed celery would be cut in short lengths and served asanhorsdoeuvre.

Since those years ago. Ive used the Olive Cheese Spread in several different ways. For instance, Ive stuffed hollowed out cherry tomatoes with it. Ive also used it to top slices of cucumber.

And just the other day, a friend who was in my kitchen while I was making a batch of the Spread, dreamed up a new way of using it. He heated a few packaged tacos to crisp them, filled them with some of the Spread and topped them with shredded lettuce and diced tomato. Very satisfying, he said.

In our long-ago Canadian kitchen, the cheese for the Spread was, of course, grated by hand and the olives and walnuts chopped with a knife. But I made my recent batch in a food processor much more speedily than it can be made by hand. The following recipe gives directions for doing just that.

PROCESSOR OLIVE CHEESE SPREAD '>2 cup pimiento-stuffed green olives (3 ounces)

2 cup walnuts (2 ounces)

8 ounces Cheddar cheese (sharp or extra-sharp)

2 cup mayonnaise 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard '

In a food processor, with the metal blade, coarsely chop the

RENTA

BORN AGAIN CARANDSAVEI

Used can be beautiful, Saveatajnkfull

Save fabric scraps to make a patchwork tablecloth, placemats and napkins.

Send a cddbration of ^ring.

Easter is Sunday, Aptfl 3.

Hie FTD Gloiy of Spring Bouquet

Green ville Flo wer Shop

1027Evans Street Phone 758-2774

Send your thoughts widi special

RMistefed trademark Florista TransworM Delivery Association.

I9K3 Florals Transvvorld Delivery Association

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Designer Jeans lU

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Womens    4 cw

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Phone 756-0857

Cooking Is Fun

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor

olives and walnuts, pulsing 6 or 7 times - the walnuts should be the size of small peas. Remove only the metal blade.

Insert the medium shredding disc and shred the cheese; turn cheese, olives and walnuts into a l-guart storage bowl that has a ti^t fitting cover. Add mayonnaise and mustard; with a mix thonn^y. Store, covered, in the refrigerator. Makes about 2andl-3rdctq)s.

SPINAL PROBLEM

NEW YORK (AP) - An estimated 10,000 American teenagers have scoliosis, an abnormal curvature of tl|e spine which can lead to serious physical deformity if left untreated.

In scoliosis, the* spine curves from side to side and also twists, throwing the body out of line.    ^

Many adol^ents can live normal lives wiUi proper treatment. Several kinds of back braces, worn from one to three years, are used to correct the problem. In severe cases, surgery may be required.

Couple Marries Recently

FARMVILLE - Sophia Angela Szymeczek and John David Stokes Jr. were married March 19 in the First Christian Cfhurch here. The Rev. Lee Parker performed the double ring ceremony at 7:30 p.m.

Hie bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Szymeczek of Washington. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Atha Stokes of

Bridal Policy

A black and white ^ossy five by seven photograph Js requested for engagement announcements. For publication in a Siinday edition, the inf(Hinatk>n must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagemmit pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement' will be printed.

Wedding write-iq>s will be printed throu^i the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-<q> giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement. Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prkn- to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.

Washington and the late John^ David Stokes.

The honor attendant was Caroline Szymeczek of Washington, sister of the bride, and the best man was the brother of the bridegroom of Newport News, Va., George C. Stokes.

Miriam Bailey played the organ for the ceremony.

A reception was held after the ceremony at the home of the Rev. and Mrs. Parker.

The couple lives near Greenville.

The bride is a register nurse and works at Pitt

County Memorial Hospital. She ^aduated fnxn East Carolina University S(^ of Nursing. The bt1degro(n is a quality control supervisor at Vermont American Corp. in Greenville. He graduated from Washington High School and attended Beaufort Community College and the University of North Carolina.

Hot Cross Buns

DIEIIERS BAKERY

IBOieidnMnAM.

WeStrveARienSavlor, CiaistTbeLotd

HARVEST BAPTIST CHURCH

RESURRECTION SUNDAY

He Is Not Here, For

He Is Risen

As He Said" Matt. 28:6 Ev.iyoii.Wriconi6ToWorshlp SERVICES

Sunday School....................................10:00    A.M.

Worship Service.........................  11:00    A.M.

Sunday Evening................... 0:00    P.M.

Wed. Prayer Service..................    7:30    P.M.

Meeting At Carolina Country Day School For Information Call 756-6890 k    Nursery Provided At All Services    

Downtown Pitt Plaza

Pre Easter Sale!

^ Gloria Vanderbilt and Calvin Klein

Black Denim Jeans Reg. $38

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Group of Georgette Dresses

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Briefs, Bikinis and Hipsters

Sum S 10 7 Ikc ukI uilntd cotton and nylon

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Terry Robes and Dusters

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ft





Officers Installed By Order Of Eastern Star

The Daily Reflector, Greenvflie; N.C

Keep In Touch

, April 1,1M3-3

A Wedding Blessing For Young Marrieds

By Abigail Van Buren

.    * 1963 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEARABBY: Our daughter, Lisa," is attending college tout of state. Last fall she told us she had met someone Special, but we didnt know it was serious until she came home for Thanksgiving with an engagement ring on her finger and Charlie on her arm! Hes a quiet, well-mannered young man also a college student. We thought It was much too fast, but Lisa was so happy and so bbviously in love that we accepted the situation.

; The kids told us they wanted a big church wedding, reception and all the trimmings this summer, so we started making plans. We met Charlies parents on the phone, ithey seemed bewildered and didnt even know their son had a girlfriend!

Last weekend the kids came home and told us that they had been secretly married since Christmas! We are still hurt by this deception. They told several others, and now II their friends know and so do most of ours. We do not leel right about putting on a big, showy church wedding and reception with all the trimmings.

We spoke with our minister, and he suggested a wedding blessing with just the immediate family. '

Charlies family live 2,000 miles away, and they dont know their son is already, married. We want to do the rh?ht thing, but dont know what that is. Please help us.

UNDER PRESSURE IN HIGHLAND PARK

DEAR UNDER) What kind of ceremony did the kids have? If it was just a civil ceremony, they could ,'have a simple church wedding with the families and a fqw close friends present. Under the circumstances, I think a big, showy wedding and reception with all the trimmings would be inappropriate.

DEAR ABBY: I had polio as a child and consequently my left foot is two sizes smaller than my right. In ordei to get a pair of shoes I can wear, I have to buy two pair in different sizes. This leaves me with an extra pair of brand new shoes that I may as well throw in the garbage! This hurts my thrifty nature.

I have at least 20 pairs of beautiful, expensive shoes in my attic (the left shoe is 4B and the right shoe is 6B.) If I could sell them for a third of what they cost me, it would make me very happy.

I tried placing an ad in our local paper, but the only two people who called did so to ridicule me. (They must have thought I was some kind of weirdo.)

; My question: Do you know of any shoe company that will sell mismated shoes?

MY FEET DONT MATCH

DEAR FEET: No, but youre in luck. There is a club you can join. Its a mismate shoe service for men, women and children whose feet also dont match. (Amputees, as well.)

There is a* nominal fee for placing your name and needs in the registry. For information, write to; National Odd Shoe Exchange, Rural Route No. 4, Indianola, Iowa 50126.

Please enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope when writing for information about how to join.

PCAIW Have Speaker

A program on garage liability insurance was given by Dawn Revere at the meeting of the Pitt County Association of Insurance Women held at the Ramada Inn.

She is a senior casualty analyst with the Aetna Casualty and Surety Insurance Co.

Joyce Mills, CPIW, gave a report on the regional convention held recently. She reminded members of the state convention to be held in Fayetteville May 20-22.

. Guests attending the meet-ing'^were Samone Pate, Larry Wynne of Ahoskie and Sam Toner of Charlotte. The welcome was given by President Audrey Stillwell, CPIW.

"Friendship was the theme for the installation of officers ceremony for Greenville Chapter No. 149, Order of the Eastern Star. The ceremony was held Saturday evening at the Greenville Masonic Temple.

Installed were: Worthy Matron, Margaret M. Schiller; Worthy Patron, Bryce W. Tharp; Associate Matron, Ruth Forrest; Associate Patron, Alonza E. Forrest; Secretary, Jean K. Tharp; Conductress, Gertrude Andrews; Associate Conductress, Gay Garris;

Chaplain, Mary J. Freeland; Marshal, Agnes Bunch; Organist, Marguerite Cook; Adah, Grace Hill; Ruth, Sarah Caprell; Esther, Nancy Corbett; Martha, Camille Leggett; Electa, Julia Lilly; Warder, Jane Adams; and Sentinel, Ellen Bostic.

Presiding officers were Jerofne Botick, Worthy Patron, and Mrs. Corbett, Worthy Matron, who gave .the welcome.

MARGARET SCHILLER

Distinguished persons attending were: Mrs. Glenn W. Gamer, Past Grand Matron, who served as the Installing Grand Chapter Officer, and Marie Ray, District Deputy Grand Matron of the Seventh Distirct; Joyce Wheless, Past Matron, Installing Grand Marshai; Fred Chappelear, Past Patron, Installing Grand Chaplain; and Corabob Turnage, Past Matron, Installing Grand Organist. They were introduced by Mrs. Gamer. They assisted her in the installation which followed

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the farewell addresses of Mrs. Corbett and Bostick.

Mrs. Schiller and Tharp gave acceptance addresses and introduced members of their family including: Mrs.' Schillers daughter, Jane; her s(Hi and dau0iter-in-law,

Mr. and Mrs. Martin Schiller and grandsons, Martin III and Andrew, all of Atlanta,

Ga.; M-Sgt. and Mrs. Marshall Chiller, another son and daughter-in-law of Beaufort, S.C. and Marzelle ^ Dillon of Charlotte. Tharp introduced his wife.

Mrs. Schiller was ptesjV,.. ented the^vel by her soaj^ Martin, which was given to her by. another son and daughter-in-law of Dandrid^, Iowa, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schiller. A musical tribute to Mrs.

Schiller and Tharp was pres-ented by Marie Mills ac-"companied by Mrs. Cook.

Pages were Mrs. Schillers grandsons.

Mrs. Corbett was escorted to the east and presented her jewel pin by Mrs. Tharp and it was pinned by her husband, Carlton. Mrs. Bostick presented her husband a jewel pin.

The chapter room was decorated with red camellias and spring flowers, seven branch candelabra holding white tapers entwined with ivy and a cross adorned with greenery.

A reception followed and was held in the Sugg-Whichard dining room. The table was covered with a white lace cloth and centered with an arrangement of camellias and spring flowers flanked by candelabra holding white tapers. Red bows and greenery accented the table. Jean Riggan poured punch assisted by Thelma Allen, Blanche Jackson,

Evel^ Davenport, Penny Garris, Gay Garris, Norma

Barnes, Gertrude Andrews, Jane Adams, Ruth Forrest, Sarah Caprell and Mary Freeland.

Audrey Felton, the Rev. Adrian Brown and Jerome Bostick greeted guests and Estelle Tucker and Lillian Hendrix presided at the register.

Margaret Gray, treasurer, will be installed at a later date.

BRYCE THARP

Nearly half a million people in North Carolina have hearing problems. It has been said that blindness cuts one off from things, but a loss of hearing shuts one off from people.

There are a number of ways to help someone with a hearing loss keep in touch, says Isabelle Buckley, extension gerontology specialist. North - Carolina State University.

A television equipped with a headset can let a person with impaired hearing ke^ in touch with the world of news, education and entertainment. Headsets can be purchased in music supply stores and can be attached to any television set.

The Agricultural Extension Service has directions for attaching a headset to a TV in its bulletin Sound Ideas. The bulletin is available throu^ your county office.

The telephone company also offers telephone aids for the hard of hearing. There is an amplified telephone handset with recessed volume control for incoming voice.

Loud bells and chimes, flashing lights and lamps that light up are also of-

TEACHING AWARD

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Emmanuel-George Vakalo has been presented with the University of Michigans Sol King Award for Excellent Teaching in Architecture.

Vakalo has been a member of the universitys architecture faculty since 1975.

5BsjLast flays

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Saturday, S^p^il2 Sunday,^prl 3 7:30 9.nPottery for Sale...

Mio ^ Ritzer, local artist in handbuilt pottery, will be demor I g in the Williamsburg Area of our store on Friday and wJurday, April 1 and 2 from 10:00 A.M. until '10:00 P.M. Items for sole will include vases, bowls, mugs, honey pots, platters, masks, candlesticks, and clay critters. These make perfect gifts! Mrs. Ritzer is one of only a few artisans who do custom work and special orders. Also,'"she will offer toy soldiers imported from England.Shop Monday thru Saturday 10 AM Until 10 P.M. Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355}

fered to help the hard of hearing know that the telephone is ringing.

When takling face to face with someone with a hearing proble,. first get his attention by speaking his name. It hell to move in close, speak distinctly and more slowly, Miss Buckley says.

Introduce the subject clearly and early in the conversation, and use only

necessaiy Vords to put the message acillss. The person speakhig'Mild avoid getting between a bright li^ and the person listening, and not sit in the shadows, as many peopte do some lip reading tp.get meaning, Miss Buckley says.

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4-The Day Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, April 1,1

Editorials

^ Giovanni, Giovanni

The saga of a bigamist who tied the knot 105 times (thats what he said) has earned a place in the record of notoriety.

Giovanni Vigliottos lawyer is planning to appeal the 28 years for fraud and the 4 years, 7 months sentence, plus a $336,000 fine for good measure. '

The jury took just 90 minutes in early February to convict Vigliotto on fraud and bigamy counts; and this month decided on a sentence within limits of what the law allows.

The four women and eight men obviously did not look lightly at the story of one man marrying 105 women to defraud them of whatever goods and cash he could get his hands on.

Poetic justice rather than the unimaginative and conventional by-the-book punishment does seeifl applicable; and there-in lie many^ many possibilities.

To make the punishment fit the crime(s), suppose Giovanni was ordered to support his various wives in the manner to which they were accustomed.

Or, to suppose again, he was to be continually exposed to the fury of 105 women scorned. (Remember? Hell hath no fury, etc, etc.)

No matter. While Giovann; Vigliotto made light of the law and social contracts, the law^nnot take him lightly, or we would all be doomed.

He may not have won himself a place in the history books, but the Guiness editors may be interested in Giovanni. Not even Pretty Boy Floyd rates mention in that annual publication.

Fitting Tribute

Greenvilles $12.5 million water treatment plant has been named in honor of Greenville Utilties Director Charles Home.

The annoimcement was made by Mayor Percy Cox, to Horaes surprise, at the dedication ceremonies for the new facility last week.

Home has served as director of utilities since 1968. Prior to that he was on the board of directors and served as chairman. He is a Greenville native who has maintained high interest in the development of the community.

Home has helped guide the financing and constmction of the water plant, and also of a waste water treatment facility which is expected to be under constmction this year. He has also helped develop the N.C. Municipal Power Agency which promises cheaper electric power for participating municipalities.

^ The naming of the water treatment plant for Charles OHagen Home is a fitting honor.

Paul T, O'Connor-

Tales Of Woe May Hurt Everyone

RALEIGH Is Duke Power Co. hurting the states industrial recruitment efforts through unduly pessimistic reports on the future of the states electricity siqyply?

That sentimat has surfaced in the" General Assembly this year in li^t of some statements made by Duke Power President Bill Lee. It is f^ that in complaining about new utility laws, Duke Power is painting an overly pessimistic picture of how much electricity weU have in the mid 1990s.

This story starts last summer after the states utilitites suffered two major losses in the assembly. They lost the automatic provisions of Construction Work in Progress (CWIP) and they got stuck with a fuel adjustment clause they didnt like. Almost immediately after the session ended, Lee started meeting with small groups of legislators.

His message was, and continues to be, that this state faces a crisis about a^' dozen years down the road. These

changes in the law have made it more difficult for Duke Power to raise the money it needs to build new power plants. If those plants arent started soon, we wont have them worWng in time to meet the demand of the mid 90s.

This position is contradicted by a recent report by the N.C. Public Staff which says that electrical demand wiU grow more slowly than Duke Power forsees and that well have plenty in 1995 without new power plants.

Several legislators have reported that Lee, in his presentation, told of a big industry vdiich wanted to locate somewhere around Salisbury. That firm, the legislators have said they were told, went elsewhere because Lee told them his fears of a future electricity shortage.

When Commerce Secretary Lauch Faircloth appeared before the House Public Utilities Committee he said he had no idea of what industry Lee was talking about. So far as he knows, no industry

has rejected N<lh Carolina because of electricity, Faircloth said. Gov. Jim Hunt said at a recent press conference that he knew of no such industry. He discounted the story, saying the industry probably just hdd Lee ^t he wanted to hear.

Dan Besse of the N.C. Ckmservation Council hdd the committee that Lee, in providing overly pessimistic information to industry, was hurting the states iiKiustriai recruitment. That charge infuriated Rep. Tom Rabon, D-Brunswick, but Besse answered that Duke Power was painting this gloom for its own benefit and hurting the state in the process.

Rq). Richard Wright, D-Columbus, one of the severest utility critics in the assembly, is saying the same thing. 1 wonder if Duke Power is discouraging industry ... Its part of a pattern by the utilities to make things look so bad to make the Legislature more pro-business and more pro-utility. Duke has gone overboard in its public reactions to make

it look like theres an anti-business climate here.

John Hicks, Duke Power vice president, says Lee ,has never said the prospect definitely rejected North Carolina on the grounds of electricity suppfy. Hicks said that Lee has been careful to say only diat the question about supply appeared to be a major concern to this film. He said that Duke Power officials will continue to tell industry that they fear electrical supply wUl be short in I middle of the next decade. If that recruitment, thats too bad, Hicks said.    ,

Wright thinks that all of Dukes dismal-talk is coming home to roost. In an' exchange with Lee at a committee meeting, Wright said that maybe Duke; Powers stock would have fared better on the markets this past year if Lee wasnt* qireading so mnyateles of woe. Im-afraid theyre creating the climate thats hurting Duke oirWall Street, he said. :

Gregory Nokes-

Murders Symbolize Salvadoran Problems

WASHINGTON (AP) - It was on Dec. 4,1980, that the battered bodies of three nuns and a fourth Catholic churchwoman, all Americans, were discovered in shallow roadside graves in El Salvador.

Three had been shot in the head and one in the chest two days earlier. There was evidence at least two had been raped.

Those murders, still unsolved, continue to plague Reagan administration policy in El Salvador and throughout Central America. Thev are a symbol of all theThe Daily Reflector

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unexplained civilian deaths - as many as 40,000 in that violent-ravaged country in recent years.

Even administration officials who favor increasing military aid to the Salvadoran government agree that members of the Salvadoran security forces were responsible for the deaths of Ita Ford, 40; Maura Clarke, 46; Dorothy Kazel, 40 - all Nuns - and Jean Donovan, a lay worker.

Despite the efforts of two secretaries of state to defuse the issue, key members of Congress still want to know why the

administration continues to give financial suppqrt to a government that seems reluctant to pursue the four deaths.

Congress has conditioned its approval of aid to El Salvador in the last two years on a certification by President Reagan that the Salvadoran government was making progress in solving these and other cases.

Five former Salvadoran national guardsmen have been accused in the deaths of the churchwomen, but there have been delays in bringing them to trial. Recently a judge said the evidence

against them was not sufficient and returned the case to a lower court.

In recent weeks, frustrated members of Congress have suggested tying the administrations latest request for $110 million in new military aid to a solution to the murders. This stUl could be done.

Its an open-and-shut case, contended Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., during a recent appearance by Secretary of State George P. Shultz before a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee.

They are thumbing their noses. They are taking our $l billion and saying, Go

tojhell, Leahy told Shultz.

'ihe senator charged that the Salvadoran authorities refuse to prosecute the case out of fear the accused will implicate high-level officials in the military and government in this and other crimes. The administration has said, however, there isnt any evidence that the murders were ordered from above.

Shultz told the Senate panel the four murdered churchwomen should be thought of in the same context as any of the murdered civUians in that nation.Art Buchwald-

If At First You Fail

"Hi, Mr. Peters, remember me? Horatio Alger the Fourth. You laid me off from the company six months ago because I was unskilled labor. Well, I just completed a welding course, and Im ready to go back to work.

Sorry, Horatio, but since youve been gone, the company has decided to invest in robot welders. I dont believe your welding skills are necessary any longer. Now, if you knew something about robotics.

"1 dont, sir, but Ill retrain myself and become a robot serviceman. Ill see you in six months.

Thats a good idea, son. Come back when you know something about robots, Horatio, and there will be a job waiting for you.

Hi, Mr. Peters. Well, sir, heres my certificate from the Consolidated Robot School. It says I can repair any kind of - robot now on the market.

This is very impressive. Lets see, according to your file, you were in this personnel office last July. Since you were here the company has invested in a state of the art computer that can repair the robots that make our zits. Were no longer hiring service people to take care of the robots.

But surely, sir, you must need someone to program the computers.

As a mattr of fact we do. Have you any experience in this field?

I dont at the moment, but I know I can be retrained to become a computer expert. If I do well in school may I have a job with your company?

Of course you can. You show the q)irit this corporation is always looking for. Hello, Mr. Peters. Long time no see. As I live and breathe, its Horatio Alger the Fourth. What have you been up to for the past two year?'

Ive been going to advanced computer programmiqg school, sir, I am now fluent' in BASIC, PASCAL and FORTRAN, and can work with any software on the market. I assume the company is still looking for programmers..

"We were for a whUe, Horatio. But then we subcontracted all our programming work to a software company who specializes in improving robot production for zits. We no longer have a computer division of our own, except for a small section that devotes itself to collating data on the zit market and then making economic pre%tions ojj how the con-

pany should expand.

Do not worry, Mr. Peters, I will retrain myself to become an economist with an emphasis on long-range zit planning.

Youll need a doctorate before I can hire you.

Do not fear, sir. I will drive a taxi during the daytime and go to school at night. If becoming an economist is the only way I can get a job, so be it -1 will become one.

You show gumption, boy. Bring me that sheepskin and youll be on the payroll.

(Three years later.)

Do my eyes deceive me? Is this the little Horatio Alger the Fourth who used to drop in here to see me about a job?

The very same, and I have something to show you. Here, sir, from the Harvard Business School, is my doctorate in HiTech Economics. And here is my doctoral thesis on the future of the zit market in the 21st century, as broken down by continents and countries throughout the non-Communist world. Now that I am retrained, may I have a position with the company?

Horatio, please sit down. Since you went off to get your economics degree, weve moved the entire companys operations to South Korea. We dont do anything here except distribute zits to our deafers.

I understand, sir, and I certainly dont blame you for going where you can make a better product for much less cost. What are you going to do now, Horatio?

The same thing any ambitious American boy would do. Im going to retrain myself to be a South Korean.

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

Elisha Douglas-Strength For Today

Some years, ago a New. England community decided to reconstruct a very old c|]urch which had fallen into disrepair.

Someone found a pencil draw-; ing of the old church which had been made by girl who was a bed-ridden invalid. She appeared' to have had considerable artistic talent. She could look out of her window to the church; she drew a picture of it, accurately and to scale. Shortly after, she passed away.

When this sketch was found, some 300 years later, the architects seized it with avidity. Here was precisely what they wanted for the restoration of the old church.    ;

Sometimes we can make only^ a very little contribution to life around us and apparently none at all to the world at large. Yet God picks up some humbler-sincere effort and causes it shine with the glory of a pearl oi^ great price.    -

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak-

iStable Currency Holds Key To Recovery

Ronald Reagans grand desigif for freeing the American economy from the stifling grasp of big government is threatened by the same bli^t that has frustrated him for two years; high interest rates.

Last summer the Federal Resrve Board, the nations central bank, turned double-digit interest rates downward, bringing renewed hopes of economic recovery. But the Feds move was only a stopgap measure, and it could backfire, reviving runaway inflation.

The ultimate solution to both high interest rates and high inflation is a stable currency in which Americans can place their faith. As Warren Brookes, one of the nations most perceptive economic commentators, explains: without confidence, wealth is not generated, risky investments are not made, crq>s are not planted, businesses are not founded and poverty ensues.

The key to that confidence, many say, is gold. The farther away the United States has gone from linking its currency to this universally-valuable cotj^modity, the

gloomier has become its economic picture. Says Sen. Roger Jepsen (R-Iowa), chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, Some argue that returning to a gold standard is a drastic step. Perhaps so, but the problems the gold stndard deals with most effectively - inflation, the long-trm capital market and short-term interest rates - are drastic ones.

Americas continuing economic crisis was touched off in 1971 when President Nixon ended the guarantee Jhat the dollar would be worth a specific amount of gold. He hoped this devaluation would enable us to sell more goods abroad, thereby increasing U.S. employment. Instead, Nixons termination of the last link between gold and the dollar touched off the worst inflationary decade in the nations history.

To curb the resulting inflation, Paul Volcker, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, declared in October .1979 that the central bank would nqjkmger worry about controlling interest

rates, but would concentrate on keeping down the overall money supply. This policy foUowed the monetarist doctrines of Nobel-laureate economist Milton Friedman, who blamed an excessive supply of dollars for inflation. The Feds move also slowed down the economy.

The effect on interest rates was dramatic. Real interest rates - that is, the actual return on money after adjustment for inflation - had beien fairly constant at around 2.5 percent for half a century. But following Volckers move to control the money supply, the real rate quickly climbed - to 4.2 percent in 1979, to 6.3 percent in 1980, to 9.8 percent in 1981.

The Federal Reserves strong medicine succeeded in rolling back inflation, and Reagan strategists expected interest rates to fall as inflation declined. Instead, real interest rates cmtinued to inch upward, dashing hopes that Reagans 1981 tax cuts - designed to revitalize the economy by restoring incentives to save and invest - would ffinerate noo-inflationagr prosperity. The economic

casualty list was long;    *

With mortgage rates close to 18 per- cent, the real-estate boom was over, and; home-buildinglanguished.    j

American auto makers, groggy over Japanese competition, were delivered near-knockout blow by 17.4 percent finan-: cing on car loans. The auto industry lak off thousands of workers, and so did sted! plants and other Detroit suppliers. 1 The boost in consumer credit-can^ rates to 19.8 percent and some installment: 8 loans to well over 30 percent diiKVMirinMidi buying.    ^

And to the dismay of the Reagan a(^ ministration, high interest rate prevented corporations from taking a$ vantage of the newly-enacted incentivei for capital investment.    .

By the summer of 1982 Volcker was havl ing a change of heart, andon July ao. 198 the Fed cut the discount rate - the In terest rate it charges financial tions. The Fed also began buying monl ,govei^ securlti^ thereby iiu^

ing the money supply Interest ratoi fen.





CP4L Files For Tax Break

The Dally Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Friday, April 1, U83-5

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Carolina Power ^ Light Co. has filed a request for a break on the $1.1 billion tax .assessment of its Wake County property, but county officals said the request is foohigh.

; CP&Ls request was for a 34.8 percent reduction, smaller than that sought by other utilities. That percentage is equal to more than $3.5 million in tax revenue for the county based on its 1982

valuation of $1.1 billion.

Making up that loss through property taxes would require an additional five cents of property tax per $100 of valuation, which would boost the county tax rate to 88 cents from 83 cents.

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6-The DaUy Renector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Friday. April 1,1983In The Area

City To Observe Holiday

City hall, all municipal offices and city recreation centers and vmnasiums will be closed Saturday through Monday in observance of the Easter holiday.

GREAT buses will operate on a regular schedule Saturday but city transit service will not be provided Sunday or Monday.

The city sanitation division will be closed Monday, but both residential pick-up routes will be served during the remainder of the week. Emergency calls for public works services may be made to 752-3473.

Sheppard Memorial Library and its branches will observe Saturday through Monday for Easter.

County Board To Meet Tuesday

The Pitt County Board of Commissioners will meet Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the county office building at 1717 West Fifth St. The board will not meet Monday as usual because of the Easter Monday holiday.

Included on the agenda is the opening of bids for three solid waste container pickup trucks; scheduleing meetings for the Board of Equalization and Review for 10 a.m. April 6, and 2 p.m. on April 18 and May 2. and a review of the Department of Transportations secondary road plan.

Rose Students To Visit France

A group of J.H. Rose High School Flinch students, enrolled with the American Institute for Foreign Stuc|y, will leave Saturday to visit France.

The tour will include visits to Paris attractions as well as the Loire Valley region of castles such as Amboise and Chenonceau. A highlight will be a visit to the Mont St. Michel monastery.

Making the trip are Robert Bond, Willa Stancill, Jody Ross, Tammy Strum, Alex Laughter, Lisa Whitlow, French teacher, Nell Williams and Dr. and Mrs. Edgar Boyd.

They will leave Raleigh-Durham Airport Saturday morning en route to the Newark, N.J., airport. They will fly on to Paris later Saturday.

Science Fair Winners Named

Winners have been announced in the Falkland Elementary Schools Science Fair. They are:

Fourth and 5th grades - 1st. Tracy Lawrence; 2nd, Eric Hale, and 3rd, Carrie Hale, Their projects will be entered in the East Carolina University Science Fair April 15.

Third grade - 1st, .Misty Joyner; 2nd, Deborah Evans, and 3rd. Allen Barrow.

Group Experiments With Computers

A program on utilization of computer tenchology including hands-on experience with computers highlighted the annual spring meeting of the East Carolina University Adult Education Association last week.    _    ,

ECU Chancellor John Howell addressed approximately 40 members attending the meeting. Howell was awarded an honorary lifetime membership in the organization.

For information about the association, call Kathy Sprau at :155-2712 or the ECU Office of Adult Education, 757-6825.

Pitt Republicans Jo Meet Tuesday

The Pitt County. Republican Party will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the basement of Planters National Bank at the intersection of Third and Washington streets. The agenda includes planning for the district convention.

Crop Insurance Sales Extended^

The Federal Crop Insurance Corp. has extended all-risk crop insurance sales for 1983 spring crops in North Carolina to April 15, according t Jim Taylor, district director for eastern North Carolina.

Producers interested in securing protection on spring crops should contact their local federal crop insurance agent, Taylor said, or call 1-800447-4700 toll free.

A list of agents is available at the local Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, he said,

'    .    'I

Bethel Town Board To Meet

"The Bethel Town Board of Commissioners will hold its regular meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the town office.

The following items will be discussed: putting up 4 community bulletin board, position of the 201 sewage disposal plan, U.S. Geological water survey of eastern North Carolina, N.C. model housing code and the state building code, evaluation of water, administative and police department supervisors, updating of the cemetery ordinance, truck routes, releasing taxes and budget amendments.

A public hearing on appropriation of funding under the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 will be held. Anyone interested should be at the town office by 7-30 p.m.

, Child Wins Baby Contest

James West Potter, 14-week-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Potter Jr. of Ayden, is the winner of this years Beautiful Baby Contest sj^nsored by the Greenville Jay-C-Ettes to raise money for the March of Dimes.

Of the $1,638.04 raised in the contest which ended last Saturday, more than $300 was contributed by supporters of the winner. The first runner-up was Cherry Leigh Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Douas Smith of Greenville, and the ^ond runner-up, Amanda Paige Pollard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kirby Pollard of Greenville.

Winterville Awards Contracts

The Winterville Town Board of Aldermen has awarded contracts to Alligood Builders for the rehabilitation of six houses under the Community Development Block Grant.

Alligood Builders were low bidders with the following individual bids; $13,990, $11,945, $12,495, $12,975, $14,680 and $7,775.

The board also approved the citizen participation plan, the affirmative action plant, the equal employment opportunity policy, the contractors handbook and the administrative guidelines ($14,000 maximum spent on each house), all associated with the CDBG.

Andrews Named To Honor Roll

Edward Andrews of Bethel was among students named to the honors list for the winter quarter at Martin Community College. The honors list is reserved for students compiling a 3.5 grade-point average for their respective course loads. Andrews is enrolled in the forest management program.

t

Classes Present Three Bears'

The kindergarten classes of Eastern Elementary School presented a musical play, Goldilocks and the Three Bears at the school this morning. A number of students took part in the play, including Chris Shiver, Kristina Wooten, Amy Shive and Beth Measamer. Teachers assisting were Delores Ford, Pat Minges and Peggy Rowlett.

Drivers Injured In Accident'

Cars driven by Mary Hodges Williams of 1619 East Wright Road and Betty Jean Belk of 1217A Clark St. collided about noon Wednesday at the intersection of 14th and Chestnut streets, according|o Greenville police.

Officers, who said both drivers were injured in the collision, estimated damage at $1,000 to the Williams car and $600 to the Belk vehicle.

Whitfield Observers Teacher Week

G.R. Whitfield School celebrated Teacher Appreciation Week reccently with a different branch of the school recognizing teachers each day for the roles they play in the lives of children.

The school administration treated the staff to coffee and doughnuts Monday and Tuesday, with media personnel and helpers presented teachers with badges reading Worlds Greatest Teacher. Gifted and talented students and teachers supervised lunchroom duty Wednesday while other teachers were treated to lunch in the lounge. Thursday, the Student Government Association placed apples on the desks of staff members.

Nature^got into the act Friday, giving staff members a snowy holiday. Several parents filled a table with food and drink the following Monday.

Annual Easter Program Planned

The Majestic Civic Club of Greenville will sponsor its 15th annual Mr. and Miss Easter Bunny Parade Sunday at 4:30 , p.m. in Sadie Saulter School Auditorium on Fleming Street.

The highlight of the program will be the crowning of Mr. and Miss Easter Bunny 1983-84. A medley of Easter and other seasonal music will be presented by Roger Ingram, organist. Admission is free.

Warren Named To Panels

Rep. Ed Warren of Pitt County has been named to represent North Carolina on the National Confrence of State Legislatures State Federal Assembly Committee on Agriculture, Food Policy and Nutrition.

House Speaker Liston Ramsey also named Warren to a committee of the Southern Legislative Conference of the Council of State Governments designed to serve as a network to function as a liaison with Congress on issues of regional interest.

Mecklenburg Alumni Host Ensembles Festival To Be Discussed

T^e Mecklenburg County chapter of the East Carolina University Alumni Association tmsted an evening of entertainment at Spirit Square in Charlotte this week.

Composer-pianist Loonis McGlohmi, an ECU alumnus, cdlaborated with the ECU Percussion and Jazz Ensembles to present a concert.

McGlohon received a certificate if recognition from Pi Kappa Lambda, a nationai-internatkmal honor society in music. He also received honorary membership to Beta Zeta. Nearly 250 people attended theconcert.

Bethel Plans Community Service

The Bethel Community Easter Sunrise Service wiU be held at the Bethel Pentecostal Holiness Church, Sunday at 5:45 a.m. The Rev. Norman Joyner, pastor of the host church, will speak.

Theft At Home Reported

Greenville police today were investigating the reported theft of $1,092 worth of property from a house at 404 E. Fourth St. Thursday night.

Chief Glenn Cannon, who said the theft was reported at 1:36 a.m. today, said a stereo, a tape deck, a gold chain neckless and heart pendant with diamonds, and a silver neckless were taken.

Hearing On Aging Scheduled

The Mid-East Commissions area Aging Advisory Committee will hold a public hearing April 14 on a comprehensive plan on aging for the Mid-East region.

The hearing will be at the Mid-East offices at 310 W. Main St. in Washington, N.C., at 9:30 a.m.

Consider Relaxing Twin-Trailer Rule

The East Carolina Arts Festival, a series of April evei^ featuring art, music, dance and drama, will be discussed oa|f^ ECU Concepts at 8 a.m. Sunday on radio station WOOW. J ,

Janice Faulkner, the festivals chairman and director of the \

ECU Regional Development Institute, will be the guest for the v ^ < 15-minute program. She will be interviewed by James Rees of the ECU Department of Drama and Speech.

Tax Collections Are Reported

Net sales and use tax collections in Pitt County fo Fdi)ruary amounted to $228,782, according to state Revenue Secretary* Mark Lynch.    ,

Totals in several neighboring counties for February included: Beaufort, $109,288; Carteret, $18,523; Craven, $218,714; Edgecombe, $130,800; Greene, $17,719; Lenoir, ^157,622; Martin, $64,297; Nash, $254,878; Wayne, $266,303, and WUson, $215,929.

et collections in the 99 participating counties during the month amounted to $17,304,782.

ii

WRECK'S TOLL NEW DELHI, India (AP) - A truck containing 33 laborers overturned Thursday night in Andhra Pradesh state in southern India, killing 23 people, police said.

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) North Carolina is considering allowing twin-trailer tructe on more roads than required by the federal government, endangering the lives of state motorists, Carolina Motor Club officials said Thursday.

According to the motor club, legislation has been introduced in North Carolina that would allow twin trailers on highways with 11 foot-wide lanes. This is 1 foot narrower than the 12-foot minimum specified by the federal government.

Despite substantial evidence from both the Federal Highway Administration and other research studies pointing up the significantly in-creasai dangers associated with these type trucks, it appears as if our state might be wiiiing to allow them access to numerous highways beyound those mandated by the federal government, said Ralph Peters, president of the 223,000-member club.

Twln-traller trucks are two trailers pulled by a tractor. Their use in North Carolina was authorized by the Sur-face Transportation Assistance Act of 1982, passed by the last session of Congress.

Correction

A Community Services Fair will be held Tuesday at 3 p.m. at the Belk Building on the East Carolina University campus, Thursdays Daily Reflector listed the date as Saturday.

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Spelling

The DaUy Reflector, Greenvifle, N.C.-Friday, April 1. W-7

Bee

Winners

PITT COUNTY SPELLING BEE WINNERS ...Scott Stepheoson of A.G. Cox, Tom Ricks of Ayden Middle, Vicki Mercer of H.B. &igg and Jeffrey Bell of Bethel Elementary (left to right) were first-place grade level winners in Pitt County schools county-wlde^^jpeUlng hee. Stephensor won the 4th grade competition, Ricks the 7th grade; Miss Mercer the 4th and Bell the 6th. Missy Rose of Griftco, pictured seperately, was the overall winner. (Reflector Staff Photo)

No Pricing Cut On Nigerian Oil

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ALDERMASTON, England (XP) - Anti-nuclear de-lionstrators sent thousands o| multicolored balloons s^ard today and Joined Imnds in a 14-mile human chain linking three key de-fise facilities that span Britains "nuclear valley." ;ihe helium-filled balloons ^re freed in the early afternoon from 14 spots to liark the linkup of tens of thousands of demonstrators protesting British nuclear weapons and planned deployment of U.S. cruise missiles to counter a Soviet buildup.

Three hours before the lininq) under ccrid and gray skies in the Thames River Valley 50 miles west of London, more than 100 peace campaigners scaid 15-foot-bi^ chain-link fences topped with barbed wire at the Greenham Common U.S. Air Base, planned sit for the cruise missiles.

A Newbury police sp6kesman said they were detained inside the base by Bijtish military pdicp. Four women who scaled the Greenham fence at dawn were picked up by military police and later released

Teen-Ager's Dream Of Trip To Europe End^

Solar Fraction

Hie solar fraction for this area Thursday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was zero. This means that a solar water heater could have provided zero percent of your hot water needs.

, LONDON (AP) - Nigeria, which broke ranks from OPEC on oil pricing last month, says it not alter its prices in response to t^ weeks price cut for Britains North Sea oil, the British Broadcasting Corp. reports.

The BBC quoted an official Nigerian statement Thursday as saying Britains price cut of 50 cente to 75 cents per barrel was broadly in line with the policy of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and a genuine attempt to restore stability to the market.

Oil market sources said the Nigerian statement appeared to remove fears that the British action mi^t lead to a price war with oUier producers.

The state^)wned British Oil Corp. announced a cut Wechiesday in its proposed benchmark price for Nortlv Sea crude from 630.50 a

barrel to $30. It said the price of other grades would be reduced an extra 25 cents to $29.75.

Nigeria, which competes directly with Britain in the high quality oil market, had pledged to match any North Sea oil cuts below $30 ddlars "cent for cent.

The long-awaited British announcement followed a March 14 agreement by OPEC to drop the benchmark price for Saudi light crude from $34 to $29 a barrel and set individual production quotas for Nigeria and the cartels other 12 members.

halrman Joan Ruddock of the sponsoring Campaign for Nuclear Dissurmament had Mtlmated it vrould take 40,000 people to stand arm-in-arm along the route, "Iftit we believe we have double that.

Mrs. Ruddock and police agreed it was impossible to make an exadt estimate or wl^etber the pro-srs Joined bands at ctly the same time, event, start of an

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are determined to do something about these terrible nuclear weapons, Mrs. Ruddock $aid.

The protesters, who arrived by bus, car, motorbike, and foot, stood four and five deq> in some places along the ro|ute bolding signs that read:/"Peace in the World or the ]Worid in Pieces" and "USA Death Merchante Go Home." '

The chain stretched from Greenham Common past the Atomic Weapons Research establishment at Aldermaston to the Royal 'Ordnance Factory at Bur^field, where Britain builds nuclear warheads. The protesters call it "nuclear valley.

Traffic snarled on rural roads in this wealthy commuter belt in the rolling Berkshire hills, with dozens of buses in mile-long lines. Many of the mainly conservative local residents grumbled about the crowds. After the organizers freed the balloons and exploded a few firecrackers, the demonstrators marched to a rally and festival at Padworth Common near Aldermaston.

Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said Thursday the )rotesters would have been )etter off "to go and link hands round the Berlin WaU.

Defense Secretary Michael Heseltine returned today from the Beriin Wall and declared the Conservative government would never pursue the "naive and reckless road" advocated by the protesters seeking unilateral nuclear disarmament.

"We are committed to defend their (the demonstrators) freedom, however much I may di^gree with the inconvenience and cost they impose on the majority of us who dkmt share their views, Heseltine told a London news conference.

WU^INGTON, N.C. (AP) - For six months, 17-yar-old Billy Jefferson peddled M&Ms, lollipops, candles and doughnuts to scrape together enough money for a nine-day trip to Europe. He arranged for a passport and endured the necessary vaccinations, dreaming of his first airplane ride and of seeing countries besides his own.

The piane carrying the Laney High School student excursion leaves for Paris Saturday, but Jefferson wont be aboard. The Laney senior might even lose the $1,200 he raised to pay for the Journey.

Jefferson was the driver of the New Hanover County school activity bus that was hit Tuesday afternoon by a tanker truck loaded with a dangerous chemical. The collision pinned Jefferson in his seat and left him with a concussion and scalp lacerations. His doctors dont know when he will be released from New Hanover Memorial Hospital. They also forbid the overseas trip.

Jefferson wasnt even being paid for driving Laney and Williston Junior Hi^ School students on their field trip to Robbins Nursery in Penderlea. He did it as a favor for the teacher, Albert Foxworth, who was in satisfactory condition Thursday afternoon at New Hanover Memorial Hospital.

All 39 students on the bus and the truck driver were injured at least slightly.

"Since its happened, I can really tell how toe Lord must have been looking after us all, Jefferson said Thuis-day, his husky body tuckd under a gold hospital bedspread and his head wrapped in a cast resembling a heavy white ski mask. A tuft of brown hair peeked from the top of the cast, matching the color of his thin mustache and the stubble of dark whiskers on his chin.

"My life is more important than any trip, he said. "Thats what Im looking at

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OLD FASfflONED SPRING CLEAN-UP -Tom Savidge of Greenville wields a sling blade in a yard just off Second Street, cutting newly sprouted weeds and encroaching kudzu vines. He cut around clumps of -violets in bloom.

leaving them to provide spring color in the yard. Savidge is a member of the Eckerd 'Wilderness Foundation, which operates a wilderness camp near Newport. (Reflector Photo by Angela Lingerfelt)

Rare California Condor Is Hatched In Captivity

By DENNIS GEORGATOS Associated Press Writer SAN DIEGO (AP)-A tiny California condor popped out of its egg with a little human help to become the first of the vanishing species to hatch in captivity, San Diego Zoo officials said early today. ,

The chick, bald about the neck and head with a sparse covering of downy white feathers, was freed of its shell at about 10 p.m. Wednesday. said zoo spokesman Jeff Jouett. It weighed 201.9 grams - about 7 ounces -he said.

'.Apparently, its in good health," Jouett said'exuber-antly. He said keepers have not yet determined the birds sex.

Two birdkeepers, Cyndi Kuehler and Pat Whitman -used surgical instruments and their hands to help the chick out of its light blue shell. Earlier, the rare bird had punched a hole a bit larger than a quarter on its own, Jouett said.

"It reached a point where it was felt that it was in the best interest of the bird to help it break out, said Jouett.

Keepers fed the hungry bird for the first time at midnight, administering "two finely chopped mice in warm water by hand, Jouett said.

Five birdkeepers and a closed-circuit television camera monitored the progress of the tiny condor. A veterinarian was on call in case of emergency.

The team of scientists had maintained an around-the-clock egg-watch since .Monday, when the chick first poked a hole in the shell, Jouett said.

The oblong egg, about six times the size of a chicken egg. was plucked from its parents nest Feb. 23 by a team of scientists in the rugged back country of the

condor sanctuary near Ventura.

Only about 20 California condors remain in the wild, and they are dying off at a rate of three or four a year. By removing the egg, scientists hoped to encourage the wild condor pair to produce another egg - in effect doubling the birth rate.

Before the Condor was freed from the egg, Jouette said a successful hatching would rank as one of the most important events in the 67-year history of the San Diego Zoo. known for its captive breeding of endangered species.

To help the baby bird along, zookeepers rotated the egg by hand to make certain heat is evenly distributed. And every two hours, they played a tape recording of a "mother king vulture. a distant cousin of the condor.

Its a form of communication that simulates what a parent might do in the wild, Jouett said. "It sounds roughly like a muted dog bark, but it seems to catch the baby condors attention because the shell rocks to the music.

The chick will remain in the incubator at the zoos Avian Propagation Center for at least 24 hours, Jouett said.

Whe^ it is healthy enough to travel, the chick will be placed in an isolette, similar to the germ-free plastic boxes used to house human premature babies. Then it will be transferred by ambulance to the San Diego Wild Animal Park near Escondido, a journey of 32 miles.

To help the chick feel at home far from the craggy peaks where its forebears soared, officials at the zoo have prepared a puppet show for feeding time.

The puppets look exactly like condors because we want the baby condor to

imprint on a condor face rather than a human face, Jouett said. Otherwise, he said, "If we released the baby in the wild, it might fly down to the first picnic table it sees since it would relate with humans.

The chick will be fed vulture vomit by the puppets, the same regurgitated food it would receive in the wild, he said.

A second egg is also being incubated at the zoo and is due to hatch in 10 days to two weeks. /

With only three California condors, all male, now in captivity, the species could plummet into extinction without human intervention, Jouett said.

We arent sure its going to work, but its the very best effort humans could make at saving the condor, said Bill Toone, the zoos condor keeper.

Car No Match For A Train

KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) -Accidents at railroad crossings left 579 Americans dead and 2,511 injured in 1982, according to the Federal Railroad Administration.

Obviously, a motor vehicle is no match for an oncoming train, Gov. Bob Kerrey said in a statement read here Wednesday to kick off Nebraskas 1983 effort to remind the public of crossing dangers.

Since a National Safety Council program called Operation Lifesaver, began in Idaho in 1972. Nebraska, Oregon, Missouri and Iowa have joined the effort to discourage motorists from trying to beat trains over crossings.

Viets Attack Cambodian Base

ARANYAPRATHET, Thailand (AP) - Vietnamese tanks, troops and artillery routed 3,500 Khmer Rouge guerrillas from their base on the Thai-Cambodian border today, killing at least 32 civilians and wounding 150, Thai military officers said. They said they also expected an attack on a nearby camp.

The officers said at least

10,000 civilians fled across the frontier into Thailand as the guerrillas deserted their stronghold at Phpom Chat, 25 miles northeast of this Thai frontier town, and split up into small groiqis, fleeing north along the border.

One high-ranking officer said 32 bodies of Cambodian civilians were recovered just inside Thai territory near the anti-tank ditch that is

Thailands first line of defense.

Fifty wounded Cambodians were taken to refugee camps near the combat zone, he said, and 100 other Cambodians were treated for minor wounds.

He said that sh^tog was continuing south of Phnom Chat, near the Nong Samet border encampment which houses more than 70,OM

N.C. Citizens Urged To Report Drug Smuggling

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina wants state residents to help catch drug smugglers by reporting suspicious boats or planes to a new toll-free number.

State Bureau of Investigation agents will man the phone 24 hours a day to take the information, and those phoning in the tips may remain anonymous.

North Carolinas coastline has historically been a smugglers paradise, Attorney General Rufus Edmisten said Wednesday. We cannot cover every nook and cranny without the help of our citizens.

The number - 1-800-662-8858 - is printed on two posters. The poster on boats will be distributed to stores and marinas on the coast and the poster on airplanes will

go to stores and airports around the state.

Hundreds of suspected drug smugglers have been caught because citizens reported suspicious activity. Fourteen people were recently convicted in a Brunswick County case because a man reported an unusually large plane landing at a local airport, he said.

They do not have to give their names, Edmisten said. People are often afraid to report drug information because of the danger of reprisal. Drug pushers mean business. They will kill one another and kill other people.

The boat poster asks citizens to look for 29 suspicious signs including:

- Boats transferring cargo from one to another at sea or tied up to each other at sea.

- Boats landing in isolated areas and being met by trucks or recreational vehicles.

- Boats purchased with cash and left registered in the former owners name.

- Installation of unusually sophisticated electronic gear.

- Absence of women or children on pleasure craft.

The plane poster, which says, No plane should be above suspicion, lists 22 suspicious signs including:

- Passenger seats removed from aircraft.

- Maps and charts of foreign countries, especially Latin America and the Caribbean.

- Large cash payments for aircraft, fuel and services.

- Failure to produce sufficient gas receipts to account for elapsed flying time in a rental airplane.

Cambodian civilians, and he and other officers said they feared the Vietnamese were about to strike there.

About 30,000 Communist Khmer Rouge guerrillas and

10.000 allied non-Communist guerrillas are opposing j80,000 Soviet-backed Vietnamese troops who invaded Cambodia in 1978 and toppled the pro^Chinese Khmer Rouge regime.

Thai tro(H>s along the tense frontier were placed on full alert and there were reports of a clash between the advancing Vietnamese and Thais guarding the border.

[ A senior Thai military of-' ficer said fghting started before dawn when about

1.000 Vietnamese troops attacked the hilly Phnom Chat area, which paddles the Thai-Cambodian border to northeast of Aranyaprathet.

The attack was directed against Phnom Chat itself, a longtime Khmer Rouge stronghold, as well as two , nearby villages - Jankago and Preymon.

The officer said fighting continued after daybreak, as

10.000 civilians huddled along the anti-tank ditch, about 200 yards inside the border.

Prasong Soonsiri, a Thai security official, held a hastily called news conference to condemn the Vietnamese attack.

He said he believed Vietnam had planned the attack several weeks earlier

Complete RadMtor Service

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and had delayed it until afjpf a conference of Eun^)M and Southeast Asian foreMfi ministers ended in Bangnd last Friday.

1 hope the Vietname will not cross the^ border. If they do, It create a worse . said Prasong. We right to defend ofourterritoiy.

He said the attack might bethebegtoningof abr Vietnamese ofMve agaii two other civilian and gufe^ rilla encampments, at Nong Samet to the south and Ban Sangae to the north, whiclvis the headquarters of i4n-communist re^tance leader SonSann.

Prasong said todays attack followed skinnistont the previous two days aim was carried out by units of Vietnams 5th Division, based at the Cambodian town of Sisophon, 27 miles from the Thai border.

He said the division had a strength of 10,000 men.

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Poisoned Home Razed, Buried

NEW YORK (AP) - An $80,000 house was bulldozed and its contents were buried after state officials determined it was contaminated by a dangerous -chemical used to rid it of termites, a newspaper reported today.

The chemical, Aldrin, was sprayed "inside the walls, beams, ceilings, linen closets, pantry and all over the house in suburban East Islip, according to Vincent Hand of Bay Shore, an attorney representing the homeowners, Jeffrey and Dorothea Lever.

Hand told the New York Daily News that the Levers ordered the home destroyed after their insurance company agreed to replace it.

Aldrin is an insecticide intended only for below-ground application around the outside of buildings, according to Donald Middleton, regional director of the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

The Daily News quoted unidentified sources as saying Mrs. Lever suffered a miscarriage within a month after the chemical was sprayed. Another pregnant woman who had stayed in the Levers house immediately after the spraying obtained a medical abortion on the advice of her physician, the News quoted state environmental officials as saying.

Hand said the Levers two children, a 3-year-old girl and a 1-year-old boy, have suffer^ liver damage as a result of their exposure to the toxic fumes.

John Meister, of the environmental conservation department, said his office had received dozens of

phone calls from concerned citizens about the contamination. The house was located less than 100 yards from the Timber Pmt-|lle-mentary School.

There is no problem to the community, said Lever, 26, a New York City firefighter. The problem was to the people living in the house. Now that the house is gone, the danger is gone.

Court Refuses Reopen School

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -In a 2-1 opinion, a panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has refused to order the reopening of Forest Hill Elementary School, which parents had once tried to turn into a squatters school.

Chris Roy, an attorney representing the parents, said Wednesday he would file a plea for a rehearing. The school was closed as part of a 1980 desegregation plan imposed on ^ public schools in Rapides Parish by U.S. District Judge Nauman Scott.

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Trestle Table

36"w X 60"! X 29h

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Distributed in the Carolinas by Porter Brothers of Shelby





S V

The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, April i, ubs-j

SENTENCED From left, former Teamsters Andrew Massa (right) were sentenced Thursday pMlon fund trustee Thomas OMalley, Teamsters for conspiring to bribe former U.S. Sen. Howard Iroident Roy L. Williams, reputed mobster Cannon of Nevada. (APLaserphoto)

Joseph lombardo and former fund trustee

Judge Warns Teamster Prexy His Sentence Will Be Severe

. BySHARONCOHEN : j Associated Press Writer ' CHICA(JO (AP) - A federal judge will probably re-doce a 55-year prison term for Teamsters President Roy L. Williams, but says the lbor leader deserves a \ harsh poialty because his ; attempt to bribe a U.S. j senator attacked the very t vitals of society.

U.S. District Judge Pren-; tice H. Marshall took note ; Thursday of Williams status ; a$ "president of one of the ' most powerful organizations in the free worid in ordering the provisional 55-year sen-f tence for the Teamster lead-\ ers part in a conspiracy to bribe former Sen. Howard 'j: Cannon.

N Persons who achieve such ^ high position should be i expected to be treated ; severely when they use the office for corrupt purposes as he did,the judge said.

Life As It's Lived

Marshall said the sentence probably sounded horrendous but likely would be significantly reduced after a 90Klay mescal assessment at the federal medical prison facility in Springfield, Mo., where Williams is to report by April 15. Final sentencing will be June 27.

Williams, 68, suffers from severe emphysema. He appeared in court on Thursday with tubes in his nose and a tank of oxygen at his side.

Marshall said it was inconsistent to believe Williams is unfit for imprisonment - as his lawyers contend - yet able to run the nations largest union.

After the sentence was announced, Williams declared through the union that he is innocent and determined to remain in the $225,000-a-year job pending appeal. He won the job days after his 1981 bribery-

conspiracy indictment.

While calling Williams a vepr sick man, Marshall said, Probation in this case would depreciate the seriousness of the offense.

Its an attack on the very vitals of society, the jud^ said of the effort by Williams and four others to buy Cannons influence in blocking trucking deregulation le^slation opposed by the Teamsters in exchan^ for exclusive rights to buy Las Vegas property.

Cannon, a Democrat who lost a reflection bid last fall, was not charged and the deregulation legislation passed with his support.

The defendants were convicted Dec. 15 of conspiracy, interstate travel to further bribery and nine, counts of wire fraud.

Williams was the third Teamsters president convicted of a felony in the last

0)mpulsive Talker Has found A Good Listener

By GAIL MICHAELS : From the time that she was first able to put a sentence toother, Meg has been laboring under the tnisapprehension that if she is prevented from talking for any significant period of ; time, she will ce^ to exist.

This belief is nowhere more apparent than in the dentists office, where enforced silence is usually the order of the day. Even I find .the proliferation of dental equipment in my mouth an impossible hindrance to Bp^h. But X-ray plates and cleaning tools hardly phase Meg. She has elevated the production of excess Verbiage to such a fine art that, if necessary, she can 5arry on an extensive monologue without the use of her jaws and teeth.

' She has not yet, however, managed to bypass the use of her tongue. The last time she ,was at the dentists, this unfortunate defect caused her extreme discomfort. She was getting plastic seals put bn her back molars, and she )iad been instructed pot to because the prereqimite cleaning ngent had a citron ; lAse vdiich would taste ter-' ,ribly bitter if it touched her : iwigue.

I Naturally, the injunction Against talking caused her _ to wag even harder.

I informed the dentist that

she was delighted to find Hi^ights" magazine in his waiting room because it proved he really cared about children. She told the dental assistant that her front teeth had a space between then because they had been stuck there in her gums for so long that they had forgotten how they were siq)pos^ to come in.

At least the jokes about my two front teeth are over, she sighed. Three years is too long to have to listen tb such silliness.

Those were her last words before the citron hit her tongue. For a few seconds she sounded as if she were strangling; then she began to wail. Its icky! Its yucky! Its gross! Its nasty! she howled without stopping to catch her breath.

The dental assistant was unrepentant. I told you not to talk.

You dont understand, Meg explained tearfully. I only talk when I have to. I have to talk to communicate. Now if I knew sign language, it would be different. I really wish 1 did know sign language.

Good heavens, that would be awful, the den.*st whispered to me. Then she could carry on two conversations at once.

Meg eventually calmed down enough to choose (me of the posters reserved for the

good patients. Chattering cheerfully, she inspected each one. Ill take this one, she finally said.    ^

From my seat in another dental chair, I heard the muffled laughter of the dental assistant. One by one, the rest of the staff joined in.

What did she choose? I managed to mumble through the stainless steel Tinkertoys that had been jammed into my mouth.

She chose a picture of a rabbit, the dentist said.

I couldnt understand why this was so funny until Meg walked over and showed it to me. The caption read, Fm not much on talking, but Im sure a good listener.

25 years. Dave Beck and the late Jimmy Hoffa were convicted on federal comq)tion charges.

Mr. Williams, you sold the working man out, Marshall said. You were willing to take the working mans pension and use it. Yes, use it for your own aggrandizement.

Three others were sentenced with Williams, 'who was also fined $29,(XX). Reputed mobster Joseph Lombardo was given 15 years in prison and fined $29,(XX), former Teamsters pension fund trustees Thomas OMalley, 30 months, and Andrew Massa, a year and a day.

All three also were given five yearsprobation.

A fifth defendant. Teamsters associate Allen Dorfman, a millionaire insurance- executive, was gunird down in January. Marshall said he believed' Dorfman was the mastermind of the conspiracy to bribe Cannon.

During six weeks of presentencing hearings, the government tried, to depict Williams as a handmaiden of organized crime. Prosecutors contended he was controlled by the Kansas City crime syndicate headed by the late Nick Civella.

Marshall said the links between Williams and organized crime were not clear, unequivocal and convincing.

The irony of the case, Marshall said, was that Cannon publicly had taken a position on trucking deregulation in opposition to what the Teamsters wanted.

There was no conceivable way he could have done other than he ultimately did, Marshall said of the former senator.

The government built its case on about 50 conversations monitored by the FBI over 13 months of electronic surveillance - believed the longest such investigation in the agencys history.

( SiS Salutes >

Great American Families Just Like Yours.

iSome May Not Add A Credit Card Fee

I By Rie Associated Press 1 North Carolina banking bfficials say some banks may pot charge a credit card fee and others probaUy wont charge the full $20 approved by the Legislature for annual bank credit card fees.

; I would imagine that fome banks are going to start charging a fee fairly loon (but) some are not to charge it at all, ^d Edmund D. Aycock, fleneral counsel for the North Carolina Bankers Associa-2fon.

; North Carolina National ank, the states largest, ' ^ily will iifofoduce the I in the next month or two, kesman Wintoo R. ! said NCNB had not I bow much to charge saM it probably would be lUayear.

Aycock predicted many

the maximum $20.

Banks must give customers a 30-day notice under the measure improved Wednesday for VISA, MasterCard and other bank credit cards.

Banks say they have lost money on the cards because they arent allowed to charge high enough interest rates on them and because $umy customers avoid interest charges altogether by paying on time.

I think I can safely say that virtually 100 percent of the banks (in North Carolina) lost money last year on the cards, Poole said.

Most banks arent kxdng money now because the cost of money has dropped in recent months, officials said.

EASTER FEATURE

$049

2

A special Easter feature that offers you the choice of one of three entrees, plus two garden-fresh vegetables:

Roast Tlirk^ and Corn Bread Dressing with Cranberry Sauce

Baked Ham

Chopped Sirloin Steak

This Easter, bring the whole family to S&S cafeterias for an Ea$ter meal youll all remember. Home cooked goodness the entire fomily will enjoy!

Where America Comes Home To Eat

Carolina East Mail Mon-FVi LUNCH 11A.M.-2:15 P.M.,

SUPPER 4:30 P.M.-8 P.M. (8:30 Fri);

Sat & Sun 11A.M.-8 P.M. (continuously) (8:30 Sat)

_    .    ''yneuw.Tw.ureenvuie, IN.t.Friday A

Chemical Plant Baffling Claim Of Risk In Dioxin

CHICAGO (AP) - Dow Chemical Co., responding to a iederal accimtion that it polluted a river with dioxin, said nearby residents would have to eat more than 25 tons of fish per year to consume cancer- causing levels of the chemical.

The government charged Thursday that Dows Midland, Mich., plant had contaminated the Tit-tabawassee River with dioxin in its most dangerous form.

Federal authoritites said the claim was based on a newly completed study supporting conclusions originally reached in 1981 by the Chicago office of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, but ordered stricken from the final draft by the EPAs Washington headquarters.

Dow spokeswoman Sarah Rowley said Thursday the company has not yet had an opportunity to study the EPA report in detail but said there appears to be nothing in the report thats inconsistent with previously published data, much of which had been generated by Dow and provided to government agencies.

Testimony before a congressional committee two weeks ago revealed the decision to delete some of the original findings after Dow had been permitted to review the report and make comments.

Revelation of that decision also led to the resignation

Radio Hoax

JERUSALEM (AF) -Israel Radio reported today a shocking new $175 annual tax pn video re-(wders, the countrys new status symbol.

After airing stunned reactions from the public and at least one Parliament member, it then announced the r^rt was an April Fools hoax.

I wont pay a single agoura (cent), said one Israeli interviewed on the street. This is mad, said another.

under White House pressure of acting EPA administrator John W. Hernandez Jr., and four other officials.

Our studies now show that Dow is a source of contaminating the Tit-tabawassee River with the most-toxic form of dioxin, said Valdas Adamkus, chief of the EPA office in Chicago. I still get angry when I think of our office being forced to delete the original findings.

Scientists so far have been unable to determine what level of dioxin is harmful to humans, but researchers contend tests on laboratory animals have proved some" concentrations of the chemical are lethal.

The compound is a waste product of herbicide manufacture.

Dow has fought efforts by the EPA to enter plant grounds for testing, and investigators have had to take samplings from the river near the complex. Not only dioxin was found, but also more than 40 toxic chemicals turned up in the samplings, the study indicated.

Dow repeatedly has denied contamination responsibility, and Ms. Rowley said, You would have to eat more than 25 tons of fish per year to reach a level of dioxin that has been shown to cause

cancer in animals.

But Howard Zar, an environmental scientist'with the (Chicago regional staff, said people should not eat fish from the river.

When water passes through fish, the chemicals collect in them and multiply, and \rtiat we get is bioaccumulation, he said. Dow discharges 35 million gallons a day and contamination accumulates.

The Midland facility, extending along both banks of the Tittabawassee, is one of the largest chemical manufacturing complexes in the country. It operates continuously, employing 5,000 people, and producing more than 200 chemicals and plastics, according to the study.

Adamkus said several forms of dioxin were found in the Dow efflirent and in caged fish placed in the river below the wastewater outfall.

the EPA study, which be^n in 1981, indicaated that a highly toxic form of dioxin was found at levels of 50 parts per quadrillion in the effluent, and at levels of 100 parts per trillion in whole fish.

The Food and Drug Administration has established 50 parts per trillion as the tolerance level of dioxin in edible parts of fish, die said complete results of the new EPA study will not be ready until summer.

Dow has maintained that any dioxin is coming not from its plant but from other sources, such as automobile combustion.

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lO-Tte Daily Reflector, GiwvUle. N.C.-Friday, Aprfl 1,190

^1

h%

r By *vj JOHN LEHT

/V,.

SPIES AND SCCXITS

IN BIBLICAL TIMES IT CAN BE SAID TVIAT AN ARM/ WAS ONLY ASSOODASITS SPIES AND SCOUTS. MAYING NO RECONNAISSANCE OWEC T^AN NAKED EYE TO REPORT WMAT M AMEAD OF an arm/ WE MEN, DESISNATEP AS SCOUTS and SPIES, WAD TD BE OUTSTANDNSLY ALERT AND ABLE TD JUDGE TWE STRENSTW OF WEIR POTENTIAL OPPONENTS SEEN FROM AFAR. TWE SCOUTS MOSES SENTTOSPYOUTTVIE , PROMISED LANDCNUMBERS 1B) WERE OF TWI5 CALIBRE. HOWEVER, IN REPORTING TO MOSES, TWEY CLAIMED TO WAVE,5EEN GIANTS IN THE LAND AND ADVISED AGAINST going FORWARD. only JOSHUA AND aLEB SAVE MOSES A CLEAR PICTURE OF THE LAND AND ITS POSSIBILITIES. FORTUNATELY MOSES SAVE EAR ONLY TO THEIR REPORT/ SCOUTS AND SPIES WERE THE UNSUNG HEROES OF EVERY CONQUERING ARMY AS THEY ARE TO THIS DA/, though SOPHISTICATEDWARFARE HAS THEM THUNDERING THROUGH THE SKIES AS ^THEV SEARCH OUT THE LAND/'

SAVE THIS FOR YOUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAPBOOK_

Copyright, 1980: John A Lehti Distributj by linoge-Plus P 0 Box 884,M,ddltlown. N Y. 10940, through Hutchinson Associotis, 18110 Villoge 18, Comorillo Co. 93010

s

Is

o|;

a

if"

p

fe

feSponsors Of This Page, Along With Ministers of All Faiths, Urge You to Attend Your House of Worship This Week, Tp Believe In God and to Trust In His Guidance For Your life.

(X)ZARTS AUTO SUPPLY, INC. 814 Dickinson Ave. 752-3194 Banks Cozan 8 Employees

Compliments Of HEILIG MEYERS CO.

518 E. Greenville Blvd. 758-4145

LESTER TURNAGE Real Estate Insurance Agency Get More With Les"

Corner Third & CotancheSt. 752-2715

WHITTINGTON, INC. Charles St., Greenville, N.C. Ray Whittington 756-8537

Ck>mpllments of PHELPS CHEVROLET West End CIr. 756-2150

WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY

7560317

123 S. Railroad, WIntervllle

JA-LYN SPORT SHOP Hwy. 33, Chicod Creek Bridge ,

752-2678, Grimealand James 8 Lynda Faulkner

VANS HARDWARE 1300N. Greenest. 758-2420

OUALITY TIRE SERVICE and Employees at N. Greene St. and2900 E. lOthSt. 752-7177    757-3762

COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN 2905 E. 5th

Take out only 752-5184 800 S.W. Greenville Blvd.

Eat In or take out 756-6434

BOND-HODGES SPORTING GOODS 216 Arlington Blvd. loth St. Greenville 7566001    752-4156

PLAZA GULF SERVICE 756-7618 701E. Greenville Blvd.

Ryder Truck Rentals 7566045 Wrecker Service day 7567618 nlte 7566479

AaCTION MOVING & STORAGE 1007CheanutSt. 7567000

ANNE'S TEMPORARIES, INC. 7966610120 Reada St QreenvUle

BARWICKS HOUSE OF MEATS. INC. 7562277100 Pollard St. Greenville Allen Berwick, owner    ,

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC

2201 Dickinson Ave. 7564267

EARLS CONVENIENCE MART

Route 17566278

Earl Faulkner 8 Employees

ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS 7563500

226 Commerce St Greenville

EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS

75635681514 N. Greene St

"A complete restaurant 8 ofUcecottee service'

ROBERTO. DUNN CO XI Ridgeway 7565278

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

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

PARKERS BARBEQUE RESTAURANT

7562388S. Memorial Dr.

Doug Parkers Employees

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

Compliments of FRED WEBB, INC.

Compliments of

PITT MOTOR PARTS, INC.

7564171911 S. Washington St

TOMS RESTAURANT "The Very Best In Home Cooking" 7561012 Maxwell St West End Area

GRANT BUICK, INC. 75618r7Greenvllle Blvd.

Bill Qrant 4 Employaea

OVERTONS SUPERMARKETS, INC.

211 S. Jarvis 752-X25

All Employees    *

TAPSCOTT DESIGNS 222 E. 5th St 757-3X8 Kate Phillips, Interior Designer Associate member ASID

Compliments of

HOLLOWELLS DRUG STORE

no. 1 911 Dickinson Ave.

no. 2 Memorial Dr. 8 6th St

no. 3 Stantohsburg Rd. at Doctors Park

PIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE 2105Dickinson Ave. 7562444 g Ricky Jackson 8 Employees

FARRIOR& SONS, INC.

General Contractors

7562005 Hwy. 264 ByPaasFarmvllle

LAUTARES JEWELERS

414 Evans 752-3831

ELECTROLUX Sales and Service

Known For Quality For Over 55 Years.''

Free Estimates Free Pick-Up 8 Delivery 104 Trade St 7566711

INAS HOUSE OF FLOWERS N. Memorial Dr. Ext. 752-5656 Management 8 Staff

Pin-GREENE PCA & FEDERAL LAND BANK ASSOQATION "Short, Intermediate 8 Long Term Credit"

IKE. IstSt 7361512

BUCKS GULF STATION & EMPLOYEES

E 10th St Ext 752-3226 "Road8 Wrecker Service"

Jartran Truck 8 Trailer Rentals

INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO. W.M. Scales, Jr. General Agent Weighty Scales, Rep.

Clarke Stokes, Rep.

7563736

PUGHS TIRE & SERVICE CENTER 752-6126

Comer of Sth8 Greene, Greenville

HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO. Realdenllal 8 Commerclel Building 400 N. 10th St 752-1593

FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, INC. Oskmont Profeaalonel Plaza Greenville, N.C. 7560000

PAIR ELECTRONICS, INC. Electronics Suppllera 7562291107 Tratie St. Greenville, N.C.

Compliments of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY 75266761506 N. Greene St Greenville, N.C.

HARGETTS DRUG STORE 2500 S. Charles Ext 7563344

DAUGHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO. 2102 DIcklnaon Ave. 7561345 Bobby Tripp 8 Emphyeea

CAROUNA MICROFILM SERVICE 1405 DIcklnaon Ave. 7526776 Jerry Creech, Owner

PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO. 7562113 Greenville

EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY. INC 2739E. lOthSt P.O. Box3785 752-4323Greenville

REDI SUPPLY, INC. lnduatrlel8Conetructk)nSuppllea 1902Cheanut 7963200

HARRIS SUPERMARKETS. INC.

"Where Shopping la A Pleasure" no.1 Memorial Dr. 7SO110 no. 2 2612E. 10th Ext 757-1880 no. 4 Bethel no. 5 N. Greene 7526110 no.e Ayden no.7Terboro

HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN .101 Hooker Rd. 7563115

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

318 W. GreenvtUe Blvd. 7564687 Johnny L. Jackson 8 Emptoveea

WESTERN SIZZUN STEAK HOUSE

We put It on the plate"

5K W. GreehviUe Blvd. 7960040 2903E. lOmSt 7562712

JIMMYS PHILLIPS 06 SERVICE All Typee Minor Repair Work Wrecker Service Comer 14th 8t 8 284 ByPaaa J.F. Baker, owner 7961445

EASTERN INSULATION, INC.

Owens Coming Fiberglass Phone Day or Night 752-1154

Compliments of THOMAS W. RIVERS

ESTATE REALTY CO.

1394 Charlee St. Greenville 7526088

Jarvie or Oorlle MillaFAITH is your haven of refuge in a troubled world





Come To CHURCH

GLOfUACei LUTHERAN CHURCH The Woman's Oub. 2306 Green Spfina ParkRd.

The Rev Richard A. MUler Phone; 75M038

7:30p.m. Fii. Good Friday Service 6:00 a.m. Sun. - Easter Festival Service

7:00p.m. Tue-AdultCoo/.aass 7^ 30 p.m. Thur - Bible aass

OUR REDEEMER LUTHERAN laoes. Elm R. Graham Nahouse 7:30 p.m. Fri. Tenebrae Service . 7:00 a m Sun. - Sunrise Service OtOb a.m. Easter Breakfast rt :00 a.m. - Holy Communion 7:30p.m. Wed. Choir Rehearsal

FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Comer Brinkley Road & Plaia Drive. Greenville, N.C. 27*34 Rev. Frank Gentry

9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday Schoot^tJWSS 'i Rook,Supt. V    ,

7:00a.m.-EasterService 11:00 a.m.-Worship Service 6;00.p.m -Choir Practice .7;0dp.m -Prayer and Praise Service ' 7t30 p.m. Wed. - Missions Service 7:00 p.m Thur. - Nursing Home ChQCflwinity 9:30 a.m. Fri. Sunday School Lesson WBZQ

-7:0Qp.m. University Nursing Home 7'OOp.m. Sat. - Teachers Banquet

EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE >FuH Gospel Church 24 Bypass West at Laughinghouse Drive

S. J.WUIiams. Minister Mike Pollard. Minister of Music 10:00 a.m. Sun - Sunday School Unwood Lawson, Supt. ll;00a.m.- Morning Worship 5;45p.m. Adult Choir Practice 7 ;00p.m. - Celebration of Praise 7:30 p.m. Wed. Prayer 4 Share -7:30- p.m. Youth Service, Gary 4 LaBeeManess 7:00 p.m. Sat - INTERCESSORY PRAYER TIME

ARUNGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH 1007W.Arlin^Blvd Pastor, Rev. Harold Greene ^;45a.m. Sun. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship Son. Sunrise Service 7:Mp.m. Mon. Deacons Meeting 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Church Council 7:30 p.m. Wed. Prayer Service 8:30 p.m.-Choir

7:30 p.m. Thur. - Nominating Commit-tee-

CEDAR grove ISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Rl. 9 Cherry Oaks Subdivision Greenville, N.C.

Pastor: Rev James Wright 7:30 p.m. Fri. Sunday School Officers and Teachers will meet at the home of Sis Rose Lee Uttle 6:00 p.m. Sat. - Board Meeting 10:00 a.m. Sun Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. Sermon by the Pastor. Music will be rendered by the Adult Choir 2:00 p. m. Dinner will be served 3:00 p.m. Rev. Clifton Gardner and congregation will render services for the Home Mission 7:30 p.m Mon - The Pastor, Male Chorus. Senior Ushers, and congreation will redner service at Selvia Chapel F.-W.B: in their Revival 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Senior ushers will meet 10:00 a m 1:00 p.m. Wed - Clothes Clospt will be open for the needy. Call 756-7517 for information 7:30 p.m. Thur Senior Choir will have rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Fri. General Conference

ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street The Rev. Lawrence P. Houston. Jr., Rector

The Rev. J Dana Pecheles, Asst Rector Easter Week

7:30 a.m. Sun. Easter Celebration of Holy Eucharist 9:00a.m. Easter of Holy Eucharist 11:00 a.m. - Easter Celebration of Holy Eucharist 7:30p.m -Al-anon, Jr Friendly Hall MONDAY PARISH OFFICE CLOSED 7:45 a.m. Mon. Bonners Lane Day Care Center Board Meeting 8:00 p.m. - St. Lydias Chapter Meeting. Mable Wolcotts, 1720 Forest Hill Drive

ry Meeting, 5:30 p.m. Tue. - Holy Eucharist 7:00 a.m. Wed. Holy Eucharist 10:00 a.m. - Holy Eucharist 3:30 p.m. - Holy Eucharist, Nursing Home

7:30 p.m. - Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 10:00 a m Thur. - Town 4 Country Senior Citizens Meeting, Parish Hall 7:00p.m, -TEEX, Friendly Hall 4:00 p.m. Fri. - Childrens Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 5:00 p.m. Jr. Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 8:00 p.m. Sat. - AA Open Group Discussion. Friendly HaU

SAINT PETERS CATHOUC CHURCH 2700 E. 4th Street Greenville, N.C.

757-3259

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

GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 264 By Pass 4 Emerson Road Brian Whelchel, Community Evangelist Carl Etchison, Campus Evangelist 8:00 a.m. Sun. Amazing Grace" TV Bible School Channel 12 10:00 a.m. - Bible Study Classes for all ages

11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship "Lessons From The Ark Of The Testimony S:00p.m. -Spiritual Maturity Class 6:00* p.m. Evening Worship, Children of Wisdom (Luke 7:24-351 7J p.m. Wed. - Bible Study Classes for all ages ECU Bible Study Opportunities;

7:30 p.m. Tue. Mens Bible Study 110 BelkDorm 7:30 p.m. Thur. Womens Bible Study 212 Mendenhall

For Farther Information and or Transportation please call 752-5991 or 752-6376

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Foiffth and Meade Streets 11:00a.m. Siffl. - Sunday School 11 :IN a.m. - Sunday Service 7:45p.m. Wed. - Wed Evening Meeting 2:00 to4:00p.m.-Reading Room 400S Meade Street

PEOPLES BAPTIST TEMPLE Rev: J.M. Bragg, Pastor 2001 W. Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.27834

7:30 a.m. Sun. - Laymens Prayer Breakfast (TTiree Steers)

10:00 a.m. - Sunday School II :00 a.m. - Morning Worship 5: IS p.m. - Choir Practice 6:30 p.m. - Special Easter Communion Service

7; 15 a.m. Mon.-Fri. - Radio Program -'Together Again - WBZQ 7:00p.m. Wed. Hourof Power 8:00 p.m.-Choir Practice

THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY 1206Mumford Road.

JamesC Brown Pastor

10:00 a.m. Sun. Sunday School

11:00 a .m. - Morning Worship Service

6:30'p m. - Young People Service 7:00 p.m.- Evai^istic Service

7:30 p m Wed. - ^ayer Meeting

IRE MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH (SouthenBaptlat)

1510 Greenville Boulevard E. T Vinson, Senior Minister; Hal leltoh. Minister with Education/Yoih 9:45'a.m. Sun.-Sunday School 11:60 a.m. - Morning Worship, Mini I Junior Church

12:60 p m. Mon. - Bi^ Women nth RA Gamer, 486 Studoit St. 7:60p.m. Tue.-SemiaaryEalenaloo

p.m. wed. - FaaMly NIAt Ser

^ p.m. - New MenMier RecofM-M anl OevetlMial, Mlaston Friends. Iienibli Carol Oiolrs .740 p.m. - GAs RAs Baptist iamen. Deacons

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 520 East Greenville Boulevard 756-3138

Dr Will R WaUace, Minister Rev. Joanne L. Ver Brug, Associate Minister

3:30 p.m. Sal. Rehearsal for ALL Choirs

9:45 a. m. Sun. - Church School 11:00 a.m. - Worship 3:00p,m. Mon.-Circled*

10:30a.m.Tue. -Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Wed. Chancel Choir Rehearsal

3:15 p.m. Thur. - Brownie Scout Troop i361

HOLY TEMPLE A.F.e.O.G (Salntsville)

Roule6, GreenvHle, N.C.

Elder I.J Robinson 7:30 p.m. Fri. - Bible Studies (Teacher) Missionary L. Debrew)

10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School, (Supt.) Lomell Whitaker 11:30 a.m. Sun. - Missionary ^nd Youth Day (Speaker) Missioary E. Barrett

2:30 p.m. - Play by the Youth Dept. Heavens Grocery Store 7:00 p.m. Tue. Midweek Service

BROWNS CHAPEL APOSTOUC FAITH CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST

Belvior Hwy.

Route 4, Greenville, North Carolina Bishop R. A. Griswould 8:00 p m. Thur. - Bible Studies (Sis. Ida Staton, Teacher)

8:00 p.m. Fri. - Prayer Meeting 7:00 p.m. Mon. - Easter Program (Youth Department Sis H. Joyner)

7:00 p.m. 1st Sat. Prison Camp Ministry, Maury, NC 10:30 a.m. 2nd Sun, - Sunday Schbol, (Deacon J. Sharpe, Superintendant)

II :30 a.m. 2nd Sun. - Youth and Missionary Day 7:00 p.m. 2nd Sun. - Prison Camp Ministry, Maury, (Miss. M Sheppard) 8:00 p.m. 18th - 22nd - Building Fund Service (Deacons in Charge)

3:00 p.nt 4th Sat Business Meeting (Bishop R.A. Griswould)

8:00p.m. 4th Sat. -1 Hour Prayer 10:30 a.m. 4th Sun. - Sunday School, (Deacon J. Sharpe, Superintendant) 11:30 a.m. 4th Sun. - Pastoral Day (Bishop R.A. Griswould)

8:00 p.m.. 4th Sun. - Pastoral Day (Bishop R.A Griswould), Pastor 7:00 p.m. 5th Sun. Prison Camp Ministry, Maury, (Miss M. Sheppard)

ST. JOHN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH P. 0. Box 134 Falkland, NC 27827 Rev. Anton T Wesley, Pastor 5:00 a.m. Sun. Sunrise Service 10:00 a.m. - Sunday School 11:00 am. - Morning Worship 4 Holy Communion    ^

6:00 p m, Youth Church Easter Program 2:00 p.m. Mon Easter Egg Hunt 7:00 p.m. Tue Prayer Meeting 4 Bible Study 6:30 p.m. Fri. - Mission Meeting 6:30 p.m. - Pastor, Deacons and Trustee Meets 7:30 p.m. - General Conference Meeting

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

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

PHILIPPI CHURCH OF CHRIST 1610 Farmville Boulevard Rev. Randy Royall 9:00 a.m. Sat. - Car Wash sponsored by the Crowell Family 11:00 a.m. Sat. Easter Program Rehearsal 5:00 p.m - Mass Choir Rehearsal 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School, Mrs. Mary Jones,Supt.

11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship, Rev. Randy Royall 3:00 p.m. - Easter Program Youth Dept

1:00 p.m. Tue. - Willing Workers Prayer Board 1:00 pm. Wed.-Joy HOur 8:00-4 Bible Study 1.00 p.m. Thur. Willing Workers Prayer Board 8:00 p.m. - Worship at Selvia Chapel in Revival

HOLLYWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HWY 43 South Minister-Rev, C. Wesley Jennings S.S.Supt.-Elsie Evans Music Direclor-Vlvlan MUls 4 Steve Aslinger Organist-Leida McGowan Youth Leaders-Debbie and Steve Aslinger

6:00 a.m. Sun. Easter Sunrise Service

7:00 a.m. - Easter Breakfast 10:00 a.m. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Worship Swvice 7:30p.m. Mon.-W.O.C. Meet 9:00 a.m. Tue. - J.O.Y, FeUowship Day

7:00 p.m. Wed.-Bible Study 8:00p.m. - Choir Practice

MORNING GLfMY APOSTOUC FAITH HOUNESS CHURCH . 1012 West Sth Street, Greenville, N.C Eldress Irene G. Epps Every Sunday

10:00 a.m. Sun. - Bible School

12:00 p.m. - Warhsip 4 Preaching 7:30p.m,-W^ipService

7:30 p.m. Tue - Worship and Preaching 7:30 p.m Thur. - Worship Service

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF UTTER-DAY SAINTS 307 Martinsborough Rd., Greenville, NC 27834 Bishop Danny Brew 8:00 a.m. Sat - General Priesthood Broadcast at the Kinston Stake Center 12:00-2:00 p.m 4 4:00*:00 p.m. Sun - General Conference Broadcast from Salt Lake City to be aired at the Kinston Stake Center, No Meetings in Greenville this Sunday 9 00 a m Sun (lOthI Fast Sunday due to General Conference on April 3rd 6:306:00 p.m Thur. - Institide at the Brewster Building on ECU Campus Room203-B

UNIVSU8TY CHURCH OP CHRIST 100 Crestline Blvd.

, Rick Townsend

1:16 a JB. Sun: - Sunday School 11:60 a.m.-MorniagWorAlp 7;60p.m.-EvcMMWorship 7:00 pjn.-Youth Meethi^ 7:30p.m.Tue -LadlesClrele 4:00 p.m. Sat.-Egg Hunt 5:00p.m.-Cookout

CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTIST OIURCH SUtonburg Road at Allen Road Reverend Arlee Griffin, Jr., Pastor 9:15 a.m. Sun. - Church School Klndergarten-I2th Grade)

11:00 a.m.-Divine Worship Service 7.00 p.m. Thur. - Prayer Meeting andBibleStudy    ^

10:00 a.m. -12:00 p.m. Sat. - Tutorial Session to be held

Feast Days Have Basis

8:00 p m.-Chancel Choir 7: IS a m Sat. - TMBC Golf Tournament Ayden County OUb 7:30 a.m. RAs Leave for Trade Meet

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Corner 14th and Elm StreeU Richard R. Gammon and Gerald M. Anders, Ministers; Brett Watson, Director of Music; E Robert Irwin, Organist

9:00 a m Sun. - Worship, Communion

9:45a.m.-ChurchSchool 11:00 a.m. - Worship. Communion 7:30p m. Moii. -CircleCouncil 9:00a m Tue. - Park-A-Tot 12:00 p.m. - Newsletter Deadline 7:00p.m. Family Support Group 7:00p.m Cub Scouts 7:30 pm - Christian Education Coinmlttee 7:30 p m. - Membership Care Committee 7:30p.m T.R. CiviUn 2:30 p.m. Wed. - Address Angels 7;00p,m,-Brownies 7:00p.m - Evangelm Explosion 7:30p.m.-Gallery Oioir 9.00 a.m. Thin^ - Park-A-Tot 5:00p.m - Bullan Deadline 7: 30 p.m. - Overeaters Anonymous 10:00a.m. Fri. PandorasBox 10:00 a.m. Sat. - Pandoras Box

FIRST FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 2600 S . Charles Street Harry Grubbs, Pastor 6:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunrise Service with Holy Trinity UMC 4 Oakmont Baptist 9:45 a.m. - Sunday School 11 ;00 a m. - Morning Worship 7:30p.m Wed.-BibleStudy

In History

HOOKER MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 111 GreenvUle Blvd.

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Ralph G. Messick, Minister Phone 756-2275

6:00 a.m. Sun. Sunrise Service 9:45a.mCoffee 10:00a.m.-ChurchSchool 11:00 a.m. - Church at Worship 4:30 p.m. - Be^nner Choir 5:00p.m. - Junior Choir 8:00pm. Wed.-Adult Choir

GO(X) HOPE FWB CHURCH 404 N. Mill St.

Winterville, NC 28590 Bishop W.H. Mitchell, Pastor 9:45a,m.Sun.-SundaySchool 11:00 a m - Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting ' 7:30 p.m. - Choir No 1 Friday night before the 1st Suhday; At Quarterly Conference Thurkdajr night before the 1st Sunday 7:30 p.m. - Usher Board No. 1 3rd Wednesday Night 7:30p.m. - 1st and 3rd Monday Night Choir No. 2 7:30 p.m. - 2nd Monday Night and 3rd Tuesday Night W H Mitchell Gospel Chorus 7:30 p.m. - Thursday Night before the 1st Sunday Church Conference 7:30 p.m. - Friday Night before 1st Sunday Quarterly Conference 7:30 p m. - W.H. Mitchell, Choir, Ushers 4 Congregation of Good Hope will participate in St. Rest Holy Church Anniversary on April 11 7:30 p.m. - W.H Mitchell, Pastor, Congregation 4 Ushers will render service at St. John FWB Church, Kinston -W.H. Mitchell Gospel Chorus wll render music

EBENEZER SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 119 Redman Avenue, Greenville, N .C. Elder Bryson

8:30 a.m. Sat. - Early Morning Prayer 9:15 a. m. Song Service 9:30 a. m. Sabbath School 10:40 a.m. - Personal Ministries 11:00 a.m. - Divine Worship 5:00 p.m. - Adventist Youth Service 6:30 p.m Wed. - Midweek Prayer Service

PINEY GROVE FWB CHURCH

Route 1, Box 674, Greenville Bro. Allan Sterlin

6:00 p.m. Fri. - Caipoll to Easter pagent-Martin County 7:00 a m Sun. - Easter Sunrise Service

10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worhsip 4 Note Burning Service 7:00p.m. - Evening Worship Service 8:00p.m.-ChoirPractice 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Bible Study

RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH

264 By-Pass West

Dr. Harold Doster, Interim Minister 7:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunrise Servie with program by youth of the church 8:00 a.m. - Continental Breakfast 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a m. - Worship Service; Dr. Harold Doster preaching NOTE; NO YOUTH MEETINGS 7:00 a.m. Mon. Mens Prayer Breakfast Nursery School - Monday through Friday-7:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

HARVEST BAPTIST CHIHICH Carolina Country Day School (P.O.

Box 8046, Greenville, NC 27834)

David J.LeBlanc

10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School

11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship

6:00p.m. -EveningWorship

7:30 p.m. Wed. - Midweek Worship

ST. TIMOTHYS

107 Louis St.

The Rev. John R. Price 8:00 pm. Fri. - Good Friday Literagy

9:00 a.m. Sat. - Easter Vigil with Holy Baptism 8:00 a.m. Sun. - EASTER - Holy Eucharist Rite 1 9:30 a m. - NO SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:30 a.m. Festival Celebration of the Reserection Easter Egg Hunt after Church for Children 5:00p.m. - NOEYC 7:30 p.m. - NO CONFIRMATION CLASS

COREYS CHAPEL F.W.B. CHURCH Route 1, Winterville Rev J.B Taylor

7:30 p.m. Fri. - Quarterly Conference

7:30 p.m. Sat. Holy Communion with the Rev. J.H Wilkes and choir and congregation of Burney's Chapel Church in charge of service 9:30 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 10:45a.m. Devotion 11:00 a.m. - Quarterly Meeting Service

2:00 p.m. - Dinner Served 3:00 p.m. Rev. J.W. Randolph, choir and congregation of Joes Branch F.W B. Church wilLbe in charge of the service

3:00 p.m. Mon. Easter Program and Egg Hunt 5:00 p.m. - J.B. Taylor Traveling Choir Practice 7:30p.m. Wed. - BibleStudy 7:30 p.m Thur. - J.B Taylor Traveling Choir will render music for servive at Mt Shiloh in Winterville, NC 4:00 p.m. Sat. - Pastors Aid Club Meeting

GREENVILLE BIBLE CHURCH Rotary Club BIdg.

D.B.Schulmeir (758-1894)

10:00-11 30 a.m. Sun. - Worship, 6:00-7;00p.m. Worship 7:306:30 p.m. Wed. - 1st and 3rd Wed Prayer 5:30-7:30 p.m. - 2nd 4 4th Wed. Growth Group 9:30-11:00 p.m. Thur. - Womens Bible Study

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SR1727 (Former Eastern Pines Community BIdg)

Mr. Melvin Rawls Pastor II :00 a.m. Sat . - Easter Egg Hunter 12:00p.m.ChildrensLunch 5:45 a.m. Sun. - Easter Sunrise Service

6:30 a.m. - Breakfast at Shoneys 10:00 a.m -Bible School 11:00 a.m. - Worship Service

JARVIS MEMORIAL UNITED METHODIST CnURCH 510 S. Washington St.

Ministers: Jim Bailey, Susan Pate, Martin Armstrong, Adrian Brown Minister of Music: Jerry Jolley Organist: MarkGansor 8:45 a.m.Sun. -Morning Worship 9:15a m-Church Library Open 9r40 a.m Church School-Nursery 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 12:15 p.m. Easter Communion-Chapel

5:00 - 7:30 p.m. - Jarvis Singers CHURCH OFFICE CLOSED MONDAY.

9:00 a.m. Tue. - Church SUff Meeting

10:00 a.m. - UMW Exec. Board-CR 6:00 p m. - Stewardship Comm. CR 7:00p.m Finance Comm. CR 8:00 p.m. - Adminsitrative Board Chapel

10:00 a m. - 12;00 p.m Wed. -Clothesline 10:30 a.m. - PrayerGroupCR 10:00 a m Thur. - Adult Bible Study CR

7:15 p m - Health 4 Welfare CR 6:30 a.m. Fri - Mens Prayer Breakfast at Toms Restaurant 12:00 p.m. - WcMnens Prayer Luncheon

10:00-12:00 a.m. Sat.'- Clothesline

FAITH PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Rt 9, Box 500 City (14Ui St. Ext., Cherry Oaks)

Rev Paul N. Brafford 11:00 a.m. Sat. - Easter Egg Hunt 7:30 p.m. Easter Drama His Last Da vs"

er.

The event is seen both as past and present, as not only a deliverance from ancient despotism, but signifying ultimate redemption from all domineering exploitations, allying God with the oppressed and suffering, and summoning belivers to that purpose.

A kindred message of hope and triumph over wrong is expressed in the Easter events recalled by Christians this week, climaxed with the celebration this Sunday of the resurrection.

Jesus was crucified^ by Roman military rulers,but he, similar to his Jewish forebears, broke loose -even from death. He is risen! the astounded witnesses exclaimed, and that good news echoed through the centuries.

His ordeal on the cross is regarded as mirroring the very agony of God at human sin, taking its consequences on himself, thus offering redemption from it and signalling victory over it in tberesurrectioiv

Behold, I make all things new, Jesus said. For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have entemal life.

The resurrection is not considered a past event, but a continuing reality and a glimmering of the future, heralding the opening of a new frontier and a new world for humanity into which Christ has pioneered the way.

6:00 a.m. Sun. - Easter Sunriae Service

9:45 a.m. - Sunday School SUff Devotions 10:00 a.m. - Sunday School (Johnny Jackson, Supt.)

11.00 a.m. - Special Easter Celebra tion

7:30 p.m. - Easter Drama His Last

Days"

Mon-Thur. - Oiristlan Workers Institute Falcon, N.C.

7:30 pm Wed - FamUy Night Program (Liddie Anderson, Dir.)

The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, April 1, I83-11

Area Church News

By GEORGE W. CORNELL APReUgion Writer With a kind of hardheaded realism, Judaism and its offering, Chiistianity, base their faith on worldly events - on actions witnessed, experienced and recorded by people.

Those key happenings are being commemorated this week in observances of the Jewish Passover and the Christian holy week, culminating on Easter.

Both are festivals of redemption. The impact of the ^ occasions are seen as conti-nuing in the p^e^nt. In both, divine intervention is keen in human affairs, ancf both in-volved luminous personalities, Moses and Jesus.

In their closely connected heritages, Judaism and Christianity draw their convictions from occurrences on earth, in the human grain.

The shared outlook is that humanity, in its limitations, can know of God only as he chooses to reveal himself in the human dimension - in the confines of time and history.

That is the biblical view and method, a record of earthly occurrences in which Gods participation is seen as showing his will and ways to people to the ex|ent they are able to grasp it.

The approach makes Judeo-Christianity a religion of history, rather than of metaphysical abstractions, as characteristic of Oriental religions, and the distinction is underlined in the occurrences celebrated this week.

The week-long Passover observance, which began Monday evening, recalls the liberation of the enslaved Jews from ancient Egyptian tyranny. Let my people go! Moses demanded, and ensuing strange disturbances made ^aroah yield.

I will sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously, goes a hymn for the occasion, from Exodus 15. The Lord is my strength and my song and he has become my salvation.

The amazing deliverance of the powerless from the powerful became a key sign of what God is like, attesting that he is one who saves, who frees from oppression, who cares for the lowly, whose love redeems the lost.

He raises the poor from the dust and lifts the needy from the ash heap, reads the Psalms chanted at Passover. Our God is merciful.... He has delivered my soul from death. ... His steadfast love endures forev-

Revival Service Starts Monday

Revival services wUl be held Monday through Friday at Hickory Grove Free WUl Baptist Church in RobersonvUle. Services will start at 7:30 p.m. and wUl include special singing.

The guest evangelist wUl be the Rev. Jack Mayo, pastor of the OrmondsvUle Free WUl Baptist Church.

Fellowship Day Is Scheduled ,

Deacons and Trustees FeUowship Day wUl be observed at Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church in FarmvUle Sunday. The observance wUl be held at the 11 a.m. service.

Easter Service Set At Allen Chapel

An Easter sermon wiU be delivered Sunday at 11 a m at Allen Chapel Church by the Rev. J.L. Tyson. The schior choir wUl participate in the service.

Festival Of Music Pianned

The Falkland Presbyterian Church Choir wUl present a festival of Easter music entitled Celebration of Joy Saturday at 7 p.m. Refreshments will be served in the fellowship hall foUowing the program.

Ayden Plans Community Service

A community Easter sunrise service wUl be held Sunday in the Ayden Cemetery at 6 a.m. with congregations of aU churches in the community participating.

The Ayden Free Will Baptist Church wUl be the host church and the speaker wUl be the Rev. David Ricks. In case of rain, the service wUl be held at the host church.

The service is sponsored by the Ayden Ministerial Association.

Concert Scheduled Sunday Night

Aristone Langley of Washington, N.C.,wUl be i

_    ,    in    concert

Sunday at Haddocks Chapel Free WUl Baptist Church. The concert wUl begin at 6 p.m.

Sunrise Service Planned For Easter

An Easter sunrise service will be held on the lawn behind the bell tower at 6 a.m. Sunday at Hooker Memorial Christian Church. The sermon will be delivered by Thomas R. Messick, minister of the Stokes Christian Church in Stokes and Selali Christian Church in Goldsboro.

The adult choir wUl provide special music. The service wUl be followed by doughnuts and,coffee in the church lounge. In case of inclement weather, the frvice wilt be held in the church sanctuary.

Youth To Present Play Sunday

The Youth Department of Holy Temple AFCOG wiU present a play, Heavens Grocery Store, Sunday at 2:30 p.m. Missionary Elsie Barrett wUl be the speaker for the service at 11:30 a,m.

The church is located on Route 6, GreenvUle.

Shields Will Be Guest Speaker

The Easter Sunday service at Oak" Grove Church on Bonners Lane will be held at 11 a.m. The guest speaker wUl be Dr. West Shields Jr. Combined choirs wUl serve.

The service will be sponsored by the United Revival Prayer Center.

Deitch To Preach in Ayden

Dr. Harold W. Deitch wUl preach at the Ayden Christian Church Sunday at 11 a.m. His sermon topic will be I Walked Today Where Jesus Walked.

Ministers Conference Is Called

Elder W. L. PhUlips, presiding Bishop of the Northeast A Division, has caUed a meeting for ministers conference and convention officers Saturday at 11 a.m. at St. John Free WUl Baptist Church in FarmvUle.

Arrangements will be made to attend the General Program on Easter Monday at the General Tabernacle in Kinston.

Easter Lawn Service Planned

Hollywood Presbyterian Church will sponsor a sunrise Easter service Sunday at 6 a.m. on the lawn of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Mobley, located across from the church. The church quartet wUl sing.

Following the service, breakfast will be prepared and served in the feUowship hall by the women of the church.

RobersonvUle Native To Preach

The Rev. F. Tyrone Little of Mother Easter Baptist Church in Moultrie, Ga., will deliver the morning message at Sycamore Chapel Baptist Church at 11 a.m. Sunday.

A native of RobersonvUle, and a former member of Sycamore Chapel where he served his deaconship prior to moving to Georgia in 1981. Little is the son of Mrs. Mary V. Clemons of Stokes and grandson of Mrs. Pauline LitUe of RobersonvUle.

Zion Chapel Plans Service

Easter Sunday services will be held at 11 a.m. at Zion Chapel Free WiU Baptist Church in Ayden. The Rev. Tyrone Turnage of GreenvUle wUl deliver the morning message.

Circle Of Faith To Sing

The Circle of Faith wUl sing at Poplar HUl Free WUl Baptist Church Easter Sunday. The program starts jt 7:30 p.m.

Sweet Hope Choir Tq Perform

The Sweet Hope Traveling Choir wUl be in concert Easter Sunday with the. Cedar Grove Traveling Choir and the Walston Travelers at Sweet Hope Free Will Baptist Church.

The program will begin at 6 p.m. and will be narated by Dorothy Nash. David Godley will direct the concert and muscial accompanyment will be provided by Alice Clemons.

Prayer And Praise Service Set

Holy Mission HiAy Church will hold a special prayer and praise service tonight entitled The Last Sayings of Jesus beginning at 7:30p.m.

Easter Sunday worship services wiU begin at 11 a.m. with Pastor Atkinson and the senior choir. At 7:30 p.m. Sunday, an Easter program wUl be held featuring the chUdren and senior choir.

Gospel Singers To Perform

The DEFG Gospel Singers wUl present a musical program at Best Chapel Church Easter Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The program will be open to the public.

Monthly Services Scheduled ]

Regular monthly worship services wUl be held at Sweet Hope Free WiU Baptist Church Easter Sunday at 11 a.m.

The sermon wUl be delivered by the Rev. Billie Ray Anderson who wiU be accompanied by the youth choir. Immediately after the youth service, the youth department wUl present an Easter program.

The pastor and financial committee wUl meet at the church Monday at 7:30 p.m.

Scouts Plan Activity Day

Boy Scout Troup No. 289 of Little Creek Free WUl Baptist Church wUl conduct field activities for area youth Saturday beginning at 2 p.m.

Activities wUl include an egg toss, a softball throw, a 50-year dash, a 100-yard relay and an egg hunt. A movie wUl be shown from 6:30-7:30 p.m.

A musical program wUl be held at the church at 8 p.m. featuring the KittreU Brothers of La Grange, the Willaires of Snow HUl and the King Trio.

Cub Scout Pack No. 599 will assist in the activity day.

St Luke Plans Meeting

Quarterly meeting services for St. Luke Church have been scheduled for the weekend at St. Matthew Free WUl Baptist Church. They include:

Friday, 7:30 p.m., board meeting; Saturday, 7:30 p.m., holy communion with Elder Caesar Crandal in charge; Sunday, 11 a.m., Eldress Hattie Cobb will preach; 3 p.m.. Elder Anderson from Rock Bottom Church will be in charge; 7:30 p.m., Eldress Peggy Evans will preach.

Easter Services Are Planned

Easter services wUl be held at Good Hope Free WUl Baptist Church at WintervUle at 11 a.m. Sunday with mixed choirs providing the music. The church asks all women to wear white and aU men to wear dark suits.

At 3 p.m. Mothers Anniversary services will be held with the Rev. Maurice Laws and the congregation of Mount ShUoh Baptist ChunUi in charge.    

Spring Revival Begins Monday

spring revival will begin Monday night and continue through April 8 at the Sweet Gum Grove Free WUl Baptist Church at Stokes. The services will start at 7:30.

The guest evangelist will be the Rev. Calvin Heath. The services wUl include special singing nightly, a story hour for ChUdren ages 2 to 4 and chUdrens church for ages 5 through 9. A nursery wUl also be provided.

Golden Jubilees To Perform

The Golden Jubilees of Greenville wUl be in concert at Arthur Chapel Free Will Baptist Church Saturday. The program will start at 7:30 p.m.

Union Grove Schedules Meeting

Quarterly meeting services will be held during the weekend at Union Grove Free Will Baptist Church beginning with ,conference Friday at 7:30 p.m. Bishop Stephen Jones and Haddock Chapel will be in charge.

Pastor H.L. Hill, senior choir and ushers will be in charge of the 11 a.m. Sunday service. Dinner will follow at 2 p.m. and at 3 p.m.. Elder J.L. Tyson and Allen Chapel Church wUl conclude the services.

Saint John Plans Program

An Easter program wUl be held at Saint John Baptist Church Sunday at 6 p.m. An Easter egg hunt wUl begin Monday at 2 p.m.

Elm Grove Schedules Revival

Revival services wUl be held at Elm Grove Free WUl Baptist Church in Ayden beginning Easter Monday night through Friday at 7:30 p.m. Elder C.R. Parker wUl be the speaker and wUlT)e accompanied by a different choir each night.

Church To Hold Mothers' Union

The first United Mothers Union wiU be held at Rock Spring Free Will Baptist Church at 6 p.m. Sunday. Elder James Tripp will be the speaker. Sponsors ask that all mothers wear white.

Club To Observe Anniversary

The Helping Hand Club will observe its 19th anniversai^ Sunday at 3 p.m. at Lewis Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.

An anniversary sermon wUl be delivered by Vice Bishop J.H. Vines and the clubs choir and ushers wUl assist. A fellowship dinner wUl be served following the service.

Greenville Church

Of The Nazarene

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

Cliff Jones, Pastor

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

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

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

355-6329 or 756-5872    ,

-

(juiti us ^ on Sastax <Sunojy.,[^

\^afiiisi Ckuxcii

SUNDAY SCHOOL...,.. 9:45 A.M. WORSHIP.............11:00    A.M.

1510 Greenville Blvd. S.E.

GREENVILLES FIRST BAPTIST CHRCH

^ Come To Our Resurrection Services At

Red Oak Christian Church

00 a.m. Sun-Rise Service 45 a.m. Bibie Schooi 00 a.m. Sermon: Stop, Look. Listen Or. Harold Doster, Interim Minister

Special Music by our choir. Joe Ray, Director Dr. Sam Winchester Jr. Organist Nursery sndDsy Csre Mon.-Frt. 7:30 s.m. tH 6:00 p.m.

Rt. 8.264 Bypass W.

The End Of Your Search For A Friendb; Church'





12-The Daily Reflector. GreenviDe, N.C.-Frhiay,    1,1883

Stock And Market Reports

By The Associated Press

Grain: No. 2 yellow shelled corn slightly higher at 2,96-3.32, mostly 3.19;3.29 east: 3.22-3.35, mostly

3.25-3.:55 Piedmont. NO. 1 vellow soybeans higher at 6.21-6,48. mostly 6.27-6.42 east: 5.95-6.25, mostly 6.25 Piedmont, Wheat 3.41-3.60, mostly 3.41-3.50; oats

1.25-1.45. (New crop corn 2.75-3.05: soybeans 6.31-6.65; wheat 2.98-3.39). Soybean meal f.o.b. N.C. processing plants per ton 44 209.70-216.00. Prices paid producers for corn and soybeans delivered in bulk to elevators as of 4 p.m. Thursday. Cofield 3.23, 6.48. Conwav 3.12, 6.32. Creswell 2.96. 6.21. Dunn 3.28, 6.25. Elizabeth City 3.08, 6.31. Farmville 3.23, 6.27. Fayetteville 6.42. Goldsboro 3.26, 6.27. Greenville 3.19, 6.28. Kinston 3.21,6.28. Lumberton 3.20, 6.27. Pantego 3.19, 6.28. Raleigh 6.40. Selma 3.32,6.27. Whiteville 3.20, 6.27. Williamston 3.19,6.28. Wilson 3.28-3.29, 6.28. Albemarle 3 22, 6,25. Barber 3.30, 6.25. .Mocksville 3.25. Monroe 3.25. Mt Ulla 6.25. Roaring River 3.25. Statesville 3.35,5.95.

- Sweet potatoes: (eastern N.C. f.o.b.) market steady. Demand good. Fifty fwund cartons washed, cured jewel 3.75-4.25, some 3.50 and 4.50. Prices paid to growers basis fifty pound cartons, U.S. No.

1 packed out at end of belt 1.7,5-2.00 few 1,50.

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly steady. 'Kinston 47.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden. Pine Level, Laurin-burg and Benson, closed, open Monday, Wilson closed, Salisbury 47.50, Rowland 47.50, Spivey's Corner 47.50. Sows: ail weights 500 pounds up: Wilson closed, Fayetteville 49.00, Whiteville 48.00, Wallace 48.00, Spiveys Corner 49.00, Rowland 48.00, Durham 47.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b dock quoted price

FRIDAY

7::i()p m, - Red Men meet

SATURDAY l iifi p m - Duplicate bridge meets at Planters Bank 8 IK) p m. - .AA open discussion group meets at St. Pauls Episcopal Church

Ortho

SPBAYETTF*

CORRECTION

The ORTHO SPRAY-ETTE 4 that was on sale in our ad in the Thursday, Mar. 31st paper was incorrectly priced. It should have read as

follows:

ORTHO SPRAY-ETTE 4

sooo

ON LY    with    purchase    of    2    pints

of ISOTOX INSECT SPRAY ($7.98 Value)

Greenville Square Shopping Center Phone 756-4949 8 to 6 Non.-Sat.

Camp Leeune Exercise Set

Obituaries

on broilers for this weeks trading was 39.50 cents, based on fuU tnick load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized to 3 pound birds. 83 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed, with a preliminary weighted average of 39.82 cents f.o.b dock or equivalent. The market is firm and the live supply is moderate fof an improving demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Friday was 1,654,000, compared to 1,157,000 last Friday.

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was trending lower. Supplies adequate. Demand ligit to moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over seven pounds at farm for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday slaughter was 16-17 cents.

Have Eye On Blue Mold

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina tobacco specialists are keeping tabs on an outbreak of dangerous blue mold fungus in northern Florida, but say as yet there is no reason for alarm.

Were in contact with those (Florida) people every day, sometimes twice a day, said NT. Powell, a plant pathologist with the North Carolina State University Agriculture Extension Service. Its just that this disease is so explosive.

Tobacco farmers are being advised to follow up initial Ridomil fungicide treatments of seed beds, Powell said. Seventy days after the first treatment, farmers should reapply Ridomil with an outer layer protective fungicide containing the chemical maneb, he said.

Powell said leaf specialists are concerned the rainy weather could help transport the mold, which can destroy an untreated tobacco bed in less than a week. Powell said, however, he was encouraged that the three Florida farms hit by the blue mold had not used a fungicide.

REQUESTAPPROVED Police Chief Glenn Cannon announced the approval of a request by the Guiding Light Temple of Faith Free Will Baptist Church to conduct a door-to-door solicitation and bake sale April 9 through May 21 to raise funds for the church.

NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -More than 47,000 military personnel fh)m all branches will participate in a trainihg exercise at Camp Lejeune, N.C., Fort Stewart, Ga., and Morehead City, N.C., April 16 throu^ May 11, the Navy announced today.

Solid Shield 83, the 21st in a series of annual U.S. Atlantic Command joint exercises, will focus on commanding military forces in a simulated combat environment, the Navy said.

Participating In the exercise will be men and women from the Armys 18th Airborne Corps; the Navys Atlantic Fleet; the Fleet Marine Force Atlantic; the Air Forces Tactical Air Command, Strategic Air Command, Military Airlift Command and Communications Command and the Coast Guard.

The exercise will simulate combat between opposing land, sea and air forces. It will include air mobile assault and amphibious operations at Camp Lejeune and paratrooper drops with mechanized and armor forces at Fort Stewart.

Off the coast of Morehead City, Air Force B-52 bombers will drop inert mines that will then be cleared by Navy units.

More than 35 ships and submarines and about 350 aircraft will be used in the exercise, the Navy said.

The Atlantic Command,

Hold Youth For Sloying

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) Police arrested a 16-year-old Thursday and charged him with first-degree murder in the slaying of a Superior Court reporter Wednesday.

Kinzel Debe Collington was being held without bond pending a first appearance hearing Friday in Guilford County District Court.

He is accused of stabbing Sue Mills Dahamni, 40, to death. She was found in her home and had been stabbed several times, police said.

Dahamnis failure to appear Wednesday at her job in Surry County Superior Court in Dobson prompted searches for her by the State Highway Patrol and Greensboro police.

Police said the killer entered the house without breaking glass or prying open a door and apparently locked the doors as he left.

Detective Capt. B.L. Thomas termed the death very violent but said little information. Including the type of weapon used, was gathered in the first few hours of the investigation.

Detectives said the house did not appear to have been ransacked and they had not determined whether anything had been stolen. The victims purse and some jewelry reportedly were in the house when police arrived.

EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.

Rain ending in the east and partly cloudy in the west Sunday. Fair over the state Monday and Tuesday. Hi^s in 60s for the east with lows in the 40s.

one of six unified commands within the D^artment of Defense, covers joint service (^rations in the Atlantic, the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean waters and part of the Pacific Ocean.

Trio Jailed In Robberies

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Three men in GuUfwd County Jail on other charges have been tied by police to a string of 67 brutal jobberies of women in. the Greensboro area in the past 2Vi> years, police said Thursd^u*

Greensboro Police Capt. B.L. Thomas revealed the results of the lengthy investigation involving computer-prepared charts and analysis, 16 law enforcement agencies and the State Bureau of Investigation and its spotter plane.

Police next week will turn over evidence to prosecutors that may lead to 76 indictments against the men, he said. No charges have yet been filed.

Detectives Ken Brady and Rick Baulding, who coordinated the investigation, said the robberies began In October 1980 but police did not detect a pattern until May 1981. The last incident in the string occurred this February, they said.

All the wojnen were beaten, some severely, and all but two were over 50 years old, and all apparently were followed home at night from shopping centers, grocery stores or hospitals, the detectives said.

The women were assaulted as they stepped out of their vehicles at home, reached back in for groceries or attempted to open the door, Thomas said in a news conference.

Decision Date For Faircloth

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina Secretary of Commerce D.M. Faircloth says hell make a decision on whether to run for governor toward the end of the legislative session.

Faircloth said if he decides to run for the Democratic nomination he will resign his Cabinet p^t.

Gov. Jim Hunt has said any high-level employee in his administration who becomes a candidate for a major office must quit.

Nightly Services

Set Next Week

Services will be held nightly Monday through Friday at Mills Chapel Free Will Baptist Church with the following speakers and choirs as guests:

Monday-Wednesday Deacon Jerry Carter; Thursday, Elder Millie Williams and English Chapel Gospel Chorus; Friday, Elder J.T. Williams and the Jubilee Gc^I Choir.

A devotion service will be held at 7 p.m. each ni^t followed by the regular services at 7:30 p.m.

Notice of Public Hearing

The City of Greenville has prepared its third year Community Development Small Cities Application for funding of the South Evans Community Development Project in the amount of $998,300.00. The application will be subniitted to the North Carolina Department of Natural Resources and Community Development for funding. The application contains the following program activities:

6. Street Improvements;

1. Acquisition of blighted areas;

2. Relocation;

3. Demolition;

4. Rehabilitation;

5. Code Enforcement;

7. Utility Improvements;

8. Fair Housing;

9. Citizen Participation;

10. Planning and Management;

11. Program Administration

The City Council will hold a public hearing to receive citizen comments qrUMs application on April 14,1983 at 7:30 PM in the City Council Chamber in City Hall located at 201 West Fifth Street. For more information contact the Community Development Office at 752-4137.

Percy R. Cox Mayor

City of Greenville

Allmond Mr. 'Oscar Allmond of Route 1, Ayden, of the Or-mondsville-Willow Green communities of Greene County, died Wednesday at Pitt CountjrMemorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 4:30 p.m. at Norcott Memorial Chapel in Ayden by Elder Charlie Edwards. Interment will follow in the Whitley^ Cemetery, Maury.

He was bom and raised in the Hamilton community of Martin County but had made his home in Greene County for the past 20' fears. He was an Army veteran of World Warn.

Surviving are one foster brother, Carl Moye of the home, aq4 one foster sister, Mrs. Bertha J. Moye of the home.

The body will be at Norcott Memorial Chapel in Ayden fr^ 6 p.m. Friday until the hour of the funeral.

Barnes PINETOPS - Mr. Bennie Barnes died Thursday in Wilson County Memorial Hospital. His funeral service will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at Crisp Chapel Free Will Baptist Church by the Rev. Robert Phillips. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

Mr. Barnes was a past employee of the town of Pinetops and a member of Crisp Chapel Church.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Nancy Bullock Barnes of the home; four sisters, Mrs. Dorothy Dupree of Greenville and Miss Maggie Tate, Mrs. Mary Lee and Mrs. Annie Mildred Pet-teway, all of Norfolk, Va., and three brothers, James Barnes of Macclesfield, John Henry Barnes of Pinetops and Roman Barnes of Norfolk, Va.

The family will receive friends at the Hemby-Willougby Mortuary in Tarboro Saturday from 7 to 8 p.m.

Bryan

VANCEBORO - Funeral services for the Rev Alfred Hilton Bryan, 86, who died Wednesday in Craven County Hospital, will be

Quarterly Meeting

Set At Cherry Lane

The following quarterly meeting services will be held at Cherry Lane Free Will Baptist Church this weekend:

Saturday, communion service at 7:30 p.m. with the Rev. Jasper Tyson and his. congregation in charge.

Sunday, 11 a.m., the Rev. C.R. Parker will deliver the message along with Cherry Lane senior choir and ushers; 3 p.m.. Bishop W.L. Phillips and his congregation from St. Paul Church will be in charge.

The services are open to the public.

SHRINE NOTICE Greenville Area Nobles of Rofelt Pasha Shrine Temple No. 175 will hold their annual Easter egg hunt Monday at 11 a.m. on the field of Tom Foreman Park. Children grades K-6 are invited to participate. One-hundred dozen e^ will be hidden along with 40 prize eggs. Parents of small children are also invited.

F.R. Sanders, area chairperson

Anninias C. Smith, arp! secretary

conducted Monday at 2 p.m. at Queens Chapd FYee Will Baptist Church in Vanceboro by Bishop W. J. Best, assisted by Bishop W.L. Jones and Bishop W.H. MitcheU. Burial will be in the Bryan-Coward Cemetery.

Mr. Byran was a native of Craven County and qrent most of his life in the Vanceboro community. He attended the Craven County schools and Winton schools. He attended North Carolina A&T University and Hamilton Institute.

He was a member of Queens Chapel FWB Church and pastored Allens Chapel FWB Church and other United FWB,churches in the Northwest Conference. He served on the Education Committee and Budget Committee of the conference. He was a member of Sheba Masonic Lodge No. 94 in Vanceboro.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Betty Green Bryan of Vanceboro; a step-mother,^ Mrs. Cora Boyd Bryan of Vanceboro; five sons, John L. Bryan and WiUiam A. Bryan, both of Vanceboro, Roosevelt Bryan of Newark, N.J., Marvin C. Bryan of Baltimore, Dr. Curtis E. Bryan of Petersburg, Va.; four daughters, Mrs. Inez Nobles of Vanceboro, Mrs. Thedis Wallace of Baltimore, Mrs. Pauline Rountree of Kinston and Mrs. Betty Ruth Green of Virginia Beach, Va.; one brother, Louis Bryan Jr. of Winston-Salem; 27 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren.

'The body will be at Queens Chapel FWB Church Sunday from 7-8 p.m. with Masonic rites accorded by Sheba Masonic Lodge. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Flanagan Funeral Home.

Fields

Mrs. Julia Fields Barber, 63, of 507 Pine St. died at Pitt County Memorial Hospital Thursday. The funeral service will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Qiapel by the Rev. Phillip Bland. Burial will be in the Snow Hill Cemetery.

Mrs. Barber, a native of Greene County, lived in Snow Hill until 1952 when she moved to Greenville. She was a member of the Mead-owbrook Pentecostal Holiness Church and for many years caredfor children in her home.

She is survived by her husband, Raymond Barber; six sisters, Mrs. Elsie Boone and Mrs. Edna Moye, both of LaGrange, Mrs. Bobbie Wade of Stantonsburg, Mrs. Helen Hill of Farmville, Mrs. Kathleen HUl of Snow Hill and Mrs. Bernice McLawhorn of Hookerton, and three brothers, Henry Fields and Morris Fields, both of Snow Hill, and Mercer Fields of Wilson.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. tonight and at other times will be at the home of Mrs. Noah Barber at Ballards Crossroads.

Harris

FOUNTAIN - Mrs. Maggie King Harris, 83, died Thursday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Her funeral service will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m. in Dildy Chapel Free Will Baptist Church near Fountain by Dr. Robert Gorham. Burial will be in the St. John Church Cemetery, Falkland.

Mrs. Harris lived in the

Fountain community all her life. She was a member of Dildy Oiapd Church for the past 60 years and served on the Mother Board for 40 years.

Surviving are ei^t daughters, Mrs. Mamie Lee Edwards, Eldress Gladys Lan^ey, Mrs. Verna L. Edwards and Miss Mary B. Harris, all of Fountain, Mrs. Elizabeth Langley of Boston, Mrs. Rena 0. Johnson of Califomih, Mrs. Edna Hardy of Winterville and Mrs. Maggie Farmer of Route 1, Macclesfield; three sons. Hardy Harris Jr. of Hookerton, James Lewis Harris of Saratoga and Johnny Earl Harris of the home; 75 grandchildren; 80 great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the Hemby-^ WUlou0iby Mortuary Chapel/-'^ Sunday from 7 to 8 p.m. y

two sons, Morris Earl Smith of Tennessee and Billy Ray Smith of Grimesland; two dau^ters, Mrs. Barbara Penland of Grimesland and Mrs. Veda Elaine Hoskins of Chesapeake? Va.; a brother, Jesse Smith of Ayden; two sisters, Mrs. Magdalene Parrott of Winterville and Mrs. Anne M. Smith of Lumberton; his ktep-mother, Mrs. Betty Smith of Winterville; three half-brothers, Pete Smith of Vaix^boro, Zeb Smith of Ayden and Curt Smith of GreenvUle; two half-sisters, Mrs. Blanche Ormond of Winterville and Mrs. Cassie Tyson of Greenville; six grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. toni^t.

Hill

AYDEN - Mr. Marion Wilbur Hill, 54( died Thursday. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Farmer |\ineral Home in Ayden.

Rivers

Mrs. Virginia Haley Rivers, 76, of 1803 E. Fourth St. died Wednesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Her funeral service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Eckie Lancaster and the Rev. Dewey Tyson. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mrs. Rivers, a resident of Greenville since 1929, had for many years assisted her husband in the operation of Rivers Store and Service Station on East Fifth Street, now known as the Landmark Store. She was a member of St. James United Methodist Church.

Surviving are her husband, John D. Rivers; one sister. Miss Alda P. Haley of Pinellas Park, Fla.; and three brothers, Boyd Haley of Cheraw, S.C., Edward Haley of Marion, Va. and Wilbur Haley of Jacksonville.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m tonight.

Smith

Mr. Asa E. Smith, 73, a retired farmer, died Friday at his home in Shady Knolls Trailer Park. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Bobby Thomas. Burial will follow in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mr. Smith, a native of the Clayroot Community of Pitt County, had lived most of his life in the Vanceboro community. He had been a resident of Greenville for the past seven years. He was a member of the Gospel Mission of the Missionary Baptist Church at Vanceboro. .

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Velma Haddock Smith;

Whitdjead <* TARBORO - Mr. James; (Bud) Whitehead died Thursday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. His^ funeral service will be conducted Sunday at 3 p.m. in Mount Zion Primitive Baptist Church in Princeville by the -Rev. Walter Adkins. Burial will be in the Pittman Grove Cemetery near Battleboro.

Surviving are a dau^ter, Mrs. Dorothy Spruill of Tarboro; three grandchildren; a sister. Miss Margaret Whitehead of Rocky Mount, and two brothers, Otis Whitehead of Falkland and Thomas Ray Whitehead of Greensboro.

The family will receive friends at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary in Tarboro Saturday from 7 to 8 p.m. at the chapel.

Wyrick GREENSBORO - Council Bryan Wyrick, 87, of 4321 Hilltop Road, Greensboro, died Thursday in Wesley Long Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday at Hinshaw Memorial United Methodist Church by the Rev. Geor^ Thompson. Burial will be in Green Hill Cemetery.

A Guilford County native, Mr. Wyrick was a retired conductor from Southern Railroad and was a member of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen.

Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Ruby Wall of Greensboro and Mrs. Nancy Bridges of High Point; six sons, Herman C. Wyrick, Howard T. Wyrick, Frank W. Wyrick, Charles W. Wyrick and Wallace B. Wyrick, all of Greensboro, and Clay T. Wyrick of High Point; two sisters, Mrs. Ruby Pearman and Mrs. Mary Hodgin, both of Greensboro; one brother, Dewey D. Wyrick of Greensboro; 13 grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren.

The family will be at Hanes-Lineberry funeral home on Vanstory Street 7 to 9 p.m. tonight. Memorial contributions may be made to the Hinshaw Memorial United Methodist Church.

TODAY , THRU APRIL 30

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SportsDAILY REFLECTOR ClassifiedFRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 1, 1983

V

Watson (Not Tom) Tied oHIng SafurdayWith Lye For GGO Lead Area Teams In Tournaments

GREENSBORO (AP) -Denis Watson, who grew up in the blazing heat of East Africa, has a problem.

Where do I go now? he asked.

Watson, shivering and soaked despite several layers of clothing, hoie4 a bunker shot for a birdie n the 18th hole Thursday and took a share of the lead in the drizzling rain and biting cold that marred the first round of the $400,000 Greater Greensboro Open Golf Tournament.

Watson is a native of Rhodesia who lived in South Africa for several years before trying the European Tour. He joined American circuit three years ago.

You must remember, said Watson, who contrived a 3-under-par 69 despite the miserable, wet conditions, "I come from a country where we dont go outside if the temperature goes below 60 degrees.

This reminds me of playing in England: bitter cold.

Thats why I left the European Tour.

I hope it gets better here. Ive no place left to go.

Mark Lye birdied three of his last four holes to gain a share of the lead.

Its kind of a surprise, he said. I felt like the round was getting away from me. I was just trying to hold on. Sometimes it happens when you dont expect it.

And he shared Watsons sentiments about the weather. The temperature didnt get out of the 40s. Leaden skies leaked a steady drizzle throughout the day.

This is one theyll talk about it, he said. The players will be sitting around a locker room somewhere talking about bad weather and theyll say, remember Greensboro in83?

Roger Maltble, Canadian Jim Nelford Mike McCullough and Bob Eastwood, a runnerup last week, were a single shot off the lead at 70.

The group at 71, and the only others able to break par, included Dave Eichelber^r, South African Nick Price, Englands Nick Faldo, Fuzzy Zoeller, Chip Beck, Thomas Gray and Craig Stadler, who will defend his Masters title in Augusta, Ga., next week.

Hal Sutton, winner of the Tournament Players Championship Monday, shot a 75. Gary Player of South Africa opened his American campaign with a 72. Danny Edwards, the defending champion and a two-time Greensboro winner, also matched par.

Watson, who said he got warm only when 1 made double bogey on the 16th, holed from a buried lie in a bunker on the 18th for the birdie that gave him a share of the top spot.

Lye, not yet a winner in six seasons on the American tour.

Sports Colendor

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

Todays Sports BasdMdl

Southern Nash at Ayden-Grifton (4 p.m.)

FarmvUle Central at Conley (4 p.m.)

UNC-Wilmington at East Carolina (3p.m.)

Tarfooro at Roanoke (4 p.m.)

Rocky Mount at Rose (4 p.m.)

Nash Central at E.B. Aycock SoftbaU

FarmvUle Central at Conley 2 (4 p.m.)

Tartwro at Roanoke (4 p.m.)

Southern Nash at Ayden-Grifton (4p.m.)

Rocky Mount at E.B. Aycock Track

East Carolina women at George Mason Invitational

Rose at Kinston Golf

FarmvUle Central at WUson FUce Tennis

FarmvUle Central at C.B. Aycock

UNC-Wilmington at East Carolina

scored three consecutive birdies, beginning on the 15th, on putts of 10,10 and 15 feet.

GGO Scores

First-round scores 'Thursday in the 4400,000 Greater Greensboro Open Golf Tournament on the 6,9e4-yard, par-72 Forest Oaks Country Oub course (a-denotes amateur):

Denis Watson Mark Lye Jim Nelford Mike McCullough Bob Eastwood Roger Maltbie Fuzzy Zoeller Chip Beck Nick Price Thomas Gray Nick Faldo DaveEichelberger Craig Stadler GregPowers Woiy Blackburn MacOGrady Joey Rassett Mike Donald Danny Edwards Wayne Levi RonStreck Lou Graham Pat McGowan Larry Rinker Gary McCord Gary Player Lanny Wadkins Jay Haas Curtis Strange Bobby Clempett Rex Caldwell Vance Heafner Jimmy Roy Corey Pavin Phil Hancock TomWelskopf Jack Renner Mike Holland

Jim Thorpe Mark McCumber

Andy North Miller Barber Scott Simpson Peter Ooaterhuis John Cook Dan Halldorson Allen Miller Bud^ Gardner Jim Dent ijirryMize Steve Melnyk Lon Hinkle Tom Jenkins Charles Coody J.C. Snead Hubert Green Lee Elder Tommy Nakajima Mick Soli Mark OMeara Bob Gilder Larry Nelson TomLehman George Archer ForrfetFezler MarkPfeil Rod Nuckolls Mike Reid BillCalfee Russ Cochran Tim Sinipson Ronnie Black Keith Fergus Joe Inman John Mahafley* Tom Purtzer Mike Sullivan Gary Hallberg Darrell Kestner John Adams Ed Fiori Hal Sutton Bobby Wadkins Mike Gove Gavin Levenson Loren Roberts Ken Green

3^34-69

34-35-

34-36-70

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35-35-70

36-35-71 36-35-71

36-35-71

33-38-71 35-36-71 35-36-71 35-36-71

37-34-71

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37-35-72 35-37-72

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35-37-72

36-36-72 3835-73

37-36-73 3835-73 3837-73 3837-73 3837-73 37-36-73 34-39-73 34-39-73 3837-73 3837-73 3837-73 37-36-73 37-36-73

3837-73 37-36-73 4833-73 3835-73

3838-74 37-37-74 3838-74

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3835-74 3838-74 37-37-74 37-37-74 37-37-74

3836-74 37-37-74 3836-74

3838-74 3836-74 3836-74 37-37-74

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3837-75 3837-75 3837-75

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3837-75 3839-75 3839-75

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3837-75 3836-75 37-38-75

Clarence Rose Brad Bryant JohnMcComish Fred Couples Barry Jaeckel Bob Charles Morris Hatalsky Tim Norris Tony Sills ThadDaber Wally Armstrong Donnie Hammond BUI Sander Lindy Miller Tommy Valentine Jeff Mitchell Curt Byrum David Ogrin David Pmles Leonard Thompson BUIKratzert A1 Geiberger Lennie Clements Pat Lindsey John Fought

4836-76

37-39-76

3837-76

3838-76 3838-76 3838-76 3837-76 37-39-76 4836-76

3837-76

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37-39-76 38S-76

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4836-76 35-41-76

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3838-76 3838-77 3838-77 41-36-77 38-39-77

4837-77 3838-77 38-39-77

Holiday baseball and softball tournaments will get underway Saturday involving a number of area teams.

Rose, Conley and Farmville Central will take part in the Pitt County Easter Tournament starting Saturday at Guy Smith Stadium, while Greene Central and Ayden-Grifton take part in the Wilson Optimist Tournament at Fleming Stadium in Wilson. Jamesville hosts its own tournament, also starting Saturday.

Williamston, * North Pitt, Bear Grass and Roanoke will be in the Roanoke Easter Tournament, scheduled for Robersonville starting Tuesday.

Rounding out the activities. Rose, Conley and Greene Central will play in the Greene Central Softball Tournament, which begins on Monday.

Three games are slated for Saturday afternoon at Guy Smith in the Pitt Tourney. Conley and New Bern kick off

Good Bite

Golfer Dennis Watson bites his tongue as he hits from a sand trap to the 16th green during Thursdays first round of the Greater Greensboro Open being played at the Forest Oaks Country Club. Watson shot a 3-under-par 69 and is tied for the lead with Mark Lye. (AP Laserphoto)

a

Cold Winds, Rain Force Watson

To Use Panty Hose For Warmth

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer

GREENSBORO (AP) - Denis Watson couldnt find a pair of long jcriins, so to keep warm during the first round of the Greater Greensboro Open, he said he had to settle for a pair of panty hose.

With cold winds and occasional rains sweeping the Forest Oaks Country Club course, golfers had to do what they could to battle the elements. Watsons idea apparently paid off since he was tied with Mark Lye for the lead with a 3-under par 69.

I think if theres anything that wears your concentration down, its much tourer playing when its windy, said Watson, who finished in a tie for seventh in last years GGO. Im not a very good cold weather player, so I was really pleased.

Watson said theres was little protection from the weather, which saw temperatures hovering in the 40s.

My hands just get very cold. Ive just gotta do my best to try and keep the rest of my body warm, Watson said. 'Theres nothing much you can really do but put on as much clothes as you can that will still permit you to swing and do as much as you can.

Lye said the sogg^' conditions made it difficult for him to get the golf ball to the perfect lie. He said after his fifth hole.

he decided to go for more distance to compensate for the weather.

The fairways are just a little bit wet, Lye said. The grass is heavy. A lot of guys. Im sure, felt like walking in. It was just a cold day at the office.

Roger Maltbie, one of four golfers at 2-under par 70, said switching from glasses to contact lenses this year helped him get through the round. He added, however, that there are other parts of him that couldnt tolerate the situation.

The hardest part was playing in the wind, Maltbie said. Theres something about wind that is annoying. You always have that noise in your ears. Its never tranquil or peaceful. If you couple that with rain, I think everybody gets a little annoyed at it.

Maltbie also said the best way to take his mind off the weather was to remember that a victory would lead to a slot in next weeks Masters tournament at Augusta.

Maybe Im a little more elevated for this than I would be normally because it is the last chance and I want to play very well, Maltbie said. This is it.

Craig Stadler, winner of last years Masters and two shots behind the leaders, said he wasnt pleased with his round, but added that it wasnt bad considering the lack of spring weather.

Ive had enough of that today, Stadler said. Im just starting to get the feeling back.

Holland: The Final Four

Greene Central, Ayden-Grifton at WUson Optimists Tournament Conl^, FarmvUle Central, Roee at Pitt Tournament Tennis

Harvard at East Carolina women

(10 a.m.)

RecLeaflue

Lobsters vs. CourtMsters Greenville Teniris Association vs. Burroughs WeUcome ' Wasllneton Netbirds vs. GreenvUle Country Club Track

East Carollnk women at George Mason InvitaUonal East Carolina at Duke Invitational

ByWILLGRIMSLEY AP Special Corre^xmdent ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. -Houston and Louisville are the power teams, said the coUegiate-looking gentleman in tweeds. 'The key will lie with the dominance of Houstons front line. Louisville is the one team in the tournament who can negate that advantage.

I feel the winner should come from the Houston-Louisville game, but somebody might get killed in the process. It will be a war.

H anyone is in a position to assess the survivors who square off here Saturday ni^.t in college basketballs-Final Four, its,Terry Holland, the University of Virginia coach. He has gone eyeball-tiKyeball with three of the teams, beating them, and has more than a casual acquaintance with the fourth, Georgia, which faces North Candna State in a duel of darkborses in the other half ofthedmw.

Actually its something of an iqiset that Holland be fidlowing the actkm from the

sidelines instead of the bench. With the best winning record in college basketball over the last four years (112 victories and 24 defeats), with 7-foot4 Ralph Sampson at center, his Cavaliers were a prime favorite until knocked off in the regional finals by N.C. State.

Virginia, without Sampson in the lineup, whipped Houston in Tokyo last December 72-63 and six weeks later crushed Louisville 96-81. The Cavaliers won their first two games comfortably against N.C. State but lost cliff-hangers to their conference rivals in both the Atlantic Coast finals and the NCAA playoffs.

N.C. State started well but Dereck Whittenburg, their best shooter (17.2 game average), broke his foot and some of the 10 games they lost happened vriiile he was out of the lineiq), Holland said. They seemed to peak at the end of the season - an opportunistic, ball-control team.

The 40-year-old Virginia coach called Houstons front line of 7-foot Akeem Olajuwan,

6-9 Larry Micheoux and 6-6 Clyde Drexler one of the most formidable ever in the college game. One observer commented that it could hold its own in the National Basketball Association.

If Houston can play the way it wants to play, the team will be hard to beat, Holland said. But Louisville Is a better balanced club. It is capable of applying a full-court game that can give anybody trouble.

Look at the game against Kentucky (won by Louisville 80-68 in the Mideast Regional final). Late in the game the pressure was so great that Kentucky had trouble getting the ball in play from out of bounds.

Louisvilles tallest starter is 6-9 Scooter McCray. The top scorers are Lancaster Gordon and Milt Wagner, each 6-5 with an average of 13 points-plusagame.

Its a poised, disciplined team which has been in the Final Four three times in the last four years, Holland said. Yet Houston can be over

powering. Drexler is a tremendous athlete. Micheaux is less sensational but more workmanlike. And Akeem is dominating.

Houston finished the season with No.l national ranking on a record of 30 victories and two defeats. Louisville was back at No. 2 with 32-3.

Incredible records, Holland acknowledged. It looks like the logical championship game but, as weve found it, anything can happen.

He said Georgias season record of 24-9 is very deceptive.

Outside their conference they were unbeaten, he added, theyre in a crazy league - Kentucky, Alabama, teams like that - where everybody beats up on everybody else. People talk about their lack of height (starters range from 6-1 to 6-7) but they are exceptionally quick and againt North Carolina they destroyed the theory that you can beat them by making them shoot from the outside.

the activities at 12 noon, followed by Havelock and Kinston at 2:30 p.m. Farmville Central and Rose collide at 5 p.m., while Washington has received a first round bye.

Play then continues on Monday and Tuesday, with games at 2:30,5 and 7:30 p.m.

In Wilson, Ayden-Grifton

Rain Delays Area Games

and Wilson Fike begin tournament action at 11 a.m. Saturday. That will be followed at 2 p.m. by Greene Central and Wilson Hunt. Wilson Beddingfield meets Southwest Edgecombe at 5 p.m., with Raleigh Enloe and North Lenoir colliding at 7:45 p.m.

Play will continue on Monday and Tuesday with games at 11 a.m., 2, 5 and 7:45 p.m. as the teams play to all eight places.

Rains hit the area again yesterday, washing out a number of athletic contests.

While a number of them have not been rescheduled as yet, according to word reaching the Daily Reflector, tfie following have been reset:

For today: Rocky Mount at Rose baseball; Greene Central at North Pitt baseball; Nash Central at E.B. Aycock Junior High baseball; Rocky Mount at E.B. Aycock Junior High softball; Farmville Central at C.B. Aycock tennis; UNC-Wilmington at East Carolina ; tennis; Rose at Kinston boys track; and Farmville Central at Fike golf.

Reset for April 11: Washington at Roanoke tennis.

Reset for April 13: Rocky Mount at Rose softball; and Rocky Mount at Rose tennis.

Postponed with no dates set were William & Mary at East Carolina baseball; Plymouth at Williamston tennis; Roanoke," Washington at Tarboro boys and girls track; and Roanoke Rapids, Edenton at Williamston boys and girls track.

Candelled was a girls track meet at Farmville which also included Greene Central and Southwest Edgecombe.

No word was received on the fate of Manteo at ,^ar Grass tennis; Conley, White Oak and West Craven boys and girls track; and Ayden-Grifton at Southern Wayne golf.

The Roanoke tournament will get underway on Tuesday with two games. At 5:30 p.m.. Bear Grass faces North Pitt, followed at 8 p.m. by Roanoke and Tabor City.

On Wednesday at 3 p.m., the losers of the first days action play and complete their activity in the tournament. At 5:30 p.m., Williamston will face the winner of Tuesdays first game, while at 8 .m., Plymouth takes on the winner of the Tuesday second game. The consolation and championships will be played on Thursday.

Jamesvilles tournament gets underway Saturday at 5 p.m. with Aurora taking on Currituck. Jamesville then faces St. Francis of Apple Springs, N.Y., in the second game at 7:30 p.m.

Monday, Bath and Camden meet at 2:30 p.m., followed at 5 p.m. by the losers of Satur-^days games. The Saturday winners meet at 7:30 p.m.

The finals and consolations will be held on Tuesday at 5 and 7:30 p.m.

The Greene Central tournament gets underway at 9 a.m. Monday with Rose facing North Lenoir. That is followed at 10 a.m. by Conley against C.B. Aycock. At 11 a.m., Southern Wayne faces Northern Nash, with Greene Central meeting New Bern at 12 noon.

The second round follows starting at 1 p.m. with losers meeting losers and winners meeting winners. The final round will be Tuesday starting at 10 a.m. as the teams play to all eight places.

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!The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, April 1,1963

NBA, Union Agree To Tentative Pact

YORK (AP) Two Rnth cidpc cav thov ont uihf utir. ^ i.

NEW YORK (AP) - Two previously untoiKhed concepts - guaranteed percentage of gross revenues and salary caps - are being added to the sports labor lexicon with the tentative agreement by the National Basketball Association and its playersunion.

NBA management and players agreed on a contract Thursday that will guarantee players 53 percent share of gross revenues, effective next season. The salary cap provisions will not ben until the 1984-85 season.

Both sides say they got what they wanted.

The players kept virtually all of their free-agent rights and assured themselves of maintaining their lucrative salary levels. The owners^say they will be better able to ixpe financially and compete more equally for player talent.

Both sides also didnt get what they didnt want - a strike that the union threatened to start after Saturdays games if a settlement was not reached by then.

We are hopeful that teams will be able to use this agreement to plan their future more successfully and we can continue to operate with 23 teams, said David Stem, the NBAs executive vice president for business and legal affairs.

The salary cap provisions will prevent teams from signing other clubs free agents or trading for players who would increase their payroll. They also require teams to spend a certain amount on salaries, and if

they do not have enough money to reach that figure, the NBA would use a pool of shared revenues to bring the stroking clubs up to the minimum standard.

Bob Lanier of the Milwaukee Bucks, president of the Players Association, said the players believe "that not only have they maintained competitive bidding, but have greatly enhanced it because now all the teams will be bidding rather than merely a handful, as has been the case for the last few years.

Daniel, Spuzich Tied At Shore

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (AP) Sandra Spuzich came to the conclusion some time last year that she must overlook her bad golf shots.

Her game since that psychological decison has improved dramatically and today she holds a share of the first-round lead at 69 with Beth Daniel in the richest event on the womens tour.

The $400,000 Nabisco-Dinah Shore tournament is now classified with three others as majors, with the winner to collect $55.000,

I decided would never be absolutely perfect, said the 45-year-old Spuzich,now in her 22nd year on the Ladies Professional Golf Association tour.

I was going to hit some bad shots the rest of my life. Once you accept that and go on, you do better.

Spuzich and Daniels shot their 3 under-par scores over the Mission Country Club course Thur^^ in different ways.

Spuzich carded three birdies and parred the other holes in what she termed the most consistent round Ive had in some time.'

Shes had many of them and last year won two tournaments after only five victories during her many previous pro seasons.

She finished in the top 10 on eight occasions in 1982 and already has been there twice this year.

But being ahead after the first round doesnt impress her.

Its like being ahead after the first two holes, she said Theres a long way to go.

Daniel holed a 40-yard wedge shot on the 11th hole to take over a share of the lead.

One stroke back at 70 on 6,265-yard, par-72 layout were Amy Alcott and Susie McAllister. At 71 were Donna Caponi and Jan Stephenson.

Defending champion Sally Little, less than four months after undergiong major surgery, fell to an 80.

Another suffering a fall was Penny Pulz who shot the best nine holes with a 32 with four birdies. Then she carded a double bogey on the 10th and added four other bogeys to score a 42 for a 74 total.

Kathy Whitworth, winner two weeks ago in the Womens Kemper Open on Maui in the Hawaiian Islands, shot 73.

After todays second round, the field of 90 will be cut to the low 70 pros and ties for the nationally televised rounds Saturday and Sunday.

Scooping It Out

LPGA Golfer Jan Stephenson appears to be scooping the ball out of the sand at the fourth hole at Mission Hills Country Club during first round action Thursday in the Dinah Shore Invitatational. Stephenson fired a one-under-par 71, two off the pace. (AP Laserphoto)

Jim Valvano Won't Be Sitting In Rafters This Year At The NCAA

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) - North Carolina State basketball coach Jim Valvano has given up his usual NCAA tournament seat near the rafters for a sideline seat that includes the chance to live a dream.

Valvanos, 16th-ranked Wolfpack earned him that sideline seat by defeating Pepperdine, Nevada-Las Vegas and Virginia in the NCAA West Regional. N.C. State, 24-10, meets No. 18 Georgia, 24-9, in Saturdays semifinals, beginning at 3:39 p.m. EDT.

Like we all say in the business, its a short walk

from the castle to the outhouse, Valvano said Thursday. Two years ago I was sitting there (at the Final Four) with (Louisville coach) Denny Crum. I was a row from the rafters and he was another row up. He had won the championship the year before and he was saying,' What a difference a year makes.

Crum will also have give up his rafter seat for one on the floor, sending his 2nd-ranked and 32-3 Cardinals against top-ranked Houston, 30-2, in the other semifinal battle.

Valvano said he has met several coaches among the

rafters, and most shared the same thoughts.

You never know who youll be sitting with, he said. Youre lucky to get a ticket, much less two together, and youre probably with somebody who coaches in the Midwest and you sit there and watch those three games (semifinals and championship). You watch and you dream and you coach with the guy down on the floor and youre going,Wow.

For Valvano, that dream has never ended.

I think about the championship constantly, he said. When we were four games away I always thought about

Georgia Plans To Think About Self, Not Its Foe

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) For 18th-ranked Georgia, getting ready for the bigges: basketball game in the schools history means the same kind of pregame preparation that got the Bulldogs this far.

That is, more time practicing and less time watching game films.

We think more about what were going to do than what the other team does, said Georgia Coach Hugh Durham, whose team meets 16th-ranked North Carolina State in an NCAA tournament semifinal Saturday in Albuquerque, N.M. Our strategy is simple -play good defense, rebound and take good shots.

it. Last year, when we lost (to Tennessee-Chattanooga in the first round) I was thinking, If we can just get by them, were only four games away.

But now, Valvanos club is only two games away.

Its just that this is what you dream about when youre a college basketball coach, Valvano said. Ive been coaching for 16 years and theres no question that this, this, is what you dream about. The Final Four. The Final Four. The final Four. Just to say it. Ive been to the Final Four so many times, but this is the epitome, to do it as a coach.

Valvano had other thoughts Thursday, including the heatlh of guard Dereck Whittenburg, who missed practice because of the flu.

Whittenburg, who missed 132 games because of a foot injury at midseason, is the Wolfpacks leading scorer at 17.5 points per gatne, but in NCAA tournament play has averaged 21.5 points.

We hope its a 24-hour thing, said assistant trainer Jim Rehbock. With rest and medication, hopefully hell be ready Saturday.

However, the five teams with the highest payrolls Los Angeles, New Jersey, New York, Philadelphia and Seattle - will be frozen at their current salary levels next season, before the salary cap provision takes effect.

These teams will be able to sign other teams free agents next season if they adjust their payrolls in other ways to keep their salary at the same level.

The final roadblock to ratification is 23 player representatives, who will consider the proposal Monday. Larry Fleisher, the unions general counsel and chief negotiator, said ratification is a formality-

NBA Commissioner Larry OBrien said 22 of the 23 members of the Board of Governors, which consists of the leagues owners or their top-level representatives, already have voted for the settlement. Eighteen votes were needed for approval.

Sam Schulman, owner of the Seattle SuperSonics, was the lone dissenter. I voted no because I wasnt given the proper opportunity to fully examine and assess all possible reprecussions as they applied to my franchise, he said in a telephone interview Thursday with The New York Times.

A strike would have been the third by a professional sports league in as many years. In 1981, baseball players struck for 50 days; last year, NFL players struck for 57 days.

There had been speculation for days that the two sides wfere close to a ^ttlement that would allow the players to drop their strike threat.

But Fleisher said the agreement was not nailed down until Thursday.

Lanier had two speeches prepared, the one he made and the one that said the war was on, Fleisher said, referring to the threatened strike.

^th sides said they are convinced the contract will enable the NBA to stay at its current level of 23 teams.

We expect teams to be sold before theyll fold, Stem said. That is because prospective buyers can project what they will have to spiend and wont have to worry about having its best players taken by rich teams.

Because of the minimum salaries and revenue sharing, Lanier said, teams will be able to compete with each other on an equal basis. The large teams like Los Angeles and New York would be bidding basically at the same level as all the other teams in the league. This is something the league has been concerned about for years and had finally accomplished.

Most teams didnt see a light at the end of the tunnel, said Larry Weinberg, owner of the Portland Trail Blazers and chairman of the Board of Governors. With this agreement, I believe that now they will be able to see a liit at the end of the tunnel.

The amount of the salary

cap will be set at 53 percent of the leagues gross receipts. Only parking and concession revenue is excluded from the gross receipts figure.

The cap cannot be lower than $3.6 million per team in 1984-85, $3.8 million in 1985-86 and $4 million in 1986-87, according to the agreement.

Since there are certain to be teams who will exceed the cap, the amount over the cap that those teams spend will be added together and then sub

tracted from the basic cap level to determine the minimum level. For example, if the cap level is $4 million and three teams are a total of $5 million over the cap level, the remaining 20 teams would be required to spend $3.6 million on salaries ($5 million divided by 20 is $400,000, which is subtracted from the basic cap level of $4 million).

The settlement also incluses a provision that would give management the option of

expanding the number of playoff teams from 12 to 16 and making the first-round series best-of-five instead of best-of-three.

Another provision would guarantee the players association 253 jobs, a figure that was arrived at by multiplying 23 times 11 - the minimum roster size. Even if -the number of teams is re-> duced, the other teams would have to increase their rosters; to keep 253 players in uniform.

Reaction To NBA Pact Appears To Be Positive

By The Associated Press National Basketball Association players, coaches and team owners say the tentative contract that averted a threatened strike is good for the present and good for the future.

Ive had. a pretty decent year. This means all those games are not going to go in vain, said Artis Gilmore of the San Antoni Spurs.

Added Pat Williams, general manager of the streaking Philadelphia 76ers: Our fans are just geared for the playoffs. Emotionally, it would have been devastating. I dont think we could have won them back.

And, summed up Rod Thom, general manager of the Chicago Bulls: I dont think the NBA could have afforded a strike at this time.

The NBA players union had threatened to strike Saturday unless an agreement was worked out. On Thursday, the NBA said 22 of its 23 members on the Board of Governors had approved a tentative four-year pact that will guarantee players 53 percent of gross revenues starting next season, while a cap on salaries goes into effect the following year.

It also requires teams to spend a certain amount on salaries, and if the teams do not have enough to reach that figure, the NBA would use other teams revenues to make up the difference.

The leagues 23 player representatives are expected to ratify the agreement Monday.

If ratified, the agreement would prevent teams from signing free agents or trading for players who would take their pajTolls over the salary cap, which cannot be lower than $3.6 million in 1985-86 and $4 million in 1986-87.

The agreement should help the leagues competitive balance, team officials said.

It not only fits in with our teams future plans, but it enables us to make meaningful commitments without the fear of not being able to compete, said Kansas City Kings General Manager Joe Axelson. The players and owners will now share in the good times and the bad times, and thats the way it should be.

Said Portland Trail Blazers general manager Stu Inman:

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The bottom line is going to bring us stability and parity. Several players feel the movement of free agents will not be substantially affected.

We feel its high enough that it wont limit free agency, said Jim Paxson, Portlands player representative. It wont hurt our salary structure as we know it. I think the better players are still going to get their money.

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Jazz, who will become a free agent at the end of Uie season, said the agreement may help him.

It will probably make some teams spend more money, and that in turn will help me and other players in my position, said Kelley, a seven-year veteran. Im not a superstar player. Im more of a middleH)f-the-road player, and this should help me and others like me.

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Parsons Suing Time For Libd

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -Former South Carolina womens basketball coach . Pam Parsons says she waited nearly 15 months to fHe a $75 million libel suit against Time Inc. and two top university officials because she didnt want to hurt the students who played for her.

The lawsuit, filed in Richland County Court of Common Pleas in Columbia Thursday, seeks $25 million in actual damages and $50 million in punitive damages from use President James B. Holderman, Chris Vlahoplus, college vice president for public relations, and Time, which publishes Sports Illustrated.

Parsons resigned as head womens basketball coach on Jan. 14,1982. In a Feb. 8,1982 article, Sports Illustrated reported that Parsons had admitted sexual improprieties involving one of her players.

In a statement she read to reporters Thursday, Parsons said the article devastated my future, both as a professional andas a person.

I have waited for two reasons - first, to assess the impact upon my own life and future, and secondly, and more importantly, not to interfere with my players and to give them an opportunity to keep their minds focused upon their own educational and athletic goals, she said.

This article, written for the dual purposes of sensationalism and to set back womens collegiate sports, presented a false, biased and

totally irres^nsible portrayal of Pam Parsons and the womens basketball program at the University of South Carolina.

The most damaging portions of the article, she said, were two statements attributed to Holderman and Vlahoplus, use vice president for public relations. These > statements are totally untrue, she said.

Vlahoplus was quoted in the magazine as saying, At first she denied being a csbian and having an affair with a player, then she finally admitted it. Vlahoplus has denied making the statement.

After the allegations became public last year, Parsons said she would explore possible legal action and later said in a radio interview that allegations of homosexuality had nothing to do with her resignation.

The national sports magazine reported that university officials said Parsons had a homosexual affair with one of her players. The story quoted Vlahoplus as saying the lesbianism accusation led to Parsons departure.

The magazine also included charges that Parsons helped players with term papers, violated an assortment of recruiting rules and evaluated prospective players with sex in mind.

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The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, April 1,1983-15

a    AfcCMcvwi,    \jicriivuic, r iiud^, npru i, wji

Candy Man Giving Pirates Hope For 1983 Season

By The Associated Press

Pittsburghs Candy Man may have given the Pirates a syveet taste of things to come.

Left-hander John Candelaria, scheduled to be the Pirates opening day pitcher next week, has been battling tendinitis in his elbow all spring and owned an inflated 9,00 earned run average after being roughed iqi for sue runs in four innings by the Boston Red Sox last ^turday.

But in Thursdays final tuneup, Candelaria was running on all cylinders. He \nt

six scoreless innings, allowing three hits, walking (e and fanning three, in the Pirates 3-1 baseball exhibition victory over the Red Sox. -

Im satisfied with the arm, Canddaria said. It didnt hurt when I was pitching, but it hurts now. It always hurts after I pitch.

Ill be glad to leave Florida. This spring when it hsnt rained, its been windy. The wind today was blowing from left to right about 40 miles an hour. My curve ball was breaking so much, it had

to be the wind.

Jim Morrison drove in two runs for the Pirates with a third-inning single after Lee Mazzilli had doubled, and with an eighth-inning home run. Pittsburghs non-roster rookie Jim Winn got Gary AUenson to hit into a double play, with the bases loaded to end the game.Winn, who worked the ninth inning, was unscored iqion for the sixth time in his seven spring appearances.

Candelarias outing was a blessing for the Pirates, who have been getting unreliable

starting pitching this spring. Candelaria and Don Robinson have battled arm problems and Larry McWilliams and Manny Sarmiento have been inconsistent, the only consistent starter has been rookie Lee Tunnell, who has pitched his way into the starting rotation.

Another pitcher getting ready for next weeks opener, Montreals Steve Rogers, held the New York Mets to one run in seven innings and the Expos got solo homers from Andre Dawson and Jerry White in a 3-2 victory,

Meanwhile, four hot teams - the California Angels, New York Yankees, Minnesota Twins and Chicago White Sox kept rolling.

Rod Carews tie-breaking single hi^ighted a three-run fifth inning as the Angels defeated the San Diego Padres 5-2 for their 10th victory in the last 11 games.

Oscar Xambles home run with two out in the bottom of the 10th inning enabled the Yankees to defeat the Houston Astros 6-5 and extend their winning streak to six games.

Bob Meacham and Brad Gulden also homered for the winners.

Consecutive RBI singles by Lenny Faedo and Bobby Mitchell with one out in the 11th inning boosted the Twins past the Texas Rangers 5-3. Minnesotas Gary Ward drove in his 28th run of the ^ring with a first-inning single as the Twins raised their exhibition record to 15^.

Home runs by Pat Tabler and Jerry Haireton powered the White Sox to a 5-3 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals,

SCOREBOARD

Rec Basketball

Arts Barber Shop 48 40-98

ToyoUEast.............86    62-88

Leading scorers: Arts-Kenno Sparrow 23, Maurice McKee 18; TE-Robert Redmond 14.

NHLStandingi

Harris 20, Melvin

_Bowlmg_

Shirts esurts

W    L

TearaiW................77    38

Tar Landing Seafood... 75.i>    40>.!

Planters Warehouse ... 75    41

Dean Oil Co............73    43

Odd Ones..............65'i    50'/i

Cornwell Builders.....61    55

The Jokers............60    56

Camelotinn...........59'4    56/i

Big Macs..............58'i!    57-^

Pac Attack............57    59

The Lucky Strikes.....54    62

Halos. ..............52    64

Family Affair ...^.....52    64

Playmates............51    65

On Time...............48',i    67',i,

Hot To Trot............42    74

Dail Music Co..........41',^    74',^

Strike Wishers.........41    75

Men's high game and series, Mark Spain, 214,617; womens high game, Carol Tripp, 211; womens high series, Pat Cannon, 504.

Mens City League

Comedy of Errors 83'^.    40'^

Sidewinders...........72    52

Earls Pearls..........71,4    52',^

Hot Dogs..............71    53

Dail Music.............63'/2    60'/

D.G. Nichols............61'^    62',i

Team #5...............59'^    64'^

Team #10..............57    67

Challengers...........54    70

Honda-Suziki..........50'i    73'^

FamUy + One.........50',^    73<A

Chain Reaction........48    76

High game, Earl Tripp, 233; high series, Carlos Mercer, 621.

^ NBA Standings

ByTheAnocUtedPreii EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic DMston

W LPct GB

z-PhUadelphia x-Boston New Jersey New York Washington

60 12 49 23 45 27 38 34 36 36

Milwaukee

Atlanta

Detroit

CleveFand

Indiana

OntralDivttMM

46 27 3t 36 32 41 26 46 19 54 19 54

*33 -6*1 11 .625 15 .52* 22 500 24

.630 -.514    >^

.43* 14 .361 19'/j .260 27 .380 27

By The Aiaodated Pkm Walet Conference Patrick Diviiiao ^

W L T GF GA Pta

y-Phil phia    47    23    *    316    235    102

x-NY Isles    41    25    12    2M    219    94

x-Washington    3*    24    16    296    275    92

x-NYRai^    35    34    9    303    2*1    79

Pittsburgh    I*    51    9    251    313    45

New Jersey    16    49    13    222    332    45

Adams Divisioo y-Boston    SO    19    9    322    222    109

x-Montreal    41    24    13    344    211    95

x-Buffak)    3*    2*    13    315    2*1    19

x-Quebec    32    34    12    332    327    76

Hartford    19    52    7    252    392    45

Confemce Dhriaioo

y-Chicago    46    22    10    329    262    102

x-MinnesoU    40    23    16    316    282    96

x-Toronto    27    39    12    2*6    321    66

X-St . Louis    24    39    15    279    307    63

Detroit    20    43    15    252    329    55

Smythe Divisin y-Edmonton    46    21    11    414    310    103

x-Calgary    32    34    13    318    314    77

x-Vancouver    30    35    14    301    307    74

x-Winnipeg    32    3*    8    301    323    72

Los Angeles    26    41    11    2M    35*    63

x<linched playoff spot y-clinched divteion title

, Ihunday'tGanie*

Buffalo* New Jersey 5

New York Ran^ 4, PhUadeiphu 2

Vancouver 4, Calury 4, tie

Washington at Detroit

New Jersey at New York Rangers

Winnipeg at Edmonton

Saturdav's Gamea Minnesota at Los Angeles Quebec at Hartford Boston at Montreal Pittsburgh at NY Islanders Chicago at St. Louis

Sundays Games New York Rangers at Washington Toronto at Buffalo Montreal at Boston NY Islanders at Philadelphia Hartford at Quebec New Jersey at Pittsburgh Detroit at Winnipeg St. Louis at Chicago Cidgary atEdiQonton Vancouver at Los Angeles

Exhibition Baseball

By The Associated Press ExhiblUan Season niursdays Games Pittsburgh 3. Boston 1 Chicago7AL)5,St.Louis3 Cincinnati 5. Detroit 4,10 innine Atlanta 6, Kansas City 5 Minnesota 5, Texas 3,11 inninu New York (AL) 6, Houston 5,10 innings Toronto vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater, Fla., cancelled, rain Chicago (NL) 10. San Francisco 7 Oakland 16, Milwaukee 13 aevelandl2,SeatUe2 California 5, San Diego 2 Montreal 3, New York (NL) 2 Baltimore 14, U of Miami 7

Transactions

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Midwest Divlalan

San Antonio    45    27    625    -

Denver    39    35    .527    7

Kansas City    37    35    .514    *

Dallas    36    3*    4*6    10

t't^    26    48    .351    20

Houston    13    60    .17*    32i

PadflcDlviBioa

X Los Angeles    53    1*    746    -

Phoenix    45    28    .616    9

SeatUe    42    31    .575    12

Portland    41    32    562    13

Golden State    26    46    .361    27'^

San Diego    25    4*    .342    29

x-clincned playoff spot yAelincbed division title z<linched division and conference tiUe

Thuraday's Games

Phoenix 106, Portland *9 Los Angeles 122. Denver 116

Friday'sGames Milwaukee at Boston New Jersey at Philadelphia Cleveland at Detroit Washington at Indiana AUanU at Chicago Houston at San Amonio Golden State at Utah Kansas City at San Diego New York at Los Angles Dallas at SeaUle

Satwday's Games Milwaukee at New Jersey Indiana at AUanta Boston at Washington San Antonio at Houston San Diego at Denver New York at Phoenix Dallas at Portland Kansas City at Golden SUte

Sundays Games

Los Angeles at SeatUe Chicago at Detroit Philadelphia at Chweland

By IheAsMctated Press BASEBALL American Leamie

IDIANS-Sem

CLEVELAND IN Dybzinski, shortstop

Jerry Jack Perconte,

second baseman; Jay baUer, pitcher, ami Tim Glass, catcher, to C3iarlestoo of the International League.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Sent Freddie Martinez, pitcher, to their minor

ASCut Fred Stanley and Dave McKay, infielders. Optioned Luis Quinones, infielder; Bill Bathe, catcher, and Jeff Jones, pitcher, to Tacoma of the Pacific Coast League    .

SEATTLE MARINERS-Sent Optio^ Jim Maler, first baseman; Spike Owi, shortstop, and Gene Nelson, Brian Allard, Lany Andersen, Bob Babcock and Jerry Don Gleaton, pitchers, to their minor league camp Placed Jim Beattie and Glenn Abbwt. pitchers, on the 21.day disaUed list, effective March 25 and Rick Sweet catcher, on ttie ISday disabled list effective March 27.

TEXAS RANGERS-Released Lamar Johnson, first baseman. Assioiing Don Werner, catcher, to Oklahoma Oty of Uie American Association. Placed Danny Darwin, Dave Schmidt, pitchers, on the disabled list.

NaUonalLeamm

ATLANTA BRAVES-^tioned Paul Runge, infielder, and Ken f

er, to Richmond of the________

League and Brian Fisher, pitcher, to Savannah of the Sotdhern League Returned Steve Swisher, cateher, and Larry Whisenton, outfielder, to Richmond CINCINNATI RDS-Traded Bill Dawley, pitcher, and Anthony Walker, outfMder, to the Houston Astros (or Alan Knicetv catcber-outfielder Sent Dave Van Gorder, catcher, and Dallas WUliams, outfielder, to their minor lei^ training facility.

ST LOUIS CARDINALS-Traded KeUy Paris, infidder, to the CincinnaU Reds in exchange fer Jim Strichek, pitcher, and asrigned Strichek to Macon of the Wh AUantic League SAN FRANCTSCO GIANTS-Optioned

use Looking Into Metro Affiliation

.CX)LUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -South Carolina Athletic Director Bob Marcum, whos sid the time is right for the imiversity to join a league, has been talking to members of the Metro Conference, says a DSC public relations worker.

Marcum has talked with both Virginia Techs and Florida States athletic directors about the Metro Conferoice, which both belrag to, says Sid Wilson, USC media relations assistant.

'Marcum said Wednesday he would soon formally propose conference affiliatk to the universitys hoard of trustees aim administration, and predicted the Gamecocks will be iqaconferaicebyl986.

Marcum did not name a loague, but the Mmro Con-^mce been menUooed in nhvs repbrts as a possiMIity iq the last two days.

'Ibe Metro is a non-football cfifereoce, offering championships and automatic

NCAA berths in basketball, as well as basd>all and other spring sports.

Marcum pointed to the USC basketball teams failure to qualify fw the Natkmal Collegiate Athletic Association toumamoit despite postii^ a 20-B record as an incotive for joining a conference. The Gamecocks racked up two postseason victories bef(m being defeated in the qumlerfinals of die National Invitatioq Toumamoq.

The adetic director said that even with that reoxtl, a financial report on the basketball season is going to be marginal.

Marcum said joining a league would solve the problem m sdieduling and give the team two goals; a league championship and an NCAA berth.

The Metro Oonfoence is expected to siga a lucrative tdeviskn pact in the offseason.

TANKMFNANAIU

I tsi96coMG(fWAaa;r OUR COIA2 iMVBI-MPOt |Kl OUR

Fccmumtis?...

1UAM MI%UIPP ^ tsm ^

-TO PROS A^JP 01VIWG UP

cooase.

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

liMK Of 1HC Ntm mjih 1MAT COOLP MAn/E VUOM

Mark Calvert pitcher, and Jeff Ransom, catcher, to Phoenix of the Pacific Coast League Placed Milt May. catcher, on the 15-day disabled list retroactive to March

HOCKEY American Hodny League

FREDERICTON EXPRESS-Signed John Demers, coach and general manag-r contract.

er, to a new three-year contri FOOTBALL

NatknialFootbiULeapie

ERS^t

Lynn

SAN FRANCISCO .49EI Thomas, defensive back.

United State* FootbaU League ARIZONA WRANGLERS-Signed Wally Henry, wide receiver-kick returner, to a two-year contract.

GENERAL THOROUGHBRED RACING ASSOCIATION-Elected Robert E Mulcahy III to the board of directors.

COLLEGE ORAL ROBERTSAnnounced the resignation of Debbie Yow, womens head basketball coach SAINT ANSELM-Named D Robert Brown head basketball coach.

Women's Golf Scores

RANCHO MIRAGE Calif (AP) -First-round scores 'niursday in the $400,000 Nabisco-Dinah Shore Ladies Professional Golf Association Tournament over the 6,265-yard, par 36-36-72 Mission Hills Country Club course:

"        -        35-34-69

35-34-69 35-35-70 35-3570

3635-71 34-37-71 37-35-72

3636-72 37-35-72

Sandra Spuzich BethDanM Suzie McAllister Amy Alcott

JanSUnhenson Donna Caponi Terri Luckhurst

JoAnnWasham Pat Bradley

Muriel Thompson Alice Miller Marlene Floyd-DeArmon a-Kathy Baker    *

Vkki Fergon Beth Solomon Janet Coles Lynn Adams Alice Ritzraan Judy Clark Barbara Moxness Kathy Whitworth Barbara Barrow JoAnne earner Hollis Stacy Judy Rankin Dianne Dailey Cindy HiU Chris Johnson Jo Ann Prentice Muffin ^ncer-Devlin Sharon Barrett Penny Pulz Susie Berning Kathy Hite Anne-Marie Palli Nancy Lopez Janet Baugh C^ Cathy^Morse DaleEggeling Dot Germain Vicki Singletwi Marta F. Dotti Sue Roberts Bonnie Bryant Silvia Bertolaccini Jane Blalock Myra Van Hoose LoriGarbacz Kathy Postelwait Mary Bea Porter-Cheney Janet Anderson Vicki Tabor Debbie Austin Patty Sheehan Donna H White Gail Toushin Carole Charbonnier Martha Nause

34-38-72

3636-72 34-38-72 37-36-73 34-39-73 37-36-73 34-39-73

3637-73 37-36-73 3635-73 34-39-73 37-36-73

3638-73 3637-73

3637-73

3638-74

3639-74

3638-74

34-46-74 37-37-74

3635-74

3639-74 32-42-74

3636-74 37-37-74

3638-74

3639-74

3636-75 3639-75

3637-75 3637-75

37-38-75

3637-75

35-46-75 3636-75 3639-75 3639-75

3639-75

3640-76

36-40-76 36-40-76

3638-76 36-40-76 36-41-77 36-41-77 36-41-77

3641-77 40-37-77

38-39-77

carotina east mall k^greenville

Say You Care This Easter with Live Easter Lilies anij Artificial Wreaths!

Permanent cemetary wreaths for Easter or other special occasions. Most include easel or tripod stand. White blooming lilies in 6" pots with single stems. Wreaths, Wreaths, 9.00 to 20.00 Easter Ullies....4.88

Shop londay through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9p.m.-Phone75SS^-K(75&i355}

Pam Gieizen Sandra Post M.J Smith Sandra Palmer Betsy King Joyce Kazmierski Patti Rizzo

Shelley Hamlin CathySherk a-Deobie Weldon Beverly Klass Marlene Hagge AyakoOkamoto Vivian Brownlee Sally LitUe Jeruyn Britz Kathy Cornelius Alexandra Reinhardt Pat Meyers Julie Pyne Stephanie Farwig Mary Mills Jan Ferraris Kathy McMullen Cathy Reynolds Carole Jo Callison Patty Hayes Debbie Massey Carolyn Hill Betty Burfeindt Louise Suggs a-Denotes amateur

36-41-77

37-40-77

4637-77

38-40-78 41-37-78

4638-78

37-41-78 3640-78

38-40-78 3640-79 41-38-79

41-38-79 3742-79

4639-79 3842-80 3941-80 4040-80 3842-80

4040-80 4140-81 4140-81 4140-81

4041-81

42-39-81 4639-82

4042-82

44-38-82

3745-82

4043-83

4342-85

4244-86

EAST REGIONAL At Syracuse, N Y. Semifinals North Carolina 64, Ohio St 51 Georgia 70, St John's 67 Finals

Georgia 82, North Carolina 77

MIDEAST REGIONAL At Knoxville, Tenu Semifinals Kentucky 64. Indiana 59 Louisville 65, Arkansas 63 Finals

Louisville 80, Kentucky 68. OT MIDWEST REGIONAL At Kansas City. Mo. Semifinals Villanova5S.Iowa54 Houston 70. Memphis St 63

NCAA Tournament

By The Associated Press

The dates, sites and pairings for the National Collegiate Athletic &sociation men's Dlviskm I championship tournament;

Houston 89. Villanova 71

WEST REGIONAL At Ogden. Utah Smlfinals North Carolina St 75, Utah 56 Virginia 95. Boston College 92 Finals

North Carolina St 63, Virginia 62

Final Four AtAlbiK]uerque.N.M. Setniflnals Saturday. April 2 North Carolina St, 24-10, vs. Georgia 24-9

Louisville. 32 3, vs Houston, 362

Monday, April 4

W inners of semifinals. i n i

their in succession and 10th in vthe last 11 games. Floyd Bannister pitched seven scorelessinnlngs for the White Sox.

The hard-hitting Milwaukee Brewers got a taste of their own medicine when Oaklands Wayne Gross smashed a grand slam home run to key a 22-hit attack as the As out-slugged the Brewers 16-13 in a game that featured eight home runs.

Davey Lopes and Jeff Burroughs also connected for the As, wbile Milwukees 16-hit atack included home runs by Robin Yount, Gorman Thomas, Don Money, Ted Simmons andBenOglivie.

Ron Cey went 4-for-4, including a three-run homer, raising his spring average to

Jamesville. Crushes Creswell

CRESWELL Jamesville High School romped to a lO-l victory over Creswell in'; a Tobacco Belt baseball game on Wednesday.

Jamesville, now 4-0, grabbed the lead in the second with three runs. Kevin Waters led off with a double and Terry Perry laid down a sacrifice bunt. The ball was errored, however, allowing Waters to score and Perry to race aU the way to third. Whit Brown followed with a walk and Earl Bowens grounder was errored, scoring Perry. Greg Hardison then hit a sacrifice fly, scoring Brown.

Jamesville added two more in the third and doubled its total with five in the fifth. Creswells only run came in the second.

Perry led the Jamesville hitting with two.

The Bullets return to action today, as they host the Jamesville Easter Tournament. Jamesville meets St. Francis of Apple Springs, N.Y., in the first round.

JamesvUle .032 050 0-10 10 1

Creswell 010 000 0- 1 6 5

Holliday and T Perry; M Davenport and J Davenport

.477 and pacing the Chicago Cubs to a 10-7 victory over the San Francisco Giants. The home run off Bill Laskey in the third inning was Ceys fifth of the spring and second in two days. Leon Durham had a two-run homer and a pair of singles for the Cubs.

Bob Horners fourth home run of the spring highlighted a three-run first inning and Randy Johnson squeezed home the deciding run in the seventh as the Atlanta Braves edged the Kansas City Royals 6-5.

Dan Driessen homered and tripled and the Cincinnati Reds scored an unearned run in the 10th inning to nip the Detroit Tigers 5-4.Dave Concepcion scored the winning run from second base when Detroit shortstop Alan Trammell let Jeff Jones tw(H)ut grounder go under his glove for an error.

Lary Sorensen allowed one run in seven innings and the Cleveland Indians rolled to an 11-2 rout of the Seattle Mariners, who committed six errors.Gaylord Perry, the 44-year-old right-hander who is scheduled to start the Mariners opener, was hammered for nine runs on nine hits and two walks in six innings, although only three of the runs were earned.

Two-run homers by Dan Ford and Eddie Murray helped the Baltimore Orioles defeat the University of Miami 14-7.

Jamesville Dumps Creswell

CRESWELL - Jamesville High School romped to a 23-1 softball victory over Creswell Wednesday.

Details of the game were not available. The win leaves the Lady Bullets at 34) on the season.

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Now Thru April 15

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Keels Warehouse No. 528

New Carolina Warehouse No. 529

New Greenville Warehouse No. 524

New Independent Warehouse No. 537

Raynor-Forbes &

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1





Vi

16The Daily Refleclor, GreenviUe, N.C.-I' noay, Ap

tProving Again New Comedies On Television News Are Doomed

3!0GETHER AGAIN - Once known as the ttlin Burtons;, Elizabeth Taylor and Fchard Burton live up to the name as they rehearse for the revival of Private Lives,

which opehs,-on'Broadway on May 8. Tte s(%ne,    between    a divorced couple

who reunt ai^^ up fighting once again. Sound familiar?JAPLa^riAoto)

TV Log

Fof comptale TV programming Itv lormatton, consult your wsskly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Rsfloctor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

'Thorn Birds' Ratings Soared

FRIDAY

7 00 Jokers Wild 7 30 Tic Tac 3 00 Dukes

9 00 Dallas '

10 00 Mississippi

11 00 News9 II X Movie SATURDAY

6 30 Rascals

7 00 Kangaroo 3 00 Popeye

3 30 Pan.

9 00 Meatballs

9 30 Bugs Bunny

10 00 Dukes

I I 00 Bugs Bunny 12 00 Soul Train

1 00 Solid Gold

2 00 TBA

3 00 Sports Center 3:30 Basketball

8 00 Vyizard

9 00 Movie ,

11 00 News

II X Dance Fever 12 00 Special

1:00 Solid Gold

WITN-TV-Ch.7

FRIDAY

7 00 Shortcut

7 30 Family Feud

8 00 Powers Ot

9 00 Knight R

10 00 Remingtons

11 00 News

II 30 Tonight 12 30 Comedy

2 00 Overnight

3 00 News SATURDAY

7 00 Better Way

7 30 Treehouse 3 00 Flintstones

8 30 Shirt Tales

9 00 Smurts

10 30 Gary Coleman

11 00 Hulk

12 00 Jetwns 12 X Flash Gordon 1 00 R Martin

1 30 Baseball B.

2 00 B Dance

2 30 Baseball

3 30 Wrestling

4 30 Golt 6 00 News

6 30 News

7 00 Hee Haw

8 00 Ditf Strokes

8 30 S Spoons

9 00 Mama's F 9 30 Teacher s

10 00 Monitor

11 00 News

n 30 Sat Nite 1 00 Closeup I 30 News

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

FRIDAY

7 00 TBA

7 30 TBA 8:00 Benson

8 AlEase 9:00 Renegades

10:00 Gold Monkey 11 00 Action News

11 Nightline

12 00 Harry 0 1-00 An Evening

2 00 Early Edition SATURDAY

5 X Telestory

6 00 Great Space

6 X Snuggles

7 00 Cartoon T ime

3 00 Superfnends

8 X Pac Man

10 00 Scooby

11 00 Mofki.

12 00 Special

12 X Bandstand

I X Matinee

3 00 Baseball

4 00 RoadToL A.

5 00 Sports

6 X In Search ot

7 X Wrestling

8 X T J Hooker

9 X Love Boat

10 X F Island

II X Action News

11 15 ABC Weekend 11 X Cinema

4 X Edition

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

FRIDAY 7 M Report

7 X Stateline

8 X Washington

8 X Wall St

9 X I Claudius

10 X Lite On

11 X A Hitchcock II 15 Hitch Hikers

11 X Mprecambe

12 X Sign Oil SATURDAY 7:X Gen Ed

8 :X Nuclear War 9:X Finance

9 X Finance

10 X Business 10 X Business

II X Making It

11 X TBA

12 X Government 12 X Government

1 X Soccer

2 X Dr Who

3 X Adventure

4 X Garden Song

5 X Woodwrighfs

5 X Old House

6 X Previews 6 X Neptune

8 X Nature of

9 X Mystery

10 X Avengers

11 X Twilight Zone

11 X Twilight Zone

12 X Sign Off

TEAM UP AGAIN GLYNDEBOURNE, England (AP) - The hottest production team in the British theater,producer Trevor Nunn and designer John Napier of Nicholas Nickelby fame, are going to team up for Mozarts Idomenea at the 1983 Glyndebourne Festival Opera season this summer.

NEW YORK (.\P) - The final episode of The Thom Birds received higher ratings than on any of the other three nights, according to A C. Nielsen Co. overnight figures released today by ABC.

The $21-million production seems assured of becoming the No.2-ranked miniseries behind Roots.

Wednesday nights installment of ABCs 10-hour adapatation of Colleen McCulloughs best-seller averaged a series-high 44.5 rating and a 62 share for Nielsens six monitored cities. In the concluding episode, the priest played by Richard Chamberlain renews his love affair with the woman played by Rachel Ward after a 20-year hiatus.

In New York. Philadelphia and San Francisco. The Thom Birds attracted more viewers than on any of the other three nights. The program had a 46.8 rating and 63 share in New York. 49.1,65 in Philadelphia, 45.7. 64 in San Francisco, 41.9, 59 in Chicago, 39.5. 58 in Los Angeles, and 45.1, 63 in Detroit.

A rating measures the percentage of an areas TV homes watching a broadcast, while a share represents the percentage of TV sets in use tuned to the program.

If national figures, which will be available today, for Wednesday nights broadcast keep pace with the overnight figures - and theyve been clc^ all week - then The Thom Birds easily will jump over The Winds of War in the miniseries rat- ings sweepstakes. The sev^n-part. 18-hour Winds of War. broadcast in Feb-mary. averaged a 38.6 rating and M share.

Through the first three episodes. The "^om Birds averaged a 41.7 rating and a 59 share. .ABCs audience estimate for the 10 hours would not be available until today.

Despite lower ratings. The Winds of War will

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remain the most-watched program of all time. Its greater length helped the $40 million production attract an estimated 140 million viewers, according to ABC.

Roots averaged a 45 rating and 66 share for its 12 hours. Despite the record rating, there were fewer homes with television in 1977, and Roots was seen by 135 million viewers, ABC said.

That miniseries was produced by David Wolper and Stan Margulies, who also produced The Thom Birds and Roots, The Next Generation.

ABC now has seven of the 10 hi^est-rated miniseries, including How the West Was Won (1977), Pearl (1978) and Rich Man, Poor Man (1976). NBC has the other three top-rated miniseries: "Shogun (1980), Holocaust (1978) arid 79 Park Avenue (1977).

ABC has a better understanding of the miniseries experience, said Margulies. Its more than just money. If money was the answer, then Ted Turner would be Williams. Palev.

Still, despite two blockbuster miniseries within two months, ABC almost certainly wont prevent CBS from winning its fourth consecutive primetime ratings race. ABC gained nearly a full point from The Winds of War and probably will net half a point from The Thorn Birds,

ABC moved The Thom Birds from May to March so the miniseries would count in the 1982-83 season, which ends April 17.

By FRED ROTHENBERG APTdevisk Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - The liability in doing any comedy about television news is that it will never be as good as The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

, CBSs new romantic comedy, Goodnight, Bean-town, doesnt come close. It doesnt work as comedy, or social commentary on TV news, so it concentrates on the chemistry between its two strong leads. Bill Bixby and Mariette Hartley.

Goodnight, Beantown, which begins its spring tryout on Sunday, joins NBCs Cheers and St. Elsewhere as Boston-based, jbut Hollywood-originated series with nary a BAHstAHn accent in earshot. But CBS obviously has faith, allowing this five-episode run to coast on Mike Wallaces top-rated coattails in the slot following 60 Minutes.

The program focuses on the kiss-and-kick relationship between WYNs news anchors, Matt Cassidy (Bixby) and Jennifer Barnes (Miss Hartley). Mary Richards and her regular gang at WJM never allowed incestuous love to develop, unless you count Ted Baxters affair with himself.

Matt is a no-nonsense anchor for Bostons bottomrated newscast - the one without Happy Talk. Shades of Harry Reasoner and Barbara Walters; Matt resists sharing his solo anchor with Jennifer. 1 wont do Punch and Judy Do the News,says Matt.

Jennifer is no pushover on the set. But at home, where shes divorced, raising a stereophonic teen-ager and liv-

'Jaws' Topped

TOKYO (API - Hie monster shark from the deep ocean has been licked by a friendly little being fiTHndeq) space.

The movie E.T., Ibe Extra-Terrestrial has far outdistanced Jaws as thd best-attended movie in Japan, and the Japanese firm that distributes it here has given each of its 43 employees an $11,000 bonus, officials of Cinema International Corp. say. The employees wanted $20,000 each.

CURATOR NAMED

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Mark Rosenthal has been named curator of 20th Century Art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

ing in the same apartment building as Matt, shes flighty. Just because TV giyes women key roles doesnt mean they wont be stereotyped.

On Mary Tyler Moore, Ted (Ted Knight) raised buffoonery to new lows. Thats not the approach here, although theres a foolish on-camera snit between Matt and Jennifer.

One point from their disagreement is that hard-core journalists are blind to the humanity in some stories, like male strippers, while another l^ssOD .is that there is too much male-female typecasting in story assignments.

After the tiff, viewers call and say they liked the friction, so the news dilator (George Coe) deems the pairing a success.

If Happy Talk news can be a rating winner, so can Goodnight, Beantown. Hard-core journalists may ask who, what, where, when and WHY?

NBC has its own journalist Sunday night in the movie; Love Is Forever, an exciting adventure saga, political thrjller and gentle love story that is weakened by excessive and syrupy melodrama.

Based on a true story, American-accented Michael Landon plays Australian John Everingham, the last Western journalist in postwar Laos who was expelled in 1977 for alleged spy activities. A year later, he secretly^ returned by swimming under the Mekong River, with communist patrol boats overhead, in a daring mission to rescue his Laotian girlfriend. The underwater footage is spectacular.

Landon is self-assured Md intense, and proves to be an effective superhero in his first major movie role since gaining TV stardom on Bonanza and Little House on the Prairie.

He plays a photojoumalist who sends anti-conununist reports out of Laos. A popular playboy, he throws good parties, but also speaks of a love for the country. With pictures of communist

atrocities, hes able to turn the head and heart of Keo Sirisomphone, played by Indonesian actress Moira Chen.

Although their love is obviously strong he risks his life for her - the script by writer-director Hall Bartlett tends to schmaltz up the drama when reality is exciting enough. A stem Russian leader of the Pathet Lao is introduced to add conflict, with the two men fighting a physical and ment^ battle of machismo ft)r Keo. ^ , ijJur|!en Prochnow'(Das

Boot) imbues Gen. Kapler with more human qualities than most Russians ever get on American TV. But the boxing match between Kapler and Everin^iam, although well-staged, brings Love Is Forever close to incredulity.

The'movie gains inspiration from Rocky in other ways, too. When Everingham is training in Thailand for his perilous underwater journey, he quits smoking, jogs and does push-ups. The only thing he doesnt "do is beat up a s^abofbeef.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, April 1,1863-17

Report Seven Injured In Thursday's 8 G)llisions

Sseven people were reported injured and an eftimated $18,550 property damage caused in a series of ejght traffic collisions investigated by Greenville ^lice Thursday.

-heaviest damage resulted tom a 9;40.p.m. collision on Memorial Drive, 300 feet nrth of the.Moore Street iiitersection in which six fcrsons were reported in-

Police said cars driven by Richard James Roberson of Robersonville and Lois Tripp Stepps of Route 1, Grimesland, collided, injuring both drivers as well as three passengers in the Roberson car and one passenger in the Stepps vehicle.

Officers, who charged Ms. Stepps with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety and driving without a license, estimated

damage at $5,000 to the Roberson car and $4,500 to the Stepps car.

Cars driven by Linwood Frank Rountree of Cor-apeake and Bettie Wheeler Rawls of Route 1, Aulander, collided about 3 p.m. at the intersection of Greenville and Arlington boulevards, causing $1,500 damage to the Rountree car and $o damage to the Rawls auto, according to investigators.

Police said a passenger in a car driven by Dalton Franklin Beachum of Route 2, Greenville, was injured when the car collided with an auto driveh by Faye Komegay Coward of Route 1, Vanceboro, about 4:45 p.m. on Memorial Drive, 300 feet south of the Village Drive intersection.

Damage from the wreck was set at $1,000 to the Beachum car and $500 to the Coward auto.

.fhe Forecast For ; Saturday. April 2 fiLow Temperatures

Snow

Anthony Dewayne Brooks of 1203 Farmville Boulevard was charged with reckless driving after the school bus he was driving collided with a utility pole on 14th Street, .2 mile west of the Berkley Road intersection about 2:34 p.m.

Damage to the bust was estimated at $1,200, while damage to the pole was set at $300.

No students were on the bus at the time of the collision, according to police.

An estimated $1,500 damage resulted to a car driven by George Lee Shaver Jr. of Plymouth, as the result of a 4:40 p.m. collision on Greenville Boulevard, 250 feet west of the Trade Street intersection.

Investigators said the Shaver car was involved in a collision with a truck driven by David Earl Vick of Henderson, which was not damaged in the mishap.

Officers said cars driven by Inga Overton Nichols of Route 7, Greenville, and Francis Noell Blank of 2402 E. Second St. collided about 5:17 p.m. on Greenville Boulevard, 100 feet west of the Elm Street intersection, causing an estimated $200 damage to the Nichols car and $1,000 damage to the Blank auto.

Extra Cents On Gasoline Price

IFronts: Cold

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Occlud(*d

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^ WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service forecasts showers for Saturday from the central and eastern Gulf to iqiper Oreat Lakes.. Snow is predicted from the

i By The Associated Press i An intense low pressure rnoving into the state will cause rain with scattered tounderstorms to return to fiorth Carolina over the ^kend.

J Some of this precipitation pould spread into the mountains late tonight. Strong isty winds will also spread iver the state tonight and Saturday as the system ^proaches.

Yesterday rain ended over Jtvestem sections of the state

during the morning hours but lingered through most of the day in the east. Heaviest rainfall amounts were in the east and ranged up to 1.% inches at Elizabeth City. High temperatures held in the mid 40s to low 50s statewide.

Winds will increase tonight and be very strong mainly from the east to southeast on Saturday. Rain will move into the mountains late tonight and spread across the state Saturday. The rain

Midwest to the western Great Lakes. Rain is forecast for the central and northern Pacific coasts and central Rockies. Most areas will be colder. (APLaserphotoMap)

could be quite heavy, especially in the mountains. Eastern sections should see warmer temperatures on Saturday but this will help increase the risk of heavy thunderstorms there.

Low temperatures tonight will dip to the mid 40s to around 50. On Saturday there could be a wide range of temperatures across the state ranging from low 50s over the northwestern Piedmont and northern foothills to upper 60s for southern and central coastal areas.

Chosen Attend Seminar

By The Associated Press

North Carolina motorists who thought gas prices were going up only five cents a gallon got an unpleasant surprise at some service stations today.

In addition to the five-cent federal tax increase there were several more cents added on in some places to make up for wholesale price increases to dealers this week.

Bill Barker, owner of the Cary Village 66 service station and past president of the states Service Station Association, said his wholesaler has increased prices five cents in the past week. But Barker said since he didnt chan^ his pump each day the prices rose, he would have to boost the price of self-service regular gasoline from $1.03.9 to $1.10.9 on Friday.

I was hoping we wouldnt have the other increases on top of the five cents, said Barker. With a decrease in the price of crude, 1 dont understand why were hav-. ing this increase in (gas) prices. So we were not prepared for this, to say the least.

Barker said service stations must take an inventory of the gasoline they currently have in their pumps and pay

the federal government the five-cent-per-gallon increase.

As a result, he said, the stations will be forced to raise their prices immediately-

Its going up all at one time, Barker said. In fact, some have raised their prices today.

Martin Hamrick, manager of a Raleigh Servco station, said his prices for regular gasoline Friday would increase from .999 cents a gallon to $1.099. Unleaded regular at $1.039 will increase 12 cents, and premium will increase eight cents to $1.219 cents.

Prices had fallen so low that somebody had to give, Hamrick said. Of course next week well have to adjust to the competition.

Fred A. Robbins, president of the Wake County Service Station Association, said he would tack a ickel onto his prices Friday.

Robbins and others reported a booming business Thursday as motorists rushed to beat the tax increase.

Business usually goes down from 20 to 25 percent when it rains, Robbins said. But customers know that (gasoline) is going up.

Some operators said business Thursday was up by 25 percent.

^0 ATTEND SEMINAR -Rchele Coburn, who was selected by ujiion Carbide to attend a con-gijessional seminar in Washington, is

given a booklet by plant Manager J.M. Maxon describing her trip to Washington, D.C. (Reflector Photo by Angela Lingerfelt)

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'J.M. Maxon, manager of the Greenville plant, said expenses and tuition for the trip and seminar will be

Miss Cobum was choscn over four other candidate who represented high schools in the city and county school systems. She was chosen because of her outstan^g scholastic record, her active interest in civic and student affairs and her panel interview.

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An estimated $550 damage resulted to each of two cars involved in a 10:25 a.m. collision on Greenville Boulevard, .3 mile east of the Landmark Street intersection, investigators said.

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Cars driven by Judith Harper Miller of 1208 Kingsbrook Road and David

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Measure Poses Obstacle To N.C. Waste Landfills

RALEIGH, S C. (AP) - A bill that would make it difficult to put a hazardous waste landfill in North Carolina received tentative House approval Thursday, but only after a lively debate.

The bill, introduced by Rep. Foyle Hightower, D-Anson, would make it "very difficult if not impossible to put a landfill in the state, said Bryant Haskins, a spokesman for the state Department of Human Resources. He said there are few places in the state where a landfill would be more than 30 feet above the water table - the requirement stipulated in the bill.

But Hightower said he knew of such places in Anson , County, which has been mentioned as a potential site by hazardous waste disposal firms.

The bill also would require that landfill operators maintain adequate insurance to cover possible accidents and that the Governor's Waste Management Board establish the level of adequate insurance.

In addition, it would require landfill operators to make monthly reports to the state and county on the kinds and amounts of waste in the facility.

Rep, William Clarke, D-Cumberland. said current state laws prohifiit the legislature from enacting laws stricter than federal regulations. He said the insurance provision in the bill would violate that law and provisions of the bill would be meaningless."

He unsuccessfully tried to have the bill sent to the Water and Air Resources Committee, which already is considering two bills aimed at tightening regulations on landfills. One of the bills was introduced by Clark.

Rep. Frank Ballance, D-Warren, said those bills had been "languishing" in the committee and cautioned against sending other proposed legislation there.

The other bills would limit the kinds of hazardous wastes placed in landfills and would allow the state to enact laws more stringent than federal regulations in at least several areas.

Hightower said he had heard there are no landfills that haven't leaked. He praised landfills in Oregon and Alabama because they are located 600 and 1,000 feet above the water

table.

"This t bill I wont prohibit a landfill in North Carolina, said Hightower. "But 1 dont think one should be put in North

Carolina."

The bill, tentatively approved 69-22, could face a final House vote today.

In other legislative action:

Separation of Powers

Two bills that realign responsiblity between the executive and legislative branches of government were approved in committee and mbved toward House consideration.

The House Judiciary I Committee approved a bill, that redistributes salary setting authority, makes ' sure the Advisory Budget Commission is strictly advisory and generally brings state government in line with court rulings that declared the line between the branches had become blurred.

The House Judiciary II Committee approved companion legislation removing the ABCs approval for bond acts by the N.C. Seafood Industrial Park Authority and the University of North Carolina System.

That bill also removes ABC authority over Clean Water Bond Acts of 1971,1977 and 1981.

Justice

A bill that would allow recovery of legal costs by those successfully appealing a government decision received tentative approval after it was amended to include costs incurred in pursuit of public records.

Mike Rouse, managing editor of the Durham Morning Herald, said the amendment would encourage disclosure of public information without going to court.

Theres nothing in the law to discourage a public body from doing this sort of thing, he told the House Judiciary I Committee.

The bill would award court costs and attorney fees only if the court finds the agency in question acted unreasonably in initiating the claim.

Rep. Howard Coble, R-Guilford, said fiscal analysts were unable to determine if the bill would cost the state anything if enacted.    -    "

Crime        '

The House Judiciary II Committee approved an amended* version of a bill that would provide up to $20,000 in crimt victims compensation, with the money to be raised by increasing court costs paid by convicted criminals.

Rep. Tom Womble, D-Forsyth, who introduced the bill, said it was amended to raise court costs $2 instead of the $5 called for in the original legislation. He said the $2 fee would raise about $1.4 million.

The bill would compensate crime victims, their dependants and third parties for economic loses greater than $100 but less than $20,000.

Compensation would be denied to offenders and their accomplices, insurance companies, people injured in motor vehicle accidents, prison inmates and anyone not reporting the crime within 72 hours.

Party Primaries

The second version of a bill to limit party primary runoffs was killed in the House Committee on Election Laws without debate.

Rep. Ken Spaulding, D-Durham, earlier introduced a bill that would allow runoff elections at taxpayers expense only if the victor had less than 40 percent of the vote. Current laws allow runoffs when the winner has less than 50 percent.

That bill was killed by an Election Laws subcommittee, prompting Spaulding to introduce a slightly different version that would allow runoffs if the winner had less than 41 percent of the vote and there was 5 percent or less separating the first and second places.

The full committee gave that bill an unfavorable report and Spaulding said he planned no further action.

Insurance

Rep. Charles Beall, D-Haywood, introduced three bills that

Criticism Of N.C. Council On Women Condemned As Unjust

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A state legislator has vowed to cut state funds for a womens advocacy group he says is lobbying with taxpayers money, hut administration oiiicial.', say liir rriticism is unjust.

"Why should taxpayers fund advocates of programs that they dont necessarily support" Rep. Brad Ligon. R-Rowan, asked the Joint Base Budget Subcommittee on General Government Thursday.

He said the Council on the Status of Women, established in the Department of Administration in 1977, was designed to help tram women who are displaced homemakers, not to lobby "for abortion, the Equal Rights Amendment or whatever."

He said he would move to drop the $331,000 state funding for the council when the subcommittee resumes consideration of the council budget Tuesday.

Stephanie Bass, a spokeswoman for the department, said council members are prohibited from lobbying the legislature although she said the council did have opinions on some bills.

"The council has supported some legislation, including bills on child support and property distribution (after divorce), but no staff members have lobbied for them, she said. And, after all, the Council on Tourism supports tourism bills. Thats part of their duties,

Ligon handed out photocopies of sample letters used by the council to teach

Bingo Parlors In Violation

GASTONIA, N.C. (AP) -Eight of nine bingo parlors operating in Gaston County had closed their doors as of Wednesday under warnings by Gaston County Police that they were in violation of state bin^laws.

Detective Dewey Brown, in charge of monitoring bingo activities, said no charges have been filed against the operations, but said action will be taken if the organizations running the games dont "get in line with state law.

Brown said the most common violation is a failure to file state-required quarterly reports including financial receipts, expenses and prizes, with the county ice.

lobbying methods at a 1981 conference and quoted council minutes mentioning pieces of legislation the group planned to push through the General Asssembly in 1982.

Ms. Bass said the conference was desired to improve the political effectiveness of participants and took no particular position on any issues.

Ligon quoted a state audit of the council as saying many of the activities conducted by the council have been done without the appropriate legislative authority.

But Ms. Bass said the state Attorney Generals Office told the department the councils activities were legitimate.

Ligon also questioned how effective the council was in its role of training women, presenting figures showing that the council spent an average of $10,400 training 30 women while the state Labor Department spent an average of $115 for on-the-job training of 5,900 employees, including 213 women.

Obviously, the Labor Department has an incredibly more cost-effective mechanism for training women, he said in a prepared statement. With $312,000 the Labor Department could have trained 1,840 women.

Administration Secretary Jane Patterson challenged Ligon to back up his figures and suggested the State Auditor appear before the subcommittee.

Once I understand where you got your figures, I would

be glad to respond and separate myth from reality, she said.

Ms. Bass pointed out that the money spent by the

council was under the federal Comprehensive Employment Training Act, which requires that trainees receive salaries while being trained.

HAPPY REUNION Sandor Zoboki and his 13-year-oId son Sandor embrace each other after arriving at Lindbergh Field in San Diego Thursday following their being reunited in San Francisco after a 12-year separation. Zoboki was a Hungarian air force pilot who defected in 1970 in a Russian MIG. Zobokis wife Eva and his other son Andy greeted them in San Diego. (AP Laserphoto)

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would affect the North Carolina Reinsurance Facility, a pool which insures motorists who are considered high risks.

The first bill would change the way Reinsurance Facility recoupment surcharges are levied. It would place more of the burden for recovering facility losses on drivers with more accidents or traffic violations. Currently all drivers are surcharged at the same rate.

Another bill would prevent the Reinsurance Facility from awarding drivers a point for property damage up to $200. The points determine the drivers rate.

The third bill would allow insurance companies that reduce ' their rates to extend those benefits to drivers inside the facility with no points.

Workers

Members of the House Manufacturers and Labor Subcommittee members voiced resentment at the tone of letters theyve received on a workers compensation bill as they staked out positions on the legislation.

The bill wotdd expand the definition of injuries for which workers may b compensated. Labor spokesmen view the bill as a compromise compared with legislation rejected last session. Business leaders say it still is too broad and would hurt them.

Chairman Rep. Tom Rabon, D-Brunswick asked both sides to come forward with acceptable recommendations to remedy the problem.

Rep. George Robinson, R-Caldwell, and Rep. Ruth Easterling, D-Mecklenburg, said they resented letters portraying the situation as labor versus industry and forcing them to choose sides..

Ms. Easterling said that what affects one side will affect the other and should be to the benefit of both.

Slavery

A House bill that began as an effort to repeal an obsolete law turned into a debate over sharecroppers and slavery. The old law made it a crime for an employer to hire a person who failed to live up to a contract.

Rep. Richard Wright, D-Columbus, noted that the bill was used to keep sharecroppers from deserting a farmer for a more lucrative offer. Others noted that the law doesnt affect all counties and is supported by much of the agricultural -community.

But Rep. Annie Brown Kennedy, D-Forsyth, said the law allowed the equivalent of involuntary servitude and imprisonment for debt. Rep. Dan Blue, D-Wake, noted that the courts have ruled it is possible to break contracts, but people must be held liable for that action.

The House delayed debate on the bill until next week because of the questions.

Lottery"

Sen. Richard Barnes, D-Forsyth, filed two bills to establish a statewide lottery. Under one bill, the lottery would be created if both houses of the Legislature approve. Under the other, a referendum would be required.

Barnes filed the legislation after a study by a subcommittee of the Senate Rules Committee. Theyre expected to be sent back to the Rules Committee, which will call a public hearing, he said.

Election Checkoff

A bill that drew stiff opposition from Senate Republicans cruised through the House Election Laws Committee with the help of several GOP votes.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Wilma Woodard, D-Wake, would revise the procedure by which taxpayers indicate on their returns that they would like to donate $1 to political campaigns.

Presently, taxpayers may stipulate that the dollar go to the Republican or Democratic Party. If they have no preference, they check undecided and the money is divided among the parties based on the number of registered voters they have.

Under the Woodard bill, all donations would be distributed on the basis of the number of party members. Taxpayers simply would indicate on their tax .forms that they want $1 to go to political campaigns.

Republicans in the Senate complained that the change would hurt them, because there are,.more registered Democrats.

Crime St(^rs

A subconunittee was created to study a bill desigi^ to help private groups that pay informants who provide crime tipoffs.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Martin Lancaster, D-Wayne, would allow judges to require as a condition for probatioi( that lawbreakers reimburse the private groups the rewardj they paid informants.

New Bills

Sen. Marshall Rauch, D^aston, filed legislation ta authorize creation of a board to devise a, deferred' compensation plan for state employees. The plan would offer.' such options as life insurance, annuities,' regulated invest- ' ment trusts, or other investments approved by the board. . 1 Sen. Ollie Harris, DCleveland, filed a bill to allow juvenilei 1 to admit themselves to treatment facilities without parentat ; consent during emergencies. However, the parents wfj; guardian would be notified within 24 hours if possible. ' -A bill to bar developers from proceeding with a project while a request for a hearing on the construction permit ii * pending was filed by Sen. Gerry Hancock, D-Durham. ; Hancock also filed legislation to create a new offense^ unlawfully obtaining funds. He defined the crime as getting money through willful misrepresentation or concealment. # *' In the House, bills were introduced to protect renterg * I against conversion of apartments to condominiums, to set id j a law-enforcement training fund and to allow the people j Kannapolis to vote on incorporation.    vjf*

Resolution^

The state Senate approved unanimously two resoluticml dealing with national policy. One urges the U.S. Navy not tq sink decommissioned nuclear submarines off the North Carolina coast, while the other asks Congress to forbid the sale of national forest lands in the state.

STEAK HOUSE

\N    April    lit,    2nd    &    3rd

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The DaJJy Reflector. GreenvUle, N.C.-Frlday, April 1,1883-19Argentines StiH Awaiting War Expianations

Shoemaker's School Is Reviving Cobbler's Art

By DOUGLAS 6RANTMINE

Associated Press Writer

BUENOS AIRES, Argen-"tina (AP) - Leopoldo Galtieri looks down from a balcony, as be did a year ago.

But it is not the balcony of Government House and there are no multitudes below hailing him as a conquering hero.

The former president and army commander who launched Argentinas ill-fated invasion of the British-administered Falkland Islands last April 2 is in civilian clothes, in retirement and in disgrace.

Since being ousted from both the presidency and the army command following Argentinas surrender to Britain last June, Galtieri has been a virtual recluse in his l^th-floor suburban apartment.

And the countrys 28 million inhabitants are still waiting for a report from an armed forces commission investigating political and strategic responsibility for

the c(Hiflict that cost about 1,000 lives and billkms of dollars.

Some are awaiting the report nune anxiously than others. The young exconscripts at the Malvinas Veterans Center are impatient and sk^tical.

. Argentines refer to the Falklands as the Malvinas.

Were waiting for the report, because when it comes out were going to study it point by point and say, This is viiats true and this is a lie, Miguel Angel Trinidad, 20, the groups secretary who ^t 10 weeks in the Falklands, said in an interview.

The military government has not prevented the Falklands war story from being told at least partially. The prisoners of war returned by Britain in the weeks following the surrender leveled charges of cowardice, corruption and logistical incompetence among much of the Argentine officer corps.

Jorge Luis Borges, the 83-year-old Argentine author

. pOBBLER John Brown, a stu-(teit, stitches the tongue in a shoe as liovice cobblers learn the old ways at

an old Army barracks at Port Townsends historic Fort Flagler. (APLaserphoto)

Ferry Schedule To Be Changed

PORT TOWNSEND, Wash. lAP) - A former busi-

}iessman with a dream of reviving the ancient craft of making shoes by hand attracted five students vdio tvould rather be independent than rich.

Each of the five who responded to an ad that Alan Zerobnick placed in Mother Earth News paid $3,000 for hn intensive monthlong jmrkshop on shoematdng.

> The students included a oarber, a park worker and b oil company computer ^rator.

{ I try not to paint anybody p rosy picture, said Zerobnick, 36, of Cosmopolis. I tell them if you start right how, and work as fast as you pan for the rest of your life you cant begin to fill iq) one kinneys Shoe Store. I tell them to think small and stay hmaU.

* A good weeks production for a cobbler is three pairs, Kerobnicksays.

! That output, ht $125 to $175 h^pair, would mean gross earnings of $18,750 to $26,250 afinually. With materials bducted, that would mean ag annual income of $11,250 to<17,250.

;; ut thats enough to sur-yflre outside the rat race, sgid Zerobnick.

; Student Cliff Stout, a M^year-old computer operator, said he flew here from ^ Jersey for the class bcause his company is cut-ligg its payroll and also this teemed to be a good way to into retirement... its not j^ically demanding and I c^d do it long after normal

. Student Arlen Johnson, 51, Anchorage, Alaska, said hi has been an Army barber {(j- 22 years and would like to 2^n a small llarber shop in |1k city. Shoemaking at-t&cted him because Ive Uen looking for something to ^ in the downtime, and Ive bpd my fill of reading, Pehnsonsaid.

jiorn in Colorado, Zerob-jilck worked in television and

llw

Trends 1$ Sunglasses

i JffiW YORK (AP) - UK M>men who help other i^men decide what to wear md how to look apparently Ijlow the trends they set, at when it comes to sun-. according to a sur-r by Coming Optics, liln a pdl of 46 female $ shion and beauty editors at introduction of a new line n sunglasses, 28 preferred c own or tortoise frames. I ght opted for red, six for k ne and four voted gray. Jl le majority of editors, 27, had oval faces, six Jild ouong or round, and each described their as square or heart-

fashioo experts selec-closely matched Corns recent poll of its which showed most popular sunglass to be tortoise, 4iitant second, toey had oval-

riiato edtton to at-aipi..n coDil-the'aatotoal trdnd, pressing a tor gold-ftouiMd

marketing, then started a backpacking equipment company but packed it up in 1976 to head West. He made his first shoes for himself and began to make others for friends who admired his efforts.

He learned his craft by reading, practicing and consulting with some shoemakers who now are in their 70s and 80s and with younger orthopedic shoemakers.

Why would people pay $100 and more for a pair of his shoes?

Comfort, says Zerobnick.

The forms from which factory-made shoes are fashioned are made in standard sizes and the average human being doesnt have standard feet,he said.

Look around you on the street some day and youll ^ a lot of people like that he said, hunching forward and grimacing. Th^ are the people who need custom shoes, according to Zerobnick.

His shoes are also built to last. Some of the first shoes

I made are still on the road after seven years, he said proudly.

For their $3,000, students at the Tenderfoot Workshop received hand tools, books and enough leather for 15 to 20 pairs of shoes. The package also included a months room and board in the old Army buildings at this citys historic Fort Flagler.

Gigi Hay, 29, is the only student from Washington state. She lives in Ashford and spends five months a year working on trails in Mount Rainier National Park, so she said she needed something "to do the other seven months ... and I definitely want to be my own boss; thats kind of a dream of mine.

With her classmates, Ms. Hay advanced through a curriculum that began with making sandals, then moccasins, shoes and boots. Three weeks into the workshop, she was wearing the boots and called them the most comfortable footwear Ive ever had.

The North Carolina Department of Transportation has announced that, beginning April 1, an extra departure will be added at the Ocracoke and Cedar Island ferry terminals to meet the expected influx of travelers to and from Ocracoke Island during Easter.

The additional departure times will be 10 p.m. from Ocracoke and 7 p.m. from Cedar Island.

Ben ONeal, director of the states ferry division in Morehead City, said an extra ferry vessel and two additional runs are normally added during Easter.

Because two ferry vessels are currently undergoing routine maintenance, the extra vessel" will not be available by Eastern weekend but will be back in service by late April, he said.

The interim schedule includes 7 a.m., 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. departures from Cedar

Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified everyday.

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ATTENTION BEAUFORT COUNTY RESIDENTSI THE DAILY REFLECTOR It now available on Sunday mornings at following neighborhood stores.

WASHINGTON

Fast Fare - Hwy. 264 East Zip Mart - Hwy. 17 Zip Mart - River Road Zip Mart - N. 32nd and River Rd.

Zip Mart - E. 3rd and Park Dr.

Foodland W. 5th St. Foodland River Road Makin* Tracks Jimmys News

CHOCOWINITY

Rufus Smith Food King D&HRed&White Clioco Shell Pantry Boyd Brothers

Island, and 10 a.m., 4 p.m. and 10 p.m. departures from Ocracoke.

Reservations are still being accepted and are recommended for both departure points, ONeal said.

Who is the grand old man of Latin American letters, commented: The Malvinas war demonstrated that Argentine military men are much more dangerous to their compatriots than they are to an enemy in the field.

He alluded to the regimes mid-1970s campaign against leftist ^rrillas that resulted in the disappearances of 6,000 to 15,000 people. Local and international human rights organizations claim many of the missing had nothing to do ,with the guerrillas, but were summarily executed on suspicion of subversion.

The administration that succeeded Galtieri has refused to formally declare a cessation of hostilities in the South Atlantic and misses no (q>portunity to declare the recovery of ^ islands one of the countrys highest priorities. But the nationalistic fervor that swept hundreds of thousands of people into Buenos Aires Plaza de Mayo a year ago is absent.

Argentina claims Britain stole the islands 250 miles off southern Argentina in 1833, when the Royal Navy ousted Argentine authorities and settlers from the archipelago and established ^ a colony.

The Falklands debacle left the 7-year-old military government in such disrepute that the generals, who prior . to the war indicated they planned to hold power until

at least the end of the decade, were forced to begin a transition to civiiian rule.

Galtieris successor in the presidency, retired Geq, Reynaldo Bignone, has promised elections, the first in 10 years, for Oct. 30. The transfer of power to elected authorities is set for Jan. 30.

Political campaigning and the deep recession - unemployment is at a 10-year high of 12 percent and 300 percent annual inflation constantly erodes salaries -now command much more ^ace in the newspapers than the war and its consequences.

Nicanor Costa Mendez, the forei^ minister during the war ' Who presented the Argentine case in world forums, is campaigning for a conservative federalist party and is mentioned as a possible presidential candidate.

He, Galtieri and the former military governor of the islands, Gen. Mario Menendez, have appeared in recent days before the investigative commission and others who played a major role in the war are to testify in coming weeks. The report is expected to be completed in early May.

The current junta says Argentina rigorously observes a de facto halt to hostilities. But deliveries of sophisticated arms in recent months have prompted expressions of concern from London about possible air raids or commando strikes

against the 4,000-man British garrison on the islands.

Diplomatic and military sources here and abroad say the air force had acquired su French-made Super-Etendard jet fighters, 10 Mirage 5s and two dozoi Israeli-made Daggers since the war and is in better shape now than last April. Argentina also has acquired from France new Exocet missiles like the ones used to sink two British ships during the conflict, and West Germany recently delivered the first of four Exocet-armed destroyers it has contracted to build for Argentine by next March.

Even so, the sources virtually rule out the renewal of hostilities by a harried government concerned principally with orchestrating an orderly retreat from power.

The war drastically altered Argentine foreign policy. Before the conflict, the staunchly anti-communist regime was strengthening ties with the United States and emphasizing the countrys Western and Christian identity.

When the United States and West European nations sided with Britain in the conflict, Argentina found moral and diplomatic support from Third World and Soviet-bloc countries. The government is now firmly entrenched in the same Non-Aligned Movement it was considering abandoning in the months before the war.

tnnheefers

EASTER BUFFET

A ROYAL PROMENADE THRU PAGEANTRY HALL

Lavish buffet, with savory holiday salads: fresh fruit, garden green tossed salad, potato salad, cucumber & onion, cole slaw and ]ello salad.

Delicious entrees of tender roasted turkey with dressing, steamship round of beef au Jus, southern honey cured ham, shrimp creole and southern fried chicken com-plimei|ted with a garden of vegetables: squash, broccoli with cheese sauce, fried okra, steamed rice, cranberry sauce, glazed carrots, com on the cob, green beans amandine, yams and parslled buttered potatoes, rolls, com-bread, and our own favorite muffins-delicious. For dessert: strawberry shortcake, chocolate mousse, and carrot cake.

Adults $7.95; children 12 & under, V2 price, children 5 & under free, 11:30 A.M. to 3 P.M. in Pageantry Hall.

Please call for reservations

756-2792

KWIADA

INN

Greenville Blvd.





2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N .G.-Friday, April 1,1963

Ctosswotd By Eugeru Sheffer

ACROSS

1 Owl sounds

6 Greek letter

9 Refuge

12 Confess

13 Paddle

14 Actress Wallace

15 Spruce Goose, e.g.

16 Eventually

18 French city

20 On the sheltered side

21 Naughty

23 Craggy hill

24 Farm unit

25 Religious linage

27 Pittsburgh product

29 Mean

31 Teeter

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37 Completed

38 .Misdeed

41 Umps counterpart

43 Append

44 Zeuss spouse

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(honest)

49 Viper

52 Decade * number

53 Stout

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DOWN

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Avg. solution time: 27 min.

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42 Deeds

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Yesterdays Cryptoquip - YOUR RING DEALER NEEDED AGOIDEN OPPORTUNITY.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: V equals P.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

19*3 King Features Syndicate. Inc

Reorganize League For 'All Religions'

MOREHEAD CITY, N.C. l AP) - Carteret County officials say they are forming a new church softball league that will allow members of any religion to play, while some members of a league that voted to exclude Mormons say they will stand by their decision and play without county support.

Neal Lewis, director of the Carteret County Parks and Recreation Department, had suspended the church league Tuesday. Mormons who attended a league meeting March 24 were told they could not participate in the league because they do not believe in the same Jesus Christ as other churches in the league.

"Some of the folks adamantly opposed to allowing Mormons to play have been replaced as the leadership of this league, said Neal Lewis, director of th^)* Carteret County Parks and Recreation Department. The league is being reorganized % folks who just dont see things that way.

The county could not legally allow the exclusion of anyone from a county-sponsored activity, he said.

".When that issue is resolved, then weve left room in our field schedule to allow them (the league) to begin on April 8, Lewis said. The bottom line is they all want to play softball.

"Some of the members of these churches have really gone back and questioned their representatives, he said. Some of these representatives have done an about-face.

However, some teams in the previous league are planning to form their own league, operating independently of the county, and will continue to ban Mormans from participating, league member Stephen Harris said Thursday.

We are going to continue our league with our decision we already made, Harris said. "Were planning to play on another field. We dont yet have a new name for our league.

Why the Easter Egg?

The egg, symbol of fertility and new Ijfe, has long been a part of the Easter celebration of the Resurrection. However, some religious historians believe that the practice of giving eggs on Easter day cofpes from an old church law that said eggs could not be eaten uring Lent. Thus, on Easter Sunday, church mem-8 marked the end of Lent by eating eggs once again. Ancient Persians who believed that the Earth had come from a giant egg often dyed eggs as part of their spring festivals and gave them as gifts. But the idea of coloring eggs for Easter began with early Christians in the ancient Middle Eastern land of Mesopotamia.

DO YOU KNOW Which President staged the first Easter egg rolling contest on the White House lawn?

THURSDAYS ANSWER - The three main U.S. Virgin Islands are St. Croix, St. Thomas, and St. John.

4-1-83    ^        VEC,    Inc.    1983

FORECAST FOR SATURDAY, APR. 2,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Try to keep your activities on a practical level because if you make moves to extend your interests you are likely to have difficulties. Take any upsetting conditions in stride.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Talk over with an expert how to make your life more successful where business is concerned. Become more economical.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) A good friend can help you attain some of your personal aims at this time. Take treatments to improve your health.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) A private talk with an influential person can pave the way to future success. Be sure to show your appreciation.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Go to an interesting site with a new friend and gain the knowledge you desire. Strive to be more successful.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) If you carry through with the promises you've made, you can easily gain the recognition you want at this time. Be alert.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to ^pt. 22) Get an early start on an important business matter for best results. Make plans for a trip soon and count the cost.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Be sure to handle duties that require your immediate attention. Come to a better understanding with loved one.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Go to a fascinating new site with the one you love and relax. Take steps to cement better relations with associates.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Make plans for the future that will give you more security. A close tie can be demanding, but take everything calmly.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Getting together with congeniis for recreation is fine today. Try and avoid the expenditure of too much money.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Discuss with family members practical affairs that affect all of you and come to a fine meeting of minds. Show loyalty.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) A good day to visit with others and find a better way to achieve success. Being with persons you like is wise.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will have an eye for culture and art. and could become very successful in life because of the ability to stick to something until it is completed. The mind is keen in this chart. Sports are a natural here.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc.

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The contract is 6 NT by South. West leads the ten of diamonds. Would you rather play or defend?

We are indebted to our good friend Jose le Dentu of Paris for this hand. Assuming best play and defense, choose whether you would rather play or defend six no trump, then send your solution, together with a complete explanation of the line you have chosen, to: Shell Game, 47 Parry Road, Stamford, CT 06907. Entries must be postmarked no later than April 13. The solution to the problem will appear in this column on April 15. All who submit correct entries will receive a copy of Goren on Pl^ and Defense."

Do you think that six spades is a better contract? If you like, you can see if six spades can be made after a diamond opening lead, presuming best play and defense. But that is for your own edification-we dont want to hear about it!

LOOK AT* ALL THE HORRIBLE JUNK FOOD OUR KIDS HAVE IN THIS BAG.-

I'M GETTING RID OF IT RIGHT NOW / j

SHOOT BOUGHT THAT STUFF FOR MYSELf^

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Avalanche Victim Back On Skis, And Teaching

By JENNIFER KERR Associated Press Writer SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - Anna Conrad, bui^ for five days in an avalanche one year ago, has returned to the ski sl^ even thou^ she lost part of a leg and foot, and says the accident taugit her dont give up.

Theres a lot of sadness involved and its kind of scary, thinking that its been as long as a year and its only been a year, she said of the avalanche that killed seven people, including her boyfrieod.

Ms. Conrad, 23, has a special artificial sports leg ahd has been ^ing this winter at Mammoth Mountain, near Yosemite National Park. She plans a skiing vacation this week in British Columbia.

Lately, much of her time has been devoted to working as a bi^ school student teacher, instructing in biolo-

Ive always wanted to teach students so they might get a little more excited about what goes on around them, said Ms. Conrad.

Since the avalanche, I try as hard as I can to do everything as well as I can. I tell (my students), Dont give up on things easily. Two avalanches roared down the slopes of the Alpine Meadows ski resort in the Sierra Nevada last March 31, covering a ski patrol building,' damaging the main lodge and burying resort employees and visitors, kb. Conrad, a ski'lift> opefator who was crosscountry skiing that day because the lifts were closed, was inside the three-story ski patrol building and got trapped in an air pocket formed by debris.

She was found five days later, her feet badly frostbitten. She later lost her right leg below the knee and part of her left foot.

People died who were very close to me, she said. Its hard to look back and say theyre not here any more.

She hasnt been back to Alpine Meadows, which she is suing, but plans to return next week for a national handicapped ski race.

My feeling is I want to be active. Ive always been

SURVIVOR NOW TEACHES - Anna Conrad, who was buried 5 days in an avalanche a year ago, is now a student teacher at the Sacramento High School (AP Laserphoto)

active and I dont want to change my lifestyle any more than I absolutely have to. Skiing is something I can do and its exciting, exhilarating and thrilling.

She said her skiing has steadily improved and she can now race down advanced slopes. Before the disaster, Ms. Conrad was an expert.

Id like to have something good come out of this. Id like to help other disabled people have confidence and not have fear in doing some things, she said.

Ms. Conrad worked at the resort last winter after finishing her biology degree at the University of Califomia-Davis. She -adu-ated last June and began student teaching last fall. She tau^t at a Davis jimior high school the first half of the year and has been at Sacramento High School since Feb. 1.

She is an in^iration, really, said Fred Vanderwold, her supervising teacher and a skier vdio followed the

avalanche story last year. Shes just a nice, good person, a dedicated person. Shes special, but I dont think shes any more special than she yrould have been anyway.

Ms. Conrad, who grew up in Glendora in Los Angeles County, says shes looking for a teaching job for S^ tember.

I think she will probably find a job, said Vanderwold. She does a good job. Her handicap is not holding her back.

Ms. Conrad sometimes uses crutches but said shes having no problems with the artificial left leg. However, the partially amputated right foot has nerve damage that might be permanent. She cannot tell \^en shes hurting it and it gets easily blistered.

She said shes not seered of skiing, but has some fear of being up in In area with a bad storm. Apd I have had to ski in some storms this winter.

New England Eggs Pose Brown Color Problem

CONCORD, N.H. (P) -Old McDonalds bought some eggs,ee-i-ee-i-o.

It used those eggs in its Egg McMuffins, ee-i-ee-i-o.

It was white eggs here, and white eggs there. Here an egg, there an egg, everywhere a white egg - except in New England, where 9 million hens lay almost 2 billjon BROWN eggs every year.

Oild McDonald has a problem, ee-i-ee-i-o.*

Hie poultry farmers who own th^ 9 million chickens in Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts are feeling fried over the fast-food chains decision to use white eggs instead of brown eggs in a nationwide giveaway in May.

In the McDonalds promotion, customers will receive half a dozen fresh white eggs with certain purchases, the idea being to put to rest any suspicion that McDonald's juses powdered or processed

business at McDonalds, youd think they would want to use our e^. But they dont.

Obviously, they want to buy all their eggs from one place, Danko said. But youd think they would bend a little in this case.

Telephone calls to McDonalds corporate headquarters in Oak Brook, 111., went unanswered Tuesday ni^t.

Some New England politicians, including Rep. Norman DAmours, D-N.H., wrote letters of complaint to McDonalds. R^. John R. McKernan, R-Maine, appealed to McDonalds to understand the potential damage the white egg giveaway could do to our egg industry. He said more than 80 percent of egg buyers in New England preferred brown eggs.

Were fighting for our

survival, said LaFlamme, who runs a poultry farm in Monroe. He said hi^er costs for heat and grain make the local brown eggs more expensive than white eggs produced closer to grain markets in the South.

LaFlamme said brown eggs are more likely to be fresh.

White eggs are shipped, and you can have eggs that are several weeks old before theyre brought to market, LaFlamme said. We ship our eggs out daily from the henhouse to the processing plant.

The color of eggs is determined by the genetic strain of the hen. Danko said about the only differeiK:e between the tw cqlors of eggs is that brown shells are thicker and harder to break than white shells.

But who eats the shells? he asked.

lice idea, say the poultry lers, but why white? Nearly all of New Hampshires 600,000Maying iKgs produce brown eggs, said Thomas Danko, poultry specialist for the New Hampshire Extension Service.

Last week, the New Eqgland Brown Egg (^cil tried unsuccessfully to convince McDonalds it should brown eggs, at least in ew England, in its

Heavy Sentence For 'Rampage'

McDonalds had 4greed to buy its eggs for the promotion from Connecticut white-egg producers, who supply all the eggs for the dhalns New England restau-

y, we are dlsap-,J^ LaFlamme, of the New I Fhultry Growers Mmclitlon, said Monday. ;felying on local people for

GASTONIA, N.C. (AP) -Johnny Hiram Allison was found guilty Wednesday of killing his mother, stabbing his father and brother and setting fire to the family home in a second trial ordered by the North Carolina Supreme Court.

The jury took less than an hour to reach the verdict. Judge Robert D. Lewis of Asheville sentenced Allison to 23-30 years in prison for the murder of his mother, 7-10 years for each assault charge and 5-10 years for burning the house.

Lewis combined the assault and burning sentences and ordered that they be served after the sentence for murder is completed. Allisons prison term is credited vdth 842 lys of

time already servd.

The charges against Allison, 39, stem from a Dec. 8, 1980, rampage. He first was cmvicted in March 1981, but the state Supreme Court granted him a new trial on grounds that the jury was not allowed to hear a psychiatrists testimony.

In both trials, Allison pleaded innodlent by reason of insanity and offered testimony from two psychiatrists who said he suffers from schizophrenia.

The Pitt-Greenville Aiiport has recently opened its new commuter airline tennhial. For information on airport facilitim, caU 7584707,

I

r

MONEY In Your Pocket!

When you need money, cash in on the items that are laying around tl\e houseitems that you no longer use.

Our Family Rates

3 Lines

4 Days

^4.00

Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellaneous For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Per Ad With Sale Value Of 8200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Ads Cash With Order. No Refund For Early Cancellation.

Use Your VISA^r MASTER CARD

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

Classified Ads 752-6166

CLASSIFIED INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Parsonal*................

In AAemoriam............

Card Of Thanks..........

Spacial Noticas..........

Traval SiTourt..................009

Automotiva.....................010

Child Cara...............

Day Nursary.............

HaalthCara..............

Employ mant.............

For Sala.................

Instruction...............

Lost And Found..........

Loans And AAortgagas....

Businass Sarvlcas........

Opportunity..............

Professional.............

Raal Estate..............

Appraisals...............

Rentals..................

WANTED

Help Wanted........

Work Wanted.......

Wanted..........

Roommate Wanted .

Wanted To Buy .....

Wanted To Lease____

Wanted To Rent____

.051

.059

.140

.142

.144

.^^46

.148

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent...........121

Business Rentals................122

Campers For Rent..............124

Condominiums for Rent.........125

Farms For Lease...............107

Houses For Rent................127

Lots For Rent...................129

AAerchandise Rentals ............131

Mobile Homes For Rent.........133

Office Space For Rent.....

Resort Property For Rent. Rooms For Rent..........

SALE

oil 029

.... 030 .... 032 ...034 ...036 .... 039 ...046

Autos for Sale........

Bicycles (or Sale......

Boats for Sale.....

Campers (or Sale.....

Cycles (or'Sale........

Trucks (or Sale.......

Pels..................

Antiques    ,.... ...........061

Auctions  ................062

Building Supplies...............063

Fuel, Wood, Coal................064

Farm Equipment...............065

Garage Yard Sales..............067

Heavy Equipment.............068

Household Goods................069

Insurance \>..................071

Livestock.......................072

Miscellaneous..................074

Mobile Homes for Sale..........075

AAobile Home Insurance.........076

Musical Instrumenis............077

Sporting Goods .................078

Commercial Property...........102

Condominiums tor Sale..........104

Farms for Sale..................106

Houses (or Sale..................109

Investment Property............ill

Land For Sale.

Lots For Sale...........

Resort Property (or Sale

Public

Notices

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix of ite of Stella Taylor Jackson

the esta'_________ _________

late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said

deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before September 11, 1983 or this notice or

same will be pleaded in bar ot their rKovery. All persons indebted to

said estate please make immediate ' 'ment

payment.

This 9th day of AAarch, 1983. Virginia J. Tucker 1109 S. Overlook Drive Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Executrix of the estate of Stella Taylor Jackson, deceased. March 11,18, 25: April 1, 1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Execufor of ate of Gladys A. Pollard lafe

the estafi

of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased

to present them to the undersigned E xecutor on or before September 12, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment. This 9th day of AAarch, 19S3.'

Hicks Pollard Rt. 8, 80x185

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 E xecutor of the estate of

Gladys A. Pollard, deceased. AAarch 11,18, 25; April 1,1983

Sealed proposals will be-recelved by the Purchasing Department of Pitt County AAemorial Hospital until and publicly opened at: 2:00_p.m., April 8. 1983 In the West Bed Tower

Conference Room of Pitt County AAemorial Hospital, Stantonsburg Road, Greenville, North Carolina, on the purchase of the following: TWO WORD PROCESSORS

Specifications and bid proposals forms are on file in the office of the

Purchasing Department, Pitt County AAemorial Hospital, and may be

obti'    ...

ained upon request between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., AAonday through Friday.

Pitt County Memorial Hospital reserves the right to reject any and all proposals.

Jack W. Richardson President

March 25; April 1,1983

NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained In that certain deed

of trust executed by Master Well and Builders, Inc., dated September 23,

1980, and recorded In Book J 49,

Page 18, In the office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County; and under and by virtue of the authority vested

lorlty vested

in the undersigned at Substituted Trustee by that certain instrument dated February 15, 1983 and recorded In Book N 5V Page 128 In the of flee of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County; and under and by virtue of that certain Authorization, Findings

PUBLIC NOTICES

^k G-26, onpage^oTlirttie^f County Registry; reference is also ma^ to deeds -recorded in Book

131 in the Pitt County Registry; be-Ing the same prppwfy conveyed by M. L. Turnw to Heber F. Cox by deed dated ^tember 10, 1964, and recqrOfd in Bo(A S-34, on page 197 in the Pitt County Registry.

The afoTMld sale will be made sublect to all encumbrances existing

prior to recording of the above' of Trust and also

referenced deed    

will be subject to all taxes and special assessments outstanding against the property.

The Successful bidder at sale will be required to make an immediate cash deposit of ten percent (10%) of the amount bid.

This the 15th day of March, 1983. JAMES A WELLONS,JR SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTf March 25, April 1,1983

FEE

T-K    TO    CREDITORS

The undersigned, having qualified Estate of JOHN AAAYO, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina does hereby

notify all persons, firms and cor afions having claims against sale estate to present them to the under

porations havii estate to prese

signed at the offices of Pulley, Wat-Attorneys

son. King & Hofler, P. A., Affori at Law, 24-E B'rightleaf Square, I Office Box 36W, Durham, N

neys Post

Carolina 2770l on or before the 17th day of October, 1983, or this notice wifi be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersign

ed

VIRGINIA AAA YO AAOOO Y E xecutrix of the Estate of

John AAayo MALVERN F KING,JR

Pulley, Watson, King & Hofler, P. A. 24-E Brightleaf Square Post Office Box 3600

Durham, North Carolina 27702 Telephone: 919/682-9691 AAarch 25, April 1,8,15,1983

Cofe?S^R"A^TVjF"?HE

CITY OF GREENVILLE, NC Pursunat to Article 19, Chapter 160A of the General Statues of North Carolina, notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Greenville, NC, will conduct a public hearing in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building in the City of Greenville, NC, on Thursday, April 14, 1983, at 7:30p.m., on the question of the adoption of an ordinance

rezoning the following describ ter-rltory within the corporate limits of

iry

the City of Greenville as follows. DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY TO

BE REZONEO FROM

(HIGHWAY COAAMERCIALJ ._ CDF (COMMERCIAL DOWNTOWN

FRINGE)

To Wit: North Greene Street Area Location: Located in Greenville Township, Pitt County, North Carolina; northerly of the Tar

River, southerly ot NC-33, easterly of the Seaboard Coastline Railroad,

westerly of Meadowbrook Drive Subdivision, and lying within the corporate limits ot the City of Greenville

During this public hearing, objections or syggestjonsjvill be di^^^con

sidered by City Council. All in terested persons are requested to be

Present at the hearing, and they wHI e afforded an opportunity to be heard

A copy ot the proposed ordinance (lie at the Cify Clerk's office located at 20) West sfh Street, and is

available (or public inspection dur ing normal working hours AAonday

through Friday BY ORDER OF THE CITY

COUNCIL

Lois D. Worthington City Clerk April 1,8, 1983

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE QUESTION OF THE ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE REZONING TERRITORY LOCATED WITHIN THE CORPORATE LIMITS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE, NC Pursuant to Article 19, Chapter 160A of the General Statues of North

-ity touncil of the City of Green ville, NC, will conduct a public hear

Carolina, notice is hereby given that

^-----    CIfy    of Grr

ubiic h lamber theCil, _ iprll

14, <1983, at 7:30 p.m., on the question

the City Council of the icf ici

__________________Ing

Greenville, NC, on Thursday, Aj

JPL

ing in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building in the City ot

of the adoption of an ordinance rezoning the following described ter-rito^ within the corporate limits ot

iry '    ___...........

the City of Greenville as follows DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY TO

BE REZONED FROM R6 (RESIDENTIAL) TO R6 MH (RESIDENTIALMOBILE HOME) To Wit: The Calvary Baptist Church, Etal Location: Located in Greenville Township, Pitt County, North

Carolina; northerly of Airport Road,        HheJ.H.'

y ot It the

southerly ot the J ty, easferl

westerly

corporated property, within the corporate fir tyof Greenville.

Farmer proper AAenrKH-lal Drive, Fred Webb, In-and lying imitsof theCn

tyof(-  .......

During this public hearing, objec tions or suggestions will be duly con sidered by City Council. All In

terested persons are requested to be present at the hearing, and they will be afforded an opportunity fo be heard.

A copy ot the proposed ordinance is on file at the Cify Clerk's office located at 201 West 5th Street, and is available for public inspection during normal working hours Monday through Friday.

BYDRDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL

Lois D. Worthington City Clerk April 1,8, 1983

EZONING TERRITORY LOCATED WITHIN THE CORPORATE LIMITS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE, NC Pursuant to Article 19, Chapter 160A of the General Statues of North

Carolina, notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Green

:ity C ville, NC, ing in the City Council Chamb the Municipal Building in the ( Greenville, NC, on Thursday,

vyill conduct a public hear-Chambers of

City of

14, 1983, at7:30p.m.,onthequesflon of the adoption of an ordinance

April

!Sfi(

rezoning the following described ter vvl

the City ot oreenviiie as toiiows: DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY TO

riton/ i^thin the corporate limits of

BE REZONED FROM lU (UNOF FENSIVE INDUSTRY) TO R6-MH (RESIDENTIALMOBILE HOME)

To Wit: Block D, Tax AAao 2

Located in Greenville

Location

Township,

County,

Carolina; northerly of We

. North 'est Gum

Road, southerly of Calvary Baptist Church, easterly of AAemorial Drive,

westerly of Holbert Street, and lying

........ -porate    limits    of    the    Cf

ty of Greenvilfe.

During this public hearing, objections or suggestions will be duly considered by City Council. All Interested persons are requested to be

iresent at the hearing, and the^ will

be

afforded an opportunity heard.

A copy of the proposed ordinance is on file at the Cify Clerk's office located at 201 West Sth Street, and is available for public inspection during normal working hours AAonday through Friday.

BYDRDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL

Lois D. Worthington City Clerk

Ity

April 1,8,1983

IN THE GENERAL COURT

DISTR lVClDUR V^DI VIS ION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY James Thomas Lewis Plaintiff,

I..,.i iiuay, nylu i, tauuxi

PUBLIC NOTICES

Un^ and by virtue of the power tain d^ of

of sale contained in a o trust executed by Jim wife, Jean B. A Book R46,

Ri

Allen and

Allen, recorded in

ook R46, Page 623, Pitt County egistry, defalt having been made I me payment of the Indebtedness

thereby ^ured, and inasmuch as holder of the same has called

the

and'Order entered by the Clerk of Superior court of Pitt C

County on

AAarch 15, 1983 and of record In File No. 83 SP 81, default havin

been

in

made In the payment of debtedness secured by said deed of trust and the said deed of trust being by Its terms subject to foreclosure.

and the holder of the Indebtedness thereby secured having demanded the foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said indebtedness, and due notice having been given to

those entitled to same, the' undersigned Substituted Trustee will offer

for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Courthouse Door In Greenville, Pitt Coun

ty, North Carolina, at 12:00 o'clock Noon on the 7th day of April, 1983, the land conveyed In said deed of

trust, the same being owned ot record ^ AAaster Well and Builders,

Inc., and being more particularly described as follows:

That certain lot or parcel of land Ituate, lying and belpg in the (.Ity ot xreenvllle, Pitt County, North

arollna, and In the Highland Pines St sld

Subdivision, on the west side of Har ding Street and beginning 300 feet south

wardly from the soutRwest corner of the Intersection of First and

Harding Streets and runs thence with the western line of Harding Street in a southerly direction 60 feet to a stake; thence In a westerly direction 114.5 feet to a stake; thence In a northerly direction 60 feet to a' stake; thence In a eastwardly direction 114 feet to a stake on the west side of Harding Street to the beginning, and being Lot No. 15 In Block "F" of the Highland Pines Subdivision as shown on map recorded In

Sion as shown on map recorded In the Pitt County Registry in AAap Book 2, on PaM 2)6, and being the same conveyed to D. L. Turnage by J. Vance Perkins et al by deed dated

Bonnie Lewis Defendant.

FILE NO 82-CVD-1741

TO: Bonnie Lewis, Defendant TAKE NOTICE, that

upon the undersigned to foreclose the same and, said deed of frost be

ing by the terms thereof subject to forecfosure, and pursuant to certain "FINDINGS" entered by the Clerk

of Superior Court of Pitt'County on AAarch 18, 1983, CSC File 83SP91,

024

Foreign

DATSUN B210 1977. Two door. Good condition. AM-FM cassette.

758 0810.

$1900.

WANTED:    Volkswagon    Beetle

body. 1974 or above. 756-M74 after 6.

1972 TOYOTA COROLLA Good running condition. $750. Dealer .?53;

If3444. 3-238l between 5 and 9 p.m.

1976 SUBARU (GF). Automatic, AM/FM, front wheel drive, good condition, radials, 33 miles per gallon. $1200. 756 3974.

the undersigned will offer for mIs at lion to Itl

______ty ............ .........,

Carolina, at 12:00 Noon on the 13th 7S2-04S4

public auctii for cat orir irolii._. April, or parcel of I

1978 DATSUN 5)0 Statlonwagon. Air, AM/FM, price to move; $i5M. Days 756 6167, nights 964-4778. May be seen at 3202 Sooth Memorial Drive.

the hight bidder ,978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed.

'or cash at Pitt County C^t^se good condition, good gas mileage, door in the City of Greenville, North I PeHect car for young graduam.

day of 1

1983, that certain tract

_     land    lying    and being in

Farmville Township, Pit) County, North Carolina, and more par

ticularly described as follows BEGINNING at an i

iron located on

the southern right of way line of SR 1200, said iron^ii

em(^ the northwest

the AAarvin V.

on property recorded in AAap : 21, page 104 ot the Pitt County stry; thence from the point of

corner of Lot No.

Horton Book

Registry; thence from the point be^nning thus determined S. 23 deg. 45 min. E. 200 feet along the line of Lot No. 4 above mentioned to an iron, cornering; thence S. 66 deg. 15 min. W. 100 feet to an iron, cornering; thence N. 23 deg. 45 min. W. 200 feet to the southern right of way line of SR 1200, cornering, thence N. 66 deg. 15 min. E. 100 feet to the point of

aid property is to be sold for cash t to ad

subiec f to ad valorem property taxes, assessments, and to any other prior encumbrance of record, if any Pursuant to North Carolina General Statutes, Section 45 21.10(b), and the terms ot the deed of trust, any successful bidder may be required to deposit with the Substitute Trustee immediately upon conclusion of the sale a cash deposit ot ten percent (10%) of the bid up to and including ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS ($1,000.00) plus

five percent (5%) of any excess over ONE THOUSAND --- ---

_ DOLLARS ($1,000.00). Any successful bidder shall be required to tender the full balance purchase price so bid in cash or certified check at the time the Substitute Trustee tenders fo him a deed for the property or attempts to tender such deed, and should said successful bidder fail to

1978 MGB Excellent conditon. Low mileage, radial tires. 6-0138 or 756 8943.

1979 HONDA Civic wagon. Air, extra clean, low mileage. AM/FM Call 746-4551 between 5 and 8 p.m.

1979    1200    Honda

AAA/FM/cassette radio. $3100. 825 3901 aHer 6.

Civic. 4 speed.

1980 HONDA CIVIC. 5 speed, AM FM cassette, radials, best of fer 752 2522._

1980 TOYOTA Corolla, 4 door, excellent condition. One owner. Contact Bob Adams, 758-5200 during working hours.

1982 HONDA ACCORD 4 door. 5 speed, AM/FM stereo, air, velour interior, good gas mileage. $8315

....    _    -fsa.r-'-    ^

neootiable. Call 756 5856

1982 AAAZDA 626. 4 door. White with blue interior. Automatic, air, AM/FM $7600 752 1929 aHer 6p.m.

029 Auto Parts & Service

BUICK 225. $375. e, good i ask for I

Chevy engine, good condition, $225 Call 752 4475, ask for Ivy.

032

Boats For Sale

FOR SALE: 17' MFG boat, 85 horsepower Johnson motor, open bow, walk through windshield. $2195. Call after 5. 7^ 0237.

OUACHITA 14'/2' Bass boat. Cox trailer. 25 horsepower Johnson; $1299. 757 3524.

14' RIVER OX. 20 horsepower pay the full balance purcha'se price AAercury motor, f^t c<mtrpl efectrie so bid at that time, he shall remain    trailer.    Call    756-5516

liable on his bid as provided for in the North Carolina General Statutes,

ader.

Section 45 21.30(d) and (e).

This sale will be held open ten (10)

days tor upset bids as required by law.

This 18th day of March, 1983. James A. Hodges, Jr.,

Substitute Trustee 106 South Me Lewean Street P.O. Drawer 3169 Kinston, NC 28501 Tel.: (919 ) 527 813)

April 1,8, 1983

WANT

ADS

752-6166

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

FREE! Stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall for free gift to be given away weekly. No purchase necessary._

010

AUTOAAOTIVE

on

Autos For Sale

RENT A WRECK 7S2-CARS Dally Weekly AAonthly Rates Save on Dependable Used Cars.

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitf County. Hastings Ford. Call 758-0114.

012

AMC

1976 AMC GREMLIN, air. 3 speed, 6 cylinder, asking $600. Call after 6, 746-2797. Avden._

013

Buick

1977 BUICK Elecfra Limited. door. 756-0489 after 5p.m.

19)% BUICK SKYHAWK, low mile

age, V6. All extras. 5 speed. $3200. 7ft 8491.    _

015

Chevrolet

seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action and the nature of the relief being sought is an absolute divorce on the grounds of one (1) year contlnous separation.

You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later 16 day of AAay, 1983. and U|

Ings not later than the

 , _    - _ 7,1983, ar)d upon your

failure to do so, the party seeking

relief service against you will apply to ihe Court for the relief soughr.

This 29 day of AAarch, 1983. James E. Brown

Attorney for the Plaintiff P.O. Box 1356 Greenville, NC 27834

April

Telephone; (9)9) 758-7255 1, f 15, 22,1983

NOTICE

NORTH CAROLINA PITT (ioUNTY

The un^slgrMd having qualified Imlnlstratf' '

as Administratrix ot the estate ot Booker T. Olxon, deceased, this Is to notify all persons, firms, and cor-

y fliii pvrsuvi* Ilf 111

porations having claims against said estate to present them to the under

signed or her attorneys, Williamson Herrin, Stokes 8> Hetfelflnger, on or before October 1,1983, or this Notice

will be pleaded In bar of their

recovery. All persons Indebted to said esfate will please make Im

mediate payment fo the undersign-thls the 29th day of AAarch, 1983.

AAary A. Dixon fnln of Bookei Route 2, Box 64)

AAONTE CARLO LANDAU Extra clean, Jow mileag.

Call Rex

equipped.

Chevrolet, Avden, 746 3141.

1980.

fully

Smith

1974 VEGA $600. Call 752 0891 after 6p.m.

1976 CAAAARO LT Low mileage. New paint lob. 752 2006 after 5.

1976 CHEVELLE Malibu Classic. 4 door, hardtop, new engine and transmission. $1150. Dealer 3444. 753-2381 between 5 and 9 p.m._

1978 CHEVETTE 51.000 miles, clean, excellent condition. $2250. 758-1606atter6._

1980 CITATION, white, mileage. Make me an i 756-36^^_

good ga If fer. Ca

1981 CHEVETTE Very good condi tion. 45,000 miles. $38(X) negotiable. Can be seen at El Highland Park after 9._

16' HOBIE CAT catamaran.

California Special. Used one season'. 2150, ask for Mike; after 6

Call 756 p.m. 756 2042

17' ABS CANOE Rated at 745 pounds. Double hull construction with paddles. $325 . 753-2459 after 5:30p.m.

1981 14' HOBIE Turbo, blue pontoons, blue tramp. Cat Fever sail. 756 9730._

034

Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. (J'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774.

18' SHASTA CAMPER

tained. air conditioned, $2600.758 3499.

Self con-sleeps 6.

SOMEONE IS looking tor your unused power mower. Why not advertise it with a low cost Classified Ad?

1977 27' COACHAAAN Sleeps 8, full bed in back, full bath. Great shape. Call 752 1589 anytime__

036

Cycles For Sale

1974 HONDA 450. Excellent running condition. Only $650 negotiable. 56

Must sell. Call 7ft 5279.

1974 SUZUKI GT 380: Very good condition. iSOO or best otter. Call 756 3033,_

1978 750 HONDA, black. RC header.

Cafe fairing new Goodyear HST, black ajpmlnum rims. Including 2

helmets, rainsuit and cover $1600 or best offer, 752 2503

1980 HONDA CM 400T Dark green. Mileage 7,912. Has crash bar with foot pegs and luggage rack. $1150. 758 4757 or 758 445

039

Trucks For Sale

CHEVROLET SILVERADO Pickup. 1976. Extra clean, Jow mileage, fully equipped. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141.

CHEVROLET PICKUP 1981. Extra clean, 17,000 miles, like new. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden. 746-3141._

1974 FORD E-lOO van, good condi-tion. Call 758-4363 after 6 pm.

1975 TOYOTA 4 speed. Excellent condition. One owner. 756-7422 after

1976 DODGE Tradesman 100 van. Equipped for camping. 756-2109.

1977 EL CAMINO Red and white. 746 4546or 756 6682 after 6p.m.

1978 TOYOTA lon^

$2800. 746 6611 after!

bed pickup.

19TO FORD XLT Pickup 33,000

miles, power steering and brakes. $2200.795-4372._

1981 ALUMINUM hill dump trailer. 32x30. 60" sides, 1020 tires. Like new, $1900. Call 749 2291 after 6

p.m._

040

Child Care

KEEP CHILDREN in my home. For 2 $40, for 1 $25 (weekly). Live at Evans Trailer Park, Lot 75. Call 752 5759 day, 756 1523 night. Have experience._

046

PETS

AKC REGISTERED Golden Re

triever puppies. Ready now. Call 753 2270 or 753 3074

AKC REGISTERED German Shep herd puppies. Black and silver, black and tan, and solid white. Male and females. Call 758 4237.

BLACK AND TAN puppies and

older dogs. Call 758 4372

BLACK LAB PUPS 3 males, ireter to sell to serious hunters, top ield trial lines, all shots. Washington 946 4924 days, 946 7971 evenings and weekends.

EXPERT DOG OBEDIENCE

training. Call 758 5590.

FOR SALE - AKC Cocker Spaniels. Call 758 2681.__

017

Dodge

1977 DODGE VAN Factor

customized, fplly equipped.

">-3109._

758-3175 or 756-:

ctory

%6S00.

THUNDERBIRD 198). AM FM cassette, tilt, cruise. Make offer. 758 5278.    _

1964 THUNDERBIRD, air, excellent condition. 99% restored. Must see to appreciate. $3600. Call 758-1719._

1966 MUSTANG, good shape, $1600 negotiable. Call 756-7051 after 6.

1966 MUSTANG 2 door hard top Good conditioi

cylinder, 3 speed A^ving. $2800 fit

firm. Kinston 527

1976 PINTO Good condition, needs paint; $1200. Call 758-5585 after 6.

1978 FORD LTD, V 8, 34,000 miles new car condition (deceased wife's car). AAany extras. Can be seen 2810 South Evans Street. $3750 firm. 756-3491._

1979 THUNDERBIRD, low mileage, excellent condition, loaded. $600 and take up payments of $122 per month.Callaffer 5pm. 752 3891

1982 MUSTANG 3,000 miles. $300 and take up payments of $2 >6 month. Must sell. Call 758 7815.__

020

Atercury

zephyr 1980. 4 door, 4 speed, power steering and brakes, air, 15,000 miles. Tike new. Call Leo Venters AAotors, Avden, 746 6171

1981 LYNX Statlonwagon. 4 cylinder, automatic, power steer-AM/FM $700 and refinance.

75?'$

021

Oldsmobile

1965 98. A classic all original. 52,000 actual miles, power windows, power seats. Have to see to appre date. $2250. Call 758-0094.__

1976 STARFIRE 58,000 miles, AM/FM cassette, automatic: $2000. 752 9203 aHer 4._

022

Plymouth

PLYMOUTH RELIANT statlonwagon, 1982,    7,000 miles,

assume payments 752 4990    ^

KITTENS 3 beautiful hand raised, registered Persian kittens. 8 weeks old Champion sire. You will not tind a gentler pet. Call 756 3466.

051

Help Wanted

BCXSKKEEPER charge bookkeeper.

Experienced full per. Mus type and do limited amount of

Aust be able to

se'cretarial work. Please send resume and/or information to Bookkeeper, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

DRAFTSAAAN

Summer position beginning ir diately. Prefer experience with ink . .yfpr Associates

^'le

(per

and Ler.oy equipment. McDavid Associates for tion. Call 753 2139.

Contact

applica-

OYNAMIC YOUNG marketing firm looking for pros in Greenville and

ng for pros    _

surrounding areas. Our program Is unique and the people we are l(x>king (or must be unique. If you are money motivated and desire above average earnings, we would sic

like to talk to you once. Call 752 4450 from 9 to 5. Monday through Friday.

HOMEWORKERS WIrecraft pr, duction. We train house dwellers.

For full details write: WirecraH, P O Box 223, Norfolk, Va 23501

HOUSEKEEPER dependable, trustworthy. Please send references with name, address and phone number to PO Box 705, Grebnville, NC_

INTERIOR DECORATOR with experience and a desire to excel. Salary and commission. Send resume to Decorator. PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834. _

PART TIME sales with some interior design knowledge and retail experience. Send letter or resume with references to PO Box 705, Greenville, NC

RN'S, LPN'S atHd/or Technicians. Pungo District Hdspital needs you. ifa<            -

LP

- , DIl _

Contact Barbara McDonald, Director ot Nursing. 943 2111.

SECRETARY Experience in gen

eral bookkeeping and typing 'approximately 50 60 words per

minute. Hours 8-5, 5 days per week Msu have 2 year technical degree or 3 years working experience. Send resume to: Olsen Associates, Inc. P O Box 93, Greenville, N C 752 1137.    ___

023

Pontiac

Administratrix of the Estate of Booker T. Dixon, Deceased

Gritton, NC 28530 Mickey A. Herrin Williamson, Herrin, Stokes

& Heffallinger.

St Law

41 January 29, 1952, and recorded in

Attorneys at.

P O. Box 552 Gremvllle, NC 27834 April 1,8, IS, 22,1983

1975 GRAND PRIXE Power win

dows, steering, brakes, sun roof. New paint. AWFM stereo with 8 track. Excellent condition; $2,050 or best oWer. Call 355-2589 aHer 6 p.m.

SURVEYING/ENGINEERING Technician/Draftsman. Must be experienced For field and office work. Technical degree and S I T preferred but not required Salary commensurate with e'perience S, lid    ,,iid s.impii- .'f /,ork

to Olsen Assoiiato<(. Inc., Engineers li> Surveyors. 120 Reade Street, PO Box 93, Greenville, NC 752 1137.    _

1976 CUTLASS SUPREME Fair condition. 753 2534 night. 749 2641 day._    _

1977 PONTIAC Bonneville Brougham. AM/FM CB, loaded. LiajMLaM-6422._

riLE, CORIAN, and cultured marble Installer, at least 3 years lance. Send lattp^or_ resume

experli

with references Greenville. NC

Box 705,

TV TECHNICIAN wanted with ox Tv and stereo

perlence In color , repair. Hwrs 8-5, AAonday thr(^

\

\





22-The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Frlday, April 1, IttS

051

Help Wanted

SURVEYOR'S AID 18 to 24 i-arf time. Hall's Surveys, 74-68A6.

WANTED Body shop manager tor multi line dealership. Modern facilities. Salary negotiable. Apply to P O Box 1068, Greenville, Kl C 27834.___

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancll, 7S2 6331

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and roofing 35 years experience In building. Call James Harrington after 6 pm. 752 7765.__

BY DESIGN

decoratoring

Spring

specials: 10% off wallpaper hanging services, 15% off exterior painting and staining. Qualify decorating, Bv Design, 758 7165

CARPETS STEAM Cleaned. 10 a foot Business and residential. Phone 355 6471

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist, Tar Road En ferprises. 756 9123 day, 756 1007 nigni

CONSTRUCTION, additions re modeling. For estimates call Dillon Watson alter 6 pm. 756 8232

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint ,7*    and    varnish    removed    from    wood

and metal. Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. All items returned within 7 days Tar Road Antiques. Call tor free estimate. Days 756 9123. Night 756 1007_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NO DOWN PAYMENT!

Discover the joys of Engage-A-Car, the common-sense alternative to BUYING a new car.

It's the modern way to drive any new car, van or truck your heart desires...foreign or domestic. With Engage-A-Car, you can laugh at inflation because NO DOWN PAYMENT is necessary and your MONTHLY PAYMENTS are lower! You owe it to yourself to get all the exciting details now.

Mid-Eastern Brdkers

2719 E. 10th SI. 757-3540

059

Work Wanted

LAWNAAOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757-3353 after 4 p.m., weekends anytime.

MATURE LADY with good refer enees, honest and dependable to live in as housekeeper permanently Call 758 1471. ask tor Jean

PLASTERING, REPAIR work, hourly or by contract. All types of plastering. No job too large or too small. Contact 523-1159 after 6 pm.

RN WILLING TO nurse in private home. Hours and salary negotiable Call 753 4151 or 753 3141.

SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as S59.95. Call Steve Atkins tor all your Sion needs. 756-9117

TREE SERVICE Trees cut and pruned. Reasonable prices. Free estimates. 758 7013

TREES-topped. trimmed, taken down. John Perry, 758-4625.

060

FOR SALE

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale J P Stancll, 752-6331.

FIREWOOD. $30 a load. Call 758 4611 or 752-4017 anytime for de livery._

065 Farm Equipment

D12 ALLIS CHALMERS tractor and eouipment. 355-6360

FARM MACHINERY auction sale Tuesday, April 5th at 10 a.m. 150 tractors. 350 implements. We buy and sell used equipment daily. Wayne Implement Auction Corp. , PO Box 233, Hwy. 117 South, Goldsboro. N C 27530. N C 188. Phone 734 4234. _

THREE POINT HITCH broadcast spreaders perfect tor fertilizer or cover crop seeding. 600 pound

iver crop seeding. 600 pound ipacity $249.95; 50 pound capacity 54.95; 1100 pound capacity $278.95. Price includes PTO snatt. Agitator $10.95. Agri Supply. Greenville, NC

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton Co.

752 61 16

SALES

REPRESENTATIVE

Self motivated salesperson for outside sales who wants to earn a minimum of $25,000 the first year. Well established business, no overnight travel, free hospitalization and life insurance. Send resume to:

Sales Representative P.O. Box 7172 Greenville, N. C. 27835

SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Olds Cutlass Supreme

2 door, metallic brown, brown vinyl interior, 3,500 miles, tilt wheel, cruise, AM-FM stereo.

1982 Volvo GLT

2 door, 14,000 miles, red with black interior, 4 speed, air, AM-FM stereo, sun roof, nice car.

1982 Volkswagen Rabbit

Diesel. Gray with black interior, 4 speed, loaded.

1982 Mazda RX-7

21,000 miles. White with blue interior, like new.

1981 Buick Century

4 door. Light blue, dark blue vinyl top, blue velour interior, automatic, air condition, stereo radio.

1981 Chevrolet Camaro

Blue with blue velour interior, 10,000 actual miles, tilt wheel, cruise, air, AM-FM stereo.

1981 Datsun4X4Truck

Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.

1981 Plymouth TC-3

Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX

5 speed, GL, blue with blue velour interior, loaded.

1981 Ford Escort

Light blue finish with blue interior, automatic, air, cruise control, cassette tape, local trade.

1981 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel

Beautiful gray metallic with blue velour interior, 4 speed, air condition, low mileage, nice.

1981 Honda Accord

4 door. Silver, burgundy Interior, loaded.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX Turbo

Gold with tan leather interior. Loaded.

1981 Datsun Pickup

Diesel engine, 5 speed transmission, short bed.

1981 Datsun 210 Coupe

2 door, 5 speed, AM-FM radio, silver with black Interior.

1981 Datsun 210 Hatchback

2 door. Light blue with blue cloth Interior, 5 speed, air.

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour.

1979 Clds Delta 88

2 door. Blue with white landau top, white interior. 44,000 actual miles, looks new.

1977 Datsun 280-Z

Light blue with black interior, loaded, 46,000 actual miles, nice car.

1977 Datsun 710 Wagon

5 speed, air, AM-FM, green with buckskin interior.

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115

065 Farm Equipment

SUPER A TRACTOR with cultivator. 752 7086after 5p.m

TOBACCO -rtiUCK CURTAINS Less than half dealers price. Hat-teras Canvas Products: 758-0641, 1104 Clark Straet

WANTED tobacco trucks 10' long Must be tield ready. Call 756-6165.

7X16 DOUBLE AXLE steel trailer. $600 or best offer. Serious calls only. 756-7707 after 6._

PUT EXTRA CASH in your pocket today. Sell your "don't needs with an inexpensive Classified Ad.

067    Garage-Yard Sale

BIG YARD SALE Dishes, clothes, rugs, household goods, Saturday, 1807 South E Im Street.

HOW! Heap big yard sale. Unlver, sity Condoiminlum.s near Eastern Elementary School, Saturday. April 2, 7r30-l:06. Great variety, large size clothes, priced to sell

LADIES LINGERIE, jewelry, etc Bike parts, toys and clothes. 105 C North Summit Street, Saturday,

8 12. __

MOVING! Big yard sale. April 2. All day. Furniture, children's clothing, chain saw, kitchenware and more. Across from Mt. Pleasant Christian Church oft Belvoir Highway. 758 8713

MOVING SALE Furniture, glassware, appliances, carpet, clothes, collectibles. 501 East 11th Street, Friday, April 1. 7 a.m.-6

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market, Greenville Boulevard. Open Saturday and Sunday 8 til 5. Crafts, tools, furniture and antiques. Displays of old postcards, buttons and antique pistols. All church and civic groups free inside. Outside dealer spaces Free! Call Bill 746 3541, Mike 746 3550, Fair Grounds 758 6916.

RAYNOR FORBESANDCURK

Flea Market open Saturdays 7 til 1 across from Moose Lodoe. 756-4090.

YARD SALE, 314 Boulevard Street, Ayden, Saturday, April 2. Some of everything cheap including firewood. 9 until.

YARD SALE Saturday, April 2nd. 8 to 1 Toys, baby items, kitchen items, puppies, and miscellaneous. 220 Fairway Drive, Sherwood Greens Subdivision

YARD SALE, Saturday, 1102 AAonroe Street, 8:30. Rain date April 9.

YARD SALE Saturday, April 2nd, from 9 until. 110 Raleigh Avenue. Tools, clothes, recliner. house goods, motorcycle helments._

YARD SALE, Saturday. April 2. 8 a.m. until. Furniture and other odds and ends. 523 Jeanette Street, Winterville.

3 FAMILIES TREASURES Some thing for everyone. Collectibles, furniture, clothes, etc. Saturday 8 until and Sunday 1 until, 103 North Lee Street, Ayden._

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables. 752 5237. ___

074 Miscellaneous

A SPECIAL Sidewalk Sale. Satur day 10 to 5. China, crystal, etc. Bargains. Coin & Ring Man. Downtown Greenville.

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air

conditoners, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for uick sale. Call B J Mills, luthorized Appliance Service. 746 2446 at Black Jack.

STERe15-^TAt PIECES For example:    Pioneer    linear

tracking tone arm turntable (List Price, $650.00)    $300.00,    SONY

AM/FM compact with Bose IA speakers, $195.00. Sears compact AM/FM/changer/2 cassettes/speaker, $190.(10. Other ieces. Lay-a-way available. Coin 8, ^nq AAan, 752 38M, 9:30 5:00. APPLE //e Starter Systems. Brand new; $1695. Also Apple accessories 15% discount. Call 757 382(L    _

ASPARAGUS VIDALIAONIONS BROCCOLI & LETTUCE

A Full Line Of

VEGETABLE SEEDS Kittrell's Greenhouses

We Speciaiize In Your Garden

2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT _CALL    756 7373_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TIRES

NEW, USED, and RECAPS

Unbeatable Prices and Quality QUALITY TIRESERVICE 752-7177

074

AAlsceHaneous

ANTIQUEv modified Duncan Phyte condition, good 6, 746

6157

Mn I ivrvEV rTKKiiiivu uuiH,n-r

sofa, original cover, good cond $300. Antique rocking chair, condition. $150. Call afttr 6,

ATARI 400 home computer. 3 months old. 4 game cartridges included. Perfect condition. Call

?ECOME A professional bartender all the Eastern School of Berfen dlno. 756 6644

BOSE 901 IV Speakers and ^se SCR Receiver - like new. Call Bronson Mafney after 6:00, 752-2775. Serious Inquiries only please

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and insfallaflon. 919-763 9734.

CABBAGE and yellow collard plants. $2 per hundred. Carl Miller, 355 6360.__

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoll and stone. Also driveway work

DINING ROOM TABLE (wood) and 4 chairs, $65. 3 window air condl tioner units. Large blue upholstered chair. $60. 756-57.

DON'T THROW OUT that old carpet. Let os renovate It with a Kirby Heritage Home Care System. Only $12.95 includes thorough vacuuming and shampoo. I2'xi5' limit please. Call Randy or Diane after 6 p.m. at 756-2404 for appointment

EIGHT FOOT Dr. Pepper box. No scratches. 3 glass sliding lids with 3Vj year warranty on box. Price, $1,050 when new, will sell for $600 cash. Phone 946-2545 between 7 am and 8 am.  __

ELECTROLUX SHAMPOOER Asking ^$150, $300 value. Call 758 0956.__

EXECUTIVE DESK Must sacri tice. $800 value for $400. 756 7541

FOR SALE; yellow collards and cabbage plants. AAarlon Mae Mills, 756 3279 or 355-2792._

FORMICA TOP dining room table and 4 swivel chairs, $200 or best offer. In good condition. Must sell! Call 756 4532 after 6 and anytime weekends.

FREEZER BEEF, grain ted Angus, whole halves or quarters. Delivered to Bethel Cold Storage for processing. 65 a pound. Live weight. L A Moye Farms, Maury, NC, 747-3506 after 6 p.m.__

GE PORTABLE color TV, good condition; $125. Sears electric clothes dryer, good condition; $125. Admiral 30" electr condition; $125. and white portal 25" color TV, good color; $175. 746 6929.    _

ilectric range, good . ^Ivania 19" black am TV; $45. Phllco

GE PORTABLE dish washer. 6 years old; $50. 746-6951

ICEMAKERS nd Reach In Coolers. Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memorial Drive, 756-6417._

JC PENNEY MODEL 17,000 BTU air conditioner, 2 years old, excellent condition, $175. Maple antique single bed, with like new mattress and springs, make an offer. Just moved, need to sell. Air hockey table with all parts, 3 years old, in good condition, no set price. Also few miscellaneous Items: record player, skates, etc. 758-7835 anytime._______

RENT A VIDEO Recorder and oet a free movie! Call U REN-<;0, 756-3862.    _

RENT THE RUG Doctor. Nothino cleans like it. Call U REN CO,

RIDING LAWNMOWER, 7 horse power. New $750. Must sell, first $400. Used 1 season. 758 2128.

SALESMAN'S SAMPLE SALE

Men's and boy's clothing. 204 (^een Street, Griffon. Saturday, March 26 and Saturday April 2nd

SAVE 20% on Millikin area rugs. Now at Larry's Carpetland, 3ffl0

East 10th Street.

SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.

SHARP SF741 Copier, 20,000 copies old; Remington 26 electric typewriter, dual ribbon; AB Dick model 437 mimoqraph machine with

storage table; Burroughs 4 key adding machine. 753-3152 Monday Friday, 8 to 5._ _

074

MIsoedaiMOus

TOPSOIL, field and, mortar Mnd -iiTt  -------

and rock. Celt 744-319 or 744-3294 TREE STUMP REMOVAL Very reatonably priced. No demege to lawn. 752-3^ or 3SS-2621 a^ 6 p.m. tor treeetlmete.

WANTED TO BUY meh baby Playpen. Call 756-6093,

WASHER-DRYER for sale, good condition. $250.355-2626 or 758-7iTl

WEDDING GOWN and tiered veil, excellent condition. Reasonable ot-fer.756-39166to11pm

WOOD BUILDING, 8X8, shingle roof. $225. 758-7693

WOULD LIKE to buy used refrigerators, air conditioners, freezers, and ranges that need repair. 746-2446.    ____

YOU NAME IT - we usually have it at our Antique Barn & Swap Shop. W L Dunn & Sons Antique Barn & Pine-

Swap Shoo. PInetops. NC

ZENITH 25" console color TV, has sharp picture, Early American cabinet, with automatic tine color.

only $225. 756 0492.

3 PIECE livingroom set. Solidpine, rustic fabric. 2 years old; $400. .37 carat man's dianuMid cluster. Size 10, $500. Neootlable. 758-4475

3 TON central air conditioner, 2 window units, washing machine, refrigerator, 3 couches, 350 Honda, heater, his and hers Quartz watches, Raleigh 10 speed bicycle. 758 4576.

075 AAobile Homes For Sale

ALL OF THESE with low down payments and monthly payments.

3 BEDROOM, 1 bath, low down payment, payment as low as $110 a

month.

1982 REPO, 14x70, 3 bedroom, IVj bath, totally electric, cathedral ceiling, paddle fan.

1981 REPO, 14x70, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, gas heat, 17' living room, separate utility room, like new.

1978 PREOWNED home, 12x63, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, totally electric, new stove, refrigerator and furniture. Excellent condition.

1972 PREOWNED home, 12x60, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, new furniture.

Country Squire Mobile Homes 264 Bypass, Greenville

BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide. 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors, plywood counter tops, total electric, ran^, refrigerator. Regular price,

Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up includecT Hours, 8 am to 8 pm.

MOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756-0191    _

BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide. 52 X 24, Tbedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras Including

masonite siding, shingle roof, bay windows, frost free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral celling and

much, much more. Regular price, $24,995,

Limited Time Only

$19,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot

financing. Delivery and set up IncludecT Hours, 8 AM'

MOBILE HOME E_________

630 West Greenville Boulevard

rs, 8 AM to 8 pm. HOME BROKERS

756-0191

FANTASTIC OFFERI 70x14. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, just take up payments from owner. 7 years left owed. 757 3580.

RITZ CRAFT, 1966,    12x60. 2

bedrooms, very good condition. 1 795 3865.__

12X65 MARLETTE, 2 bedrooms, 1 full bath, deck, underpinned, expanding den. Excellent condition. See to appreciate. $5500 negotiable. Call after 3, 756 8863.__

070 MobilHonMlnMirancB

MOBILC HOME^SRIHMcr

- the best coverage for ma money. Smith Insurance end Raatty, 7S2^

en_

077 Musical Iratnimants

FENDER JAZZ bass oyltor. with hardcase. Hke new, iSSO. Peevey TNT 100 amp with cover and rollers, Ilka new. 8250.7S6-$354

HALF PRICE SALE on oil brands of pianos and organs through April 6. Piano A Organ Distributors, Greenville. 355-6008._

HAMMOND M3 ORGAN Like now.

753 2534 nioht. 749-3641 doy.

HAA4A40ND M-2 Spinet organ. $400. Call 752-7411

USED PIANO, upright, mahogany wood. Excallant for beginner student or beginner adult. $350. Call 758-8996.__

082 LOST AND FOUND

LOST black 2 year old CKker Spaniel. Last seen near Oak Grove Avenue and Greenfield Terrace wearing a red collar. Please call

752-1

LOST IN ROUTE from Ash Street in Greenville to Henderson', N C , footboard tor bed. Reward tor return. Call 752-9565. ask tor Jim.

085 Loans And /Mortgages

2ND MORTGAGES by phone-commercial loans-mortgages bought. Call tree 1-aOO-a4^3^

091

Business Serviced

INCOME TAX SERVICES Hilton Boyd. Call 756-3264._

093 OPPORTUNiTY

LIST OR BUY yOur business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial A Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, NC 757-0001, nights 753 4015.

LOSING THE BUDGET RACE? Help your income keep up with your outgo through pleasant part-time work. Training provided. Cell 1 524 4769 or write SBG, Route 3. Box 68, Griffon. NC 28530

SMALL BUSINESS opportunity. Convenience store and grill located near Eastern Pines. Ideal area for growth. Daytime, 355-6045, nights,

095 PROFESSiONAL

BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and

sheetrock (hanging finish), 10 years experience. Call 757-0678. If no answer 355 6952.__

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman.

North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years expencnce working on chimneys and fireplaces. Can day or night, 753-3503, Farmvllle.

GUTTERS CLEANED of leaves and debris. 752 1080.

100 REAL ESTATE

102 Commerciai Property

MOBILE HOME Park investment opportunity. Ongoing mobile home

complex with spaces for 34 homes. Water and electric hookups to each ce. Protlta litied buyei ing available. Owner relocating! Call the Rich Company. 946-8021

__ ;ups _____

space. Profitable opportunity for qualified buyer with owner financ

days or 946-6829 nights.

104 Condominiums For Sale

SAAALL GARDEN plot wanted to rent in vicinity of East Greenville area, preferably near Rivergate Shopping Center or Uth St. Extension. Gall 752-4594 after 5:30 pm. _

SNOW SKI EQUIPMENT for sale. Over 25 bindings and over 50 ski stoppers. 25 boot totes and lots more. $150 tor all. 355 2626 or 758 7114.

SPINET PIANO, Kohler and Campbell, $700. Free standing wood heater with some pipe/mat, $75. Dining room table and four chairs, $75. Call 746-4271.

STEREO Kenwood AM/FM re ceiver, 50 watts per channel with JBL speakers, $500 or offer. After 6 p.m., 756-0096.    _

TOPSOIL

Clean. $7 per cubic yard delivered. 758 7693

Want to sell livestock? Run a Classified ad for quick response.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

12X65 RITZ CRAFT $500 down, assume loan payment of $125 month. Call 757-0633.

1960    1 2x60 .    2    bedrooms,    un

furnished; $2500. Call 746-6665 days and 746 3347 after 7._

1972 PEACHTREE, 12 X 65 un furnished, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, washer,dryer, all kitchen appli anees, new carpet, draperies. ~ firm. Call 757-1272._

1974 12x46 Vogue, air condition, total electric, underpinned. $3800. Call 752 2111 days or 7& 0050 nights.

1977 OAKWCXJD mobile home, 12x60, good condition. All rooms are closed oft. Call 746-4677 from 4-9.

1982 TOWN A Country by Mansion. 14 X 70, 2 bed, 2 bath and garden tub, like new. Call 756-4376 after

6:30 pm.

45x10 FULLY furnished. 18,000 BTU, air condition, electric ^le and box, new refrigerator. On rented lot on water at Blounts Creek. Mobile home can be moved or lot rented. $2900 or will trade for Pickup truck or farm tractor of same value. 758-0609._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

DESPITE THE RUMORS

You can still buy in - a nicte neighborhood at a low price with little cash downi Our townhomes and condominiums otter an affordable opportunity of ownership. Call Jane Warren at 758-6050 or 758 7029 and Will Reid at 758-6050 or 756 0446.

MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

100

Farms For Sale

58 ACRE FARM Good road frontage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared. 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 Mrqpm

house. St. J^ns Community. Call for more details. Call AAoseley-Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details._^_

CLASSIFIEP DISPLAY

GRANT BUICK, INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

LUXURY AND INTERMEDIATES 1982 Pontiac Grand Prix SJ

Power windows, cruise control, tilt wheel, stereo with tape.

1981 Buick Regal Limited

One owner, cruise, power windows, stereo, sharp!

1979 Buick Century Wagon

Clean, one owner.

1979 Buick Skylark

Four door, economical.

1978 Buick LeSabre

Four door, one owner, 4^,000 miles.

1978 Buick Electra

One owner, clean.

1977 Buick Regal

Two door, white, one owner.

1977 Buick Regal

Two door, white with blue top.

1975 Buick LeSabre

Clean, one owner.

1980 Pontiac Grand Prix

Loaded. 33,000 miles.

SPORTS 1980 Pontiac Trans AM

Limited Edition. T-top, loaded, 23.000 miles.

1980 Chevrolet Camaro

One owner, clean.

1978 Pontiac Firebird

Clean, one owner, 46,000 miles.

Weekdays: 8:30-6:30 Saturday: 9:00-2:00

1978 Toyota Clica

Automatic, air, clean.

1980 Mazda RX-7GS

Air, sunroof, sport wheels.

COMPACTS 1981 Honda Accord

One owner, 25,000 miles.

1981 Mazda GLC Sport

Sunroof, air, stereo with cassette tape.

1979 Mazda GLC

Good economical transportation.

1981 Datsun 310

Extra clean, one owner.

TRUCKS AND FOUR WHEEL DRIVES

1977 International Scout

48,000 Miles.

1981GMC Truck

One owner, camper shell.

1978 Ford Ranger F-150

46,000 miles, one owner.

1981 Mazda Truck

Long bed, one owner.

1982 Toyota Truck

5,800 miles.

1959 Ford Truck

Phone 756-1877

100 Farms For Salt

tor Ml*.

107

Farms For Laaaa

WANTTOBUY

CORN

100 Houses ForSala

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

SO'aAMO's

HORSESHOE ACRES 1IVz% FHA loan assumption just oft Stan-tonsburg Highway near hospital. Th $ ranch ha* 3 btdrooms and 2 full baths with lot* of storage and large lot. Call today for appointment. Mid $50'$. Low equity.

JUST MINUTES from the ho^iltal, thi* well designed 3 bedroom ranch l^s nearly 1300 square feet plus 16 x 20 outside storage workshop. Wood stove Included. 9>A% VA loan assumption. Full garage with automatic door opener. Built-In desk in den. Offered at $60.900.

CAME LOT can be In your future with this new 3 bedroom home including garage, separate utility room, large great room with rear access, bay window and priced to sell with 12% financing. $61,m

LOOKING A good deal in new construction? This colonial ranch has nearly 1500 square feet and spacious rooms. 12% fixed loan

available. In Cameigt, built by Bill Clark Construction Co. To be com-glef    -    -

leted by May. Call today. Only

'?,700.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC

REALTORS

756-0336

Tim Smith.... ON CALI_____752-9811

AAary Chapin...............756-843)

Ray Holloman..............753-5147

Gene Quinn................756-6037

Sharon Lewis..............756-9987

John Jackson..............756-4360

Toll Free: 1-800-5258910,    ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

STD's

FARMVILLE Beautiful 4 bedroom home with 2 bedrooms upstairs, two downstairs, 2 full baths with formal living room and dining room. This home has a rustic den that will make everyone feel at home. 2 car carport with lots of storage. Walking distance to all schools. Call today. LowSTO's.

NEW OFFERING In Club Pines. Get in Club Pines for $73,000. This Williamsburg decor may suit your needs with hardwood floors, brick patios, cozy den with fireplace, lots of extra trim and built-ins. Double garage or pUift*room Is offered. 1 year warranty. Call today and move In now.

CHERRY OAKS Like traditional exteriors with a modern floor plan. Room and more room in this plan with over 1600 square feet. Master bedroom 16 x 12, walk-in closet, large breakfast area plus dining room. Separate laundry room near the bedrooms. Fully applianced and under construction. Select your own decor. Low$70's.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC

REALTORS

756-6336

Tim Smith.... ON CALI 752-9811

Mary Chapin .........756-8431

Ray HollOfhan..............753-5147

Gene Quinn  ............,.756-6037

Sharon Lewis..............756-9987

John Jackson..............756-4360

Toll Free: 1-800-525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$40'S

GREENFIELD Ayden. FHA 235 loan assumption. Not many of this kind left. This home has 2 bedrooms, larM master bedroom with IV] baths. Fireplace and carport. Call today. Low$40s.

THE CHOICE is yours! Assume the existing loan of    with total

payments of $314.48 or seller will pay points for a new loan. Convenient!o the hospital. Mid $40's.

FLEXIBILITY This home, coove niently located to the university, qualifies as a single family dwelling or one area can be used as a source of income to assist in making that monthly Investment. FHA 8Vz% assuniption with total paynnents of $292.87^ Seller will consloer points on new financing. Offered in upper $40's.

NEW OFFERING This may be the one you have been waiting tor. Location: College Court, FTnanc ing: 11% VA loan with low equity. 3 bedrooms, one car garage, fireplace, central air condition. High forties.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC

REALTORS

756-6336

Tim Smith.... ON CALI 752-9811

Mary Chapin...............756-8431

Ray Holloman  ......753-5147

GeneC^inn................756-6037

Sharon Lewis ..........756-9987

John Jackson..............756-4360

Toll Free: 1-000-525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

BY OWNER; Lovely ranch. Vi acre forest, adjoins creek. 2 baths, 2 fireplaces. Huoe deck pro|ecting into woods. Rustic easy to maintain. Excellent location! (Professional

neighbors. Near schools, shopping, tennis). Central air-heat. Large family room. Fenced. A real |oy!

Peaceful country llving-clty convenience! SOO's (possible "anythin 355-2211.

niencel SOO's (possible trade for ling or second mortgage".

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS Remodelinq Room Additions

C.L. Lupton, Co.

' IWUUUU"

^ RoeiA

Pool CoMtnietMm

AndSuppllo

 

VrVfBTMW PMI

108 HouMoForSalt

and elMlng cost. 3 bedrooms^ baths. Brlct ranch on quiat straet.-Livlno room, large family toom , with flraplaca, 'O*    '

an, fancad back yard, beautiful tof. -

$62,5iy). 756-5545.__

BY OWNER; Attractive custom built tarmhome. 2 bedrooms, 1Vi baths, heat pump, wood stpva, patio, attic and t<t more extras. Twin Oaks. W,900. Call evenings tor appolntmanf. , ^5i-M65--

CHILDREN NEEDED

To enjoy the large yard and the spaciousness of this 3 ^room, 2

Bath '^ick home In Candlewjck Estates. Formal living at

room, den with a fireplace. ------

kitchen tor AAom, and Dad c_an hpve

a workshop In the garage. Ret^ced for quick sale. $50's. 461. CEN-TUR V 21 Bass Realty. 756-6666.

COUNTRY HOME 3 b^rooms, 1 bath, % acre, with 10% owner financing. Steve Evans & Assoclatesr3S5 2727 or 758 3338.

COUNTRY SETTING -

This three bedroom home |usf outside of Greenville on a wooded lot otters privacy and seclusion to those who like to have their own retreat. You'll love cooking in this

for casual entertaining under line trees. $50's. 483.

stM> saving kitchen. Use the outside paflo for casu

tall Dll., ______   .    ...

Bass Realty, 756-5868

patio tor casi those tall pii CENTURY21

DG NICHOLS AGENCY

T52-4012

OWNER'S LOSS YOUR GAINI Ovner being transferred from this extraordinary home in immaculate condition at 218 Freestone Road In Orchard Hill Subdivision. Large wooded lot, great room with fireplace, dining area, cozy kitchen, large utility area, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, huge deck. Priced at 163,500.

UNIQUE FLOOR PLAN In popular Belvedere Subdivision. Located at 103 Placid Way this home must be seen to appreciate. Unusual floor plan features a cozy kitchen which opens to a den or eating area with a fireplace, separate family room, formal living room, three bedrooms, lVi baths, large carport, hardwood floors, lots of extras. Priced at 863,900

PRICE HAS been CUT The price on this immaculate home at 1103 Cortland Road has been cut $1,000 and the owner means business. This fine home features a living room with brick fireplace, kitchen-dining area opening onto a deck with sliding glass doors, three bedrooms, two full baths, garage, extra large lot (somelencedin).$52,900.

LOTS OF EXTRA'S including walk-in-closet, thermopane windows, and spacious kitchen counter. This immaculate home Is only 9 months old and just like new. Floor plan features living room, kitch en-dining area, three bedrooms, tvj baths. Lovely colors throughout the house, spacious garage, possible FHA 235 loan assumption. Balance iximately $38,0o0, payments.

approximately $3 SiSSPITI $53,500.

LOVELY WILLIAMSBURG on a large wooded lot in lovely Win demere subdlvsion. Exact replica of an old Williamsburg home but everything about this one is new.

with large

I, la

mal living and dining family room with

Over 2500 square feet of heated area

rooms, large family room fireplace, kitchen with eating area, four bedrooms, 2Vz baths, nice foyer, double garage, basement with work area, bio deck. $116,500.

DG NICHOLS AGENCY

^^752-4012

GREAT LOCATION This fine home at 1617 Longwood Drive in the Elmhurst area Is conveniently located near schools, churches, parks and the university. Unique floor plan features a very large great room with large brick fireplace with insert, separate dining room, kitchen utility area, three bedrooms, two full baths, nice deck, large carport with lots of storage;, large 12' x 16' separate workshop or muTtl-purpose room. Won't last long. Price reduction already $53,0 to $53,000.

OWNER HAD TO LEAVE this' lOVa% loan. His loss-Is your gain. Over 1460 square feet of heated area with great room with fireplace and separate dining area. Nice kitehen, three bedrooms, two full baths, deck. Lots of extras including four celling fans. This home is immaculate. Current I oan balance of approximately $45,000. Monthly Sso^ooo"^    Price,

SPRUCED UP FOR SPRING This home in McGregor Downs has a new owner and lots of work has been done to fix the place up. Plan features very large foyer, sunken living room, separate formal dining room, large kitchen with loads of cabinets, two bedrooms and a study (or three bedrooms'), large double garage. Two acre lot, additional lot also available. Good price for the area. $72,500.

INTEREST RATES MAY NEVER get this low again!! A fixed rate loan of 10% isnl the only great^lus

ly great pli

about this fine horne at 213 Sta fordshire Road in Belvedere Sub

division. The two story floor plan features foyer with formal living and dining rooms, large kitchen and eating area, family room with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, utility area garage and two separate deck areas. Current loan balance approximately $49,000.

balance approximately I Payments $544 P IT I. $69.i00.

DG NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

TWO STORY COLONIAL with great view of the oolt course located at Brook Valley. You must see this home Inside to appreciate. Tremendous great room with fireplace, huge country kitchen with pine floors, formal dining room with pine floors, large utility area, work or hobby room, three bedrooms with fourth all purpose room. Garage and extra storage. $102,500.

A LOT OF HOUSE for the money! Located on a large corner tot at 1D4 Ragland Road in Ragland Acres Subdivision, just outside of Win tervllle City Limits. Large corner lot, back yard fepced in for pets or kids, floor plan features foyer.

formal living and formal dining room, large kitchen with lots of cabinets, large family room with

fireplace, thre bedrooms, two full baths, large garage with lots of storage. Nearly 1800 square feet of heated area. All in excellent condition. Possible VA LOAN ASSUMP TION Priced at $65,900.

DISCOURAGED?

DISAPPOINTED?

depressed?

Think you'll never find that 3 bedroom home you really want at a price you can afford? Don't dispare, we have just what you've been looking for, with all formal areas, den with a fir ' ble 8A6% loan

Ireplace, plus assuma 1. This new ott '

new offering is . 450. CN-756-6666.

EASY LIVING

That's what this beautiful three bedroom townhouse will give you. No grass to cut, |ust relax ar lounge around the pool. Entertain casually on your private patio or snuggle close to the fireplace In your greatroom. Owner will rent with an option to buy. $51,000. 489. CEN TUR Y 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666-

ERA OF THE PAST

Have you Inherited some fina 18th cantury furnishings that need the right setting? This elegant home contains the old time workmanship and spaciousness that Is compatible with the largest of pieces. A country estate off to ItMif, and Incluid stablas. 451. $81,900. CENTURY 21 Ba$ Realty. 756-6666._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY i

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION

WATER PLANT OPERATOR

$10,899-$17,722

Position avsHsblo for rospontiblo porson to form skHlod work in tho oporation of tha Watir Traatmant Plant on a rotating shift basis. En^ Itval status and starting salary will ba commaSi; aiirato with aducatlon, training, axparionea, or lovol of state certification as a Watar Traate mant Plant Oparator.

Apply in parson at tha Paraonnel Offlea, 3hf Floor, QroonvlH# UtHitlaa Offict BuHding, 200 W; Sth Stroot, QrowwHIo, NC 27134

An Equal OpportunHy Employw

I





109' Houses For Seie

CEDAR FARMHOUSE

a    r/WUM    <i4Sk    B    lli>^_i^______

a graat room with a fireplaca, three bedreoms, a co2v kitchen plus a carp^. j^'s. t/44. CENTURY 2> BawNealty. J56-66M.

EXCELLENT AREA, beautiful lot, fuH of mature pines. 3 bedrooms, Includ ng master suite, family room with fireplace, formal dining area,

*CA rAA a-Tii .ai

fwt titai MlllMIU STVa,

feiK^ backyard. SS8.S00. Call Jeff *'drldge, Aldri(^ & * ky>7or 7S6-35tiP. A 2

& Southerland,

AldrI

EXCELLENT BUY for a young couple or Investor. Three bedroom home in University area, Harding St. S3S.000. Call Jeannette Cox Agency, 756-1322

EXEiyriVE HOME in prestigious neighborhood. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, patio, and double garage. Well landscaped lot. CENTURY 21

ev^it >(>uva|/v\j ivi.    I    UF\    T    aI

Agency, 756 2121 or

75Q:742o

FARMERS HOME Loan Assump

*i I Z    tosewii    r^93UMIU'

tion. in the country. 3 bedrooms, 1

........SI

bath, large lot. Steve Evans'& Associates, 355-2727 or 758-3338

FINISHING TOUCHES AAAKE THE DIFFERENCE

And youTI see what we mean when you wo h in this 4 bedroom home in .lub, Pines. All formal areas, den

withja fireplace and a kitchen with ast nook

a breakfasf'nook. Buy now and you can choose your own wallpaper, was: #350. CENTURY 21 Sss Reaflv, 756-6666.

FmWA LOAN assumption. 3 bedrpom brick ranch, family room, carport. La back yard. Call today. CENfURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426_

FOR FRAZZLED PARENTS

And .the little "frarilers" too. This

pfi%a .lire? iisiic llOAAIViai TOO. IRIS

large 4 bedroom, 3 bath home offers

spacVa^'cvene;;,ce wrth a su^? --afion. *---------

locaflon. All formal areas, den with a tirplace and a playroom with a fireplace. What more could you ask

115

Lots For Sale

BAYTREE SUBDIVISION

Affra^ive wooded lots within the

cy^W% financing avaliibh; ci^

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

BEAUTIFUL WOODD LOT with hardwoods and pines in Washington. 250 foot frontage on private road. Located 1 mile from

BELVpiR HIGHWAY mobile home and perked. Good    Realty,

lots. Surveyed and perk drainage. $5800. Speight 756 3220; nights 756 7t41

CANOLE WICK ESTATES Beautiful wooded lot, excellent

area! $8500. Call Jeff Aldridge,

Aid-'-*--*     ----

756

AldrWge & Southerland, 756-2807 or

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOAAESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

LOTS

$300 DOWN on Vi acre lot 12 miles east of Greenville on the Pactolus Highway. Cash price $5,300. Owner

financing available at 12% rate of 8 years. Aranthly payment o Call John Jackson, 756-4360.

2Vi ACRC wooded lot 6 miles east of Greenville on Hwy 33. Private road, community water available and bridle trails. Owner financing. Purchase price $11,500. $1500 down, 7 years at 12% with a monthly payment of $176.53. Call John Jackson, 756 4360.

BROOK VALLEY Beautiful wooded lot located on a cul de sac. Great site for building that dream home. Call for details. Offered at $24,000.

121 Apartments For Rent

AVAILABLE MAY 1. New I, 2 and: bedroom apartments. Drapes, wal to wall carpef, central heat and air outside storage. Griffon area Phone 524 4239.

AZALEA6ARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniqi^ly furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Frw water and sevrer and yard maintenance.

AH 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

brand new duplex townhouses available in 30 days. Approximately 1 mile from the ECU med school and hospital. 2 bedrooms, l'/j baths.

washer and dryer twok ups. MOO per month. Call 752 3152 or W2 6715 ask

for Bryant or John.

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'/j baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, free cable TV, wasner-dryer hookups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752-1557

for other than perhaps" ""baby #464. C^TURY 21

sitter? $70's.----

Bass Realty. 756-5868.

GOOD LIVING for $448 (PITI) per month. Assume 9Vj% VA mortgage

   r    -        rw    w    -    iiit/l IVOWV

on newly re-decorated 3 bedroom t Wlr

flat at Windy RIdoe. Call 756 0339.

HARDEE ACRES, 1950 square feet heated, garage. Hying room, large 'greatroom with pool table and fireplace, dishwasher, neXly carpeted. Cost Is only lo% higher than houses one half Its size in the area. $57,900. 758-0144or 752-7663

Street, Ayden. 4 bedrooms, living rooni, dining room, kitchen, utility, I'j baths, ffreplace, out buildings, grap vine, blueberry garden, fish

pond, room tor nice garden.' For sale bv owner. 746-6078

LOVELY pLDE^R tjKWE, Unlversi ty area. 555,000. Call Joe Bowen, East Carolina Builders, Inc. 752-7194.

MOM WILL LOVE all the cabinets in kMchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.

'S'"9e workshop. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756-2121 or 756-7426    ^

NICE, COZY contemporary house in Twin Oaks, excellent financing.

... .    iMiancino

F L Garner, 355-2628 or 756 3217 Owner, 758-2520.

NICE HOUSE located mile from Farmvllle. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, den, kitchen, and wash area. 753-4664 or 753 5158.

NO DOWN PAYMENT 106 East Cat

,..t Catawba Road (Greenfield Terrace Subdivision). Three bedroom, iVj bath home. P & I $380 per month. For details call 1 (9191-493-1158, Lesfep and Associate

OUT OF THE ORDINARY

This exceptional rustic cedar farm

home offers superior construction.   flxti

Pewter light fixtures and period wallpaper. Floor plan is a re production of the owners grandma's home and lends a touch of nostalgia. Owners transferred and r^ret having) to sejl. $79,500. #441

LOOKING FOR LAND to build a home or business on? Over 4Vj acres available right oft Highway 11 between Ayden and Griffon. Owner financing available.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC

REALTORS 7S433#

rim Smith. . .ON CALL

Mary Chapin...........

Ray Holloman..........

.752 9811 . 756-8431

................ 753-5147

jene Quinn................756-6037

sharon Lewis............. 756-9987

John Jackson..............756 4360

Toll Free: 1-800 525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

117 Resort Property For Saif

RIVER COTTAGE Priced to sell. 5 rooms and pier. Darden Realty, 758-1983, nights and weekends, 758 2230.    _

CYPRESS GARDENS APARTMENTS

2308 E Tenth Street Available immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook-ups, heat pump, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal. Call days 758-6061, nights/weekends 758 596Ci.

Professionally managed by Remco East, Inc.

DUPLEX (two spacious apartments available) upstairs $250; downstairs $265, 2 large bedrooms, refrigerator, range, carpeted, gas heated. (Water bill paid by owner).

Lease and deposit required 7:

Latham and 5th Street. 752 2844 after 6 p.m.

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal ind cable TV Conveniently located

to shopping center and ' schools ated lust I

Located just off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

WATERFRONT PROPERTY ap proximately 1 acre, 102 front feet Well and septic tank. Mature pines. Southwest exposure. Located on

Neville Creek at Crystal Beach on Pamlico River. 946-5121 or 946-2018

5.8 ACRES, Blue Ridge mountains. Appraised at $9,500, owner will finance or trade for power boat. 756 7766 after 7 pm.___

120

RENTALS

CESSNA 210 for rent. Full Instru

men! flight rules and certified - all new BX2000 Avionics with encoder

plus distance measuring equipment

iT< - -

fast and very economical. $65 hour. Call Allison Aviation, 758-58

Bass Realty! 756 5868.

OWNERS HAVE HAD IT!

They say sell and sell quick, so we've reduced the price $53,900 for

this three bedroom ranch with a double garage. Located on the south

double garage. Located on the south side of Greenville. #294. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868

PACTOLUS HIGHWAY, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, bricked, excellent condition. $40,800. Speight Realty, 756 3220, nights 758 77^.

QUIET AND PEACEFULI 3

tedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, large lot. Assumable

liVfe FHA loan. CENTURY 21 B Fprbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426.

READY FOR SPRING!

Enjoy this flower filled yard with rom tor a city garden. Spacious

family room, three bedrooms, den vilth a fireplace and all located in

B Cnktri CXn'e lJTAD r*CM

CbleB Court. $50's. #470R CEN TURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.

RED OAK Almost an acre lot on quret, traffic free circle. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace, double garage, one of the nicest homes in this area! Call Jett Aldridge, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 7iS6 2807 or 756-35W. A 9.

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758-4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Open day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933.

121 Apartments For Rent

FURNISHED APARTMENT Also private rooms for girls with kitchen privileges near college. 758 2201

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apartments, carpefed, dish

washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical id poof

utilities and pooL Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your

121 Apartments For Rent

ONE BfcuROOM, furnished apartments or nriobll homes tor rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756-7815    ^

ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near

cai  '    ----

756

cait^g. No pets. $215 a month.

REDWOOD APARTMENTS 806 E 3rd Street. I bedroom furnlshec apartment, heat, air, water furnished. 2 blocks from campus. No pets. 758-3781 or 756-0889

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U-REN-CO,

756 3862

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours I0a.m.to5p.m. AAonday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-48(10

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All -A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM apartments available. No pets. Call Smith

Insurance 8. Realty, 752 2754._

TWO BEDROOM, IVz bath condominium tor rent. Close to ECU bus stop. $280 a month. Toll tree

number, 1-800 446 370 day;

........       ch-

1 804 741 5715 night; ask for Riel ard

WEDGEVTOODARMS

NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom, iVz bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court;

756-0987

\    bedroom    apartments.

Available Immediately. 752-3311.

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn; $215. 756-0545 or 758-0635

BEDROOM DUPLEX Jarvis Street. $240 per month. Call 757-0688.

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash

er, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable TV.wall-to-walf carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekifays

9 5 Saturday    15    Sunday

AAerry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

NICE 3 ROOM apartment. Stove and refrigerator furnished. Located at 1301 Dickinson Avenue. $130 monthly. 756-3662.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, disposal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains In the Classified Ads.

BEDROOAA townhouse at Shenandoah. IV2 baths, fireplace, practically new. $330 per month. Call Clark Branch, Realtors, 756-633<^.

121 Apartments For Rent

DUPLEX APARTMENT available at Frog Level on I acre wooded lot. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen and

dining combination, sundeck, and heat pump. $260 a month. Call 756-4624 before 5 p.m. or 756-5168

after.

DUPLEX FOR RENT Downstairs, 2 bedrooms. 104 Sooth Woodlawn

Near ^^wr^us. Water furnished;

$250.75

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom

iiarden and townhouse apartments, eaturing Cable TV, modern appliances, 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

....... ifh

Starting $250 monfh and up

756-5555 Olde London Inn

EFFICIENCY APARTMENT on

Memorial Drive. Excellent location. $160. Speight Realty, 756 3220, nights 758-7741.    _

122 Business Rentals

FOR RENT- 10,000 square foot

building. Ideally located on 33 in Cnocowinity. Call

Donnie Smith at 946-5887.

FOR RENT Prime retail space on

Arlington Boulevard, 4500 square teet .y56-5097or 756 9315

GREENVILLE BOULEVARD 1500 square toot building. Call Echo Realty. Inc. 756-6040or 524 5042

WAREHOUSE AND office lease. feet

756-9315

KKtnuuac AND office space '*7

e for lare

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, IVj bath, carpeted, major illances furnished. No

2 BEDROOM townhouse at Shenandoah. IV2 baths, available April 1st. $300 per month. Call '^lark Branch, Realtors, 756 6336

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Energy efficient. Carpeted, appliances, fireplace. Brookwood Drive. Depos-It and lease required. Call 756 2BTO.

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, stove, re frigerafor, central heat and air.

deposit, lease, no pets. 756-6834 -ffe---

after 3 p.m__

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT, close to university. Heat and hot water furnished. $300 a month. Deposit and lease required. Call 758-0491

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX near ECU Energy efficient. Central air.

Carpet, range, refrigerator, hook-

-   ------

ups. No pets. $275. 756 7480_

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX Close to

university. Dishwasher, washer and dryer, fully carpeted, central heat

' I T '    vviMiai    inrai

and air. Lease and deposit required 756 4364 after 6, ask forDonnv^

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr    756-6221

T-HERE ARE over 1800 square feet in this charming older home located on a wooded lot adjacent to East Carolina University. There are 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths and a firralace. Outside newly painted. Priced at only $54,500. Please call

for a no obligation showing. Aldrl^e 8> Southerland, 756-35()0; CMck Evans, 758-1119

UPPER BUCKS

Don't miss your chance to see this home in Lynndale with 4 bedrooms.

a playroom, formal areas, den with a firepi

lireplace, and a wet bar. Formal and casual entertaining are easily

achieved in this prestigious home $130's. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty,

756-6666__

VAXUE AND COMFORTI bedrr  ''    ------

irooms, 2 baths, family room.

4 iMiiia, lairiiiy ruum,

fireplace, and deck. 11'/2% FHA 245

loan assumption, balance approxi mately $39,840. Possibility of owner

"------------ '    ,    fii

UIVI^    rv9aiviiiiy ui UWIier

financing half of equity. High $40's. century 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426

VERY NICE RANCH Great room, 3 bedrooms plus office. 2 full baths. I lew carpet, attractive exterior and

interior. Large 2 car garage. Solar hot. water. Alexander Circle. Re

duced from $68,000, now $59,9(X). By owner, call 752-6316.

112 PARK DRIVE 3 bedroom immaculate home with 1188 square

immaculate nome with 1188 square feet, .garage. Assumable VA loan. $44,500, Bill Williams Real Estate, 752*2615

8V2% FHA LOAN assumption, no q-ualltication necessary. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, workshop, and patio. Possibility of some owner financing. CENTURY' 2 B Forbes Agency, 756-2121 or 756 7426.

113

Land For Sale

approx IAAATE L Y 103 acres of cut over woodsland near Black Jack, N C Contact David Nichols, 752-4012 or 752 7666.

115

Lots For Sale

2MORY WOOD; $3000. Call for tetalls. The Evans Company 752

appliances furnished. No pets Married couple preferred. 82^7321 after 5 p. m

WINDY RIDGE 3 bedroom townhouse with many extras. Pool and tennis courts. $475 month. Call Tim Smith, 756-6336or 752 9811.

127

Houses For Rent

ATTRACTIVE ALUMINUM siding starter home, near university, ap-pliances furnished. Davis Realty, 756 2904, Rhesa Davis

BRICK RANCH with 3 bedrooms. Large and spacious family room with firmiace. Must see to apprecl-ate. 1 977-6417.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

127 Houses For Rent

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

clean 12* wWe, 2 badrooms, eir. Colleoe Court, East 5fh Striet. $150 OlusoeDOSit 75*-l4Sor75-0i2?

2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, dryer. Country lot. $175. 753-5732.

T 3 btdrooms,

2 BEDROOM, 1 teth. very nice, no pets. SMight Realty, 756-3220, nlqhts 758^41.

neighborhood. 1 block from tennis courts. 756 8160. 756 7768.

2 BEDROOM on large lot, minutes from citv. 758-5920.

f^^TWpqO 3 bedrooms, two

Sf/il.*' "'' H?

5 disposal end dishwasher, (Ireplace, central heat and air condition, garage, fenced in $450 per month. Cell 756-3391 after 6 p.m. and weekends.

135 Office Space For Rent

DOWNTOWN, lust off matl. Singles and multiples. Convenient to courthouse. 756-0041 or 756-3466.

OFFICE SPACE for rent. 1123 South Evans Street. From 350 square feet to 3000. Call 758-2174.

FR RENT with option to buy In heart of Farmvllle, 8 room house, 2

3-3^30 **

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommv Williams. 756-7815.

HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in 524^3180 246-3284 or

THREE ROOM downtown office at 219 Cotancha Street, 440 square feet. Parking available. Call Jim Lanier at 752-5505.

3 brtroom brick house, 3 Mihs, carpet, heat pump, garage, **ve *340 month. 746-6394 or 752 5167.

137 Resort Properly For Rent

3 BEDROOM ranch style home. Cawt' storage, quiet subdivision. Call 757 0(XII or nights, 753 4015, 756-9006.

HANDICAPPED, and elderly equipped. Brand new beach cottage located In beautiful Ocean Ridge, Atlantic Beach, NC This new cottage is located on the second row with a beautiful ocean view and 20' ocean access. $475 per week, beginning the week ot AAdy 28. No

3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, living rooni, dining, kitchen and carporf Woo^ corner lot. No pets. $395. 107 OuDont Circle, 756 8700.

3 BEDROOMS, 1 tath, large kitch en, oil furnance. Colonial Heights. *325 plus deposit. 756-0783 or 756-

8o43.

3 bedrooms $150 per month. On Stantpnsburo Road. 15 miles from hospital. Can 753-2776.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, April 1,1983-23

4/5 bedroom home in Lake E|lsworth. Over 2,000 square feet with all formal areas. $475 month.

r^sll    "ttA    .

X".'/-.?'*    areas. S4/s monti

Call Tim Smith. 756 6336 or 752 9811. 405^ WEST 4th STREET 4 or 5 bedroom. $300. Call 757-0688

133 Atobile Homes For Rent

AVAILABLE MAY 1. 2 bedroom apartment, 2401 East 3rd Street. Carpeted, air. Heat, water, stove and refrigerator furnished. $250

Ray Spears,>58-4362; 'Oick" E vans! 1119 or----

758 1119 or 756-3500.

TWO BEDROOMS, air condition, washw, dryer, 12 X 12 utility shed.

I    *    Ulllliv    91 IWr

private lot. Couples only. No pets. Four miles frorn hospital on Man tonsburg Road. Call 746 6860 atter 3 pm

12 X 65 TWO bedroom furnished.

cenfral air, washer and dryer

--------  -    -    --    ri

^...>. OM, w89Mcr ana gry^er. Deposif required. No pefs. Near The Opry House. Call atter 6, 746-4164

JWfFOoms, fully carpeted; S'- No children. No pets. 758 4541 or 756-9491.    _

2 BEDROOM Mobile Home tor rent. Call 756-4687

2 Bedrooms, near Ayden.

L? 2 ^room

near city. 757 3177 or 524 4349

2 BEDROOMS, furnished. No pets J-^sTra^ark, Winterville.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton, Co.

752 6116

SALESPERSON WANTED

Brown-Wood, Inc. has an immediate opening for a salesperson," Previous car, sales experience not necessary. Excellent income opportunity and fringe benefit package. Apply In person to Bob Brown between 9 a.m. and 12 noon, Monday-Friday.

BROWN-WOOD, INC.

Dickinson Ave., Greenville

The Real

Estate

Corner

138

Rooms For Rent

UNFURNISHED ROOM near uni dS^Vt. 756^.'""*^ ***'

142 Roommate Wanted

FEAAALE ROOAAAAATE wanted Responsible person to share 2 bedroom apartment, '/j all expenses. Call 756-9597.

WANTED AAALE roommate to share 3 bedroom trailer. Furnished. 752 2663.__

144 Wanted To Buy

G R HADDOCK Logging & Timber ^6i37*"^ cuMing ail species. Call

USED ELECTRICAL hoists. Anv size for manufacturing plant. Call 752-2111 between 8 ar^ 5 p m.

Monda^rffiFOugh Friday. Ask for

Bryan.

WANTED TO BUY good used Spinet Plano. 756 3816._

148-    Wanted To Rent

SAAALL garden plot wanted to rent in vicinity of East Greenville a, preferably near RIvergate Shopping Center or 14th St Extension. Call 752 4594 after 5 30 pm.

ATTENTION!

LDC FORYURIKA FOODS CORPORATION

New Hours: Tuesday & Thursday 4-9 PM Other Days By Appointment Only 752-0207

AUCTIQ

bD

V Saturday, April 2,1983 9:00 A'.M.

Location: Hwy 17 South, Now Bom, N.C. approximately 2 mUos on rtghl. 0800 Clarendon Blvd).

Askews Hardware & Building Supplies Reduction Sale Hardware & Building Supplies

Plywood Wood Moulding Wood Siding Sheetrock Insulation

Insulation Sheathing Metal Doors Ceiling Tile Roofing Products Wood Doors Wood Windows Metal Windows Aluminum Storm Doors Wood Stoves Fireplace Glass Doors IHardboard Siding Aluminum Storm Doors

Aluminum Patio Doors Paneling Tileboard Wood Blinds Plastic Blinds Bath Vanities and Tops Cast Iron Bath Tubs Fiberglass Tub and Shower Cast Iron Sinks Water Heaters

Faucets and Other Plumbing Items Ladders

Whole House And Attic Fans Pool Tools

Large Assortment of Hardware

Many More Items To Be Auctioned

. _   LUNCH    WILL    BE

Sale Conducted by AVAILABLE

COUNTRY HOYS AUCTION AND REALTY CO. P. 0. Box l/JS Wdihinijton, North (.,rolit Phone ')U(, 67    St.itt-    LiretiM-    No.

IDOUC CURKINS Creenville, N. C..

1751-1875

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

RALPH RESPESS Washington, N. C. 9<6-8$7?

WATERFRONT DREAM 4

^ 10 Acres, baautifully wooded, 450 foot waterfront. South ^ side Pamlico River, 24 miles from Greenville. 1870 cabin,

^ pier, private road, absolute seclusion. Best fishing, sailing, J 3^ swimming with adequate shallow water for children. W ^ Unlimited beach possibilities, restricted to residential use. ^ W $175,000    ^

Z    PHONE    522-5171    ^

>

RIVER COTTAGE RIVER COTTAGE RIVER COTTAGE

%

A framed cottage setting on a wooded lot about one hour from Greenville. 5 rooms, 1 bath and mostly furnished. Located In a nice and small development about 10 minutes from Aurora on the PAMLICO. Call Carl for details on a good buy.

2814

HANRAHAM SUBDIVISION Spacious half acre lots fur sale for $4580, $500 down, balance financed by seller. Call 756-2682 or 355-2887

HIGHWAY 33 EAST, acre lot. Hardwood trees. $9.000. Speight ReaHv. 756-3220; nights 758-77VT

Lot FOR SALE in Tucker Estates. Call for price and location. The - vans Company 752-2814

STOKES, 3 acres. $12,500. Speight Realty. 756 3220, niohts 758-77^

RES with septic tank and $13,000. 10 miles

. , _ fed well ________

east dt Greenville. 757-3964

2 DUPLEX LOTS ln_city. Close to d El"' -        

lital and ECU Priced to sell. 756-7473._

CLASSIFIED. DISPLAY

if LEMING FURNITURE & APPLIANCE

NewServleee CfoaMy AfpNMit ^ XeWnelorAppSei

Speed Queen UiMdry FeddereAlrCondNlenen

DARDEN REALTY

N 758-1983    758-2230    M

^7//74JTir777777/////77r77ii^

Nights-Weekend 758-2230

S/

Announcing

the

opening

of

BENFORD

REUTY

PHONE

758-2386

NIGHTS-752-0661

See Me For Your Real Estate Needs " Robert (Bob) Benford

is the time to buy a new home!

Camelot Subdivision

Hurry and you can choose your own color scheme, carpet, wallpaper and vinyl in this home now under construction. 3 bedrooms, 2 toll baths, activity room with fireplace, dining 'room. Kitchen has range and 'dishwasher. Heat pump. We will pay up to 4 points and closing costs. 1340 sq. ft.$58,000.

The Evans Company also has lots in other areas where we can build a quality home for you.

Call us now at 752-2814

Or

HOUSE FOR SALE

Corner of 8th and Forbes - 1500 square feet downstairs with upstairs apartment having approximately 1000 square feet with separate entrances. For more information CALL 792-6488 AFTER 5:38 P.M.

NEW LISTINGS

Winnie Evans 752-4224

The Evans Cofflpany

Of Gfeenvile he

BiMrrs OMTwWrl

701 W. Fourteenth SI Greenville. N.C

COMMERCIAL AND INVESTMENT PROPERTIES

Offered By

Jeannette

Agency,Inc.

SOCIAL SECURITY BUILDING - Plaza Drive Govern inent lea,sed. Excellent lax sl:eller

COMMLRCIAI. BUILDING 3000 plus square feet of warehouse Two private offices, $68.000 Excellent Buy'

2 OFMCF. BUIl DIN(,s - Exce'lent Locations Completeiy occupteij Good cash flow

MEDICAl OFFTCF. BUILDING - Physicians Quadrangle Building contains 3472 plus square feet. Operating room, lab, examination rooms, private offices For sale or lease with option

Call Jeannette Cox For Information

OHU '756 1322 Li 757 N747

Hon< 756 2521 ot (4ll Toll I t,M 1 800 44.1 2781.

I xt t 14

COLLEGE COURT

Possible VA loan assumption at 8/i%.APR with payment of the equity and monthly payments of $413.93 and approximately 24 years remaining. Three bedrooms, I/i baths, foyer, great room, fireplace, deck. Possible secondary financing by owner. $67,500.

75B-5395

DELLWOOD

Possible owner financing pn fhi& desirable corner ranch. Three bedrooms, two batt, liyingroonL dining area, family room with flreplackydr^ stove.

Me garage, utility shed, fenced. $60

GREENVILLE. N.C

NEW LISTINGS

CAMELOT

A beautiful ranch on a nicely landaciped lot. A home that you can be proud of. Three bedrooms, two baths, (oyer, great room with fireplace, dining room, wood deck, garage. $14,600.

HARVEY ORIVE

Pay the equity and assume the loan on this homo. Three bedrooms, bath, living room, fireplace, dining room, quiet street. $30,000.

WILDWOOD VILLAS Possible loan assumption. Town homo with two bedrooms, IVi baths, living room, dining area, unfinished basement. $42,000.

YORKTOWN SQUARE Condominium with two bedrooms, 1W baths, (oyer, living room, kitchen with dining area, privacy fence, refrigerator. Washer, dryer. Ckxnvenlent area. $39,900.

EASTERN STREET You can be close to the University hero! Three bedrooms, bath, living room with fireplace, dining room, patio, lots of storage space. $45,000.

EDWARDS ACRES New with 10W% APR FHA or VA, thirty year, fixed rate Hnanclng. Three bedrooms, 1V4 baths, living room wHh fireplace, dlnlng area, deck, garage. $M,ON.

PINERIDQE ANO REDUCED Not far from the Medical School and Hospital. Three la bedrooms, two batha, foyer, living room, wood stove, Mj^m, solar end electric hot water. Storage.

WESTHAVEN

You can assume the FHA 245 loan after paying the equity on this pretty Williamsburg. 11W% APR with payments of approximately $650 and a loan balance of about $00,000. Three bedrooms, 2'A baths, living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, breakfast area. Extras! $15,500.

BROOK VALLEY-REDUCED

This pretty ranch home has been reduced In price., Across from the pool and club house but secluded by trees, It has four bedrooms and 2% baths, recreation room or fifth bedroom, (oyer, living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, large double garage. $99,900.

OFFICE OPEN 9-12 Saturday, 1-5 Sunday

Cthrin CrMch On Duty This Wspksnd Call 7584587 Non-oifict Hours

IMMACULATE CONDITION, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch. Carport, wood burning stove, workshop. 8% VA loan assumption. $58s. Listing Broker: Blanche Forbes.

LOVELY 3 bedroom ranch. Living-dining combination, kitchen, fireplace, utility, fence in back. $38s. Listing Broker: J.C. Bowen 756-7426.

PRICED TO SELL! 3

bedrooms, living room, kitchen, utility, ceiling tan. and hardwood floors. $20's. Listing Broker; Blanche Forbes 756-3438.

GOOD INVESTMENT PROPERTY Only $19,908 and you can own this 3 bedroom home. Approximately 1120 square feet. Listing Broker:    j.C.

Bowen 756-7426.

MOBILE HOME LOT. Approximately V4 acre, wooded. Grimesland Area. $4,500. Listing Broker: David Heniford 75 0180.

RESIDENTIAL LOT.. Approximately 100x125' $4.000. Listing Broker: Ray Everette 758-9549

756-2121

2717 S, Memoii.ll Di

B rORBESAGENCY

i

\

f





Marcos Children Unlikely Heirs To A Dynasty

By DAVID BRISCOE Associated Press y/nter MANILA. Philippines (AP) - They have grown up neai the seat of power, but tht three children of Riilippine President Ferdinand E. Marcos appear unlikely heirs of any political dynasty.

While son Ferdinand Jr., 24, and daughter Imee, 27, hold government offices, neither has shown the political

flair that has kept their father and mother, Imelda, in power for 17 years.

Marcos has denied any dynastic intentions, although he has placed a brother, a brother-in-law, a n^hew and several distant relatives in influential government positions.

Ferdinand Jr., still known by bis childhood nickname Bongbong, was^ sworn in

Mardi 24 as governor of the presidents home province. He replaced Marcos sister, Elizabeth Rocka, who resigned for health reasons. But the presidait says his Oxford-educated son is more inclined to mathematics than national politics.

Imee Marcos, who studied political science at Princeton and'is finishing a law degree here, is widely considered

FIRST FAMILY - PhUippine President Ferdinand E. Marcos and his wife, Imelda pose with their children and an adopted niece in 1981. The family, from left, consists

of Irene, 22, Ferdinand Jr., 24, Imelda Marcos, Aimee (a 4-year-old niece of Imelda), the President, and 27-year-old Imee. (AP Laserphoto)

Iraq's Foreign Workers Leave As Boom Fizzles

By NICOLAS B.TATRO Associated Press Writer B.AGHDAD. Iraq (AP) -The drain of the war with Iran and falling oil prices have brought an end to Iraqs construction boom and throngs of foreign worked who had come to reap its benefits are now streaming back home. Western diplomats say.

At ttie same time, the country's oil-supported economy has come under heavy strain.

At the height of the boom last summer the more than 2 million foreign workers made up more than half of the nation's labor force; 1.5 million Egyptians alone accounted for nearly 10 percent (/! the total population.

Tlies workers sent home about $3 billion to $4 billion annually and symbolized President Saddam Husseins policy of pressing,ahead with development in spite of the war with Iran that began in Sept. 22.1980.

Now, th? departure lounge 0 Baghdad airport is crowded with Pakistanis in traditional baggy pants and Egyptians in native robes. There are few new arrivals.

One hotel worker from the Philippines said a new regulation went into effect in December under which the government cut back the hard-currency portion of his salary from 75 percent to 60 percent.

!! IS now taking more than a month to transfer even this and its causing hardship for my family back home. said the worker, who declined use of his name for fear of losing his job.

One Iraqi dinar is worth S3.20 at the official rate, but ^outside Iraq and on the black market it is worth only about half that.

In a further sign of the economic phich, the. ^v-crnment has let no new contracts, delayed payments fiv r,rk already completed, publish the national uogt .or 19*3, and reduced tlie amowt of currency forei0i woiters can take out of the country.

As a hMlt, ifltermtteal businesses ire kiIbk back their local afflcoood tatttsg workers gtrite eoovMng projectiw;'Oae Aitarteaa coropanf, kr mmtyk, has

cut its staff from 17 to four.

Before the war began with Iran, Iraq had $35 billion in reserves built up from the sale of its oil. Debite nearly $20 billion in aid from nei^-boring Arab oil states wor-ried about Iranian expansion, the" reserves now total only about $4 billion, diplomats say.

Perhaps the biggest blow was Syrias decision to close its borders with Iraq in February 1982, thereby cutting off the flow of 400,000 barrels of Iraqi oil a day through the a pipeline to the Mediterranean.

Syrian President Hafez Assad, who heads a rival faction of the Socialist Baath Party, accused the Iraqis of

supplying anti-government Islamic fundamentalists in Syria with arms and explosives. Western d^lo-mats say Syria is now acting as a conduit for arms sales to Iran.

Iraqs main source of income is from oil through a pipeline that runs through Turkey, carrying about 700,000 to 800,000 barrels a day. A project to expand the Turkish lines capacity to over a million barrels daily will take about 18 months.

Even if they get the capacity of the pipe increased it may just balance the drop in prices from $34 to $29 a barrel, said the diplomat.

CAUGHT UP IN A HOBBY - Stxty-yMTOld Leooinl of SpokMe, Waa, pONs with tbe hypraduc^ hobby he begou dariiig Ui icHRment and in between two ^ heart epentfc in tbe pmt (our yean. With a lot of tkne an his handi, PliiddU bepi nuinf a cbaii out of oM waiwpen folded tapBier to a vedri way - aod now the ilMinstretcbeaneartyMNiBetk^(APLaMiilBlo)

the most articulate and politically visible of the children. She is also the most independent arid has defied her parents by secretly marrying Philippine sportsman Tommy Manotoc in the United States in December 1981. She is reportedly expecting her first cMld soon.

The youngest child, Irene, 22, is interested primarily in anthropology and music. A cover story in a recent Sunday supplement announced her plans to marry a local businessman in June, although the marriage has not been confirmed by the Marcos family.

Marcos, 65, was elected president in 1965 and reelected in 1969. He declared marti^ law in 1972, endmg an American-style c^moc-cy. After lifting martial rule eight years later, he ran against a token opponent and won a six-year term which runs until 1987.    *

The 52-year-old first lady married Marcos when he was already an influential congressman and eventually shared power with him. She is minister of human settlements, metropolitan Manila governor and a member of parliament. Both have de

nied pmistent ^Illation that she is likely to succeed him as president.

The Marcos children, described once in a new^aper headline as the darling of the palace, have grown up with privileges close to those of royalty. TTie president says he sent them abroad to study so they could avoid the special treatment they get here.

They now travel with armed presidential security officers. Imee Marcos once said the best thing about being a presidential daughter was that you didnt get stuck in traffic jams.

None of the childi^ has been the subject of serious criticism here. They"(^n sit quietly on the sidelines at^ public gatherings in contrast with their fathers powerful "Oratoi7 and their mothers star-like aura.

Marcos son is a soft-spoken, nu^aired student of politics, philosophy and economics. Since finishing school in England, he has been working as a bank consultant and doing postgraduate work at the Wharton School of Finance in Pennsylvania.

He was elected vice governor of llocos Norte in 19S0

without oppositkin. A government dispatch says his major accomplishments have beui improvement o^ provincial slaughterhouses and running sports programs.

Imee last year was making nearly as many public iq>-pearances as her mother. She heads a national youth movement and a heavily funded govonment cinema agency, but has recently withdrawn from the limelight.

The 33-year-old Manotoc, who was kidnai^ ^ beld for six weeks last year, has not commented on his marriage to the eldest Marcos daughUHr or the kidnaf^iing which he^lainM on communist rebeb rdUll^ had publicly .expressed suspicions that the Marcos family had a hand in it because they opposed their daughters marriage to a divorced man.

Marcos last month acknowledged for the first time that hb dau^ter loved and had married Manotoc. He said Mrs. Marcos was in a frenzy but the coiqile had to accept the marriage because the dau^ter had threatened to go away if they didnt.

The family appears to have

accqited the suitor of their youngest daughter, 35-year-old businessman Greg Araneta, son of a prominent local architect. The magazine which reported their engagement is public by Mrs. Blarcos brother.

'Riere is a fourth Marcos child who has not figured in

any political ^leculatkm 4-year-o!d Aimee, a niece of the first lady. She has been adopted by her aunt and uncle and appears alongside the older children in official family portraits.

Little has been said publicly about the child and nothing about her real parents.

CORRECTION

On png* 7 of tho Kmart Eastar Diacotinta Sactlon which was publlshad in tha Wad. Mar. 30 adhlon of Tha Daily Rafloctor and ShopiMrs Guida, tha dascriptlon for tha K4003 and K2003 lawn mowars waia mistakanly switchad and should hava appaarad as foHows:

K 4003-Our Reg. 177.00 SalaPrlca157aO()

   a-

22" Self propelled. Front wheel drive, recoil start, 3Vi H.P. B&S engine. Controls on handle.

K2003-Our Reg. 147.00

SalaPrlca127 00

Rotary 3V^ H.P. Mower. 22" side discharge, 3^/i HP engine, recoil start, wheel height adjustment.

Wa regret this error and any inconvenience this may have caused.

HOP ON OVER FORTHESE

SP^PIS

LANDSCAPE

EVERGREENS

ALL SIZES ALL VARIETIES

HALF PRICE

HUGE SELECTION!

ONE YEAR OLD

DOGWOODS

IN ONE GALLON POTS

A SKOO

"Tfor V

VEGETABLE PLANTS

REG. NOW

69' 9packs$'1 00

W ! for I

1/2 BUSHEL SIZE PETAL'GRO O

DOTTIMriCAII .X BAQS^ S

SATURDAY MORNING 8 AM-10 AM ONLY!

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RED, WHITE, PINK IN 3 INCH POTS

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GERANIUMS


Title
Daily Reflector, April 1, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30407
Date
April 01, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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