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SPORTS TODAY
East Carolina holds Its Annual Purple - Gold Football Game Saturday night, winding up Spring practice. Page 13.
INSIDE TODAYCOMING SUNDAYTHE LEGISLATURE...
N.C. editor reminds lawmakers you can expunge official records, but you cannot expunge public memories. Page 24
-Special section on Home Improvement
- Photo feature of the new prison in Maury
- Highlights of the ECU Purple-Gold football game
- ECU dancers to appear in Mt. Airy
Waother
Chance of rain late tonight, lows near 50. Windy and occasional rain Saturday with highs in 60s.
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
INSIDE READING
Page 9-Area items Page 10-Spies expelled Page 12-Obituaries
102NDYEAR NO. 96
GREENVILLE, N.C.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 22, 1983
24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS
Food Prices Soared In Living Cost Index
Part Of An 'Experiment'
WHOOPS!... Rick Musgrove, a sofriiomore at East Carolina University, falls vriiile riding in a tricycle race at an Alcohol Awareness Fair Wednesday on campus. Particpants in the
race drank a cup of beer from a keg, right, between each race to measure their coordination skills. (Reflector Staff Photo By Angela Llngerfelt)
By SALLY JACOBSEN Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Food prices soared at their sharpest rate since June to more than offset fresh falis in gasoline and fuei oii costs and send consumer prices overali up a smali O.l percent in March, the government said today.
For the first three months of the year, prices rose at an annuai rate of 0.4 percent, the smaiiest gain for a caiendar quarter since 1965.
Todays Labor Department announcement of March price activity means the 36 miliion Sociai Security recipients wilt get a cost-oMiving increase of 3.5 percent next January.
That will be the smallest inflation adjustment since 1975, when automatic yearly increases were tied to the Consumer Price Index. The benefit increase was 7.4 percent last year and 11.2 percent in 1981.
The new adjustment will translate into an average increase of $14 for a single retired worker and $24 for a retired husband and wife who both receive benefits.
At the White House, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said the small consumer price rise indicates that the underlying rate of inflation has fallen to a level below 5 percent. Tliis is extraordinary progress.
The department said a 4.4 percent increase in fruit and vegetable prices accounted for almost the entire food price gain of 0.6 percent, which matched the increase of last June. Since then, food prices had posted small gains or none at all.
Todays report said that, in particular, fresh vegetable prices rose sharply, reflecting reduced supplies caused by the rain storms in California and Florida.
Economists expect fruit and vegetable prices to rise even more sharply in the months ahead, partly as a result of this weeks severe frost in the South and partly because of the lingering effects of wet weather in crop-rich areas of the country.
Prices for beef, pork, poultry and fish fell slightly, but egg prices surged 7.7 percent. Prices for dairy products were unchanged while prices for cereal and bakery products rose 0.4 percent. Overall, grocery store food prices soared 0.9 percent while restaurant meal prices rose 0.2 percent and alcoholic beverage prices jumped 0.7 percent.
For the last 12 months, food prices overall have risen only 2.8 percent.
Energy prices contined to fall last month.
Budget CommHtee Gives tJMoMhOU-Boy Given Reagan Second Uver Transphnf
Associated Press Writer Sen. Pete V. Domenici,
REFLECTOR ''"T
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only Initials will be used.
SCREENING RESULTS?
I am looking forward to taking advantage of the health screenings being offered at Carolina East Mall here^this weekend during the Pitt County Health Fair. However, I would like to know before I go if the results of the screening wUl be given or sent directly to the person or if they will be sent back to ones doctor. I dont want to mess with it if I have to pay for a doctors visit in order to get the results. F.B,
Results of such screenings as vision, hearing, blood pressure, anemia, height-weight, oral abnormalities and foot abnormaiities will be given on the spot. Health Fair coordinator Barbara Berman said. The results of the blood chemistry tests that are being offered for a minimal $8 fee will be sent directly to the person within not more than eight weeks.
Hours of the fair are today from noon to 8 p.m. and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday.
HOUSING LOAN PROGRAM?
Im interested in the low- and middle-income housing loan program that was announced in Fridays paper. J.R.
This loan, according to a spokesperson for the North Carolina Housing Finance Agency which made money available for approximately 500 housing loans in the state, is not being handled by the state office itself, but by various banks and mortgage companies throughout the state.
Branch Banking and Trusts mortgage division and Wachovia Mortgage Co. were given out by this office as the Greenville agents. However, a spokesman for Wachovia said that Wachovia statewide was allocated $500,000 to loan through this program, but that none of this money is being made available through the Greenville office.
Applications will begin being processed In Greenville by BB&T Mortgage Loan early in ,May. For more Informatloii; call the offlce of ^ Walter House, local BB&T mortgage loan officer, .Monday or after, a spokesman for BB&T in WUsonsaid. ^
By MIKE SHANAHAN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -The Republican-controlled Senate Budget Committee has handed President Reagan a major congressional defeat by approving a 1984 budget plan which would raise taxes by $30 billion next year and dramatically slow the presidents defense buildup.
The budget blueprint contains almost nothing which Reagan would support and was sent to the floor of the Senate on Thursday with only five Republican votes among 22 members on the committee.
That produced the unusual political spectacle of eight Democrats on a Re-publican-controlled committee providing the margin of victory for passage of a budget resolution / which contains higher taxes urged by Democrats.
The spending and revenue proposal, approved 13 to 4, is certain to face significant changes when debated in the full Senate next week or in early May.
At the White House, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said today that the committees action moves the battlefield to the Senate floor.
We think we have much more strength there than was indicated by the vote, he said.
Earlier, Speakes condemned the plan as ^oss disservice to the American people.
He said Reagan would join with Senate Republican leaders to lower domestic spending, restore the military budget to levels essential to the nations security and cut back the utterly ridiculous tax figure.
Once a final budget resolution has been approved by both the House and Senate, it does not require the presi
dents signature.
Sen. Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M., the committee chairman, said althou^ he was among the five Republicans voting for the plan, he will
on taxes and defense spending on the floor.
The budget resolution included a Democratically-sponsored tax plan which was approved on an identical 13 to 4 vote.
Approval of the tax ceiling which would raise taxes by $266 billion over the next five years followed the breakdown of efforts to reach a compromise among Republicans on the committee and the White House.
One Republican committee member, Mark Andrews of North Dakota, said bitterly, The White House was not negotiating. The White House wasdictating. They said take it, or else.
Over the last several days, Domenici tried and failed to find a combination of taxes and federal spending which would attract a majority of Republicans.
He was blocked by a handful of hardline conservatives who refused to budge on their insistence that there be no tax increases to offset federal deficits approaching $200 billion over the next several years.
There was little chance of getting a solid Republican majority, said a dispirited Domenici after the vote.
So, Domenici said he decided that the alternative was a continued deadlock in the committee, and no Senate budget resolution, an outcome he found unacceptable.
As a result, Domenici and the four other Republicans reluctantly voted for the $30.2 billion tax hike recommended by Sen. Lawton Chiles, D-Fla., as an expedient way to get the budget resolution to the floor.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -Surgeons transplanted a second liver into 13-month-old" Brandon Hall today as the worlds second-youngest liver transplant patient kept on fighting for life.
What makes you so sick is that he wants to live so much, said Billie Hall, the boys mother. He just wants to live. Hes fighting so hard to live. It seems that someone who wants to live that bad should be given a chance.
John Donica, spokesman at LeBonheur Childrens Medical Center, said doctors had removed the malfunctioning liver Brandon received just eight days ago by 3:30 a.m. and replaced it with the organ of a 5-month-old Kentucky girl 80 minutes later.
The surgery, which began shortly after 1 a.m. CST, was completed at 9:05.
This liver is much healthier at this point than the previous organ, said Brandons pediatrician. Dr. Peter Whitington. The previous transplant suffered a great deal during surgeiy because of shock. In this instance, theres been no shock and the liver really looks outstandingly good.
Asked if Brandon stands a better chance of survival than the 50-50 chance doctors gave him after the first transplant, Whitington said,
I really would hate to assess his chances of survival because you conversely assess his chances of dying.
Brandons heart stopped during the first operation, and doctors were forced to give him 20 pints of blood during surgery. The second operation was needed because of clogged arteries to the transplanted organ.
Whitington said surgeons today connected the aorta, or large artery, from the donor organ to Brandons aorta
instead of making the connection with the much smaller hepatic artery as doctors did in the first operation. However, he said there was a chance of clotting again.
The donor liver was flown in by charter jet at 1 a.m. after a surreal team from the University of Tennessee removed the organ in Bowling Green, Ky.
Dr. Rick Voakes of Bowling Green said the liver looked perfect and really good, although the girls blood "was type A negative and Brandons is type 0 positive.
Whitington said doctors did not think the difference in blood types will pose much of a problem in organ rejection.
... Many tissues, most notably the kidney and
hearts, carry biood-type antigens, so that if they are transplanted into the body theres essentially a transfusion reaction which is chronic because youve implanted a solid organ, he said. The liver supposedly lacks those antigens in most instances.
He said Brandon would be placed on routine therapy for rejection.
Resume Old Debate On Daylight Saving Time
By H. JOSEF HEBERT Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -For Frank Taylor, an avid softball player, this Sunday is the Sunday hes been waiting for.
But for John Datt, who grew up on a Pennsylvania dairy farm, it brin^ back memories when his family used to keep two clocks -one my Dad called Gods time to run the farm and another his mother always used to keep appointments.
Its the weekend when at 2 a.m. Sunday most of the nation will usher in daylight-saving time, long a scourge to farmers and a blessing to sports enthusiasts.
Americans will lose an hours sleep and, if all goes right, wake up at 8 oclock when their bodies tell them its 7. To keep things straight when changing the clocks, an old adage might help: Spring forward, fall back.
With the exception of
Arizona, Hawaii and 18 counties in Indiana, the longer daylight hours will last six months until the last Sunday in October when the clocks again will be set back an hour.
Congress established the uniform summertime chan{^ in 1966, although giving states an option not to participate. Now there is a movement gaining support on Capitol Hill to
stretch daylight-saving time to seven or eight months, with the time change coming as early as the first Sunday in March.
While public opinion polls indicate widespread support for the longer dayli^t hours, the issue remains controversial.
Among the persistent critics have been farmers. The American Farm Bureau Federation, which represents more than 3 million farm families, is not only against the current time change, but wants Confess to limit daylight-saving time to between Memorial Day and Labor Day.
The trouble, the farmers say, is they lose an hour of planting and harvest time in th morning, only to have to make it up in the evening. Dairy farmers say the time change isnt appreciated by cows either because they have to hold their milk longer in the morning.
(Please turn to Page6)
Cosmonauts Fail Space Link-Up; Return To Earth
MOSCOW (AP) - The three Soviet cosmonauts aboard the Soyuz T-8 ^aceshh) that faUed to dock with the Salyut 7 mace station returned to Earth today, the official Tass news agency reported.
It said the cosmonauts feu well after a soft landing in the designated site 20 miles northeast of the city of Arkalyk, which is 1,500 miles
southeast of Moscow.
Tass said the craft landed at 5:29 p.m. (8:29 a.m. EST), nearly a full day after the docking was aborted.
The news agency did not explain why it took nearly 24 hours to get the cosmtmauts back to Earth but the rqxxrt of the landing indicated there were no troubles during reentry into the atmosphere.
In a report from the mission control center outside Moscow, Tass mid the docking maneuver was called off because the Soyuz strayed Thursday from its correct approach path to the year-old spacdab.
Wedem monitoring stations said the two crafts came within yards of each other but never linked up.
Docking of manned
spaceships with Soviet spacelabs usually has occurred within 24 hours of launch, but the state media did not indicate the Current mission was in trouble until the cancellation was announced.
As the Soyuz a^iroached the Salyut on Thursday the radio said the linkup would he one of the most diffiailt
and responsible stages of the flight, signaling in advance Soviet apprehension about the maneuver.
The Salyut was doubled in size last month with the addition of the (^os 1443 supply craft. The total weight of the complex is now 40 tons.
The cancellation of the docking was the fourth
known failure of a launch craft and a space statkm to dock since the Soyuz-Saiyut program was launched in 1%7. In addition, four Soviet cosmonauts died on space missions during the 15-year history of the pro^am.
Radio Moscows Englisb-language world service broke the news in an early morning broadcast.
1
2The Daily Reflector, GnanvlUe, N.C.Friday, April 21, IMS
Have Your Prenuptial Agreement
By Abigail Van Buren
1983 by Unrvarsal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: I am writing to you because my fiance and I have been fighting constantly over what I consider a major issue in our relationship.
I will be getting a large sum of money over the next two years and have informed my future husband that I would like to keep this money in my name after we are married. My reasoning; If the marriage doesnt work out, I do not want to have to split my money 50-50 with him.
My parents think I have made the right decision, but my fiance feels differently. He thinks I am taking a very pessimistic view of our future in even considering that our marriage might end in divorce. I really dont feel that way. Im just playing it safe.
Its funny because lately I've been thinking that the reason my fiance wants to marry me is because he knows I am coming into a lot of money.
1 really do love him, Abby, but need to know if you think I made the right decision.
PLAYING IT SAFE
DEAR PLAYING: Yes. Every divorce started with a marriage. And if you have even the slightest suspicion that your fiance is marrying you for your money, have a lawyer draw up a prenuptial agreement. Or better yet, dont marry him at all.
DEAR ABBY: The letter from the traveling man who spends five days a week on the road interested me. He said he came home to discover a well-used pipe in the pocket of his bathrobe, and since neither he nor his wife smoked he was not only bewildered but a bit suspicious. Upon questioning his wife, she denied any knowledge of how said pipe came to be in his bathrobe pocket.
The following day when he went to get the pipe, it was nowhere to be found! He asked for your opinion of this puzzling incident, and you dismissed it with, Too bad the evidence went up in smoke.
Well, Abby, this should clear up the mystery of my missing pipe, ^ing a plumber, I was summoned to the home of an attractive woman to repair a faulty shower nozzle that was spraying water all over her bathroom.
While waiting fcr my clothes to dry I slipped into a robe hanging on a hook in the bathroom, and 1 must have thoughtlessly put my pipe into the pocket.
After searching for it high and low later, I suddenly remembered. When I went back to that house, the dpor was open and I could hear a loud argument coming from another room, so I sneaked in and quietly retrieved my pipe.
I hope this explains it for all hands.
PETE McG.
P.S. Could you find out for me which five days that man is on the road?
DEAR P^E; Sorry, no help from this corner for a plumber who cant keep trck of his pipes.
DEAR ABBY: Whats the difference between a lady and a tramp?
STUMPED IN CLEVELAND
DEAR STUMPED: Ive been sitting at my typewriter staring at a blank piece of paper for 20 minutes, rejecting one thought after another. Like you. Im also stumped, but Id recognize an appropriate answer if I saw it.
Readers, I need your help. Please send the difference between a lady and a tramp to Abby, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
Youre never too old (or too young) to learn how to make friends and be popular. For Abbys booklet on Popularity, send $1, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
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Kangaroo rats can live without drinking a rm of water. They rely solely on the moisture in seeds, their main diet, and green plants, according to National Geographic.
Ex-Army
Spotlight
By THOMAS FERRARO
WASHINGTON (UPI) -At the sound of a firehouse siren, Lynda Van Devantor dropped to the floOT and crawled combat-style into the living room and back into Vietnam.
The sound was identical to the red-alert sirens that signaled rocket and mortar attacks while she served as an Army surgical nurse in South Vietnams central highlands a decade earlier.
Suddenly I was back in Vietnam and we were under rocket attack, except I realized I was safe in Long Island, Miss Van Devanter recalled.
The 1979 wail of the firehouse siren gave her one clear message: Her war experiences were likely related to her profound depression in civilian life.
This flashback helped Lynda Van Devanter, a former high school cheerleader and one of five daughters of a Roman Catholic family in the nations capital, to finally come home again from the emotional hell of Vietnam.
It was an ungodly ordeal that is the basis of her book.
Garden Club Meet Set
Mary Everett will be speaking at the Monday meeting of the Lynndale Garden Club at the home of Mrs. Charles White. Mrs. Derek Dunn and Mrs. Winston Hill will be assisting
hAQf ACCPG
Her topic will be I Didnt Think He Would Die.
A new slate of officers will be presented. It was announced the May luncheon will be held at the Greenville Country Club May 24. Reservations should be made by May 16 with Penny Taft. Members should bring a plant for the plant exchange.
April activities included a trip to Tryon Palace, Easter egg hunt for the nei^borhood children, an appreciation day coffee and floral arrangement for the teachers at Rose High School and the planting of azaleas by members.
A pig pcking will be held in May for all association members who have paid annual dues.
The yard of the month went to Ed and Vicki Ge-ment.
Scott Luce Is Speaker
Scott Luce was guest speaker at the meeting of Alpha Omega Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha International Sorority Tuesday.
He is a clinical social worker and geriatric specialist with the Pitt County Mental Health Department. His program topic was Guild and How It Affects Our Lives.
Vice President Nellie Taylor conducted the business meeting. Barbara Zicherman was meeting hostess.
Nurse Puts The On Women Vets
Miss Crosswaite Marries
Home Befme Morning -The Story of an Army Nurse in Vietnam (Beaufort Books, $16.96).
TTie recently published book is being considered for a made-for-television movie.
I kind of think the book will do pretty well, Miss Van Devanter, 35, said in an interview from her downtown office where she serves as head of the Vietnam Veterans of Americas Womens Project.
I think the American public, after so many years of turning its back on Vietnam and the veterans, is ready to read about this war.
For many years Miss Van Devanter was unable to look back and cope with her 12-month tour in Vietnam. She was possessed by the war that divided the United States and radicalized a generation.
Countless male Vietnam veterans experienced similar difficulties, but in many ways these problems were more acute for Miss Van Devanter and other women.
Neither the U.S. Army nor American society was fully prepared to deal with woman as warriors or as veterans.
In Vietnam, the Army didnt even bother to issue women tampons. Miss Van Devanter said. Back in the United States, the Veterans Administration and veterans groups often seemed blind to women.
A few years after returning home, she attended a meeting of Vietnam vets planning an anti-war demonstration. She and other women were asked to leave - they didnt look like vets.
pt the 193,000 women who
served in the armed ftnxes in the Vietnam era, 7,465 were stationed in Southeast A^ 4,500 of tbmn as members of the Army Medical Corps, Defense Department records show.
As bead of the Womens Project for the past two years. Miss Van Devanter has emerged as a one of the leading advocates for women veterans in America.
She has testified befwe Congress, addressed counseling centers and sought to raise funds for a comprehensive study of issues unique to woman Vietnam vets, whom she calls the forgotten minority.
In her book, she tdls bow she went to Vietnam as a staunch stq^mrter of the U.S. war effcnl and-how, after tending to a steady procession of mangled bodies, became an ardent foe of it.
Returning home, she found a public that ignored vets or held them in contempt. She developed recurring ni{^tmares, began drinking heavily, had difficulty establishing relationships and, at one point, considered suicide.
Shortly after the firehouse siren, she received counseling at a veterans center that helped her walk through her Vietnam experience.
In her book she writes:
Somewhere between the therapy... the work that Ive done with the VVA, and my therapy and rap groups. Ive reached the point where I can truthfully say the war has lost its ability to destroy me.
Im back in control of my own life and Im proud to call myself a veteran.
ELM CITY - The Oak Grove Free WiU Baptist Chtffcb hmo was the setting April 16 of the wedding cermnony of Jeanne Marie Crosswaite and James Thelbert Smith. The Rev. Garence Harris performed tbecerem(myat2p.m.
A program of nuptiai
mus was presented by Marilyn Gardner, organist. Vocalists were Larry, Roger and Wanda Summerlin. Laurie Gardner directed the ceremony.
Parenta of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Jack Crosswaite of Wilsmi. Tlie bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thdbert Smith of WintervUle.
The bride was givm in marriage by her parents. Teresa Branch of Route 1, Wintmrville, was honor attendant and Pam Wilt of Erie, Pa., cousin of the bride, was bridesmaid. Heather Schultz was flower girl and Brian Schultz was ring bearer. Both are cousins of the bride of Waterford, Pa.
Ushers included Jeff Crosswaite of Wilson, brother of the bride, Doug WUt of Erie, Pa. and Mike Kurten of New York, cousins
The tride was (hessed in a gown of \Adiite satin and silk organza. Re-embroidered motife encrusted with seed acceided the Med lice, waistline, Queen Anne neckline and fitted sleeves. The motifs also accented the chapel length train and A-line skirt. A border of scalloped lace trimmed the skirt and sleeves. Hr \riiite chapd length veil and blushm* was edged with scalloped lace and was attached to a pearl accented tiara. She carried a bouquet of white lil^, roses, pink roses, ste^dumotis tied with white satin ribbon.
A recqition was held at the church after the ceremoiqr and was given by the brides parents.
Hie couple is living in Wilson after a trip to the Bahamas.
(Please turn to Page 3)
Mrs. James Ihelbert Smith
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BREATH OF SPRING Cotton damask breathes fresh air into spring and summer late-day dressing, here in a tulip-edged dress in bright white with contrasting black obi sash. (From Little Black Dress by Gale Warren.)
-^|tCuwjL
Send Mom the VerYBest!
Dont forget to send Mom your warmest thoughts and wishes on her special day, May 8th.
OLD-FASHIONED SUNDAY
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Engagements Announced
Cooking
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, April 22,19633
Crosswaite...
McCain at Wilson ainic, P.A.
Is Fun
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor
SHARON LEIGH ISENHOUR...S the daughter of Cmdr. and Mrs. W.J. Isenhour of Route 5, Hickory, who announce her engagement to Jeffrey Paul Sarvey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sarvey of Michaels, Md. The wedding is planned for May 14.
DEBBIE JEAN ADCOX...S the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milton T. Adcox of Weldon, who announce her engagement to Norman Oscar Stancill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar M. Stancill of Grifton. The wedding will take place May 7.
COME FOR DESSERT Fruit Pie Coffee FRUTTPIE A springtime combination American cooks cherish - and no wonder.
Vk cups granulated sugar 1 ciq) all-purpose flour 1 quart (scant) strawherries, hulled ,
1 pound rhubait, cut crosswise into ^-inch pieces (2 heaping cups)
2 taUespotms hutter, soft 2 tablespoons lip brown
sugar V4 teaspoon cinnamon Unbaked pastry for 10-inch pie shell V4 cup orange juice In a large bowl, stir together the granulated sugar and ^h. cup of the flour; add strawberries '^and rhubarb and toss together; let stand at room temperature 30 minutes. In a small bowl stir together butter, brown sugar and cinnamon; work in remaining flour to make a crumbly mixture. Turn strawberry-rhubarb mixture into pie shell. Sprinkle with
orange juice, then with crumbly flour mixture. Bake on the rack below center in a preheated 425Hlegree oven for 1 hour. If top browns too much before baking period is over, place a sheet of foil over it. Cool on a wire rack until filling is set. (It will still be on the runny side.)
(Continued from Page 2) The bridegroom graduated from D.H. Conley High School and Hardees School of Management. He attended East Carolina and Pitt Community Colleges. He is associated with Hardees Food Systems. The bride graduated from Du Bois Christian Academy in Du Bois, Pa. and Edgecombe Technical College in Tarboro. She is a medical assistant for Dr. John L.
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Adoption
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Mr. and Mrs. Dale Brooks of Grimesland announce the adoption of a son, John Bradford, and a daughter, Sandra Leigh, on April 8, 1983.
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At Wits End
By Erma Bombeck
Man has finally revealed his divine plan for life here on earth.
For six days of every week he will toil, putting together three football leagues with seasons running from the first of September through the last of August.
And on the seventh day, he will watch!
With the creation of the United States Football League, he has only one more league to go before the plan is complete.
I ask you, ladies, where were we when the new league was put together? We slept! I cannot remember when anything went together so fast. One minute, I remember old whatshisnamc sitting in front of the Super Bowl lamenting he had only one bowl to go before he was homeless, and the next thing you know 12 teams in three divisions calling themselves the United States Football League trotted out onto the field where they are going to play until the middle of July.
I cant believe it. Everything takes time. Creation of the earth; seven days; man on the moon; 200 years; full term of a baby on a soap opera; three weeks; creation of a football league; 15 minutes.
What Im saying, ladies, is weve been had.
Weve sat idly by and watched the sports week grow from Friday nights to Mondays, anil the season extend from fall through midsummer.
If they can jam in another league at the start of the baseball season, then baseball will have to retaliate by putting in another league in the two weeks between NFL and the basketball season. Basketball spills over into the golf classics now, so theyll stick in another league that will wedge between the golf opens and the National
Hockey League, which takes away the week and a half between tennis at Wimbledon and the Indy 500.
I dont like to think where that leaves Bowling for Dollars.
In my heart I know that out there somewhere in this country, even as I write, is. a group of men in a smoke-filled room putting together another football league to fill the 27-day gap that would make the season continuous throu^out the year. No one will know anyone on the teams, but no one will care.
After all, how can you reason with someone who will love the Green Bay Packers in November as he loves the Arizona Wranglers in July?
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/
Editorials
They Can Take It'
One would think the United States diplomatic service would have learned a lot from attacks on embassies in Iran and Pakistan.
The huge, seven-story American embassy in Beirut (a hotbed of violence in a country famous for recurrent violence) was a natural target.
The unwalled complex faces a busy highway, and as the Marine colonel in charge of the U.S. contingent in Lebanon observed, it was not adequatly protected, thats for sure.
In truth, the building probably could not be completely protected against fanatics determined to inflict damage and casualties among its personnel. And, as do so many people, we have a near-inherent distaste for walled-in facilities as symptomatic of a siege mentality, unsuited to the desired image of a friend helping friends that should be part and parcel of our diplomatic efforts.
We should marvel, instead, that the embassy has not suffered similar damage and losses long before now. One small terrorist unit armed with modem rockets could have wreaked an even greater disaster (at a safe distance) upon the building.
Attacks on American installations should be anticipated in many parts of the world. Our presence despite good intentions stirs antipathy among all kinds of people.
It goes with being rich and famous.
We even see it at home.
As one comedienne recently explained why she saved her most outrageous remarks for the biggies: it was because they can take it.
Evidence Of Progress
Many graduates and former students of East Carolina University are returning to the campus this weekend for the annual Alumni Day.
It is a day for varied activities for those who have been away from Greenville and the campus. The Purple and Gold spring football game will be held and there will be a reception at the chancellors home. Various classes are having reunions and other activities and the annual Alumni Association meeting will be held.
There will be campus tours which should be exciting to the returning alumni.
The Brody Medical Sciences building is now in full use and various other changes are taking place at Pitt County Memorial Hospital and on the main campus. Evidence of progress still abounds on the ECU campus and it is a matter of pride for the alumni.
Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer-^
Radio Marti Would Be Redundant
HAVANA - Does the State Department need to beam 14 hours of daily radio programming to this Caribbean island to inform Cubans about Qte wonders of the United States and the evils of Fidd Castro?
Most levd heads in Washington think not. But after ^)ending the better part of a work week here, even the most rabid anticommunists could see (and hear) ttat the Reagan administratkms Radio' Marti project, now awaiting congressional approval, would be redundant, dangerous and fiscally wasteful.
When first introduced last year. Radio Marti was to be an independent radio operation, broadcasting from Washington via four 2S0-foot antennas in Key West, Fla. Programming was to include news, rock music, weatho' reports, American baseball game broadcasts and time checks - all for $12.9 million in the first year.
But the proposal, passed by the House, eventually died in the Senate. U.S. broadcasters had complained that Radio Marti would share its frequency with WHO-AM in Des Moines, Iowa, and the Republican majority wasnt about to leave Ronald Reagans old employer vulnerable to interference from the Key
WeststatkmorCubanjamming.
This led the state Department to propose three alternative frequencies: one already used by Voice of America in its Spsmisb iMoadcasts to Cuba; off band slots at eitbor oxi (rf the AM dial; or short wave. All three possibilities have been incorporated in a biU sponsored by Soi. Paula Hawkins (R-Fla.) that would also allow the U.S. to rent air time from privately-owned stations. Unless U.S. broadcasters succeed in adding expensive provisions to compensate stations dimipted by Cuban interference, the Hawkins biU would cost a modest $6 miUkm this year.
Though Americans know little about this island nation, Cubans already know a great deal about the States. Because they reside only 90 miles south of Florida, residents have no trouble tuning in American TV and radio programs.
For instance, weve been able to hear National -Public Radios Morning Edition on the Armed Forces Radio Network; Southern U.S. commercial stations such as Miamis all-news WGBS (you give us 22 minutes, well give you the world); and tjie two major world services from the Voice of America and British Broadcasting Corp. Spanish
speaking stations on the AM and FM usually ame in loud and clear
from Miami, as do broadcasts of ABC-TV and Jerry Falwells Old-Time Gospel Hour from Fort Myos.
At the same time, however, the Reagan iulministration wants Radio Marti to be all that availaUe offerings are not: an anti-Castro propaganda tod. It would like to counter the admittedly-biased views of the state-contrdled Cuban press with additional stories about Soviet adventurism Latin American affairs, and Cidms economic trotdsles, \riiile projecting a better image of the United States.
All of this could get out of hand. The station, says Rkmdo Alarcon, vice minister for fweign affairs, would by definition be hostile and prompt Havana either to jam or to counterbroadcast to the U.S. (an action to which Pentagon planners would respond by knocking out Cuban antennas).
Reagans State Department also believes that Marti can provide Cubans with coverage of local news, such as Radio Free Eun^ does from its listeners behind the Iron Curtain. Yet Cubas internal press is quite limited.
particulariy when it comes to dcnnestic news. Foreign correspondents here, nuneover, number fewer than 10. And there are no Cuban press officer or spokemien from ^m to dicit even a no comment.
There is no way Radio Marti will be able to contrttxite reliable information or internal events in Cid, says Lionel Martin, a U.S.-born correspondent for Reuters whos spent the last 20 years here. Marti will be forced to broadcast rumors from Cubans (living) in Florida. Radio Marti (named after Jose Marti, a 19th-century Cuban patriot still revered here) would be a sorry way to seduce Cubas well-educated (by Caribbean standards) population. Rmald Reagan would be better advised if his policymakers understood that most . Cubans have long differentiated between the U.S. government and the American pe(H)le. Remarkably, a long history of invasion, embargo, harassment and prq>aganda by Washington hadnt kept the Cubans we met from a deep admiratHH) for Americans.
But all-hype radio, run by Uncle Sam, will only further Cuban disrespect for our government.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.
Ki5:;ffli
^WJM. tsxm, m fmmi toNii l&t a novios mxi-
YOU'Ui flW m HANS OF IT IN NO TlMei"
Walter Mears
Court's Ruling Adds To Problems For Nuclear Power
WASHINGTON (AP) - Nuclear power development was on hold even before the Supreme Court ruled that states can block new plans until the government figures out a safe way to get rid of waste fuel. Now theres that legal problem to go with the political and financial dilemmas that already were facing the nuclear power industry.
And the outlook for expansion of that energy source at any time soon is a bleak one, at best. Early in the atomic era, advocates of nuclear power claimed electricity could be generated so cheaply and plentifully that it wouldnt have to be metered. That science fiction euphoria is long gone.
In the four years since the accident at Three Mile Island, near Harrisburg, Pa., there have been no new orders for nuclear power plants, and some old ones have been canceled.
One major reason is money. Investors are wary of the risks involved in financing nuclear power plants, with costs spiraling and regulatory delays chronic, even when all goes well. When all does not go well, the cost of cleaningThe Daily Reflector
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up after a nuclear plant accident can be stratospheric.
Even now, radiation remains at lethal levels in the Three Mile Island reactor that failed. A companion reactor was undamaged, but is still shut down. The cleanup is costing about $1 billion, and General Public Utilities, which owns the plant, estimates it will take another five years to complete the job. Financial problems have slowed the process.
Despite such problems, most financiers are said to favor rapid development of
nuclear generating plants. Two Columbia University researchers who surveyed the (pinions of decision-makers on nuclear power say that also is the prevailing view among government reg^ators, in the scientific community and in Congress.
But Robert L. Cohen and S. Robert Lichter of the Research Institute on International Change, found the most powerful and persuasive people involved in nuclear plant decisions were environmental leaders and anti-nuclear activists, who are unanimously opposed
to proceeding with new plants.
In spite of this impressive pro-nuclear consensus among key decision makers, both public opinion and the nuclear regulatory process have moved in recent years toward the preferences of the activists, Cohen and Lichter say in a study published by The American Enterprise Institute, a Washington research organization. This suggests that the anti-nuclear and environmental group leaders have acquir^ a kind of veto power over nuclear development.
Ck)hen and Lichter suggest that it stems from political savvy, and from the willingness of sympathetic national media to convey anti-nuclear arguments to the general public.
Their survey cciyered 274 peqile, among them scientists in and out of government, members of Congress and their tq> aides, financiers, nuclear power industry executives, officials at the Nuclear Regulatory Ck)mmission and other government agencies, and the environmentalists.
Michael Roddy
Deregulation Brings Unity
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Deregida-tion has brought hard times to the airline industry.
But at the same time, says Professor Herbert Northrop at the University of Pennsylvanias Wharton School, it has made labor and management realize the importance of working together to cut costs.
Deregulation can be credited with having compelled more cooperative employee relations in this industry and with giving the public a greater choice of domestic carriers at a lower cost,
Northrop said in a recent article in Industrial & Labor Relations Review.
In an interview, Northrop said it is hard to separate the impact of the recession and deregulation on the airlines, which went from making money before deregulation in 1978 to losing hundreds of millions of dollars in the last three years. But he said that during previous recessions, there were none of the concessions that he found in his analysis of recent labor settlements.
He noted that many of the new airlines which have cropped up since deregulation, such as People Express, Midway
and New York Air, have hired non-union help.
The newcomers are taking the business because their rates.are lower, Northrop said. They are forcing the airlines to be more efficient and they are making unions think twice before making demand that would push rates up.
Spokesmen for industry and labor, however, say that while strikes may be down, it is questionable whether labor relations have improved.
Northrop concludes that unions and management are cooperating better, butArt Buchwald-
be adds that he also bases that belief on his analysis of the contract settlements and employee-relation developments.
For the future, he said, We are going to have tmigh competition and pressure on airline earnings. There will be pressure on the unions to contain their demands and pressure on the companies to contain those demands. We will have a much more normal situation.
Whosever you have governmoit regulation you have enhanced union power... because the employer ^ts relief, Northnq) said. Now that relief is no
Opinion Makers Agree On Opinion
Larry Speakes, President Reagans press secretary, has blamed the media for the administrations disastrous defeat on military spending in the Senate Budget Committee. Speakes said Congress was responding to a puMic informed by a press that was not giving the administrations defense program a fair shake.
Larry, for once, knows what hes talking about.
As soon as the presidoit announced he wouldnt budge fnrni a 10 percent increase in military spending, a group of opinion makers met at The Gass Reunion restaurant to discuss what action to take.
Sam Donaldson, of ABC, said, I think the president has gone overboard on defense, andi am nof prepared to give him a dime until he tells me bow hes
. )spendit.
Leslie Stahl, of CBS, agreed with Sam. 1 oppose sticking a lot (rf MX missiles in the ground until the Joint Chiefs of Staff assure me that they are not vulnerable to Soviet attack
Is this your personal opinion? I asked.
It is not only mine, but Dan Bathers. Dan feels Dense Pack basing is unfeasible and a waste of money.
So do Tom Brokaw and Roger Mudd, Chris Wallace, of NBC, told us. Theyre fCH* cutting the (HmUeots milita^ request in ball
Helen Thomas, of United Press, said, Ive read the defense budget from cover to cover and there is a lot of waste and fraud there. Why shrndd 1 support Weinberger if the Pentagon wont clean
up its act?
Rowland Evans and Bob Novak, media hardliners, who qieak with one voice, said together, If we dont give the president what hes asking for, we will be sending a message to the Soviets that they can get anything they want in the Geneva disarmament talks. We say Reagan it asking enough. You ultra-libels are tying the presidents hands, just M the time when the Soviets are starting to realize we mean business.
We all ignored Evans and Novak, as we usually do, when the question <rf national security comes 19. (
I said, No one wante a itronger defense than my readors do. But 1 must know what our defenae policy is. If the /mUitary will jiMt teU me what My plan to do with the money, 1 would be the flrst to
say, Go getem boys.But as long as the president has his feet in concrete, 1 have tobeanay-sayer.
Tom Wicker, of the New York Times,' said, I couldnt agree with you more. I want to know if we are preparing to fight a limited nuclear war, a prolonged oudear war, atwo-oeeanwar, aonoKioean war.or ipolioeactioninapaee. v David Brinkley said, **Wliat gets me is that the military will come to the media and teU us they only need $10 billion for a new weiqion, and one tfeiey develop ti, theyre going to return next year and way it wOl cost us four times as nuich as ttiey origbu^ thou{$)t. I got badly bmned on the F-18 fighter plane, and rm not goihg to get sucked in again.
^umnist Jan$ss Kilpatrick said, I think youre all talking a bimch of
Elisha DouglasStrength For Today
As Christian, in Pilgrims Progress, goes down into the water, he calls back over his shoulder, I can feel the bottom, and it is firm.
We have peace in our religius experience when we believe we are standing on infallible and eternal truth. Walking against the current of a stream is not easy. We want to know that the bottom is firm. Only then can we withstand the current.
Peace of heart! Many people regard it as a mood, a gift from heaven which settles down upon us when we banish fear from our lives. But peace has its origin in deep certitudes. We are peaceful when we are sure about God and his goodness and his care for us.
Peace of heart is more than a moon it is an assurance. It is the unshakable confidence which comes when we know that we are standing upon the unshakable when we can say, as did Christian, I can feel the bottom and it is firm.
daptrap. ,
We waited for him to continue, but apparentiy thats aU he wanted to say.
Sarah McQendoii said, Icant Justify a 12 trOlkm military expmiditure over tira years whra there isnt owugh mcmey to
take can of the sick and the poor. I say cut.
Then the oonseiisui is, I said, thatssssseaxs
to have t go back to the drawing boaiS
and c(ne up with smnething the mMia canlivewith.
Whats our next stop? Ma^
W?^itart a steady drumbeat^^of negative thought about defij^ expenditures, and M Congiik take it fromthme.
Widow Regrets Police Not in indictment List
The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Frlday, April 22, lW-5
ByELISSAMcCRARY Associated Press Writer WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - The widow of one of five Communist Workers Party members slain during an anti-Klan raUy in 1979 says she was disappointed that no federal agents or police were named by th federal grand Jury that indicted three Nazis and six present or former Klaismen on conspiracy charges.
The indictments stem from the shooting deaths of five CWP members in Greensboro on Nov. 3, 1979. The shooting came after a caravan of nazis and klansmen drove to the rally.
Five of those indicted Thursday were among the first group of six nazis and Klansmen tried on state murder charges stemming from the shootings. The d^ fendants were found not guilty by a Guilford County Superior Court jury after the longest murder trial in state history, and charges against 10 other Klansmen and nazis were dropped.
Dr. Marty Nathan, whose husband Mike Nathan was one of the victims, said she was disappointed no federal agents or police were named in the indictments.
We welcome them (the indictments), Ms. Nathan said. Just because they are indicted does not mean they are going to be convicted this time, she said. We are urging full prosecution. Prosecutors also announced that former Klansman Mark J. Sherer of Cramerton already has pleaded guilty to participating in a conspiracy. Sherer, charged in a criminal information procedure, pleaded guilty March 24 in Winston-Salem, government officials said.
Prosecutors would not say whether Sherer, who fired the first shot in the 1979, violence, has agreed to serve as a government witness. It is known, however, that he has not been sentenced.
Also indicted Thursday was Henry Clifford Byrd Sr., a witness who appeared. before the grand Jury Tuesday. The indictment says Bjrd lied in five instances.
Five of the nine new defendants named in Thursdays 14-count indictment were arraigned before a federal
Drop Plans For Landfill
WADESBORO, N.C. (AP) - Citizens Against Toxic Underground Storage planned a victory party Thursday night to celebrate the decision by Chemical Waste Management Inc. to drop plans for a hazardous waste landfill in Anson County.
Were not going to pursue the Anson County landfill, said Donald Reddicliffe, director of corporate and public affairs for the company, in a phone interview from his Oak Park, 111., office.
In view of the moratorium and the current public hearings with rei^t to hazardous waste regulations in North Carolina, we have put in abeyance any plans for further site investigations in the state, he said.
Chemical Waste Management has been ambiguous about its position on the Anson site, but CACTUS members say they hope the company is gone for good.
We dont really know how to interpret the companys statement regarding the landfill, since they admitted they would not build the plant and thoi denied it and then admitted it again all in the same week, said CACTUS volunteer Connie McKinnon.
Surely we hope they meant it when they said they had no plans in tte future to use this site, said Ms. McKinnon. I am convinced that theyre not coming here.
PETITION RELEASE MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Filipino reporters signed a petition Thursday urging President F. Marcos to free veteran newsman Antonio Nieva, Jailed fUr nine. on charges of re
magistrate and wdered held on bonds ranging from $15,000 to 3100,000.
Virgil Griffin of Mount Holly, state leader of the Invisible Empire, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, historically one of the most mUi-
tant of the states several Klan factions, was ordered held without bond. Griffin, 38, was called by a Justice Department spokesman a ringleader in the plot. He was charged in two conspiracy counts.
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6-Tbe Daily Rdlector, GreenvlUe, N.C.-Frtday, April 22, IW
Area Church News
Fellowship
The Unitarian-Universallst Fellowship will have a social and election of officers Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
The gathering will be held at the Green Springs Park Shelter if the weather is good, at 2500 E. Fourth Street if it is not. At 11 a.m. Dennis Chestnut, an East Carolina University psychology professor, will talk about The Role of the Black Church. A covered dish lunch vidll be held at noon.
DISCUSSING ADVANCEMENTS ... Hattie Blue, Business and Office state Consultant, Dr. Craig Phillips, state superintendent of Public Instruction, the guest speaker and Loretta Martin, North 'Carolina
Association of Education president discuss advances in technology of business education yesterday at a meeting held in Greenville. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)
Revival
A revival will be held Friday through Sunday of next week at the Church of God of Prophecy on Mum-ford Road. The Rev. Louis Iman of Hiddenite will conduct the 7:30 p.m. services.
Business Career
Emphasis Urged
Dr A. Craig Phillips, superintendent of the State Department of Public Instruction. told eastern North Carolina business and education leaders that students need to dedicate more time in their high school careers to business education.
Phillips spoke at a Business and Office Education Awareness Seminar titled "The Impact of Technology in the Business Education
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Curriculum.
"People are always talking about students not being as good spellers, writers and readers as they used to be. How can this be changed if legislators are talking about cutting funds for education, not what they can do to get funds? Phillips commented.
Other speakers at the seminar included Loretta Martin, president of the North Carolina Association of Educators; Gail Meeks, Greenville city manager; Kathy Riggs, administrative assistant of the Greenville schools and Hattie Blue and Elizabeth Douglas, state business and office education consultants. John Keely of the Bowman
Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem presided at the seminar.
An afternoon session consisted of teacher improvement sessions in accounting, word processing, typewriting-keyboarding and career opprtunities in the80s.
The seminar was sponsored by the Business and Office Education Division of Vocational Education of the State Department of Public Instruction.
Concert
The Livingstone College Concert Choir and Jazz Ensemble Band of Salisbury will be presented in concert at the Moose Lodge in Greenville Saturday at 5 p.m.
St. Stephen AME Zion Church of Farmville is sponsoring the event,, proceeds of which will go to the building fund of the church. An adults ticket costs $4; a childs, $2.
Drug Pushers Escaping Jail
Big Gospel Sing
Featuring Greenvilles Own
RANDY WARREN and THE GOOD NEWS SINGERS
Appearing in Gospel Concert"
ALSO...
Quinton Mills & Deliverance
of Hollister, N.C .
The Singing Laymen
of Windsor. N.C
PLACE-Greenville, North Carolina ADDRESS-J.H. Rose High School Gpi, Elm St. DATE-April23,1983 TIME-7:30-10:30P.M.
Tickets Advance $3.00-At The Door $4.00 Available At:
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AngeA W & Co U6W.MainSl.,Winterville,N.C Edwards Discount Pharmacy 215S Lee.Ayden.NC Alkn & Jones Furniture Co . Inc lllN.MainSt.FaimvIe.NC Snow HPharmacy Inc.
N" Green St , Snow HI.N C Bethel Pharmacy. Inc Main St , Bethel, N C
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - Although a new study shows that more than half the convicted drug pushers in Pennyslvania escape jail, judges shouldnt get the blame, says a court official.
Attorney General LeRoy Zimmerman issued a three-year study Thursday that also said 31 percent of the 1,800 drug sellers arrested by Pennsylvania agents got less than one year in jail. Almost all could have been sentenced to five years in prison, he said.
Youth
A youth service will be held at Morning Star Holy Church in Ayden Sunday at 11 a.m. Eldress Ruby Komegay and the junior choir will be in charge.
A musical program will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday featuring Leo Williams and The Faithful Airs of La Grange, The Spiritual Airs of Greenville, and The Golden Stars of Aydn and others.
Evangelism
An evangelistic service will be held at Christ Disciples Holiness Church in Farmville tonight at 7 p.m. by the Rev. Philip Baker and the Rev. Marvin Lee. A worship service of the church will be broadcast on WBZQ radio Sunday at 9:30 a.m.
North American Neighbors
This weekend marks the beginning of Canada-United States Goodwill Week, a celebration of one of the longest-standing international friendships in history. U.S. President Reagan and Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau lead the two wealthiest and most powerful nations in the Western Hemispheretwo nations that have had their differences but have, always continued to maintain close ties. For many years, Canada has been our nations most important trading partner for imports and exports. We also share membership in NATO and have fought side-by-side in three wars. But the most important symbol of friendship is our mutual border 4,000 miles longthe longest unguarded border in the world.
DO YOU
Canada?
KNOWWhat city is the capital
THURSDAYS ANSWER-The 1980 Democratic Convention was held In New York City.
4-22-83 c VEC. Inc. 1983
\
rTYYXYTYTTIXTmTITIXIIIIX^
MIRACLE
SUNDAY
GRACE FWB CHURCH
400 Watauga Ave. Greenville, N.C.
Pastor
FredLockwood^^^ GOa//S 500 In Sunday School
Sunday School Begins At 9:45 P.M.
Associate Pastor Rev.JonForlines
Ice Cream, Cake, Pepsi Cola For the Children
Lunch
For
Everyone
BiUe Preaching, Music and Youth Ministry, Childrens Church
GRACE IS THE PLACE
Quest Speaker Rev. EIro Driggers Tbnmonsville, S.C.
A Church That Ministers ToThsEntirsFamHy
Beatitudes
A special Beatitudes service will be hdd at Deliverance Back To God Revival Temple, 207 Moore St., Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
The speakers will be Eldresses Daisy Barnes, Vera Petteway, Emma Forbes, Sandra Bryant, Martha Strong, Sandra Gark and Evangelist Mattie Smith.
Anniversary
The DEFG Go^iel Singers will celebrate their first anniversary Sunday at Fleming Chapel Church on the Belvoir hi^wayat2p.m.
The program wUl include the Mighty Traveletts of Hamilton, the Sunli^t Gospel Singers and the Angelic Voices of Kinston, the Junior Consolators, the Edward Singers, the Siqireme Gospel Singers and the Holy Sterlings of Greenville and the Mabel Singers of Ayden.
Evangelist Jean Marshall of Baltimore will be the special guest and will hold bible study Saturday at 1 p.m. at the church.
Joy night services will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday by the Rev. Willie Joyner, the Rev. Charles Joyner and the Rev. Eugene Joyner of Farmville. Music will be provided by the Best Chapel Senior Choir.
Program
A musical program will be held at Mills Chapel Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 7 p.m. with the Southern Spirituals of Ayden and the New Tones of Grimesland as the guests. The service is open to the public.
Service
Eldress Mary Joyner will. preach at Sweet Hope Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 7:30 p.m. She will be accompanied by the Sincere Community Choir of Greenville.
DST Debate...
(Continued bum pagel)
Datt, director of the farm bureaus Washington office, recalled his fathers struggle with the time change and his solution: two clocks in his Pennsylvania farmhouse.
The farmers feelings have not dianged, he told a group of senators the other day, altlMx# conceding that in some cases rightly or wrongly (they) have come to almost accept what has happened to them.
But Taylor had another view as one of the countrys estimated 30 million softball enthusiasts and past president of the Amateur Softball Association. He argued that most Americans get a lot more out of an extra daylight hour in the evening than in the morning.
I dont know of any softball that is played at 5 in the morning. I know of an awful lot of softball games that are called because of darkness at 6:30 in the,afternoon, he said.
His view was supported at the recent Senate hearings by other speakers, including a s^esman for the convenience store industry, who said daylight hours cut crime and increase business, and a speaker for 400,000 people who suffer ni^t blindness and consider an additional hour of evening daylight a precious gift of si^it.
Various forms of daylight-saving time go back to World War I, but there was no attempt to standardize it on a permanent basis until Congress took action in 1966. After the jump in oil prices in
Meeting
Simpson Chapel has scheduled quarterly meeting services this weekend, starting with a conference Friday at 7:30 p.m.. Eldress EUa Hooks wUl lead the service at 7:30 p.m. Saturday and on Sunday, at 11 a.m., Eldress Mary Phillips will deliver the sermon. At 3 p.m.. Elder W.J. Best and Queen Chapel of Vanceboro will be in charge.
Homecoming
The Rev. Adrian Brown will conduct the homecoming service to be held at Bell Arthur United Methodist Church Sunday at 11 a.m. A covered dish dinner will follow the service.
Visitor
The Rev. J.H. WUks of Burney Chapel Church will render a service at St. John Baptist Church in Stokes Sunday at 7:30 p.m. He will be accompanied by the Burney Chapel choir and congregation.
FIJRNITUFH
STRIPPING
Choir
Choir No. 2 of St. Mary Missionary Baptist Church will celebrate its seventh anniversary Sunday. The observance will be held at 4 p.m. at the church.
Board
Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Church of Ayden will hold a board meeting Friday at 7:30 p.m.
Elder Elmer Jackson and members of Elm Grove will hold services at (Jood Hope Church in Winterville Sunday at 3 p.m. .
MBIT It VilMSa ttWV nM HMTIIf
WND IR NETAL
Ckurs *$Miitrs *SINI$ * Tints
*Ckcsis *ki$ Micks Mrs
Nti4| I Mikcri H nrftr Mctn Houn:Moii.-Fri. 8:30-5:00
St. 8:09-2:00___
Tar Road Ai?liquc8
I-Mile South Of SunshiM Gordin Cntr,Wlnlevllle,NC
756-9123 DiV 756-1007 IWMrt
late 1973, the government extended it to 10 months in 1974, put it back to eight months in 1975 and then to the six months now in effect.
But the 1974-75 experiment spawned efforts to permanently lengthen the daylight-saving time season.
Basically, says Sen. Slade Gorton, R-Wash., sponsor of a bill that would start daylight-saving time a month earlier, its an attempt to bring the clocks in line with the way people actually live.
A supporter of Gortons legislation. Sen. George Mitchell, D-Maine, complains daylight-saving hours now go four months past June 21, the point of maximum daylight, but begin only two months before.
Legislation similar to Gortons is being pushed in
the House by Rep. Richard Otttager, D-N.Y., who has scheduled hearings next week on his bill calling fw a two-month extension of daylight-saving time.
The House last year by a 243-165 vote, approved a similar bill requiring an end to standard time on the first Sunday in March. But the effort in the Senate was bottled up in committee, chiefly because of opposition from a bloc of Midwestern senators.
Aroyouoxporioncing,
NECK. SHOULDER. ARM. LOW BACK OR LEG PAIN
from acddont or Injury
Now through LCT Thormogriphy wo can diognoso and offactlvoty
troatyourproManw.
FAMILY CHHIOPRjOC HEALTH (ACCIDENT
SERVICES
756-8160
MHIStraot
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Donald R. Patrick, D.D.S.
is pleased to announce the association of
Donald L. Hardee, D.D.S.
for the practice of General Dentistry
207 Commerce Street Greenville, N.C.
756-5388 756-6626 756-5911-New Patients
Office Hours Mon., Thurs. 8 A.M.-9 P.M. Tues., Wed., Fri. 8 A.M.-5 P.M.
LIQUIDATION SHLE
Beginning April 21,1983 Carolina Sales Marine Division Corner 14th & Evans Street, Greenville, N.C.
ALL TYPES OF MARINE ACCESSORIES & SUPPLIES
20% TO 40% SAVINGS
On Over $250,000 Of Merchandise
Ski Equipment Marine Electronics Sailing Accessories Safety Equipment Marine Paint
Marine Sportswear Rain Gear
Boat, Motor & Trailer Parts & Accessories
Rope, etc.
Cash, MasterCard or Visa Only
Sale Hours: 1 P.M.-8 P.M., Mon.-Fri. 9A.M.-5P.M.,Sat.
For More Information Call
752-4915l_
N.C. Woman
And Spouse Found Deod
BEffiUT, Lebanon (AP) -The bodies of a former North Carolina woman and her husband were pulled from the rubble of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut Thursday, three days after a terrorist bomb exploded in th courtyard.
Monique Lewis, 36, formerly of Goldsboro, N.C., and her husband, James Foley Lewis, 39, brought to 47 the known dead fdlowing the blast.
Mrs. Lewis had reported to the embassy for her first day of work as a secretary the day the building was bombed. Her husband was assigned there as a top political-military analyst. They had served earlier in Tunisia where she worked as anintrepreter.
Mrs. Lewis, the former Nguyet LeMinh, a Vietnamese, had lived with Dr. and Mrs. Bob Getchell of Goldsboro after the fall of Saigon in 1975.
We couldnt adopt her because of her age but she was family, said Mrs. Getchell. We considered her our daughter. We loved her like she was our own flesh and blood.
The Getchells were notified of their deaths Thursday morning and will be guests of the government at memorial services at Andrews AFB Saturday and at the funeral in the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., Tuesday.
They first learned that the couple was missing when a State Department official called Monday night.
But in a way, we already knew, Dr. Getchell said Thursday. When 1 learned that the embassy had been bombed, I said. Oh, no!
The Getchells had taken Nguyet and her cousin. Dung Nguyn, into their home as adopted daughters.
Nguyet was the daughter of a former attorney general of South Vietnam. She was educated in France and at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., where she met her husband.
Lewis had served as a foreign service officer in South Vietnam and was instrumental in directing the evacuation of Saigon when the country fell to the communists.
He was captured by the North Vietnamese after the evacuation and spent several months in solitary confinement at Son Tay Prison, North Vietnam.
While in Goldsboro, Mrs. Lewis, a pharmacist, had worked with ICI Americas. She was a member of Adamsville Baptist Church.
Lewis was a native of California. They had no children.
Plan Tribute To
NormanCouslns
BOISE, Idaho (AP) -Former Saturday Review editor Norman Cousins is to receive a peace quilt from a group wishing to recognize him for his peacekeeping work, a spokeswoman says.
Heidi Read of the Boise Peace Quilt Project said Thursday that Cousins will be given the quilt Saturday when he stops at Boise en route from Sun Valley, Idaho, to Los Angeles.
He was real excited, real touched, I think, to learn he had been chosen to receive a quilt, Mrs. Read said.
The thenie of Cousins quilt is based on childrens drawings of family life and is being awarded because his peacekeeping work has given a lot of hope to their generation.
Cousins, on the medical faculty at the University of California at Los Angeles, has received a United Nations peace medal and helped bring Hin^ima maidens, survivors of the atomic blast, to this country for treatment, she said.
, 'NOREDUCTION LONDON (AP) - An appeals court has refused to rduce the 38-year sentence di Geoffrey Prime, the British translator convicted of spying for the Soviet Union' forllyaars.
SELL YOUR OLD car in daaaified and youll have extra mooay for a new one. Call
"isUm.
Carolina east mall k^^greenville
Saturday Only
Hourly Specials
Some Items In Limited Quantities No Phone orders Or Lay-a-ways
ON SALE 10 AM TO 11AM ONLY
Our Entire Stock of
Patio
Furniture
By Lyon Shaw
1/3
Off
Regular to $700.00
Select From Our Stock Of Furniture For One Hour.
Ladies
Dresses
40%
Off
Reg. To $25.97
A Select Group Of Dresses In Our BUDGET STORE.
Mens
Calvin
Klein
Jeans
$2788
Reg. $40.00
5 Pocket In Blue Denim
Ladies
Tennis
Shorts
By Court Casuals
Ml
88
Reg. $17.00
Misses Tennis Shorts In White, Navy & Red At Great Savings.
Junior Ocean Pacific
Corduroy
Shorts
$1388
Solid Colored Shorts
Ladies
Century
Skirts
$1488
Reg. $24.00
Side Pocket Wrap Skirts In Many Colors.
Ladies Aigner
Aii-
Weather
Coats
40%
Off
Our Stock Of Famous Coats On Sale For ne Hour Only.
Junior
Cheenos
MO
Select From Solid Color Slacks At Great Savings For One Hour.
Mens
Burlington
Socks
1/3
Off
Values To $5.50
Select From Our Stock Of Crew, Over-The-Calf For One Hour.
Pre-Teen
Sportswear
by Russ
30%
Off
A Select Group Of Spring Sportswear At Great Savings.
Ladies Oscar de La Renta
Jeans
Ml
88
5 Pocket Western In Denim Blue.
Gloria Vanderbilt
Jeans
For Ladies
21
88
Reg. $38.00
Black Denim Jeans At Great Savings.
45 Piece Set Of
Noritake
China
12 Sets Only To Sell
Abundance, Talisman, Or First Blush. Limit 1 To A
Customer.
Sale
SOftOO
Reg. $325.00 to $440.00
Mens
Arrow
Shirts
Ml
88
Reg. $18.00
Mens Short Sleeve Plaid Button Down Shirts.
Ladies
izod
Shirts
$1288
Reg. $24.00
Izod Solid Knit Shirts In Many Colors.
N.C. State No. 1
Wolfpack
Shirts
$488
Reg. $7.00
Mens Sizes.
Entire Stock Of Junior and Misses
Swimwear
1/3
Off
Select From Famous Brands Like O.P., Bill Blass, Jantzen, Catalina, And More For One Hour.
Lark
Luggage
Totes, Suitcases, And Garment Bags In Black And Blueberry Colors.
V3
Off
Reg. To $197.00
Burlington 4
Hosiery For Ladies
Variety Of Styles And Colors.
1/3
Off
Reg. To $6.00
Hoover
Vacuum
Cieaner
Model U4127. Convertible Upright. 18 Only To Sell.
Sale
60
00
Reg. $94.95
Mens Pony
Athietic
Shoes
Assorted Styles Of Leather, Canvas, And Nylon In Oxford And Hi Top Stylings.
1/3
Off
Reg. To $42.00
Gorham
Silverpiated
Candiesticks
Sale
$g88
Reg. {32.50
9Vi/est Shoes For
Ladies
A Wide Selection Of Stylish, But Affordable Shoes For All
Occasions.
25%
Off
Reg. To $46
Playtex
Bras
25%
Off
Our Entire Stock of Bras & Girdles On Sale For One Hour. BUDGET STORE.
Mens
Archdale
Underwear
30%
Off
Reg. Prices
Select From T-Shirts, Boxers & Briefs In Our BUDGET STORE.
Pre-Teen
Izod
Sportswear
30%
Off
A Select Group Of Girls Sportswear At Great Savings.
Pre-Teen
Jeans
by Gloria Vanderbilt
M9
Reg. $30.00
Black Denim Jeans At Great Savings.
Seiko
Watches
For Men And Ladies Wide Selection
25%
Off
Reg. To $250.00
Mens
Bass
Weejuns
Tassel And Penny Loafer Styles In Cordovan, Black.
S3988
Reg. $66.00
Queen Elizabeth
Full Size Bedspread
by Bates
Antique White Only
Sale
$59
Reg. $98.00
Mens
Andhurst
Underwear
1/3
Off
100% Cotton-Blends in Briefs, T-shirts & Shorts.
Mens Ocean Pacific
Corduroy
Shorts
M3
Reg. $18 & $19.00
Regular And Elastic Back Waist.
Mens
Suits & Blazers
1/3
Off
Reg. To $88.00
Selected Spring Suits In our BUDGET STORE.
Mens
Slacks
25%
Off
Select From Our Stock Of Haggar, Asher, Jaymar & Thompson Slacks For One Hour.
Coleco
Vision
The Arcade Quality Video System. 16 Only To Sell.
Sale
SI 5000
Reg. $229.88Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
. '
after chase ... Investigators night. They have identified the driver
look over the car which led police on as Nelson Dewy Edwards Jr. (Re-
a chase through Greenville Thursday fleeter Photo by Tommy Forrest)
Classmates Say Steve McQueen Was loner'
CHINO, Calif. (AP) - One of Steve McQueens reform school classmates remembers the late actor as a loner who didnt participate but who nevertheless felt that Boys Republic turned his life around.
McQueen, star of The Sand Pebbles and Papillon who died of cancer in 1980 at age 50, was honored by his alma mater Thursday with the dedication of the $310,000 Steve McQueen Recreation Center at Boys Republic 40 miles east of Los Angeles.
The 8,000-square-foot facility includes pool and ping-pong tables as well as other games, a reading room and a crafts shop.
McQueen, who was sent to the Riverside County facility in 1947 by his mother after she gave up raising him herself, never tried to make a secret of his reform school background. He left $200,000 to Boys Republic in his will.
He was always a loner, said former classmate John Babcock. He kept to himself and didnt participate in student government or any of the other organized activities.
But Babcock said McQueen always felt that the school turned him around.?
He never was active in our alumni association, but
he always stayed in touch with the school, said Babcock. He liked to drop in unannounced and spend an afternoon with the kids in his old dorm.
Babcock also went on to success in later life. He is executive producer of documentaries and investigative news at KABC-TV in Los Angeles.
Now Eager* To Start Her Trial
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Feminist leader Ginny Foat, charged in Louisiana with a 1965 murder,'is eager to get on with the trial after losing her fight against extradition, her lawyer says.
Attorney Robert K. Tuller said Thursday he will travel with Ms. Foat to Louisiana after a court appearance here Monday in Municipal Court.
Ms. Foat, 41, on leave from the presidency of Californias National Organization for Women, has been fighting extradition since being Indicted Jan. 18 for a 1965 robbery-slaying. A former husband, John Sidote, has implicated her in the crime.
The state Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected her last bid to avoid extradition.
FIRE CAUSED HEAVY DAMAGE TO RURAL HOME - Staton House firemen extinguish the last sparks of a 4:25 a.m. fire that caused heavy damage to a Route 11, Greenville, house. According to Staton House Fire Chief Darrell Williams, the owner and occupant of the house was listed as Mrs. Henry Foskey. Williams said Mrs. Foskey was home when the fire started and escaped
injury. Williams said Mrs. Foskey told him she thought the fire may have started from an electric blanket in a center bedroom of the woodframe house. The six-room house sustained heavy smoke damage to three of the rooms and heavy smoke and water daamge to the remainder of the home. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)
NIGHTTIME-FAMILY DENTISTRY
FAMILY DENTISTRY
DR. ROBERT L. CAPPS
DR. QUALLIOTINE DR. Q
DR. GARY . MICHELS
Practice of Family Oentiatiy
1012 CbarlM Blvd. Located Behind Croare Neet Phone 752-1337
8A.N.-9P.M. Mon.-Thui.
8 A.M.-5 P.M. Friday 8 A.M.-11:30 A.M. Saturday
All Aspects Of Dentistry Provided Childrens Dentistry Surgical Removal Of Wisdom Teeth Modern Pain Control Including Nitrous Oxide Sedation Laughing Gas Root Canals
I 1Arrest Driver Following Chase
Nelson Dewey Edwards Jr., 18, of 166 Jons Dorm was arrested by Greenville police Thursday night on multiple charges following a chase that led officers from the East Carolina University campus to a point about five miles West of Greenville on U.S. 264.
Chief Glenn Cannon said local officers received a call from ECU police about 10:42 p.m., saying they were in pursuit of a car and asking for assistance in stopping the vehicle. Local police took up the chase on Fifth Street near the Elm Street intersection. Cannon said.
The chase led south on Elm Street, west on 10th Street, north on Grand Avenue, west on Chestnut Street, south on Skinner Street, west on Dickinson Avenue and west on U.S. 264.
Cannon said during the chase Edwards failed to stop for six traffic lights, several stop signs and allegedly tried to ram two police cars. He
If you or your neighbors would like to sponsor a community beautification project, call the Public Works Department at 752-4137.
said Edwards was charged with failing to stop for a blue light and siren, speeding to elude arrest, two counts of speeding and two counts of assault on an officer (with vehicle).
University police charged Edwards with careless and reckless driving. ?
Francis Eddin^, assistant director of security at ECU, said a campus officer on foot attempted to stop the Edwards car about 8:42 p.m. because of the way the vehicle was being operated on campus.
When he was unsuccessful, Eddings said, the officer radioed one of the campus police cars which later took up the chase.
BEYOND NEEDS 'MOSCOW (AP) - The" Soviet news agency Tass says Frances plan to develop a new, longer-range nuclear missile exceeds considerably the countrys defense needs and goes far beyond the limits of so-called deference.
PUBLIC HEARING TOWN OFWINTERVILLE
The public is hereby notified that a public hearing will be held at the regular scheduled meeting at 7:00 p.m. on May 9,1983 in the Board Room of the Municipal Building for the purpose of discussing the proposed uses of General Revenue Sharing Funds during the fiscal year 1983-84.
The Town will receive approximately $30,000 in General Revenue Sharing Funds.
Citizens are invited to offer oral or written com-
Budget Officer
April 22 Elwood Nobles
stm smokii^
April 25-29 7:00 P.M.
PITT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
The popular 5-Day Plan to stop Smoking will be directed by Allen F. Bowyer, president of the Pitt County American Heart Assn., and Chief of Cardiology, E.C.U.
Group Therapy-Fllma-Lectures-Buddy System-Your Own control book-lta Qreatl And you wont gain weight If you follow the 5-Day Play. For information call 756-2014 or 757-3082. It is not necessary to pre-register.
Stop Smoking Week, April 25-29,7:00 p.m.
At First FederaFs 24-hour Prestige Place.
Your cash needs dont always coincide with regular business hours. First Federals Prestige Machine, at Prestige Place, gives you the First Class convenience you deserve...push-button cash control 24 hours a day, every day of the year.
Get the money you need when you need it by withdrawing money from your Prestige Checking account, Savings Account, First Insured Money Fund, or First Investors Checking.
First FederaFs Prestige Machine and your Prestige Card let you take care of business when its convenient for you. Add to your savings account... or make a payment on your First Class Home Loan or First Class Consumer Loan. A receipt comes with every Prestige Machine transaction.
And Prestige Place is located where its convenient for you...on the 264 Bypass in Greenville. Its well-lighted for safety, and completely enclosed to keep the weather out.
t
How to Get Prestige Ikeatment
To get your Prestige Card, just visit any First Federal Office and open a Prestige Checking account, First Insured Money Fund, or First Investors Checking account. A helpful First Federal savings counselor will explain all the details.
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GREENVILLE: 324 S. Evans St./758-2145*8l4 E Greenville Btvd./756-6525 AOiDEN: 107 W 3rd St./746-3043 WhRMVILLE: 128 H Mam St /753-4139 ORIFTON: 118 Queen St /524-4128
In The Area
Kidney Foundation Unit Organiud SfudanHHolplasfarSaalProlocf Mora Charges Aro Filed
An organizational meeting to establish a Pitt County chapter of the Natkmal Kidney Foundation of North Carolina was held Thursday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Steve Joyner, administrative transplant coordinator for the East Carolina University School of Medicine, was the sponsor for the meeting.
Larry Comer, executive director of the National Kidney Foundation of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, ouUined the stq)s needed to organize a chapter. Officers will be dected and committees appointed at a meeting May 19 at 7:30 p.m. at Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Third, fourth and fifth graders at St. Peters School, Greenville, raised $1,033.73 recenUy whUe participating in the 1983 Pizza Hut Spell-A-lbon for Barter Seals.
The money will be used for continued service programs of the Easter Seal Society of North Carolina, including equipment purchases and loans, summer speech clnics, swim programs, support groiq)s and residoitial camping at Camp Easter-in-the-Pines.
Top fund-raisers from each classroom were Michelle Meyer, Alan Averette and Taylor Evans. Averette also received the school champion trophy for raising $144.78.
Workshop For Teachers Is Canceled Chorale Society To Perform
A workshop on alternative careers for teachers planned by the East Carolina University Division of Continuing Education for Saturday has been canceled because of insufficient registration. The same workshop will be held in Raleigh April 30.
For information call 757-6143.
Student Wins Scholarship
Elizabeth Dixon Mclnnis of Scotland Neck has been awarded the Patricia Garke Endrikat Scholarship for her work as a graduate student in the department of psychology at East Carolina University. She will receive full tuition for the 1983-84 academic year.
Mezzo-Soprano To Perform
Mezzo-soprano Catherine Wafford of Wilson, a soloist with operatic experience, will perform in recital at 3 p.m. Sunday in the A.J. Fletcher Recital hall on the East Carolina University campus.
Her program, free and q>en to the public, will include arias by Handel, Purcell, and Bach, two Debussy songs, four Brahms songs, an aria by Tchaikovsky, and contemporary songs by Birch, Dougherty and Bernstein.
She will be accompanied by pianist Mark Gansor and assisted by cellist Andrea Thomas.
Mills Family To Hold Reunion
The James Allen Mills family will hold its annual reunion Sunday at the Simpson Community Building. Family members are asked to bring a picnic lunch. *
Theft Reported At Home
Greenville police today were investigating the theft of an estimated $3,700 worth of property from 313 E. 10th St.
Chief Glenn Cannon said Any Lou Schmidt told officers that a television set, a stereo system, a watch, 18 pairs of earrings and four art works were taken from her residence. Cannon, who said a door to the home was forced open to gain entrance, said the theft was reported at 1:24 p.m. Thursday.
Woods Scholarship Established
The Danny Woods Memorial Scholarship prorgam has been established at Pitt Community College, Dr. William Fulford Jr., president of the college, has announced.
A recent donation of $1,000 from the Alpha Omega Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha International Sorority established the scholarship, which honors Danny Woods, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Woods of Greenville. Woods was planning to study accounting at PCC at the time of his death.
The scholarship will be administered by the college and will provide assistance for tuition and required fees for a Rose High graduate who is a first-year accounting student. The value is $150 per year.
The Greenville Chorale Society will present its spring concert at 3 p.m. Sunday in Wright Auditorium in exjunction with the third annual Eastern Carolina Art Festival.
Admission is $2 for all ages. Tickets are available from the Pitt-Greenville Arts Council office, located in the Home Federal Savings and Loan Association Building, 543 S. Evans St., from any member of the society or at the door prior to the performance hour.
The major work on the program will be Haydns Theresa Mass. Additionally, an assortment of American folk tunes will be included X the program.
Two Wrecks Are Investigated
An estimated $1,700 damage resulted from two traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Thursday.
Officers reported heaviest damage resulted from an 11:48 a.m. coUiskm on Greene Street, 600 feet north of the First Street intersection. Police said cars driven by Tony Oliver Dawson Jr. of 401 Nash St. xd Steven Ray Padgett of Stancil Trailer Park collided, causing an estimated $50 damage to the Dawson car and $1,000 damage to the Padgett vehicle.
Cars driven by Jeng Ja Kim of 302 Scottish Court and Audrey Kaye Honea of 1101 Forbes St. collided about 9:18 p.m. at the intersection of 10th Street and Riberbluff Road, causing $250 damage to the Kim car and $400 damage to the Honea vehicle.
Students Open Restaurant
Hollywoods Golden Cafe, a restaurxt operated by the food service students and mxaged by the faculty of D.H. Conley High Schxl, held its grxd (^ning Wednesday.
The students have obtained training through classrxm instruction, guest makers xd field trips to several Ixal food establishments. In addition, the food service classes have been operating a cake bakery for the Conley faculty and students.
NOTICE!
The location of The Eastern Farm/Home Trade Expo on April 21, 22*& 23 was omitted in our large
Sunday ad. The Expo will be held at Works Tobacco Warehouse in Rocky Mount. Hwv. 301 S.
For 10% down well deliver your American Lincoln Log Home to your building site^
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P.O DRAWER 6S0 UTTLETON, NORTH CAROUNA 278S0 TELEPHONE (919) 686-3127
PLA NmbEE S^ViiSERY-
Cheaper By The Dozen
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FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
Bedding & Vegetable Plants _ _ .
99'
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Plants In 6 Paks ' Are Cheaper Than Plants In 4 Paks
DOZEN
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Geraniums
In 1 Qt. Pot
Ea. Better Boy
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In Gallon Pots with Blooms
EA.
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-WITH THIS COUPON-OFFER GOOD THRU SUNDAY APRIL 24.1983
PLANT&SEE NURSERY,
LOCATED BESIDE SUNSHINE GARDEN CENTER
PHONE 756-0879
7 DAYS A WEEK
James Allen Wilsx, 23, of 605 Albemarie Ave., arrested by Greenville pdice in connection with a Wednesday break-in at Elmhurst Elemxtary Schxl, has hex charged in connectix with two other break-ins at the schxl. Chief Glex Canxn said Wilson was charged with breaking and xtering after offixrs caught him craning out of the schxl abxt 3:04 a.m. Wednesday.
He said further investigation hx led offixrs to charge Wilson with breaking, entering and larceny in crainection with X April 14 break-in in which $300 in foodstuff were taken from the schxl cafeteria. Wilson hx also been chxged with breaking and entering xd attempted safe cracking in coxection with x incident reported Sxday.
Cannx said that, in the Sxday incident, x intruder attempted to force open a safe in the schxls office, cxked hamburger in the schxls kitchen and left a xte saying he was sorry for his actiox.
Club To Make Donation
The Pinxhle Bug Sxial and Civic Gub will present a $1,000 check to Pitt Coxty Memorial Ho^iital during its national conclave being held at the Holiday Ix here this weekend.
The moxy will be used to purchase infxt monitors to be made available to familix who need to rent them in order to take their babies home from the hxpital, according to Myriam Harris, president of the Ixal chapter.
Secretaries Week Proclaimed
Mayor Percy Cox hx prxlaimed April 24-30 as Professional Secretaries Week xd urged mxagement to join in recognizing the oxtanding professionals in their employ, especially on Wednesday, Professional Secretaries Day.
The week hx been designated by Professional Secretaries International.
Brothers Fined in Transporting Animals
Joseph A Perry of Deep Rx and Elwood Everett Perry of Greenville were recently convicted of violating federal law controlling the movement of animals.
The brothers had been charged with traxporting two caribou xd two dahl sheep from Alaska to Washington, N.C.
U.S. Magistrate C.K. McCotter of New Bern fined Joseph Perry $1,500 and ordered him to pay a $1,500 replacement fine. Elwood Perry was fined $500 and a $500 replacement fee.
Best Wins Welborn Award
Art Best of Aycxk Junior High hx been presented a David Welborn Memorial Scholarship by the Greenville City Band Boosters.
His name wx inadvertxtly omitted from the list of other winners published in Thursdays Daily Reflector.
Cohen Speaks At Symposium
Dr. Steven I. Cohen of Family Chiropractic Health xd Accidxt Services in Winterville wx a speaker at a recent symposium on sensory xrve injury xd thermograjic analysis. Dr. Cohen presented a l^ture on the clinical uses of thermography in his practice.
ABSOLUn
^AUCTION ^
APRIL 23-7:30 p.m.
fPtf lOCATWN
WorMngtons Warehouse, lannvWe, N. C. MariborD Rood
NEW
inafCAiBT lAK
USED
TMCIT881 ITEM
ITM8fMKITCIH
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Special!
Were going to sell a 30 minute plane ride over Pitt County
Auctioneers Note:
This is a fund-raising project for Piney Grove FWB Church. Come out and help us and have a great time, too!
Sale Conducted by:
Piney Grove Free Will^aptist Church
Greenville, N.C.
I ' ^
fw WiriMllM CMiKt hM WtrmailM KAl IM3 (Hmm m-mi)
A Brilliant Choice For Diamonds & Gold
Diamond Pendents
Y
fg. NOW
.02 Ct.......$75 *49
.05 Ct......$125 *69
.08 Ct......$150 *89
.15 Ct......$275 *199
.25 Ct......$490 *349
Diamond Solitaires
Diamond Earrings
Reg. NOW
lOCt. ...$269 25Ct. ...$635 .33Ct. ...$850 .50Ct. ..$1550
*199
*495
*695
*995
I.OOCt. ..$4200 *2495
Reg. NOW
.06 Ct $99 *69
.12Ct. ...$250 *159
.25Ct. ...$395 *249
.50Ct. ..$1040 *699
I.OOCt. ..$3000 *1995
14K Chains 50% OFF 14K Bracelets
14K Serpentine Bracelets Reg. $24.95 NOW $9.95
Selected Watches
25% OFF
14K Floating
Hearts
$200
14K Earrings
20%off
Gold Dipped Leaves and Pine Cones 99^^
Diamond Clusters
Mens Diamonds
Reg. NOW
.04 Ct.....$129 *79
.12 Ct.....$280 *199
.25 Ct.....$460 *299
.50 Ct.....$690 *499
ll.OOCt. ...$1670 *950
14K
Gold Beads
3mm.............39
4mm ........69'
5mm.............99'
6mm .........$1.29
7mm...........$1.49
Reg. NOW
.07 Ct.....$285 *179
.25 Ct.....$580 *359
.50 Ct.....$750 *479
I.OOCt. ...$1850 *999
5 Convenient Ways to BuyNobody but Nobody Undersells REEDS
.)n PiiMiti Ji.mumil A| iiv.piH'tian
Other Locations:
Cli.ipol Hill. Caiv Rork, Mt WiInOii Wilniiiu]ton Jack' Oii-, ^^hili'villo Myillr HimcI'
Three Russian Spies CaughtrExpelled
ACROSS 1 Scoundrel 40wned 7 Lustrous gems
12 Gone by
13 Exist
14 Songbird
15 Kitty IS African
native
18 Fury
19 Mideast ruler
4S Michelangelo DOWN statue 1 Swift 47 Slower: mus. 2Marke^ce
48 Touchy subject
52 Grain
53 Stellar hunter
54 Collection
55 Past tense (rf 24 Down
3 Tribal symbol
4 Laugh sound
5 Scents
8 Hinder
7 Finished
8 Wrestling fall
58 Quick looks
57Mao--tung SMuseumfiU 58 Patriotic 18 Zodiac 20 Hoover and org. cat
Aswan solution time: 25 min.
22 Rainbow
23 Ego 27 Used to be 29 Empty talk 31 Worked
34 Deerslayer name
35 Frank
37 Sopping
38 Prescription info
39 Paddle 41 Spanish
river Answer to yesterdays iMizzle.
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DDIiSSlSSlS] m\SM ang] Qaaaaaii aSSaQQ !QB1 aiQ mn (sdsqs mm SDQ Qssa mm agi mm siiQsaQ aQSSiQizid mmm mmm (oacsBoaas mm ansiia um aaaa ssoa scai!]
4-22
11 Drunkard 17 Cal-(Pasadena coL)
21 Scandinavian
23 Condition
24 Diner verb
25 Illuminated 28 Cook fish 28 Fuss
30 Chorus line" song
31 College deg.
32 Card game 33-aboy! 38 Capricorn 37 Pens
40 Nautical cry 42 Wide ,43 Lasso
44 Playful mammal
45 Puts on 48 Love to
excess
48 Spring
49 Mine output
50 Draw
51 Cork sound
CRYPTOQUIP
4-22
WKSJMGXX EAJFLVC KS FKCCNEJ FXNM AW NTRVCLGTRVR EVCWKT. Yesterdays Cryptoquip - THE KEEN BEEKEEPER KEPT HER BONNET ON. .
Todays Cryptoquip clue: N equals U.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Sii^le letters, short wor^, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
I9U King Ftaturei Syndicate, Inc
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc
North-South vulnerable. South deals.
NORTH
AJ83 ^ A62 0K4
AK72 WEST EAST KQ10965 4742 ^Q1098 ':KJ54
0J8 0 95
43 4QJ85
SOUTH 4 Void '773
0 AQ107632 40964
The bidding:
South West North East 3 0 3 4 6 0 Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead: Three of 4.
Many a contract has foundered on the shoals of distribution. But don't let a bad break throw you off. There may be a way to counter it. Follow the technique of one of Italy's stars, Lorenzo Lauria.
We like the auction. We approve of West's overcall, especially at this vulnerability, and North's jump to six diamonds has the virtues of being both accurate and direct.
Hunting Source Of Contaminant
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Extensive tests will be needed to determine the source of bacterial contamination that is forcing about 112,500 residents to boil their drinking water, officials say.
The order to boil water used for drinking and cooking was Issued Thursday for Miami Beach and the coastal communities of Surfside, Bal Harbor, Bal Harbor Island and Indian Creek Village.
Routine tests turn^ up contamination from coliform bacteria, said the Dade County Health Department. The boil-water order will stay in effect until the water is found to be safe, officials saM.
MIRACLES TAKE A BIT LONGER
When West led the three of clubs, it was obvious to all at the table that it was a singleton. Therefore, it seemed that declarer would have to lose two tricks, since he could get only one discard on the ace of spades. But Lauria had other ideas. -He won the king of clubs in dummy, cashed the ace of spades for a heart discard and ruffed a spade in hand. Next came the ace of diamonds and a diamond to the king. He ruffed another spade to eliminate that suit from East's hand, and then started to run trumps, coming down to this position:
NORTH
4 -
7 A62
0 -
4A72
WEST
EAST
4KQ10
4 -
7Q109
7KJ5
0 -
0 -
4 -
4QJ8
SOUTH 4 -
7 7 0 107 41096
West's hand is immaterial. On the penultimate trump, dummy parted with a heart. East could not discard a club for then declarer could simply give up a club, so he too let go of a heart. The groundwork for an end play was complete.
Declarer led a heart to the ace and ruffed a heart, then exited with the ten of clubs. East was forced to win and lead away from his queen of clubs into declarers combined A 9 tenace, and the slam was made.
By MICHAEL J.SNIFFEN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON CAP) -Three Soviet officials - a KGB officer, the acting defense attache, and a diplomat at the United Nations have been expelled from the United States after the FBI cau^t them trying to obtain classified documents.
In two cases, the FBI used cooperating Americans acting as double agents to trap the Soviets. FBI agents surprised the attache, who is a military intelligence officer, as he picked up a green plastic garbage bag containing films of secret U.S. military documents from a dead drop at the base of a tree in a remote, wooded area outside Washington.
FBI officials said that no U.S. secrets fell into Soviet hands in the three unrelated incidents. The Soviets were seeking documents about U.S.-Soviet relations, military matters, the U.S. aerospace industry and weapons technology.
It was coincidental they all came out at the same time, Assistant FBI Director Roger Young said. The cases are closed; no other people are being sought.
Young denied the expulsions were retaliation for the recent Soviet expulsion of a U.S. diplomat, Richard Osborn, for alleged spying. Im sure that case was in the minds of those who made the decision, but it was not the reason for the expulsions.
Price Wins A 2nd Term
KINSTON - Woodrow Price of Gloucester has apparently succeeded in his bid to gain a second six-year term as a member of the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, representing the 2nd District.
Price narrowly defeated Clyde Sutton of Lenoir County here this week in balUiiiiig at the district Wildlife Commission meeting. Although Gov. Jim Hunt makes the official appointment to the commission, historically the governor has chosen the candidate with the top vote total.
Under the selection format, the names of Price and Sutton would be submitted to Hunt but Sutton said that he will withdraw his name.
Over 2,000 people from the 12-county district, which includes Pitt, attended the meeting and gave Price the top position over Sutton by a margin of 807 votes to 746.
Bud Dixon of Morehead City was elected to serve as chairman of the meeting, defeating Claude Westbrook of Lenoir County, and Henry Oglesby of (Jrifton was named by Dixon as secretary.
Sex And Drug Ring Disclosed
SANTA ANA,* Calll. (API - Orange County officials have disclosed details of a sex-and-drug ring they say exploited girls as young as 9, luring them into sexual activities with drugs, money and jewelry.
Arthur C. Bowen, 40, was being sought Thursday on 22 counts, including illegal intercourse, rape, sex perversion and narcotics, said Sheriff Brad Gates. Six other men were arrested in the 181-count felony case Wednesday, he said.
Gates said the ring had been active for at least five years. An undercover investigation and the v^ling-ness of three teen-age rls to aid authorities led to the charges, he said.
Repeal Handgun Control
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) - A law controlling handgun sales in Broward County was repealed by commissioners before it could be enforced, because of a revdt by local communities.
County commissioners voted 4-1 IlHirsday to kill the law enacted Jan. 20 that would have required* a
county permit to own a gun, and reared criminal and mental checks for gun purchasers.
Since its adoption, the law had generated controvery. Enforcement was held off because of opposition from six county cofnmunities that voted to exen^ themselves - including Oakland Park apd Fort Lauderdale.
But the expulsion of diplomats for alle^ ^ying has been mounting in recent months. In the most celebrated case, France sent 47 Soviet officials packing. Britain has expelled four Soviets in recent weeks, and the Soviet Union has thrown three Britons out in retaliation.
Canada and Spain also have expelled Soviet officials.
FBI Director William H. Webster said Aleksandr N. Mikheyev, 44, an employee of the Soviet mission to the United Nations, tried to secure a highly classified document on Soviet-U.S. relations from a legislative aide to Rep. Olympia J. Snowe, R-Maine.
Soviet Army Lt. Col. Ye-vyeniy N. Barmyantsev, 39, who was acting military attache at the Soviet Embassy in Washington, was picked up by the FBI while retrieving eight rolls of undeveloped 35mm film of classified military documents near a re-mote state park in Montgomery County, Maryland, last Saturday, Webster said.
On April 2, Oleg V. Konstantinov, 33, an officer in the KGB, the Soviet intelligence agency, , was detained by FBI agents as he attempted to obtain classified U.S. aerospace industry and weapons technology information from U.S. citizen who was cooperating with the FBIs investigation, Webster said. That incident occured in Manhasset on Long Island.
Konstantinov served a& third secretary in the Soviet U.N. mission.
Aides to Rep. Snowe declined to discuss the case, but Webster said that in April Mikheyev approached Marc E. Zimmerman, her legislative assistant, trying to obtain the U.S.-Soviet relations document.
Zimmerman asked the FBI for guidance. At the request of the FBI and with the concurrence of the congresswoman, Zimmerman arranged to meet Mikheyev.
FBI recordings of Zimmerman's talks with Mikheyev showed Mikheyev persisted in trying to get the document even after Zim
merman tdd him it was classified. Young said their meetings occurred in Washington restaurants and Zimmermai) was carrying a concealed recording device.
Webster said Barmyantsev was known to have tried to recruit several individuals in the United States with access to secret material.
At 8 p.m. last Saturday, Barmyantsev was stopped by FBI agents after he picked up the trash bag containing the film.
When the agents pounced on him, he immediately threw the bag in the air, Young said.
Young said that although the photographs were of ac
tual classified documents, there was never any je(q)ardy of their being discing, but he declined to say why.
When Barmyantsev identified himself as a diplomat, FBI agents let him go at the scene.
Soviet officials in this country, like diplomats of all countries around the world, are immune from criminal prosecution.
On ^ril 2, Konstantinov was confronted by FBI agents on Long Island as he met with an American from whom he was attempting to obtain classified aero^ace and weapons data, the FBI said.
Young said the American was a double agent who has operated under the control of the FBI for several years and its a fair assumption that he had access where he works to this kind of data. But Young would not amplify.
Konstantinov was allowed to depart after he identified himself.
State Department spokesman Rush Taylor said Barmyantsev had been expelled on Tuesday and Mikheyev on Wednesday. He did notmention Konstantinov, but Young said the bureau believed he had already left the country after being advised to do so.
WE WORK N YDUR
\R\c/maiMs.
_
Travel Express is open on Saturdays from 9:00 am until 1:00 pm. So if you need help on weekends, we work on your vacations.
A
TRHVEL
EXPRESS
FULLgffVCgTPffS/ELQGnCV
656-B Arlington Blvd., Greenville, NC 756-4100 (M-F 9-5, Saturday 9-1)
HOME BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.
2000 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville, N.C. 758-4151
Spring Yard Sale
Rain Date: Saturday, April 30
Saturday, April 23 8:00 A.M. to 12 Noon
Come on out Saturday morning and take advantage of our goofs, odd lots, and discontinued items.
Prices Slashed On All Instore Merchandise Also!
All Drastically Reduced For This Sale!
Cash Sales Only
Register to win A Free
Ceiling Fan
A $149.00 Value!
No Purchase Necessary. Do Not have to be present to win.
All Sales Final
Free Pepsis and Unbelievable Values
L
CfliO
HOME BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.
No Admittance
Mor. e A,M. on 2000 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville, N.C
Day of Sale. '
758-4151
Nuclear Waste js Yet To Be Solved
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER Associated Press Writff
WASHINGTON (AP) -There was once talk of shoo^ It into i^iace or burying it under a polar ice cap. While those notions have been discarded, the protdem of what to do with nuclear wastes that will remain lethal for thousands of years is a l(Mig way from being solved.
Since the dawn of the atomic age four ctecades ago, the waste has been piling up from construction of nuclear warheads and the generation of electricity at civilian power plants.
Congress, after 25 years of debate, passed a bill last December that sets up a schedule for completing the first burial site for civilian wastes by 1998.
WhUe that gives the government IS years to find and build the site, past history indicates that all that time and more may be needed.
The problem gained new urgency Wednesday when the Siq>reme Court tg)beld a California law banning new nuclear power plants until the federal government devises a safe method of disposing of the wastes. At least 12 other states have some type of restriction on plant construction.
Even before the decision, the Reagp administration was pushing ahead on an accelerated schedule to meet the requirements of the waste bill to demonstrate its commitment to solving the problem.
While the law requires the president to pick t^ sites for detailed studies by Jan. 1, 1985, Department of Energy officials say they exp^t to have the three candidates picked by the end of this year.
Then they will begin detailed site characterization work leading to the selection of one site for the waste dump by the president (m March 1987.
Two of the three sites - in Washington and Nevada have already been nominated. Four states -Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana and Utah - are in the running for the third site. Each candidate site in these four states features underground salt formations. The department may decide to pick one primary salt formation for study with a back-up in case problems are found.
The selection of candidate sites has stirred stiff opposition.
F|ve hundred people tim^ out for hearings in Nevada last month to protest selection of the Nevada test site and Gov. Richard Bryan promised to veto a high-level dump in his state.
The law allows such a veto, but Congress can override it
Nuclear Wasta Repository
Cross Sectional View
Source: Office Of Nuclear Waste Isolation
WHERE TO PUT IT? One possible way of nuclear waste disposal is to bury it deep underground, as diagramed here. (AP Laserphoto)
by simple majorities in both houses.
The DOE plans to spend close to $100 million at each of the three final sites sinking test shafts six to 20 feet in diameter and up to 3,000 feet deep for a detailed look at the geology of the formations.
At the Hanford, Wash., nuclear reservation, the shaft will go into dense basalt rock. At the governments nuclear test site in southern Nevada, scientists will be drilling into volcanic tuff. The salt formations are located along the Gulf Coast and in the Texas Panhandle.
Once the president picks a final site, the DOE will have two years to prepare a license application and design the repository. The Nuclear Re^atory Commission would then have three years to hold hearings and issue a final license.
After construction, the facility would resemble a rabbit warren with tunnels leading off from the main shaft where the nuclear waste capsules could be stored 2,000 to 3,000 feet underground. The site must be certified as capable of preventing the release of radioactivity for 10,000 years.
Whenever it is built, the government wont have trouble filling it. Utilities are already storing some 8,000
metric tons of wastes in concrete pools at the reactor sites. By 1990, this waste is expected to triple.
While selection is still under way for the first site, government geologists have already begun examining rock formations for a second burial site. Tliey are looking at formations in 17 states, primarily along the Great Lakes and in the Northeast. The Energy Department must recommend five sites by 1989 for a second repository.
Voters in Wisconsin arent waiting that long. Earlier this month, in the first referendum of its kind, they voted to Impose locating the second dump in Wisconsin, one of the states being considered.
Besides Wisconsin, the other states under consideration for the second site are Michigan, Minnesota, Geor^a, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont.
The nuclear industry contends that the technology for safe disposal has existed for more than a decade but what is lacking is the political will to pick sites.
However, environmentalists contend that the public is right to be concerned.
The solution to the waste problem isnt just around the comer. We have some difficult technical and scientific problemsd to solve, said David Berick of the Environmental Policy Institute, an environmental research group.
Advised Resist Any Shortcuts
j deus my
Oram an igioo ob duui w m onhmI Cmut od id floe wlien adentiitf are atH^ylog UDderwater Uflia. Latt, a Norwegian wttti yean aretk
'Ztu teiUA MM M M MiMAnr tU hrk
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Tobacco farmers should resist the ten^tion to make up lost time due to soggy Helds by sImhI cutting waiting periods required for certain disease control chemicals, a plant patlKdogistsays.
Dr. N T. PoweU, North Carolina State University extension tobacco disease specialist, said fanners run the risk of reduced disease control and chemical damage to transplants, if the plants are placed in fields treated with multi-purpose soil fumigants too soon after treatment.
Powell recommoxls that fannm go with a late crqj), if necessary, use non-fumigint type chemicals fbr nematode control and Ridomfl to hdp control black shank, and avoid planting the tobacco unlesi the multi-purpose fumigant materials can be used and tl-Kg waitlngperiodobwrved.
dtais. Latt, a Norwegian with yean arene 5t the Igloo to serve as an outdoor toilet when iy el the expedltkiB arrived two weeks ago to let .(APLaaerpbolo)
TOP QUALITY, fuel-ecxHxxnical cars Can be found at kreprieeslnClaasified.
20/^i)ff all ourl swimwear
Beach Party
5 5
Sale 16.50 to 22.50. Re^<$|2 to $30. The biggest savings this side of sea or shore are yours for the basking. French-tied bikini, boy legs, two-piece styles and lots more. Junior and misses sizes. Come to the splash down at JCPenney and save.
WRQR live remote in our womens fashion department Saturday April 23 from 10 am til 12 pm. ECU cheerleaders will be modeling our swimwear.
Check the JCPenney Weekly Buying Guide for family fashion savings. And more!
Sale 13.99 Save 20%
Motion Pant and Boy s shorts and tops
partners
Sale 5.99
Tennis short and sporty tee
Reg. $18 and $20. Save on Motion Panf and its counterparts. Like Motion Blouse^ or Motion Skirt. Easy-care stretch woven Dacron poly for Misses or petite sizes. Large-size Motion Blouse* or pant. Reg. $20 Sale $15.99
Reg. 3.99 to $7. Sale 3.19 to 5.60. Great summer savings for big and little boys in easy care fabrics. Choose from novelty or mesh tops, camp shorts, athletic shorts, tennis short and more. Sizes 4-78-14.
Reg. $8 and 8.50. Play it cool, comfortable and casual in our tennis shorts and scalloped tee with white contrast trim. Both in poly/cotton. Sizes 6-20.
Sale 9.99 Save 20%
Sale 11.99
Womens tennis oxfords Girls shorts and tops
Shirt and skirt
Reg. $12. The courts for noon, so step on it! Cotton duck tennis oxfords help see you through the match. Womens sizes.
Reg. 3.49 to $7 Sale 2.70 to 5.60. Select group of summer tops and shorts for big and little girl's. Choose from tank tops to tie tops or athletic shorts to tennis shorts. Big and little girls sizes.
Reg. $14 and $17. The button front poplin skirts under scores a softly tailored top of solids or stripes.
Save 20% Save M to*7
Sale *3,0*5
Childrens swimwear Mens Hunt Club
TM
The Fox for women
Reg. $16 end $17. Our famous Fox shirts tops off summer stripe or plaid shorts All in poly/cotton.
Reg. 7.50 to $15, Sale $6 to $12. Entire line of boys and girls swimwear. Assorted styles and colors. Sizes 4-6 and 8-14.
Reg. $22 to $36. Sale 17.99 to 28.99. Mens Hunt Club^ casuals includes cotton shirts in solids or stripes and coordinating slacks in poly/cotton waist 30 to 40.
(Penney
FASHION EXPO SALE ^lewSt^eHoursstail^^MoMh^^
U-Tbe Dafly Reflector, GreenvlUe, N.C.-Fridey, AprilIttS
Stock And Market Reports
Hogs
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - Hie trend on the North Carolina job market today was mostly 50 cents to 75 cents lower. Kinston 46.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 45.50, Wilson 45.25, Salisbury 45.00, Rowland
45.00, Spiveys Comer unreported. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 44.00, Fayetteville 45.00, Whiteville
45.00, Wallace 45.00, Spiveys Comer unreported, Rowland
44.00, Durham 47.00.
Poultry
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 40.50 cents, based on full tmck load lots of Ice pack USDA Grade A sized to 3 pound birds. 70 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a preliminary weighted average of 40.98 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate, instances light for a good demand. Wei^ts desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Friday was
1.692.000, compared to 1,887,000 last Friday.
Hens
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was steady with a firm undertone. Supplies adequate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday slaughter was 17 cents.
NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices turned hi^er and the Dow Jones industrials average renewed its assault on the 1,200-barrier today, reversing Thursdays mild setback.
FRIDAY
7; 30 p.m. Red Men meet
SATURDAY
1:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank
4 p. m. - Hillsdale Community Club at the home of Mrs Bettie Bell Stevenson.
8:00 p.m. AA open discussion at St Paul Episcopal Church
s 20%Off
REGULAR PRICE DRY CLEANING
^ PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER a m
l|
I
I I I
I 20% off the regular price of dry cleaning mens, | I womens and childrens clothing. I
COUPON VALID THROUGH APRIL 30
Fluff 4 Fold Service J
Open 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. 758-2164 Greenville, N.C.
Glenn Formolly Announces Bid
A surge among automotive issues and an encouraging government report on inflation helped fuel the rally.
After trailing in the early going, more stocks rose in price than fell in the midday tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
The Dow Jones industrials, off 3.20 points Thursday, rose 5.91 points to 1,194.18 in the first two hours. On Wednesday, the blue^ihip average reached an all-time closing high of 1,191.47.
A long-awaited rebound in profit in the automobile industry helped ^ur buying. Earlier this week. General Motors said earnings soared five-fold, and Chrysler said Thursday its profit was a record for any quarter.
Chrysler topped the active list on the NYSE for the second straight day, up 1/^ at 25/i. GM was up % at 64%, Ford rose 1% to 47 and American Motors gained to 7%.
Among encouraging developments cited by analystc was a government report today that consumer prices rose 0.1 percent in March and that Inflation rose at an annual rate of 0.4 percent over the first three months of the year, the smallest quarterly gain since 1965.
But analysts also said a growing economy, a nickel-a-gallon gasoline tax that took effect this month, and rising wholesale pricess for gasoline are expected to push consumer prices higher in future months.
The NYSEs composite index rose .19 to 92.14. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 1.36 to 414.81.
Big Board volume reached 42.10 million shares a third of the way through the session, down from 52.72 million in the same period Thursday.
The interruption of a rally Thursday was attributed in part to investor disappointment with a Texas Instruments report of a 74 percent decline in earnings, which pushed technology issues lower.
Texas Instruments, which plummeted 11 % points Thursday, fell another 4V4 to 144% after a delayed opening today.
BankAmerica slipped % to 23V4 in trading that included a block of 1,245,700 shares changing hands at 23% a
share.
NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks;
Hi]^ Low Last AMR Corn as 28^ 28i(,
AbbtLabs 46^, 45t(i 46>4
Allis Chaim 13'i 13% 13>.4
Alcoa 32% 32 32%
WASHINGTON (AP) -John Glenn stressed bis small-town roots, Walter Mndale his experience.
Am Baker
AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmStand Amer TAT Beat Food BeUi Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX(
Celanese Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CocaCoia Coig Palm Comw Edls ConAgra ConU Group DeltaAlrl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress FordMot For McKess Fuqua Ind GTCCorp GnDynam Gen Elec Gen Food Gen MUIs Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacK Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf OU Herculesinc Honeywell HosptCp s Ing Rand IBM
InU Harv Int Paper Int Rectir Int TAT K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrogerCo Lockheed Loews Corp Masonite n McDrmlnt n Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNBC NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou n OlinCp Owenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhUipMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RCA
RalstnPur RepubAir Republic SU Revlon Reynldind Rockwelint RoyCrown StRegis Pap Scott Paper SealdPow SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co Sperry Cp SldbilCaT StdOUInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide UnOUCal Uniroyal US Steel Wachov Cp WalMart s WestPtPep Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Wool worth
13% 13% 13%
51% 51% 51%
31% 3S 31%
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64% 64% 64% 21% 21
SOA,
60
21%
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26%
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43 42% 42%
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8% 8 8% 82% 81% 82%
37% 37% 37%
63 63 63
33 32% 32%
20% 20 20% 37% 37% 37%
20 19% 20
46% 45% 46
44% 43% 44
44% 44% 44%
43% 42% 43
47% 47 47
111% 110% 111% 42% 42% 42%
53 52 % 53
64% 64% 64%
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28% 28% 28% 39% 39% 39%
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43% 43% 43%
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103 101 102%
50% 49% 49%
42% 42% 42%
116% 114% 116% 9% 9% 9%
54% 54% 54%
20% 19^4 19%
38% 38% 38%
34% 33% 34%
17% 17% 17%
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37% 37% 37%
118% 117% 118% 172% 172% 172% 56% 56% 56%
18%' 18% 18% 24% 24% 24%
84% 84% 84%
28% 28% 28% 91% 91 91%
27% 27% 27%
37 36% 36%
26% 26V4
58% 57% 58%
31 30% 31
32% 32 32'.4
67% 67% 67%
39% 39 39%.
29% 29 29
65% 65% 65%
33% 33% 3344
33% 32% 32%
62% 62 t. 62%
48% 48
48%
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52'-4 52% 52%
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Wrigley 46%
46 46%
Xerox Cp 45%
44% 45
Following are selected 11
a.m stock
market quotations:
Ashiand prC
39
Burroughs
451,
Caroiina Power & Light
21%
Coitins & Aikman
25%
Ctonnor
20%
Duke
23%
Eaton
37%
Eckerds
31%
Exxon
32%
Fietdcrest
36
Hatteras
15%
Hilton
48%
Jefferson
32%
Deere
36%
Lowe's
37%
McDonald's
74%
McGraw
47%
Piedmont
36
Pizza Inn
11%
P&G
62%
TRW. Inc
66%
United Tel.
21
Virginia Electric
15%
Wachovia
40%
OVER THE COUNTER
Aviation
27-27%
Branch
22%-23%
UtUeMint
1-%
Planters Bank
32%-33%
Alan Cranston his dedication to arms control and Gary' Hart his search for new ideas.
Southerners Ernest HoUings and Reubin Askew made it clear they were not Jimmy Carter in style or substance.
That was how they began their presidential campaigns, these six Democrats who hope to succeed Ronald Reagan.
Each had his own style and tone. But their announcement speeches sounded many common themes.
Glenn was the most recent to declare his candidacy. He entered Ihe race on Thursday with a ^leech in the John Glenn High School in his hometown of New Concord, Ohio.
Glenn chose the most out of the way site for his announcement, a small town a two-hour bus ride from Columbus, Ohio. But for the senator and former, astronaut, New Concord perfectly symbolized his emphasis on the simple values we learned in this , small town.
Mndale and Glenn run one-two in polls ranking the Democratic contenders.
Beach Bridge Heoring Set
MOREHEAD CITY - The Department of Trans^ portation will hold a hearing here April 28 to get public reaction to the proposed replacement of the bridge over Bogue Sound between Morehead City and Atlantic Beach.
The hearing will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the West Carteret High School Auditorium on Country Club Road. DOT representatives will explain the locations and designs of four alternatives being considered.
Alternative 1 would have the new bridge connect to the present causeway on the beach side and to the 23rd and 24th Street area on the mainland, while Alternative 2 would connect the present causeway on the beach to the 25th and 26th Street area on the mainland.
The third alternative would connect the 28th and 29th Street area in Morehead City to the old causeway road on the beach; while Alternative 4 would connect U.S. 70 west of the Bridges Street on the mainland to N.C. 58 just west of the end of the curb and gutter section on the beach side.
Two designs for the high-level bridge are being considered. One would include four 12-foot wide traffic lanes with a separate sidewalk, while the other would have four 11-foot wide traffic lanes with 5-foot wide shoulders.
OES CHAPTER
Bright Star Chapter No. 313, Order of Eastern Star, will meet Saturday at 2 p.m.
AniNTION GREENVILU CmZENS!
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 Statutes 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 May 5,1983, at 7:30 p.m. on the question of the adoption of an ordinance rezoning the following territory within the corporate limits of the City of Greenville as follows:
DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY TO BE REZONED FROM I.U. (UNOFFENSIVE INDUSTRY) TO C.D.F. (COMMERCIAL DOWNTOWN FRINGE)
To Wit: The warehouse located between 9th and 10th Streets at Clark Street. Also, being lot No. 1 as shown on Tax Map No. 35, Block H. Location: The property is on the northern side of 10th Street, the southern side of 9th Street, the eastern side of Clark Street, the western side of W.S. Pollard property, and located within the corporate limits of the City of Greenville During this public hearing, objections or suggestions will be duly considered by City Council. All interested persons are requested to be present at the the hearing, and they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.
A copy of the proposed ordinance is on file at the City Clerk's office located at 201 W. Sth Streel. and is available for public inspection during normal working hours Monday through Friday.
BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL.
Lois 0 Worthington City Clerk
PUBLIC NOTICE
Public notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Greenville will conduct a public hearing on Thursday, May 5,1983, at 7:30 p.m., in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building, 201 West Fifth Street, for the purpose of considering approval of a noise ordinance to regulate noise within the city limits of Greenville A copy of the proposed ordinance is available for public inspection in the City Clerk's Office during normal working hours.
All interested citizens are encouraged to be present at the public hearing at which lime they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.
Lois 0. Worthington CityOerk
April 22,29.1983
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON REQUEST FOR NONCONTIGUOUS ANNEXATION
The public will take notice that the City Council of the City of Greenville has called a public hearing at 7:30 P.M. on the fifth day of May, 1983, at the Municipal Building on the question of annexing the following described non-contiguous territory, requested by petition filed pursuant to G.S. 160A-58.1. as amended:
To Wit: A portion of the Philip E. Carroll property known as Carolina Opry House
Location: Located in Pactolus Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, on the southwestern side of State Road 1534 approximately 3200 feet east of its intersection with Greenville Boulevard, N.E. and northwesterly of the Abron Best and Norman Winslow property, and lying outside the corporate limits of the City of Greenville.
Containing approximately 8.3 acres.
LOIS D. WORTHINGTON, CITY CLERK
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON REQUEST FOR NONCONTIGUOUS ANNEXATION
The public will take notice that the City Council of the City of Greenville has called a public hearing at 7:30 P.M. on the fifth day of May, 1983, at the Municipal Building on the question of annexing the following described non-contiguous territory, requested by petition filed pur-suanttoG.S. 180A-58.1, asamended:
To Wit: Greenridge Subdivision
Location: Located In Falkland Township. Pitt County, North Carolina on the east side of SR1204 approximately </k mile south of NC 43, northerly of the Greenville Utilities Commission property, southerly of the Joseph D. Speight and Silas M. and Nancy Cherry properties on the eastern side of SR 1204, and located outside the corporate limits of the City of Greenville.
Containing approximately 6.32 acres.
LOIS 0. WORTWNOTON, CITY CLERK
BISHOP A.G.DUNSTON
Dedication Set Sunday
The new building for York Memorial AME Zion Church, corner of Third and ^son streets, will be dedicated Sunday, with Bishop Alfred G. Dunston of Philadelphia as the gest speaker.
He will lead both the 11 a.m. worship and the 3 p.m. dedication service.
A native of Coinjock, Bishop Dunston has served AME Zion churches in several states and was elected a bishop in 1964. He has also supervised churches and schools in West Africa and has taught black history in the public schools of Philadelphia. He now presides over the 2nd Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church.
Charged With Chemical Theft
A 29-year-old Dover man has been arrested by Pitt County authorities and charged in connection with the April 12 larceny of farm-, chemicals valued at $6,000-$6,500 from Blount Fertilizer Inc. on N.C. 11 at Ayden.
Sheriff Ralph Tyson said David Earl Rouse was charged with felonious breaking, entering and larceny stemming from the incident, which resulted in the theft of liquid and powdered chemicals, including herbicides and fungicides.
T^son said the chemicals were apparently loaded onto a company-owned truck before the vehicle was driven through a fence on the property and then stolen.
He said officers have recovered the truck and ap-proximateiy 32 gallons of farm chemicals. Investigation of the theft is continuing.
SHRINE NOTICE Rofelt Temple Shrine Temple No. 175 A.E.A.O.N.M.S., P.H.A., Rocky Mount, will honor its recently elected potentate with the Annual Shriners Ball, scheduled to be held today at 9 p.m. at the Roanoke Rapids Community Center. The ball will climax the shriners anniversary celebration.
James Ebron Jt,
potentate
Obituories
Diqiree Mrs. Mary Blanche Diqiree of 1006 Fairfax Ave. died Thursday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was the wife of John Dupree of the home. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Home.
Gardner Survivors of Mr. Curtis Earl Gardner, who died Friday at Pitt County Memorial Ho^ital, include his parents: Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Gardner of the home and his maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Phillips of Ayden.
Greene Miss Janie L. Greene, 33, died Tuesday at her home, 2830 30th Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. Her funeral 'service will be conducted Sunday at 1:30 p.m. in Philippi Baptist Church, Simpson, by Dr. C.B. Gray and the Rev. James Purvis. Burial will be in Brown Hill Cemetery.
Miss Greene was a native of Greenville who attended school here and was a member of Philippi Baptist Church, Simpson. She received her B.A. degree from Livingstone College in Salisbury and a masters degree from Trinity College in Washington, D.C. She was a public school teacher.
Surviving are her father, John Stanley Greene of Baltimore; three brothers, Wilbert Lee Greene of Lansing, Mich., Donald Greene of Washington, D.C., and Howard Mallory of Greenville; ei^t sisters, Mrs. Leonie Wilson of Portsmouth, Va., Mrs. Doris Adams of South Ozone Park, N.Y., Mrs. Novella Gumbs of Staten Island, N.Y., Mrs. Dennie Jones of Washington, D.C., Mrs. Mary Isler of Gamer, Miss Gloria Greene of Washington, D.C., Mrs. LTange Alexander of Mount Laurel, N.J., and Ms. Barbara West of Baltimore.
'The family will receive friends at Flanagan Funeral Home Chapel Saturday from 7 to 8 p.m. At other times they will be at the home in Simpson.
Harris
Mr. Amos Harris of 1009 Ward St. died at his home here Thursday. He was the husband of Mrs. Lottie Taft Harris of the home. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Hhome.
Holloway Mr. Will Holloway of 603
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W. 14th St., GreenviUe, died at Pitt Coimty Memorial Hospital Thui^y. He was the husband of Mrs. Naomi Holloway of Winterville.
Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Mitchells Funeral Home in Winterville.
Howard
FORT BARNWELL - Mr. York Howard, 83, died at Lenoir Memorial H(pital Tuesday, Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 3 p.m. at Antioch Free Will Baptist Church in Kinston by Bishop J.N. Gilbert. Burial will follow in the Howard Family Cemetery.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Lela Suggs Howard of the home; two sons, Irvin Howard of Grifton and Nelson Howard of Fort Barnwell; one daughter. Miss Catherine Howard of Baltimore; one sister, Mrs. Eva Barrow of Baltimore; 18 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.
The family will receive friends Saturday from 8-9 p.m. at St. Edwards FWB Church in Fort Barnwell. The body will be taken from Mitchells Funeral Home to the church one hour before the funeral.
Proctor
Mrs. Luetta Newkirk Proctor. 4815Old Fort HUl Drive, Austin, Texas, formerly of the Ayden community, died Sunday. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 11 a.m. at Grant Chapel Church in Austin by the Rev. W.D. Turner. Burial will follow in the Austin Cemetery.
Mrs. Proctor was bom and reared in the Ayden community but had made her home in Austin for the past 20 years.
She is survived by her husband, Frederick Proctor of the home; one daughter, Mrs. Jeanmtte Gibbs Bell of Ayden; her mother, Mrs. Bessie Payton Newkirk of Ayden; one brother, Harold Newkirk of Baltimore; four sisters, Mrs. Velma Burney and Ms. Evelyn Newkirk, both of Ayden, and Mrs. Alma Stewart and Mrs. Lillian Chapman, both of Baltimore, and five grandchildren.
Messages of sympathy may be sent to 4815 Old Fort Drive, Austin, Texas, or Louis Jones Funeral Home, Austin, Texas.
Tune-Ups Brake JoDs General Repairs
Auto Specialty Co.
917 W. 5th St.
758-1131
NOTICE
Waterside F.W.B. Churcli
Someone illegally ran an announcement in this paper on Thursday that our quarterly meeting had been cancelled for this week-end. Please disregard that announcement. Ail services will be as scheduled.
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Career Opportunity
Dedicated Christian to plan, co-ordinate and implement the total, religious educational program of large church in Greenville, Previous experience in Public or Christian Education preferred. Send resume and references to:
Religious Education P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N.C. 27835-1967
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SportsDAILY REFLECTOR ClassifiedFRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 22, 1983
Purple-Gold Gome Set For Saturday
ODYPRF!T.R thA hAim \t Ka n/vi/i Am/i A#fAictPA i*a n _ < .. ...... .
By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor Saturday night at 7 p.m. in Ficklen Stadium, East Carolina football coach Ed Emory will watch his charges go through their fourth Purple-Gold intrasquad game under him-and he expects it to be the best since hes been at the school.
Weve got a lot better players than weve ever had before, Emory said prior to the contest. Now - for the players - its a first chance to prove it.
Returning starting quarterback Kevin Ingram will be guiding the P^le team, with John Williams at
the helm of the Gold. And Emory says he has to give a little bit of a nod to the Gold team in the contest.
"From the results of the draft, I think the Gold team came out a little ahead, although there are good people on the Purple team too. I think both teams will be able to score some points, Emory added.
The starting lineup for the Purple on offense has Ingram at quarterback with Reggie Branch and Tony Baker at the running backs. The flanker will be Chris McLawhom, with Ricky Nichols at split end. Lloyd Black will start at tight end.
The offensive line will have John Floyd at center, John Robertson at right tackle and Greg Sokolohorsky at left tackle. The guards will be Brad Henson on the left and Scott Totten on the right.
On defense, Gerry Rogers will start at nose guard with Hal Stephens and William Jennette at the tackles. Curtis Wyatt and Willie Mack will be the ends, with Mike Grant and Chris Santa Cruz at the linebackers. Chuck Bishop will be at right comer, with Rolando Caparas at left corner. Randy Bost will be the strong safety with Marcus Somerville at free safety.
Stuart Ward will hand
snaps, with Jeff Bolch doing the punting.
On the Gold unit, John Williams starts at quarterback, with Earnest Byner and Bubba Bunn at the running backs. Stefon Adams will be the split end with Henry Williams at flanker. Either Norwood Vann or Damon Pope will start at tight end.
The offoisive line includes Terry Long and Ricky Hilbum at the guards, with Greg Quick and Tim Dumas at tackles. Greg Thomas will handle the center position.
Hie defensive backs will find Oint Harris at free safety, Keith Brown at strong
safety, with Kevin Walker and Calvin Adams at the comer.
The linebackers will be P.J. Jordan and Tyrone Ji^mson, with Jeff Pegues and Kenny Phillips at the ends. David Plum will be at nose guani with Steve Hamilton and Maurey Banks at the tackles.
Kevin Samuel will handle sna( with Williams doing the punting.
Throckmorton, the new defensive coordinator, handling the Purple.
Jeff Heath will handle kickoffs, placements and field goals for both squads.
Art Baker, the new offensive coordinator, will be the head coach for the Gold, with Tom
You never accomplish all you want to in spring practice, Emory said. But weve had some good things happen. We brou^f in five junior college players and four of them have worked their way into the top two units. I like that.
Tim Dumas has been one of the pleasant surprises of the offensive line, and getting Greg Quick back is a positive thing. Greg Thomas also had a heck of a spring in the of
fensive line.
There were some negative things too. Weve missed some people with injuries and this concerns us. But we do feel that we have a chance to have a real good offensive line. We have four good tight ends, but we havent found a third fullback.
Emory feels that the Pirate defense is the best its been in years. They are older and been through a lot, he said. Gerry Rogers is giving us good play at nose guard, but we still need another.
Having healthy linebackers
is also a blessing, Emory feels. Theres no question that our secondary is better.
Things are still unsettled at snapper and in the punting department. Jeff Bolch, who punted last year, missed much of the spring, but Emory notes John Williams is coming on.
John has improved tremendously, he sjid. This is the first spring hes had, and if he had been here last spring, he really would have been something now.
East Carolina opens its regular season against Florida State on September 8.
Rose Crushes Fike, 12-0
Pizza Gift
Officials of Dominos Pizza bring good news to East Carolina Universitys chancellor John M. Howell, right. The firm has pledged $22,500 to ECUs million-dollar fund raising campaign for
athletics. From left to right are Tony Erredia, owner of Dominos Pizza; Claude Jones, Greenville manager; and C.R. Blake, assistant to the chancellor. (ECU News Bureau Photo)
By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor
Mike Kinley and Randy Warren each hit two-run homers and Rudy Stalls had a three-run double to higldight an eight-run fifth inning as Rose High School romped to a 12-0 baseball win ovfer Wilson Fike yesterday.
Kenny Kirkland tossed <a three-hitter for the shutout gaining his second victory against no losses this year.
Stalls, who had two doubles, led the Rose attack with three hits, while Warren and Kirkland each added a pair. Rose banged out a total of 13 hits during the afternoon.
Kirkland had some control problems, walking five and striking out four and going to a full count on several batters.
But he helped start a double
play one of two the Rapants pulled off to kill the biggest Fike threat.
That came in the top of the fifth, just before the big Rose explosion. With one out, Kirkland hit Allen Boyette and Brad Almond and Rusty Dail both got singles, loading the bases. Kelly Farmer, however, grounded back to Kirkland, who relayed home to get Boyette, then Curtis Evans nailed Farmer going to first to retire the side.
Only on two other occasions did Fike threaten, leaving a man at second in the first after two walks, and in the seventh, when a walk, and out and a wild pitch, put a runner at third.
Rose, meanwhile, had grabbed the lead in the first inning. Traye Fuqua reached
on an infield hit with one away and was sacrificed up. He took third on Kirklands infield hit and scored on a passed ball.
The Rampants pushed over three more in the third. Stalls led off with a walk and Fuqua reached on an error. Warren doubled, driving in Stalls, and Kirklands dropped sacrifice fly scored Fuqua. Warren then scored when Kinley grounded out.
Rose then exploded for eight big runs in the fifth frame. Kirkland opened with a single to left and Kinley followed with a homer to center, making it 6^.
Eric Woodworth walked, as did Evans and Bobby Buie, loading the bases with one away. Stalls then cracked a double to left, driving in all three runners to up it to 9-0.
After Billy Michels single drove in Stalls, Warren closed out the scoring with a homer to left, and Rose held a 12-0 margin.
It was good to get a shutout, Coach Ronald Vincent said, Kirkland made some good pitches at good times, and our defense played well. Fuqua had a good game at shortstop, and I was real pleased with the way Evans played behind the plate.
We got some good hits from Warren and Stalls continues to hit the ball well.
Rose boosted its record to 9-0 overall and 5-0 in the conference with the win. Fike falls to 2-3 in the league and 5-6 overall.
Rose travels to Wilson Hunt tonight for a 7:30 p.m. contest.
Conley Girls Roll, 13-1, Past
Ayden-Grifton In Softball
Rudd Captures Pole For VNB 500 Race
HOLLYWOOD - D.H. Conley romped to a 13-1 softball victory over Ayden-Grifton yestenlay in a non-conference contest.
Conley got all it needed in the second inning scoring three times. The Valkyries added four in the third, then picked up three each in the fifth and sixth innings. Ayden-Griftons lone run came in the top of the seventh.
Karen Barrett and Darlene Cannon each had two hits to hi^ight the Conley attack. One of Barretts was a solo homer in the third inning. No one had more than one hit for the Lady Chargers.
Conley climbs to 7-2 with the win, while Ayden-Grifton is 1-5.
Conley travels to North Lenoir today, while Ayden-Grifton entertains North Pitt.
Ayden-OrinonOOO 000 1- i 7 7
Conley 034 033 x-13 8 3
WP-Lisa Mills.
G. Christian 14
Goldsboro.........4
Greenville (Cristian Academys girls softball team claimed its first victory of the season yesterday with a 14-4 win over Goldsboro Christian.
Greenville pushed over five runs in the top of the first to get all it would need. The Lady Knights added three in the third and six in the fourth however.
Goldsboro scored once in the second, twice in the third and once in the fifth. The game was ended after five innings as the ten-run lead rule was enforced.
Jo Williams led the Greenville hitting with three, while Gina Brown, Dawn Faulkner, Patti Carr, Rhonda Vemelson and Robin McGowan each had two. Amy Sutton had three to pace the Goldsboro hitting.
Now 1-4, Greenville Christian plays host to Wilson
Christian on Tuesday.
CMdsboro.......012 01- 4
Greenville.......503 6x14
WP Rtionda Vemelson.
Jamsville....,....7 Chocowinity...____0
JAMESVILLE Jamesvilles unbeaten girls softball team added another win yesterday, rolling to a 7-0 win over Chocowinity.
Jamesville got all it was to need in the first, scoring four times. The Lady Bullets picked up three more in the third, all on a homer by Robin Manning, who was the lone Jamesville player with two hits.
Wendy Elks led Chocowintys hitting with two, one a double.
Now 7-0 overall and 64) in the league, Jamesville travels to Bear Grass on Tuesday.
fourth before the big fifth frame, which ended the game.
Lisa Radford led the Ram hitting with four, while Denise Warrenand Sharon Crooms each had three. Crooms had two homers, while Warren and Trynette Daniels each had one. Gorham had two hits to pace Farmville Central.
The Lady Rams are now 9-5 overall and 2-2 in Eastern Carolina play. They play host to Southwest Ed^combe today. Farmville travels to Southern Nadi today.
MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) Ricky Rudd of C!h^peake, Va., has been a consistent pole winner at Martinsville Speedway but has yet to record a victory at the .525-mile oval. He hopes to change that in Sundays 28th annual Virginia National Bank 500 NASCAR Grand National race.
Rudd set a qualifying record Thursday, gunning his Chevrolet to an average speed of 90.005 for the t(^ starting
FannvilleC 000 00- 0 2 9
Greene C 422 3(17)-28 24 4
WP DalenHerin.
Rose Tops Jag Golfers
Aurora.
10
Chocowinity...000 000 0-0 5 3 Jamesvilie....403 000 x-7 6 3 WP Robin Manning.
Sports Caltndor
Editors Note; Schedules iare suppiied by schools or sporaclng ancies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays Sports BasebaU
North Pitt at Ayden-Griftm (8 p.m.)
Greene Central at Southwest Edgecombe (7;30p.m.)
Farmville Central at SouUiem Nash (4 p.m.)
SouUiWest Edgecombe at Greene CentralJV(4p.m.)
Rose at Hunt (7:30 p.m.)
Campbell at East Carolina (7 p.m.)
Washington at Roanoke (7:30 p.m.)
Conley at North Lenoir
PlymouUi at WiUiamston (7 p.m.)
Williamston at North Pitt JV (4 p.m.)
Goldsboro at Greenville Christian (4 p.m.)
E.B. Aycock at Rocky Mount (4 pm.)
Hunt at Rose JV (4p.m.)
Sortbafl
Farmville Central at Southern Nash (4 p.m.)
Southwest Edgecombe at Greene Central (4 p.m.)
Rose at Hunt (4 p.m.)
Washington at Roanoke (4 p.m.)
NorthPltt at Ayden-Grifton (4 p.m.)
Comey at North Lenoir (3:30 pm.)
PlymoiA at WlUlaniston <7 p.m. >
Goldsboro at Greenville Ctariitlan
Campbell at East Carolina (2 p.m.)
Track
Rose girls, FarmvUle Central boys at Beddingfield Invitational East Carolina women at Penn Rdays
Tennis
East Carolina women at UNC-^Vilmington Tournament Rec League Greenville Country Club at Burroughs Wellcome ''
GreenvUle Tennis Association at Washington Netbirds Court Jesters at Lobsters Football
East Carolina PurpleGold Game (7:30p.m.)
Greene Central ... 28 Farmville C........0
SNOW HILL - Greene Central exploded for 17 runs in the fifth inning to put an already out-of-reach softball game into orbit as the Lady Rams dumped Farmville (Central, 28-0.
Greene Central pushed over four runs in the first inning and added two each in the second and third. The Lady Rams added three in the
Bear Grass 2
BEAR GRASS - Aurora scattered eight hits and utilized nine Bear Grass errors to take a 10-2 softball victory Thursday.
Bear Grass jumped out to a 2-0 lead with a pair of runs in the first frame, but Aurora scored one in the second and two each in the fourth and fifth. Aurora added four more in the sixth.
Powell. C. Cayton and Larkin went 2-4 for Aurora, while Vicki Mizelle posted a pair of hits in three trips to the plate for Bear Grass.
Bear Grass, now 3-3 on the season, hosts Jamesville Tuesday.
Aurora 010 224 1-10 8 8
Bear Grass... 200 000 0- 2 4 9 WP-C. Cayton.
Rose High School avenged a loss on Wednesday by downing Farmville Central in a return golf match at Brook Valley yesterday.
The Rampants finished the afternoon with a 314 total, while Farmville had 323.
Craig Davies led Rose with a three-under-par 69. Brian Hill added a 77, while Jordy Smith had an 83 and Clay Young had an 85.
Farmville was led by Gary Hobgood with a 77, Alan Wooten with a 78, and Scott Lewis and Sean Thompson with 84s.
The win boosted the Rose record to 7-4 on the year, while Farmville is now 14^. Rose returns to action on Monday, traveling to Wilson Hunt, while Farmville goes to Ayden-Grifton next Wednesday.
spot in the 500-lap, 262.5-mUe event, which has a purse of $218,310.
Geoff Bodine of Pleasant Garden, N.C., took the outside pole in a Pontiac with a spised of 89.672 mph with Darrell Waltrip of Franklin, Tenn., third; Joe Ruttman of Upland, Calif., fourth, and Buddy Baker of Charlotte, N.C., fifth.
Rounding out the top 10 qualifiers were Bobby Allison, Terry Labonte,defending VNB champion Harry Gant, Richard Petty and Mark Martin.
The rest of the 30-car starting field was to be decided in time trials today. Among those still trying to make the lineup are Grand National point leader Neil Bonnett, Dick Brooks, Bill Elliott, Dale Earnhardt, Ron Bouchard, Tim Richond and Kyle Petty.
Rudd broke the old qualifing record of 89.988 mph that Labonte set last year. It was his fourth pole position in seven races this season and his second straight here after winning the top spot in last falls Old Dominion 500, in which he fini^ed second to Waltrip.
Rudd picked up $3,000 for winning the pole Thursday, Bodine $2,000, Waltrip $1,000 and Ruttman $500.
I enjoy driving this track because this is a thinkers track, Rudd said. Qualifying is something you set aside and when the race gets going, youve got to use your head as far as keeping the equipment underneath you.
Id have to say, and I wouldnt say that not everybody thinks, but a lot of people get to wanting to race real early, he said. You can do that and about 50 percent of the time youll make it to the end and the other half of the time youll burn up your brakes after about 30 or 40 laps.
Fike
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Page.lb
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Boyette,2b
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2 0 0 0 Scott,pb
3 0 0 0 Kinley,lb 0 0 0 0 WUaon.ll
0 0 0 0 Woodward.dh 2 10 0 3 0 10 Fischer.2b 10 0 0
1 0 0 0 Jobnson,rf 0 0 0 0 Iaboni,rf 0 0 0 0 Evam.c
W'ingU,ph Buie.3b Bost,2b 23 0 3 0 ToUU
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4 2 3 3 3 2 2 0 1111 10 0 0 3 2 2 3 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 1 10 10 3 113 0 10 0
3 0 0 0 110 0 2 0 10 10 0 0 2 10 0 10 0 0 31121311
Fike..............................000 000 0-0
Rose.............................103 000 x-12
E-Davis, Phillips, Lamm, Fischer; OP-Roee 2; LOB-Fike 9, Rose 8, 2B-Evans, Warren, Stalls 2; HR-Kinley, Warren; SB-Farmer, Wilson 3. Stalls. Woodworth; S-Warren; SF-Klrkland.
Pitching
Fike
Almond (L.1-2)
Boyette..........
Davis...........
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Boyette (aced four batters in the fifth inning. HBP-by Kirkland iBoyette. Harris); WP Kirkland; PB-Lamm
1. Kicfo Kudd, Chevrolet, 90.005
2. Geoll Bodine, Pontiac, 89 672
3. Darrell Waltrip, (Chevrolet, 89.549.
4. Joe Ruttman, Buick. 89.447.
5. Buddy Baker. Ford, 89.426.
6 Bobby Allison. Buick. 89 031.
7. Tewrry Labonte, Chevrolet, 88 888. 8 Harry Gant, Buick, 88 851
9. Richard Petty, Pontiac. 88 705.
10. Mark Martin. Buick. 88.697
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Hendrick Doubis Reports
MONTREAL (API-It may be a while before St. Louis outfielder George Hendrick believes the Cardinals scouting reports.
The report on Bryan Little, the diminutive switch-hitting shortstop of the Montreal Expos, was not to play tom as a pull-hitter batting left-handed. Dutifully, Hendrick, the Cardinals right fielder, moved away from the line when Little came to bat in the first inning Thursday.
Little promptly doubled into the right-field comer, driving in Tim Raines and tying the score 1-1. The hit sparked a three-run first inning and the Expos went on to defeat St. Louis starter Joaquin Andujar, an old nemesis, 6-5.
In the only other National League game, the Houston Astros edged the Cincinnati
Reds 4-3 on Phil Gamers two-run double in the bottom of the 10th inning.
Andujar had an 11-1 career record against Montreal and had won 12 consecutive games, including a victory in the 1982 NL playoffs, and two in the World Soles.
Little delivered another run-scoring double to almost the identical spot in the second iiming, which prompted a comment from Hendrick as he passed him on the field later in the game.
Am I going to believe the scouting reports on you any more?he asked.
Explaining his success, Little said; The only thing I was trying to do was move Tim Raines over to third base because he was on second both times I came up. But I got something I could pull and it
worked out to my advantage. A1 Olivw and Terry Fran-cona added RBI sin^ in the first inning and Gai7 Carter belted a solo home run, Astros 4, Reds 3 Omar Moreno led off the Houston 10th with a single off Cincinnati relief ace Tom Hume. Kevin Bass singled
Moreno to third and went to second on the Uirow and Dickie Thon was intentionally walked to load the bases. Gamers long fly to center bounced over the wall to score Moreno and Bass. Gamer also horoered in the fourth and singled a run across in the 10th.
Rse Defeats Hunt, Remains Unbeaten
Rampants Win Track Event
Greenville Rose cruised through a Big East 4-A Conference track meet to a 110-22 victory over Wilson Hunt Thursday.
'The Rampnts won every event except the 800 meter-run which was taken by Deans of Hunt in a time of 1:59.5.
Rose, now 4-0, will run against Northeastern Tuesday.
Shot Putt: Wall (R 47-0^4, Norris - (R140-9' 2. Casey (R) 39-11i>.
Long jump: Carr (R) 21-1, Walston (R) 20-7, Godley (R) 19-2.
High jump: Streeter (R) 6-4, Caterter (H) 6-4, Lee (R) 6-2.
Discus: Norris (R) 113-0, Bet (R) 109-0. Maye (R) 109-0.
Triple: Sparkman (R) 41-4'^, Carr (R) 39-7, Westley (H) 38-6.
Ploe vault: Carraway (R) 11-6, Farley (R) 9-6.
110 high hurdles; Carraway (R) 15.6, Daniels (R) 17.6, Funderburk (H)18.4. .
100: Frazier (R) 10.66, Harrell (Ri 11.1, Jackson (H) 11.31.
800 relay: Rose (Carr, Walston, Dupree, Michaels) 1:31.8.
1600: Foreman (R) 4:44, Hudson (H)5:00, Lucas(H) 5:02.
400 relay: Rose (Michaels, Harrell, Smith, Frazier) 42.8.
400: Walston (R) 53.6,
Brewington (R) 54.08, Sparkman (R)55.9.
800: Deans (Hi 1:59.5, Godley (R) 2:06.7, Williams (R) 2:07.
200: Frazier (R) 21.3, Harrell (R) 22.4, Jackson (H) 22.9.
3200: Ormond (R) 10.08, Harris (H) 10.25, Bowman (R) 10.35.
1600 relay: Rose (Daniels, Williams. Speight, Dupree) 3:43.
Conley...........85
W.Croven 45
W.Carteret 37
MOREHEAD CITY - D.H Conley followed victories in the 400 and 800 meter relays for an 85-45-37 win against West Craven and West Carteret in Thursday track action.
Conley, now 13-3, travels to West Carteret Tuesday for a
Whitfield Bethel
make-up date with the Patriots.
Long jump: Harris (WC) 22-2, Clemons (C) 20-2, Rasberry (WCr) 194), Gillikin (WCa) 18-10.
Shot putt: Becton (WCr) 45-10, W. Green (C) 39-1, E. Roach (C) 37-5, Engelhard (WCa) 35-8.
High jump: Harris (WCr) 6-9, Clemons (C) 6-4, Rasberry (WCr) 6-2, T. King (WCr) 5-8.
Triple jump: Harris (WCr) 42-7, Clemons (C) 42-1, Newton (WCa) 35-3, Engelhard (WCa) 34-5.
Discus: Becton (WCr) 122-4, W. Paramore (C) 101-5, Mills (C) 100-4, E Roach (C) 100-3.
Pole vault; Norris (C) 8-0, Speight (0 8-0, Wilkerson (0 8-0, Gregg (WCa) 7-0.
110 high hudles: J. Roach (C)
16.0, Dudley (C) 17.4, Heath (WCr)
17.6, Newton (WCa) 20.3.
100: King (C) 10.9, Becton (WCr)
11.7, Taylor (WCr) 11.7, Nobles (C)
11.7,
800 relay: Conley (Wilkerson, Green, Speight, J. Roach) 1:38.9, West Carteret 1:55.
1600: Hardison (WCa) 4:47.1, Day (WCa) 4:59.9, Heath (WCr) 5:02.3, Wingard (WCa) 5:03.9.
400 relay: Conley (Wilkerson, Green. Speight, Nobles) 46.2, West Craven 49.1.
400: King (C) 56.8, Heath (WCr)
57.8, Norris (C) 58.1, Hudson (C) 58.4.
800: Hardison (WCa) 2:09.8, Edwards (C) 2:11.9, J. Roach (C) 2:13.8, Day (WCa) 2:16.6.
200: King (C) 22.6, Nobles (C)
23.1, Taylor (WCr) 23.7, Evans (WCa) 25.1. .
3200; C. Paramore (C) 10:56.4, Wingard (WCa) 10:56.5, Day (WCa) 11:20, Dixon (WCa) 11:22.
1600 relay: Conley (J. Roach, Speight, Wilkerson, King) 3:57, West Carteret 4:08.
WILSON - Rose High Schools tennis team rolled to a 6-3 victory over Wilson Hunt yesterday, remaining unbeaten on the year.
The Rampants l(t matches in the number two and five singles and the number two doubles.
Now 10-0, Rose plays host to Northeastern on Tue^ay. Summary:
Steve Holloman (R) d. Van Brockwell,7-6,6-4.
John Kong (H) d. Clay Jackson, 6-3,6^.
Lance Searl (R) d. Matt Oiemer,
6-4,6-1.
Rogers Warner (R) d. John Grover, 3-6,6-4,6-4.
^ Richard Fielding (H) d. Ed Schwidde, 4-6,6-2,62.
Bill Messick (R) d. Scott Sims,
7-5,64.
Holloman-Searl (R) d. Brockwell-Diemer, 8-6.
Kong-Fielding (H) d. Jackson-Wamer, 61.
Messick-Schwidde (H) d. Grover-Sims, 8-6.
Greene Central .... 7 FarmvilleC. .....2
SNOW HILL - Greene Central gained a 7-2 tennis victory over Farmville Central yesterday.
The Jaguars of Farmville won only in the number six singes where Jeff Dixon took a win, and in the number three doubles, where Dixon teamed with Jeff Blake.
Farmville is now 0-5 on the year and hosts Southern Nash on.Tuesday. Greene Central returns to action on Tuesday atC.B. Aycock.
Summary:
Jack Griffin (GO d. Paul Bassett, 64,62.
Jim Hubbard (GO d. Joe SmiUi, 63,64.
Steve Harrison (GO d. Jeff Blake, 61,63.
Mark Hall (GO d. Greg Bullock, 63,61.
James Hill (GO d. Howard Keel, 7-5,62.
Jeff Dixon (FC) d. George Harris. 60.60.
Lady Jaguars Top SWE Thinclads
Tops
GRIMESLAND - G.R. Whitfield took a pair of junior high ball games from Bethel yesterday.
In the boys baseball game, Whitfield took a 74 decision. William Mizelle, Mark Hardee and Michael Barnhill led the Whitfield hitting, while Shelton Boyd hurled the win. Whitfield is now 3-1.
In the girls softball game. Whitfield rolled, 16-1. Linda Hardy led the hitting for Whitfied.
Farmville.........10
Chicod............9
CHICOD - Farmville Middle School gained a 10-9 baseball victory over Chicod yesterday.
Robert Evans, Roger Harris and M. Terrell each had two hits for Farmville. Chicod was led by Brian Evans, Mike Mills, Donnie Boyd, Russ Pittman and Chris Stocks, each with two.
Farmville is now 2-1, while Chicod is 04.
In the girls softball game, Chicod rolled to a 17-9 win. Glenda Horton led the Chicod hitting with four, one of them a homer. Dona Beacham, and Loryane Taylor each had two hits. Rhonda Jackson was the winning pitcher.
Chicod is now 4-0.
PINETOPS - Farmville Centrals girls edged past Southwest Edgecombe in a three-way track meet yesterday. The Lady Ja^ars finished the afternoon with 80 points, while Southwest had 62.
Greene Central was third with 23.
The three teams return to action on Tuesday at Farmville Central.
Summary:
Shot put: Jordan (FC) 27-10'^; Davis (FC) 269; Booney (SW), 24-4; Wooten (FC) 23-6.
Discus; Wilkes (GO 79-10; Davis (FC) 662; Wooten (FC) 661; Booney (SW) 667.
Long jump: Tyson (FC) 1610/i; Mayo (SW) 165=4; Smith (FC) 16D.; Dixon (GO 144,i.
Triple jump; Staton (SW) 33-9/4; Payton (FC) 363; Williams (FC) 28-7; Johnson (SW) 262.
High jump: Daniels (FC) 4-8; Lyons (SW) 4-6; Lawrence (SW) 4-6; Hanson (SW) 4-2.
100 hurdles: Dixon (FC) 18.1; Williams (FC) 18.6; Johnson (SW) 18.9; Battle (SW) 19.5.
100: Smith (FC) 12.8; Payton (FC) 13.05; Ellis (FC) 13.08; Gains (SW) 13 4 800 relay: SouUiWest Edgecombe 1:53.8; Farmville Central 1:55.3.
1600; Harrison (GO 6:11.8; Tyson (FC) 6:16.7; Brown (SW) 8:16.7.
400 relay: Farmville Central 53.3; Southwest Edgecombe 53.5.
400: Staton (SW) 62.5; Lawrence (SWI 66.6; Jones (GO 68.0; Miles (SW)68.2.
200 hurdles: Wilkes (GO 34.9; Dixon (FC) 35.06; Williams (FC) 35.9; Johnson (SW) 36.91.
800: Mayo (SW) 2:50.6; Parker (FC) 2:57.1; Hanson (SW) 3:16.8.
200: Payton (FC) 27.3; Mayo (SW) 27.4; Gaines (SW) 28.4; Daniels (FC) 28.6.
3200: Harrison (GO 13:59.4; Williams (SW) 14.11.
1600 relay: Southwest Edgecombe 4:30; Farmville Central 4:51.
W.Carferat 120
Conlay...........27
W. Craven.........5
MOREHEAD CITY - West
Carteret ran away with a girls track meet yesterday, as the host team piled up 120 points in a three-way contest. Conleys girls were second with 27 points, while West Craven got only five points.
Conley runs again at West Carteret on Tuesday. Summary:
High jump: Compton (WC) 60, Kelly (C) 3-4.
Shot put; Lawrence (WC) 29-6; Thomas (C) 268; Daniels (WC) 263; Trumble (WC) 266.
Long jump: Jordan (WC) 17-0; Parker (WC) 14-8/i.; Martin (WC) 14-l>/i;WiggS (WCR) 14-1.
Triple jump: Martin (WC) 34-1; Jordan (WC) 32-9a; Reels (WC) 28-10; Martin (WC) 28-9.
Discus; Daniels (WC) 91-1; Thomas (C) 73-1'/^; Lawrence (WC) 665; Greg (WC)569>,i.
lOO low hurdles: Horton (WC) 17.9; Fox (WC) 18.5; Harris (WC) 19.2; Ditto (WC) 20.0.
100: Jordan (WC) 13.07; Harper (WCR) 13.39; Hardy (C) 13.6; Cherry (C) 13.7.
800 relay; West Carteret 1:53.9; Conley 1:55.2. ^
1600: Fischler (WC) 6:06.9; Hardison (WC) 6:30.3; Ambrose (WC) 6:36.4; Chapelon (WC) 6:37.6.
400 relay: Conley 55.4; West Carteret 55.58.
400: Jordan (WC) 1:05.6; Reels (WC) 1:06.5; Thomas (C) 1:09.4; Baker (WC) 1:11.5.
800: Fischler (WC) 2:44.5; Hardison (WC) 2:52.3; Ditto (WC) 2:56.4; Price (WC) 3:03.1.
200: Martin (WC) 26.4; Harper (WC) 26.6; Cherry (C) 27.0; Fugate (WC)27.1.
3200; Results unavailable.
1600 relay; West Carteret, Conley (times unavailable).
200 low hurdles: not run.
itt
Every day in
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Seattle Hurler Ignores Scouting Report, Throws Past Minnesota
Giiffin-HaU (GO d. Bassett-Keel, 8-4.
Hubbard-Harrison (GO d. Smith-Bullock, 63.
Blake-Dixon (FC) d. Joel Ginn-Harris, 61.
Williamston 8
Roanoke .....1
ROBERSONVILLE -Williamston High Schools tennis team rolled up an 8-1 victory over Roanoke Hi^ School yesterday.
Roanokes only win came in the number one doubles where David Yates and Randy Stout combined to down Cecil Elks and Kevin Griffin of Williamston.
The win boosts the Tiger record to 7-4. Williamston travels to Tarboro on Tuesday for its next match. Roanoke returns to action on Tuesday at Roanoke Rapids.
Summary:
CecU Elks (W) d. Sean Coefield, 60,60.
Kevin Griffin (W) d. David Yates, 64,63.
Chris Jones (W) d. Victor Long, 67,64,61.
Bert Jenkins (W) d. Randy Stout,
7-6,1-6,7-5.
Rusty Willard (W) d. Jeff Stevenson, 60,60.
Phomus Reddick (W) d. Mickey Peele,63,60.
Yates-Stout (R) d. Elks-Griffin,
8-7.
Glenn Perry-Willard (W) d. Keel-Long, 8-4.
Reddick-Fanny Peele (W) d. Tripp-Coefield, 63.
Creswell..........4
Bear Grass .3
BEAR GRASS - Bear Grass won the final two singles matches and the third doubles, but Creswell recorded a 4-3 victory Thursday in Tobacco Belt 1-A Conference action.
Jim Carter took an 8-2 victory over Kevin Belks in the fourth flight singles, and Robin Knox managed an 8-1 win over Sandra Phelps in the final match.
Cindy Harrison and Mary Rogerson teammed for an 8-2 win against Linda Leigh and Phelps in the second doubles match.
Bear Grass, now 4-2 on the season, hosts Cape Hatteras Tuesday.
Summary:
Jerome Horton (C) d. Derek Price, 8-3.
Elvin Patrick (C) d. Daniel Coefield, 65.
Rolton McCray (C) d. Brian Selhke, 67.
Jim Carter (BG) d. Kevin Belks, 62.
Robin Knox (BG) d. Sandra Phelps, 61.
Horton-Patrick (C) d. Price-Coefield,64.
Cindy Harrison-Mary Rogerson (C) d. Linda Leigh-Phelps, 62.
Aurora Slips By Bear Grass
BEAR GRASS - Aurora plated nine runs in the second inning and cruised to a 12-1 victory over Bear Grass in Thursday Tobacco Belt 1-A Conference action.
Jeff Hathaway went 2-4 at the plate for Aurora with a double and Tom Howard wa 2-4 with a triple for the visitors. Dave Cratch had a double for the lose Bear Grass hit.
Bear Grass is now 5-2 in the conference and hosts Jamesville Tuesday.
Aurora.................092 01-12 8 1
BearGrass.............001 00- 1 1 8
Howard and Bonner; Taylor, Leggett (2)andFulford.
By The Associated Press Mike Young is a Seattle rookie pitcher quickly learning that what got him to the major leagues will keq> him there.
After taking one lotA at the scouting reports for Thursdays Mariners-Minnesota game. Young promptly threw them away. And then he went out and threw the ball past the Twins.
I had been trying to follow the pitching charts on how to throw to each hitters weakness. It wasnt doing me any good, said Young, who pitched 81-3 innings of two-hit ball in Seattles 2-0 victory over the Twins.
I was pitching too fine, trying to hit spots. Thats not me. Today, I decided Id be me, let my natural stuff work for me. I went mainly with the fast ball, busted the slider on the right-handed hitters. No soft stuff.
In other games on an abbreviated American League schedule, the Baltimore Orioles edged the Texas Rangers 3-2 in 14 innings and the California Angels swept a twi-night doubleheader from the Oakland As, winning the opener 6-2 and taking the nightcap 6-5.
Young, now 2-2, struck out four and walked two. He gave up a single in the first inning to John Castino and a one-out single by Darrell Brown in the ninth, which brought Bill Caudill in from the bullpen. Caudill retired the last two
Jamesville Wins, 5*4
JAMESVILLE - Jamesville Hi^ School nipped Chocowinity, 5-4, with a run in the bottom of the eighth inning yesterday, remaining unbeaten in Tobacco Belt Conference play.
Chocowinity had grabbed the lead in the game in the third with a run, but Jamesville came back with two in the bottom of the fourth.
Terry Perry opened the fourth with a walk and Kevin Perry tripled to score him. Rex Bell then squeezed Kevin Perry over for a 2-1 lead.
Chocowinity came back with two in the fifth, while Jamesville added one. Chocowinity moved back out with one in the sixth, but Jamesville tied it again at 4-4 in the seventh.
Then, in the ei^th, the Bullets pushed over the winning run. Kevin Perry singed and stple second. Tim Norris was tlien intentionally walked. Rex Bell followed with a single, scoring Perry to end the game.
Matthew Moore, Greg Hardison and Kevin Perry led the Bullet hitting with two each, while J. Tripp and S. Harding each had two for Chocowinity.
Jamesville is now 7-0 in the league and 8-2 overall. The Bullets travel to Bear Grass on Tuesday.
Chocowinity .001 021 00-4 10 2 Jamesville .000 210 11-5 7 3 Tyree and Squires; Norris, Ange (5) andT. Perry.
batters on grounders for his third save.
Young, who got all the runs he needed (m seventh-inning solo homers by Pat Putnam and Julio Cruz, said he wasnt overly disappointed about exiting the game so close to his first major league shutout.
I dont mind leaving for Caudill, the 24-year-old left-hander said. I probably could have completed the game. But we are fortunate to have a strong relief pitcher like Caudill to come in and finish at the end. Thats what hes being paid for.
Castino said he was impressed by Young.
He was tough. He kept riding that fast ball or sinking it away off the outside corner from the right-handers. And he had the hard slider in tight.
The rookie pitcher also made an impression on Minnesotas Kent Hrbek, namely on the arm.
Hrbek left the game in the
second inning after being hit in the right forearm by a Young pitch. X-rays were negative, although Hrbeks arm will be in a plastic cast for the next few da;^.
OrkdesS, Rangers2 John Shelby scored the winnii^ run in the bottom of the 14th inning as Texas failed to complete an inning-ending double play. Shdby singled with one out off Odell Jones, 1-1, and cruised to third on Dhn Fords bloop single.
Cal Ripken then hit a grounder to shortstop Bucky Dent, who bobbled the ball before throwing to second baseman Mike Richardt. Fords bard slide into Richardt broke iq> the relay and allowed Shelby to score.
Tim Stoddard won his first decision of the year by striking out four in the final two innings. Orioles starter Jim Palmer gave up two unearned runs in ei^t innings.
Benny Ayala homered for Baltimore.
Greene Central Downs Farmville Nine, 5-4
SNOW HILL - Greene Central pushed a run over in the bottom of the eighth inning to squeeze past Farmville Central, 5^, in an Eastern Carolina Conference baseball game yesterday.
Greene Central grabbed the lead in the second, scoring once. Mike Warren walked and Chris Suggs reached on an error, moving Warren to third. He scored on a sacrifice fly by Tommy Goff.
The Rams added a second run in the third, and Farmville broke the ice with one in the fifth.
Roy Roman led off the fifth with a walk and Tim Askew singed. Wade Corbett and Alvin Baker both walked, forcing in Roman.
The Rams got two more in
the bottom of the fifth for a 4-1 lead, but the Jaguars tied it up with three in the seventh.
Then, in the eighth, Greene Central got the winning run. Ken Lan^ton walked and Warren did too. Chris Suggs reached on a bunt single and Goff was safe on an error, scoring Langston with the game winning run.
Farmville Central drops to 1-4 in the league and 5-7 overall with the loss, while Greene Central climbs to 4-1, 10-3.
'Farmville travels to Southern Nash today, while Greene Central is at Southwest Edgecombe.
FannvUleC........000 010 30-4 4 3
Greene C.^..........Oil 020 01-5 9 3
Godley and Baker; Goff, Murphy (8) and Grant.
Greenville Defeats Goldsboro, 18-8
Greenville Christian Academy crushed Goldsboro Christian, 18-8, in a baseball game yesterday.
Goldsboro jump^ into the lead in the first inning, scoring three times, but Greenville came right back with four in the bottom of the inning.
Then, in the second, the Knights put it away with five big runs. Billy Stancil reached on a fielders choice that left two men out. Jay Wynne reached on an error and Darin OBrien singled in Stancil. An error on the play let Wynne score, too. Tom Warburton also, reached on an error, scoring OBrien. Duane Roeser singled and Troy Stox reached on an error, scoring two runs for a 9-3 lead.
Greenville added one in the third, five in the fourth and three in the sixth for its 18-run total. Goldsboro picked up four in the third and one in the sixth.
Chris Stox led the Greenville hitting with five, while
OBrien and Roeser each had two. Steve Boyette had two hits for Goldsboro.
Now 2-3, the Knights play host to Wilson Christian on Tuesday.
Goldsboro 304 001- 8 5 7
Greenville 451 503-18 14 1
Finnell and Smith; Stox and Wynne.
AngelsHAsI5 Fred Lynn drilled a two-run homer in the first game and triggered a six-run, sixth-inning rally with a leadoff homer in the nightcq).
Geoff Zahn, 2-1, tossed a five-hitter in the first game and got additional hitting support on a two-run homer by Doug DeCinces. Rickey Henderson hit his first homer of the year for Oakland.
Lynns fifth homer of the season helped the Angels overcome Oaklands 2-0 lead in the second game. Brian Downing and Bobby Grich also singled in runs during the uprising.
PCC Downs Craven, 6-2
Pitt Community Colleges tennis team gained a 6-2 tennis victory over Craven Community College yesterday.
The win was the third against no losses for Pitt.
The number two doubles match was not played.
Pitt returns to action on Monday, hosting Coastal Carolina Community College.
Summary:
Will Jones (P) d. Tom Arthur, 60,60.
Brian Williams (P) d. Mike Rice, 60,61.
Dale Dawson (C) d. Richard Harrison, 63,67,6-4.
Bobby Wilkins (P) d. Ralph Sauder, 61,63.
Kent Perry (P) d. Kenny Gray, 61,0^,62.
Roy Pittman (C) d. Arvin Williams, 63,61.
Jones-B. WUliams (P) d. Gray-Pittman,61,62.
Perry-Richardson (P) d. Ar-thur-Rice, 61,62.
Silverthorne Wins Tourney
Steve Silverthorne won the Thursday Night Amateur Tournament at the Greenville Putt-Putt last night.
Silverthorne captured the tourney on the first hole of a sudden death playoff with Jimmy Silverthorne after the two tied with six-under-par 66s at the end of two rounds of play.
Kelly Robinette captured third place by shooting a five-under 67. Henry Beacham was fourth with a 69.
A tie for fifth was settleil between Rob Dozier and Bo Morrisey when Dozier won the playoff.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, April 22,1983-15
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
Bowling
Hillcrest Ladles
W L
Team...............82V4 45/4
Haddocks Tires.......so 48
Thorpe Music Co.......77 51
H. A. White............76^ 51t4
aiffsSeafood.........74 54
Team#2 ............... 72 56
T-Shirts Plus..........72 58
Arbys.................70 58
Perais Pizza Den 67 61
Dally Reflector........60/4 67V4
Merry Five............54',4 73V4
ATasteOf Honey......54 74
Bricks Clothing.......sO'/i 77;4
Team 1(16..............48'* 79'*
IPCCC................47 81
RoUingPins ,..38 90
High game, Pat Mewborn, 209; high series, Mae Harrell, 540.
Burroughs Wellcome
Ann's Angels..........66'* 49'/4
Hi A Hopes............65'* 50'*
E.T....................60 56
. The Fritos.............59 57
Ebony and Ivory.......57'* 58'*
Unicom Four..........56 60
Pin Wreckers..........55 61
Carolina Cowboys.....54* 61'*
Strike Force...........54 62
LoilyPops.............52 64
Mens high game, Curtis Ward, 203; mens high series, Stewart Brown, 562; womens high game and series, Sandy Hardison, 204, 513.
Bosebflll Stondings
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W LPct. GB Baltimore 8 5 .615 -
Milwaukee 6 6 .500
Toronto 6 6 . 500 1'*
Boston 6 7 462 2
.40
.417
.
sn
New, York ' f 7
DetroW 7
Cleveland 5 I
WEST DIVISION California 9 4
Oakland 9 6
Kansas City 6 4
Texas t (
Chicago ( (
MinnesoU 7 I .7 2
Seattle 6 It . 4
Thursday's Games Seattle 2, MimeaoUO Baltimore 3, Texas 2,14 innings California (4, Oakland 2-5 Only games scheduled.
Fridays Games Chicago (Bannister 1-1) at Cleveland (BlylevenO-3)
Seattle (Stoddard 1-2) at Detroit (Wilcox 1-1), (n)
Minnesota (Havens 1-1) at New York (AlexanderOd), (n)
Toronto (Clancy l-l) at Kansas City (Leonard 1-1), (n)
Milwaukee (McOure 0-2) at Texas (Darwin 0-1), (n)
Baltimore (Flanagan 2-0) at California (KisonZ-l), (n)
Boston (Hurst 1-1) at Oakland (Krueger 2-0), (n)
Saturday's Games
SeatUe at Detroit Minnesota at New York Chicago at Geveland Boston at Oakland Toronto at Kansas City, (n)
Milwaukee at Texas, (n)
Baltimore at California, (nl Sundays Games Seattle at Detroit Minnesota at New York Chicago at Qeveland Toronto at Kansas City Milwaukee at Texas Baltimore at California Boston at Oakland
OMi^ I I JM IW
^ Diego I .429 4
San Francisco 4 10 JH I
Houston 4 11 JI7 IW
ThumdhysOansa Montreal (. St LsM 9 Houaton 4, Ctamhrnati 3, U tamings Oidygameaaeheduied.
San FrandarefLMkey W3) at Chicaio (JenkinsO-2)
tMwlttal.
HOME RUNBLyim. CaUonla. I; 7 are Uedwith4 STOLEN BASESCarda, TOkonto, 7;
JCruz, Seattle. 7; WWUaen, Kansas 6ty', 7; (Una, Toronto, I; MDavls, Oakla^
I Ai^ (Reuas >4) at Pittsburg UenMl.d
(RtiodentM),(a)
Montreal (Lea 24 at Cincinnati (PastoreM), (n)
New York (Holman 0-1) at AtlanU (NiekroO-l),(n)
San Diego (Dravecky M) at St. Louis (Forsch 1-1), (n)
PWladehiUa (Ruthven M) at Houston (Ryan 1-0), (n)
SaturdaysGamea Los Angeles at Pittw^
San Francisco at Chicago Montreal at Cinctnnati, (nl New York at Atlanta, (n)
PITCHING (3 dodsionsl-Forsdi. California, 34), 1.000, 3.10; Gura, Kareaa City, 34). 1.000, 2J0; RMetti, New York, 34), 1.0MI, 2J1; SUeb,lhnoto, 31, .7, 141' 7an tied with 167 VfRflSiOlTr^ Zahn,
Callfoniia. U; Norris, Oaktond, U; RigbetuTNew York, 17; HoyTctocago, 16;Kiaon,CalUaii^l6. MVES^piUnerTcimiaod. 4; Beard,
OaUand, 3; Cau^iU, Seattle^ 3;' Quisen-b^TKaiaas City, 3;^vis, Min-
NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (25 at bats): Keep, New
San Diego at St. Louis, (n) PhUaddi^U at Houston,!
York, .510; Aabby, Houston, .393; Hendrick, St.Louit, J97: Dawson,
MontreaL -OH; OambUaa, AtlanU, .370.
(n)
Sundays Oiunm Los Angeles at Plltsburgh
NewYorkatAUanU
Montreal at Cincinnati San Diego at St. Louis San Francisco at Chicago PhUaddphU at Houston
Leogw Leodwrt
%CERaS4L^^
St. Louis Montreal Philadelphia Pittsburgh New York Chicago
NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W LPct. GB
2 .750 -
4 .636 '*
4 .636 '*'
5 .545 1(5
6 .400 3
10 .167 6
BATTING (2S at bats) Brett, Kansas City, .475; Shelby, Baltimore, .440; Hassey, Oeveland, .423; Carew, California, .417; Gross, Oakland, .407.
RUNS-BretL Kansas City, 13; Bemazard, (%lcaflo, 12; Gaetti, Mln-nesoU,12;6aretiedwithll.
RBI-Kittle, Chicago, 14; Lynn, California, 14- Brett, Kansas City, 13; Thornton, Cleveland, 13; (urew, California, 12.
HITS-Boggs, Boston, 30; Carew, California, ; TCnii, Seattle, 20; 5 are tied with 19.
RUNS: Garvey, San Dim, 11; Horner, AUanU, 11; Drlessen, ncinnaU, 10; Lacy, Pittsburgh, 10; Richards, San Dim 10 ^
Rfif;>,T.Kennedy, San Dim, 16; Drieditt Cincinnati, 12; Hmdrick, St.LmS, 12; Bend), Cincinnati, 11; Landreaux, Los Angeles, 11.
HITS; Bonilla, San Diego, 23; T.Kennedy, San Diego, 20; Thon, Houston, W; Guerrero, Ir Angeles, 19; Oesterjlncinnati, 19.
DOUBLES: Ten are tied with 4. TRIPLES: Dawson, Montreal, 3; Green, St.Louis, 2; Seaver, New York, 2;
2-1, .667, 3.43; Valenzuela, Los Angeles, 3LJ67,3.37.
I^IKEOUTS; Caritoo,
42; Berenyi, Cincinnati, 25; _ CinclnnatL .25; P.Perez, AUanU, 20;
Mayl
Valenzuda,LosAnfleles,20 Lucas, San E
SAVES: Lucas, San Diego, 3; Stewart, Los Angeles, 3; Allen, New York, 2; <laitier, AtlanU, 2; Hume, Cincinnati, 2; Minton, San Francisco, 2; S.Howe, Los Angeles, 2.
lay 1
Edmootan at Chicago, (n), Tuesday, May3
d)lcago at Edmonton, (n), Thursday,
"liaKTw,
Rosey Bartlett Dot Germain
Sandra Haynie Brenda Goldsmith
i, (n), Sunday, 1^8, if necessary
(micago at Edmonton, (n), Tuesday, lay 10, If necessary
C.Davls, San Francisco, 4; Sdimidt, BylheAiaoclaUdPre
T of C Golf Scores
Phlladdphla, 4; Chamblim, AtlanU, 3; Dawson, Montreal, 3; Guerrero, Los
Angeles,' 3; Hendrick, St.Louis, 3, Homer, .......... Uadeiphta, 3;
WEST DIVISION
AUanta 9 3 .750 -
Los Angeles 9 4 .692 i*
AUanU, 3; Matthews, PhUa Yeager, Los Angeles. 3.
ST^N BASES; Lacy, Pittsburgh, 11; S.Sax, Los Angeles, 8; E.Mllner, uncin-naUjS Jisooaid, San Francisco, 5.
PITCHING (3 decisions): P.Perez, AtlanU, 34), 1.000, 0.35; Sanderson, Montreal, 341, 1.000, 3.72; Cartton, .......a, 31, .750, 1.69; Soto,
By The Asaoclated Preas First Round (Best of Three) EASTERN CONFERENCE
CARLSBAD, Calif. (AP) - First-round scores Thursday in the $400,000 MONY-Toumament of Champions on Uie 6,911-yard, par 36-36-72 La Costa
New York vs. New Jersey riesl4)
Strahanie Farwig Alice Miller Debbie Meisterlein Alison Sheard Julie Waldo Rose Jones Jeannette Kerr Vicki Singleton Rica (tomstock Catherine Duggan Valerie Skinner KaUiy Whitworth
(New York wins series New York 118, New Jersey 107
New York 105, New Jersey!
n.Boito
Atladavs.L (Boston leads series 1-0) Boston 103, AUanU 95 atAUanU,(n),l
6; Hrbek, MinnesoU, 6.
TRIPLESGWilson, Detroit, 3; Baines, Chicago, 2: Yount, Milwaukee, 2; 34 are
31, '.750, i.40; Andular;
ling, San
St.Louis, 2-1, .667, 0.50; Breining, Francisco, 31, .667, 3.76; Dravecky, San Diego, 2-1, .667,2.86; Pastore, Cincinnati,
f
Tigers, Tar Heels Clash
Boston at AUanU, (n), Friday, April 22 AUanU at Boston, Sunday, April 24, if necessaiy
WESTERNCONFERENCE Phoenix vs. Denver (Series tied 1-1)
Phoenix 121, Denver 108 Denver 113, Phoenix 99 Denver at Phoenix, (n), Sunday. April
24
Seattle vs. Portland (PorUand leads series 1-0) PorUand 106. Seattle 97 SeatUe at PorUand, (n), Friday, April
22
PorUand at SeatUe, Sunday, April 24, if necessary
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - Clemson will meet top-seeded North Carolina tonight in the Atlantic Coast Conference baseball tournament, but Tiger coach Bill Wilhelm would like a change of venue before meeting the Tar Heels on their home field.
Could we possibly arrange for this game to be played somewhere else? Wilhelm said. Its a tremendous advantage for this.
The Tigers advanced to the next round with an 8-1 victoi7 over North Carolina State in the finals of the second round. The Tar Heels built a 9-2 lead, then had to hold on for a 13-11 victory over Maryland.
In daytime action, Duke needed Russ Lees bases-loaded single in the bottom of the ninth to escape with a 14-13 victory over Wake Forest to eliminate the Demon Deacons. Virginias John Kampschror scattered eight hits as the Cavaliers downed Georgia Tech 8-1 and send the Yellow Jackets home.
In todays games, Virginia
tangles with Maryland at 1 p.m., while Duke and N.C. State meet at 4 p.m. The Tigers and the Tar Heels close the days action at 7 p.m. Two regular-season Clemson and North Carolina games were rained out this year.
Wilhelm, whose Tigers have won four tournament titles, is not too bashful when it comes to expressing his opinion on playing in Chapel Hill.
Its regrettable that its here, Wilhelm said. It definitely shouldnt be established at one place.
Ricky Hester,-who had a home run and three RBI in Wednesdays 12-5 victory over Virginia, clubbfd a bases-loaded triple during a six-run Clemson spree that broke a l-l tie. Hester collected four more RBI against the Wolfpack.
Hesters hit followed a run-scoring single by Jim McCollum and a bases-loaded walk to David LeMaster. Hester later scored on Jay Fultons single as the Tigers claimed a 7-1 lead.
Bob Paullings 10th home
run in the seventh completed the Clemson scoring.
Tiger right-hander Jeff Gilbert pitched a three-hitter, struck out 11 and retired the last 15 batters he faced, giving Wilhelm his 685th coaching victory.
N.C. State took a 1-0 lead on Tracy Woodsons fourth-inning solo homer, his 13th. Hesters fifth inning single scored LeMaster, who led off the inning with a triple.
Wolfpack starter Mike Pesavento, who surrendered five runs in the Clemson rally, suffered the loss, falling to 5-3.
North Carolina reliever Chris Mench retired Martin Freeman on a ground ball with the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth to preserve the victory over Maryland.
Drex Roberts fifth inning homer broke a 9-9 tie, and the Tar Heels scored three more runs to take a 13-9 lead into the bottom of the ninth.
After relief pitcher Gordon Douglas got two outs, he walked Kevin Johnston and
Chris Staik to load the bases and force Cdach Mike Roberts to call on Mench, the fifth North Carolina pitcher.
Mench walked in two more runs before the ground ball play that ended the Maryland threat.
North Carolina broke a 2-2 tie with a 7-run third inning. Highlighting the inning were 2-run singles by Glenn Liacouras and Jeff Hubbard.
Maryland tied the game in the bottom of the fourth. Tom Weider singled, moved to second on a walk to Scott Rowe, stole third and scored in Bryan Davenports single. Rowe moved to third on the hit and scored on an infield out.
Roberts shot was his ninth home run and came with two outs. The Tar Heels added two runs in the sixth and tacked on one more in the ninth.
Gordon Douglas, the fourth Tar Heel pitcher, got credit for the victory. He worked the last 6 1-3 innings and raised his record to 2-0. Ed Hogge, 0-2, was the loser.
NHLPIoyoffs
By Hie Afiociated Pms Divlilon Finals (Best of Seven)
WALESCONFERENCE Adams Division ;
(B4)stoo lead series 32)
Buffalo 7, Boston 4 Boston 5, Buffalo 3 Buffalo 4, Boston 3 Boston 6. Buffalo 2 Boston 9, Buffalo 0
Boston at Buffalo, (n). Friday. April 22 Buffalo at Boston, (nl, Sunday. April 24,ifnecessai7
Patrick Division (Islanders lead series 32)
N Y. Islanders4, N Y Rangers 1 N Y IslandersS, N Y Rangers 0 N Y. Rangers 7, N Y Islanders 6 N Y. Rangers 3. N Y Islanders 1 N Y. Islanders 7, N Y Ranrs2 N Y Islanders at N Y Itongers, (n),
y dub course Jack Nicklaus Lanny Wadkins Hal Sutton Gary Koch Ray Floyd Craig Stadler Tom Kite Johnny Miller Keith Fergus Jay Haas Cal Peete GU Mor^
Bobby (^mpett Wayne Levi Gary Hallberg Tim Norris Isao Aoki Mike Nlcolette Fuzzy Zoeller Bob GUder Ed Sneed Payne Stewart Bruce LieUke Scott Hoch Tom Watson Bob Shearer Tom Welskopf Bill Rogers
hy _________
Lori Huxhold
32-33-65
3334-67 34-33-67
3332-67
3335-68 34-35-69
3334-69
3333-69
3335-70 3337-70
3336-71
3336-71 3335-72
3337-72 37-35-72
3335-73
3337-73 3339-74 37-37-74 37-38-75
3336-75 37-38-75 3339-75
3338-76
37-39-76
3339-77 4337-77
38-40-78
Patty Sheehan Jerifyn Britz Sue Roberts
Diane Dailey Kathy Martin
Cathy Reynolds M.J Smith
Becky Pearson Vivian Brownlee Connie (liillemi a-Lynn C. (tonnelly Vicki Fergon Marlene Hagge Sandra Spuzich Patty Hayes Terry Luckhurst Sydney Cunningham lnn Adams Therese Hession Gerda Boykin
Boyk Barbra Mizrahie
Judy Ellis Cinay Lincoln
LPGA^corei
LeAnn (Tassaday Murle Breer Alice Ritzman Kathy McMullen Carolyn Hill Martha Nause Pam Gietzen Bonnie Bryant a-Cathy Hanlon
ST PETERSBURG,--diia. (AP) -Thursdays first-round scores of the $150,000 LPGA S&H aassic played over the par-72, 6J)23yard Pasadena Golf Club course (a-indicates amateur):
Beth Daniel Laura Cole Sandra Palmer Janet (toles
thy
Vicki Tabor
Beverly Klass Robin Walton
Nancy Rubin Jane Blalock
a-Amy Benz Debbie I
! HaU
Dale Eegeling mckerson
Friday, April 22 N.Y Rani
Marty Deedee Lasker Lori Garbacz Mindy Moore Kathy Postlewait Pat Meyers Lauri Rinker
Sunda'
. Rangers at N.Y. Islanders, (n), ly, April 24, if necessary
(ahpbeLl conference
Jan Stephenson Sherk
Norris Division (CtolcagowiiisVl)
Chicago 5, Minnesota 2 Chicago 7, Minnesota 4 Minnesota 5, Chicago 1 Chicago 4, Minnesciia 3, OT Chicago 5, Minnesota 2
SmytbeDivlsfc
(Edmonton wins 31)
Edmonton 6, Calgary 3 Edmonton 5, Calgary I Edmonton 10, Calgary 2 Calgary 6, Edmonton 5 Edmonton 9, Calgary 1
(tonference Finals Best of Seven CAMPBELL CONFERENCE (ChiCMSo VI. Ednkooton)
Chicago at Mmonton, (n), Sunday, April 24
(toicago at Edmonton, (n), Tuesday, prtl26
at Chicago, (n), Sunday,
Cathy :
JoAnne Career Pat Bradley Patti Rizzo Jo Ann Washam (toris Johnson Janet Anderson Hollis Stacy Anne-Marie Palli Mary Dwyer Man McDougall Cathy Morse Joyce Kazmierski Shelley Hamlin Sally Little BeUy King Debbie Austin Jane Blalock Sandra Post Myra Van Hoose Lauren Howe
Ayako Okamoto Muf
Auffin Spencer-Devlin
Susan Lynn Grams Cathy Mant
Barb Bunkowsky
3333-66 32-34-66 3337-67
3334-67 34-34-68
32-36-68 333368
34-34-68
33-35-68 3334-69 3334-69
3333-69
3334-69 3334-69 3334-69
34-35-69 34-35-69
33-36-69 3336-69
34-35-69 3334-70 3334-70 34-36-70 37-33-70 34-36-70
3334-70 34-36-70
3335-70 3334-70 3334-70
3334-70 37-33-70 34-33-70 34-37-71
3335-71
3336-71 33,16-71
3335-71 34-37-71
3336-71 3336-71
Karen Permezel Gail Hirata Kellii Rinker Jane Crafter Pia Nilsson Carole (toarbonnier Barbara Barrow Susan Stanley Penny Pulz Debbie Rhodes Lauri Peterson Mina Rodriguez Barbara RiedI Joan Joyce Coleen Walker Cindy Hill
3336-71
3336-71
3336-71
34-37-71
34-37-71
3335-71 34-37 -71
3336-71 3336-71
3336-71 3339-72 37-35-72
3337-72 3337-72 37-35-72 3337-72 3337-72 34-38-72 37-35-72 3336-72 37-35-72
3336-72
3337-72 37-35-72 34 38-72
3336-72 3335-73 37-36-73
37-36-73
38-35-73
3338-73
3337-73 37-36-73 37-36-73
3337-73 37-36-73 33^0-73 37-36-73
39-34-73 37-36-73
4333-73 3335-74
3339-74
4334-74 37-37-74 37-37-74
3338-74 37-37-74 3338-74 37-37-74 37-37-74 37-37-74
37-37-74 3338-74
38-36-74 38-36-74 37-37-74
3338-74
37-38-75
38-37-75
3339-75
37-38-75
39-36- 75 34m-75 35-40-75 39-36-75 3341-76 39-37-76
38-38-76 4336-76
Alexandra Reinhardt Marianne Huning Deborah Petrizzi Marga Stubblefield Catherine Panton
Betsy Barrett irloti
Charlotte Montgomery Lenore Muraoka Sharon Barrett Sue Ertl Kelly Fuiks Laura Hurlbut Mary Hafeman Julie Pyne Lynn Slroney Sarah LeVeque Beverly Davis-Cooper
Marjorie Jones e Fo
Sue Fogleman a-denoles amateur wd-withdrew
3338-76 37-39-76
35-41-76
3337-76
3339-77 37-40-77
3338-77 3341-77 3338-77 3338-77 3641-77 3741-78 40-38- 78 4338-78 4338-78 42-36-78 3743-80 3644-80
WD
Transactions
By The Asaoclated Press FOOTBALL
Canadian Football League
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS-Signed
Mark Chipman and Lester Mickens, wide receivers, and Tony Fuller, defensive back
SOCCER
American Soccer League JACKSONVILLE TEA MEN-licky Zibalievic, forward PENNSYLVANIA STONERS-Signed
M-Signed
signed frank paonessa, forward 'Announced the retirement of Jim Stamatis,
forward.
Major Indoor Soccer League PHOENIX INFERNO-Fired Norm
Sutherland, general manager, and named Kelly Dunne, marketing director, as acting general manager
colSige
DARTHMOLTH-Named Reggie ' Minion head basketball coach.
FA1RLE1GH DICKINSON-Named Barbara Leshinsky associate director of athletics for women
WAYLAND BAPTIST-Announced the resignation of Kathy Wilson, head basketball coach, and Sally Miller and Stuart Beckwith, assistant basketball coaches.
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JOHN LEHTiSAFETY IN FORTIFICATION
IN BBUCAL TIAAES PEOPLE ONLY PELT SAPE WMEN1NEV HAD IHE VlALLS OF A TOWN STRONS ENOUGH TO WrWSTOND THE ONSLAUEHT OF PAPtAOOUS ATTACKERS. WALLS SOMETIMES SEVENTY OR A HUNDRED FEET IN DEPTH WERE KNOWN TO EXIST. SATEWAiS WITH STRONS TIMBERS THREE FEET THICK WERE NOT UNUSUAL. ALSO DOUBLE WALLS WERE QUITE COMMON. ONE CAN IMAGINE THE CHAGRIN OF THE ATTACKING FORCES WHO HAD FINAUY MANAGED TO PUNCH A HOLE IN THE WALL ONLY TO REALIZE THAT A SCANT FIFTY FEET MORE THERE WAS ANOTHER WALL TO BE PENETRATED! NO W0M5ER, WHEN MAKING AN OfflH, PEOPLE OFTENTIMES WOULD SWEAR BY THE TOWEHINS WALL OF THEIR NAHVE HOMESITE.
SAVE THIS FOR YOUR SUNDAY SCHOa SCRAPBOOK_
Copyright, 19, JrPin *. Ichti, Dkpibpttd by lioogrfhn, P. 0. Bp. eW,MKMktown, H. r. lOWO, Hirovgh Huldimiop Astpeioln, 18110 ViKapi 18, CampriBp CP. 9I0
Sponsors Of This Paee, Along With Ministers of All Faiths, Urge You to Attend Your House of Worship This Week, To
Believe In God and to TrusMn His.Guidance For Your life.
COZARTS AUTO SUPPLY, INC. J4 Dickinson Ave. 752-3194 !> Banks Cozarl i Employees
Compliments Of HEILIG MEYERS CO.
518 E. Greenville Blvd. 756-4145
LESTER TURNAGE
Real Estate & Insurance Agency Get More With Les"
Corner Thirds CotancheSt. 752-2715
WHITTINGTON, INC.
Charles St.. Greenville, N.C. Ray Whittington 756^7
Compliments of PHELPS CHEVROLET West End Cir. 756-2150
WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY 7560317
123 S. Railroad. WIntervllle
JA-LYN SPORT SHOP Hwy. 33, Chlcod Creek Bridge 752-2676, Grimesland James S Lynda Faulkner
VANS HARDWARE 1300 N. Greene St. 758-2420
QUALITY TIRE SERVICE and Employees at N. Greene St. and2900 E. 10th St.
752-7177 757-3762
COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN 2905E. 5th
Take out only 752-5184 800S.W. Greenville Blvd.
Eat In or lake out 7360434
BOND-HODGES SPORTING GOODS 218 Arlington Blvd. lOlh St. Greenville 7560001 752-4156
PLAZA GULF SERVICE 756-7618 701E. Greenville Blvd.
Ryder Truck Rentals 7560046 Wrecker Service day 756-7616 nite 75760479
AaCTION MOVING 4 STORAGE 1007CheanutSl. 756-7000
ANNES TEMPORARIES, INC. 7560610120 Reade St. Greenville
BARWICKS HOUSE OF MEATS, INC. 758-2277100 Pollard St. Greenville Allen Berwick, owner
EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC 2201 Dickinson Ave. 756-4267
EARLS CONVENIENCE MART
Route 17560278
Earl Faulkners Employees
ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERUND REALTORS 7560500
226 Commerce St. Greenville
EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS 758-35881514 N. Greene St.
A complete restaurants office coffee service"
ROBERT C. DUNN CO XI Ridgeway 7560278
HENDRIX-BARNHILLCO. Memorial Dr. 752-4122 All employees
Compliments Of LOVEJOY AGENCY Dayt^eak records 756-47741180akmonlDr. Larry Whittington
PARKERS BARBEQUE RESTAURANT
756-2388S. MamorlalDr.
I Doug ParkarS Employees
C.H. EDWARDS, INC. Hwy.11S.7560SOO
CompUmentsof FRED WEBB, INC.
CompUmentsof PITT MOTOR PARTS. INC. 758-4171611 S. Washington SI.
TOMS RESTAURANT "The Vary Baat In Home Cooking" 756-1012Maxwell St. VVeatEndAna
GRANT BUICK, INC. 796-1677Qreanvma Blvd. BMOrantSEmployaea
OVERTONS SUPERMARKETS, INC.
211 S. Jarvis 7S2-X2S All Employees
TAPSCOn DESIGNS 222E. 5th SI. 757-3558 Kate Phillips, Interior Designer Associate member ASID
CompUmentsof
HOLLOWELLS DRUG STORE
no. 1 911 Dickinson Ave.
no. 2 Memorial Dr. S 6th SI.
no. 3 Stantonsburg Ftd. at Doctors Park
PIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE 2105 Dickinson Ave. 756-2444 Ricky Jackson S Employees
FARRI0R4S0NS.INC.
General Contractors
753-2005Hwy. 264 ByPassFarmvUte
LAUTARES JEWELERS 414 Evans 752-3831
ELECTROLUX Sales and Service
"Known For Quality For Over 55 Years."
Free Estimates Free Pick-Up & Delivery 104 Trade St. 7566711
INA'S HOUSE OF flowers N. Memorial Dr. Ext. 752-5656 ManagamenlAStaff
PITT-QREENE PCA 4 FEDERAL LAND BANK ASSOCIATION "Short, Intermediate A Long Term Agricultural Credit"
1XE. latSI. 756-1512
BUCKS GULF STATION 4 EMPLOYEES E 10th SI. Ext. 7523228 "Road A Wrecker Service"
Jartran Truck A Trailer Rentals
INTEGON UFE INSURANCE CO.
W.M. Scales, Jr. General Agent Weighty Scales, Rep.
Clarke Stokes, Rep.
7S637X
PUGHS TIRE 4 SERVICE CENTER 752d125
Comer of Sth A Greene, Greenville
HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO. Residential A Commercial Building 400 N. 10th SI. 752-1553
CompUmentsof YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY 752-08781506N. Greene St.
Greenville, N.C.
HARGETTS DRUG STORE 2500S. Charlea Ext. 756-3344
DAUGHTRIDGE0IL4GASC0.
2102 Dickinson Ave. 756-1345 Bobby Tripp A Employees
CAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE 1405Dickinaon Ave. 7523778 Jerry Creech, Owner
PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO. 758-2113Greenville
EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. 27XE. 10th St. P.O. 80x3785 752-4323QreenvUle
FOUNTAIN OF UFE, INC. Oekmont PtofeaalonM Ptaia GreemriUe. N.C. 7866000
PAIR ELECTRONICS, INC.
Electrnica SuppHers
7664261107 Trade SI. * Greenville, N.C.
REDI SUPPLY, INC.
Industrial A Construction SuppUea 1002Cheanut 7563200
HARRIS SUPERMARKETS, INC.
"Where Shoootnq la A Pleasure" no. 1 Memorial Dr. 7560110 no. 2 2612E. 10th Ext. 757-18U no. 4 Bethel no. 5 N. Greene 752-4110 no.6 Ayden no.7Tarboro
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-OATSUN 101 Hooker Rd. 7504115 .
JOHNNYS MOBILE HOME SALES. INC. "The Finest In Manufactured Housing"
310 W. Greenville Ovd. 7564687 Johnny L Jeckaon A Employaea
WESTERN SIZZUN STEAK HOUSE "WeputHontheplate"
500W. QreenvmOM. 7560040 2003E. 100181.7564712
JIMMYS PHILLIPS 08 SERVICE All Types Minor Repair Work VWeokerBenlce Conmm8t.A264ByPe$8 J.6. Baker, owner 7861446
EASTERN INSULATION, INC. OweneComlnamergMee Phone Oey or Night 7864184
CofflpHinentsol THOMAS W. RIVERS
ESTATE REALTY 00. ijMOmlmSLGmnvOle
JemearOoimMm:// >-
FAITH Is your havon of refine In a troubled world
Come To CHURCH
GUMUA MU LUTHERAN CHURCH nw Muot Club, 2M GraM Sprtap ParkRd. ^
Thu Rev. Rlcberd A. Mlikr, PboiK 7SM03B t;W a.m. Sun. - Sunday Scbooi M:U a.ffl. - llie Montaii WonMc Service 4;Np.m.Man.-Sr.Ooid.ChM 7:3apjB. Hair.-Adult BOrie dan
OUR REDEEMER LUTHERAN , 1800 S. Elm R. Graham Nahouse 9.00 a.m. Sun. - Holy Communcion 9;45a.m. - Sunday School 11 ;00 a.m. - Worship Service 8:OOp.m. - Family him Night &00p.m.-LSA
4:15 p.m. Tue. - 1st Year Confirmation 7; 30 p.m. - Evangelism Committee 7:30p.m. Wed.-^Ir Rehearsal
Conference, Mission Friends, Cherub A Carol Choirs 7:00 p.m. - GA's RAs Baptist Women Council 8:00p.m. Chancel Qiolr 12:(ib p.m. Thur. - WAO Lunch and Meeting
7:00 p.m. - Nominating Committee
FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Comer BiinUey Road & Plasa Drive, Greenville, N.C. 27834 Rev. Frank Gentry
9:45 a.m. Sim. - Sunday School, Dickie Rook,Supt.
II :00 a.m. - Worship Service 6:00p.m. -Choir Practice 7:00 p.m. - Prayer/Pralae Service 7:00p.m. Mon. - Mens Fellowship 7:30 p.m. - Prayer Warriors 7:30p.m. Wed. - BibleStudy/Lifeliners 7:30 p.m. - Children's/Teen Choir 7:00 p.m. Thur. Nursing Home Chocowmlty 9:30 a.m. Fri. - Sunday School Lesson WBZQ
7:00 p.m. - University Nursing Home Sat. - Conference Teen Talmit/Blble Quiz; Falcon. NC
EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE Full Gospel Church
264 Bypass West at Laughlnghouse Drive S. J.WUIlams, Minister Mike Pollard. Minister of Music 10:00 a.m. Sun - Sunday School Unwood Lawson, Supt 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 5:45p.m.-Adult Choir Practice 7:00 p.m. - Celebration of Praise 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer & Share 7:30 p.m. - Youth Service, Gary A LaRee Maness 10:00 a m. Sat. - INTERCESSORY PRAYERTIME
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Comer 14th and Elm Streets Richard R. Gammon and Gerald M. Anders, Ministers; Brett Watson, Director of Music; E. Robert Irwin, Organist 9:00 a.m. Sun.-Worship 9:45 a.m. Church School 11:00 a.m.-Worship 6:30 p.m. - Overeaters Anonymous Study
9:30 a.m. Mon. - woeCouncU 6:30 p.m. Brownies 7:00p.m.-GlrlScouts 7:00p.m.-Boy Scouts 7:30 p.m. - Church Council 9:00 a.m. Tue. - Park-A-Tot 10:00 a.m. - Presbytery-Rocky Mount
12:00 p.m. - Newsletter Deadline 7:00p.m. Cub Scouts 2:30 p.m. Wed. Address Angels 7:00p.mBrownies 7:00 p.m.-Girl Scouts 7:00 p.m. Evangelism Explosion 7:Mp.m. Galleiy Choir 9:00 a.m. Thur. - Park-A-Tot 10:00 a.m. Crafts Giwm 5:00 p.m. Bulletin Deadline 7:30p.m. Overeaters Anonymous 10:00 a.m. Fri. Pandoras Box 10:00 a.m. Sat. - Pandoras Box
ARUNGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH 1007 W. Arlington Blvd.
Pastor, Rev. Harold Greene 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 11 -.00 a.m. Mission Friends 7:30p.m. -Evening Worship 6:30 p.m. - Teachers A Workers 6:30 p.m. Mon. - Leave Church VBS Clinic Webbs Chapel 7:30 p.m. Wed - Worship Service
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 520 East Greenville Boulevard 756-3138
Dr. Will R. Wallace, Minister 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Chiirch School 11:00 a.m.-Worship 1:30 p.m. - Chi Rhos "Golf Afternoon 4:00 p.m. - J.Y.F., Primary Choir, Youth Room 5:00 p.m. Snack Supper for all youth groups 5:30 p.m. C.Y.F., Junior Choir 6:30 p.m. CWF Executive Board Meets
7:00 p.m. - All Church Committees/CMF Board Meet 8:30 p.m. - Long-Range Planning Committee Meets 10:30 a.m. Tue. - Bible Study 6:00 p.m. Wed. - Hookerton Union District Meeting in Walstonburg 7:30 p.m. Chancel Choir Rehearsal
CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 9 Cherry Oaks Subdivision
Greenville, N.C.
Pastor: Rev James Wright 7:30 p.m. Fri. - The Senior Choir Club will meet at the home of Sis. Christine Only
10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship, Sermon by the Pastor. Music will be rendered by the Gospel Choir 3:00 p.m. - The Jr. Ushers will sponsor a musclal program 7:30 p.m. Mon. Jr. Ushers will meet 10:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Wed. Clothes Closet will be open for the needy. Call 756-7517 for information.
7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p.m. Thur. Young Adult Choir will have rehearsal
HOLY TEMPLE A.F.C.O.G (SaintsvUle)
Routed, Greenville, 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.) Deacon Lomell Whitaker 11:30 a.m. 4th Sun. Pastoral Day Speaker: Elder I.J. Robinson 7:00 p.m. Sun. - Worhsip Service 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Midweek Service 11:00 a.. 1st Sun. May 1st -Missionary A Youth Day Missionary Debrew. Youth Dept. The Twelve Tribes of Israel
ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street The Rev. Lawrence P. Houston, Jr., Rector
The Rev. J. Dana Pecheles, Asst. Rector The Fourth Sunday in Easter 7:30 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist 9:00 a.m. - Holy Eucharist 10:00 a.m. Christian Education 11:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist 6:00p.m.-Jr.EYC,ParishHall 6:00 p.m. - Sr. EYC, Leigh Laniers, 526 Westchester Dr 7:30 p.m. - Al-anon, Friendly Hall 5:30 p.m. Tue. - Holy Eucharist, Canterbury 7:30 p.m. Greenville Parents Support Group, Parish Haii 7:00 a.m. Wed. - Holy Eucharist 10:00 a;m. - Holy Eucharist and Laylng-On of Hands 3:30 p.m. - Holy Eucharist, Nursing Home
6:30 p.m. Parish Eastertide Dinners and Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 7:00 p.m. Thur. - TEEX, Friendly Hall 7:30 p.m. - Parish Visiting Group, Guild Room 4:00 p.m. Fri. - Childrens Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 5:00 p.m. - Jr. Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 7:30 p.m. Sat. - Holy Matrimony 8:00 p.m. - AA Open Group Discussion, Friendly HaU
ST. JOHN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH P. 0. Box 134 Falkland, NC 27827 Rev. Anton T. Wesley, Pastor 7:00 p.m. Fri. - Youth Church Choir Rehearsal 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 am. - Morning Worship 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 10:00 a.m. - One Day Session of O.E.M.B.A. at Mt. Calvary M.B. church of New Bern, N.C.
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 7:00 p.m. - Evangelistic Service 7:00 p.m. Tue. - Worship Service-Unlversity Nursing Home 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Family Training Hour
7:00 p.m. Thur. - Worship Service-Green vllle Villa Nursing Home Dial-A-Prayer 752-1362
SAINT PETERS CATHOUC CHURCH 2700 E. 4th Street Greenville, N.C.
757-3259
Rev. William E. Frost 5:30 p.m. Sat.-VlgU 8:00 a.m. Sun.-Liturgy 10:30 a.m.-Liturgy
PHILIPPI CHURCH OF CHRIST 1610 Farmville Boulevard Rev. Randy Royal!
2:30 p.m. Sat. - Gospel Chorus Business Meeting 3:00 p.m G<pel Chorus Rehearsal 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School, Sis. Mary Jones Supt.
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship, Rev. Randy Royall 3:00 p.m. - Worship with St. Peters, Kinston
4:00 p.m. Jr. Ushers go to Holly HUl
2:00 p.m. Mon. - Joy Hour-Greenville Villa University 1:00 p.m. Tue. - Willing Workers Prayer Board 12:00 p.m. Wed. - Prayer at the Church, Visit Sick 1:00 p.m. Thur. - Willing Workers Prayer Board
GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 264 By Pass A 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 Oasses for all
11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship . 5:00p.m.-Spiritual Maturity Class 6:00 p.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Bible Study Classes for all ages
For Further Information and or Transportation please call 752-5991 or 752-6376
HOLLYWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HWY 43 South
Minister-Rev. C. Wesley Jennings S.S. Supt.-Elsle Evans Music Director-Vivlan Mills A Steve Aslinger Organlst-Leida McGowan Youth Leaders-Debble and Steve Aslinger 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Worship Service 7:00 p.m. Wed.-Bible Study 8:00p.m. - Choir Practice
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Fourth and Meade Streets 11:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Sunday Service 7:45 p.m. Wed. - Wed. Evening Meeting 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. - Reading Room 400 S; Meade Street
MORNING GLORY APOSTOUC FAITH HOLINESS CHURCH 1012 West 5th Street, GreenvUle, N.C. Eldress Irene G. Epps Every Sunday
10:00 a.m. Sun. - Bible School 12:00 p.m. - Worhsip A Preaching 7:30 p.m. - Worship A Preaching 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Worship A Preaching 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Worship A Preaching
PEOPLES BAPTIST TEMPLE Rev. J.M. Bragg, Pastor 2001 W. Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.27834 7:30 a.m. Sun. - Laymens Prayer Breakfast (Three Steers)
10:00 a.m.-Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship, Old Fashioned Day 5:15 p.m. -Choir Practice 8:30 p.m. - Evening Worship 8:00 p.m. - Teens - Fireside 7:15 a.m. Mon.-Frl. - Radio Program -"Together Again-WBZQ 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Hour of Power 8:00p.m.-Choir Practice
THE CHURCW OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS 307 Martinsbmnugh Rd., Greenville, NC 27834 Bishop Danny Brew 9:00-10:10 a.m. Sun. Sacrament Meeting 10:20-11:00 a.m. - Sunday School 10:20-12:00p.m. - Primary 11:10-12:00 p.m. - Relief Society, Young Men Women 6:30-8:00 p.m. Thur. - Institute at the Brewster BuUdlng, ECU, Room 203-B 2:00 p.m. AprU 23 - Ward Social 9:00 a.m. May 1 - Ward Conference
THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY 1206 Mumford 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.- Evtm^istk Service 7:30p.m. Wed. -Prayer Meeting Revival Service 7:30 p.m. nightly toril 29-May 1, Louis Inman of Hlddenlte N .C.
UNIVERISTY CHURCH OF CHRIST 100 Crestline Blvd.
Minister, Rick Townsend 75A6545
10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School II :00 a.m. - Morning Worsldp 11:00 a.m.-Jr.(3Hirch 5:00 p.m. - Elders Meeting 6:00 p.m. - Choir Rehearsal 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship A Youth Meeting
THE MEMORIAL BAPTIST OIURCH (Southern BaotW)
ISIO Greenville Boulevard
E. T. Vinton, Senior Mlnlaler; Hal
3. A. TUaWMa, e^ueww |
MeUoB, Minister with Education/Youth 9:49a.m. Sun.-Sunday Shhoei
11:60 a.m. - MornlniWorfhlp. Mini
A Jtnlor Church U;M p.m. - Student/Family Catered Dutch Lunch 4:80p.m. Clown Ministry Training 6:90 p.m. - Christian Adult Training, Jr. Hl Youth
CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTISTCHURCH StMonburg Road at Allen Road Reverend ArieeGrUfla, Jr., Pastor 9:15 a.m. Sun. - Ourch School (Klndergartcn-Uth Grade)
9:30 a.m. - New members wUl meet 11:00 am.-WorsldpSarvioe 6:30 p.m. TlHir. - Youthstones meet (or BIbie Study 7:30 p.m. - Prayer Meeting and BlUe Study
Group Leaves
HOOKER MEMOfUALCHRISTUN
5:00 p.m. - Junior Choir 7:00p.m.-Blblei 8:00p.m. Wed-Adidi Choir,
The Dally Reflecto-, GreenvUle, N.C.-Frlday, April 22,1983-17
Group with Edith Worthington, 303 Lewis St.
4:30 p.m. Wed. - Clown Trainhig Session
5:4Sp.m.-FamUy Night Supper 6:30 p.m^ - Owrch Quarterly
- RED OAK CHRBTIAN CHURCH 364 By-Pase West
Dr. iMrold Doster, Interim Minister 9:4S a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Dr. Doster Preiu^ 5:00 p.m. - The New Begloning 6:00 p.m. - Youth Proipam for all ages
7:00 p.m. - Functiooal Committee Meetings 7:00 p.m.-Choir Rehearsal 7:00 a.m. Mon. - Mens Prayer Breakfast 7:00 p.m. Wed.-VislUtion Nuraei7 School - Monday through
Friday 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SR1727 (Former Eastern Pines (immunity Bldg)
" Mr. Melvin Rawls Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun.-Bible School 11:00 a.m. - Worship Service 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worhsip A Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. - Prayer Meeting and Youth Meeting
JARVIS MEMORIAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 510 S. Washington St Ministers: Jim Bailey. Susan Pate, Martin Armstrong, Adrian Brown Minister of Music: Jerry JoUey Organist: MarkGansor 8:45 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship 9:15 a.m. - Church Library Open 9:40 a.m. Church School-Nursery 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 12:15 p.m. Holy Conununion-Chapel
4:00p.m. - WorshipComm.-Chapel 5:00p.m. -JarvisSingers 6:00 p.m. - UMYF Supper 6:30p.m. - UMYF Programs 7:30p.m. Celebrate Life 10:45 a.m. Mon. - Adult Handbells 7:00p.m.-Girl Scouts FH 7:00p.m.-EEllICR 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Wed. -Clothesline 10:00 a.m. - UMW Call to Prayer and Sel(-Denial-Chapel 10:30 a.m. Prayer Group CR 4:30 p.m. Pre-School Choir, Beginnger Choir, Primary Choir, Older Children's Choir 7:00 p.m. Chancel (Jioir 7:00p.m. - EducationComm.-CR 10:00 a.m. Thur. - Adult Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Susan Pates Bible Study 8:00 p.m. - Martin Armstrongs Bible Study 6:30 a.m. Fri. - Mens Prayer Breakfast at Toms Restaurant 12:00 p.m. - Womens Prayer Luncheon-CR 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Sat. -Clothesline
FAITH PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Rt 9, Box 500 City (14th St. Ext., CTierryOaks)
Rev. Paul N. Brafford 9:45 a.m. - Sunday School Staff Devotions 10:00 a.m. Sunday School (Johnny Jackson, Supt.)
11:00 a.m. - Morning Praise of Worship
6:30p.m. -Church Choir Practice 7:30 p.m. - Evening Hour of Exhortation 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Family Night Program (Liddie Anderson, Dir.)
8:15 p.m. Teen Talent Practice Session
Sat. Conference Teen Bible ()uiz A Talent Competition, Faltn, N .C.
HOLY TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1400 Red Bank Road, GreenvUle, N.C. Rev. Don Paul Lee 9:45 a.m. Sun. Sunday School 11:00a.m. - WorshlpServlce 6:30 p.m. - United Methodist Youth Fellowship 6:00 p.m. Tue. Troop 19 Brownies 7:30 p.m. -WomensBible Study 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Choir Practice
SELVIA CHAPEL FREE WILL " BAPTISTCHURCH 1701 South Green Street Rev. Clifton Gardner. Pastor 3:00 p.m. Fri. - Prayer Meeting 9:45 a m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00a.m.-Worship Service 3:00 p.m. - A Spring Musical wiU be held, all Choirs, Clioruses, and Groups are invited to participate: Sponsors The Youth Department 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 3:00 p.m. Fri. - Prayer Meeting 7:00p.m. SeniorChoir Rehearsal 3:00 p.m. Sat. The C.G. Spiritual Choir Rehearsal
OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 1100 Red Banks Road .
E. Gordon Conklin, Pastor Neil D. Booth, Jr., Min. of Education TrevaFidler, Min. of Music 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Library Open 10:00 a.m.
9:45 a.m. - Sunday School 10:45 a.m. - Library Open 11:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship, ChUdrens Church 5:00 p.m. Carol Choir Rehearsal 6:00 p.m.-GAs 9:15 a.m. Wed. - Staff Devotional 8:00 p.m. Prayer Meeting 8:00 p.m. Thur. - Chancel Choir Rehearsal ^
IMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 1101 S. ElmSt., GreenvUle, N.C.
Hugh Burlington, Pastor Minister of Eduction A Youth, Lynwood Walters 9:45 a. m. Sun. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 4:30p.m.-YouthChoirs 5:30 p.m. Youth Suppers 6:00 p.m. Church Training 7:00 p.m. Evening Worshlp-Begin doctrinal study 7:00 a.m. Mon. - Youth Breakfast in the fellowship hall Tue. - GAPS leave (or overnight trip toCTilnqua-Penn 7:0041:30 p.m. Tue. - Assoc. VBS clinic at Webbs Chapel 5-.30 p.m. - BSU Supper A Recreation 6:30 p.m. - Assoc. Brotherhood, RA RaUyatTMBC 9:30 a.m. Wed. - Kiononea Bible Study
5:15 p.m. - 1-3, 46, ChUdrens Choirs, Library Open 5:45 p.m. - Fellowship Supper line Opens
6:45 p.m. Pie A Cake Auction (or Ccintrifuge 7:30p.m. - Nominating Committee, Adult Choir 7:30 p.m. Thur. - BSU "Pause Worship
10:00 a.m. Fri. - Prayer-Blble Study
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 3611 Eut 10th St.
Robert H. Kerr, Pastor 757-3062 or 7566717 1:00 p.m. Fri. - "Bible Highllghto WBZQ, 1560 9:30 a.m. Sat. - Church at Study, topic: "Hannab, Women of Fatih 10:45a.m. -Church Concerns 11:00 a m. - Church at Worship, Sermon; Christian Bducatloo, ly the Brookhaven School
a. Robert Bowman, Jr. Invocatloo
b.BinyHawkes, Scripture
c. Lynne Warren, Pastoral Prayer
d. Dionne Vines, Offertory Prayer
e. Mias Straughan, School Report
(. Tajmaletty Reddick, "True Education g. June Hawfcas, "What Education MeaneToMe b. Trida Bowman, "Education for Eternity
1. 1W(ia Perry, Christiaa PaienU and Education
^JMIk^tehurst, Train lor Higher k. Shawn McLawhom, How I Value
Music Said Key To The Hearts
By GEORGE W. CORNELL APReUgion Writer In a heavily secularized world, churches are revitalizing a way to break through barriers to faith, says singer Jane Murphy. She says its being done with
ST. TIMOTHYS EPISOCAL 107 Louis St.
The Rev. John R. Price
8:00a m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist-Rlte
9:30 a.m. - Christian Education 10:30 a.m. - Holy Eucharist Rite II with Holy Baptism and Cooflrmatkm-Bishop Hundley Elebash Guest 5:00 p.m. - Episcopal Young Churchmen 7:30 p.m. Mon. - Vestry and Building Committee Meeting 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Lobster Fair crafts workshop 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Needlecraft (or Kneelers
Music can worm its way throu^ armor, she says, adding that this subtle yet potent means is particularly necessary in a techndogi-cally obsessed age which tends to deaden the sense of spiritual realities.
A numbness, she calls the effect. She says apt music can penetrate that crust and touch those levels that we need but that were out of touch with most of the time.
Those depths remain present, even when covered over, she says. Were not really fooled down inside. Theres a tremendous, deep-down yearning for the transcendent.
The evidence of it, and its rise to the surface, is something she has observed many times in parish renewal gatherings that she and a priest-evangelist have conducted in many communities.
After the priest, the Rev. Owen Lally of Chelsea, N.Y., gives a talk on some theological concept, such as Gods constant love for every person, then she will gently reinforce the message in poignant song.
Softly strumming her guitar, her clear, wistful soprano appeals for that greater friendship. Father, its one of your children again, she sings, asking that you would hear. Ive only a few simple words to speak. I guess you might call it a prayer.
Typically, by the time shes finished, the eyes of listeners are wet with tears.
People cry a lot, she says. Music intrinsically is more intimate. They feel way beyond what they feel with spoken words.
1:00 p.m. Mon. - "Bible HighlighU WBZQ 1550 7:00p.m. - FIVE DAY PLAN, PITT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL AUDITORIUM 1.00 p.m. Tue. - Bible HighlighU WBZQ 1550 6:30 p.m. - PathfindersClasswork 7:00p.m. - FIVE DAY PLAN, PITT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL AUDITORIUM 1:00 p.m. Wed. - Bible HighlighU WBZQ 1550 7:00 p.m. - FIVE DAY PLAN, PITT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL AUDITORIUM 7:00p.m. - Prayer and Fellowship 1:00 p.m Thur. - "Bible Highll^U WBZQ 1550 7:00 p.m. - FIVE DAY PLAN, PITT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL AUDITORIUM
SAINT JAMES CHURCH UNITED METHODIST
200 East Sixth at Forest HUl Circle GreenvUle, North Carolina 27834 (919) 7526154
M. Dewey Tyson, Ministar; Ralph A. Brown, Associate Minister; Stephen W. Vaughn, Diaconal Minister 9:40 a.m. sun.-Church School 10:30 a.m. - Chancel Choir II :00a.m.-Worshipof God 6:30 p.m.-Youth Choir 7:30 p.m. ^ "CELEBRATE UFE (A Pulpit/Musical Drama about Uie life of our Lord. The production includes speaking parU, solos, and choral numbers. It Is given by the Youth Choir, directed by Alice Medlin, with Carol Smith, accompaniest.) - In the sanctuary.
9:00-12:00 p.m. Mon-Fri, - Weekday School
8:00 p.m. Mon. United Methodist Womens Executive Board 4:30 p.m Tue. - Chapel Choir, Merry Music Makers
7:15 p.m . Wed St. James Ringers p340
7:30p.m. Boy Scout Troop I) 8:00p.m.-Chancel Choir 3:00 p.m. Fri. - Cub Denl3 Acolytes
11:00 a.m. - Nancy Midgette, ArieUe Sturz
PINEY GROVE FREE WILL BAPTIST Rt.l Box 674 GreenvUle, N.C. Bro. Allan Sterbtn, Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun. Sunday School II :00 a.m. - Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Bible Study 7:30p.m. Thur.-VlslUtioo
UNITED miTEOOSTAL CHURCH 114 E. 11th Street, Greenville, NC 27834 (Corner of nth t, Forbes)
Pastor Ronald Lappin 10:00 a.m. Sun. ^ Simday School 7:30 p.m. Sunday Night Service-Evangelistic 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Bible Study
BROWNS CHAPEL APOLOSnC FAITH CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST
(BelvoirHwy.)
Rte4, Greenville, North Carolina Bishop R.A. Griswould, Pastor 8:00 p.m. Thur. - BlUe Studies (Sister Ida SUton, Teacher)
8:00 p.m. Fri. - Prayer Meeting 3:00 p.m. 4tb Sat. - Btttlness Meeting
8:00 p.m. 4th Sat. - 1 Hour Prayer (Bishop R.A. Grlswould)
10:30 a.m. 4tb Sun. - Sunday School (Deacon J. Sharpe, Superinlendant) 11:30 a.m. 4lh Sun. - Pastoral Day (Bishop R.A. Grlswould)
8:00 p.m. 4th Sun. - Psstoral Day
GOOD HtMV FWB CHURCH 404N.M10St.
WlntervUle,NC 28880 Bishop W.H.MItdieU, Pastor 5:00p.m. Sal. - Choir UMeetlng 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Mong^onblpChoir IIRenderinfMwlc Prayer Ifeetlng-Bveiy Wednesday N^t 7:00 p.m.
No. 1 Friday night before the 1st Sunday; at quarteriy conference Thursday night betere the 1st Sunday 7;90p.m.
UaW Board No. I 3rd Wednesday
Touching that emotional chord is relative new for Roman Catholics and some liturgically formal Protestants, but its essential in a mentally secularized time, Mrs. Murphy said in an interview.
It brings into play one element of our spirituality that we havent engaged before - our emotions, she said. That a^t, she said, must be integrated and balanced with the intellectual, devotional side.
Just jump and holler affairs lack comprehensiveness, she said, but the feeling element, conveyed in tender, tasteful song, reaches into that little comer clogged by modem thought-patterns and unreachable by mere words.
Mrs. Murphy, a warmly vibrant Roman Catholic who is regular soloist at Our Lady of Fatima Church of Port
Washington, N.Y., also is enga^ widely at various Catholic and Protestant churches, .schools and civic organizations.
A dq;)ersonalization has crept over pef^les lives, she said. But music can reach over and around their defenses.
At schools and some other civic settings, the specifically religious notes have to be omitted. You have to be very circumspect about that, she said. Recently in our society, any mention of God or faith has become a faux pas.
A kind of idolatry has put man in the position of God so that expressing relationship to any hi^r authority is considered immature. It has circumscribed our thinking.
In the secular arenas, where her songs are especially for children to help them express inner feel
ings, she said the numbers are usually of a humorous, give-and-take nature, but underlaid with Christian principles.
Mrs. Murphy, with a melting, golden voice, also has issued an album, Magnificat, of contem-porary-style religious songs about hope, faith and biblical imagery.
A one-time teacher, married and the mother of two, she said that in Roman Catholicism a whole new phenomenon in church music has opened ip, sometimes still with its rough edges but now more skillfully incorporating contemporary musical forms.
It touches people in a way the grand old stuff never could, she said, noting that what used to be called folk Masses - with string and wind instruments - have been refined into an increas
ingly regular part of liturgy.
The church is finding its voice musically. Its forging a new one, an amaigamation of all that is best, the contemporary taking its place alongside the ancient hymns and chants we grew up with.
Protestant churches also have shared in the trend with several denominations issuing or working on new hymnals, including Episcopalians, Lutherans and Presbyterians, both of old and new songs.
Mrs. Murphy, ecumenically at home across denominational lines, calls her religious songs almost archetypical, going to the core of peoples hearts. Anyone gets this kind of music.
Theres a yearning for spiritual contact and music serves to spark it when it cant be done by spoken words.
Area Church News
Choir To Observe Anniversary
St. John Gospel Choir of Vanceboro will celebrate its seventh anniversary Sunday. The observance will begin at 6 p.m. at St. John Missionary Baptist Church.
Choir To Sponsor Program
The Young Adult Choir of Wynnes Chapel Missionary Baptist Church of near Robersonville will sponsor a musical program Sunday at 2 p.m. Featured will be Onession Brooks and Charles Dudley of Greenville and the Brothers In Christ ofTarboro.
Awards Day Is Scheduled
Tribute and awards day will be held Sunday at 4 p.m. at Holy Trinity United Holy Church. Families of the founders of the church will be recognized.
Bethel Church Plans Revival
A revival will be held at the Bethel Church of God starting Sunday at 7:30 p.m. The evangelist will be Mrs. A.E. Wingate.
Deacon Board Marks Anniversary
The Haddock Chapel Deacon Board will celebrate its 10th anniversary Sunday. A special service is scheduled at 3 p.m, at the church in Winterville.
Church school will be at 9:45 a.m. Morning worship at 11 a.m, will be led by the Rev. Billy Anderson and the young adult choir.
Ayden Church To Show Film
The Ayden Pentacostal Holiness Church at Sunny Lane and East College streets will show a film, Reflections of Love, featuring Joni, at 7 p.m. Sunday. The showing is open to the public at no charge.
Quarterly Services Are Scheduled
St. James Free Will Baptist Church on Perry Street will observe quarterly meeting services this weekend.
Vice Bishop J.H. Vines of Lewis Chapel FWB Church will lead the service Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. C.R. Parker will be in charge at 11 a.m. Sunday. The youth choir will provide the music.
The Rev. Blake Phillips of Zion Hill FWB Church, Winterville, will conduct a service at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, business meeting will be held Saturday at 6 p.m.
First Timothy Plans Revival
A revival will be held at First Timothy Free Will Baptist Church Monday through Friday of next week with Elder Theodore Underhill as the evangelist. A prayer service will b egin at 7 p.m., followed by the regular service at 7:30 p.m.
Choirs and ushers serving will include: Choir No. 2 and ushers. First Timothy, Monday; Arthur Chapel, Tuesday; Waterside Traveling Choir, Wednesday; St. Paul, Thursday, and English Chapel Gospel, Friday.
Waterside Schedules Services
Waterside Free Will Baptist Church will hold anniversary and quarterly meeting services this weekend.
Friday at 7:30 p.m. the Rev. C.R. Parker of Cherry Lane Church will render service. Saturday communion services will be held by a choir and ushers from Rocky Mount. On Sunday, Bishop W.L. Phillips and the combined choirs will conduct the 11 a.m. service. Dinner will be served at 2 p.m. At 3 p.m. service will be led by the Mayes Chapel minister, choir and ushers and at 7:30 p.m. Delores Lang will preach her initial sermon.
Sycamore To Honor Musician
Members of Sycamore Hill Senior Choir will honor its musician, Alice Clemons, at an appreciation program Sunday at 2 p.m. The church is located on Route 5, Greenville.
WORSHIP.............11:00 A.M.
No. 2 lit and 3>d Monday ntgM
itUt CSiuxJii 1510 GiMn^W Blvd.
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Rodgers Specialist Program Planned
The Womens AuxUiary of White Oak Baptist Church of Grimesland will present the W. Rodgers Specialist program Sunday at 4 p.m. The program will be held at the church.
Nazarene Church Plans Revival
The Rev, Willie H. Joyner, pastor of Moyes Chapel and Patricks Chapel Free Will Baptist churches of Farmville, will hold revival services Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Nazarene Church of Christ. The church is located at 205 W. Skinner St.
Ushers To Sponsor Baby Contest
The Reserve Ushers of Rock Spring Free Will Baptist Church is sponsoiring a baby contest Sunday at 7 p.m. The guest speaker will be Eldress Shirley Atkinson.
Fellowship To Sponsor Contest
The second annual Talent Contest of the Northwest B Fellowship will take place at 5 p.m. Sunday at the Hull Road Free Will Baptist Church, Kinston. Special guest will be the Mount Olive Male Chorus. Chairman of the event is Danny Stancil.
Holy Mission Plans Meeting
Quarterly meeting will begin at Holy Mission Holy Church Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with holy communion.
Sunday worship at II a.m. will be led by the pastor, Shirley Atkinson, and the Senior Choir and Ushers. At 2 p.m. dinner will be served. At 3 p.m. the Rev. Adolphus Holmes and Burning Bush Holy Church, Vanceboro, will render a service. At 7 p.m. the pastor and congregation will render services at Rock Spring Free Will Baptist Church.
Jarvis Singers To Perform
The Jarvis Singers will give two performances of Celebrate Life! at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. Sunday and at 11 a.m. May 1.
The singers, a youth and young adult choir, are accompanied by a four-piece jazz ensemble. Jerry J. Jolley, minister of music at the church, will direct the musical drama.
Link Arms And Unemployment
NEW YORK (AP) -Linking unemployment and the arms race, a group of 19 Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish religious leaders say huge U.S. military expenditures threaten the economic- fabric of American society.
In connection with a
mid-April Jobs with Peace Week sponsored by Mobilization for Survival, the group said in a statement: Contrary to the accepted myth that war is good for the economy, high military spending is actually destroying jobs while it increases innation.
GREAT THINGS ARE HAPPENING
Red Oak Christian Church
264 Bypass West Or. Harold Doster, Interim Pastor
9:45 a.m. Bible School. Come Grow With us 11:00 a.m. Worship Service-Dr. Doster preaching 6:00 p.m. GREAT YOUTH PROGRAM FOR ALL AGES.
OUR SERVICES ARE HAPPY,
HOPEFUL, HELPFUL. COME!
Nursery School Mon. thru Fri. 7:00 a.m. til 6:00 p.m.
THE END OF YOUR SEARCH FOR A FRIENDLY CHURCH
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"A Southam BaplM Chuich"
REVIVU SEIVICES
Parkers Chapel F.W.B. Church
Rt. 5, Box 113 - Pactolus Highway April 24-29 7:30 Nightly
Larry R. Stevens, Pastor
Evangelist, Jack Stallings Pastor of The Collinswood F.W.B. Church, Portsmouth, Va.
BlUe Preaching That Exalts Christ
.-W .
Nursery Provided I Special Music Each Evenlng
T
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18-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Frlday, April 22,1M3
A
Blake Great In His Hoff a Role
TABLE SERVICE - Celia Weston of TVs Alice and Betty Thomas, left, of Hill Street Blues, pose as waitresses - a job both held in real life - at the Hard Rock Cafe in Los Angeles in this photo from the May issue of
Glamour magazine. Celia prepared for her TV role as a waitress in a Winston-Salem, N.C. steak house; while Betty once waitressed at Chicago OHare Airport. (APLaserphoto)
A Review
Ayden Theatre Has A Pleaser
The stage opens to the strains of a lonely concertina and closes with a pair of young lovers, but in between there are puppets and dancing bears, beautiful candy and magic as "Carnival comes to the Ayden Theater Workshop. (Two more performances of Carnival will be given at Ayden-Grifton High School, on Saturday
evening at 8 and Sunday at 3 p.m.)
The production is set off by some good, solid performances and a non-stop progression of innovative sets and properties. Director Doug Mitchell and company have put together a show that starts in the lobby, fills the stage and at times even spills into the audience.
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The story is about a young girl. Lili, finding a life in the carnival. Heidi Anderson Lane, as Lili, gives a strong consistent performance in both acting and singing, as did Mitchell Riggs as Jac-quot the young puppeteer. Lili falls in love, first with the debonair magician Marco (John Williams) and finaly with the shy puppeteer Paul (DarrellMitchell).
These two roles allow us to enjoy the magic of Mr. Williams (complete with white rabbits and disappearing ladies) and the wonderful baritone voice of Mr. Mitchell. Also putting in exceptional performances were Lauretta Riggs as the Incomparable Rosalie and Joey Pollock as Carnivalmaster Schlegal. These two, individually and in their duet, Humming, were entertaining.
The production itself moved well throughout Act one thanks to the rapid-fire scene changes and the cast support from the Roustabouts and the chorus. Act Two opened with a charge the entire cast on stage in a celebration of Beautiful Candy and the chorus moves into the audience to pass out balloons and cotton candy to top off the affair.
The show slows down at this point to let the love stories emerge and resolve, then the orchestra kicks back in for the finale. The costuming was (as usual with ATW) colorful and creative. Music overpowered some of the singers, but generally Tim Haleys direction was good support for the musical talents of the cast.
Overall, Carnival is a dazzling visual performance offering a wide range of entertainment. The pup-
ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Televisin Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -Blood Feud, dramatic-license history depicting the bitter, decade-long struggle between Robert F. Kennedy and Teamsters Union leader Jimmy Hoffa, is a four4iour, syndicated TV movie that feels more like four rounds in the boxing ring.
Thats because of the one-track, dogged way Kennedy, first as a congressional investigator, then as attorney general, pursues and prosecutes Hoffa, As characterizdd by this Operation Prime Time presentation, Kennedy was obsessed with Hoffa, and Hoffa became paranoid about Kennedy.
In one scene, Kennedy finishes work at 12:20 a.m. In the parking lot, he looks up and the sees lights in Hoffas office. Not to be out-worked, he heads'back to his desk. It could have been the janitor, or an energy-wasting Hoffa, but Blood Feud doesnt consider those possibilities.
In another scene, Kennedy is taking a much-publicized EO-mile walk for fitness, while Hoffa is tearing up his own office because hes convinced Kennedy has a bug planted there.
The two-part Blood Feud, a project which was developed for NBC, then dropped by the network during front-office shuffling, will be seen on 88 stations, reaching nearly 90 percent of the country, starting Saturday, although air date and time varies. The ad-hoc OPT network has distributed such
Tennis School FR For Hu Na
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) -Hu Na, the 20-year-old tennis player whose defection to the United States prompted China to end many cultural and sports exchange programs between the two nations, is training at a Florida tennis academy.
The athlete arrived Wednesday to sharpen her game at a tennis camp in nearby Bradenton. Nick Bollettieri, who runs the academy, would not comment about how long she was scheduled to stay.
The young lady is here to train and play tennis, Bollettieri said. And shes going to have a chance to do just that.
Hu Na slipped away from her hotel last July 20 during a tennis tournament in Santa Clara, Calif., and asked for political asylum five days later.
dancing of the Red Bird Ladies and of course the music make for a evening of variety and fun.
Carnival is the last show of the 1982-83 season for the Ayden Theater Workshop.
Michelle Lang
(Miss Lang is a poet and a teacher of creative writing at
exceptional programs as A Woman Called Gidda, starring Ingrid Bergman, and Smileys People, with Alec Guinness.
Blood Feud isnt in the same league with those productions. Although it often is gripping and volatile TV, its focus is too superficial and onedimensional. There are times when the movie seems to be a sequence of staged confrontations.
There had to be more to these men than their public parrying, yet their motivations and lives beyond the committee hearings and courtrooms are ignored.
. One time, though, Hoffa and Kennedy get stuck in an elevator together. So hows the family? asks Hoffa. Although Kennedy is reluctant to drop his guard, they finally do look at each others wallet pictures.
As the back-slapping, street-smart, mob-connected Hoffa, Robert Blake makes a superb comeback performance. The child star from Little Rascals who gained TV fame in Baretta, Blake
TV Log
For comploto TV programming Information, conault your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday'a DaHy Raflaclor.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
admits to pushing bis self-destruct button too often during the 1970s. He was a heroin addict and a star who crossed too many directors and network executives.
He didnt work in the year and a half before Blood Feud, and only nailed down the Hoffa part after agreeing to a unique condition. Blakes full salary would be held in escrow and be paid only if his conduct and performance were judged thoroughly professional by Harris Kat-tleman, chairman of 20th Century-Fox, the production company behind Blood Feud.
Blake, who was paid, deserves a bonus. His work is sensational. With hair slicked back, paunchy jowls and piercing cackle, he brings a fist-waving passion and vitality to Hoffa, making him, at times, a sympathetic
Sevoreid Is A Winner
FRIDAY 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 Dukes 9:00 Daiias 10:00 Mississippi 11:00 News9 11:30 Playoff SATURDAY 6:30 Rascals 7:00 Kangaroo 8:00 Popeye 8:30 Pan.
9:00 Meafballs 9:30 Buqs Bunny
10:00 Dukes 11:00 Bugs Bunny 12:00 Soul Train 1:00 Mafinee 4:00 Sporfs Center 4:30 Sports 6:00 News 6:30 News 7:00 Solid Gold 8:00 Special 9:30 Special 11:00 News 11:30 Dance Fever 12:00 Special 1:00 Solid Gold
character and seemingly the steppingstone for Kennedys political ambition.
Although no saint, Hoffa seems to care about his rank and file. His finest hour could be his decision not to call a national strike to protest his jailing for jury tampering.
On the other hand, Kennedy is treated more ambivalently. Although hes dedicated and virtuous, he shows no respect for J. Edgar Hoover (Ernest Borgnine) or Lyndon Johnson (Forrest Tucker). The broadcast seems to be saying that Kennedy lost sight of the war on crime because of his personal vendetta against Hoffa.
It doesnt help Kennedys cause that newcomer Cotter Smith gives the part a caricature quality because of an annoyingly shrill New England accent.
Ethel Kennedy, the widow of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, protested the program, saying it distorts history.
Maybe so. But as contemporary history, it is often fascinating to watch, even if theres an element of event-dropping here, with shopping-list inclusions of the illegal wiretaps by the Justice Department, a CIA plot to kill Cubas Fidel Castro and the theory that organized crime may have been involved in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
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11:00 Hulk 12:00 Jetsons 12:30 Flash Gordon 1:00 R. Martin 1:30 Baseball 4:30 Tournament 6:00 News 6:30 News 7:00 HeeHaw 8:00 Dift. Strokes 8:30 Silver Spoons 9:00 Mama's F. 9:30 Teacher's 10:00 Monitor 11:00 News 11:30 Sat.Nite 1:00 Closeup 1:30 News
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ERICSEVAREID
NEW YORK (AP) - Retired CBS commentator Eric Sevareid has been named winner of the Lowell Thomas Award for having the same imagination, courage, ambition and humanity as the late broadcaster-explorer.
The award for outstanding service was announced Thursday by officials at Marist College, a liberal arts institution in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., where Thomas was an honorary alumnus. Thomas, who died in 1981, ws a broadcaster well known for bidding the world so long... until tomorrow.
Sevareid, 70, a long-time analyst on CBS Evening News, joined the network as a European correspondent in 1939 and broadcast news from around the world. He is the recipient of three George Foster Peabody awards.
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Greenville Church Of The Nazarene
Presently Meeting In The First Federal Building, Community Room, Greenviiie Bouievard.
Cliff Jones, Pastor *
Sunday School..............................9:45 A.M.
Morning Worship ..................11:00 A.M.
Sunday Evening Service............ 6:00 P.M.
A Special Service Is Planned For Sunday, April 24 At 6:00 P.M.
Rev. Oval Stone. District Superintendent Of The North Carolina District Of The Church 01 The Nazarene.
Will Be The Guest Speaker.
Following The Service There Will Be A Pot Luck Fellowship Meal. The Public Is Cordially Invitad.
aw ADULTS $2.00 TIL 5:30* gtlM)
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PEACEKEEPER TESTED - This first fuUy assembled and outfitted Peacekeeper (MX) missile, minus propellent and waiteads, is being used to test all systems of the new missile. This missile will undergo all preparations for flight testing at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Caiif. (AP Laserpboto)
Brazil Building Military Might
By K. MICHAEL FRASER Associated Press Writer SAO PAULO, BrazU (AP) Brazil, which has the iargest armed forces in Latin America, is showing signs of increasing willingness to use its military muscle to help other countries in the region.
One indication is the recent buildup of Brazilian forces on the northern borders in response to tensions between nei^boring Venezuela and the leftist government of Guyana.
Veja magazine, Brazils largest newsweekly, reported that Venezuela would like to count on Brazil as a staging area for its forces in case of armed conflict with Guyana.
Brazil also is continuing an active business in the international arms market, becoming the largest arms exporter in the Third World. The Air Force said this week it sold 12 fighter-trainer Xavante jets to Argentina for $60 million, adding to the nine Xavantes sold to Paraguay earlier.
Army Minister Gen. Walter Pires said in a recent speech to the Siqwrior War College that mitary exports were expected to reach $2 billion this year.
And 0 Estado de Sao Paolo, an independent daily newspaper, reported that the military is creating a special rapid deployment force with capability of reaching not
only the Amazon but other regions in Latin America. The army has refused to comment, but Ctol Mario Jose Santana FUbo, an air force spokesman, said new airbases in northern Brazil could be used to move troops into the area quickly.
Gen. Danilo Venturini, a special Cabinet minister with personal access to President Joao Figueiredo, the head of Brazils military-backed government, made an unexpected trip this week to Surinam. The purpose, according to the Foreign Ministry, was to expand and strengthen cooperation and to protect South America from confrontations which are not part of its character.
Saturday Night
"Beef And Burgundy
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Also By Popular Demand Wednesday & Friday Nights
"Shrimp And Chablis
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756-2792
Dinner Hours 5 P^M. * 10 P.M.
Deadly War Games In Nevada Desert
The air force has announced plans to build one airbase in Roraima, a wilderness that borders Venezuela and Guyana, and one in Rondonia on the border with Bolivia to the northwest. In January the army set up a 250-man unit in Boa Vista, the capital of Roraima, equipped with tanks and other armored vehicles.
ByROBERTMACY ,
Associated Press Writer
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Residents of the tiny eastern Nevada town of Piocbe say the mammoth B-52s pass over at an altitud so low you can almost see the rivets in the bellies of the aging warhorses of Americas nuclear fleet.
The 225-ton ^ants cut west across 200 miles of rugged desert tmain for a realistic rendezvous with jet fighters bearing ominous red stars.
Several times a year, for six weeks at a stretch, electronic war games are play^ out as the giant B-52s and more sophisticated F-llls zip through canyons carved between 9,500-foot mountain peaks, homing in on targets on the desert floor.
More than 40 men have died since Operation Red Flag was initiated in November 1975 by an Air Force worried about heavy losses in Southeast Asia. Seven B-52 crewmen died on a Red Flag exercise last week when theri huge bomber slammed into the side of a Utah mountain during a blinding snowstorm.
Yet the Air Force says the losses in the peacetime war raging over the three militan acre desert bombing range are a necessary price to pay if American pilots are to hold their own in real combat.
On a clear day, the 600 residents of Pioche and the 40 people in the nearby hamlet of Caselton, 180 miles northeast of Las Vegas, watch the powerful B-52s lumber down the vaUey between their communities.
Theyre so close to the ground you can practically hit em with a rock, says Lincoln County Sheriff Larry WUkinson.
He says people at higher levels of the valley can look down on the camouflage-speckled wings, which stretch nearly two-thirds the length of a football field, as the bombers sneak in low to the grouita to avoid radar detection.
Awaiting the huge bombers and escort fighters are elaborate Soviet-style tracking. gear and an aggressor squadron trained in the latest techniques of Warsaw Pact pilots.
Its almost impossible to go in there and not get in a fight, says Col. Joel Hall, commander of the 4440th tactical training group at Nellis Air Force Base. "Everybodys gotta die at least three times or were not doing our job.
Halls job consists of orchestrating battle conditions so realistic that pilots return totally drained to Nellis or their home base - the B-52 that crashed was flying out of Robins AFB in Georgia - after a mission.
While the pilots and crew evaluate the mission, a threat analysis section spends the night viewing videotapes of the
READY FOR ACTION Planes from the Canadian Air Force join American aircraft on the flight line at Nellis AFB during recent Red Flag
exercise. Red Flag is designed to test readiness of American and allied pilots against Soviet air tactics. (AP Laserphoto)
Hunt Drugs In School Lockers
Venezuela has long claimed five-eighths Guyanas territory, or all the land west of the Essequibo River, as Its own, and tensions between the two countries have been growing in recent months.
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - A Durham police dog trained to find drugs was taken to a junior high school Thursday to sniff at lockers at the request of county school administrators.
Of the 850 lockers at Neal Junior High School, the dog reacted at only one, said Dr. Thomas E. Dixon, the schools principal. The locker was opened, but no drugs were found. Capt. C.W. Clayton, head of the police vice squad, said he was convinced drugs had been there.
Sidney Ray, administrative assistant to Superintendent J. Frank Yeager, said school officials hope to use the dog at all junior and senior high schools in the county.
Were hoping something like this would be a deter-rent,1iesaid.
Clayton said city officers did not go to Neal to make arrests. He said that decision woidd have been left to school administrators.
Wer trying to keep kids from bringing drugs to school, Claj^on said.
Ray said school administrators were more in
terested in prevention and correction than punishment. But he added Were certainly not above having somebody arrested.
Dixon, said all the schools lockers were checked. The dog was taken through the gymnasium and other parts of the school and across the school grounds. The students were in class at the time and were barred from the hallways, he said. Neither students nor teachers were told in advance that the dog would be brought to the school.
This checlr was not the result of any information that led us to believe we would find anything, Dixon said. He said the dog was not used in an investigation of particular students.
It was the first time a dog has been taken into a Durham County school in a search for drugs. Ray said the dog could also be used to sniff at the trunks of cars in parking lots.
The dog was not used to search students, Ray and Clayton said.
Ray said school administrators believe they
battles. It is then the pilots and crew learn whether they survived their encounter in the desert, 200 miles north of Las Vegas.
Eight times in the morning and seven times in the afternoon planes of all descriptions lift off the Nellis flightline for their desert battles.
The job of the friendly or blue pilots is to knock out desert targets - tank convoys, airfields, industrial complexes, surface-to-air missile sites and a railroad yard complete with tunnel.
Aggressor aircraft and the red battle commander, also headquartered at Nellis, are there to make the job as difficult as possible.
Electronic dogfights rage from the desert floor to a height of 25,000 feet while commercial flights slip over the area at 37,000 feet - passengers unaware of the realistic war games below.
Army, Navy and Marine pilots also participate in Red Flag, preparing for weeks at their home base before deploying to Nellis for a six-week stint - equipped as if they were heading for battle.
They have to anticipate scheduled maintenance, says Hall. We dont want to stop in the middle of combat to change an oil filter. If they bring in six airplanes, theyd better bring in the supplies for those six planes.
The pilots and crew are even required to have necessary shots in case they should be deployed straight from Nellis to a battle area.
Problems for the pilots start out relatively simple.
We start the war easy, gradually making it harder, says Hall. We start out one step higher than what theyve been doing at their home base. I feed the war to them one day at a time.
Air crews work 12 to 13 hours a day, and for some it is their first experience at loading live ammunition. More live ammunition is loaded at Nellis, and delivered at the bombing range, than anywhere else in the world, Hall says.
When the planes are armed they head north for the encounter with the aggressor aircraft and missile sites. Giant AW ACS early warning radar planes are stationed near the battle site and help control the battle, tipping friendly forces to the location of red planes and missiles.
By the second week of Red Flag, pilots are learning the intracacies of survival - how to detect an enemy missile site on their radar, escape a red aircraft, unjam jammed signals and sort out friendly from fake orders.
They become cheatin, sneaky, lyin thieves, Hall says proudly of his blue forces. Then theyre learning how to survive.
TOURISM HOPES LONDON (AP) - A record 2 million Americans are expected to visit Britain this year because of the stren^h of the dollar, the British Tourist Authority says.
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have a right to open the lockers.
We are taking the position that the lockers are our property and we could go into them if we need to, he said.
Ray said he expected some people might object to the use of the dog. Everything you do gets some kind of reaction, he said.
Archie Nobles and Sons 315Stantonsburg Road. (Across from Doctors Park)
758-4600
Steaks -Seafood- Chicken-Salad Bar
20-Tbe Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, April 22,1983
Life As If's Lived
True, Greener Grass In The Neighbors' Yards
notice OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY James Thomas Lewis Plaintiff, vs
Bonnie Lewis Defendant
FILE NO 82 CVD 1741 TO Bonnie Lewis, Defendant TAKE NOTICE, that a pleading 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 ot one (1) year continous separation.
You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than the 16 day of May, 1983. and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking relief service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sought.
This 29 day of March, 1983.
James t. Brown Attorney for the Plaintiff P O, Box 1356 Greenville NC 27834 Telephone (919) 758 7255 Aprill. 8, 15, 22, 1983
NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned having qualified as Administratrix of the estate of Booker T. Dixon, deceased, this is to notify all persons, firms, and cor porations having claims against said estate to present them to the under
signed or her attorneys, Williamson Herrin, Stokes & Heftelfinger, on or before October 1, )983, or this Notice
will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate payment to the undersign
ed.
This the 29th day of March, 1983. Mary A Dixon Administratrix of the Estate of Booker T, Dixon, Deceased Route 2, Box 641 Griffon, NC 28530 Mickey A. Herrin Williamson, Herrin, Stokes & Heftelfinger Attorneys t Law P O Box 552 Greenville, NC 27834 April 1, 8, 15, 22,1983
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF
PITT FARMENTERPRISES, INCORPORATED NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Articles of Dissolution of Pitt Farm Enterprises, Incorporated, a North C irolina corporation, were filed in
th.
Office of trie Secretary of State of th Carolina on the 31st. day of rch, 1983, and that all creditors
claimants agains the corpora are required to present their r pective claims and demands im ' .Jiately m writing to the corpora so that it can proceed to collect ! issets, convey and dispose of its properties, pay, satisfy, and discharge its liabilities and obliga tu ns and do all other acts required to I iquidate its business and affairs.
This 5th. day of April, 1983.
Pitt Farm Enterprises, Incorporated Route 8, Box 785 Greenville, N.C. 27834 W I Wooten, Jr., Attorney Greenville, N.C. 27834 Aprils, 15,22. 29, 1983
not'ice
NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY
Having this day qualified as Ex ecutor of the Estate of McAlvin Turner, late of Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before the 8th day of October, 1983, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement.
This the 28th day of March, 1983 Karl E. Turner 1201 Crestwood Drive Greenville, N C. 27834 William I Wooten, Jr , Attorney Greenville,,North Carolina 27834 April 8. 15, 22, 29, 1983
NOT ICE^F FORECLOSURE SALE
Under and by virtue of the power ot sale contained in a certain deed of trust made by Vernon Marshail Mohrisort to TIM, Inc., Trustee(s), dated the 11th day of August, 1980,
and recorded in Book F49, Page 820, Pitt County Registry, North Carolina, Default having been made in the payment of the note thereby
This the 13th dy of April, 1983. OWENS, ROUSE & NELSON BY! '
James A. Nelson, Jr.
Attorney tor Plalntltf P O. Bo)<3M
Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4276 April IS, 22, 29, 1983
By GAIL MICHAELS That aphorism about the grass always being greener, is nowhere more irrefutable than at my house. My kids like everyone elses yard better than their own. In fact, the mere suggestion that it might be Megs turn to entertain on her own turf brings tears to her eyes.
Now I realize that our yard is not exactly Pullen Park. We hardly have any grass at all, mush less enough for color comparison. Our driveway is so steep that all Big Wheel traffic is forbidden. And Meg, unlike some of her neighbors, does not have free access to the goodies stored in the freezer in the garage.
But I have the feeling that even if our yard mimicked Busch Gardens, Meg would balk at being confined to it.
Christinas yard is just better, thats all, she says when asked to explain her
preference. Shes got a dirt pile.
Youve got something even better, I tell her.
What?
Mud.
Oh, mother, she groans and rolls her eyes. But I can remember actually seeking out as a child the lots in my nei^borhood with the most mud so that I could slide down the inclines. And here Meg has for the asking a lot that is almost entirely an incline with red mud enough to content the greediest of bleach substitute manufaturers. That I am immune to its charms is understandable; that she is immune is preposterous.
Our yard doesnt have trees, she explains. This is true. Phillip and I have spent innumerable hours nursing the one maple alloted by the developer. It gives shade only to a few of the assorted insects making their way
FORECAST FOR SATURDAY. APR. 23,1983
secured by the said deed of trusf, and the undersigned, WARREN H COOLIDGE, having been substitufed as Trustee in said deed ol trust by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of fhe Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North Carolina, and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will otfer for sale at the Courthouse Door, in the City ot Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, at One (1 00) o'clock P.M. on Friday the 29th day of April, 1983 and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, situate in City of Greenville, Pjff County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows.
That certain lot or parcel of land situate and being in the western part ot the City of Greenville, Pift County, North Carolina, on the west side ot Pans Avenue, between Dickinson Avenue and Chestnut Street, described as follows: PE GINNING at a stake on the west Side of paris Avenue, corner between the Evans land and the Biggs T Cannon property said stake being located 150.87 teet north of the corner of Paris Avenue with Dickinson Avenue and running thence in a westerly direction with the Evans line S 61 59 30 W, 150.01 feet to a stake, thence in a northerly direction with the back line N 28 30 00 W, 60.00 feet to a stake, thence in an easterly direction, parallel with the first line, N 61 59 30 E, 150.00 feet to the west side of Paris Avenue, thence in a southerly direction with fhe west edge of Paris Avenue, S 28-24-16 E, 60 00 feet to the BEGINNING, and being the identical property conveyed to William T. Cannon by Phoebe Cannon, widow, Minnie S. Cannon, Guardian for Alvin L. Cannon and Biggs Thomas Cannon, el al by deed dated May 13, 1949, and of record in Book M-25, at page 8 in the Office ot the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, and further being that property described in a survey prepared for Vernon Marshall Morrison, dated Augusta, 1980, by P, G Dickerson, R.L.S., and attached hereto Including the single family dwelling located thereon; said property being located at 107 Paris Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina.
This sale is made subject to all taxes and prior liens or encumbrances ol record against the said property, and any recorded releases.
A cash deposit of ten percent (10%) of the purchase price will be required at the time ot tne sale.
This Bth day of April, 1983. WARREN H COOLIDGE, SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE COOLIDGE&CRAIG, PA Attorneys al Law, P.O. Box 153 Fayetteville, North Carolina 28302 April 15, 22, 1983
FILE:83CVD408
FILM:
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT LaVerne Turner vs.
Nathaniel Turner, Jr.
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: Nathaniel Turner, Jr.
TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you hat been fiipd n the above entitled action on
GENERAL TENDENCIES; A day to take no chances, but make a special point to coordinate your efforts with others so you can handle duties requiring your undivided attention. You can accomplish much now.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19| Try to avoid arguments with allies today or it could turn into something serious. Make sure to keep your promises.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Keep busy attending to chores without relying so much on others. Do something thoughtful for a special friend.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Be content with simple pleasures that don't cost much money. Follow your intuition which is accurate at this time.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Try to be more considerate at home and establish more harmony. The evening can be a most exciting time.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Make sure you listen to ideas of associates and try to cooperate more with them. Speak more clearly and concisely.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) If you are too extravagant now, you could jeopardize your present comfortable position. Improve your health.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Take a deep look into yourself and make plans for improvement, healthwise and careerwise. Express a talent you have.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Not a good day for investigating so get busy attending to necessary duties. Lend a helping hand to a good friend.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Keep away from an individual who never fails to either bring trouble or be in trouble. Make plans for the future.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Listen to what good friends have to say and follow their ideas to the letter for best results. Show more affection for loved one.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Spend some time looking into the facts and costs of new project before getting yourself involved. Use common sense.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Your hunches are not working as accurately now as usual, so dont follow them. Use your finest judgment instead.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be eager to get along well with others, but if too many favors are extended, it could lead to trouble. There is much talent in this chart, so sent to the finest schools. Give ethical training early in life.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!
(& 1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
toward our domain. With luck it will be a climbing tree for my grandchildren. But Nancy at this very moment has a whole forest behind her house with enough climbing trees to accomodate any number of evolutionary throwbacks.
And Rebecca has a screened-in porch that makes a great jail. Susan has her very own make-believe playhouse between two stacks of logs. Jennifer has a front porch with a swing.
All we have, Meg sniffs, is Zachary.
But Zachary doesnt want to be here either. He prefers Christophers yard, Christopher has a sandbox equipped with two dumptrucks and a boom crane. Andy, on the other hand, has a teeter-totter. We have a yucky old T-gym. Patty has a mother who gives gum. And Scott has a volcano.
A volcano? 1 repeated when Zachary first claimed this distinction for Scotts yard.
Yes, Zachary assured me solemnly. It chased me but I was too fast for it.
Volcano or no, I finally put my foot down. I am not stirring out of this yard today, and neither are you two. If you want someone to play with you can invite them here.
But after two full hours of intermittent thundershowers and hair-raising noise, I suddenly saw my childrens point. I would have rather been some place else, too.
Homebuilders Set A Record
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Charlotte homebuilders say they set a record last month by taking out 1,137 permits for housing.
The permits, valued at $36.3 million, almost tripled the 420 permits granted in March 1982.
The figures also outpaced February this year when permits were granted for 311 housing units valued at $14.5 million.
Harry Grimmer, president of the Charlotte Homebuilders Association, said builders see the increase as evidence of overall economic recovery.
Reunion For Vets Of 25th DV.
ANDERSON, S.C. - Veterans of the U.S. Armys 25th Infantry Division, serving during WWII, Korea and Vietnam, will hold their 34th Annual Reunion at the Sheraton Atlanta Hotel, Atlanta, Ga. Sept. 30 through Oct. 2.
Former members of the Tropic Lightning Division are being urged to attend the event.
Additional information is available from Clarence Compton, Rt 7, Box 57-B, Anderson, S.C. 29624.
PEANUTS
KfORE U)E CONTINUE UIITH YOUR TREATMENT U)E NEEP TOPO SOMETHING.-
|'M60IN6TOASKYOU TO TARE THE BLANKET OFF YOUR HEAP...
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irpnchKiTis
: fma enrtrpriui, me . tua
fJ2
(JAB&SH RPR FAULWILUAN\$
NUBBIN
)ji, MR6. eruBeiN. MU6BIM? y
'Jo
HE'e WALUPAPERlNCr HI6 0EPROOM.
I'LL ee& HOW I HE'e crarmcr ALOHCr.
BLONDIE
I JUST DREAMED I WAS STRANDED ON A TROPICAL ISLAND
there were singing
BIRDS, WATERPALLS, AND GOLDEN
9^
WELL, WHAT'S THE AAATTER?
OH,BOO*HOO...YOU . DIDN'T EVEN TELL ME VOU WERE GOING... BOO-HOO-HOO
FRANK & ERNEST
7/nd (liiy ol March, 1983. The Ujrr ot the relief sougM Is as iiiv-. . Ahsolule divorce based on ne year's separation.
You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than the
30th dayot May71983, upon failure to y seeking
for the re'llet soughf**''
do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the G>urt
PUBLIC NOTICES
D1M
COURT
IIVISION
j fMtl all persons having dal.... against the estate of said leased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before October t7, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate
This 13th day of AprilTl M. Byrd
ParmleAA. Byrd 509 Duke Drive Raleigh, North Carolina 37601 E xecutrix of the estate of Emily C. Moore, deceased. April 15,32, 39; May 6, 1983
LINDA ANTHONY TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, take notice that Clara H. Bland, 304 East Jackson Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina 27834 hereby claims a landlord's Men against--------
'd s Men against persona owned by Linda Anthony
property owneo oy Linaa Antnony. It is described as follows:
1.Couch
2. Chair
3. Love Seat
4. Coffee Table
5. I Bedroom suit, mattress, box springs
6.1 sot of bunk beds, 2 maMresses, 2 box wrings
7. 3 stereo components, tapes, records
8. Kitchen utensils (dishes and cookware)
9.2 bicycles (boys) ~ 'able *
10.2 table lamps
11. Washing machine '
12. Bedspreads, sheets, pillowcases
13. Some clothing (boys, girls, ladies)
14.1 electric heater $585.00 is the amount due for which the lien Is claimed. The property will be sold at public sale the^h day of May, 1983 at 10:00 a.m. at Mini Storage, Inc., Greenville Blvd NE, Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina.
WILLIAMP HARPER,JR
Attorney at Law Post Office Box 1545
216 South Washington Street Greenville, North Carolina 27835 1545
Telephone NO. (919) 757 0042 April 15, 32, 1983
NOTICE OF^FORECLOSURE
Under and by virtue of the power ........I deed of
of sale contained in a certain______
trust made by Terry John Jones and wife, Deborah Harris Jones to J. Larkin Little, Trustee(s), dated the 25th day of February, 1981, and recorded in Book T49, Page 567, Pitt County Registry, North Carolina, Default having been made in the
payment of the note thereby secured by the said Deed of trust and the
undersigned, H. TERRY HUTCHtNS, having been substituted as Trustee in said deed
of trust by an Instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North Carolina and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the Courthouse Door, in the City of Greenville, Pitt County, North
oreenviiie, Hin county. North Carolina at Eleven (I1:06) o'clock A.M. on Friday, the 6th day of A6ay, 1983 and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate situate in City of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, and
being more particularly described foTlows:
asfi
Being all of Lot No. 26, in Block "B", Twin Oaks Subdivision, Section 11, as shown on map of record in AAap Book 26, at Page 76, PIH County,
North Carolina Public Registry, eby made
reference to which is hereby
for a more complete and accurate description. Including the single family dwelling located thereon;
said property being located 1M Fletcher Place, Greenville, North Carolina.
This sale is made subject to all taxes and prior liens or encumbrances of record against the said property and any recorded releases.
A cash deposit of ten percent
(10%) of the purchase price will be "le time of the I
syofApril,
H. Terry Hutchens,
requin
This
15th day
,1983.
Substitute Trustee HUTCHENS8iWAPLE,P A Attorneys at Law TV 40 Building 230 Donaldson Street P.O. 80x650
Fayetteville, North Carolina 28302 April 22, 29, 1983
PITT COUNT.
EDWARDL GARRISON, Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel.
PHYLLIS GRIMES JOHNSON
JAMESEARL JOHNSON TAKE NOTICE that
PUBLIC NOTICES
_________________ellef sought Is (I)
to establish your pafenWfy of the minor child Laterra Lavette
1 he nature ot the relief t
Trimble, tani Augusf 4, 1978; (sTto recover ell sws paid
swhing" rif asSinst"^ asobeen fjW In the above-onfitled action.
The nature ot the relief siughtTs (i) to r^oyw all sums paid in public
assistance to or tor the benefit of the minor children Venson E. Johnson,
yxfrws VSSISWSV1I VVIIMIVI E. JWnnMHI,
born February 16,1969; Bridgette A. Johnson, born December 23, 1970, Ashley L. Johnson, born June 26, 1972 up to the time of entry ot judgment; (2) to obtain an order for
?hit';*nd Yij-'ti' reiover*th;:
for such
costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you^wlll apoly to the Court tor the
This the twenty-second day of April, 1983.
EVERETT&CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS
Edward J. Hawer, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street
P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 April 22, 29; AAay 6,1983
FILE W 81 CvO1610
IN THE G^^RAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON, Director, Pitt County Department of S<xlal Services ex rel.
GLORIA ELAINE EDWARDS VS
ERNESTL CARMON
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF SERVICE BY PUBLICATION To: ERNEST L CARMON
TAKE NOTICE fhat a pleading seeking relief against you has been tiled in the above-entitled action.
The nature ot the relief sought Is (1) to establish your jMternlty of the minor children Chonklli Renata Edwards, born Marth 13, 1981, and Donkili ReCarter Edwards, born March 13, 1981; (2) to recover all
sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such children up to
the time of entry ot judgment; and (3) to obtain an order tor prospective support tor such children; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) ot such action.
You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sought.
This the twenty-second day ot April, 1983.
EVERETT&CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, II
torneys 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758-4257 April 22, 29; May 6, 1983
FILE NO KCvD234 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON, Director, Pitt County Department of Social Services ex rel. DELORISSPELLAAAN VS
HENRY JONES
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: HENRY JONES TAKE NOTICE that
seeking relief against you h tiled in the above-entitled action.
pleading has been
The nature of the relief sought Is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor children Henry Jr. Spellman,
born July 4, 1977, Yvonne Spellman, born June 7, 1978; and Tyronica
Denise Spellman, born November 23, 1980; (2) to recover all sums paid
In public assistance to or for the benefit ot such children up to the time ot entry ot judgment; and (3) to obtain an order tor prospective support for such children; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's tees) of such action.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and failure to do so, the
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
IN THE MATTER OF THE APPOINTMENT OF SUCCESSOR TRUSTEES OF BRANCH
NOT?CE^<5f^5E^^^^^ of
PRCKESS BY PUBLICATION TO: All persons who are related to
heirs of or spouses of those persons interred In the Branch Colored
Cemetary, Haddocks Community,
Pitt County, North Carolina, and all who
rsons who are or claim to be neficiaries of that certain trust
created on the 7th day of January, een Annie Haddock and
1937, between . husband, Arthur Haddock Trustors, and L.S. Patrick and Jesse Smith, as Trustees, relating to the establishment ot a trust creating a burial ground for the colored rate ot the Haddocks Community TAKE NOTICE that a
seeking relief against you h filed in the above-entitled
...... action.
The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: >
To appoint Successor Trustees for the above-mentioned trust pursuant
the above-mentioned trust pursuant to G.S. 36A-33, by reason ot the death of the original Trustees.
You are required to make defense to such pleading within forty days after April 32,1983, exclusive of such date (not later than June 1, 1983), and upon your failure to do so, the
parties seeking service against you will Court for the relief
*t8is the 18th day ot April, 1983. kTTOXiDAVlSP A
FredT.AAattox AHorney tor Petitioners Post Office Box 686 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Phone: 919/758-3430 April22, 39;May6,1983* _
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Jimmie White Cobb late
of PIH 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 October 24, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All ^sons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 20th day of April,
Carole S. Tolar 101 Poplar Drive
Greenville, N.C. 27834 ^
Executrix of tlw estate of Jimmie White Cobb, deceased.
April 22, 29; A8ay 6,13,1983
'vD 124
...,^AL COURT JUitlCE
IRT DIVISION
ri. . v-wNTY EDWARD L (JARRISON,
Director, PIH County D^rtn -----------
^^/tnient of Social
S3*S6h
VS
JOHNN
TAKfe NOTICE that a pleading
action.
to recover all sums paid
s5s;,'.hru'.'S.'
reeswieM attorney's fees) of sucn action
I yeur failure to
I, and upon your he party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.
This the twenty-second day ot
^'^E VERETT 8i CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS
Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street
P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 April 22, 29; AAay 6, 1983
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA
PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON, Director, PIH County Department of Social Services ex rel.
ANNIE NICHOLSON THIGPEN VS
HENRY JONES
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To; HENRY JONES TAKE NOTICE that
seeking relief against you has been .....ifitlei
filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is (1)
to establish your paternity of the mirior children Gregory Eugene
Nicholson, born AAay'28,'1973,'and Brid^t Belinda Nicholson, born
September 5, 1974; (2) to recover a|l sums paid in public assistance to or tor the benefit of such children up to the time of entry of judgment; and (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such children; and (4) to recover the costs (Including reasonable aHorney's tees) of such action.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your (allure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to tne Court tor the relief sought.
This the twenty-second day of April, 1983.
EVERETT8.CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS
Edward J. Harper, II orneys for Plaintiff 2(W South Washington Street
P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 37834 Telephone; (919) 758-4257 April 22,29; AAay 4,1983
FILE!
IN THE general COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON, director, PIH County Department of Social Services ex rel.
ELLA SAAALLWOOD VS
LINWOOD EARL SAAALLWOOD
To: LINWOODEARL WOOD
SAAALLV
TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you hat been filed In the abovq-enfltled action.
The nature of fhe relief sought Is (1) to recover all sums paid in p
_________ . public
assistance to or for the benefit of the minor children Dietrich Smallwood, born AAarch 17, 1973, and Frederick
Smallwood, bom August 38, 1974 up to tiM time of entry or judgrnent; (3f)
to obtain an order for support for such chit'
aird(3)to
recover the costs (Including ich
reasonable attorney's fees) of tuci action.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not lat^ than June
are require
1 pleading r
1, 1983, and upon your_________
so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sou^t. s tfie h
This
AprlJ/.V
fwenty-second day
Edward J.Haroer, II AHomeys for
>.0.^1220 Groonvllle, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919)758-4257 Aprll22^; AAay4,1983
action.
assistance te or (or the _______
such child up te the Hme of entry of fu^ment, and (3) fo obtain an order for prospective support for such chil<r and (4) to recover the costs (Including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June I, 1983, artd upon your failure to do
you , reliefs. This ([.. April, 1983
twenty-second day ot
EdwardJ.Hanier, II Attorneys for Plaintiff lOOSoufhIA
, lalntlff 200 Soufh Washington Street P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 April22, 29;AAay6,1983
="-%'t?ENS'
THE GENERAI
;vD475
DISTRICT Court DIVISION
NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON, Director, PIH County Department of Social Services ex rel.
DOROTHY JEAN HARRIS VS
JOHNNY WAYNE BARRETT
ION
To: Johnny wy1brrett
TAKE NOTICE that a pleading x; has been
seeking relief against you fijed in the above-entitled action.
The nature ot the rellet sought Is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child Terry Leon Harris, born
April 17, 1974; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or tor the benefit pt such child up to the
time ot entry ot judgment; and (3) to obtain an order tor prospective support tor such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable aHorney's tees) of such action.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June
1, 1983, and upon your failure to do
so, the party seeking service against win apply to the Court for the
?e%fsou This the April, 1983.
EVERETT 8. CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS
twenty-second day ot
Edward J. Han>er, II orneys for Plaintiff m South Washington Street
P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 April 22, 29; May 6,1983
FILENO 83CvD235
IN THE GE^RAL COURT 3F JUSTICE
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON, Director, PIH County Department ot Social Services ex rel.
LINDA JOYCE SMITH VS
MILES MILTON JONES
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF ---------------IC/
PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: MILES MILTON JONES TAKE NOTICE that seeking relief
tiled in the above-_ ____ ________
The nature ot the rellet sought Is (I) to estalbish ^our paternity of the
born April
nCE that a pleading against you has been above-enfitled action.
minor child Stacy
12, 1979; (2) to recover all
ihontelle Smith,
sums paid In^ublic assjstahce to or
tor the benefit ot such child up to the time of entry of judgment; and (3) to obtain an order tor prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable aHorney's tees) ot such action
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June
1, 1983, and upon your failure to do
so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the rellet sought.
This t^e twenty-second day of April, 1983.
EVERETT 8, CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS
Edward J. Harper, II
y (or Plaintiff
2(XI South Washington Street
P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N.C. 37834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 4257 April 22, 39; May 6, 1983
FILE NO 83CvD233 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON, Director, PIH County Department ot Social Services ex rel. DELORISSPELLAAAN VS
JOHNNY LLOYDCRANDOL NOTICE OF SERVICE OF
To
ROCESS BY PUBLICATION JOHNNY LLOYD CRANDOL
TAKE NOTICE that a pleading king relief against you has been filed in the above-eniltled action. The nature of the relief sought Is (1) to establish your paternity of the minor child AAark Christopher Spellman, born April 10, 1973; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of iudgment; and (3) to obtain an order for prospective support (or such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable aHorney's fees) of such action.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sough).
This the
. . _ twenty-second day of AprIL 1983.
EVERETT8.CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Haiper, II Attorneys for f^lntlH 200 South Washington Street P.O. Box 1220 Greenville, N C 27834 Telephone: (919)758-4257 April 32,29; AAay 6,1983
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON,
Director, PIH County Department of Social Services ex rel.
ALICE FAYECOPPEDGE VS
WILLIAM EARL WCXJTEN NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To; WILLIAM EARL WOOTEN TAKE NOTICE that a pleading has been
seeking relief against you h tiled in the aboventitled action.
The nature of the relief sought is (1)
to establishment your paternity'of the minor child Alexander
Coppedge, born September 19, 1976; (2) fo recover all sums paid In public assistance to or fora me benefit of
such child up to the tinrw of entry of iudgment; and (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) fo racgvar the costs (including reasonane aHorney's fees) of such action.
You are required to nrtake defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sough).
. This the twenty-second day of AprIL 1983.
EVERETT 81 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS Edward J. Harper, It AHorneysfor F^lntlff 200 ^th Washington Street P.O. Box 1230 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919)758-4257 Apr! 33T%; AAay 4,1983
'"fiia
IN THE GEN
COURT
(VISION
NORTH CAROL PITT COUNTY EDWARD L GARRISON, Director, PIH C^ty Department ofSoclal Services ex rel. BARBARAJ EDWARDS
TRAVIS P FMA^R
TAKE NOTICE that a pleadir sacking rellaf against you has bae filad In tha abovaWltted actkx
...... action.
Tha nature of tha raliof sought Is (I) to establish your pafornlty of tha minor child Towander Edwards, born Saptomber II, 1974; (3) to recovar all sums paid In public
asslstanca to or fora tha banafH of such child up to the timo of ardry of [udgmant; and (3) to obtain an ardor
, . - iaSi!S5S! astsausiar*
You aro roqulrod to mako dofonaa to such ploading not lator than Juna
I, 1983, and upon your (allure to do
This AprIL 1
twonty-second day of
Edward J.Hi^, II AttomoysforPlainllH
' ilngton Straat
GroanvllloTN.C'. 27834
PUBLIC NOTICES
INTHI
DISTRI
v314
COURT
NORTH CAROLINA PITT irOUNTY
IVISION
EDWARDL (MRRISON, Director, PIH Counfy Department of Social
Services ax rol.
RHONABARNES
VS
AAOSE HENRY HARRIS
To: AAOSE HENRY HARRIS TAKE NOTICE fhat a pleadi . seeking reliaf against you has bean filed In the. above-enfitled action. The nature of tha relief to establish
minor child ___________ . ________
born August 10, 1980; (2) to recover
If Hie relief sought is (I) your patwnlty of the Kamu Jabbor Barnes,
all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of.such child up to
the time of entry of judgment; and (3) to obtain an order for prospective support for such child; and (4) to recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's fees) of such action.
You are required fo make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the
you
the party seeking service against will a^ly to the Court for the
relief sough This the twenty-second day ot
AprIL 1
iL 1983.
EVERETT 4 CHEATHAM, ATTORNEYS
Edward J. Haraer, II AHorneys for naintif f 200 Soufh Was P.O. Bax 1220
Vashlngton Street
Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4257 April 22,29; AAay 4,1983
FILE^NO 83CvD228 IN THE GENERALCOURT
OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY EDWARDL GARRISON,
Director, PIH County Department of Social Services ex rel.
DELORIS SHACKLEFORD VS
FREDERICK IX3UGLAS CARAAON
.NOTICE OF SERVICE OF
PROCESS BY PUBLICATION To: FREDERICK DOUGLAS CARAAON TAKE NOTICE that a
seeking relief against you has been filed in the above-entitled action.
The nature of the rellet sought is (I) to establish your paternity ot the minor child Jeffrey Earl Shackleford, born June 6, 1971; (2) to recover all sums paid in public assistance to or for the benefit of such child up to the time of entry of
iudgment; and (3) toobtain an order for prospective support tor such child; and (4) to
recover the costs (including reasonable attorney's tees) ot such action.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 1, 1983, and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sough).
This the twenty-second day of April, 1983.
EVERETT 8.CHEATHAM, ATTORNEY
Edward J. Harper, II Attorneys for Plaintiff 200 South Washington Street
P.O. Box 1230 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Telephone: (919)758 4257 April 22, 29, AAay 6,1983
NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Having this day qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of Lynwood C. Dorman, late of Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them fo the undersigned Administratrix on or before the 22nd. day ot October, 1983, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlemenf.
This the 19th. day ot April, 1983. ! Dormai
Mrs. Maidline Dorman Route 3, Box 108 Ayden, N.C. 28513 William I. Wooten, Jr., Attorney Greenville, North Carolina 27834 April 22, 29; AAay 6, 13, 1983
WANT
ADS
752-6166
002
PERSONALS
ARE YOU a compulsive overeater? Overeaters Annonymous can helof Call 355 2508.
WHITE WIDOW in 40's looking for a white male companion 40's or mid 50'S. Call 746 4240._
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
'(* 'ii) register at Floyd G _ Robinson Jewelers,
. V rkruuinxin jewelers. Downtown Evans AAall for tree gift
4.VOII nruin lor Tree to te given away weekly. purchase necessary.
on Autos For Sale
u ?ENT-A-WREcK-752-CARS i14.95/day, or weekly, monthly Lave with dependable used cars
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in PIH County. Hastings Ford. Call 758-0114. ungs
013
Buick
1980 BUICK ELECTRA Limited, diesel. Loaded. Priced to sell. Call 756 3374 days; 746-4653 aHer 5.
1980 SKYLARK Limited 3 door. Excellent condition. Loaded. 756-9520.
014
Cadillac
1975 ELDORADO, loaded, new tires. Car is like new. $2295 or best offer. Call weekdays 4:30-7, 746-3153.
015
Chevrolet
CAPRICE CLASSIC 1978. Low mileage, extra clean. CaH Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746-3141
CHEVELLE 1948, SS 396, 4 speed, new motor. $2100. 756 4693.
CHEVETTE 1981. 2 door,
automatic. Excellent condition. One owner. 32,000 miles. 752-0098, 753-6605._
018
Ford
19to MUSTANG Good
m^and equipment
5 p.m.
020
A8ercury
^RQUIS SQUIRE WAGON 1983 Ford Executive vehicle. White with
woodgrain, like new. 5100 miles Leo V ......
/enters Motors, Ayden, 746
021
Oldsmoblle
CUTLASS SUPREME 1982. 2 door. Rex*'*Smith
3141
FOR SALE: 1975 Olds Cutlass
Supreme. 69,000 miles, new tires, power steering and brakes. $1100 Call after 6, -
ering and
1980 OLDS CUTLASS LS, diesel, 4
FOR SALE; 1975 Impala Chevrolet. $895. Call 758-4155. _
AAALIBU 1982. real nice. Call Rex Sm Aydeti. 746-3141
Fully equipped, Itn Chevrolet,
1973 VAN Partially customized automotive AM/FM radio with 8-track. Good condition. $1600. Call 752 2725aHer5:3Qp,m.
1974 Z28 CAMARO $1700. 758-3715 aHer 2._
1975 AAONZA Yellow with black
vinyl top and Interior. Body In excellenf condition. New paint and
radlals. Needs motor. 753
; pain 1-4183.
1975 NOVA 4 door. Clean, runs good, after i
new paint. $1000. 746-4535 p.m
1974
Stall $1400.756
MALIBU ____
I. Air, full power
CLASSIC . First
1978 IMPALA. 4 door, dgW$.alr.AM;FAA.$2.f
.757
win-
1980 CITATION White, V6, air.
power steering, brakes, and windows. 4 speed, 4 door hatchback.
Prj<;8dt9tol|-T?7W?toJ473.
1981 CHEVETTE AAA/FM, 4 speed, air. disc brakes, 4 door, 42,600 miles, new Radlals. Excellent con
dition. $4250. 756-2448 Or 756-7812, a$ktor Jim.
INC MULIBU Statlonwagon. Air, AM/FM stereo, cruise, tilt wheel. $7800. Call 744-2445 aHer 6 p.m.
017
1974 DODGE DART Good condl tion. (Sod tires. $900. Call 758-6921.
condition
DODGE AAaxi Van. Ion. Call 752-5334.
<*ood
018
Ford
1973 FORD Tftunderbird, power steering, brakes, windows, air and more. Extra clean Inside, outside
rust. $1200.754-9425 or 757-4491.
1974 FORD THUNDERBIRD VMIte with new blue vinyl top. Good condition. $950. Call ^3-3928 aHer 4
Bd!L.
>974 GRAND TORINO ELITE Call 3S5M77anyTlttto>
rooi.
ANO. Automatic. ^
condition. 81300
7J^0185altor4;30.
1(475.753 8905. ^
1977 FORD. MUSTANG Cobra II
door, power steeting and brakes, automatic, AM/FM stei
- jreo cassette, new radlals and shocks, 25 miles per gallon, >5500. 756-6935
1980 OLDS CUTLASS Calls. Low mileage, loaded. Priced below NAPA retail. 758-2986aHer 5.
022
Plymouth
1978 PLYMOUTH FURY, 4 door, air, radio, power steering and
brakes, automatic. 440 motor. Very .......... 756-4905
clean. $1500, Negotiable after 6
023
Pontiac
1977 FIREBIRD Power steering, power brakes, tilt wheel and more. $3500 firm. 758 4349 after 6 p.m
1977 FIREBIRD ESPIRIT
Call 355 2872 after 4 p.m.
1993 PONTIAC Bonneville Sta tionwagon, AM/FM cassette player Air. Excellent condition. 756-6820.
024
Foreign
MG MIDGET, 1974,
runninc
condition and new interior. $ira
negotiable. Call 756 9273.
1966 VW BEETLE Good body and engine. Very sound electrically and mechanically. $850 negotiable. Call 752-8976 between 11 a.m. and 9p.m
1973 VOLKSWAGEN statlonwagon. Rebuilt. Good condition. $1,000. tall 758 5286.
1975 DATSUN B210. AM/FM, runs good. $850. 756 3974._
1975 TOYOTA Clica. Call after 6 p.m. 355 2260. .
1977 DATSUN B210. AM/FM, air, good^ condition. $1500 negotiable 756-7!'"' "
1-7796 anytime.
1978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed,
Pood condition, good gas mileage, ertect car (or young graduate.
752 0454.
1981 VOLKSWAGON Rabbit Diesel L 4 door, white, extra clean. 753 5516 or 753 3331.
1982 HONDA CIVIC 4 door 5 speed. Metallic brown, AM/FM cassette 4 speaker stereo system. Call after 6 746 4887.
032
Boats For Saie
SAUN JUAN 28. Pressure hot and cold water; 5 sails with spinnaker; Insured (or $28K Make and otter! 758 0849 nights; 756-1343days
16' JOHNSON Tri hull, 125 horse power inboard/outboard. 746 3906 atterp.m
16' STARCRAFT, new carpet, 70 trailer.
horsepower Crysler, tires, two
new til
gas tanks, 6
Mt^ackets, Slolam ski, ski board.
i condition. $1500. 756 1253.
1973 . motor
. boat with Johnson
lall 752 6496.
1978 GLASSTRON family boat. Mercrulser inboard/Outboard. 165 horsepower. Excellent condition. $5000. 758 0501.
1981 SANDPIPER 12' sailboat, $795. Call 756 6840 after 6 p.m.__
20'
MARK TWAIN deep V 188 (cell
horsepower inboard, excellent con dition. Recently overhauled. New lalvanized trailer will sell or trade or late model car. Seen at Budwiser plant North Green weekdays. Phone
756-8936 nights.
26' TROJAN 1977. Fly bridge, head, galley, and DF radio. Call 946-6127.
034 Campers For Sale
POP UP CAMPERS tor rent. 746 3530.__
STARCRAFT hardtop pop-up camper. Excellent condifion. Simps
imper. t 746 3530
days; 746-4203 nights.
STILL NEW 1982 Coachman pop-up camper. Factory warranty, many options. This is a Real Bargain $&'' ......
2800. Call 753-5833after6p.m.
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774
18' SHASTA CAMPER, sleeps 6, complete with stove, refrigerator, and bathroom. Self-contained. $2350. 758 3499.
036
Cycles For Sale
ATTENTION BIKERS: 1981 Honda 400 Custom, showroom condition. 756 3497 after 6.
YAAAAHA 400 SPECIAL, 1981, with helment. Low mileage. Like new. $1150. 735 0576.
1978 YAAAAHA 1100 cc's. 11,000 miles. Excellent running condition but needs exhaust. Best otter. 946 0248.
1980 CAA400T HONDA Excellent condition. 9300 miles. $1100 negotiable. 756-0912._
1980 HONDA CX 500. Excellent condition. $1400. 757 1236.
1980 KAWASAKI 440 LTD Appro imately 2,000 miles. Garage kei Mint condition. $1150. Call 7-7189
1981 HONDA CB 900 Custom, taring.
SSoSSa hiiles;
(7849 after 5.
1983 HONDA XL 250, new, 600 miles. High powered on-off road bike with extras. $1350. Call or come by 2808 Edwards St. 758-4666.
039
Trucks For Sale
1953 FORD PICKUP Restorable. $700. Will trade for car cr motorcy-cle. 524-4652 after 5p.m.
1969 CHEVY PICKUP 307 V-8, only
60,000 miles, power steering, new battery and brakes. Good tires. $1200. Call before II a.m., 752 1994.
1973 CHEVROLET pickup truck.
Needs t minor repair! $700'or make
2T
otter. Call 758 6921
1973 CHEVY VAN Good condition, $700 but negotiable. 752 4148.
1978 CHEVROLET SILVERADO, automatic, air, power steering, tilt wheel, cruise, delay wipers, AM/FM cassette, sliding rear window, camper shell with sliding window. Excellent condition. $4800. 757-3180 or 752-0088._
051
Help Wanted
AUTOMOTIVE Excellent
SALES carper.
Excellent starting salary and benefits. Good working conditions. Sales experience preferred. East
Carolina
756-4267
LIncoln-Mercury-GMC,
AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON Experience helpful but not necessary. Individual mus) have suc-
sary
cessful background and the willingness to advance quickly. Only those responsible and desiring to need to
earn top commissions ____ ._
apply. See Brian Pecheles in person for Interview. 8 a.m. - 12 noon. Joe PMheles Volkswagen, Greenville Blvd._
BOOKKEEPER Part time book keeper/receptlonlst with some real estate management experience needed. Call 758-6061 or send resume to PO Box 6026, Greenville, NC 27835.
BRODY'S FOR MEN has an open ing tor a full time sales person. Stron nMn's retail experience pre
ferred. Good salary. Ability to earn commission. " ' - -
Plaza. AAonday
salary. Aointy to earn Apply at Brody's, PIH y through Friday, 2 to
BRODY'S has an opening for a full Must be -able to
time secretary
Jry. Most
office
ice work and be accurate Non-smoker preferred. Good sala
dav-Frldav, 2 5
040
Child Care
WILL KEEP infants and toddlers In my home weekdays. Located on Highway 33. 752-1783._
041
DAY NURSERY
MOTHERLAND NURSERY Children 1 month to 13 years. Hot meals, preschool learning environment. Weekly rates, $25 for 1 child, $40 (or 2. Phone 752-2743.
046
PETS
ADORABLE AKC Golden Retrlev-...Pick of the litter. After 6,
ers. . . ^52-6136
AKC ENGLISH SPRINGER Spaniels. 3 males, 2 females. Llver/whlte and black/white. All shots and dewormed. I have dame and sire. $125 male; SlOO female. 756-2087.
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVERS Ready now. 355-6171 after 6 p.m.
AKC LHASA APSO puppies. 6 weeks old. $150. Call 752 5093 weekdays, 756 8803 nights and weekends._
weeks
POMES
914 Call
756 8695.
male, 12
AKC REGISTERED great danes; I male, 1 female, black and white, 1V>
^rs old, full_ groym._EaM have
P^#ll
1 cropped, all wots. 795-3744.
AKC REGISTERED (enrale poodle. Call7S2-0M4aHer5.
AKC REGISTERED German Shepherd puppies. Black and silver, black and tan, solid white. Male and female. 758-4237.
BEAUTIFUL AKC PUPS. 875. 758-6912.
Irish SeHer
COCKATIELS Healthy male and female. Reasonably tame 2 olds. Call 758- 10M aHer 5:30.
DACHSHUND PUPPY Female. 8 weeks, all shots. $25. Call 756 8109.
EXPERT DOG OBEDIENCE (ralnlnq and boarding. Call 758 5590.
FERRETS FOR SALE Mink Ilka animals. Albino, sable; male or Wto.SSSectL Call 758-4857.
GIVING AWAY PUPPIESI Pert ferrlqr, part Collie.
saL
6 weeks old.
5C?Pir.veKR'^ts.X^
753-3074. nlQhts753-270._
60M HOME tor 8 yMr old male Irlsir Setter. $ V best offer.
afciw. _
CAR STEREO installation specialist wanted. Experience pre (erred. Salary based on experience Apply Stereo Village, 317 Arlington Boulevard. Greenville.
DENTAL ASSISTANT WANTED
Flexible hours, part or full time. Must have experience. Call 752 5126
DENTAL POSITION Need mature personable individual. Dental expe rience desired. Send complete re sume to Dental Position. 203 Ravenwood Drive, Greenville, NC 27834
FULL TIME
_---- maid-housekeeper,
Grimeslpnd area. Must have trans portation. Normal hours, 9 to Monday thru Friday. Call 752-0137
FULLER BRUSH reps needed Must have transportation. $5.00 plus. Call 758 5590.
GOVERNMENT JOBS
Various information on positions available through local government agencies. $15,000 to $50,000 poten tial. Call (refundable) 1 (619) 569 0241, department NC113 tor 1983 directory
HOMEWORKERS
duction. We train ____
For full details write: Wirecraft, P O Box 223. Nortolk. Va. 23501
Wirecraft pc.
We train house dwellers.
INTELLIGENT, attractive, some mechanical aptitude, personality and ability to communicate wift
professional person is essential.
M '
lUSt desire extremely high income and be willing to sacrifice social life for lifetime security. Some short travel. Must have late model auto Call 637 3337 for interview, Executone/Coastal Carolina, New Bern. NC
INTERIOR DECORATOR with ex perience and a desire to excel Salary and commission. Send re sume to Decorator, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834._
LEGAL SECRETARY Local law firm needs attractive person with excellent secretarial skills. Typing 70-80 words per minute. Prior legal secretarial experience preferred Excellent salary and benefits Please send resume to Legal Secre tary, PO Box 802, Greenville, NC 27834 0802.
MATURE LADY to live in with elderly gentlemen. Must have drivers license. Call 746-4321.
NIGHT KITCHEN supervisor/cook Experience in quantity, production
id p ----- ...
and presentation required. Salary negotiable. Apply in person, 1 to 4 p.m., AAonday-Friday, Ramada Inn, Greenville Boulevard.
PART TIME piano player needed couple da^ys a week. Contact 758
8883 after i
PREMIUM BRAND wholesale beer distributor needs industrious, alert type person to work in Greenville area. Guaranteed salary plus commission. Fringe benefits ' eluding hospitalization and tirement. Contidential. 758-0009.
RETIRED OR SEMI RETIRED in
dividual to do light delivery work on
Wednesdays. Must be in good health and have_ automobile. Write "De
livery"! PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.
bUMtUNb TO LIVE in with elderly lady. Room and board furnishea. Small salary. 756-9844._
SOUTHERN TIRE BROKERS Due to rapid expansion. Southern Tire Brokers is In need of a manager trainee for its Greenville location. Must have experience in brake work and a high school education. Top starting salary and profit sharing. Contact Rod Roebuck in person at Southern Tire Brokers, Greenville and Charles Blvd., Greenville, NC_
WANTED - full time orthodontic assistant. Prefer trained dental or orthodontic assistant. Will consider training individual. Applicant needs to be neat, have a pleasant person ality and good dexterity. Gooc working conditions and benetits Excellent leave time. Reply to Orthodontic Assistant. PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834._
WANTED .hop mana OllM
college ani
Electric motor repair r. Must have 2 years 5 years experience
Please send complete resume to PO Box 471, Rocky Altount, NC 27801.
059
Work Wanted
ABLE BODIED responsible, individual would like to do odd jobs. Yard work, gardening, clean out gutters, etc. in Pitt County. 756-6913,
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancll. 752-6331
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 (perience in building. L Harrington aHer 6 pi
years exj James 752 7765
CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road Enterprises. 756 9123 day, 756-1007 Iht.
nigh
CLOTHING REPAIRS and minor alterations. Call 756-3584 after 6.
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood
and metal. Equipment formally of p and Strip. All Items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques.
Call tor tree estimate. Days" 756-9123, Night 756 1007.
GR^EN ACRES LANDSCAPING Residential landscaping, lawn maintenance. Call 757 0317 or 752 4680, ask (or Sam Pearce, Jr
HOMES PAINTED interior and ex terior. 3 graduate students with experience in painting. We give excellent work with substantial
savings over professional prices. 756-8948 anytime or 752-8356 after 9:30 p.m.
HOUSE PAINTING, remodeling, storage buildings and garages bull).
storage b 758-6212.
LANDSCAPING, grass cutting, lot cleanirg, small loads of sand and
dirt, any 752 1356 aHer
outside work.
LAWNA40WER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757-3353 aHer 4 p.m.. weekends anytime.
PAINT PROS
We specialize In use of Benjamin Moore paints. Residential or commercial. Interior or exterior. Plaster artd wallpaperittg. Free estimate. 758-4155.
WE DO IT RIGHT
Ilf I R L E Y ' S IERVICE Have your weekly or monthly. We also dp
CLEANING home cleaned
windows and carpets, and businesses refereiKes offered.
Residential
753-5908 after 3 p.m.
SIGN PAINTING Truck leHerlng as low as $59.95. Call Steve Atkins (or all vour slon needs. 756-9117
TIRED? NEED MORE TIME? Let someorte else do your houseclean-Ing. Ask about introductory offer. Cail 752 3758._
060
FOR SALE
061
AntiquM
ANTIQUE SOFA Green velvet, 80". $300. Call aHer 5 p.m. 355-6219.
VISIT SIGNS OF THE TIMES for s. gifts, and collectables. We
antiques, have loads of old books, sontething
(or everyone. Open 9 to 5. NIoitday through Friday. 10 to 10, Mturday. 1 to 6 Sunday. Located 9 miles south
of Chocowinity on Highway 946^481.
062
Auctiont
COME VISIT us every Saturday night at 7:30 for an old time country
auction. We sell everything from puppies and cakes to genuine anil^. NCAFL 2774. Signs of the
Times is located 9 miles south of Chocowinity on Highway 17. 946-8481. Wte aro licensed and bonded. Habwjoawction for you. Estate;
avallabto(
SW FOkKUFn, 12 trMlers. 4 trucks, bolts, oftice equipment, tools, parts , bins, weldsrs, auto
accessories plus much more will be sold at
_ ABSOLUTE AUCTION Thursday,'A^ll 28 In wi^ingl For broc(ny> call 919-483 1043. ^
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Priday, April 22,1983-21
064 Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale.J P Stancll. 752 6331._
067 Garage-Yard Sale
YARD SALE, April 23, 2205 Jet (erson Drive, 8 a.m. until. Moving. Lots to sell I_
065 Farm Equipment
LIQUID STORAGE supplies polyolefin tanks ideal for nitrogen farm chemicais-550
gallon, $294.95, 1100 gallon, $447.49, 1600 gallon $608.95. 3 horsepower 2" transfer pump. $176.66. Hoses, cam
pump,
wvUplirMS/ ona Winer iiTiings m
stock. AgrI Supply, Greenville, NC 752-3999.
TOBACCO TRUCK CURTAINS Less than half dealers price. Hat (eras Canvas Products, 758 0641, 1104 Clark Street._
067 Garage-Yard Sale
CLOTHES, FURNITURE, carpet, antiques, glassware, used vacuum
cleaners, and toys. Saturday, 8 to 12.1023 West Wrioht Road
CRAFTS, furniture. Good prices. 607 West 4th Street. Saturday.
AAOVINGI Everything goes. Fabrics, zippers. b(X)ks, gilt boxes, odds
rics, zippers, books, ______________
and ends. Saturday, 7 till 2. Kings Rowe Apartments Party Room. CJtt
East 10th Street.
MOVING SALE Lawnmower, air compressor, etc. Everything must go. 2412 Umstead Avenue. Satur-oav, April 23, 8-1.
MULTI-FAMILY moving sale. 8 piece sectional sofa in excellent
condition, linens, appliances, dress >, )oys.
er, tables, lamps, toys, bike, tools, ceramic supplies, mirror, bed.
hobbie horje, and more. 107 Valley
1. 9
Lane in Eastwood subdivision, a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday. Rain or shine.
NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market Open Saturday and Sunday 8 til S. Attention all Dealers. Super Beach Music 1983 will be held April 24. Outside dealer spaces $2.00. Inside spaces $6.00. Call Bill 746 3541, Mike 746 3550, Fair Grounds 758 6916.
RAYNOR FORBESANDCURK
Flea AAarket open Saturdays 7 til 1, across from AAoose Lodge. 756 4090.
SATURDAY, April 23. Women's clothes, books, cassettes, albums, furniture. Inside it it rains. 8 to 12. 207 B East 13th Street, Greeny i I le.
SPRING IS HERE I We are open
every Wednesday and Saturd ~ FU
Tice Drive Inn 756 3033
-lea Market. Call
PRING YARD SALE at Home Builders Supply, 2000 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville. NC Saturday. April 23. 8 a.m. to 12 noon only.
YARD SALE, Saturday, 7 a.m.
until. All items priced to go. 102
* ij-j.
Austin Place, this is a small street connected to West Wright Road in College Court Subdivision.
YARD SALES in Tuckahoe Sub division. Saturday. April 23. From 8 until. Weather permitting._
YARD SALE, Saturday 8 until. Many items: flatbed trailer.
clothes, household items, earrings.
miscellaneous items. 2101 East Sth Street, Kappa Delta Sorority. Rain or shine.
YARD SALE Located behind Pitt Community College. Some of every thing. Saturday, 7 until.
YARD SALE, Saturday. Curtains, rugs, clothes. 125 North Mill Street, Winterville.
YARD SALE Saturday. April 23, 8 to 12. 1 block off Greenville
Boulevard. 117 Belmont Drive. Eastwood. Wicker furniture, exercise bike, antique mirror, room size braid rug, oriental rug, 10 gallon aquarium and supplies, mis cellaneous furniture, draperies, curtains, miscellaneous rugs, books, records, clothes, shoes, light fixtures, appliances, much more.
YARD SALE 5 families. Saturday, at 10 on Highway 17, 9 miles south ot Chocowinity. _
YARD SALE, 7:30 noon, Saturday. April 23, 125 Vernon Avenue, Winterville.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
YARD SALE, Saturday 8 1. Cooper Street, Winterville. Lots of
childrens clothes, toys, record players, vacuum cleaner, maternity clothes, small appliances.
YARD SALE, Saturday, April 23,
Stantonsburo Highway. 3'j miies from hospital. Baby crib, toys.
jy _____ ____
clothes, many other items, 7 a.m. fo
1 p.m.
YARD SALE, Saturday, April 23, 8 Taby items.
til 11, 111 North Meade. Baby I_______
girls clothes, size 6, mens and womens clothes, paperbacks, carpet and other household items. No sales before 8._
YARD SALE, Rain or shine, several families, Stokes Activity Center, Stokes, NC Friday, 15, Saturday, 9
until.
YARD SALE, Saturday. 7 a.m. 2509 Jefferson Drive._
YARD SALE Saturday morning 9 - 210 Circle Drive, Hardee
to 12 Acres
yard sale, Saturday, 8 1. Garden
plow, tour 14" keystone mag wheels ' tires, single mattress and
and
headboard, cloth, clothes, loes, curtians, lots more. 2 miles out on Belvoir Highway, 5th house on left past Old River Road turn-ott.
springs, shoes, c
YARD SALE, Saturday, 8 a.m. Baby items, bicycle, among others. 1313 Chestnut Street. _
112 ANTLER ROAD, Club Pines Furniture, household items, and clothes. 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.
118 RIPLEY DRIVE, Club Pines, Saturday. 7:30-noon. Broyhill Pre mier sofa and chair, bicycle, tricy cle, toys, clothes, dishes, etc._
4 FAMILY YARD SALE Clothes, baby things, etc. 1601 and 1603 East Wright Road. 8 until. If it rains, it will'be the (ollowinq Saturday._
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING
Stables, 752 5237.
074
Miscellaneous
A SPECIAL Sidewalk Sale. Satur day 10 to 5. China, crystal, etc. Bargains. Coin 8, Ring Man. Downtown Greenville.
y used
and womens wrist watches. Seiko. Pulsar, and others. Some old. some like new, some wind, some
automatic, some (^artz. some solid Coin & Ring Man,
gold. $15 and up 4th and Evans,
Greenville.
downtown
ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air conditoners. freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced (or quick sale. Call B J Mills, Authorized Appliance Service, 746-2446at Black Jack.
WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to boy, they turn to the Classified Ads. Place your Ad today, tor quick results
APPLE //e Starter Systems. Brand new; $1695. Also Apple accessories 15% discount. Call 757 3820.
SALES Air condi Id up. Chest freezers.
APPLIANCE
tioners $150 and up. ____ _________
Apartment size electric or gas ranges, clothes dryer, 30" gas range, refrigerator, $125 each. 30" and 40" electric range, $200 each. Like new and guaranteed. 746 2446.
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $39.95 on a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World, 757 0451. We take trade ins._
BATTERIES by North State new, $29.95 up. full warranty. Used tires $6 12. Aluminum Recycling Com panv, 1104 Myrtle Avenue. 752 6433.
BROWN VINYL rocker recliner. Sits good. $65. Call 756 4472 after 6
p.m._
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL
Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 763 9734.
Want to sell livestock? Run a Classified ad for quick response.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS
1982 Volvo GLT
2 (ioor, 14,(X)0 miles, red with black interior, 4 speed, air AM-FM stereo, sun roof, nice car.
1982 Pontiac Bonneville Wagon
Navy blue, buckskin interior. Loaded. 15,000 miles.
1982 Olds Delta 88 Royale
Brougham. 2 door. Loaded, diesel engine, 36,000 miles, gray with gray velour interior.
1982 Volkswagen Rabbit
Diesel. Gray with black interior, 4 speed, loaded.
1981 Volvo
4 door, 21,000 miles. Automatic, air, AM-FM stereo. Brown with saddle interior.
1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Silver with blue velour interior, 31,000 miles, automatic, air condition, tilt wheel, cruise control, stereo with cassette.
1981 Datsun 4 X 4 T ruck
Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.
1981 Plymouth TC-3 ^
Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.
1981 Ford Escort
Light blue finish with blue interior, automatic, air, cruise control, cassette tape, local trade.
1981 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel
ailii
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 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.
980 Pontiac Sunbird
Silver, burgundy vinyl interior, 4 speed, air, AM-FM stereo, 34,000 miles, looks new.
980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic
4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.
979 Olds Delta 88
2 door. Blue with white landau top, white interior, 44,000 actual miles, looks new.
978 Lincoln Mark V
Yellow, burgundy interior, loaded. 49,000 miles.
977 Datsun 280-Z
Light blue with black interior, loaded, 48,000 actual miles, nice car.
978 Ford LTD
4 door, 40,000 miles. Light blue with dark blue velour interior. Looks new.
977 Chevrolet Nova
Brown with beige velour interior, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, 56,000 mites, one owner.
HOLT OLDS-DATSUN
Kt1 Hooker Rd.
756-31159
22-TIk Daily ReflecU-, GreenvUle, iN.C.i. aiuuj, A(>nt22, lltt
074
Miscellaneous
buying aluminum cans 21 steel beverage cans S, market prices tor copper, brass, all alumi num. batteries, plastic bottles Aluminum Recycii 1104 Myrtle Avenue
Recycling Company, 755^433
1104 Myrtle Avenue. /sz-e433._
CABBAGE and yellow collard plants. $2 per hundred. Tomato ilants. TSt per doien. Carl Miller, 55 360.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads ot sand, topsoil and stone Also driveway work
CAR WASH Saturday. 9 until. Shell Station corner of Highway 264 and Evans Street on Greenville Boulevard next to Space Castle Entertainment Center._
CENTIPEDE SOD
4994.
758 2704, 752
CHILD'S FURNITURE Desk, night stand, like new. $200. World Book Encyclopedia, all your books. $300 752 3000, 756 1997
CHILDREN'S CLOTHING, brand
namei like new, sizes 7 14 . 756-7920 after 5______
COMPLETE SET of Encyclopedia. Brittanica plus year books. $400. 756 1188 or 756 883__
CUT YOUR FOOD BILL Coupon Shoppers Club. Free details. Send SASE to PO Box 2492, Greenville. NC 27834
E Z PULL GOLF Cart, Ladies Clubs,,2 woods, 5 irons, leather bag. $30 758 6657 __
FACTORY 2nds NOW available direct from manufacturer Hand woven rope hammocks, $19.95 to $53 Hatferas Hammocks, 1104 Clark Street, Greenville_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.
Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr 756-6221
AUCTION
SALE
FURNITURE AND HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Ann Sumerell 208 Country Club Drive Ayden, N.C. APRIL 23,1983
10:00 AM
Rain Date. April 30.10 AM Reason for selling: Moving All furniture in good ^condition. All items will be sold to highest bidder.
ITEMS FOR SALE Washer Dryer
3 Book Cases Lamps Twin Beds Pictures 2 End Tables Round Table Coffee Table Odd Chairs Encyclopedia Electric Sewing Machine Couch and Chair Desk and Chair Many More Items Too Numerous To Mention Conducted By D. Melvin Owens 752-5919 N.C.Lic.No.310
074
AAiscellaneous
FtSHERMAN: Doe to inclimele weather, when the ad was first run.
ramTtiiriTTghtly over stocked on fishing worms. 5
scoops (approxj
mately 5 gallons) taken from well-stocked worm beds. $5 a container. Special good until over stock is reduced.^ Bring your own con-
tainers. Some containers available Call 752 7375 after 4:30
FOR EXPERT TV repair, bring set to Four Way TV in Hookerton. (We sell new RCA sets) . 747 2412.
FOR SALE: yellow col lards and cabbage plants. Marion Mae Mills, 756 32/V or 355 2792.
FOR SALE: A BONE trame goc^t with 5 horsepower motor. $200. 753 484?,_
FOR SALE: Drop leaf table and 2 chairs, $50. Small Sanyo refrigera tor, $35. Double bed, $45. Twin bed, $20. Upholstered chair, $15. 2 lamps, $8/set. Shelving unit, $12. Bean bag, $5. 756 9625 or 757 6491._
FRIGIDARE COMPACTOR, Girl's 26 " bicycle with balloon tires. 752 0349. _
FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS Call
758 5590._
GAC MEMBERSHIP Call 757 3597.
GOLF CART, electric. Excellent rondition. $500. 756 3084._
GOT JEANS that need patching? Also simple alterations. Call 756 8867 or 756 2615._
GRADUATION IDEA? Moftitt's Magnavox has 12" black and white TVs tor only $74.95! 2803 Evans Street Extension, 756-8444.
HARDEE SMALL INDUSTRIAL
trailer 6' x 8'. Ideal for lawn mowers. Reduced to $550.00. Goodyear Tire Center. West End snooping Center, 756-9371.
ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers. Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memorial Dr i v', 756 6417
JOIN MOFFITT'S MAGNAVOX video tape club. Greenville's first and largest. 2803 Evans Street Extension, 756 8444._
KELVINATOR ELECTRIC Range Self-cleaning, 5 years old, 30". Call
746 3020 after 6.
LARGE LOADS ot sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.
LIKE NEW! Used piano. $600 Call 355 2128._
LIKE NEW cash register. Call 756 7247.
MOVING SALE Living room suit, dry sink, trssel table, dresser.
night stand, small rolltop desk, 3 beds, set ot cabinets with formii
formica
top, and more. 756 8833or 756 8674.
CH
PHYSICAL
NEW SHARP copierssale, lease, rent Large selection of used
cop
3M
iers Xerox, Sharp, IBM, Savin, 756 6167.
PIANO FOR SALE In good condi tion. $700. Call 756 7624._
PINE COUNTER TOP cabinets and bar. Best otter accepted. Call after 6, 758 9404. _
PROM OR BRIDESAAAIDS type formal dresses. Like new! Ladles
sizes 9, 10, 11, 12. Priced from $15 fo $20. Call 746 4535 after 7 p.m
SEEDS
SEEDS
SEEDS
AND
PLANTS CABBAGE ACOLLAROS TOAAATIOES& PEPPERS
Many Other
VEGETABLE PLANTS FLOWER PLANTS
We Specialize In Your Garden
Kittrell's Greenhouses
2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT _CALL 756 7373
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
JIMMYS PERFORMANCE
00 GENERAL AUTO REPAIR ALSO PERFORMANCE WORK Open 4 PM to 9 PM Weekdays All Day Saturday
758-7252
EF HERAPIST
Join our progressive HCA team. Immediate full time position available for Chief Physical Therapist. Previous experience in general acute care hospital required.
Edgecombe General Hospital is an affiliate of Hospital Corporation of America providing a full range of In and Outpatient services. Enjoy our excellent benefit package including a stock purchase plan and tuition reinbursement. Let your future begin with us. Submit resume to the:
PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT EDGECOMBE GENERAL HOSPITAL
2901 Main Street Tarboro, N. C. 27886 or call Area 919-641-7156 EOE
AUCTION
BARGAINS EVERY FRIDAY, SATURDAY & MONDAY NIGHT
7:30 PM
On Pactoius Highway Next To Old Greenville Stock Yard
TOOLS, PORCELAIN, FIGURINES STEREO EQUIPMENT (AUTO & HOME), MANY MORE ITEMS
ALL NEW MERCHANDISE OTHER ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST PRESTON HEATH. AUCTIONEER LICENSE NO. 1600
074
Ml:
scellaiieous
RENT THE RUG Doctor. Nothing it. Call URENCa
cleans Ilka 756 3862
RUG DOCTOR- it's fantastic! Rent one at URENCO, Harris Soper Markets, A Cleaner World, A-1 Quality Claaners, Nawton's Red
White, GriHon Piggly Wiggly, Red Oak Convenient AAarf and the Qwlk
Stitch._
SAVE 20% on Mlllikin area rugs. Now at Larry's Carpetland, 3010 EastlOth Street.
SEARS DELUXE ROWING
Exerciser. Hardly used; $100. Call
alter 6, 758 6373. _
SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent
shampooers and vacuums at Rental Come
ToollTompany.
SOLIO OAK formal dining suit; oval shaped table with 6 chairs
and large hutch. 756-7400 anytime Saturday or Sunday
STILL BUYING BARGAINS Even after unusually heavy buying for past 90 da^^s. Why? Because our
sales are still growing! W L Dunn & Son, Antique Barn 8, Swap Shop, Pinetops, NC_
STUDENTS DESK with formica too, $35. 758-1955 evenlnos after 6,
SURFING EQUIPMENT: 6x9" natural art surf board, great for larger waves. Complete wet suit; suit, vest, boots and gloves, all size small. 757 3877
SWEET POTATOES, $4 a bushel Call 756 2434._
THE HARVARD CLASSICS
52 VOLUMES
$50
CALL 758-6657_
TOPSOIL, mortar sand, fill sand and gravel. Davenport Hauling, 756 5247
TREE AND STUMP REAAOVAL
Very reasonably priced. No damage to lawn 752 3400 or 355 2621 after 6 p.m. tor free estimate
TWO 15"x8" keystone classic with almost new 60 series BF Goodrich radial TA Asking $170. Call 756-3647 after 4 p.m
USED WOODWORKING TOOLS for
sale Table saws, radial arm saws, air compressor, mortising machine, stroke sander, plus many other hand and larger tools. All tools less than 1 year old. Must sell. Call after 6 p.m., 756 4373._
WANTED: I am interested in a
truck to carry freight on backhaul from Durham, NC to Greenville,
NC 919 355 2686.
WOULD LIKE to buy used refrig erators. air conditioners, freezers, and ranges that need repair. 746-2446._
11 HORSEPOWER ridincj^^^lawn
mower. Good condition. 753 19" COLOR TV Rent to own. $23.11 per month. Furniture World. 757-045L_
20" SCHWINN VARSITY, 10 speed bike, $100 . 24" Schwinn Varsity, 10 speed, $75 756 0357
25 " CONSOLE color TV, has sharp picture, beautiful cabinet, with
automatic tine color, only $185 756 0492.
25" QUASAR color TV, instant on, excellent condtion. $225; Royal portable typewriter, $25; RCA portable black and white TV, $45,-' lull size bed trame and headboard. $25; GE portable color TV, good condition, $125. 746 6929._
4 SLOT DISH RIMS for Volkswagen, tits 4 lug. Call 825 1816.
075 AAobile Homes For Sale
APPROXIMATELY 1 ACRE and
trailer for sale by owner in country. 12 x65, 1976 Conner Tidwell, com pletely furnished with , central air, garage/storage area (16x16). Price neaofiable. 756 2692 tetween 7 11
BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof, troST free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much more. Regular price, $21,995 Limited Time Only
$16,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up included. Hours, 8 AM to8 pm. CROSSLAND HOMES
(formerly Mobile Horne Brokers) 630Weslr -
I Greenville Boulevard 756-0191
BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home
loaded with extras, plywood floors, plywood counter tops, lotal electric.
range, refrigerator. Regular price, $12,995
Limited Time Only
$9,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up
included. Hours. 8 am to 8 pm.
HOAAES
CROSSLAND t (Formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191
12x60. FURNISHED with washer and dryer. Highland Park. $6000. 758 4476.___
14 X 70 Vintage Lanier, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. Lots of cabinets and closets. All electric with central air. Includes screened porch. Plush carpet. $13,500 . 756 7736 tor more intormation._
14 X 70 3 bedroom, 2 bath. $500 down. $191.10 month, 7 more "years. 757 3964. __
14x70 MOBILE HOME 2 bedrooms, bath with garden tub, all appliances, furnished. Equity and assume loan. 757 1216 anytime.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752-61 16
INVENTORY^
PURCHASING
CLERK
Growing beauty product distributor needs experienced Mividual with knowtedge ot biiylng, inventory control, and general office (unctions. Good typing, organizational, and bookkeeping skills a must. Excellent benefits. Replies contidential. Write to;
Roy Honeycutt P.O. Box 1467 , Greenville, N. C. 27834 A
Drive A New
1983 Datsun Pickup
For As Little As
$13886
per month
Based on selling price of $6265.00. State taxes not included. Down payment or equvalent trade $900.00.9.9 Annual Percentage Rate, 48 mon-thly payments, finance charges $1180.28, Total of payments $6665.28.
Oatsun Deluxe Lil Hustler
HOLT OLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd
Greenville
75M115
I
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
19M RITZ-CRAFT traUM- with woodheatw. Call 7Sa-4334 after 7
tMa 12x5S FURNISHED New carpet, set up on nice rented petit. Some financing. $4500. Call SsHus anytime._
1973, 34x60 mobile home. 3 bedrooms, 3 batha, living room, dining room, kitchen, utility room, den with woodburning heater. Central heat and air. Unfurnished except for appliances. $13,000. Must
" - agr
be moved. 946^773 after 7.
1973 FAIRWAY 13x61. 2 bedrooms, 3 baths, unfurnished. $6000. 75I-4929
1973 FRONTIER 12x60. Central air, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, washer, dryer. Set up In nice park. $5500. 756-6495 after 4,_^_
106
Farmf For Solo
FARM FOR SALE 2 miles North Vanceboro, 130 acres; 75 cleared, _ acres clearabie cropland/ 30.000
gS&.aiciB'ssi/f'iai
Properties. Ltd, New Bern, NC, 633^14
136 ACRE FARAA, 1)0 acrM cl^red in Craven and Beaufort County at the Pitt County line. Call Ayden, 746W7
58 ACRE FARM Good road tron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Communl^ Call
for nriore details. Call AAoseley-- 1 for full
AAarcus Realty at' 746-2166 details.__
1977 OAKWOOD mobile home, 12x60, good condition. All rooms are
closed oft. Call 746-4677 from 4-9.
1981 AAOBILE HOME 56x14. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Furnished. No Take up payments.
downpayment.
752 ISM._
1983 ALL AMERICAN Family, double wide, 24 X 60, 3 bedroom, 2
full baths, great room, gas heat, siding, shingle roof. Small down payment, assume loan. Call
masonite!
752 5310 after 7:00, ask tor Mike.
3 bedrooms with walk-in closets, 2 b,
24X60, - __________
closets, 2 baths, woodheater, central air, dishwasher. Equity and take over payments. 752 736 4000. _
076 /Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance
the best coverage tor less money.
.... V _
Smith Insurance and Realty, 2754
Sell
Class:
your used television ified way !Call 752-6166.
077 Musical Instruments
FULL SIZE VIOLIN with bow. E xcei lent condition. 752 3949._
IBANEZ ARTIST GUITAR with a 60 watt Peavey classic amp. Excellent condition. 758-7200, ask tor Matt._
KIMBALL CONSOLE piano. New pecan or walnut finish. $1,599 with nch, delivery and 10 year war
i^anty. Piano Distributors,
Greenville, 355-6
KRAMER BASS GUITAR with case; excellent condition, three DiMarzio pickups. $400. Call 758 7357 anytime.
PIAN06 Studio Grande. New strings, needs tuning. $900. 756-8737. 80 YEAR OLD retinished cherry wood upright piano. Also guitar.
mandelon (iarp dated 1894. Original key. Excellent
book and tuning , condition. Contact Signs of the Times, 946-8481._
082 LOST AND FOUND
FLUFFY FEAAALE multicolored cat lost in Shady Knoll Trailer Park, Monday morning. Call 757-1216 anytime or 752-8155 after 6, Reward ottered._
LOST: Neutered male tabby cat.
black stripes. AAissing mint Park area since
issing
Brown with black strii
ApHI 10. tlOO reward. Call 758 7738 after 6.
LOST: tennis racket, Kenner
Golden Ace in area of Jarvis and 5th Streets. $20 reward. 757 6041.
085 Loans And Mortgages
2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans-mortgages
bought. Call tree 1 800 845 :
107
Farms For Lease
WANTTOBUY
CORN
Top Prices Paid for your corn. Worthington Farms Inc.. 756-3837 Days. 7M 3732 Nights
WANT TO LEASE peanut poundage or buy the allotment. Call 752-5W from 7 p.m. on._
109
Houses For Sale
A RARE FIND Very seldom for AAobile home located on over
sale.
an acre lot in city with additional mobile home spaces to be rented out for additional income. We have It! Call Davis Realty, 752-3000, 752 2904. 756-1997
A REAL PEOPLE PLEASERI .
bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, wood stove, workshop, and carport. Immaculant condition. Mid SO's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7008.
A SUNOECK ENHANCES this energy efficient 3 bedroom house, located in a quiet subdivision in Greenville. FHA 235 assumable loan. Total price$46,000.355-6314.
ALAAOST FINISHEDI That's right! This new home in the country will
be finished soon and the price must go up but you can buy It now and finish it yourself and save. Over
2000 square feet to work with. Oh! e IS also 10 acres of land that
There
come with it. Located south of
Greenville. Only $75,000 with owner financing for 30 years. #160.
TURY 2f Bass Realty. 756-6666
ASSUMABLE FHA 235, 3
bedrooms, IV2 baths. 10x14
workshop, 204 Burrington Road, ....... 2647
Singletree. $47,000. 355 :
ASSUME 9% loan on this well cared for and attractive brick veneer ranch surrounded by beautiful trees, located In one of Greenville's most beautiful neighborhoods. Conveniently located to shopping and schools. Recently painted and carpeted. 3 bedrooms and 2 bath
home. Spacious den and garage. $69,900. Call Davis Realty,
Only $4 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997
BELOW AAARKET PRICE makes this 3 bedroom much more attractive since it's just been reduced again! This brick home could be just the starter home you and your wife have been looking. Mid $40's. #369. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 6666.
COUNTRY HOME with 2 lots and 10% owner financing available. Payments could be as low as $220 per month. Steve Evans & Associates. 355 2727 or 758 3338.
COUNTRY LIVING can be yours. Over 1400 square feet modular home on brick foundation, ''3 acre lot, heat pump. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
all appliances remain. Only $43,900. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000. 752-
2904, 756-1997.
093
OPPORTUNITY
ATTRACTIVE, MODERN CARD
and Gift Shop. Well located. Ideal tor retired couple or wife. Prof itable. Owner must sell because ot illness. Priced at $5000.00 plus current inventory. SNOWdEN ASSOCIATES 752-3575._
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015._
SPECIALTY FURNITURE Shop. Enjoying brisk business. Very attractive. Well located for high traffic. Owner has been transfered. Must sacrifice at $19,500.00. Offered by SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, 401 W First Street. 752 3575._
TO BUY OR SELL a business. Appraisals. Financing. Contact
Appraisals. Financing. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATE, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752 3575.
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 experience workini
on chimneys and fireplaces. Call day or night. 753-3503, Farmville.
096 Home Improvement
YOU CAN TRUST your home to ite
Sears. Free estimates on siding, guttering, mobile home roofover, insulation, interior and exterior painting and roof vents. Call 756-9700, ext, 232. Monday Saturday 10 a.m. 9p.m,
100
REAL ESTATE
104 Condominiums For Sale
COMING
SOON!!!
Ogen-.fPOse.Vyeck at BROOKHILL
3WNHOMES Model will be open daily. Plan to see our affordable alternative to renting! Call tor details on our 2 and 3 bedroom units. Jane Warren at 758-6050 or 758 7029 and Will Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446.
MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050
FIREPLACE In living room makes
It cozy, yet it's spacious with 3 bedrooms, 2Vj batns, patio with
storage, adjacent to pool and play
" D. Can
area at Windy Ridge. $58,000.____
J^L 4 Harris & Sons, Inc., Realtors,
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUMS 2
bedrooms, IV2 baths. Great condition. $32,500 Make an offer. Owner
Speight Realty. 756-3220, night 758 7741. _
WINDY^ RIDGE 3 bedroom customized townhouse. Near clubhouse. Sauna, pool, and tennis courts. $54,500. Call 756 8794 after 6 p.m. or weekends.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR
SCREENS i DOORS
Remodeling- Room Additions
C.L. Lupton Co.
7:.Z bl If)
BRICK RANCH situated on a wooded lot. Excellent neighborhood. Winterville school .fr
district. No city taxes. 3 bedrooms,
1' 7 baths, recently painted inside. Only $56,900. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 752 2904, 756 1997.
BRICK VENEER DUPLEX
reduced to $48,000. Assume 9t>/4% Iduh. Cash flow. Owner findncini
possibly equity. Almost 3 years old. Heat pump. 2 bedrooms, I bath, each side. Call Today! Davis Real-tv, 752 3000, 752 2904, 756 1997.
BUILDER'S CHOICE That's right, he built it for himself but we've talked him into selling it. You should see all the extras. The marvelous floor plan. This Is the one you've been dreaming about. Trade that smaller home for this spacious beauty surrounded by trees. $90's. #434. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868.__
BY OWNER 3 bedroom house, newly painted, 1007 West 4th Street. $24,900. Call 756-6382 or 756-0489 (alter 5 p.m.)
BY OWNER IN CLUB PINES
This lovely 5 year old, two story
brick Williamburg home has 3/4 bedrooms, 2Vj baths. You'll love the
spacious rooms, especially the 25'7" X 17'2" Great Room with fireplace and large eat-in kitchen with
built in appliances plus formal din ing room. The 2400 square foot area
is equipped with two heat pumps. Attached double carport and
Attached double carport and storage area. Portion of back yard has board fence. Assumable 9'/2%
V A loan makes this a very attractive buy for $100,000.
OPEN HOUSE Sunday, 4 17, Satur day, 4-23 and Sunday 4-24 from 1 to 5
pm. Weekdays call tor appoint- 753. No Real Esta
ment, 756 8953. No Real Estate Agents, please.
BY OWNER in Farmville. 3 bedroom brick veneer, living room, dining room, kitchen, (dishwasher, refrigerator), 1 bathroom fully carpeted and insulated. Utility house in rear. Only $35,000. 753 2038.
BY OWNERS Good condition. 4 bedrooms, 2 bath, IV: story. )900 plus square feet. Very near ECU campus. 1005 North Charles Street.
Nice kitchen, fully equipped. Washing machine, wood stove, oil
109 HoueeeFdrSale
BELVEDERE 1 l03SfaffordiWre
owmar. I62.S00.
SS!(iIf*5
R^ to ttmri on
CH _____
this rww home. Add your own perional touch by-picking out paint, wallpapor, carpet end vinyl. Will
. four points plus cloeing costs, i't. The Evan* Co,,. 753-2814. Faye
Bowen,
752-4234
754-5258, Winnie Evans,
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
109 HoubbbFotSbIb
COUNTRY SETTING
bedroom home ust _______
Greenville on a. woodod lot oflort
This 3 outtido
privacy end seclusion to those who Ulotohi
havo their own rotroat. You'll
onioy cooking In this stop saving kitch* ----"---
...tchen. Use the outside petio for casual entertaining under the tall pines. S50's. #483. CENTURY 31 iss Realty. 754-4446.
DISTINCTIVE CONDO UNIT is the word tor this one-of-a-kind
50'sli 840's
HORSESHOE ACRES 11</>% FHA loan assumption just off Stan-tonsburg Highway near hospital. This ranch has 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths with lots of storage and large lot. Call today tor appoint ment. Mid ISO's. Low equity.
JUST MINUTES from the hospital.
this well designed 3 bedroom ranch has nearly 13(10 square feet plus 14 x
20 outside storage workshop. Wood stove Included. 9Vx% VA loan
assumption. Full garage with automatic door opener. Built-in desk in den. Offered at $40,900.
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. $41,300.
furnance. Low $50's. Monthly payments $263, 8% loan. Shown by appointment. Phone (919 ) 875 8591. DISTINCTIVE Williamsburg ranch. We are proud to offer this charming 3 bedroom with Williamsburg decor in Cherry Oaks. Spacious living room with dining area, sunny kitch en with breakfast nook, nice wood deck off the family room which offers extra wide crown molding, chair railing, built-ins and a gorgeous fireplace. $79,9(X). #490. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 754-5868.
EXCELLENT LOAN assumption .........Ridge.
9.78. Condominium at Windy .... Located with lots of privacy. , bedrooms, 2Vj baths, den with fireplace, outside patio, owner re locating. Steve Evans 8, Associates. 355 2727 or 758 3338.
EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Excellent location. 3 bedrooms, large family room with fireplace, garage, deck, patio, extra large room tor office, study or etc. Some equity (possible owner financing). Only $42,500. Call Davis Realty, 752 3OO, 756 :
756 1997.
.2904,
XCLUSIVE AGENCY
Commercial property. Located in city. 7,676 square feet. Zoned CDF
Could be used for automobile related offices or etc. $75,000. Call Davis Realty, 752-3000, 756-2904, 756 1997.
EXECUTIVE HOME This four bedroom home in Lynndale is perfect for entertaining the most prestigious guest in your formal dining room and living room with
extra high ceilings and hardwood floors. The more casual will love
the den with a walk in wet bar. Dad can use the garage for puttering or storage. Would cost too much to replace this one but it's affordable. $l50's. $407. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868
FARMERS HOME assumption 8%
3 bedrooms, lVr biaths,' oarage, central heat and air. Steve Evans &
Associates. 355-2727 or 758-3338.
FmHA LOAN Assumption. 3 bedrooms, family room, utility, carport. Only 7 years old. $36,500. century 1 B Forbes Agency 756-2121 or 756-7008.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR & RESPIRATORY THERAPIST/TECHNICIAN
Or Eligible, immediate openings available in our Respiratory Department. Procedures Includes intubations, ABQs, hemodynamic monitoring, Pre Op pulmonary screening, PFTs, plus routine therapy. Assistant Directors responsibilities include coordinating all clinical activities, preventive maintenance program, inservice, quality eeeurance and other managerial duties. Join our progressive HCA teem. Opportunities for education in EKQ, cardiac streas testing and Holtermonitortng.
Edgecombe General HoepHal Is an affiliate of Ho^tHal Cor-^tion of America. Enjoy our axeoMont bonafH packaga In-eluding a atoek purchaae plan and tuHion ratnburaomont. Wa HotMoo from tho baaeh or moun-
Ut ua ba tho boglnning of your futuro. Submit rasufiw to tha D#psrtiMntr
EDGECOMBE GENERAL HOSPITAL
2991 Main Stmat Tarboro. N.C. 27199 or caNAroa 919441-7119 Monday tbrough Friday EOE
I
LOOKING A good deal In new construction? This colonial ranch
has nearly )S00 square feet and spacious rooms. li%
^_____ _ , fixed loan
available. In Camelot, built by Bill Clark Construction Co. To be completed by AAay. Call today. Only 562,700.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC
REALTORS 756-6336
Tim Smith... ON CALL..
Ray Holloman............
Gene Quinn..............
Sharon Lewis............
John Jackson ............
Marie Oavis.
.752-9811 . 753-5147 . 754-6037 .756-9987 . 756 4360 756-5402
Toll Free: 1-800-525-8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housino Opportunity
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
STO't
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 oen that will
make everyone feel at home. 2 car ft
carport with lots of storage. Walk 'ng distance to all schools. Call :oda
today. Low$70's.
NEW OFFERING in Club Pines Get in Club Pines for $73,(X)0. 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 playroom Is offered. 1 year warranty. Call today and move in now. Owner will paint and you select the colors.
CHERRY OAKS Like traditional exteriors with a modern floor plan. Room and more room In this plan with over 16(X) 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 CALL.
Ray Holloman...........
Gene Quinn .............
Sharon Lewis...........
John Jackson ...........
Marie Davis.
.752 9811 . 753-5147 . 756-6037 . 756-9987 . 756 4360 . 756 5402
Toll Free: I 800 525 8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$40'S
AydL......
loan assumption. Not many ot this kind left. This home has 2 bedrooms, large master bedroom with iVj batns. Fireplace and carport. Call today. Low$40's.
THE CHOICE is yours! Assume the existing loan of 9'/e% with total payments ot $314.48 or seller will pay points for a new loan. Convenient to the hospital. Mid $40's.
townhouse In Windy Ridge. It has the square footage of a 3 bedroom
unit but ha* boon designad with 2 master bedroom suites. Downstairs Is the craft wood-burning firaptaca
Insert keeps you snug and warm bassRaaltx,254-^.
FOUR BEDROOMS, country kitch
en, formal areas, 2 baths, walk-in closet (or $39,900. That's right, this
remodeled hbme is In a super location and crying -for a new owner. This Is a real deal, Naal
Call for your private showing today! #37S. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 754-6444._
GET OUT OF TOWNI For under $40,000. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace. 8Vj% FHA loan assumption, balance approximately $24,200, no qualification necessary. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 754-2121 or 754-7008._
GREAT ASSUAAABLE in Eastwood, by owner. $42,900. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 9% loan. $39,200. $401.02 PITI Excellent condition. 109 Prince Road. 757 1977 by appoint ment._
109 HouMtForSalB
FOUR BEDROOM honw fordable P>c.^r.nj^ **
family room, two I
in af-itap-down corner lot
,OCATED NEAR hospital Neat ;k
less Yha7 $^TYou may. pureha
!cC Brick cently
Veneer starter bon c^rc
decorated, new cArpet.
Re
For
and cLosa this home. (Dnl^^.W.
Call Davis Realty, 752-3 2904. 754-1997.
LOVELY
7194. _
HIGNITE, REALTORS 746-2448
$85,000. Four bedroom home with
^ame room and plenty qf stwage.
full baths, and (nrmal dining room, den with fireplace. Lake Ellsworth. For rent or sale.
FARM in Chocowinlty. 100 acres and 10,000 pounds of tobacco. $159,000.
FARM with house. New, $94,500.
24 ACRES Wooded with access off Highway 33. $17,000.
SACRES State Road 1126. $19,000.
% ACRE LOT in country. $5,000. LOT In Cherry Oaks. $12,500.
HIDDEN TREASURE Picture the beauty' of an older colonial home
situated far off the road on a large ipTit
lot with graceful trees and a P rail fence. Add stables and pasture land, and you have a slight idea of what this home has to offer. The
interior displays as much character xferior
as the exterior. Assumable loan $81,900. #451. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 754-5848
HIGNITE, REALTORS
746-2448
$24,000. Older home in Ayden area,
in good shape, two bedrooms and living room, kitchen and bath.
$27,500. Three bedrooms, one bath, living room, fireplace, kitchen, and outside covered in aluminum siding.
$28,900. Two bedrooms downstairs
and two bedrooms upstairs make I far
this a deal for the big family. Living room, den and kitchen combination
$34,900. FmHA home located on Edge Road in Ayden, N C Three bedrooms and one bath priced right. Farmers Home loan is available to the right person.
$37,900. FmHA home located on Edge Road in Ayden. Three becfrooms, one bath and this one can be rented or sold. Just freshly painted.
$43,900. Four bedrooms, IV3 baths, large kitchen with eat-in area, living room and wall to wall new carpet, all located on a big corner lot and all fenced in.
$59,900. Nine trailers included with this trailer court on two lots. Fine investment and owner financing.
$74,900. Nice brick home located on
big lot 2 miles outside the city limits
will
h four bedrooms and 2' z baths Formal areas and nice kitchen with built-in appliances. Oen with fireplace anddeck on rear of house.
$77,900. Beautiful home in Cherry Oaks area. Big den with fireplace, screened in porch, three bedrooms, two baths, dining room, kitchen with eat-in area, passive solar, and
all on a sloped lot for landscaping ulTba! .......
beauty. Full basement with drive in garage and workshop. Location: 215
Joseph Street. Open Sunday from 1:30 til 4:00.
HOME SWEET HMEI Beautiful 3 sth home. Carport,
bedroom, IVj ba . _
and. patio. 9Vj% VA loan assumi tion. High 40's. CENTURY 21 Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7008
I'M IN HEAVENI is what you'll be singing when you walk into this lovely 4 bedroom in Cherry Oaks. Owners have been transferred and want you to know that they will truly miss this custom home and that no details were overlooked during construction. So, if you are looking for a special home on a private wooded lot call for your irivate showing. CENTURY 21 lass Realty, 754-6464._
IDEAL HOME for young family. Located on large lot in country. 3 bedrooms, deck. Assume loan plus equity (owner will finance equity) only $34,5<XI.. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 752 2904, 756 1997._
IDEAL STARTER HOME 3 bedrooms, brick. Excellent condition. Located near fairgrounds.
$40,500. Speight Realty. 756-3230, night 758 7741._
FLEXIBILITY This home, conveniently located to the university, qualities as a single family dwelling or one area can be used as a source of income to assist in making that monthly Investment. FHA 8Vj%
IF WE DON'T SELL YOUR HOME, ERA WILL BUY IT
assurnption with total payments of $292.87. Seller will consider points
on new financing. Offered in upper $40's.
FHA 235 loan assumption. Wooded lot in Oakgrove. Offered at $41,500 includes carport and plenty of shaded privacy on a dead end
shaded privacy on a dead end street., tncome should be under $21,000. Call today.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC
REALTORS
756-6336
Tim Smith.... ON CALI 752-9811
Ray Holloman..............753-5147
Gene Quinn ................756-6037
Sharon Lewis ..............756-9987
John Jackson ..............756-4360
Marie Davis................756-5402
Toll Free. 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housino Opportunity
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$20's8i$X's
INVESTMENT POTENTIAL This home has 4-5 bedrooms and two full baths and could easily be converted to a duplex. It you're in need of a
good tax shelter, let us show you this one. VA loan assumption.
Twentles. Break even cash flow
FISH, SKI AND SAIL on the
Paml'icoT Cute cottage available now at Core Point for $,5(X). You'll
love the view from the glassed in room overlooking the river. Some owner financing possible, too.
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM
Why pay rent when you can own a 2 bedroom, IV3 bath townhouse tor the same monthly payment as rent. This unit was recently rb-carpeted. Call today. Low$M's.
SELECT YOUR OWN lot in conve nient Lindbeth. 1020 square feet. 2 bedrooms, iVz baths. Cape Cod style duplex. Builder pays closing costs and discount points. Move in for En*
under $1400. Energy efficient heat pump. Call today tor this unusual
opportunity. Beat the rent racket with low payments
NEED PAYMENTS less than $300 per month? Try our shared
ownership loan on this duplex near the hospital and get your payments below t300 per month on this two
bedroom townhouse. Select your own decor and move In for approximately $1500. Offered at $38,000.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC
REALTORS
756-6336
Tim Smith... .ONCALI 752-9811
Ray Holloman..............753-5147
Gene Quinn.........754-4037Sharon
Lewis......................754-9987
John Jackson..............754-4340
AAaria Davis................754-5402
Toll Free: 1-800-525-8910, ext. AF43
HERE'S A DOLL HOUSE just waiting tor you. Excellent location near hospital. 2 bedrooms, family room, very pretty kitchen. Start housekeeping today. $29,900.
DON'T LET THIS great opportunity pass you by. Condo priced below market to sell quickly. 2 bedrooms, IV3 baths, all appliances, furnished. $30,900.
MAKE AN INVESTMENT! Don't rent! Owner is leaving area and ready to sell this attractive condominium. Assume existing loan and save closing costs. $31.50<r
THE NEWLY PAINTED exterior sets off this attracttlve brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, I'^a baths, family room. Owner is ready to sell.
COUNTRY HOME with fireplace at this price is very seldon ever to be found. Large rooms, 2 or 3 bedrooms, kitchen-dining combination, separate utility area, extra storage area, all appliances furnished including wasner and dryer. $37,5(X).
TAKE A PEEP at this home and you'll be sold! 3 bedrooms, large kitchen-dining combination, family room, carport, large lot. Located near hospital. $39,900.
IF YOU HURRY you can be the new owner ot this home. It's really neat as a pin! 3 bedrooms, I'.i baths, family room, carport, central heat and air and more. You'll love It! $41,900.
OVERTON .POWERS 355-6500
0-744-4751
IMPRESSIVE PICTURE pertecti Perfect features, perfect location
for the family who demands quality and space. This beautiful home has
it all. Five bedrooms, family room with cozy fireplace, spacious kitchen, all formal area, beautifully
landscaped lot. This is the perfect dream home. -
_____ $101,500. #482. CEN
TURY 21 Bass Realty. 754-4444.
Jeannette Cox Agency
INC
COUNTRY LIVING at Its best can be found with this home located on three acres and overlooking a lake.
Greatroom, formal dining, study, 3 bedrooms, 2'/i baths, and 9% loan
assdumptlon to qualified buyer. $89,900.
ELEGANT HOME with yesterday's greatness. Just painted inside and ready for your inspection. Huge entrance foyeC with grand staircase, large living and dining rooms, panelled den, four bedrooms, 2 full and 2 half baths. It is unique. It Is irreplaceable for $94,500.
LOT in city. $3,900.
NEAR ECU 3 bedrooms, I j baths, $39,000. Work: 757 0042; home:
658 4040. _
NEW HOUSE just started. Cedar siding, 3 bedroom, 1>/z baths. -300. Will pay four points and closing costs. Low 50's. The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen. 754-5258, Winnie Evans. 752 4224.
NEW LISTING on this attractive three bedroom home in PInewood Forest situated on spclous wooded corner lot which joins Lynndale; formal areas, family room with fireplace, two-car garage - $79,500.
Estate Realty Company. 752 5058;
14 or 752 3647._
nights 758 4474
IF WE DON'T SELL YOUR HOME. ERA WILL BUY IT
NEW LISTING Call today for your showing. You'll like this home in Kennedy Estates. Features 3 bedrooms, V/7 baths, central heat and air, carport. Total fenced in yard. $42,500.
WHAT A DEAL this Is! Owner has reduced this price from $51.500. 4 bedrooms, double < lot. garage.
.k ai.Ccv.
I price t . . double .
central heta and air. Assume 9V?% loan and really save. $45,000.
A HOME THAT NEEDS a face lift
offers the buyer a real opportunity
!f.
to select his own color and carpet This custom built home has every thing. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, den, double garage, fenced backyard. $45,000.
You'll LOVE this home! It's Williamsburg through and through. Tastefully decorated and immaculately kept. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room, formal dining room, den with fireplace, porch, garage, large beautiful yard.
DID YOU KNOW an 8'z% still existed? Ideal location in country. No traffic and plenty of play room, 2854 square feet. 4 bedrooms, 2'z
baths, extra large rec room, family )lace, formal dining
room with fin room, lar 28 X 40 workshop, beauty shop.
lith fireplace, formal dining arge utility area, heat pump, detached building. Ideal for sp, beauty shop. etc. $79.900.
NEW LISTING Lynndale What a e te<
home! 3000 square feet. 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal living room, formal
dining room, den with fireplace, double garage, heat pump.
Possesses outstanging features and excellent quality. Assumable loan. $142,500.
OVERTON 8. POWERS 355-6500
Or 744-4751
PERFECT PRESCRIPTION Take 1400 square feet of unusual interior design, add three bedrooms, a well equipped kitchen, greatroom with fireplacp. Rest comfortable on a wooded lot. Call me to see this contemporary home in the $40's. #345. (^NTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6464.
POSSIBLE FmHA loan assumption. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, family room. Only 4 years old. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 754 2121 or 754-7(X)8.
RIVER FRONT TOWNHOUSE Washington Harbor. 3 bedrooms,
Washington Harbor. 3 bedrooms, 7'7 baths, pool, tennis, and boat slip. Call 944-4127._
STOP PENTINGI This cute home can be yours for just a little money down. You can have the pride of ownership yet payment cheap as rent. Located in the University area. Be the first to see the solarium in the home. $40's. #497. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5848.
STRETCH-OUT on approximately 1.2 acres. Beautiful 3 bedrooms, log home. Living room with fireplace. Excellent condition. Mid 60's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 754 7008.
Super Properties!
Super Locations! SUPER
SUPER PRICES!!
GREAT BUY NOW BACK on the market. This home has appraised for much higher but is priced below market to be sold. Owner has transferred and needs to sell. Located at 300 Westhaven Road in Westhaven Subdivision this fine
plan features foyer, formal living .
kitchen with
and dining room, larg eating area, three bedrooms, two full baths. Large corner lot. Priced to sel I at $59,9
WE REALLY WANT TO SELL
this home. There's not a better buy
you buy
In a better location than this selection at 213 Staffordshire Road in popular Belvedere Subdivision. Rates aren't going to drop much more but this home otters a 10Vj% Fixed Rate Loan with a current balance of approximately $49,(X)0
and payments total only $544.00 -'fai ' .....
PITI Plan features Split foyer with formal living and dining room, sunken family room with fireplace, large kitchen and eating area, three bedrooms, two full baths, two decks, garage. Priced at $49,500.
YOU'VE HEARD IT before, but you really must see inside to appreciate
this immaculate and well decorated home at 218 Freestone Road. Large wooded lot with lots of privacy highlights the large deck off the back great room and master bedroom. Lovely kitchen with corner sink, large great room with fireplace and dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, extra large utility room. Priced at $43,500.
D G NICHOLSAGENCY 752-4012 752-7666
COMING SOONI NEW LOCATIONI "
Super Properties! Super Locations! SUPER PRICES!!
A WHOLE LOT OF activity on this h'^ not with this
home and wh beautiful one , which features
kind Interior 1 enormous country kitchen with beautiful pine floors. Tremendous great room with huge (ireplaca. formal dining room with pine floors, work or sawing
TIREO OF CITY llvingl Coma to the country and m this, special
untry
I Which will delight your family. Greatroom, playroom.
tri level
large kitchen and dining area, 3 bedrc -
00ms, 2Vj baths, garage and
3/4 acre lot . $77,900.
REDUCEOI EASY LIVING at Yorktown Condominium. Greatroom with fireplace, formal
Greatroom with fireplace, formal dining and fully equfppad kitchen. Three bedrooms, 2'/i baths and excellent storage. Lovely decor throughout, iu*tU5,000.
An Equal Housino Opportunity
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
S1wER[P(ir
113 W. 4th Btroot-Phono 79B0204 Downtown QrooflviU*
7S8-0204
OpBn:Mon.-Frl.8a.iii.
tiiep.m. Saturday 91.11). 'UI3p.m,
A BIG OPPORTUNITY to own a 3 story (armhousa In Cherry Oaks. Filled with charm from the spacious kitchen with cantor Island through tho rustic greatroom, study and dining room all with pin# floors, 4 bedrooms, 3 full and 2 half baths, plus a playroom. $107JOO.
756-1322 Anytime!
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STOHM WINDOW DUOHb AWNlNi:
ir ...loluu) H'w'" Al,ii
(. I lijrion. i U
T
room, separata utility area, three-four big bedrooms, two and a half
ig - _ _ _
baths. Scrtjenad In porch overlooks the beautiful fifth hole at Brook Valley. Priced to tall at $103,500.
OWNER DOESN'T WANT to mow the grass this sum
the grass this summer in (his huge yard at 1103 Cortland Road^ Orchard Hill Subdivision. This man's problem can be your gain hough V( you Ilka a large fenc^ m yard with room tor a garden and
- . garden and
P*1*- Floor, Plon feature* living room with fireplace, kitchen-eating area opens to a deck, three
bedrooms, hm full baths, garage. Price has bean reduced which
make* IthI* a good loan assumption with a balance ot approximately MS'SM O J>iy'rt* of apporox-Imately $57100. Price has bean reduced $2,000 to $51,900.
YOJJ'LL NEVER PiNO this much
find the toptage but not like ^it
custom built home otters. Well constructed hotr-qUMrate formal dining rooms, large eating area, family
how features (oyer, mal living and lormai IS, large >ltchan with
tiraptice^ threw bedrbomv^lSii baths, extra large garage ontY a tranwndou* comer lit lot*! of
D G NICHOLSAGENCY
752-4012 752-7666
gMMflWftWtWWLO^TlON(
109
Homm For Sale
NEW HOM In Canrwlot. Buy this AWMk and you can still pick out your
own colors. Will costs.
Fay# ________
Evans, ysa-aas
Super Properties! Super Locations! SUPER PR!CESM
PRICE KEEPS DROPPING on this homa at 1617 Lormwood Drivo which wo fosi hM tTw host location around. Can't beat tho convonoince to schools, churches, parks and the University. The home has a lot of features you don't find in your new basic home. Plan features great room with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, dining room with built-lns. kitchen, utility area, larw carport with storage, outside 16' workshop, fencMTIn ysi'* *52,500, make us an
otter. We're Negotiable.
YOU'LL OOH AND AHH at the Inside of this home. Located on a large wooded lot in Windemere Subdivision at 105 Windemere Court, this immaculate home is an exact replica of early Williamsburg. Over 2500 square feet of heated area with large entrance foyer, formal living and dining rooms, kitchen with custom cabinets, eating area, utility area, large den with fireplace, four large bedrooms, two and a half baths, large double garage, tremendous deck. A lovely brick home priced at *102,500.
DG NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
752-7666
COMING SOONI NEWLOCATIONI
Super Properties! Super Locations! IPER
SUPER PRICES!!
A HOUSE SUCH AS THIS isn't easy to find at this price. Located at 264 Circle Drive in Hardee Acres you're getting a real good buy tor the money. Home features living room, kitchen with large eating area, three bedrooms, one and a half baths, garage. Nice yard with room to roan. Sellers need more room and have their eyes on another home so now's the time to deal. A good price at *48,500.
SOMEBODY NEEDS TO BUY this house. Make us an offer, we might take it. Where can you find a house in popular McGregor Downs near the Hospital Complex tor this price? Unusual plan features large spacious foyer, sunken living room
with fireplace, formal dining room, . kitchen with bunches of
Ian
rge
Dinets, 2 or 3 bedrooms, or two and a study, larjie double garage
rge do
built. Ready to sell at
DG NICHOLSAGENCY
Custom
*72,500
752-4012
752-7666
COMING SOON! NEW LOCATION!
THIS COZY home on an attractive lot in Colonial Heights area
- is -
great starter home! It has 3 bedrooms, hardwood floors, oil heat, and it's convenient to shopping. Approximately 1,050 square leer Only *36,500! Call J L Harris Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758 4711.
TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE by owner. 2 bedrooms. IVi baths with finished basement. Ideal for family. S45.000. Mr. Baker, 758-1799 after 7.
TREAT YOURSELF Impressed
ypuTI be when you enter the *oyer
of this four bedroom home in Pines. Skylights, casablanca
and greenhouse are iust a few of the extras. Master bedroom has it's
own deck for those romantic spring nights. Owners transferred so this can be yours. *80's. *481. CEN TURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.
UNIQUE AND CONTEMPORARY
Two story on a beautiful corner lot with trees. 3 bedrooms, including master suite with 2 walk-in closets and private bath. Modern kitchen
with bar, dining area with sliding eadi
glass doors leading to wood deck, earthtone colors throughout. *66,900. *487. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 5868.
WANT TO BE in the middle of things? Great location tor universi ty dwellers. 3 bedrooms, nice livir)g area with fireplace, new heatpump and cenfral air. Call for more Information. *35,000. *452. CEN TURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-5868.
this
YOU'LL ENJOY fixing up older home in Winterville with , rehab potential. It has a screened
porch, large lot, storage building, and is close to downtown. See It
today! $20,000. Call J L Harris 8. Sons. Inc.. Realtors. 758-4711
1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool ta^ nd fir
and fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7Vears old. Located 3 miles from Greenville.
Priced in the *50's. 752 7663.
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, 2 full baths, don and kitchen. Call after 6, 757 1489._
207 N(
$25,(
)RTH LEE STREET. Ayden. I. 756-2717. __
2403 EAST FOURTH STREET 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 1214 square feet of living area. Very nice neighborhood. $38,500. Bill Wil Real Estate. 752-2615
lllams
3106 SHERWOOD, Williamsburg, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all formal areas, den with fireplace. Owner says "Sell". Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500. E -166_
8'/i% FHA LOAN assumption, balance approximately $30,050, no qualification necessary. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, patio, workshop. Some owner financing available. Mid 40's. CENTURY 21
B Forbes Agency 756-2121 or 756-7008.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
JARMAN
AUTO SALES
1977 Birick Regal, 2 door landau. loaded. 933S0
1971 Toyota Corolla Wagon. 5 speed, air condition. $3990
1971 OMs Cutlass Supreme, 2 door hardtop. $4390
1979 AMC SpMt. 4 speed, sunroof, loaded. $3299
1979 Pontiac Grand LeMans, 2 door landau. 14490
1979 Chevrolet
Automatic, air $3990
Monza,
condition.
1979 Mallbu Station Wagon.
air, automatic. $3990.
1990 Chevrolet Caprice Claeeic, 4 door. $9690
1901 Pontiac LeMans, 4 door, 6 cylinder, automatic, power steering and brakes, AM-FM. $9790
1901 Toyota Corolla Uftback, 2 door, automatic, air condi
tion. $9900
1901 Ford EXP SporU Coupe, air power steering and brWios. AM-FM, automatic, appearance package. $0690
ion PM Futura, 4 door, vinyl top, air condition, automatic, power steering, power brakes, AM-FM stereo, wire el covers, appearance package. 1600 miles. $6000
ilMemiie.iMMMOee
HuytSNarth
dianlJNnan.......70040tt
Ei|Or Denton.......7904901
111 Investment Property
DUPLEX QJ Isf Str*t, hMr unl-vM-sity, with a 1 badroom and a 2 badroom unit. In good condition, haa garaw and 2 drivas. SdOar will considar financing part of
prlca.
Approxlmataly 1,400 wuara faat, groas living fr. %3*M. Call J L Harris A Sons, '
75S-47I1.
Inc., Rsaltors,
E^ABLISHED INCOME 2 housas and 1 duplax. Rsntal incoma of $750 month. CENTURY 21 B Forbas
Aflancv 756-2121 or 756 7008
NEW TOWNHOMES Oakmont priva. Ei^lant opportunity for invastor. Down --------
Invastor. Down Mvmant approxi-nrwtaly 81500. J R^Yorka Construc-ilpn Co., Inc., 355-2286. _
115
Lots For Sale
BAYTREE SUBDIVISION
Attractive woodad lots within the city. 90% financing available. Call 758-3421.
EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY
BELVOIR HIGHWAY Mobile home lots, $5900. Slight Realty.
756-3220. night 756-7741
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
LOTS
$300 DOWN on </} acre lot 12 miles east of Greenville on the Pactolus Highway. Cash price $5,300. Owner financing available at 12% rate of 8 Monthly payment of $176.53.
years. Monthly payment ot Call John Jackson, 756 4360.
121 Apartments For Rent
AVAILABLE MAY 1. Naw I, 2 bedroom apartments. Drapes,
haafandair.
md3
wall
_________apartments. ,
to wall carbt, cMtral t outsida storaga.^lfton area. Office hours 10 a.m. la 2 p.m., Monday through Friday, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. SaMiay and SunAy. Phena 524-5SE
AVAILABLE MAY 1. Enaray atfl-ciant 2 bedroom townhousa duplax.
Carpeted, wood deck
agpllances, 1W baths, Rldg# Place. Call 756-
AZALEA GARDENS
Graanville's newest and most uniquely fumishad one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen siie beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with perches.
Frost-free refrigerators.
Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or
sin -------
Jngles. No pets.
Contact JT or Tommy Williams _756-7815
BRAND NEW
2 bedrooms, IV_____
1 mile from Pitt County j ........leal Scl
-...... duplex townhouse
2 bedrooms, iv, baths, ready May t, Memorial
Ho^ital and Atedical School. De
and leasa. $300 per month. Call 4931._
2</> ACRE 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 tor building that dream home. Call for details. Offered at $24,000.
LOOKING FOR LAND to build a home or business on? Over 4'/j acres available right off Highway 11 between Ayden and Griffon. Owner financing available.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC
REALTORS
756-33
Tim Smith.... ON CALL.
Ray Holloman...........
Gene Quinn .'......
Sharon Lewis...........
John Jackson ...........
Marie Oavis.
..752 9811 ..753-5147 .. 756-6037 . 756-9987 . 756-4360 .756 5402
Toll Free:! 800 525-890, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
COUNTRY LOTS Large 1/2 to 3/4 acre, reasonably priced. Cali for locations and prices. The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756-5258, "52-4224^_
Winnie Evans, 75:
EMORYWOOD SUBDIVISION
located oft Fafmvllle Highway.
Co .. 752 2814.
$3,000. The Evans Faye Bowen, 756 5258, Evans. 752 4224.__
Winnie
HUNTINGRIOGE Residential lots. % to IV2 acres. Convenient location. 2 miles north of Greenville, Highway 43. Call 752.-4139, Millie Liflev -
flev Owner/Broker.
LOT IN MILLBROpK Subdivision
near Simpson. $8,500. Co., 752 2814. F
fhe Evans
Winnie E vans, 7:
Bowen, 756-5258.
aye Bow '52 4224.
ROSEWOOD SUBDIVISION
Country lots near Winterville. $7,500. The Evans Co., 752-2814. Faye Bowen, 756-5258, Winnie E vans,^ 752 4224._
10 MILES east of Greenville. 2 acres. Well and septic tank. $13,000. 757 3964._
3 ACRES near Stokps. Owner financing. $11,900. Speight Realty, 756 3220. night 758-7741._
117 Resort Property For Sale
FOR SALE BY OWNER 5.2 acres of river front property behind Greenville airport. Also 1 acre sound Harbor 1852 9 p.m.
vine airport, aiso i acre front property. Collngton r in Dare County. Call 756-to 11 a.m. or 355 2285 2 to 6
NICE BIG VACATION lot at Scup pernong Village in Tyrell County. Call 740-4911 from 6 to8 p.m._
PAMLICO COUNTY LOTS Available for homes or mobile homes. Road front and creek front lots. Land located near Oriental and Dawson Creek. County water available. Priced from $2000 to $6500. Call Oriental Realty (919) 249-0717 or owner at (919) 823-6653.
WATER FRONT PROPERTY, 100x325 on Pamlico River at Bay view (near Bath, NO, contains 2 completely furnished houses. neootlabU
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with l'/i baths. Also 1 b^room apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.
compactors, patio, free cable TV, wasner-dryer hook-ups.
laundr
room, sauna, tennis court, house and f^L. 752-1557
ndry
club
DUPLEX 2 bedrooms downstairs. New paint. 104 South Woodlawn. $250. 756-6004.__
TO PLACE YOUR Cla$slfled Ad, iust call 752 6166 and let e friendly Ad-yisor help you word your Ad.
121 Apartmants For Rant
756-7417,
BEDROOM with patios, wer furnished.----------
. $210 month.
QUIET DUPLEX lances, carpei. eir, hook ups.
NICE ____
Appliances, carpel, _ oanlen >pece. 7^U71 or 758-1543.
OAKAAONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. &sh washer, refrigerator, range,, disposal included* We also have TV Very convenient to Pitt and University. Also some furnished apartmants available.
/cable
Plaza
756-4151
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rant. Confect J T or Tommy williams, 756-7815._
ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near No pets. $215 a month.
campus.
756-3w3..
ONE BEDROOM apartment.
t-7S81.
Partially furnished. 752-)
ONE BEDROOM apartment for
I to u
rent. Located close Call after 4, 756-0528.
university.
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 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-^
EASTBROOK
AND
VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, t) and three bedroom
garden and townhouse apartments, feaf ' ^
turing Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
" 752-5100
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
All utilities Cable TV Telephone (soon) Furnished
With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates
weekly or monthly rales Starting $250 month and up
756-5555 Olde London Inn
FISCHER VILLAGE apartments, Aurora, NC, available for occupancy. Elderly, handicapped and disabled. Rent based on income. > Barbara Miller, 322-4990 or 322-4913. Equal Opportunity Housing
FURNISHED APARTMENT, also irivate rooms with kitchen privi-eqes. Near colleoe. 758 2201._
Large
GreeneWay
2 bedroom garden apart-me'nts, carpefed, dishwasher, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and P(X)L. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869
IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment. Appliances furnished. No children, no pets. Deposit and lease. $195 month. 756-5007._
JOHNSTON STREET APART MENTS 1 bedroom unfurnished apartments available immediate. Water and appliances furnished. No
appi
pets. Call Judy at 756-6336 before 5 p.m., Atonday
SMrchii
ly at 756 Friday.
hing for the right townhouse? > Classified every day.
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
two bedroom garden
One and two bedroom apartments. Carpeted frigerator, dishwasher.
------- . .jsposal
cable TV Conveniently located
to shopping center and schools. Located just off 10th Street.
Call 752-3519
LOVE TREES?
Price negotiable. Call 923-2281.
2 NEW HOMES on Pamlico River. Located at Bath, NC Beautiful water front lots, excellent location. AAany year round neighbors. Homes built for year-round comfort, fully insulated, heat, air and fireplace.
Completely new, ideal for retire-menf. Contact Vance Overton,
923-2701 or 756-8697.
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 a
mobile homes. Securl
bedroom deposits required, 7544
_____. no pets.
4413 between 8 and 5.
and 3 Ca
NEED STORAGE? We have any 1. Call
ngton Self Storn day-Friday 9-5. Call!
size to meet your storage need
jton Self Storage, Open Mon ill 756-9933.
Arllr
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Experience the unique in apartment livmg with nature outside your
COURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS
TAR RIVER ESTATES
), 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dry hook-ups, cable TV, pool, cl house, playground. Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm 8. Willow
752-4225
TWO BEDROOM
ipartments ^ . Call Smith Insurance 8, Realty, 752-2754
available. No pets. Call iltv, 7:
TWO BE DR
SuirTiris,
fully furnished 756-6592,_
by owner. $348.
TWO BEDROOM apartment near ECU Appliances. *275 a month. Heat and water furnished. Phone 758-0491 or 756-7809 before 9 p.m
UNIVERSITY AREA Upstairs duplex. Available May I. 2 bedrooms. $200. 1204 A Forbes Street. 756^765._
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, IV} bath townhouses. Available now. $295/month. 9to5AAonday Friday
5AAonday-rr
756-7711
WEDGEWOODARMS
NOW AVAILABLE
2 bedroom, IV2 bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hooxups, pool, tennis court.
756-0987
1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments.
rS2:
Available Immediately. 752-3311.
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn; $215. 756-0545 or 758 0635
1 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances. $195. Greenville AAanor Apartments. 758-33H.__
1 BEDROOM apartment. $130. Located on 608 West 4th Street. Call 757 0688._
2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances. 804 Willow Street, Apartment 4. $250. 758 3311._
2 BEDROOM apartment air, cao>eted,
rpeted, applianc( month. Bryton Hills. 758 33H
Cenfral $250 a
2 BEDROOM, carpet, refrigerator, dishwasher, air. 5 blocks from campus. $265 a month. 752-0180, 756 KIO._
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Stove, re frigerator, central heat and air. Deposit and lease. No pets. Availa-ble AAav I. $245 month. 7^ 2086.
2 BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM, IVj
bath, close to ECU bos stop. J
stop. $275 month plus deposit. Call toll free 800-446-3870, ask for Richard; Sat-urdav-Sundav 752-5462._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra Insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1-5 Sunday
AAerry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
NEW TOWNHOUSE with fireplace to professional single or married couple. 758-6242 at^r 7 p.m._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Rent To Own
CURTIS MATHES TV
756-8990
No Credit Check
LIQUIDATION
AUCTION
V.P. Brinson Welding & Machine Shop
Location: 1105 West 3rd Street Washington, N.C.
Saturday, April 23,1983 8:00 A.M.
Lunch Will Be Available
Magnutie DrlH Black 6 Decker Type 1 Ser. No. 48113113/4 Chuck 1100 lb. PuN; Fabricated End MW Machine 38" Tibie Heed t Table hac 12" Travel; WHton 1 1/4"x9 OrW Prate Taper SplndM DrM 11/2 HP No. 41557 No. 3MT; Cin-ndnati Model 121 2 HP Ser. No. 102023 Floor Standing Double Ended 12"x 11/4** Pedeetal Grinder; Graenaboro Supply Co. Prentice Bros. Co. DrW Proae No. 4MT 24** Table Upright DrlH Preas; Rigid 930 Pipe B Bolt Threader 44Ne Heade Complete Diea Boh A Pipe SAE A Slandard up to 2* Bolt A 2** Pipu; One 21/2* to 4** Portable Die Head Complote wRh Diet A Drive Shaft; I2**x12** MacMneel Viae A Ateortod Vtoee; Graenard Arbor Proae No. 10 Bor. No. 947070 wHh 11/2** TIo Rode; Dvorak Hydraulic Iron Worker Model 1047 Bar. No. 0073 W/Angit Cutter A Punch A14** Cutter Bar, Vertical Kalamazoo Band Saw W/WoMor 8m. No. 90002 wHh 30** Throat A 3 Whaale Blade Weldor A Grinder, HydteuHe Hoeeflald Iron Batidor mMi all Olee aqume 2; BevaNy 3/10** Hand Sheen Chicago Steal BoMUng Brake 10*x14 Ga. Bar. No. 101301; Ntagme Eleo-trie OxIO Ga. Steel RoBora wHh 4** RoNera A 2 HP Motor; Marvel No. 4 Haek Saw (uoee 14** Blade) 0*x0** W/14** Btmie; Kalmnezoo Metal Cutter Band Sam Model 0 AW Bar. No. 0M3 10**x12* cut; Iron CrMter Iron Worker Model No. 40 Bar. No. 70043 W/Chamwl A Anna Cut. turu; Aaeortud Bunoh VImu; Altee 280 Amp. AC/DC Bumbiobee Bor. No. HOB00847; 100 Ton Hdy. Pteoe (3 or 4 yra. old);
Abco 900 Amp. C-4S0 Aircomatic Welding Machkw Coda 0107 Sor. No. RG011014 (douMo
gat hookHip); Aireo 900 Amp. Dual rang#
9 DDRS.24.B Sor. No. HE782900; Fork Uft
Hyator Modal YC-40 4000 lbs. Sar. No. YC102137; Alico AC/DC HoHwoMor IV. 300
Amp- A Stick; Kwtk-Way Boring Bar W/Block Bar A Talbo Boring CapacHy 20^xS6 2 5/8x9 3/10* Cinncinnatl 21*x0 Latho Taper Attachment Ser. No. 19020 21x00 Cantor to Cantor Dl-0 Flamed Hardened Wevea A Chip Pan; Monarch I6*'x72 W/V BoH Drivo A 3 Spood Herring!^ Goar Box A Taper Attachmont
Latho; Bridgeport MIHkig Machhw W/0x42 Table A 8 HomI Bor. No. JM720 A J Howl HP A Chramo Wavoe A On# Shot Ube; Davla Key Boater Machine Up 1/4 to,7/0 Comploto W/Broaehoe; F-290 3/4 Ton'PlekHip Truck W/100 Amp. Super Hemet Akoo DC/AC Welder Ser. No. H8177713; Aaet. Oxygen A Acetylene Cutting Torch OutfHs W/Carte; Oatm Threading Machina W/Dloa 2* No. 902 Ak Oporatad Pip# Bondar 4** Cap; Track Jack; JwacU Mfg. Co. 4 to I Pipe Tfwoador, Oator Throadkig Machino No. 100 wHh Oloa A Dio Hoodo; BoMorlO 8onchOrindor4** loO Plpo MaeMno Comploto wWi Oloa; Mioe. TaUaa A work Bonehaa A Tool Cabkioto; Mho. hwid A Electric hand Toole 3/1 Cap. MeW Nttfler W/Dloe; 187.4 Ford Truck Low
W/Dlou; 187.4 Ford Truck Lew MNuugo; Letgu Suppiv of Now A Uiod End MIto AINIInB Cut-tora. Asaortmant of Larga Brazed on Catbldo
Toda; No. 818 ONvor DriH Pobri Wd Grinder 1/4101**
8aIp Conduotocl by
COUNTRY BOYS AUCTION AND REALTY CO.
KO.Box12l5.WBdiliN|ton,N.C. PhOfwMMOB? 8tAttUciMNo.7l8
OOMQQURKIN8
SmSUSSt
RALPH RE8PE88
fti #1 *
122
Businats Rentals
FDR RENT- lO.IM tquar* foot building. Idoally locatod on Highway 33 In Cnocowlnity. Call Donnie Smith at 946-5887._
WAREHOUSE AND oHIoe space for
iMse. 20,000 sentare feet available. Will subdlyldeT7S6-S097or 756-9315.
125 Condominiums For Rant
FDR RENT OR SALE, 2 bedrooms. Call 756 8078or 758-1832
NEW TOWNHOMES Oakmont Drive. Excellent opportunity for investor. Down payment approximately I1S00. J R Yorke Construc-tlonCo., lnc.,3S5-2286._
TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available In Shenandoah. $300 per month, 12 month lease. Young couple preferred. Call Clerk Branch Realtors, 756^.
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2 bedroom: IVz bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished. No pets. 8T732I aHer 5 p.m. _
127
Houses For Rent
AVAILABLE NOWI New 2 bedroom duplex. Appliances and washer/dryer hook-ups. Professional single or couple preferred. $300 plus (Mposit. No pets. Call Mary days 752-3000, nights 756 1997.
CLEAN 3 BEDROOM house, 1007 West 4th Street, lease and deposit
required, no pets. $300 nrMnth. Call 756 0489Of 756-6382 (atterSo.m.)
COZY ONE bedroom, in a quite neighborhood. 1 block from tennis courts. 756-8160. 756-7768._
PUT EXTRA CASH In your pocket today. Sell your ' don't needs with an inexpensive Classified Ad.
FOUR BEDROOMS, t>/, baths, carpeted, central heat and air
conditioning. $330 a month. Avalla-5. Ill North Jarvis Street.
752
, ask for Loree.
ble May 5.
4156, as
____________ HOUSE __________
sity. 3 bedrooms. Suitable tor small
FURNISHED
family or 3 students. $375. 210 North Library Street. Call 752 5373.
HOUSE 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths. Carpet, blinds, and appliances furnished. Quiet neighborhood. $350 a month. 756-4829.
HOUSE FOR RENT Neat and well cared tor home in walking distance of university. 2 bedrooms, family room, good size kitchen with appli-
. good size kitchen with appliances furnished. Call Davis Realty,
752 3000, 756 2904; or Rhesa Tucker, 355 2574.
HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in
town and country. Call 746-3284 or 524 3180.
NEAR UNIVERSITY, 3 -bedrooms. No pets. Call 726-7615
or
RED OAK 3 or 4 bedrooms. Central heat and air. Very nice. $400. S^^ht Realty. 7M-3220, night
SUPER NICE 3 bedroom, 2 bath, close to university. $375 month. 756 7417._
THREE BEDROOM home, nice lot. Call 752 3311.
Help fight Inflation by buying and selling through the Classitied Call 752 6166.
3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, living room, dining, kitchen and carporf Wooded corner lot. No pets. $395. 107 Dupont Circle, 756-
3 BEDROOMS, IVj baths, closed-in garage, heat pump, fenced backyard. Beautiful setting. $355. Call 757 0001 or nights, 753 4015, 756 9006.
3 BEDROOM HOUSE with large yard. Close to university. $390 per month. Call 758 6200or 756 5717.
3 BEDROOM BRICK home, large
living room with fireplace, eat in ilr,
kitchen, den, bath, central heat and air. $295 a month. 5 miles west of Washington, Highway 264. Call 946-1678 after 1 p.m._
CLASSIFIED DI&PLAY
COUPON
EaH and Davids
Precision Saw Sharpening Service
There's A Sharp Dlllerencc
ONE SKILL SAW SHARPENED _FREE PER CUSTOMER 752-3678
IVd mM past oM Priaon Camp
I Hwy33WaaiaraanvUla, N.C.
127
Hausas Far Rant
3 BEDROOM, I'/i bath, dishwasher, carpet, central haat and air conditioning. 113 North Jarvis Street. IMP month. Call 758-7997._
3 BEDROOMS, l>/i bath brick home with garage, fireplace, fenced in backyard nr rant in Ayden. Call after S Monday-Thurtday; Fridav-Sunday anytime, 756-7247
3 BEDROOM HOUSE, larga kitch en, large tencad-in yard, brick garage, $390 month. Deposit ra
oulrad. 756-9934 attar 7 p.m.
30S SOUTH MEADE AAay 17, 3 bedrooms, month, lease, deposit, 758 1355 after 7:30 ).m. nmssaoe 756-1281.
Available $400 par no pats, or leave
405 WEST 4th STREET bedroom. $300. Call 757-0688.
4 or 5
133 AAobile Hames For Rant
FOR RENT OR SALE Small, I Barn
for one p-son. Naw 43. 6 miles out ' 756-0588._
Highway
Call 756-1168 or
FURNISHED 2 bedrooms, air. smi private lot with garden space. 757 3177 or 524-4349._
FURNISHED, 3 Parkers Berbec 355-2381._
bedrooms, e. Call 8
Near
to 5,
SAVE MONEY this winter .. and use the Classified Ads day!
. shop every
SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes. $135 and
up. No pets, no children. 758-4541 or 756-9491._
UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom trailer tor rent. Call 756-2602.
12x55. 2 bedrooms, furnished with washer, dryer, and air. Azalea Garden. $l75a month. 758-4476.
2 BE DROOM Mobile Home for rent. Call 756 4687._
2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good !qcatiqn^_ No pets.
children. Call 758-4857.
2 BEDROOMS, washer, dryer, furnished. Very clean. $175. Speight Realty. 756-3220. night 758-7741.
2 BEDROOMS furnished. children, no pets. Call 758-6679.
No
2 BEDROOM trailer with air in Edgbwood Trailer Park. $150 month. 758-1650.
2 BEDROOMS, air, washer/dryer, awnmg.
12x12 shed, patio Private lot. 746-6860.
2 BEDROOMS, air, underpinned, furnished. Colonial Park ana AAead-owbrook also. 756 3377 after 5.
2 BEDROOMS on large lot. Minutes from city. 758 5920._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
11* LRuiy tteuecwr, ureoivuie, n.t.-Tday, April 22,1983-23
133 AAobile Homes For Rent
60X12, 2 bedrooms, air, washer, $170 month, $75 deposit. Call
T( ------
rommv. 756-7815.
135 Office Space For Rent
FOR RENT 2500 square feat Suitable for office space or commercial. 604 Arlington Boulevard. 756-811L _
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756-7815.
137 Resort Property For Rent
EMERALD ISLE beach house. 3 be^o^s, 2 baths, central air.
Cable Tv $300a weak. 919 354-3301
LOVELY^LOT ON Pamlico River (Covi
South side of -jOve Point). Com plata with water, power, and septic P*' y*** Call (16) 751-7921 after p.m.
NICE, 5 b^room, ocean front house (Ocean Ridge Atlantic Beach) Available weeks ot June I2th and
I9th and AuMSt 14th and 21st Cali 756-3368or7a 1177.
^EAN_JII0GE(^ AHantic Beach,
niwws,, niianiic DeacH,
Brai^ new handicap equipped beach coHage with all amenities. This new cottage Is located on fhe second row with a beautiful ocean view and 20' ocean access. $475 per week, beginning the week of May 28. No house parlies. Call Bryant KIttrell, 752-6715 after 5.
138
Rooms For Rent
RCX>M FOR RENT davornloht._
Call 752 6583
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
142 Roommate Wanted
FEMALE ROOMMATE Pro
tessional or grad studen to share 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Non-smoker preferred. Available May lOth. Call 756 0655 anytime.
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 2 bedroom townhouse. $150 month plus '} utilities. Available 1. (fall I
MayJ
I between I 5, 756-9489.
RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE
needed for nice home in country. $125 plus half expenses. 756-0344, leave name and number._
ROOMA6ATE WANTED ' 3 rent; utilities. Call 752 5260._
144 Wanted To Buy
APPROXIMATELY I acre of land 10 miles around Greenville. $4,000 maximum, 746-4764 after 5._
AAARINE RADIO in 1 746-4793 after 5 p.m.
WANT TO BUY 3 old houses, approximately 25 35 years old.
located in the immediate vicinity of
- -
Greenville. Call 752 2405 or 756 ; after 6 pm.
WANT TO BUY used tractor. 8 N's Ford 600 or 800 series. Fords and Jubilees, Massey Fergerson 35, gas. Call 758 4669after 7 p m.___
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FLEMING FURN!TURE
& APPLIANCE
NowBenrteee CreebyAppNMwee KcMnetorAppHMcee Speed Queen Laundry Fedden Mr Conditioner*
1812 DteUneon Ave. 7U-mi
500 REWARD
!<ir inforiii.ition h.uliii.j to tho <irr.'sl <tiul ( oiuK tioii of the jx-rsoii or jrorsons rosjroiisihlo for into (ircoMuillo .Mdriiio and Sporis ( oiitor l"(.ilcd on (.ri'onvillc Boiilovard M somotinio (InriiH! It"' wc'okond of April 1 6 - 17
CALL 758-5938
NEWOIDS
FUtENZAOr
JUST
59446*
Low 9.9% financing available to qualified buyers
Heres what a sporty (or an be
0 sporty av when its on OiuRMUe.
The Olds Rreno GT-Hs sporty inside and out.
RECUNiNG BCKE SEAS SPKIHC INTERIOR DOOR TREAUBnS SPORT STBRIHG WHEEL WITH LEATHER GRIPS BOU) RB) ACffllTS ON INSTRUMENT PANEL
SPEGRA RED EXTERIOR WITH SILVER TRIM AND MUCHMORL
* Does Not Include Tax And Tags
HOLTOLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
Greenville
756-3115
The
Real
Estate
HERE IT IS FOLKS!
Nearly acres of land with a 1767 square foot home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car garage. Central heat and air. Highway 33 East 10 miles from Greenville. S69,900.
ALDRIDGE & SOUTHERLAND
756-3500 Dick Evans, REALTOR 750-1119
Corner
OFFICE OPEN 9-12 SATURDAY AND 1-5 SUNDAY
On Cali This WeakGnd Nanette Whichard REALTOR During NON-Offlce Hours PleaaaCall 756-7779
DFFS REALTY, INC.
756-5395
Lexington Square Phase II
NaatTha GnaavUla Athletic Club
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-4 P.M.
2 And 3 Bedroom Units Ottered
J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.
355-2286
Shenandoah Village Townhomes
41,900
Down Payment Less Than $2,000.00 Payments Comparable To RentI
Private Patik)
Brick
Eneigy Efficient FnistFree Refrigerator with ice maker G.E. Appliances
ConaenlentTo Carolina East Blell
Profcsaionally Landscaped
Proieaelonally Decorated
Call Us For More Exciting Details!
Aldridge & Southerland
756-3500
A New Offering
Fantaatic Far Family Living
Located In one of Greenville's most prestigious areas, Easthaven, and on a well landscaped corner lot, this home is ideal for entertaining and family living. Quality built with 5 bedrooms, or 1 bedroom downstairs with built-ins can be used as a study, 3 full baths, fenced in back yard. Close to the university. A must see priced in the upper $90s. Call today.
Listing Broker Marie Davis 756-5402
REALTY WORLD#
CLARK-BRANCH
REALTORS
756-6336
ua*a
1'
!
Activities in The LegislotureG)mmittee Studies lifsire Of Criminal
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writo*
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A bill to allow erasure of arrest records for those cleared of criminal charges dominated a Senate committees action, but the panel fmmd time for bills on high-rise ridge construction and church-run day care.
You can expunge official records but you cant expunge peoples memories and false memoria, Mike Rouse, managing editor of the Durham Morning Herald, told the Senate Judiciary I Committee Thursday.
Supporters of the bill argued that those mistakenly arrested may have their reputations hurt and have trouble finding jobs if a record is kept.
But Rouse said erasing court records could ccmceal patterns of frivolous prosecution.
Police states tend to close records; democratic states tend to leave them open, Rouse said, speaking on behalf of tte North Carolina Press Association.
The committee considered removing an amendment adopted by the full Senate that would give the courts discretion over erasing records.
When you have a discretionary bill you dont have any law, said Sen. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe.
Since the form recommended by the Governors Crime Commission was amended. Gov. Jim Hunt has opposed the bill, saying it is too broad. The panel was expected to vote on the chan^ next week.
The original bill would have allowed defendants who were found innocent or against whom the char^ were dismissed to petition the court to erase their arrest record immediately if they were younger than 18 years old or three years later if they were older than age 18.
TTie court would have had to find that the arrest involved a case of mistaken identity or mistaken finding of probable cause for arrest before the record could be erased.
The bill was amended to remove the distinction between defendants older and younger than age 18. It was amended on the Senate floor about a week ago to exclude a finding of not guilty by reason of insanity.
The committee approved and sent to the full Senate a bill that would prohibit hi^-rise construction on mountain ridges after considering it for the third time.
The panel amended the measure, introduced by Sen. R.P. Bo Thomas, D-Henderson, to give counties and municipalities 120 days to exempt themselves from the proposed law. Other changes adopted expand the bill to cover towns and villages as well as cities and explain terms used in thebUl.
The bill would prohibit construction of buildings higher than three stories or 35 feet high on mountain ridges at an altitude of more than 2,950 feet above sea level.
Those injured by a violation of the proposed law could seek injunctive relief, enforcement of the measure, damags or a combination of the three.
The rules would not apply to government buildings or water, radio, telephone or television towers.
The committee also approved and sent to the Senate a bill that would exempt church-operated day-care facilities state licensing requirements as long as they comply with the same standards as private day-care centers.
If the facilities did not meet standards set in the bill, the state could order them to close or seek an injunction.
Tom Strickland, lobbyist for the North Carolina Association of Christian Schools, said the churches operating day-care centers believe the license is a form of prior restraint on a religious mlnisti^.
John Lail, director of the Office of Child Day Care Licensing, said the bill was the best compromise we can get that does not compromise the states interest in protecting
children while satisfying the iidarests of the churches.
In other tegUative actioo:
Lethal Injections
Action was postponed on a bill to change North Carolinas mode of executing death-row inmates from the gas chamber to lethal ifljections while Senate committee memibers awaited a second fiscal note.
Sen. Ken Royall, D-Durham, said a note saying lethal injections were cheaper than the gas chamber was incomplete because inexperienced researchers compUed
Hie note indicated death by gas chamber cost the state $104.04, while death by lethal injection would cost $30.12. Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne, chainnan of the Soiate Judiciary III Committee, said information was needed on start-up costs for switching procedures.
Supporters of the chan^ say lethal injections are more humane, wdiile exponents say reducing the brutality of executions will niake juries more likely to apply capital punishment.
Equitable Distribution
House Finance Committee chairman Rep. Dwight Quinn, I>Cabam]S, broke a 20-20 tie by voting to send to subcommittee a bill that would clarify a 1981 law giving husband and wife equal rights to income from jointly owned property.
Rep. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, said the bill sh(Mild be sent to the subcommittee he chairs because fiscal analysts have estimated that it would cost the state between $750,000 and $900,000 per year.
Mavretics panel is examining about a dozen bills expected to reduce state revenues.
What we have to do is study these bills and decide on some priorities, said Mavretic. Its difficult to decide how much money you can give up when the revenue picture is so unclear.
But Rq>. Bertha Holt, D-Alamance, said the bill cleared iq)
a legal isie that needed clarification regardless of bow much it cost.
Social Workers
A bill to require certification of social workers, which has cleared the Senate and the House State Government Committee, encountered at least a temporary setback whm the House Finance Committee voted 14-18 not to ^ve the bill a favorable report.
Rep. Martin Lancaster, D-Wayne, quickly moved that the bill be debated later, forestalling effort to kill the legislation outright.
The bill would establish qualifications for certified social workers and prohibit anyone not meeting them from representing himself as a certified social worker. It would not bar uncertified social workers from practicing.
The bill also would create a State Board of Examiners for Social Workers, which would certify applicants, collect fees and establish ethical and disciplinary standards.
Sara Fields, acting president of the N.C. State Assocition of Black Social Workers, said she was elated by the vote.
I didnt expect thhC the bill is so far along, she said.
Ms. Fields said her group opposes the bill because it would place too much emphasis culturally biased written tests instead of applicants true abilities. Separation of Powers
The House Judiciary I Committee reconsidered a bill to realign authority between the legislative and executive branches of government, adopted some technical amendments and reapproved the bill.
The amendments made clear that the governor would set the salaries of certain positions in consultation with the Advisory Budget Commission, which the separation of powers bill changes from a policymaking body to an advisory board.
The bill is the result of a state Supreme Court niling that the lines between the legislative and executive branches had become blurred.
Education
The Senate Education Committee approved a bill proposed
Compromise Clears A Hurdle In Workers Compensation Coverage
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C.(AP)-A state House committee has approved a compromise for expanding the number of injuries covered by workers compensation but the bill may go to another committee before it reaches a House vote. '
The House Manufacturing and Labor Committee voted Thursday to approve the biil. Committee chairman Rep. Tom Rabon, D-Brunswick, said he didnt think the bill would have a significant impact on the size of claims paid by the state. But budget leader Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, said it might be
well to refer it to the Appropriations Committee before House members get a chance to vote on it.
The compromise was worked out by Frank Huskins, a former state Supreme Court justice and Industrial Commission member, at the request of industry.
For at least three years, labor representatives have 'tried to expand the existing law as interpreted by the courts. Many industry representatives have resisted any change while others have tried to limit the number of new kinds of injuries included in possible changes to the law.
The courts have ruled that workers may be compensated for injuries sustained when they slipped, tripped or fell at work. They said workers cannot be compensated for injuries sustained during the normal pertormance of their job.
Rep. William Clark, D-Cumberland, introduced the original bill which would have compensated injuries from any job-related accident.
The proposed compromise would allow compensation for back injuries from any job-related accident while limiting compensation for other kinds of injuries to those sustained when the
worker slipped, tripped or fell.
Rep. Marvin Musselwhite, D-Wake, said the compromise would help compensate 95 percent of the workers who have been barred unjustly from compensation under the current law.
The substitute does not solve all the problems or concerns on the employee side of the question nor does it resolve all the concerns of industry, Musselwhite said.
Some of the committee members, including Adams, sought assurances that the Senate would approve of the bill and that industry would support the proposal.
by Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green to create a vocational educatkm program in some sevith- and eighth-grade classrooms.
The cmnmittee ddayed a vote on a bill that would establish a pilot program in which odl^ and public schod teachers would swap places tenqx)rari]y. The House approved the bill ovenriielmii^y.
Rq>. Howard Chapin, D-Beaufort, said his bill would give both college and public school teachers a chance to hone their skills.
The bill is opposed by s(ne education officials, and a vote was pos^xmed to give them an (qtportunity to respond.
On an'unrdated subject, Duke Univer^ty educational psychologist Ellis Page told the committee that teachers should give pidriic schod piqiils m(M homework.
Page said'homework and student ability were the main factors in determining performance and grades.
Lottery
A bill that would estaUish a statewide iottery if voters concur in a referendum, approved eariio* this week by the Senate Rules Committee, was referred to the Smate Judiciary n Committee.
Bill sponsor Sen. Richard Barnes, D-Forsyth, said some technicai amendments needed to be added. He wouldnt say whether be expected more substantive changes.
The bill would set iq> a statewide lottery if voters approve a referendum (m the measure in November 1984.
Smte Action
The state Senate voted unanimously to direct the N.C. Courts Commissi(m to study Siq)erior Court operations and to approve resolutions authorizing ccmtinuation of the Joint Special Committee to Review the Department of Transportation and assuring public ownership of North Carolina forest and park lands.
A bill proposed by Lt. Gov. Jinuny Green to allow children of missing Vietnam War soldiers to attend state universities at in-state tuition rates was returned to committee when Sen. Bili Redman, D-Iredell, pr(q)osed giving spouses the same priviiege.
Chowan Hoiq)ital A bili to allow some hospitals to garnish wages to recover overdue payments was delayed in the House after several members moved to exempt their counties from its impact.
The bill, first intnktuced by Rep. Vernon James, ' D-Pasquotank, to help Chowan Hoiq)itat, was killed in committee after it grew to a statewide bill. It re-emerged Wednesday on the House floor in its original form, but lawmakers rushed to add 14 more hospitals to it.
Under House rules, (mce a public bill is defeated it may not be taken iq) again. A local bill becomes public when it involves 15 or more counties.
After the bill was amended Thursday to include 15 hospitals in less than 15 counties. Rep. Dan Blue, D-Wake, asked to have his countys facility removed. Rep. Martin Nesbitt, D-Buncombe, then objected to the inclusion of a ho^ital in Henderson County, saying it might garnish the wages of his constituents.
Lawmakers with simiiar concerns removed Bladen, Pender, Sampson, Orange, Durham and Chatham counties -from the areas that coiild be subjected to gamistunent. Nesbitt was in the process of removing Buneomte, Transylvania, Haywood, Jackson, Madison, Swain, Alamance, Rockingham, Brunswick and Washington counties when Rep. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, moved to recalendar the bill for Tuesday.
Accident Reports The House approved and sent to the Senate a bUl that raises from $200 to $900 damages due to automobile crashes that must be reported to the state.