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OLIVIER FETEDA host of stars came out last night to fete Sir Laurence Olivier in a three-hour tribute at Lincoln Center. (Page 12)THE LEGISLATUREHouse action to cut legislative sessions by 3 weeks faces possible conflict with a measure being considered in the Senate. (Page 16).
NFL DRAFTThe Baltimore Colts selected Stanford quarterback John Elway as the top NFL draft choice of 1983. Page 9
Weather
Fair tonight, temperatures in low 50s. Mostiy sunny Wednesday with hi^ in the mid-80s.
DAILY REFLECTOR
INSIDE READING
Page 8-Obituaries Page 13-Area items
102NDYEAR NO. 99
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 26, 1983
24 PAGES3 SECTIONS
PRICE 25 CENTS
Commissioners Begin Budget Sessions
Bv STUART SAVAGE *____ * ...
By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer
The Pitt County Board of Commissioners Monday held the first of a series of preiiminary budget workshop sessions as it began preparing a budget for the 1983-1984 fiscal year.
Appearing at the session were representatives of the Pitt-Greenville Arts Council, who asked for $3,500 for the coming fiscal year (the council received $3,000 this year), and Mark Webb, county ranger for the N.C. Forest Service, who asked for $33,937^)r 1983-1984 ( 40 percent of the $84,842 forest fire protection budget and $3,760 more than budgeted this year).
Also appearing were representatives of the Pitt-Greenville
Airport Authority, which asked for $30,000 ($5,000 more than the current level to help fund a total budget of $333,450 for the coming year), and Southern Flue-Cured Tobacco Festival Executive Director Kay Warren, who asked for $5,000 of a proposed $80,000 budget ($3,000 more than the festival received from the 1982-1983 budget)
Others appearing at the budget workshop included: John Roberson, executive director of the Mid-East Commission, who asked for $24,125 as Pitts assessment to help fund the $96,000 local government share of the commissions $221,000 administrative budget for 1983-1984 (the same as the 1982-1983 assessment for the agency which serves five counties in state
The Deck 'Floats'
NO TANKS - Empty gasoline tanks at a West Greenwich (Rhode Isiand) station Monday floated out of the ground, taking the concrete apron along with them. Water from heavy
rains Sunday apparently seeped into the tank hole and floated them out of the ground. (AP Laserphoto)
Lasf-Minute Execution
Appeals Before Court
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court is considering a case that may yield a life-and-death timetable for some 1,200 condemned murderers nationwide.
The justices are expected to use a Texas case argued before them today to decide, by July, how federal appeals courts should handle
emergency appeals from death row.
At issue is what standard those 12 appeals courts should use in deciding whether to postpone the execution of a death row inmate who has filed a new appeal with them.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, based in New Orleans, has adopted a policy
of denying postponement requests unless the death row inmate can show the underlying appeal likely will be successful.
Other appeals courts use a much less demanding standard, granting execution delays if the underlying appeal is not frivolous.
The standard the Supreme Court selects could result in months, even years, of added court proceedings and
execution delays.
Also at issue in the case of Thomas Barefoot, sentenced to die by lethal injection for the 1978 murder of, a Texas police officer, is whether psychiatrists should be allowed to testify about a convicted murderers future dangerousness.
Juries now hear such testimony in choosing between the death penalty or life in prison as an appropriate punishment.
REFLECTOR
hOTLIttf
School Bus And
752-1336
Pickup Collided
Hotline gets things done for you. Cali 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.
FEW MORE SLOTS Friendship Force volunteer Claire Pittman has asked Hotline to appeal for persons interested in being Friendship Force ambassadors to Quebec, Canada, this summer to contact the Friendship Force office.
Ambassadors this year will live for a week with families in the town of Rinouski on the Gaspe Peninsula. They will have the option of traveling in Canada for any length of time they wish. Cost of the exchange Is $428. For further information, call the Friendship Force offlce, 752-1784, or Jess Berman, 756^10.
By TOMMY FORREST Reflector Staff Writer
Five students were injured in the collision this morning of a Pitt County school bus and a pickup truck at an intersection west of Win-tervUle.
According to Trooper Wayne Taylor, the accident occurred at the intersection of rural paved roads 1726 and 1727. Taylor said the bus was headed east on 1726 and approaching the intersection when it and a truck that was headed south on 1727 collided.
Taylor Identified the driver of the school bus as James Robert Carmon of Route 1, WintervUle, and the driver of the truck was listed as William Deaver Dunn of Quail Hollow Trailer Park, Greenville. The trooper said the bus skidded about 25 feet
trying to stop prior to the collision.
Taylor said 18 students were aboard the bus. He identified the five that were injured as Darlene Harris, 17; Bobby Harrison, 16; Shirley Harper, 16; Edna Harper, 14, and Jackie Blalock, 15. Taylor said Harrison and Edna Harper received a shoulder injury. The others received only minor bumps.
The students were bound for D. H. Conley High School.
Damage was placed at $800 to the bus and approximately $700 to the truck.
Taylor said Dunn was charged with failure to yield the ri^t of way at a stop sign.
The accident occurred about 8 a.m. Units from the Wintervile Fire-Rescue Squad responded to the call.
planning region Q); representatives of the Council on Aging, who asked for $17,596 as compared with the present appropriation of $18,550; Arthur Wright, chairman of the Pitt County Committee for Employment of the Handicapped who asked for $750 for the coming fiscal year (compared to $300 appropriated this year); and Leroy James, chairman of the Agricultural Extension Service in the county, who requested $103,890 for the new year. (The proposed increase over the current $20,972 appropriated this year would go for the purchase of a copy machine and a file cabinet.)
At the begining of the meeting, board chairman Charles Gaskins said commissioners are striving to keep the tax rate where it is (54 cents per $100 valuation) for the coming
fiscal year. Thats what you want to keep in mind, he told fellow board members and other county officials at the workshop.
County Finance Officer Margaret Roberts told board members that for the most part, budget requests from most county departments and agencies for 1983-1984 are "at the same level or under the appropriations approved for 1982-1982.
Other preliminary budget workshop sessions.have been scheduled for 10 a.m. Wednesday and again Monday afternoon following the commissioners regular first Monday meeting.
Reagan To Name A Special
Central America Envoy
WASHINGTON (AP) -President JReagan, preparing
a major addre^ to Congress on his Central American policy, has decided to name a special envoy to the region, administration sources say.
The appointment had been sought by critics of his efforts to increase aid to the war-torn area and was revealed Monday as several congressmen were returning from inspections of El Salvador and Nicaragua.
One official, who asked that he not be identified by name, said Reagans decision would be conveyed in a letter drafted at the State
stressing the word formally.
He said the administration was continuing to consult with members of Congress and that the letter to Long
had not been sent. Reagan planned to meet in the afternoon with several members of the House Intelligence Committee.
'One administration of
ficial, asked about the report that Stone, who has represented Reagan in Central America, might be named to the post, said its certainly possible.
Sweden Charges Soviet
Submarines Intruded; Ambassador Is Recalled
Department and addressed to Rep. Clarence Long, D-Md., chairman of a House Appropriations subcommittee handling Reagans request for $60 million in emergency military aid for El Salvador.
The administration source said the letter would probably be sent after the subcommittee votes today.
The NBC-TV Today show said today that former Sen. Richard Stone, D-Fla., was in line for the appointment, but deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said Reagan had not formally decided who would be named.
Those decisions have not been formally made by the president, Speakes said.
ByROLFSODERLIND Associated Press Writer STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Sweden recalled its ambassador from Moscow today and charged that six Soviet submarines operated near this neutral Scandinavian nations top secret naval base last October.
Six foreign submarines, three of which were midget submarines of a hitherto unknown character, may have operated in the Stockholm archipelago during October 1982, said a government report released today.
The 90-page report said the two weeks of hide-and-seek with the Swedish navy occurred near the secret naval base on Musko Island, 19 miles south of Stockholm.
One of the mini-submarines, apparently crawling on the seafloor using treads, went as far as Stockholms harbor, it said.
The Foreign Ministry said Ambassador to Moscow Carl de Geer has been recalled to be informed about the findings of the submarine commission. It indicated that the Soviet
Ambassador to Sweden, Boris Pankin would be summoned later to receive a formal diplomatic protest.
The report, requested by Parliament, is the product of a six-month investigation by a special commission appointed by Prime Minister Olof Palme.
Using circumstantial evidence such as sonar contacts and imprints on the seabed, it ruled out the possibility that any North Atlantic Treaty Organization vessels were involved in the Hors Bay incident.
That left the Soviet Union, with an estimated 45 submarines operating in the Baltic Sea, as the only plausible foreign power behind the violations, the submarine commission said.
A submarine does not have to be grounded for us to know where it belongs, said Sven Andersson, a former foreign and defense minister who headed the investigation.
We conclude that there were submarines in Hors Bay and that the intrusion presumably was part of a coordinated submarine operation in a relatively large area.
TOUCK AND SCHOOL BUS COLLIDE ... Trooper bus Jthis morning. Five students were injured.
Wa^ Taylor, left, marks off the distance after a (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)
collision between a truck and a Pitt County school
Intergeneration Program Helps Both Teenagers And Oldsters
By RUTH YOUNGBLOOD
LEXINGTON, Mass. (UPI) - A busy high school senior spends her scant free time with an 81-year-old woman who eases the youngsters fear of aging.
Although Evalina Cole is recovering from a stroke, her zest for life and delight in her own experiences never stop amazing 17-year-old Susan Singley.
i only hope I can be like her, Miss Singley says, "and look back with no regrets.
The teenager's ambition is shared by a special class of her peers, all finding their fears of aging dissipating as they become friends with mentally active senior citizens.
The inter-generation course, aimed at dispelling myths of growing old. is a realistic response to the increasing proportion of elderly in society and the necessity for more sensitivity to their needs, said teacher Evelyn Saulich.
The pioneer program at Lexington High School is not only bridging generations but is shattering the misconception that teenagers cannot relate closely to individuals older than themselves.
"1 never realized how many interests we could share. Miss Singley said. "Before meeting Evalina I tended to think of the elderly as reserved and quiet, having little in common with vouth.
But they discuss everything from Miss Singleys concern about her college applications and her part-time job to their mutual love of music and Mrs. Coles philosophy of life.
She is so thankful for all the experiences she has had, Miss Singley said, and tells me she has no fear of death.
Visiting Evalina twice a week at her apartment isnt like a school assignment. Shes a good friend, and I intend to write to her from college and visit on vacations.
For Mrs. Cole, the enthusiastic visitor has become a daughter.
Its no accident that they hit it off so well.
They were not only matched according to interests but Miss Singley spent Vk hours each week learning of the physical and social aspects of aging. The course covers biological changes," life support systems, elderly abuse, home and nursing care, loneliness and how the aged are treated in America compared to other societies.
We live in osvery age segregated society, Mrs. Saulich said. I let the students reach their own opinions about how good or bad this is after theyve been exposed to an elderly friend for a while.
Mrs. Saulich said a session of simulating physical handicaps helps the students understand how difficult the
simplest tasks can be.
With blindfolds over their eyes, cotton stuffed in the ears, and fingers bandaged togpther, the youngsters get a sample of what many of our elderly have to contend with.
Finding a number in a telephone book becomes very difficult when hands are crippled by arthritis, Mrs. Saulich noted.
With the breakup of extended families, Mrs. Saulich finds most youngsters have very little experience in dealing with the elderly. As a result, many are apprehensive about aging.
They are all surprised at the wealth of knowledge older citizens possess, Mrs. Saulich said, and this eases their fears of growing old.
Jason Robars: Living Quietly
ByJAYSHARBUTT AP Drama Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - At one point in the hit revival of "You Cant Take It With You, Jason Robards points out that "the worlds not so crazy ... just the people in it. Lifes pretty simple if vou just relax.
A fine philosophy. He expresses it as Grandpa Vanderhof, the happy-go-lucky patriarch of a familv of blithe spirits now gathered on Broadway in the reprise of the Hart-Kauffman com-edv that won a Pulitzer Prize in 1936.
At 60. Robards seems to have gotten the hang of relaxing. Once a- roisterer filled with one part whoopee and two parts misery, he now lives quietly with his fourth wife, Lois, and their two kids.
His idea of wild is to read and putter about at home in Connecticut. He quit partaking of what Brendan Behan called the gargle years ago. He avoids the Hollywood ramble. He generally resembles a happy man at peace with himself.
Robards has made a Disney film, "Something Wicked This Way Comes, which isnt out yet, and a new Neil Simon film comedy, which is. And then he signed on for "You Cant Take It With You.
The Simon piece is Max Dugan Returns. In it, he also plays a happy-go-lucky grandfather, but one who suddenly turns on the doorstep of the daughter he deserted ,30 years earlier.
Making the film, he says, was fun. "But it was a tough thing to do, because youre dealing with desertion, death. And the. question is, how as an actor do you play if?
The tall, lean-jawed actor with the dark, brooding eyes has pondered that question as a stage, film, radio and TV actor for 37 years. He has a Tony award for The Disenchanted in 1958 and he won back-to-back Oscars in 1976 and 1977 for his work in "All the Presidents Men and Julia.
Considered one of the foremost interpreters of Eugene O'Neills plays, he became an ovemi^it star -after 10 years of overnight obscurity - in 1956 in a memorable performance as Hickey in an acclaimed of-f-Broadway revival of ONeills The Iceman Cometh, directed by Jose Quintero.
It led both to both Broadway and a raft of films, among the latter the rollicking A Thousand Clowns" (which he first did on Broadway) and his favorite movie, The Ballad of Cable Hogue, a romantic old Western
He expected to be a career Navy man, but decided to give acting a try after reading a copy of ONeills Strange Interlude.
Before the students meet the person they will visit each week for the school year, Mrs. Saulich emphasizes they must not make promises they cannot keep.
Telling an elderly person he can count on visits forever or that all errands will- be taken care of whenever he wants isnt realistic and only sets him up for disappointment.
She also advises the youngsters not to be condescending or patronizing -or discouraged too soon.
The students have the privilege of sharing in an older persons life and home, Mrs. Saulich said, stressing that what is discussed is confidential and should not become a source of gossip.
Miss Singley has given Mrs. Cole every reason to maintain her great faith in people,
I expect the best of everyone, and Susan has met my expectations in 1,000 different ways, Mrs. Cole said. She has a tremendous amount of feeling for others.
We want the students to have a positive experience, Mrs. Saulich said, explaining the towns Council on Aging helps coordinate the project by picking senior citizens who are articulate and want more social contact.
At 93, Sigrid Olson said, she asked herself, At my age, what can I do for a young girl? I decided to let her come and wed see. Now were quite chummy, and I have a lovely little friend.
Mrs. Olson is determined to teach Pamela Nieterman, 16, how to play pinochle, a truly international game, and enjoys learning about the sophomores activities compared to her own in Sweden as a youth.
Miss Nieterman said being with Mrs. Olson makes her feel better about growing old.
Curiosity about old age is the most frequent reason students cite for taking the accredited course given after school ends at 2:30 p.m.
I was wondering how one spends his life after so many years, said David Lukas, 17.
Although Lukas elderly friend has trouble with English after living most of his life in Lebanon, the youngster is learning more about the Middle East than he ever expected.
The benefits of this program go two ways, Mrs. Saulich said. The youngsters have a valuable experience and opportunity to understand another generation. Hopefully they will grow from the relationship.
The elderly also find they have a lot more to share with todays youth than they imagined, she said, and they know someone cares. That makes all the difference in the life of a person whose family and friends are geographically distant, emotionally uninvolved, or have died.
Fall Boldness
ANNE KLEINS FASHIONS FOR FALL AND WINTER Models show a bold oversized plaid wool coat during a fashion show in New
York. The Klein line was designed by Donna Karan and Louis Dell01io.( AP Laserphoto)
If you put off writing letters because you don't know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038. -
Plastic Surgeon Writes To Abby
Personal
Mrs. Michael Eugene Parker and son, Kevin, and Mrs. Willard Parker of Norfolk, Va., have returned home after visiting their family during the weekend.
CAKES FOR MOTHERS DAY
DIENERS BiUIElY
MSDIeUnaonAw.
By Abigail Van Buren
1983 by UnivtrMi Prm SyndictM
DEAR ABBY: I applaud your statement, No one should be asked to submit to cosmetic surgery to please another. This may seem rather odd coming from one who has been a successful plastic surgeon for nearly 30 years, but I am in complete agreement with you. When someone comes to me for cosmetic surgery, in the initial interview I ask, Why do you want cosmetic surgery? What do you expect it to do for you?
If the response is, To please my boyfriend, or my husband, or my mother or myfriends, I say, Sorry, thats not a good enough reason.
Only when the person wants the surgery to please herself (or himself) would I consider performing the operation.
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DEAR ABBY: I usually agree with you, but you disappointed me when you told Not Content in California to seek therapy to find out why he found his mate of over 40 years physically repugnant because of her protruding tummy and lovely time-etched face. (She was 60 and he was 69.)
Abby, with young, beautiful women so available these days, most men wouldnt even bother with new trim on an old model. 'This man gave his wife fair warning that > hed be happier if shed have cosmetic surgery, but she insisted she wanted no part of such an operation.
Instead of siding with the wife, you should have said, Honey, make yourself as attractive as possible for your man. 'There are plenty of available women out there just waiting to grab him!
Utis is not a put-down of women, Abby. Most women will do everything possible to look better for themselves. And if thats not enough motivation for cosmetic surgery, holding a husband should be.
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DEAR REMODELED: Read on for an opposing view:
DEAR ABBY: The letter from the husband who asked you to persuade his wife to undergo cosmetic surgery really fired my ire!
Its incredible that this man has lived 69 years but has not yet reached maturity! Obviously he has so little selfesteem that he must catch some reflected glory from his wifes beauty. Consequently when her looks started to go, it was no small matter to him since his very image in the eyes of society was threatened.
Of course he will say he was thinking only of his wife. I say, Baloney!
When people stake their happiness on something as transient as good looks, they are doomed to inevitable disappointment. Is there any wonder there are so many empty marriages?
ON YOUR SIDE
DEAR ON: Heres another one for my side:
DEAR ABBY: Please tell Not Content in California that he has made me appreciate my husband even more.
Weve ^n married for 46 years, and I, too, have a lovely, time-etched face (wrinkles), and a bulge below the waistline that doesnt respond to diet or exercise, but I have never heard a word of complaint from my husband.
Im nearly 70, and hes two years younger. For years Ive suggested cosmetic surgery for myself, but he has resisted the idea out of concern for my welfare because he fears I might come out looking like somebody else.
In short, he loves the real me, and he lets me be. And I return the compliment. Hes not as slim and youthful looking as he used to be either, but if we cant relax and enjoy just being alive in these advanced years, when will we ever?
Tell Not Content to thank God he still has the same faithful wife after 40 years. Not many can say that, and the familiar is so comfortable!
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Pressure On To Suppress Individuality
By JOHN NEEDHAM TOKYO (UPI) - Last April, 15-year-old Rei Iwasaki stopped her piano and flute lessons and started going to a cram school on Sundays, stretching her school week to seven days.
It paid off on Feb. 14. She passed an all-day, five-subject examination and got into the senior high school at the top of her wish-iist, one of four to which she had applied.
She was one of the lucky ones.
Thirteen-year-old Akio Yoshiwara wasnt facing an exam for a new school, just one marking the end of the school term. But combined with the death last year of his grandfather, it proved to be too much.
i did my best in this dear life, but its no good, read the suicide note on the desk of his house in Imaichi, 100 miles north of Tokyo, where Akio hanged himself Feb. 22.
The suicides each year are an accepted part of the student scene in Japan.
More troubling this year has been a spate of violent incidents including attacks on teachers that have drawn the attention of everyone up to and including the prime minister and a welter of newspaper and television specials.
The boys and girls of Japan, garbed in blue uniforms and carrying schoolbags, set off six days a week to have words, figures and facts stuffed into their heads in perhaps the most regimented school system in any of the industrialized nations.
Japanese students attend school 240 days a year, compared to 180 in the United States. Ninety-five percent graduate from hi^ school, compared to about 75 percent in the United States.
With mops, brooms and cleaning rags, Japanese school children join teachers in helping clean the classroom. Educators say the purpose is to instill respect for manual labor. V
The students listen to what the teach^ says. They dont ask questions unless ordered to do so. TheyOww respectfully at the start and end of class. \
{And every few years they are tested tot see which school they will enter, for junior high school, hi* school, college. Even for kindergarten.
The ideal result is a well-informed, disciplined student, memorizer of a legion of facts, spurner of creativity or innovation in a homogeneous society in which the nail that * stands out gets hammered down.
The good students are also fodder for the factories of Japan, cogs in the wheels that propel Japan, Inc.
The uniformly high quality of training provides Japan with an unexcelled supply of generally competent labor power prepared for company life and receptive to learning more specialized skills at the workplace, Japan-watcher Ezra F. Vogel wrote in his book, Japan as No. 1.
But Vogel and others also have noted the absence of fun, the disregard of student creativity and the incredible pressure of the examination hell that causes student suicides every year.
The system takes its toll of the teachers, too. Thenumber of educators committing suicide each year is increasing.
Last year the principal of a school in Chiba prefecture, near Tokyo, committed suicide after leaving a note taking the blame for students who broke school windows and set a fire in a school toilet.
The series of incidents was due to the lack of appropriate measures by the principal and 1 apologize, he wrote. I am very tired.
But it is on the students that the most pressure falls.
Rei Iwasakis mother, gatoko, recalled that after her daughter passed the examination to get into her first-rate junior high school in 1980, she was tired for the next two years.
So we said to her. Please relax. She went to piano school, flute school, belonged to the brass band club at the school. She was very active in the things she liked.
But at the start of the final year of junior high, Rei took a practice senior high school admission test and didnt do well.
So we said, now its time she went to a cram school, and we sent her.
Nearly all the 40 students in Reis class went to a cram school. Some only went on Sundays, leaving home at 8:30 a.m. and coming home at 4 p.m. or later. Some went Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays after school.
A1981 survey by the Tokyo metropolitan government found that more than 70 percent of junior high school pupils were going to cram schools, paying an average of $62 per month.
The involvement of the entire family, especially the mother, is a feature of education in Japan.
The mother meets the teachers and supervises at-home studies.
Newspapers and magazines give tips on preparing the child for exams, such as serving high-protein meals so the student remains alert while studying.
Brothers or sisters often pick up the examinees household chores so there is no interference with studies.
Father picks up the bills, as well as offering encouragement. A January survey by a Japanese bank put the cost of ending a child through school from kindergarten through high school at $30,000. Public school costs came to $6,086.
Japanese students do get a break in that generally once they get into a school, they graduate. Though they may not pass the exam to continue on to college, they wont fail out of high school or get left back.
And college itself is considered a four-year vacation for all but the most serious students.
Japanese companies look at the students alma mater, not how well he or she did there. The firms run their own training programs, some of them lasting two years. It is difficult for us (Japanese) to enter a university, but its easy to graduate, Mrs. Iwasaki said.
William III and Mary were proclaimed joint monarchs of the United Kingdom in 1689.
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Designers Show Elegant Casuals, Evening Wear
By JUDIE GLAVE Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP)-Ralph Laurens fall collection is like a good chefs salad. Both have plenty of color and taste and leave you feeling satisfied but not stuffed.
His designs are bright and brash, tastefully tailored, and playfully pretty all at once. From his oversized knit, embrodiered sweaters to classicaliy tailored gray pinstripe pantsuits, Lauren shines as a master of elegant casual wear.
The sweater-look was a major part of the Lauren collection from buiky, ski ' sweaters and sleek sweater dresses to hooded, tunic tops and flashy metallic-beaded sweaters for nighttime.
Especially pretty were the diamond-patterned beaded sweaters that mixed red and gold, silver, and multi-colors on a basic black sweater and black cuffed pants. The combination is perfect for either an intimate dinner or stepping out on the town.
Lauren fans can also light up the town when stepping out in some of the sizzling colors seen in this years collection like deep violet, eggplant, fuchsia, Kelly green, lemon yellow and fire-engine red. The brighter the better seems to be the designers statement for the fall.
The colors work best in Laurens set of suede-cloth cape tops worn over hooded tunics and skin-tight ski pants - straight from the 60s, complet , with the stretchy foot strap and all.
But the classic Lauren styles of three-piece suits and double-breasted pantsuits stole the show.
Gray striped trousers matched with a form-fitting navy vest, white bow-blouse and a loose jacket was just one of the winning combinations. Another was a large-check, navy pantsuit with matching fitted jacket.
His casual style, however, does not work when applied to formal wear. ,
Black tuxedo pants, white tailored shirt and a ruby-red smoking jacket with lapels and cuffs trimmed in black satin may look elegant on a top model but on most women it would look like they were wearing rich Uncle Claudes clothes.
Lauren also offered a gray, strapless cashmere gown, knotted at the bust (this piece looked more like a giant bath towel than an evening gown) and a slinky black, silk shift with skinny, rhinestone straps that outlined every nook and cranny of the body.
For true glitz and glamour in evening designs, Bill Blass is the man.
Chiffon, brocades and moire taffeta were some of the lush fabrics Blass chose for evening.
Black combined with metallic gold in a long halter dress with back full-length bias flounce and a one-shoulder gold and silver brocade with an illusion
wrap belt low at the hips were two favorites.
And althou^ black seems to be the main color, there was also a splash of fuchsia, violet and turquoise stripes in several taffeta and organza gowns with jaunty bows at the hips, waist and neckline.
Giorgio Sant Angelos collection was just the posite of Laurens.
His daytime sweater outfits in dull gray and camel checked over gray flannel trousers were boring but hte evening wear was a glistening collection in festive holiday colors of emerald green, ruby red, deep plum and basic black.
A pair of emerald green, front-pleated trousers with a matching angora ribbed sweater is elegant as is a mauve silk pajama outfit with silver front-scoop, halter top.
Sant Angelos style of body conscious dressing was evident in a plum, piickered-faille, evening dress with a teardrop back, a large draped back-bow and matching plum piping along the sleeves and collar.
The Carolina Herrera collection for fall allows women to swing easily from a daytime luncheon to a nighttime dinner with softly tailored suits that double as sophisticated evening wear once ordinary jackets are removed.
A black wool crepe suit, trimmed in lemon yellow at the collar and hem is crisp and smart looking for day. Take away the jacket and youve got a two-piece outfit featuring a black velvet halter top.
Velvet is big in the Herrera collection, used in waist wraps, flounces and blouse insets. This is a device that sometimes works and sometimes doesnt.
A royal blue wool suit with a matching velvet waist flounce is pretty but a red wool dress with a starburst drape collar and red velvet * inset is too much.
For evening there is a lot of black and white silk, satin and taffeta designs.
One deviation, however, was a sassy, marigold jacquard gown with a ruffled capelet and hem, guaranteed to make the wearer break into a spontaneous Mexican hat dance.
ENERGY WASTERS
WASHINGTON (AP) -Automatic controls for central heating, ventilating and air-conditioning equipment could actually increase energy consumption, if they dont operate properly, according to a study by the U.S. National Bureau of Standards.
The computer simulation study concluded faulty controls could increase energy consumption by as much as 30to50^rcent.
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At Wits / End
By Erma Bombe^^
The OaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Tuesday, April 26,19633 vision when I look into it. If il it stUl fits snug, I dont
for any reason the dress seems tight, I puli out my scale. By propping it up against the toilet bowl brush holder, it will register three pounds less. If I need more reassurance, I put it on the caipet in front of the lavatory which subtracts another five pounds.
like the color. Its that simple.
Eastern
Electrolysis
1J3OAKMOT0fllVE,SUITE6 PHONE 7564031. GREENVILli.N.C. PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLQGIST
The quality of my life has improved enormoii^y since Ive been shopping for clothes by mail.
Its hard to believe that just a little thing like eliminating fitting-room mirrors can make you a different person. You show me a woman who tries on a bathing suit wearing nylons up to her knees, and Ill show you a woman who will never be the same again.
Ive never been good at imagining what a dress on the hanger wUl look like wrapped around my body. This way, all I have to do is to thumb through mountains of catalogues and live out my fantasies.
I can be the nymph on page 73 who is wearing a dress with a drop-waist of bold black polka dots with a seven-foot lemon yellow sash wound around her hips.
Or the dramatic little beauty on the cover with the pouty lips who has layered a blouse and sweater and can still get her arms through the jacket.
Or the sultry blonde wearing a satin teddy body suit that if I ever got into would have to be removed... surgically.
I buy anything this one catalogue model wears. The moment I looked at her, I realized how much alike we were. We have the same dramatic flair, the same adventurous style, the same good taste.
Births
Oh, there are little differences. She is 6-2, has hair down to her waist that she draws back from her face into a bun, weighs 97 pounds, is black and was six months old the year I started on estrogen, but we can wear the same clothes.
Last month, she modeled a clinging silk dress of blues and greens that exposed her knee to the hip and a beach hat with a three-foot brim. (My nearest beach is an hour and a half-by jet).
I had to return the outfit. The color was wrong for me.
The problem with public fitting rooms is that the tryonee has no control over them. At home, its the best of all worlds. The mirror is attached to my bathroom door. There are 14 inches to stand between the mirror and the toilet bowl. I am farsighted, giving me blurred
CORRECTION
In Our Founder's Days Sale Circular in today's newspaper, on page 4 there was an error on the Blooming Plants. The copy should have read as follows:
Fantastic Savings on Healthy and Colorful Blooming Plants
3"Geranium/Begonia, Reg. 99c.. 75^
We regret the error and hope this has not been an inconvenience to any of our customers.
wt ^ CQwero
rram(^ Shop
8i fellizru^
Mothers Day Special
Mills
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Lynn Mills, Washington, a daughter, Angela Danielle, on April 20, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Woolard Bora to Mr. and Mrs. David Homer Woolard Jr., Washington, a son, David Austin, on April 20, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Noel
Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Martin Alien Noel, Havelock, a daughter, Lisa Marie, on April 20,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Hudson Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lewis Hudson, Farmville, a daughter, Marcia Lynn, on April 20, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
10%o
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20% o.
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Void May?
526 Cotanche St., Greenville
752-4620
Carolina east mall ^^grenvilk
Editorials
Jomes Kilpatrick^
Hollings And The Race
And Then There's Glenn
In his hometown of New Concord, Ohio, last week. Sen. John H. Glenn announced his candidacy for president.
The senator, who is well known as a former astronaut, called for a return to the simple values we learned in this small town.
He cited the values of excellence, honesty, fairness, compassion for those who have less and confidence in facing the future as the values all Americans share.
Glenn told the audience that the issue is leadership. He said he would stand up for the military but also he would stand up to the military. The senator is an opponent of the MX missile and recently has begun supporting the SALT II treaty.
In what has become a crowded field of candidates for the Democratic nomination Sen. Glenn has to be considered one of the frontrunners. He and former Vice President Walter, Mndale have the name recognition and the public confidence at this point to be considered the most likely Democratic convention choice possibilities.
... But the campaigning has only begun.
Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer
Arms Go Abroad
WASHINGTON - Sen. Robert C. Byrd thinks theres one military issue that hasnt received enough attention: the sale of conventional arms abroad.
The West Virginia Democrat, traditionally no dove on national security matters, worries that the Reagan administrations aggressive arms-vending to developing nations will only bring Uncle Sam trouble. It seems time for someone to call on this administration for a policy of selectivity and restraint in arms sales, Byrd told his colleagues recently. They do not recognize the risks which accompany some of these sales.
In fiscal 1982, sales of American-made weaponry to developing countries totaled $15.2 billion, up 300 percent over 1981 and at least 50 percent more than the estimated value of Moscows Third World shipments in 1982. The administration Is reluctant to project the dollar volume of non-NATO sales in 1983, yet its budget calls for a 22 percent increase in the military sales loan guarantee program.
Moral questions, prompted by the size and frequency of U.S. arms sales, arent all that trouble Byrd. The advanced nature of the arms involved, he says, makes them a potential threat to U.S. and allied security should they fall into the wrong hands. One case in point is the loss of F-14 fighters and Phoenix missiles to Soviet intelligence following the demise of the shah of Iran. Have more recent plans to sell F16s to Pakistan and M-1 tanks to Saudi Arabia taken the political fragility of those countries into account?
The risk is compounded, Byrd adds, by the dispatching abroad of highly-trained U.S. technical specialists to service American-made weaponry. In the event of an international crisis, maintenance agreements could leave the U.S. shorthanded, even if temporarily.
These concerns have prompted Byrd to introduce the National Security and Arms Export Review Act of 1983. His legislation would require House and Senate approval for individual sales in excess of $200 million (last year, there were 21 in this range) and call for NATO negotiations on limiting the sophistication of arms sold.
For many years, the U.S. has armed its friends in the name of peace. The Byrd bill, may be a first step to a more constructive foreign policy.
El Savadors anti-government alliance, the FDR-FMLN, is planning to step up its public relations efforts in the United States. A full-fledged Washington office and weekly briefings on military developments are under consideration, according to one American who is familiar with the scheme. While the Salvadoran guerrilla groups have been represented in Washington for some time, they apparently want a more professional presence should Central America become a major campaip issue in 1984.
The Daily Reflector
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John B. Anderson can breathe more easily with the Supreme Courts ruling, issued April 18, that states may not impose unfairly burdensome requirements on independent political candidates. The former Illinois congressman, who has been considering another independent presidential bid in 19M, will at least be free from the early filing deadlines that almost kept him off the 1980 ballot in many states. In effect, the courts ruling could give him more time to raise money and a better chance to capitalize on late-season voter dissatisfaction with major-party candidates.Years Later, Each Case Is New
South Carolinas Ernest Hollings has entered the bidding for the Democratic nomination for president as a centrist someone whos not a big spender and whos not insensitive. Websters doesnt really agree with that definition, declaring a centrist to be one who takes the middle course.
Hollings can do that, and do it well. One of his few stands away from the center ground was on his opposition to the MX missile.
But now, as an aspirant to the White House, its money that has Hollings attention. He says the Democrats lost the 1980 elections because every time a problem arose, we (the Democratic Party) offered a single solution send more money.
Hollings as a politician is really known only in South Carolina and even there he has been overshadowed for years by fellow Sen. Strom Thurmond.
He says federal spending should be frozen across the board to overcome that problem of sending more money by the party in 1980 and to help defray the federal deficit.
While we and many others believe that sending more money as a cure-all has been overdone, its difficult to give Hollings even a fighting chance at winning the nomination.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) needs at least 1,000 more employees in Its regional offices to enforce the nations environmental laws, according to a recent study by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.). The faUure to adequately staff the regional offices is critical, because it is in the regions that environmental law enforcement fails or succeeds, Leahy said.
BATON ROUGE, La. - Almost 29 years have passed since the Supreme Court handed down its landmark decision in the school segregation cases. It seems incredible that federal judges still should be formulating detailed decrees, school by school and child by child, in a futile effort to fix ideal levels of racial integration, but they are.
Consider, if you please, the melancholy case of Rapides Parish, La. At the time of the Supreme Courts 1954 decision in the Brown case, the parish was operating a dual system of public schools. Such was the law of that day. In 1965, the parents of several black children brought suit to hasten the process of desegregation. The original plaintiffs long ago grew up and left the system, but the suit goes on. On March 30 of this year, for the sixth time, the 5th U.S. Court of Appeals tackled the problem anew.
This was the particular difficulty that engaged the power, might and majesty of our judicial system: The Cheneyville area is too black; the Forest Hills area is too
white. Earlier efforts to tinker with high school enrollment had resulted in an exodus of affected whites, but the high school stuctents were not at issue in the case at bar. This time the court was concerned with children from kindergarten through the ei^th grade.
How was the constitutional imperative of desegregation to be achieved? The draconian remedy, fashioned by the trial court, was (I) to close the predominantly black K-8 school in Cheneyville, (2) to close the predominantly white K-8 school in Forest Hills, and (3) to bus the uprpoted children to two other schools in the town of Lecompte. The 5th Circuit, with evident weariness, affirmed the trial courts decision.
It was too much for Chief Judge Charles Clark. The two communities, he noted in dissent, now stand to lose their only schools. The greatest costs, he said, are to the families that include school-age children, but repercussions extend throughout the area.
Parents in both communities asked
the court to leave their schools open, at least for their youngest children. Their petitions were ignored. These children, ranging in age from kindergarten through early elementary grades, must rise early, board buses, drive past their community school houses and go into a distant town and then reverse the journey in the evenings ... Their family situations are not detailed. Their needs, their hopes, their rights are dashed without discussion. If a 5-year-old gets sick or forgets her coat or her lunch and wants to contact her parents, she must make a long-distance call to reach her home ... Much more remarkable, I think, is the fact that the children, parents and communities who are so damaged did not cause or contribute in any way to the conceived constitutional wrong the court sought to remedy...
For 18 years this school district has been under the injunctive edicts of federal courts. It has not violated one. The fault for any perceived shortcomings in the district lies at the doorstep of the federal
courts, not the school district, its staff or patrons. Moreover, courts delude no one but themselves when in the name of justice they make wholesale adjustments to the intimate, individual and differing rights of hundreds of citizens...
In 13 years on this court I have participate in the affirmance of a number of public school desegregation plans. Most have been, as most are, successful in theory only. I nevertheless remain readily obedient to follow precedent. But that does not keep me from knowing what* everyone knows; Zones, pairs, clusters and busing are workable remedies only in extreme cass. When the problem is reduced to dealing with people of good will who have done no wrong, maximum use of the neighborhood school is the key to assuring equal educational opportunity. That equality of opportunity is the constitutional lodestar.
Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate
Lost in Space: Former U.S. senator Harrison "Jack Schmitt of New Mexico has told a Stanford University audience that its only a matter of time before the moon becomes home to permanent settlements. According to Schmitt, a former astronaut, moon settlements will help to insure the preservation of the species and serve as a pit stop on regular travel to Mars.
Copyright 1983Fleld Enterprises, Inc.
Public Forum
To the editor:
I have a complaint concerning WNCT-'TV. Why does this station con-
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
tinually omit coverage of the D.H. Conley High School Marching Band? For every parade we win, WCTI-TV (Channel 12) almost always has coverage of the Marching Vikings. It seems rather absurd that a station in New Bern offers more coverage of a band in Greenville than the Greenville station does.
During the Grifton Shad Festival, WCTI-TV had a brief segment showing the Conley Band, WNCT-TV - the Washington Pam Pack Band. Another instance the Vikings went to New Orleans (Mardi Gras) in February of 1982, Channel 12 had coverage before we left and when we returned. Channel 9 had nothing except a few brief moments on the Carolina Today Show.
I feel that we, the flag squad, majorettes and band members have been neglected by our local broadcasting station.
Lisa Ivey
Co-cq>tain
D.H. Conley Flag Squad
Shultz Sees A Defeat
WASHINGTON - All but lost in the debris of Ronald Reagans shattered peace plan, more than 10 years of U.S. success in blocking Moscows return to the Mideast has been ended by the growing presence of Soviet military specialists in Syria - George Shultzs first diplomatic defeat as secretary of state.
Those sp^ialists, now estimated at 5,000, are still increasing. They are flying Syrian helicopters, manning two or more SAM-5 anti-aircraft missile batteries and organizing an integrated air defense system unique in the Arab world. The major reason Syria asked for them: Shultzs failure to recognize the high value of the Syrian card while appealing in vain to Israel to get out of Lebanon.
Apart from the presidents personal humiliation in the Israeli-Arab savaging of his once-promising peace plan, reintroduction of Soviet power into, the Middle Bast for the first time since Egypts Anwar Sadat kicked out the Russians in 1972 causes deep White Bouse alarm. U.S. forces in the Eastern Mediterranean are vulnerable if Israel, never predictable, chooses to attack Soviet-manned missiles in Syria,
Soviet re-entry into the region may reflect a more ambitious, more aggressive policy in the Kremlin under Yuri Andropov. The ease with which it was arranged stunned national security operatives at the White House. To slacken the Soviet grip on Syria, one aide told us, the U.S. must give Syria some alternatives. That means weaning Syria away from Moscow and reestablishing a more friendly U.S.-Syrian relationship of the kind that existed behind the scenes during the Henry Kissinger regime.
A look at the radically-changed military balance in the Eastern Mediterranean explains why the presence of Soviet forces in Syria, close to Israeli borders, distresses the white House. The once-dominant American 6th Fleet is still superior, but only marginally so. The Soviet Black Sea Fleet is closer at hand than U.S. reinforcements.
Far worse, in the view of presidential advisers, is the possibility of basing Soviet Backfire bombers in both Syria and Libya. Designed for naval operations Backfires could compromise the 6th Fleet if an Israeli attack on Soviet-manned SAM missile sites led to broader hostilities.
Thus, for the first time in the procession of Arab-Israeli wars dating back to 1956, dominance of U.S. military power in the Mediterranean basin has become questionable. That acts as a brake on American freedom of action. It coincides with the progressive weakening of U.S. control over independent action by Israel, reflected by the U.S.opposed invasion of Lebanon almost a year ago.
Complaints that Shultz let this happen are being voiced in the White House, but criticism of the secretary from that source is not limited to the reappearance of Soviet power in Syria. Presidential aides were stunned when they learned that one of Shidtzs top Mideast officials. Deputy Assistant Secretary Robert Pelletreau - clearly acting under orders - told the House Foreign Affairs Committee that the administration did not want U.S. aid to Egypt increased in the same proportion that the committee had boosted aid to Israel.
At almost the exact moment Pelletreau was throwing cold water on Egypt, Ronald Reagan was pleading with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on the telephone for help in bringing King Hussein of Jordan back into the peace process. Shultz is now having second thoughts about aid for Egypt, but the insult to Cairo will not so easily be forgotten.
Shultz also insisted, against the judgment of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and top White House officials, on releasing U.S.-licensed components needed by Israel for its new Lavi fighter aircraft. The decision astonished Egyptian and other moderate Arab leaders in view of President Reagans personal decision not to release F-16s to Israel until its troops leave Lebanon.
Elisha Douglas
Strength For Today
The Lords Prayer is an our prayer. We do not say, My Father, who art in heaven, or Give me this day my daily bread. Instead, we repeat, Our Father, who art in heaven, and Give us this day our daily bread.
In other words, the very fabric of the prayer which our Lord gave us as a guide and model contains a substantial social message.We are saved one by one, just as we are born one by one, but we gather together in churches after God has laid his
finger upon us and we live not as isolated individuals but as social beings amid the variegated activites of society.
God is concerned not only with individuals but with society as well. The reason is that our chracter and beliefs are fashioned not only by our own wills but by the interaction of society. Therefore, the Christian life is an our or social existence.
Christianity begins as a message to the individual and become a message to the world.
To the editor:
Literally hundreds of people of Grifton and the surrounding area worked hard on advance plans, pitched in to help carry out events, and cooperated with others to help make the 13th annual Grifton Shad Festival the biggest and best ever.
As far as we can determine, there were fewer problems and everything went off more smoothly with more help than ever before. We heard so many favorable comments from visitors and almost no complaints. Wed appreciate your sharing with us those comments you heard and those things you observed yourself. Wed like to improve each year and there are always little points that can be changed if we are aware of them. Do this while these thoughts are fresh in your mind.
Be specific. Leave your comments, with name, address and phone number, at the Town Hall or slipped under the door of the Grifton Times or maUed to Grifton Shad Festival, Box 928, Grifton.
Also we are seeking the names of those who helped in any way, what they did and how to reach them next year. Committee chairmen are asked to supply these names, addresses and phone numbers.
Th^s again and we look forward to hearing from you before our Evaluation Meeting to be held Wednesday, May 4, at 7:30 p.m. at the Grifton Historical Museum. You are invited to attend this meeting.
Janet L. Haseley, chairman Grifton Shad Festival Publicity Committee
John CunnlH
Tax Issue Isn't Resolved Yet
NEW YORK (AP) - Though the Senate voted to delay by at least four years the withholding of taxes from interest and dividends, the issue is hardly resolved.
President Reagan, it is said, is determined to win his way as a matter of principle, notwithstanding his opposition to a similar measure during former President Jimmy Carters years, also on principle.
Agreeing with the president. Rep. Thomas P. ONeill, D-Mass., the House Speaker, said he opposed the Senate action, one reason being, apparently, that a lot of cheats and frauds are denying the government its due revenue.
Throughout the long battle over the law, which is stUl to be dealt with by the House and which is still scheduled to go into effect July l, there has also been a side issue over the identity of those who oppose it.
During the months of controversy. Congress was inundated with letters and postcards in opposiUpn to the law. Who were these people who expressed qpposi-tion: individuals - or agents of the banks?
The White House chose to blame the latter, almost as if no opposition at all came from concerned individuals. The president aiKl his Treasury secretary, Donald Regan, seemed to make clear in sharply worded statements.
But there remains a question. .. individuals affix their signatures to a preprinted letter or postcard do they automatically become bank agents? Or are th^r merely using a omvenlent dqyloetoexpreBB tbeir wishes?
that
If
The banks, no doubt, exerted an enormous influence on public opinion, and banking industry leaders today are congratulating themselves on one of their best public relations and lobbying cam-paigi^ever.
But it was individuals who wrote the signatures, and nobody threatened them with penalties if they declined to sign. What the banks did, after all, was perfectly legal. And what individuals did was of their own free will.
Still, the banks in the long run mi^t have generated some ill will, because neither elected officials nor those who elect them are particularly pleased with shows of power. Besides, it is easier to blame banks than voters.
The matter that seems to have been ignored in all the controversy Is whether those who opposed the law were making an important political statement. And there are indications they were.
Among the millions of votes that eiected Reagan president, for example, were those of people who agreed with him that it was time to get government off the backs of people. Tax withholding seemed badly at odds with that notion.
Backers of the law said it was the Only way to reduce non-payment of income tax due on Interest and on dividends -which incidentally are doubly taxed. The revenue, perhaps as much as $18 billion yearly, was badly needed, Reagan said.
But Reagan had also been elected as an advocate of reducing governments financial needs, and many of those who otherwise siq)ported him were
It seems likely that many people believed that if fraud were to be reduced and revenue raised, then there were quicker and easier ways of doing it.
The Office of Management and Budget, for example, reported last September that it is writing off more than $1 billion a year in bad debts, and that many billions of dollars owed the government are delinquent or in default.
The General Accounting Office has identified thousands of cases of fraud in federal agencies. And the Department of Health, Education and Welfare conceded in the past that billions were misspent as a result of fraud.
Atop this is the questionable use of funds by elected officials, who are known to appear suddenly in remote parts of the world usually not their home territory - immediately following the close of congressional sessions.
When you consider all the possibUities, the disapproval of the law by so many people probably wasnt so much a battle of the big banks against the administration as it was anger on the part of ordinary people.
Quotes
We need greater virtues to sustain good fortune than bad.-LaRochefoucald
weU
aware that money sent to Washington
We are so vain that we even care for the opinion of those we dont care for. -r Ebner-Eschenbachmam
Anniversary of Terror
Late in the afternoon of April 26,1937at the height of the Spanish Civil Wara squadron of German-made airplanes attacked the town of Guernica in northern Spain. For three hours, the planes bombed the town into rubble and machine-gunned fleeing civilians. The world blamed the Nationalist army that was trying to gain control of Spain with the backing of Nazi Germany. But responsibility for the terrorist attack was never established. Pablo Picasso, a Spanish artist living in France, painted Guernica as a memorial to those who died in this first massive air raid against civilians. According to Picassos request, the painting did not return to Spain until democracy was restored 44 years later.
DO YOU KNOWWho led the Nationalist forces during the Spanish Civil War?
MONDAYS ANSWER-UNICEF, the United Nations Chiidrens Fund, serves the worids chiidren.
c VEC, Inc. 1983
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
01883 TrIbun* Comptny Syndicla, Inc;
OUTFLANKED IN THE BALKANS
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Opening lead: Two of 'J.
It is time to raise a glass of Bols liqueur and drink a toast to the winners of the 1982 Bols Brilliancy Prizes. The top award went to Jean Besse of Switzerland for his discard of the ace of diamonds featured in this column a few months ago. Second prize went to Lubin Zaikov of Bulgaria for this sparkling defense from his countrys match against Greece in the Balkan Championships.
In one room the Bulgarians reached a contract of four spades and made it. In the other, Greece bid to the inferior contract of three no trump on the unrevealing auction shown. That contract is not easy to defeat, but Zaikov defended as if he
could see all the cards.
Declarer won the opening lead in dummy and led a low spade from the table. Zaikov unhesitatingly flew in with the jack of spades, then shifted to the king of diamonds! If declarer won the king with dummys ace, he would have had no entry to the spades once they were established, so h? was forced to hold up.
Now, a spade, heart or diamond continuation would have allowed declarer to get home, but Zaikov did not falter. He shifted to a club, and declarer had no recourse. Whether or not he won the ace of clubs, the defenders were sure to get at least two spade tricks, a diamond and two clubs.
Well certainly drink to that performance!
Consult the Energy Services Department at Greenville Utilities Commission concerning ways to save energy in your home and business. Call 752-7166.
CORRECTION!
In the Sears Spring Home Appliance Sale Section in the Sunday, April 24 Newspaper on page 2 the no. 4227 Color TV with Remote Control advertised at $399.99 special purchase will not be available for sale.
We regret any Inconvenience that this might cause.
Sears, Roebucks Co.
Greenville, N.C.
BROTHERLY MUTUAL BURIAL ASSOCIATION, INC.
Fountain, N.C.
Financial Statement For Period Ending;
December 31,1902
BALANCE DECEMBER 31,1901............. ............$32,761.46
RECEIPTS:
1. Current assessment
collected $9,742.17
2. Number new members...at 25
3. Interest on time deposits, stocks, bonds 4,684.69
4. Miscellaneous
5. Disallowed death claims
6. Total (lines 1 to 5, Inc.) $14,426.06
7. Not difference of advance
assessments; 0
0. Receipts 9. Total receipts
DISBURSEMENTS;
14,426.06
47.188.32
14.
Salaries $2,400.00
Collocllon commissions 196.54
Mlacollanoous expenses 1,977.35 Total expenses (lines 10 to 13, inc.)
Death benotlts paid (No. 41)
No. $50. No. 100.8 ' No. 200.33
Membership fees paid agents Refunds
Total disbursements (linos 12 to 16, Inc.)
BALANCE TO BE ACCOUNTED FOR ASSETS;
18. Cathshonago Cash on hand Bank deposit BBST
Home Federal SSL CD No.0101-1000963
Branch Bank S Trust CD No. 317-3014-961
Tarboro SSL CO No. 960490093 Socurltlee Baourltles SeeurHlet Total assets LIABILITIES:
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Ordered End Suppression
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Insurance Commissioner John R. Ingram has been * ordered by a federal judge to stop suppression of a con- troversial insurance industry newsletter.
On April 6, U.S. District Judge Franklin T. Dupree Jr. made permanent a tem-poraiy order directing Ingram to stop his efforts to suppress the April 1981 issue of The Insurance Forum. The preliminary order was issued in February 1982.
Joseph M. Belth, editor of the newsletter, said Ingrams department had warned insurance agencies not to show the newsletters to clients because it said it included misrepresentations about A.L. Williams Co., a Georgia life insurance agency.
'In his ruling, Dupree also awarded attorneys fees to Belth, who is asking for about $20,000 in fees. Dupree must now rule on the amount to be awarded.
If Ingram wants to suppress the 2-year-old issue, he must make a formal finding that the issue can be suppressed by law. The states law on unfair trade practices law allows suppression of information that is false and misleading.
If Ingram decides the issue can be suppressed, he must allow a hearing on the issue before taking steps to block dissemination of the publication, Dupreee ruled.
The Dally ReOector, GreenvUle. N.C.-Tuesday, April 26,1983-5
Six Accidents In City Sunday
CHAP TUCKER
Chap Tucker Participant
RALEIGH - Chap Tucker of Farmville is one of 23 young farmers who participated in a recent agricultural leadership program.
The program stressed speech-making, southern literature, public policy development and meeting procedures.
Governor Jim Hunt spoke with the group during the program.
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An estimated $10,200 damage resulted from a series of six traffic accidents investigated by Greenville police Sunday.
Officers said heaviest damage resulted when a car driven by Zachary Ellis of Route 1, Farmville, skidded on Memorial Drive, .1 mile south of the OHagen Place intersection about 3:42 a.m. and collided with a utility pole.
Damage to the car was estimated at $4,000.
Cars driven by Ronnie Eugene Austin of 519 Vance St., and Fred Eula Meadows of Route 1, Ayden, collided about 8 p.m. on Memorial Drive, 500 feet north of the Mall Drive intersection, causing an estimated $1,700 damage to the Austin car and $850 damage to the Meadows vehicle.
Police are still looking for
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a hit and run driver involved in a 2:31 p.m. mishap at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Greenville Boulevard.
Investigators said cars driven by Charles McLawhom of 608A Pamlico Ave., and Thornton Gorham of Washington, were stopped for a traffic light on Memorial Drive when a car collided with both vehicles, then left the scene, headed east on Greenville Boulevard.
Damage to the McLawhom car was set at $500, while damage to the Gorham car was placed at $1,450.
Cars driven by Sandra Leverne Daniels of 208A Cadillac St. and Devore Levell Hill of Route 4, Greenville, collided about 8:04 p.m. at the intersection of Fifth and White Streets.
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causing $175 damage to the Daniels car and $450 damage to the Hill auto.
An estimated $300 damage resulted to each of two cars involved in a 7:40 p.m. collision at the intersection of Greenville Boulevard and Bismark Street.
Drivers of the vehicles were identified as Jack Bradley Rollins of 205 Joseph
St., and John Edward Byrd of 225 York Road.
Police said cars driven by Bennie Sherrod of Route 1, Bethel, and Thelma Matthews Tyson of 701A Bradley St., collided about 7:43 p.m. at the intersection of Fifth and Nash Streets.
Damage was set at $425 to the Sherrod car and $50 to the Tyson car
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The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, April 26,1965-7
20TH ANNIVERSARYSALEWere Celebrating With Big Savings For You!
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GREENVILLE, N. C. 27834
8The Daily Reflector, GreenvlUe, Nj;.Tuesday, April 86.1963
Stock And Market Reports
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly $1.50 higher. Kinston 47.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 47.50, Wilson 47.25, Salisbury 47.50, Rowland 46.50, Spiveys Comer 46.50. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 44.00, Fayetteville
43.00. Whiteville 44.00, Wallace 43.00, Spiveys Corner 44.00. Rowland 43.00, Durham 44.00.
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 truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2>i. to 3 pound birds. The final weighted average of 40.79 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market tone for next weeks trading is steady to firm and the live supply is moderate for a moderate to good demand. Weights desirable, instances heavy. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Tuesday was
1.847.000, compared to 1.787,000 last Tuesday.
Hens
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was 1 cent higher. Supplies adequate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Tuesday and Tuesday slaughter was 18 cents.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market lost more ground today, continuing the retreat that began in the latter stages of Mondays session'
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, off 9.09 Monday. dropped 1.06 to 1,186.15 by noontime.
Losers led gainers by about 5 to 3 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
WEDNESDAY
8:(XJ p.m. - Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at AA Bldg. on Farmvill hwy.
8:00 p.m. - John Ivey Smith Council No. 6600, Knights of Col-unmbus meet at St. peters Church Hali
8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg, Farmvill hwy
THURSDAY
6:30 p.m. - Exchange Club meets
6:30 p m. Jaycees meet at Rotary Bldg.
7:00 p m. - Greenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers
7:30 p m. - Overeaters Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church
8:00 p.m. - Chapter 1308 of the W omen of the Moose
i:00 pm. VFW Auxiliary meets at Post Home
After rising sharply to record highs in the past two weeks, ^e market bogged down in early trading Monday when the Dow Jones ' industrial average reached 1,200 for the first time.
Analysts said it appeared that many investors had made plans to cash in profits at 1,200. When they did so, other market participants concluded that it might take some time before the market could break through that round-number level.
Brokers also noted some hesitancy over the near-term outlook for interest rates, with the government scheduled to announce its quarterly financing plans on Wednesday.
Digital Equipment fell 4'/8 to 114 in active trading. On Monday the company reported a 25.8 percent earnings decline for its latest fiscal quarter.
.NEW YORK (AP)
AMR Corp AbbtLabs Allis Chaim Alcoa AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmStand Amer T&T Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burl net Ind CSX Con) CaroPwLt Celanese Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAirl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon , Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress FordMot For McKess Fuqua Ind GTE Corp GnDynam Gen Elec Gen Food Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculeslnc Honeywell HosptCp s Ing Rand IBM
Inti Harv Int Paper Int Rectif Int TiT K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrogerCo Loews Corp Masonite n McDrmInt n Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB Cp NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorRkSou n , OlinCp OwensIIl Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RCA
RalstnPur
RepubAir
Republic Sll
Revlon
Reynldind
Rockwellnt
RqyCrown
StKegis Pap
Scott Paper
SealdPow
SearsRoeb
Shaklee
Skyline Cp
Obituary Column
A NEW TITLE... designating Greenville as The Golden City, will be utilized in public information distributed by the city. The slogan reflects the areas reputation as the worlds largest tobacco-producing center.
Badges Boast A Golden City'
High
Low
Last
27%
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46%
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46
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33
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42%
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18%
18
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32%
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65%
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65%
26%
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21%
21'*
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39%
39
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, 44%
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63%
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15
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24%
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55%
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53%
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64%
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24
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35%
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35',
99',
98%
98%
50',
49%
49,
44
43%
43%
114%
113%
114
10'*
9,
10
54',
54',
54',
18%
18'*
18%
37'-.
37',
37'-.
34'*
34
34',
18
17,
17,
16%
16%
16',
14'.
13,
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36',
36',
36',
172
172
172
57
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18',
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18%
25',
24,
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84'*
83,
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28%
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28
89',
88%
89
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26,
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35%
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55',,
55%
55%
30%
30"^,
30%
32
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32
65
64%
64%
39
38%
38',
29%
29%
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63%
63
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33
32%
31%
31'*
31',
61%
61
61',
49'*
48',
48%
25%
24,
24,
22
21%
21%
8%
8%
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22
21,
22
34%
34'*
34'*
50%
50%
50'*
55
54%
54%
23%
23%
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32
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22%
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22',
45%
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45%
39',
38%
39',
58
57%
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23%
23'*
J?%
Several city department heads and employees are wearing colorful badges proclaiming Greenville as The Golden City.
What better way to recognize Greenville and Pitt County than through its reputation as the largest tobacco producing center in the world, said City Manager Gail Meeks.
More and more, the city is participating in exhibits, special programs, group tours and things of this nature, Mrs. Meeks said. We wanted an ear and eye-catching logo we could use on announcements, brochures and other handouts, a theme that would be representative of Greenville
16
35%
36%
43%
45 24 67% 34% 52% 11% 71% 61% 13% 23% 30% 40% 62%
46 42% 39% 50% 34% 46% 44%
14%
15%
35%
36%
43%
44%
23%
66%
34%
52%
11%
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13%
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61%
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rn Co Sperry Cp sfdOifcaf StdOilInd
StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide Uniroyal US Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMarl s WestPtPep Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp Following are selected 11 a m market quotations:
Ashland prC Burroughs
Carolina Power tc Light
Collins Aikman
Connor
Duke
Eaton
Eckerds
Exxon
Fieldcrest
Hatteras
Hilton
Jefferson
Deere
Lowe's
McDonalds
McGraw
Piedmont
Pizza Inn
P&G
TRW, Inc United Tel.
Virginia Electric Wachovia
OVER THE COUNTER Aviation
14%
15%
35%
36%
43%
45
23:4
66%
34%
52%
11%
71%
61%
13%
23%
30%
40%
62
45%
41%
39%
50
34
46%
44%
Stock
38%
45%
22
25%
20%
23'.v
38%
30%
33%
36%
15%
48%
32
37%
37%
72%
45%
35%
11%
61%
67
20%
15':,
40%
and that would stick in visitors minds.
The manager said another connotation of the theme is the abundance of golden opportunities available in the area. We feel Greenville has much to offer new industries and people looking for a good place to live and raise their families.
She said the new title is one of the ideas generated through the citys public information office.
Arrested For Sunday Assault
Michael Eugene Green of 607 Contentnea St. was arrested Monday' by Pitt County deputies on charges stemming from the alleged assault of a 27-year-old woman at her residence near Parkers Chapel Church, according to Sheriff Ralph Tyson.
He said Greene, 24, was charged with second degree sex offense and assault on a female in connection with an incident Sunday at the womans mobile home. Tyson said the woman told authorities a man locked her in a closet in the incident.
Tyson said the woman was treated at Pitt County Memorial Hospital and released.
Bond for Green, who was also charged with possession of heroin, was set at $20,000, Tyson said.
CamKm AYDEN - Mrs. Lillie Rubelle Ellis Carmon of 808 High St. died this morning at her home. She was the wife of Elmer (Mama) Cannon Sr. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott and Company Funeral Home, Ayden.
- Clark Mr. R. Bruce Clark, 70, of 309 Airport Road, Greenville, died at Duke Hospital in Durham Monday. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. James H. Bailey. Burial will be in Greenville Cemetery.
Mr. Clark, a native of Pitt County, had lived in Washington for a number of years, retiring to Greenville in 1955. He had been a salesman with the McKenzie International Harvester Equipment Co. and had worked at Savage Stables. For the past 28 years, he had been involved with horses and horse training. He was a
Youth Jobs Allocation
ATLANTA (AP) - U.S. Secretary of Labor Raymond J. Donovan has announced the allocation of $130 million to 66 Southeastern state and local governments to provide summer jobs for economically disadvantaged youths aged 14-21.
The total includes $18,869,526 to North Carolina, an increase of $2,084,492 over 1982.
The counties and cities to receive the monies are: Alamance Co., $335,135; Buncombe Co., $537,036; Cumberland Co., $895,705; city of Charlotte, $755,337; Durham consortium, $395,019; Gaston Co., $468,224; Greensboro consortium, $863,342; city of Raleigh, $457,1%; Robeson Co., $524,373; balance of Wake Co., $289,387; Winston-Salem consortium, $619,850; and Davidson Co., $324,630. The balance of the state is to receive $12,404,292.
Labor Departments Summer Youth Employment Program participants will work for state and local government agencies and for private nonprofit organizations for an average of nine weeks. The will be paid the prevailing minimum wage.
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member of Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church, a member and past president of the Greenville Saddle Club and was a member of the board of directors of the Coastal Plains Horse Show Circuit.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. aara Forbes Qark; two brothers, George A. Clark of Gremiville and Baxter N. Clark of Augusta, Ga., and a sister, Mrs. Margaret C. McLaren of Myrtle Beach, -S.C.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Dudasik
VANCEBORO-Margaret Willis Dudasik, 61, of 2008 Old Cherry Point Road, New Bern, died Monday morning at Craveh County Hospital. The funeral service will be conducted at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Vanceboro Pentecostal Holiness C3iurch by the Rev. Frank Moore and the Rev. Walter Sutton. Burial will follow in Celestial Memorial Gardens, Vanceboro.
Mrs. Dudasik was bom and raised in Vanceboro and had been a resident of New Bern for the past 20 years. The past two years, she served as chairman of the Grey Ladies at Craven County Hospital and was a member of the organization for 10 years.
Surviving are her husband, Stephen W. Dudasik; two sons, Stephen William Dudasik Jr. of the home and Joseph J. Dudasik of Asheville; two daughters, Mrs. Debra D. Sanders and Mrs. Cheryl Dudasik Wiggs,, both of New Bern; her stepmother, Mrs. Vivian Willis Purser of Vanceboro; two brothers, James Lee Willis of Erlander, Ky., and Douglas M. Willis of New Bern; a sister, Mrs. Audrey Willis Kotara of New Bern, and two grandchildren.
The family has suggested that anyone desiring to make a memorial contribution consider the American Cancer Society.
The family will receive
IF THERES something you want to rent, buy, trade or sell, check the classified columns. Call 752-6166 to place your ad.
friends at Wilkersons Fungal Home in Vanceboro from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday night.
HarreU
GOLDSBORO - Mr. Danny Keith HarreU, 28, died Monday. His funeral service will be conducted Wednesday at 3 p.m. in the Edwards Funeral Home Chapel in Goldsboro. Burial will he in the Snow Hill Cemetery.
Mr. Harrell was a employee of the Wilson Construction Co. of Salisbury.
Surviving are a son, Dustin Heath Harrell of Snow Hill; his mother, Mrs. Irene Car-raway of Newport News, Va.; his father, Robert Harrell Jr. of Goldsboro; two sisters, Mrs. Ellen Andrews of Selma and Mrs. Terry Eakes of Farmville; a brother, Robert Franklin Harrell of Farmville, and his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Esther Ellen Carraway of Snow Hill.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home tonight from 7 to 9 p.m.
Lassiter
BETHEL - Erma I)ean Lassiter, 64, died today. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. at the Bethel Baptist Church. Burial wiU be in the Bethel City Cemetery.
Surviving are one dau^-ter, Sandra Lassiter Jones of Bethel, and seven grandchildren.
The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. toni^t at Ayres-Gray Funeral Home.
The family suggests that memorial contributions may be made to Bethel Baptist Church and to the East Carolina School of Medicine, department of surgery.
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SportsDAILY REFLECTOR ClassifiedTUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 26. 1983
NFL Draft 1983
Baitimore Colts Tab Reluctant Elway As Top SelectionJohn Elway...fop draft pick
NEW YORK (AP) - The Baltimore Colts, who for weeks shopped the rights to John Elway, kept the All-American Stanford quarterback for themselves today and made him the first pick in the National Football League draft. But Elway was quoted as saying there was no way he would play for Baltimore and would play baseball instead in the New York Yankeesfarm system.
Steve Raczynski, the Stanford sports information director, said Elway told him midway throu^ the first round that there are still some deals Im listening to. Raczynski said he thou^t Elway still was hoping for a trade to San Diego or the Los Angeles Raiders.
Qubs including the Chargers, Raiders and Dallas had shopped for additional draft picks to trade to Baltimore for the right to draft No. 1.
In the end, the selection by the Colts was somewhat of a surprise, considering that Elway had let the Colts know he does not want to play for them. He has the option of signing a multimillion-dollar baseball contract with the New York Yankees, who paid him a reported $140,000 last summer to play minor league ball.
The 6-2>/^, 205-pound Elway, considered a pure passer with extraordinary arm strength and a quick release, had let it be known that he wishes to play either on the West Coast or for Dallas, and for weeks there was speculation that the Colts would trade the rights to their No. 1 pick in exchange for a wave of draft choices, veterans or a combination of both.
Instead, they caught most observers off guard and picked Elway. Last year, quarterback Art Schlichter of Ohio State _ was a first-round pick of the Colts. Schlichter, however," wound up their third-string quarterback behind fourth-round pick Mike Pagel and veteran David Humm, and recently became entan^ed in a gambling probe.
ESPN quoted Elways agent, Marvin Demoff, after the Colts pick as saying Elway had chosen baseball over football.
ESPN said Elway told Colts Coach Kush after he was selected: There is no way I am going to play for Baltimore. I cant believe you didnt take the draft choices. I am going to baseball.
The Los Angeles Rams, tb no ones surprise, selected Souttiem Methodist running back Eric Dickerson with the No. 2 choice obtained from the Houston Oilers.
Dickerson had exulted in the fact that he would be playing on the West Coast, referring to his prospective team as Hollywood.
The Seattle Seahawks, who traded with Houston and the Rams to get the No. 3 pick, used it to take running back Curt Warner of national champion Penn State.
The 6-2, 215-pound Dickerson rushed for 1,617 yards last season, second best in Southwest Conference history, and broke Earl Campbells SWC career record by piling up 4,450 yrds. And he did it while splitting time at tailback with Craig James, who signed with Washington of the USFL.
Warner, 5-11 and 198, is the top all-around running back in Penn State history. Despite nag^ng ailments, he rushed for 3,398 yards during his career. Warner outgained Heisman Trophy winners Marcus Allen of Southern Gal in the Fiesta Bowl as a junior and Herschel Walker of Georgia in the Sugar Bowl as a senior.
The fourth pick was Denvers, and the Broncos spent 13 of their 15 allotted minutes before selecting Chris Hinton, an offensive lineman from Northwestern. Hinton was a tackle who was announced as a guard by Commissioner Pete Rozelle when he read the Broncos selection.
The San Diego Chargers, using the No. 5 pick acquired from San Francisco, chose linebacker Billy Ray Smith of Arkansas, considered to be the most dominating defensive player available, not unlike Lawrence Taylor was two years ago.
Hinton, 6-4/i and 265, has played tackle, guard, tight end and linebacker. He was switched from tight end to tackle last year after catching 19 passes in 1981.
Smith, whose father, Billy Ray Smith Sr., was once a star with the Colts, has been a standup defensive end the last two years. He started all 48 games during his college career, including assignments at nose guard and defensive tackle. His career totals include 195 solo stops, 104 assists and an Arkansas record 63 tackles for a loss.
The Chicago Bears, with the first of their two opening-round
selections, took 280-pound offensive tackle Jimbo Covert from Pitt, who allowed no quarterbacks sacks and only three pressures last season and graded % percent on his run-blocking.
Kansas City, with the seventh pick, chose Penn State quarterback Todd Blackledge, who elected to graduate with his class and give up his final year of eligibility.
The Chiefs new head coach, John Mackovic, coached the quarterbacks for the Dallas Cowboys the past few seasons and was noted for his wide-open passing attack when he was a head coach at Wake Forest University.
The Philadelphia Eagles then selected Michael Haddix, a Wishbone halfback from Mississippi State.
The Houston Oilers, hoping to give Earl Campbell some blocking, selected offensive lineman Bruce Matthews from Southern Cal. He played guard for the Trojans, but was listed as a tackle by the Oilers.
Matthews, a 275-pounder, was a three-year starter at Southern Cat. During that period, he trimmed his clocking in the forty from 5.5 to 5.0. He has started at both strongside and weakside guard and also snapped for placekicks.
The 225-pound Haddix has fullback size and 4.6 halfback speed. His career average of 6.0 yards per carry is the best in Mississippi State history.
Blackledge was eligible because he sat out the 1979 season with a broken hand. Last fall, he led Penn State to its first national championship by completing 161 of 292 passes for 2,218 yards and a school record 22 touchdowns. A Phi Beta Kappa student, his father is offensive line coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The New York Giants, with the 10th pick of the opening round, selected defensive back Terry Kinard, the Clemson safety who is said to have enough speed to play comerback as well.
He joins cornerback Mark Haynes, selected No. 1 by the Giants three years ago.
There was muted approval from the gallery of several hundred at the hometown Giants pick.
The Green Bay Packers made cornerback Tim Lewis of Pitt their No. 1 choice.Opportunities Elude Pirates, Bulldogs Win 8-4
By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor
There have been times this year when Coach Hal Baird and his East Carolina baseball Pirates might believe that they were, indeed, snake-bitten. Everything just seemed to go wrong at the right time.
Last night, when the Pirates hosted Atlantic Christian, was no exception. Everytime the Pirates had a chance to break the game open or get something going, something would go wrong.
As a result, Atlantic Christian came away with an 8-4 victory over the Pirates, who are shaking their heads as the 1983 season winds down to a conclusion.
We had a lot of chances out there, Baird said, but we didnt take advantage of them.
He could have pointed to the second inning, for example, when the Pirates loaded the bases with no one out - but didnt score. Or to the seventh, when the Pirates had a potential doubleplay wiped out by hesitation on the part of the initial fielder.
We couldnt seem to play defense very well; we had
breakdowns in every area, Baird continued. An example was when Tony Salmond led off the fourth with a single and Jack Curlings followed with a double to ri^t. Salmond was waved on to the plate and thrown out easily - killing that rally.
You know, our last two wins have been against two of the better pitchers in the state. Then, when we come up against somebody we ought to hit, we just cant seem to get the job done. It wasnt so much that they didnt hit -they got 12 they never got them in the proper places. There have been so many times this year when we dont get the two-out single we need, Baird pointed out.
The kids are still playing hard, but not well. I think there when we had the bases loaded and didnt get anything, it took the gas out of us.
Baird also feels that the chances are dimming for a shot at an ECAC-South tournament berth. The Pirates now stand fifth among eligible teams as to record, and have just four games left to play. I think our schedule has been tougher than anyone elses in
the league, and they should take that into account, but will they?
Atlantic Christian grabbed the lead in the top of the first, getting a pair of runs on a homer by David Lawhon. Eric McDaniels had drawn a one-out walk just prior to McLawhons blast to left center.
The Pirates came back with one in the bottom of the inning. Kelly Robinette led off with a double to left center, off the fence, and took third on John Hallows liner to center. Todd Evans grounder then scored Robinette.
The Bulldogs got two more in the second, raising their lead to 4-1. Mack Smith led off with a single up the middle.
and Greg Baker followed with a fly to right center that Hallow just missed after stumbling. That went for a double, and a wild pitch brought in Smith. Baker then scored on Russ Williamsons infield hit.
The Pirates loaded the bases on a walk and two infield hits with no one out in the second, but a grounder back to third got one at the plate, and a double play then killed the threat.
ECU came up with a run in the third despite another twin-killing by the Dogs. Hallow opened by reaching on an error and Todd Evans singled. Winfred Johnson grounded into a double play, however, before Mike
Williams single drove in Hallow with a single to left. That cut it to 4-2.
Two more runs came over for ACC in the fourth. Smith walked and Baker singed. A1 Hardison was then hit by a pitch, loading the bases. With one down, relief pitcher Bob Davidson walked Williamson to force in Smith, and McDaniels reached on an error, scoring Baker.
East Carolina lost a golden opportunity to score in the bottom of the fourth when Salmond was thrown out at the plate trying to score from second on a double by Curlings.
The Pirates scored once in the fifth as Johnson homered the left - his llth of the year.
Farmville Captures Meet
Sports Calendar
Editors Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays Sports Baseball Jamesvilel at Bear Grass Southwest Edgecombe at Ayden-Grlfton(8p.m.)
Greene Central at Farmville Cnetral(4p.m.)
West Craven at Conley (7:30 p.m.)
Roanoke at Edenton (7:30 p.m.) Williamston at Ahoskie (4 p.m.) Northeastern at Rose (4 p.m.) Wilson at Greenville Christian (4
p.m.)
C.B. Aycock at North Pitt JV (4 p.m.)
North Pitt at C.B. Aycock - 2 (5 p.m.)
E.B. Aycock at Kinston (4 p.m.) Track
Greene Central, Southwest Edgecombe at Farmville Central girls
Roanoke Rapids at Wiliiamston Northeastern at Rose Conley at West Carteret Conley girls at West Carteret ,
Softball Jamesville at Bear Grass Greene Central at Farmville Central
Southwest Edgecombe at Ayden-Grifton(4p.m.)
West Craven at Conley (3:30
p.m.)
Roanoke at Edenton (7:30 p.m.) Williamston at Ahoskie (4 p.m.)
Northeastern at Rose (4 p.m.)
Wilson at Greenville Christian (4 p.m.)
C.B. Aycock at North Pitt (4
p.m.)
Northeastern at E.B. Aycock (4 p.m.)
Tennis
Southern Nash at Farmyille Central (3:30 p.m.)
Greene Central at C.B. Aycock
Roanoke at Roanoke Rapids
Williamston at Tarboro
Northeastern at Rose (3:30 p.m.)
Wednesdays Sports
Baswall
Greene Central at Farmville Central (4 p.m.)
South Lenoir at Greene Central JV(4p.m.)
Bear Grass at Mattamuskeet
West Carteret at Conley (7:30 p.m.)
SoftbaU
Greene Central at Farmville Central (4 p.m.)
Bear Grass at Mattamuskeet (^ey at Ayden-Grifton
Track
Greene Central at Farmville Central (3:30 p.m.)
Big East girls meet at Bed-dingiield
Northern Nash at E.B. Aycock Golf
Farmville Central at Ayden-Grifton (1p.m.)
Northern Nash at Rose (1 p.m.)
Tennis
Greenfield Academy at Greenville Juniors
FARMVILLE - The Farmville Central relay team Calvin Tyson, Tony Hargrove, Wesley Harris and Wesley Carmon took victories in the 440- and 880-yard events to lead the Jaguars to victory at Southwest Edgecombe Monday.
The Jaguars posted 111 points, while Southwest Edgecombe followed with 87'/4, Greene Central Wk and C.B. Aycock 15.
Farmville Central posted a time of 45.9 in the 440 relay and 1:34.3 in the 880 relay. Eric Faison won the discus for the Jaguars with a toss of 12441.
Cannons time of 9.7 in the 100-yard dash was the best in the field, and the mile relay team placed first at 3:37.
Farmville Central is now 25-11 on the season. The same four teams meet Wednesday at Southwest Edgecombe for the final run of the 1983 season.
Shot putt: Mayo (SW) 42-5, Boone (F) 40-9, Eason (GO 40-8, Joyner (SW) 39-4>.^, Faison (FC) 38-8.
Long jump: Carmon (GO 19-8, Johnson (SW) 19-6, Campbell (GO 19-1, Ford (FC) 18-10, Dawson (GO 18-4.
Triple Jump: Johnson (SW) 41-2, Carmon (GO 40-11, Joyner (FC) 40^'/, Hardy (GO 39-11^4, Ford (F0 39-2.
High jump: Hargrove (FC) 6-2, Haskins (SW) 64), Ford (SW) 64), Petteway (FC) 5-10, Campbell (GO 5-10.
Discus. Faison (FC) 124-8, Mayo (SW) 112-4, Edwards (GO 107-11, Boone (FC) 101-4'/, Joyner (SW) lOl-l'/!.
Pole vault: Jones (SW) 8-6, Darden (SW) 88, Pitt (SW) 78, Gurley (A) 78.
120 high hurdles: Edwards (FC)
15.8, Evans (SW) 17.0, Moses (SW) 18.7, Hines (SW) 19.1, Barrett (FC) 19.5.
100 dash: Carmon (FC) 9.7, Grant (GO 10.3, Harris (FC) 10.3, Tbore (SW)10.4, WUllams (FC) 10.5.
MUe: Moses (SW) 4:52, Aycock (A) 5:13, Ryals (A) 5:14, Roberson (GO 5:15, Vines (FC) 5:20.
880 relay: Farmville Central Dve, Harris; Payton) .3, Southwest 1:35.9.
440 relay: Farmville Central (Tyson, Hargrove, Harris, Payton)
45.9.
440: Carmon (FC) 53.4, WUllams
(FC) 53.7, Petteway (FC) 54.7,
Staton (SW) 56.8, Hardy (GO 57.2.
330 IM hurdles: Hargrove (FC) 45.1, Edwards (FC) 45.2, Moses (SW) 47.3, Evans (SW) 47.6, Barrett (F0 48.5.
880: Owens (FC) 2:11, Campbell (GO 2:12, Payton (FC) 2:18,
Johnson (SW) 2:19, Vines (FC) 2:20, Knight (SW) 2:20.
220: Carmon (FC) 22.7, Payton (FC) 23.2, Haskins (SW) 23.3,
Thorne (SW) 24.3.
Two-mile run: Bullock (SW) 11:41, Aycock (A) 11:51, Campbell (GO 11:55, Vines (FC) 12:00,
Joyner (FC) 12:05.
Mile relay: Farmville Central (Payton, Petteway, Williams, Carmon) 3:37, South West 3:41, Aycock 3:46.
leaving him just one off Butch Davis season mark of 12.
After halting a bases-Ioaded threat by the Pirates in the bottom of the sixth with no damage, ACC added one in the seventh. With one down. Baker singled and Hardison got a hit. A fielders choice moved Baker to third, and he scored when Williamson reached on an error.
ECU got'another in the eighth to cut it to 7-4. With one down, Salmond reached on an error and Curlings doubled him to third. He scored when Hallow grounded out.
The Bulldogs countered with
AChristiu ab r h rb ECinlini ab r b rb
Williamson,3b 5 10 2 Robinette,ss 3 110 McDaniels.2b 4 111 Hallow.3b 4 111 Uwhon,ss 5 112 Evans.lb 5 0 11
BaUey.U 3 0 0 0 .lohnson.dh 5 111
Pierce,lb 5 0 0 0 Langston,pr 0 0 0 0
MSmith,dh 3 2 1 0 DWells,r( 10 00
4 4 4 0 WUlams,r( 4 0 11
3 0 0 0 RWeUs,c( 4 0 10
2 0 0 0 Shank,lf 4 0 10
1 0 0 0 (3)ckitl,pb 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 Salmond,2b 4 12 0
0 0 0 0 Curlings,c 4 0 2 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
3( I 9 5 Totals 412 4
one in the ninth. With one away. Baker dobled and came around on two passed balls.
Baker paced the ACC hitting with four of the teams nine hits. "
East Carolina was led by Curlings and Salmond, each with two, as the Pirates banged out 12 hits.
The loss tumbles the ECU record to 18-16-1 on the season, while ACC is now 17-14.
East Carolina plays host to Baptist College on Friday at 7 p.m., then again on Saturday at 2 p.m., closing out the year at Atlantic Christian on Sunday in a 1 p.m. doubleheader at Fleming Stadium.
Johnson Honored By ECAC-South
Baker, rf
Hardison,c
Colla7o,c(
Bagbey.ph
Woodell,pr
Shouls,rf
Totals
AUaotic Christian...............230 200 101-0
East Carolina...................101 010 010-4
E-Lawbon 2, Salmond. WUIiamson 2; DP-East Carolina 2, Atlantic Christian 2; LOB-ACC 10. ECU 12; ffl^;^inelte. Baker, Curlings 2; HR-Uwhm/ioiiiiBbn, SB-McDaniels, WoodeU, Williamson. \
Pitching h r er bb so
AUantic Christian
Godwin lW,3-2).................5s ^3^2;.^ 1
Ehle.............................3h I 1 o\3
East Carolina
C.Smith(L,38..................3H. 5 6 6 3
Davidson........................54i 4 2 0
HBP-by C. Smith (Hardison); WP-C. Davidson; PB-Hardison, Curlings 2.
Ehle
East Carolina freshman pitcher-designated hitter Winfred Johnson has been honored by the ECAC-South for the second time in three weeks.
Johnson, a 5-10, 210-pounder from Elizabethtown, was named as the co-Player of the Week by the conference, along with James Madisons Todd Whitaker, for his p|ay last week.
Johnson banged out four hits, including a home run in East Carolinas 6-0 shutout of UNC-Wilmington. He also hurled the win, a four-hitter, striking out nine in the contest.
He also had two homers and a double, one of the roundtrippers winning the game in the tenth inning against Campbell on Saturday.
For the week, he was 88f-13, with five runs batted in and he scored five runs.
Two weeks ago, Johnson was named as the Pitcher of the Week in the conference.
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10-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Tuesday, April 36,1983
I
Marshall Settles Score
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Mike Marshall of the Los Angeles Dodgers was just ^tting even with fireballing right-hander Joaquin Andujar of the St. Louis Cardinals.
He struck me out with a slider the first time, said Marshall, who belted a mammoth fifth-iiming home run off Andujar Monday night. I thou^t he might come back with it again. I guess the odds were with me.
Marshalls homer, his first of the year, ignited a 10-hit attack to pace Los Angeles to an 8-0 victory behind Fernando Valenzuelas seven-hitter.
It was a breaking ball down, St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog said of Andujars delivery to Marshall. He didnt get it out over the plate. Youve got to give him (Marshall) credit.
Until Mamhall connected, the game, the only scheduled National League contest, was a scoreless duel between Andujar, 2-2, and Valenzuela, 3-l.Greg Brock had drawn a leadoff walk preceding Marshalls homer,
That, as it turned out, was only the beginning for Los Angeles. Pedro Guerrero became the major league home run leader with his sixth round-tripper an inning later, and Dusty Baker hit his third of the year in the seventh.
Baker, whose home run was over the gate into left-center, admitted awe over the assortment of six extra-base Dodgers hits.
Were a power-oriented team, but in this ballpark there are no cheap home runs, Baker said. 1 cant remember the last time I was here and a team hit three
home runs.
As Los Angeles was dicing in against Andujars offerings, Valenzuela won an early bout with his control and pitched his second complete game.
Hes a finisher, said Dodger Manager Tommy Lasorda, in respect to the stocky left-hander, whose shutout was the 13th of his career. Hes the kind of pitcher that gets tougher as he
Following Bakers homer, which established a 5-0 cushion, Los Angeles mopped up on Brocks RBI double and single and Steve Yeagers run-producing triple.
We were fortunate. It looked like it was going to be a real pitching duel, Lasorda said. Both of them Jiad good stuff.
Marshalls home,^ run, a blast into the center field
bleachers more than 400 feet from home plate, proved especially satisfying in view of his slow start after a torrid spring training in which he hit six homers.
Its just nice to hit a ball hard, said Marshall, vidio started the ni^t with a .211 batting average and two RBIs after an early-season beanihg by Montreals Jeff Reardon slowed his p;rogress. I hadnt been making good contact. It meant something. Thats the most important thing.
Valenzuela, who struck out six to go with two walks and a hit batsman, handed the Cardinals their first shutout loss in 12 games.
He was around the plate. He was ahead of the hitters most of the time, said Yeager, the Dodgers catcher.
'Louisiana Lightning' Strikes
Nailed At The Plate
St. Louis Cardinals Ozzie Smith is caught short of home during the fourth inning Monday night as Los Angeles catcher Steve Yeager swings around
to tag him out. Smith attempted to take advantage of a bad throw by Steve Sax but was gunned down by Dodger first baseman Greg Brock. (AP Laserphoto)
NEW YORK (AP) -Louisiana Lightning has struck for the second time in a row.
He looks like hes on his way now, said Manager Billy Martin after Ron Guidry pitched the New York Yankees to a three-hit, 2-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins Monday night in the only scheduled American League game.
It was the second straight
Baseball Changes, Remains The Same
By JOHN NELSON AP Sports Writer One of the great things about baseball - and probably a reason it endures - is that the old and new mesh so well.
It is virtually impossible -without knowing the names, places and dates - to determine whether a player was griping about something that happened last year or 50 years ago. Theres no way to date a boastful outburst or a moment of sorrow without knowing
who expressed it about what.
Through the ages of industry, space and the microchip computer; through wars, stock market crashes and rock n roll: through the iron horse, the automobile and the space shuttle, baseball remains understandable to those who understand it and a mystery to those who dont.
its the same old stuff, so even the new fan can relate to players who wore the strange uniforms of another time.
John Chiegers new book, "Voices of Baseball; Quota
tions on the Summer Game, captures this timelessness of baseball simply by offering observations, nearly 2,000 of them, from players, managers, club executives, journalists and other interested parties.
Published by Atheneum, the book begins with a quote from Sinclair Lewis Babbitt, vintage 1922: A sensational event Was changing from the brown suit to the gray contents of his pockets. He was earnest about these objects.
Nuggets Surprise Some, Not Pleased With Effort
By The Associated Press
The Denver Nuggets have advanced further in the National Basketball Association playoffs than most people expected, yet they are far from satisfied.
The Nuggets open their best-of-seven Western Conference semifinal series at San Antonio tonight, Denver qualified for a matchup with the Midwest Division champion Spurs by ousting favored Phoenix 117-112 in overtime Sunday night in the third game of their mini-series.
"Were not going down there thinking we dont have a chance," said guard Mike Evans, who was a key performer down the stretch in Denvers decisive victory. Evans, who was cut by the Spurs with one month left in the season three years ago, hit a three-point basket with 37 seconds left to force overtime. He also made an important steal in the extra session to boost the Nuggets home.
"Well all be ready for them. Were not happy just to have made it this far.
Still, the Nuggets face a difficult task against the Spurs, who won 53 games this season and finished eight games ahead of Denver in the standings. San Antonio rested up with a first-round bye while the Nuggets were battling the Suns.
Spurs center Artis Gilmore is confident that his team will erase the memories of past postseason failures.
"Everybody realizes where the pressure is, said the 7-foot-2 Gilmore, who joined the Spurs from Chicago this season. Wqre not avoiding it. We know what kind of task we have before us.
"The opportunity is here
Loffin, Harris Win
Jake Loftin and Mike Harris won the Best Ball Tournament Monday night at the Greenville Putt-Putt Golf Course.
The pair won by shooting a 21-under-par 87 after three round of play.
Second place went to Lanny Morris and Ron Newton, who finished with a 15-under-par 93.
f
t
much more than in the past. We re able to relax, work hard and well be able to meet the challenge when it comes.
The challenge probably will come from the Nuggets high-scoring front line of Alex English (the NBAs top scorer this season), Kiki Van-deweghe and Dan Issel. Gilmore, guard George Gervin and forward Mike Mitchell will bear most of the offensive load for San Antonio.
In the only other NBA action tonight, the Los Angeles Lakers, leading 1-0 in their Western Conference semifinal with Portland, hosts the Trail Blazers,
On Wednesday night, the Philadelphia 76ers and New York Knicks resume their Eastern Conference semifinal, with the 76ers leading 1-0, and Milwaukee opens its semifinal matchup at Boston.
The Lakers ripped the Blazers 118-97 Sunday in Game 1, with Kareem Ab-dul-Jabbar pacing the Lakers with 32 points, six rebounds and six blocked shots.
I think Portland was emotionally spent because of the two games they played against Seattle (in a miniseries sweep), said Los Angeles Coach Pat Riley.
Added Earvin Magic Johnson, the star guard of the Lakers;
You have to respect the Trail Blazers. Thats probably
Hunt Edges Rampants
WILSON - Wilson Hunt High School eased past Rose High Schools golfers by five strokes, despite a medal winning round by Craig Davies of the Rampants.
Hunt, unbeaten this year, finished the day with a 322 total, while Rose was in at 327.
Davies led the way for the Rampants with a 75, while Brian Hill had an 80, John Jordan, an 84, and Chris Evans, an 87.
Mike Kennedy led Hunt with a 77, while Jimmy Allen carded an 81, Kent Williams had an 82 and Scott Vanden-berg, an 82.
Rose plays host to Northern Nash on Wednesday.
what happened to Seattle. They didnt respect Portland. But we do.
Sigler, Moreno In Region VIII
HATTIESBURG, Miss. -Debbie Sigler placed sixth on the uneven parallel bars and 12th overall to help the North Carolina team finish fifth at the Region VIII Gymnastics Championships held this weekend at the University of Southern Mississippi.
Also representing the Greenville Gymnastics Club on the seven-member North Carolina team was Kerri Moreno, who finished sixth in the floor exercise with a 17.35 and 10th on the balance beam at 16.65.
Sigler posted a 16.95 on the uneven bars and a total of 66.35 in the all-around, competing against 73 girls from eight states.
Florida took first place in the meet with 341 points, followed by Mississippi with 337.35, Louisiana with 337.30 and Alabama with 329.55. Tennessee, Georgia and South Carolina also competed in the meet.
ACC Proposes Rules Changes
GREENSBORO (AP) -Atlantic Coast Conference basketball coaches Monday recommended the league adopt a 45-second shot clock, to be turned off the final four minutes, and a box restricting coaches movement for the 1983-84 season.
The leagues athletic directors and faculty representatives, who wiil vote on next seasons rules during a May 12-18 meeting at Myrtle Beach, S.C., received the proposal from ACC basketball coaches chairman and Duke coach Mike Knyzewski.
The conference will then apply to the National Collocate Athletic Association for permission to use the rules. The NCAA will an-! its decision Sept. 15.
They were of eternal importance, like baseball or the Republican Party.
Many of the quotations deal with time itself and its relationship - or lack thereof -to the game. They include the well-known quote from writer Roger Angel in his book The Summer Game, published in 1972,50 years after Babbitt.
Since baseball time is measured only in outs, all you have to do is succeed utterly; keep hitting, keep the rally alive, and you have defeated time, Angel wrote. You" remain forever young.
And, from a 1979 San Francisco Chronicle article by Herb Caen: Th(? clock doesnt matter in baseball. Time stands still or moves backward. Theoretically, one game could go on forever. Some seem to.
Under various headings, the book also contains advice from some of the games greatest names, some quotes to be taken rather less seriously than others. For example:
Dizzy Dean on the benefits of good grammar: A lot of folks that aint sayin aint, aint eating.
Rocky Bridges, former
major league infielder, on dieting: You mix two jiggers of Scotch to one jigger of Metrecal. So far Ive lost five pounds and my drivers license.
Ty Cobb on hitting: Every great batter works on the theoi7 that the pitcher is more afraid of him than he is of the pitcher.
Wee Willie Keeler on hitting: Keep your eye clear and hit em where they aint. And Chuck Tanner, . Pittsburgh Pirates manager, on the merits of being rich: You can have money piled to the ceiling, but the size of your funeral is still going to depend on the weather.
Top tqp it off with a boast: I can hit buckshot with barbed wire. - George Wilson, Pacific Coast League siugger.
A lament: If I did anything funny on the ball field it was strictly accidental. Like the way I piayed third. Some people thought it was hilarious, but I was on the ievel all the time. - Rocky Bridges.
And a iittle homespun philosophy from Gene Mauch, former manager; Baseball and malaria keep coming back.
Greenville Juniors Drop Match, 6-3
The Greenville Recreation and Parks Departments junior boys tennis team lost to Rocky Mount yesterday 6-3.
The loss leaves the juniors with a 2-2 mark. Their next outing will be Wednesday when they host Greenfield Academy at 3 p.m. at River Birch Tennis Center.
Summary:
David Lee (G) d. David Thorpe,
8-3.
Chris McAuley (RM) d. Scott Davis, 8-4.
Richard Haselrig (G) d. Harrison Tullos,8-5.
Bill Winfield (RM) d. Mike Herrin, 8-5.
Lewis Lamar (RM) d. Ralph Harper, 8-6.
Doug Bray (RM) d. David McDonnell, 8-6.
Lee-Davis (G) d. Winfield-C.McAuley, 8-5.
Tullos-J. McAuley (RM) d. Haselrig-Harper,9-7.
Lamar-Crawley (RM) d. Her-rin-Hickman, 8-6.
Exhibition: Tray Stewart (RM) d. Josh Hickman, 8-4; Burt Aycock (G) d. Alby Brice, 8-i; Earl Hines (G) d. John Patlllo, 8-3; Heath Heartley (RM) d. Brian Wllle, 8-5; Kevin Fisher. (G) d. Tyson Smith, 8-2; John Haney (RM) d. Howard Resnlk, 9-8; HearUey-Brice (RM) d. McDonnell-Aycock, 8-6; Fish-er-WUle (G) d. Patillo-Thorpe, 9-8,
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strong performance by the Yankee left-hander after a slow start. He blanked the Toronto Blue Jays 3-0 on a two-hitter precisely a week earlier.
I dont know what all the talk was about, said Martin, referring to criticism of Guidry after the southpaw from Lafayette, La., was routed in his first two starts. Guidry hasnt lost a thing. He still has great velocity and he still has a great slider.
And he still has pretty good control, too. He walked only one batter Monday night, and Guidry thought even that was suspect.
I had him struck out with a slider on a 2-2 pitch, Guidry said of Tim Laudner in the fifth Inning. The umpire gave him that walk.
Staying ahead of the hitters
was Guidrys game plan, and it worked.
When you dont walk batters, it takes a lot of their game away, said Guidry. Ive been fortunate lately to get ahead of the hitters. The Twins are a fastball-hitting club and they like to swing a lot at first pitches. If you make good first pitches to them, youre in good shape. Thats what I did. I got a lot of guys out on first pitches. Thats why I didnt get too many strikeouts tonight.
Guidry fanned only just three.
Rick Cerone, who also caught Guidrys shutout against Toronto, sees a changed pitcher since his first two starts when he was shelled for 10 runs in eight innings.
Hes been very aggressive
the last couple of weeks, Cerone said. He seems to be going after the hitters more. By contrast, Minnesotas Frank Viola seems to be out of control. He walked four batters in 61-3 innings and gave up seven hits en route to his eighth straight loss over two seasons. Ironically, Violas last victory was a 5-shutout of the Yankees last Aug. 24.
These are trying times, the left-hander said. The thing is not to get down on yourself.
Dave Winfield paced the Yankees with a first-itming double and a triple in the fifth. The double broke a scoreless tie, .and Winfield scored on a single by Don Baylor.
Whitfield Sweeps Wellcome Juniors
Whitfield Junior High swept a baseball-softball doubleheader from Wellcome, taking a 7-3 victory in softball and a 12-7 win in baseball.
Linda Hardy went 3-3 with a homer and a pair of doubles for Whitfield in softball.
Mark Hardee, Shelton Boyd and James Smith led Whitfield at the plate in the baseball contest, with Hardee recorded as the winning pitcher.
Cox ......10
Chkod............0
WINTERVILLE-A.G.Cox Junior High downed Chicod, 10-0, yesterday in baseball.
Sherwood Wilder led the Cox hitting with two, and also hurled the win. No one for Chicod had more than one hit.
Chicod is now 0-5, while Cox is 5-0. .
In the ^rls softball game, Chicod gained a 13-2 Win over Cox. Teresa Stancill led the chicod hitting with two, while Rhonda Jackson got the win.
Chicod is now 5-0 and Cox is 4-1.
Farmvilie..........9
Bethel............6
FARMVILLE - Farmvilie Middle School gained a 9-6 baseball victory over Bethel yesterday.
Farmvilie was led by Roger Harris, who hit a home run. Brian Huber was the winning pitcher.
In the girls softball game, Farmvilie rolle to a 15-5 victory-
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RecSoftboll
Pre-Seaaon Tournament
Empire Brushes 744 70329
Metalcraft .511 034-14
Leading hitters: MC-Tom Odom 3^, Don iJavenport 34; EB-James Parker4^.
Faith Pentecostal... 10( lO) 144-20
Union Carbide ooo lll-ii
Leading hitters: UC-J. Luffred 3-3, S. Beamon 34; FP-Scott Brady 4-5, Tim Edwordy 4-4.
Wachovia..........220 110 17
PTA...............604 033 x-16
Leading hitters. PT-J. Cargile 33, B. Peak 34; W-T. Beard 44.
Oakmont...........323 020 0-10
Pitt Memorial......lOl 200 0-4
Leading hitters: PM-Tom Bentz 2-2, Darrell Young 2-2; 0-Mike Brown 3-3, Don Binikley 34.
Calif. Concepts 110 200 04
Subway.............400 100 x-5
Leading hitters: CC-Cloyde Wilson 2-3, Jeff Cobb 2-3; SW Dave Stillwell 2-2, Tom Overstreet 2-2.
Whittington.........212 003 1- 9
Public Works.......101 108 x-ll
Leading hitters: W-Boyd Holmes 34, R. WUson 34; PW-R. Pettus2-3, L. Williams 2-3.
JAs.................(11)00 85-24
1st Presbyterian........600 02-8
Leading hitters: JA-Lonnie House 34, Randy Phillips 34; FP-Greg Nelson 2-3, Allen Hahn
2-3.
Airborne...., 400 214 2-13
Church of God 030 120 0- 6
Leading hitters: CGFranklin Tripp 2-2, James Ross 2-3; ADave Burnette 44, Dave Regan 4-5.
Phillips.............Oil 203 2-9
Sunnyside Eggs .... 341 310 x12 Leading hitters: SEGene RacUey 33 (2 HR), Ike Arnold HR, Mike Board 2-2; JP-Charles Rice
3-3, Kemp Bradshaw HR.
CIS....................603 133-16
Memorial Baptist......020 312 8
Leading hitters: MB-Bill
Clayton 2-3 (HR), BUI Lee 2-2; CI-Barry Weston 4-5, Dave Bran-tingham 35, Wayne Elks 35.
TRW..............102 031 50-12
Cox...............137 100 01-13
Leading hitters: C-Ronnie Jayne 35, Craig Cox 35, Donald Cannon 35; TR-Bobby Daniels 35.
Ormonds...........040 040 311
B-Wellcomell......013 000 0-4
Leading hitters: BW-Rlck Langley 34; 0-Stu Brooker HR.
Unity FWB.........006 322 0-13
Empire Brush t .... 100 002 0-3
Leading hitters: EB-Dwight Foster2-3; UF-Bruce Bullock 44.
Carolina Leaf.......000 015 0-6
1st Pentecostal.....200 209 x-13
Leading hitters: CL-Craig Browning 2-3, Chucj^ Baldwin 24; FP-Larry Anderson 34, Steve Keeter24.
Grace...............214 100 0-8
Mt. Pleasant.........060 001 01
Leading scorers: MPBob Cot-ten 3-3, Durwood Moore 2-3, Michael Taylor 2-3; GHaywood Outland 24, Tony Godley 24.
Pair.................005 022 0-9
Pantana.............021 020 0-5
Leading hitters: PrJoe Blick 2-3 (HR), Carlton Parker 34; Pn-Scott Taylor 2-3.
USFl Standings
By The Associated Press AtlanUc W L T Pet. PF PA Philadelphia 7 10 STS 168 73
Boston 5 3 0 .625 182 153
New Jersey 2 6 0 .250 123 189
Washington I 7 0 .125 117 192
Central
Tampa Bay 6 2 0 .750 167 154
Chicago 5 3 0 625 183 112
Michigan 4 4 0 .500 152 152
Birmingham 3 5 0 .375 108 114
Pacific
Arizona 4 ' 4 0 .500 148 186
Denver 4 4 0 500 109 133
osAngeles 4 4 0 .500 123 130
akland 3 5 0 .375 133 124
Saturdays Games Michigan 34, LosAimeles 24 Arizona 24, Denver 3
Sundays Games PhUadelphIa 23, Boston 16 Tampa Bay 30, washlnj^ 23 Blrmlngiam 21. Oakland 9 Mondays Game Chicago 17, NewJersey 14, OT Saturday, April 30 la at Tampa Bay Sundky.Mayl Michigan at Boston Birmingham at Washington
Texas
MlnnesoU
Chicago
Seattle
New Jersey at Denver Chicago at ^Angeles
Arizona at Oakland, (n) ^
Transoctions
By The Aasoclated Press BASEBALL
National League
NEW YORK METS^ecalled Ronn
Reynolds, catcher, from Tidewater of the International!
Canadian Football L _
BRITISH COLUMBIA LfDNS-Sent Tyrori Keys, defensive end, to the Toronto Argonauts lor Jo Jo Heath, comerhack.
frgil
WASHINGTON REDSiGNS-Signed Charles Riggins, defensive lineman, and tight end.
0 I .520 1(5
.471 2W
7 S .417 3V5
6 14 .300 I
Chicago 9, Cleveland 3 Kansas City 7 Jhronto 1 Milwaukee Sjrexasl California 7, Baltimore 3 BotfUm 4, (mliiid 2 MlnnesoU at New York, ppd., rain Mondays Gama MlnnesoU atwYoik, (n)
Only game scheduled
Tuesdays Gamas MlnnesoU (CutOlo 14) at Cleveland (Sorensen 0-3)
Chicago (Hoyt (1-3) at Milwaukee (Haas 04), (It)
Kansas City (Gura 34) at New York (RighetU34),(n)
Toronto (Stieb 3-1) at Texas (Smithson 24), <n)
Baltimore (Palmer 04) at Oakland (Underwood 1-1), (n)
Boston (Brown 1-1) at Seattle (Perry 1-2), (n)
Only games scheduled
Wednesdays Games MlnnesoU at aevdand Chicago at MUwaukee, (n)
TANK IPNAMARA
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
------
MCU
APTleoORMgAPLIKl
O40IC&
KansasCity atNew York, (n) Toronto at Texas, (n)
Detroit at California, (nl Baltimore at Oakland, (n> Boston at Seattle, (n)
wednsadaysG^____
San Frandaco at ratshurgb New York at OncinnaU Los Alleles at St . Louis Houston at Montreal San Diego at Chicago Philado^ at AtlanU
National Basketball Association GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS-Named
A1 Attles general man^r.
COUilGE
CAMPBELL UN1VERS1TY--Announced the resignation of Danny Roberts, head basketball coach.
LOUISIANA STATE-Announced the hiring of Stanley Bertman as head baseball coach. V PITTSBURGH-Named Joe Moore as offensive line coach.
NATIONAL LEAGUE EASTDIVISHm
W LPct. GB 9 4 .692 -
8 9
STOLEN BASES: JCruz, Sealtle, 8; Garcia, Toronto, 7; WWilson, Kansas Oa&and * MDavIs,
PITCHING (3 decisions): Forsch, California, 34, 1.000. 3.10; Gura, Kansas
City, 34, 1.000, 2.89;'RiBhlti, NewYork, 34, 1.000, 2.21: Stieb, Toronto,
Montreal St. Louis 8 4
Philadelphia 9 5
Pittsburgh 6 7
New York 4 9
Chicago 4 11
WEST DIVISION
.667
.643
.462
.308
.267
Uogu Lwoders
1.41
31, .750,
By The AiaocUted Press (UfEBUCANI
Boseboll Stondings
AtlanU Los Angeles Cincinnali San Diego San Francisco Houston
By The Assocuted Press A5IERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
Mondays Game
es8,St.Louls0
.800
.750
.529
.412
.294
.278
lUIAGUE BATTING (25 at baU): Brett, Kansas City, .455; Carew, California. .455; Hassey, Cleveland, .423; Moseby, Toronto, .407; Shelby, Baltimore, .407. RUN^: Downing, CallfOnda, 14; Brett,
STRIKEOUTS: Blyleven. Cleveland, 22; Stieb, Toronto, 22; Kison, California, 20; Zahn, California, 19; Norris, Oakland, 18.
SAVES: Quisenberry, Kansas City, 4; Spillner, Cleveland. 4, feard, Oakland, 3; Caudill, Seattle, 3; RDavis. Minnesota, 3; SUnley, Boston, 3
Downing,:
Kansas City, liTCasUno, MlnnesoU, 13; GaettI, Minnesota,
2; Lacy, Pittsburgh, 2, Seaver, New York, 2, Washington. Atlanta, 2.
HOME RUNS: Guerrero, Los Angeles. 6: Davis, San Francisco, 5: Hendrick, St.Louis, 5: Horner, Atlanta, 5; Schmidt. Philadelphia. 5.
ILENI
Sax,
Houston, 5: Wilson, New York, s' PITCHING (3 decisions): Camp, Atlanta, 34, 1 000, 2.05; Perez. Atlanta, 34. 1.000, 0,35; Reuss, Los Angeles, 34, 1 000. 2.67; Sanderson, Montreal, 34. 1 000, 3.72; Carlton, Philadelphia, 31,
Philadelphia, 5.
STOLEN BASES: Lacy, Pittsburgh. 11; Sax, Los Angeles, 8; Irfilner, Cincinnati, 5, Leonard, san Francisco, 5, Moreno,
Philadelphia at New York, Saturday, April 30
Philadelphia at New York. Sunday. May I
New York at Philadelphia. Tuesday. May 3, if necessary Philadelphia at New York, Friday, May 6, if necessary New York at Philadelphia. Sunday,
May 8, if necessary
(Milwaukee vs. Boston)
W LPct.
GB
Baltimore
9
7
563
Boston
8
7
.533
Detroit
8
7
.533
'<4
Milwaukee
8
7
.533
'4
Toronto
7
8
.467
1'4
New York
7
8
.467
14
Cleveland 7 9 WEST DIVISION
.438
2
Kansas City
8
5
.615
4
California
11
7
.611
Oakland
9
8
.529
1'4
Los Angeles 8^ ..^
Only gar..e scheduled
TueidayiGame*
Houston (Knepper 0-2) at Montreal (Gullickson l-I)
San Diego (Montefusco 1-1) at Chicago (RaineyO-3)
San Francisco (Brelning 2-1) at Pittsburgh (McWUIiams 1-2), (n)
New York (Seaver 14) at Cincinnati (Berenyi 1-I),(n)
Philadelphia (Christenson 0-1) at AtlanU (Perez34), (n)
Los Angeles (Hooton 0-1) at St. Louis (Stupen-4), (n)
l; Bernazard, Chica, 12.
RbT Carew, California. IS: Brett, Kansas City, 14; Kittle, Chicago, 14; Lynn, California, 14; Thornton, Cleveland, 14.
HITS: Carew, California, 25; Caslino, MlnnesoU, 22- Boggs, Boston, 20; Brett, Kansas City, 20; Rlpsen, Baltimore, 20; 'rCruz,Seanie,20.
DOUBLES: BreU, Kansas City, 9:
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (25 at bats): Heep, New York, .444; Hendrick. St Uuis, .391;
.750, 1.85; Dravecky, San Diego, 31, 750, 2 32: Valenzuela, Los Angeles, 31, .750, 258
Milwaukee at Boston. Wednesday, April 27
Milwaukee at Boston. Friday, April 29 Boston at Milwaukee. Sunday. May 1 Boston at Milwaukee. Monday, May 2 Milwaukee at Boston, Wednesday May
Kennedy, S a n D i e g o 7 3^1' lifadr ~
ity, 9;
., Boston, 7; SHenderson, SeatUe, 7; MlnnesoU, 6; Cooper, Milwaukee, : HrnekJiinnesoU, 6.
TRIPUES: GWUson, DetrolL 4; Baines. Chicago, 2; Evans, Boston, 2; Yount. Milwaukee 2.
HOME RUNS; Castino, Minnesota, 5; - Lynn, California, 5; Kittle. Chicago 4:
Perez.Philadelphia, 373; Chambliss, AtlanU .372.
RUNS: Garvey, San Diego. 13; Guerrero Los Angeles. 13, Horner, Atlanta, 13; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 13; Brock, Los Angeles, 12.
RBI: Kennedy, San Diego, 17; Hendrick, St.Louis, 15; Guerrero, Los.
STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia. 46; Soto, Cincinnati. 30; Valenzuela, Los Angeles, 26. Berenyi. Cincinnati, 25, lujar, StLouis, 21; Candelaria. Pit
4.if necessaiy Boston at Milwaukee, Friday, May 6, if
tsburgh.21 SAVES:
Garber, Atlanta. 3, Lucas, San
Diego, 3; SHowe, Los Angeles, 3; Stewart, Los Angeles, 3; 7'are tied with 2.
NBAPIoyoffs
Thon.Houston, 23, Cruz. Houston, 22, DOUBLES: JRay, Pittsburgh, 5;
Washington, Atlanta. 5. -PLF-
TRIPLES: Dawson. Montreal. 3 Flannery, San Diego, 2; Green, St.Louis,
By The Associated Press CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best of Seven)
EASTERN CONFERENCE (Philadelphia leads series 14) Philadelphia 112, New York 102 New York at Philadelphia. Wednesday, April 27
necessary Milwaiikee at Boston. Sunday. May 8. if necessary
WESTERN CONFERENCE (Los Angeles leads series 14)
Los AngelesTl8, Portland 97 Portland at Los Angeles Tuesday April 26
^Los Angeles at Portland; Friday, April
^ Los Angeles at Portland. Sunday, May
Portland at Los Angeles. Tuesday, May 3, if necessary Los Angeles at Portland. Friday, Mav 6, if necessary Portland at Los Angeles, Sunday. May 8, if necessary
Rollins Fined, Suspended For Role In Brawl
NEW YORK (AP) - Wayne Tree Rollins is $5,000 poorer, and thinks he got a bad rap from the National Basketball Association. And the Boston Celtics may add to Rollins woes by suing him.
The 7-foot-l center of the Atlanta Hawks has been fined $5,000 and suspended without pay for the first five games of the 1983-84 season for his role a bench-clearing brawl at
in
Boston Garden Sunday. Boston guard Danny Ainge has been fined $1,000.
Rollins said he was shocked and would apical, going all the way to arbitration if necessary. It is estimated that the fine and suspension could cost Rollins $30,000.
Its absurd, ludicrous and a shock, said Rollins, who added that Ainge hit me with the first punch. He had hit me twice previously and I reported both to the referees.
Theres no way they can fine me that much considering I didnt get a technical foul and didnt get ejected. Ainge got both.
The fines and suspension were announced Monday by
Scotty Stirling, the NBAs vice president of operations. Commissioner Lany OBrien also warned against further misconduct during the playoffs and said he was still investigating the roles played by others in Sundays incident.
Ainge also was fined $250 for being ejected.
Hawks guard Mike Glenn also was ejected from the game, but Stirling said a review of videotape of the incident showed he did not play a primary role and, as a result, any fine will be withheld pending the completing of the full investigation.
The brawl took place at Boston early in the decisive third game of the Eastern Conference mini-series. The Celtics won the game and moved on to the Eastern Conference semifinal round against the Milwaukee Bucks.
Stirling announced the fines and suspension following a review of the videotapes of the game, which the NBA said clearly showed from several different angles that Rollins
precipitated the incident in the third quarter by striking Ainge in the fate with his left elbow.
This was without question a vicious elbow thrown by a player who has a history of elbowing violations, said Stirling, noting that Rollins was fined three times for such violations during the 1981-82 season, including once in the playoffs.
Ainge, 6-foot-4, retaliated by tackling the 7-1 Rollins. Players from both teams, including those on the two benches, joined in. During the ensuing battle, the NBA statement said, Rollins bit the middle finger on Ainges right hand, administering a wound which Dr. Thomas Silva, the Celtics team physician, described as a. curved laceration of approximately three centimeters. The wound took five sutures to close. Rollins has denied he bit Ainge.
Although it clearly was Rollins who precipitated the incident, provocation is no justification for Ainges actions, Stirling said. By
tackling Rollins, Ainge escalated the incideht to dangerous proportions and for that he is being fined.
Asked if he thou^t the decision might be racial, Rollins said, Im trying hard not to think that way. Maybe they are thinking of it as a big black guy against a little bitty white ^y from Brigham Young. My attorney thought that might be it.
Meanwhile, Celtics General Manager Red Auerbach said the club may file a lawsuit against Rollins.
Were going to have further discussions with the league and see what happens, Auerbach said. Were going to talk to lawyers and find out how to proceed ... It was violent and unprecedented behavior, to say the least. Ainge at first said he didnt think it would be right to sue Rollins, but after he talked with Auerbach, Ainge said, Youd better check with Red on that stuff.
Last spring, Rollins filed a $l-miIlion lawsuit against M.L. Carr and the Celtics, claiming Carr had brandished
a knife and threatened him after a Celtics-Hawks game. The suit was later dropp^.
Mike Gearon, president of the Hawks, supported Rollins.
Well take whatever action we have at our disposal, he said. Well request a hearing and then the facts wil come out.
I have visual evidence clear as a bell that Ainge initiated the contact. What happened was Ainge telegraphed his punch and Tree beat him to it.
Its just like somebody winding up to hit a person and then being nailed with a jab. It is clear when you view the
tape from the direction facing Rollins that Ainge was attacking Rollins. As Ainge came at him, Rollins lifted his left arm and caught him in the head without stopping his progress downcourt. Ainge followed through but couldnt reach Tree. Then Ainge came after Tree and tackled him
The NBA said Jack Joyce, the leases director of security, reviewed the videotapes, along with Stirling, and that interviews have been held with appropriate parties.
Fighting has no place in the sport of basketball and simply will not be tolerated, OBrien said. Our resolve in
this area was emphasized to players, coaches and general managers prior to the start of the playoffs. 1 want to do so once again ri^t now, and I have also directed Scotty Stirling to speak with the coaches of each of the teams still competing in the playoffs, emphasizing to them that a repeat of Sundays incident would be dealt with severely.
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Walker Sprints For 138 Yards, Takes Over 5FL Rushing Lead
CHICAGO (AP) - Herschel Walker ran for 138 yards and a touchdown in 36 carries to take over the United States
Carolina Tops Tigers For Title
CHAPEL HILL (AP) -Scott Bankhead struck out 11 and Pete Kumiega rocked Clemson with a sixth-inning shot as North Carolina defeated the Tigers 10-1 and grabbed the Atlantic Coast Conference baseball championship Monday.
The victory for the Tar Heels, now 41-8, assured an automatic berth in the NCAA playoffs next month. The date and site have not been determined.
Kumiegas hit loosened up the guys, said North Carolina coach Mike Roberts. But its not only been his hitting. Hes been playing tremendous defense. He made a great play against Virginia that may have saved the game.
Bankhead, who improved to 8^, scattered eip hits, giving ninth-ranked mrth Carolina its second straight ACC tournament title. The Tar Heels and Tigers, who fell to 28-17-1, shared the crown last year.
In his two tournament starts, Bankhead gave up 13 hits and struck out 20 batters in 16 innings.
The rainout certainly rested his arm, Tar Hbel coach Mike Roberts said in reference to the rainfall that p8te<ied Saturdays session. He didn't throw it exc
Football League rushing lead - and Chicago Coach George Allen credits the Blitz defense for stopping him.
Walkers a great back, but we did a heckuva hob on him, Allen said after his teams 17-14 overtime victory Monday night over the New Jersey Generals.
We shut him down in the second half, said the jubilant coach, who stakes his reputation as a winner on defense.
Allen apparently misread the games statistics: After rushing for just 29 yards, including a 3-yard scoring sprint, in the first half. Walker galloped for 112 second-half yards - and lost three in the overtime period.
His fourth straight 100-yard-plus performance gave him 851 yards in eight games. He entered the weekends action tied for the USFL lead with Philadelphias Kelvin Bryant with 713.
Beor Grass Tops Manteo
Bryant rushed for 110 yards Sunday against Boston.
But Walker also fumbled twice, the second one stalling a fourth-quarter drive on Chicagos 5-yard-line. And the 21-year-old Heisman Trophy winner, who signed with the Generals rather than play his senior year at Georgia, also had plenty of praise for the leagues leading defense.
They got a lot of experience, a lot of veterans, Walker said. They know how to get the ball, how to stop certain blocks.
And, as Generals Coach Chuck Fairbanks pointed out, the Blitz defense also knows how to exploit advantage of an obvious weakness.
1 think George and his staff did a good job in exploiting what has been a weak point for us all season and that is protecting our passers, Fairbanks said.
Chicago had seven quarterbacks sacks, with veterans Stan White and Junior Ah You getting two each. And eight times. Blitz defenders stopped Walker for a loss or
BEAR GRASS - Bear Grass won three singles matches and added the first doubles match for a 4-3 win over Manteo in Monday tennis action.
Bear Grass, now 5-2 on the season, hosts Cape Hatteras today.
Summary;
Chicagos offense looked brilliant at times, with
league-leading passer Greg Landry completing 22 of 35 attempts for 246 yards and a touchdown, and league-leading receiver Trumaine Johnson snaring six tosses for 97 yards.
But the Blitz needed mine than 12 minutes of overtime and a 27-yard Frank Corral field goal to push its record to 5-3 before a crowd of 32,182. The Generals fell to 2-6.
New Jersey took the lead wi the first play of the second quarter when Walker ran untouched around right end from 3 yards out.
Chicago took a 7-6 lead on its next possession when Landry drilled a 12-yard scoring pass to Lenny Willis, cappii^ a 55-yard march.
The Generals made it 14-7 when free safety Keith Moody blocked a Corral punt and linebacker John Joyce picked up the ball and ran 13 yards for a fourth-quarter score. Dave Boisture, substituting for Bobby Scott who left the game with a bruised calf, passed to Victor Hicks for the two-point conversion.
Chicago tied it four minutes later on a 1-yard plunge by Kevin Long.
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NEW BERN - New Bern Junior Hig^ School took a track victory over Farmville Middle School and Havelock yesterday.
New Bern won the boys meet with 56 points, while Farmville had 39 and Havelock 18. The New Bern drls piled up 54 points to Fannvilles 47 and Havdocks 18.
Bovs vdnners for Farmville
were: 800, Tim Dupree 2:18; long jump, Anthony Canm 19-5; shot put, Gary Mome 46-9; discus, Gary Moore IHFO; 400 relay, 47.7 (school record).
Girls winners for Farmville were: 100, Kim Paytoo 12.8; 200 Lisa Lang 25.9; long Jump, Lisa Lang 17.5; high Jump, Usa Lang 441; shot put, Lisa Shackleford 264; discus, Lisa Shackleford 64-2.
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25 German hall
26 Manhattan, for one
30 Anger
31 Catalogues-
32 Artificial language
33 Decorations for hats
35 Nourishing dish
36 Affirm
37 Church parts DOWN
38 Operas Geraldine
41-Lanka
42 Divas forte
43 Certain Londoners
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Yesterdays Cryptoquip - FOUND: A SURE-FIRE TACTIC TO END ARSON.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: L equals I.
Tbe 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 words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, APR. 27, 1983
GENERAL TENDENCIES: You have an opportunity to put in motion a plan of action that brings your creative talents into play. Problems that need to be eliminated can be quickly done at this time.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You have to make a change in your plans if you wish to achieve the success you desire. Take stock in your finances.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You are able to improve conditions around your home, so get busy. Take extra steps to please family members.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Consult with experts in your field of endeavor so that you can improve your own routiens. Do something thoughtful for loved one.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Be certain to complete any tasks left undone. Listen to what an expert has to suggest about a business matter.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Do the thoughtful things that will increase goodwill with business associates. Make plans to improve your environment.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) If you clear the slate of present problems, you pave the way for a much brighter future. Enjoy social activities tonight.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Handle any civic work early so that you can later be with good friends for social purposes. Strive to get ahead.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Discuss future plans with a higher-up so you can advance more quickly and add to present prestige. Express happiness.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You have fine ideas that should be put in operation without delay. Obtain the data you need to further your career.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Handle routine duties in an efficient manner and gain the respect of others. Take needed health treatments.
'AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Before making anv new deals with associates, make sure you clear the slate of present obligations. Be logical.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Attend to duties you really enjoy and you can make much progress now. Show more appreciation for others and increase harmony.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will gain all sorts of favors by the simple expedient of a winning smile and friendly nature. Be sure to give a good educational background, since the creativity here is high. Then, success is assured.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
Concerts Slated At Carowinds
CHARLOTTE -Carowinds will start its 1983 Paladium season on Saturday with concerts by three top black soul groups. Evelyn King, The Fatback Band and the S.O.S. will perform concerts at 3 and at 8p.m.
Tickets are $3 in addition to the general Carowinds admission of $11.95 and will
be on sale at Carowinds on the day of the concert.
Other concerts scheduled to date at the Paladium include Joan Jett and the Blackhearts on May 15; Gene Cotton, May 21; A Flock of Seagulls, June 11; Little River Band, July 23; Rick James, July 24; America, August 13; and Dolly Parton, August 17. ^
By HENRIETTA LEITH Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) - A glittering gathering of stars from Hollywood and Broadway feted Laurence
Olivier in a threediour tribute at Lincoln Center that left the renowned actor marveling. at his audiences endurance.
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OLIVIER SALUTED Sir Laurence Olivier smiles as he accepts the praise heaped on him by the Film Society of Lincoln Center during ceremonies at New York. (AP Laserphoto)
Chamberlain, Maureen Stapleton, George C. Scott and others stood and cheered as the honored guest came on stage at the end of Monday nights gala to comment on the length of the festivities, saying:
You must be dying! Such prodigality!
The Film Society of Lincoln Center, which in the past has honored fellow-Britons Charlie Chaplin and Alfred Hitchcock at its annual galas, staged the program in Avery Fisher Hall to a sold-out audience that included many who had paid $150 for the privilege of also attending a reception in the New York State Theater.
At the start, the 76-year-old Olivier merely came into his front-left box, holding onto the railings, and beamed as he accepted a standing ovation. Then he sat with his wife of 22 years, actress Joan Plowright, and son Richard, to quietly watch his 50-year film career unfold on the screen.
Douglas Fairbanks Jr., who acted as host, recalled a friendship going back to California fishing trips in the 1930s and said he found it difficult to reconcile himself with the universal renown - almost divinity which Olivier gained later as the
NBC Is Number Three, But Network Climbing
ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - For a long Mme, the jokes have been on NBC. Some called it the fourth-rated network behind CBS, ABC and Atari. One producer, who had two series on NBC last season, referred to it as the National Biscuit Company.
Sure, NBC would be No. 1 if the ratings were read upside down, but things are looking better. NBC still is third in viewers, ad revenues and profits - although its 1982 profits are up $60 million over 1981 - but the network is reaching a different audience, and advertisers are noticing.
TV Log
For complete TV programming Information, consult your weakly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays Dally Reflector.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
TUESDAY
7 :00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Special 9:00 Movie 11:00 News9 11:30 Late Movie 2:00 NIghtwatch WEDNESDAY 2:00 NIghtwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8:25 News 9:25 News 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Child's Play 11:00 Price Is
12:00 News9 12:30, Young and 1:30 As The World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Light 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 AndyGriftith 6:00 News9 6:30 News 7:00 Joker's Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Zorro and Son 8:30 Square Pegs 9:00 Movie 11:00 News9 11:30 AAovie 2:00 NIghtwatch
WITN-TV-Ch.7
TUESDAY
7:00 Jetterson 7:30 Family Feud 8 00 ATeam 9:00 R.Steele 10:00 White Paper 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12 :30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News
WEDNESDAY
5:30 H. House 6:00 Early Today 6:25 Almanac 7:00 Today 7 :25 News 7:30 Today 8:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons
9:30 All in the 10:00 FactsOILife 10 :30 Sale of the 11:00 Wheel Ot 11:30 Dream House 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 Another WId. 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Dark Shadows 4:30 Little House 5:30 LieDetector 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jetterson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Real People 9:00 Facts ot Life 9:30 Taxi 10:00 Quincy 11:00 News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
TUESDAY
7:00 Three'S Co. 7:30 Alice 8:00 Happy Days 8:30 Laverne 9:00 Blood Feud 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12:00 Harry0 1:00 Mission 2:00. Early Edition WEDNESDAY
5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J.Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6 :30 News 7:00 Good Morning 6:13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News
9:00 Phil Donahue 10:00 GoodTimes 10:30 Laverne 11:00 Love Boat 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan'sHope 1:00 My Children 2:00 One Life 3 :00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 Special 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 Three's Co. 7:30 Alice 8:00 Fall Guy 9:00 Ryan'sFour 10:00 Dynasty 11:00 Action News 11:30 ABC News 12:00 HarryO
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
TUESDAY 7:00 Report 7:30 Almanac t oo Nova 9:00 Playhouse 10:30 Kingofthe 11:00 A.HIfchcock 11:30 Morecambe 12:00 SignOtf
WEDNESDAY 7:45 AM Weather 8:00 Gen. Ed.
t:3S Music Box 8:50 Readalongl 9:00 Sesame Street 10:00 Thinkabout 10:15 Short Story 11:00 Footsteps 11:30 Let Me See 11:45 WriteOn
f:50 Raadahmgll 00 Cents
12:15 Self Inc.
12:30 We Live 12:45 ElecticCo. 1:15 All about 1:30 Raisin'Up 1:45 AAusic6 2:00 Equal 2:30 Nutrition 3:30 Cooking 4:00 Sesame St. 5:00 Mr. Rogers 5:30 3 2-1 Contact 6:00 Dr Who 6:30 Sherlock 7:00 Report 7:30 Statellne 8 :00 Creatures 9:00 BarbaraW. 10:00 Mark Russell 10:30 Steady as She 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 Morecambe 12:00 Sign Oft
NBC has improved its demographics this year, says Bob Igiel of the NW Ayer advertising agencyv NBC apparently is appeal-^ ing to younger adults and male viewers. It makes them a viable buy. Theyre still not on a par with ABC and CBS, but theyve made strides.
The end of the prime-time ratings race last week put NBC a distant third, but, in comparison with the 1981-82 season, the network was the only one whose national audience did not decline. NBC also was the only network to gain viewers in the five largest markets, and increase' its share of hi^er-income viewers nationwide.
Although CBS was clearly the leader in over-all audiences and ABC was most popular with young-adult viewers, NBC showed prime-time strength with the hard-to-find male adults. In fact, NBC was second to ABC in males 1849.
Were still looking mostly for women in prime time, says one ad executive requesting anonymity, but I can make a good case for buying NBC with my clients when they have male products, or they want to reach dual audiences or they want NBCs cheaper rates. Theres room for different niches, and NBC is carving out its own little niche.
NBCs award-winning Hill Street Blues was sec-
Princeton Has Accepted Her
PRINCETON, N.J. (AP)-Brooke Shields can finally stop worrying. Princeton University, the actress-models first choice for college, has accepted her for admission this fall.
I am confirming that Brooke was offered admission to Princeton. She got her letter along with the others. The letters were mailed April 15, university spokesman George Eager said Monday.
Like other applicants. Miss Shields has until May 1 to decide whether to enroll. Eager said.
Eagers official comment on Miss Shields application ended weeks of s^ulation among Princeton students that prompted a Brookewatch in the student newspaper.
Jazz Loft Skip Gdiles Quartot
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April 29 & 30 Bi'ei Barn
ond behind Monday Night Football on ABC in attracting male viewers. In one month, Chrysler, Ford, Mercedes, Chevrolet and Volkswagen all advertised on Hill Street. The program also was most popular in homes with cable hookups, suggesting that quality may be one answer to the networks dwindling share of the viewing audience.
Comic Sees TV Decline
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) Network television could transform itself to little more than news, sports and special events if the decline in viewers continues, comedian Red Skelton predicted during a news conference Monday.
Skelton was on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Greeiisboro as part of a week-long celebration.
The 69-year-old Skelton said network executives have lost touch with their viewers and that writers are taking shortcuts - both of which result in low-quality programs.
They should know by now, instead of making pilot films for television, they should go out and talk to people, said Skelton, who spent 20 years in television. And little by little, viewers are complaining now about what is being shown. The ratings are down on the networks.
He said the networks are subliminally educating people now to the news. They interrupt the news broadcast to bring you a news bulletin.
Skelton also said people should make use of their lives and try to make each day a good day. Time is the glutton that eats up life and we must learn how to use it rather than letting it use us.
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first actor to become a lord and as a member of the exclusive Order of Merit. Fairbanks noted that this made him officially Baron Olivier of Brighton, O.M.
The list of" those recalling their on-the-set memories of Larry read like a Whos Who in the theater, including Trevor Howard, Glynis Johns, Jean Simmons, Christopher Plummer, Maggie Smith, Jeremy Irons, Frank Langella and Kate Nelligan.
Maggie Smith, who had watched herself being strangled onscreen by Olivier as Othello, came onstage to recall that she first turned down the role of Desdemona, then sent Olivier an hysterical telegram changing her mind.
What distinguishes Olivier, she said, is his courage and daring, and bits of it rub off onus.
Miss Simmons, who played Ophelia to Oliviers Hamlet, came on after the showing of Ophelias last scene with Hamlet and confided that she fell hopelessly in love with her co-star during the filming but all I got was Get thee to a nunnery!
Equally love-lorn was Miss Stapleton, who said acting with Olivier showed her his extraordinary professionalism, but watching him in Wuthering Heights gave her lust - plain, old-fashioned lust.
Langella, who as Dracula cowered. before Oliviers crucifix, recalled that Olivier had told him not to keep looking at the dailies to see how he looked or acted but to settle for what he had.
He said he asked Olivier when he had settled and the great man had replied: When I was about 70.
Chamberlain said he considered it a hi^light of his life to play with Olivier in Lady Carolyn Lamb even though they had only one scene together and no dialogue.
Plummer said he took up acting after seeing Henry V and later Olivier directed a play in which I was miscast.
He would take the most amazing pratfalls of agony and despair, said Plummer.
The subject of all these reminiscences, after commiserating with audience members over their long ordeal, told them;
GameShowSuit Is Thrown Out
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A suit by a Pepperdine University law student challenging a game-show policy of limiting repeat appearances by contestants has been thrown out federal court.
U.S. District Judge Lawrence Lydick ruled Monday that the antitrust suit by Martin Alan Fine was invalid because Fine had not suffered damage to his trade or business by being barred from the program The Joker Is Wild.
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My heart is indeed so tuii that it is bound, if I am not very careful, to overflow.
,Calling the tribute glorious, he asked them to accept thanks from one who is a foreigner, but not, perhaps, a stranger.
Thank you from my everlastingly, deeply grateful heart.
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The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, April 26,1963-13Seed Expert Gives Knowledge To Hunger Problems
In The Area
SYDNEY BARNWELL
Snow Hill Man Electrocuted
A Snow Hill man was electrocuted Monday about 1:15 p.m. at a bridge construction site between Ahoskie and Har-rellsville on Highway 561 in Hertford County.
According to Wesley Liverman, an investigator for the Hertford County Sheriff Department, Danny Keith Harrell, 28, was guiding an I-beam lifted by a crane into place when the beam or the crane boom touched a power line. Liverman said he was told following an initial medical examination that Harrell probably died instantly of cardiac arrest.
Harrell was employed by Wilson Construction Co. of Salisbury, which was doing bridge work across Chinquapin Creek about three miles from Harrellsville. The Harrellsville Rescue Squad transported him to Roanoke-Chowan Hospital.
Arraignment Day Is Changed
A new arraignment date of May 23 has been set for two people charged with the February murder and robbery of a Griffon minister and a Goldsboro man whose bodies were recovered from the Tar River near Falkland.
Arraignments for Dwight Parker of Newark, N.J., and Carolyn Denise Pippins of Route 4, Greenville, were postponed Monday in Pitt County Superior Court. Parker and Miss Pippins were each indicted last week by the Pitt County Grand Jury on two counts of murder in the deaths of the Rev. Leslie L. Thorbs and Anthony Ray Herring.
Parker was also indicted on two counts of robbery with a dangerous weapon and a true bill of indictment was returned against Miss Pippins on one robbery count.
Barnwell To Head U-U Fellowship
Sydney Barnwell, a physician and member of the ECU School of Medicine staff, has been elected president of the Unitarian-Universalist Fellowship of Greenville.
Other officers elected were Beatrice Behr and Lon Felker, co-program chairpersons; Kacem Sebti, treasurer, and Edith Webber, secretary. Charlotte Purrington and Gene Sutton were elected to the board.
The office of religious edu- cation director will be filled by Mimi Reid, a child development majorat ECU.
. Christ Disciples Holds Revival
A revival is under way this week at Christ Disciples Church on South Main Street in Farmville, with services at 7:30 each 7 evening.
Tonight Evangelist Evelyn Adams will speak. On Wednesday night. Dr. R.V. Wheeler of Wilson will speak, followed on
- Thursday and Friday by Evangelist Erma Daniels and on Saturday by the Rev. Lewis Baker.
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. Wheeler will conduct a session of a Bible course that he offers at Christ Temple each Wednesday.
; Elmhurst To Hold Festival
Elmhurst Elementry School will hold its 1983 Spring ^ Festival from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday.
" The festival will feature a carnival atmosphere with a " country store selling crafts, plants, and home-baked items. Additionally, the event will feature games, special events, supper, and other activities.
The festival will be open to the public with all proceeds going to school projects.
V Facility To Hold Reception
The Treatment Facility for Women will hold a reception for the 1982-83 volunteers tonight at 7 p.m. at the facility. The . public may attend.
: Hospital Recognizes Volunteers
Pitt County Memorial Hospital honored 244 volunteers for the combined 20,387 hours of service during the third annual Volunteer Recognition Banquet recently.
If the hospital paid average wages for volunteer services, we would have paid $150,000 for your services in 1982,
' Hospital Vice President Fred Brown fold the group. Those recognized for more than 1000 hours of servidces were Ann Stalls, Mary Kraft and Edythe Price, all of Greenville, and Ina Venters and Mildred Venters, both of Grimesland. Groups which made volunteer contributions were also recognized.
Toastmasters Meet Wednesday
Greenville Toastmasters Club No. 2595 will hold its regular , meeting Wednesday at Western Sizzlin Steak House on 10th. Street. Dinner will begin at 6 p.m. and the program will ' follow at 7p.m.
" The program will feature the second in a series of five
- lectures on parliamentary procedure. Charlotte Flanagan will be toastmaster. Mary Munell, Joe Sherwood and Glenn
'> Robinson will speak. For more information call Tom Houston 'at 756-8171.
NCCU Alumni To Meet
The Pitt County chapter of the N.C. Central University Alumni Association will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at the home of Ms. Hilda Payton, 1500 South Lee St., Ayden.
For information call Ernest Brown, chapter president, at 7564)982.
Police Report Two Collisions
WOW Units Present Flags, Check
Woodmen of the World have given American flags to North Pitt High School, First Christian Church and Eastern Carolina Vocation Center and a donation to the Belvoir Fire Department, the group announced at a recent meeting.
It was also announced that the Cam Site Center at Fort Barnwell will be dedicated June 18 at 2 p.m. Unit 1349 girls will go to camp June 27 and Unit 1348 boys will go later.
Sanford Man Arrested In Theft
A 23-year-old Sanford man has been arrested on charges stemming from a Feb. 13 break-in at a residence near the Pitt-Greene County line that resulted in the theft of property valued at $1,129.
Sheriff Ralph Tyson said Samuel Keith Sykes of 3118 Hickory Hill Drive, Sanford, was charged with second degree burglary and larceny of property from the residence of Susan Schneiderman, P.O. Box 383, Ayden.
Tyson said said Ms. Schneiderman reported the theft of turntables, receivers, speakers, cassette decks and camera lenses in the incident. The sheriff said some of the missing property was recovered from pawn shops in Sanford and Spring Lake nar Fayetteville. The Chatham County Sheriffs Department also recovered a cassette deck, said Tyson.
Bond for Sykes was set at $5,000 and a first appearance hearing was held Monday in District Court here.
House Break-In Is Investigated
Greenville police today were investigating a break-in at 1209B S. Pitt St. which was reported Monday at 5:30 p.m.
Chief Glenn Cannon said a television, a kerosene heater and a package of bologna, valued at about $470, were reported taken. A rear door was forced open to gain entrance to the house, the chief noted.
Arrest Made In 1982 Assault
Greenville police Monday arrested Marvin James Elliott, 23, of Alexandria, Va., on first degree sex offense charges following investigation of an incident on Nov. 11, 1982, in which an 18-year-old East Carolina University co-ed reported she was assaulted.
Chief Glenn Cannon said Elliott also has been charged with committing a crime against nature. Cannon said the coed was walking along a path in a wooded area off West Rock Springs Road when shew was grabbed from behind, choaked, forced to disrobe and assaulted.
. By CAROL TYER Reflector Staff Writer
Gary Reusche, .a seed expert now working for N.C. State University who has traveled extensively, spends much of his leisure time sharing with others about world hunger and how it can be alleviated.
A native of Northern Virginia, he talked recently here before the local Bahai group - (he subscribes to the Bahai faith himself) -and also appeared on a Washington, N.C.-originated television program.
He and his wife, Carolyn, and their two children moved eight months ago to Cary, soon after he completed a Ph.D. degree at Mississippi State University, where he also held a full-time job. Prior to that he lived two years in the Ivory Coast, West Africa, and two years in Haiti.
While in Ivory Coast, he worked on food production projects for an African regional organization which served five countries. In Haiti he was a research and varietal developer of corn suitable for growing there. He has been employed much of the time by the U.S. Agency for International Development and plans to conduct some projects for this agency in conjunction with his work at N.C. State.
He is working mainly with seed producers throughout the state, mostly in eastern North Carolina, he said.
Ivory Coast, he said, in terms of food provision for its people, is one of the best-off countries in Africa, he said. Most families have two-to-five-acre farms on which) they raise subsistence crops. They tend them with short-handled hoes. Gradually, though the children are
moving away to the cities, and uie labor picture is changing. Animal traction (ox-pulled plows) is coming into being.
More modest innovations in farming work best, he said, For instance, in Third World, it is best to promote open-pollinated grains, not
Honored In Awards Event
CHAPEL HILL - Three Pitt County students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill were honored at the chancellors annual awards ceremony April 20.
Candance Elizabeth Martin of 310 Prince Road, Greenville, received the Op White Prize in Geology. She is the daughter of Thomas and Vera Martin of Greenville and is a senior majoring in geology at UNC-CH. Her career plans include teaching and research.
Hattie Faye Hardy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Henry Hardy Sr. of Greenville, Route 5, received the Interfratemity Council Panhellenic Council Outstanding Senior Award for 1983. She is a senior at UNC-CH majoring in speech communications and plans a career in law.
Mary Catherine Hanifer of 118 Oxford Road, Greenville, received the Ernest H. Abernathy Prize in Student Publication Work for 1983. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Hanifer of Greenville and is a senior majoring in industrial relations. Her career plans include communications and public relations.
hybrid ones, because it is only sensible that these people be able to save their seeds for new crops. Therefore, his focus in varietal development has been the improvement of open-pollinated varieties.
In Haiti he worked in conjunction with the International Center for Improvement of Corn and Wheat in testing some of the varieties developed by this center located near Mexico City. There are eight such centers in the world which work to develop grain crops compatible with particular areas and cultures. Rice is developed in the Philippines; soybean and millet in India; potatoes in Peru, and corn, soybeans and cowpeas in Nigeria. These centers, he said, are modeled after agronomy departments like the one at State out of which he works.
World hunger, he said, can be solved from a technological view. What is more difficult, he said, are the political and social considerations. Often, he said, its good policy to keep crop prices low. Farmers, if they could get good prices for their crops, would pick up the technology thats available, but they cannot when all they can raise is barely enough for their families to eat.
He speaks to others about world hunger, he said, because he believes that the world is now beyond thinking that what happens somewhere else does not affect people here and vice-versa. He seeks to dispel the myth
GARY REUSCHE
that transferring technologies to underdeveloped countries threatens the well-being of people here by creating competition. The Europeans, he said, are further along than we are in developing markets throughout the world, bringing good to the countries they assist, even as they make money themselves.
With food production in a country, he said, comes better health facilities, a cleaner environment, more education, and thus a better way of life.
Speak To Me...
ROBOT - Hero, one of two all-electronic robots used by Pitt Community Colleges Electronics Department, plays hard-to-get with TV rqwrter Linda Shore at a press conference that intro^ed the creatures to the public. Students will use
the robots to learn circuit structure and repair, say PCC officials. The pair can be programmed to do almost anything -walk, speak, respond except give interviews. (Reflector Photo By Mary Schulken)
Safood Lovers - You Win!!
J.B.s Island Seafood
Lite Lunch
Serving Mon.-Fri. 11:45-2:00 Soups Quiche
Salads Crepes
Appetizers Broiled Flounder
Fried Oysters Fried Shrimp
-Two Specials Daily-
Tuesdav-Ovster Nioht
Steamed or so/
Half-Shelled Oysters. ..... O / dc.
Fried or *
Broiled Oysters............... O.dO
Large Oyster Platters .....
'6.95
J.B.s Dinner Served Mon.-Sat. 5:30-10
Located In Rivergate Shopping Center
E. 10th St. Greenville
752-1275
Our Specialty If Quality"
Radio Guests
City Manager Gail Meeks announced that the guests on the City Hall Notes radio program this week will be Nadine Bowen, administrative assistant, and Walter Stasavich, superintendent of parks.
Mrs. Bowen will discuss the citys bud^t process and Stasavich will talk about River Park North. The program is aired each Tuesday and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. on WOOW Radio.
BACK TO WORK?
An estimated $3,900 damage resulted from two traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Monday.
Heaviest damage, officers said, resulted from a 4:20 p.m. collision on 14th Street, 66 feet east of the Dalebrook Circle intersection, involving cars driven by Ann Johnson Arrington of Route 2, Win-terville, and Mary Susan Templeton of 115 Osceola Drive.
Damage from the collision was estimated at $1,500 to the Arrington car and $1,100 to the Templeton vehicle.
Cars driven by Pamela Annette Knott of Roanoke
Xand Michael Todd of WrightsvlUe Beach collided about 2 p.m. at the intersecUon of Fourth and Summit streets, causing an
estimated $800 damage to the Knott car and $500 damage to the Hall# auto.
Watertree Terrace Restaurant
13
Prime Rib for 2 Salad Bar $ Potato Wine
Tenace Seating Available 5:30^10:00
Its the small things like flowers and candles you appreciate, but it is the Prime Rib you will come back for.
Every Wednesday
758-3401 S. Memorial Dr., GreenviOc
Is the recession over? Can workers finally find jobs after the worst economic crisis in North Carolina since the Great Depression ? Anne Jones looks at these westions in a series of Special Reports Beginning on iiy nesday April 27 on WNCT-TV NEWS
14-The Day Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Tuesday, April 26,1983
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PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE
Havina qualified as Executrix of ..ie Eifate of Robert Midtte Bateman, also known as RoMrt
Midgette Bateman, Jr., late of Pitt County, Doris R. Bateman hereby notifies all persons having claims against said estate to present them to her or to her attorney, Jeffrey L. Miller, P.O. Box 7142, Greenville, N.C., on or before October 12, 1V83, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate
This 8th day of April, 1983. Oorls R. Bateman Executrix 704 W. 5th Street Ayden, N .C. 28513 April 12, 19,26, May 3, 1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Marjorie S. Deanes late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before October 19, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 19th day of April, 9M.
Robert F. Deanes 200 Greenwood Drive Greenville, North Carolina 27834 E xecutor of the estate of Marjorie S. Deanes, deceased. April 19, 26, May 3, 10, 1983
83 E 177 NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned, having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of NORAAANH CAMERON, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Executrix at 1602 Elm Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27834, on or before October 27, 1983, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make payment to the undersigned Executrix.
This 20th day of April, 1983 ANNE BRADLEY CAMERON Executrix of Estate of Norman H, Cameron Gaylord, Singleton, McNally 8, Strickland P.O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 April 26; May 3, 10, 17, 1983
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTJH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Harold Allen Vrooman Plaintiff,
VS.
Lynda Grace Vrooman Defendant.
FILE NO 83CVD533 TO: Lynda Grace Vrooman 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 of one (1) year continuous separation.
You are required to make defense
to such pleadings not later than the 6 day of June, 1983 and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking relief service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.
This 22 day of April, 1983.
JAMESE BROWN ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF Telephone: (919) 758-7255 P O Box 1356 Greenville, NC 27834 April 26, May 3, 10, 17, 1983
FIL 7T(r M C^l 88
FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY GRACIE LEE JASPER VS
WARDELL JASPER, JR
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: WARDELL JASPER, JR Take notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought
The nature of the relief being sought is for an absolute divorce from the bonds of matrimony based on separation tor one year.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than June 5, 1983, and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.
This the 26th day of April, 1983. Willis A. Taitn Attorney for Plaintiff
216 W. Washington St.
P.O. Box 390
Greenville, N.C. 27835 0390 April 26, May 3, 10,1983
NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned having qualified as Executor of the .Estate of JOHN BAILEY BE LAND, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before the 10th day of October, 1983, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned Executor.
This 30th day of March, 1983. WACHOVIA BANK 8, TRUST COMPANY, N A P.O. Box 1767 Greenville, NC 27834 Executor of the Estate of John Bailey Beland, Deceased Gaylord, Singleton, McNally & Strickland Post Office Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 Attorneys at Law
021
Oldsmobile
CUTLASS SUPREME IN2. 2 door, low mileage, axlra clean. Call Rax Smith Chevrolet. Avdtn. 746-3141. I9M OLDS CUTLASS Calls. Low mileage, loaded. Priced below NAPA retail. 758 2986 after 5.
mi OMEGA 4 door sedan. 17,000 miles. Like new. 758-1566._
023
Pontiac
BONNEVILLE SAFARI Wagon. 1980. Fully equipped, extra clean. Call Rex smith Chevrolet. Ayden, 746 3141.___
FIREBIRD I9a3. T top, 9,000 miles, fully equipped, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746-
3141.
19*3 PONTIAC Bonneville Sta tionwagon, AM/FM cassette player. Air. Excellent condition. 756 6820.
024
Foreign
FIAT, 1975, excellenf condltlw. Completely overhauled. AM/FM, low mileage, $1450 negotiable. 756 0183days.~756 3712 nlQhfs.
PORSCHE, 1969, 91 IT Coupe, *119122146. White. 64,000 miles. Good condition. $8,000. Greenville, 355-6881 between a and 10 p.m.
1972 VOLKSWAGEN Body excellent. Runs good. New radials, battery, needs muffler. $1050 . 758-6536.
OJJP. . -
1976 DATSUN BllO. Low miles. $1200. Call 758 3138.
1977 DATSUN B210. AM/FM, air, good condition. $1500 negotiable. 756-7796 anytime.__
1977 200 SX DATSUN New paint job, new interior. Good condition. Call Debbie at 758 1846 days, 756 1759 nights.
1978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed, good condition, good gas mileage. Perfect car for young graduate. 752 0454
1979 JAGUAR XJ6, 4 door sedan. Excellent condition. 33.000 actual miles. 757 1321 or 523 1524 after 7.
1979 280ZX 2 plus 2. Gold color. GL package. Air conditioning, 33,000 miles, new tires. Excellent condi tion. Priced to sale immediately. 752 9725.
1981 DATSUN 280ZX, 2+2, loaded, 5 speed. Call 757 1321 or 523 1524 after 7o.m. _
1981 DATSUN 200SX, like knew, low mileage, $6950. Call 355 6248 after 6
p.m
1982 HONDA PRELUDE,
automatic, air, AM/FM cassette. 5500 miles. 757 1505or 756 1076
1982 HONDA PRELUDE 5 speed, AM/FM stereo. Excellent condition. 746-2124 after 9 p.m._
1982 VOLVO 4 door sedan, black with gold interior. Call 757 1321 or 523 1524 after 7 p.m_
032 Boats For Sale
12' ALUMINUM V Bottom boat with tilting trailer plus 6 horsepower Evinrude motor. $600. Excellent condition. Call 756 1544 after 5.
16' JOHNSON Tri hull, 125 horse power inboard/outboard. 746 3906 after 6 p.m
16' STARCRAFT, new carpet, 70 horsepower Crysler, long trailer, new tires, two 6 gallon gas tanks, 6 life jackets, Slolam ski, ski board. Good condition. $1500. 756 1253.
19' CHAPPARAL, 1974 model, 135 horsepower Chrysler outboard with lower trim and tilt. $4295. Days 57 6611, ask for Frank. Nights 792 4758,_
1972 GLASTRON 16' with 65 horse ower Evinrude and trailer. $1595. 55 2970._
1973 CRUISER, 16', 105 horsepower Chrysler engine, Cox tilt trailer. Call 756 6989after 6._
1973 D&M 22' sailboat, 4 sails, head, fixed keel. Book value $8,000. Call 756 1646,_
1974 MEKEE BOAT, motor and trailer with 50 Mercury with all accessories. Excellent net boat, in good shape. 746-6017 or 355 2255.
1978 GLASSTRON family boat. Mercruiser inboard/outboard. 165 horsepower. Excellent condition. $5000.758 0501. _
1981 SANDPIPER 12' sailboat, $795. Call 756 6840after 6p.m
26' TROJAN 1977. Fly bridge, head, galley, and OF radio. Call 946-6127.
034 Campers For Sale
STARCRAFT hardtop pop-up camper. Excellent condition. Sleeps 8. 746-3530 davs, 746 4203 nights.
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Brlants, Raleigh. N C 834-2774._
036
Cycles For Sale
YAMAHA 400 SPECIAL, 1981, with helment. Low mileage. Like new. $1150.735-0576. _
1980 HONDA CX 500, Excellent condition. $1400. 757 1236._
1980 HONDA CAA400T Good condi tion. 9,000 miles. $700 firm. Call after 4:30. 756 7334. _
Attorneys at Law April 5, 12, 19, 26,
1983
WANT ADS
002
PERSONALS
WHITE WIDOW in 40's looking for a white male companion 40's or mid SO's. Call 746 4240. _ _
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville.
Oil
Autos For Sale
BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay top dollar._
NEEDACAR?
Rent a used car and save! CALL RENT A WRECK 752-2277
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114._
012
AMC
1974 AMC GREMLIN Great shape.
$850. 758 2671._
013
BuIck
LeSABRE 1982. Fully equipped, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746-3141
REGAL 1982. Low mileaoe, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141._
015
Chevrolet
CHEVETTE 1981. 2 door, automatic. Excellent condition. One owner. 32,000 miles. 752 0098, 752-6605.
1974 VEGA 55,000 miles, $250. ZS6A339.
1978 IMPALA, 4 door, power wln-dows, air, AM/FM. $2,Ci0(r 757-3380
1981 Z28 CAMARO Smoke gray 24.000 miles. Fully loaded. {B50C Can attef 6~ 756 903!/.
MAL
1981 HONDA CB 900 Custom, faring, luggage rack, extras, 2900 miles; $2400.756 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
DODGE D-50 PICKUP 1981. Low mileage, good condition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden. 746-3141.
1975 LUV TRUCK Good condition. $1650. Call after 7:30p.m., 756 1905.
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 tor 2. Phone 752 2743.
046
PETS
AKC ENGLISH SPRINGER
Spaniels. 3 males, 2 females. Liver/white and black/white. All shots and dewormed. I have dame and sire. $125 male; $100 female. 756 2087._
AKC REGISTERED great danes. 1 male, 1 female, black and while, I'-z years old, full grown. Ears have tieen cropped, all shots. 795-3744.
BEAUTIFUL AKC Irish Setter PUDS. $75. 758-6912.
DACHSHUND PUPPY Female, 8 weeks, all shots, $25. Call 756 8109
EXPERT DOG OBEDIENCE training and boarding. Call 758-5590. FERRETS FOR SALE Mink like animals. Albino, sable; Tiale or female. $45each. Call 758 .57.
FREE TO GOOD home. Beautiful female' cat. Has been spayed and has all shots. 752 0919
- AWAY PUPPIESI Part
errior, part Collie. 6 weeks old. 756-3404
SIBERIAN HUSKIES, registered, 4 red with blue eyes, 6 weeks old, wormed. $150. 753-4055._
051
Help Wanted
A MATURE RESPONSIBLE LADY
with child care experience Is needed to fill a part time church
nursery position. (Averages 4 to 5 hours a week). Please call 758-4027 or 752-0387 after 6 p.m.
W2 MALIBU Stationwagon. Air, AM/FM stereo, cruise, 'tilt wheel $7800. Call 746 2465 after 6 p.m
018
Ford
1*73 FORD Thunderbird, power steering, brakes, windows, air and more. Extra clean Inside, outside rust. $850. 756 9625 or 757-6491
1974 FORD THUNDERBIRD White
with new blue vinyl~Y<>p! condition. $950. Call 752 39 after'*
020
SI
Mercury
brMs, power steering, air Ino, rear glass defroster, radio. Very clean, $3850. 752 2M2._
021
Oldsmobile
OTLAS SUPREME 1982. 2 door.
4rs,sirthrsrJiw,l'
t
ALSO TAKING applications for tull-tlme cake decorator. Please bring along pictures of finished work. Apply In person, Jerry's Sweet Shoppe. Pitt Plaza.___________
AUTOMOTIVE SALES career. Excellent starting salary and benefits. Good working conditions. Sales experience preferred. East Carolina LIncoln-Mercury GMC, 756 4267._
BOOKKEEPER Part time book keeper/receptionist with some real estate management experience needed. Call *58-6061 or send resume to PO Box 6026, Greenville. NC 27835.
BUILDIN6MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
One mechanic for buildings located Kinston, Greenville, Trenton. Re
.......er, pneumatic con
plumbing, experl
frigeration, boiler, pneumatic con troTs. lighting, plumbing, experl ence rgqulred. Routine PM and
general repair capability. Start May 1. Call by Wednesday, April 27 if interesfad.
GRIFFIN SERVICES INC
tev 404-233-0995
051
Help Wanted
OUT TO PAST AND PROJECTED growth Wendy's wd Fashioned Hamburgers has management positions available in Eastern NC Previous restaurant management experience highly preferred, but not necessary. Hardworking, Intelligent individuals who can manage people should be unit managers within 6 months to ) year, salary commensurate with experience. If you desire fast advancement and an exciting career, send resume to Stacy Plummer, Area Director Wendy's. 3220 C Carey Road. Kinston, NC 28501.
ENJOY NEEDLECRAFTS?
Creative Circle needs part time workers, must be interested in crafts such as: crewel, needlepoint, latch hooking. Will train. For in
formiation and a^i^Mcations, Wed; JP
Holidome, Greenville and Thurs-
nesday, April 27 2 5 p.m. and 6:30-7:30 p.m., Holiday inn
April 28, 9-noon, Holiday Inn,
HAIRDRESSER WANTED Apply in person at Great Expectations, Carolina East Mall.
HOMEWORKERS Wirecratt pro duction. We train house dwellers. For full details write: Wirecratt. P O Box 223, Norfolk, Va. 23501.
INTERIOR DECORATOR with ex
ferience and a desire to excel, alary and commission. Send resume to Decorator, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834.
world of finance and investment? Good clerical skills, "take charge" personality, and career motivafion may qualify you for this office manager position. Word processor or computer experience helpful. Call Paula, Thomas & Thomas Vocational Assessment (Personnel Service Division) 757 1098.__
DENTAL POSITION Need mature personabla individual. 0ntal axpa rienca detlrad. Send completa resuma to Dental Position, 203 Ravenwood Drive, Greenville, NC 27834._
LADY old di
r noma. P
tor our 13 month tktky*
'art time weeks
In yow home. Prefer you keeping 1-2 other children. Call after 4 p.m.,
isusa. ^ - ..^.s
INVENTORY PURCHASING CLERK
Growing beauty product distributor needs experienced individual with knowledge pf buying, inventory control and general office functions. Good typing, organizational skills a must Excellenf benefits. Preplies confidential. Write to: Roy
Honeycutt, P O Box 1 467,
Greenville, N C 27834._
JOB SEEKING SKILLS SEMINAR for the unemployed to be an nounced. If interested call 758 9946 trom 8 to 5. _
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 INDIVIDUALS with re cent work experience. Occasional hourly work, weekdays, 9-5, physically inventorying and verifying serialized merchandise at retail stores in Greenville. Write to In-venchek. Box 105029, Atlanta, GA
30348._
MATURE LADY to live in with elderly gentlemen. Must have drivers license. Call 746 4321._
MUTUAL OF OMAHA
We need one person who needs as much as $359.80 a week and more selling tor Mutual of Omaha. Call for personal interview:
LeeW Weaver 756-1150 Greenville, N C
Life Insurance Affiliate United of Omaha Equal Opportunity Companies M/F
NOW TAKING applications for full time day time counter work. Apply in person. Jerry's Sweet Shoppe, Pitt Plaza.
PART TIME piano player needed couple days a week. Contact 758 8883 after 4. _
PART TIME help wanted Office work. Setting appointments. We will train. Salary plus commissions. Must" be local resident. Hours 6 9 p.m. Call Dawn at 756 628 between 7 and 9 p.m.
POSITION AVAILABLE
LPN/Receptionisl. No shift work. Apply Greene County Health Care, Inc., PO Box 657, Snow Hill, NC 28580, 747 8162. EOE_
PROGRAMMER Minimum i year experience in RPG programming on IBM system, 34 or 38. Reply to Attention: Personnel, PO Box 1879, Goldsboro, NC 27530
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
Sales
SALES POSITIONS
With A Present And A Future
3 POSITIONS
E xceptional Opportunity Average Over $500 A Week
To qualify: Must have car; good educational and character back ground, bondable. Free to travel in Eastern North Carolina. Must be aggressive, alert, highly sociable, ampitious and responsible. If you are selected
Your Future Is Secure
You will be given a complete classroom sales training program, then be GUARANTEED AN EXCELLENT INCOME to start in field training n
Our representatives are given every opportunity for advancement to key management positions.
This Phone Call Can Change Your Life
If you have some sales background cafl Chuck Carroll in Greenville, N C Monday, Tuesday or Wed nesday, 10 A M to 5 P M for personal interview only.
919-758-3401
Our people are earning up to $1000 per week in North Carolina now working our company supplied leads.
Egual Opportunity Employer M/F SALES REPRESENTATIVE Ma ior national company has an open ing for a Sales Associate in the Greenville area Prior sales experience not as impgrtant as ability and willingness to learn. Salary negotiable. Excellent benefit package. For a confidential in terview send resume to MANAG ER, PO Box 1985, Greenville, NC 27835. Equal Opportunity Employer
SR TYPISTS!
55 Words Per Minute WE NEEDYOUl MANPOWER TEMPORARY Services offers you:
> Unique Fringe Benefits
> Top Pay
> Flexible Schedule
Call us for an appointment We Are Not a Fee ^ency
MANPOWER
TEMPORARY
SERVICES
118 Reade Street 757-3300
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. Good working conditions and benefits. Excellent leave time. Reply to Orthodontic Assistant, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834._
WANTED Electric motor repair shop manager. Must have 2 years college and 5 years experience. Please send complete resume to PO Box 471. Rocky Mount, NC 27801.
WANTED EXPERIENCED storm window and door installers to work with Eastern Carolina's leading manufacturer. Salarv, expenses, and fringes. Call 757-l2<K) tor ap-polntmenl.
059 Work Wanted
CALL SEARS ROEBUCK & Co tor trae' estimates on siding, guttering, mobile home roofover. Insulation, Interior and exterior painting aw roof vents. Call 756-9700, exf. 232. Mondav-Saturday 10 a.m. 9 p.m^
CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road Eiv terprises 756 9123 day, 756 1007 night. _____
CLOTHING REPAIRS and minor alterations. Call 756-3584 alter 6.
WANTED registered nurse for small business. Good hours. Call to make an appointment, 355-2470.
WANTED.; Field sales repre sentative for solid established firm. Works approximately 3 counties. Excellent commission op portunities. Send resume and rater-ences to Sales Representative, PO Box 130. Washington, NC 27889.
059 WorkWanttd
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licdnsed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimafts. J P Stancti, 752 6331
CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO
Quality construction and renova tion. Phone 757 0799after 6pm
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. All Items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call tor free estimate. Days 756 9123. Nioht 756 1007.
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 9:30p.m._
HOUSE PAINTING, remodeling, storage buildings and garages built. 758 6212.
LANDSCAPING, grass cutfino, lot cleaning, small loads of sano and dirt, any type of outside work. 752 1356 alter 6._
LAWNAAOWER repairs We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m., weekends anytime.
PAINT PROS
We specialize in use of Benjamin AAoore paints. Residential or commercial. Interior or exterior. Plaster and wallpapering. Free estimate. 758 4155.
WE DO IT RIGHT
PARKIN CONTRACTING
additions reaaodeling
REPAIR WORK Call 756-4296 Evenings
SHIRLEY'S CLEANING SERVICE Have your home cleaned weekly or monthly. We also do windows and carpets. Residential and businesses references offered. 753 5908 after 3p.m.
SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59.95. Call Steve Atkins tor all your sign needs. 756-9117.
TIRED? NEED MORE TIME? Let
someone else do your houseclean ing. Ask about introductory offer. Call 752 3758___
TRUCK LETTERING AND sign painting. Free sketches and estimates. Over 40 years experience For a sign of beauty call Rudi, 746 6156.__
WE INSTALL VINYL SIDING and
sea/nless gutters. Work guaranteed. Call 752 5626 or 758 3514 anytime.
062
Auctions
six FORKLIFTS, 12 trailers, 4 trucks, bolts, office equipment, tools, parts bins, welders, auto accessories plus much more will be sold at
ABSOLUTE AUCTION Thursday, April 28 in Wilmington. For brochure call 919 483 1043._
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of lirewood for sale. J P Standi, 752 6331._
065 Farm Equipment
TOBACCO TRUCK CURTAINS
Less than half dealers price. Halteras Canvas Products, 758 0641, 1104 Clark Street. _
3 POINT HITCH broadcast spreaders 600 pound capacity
$249.95; 700 pound capacity $251.95;
850 pound capacity $254,95; 1100 pound edacity $278 eludes PTO shaft. Agitator $10.95.
78 .95. Price in-
Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752-
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752-5237.
074 Miscellaneous
A SPECIAL Sidewalk Sale. Satur day 10 to 5. China, crystal, etc. Bargains. Coin & Ring Man. Downtown Greenville.
A TIME SAVERI Fifty used mens and womens wrist watches. Seiko, Pulsar, and others. Some old, some like new, some wind, some automatic, some Quartz, some solid gold. $15 and up. Coin 8, Ring Man, 4th and Evans, downtown Greenville.___
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.__
BROWN VINYL rocker recliner. Sits good. $65. Call 756-4472 after 6
p.m._
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL
Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installatin. 919 763-9734.
If you're not using your exercise equipment, sell it this winter in these columns. Call 752-6166.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.
CAMERA 35mm Fugica ST901 with 55mm lens, auto/manual, LED light meter. 756 9500, 8 6; 746-4072after 6.
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years axperiance in building, call Jjmw^ Harrington attar * pm. j 2531 DICK
CARPET, CARPET, CARPET!
Assorted sizes and colors. 9x12's. 9xl5's, 12xl2's, 12x15's, Priced to move. Financing available. Furniture World 2808 East 10th Street, 757 0451.
CB 40 CHANNEL BASE, antenna, mast, cable and power mike, $100, Roberts 23 Channel mobile with antenna, $20. 756 2586.
CENTIPEDE SOD 758 2704, 752 4994. _
CHAIR, blue upholstered; $35. 756 5772._
COLONIAL STYLE SOFA, floral print, 3 cushions, 2 years old. Good condition. $250. 756 2683 after 5.
CUT YOUR FOOD BILL Coupon Shoppers Club. Free details. Send SASE to PO Box 2492, Greenville, NC 27834._
ELECTRIC RANGE, green 30", $100. 758 4535.
FACTORY 2nds NOW available direct from manufacturer. Hand woven rope hammocks, $19.95 to $53. Halteras Hammocks, 1104 Clark Street, Greenville
FOR EXPERT TV repair, bring set to Four Way TV in Hookerton. (We sell new RCA sets). 747-2412.
FOR SALE: A BONE frame gocart with 5 horsepower motor. $200. 753 4849,
FOR SALE: Used washing " machines. $85 or $75 with trade. -756 2479.
FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS Call
758 5590._
GRADUATION IDEA? Moffitt's . Magnavox has 12" black and white TVs for only $74,95 ! 2803 Evans ' Street Extension, 756-8444.
ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers. Sale 40% oft. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memorial Drive, 756 6417.
INTERNATIONAL CUB Cadet. 12 horsepower. Used very little. Excellent condition. Owner de-ceased. Call 746-4546.
JOIN MOFFITT'S AAAGiNAVOX video tape club. Greenville's first and largest. 2803 Evens Street Extension, 756 8444._
LARGE LOADS of sand and top . soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson._
LIKE NEW cash register. Call 756 7247.
LOWREY GENIE ORGAN Like new. Only $985. Call 756-8833.
MOVING, must sell. Heater,,refrigerator, 2 air conditioners, stove, love seat, coffee table, recliner, 19" black and white TV, 2 electric heaters, 1 oy heater. Call 757-0385.
NEW SHAAP copierssele, lease, rent. Large Miectlon of used copiers Xerox, Sharp, IBM, Savin, 3M 756 6167._
RENT A VIDEO Recorder end oet a free movlel (Tall URENCO, 756 3862.
RENT THE RUG Ooctor. Nothing cleans like it. Call U-REN-CO, 756 3862.__
SAVE 20% on Milllkin area rugs. Now at Larry's Carpetland, 3(TlO East 10th Street.
SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS
plXRts
CABBAGE &COLLARDS TOMATIOES& PEPPERS
Many Other
VEGETABLE PLANTS FLOWER PLANTS
AvjNyfpxT
074
AAiSCtliwiwut
SHAMPOO FOR FAtH Rent shampooers and vacuum* at Rental Tool Company._
^WEET_PpTATOES, $4 a bushel
i-?434.
TOBACCO PLANTS for tale. Call Tommie Simmons, 912-U9-33S7 or Charles Sutton. 912 73S-347*.
TOPSOIL, mortar sand, and gravel. Davenport >S2l7._^
756J
fill sand Hauling
TWO IS"x8" keystone clastic with almost new 60 series BF Goodrich radial TA Asking 1170. Call 756-3647 after 4 p.m
USED^WOOOWORKING TOOLS tor sale. Table saws, radial arm saws, air compressor, mortising machine, stroke sender, piut many other hand and larger tools. All tools less than 1 year old. Must sell. Call after 6p.m., 756-4373.
1 COUCH, 1 chair, 2 tables, and larnp for sale. Very good condition Call756-I544after5
19" COLOR TV Rent to own. *23 ger^ month. Furniture World. 757
4 CHANNEL VHF-FM mobile 40 watt transceiver. 132-174 MHz range. Auto-scan C T C S S and other features. >a wave antenna $550 firm. 758 494, 8:30-4:30 Mon day Friday
4 SLOT DISH RIMS fo
Volkswaoen, fits 4 luo. Call 825-1816
8 HORSEPOWER ridin lawnmower. In good shape. $32: 746 6017 or 355 2255._
075 /Mobile Homes For Sale
APPROXIMATELY I ACRE and
trailer for sale by owner in country 12x65, 1976 Conner Tidwell, corn pletely furnished with central air. garage/storage area (16x16). Price negofi ' '
neoofiable. 756-2692 between 711.
BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof, fros free refrigerator, garden fob, 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 to 8 pm.
CROSSLAND HOMES (formerly ASobile Home Brokers) 630 Wesl Greenville Boulevard 756-0191
BRAND NEW 1983 top Quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home
loaded with extras, plywood floors plywood counter tops, total electric,
refrigerator. Regular price,
ange,
$12,995
Limited Time Only
$9,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up included: Hours, 8 am to 8pm.
CROSSLAND HOMES (Fornnerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756-0191 _
12x65. 3 bedrooms, partly furnishecF $3400 down and take up Call after S p.m. 758-240f
payments
14 X 70 3 bedroom, 2 bath. $500 down. $191.10 month, 7 more years 757 3964. _
1970 COBURN Low down payment Low monthly payments. 1 bedrooms, '1 bath, oil heat. Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville.
1973, 24x60 mobile home
bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, kitchen, utlllfy room, den with woodburning heater. Central heat and air. Unfurnished
except for appliances. $12,000. Must be moved. 946-6773 after 7._
1977 OAKWOOD mobile home. 12x60, good condition. All rooms are closed off. Call 746-4677 from 4 9.
1978 CONNER 12 x 60, 2 bedrooms, air condition unit. $500 and assume ^yments. Call 756-4592 days, 756
I nights.
1979 CONNER Low down payment Low monthly payments, i bedrooms, 1 bath, oil heat. Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes. 264 Bypass, Greenville.
1980 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, unfurnished. $1500 equity and take up payments of $181.43. Call after 5:3(r746 4615._
1982 TOWN AND COUNTRY 14x70 2 bedrooms, 2 baths with garden tub. Must sell. Call 756 4376 after
6:30. _
1983 EASTWOOD New home. Total electric. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, A-roof, ceiling fan, cathedral celling, -AtT for $8995. Payment under $125 _ month. Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville._
24X60, 3 bedrooms with walk-in closets, 2 baths, woodheater, central air, dishwasher. Equity and take over payments. 752-48M 736 4000. _
076 /Mobi le Home I nsurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754._
077 /Musical Instruments
IBANEZ ARTIST GUITAR with a 60 watt Peavey classic amp Excellent condition. 75S-72(X), ask for Matt.
KIMBALL CONSOLE piano. New pecan or walnut finish. $1,599 with ench, delivery and 10 year war
^anty. Piano &^O^an Distributors,
Greenville, 355-(
UPRIGHT PIANO Great for piano student. Antique finish. Recent! tuned. $525 or best offer. Cal 355 2850.
078
Sporting Goods
44 AAAG SW AAODEL 29, 8^ barrel $450'firm. 357 SW model 19, 4' barrel. $300 firm. Serious callers only. 753 5988or 758-2681._
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST MINIATURE COLLIE (also known as Sheltie or Shetland Sheepdog), missing since April 22, male, 11 years old, family dog since 6 weeks old, easily frightened in unfamiliar surroundings. Please call owner 757-4724, Monday-Friday, 8 to 5; 752-2890 evenings and weekends
LOST: White poodle, weighs about 25 to 30 pounds. Wearing brown collar with rabbi tag. $100 reward. 757 6193 or 758-3046._
LOST: Yorkshire Terrier In
vicenlty of Lindbefh Drive. Call 756 9661)._
LOST: 9 month old male gray tiger
------- V..'
cat near Stancil Drive area. 752 0436
085 Loans And/Mortgages
2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans-mortgages bought. Call free 1-800-845 392ir
093
OPPORTUNITY
095
PROFESSIONAL
North CzHVlina's orlainal chimney sweep. 25 years expaence working M chimneys and^lraplaces. Call
dav^ rdflST^^535(0,'?armvMie
104 Condominiums For Sate
CO/MING
SOON!!!
^g^Hpy**_W*ek at BROOKHILL
HOMES AAodel will be open daily. Plan to see our affordable alternative to renting! Call for 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
100 Houaea For Sale
NEAR ECU 3 bedrooms, ivy baths, 839,m Work: 757-0042,' home:
NEW HOME in Lameiot. Buy this week and you can still pick Out your own colors, carpet and wallpaper. Will pay four points plus cloting cost*. SO's. The Ivans Co., 752-281 Faye Bowen, 756-5258, Winnie Evans, 752-4224.
NEW HOUSE just started. Cedar siding, 3 bedroom, l</> bath*. E-300. Will pay four points and closing costs. Low 50'*r The Evans Co. 752-2814. Fay* Bowen, 756-5258. Winnie Evans, 752-4224
121 Apartments For Rent
AZALEA GARDENS
NEW
_____Red Oak, custom
built brick ranch with all the extras! Lovely formal rooms, den with fireplace, 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 full baths, double garage, fenced backyard-beautiful nomel Call Jeff Aldridge, Aldri 8, Southerland, 7S6-280ror 756-3 A14. _
NEW LISTING Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath comtemporary in Camelot
FIREPLACE in living roOm makes
it cozy, yet it's spacious with bedrooms, 2' j baths, patio with
storage, adjacent to pool and play . Call
area at Windy Ridge. $58,000.
J L Harris 8, Sons, Inc., Realtors 758-4711
106
Farms For Sale
58 ACRE FARM Good road fron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond aed 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details.
107
Farms For Lease
WANTTOBUY
CORN
Top Prices Paid for your corn Worthington Farms Inc., 756-3827 Days, 7 3732 Nlohts
WANT TO LEASE peanut poundage or bu^ the allotment. Call 752-5968
rom 7p.m. on.
109
Houses For Sale
ASSUMABLE FHA 235, 3 bedrooms, IVj baths. 10x14 workshop,. 204 Burrington Road, Singletree. $47,000.355 264~
BELVEDERE By owner. $62,500 103 Staffordshire Rfoad, 756 5545
BY OWNER 3 bedroom house.
newly painted, 1007 West 4th Street $24,960. Call 756 6382 or 756-0489
(after 5 p.m.)
BY OWNER College Court. 3 bedroom house. Assume llVj% VA loan. $6500 down. Closing cost under $200. Call 758 6200or 756 5217.
CHERRY OAKS Ready to start on this new home. Add your own
personal touch by picking out paint, wallpaper, carpet and vinyl. Will pay four points plus closing costs. 60's. The Evans Co., 752-2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258, Winnie Evans, 752 4224.
GREAT DEAL!
Assumable 8'/?% loan with monthly
lavments of $170. 3 bedrooms, IVj larhs, carport with shop/storage
area. Brick veneer Heights, Winterville
(hi 757 3
In Weathingfon elTi
Excellent
asking price. Mid-Eastern Brokers, 1540, nights 757 3529._
HOUSE FOR SALE Call 746-6078.
Many extras.
Jeannette Cox Agency
INC
COUNTRY LIVING at its best can be found with this home located on three acres and overlooking a lake. Greafroom, formal dining, study, 3 bedrooms, 2V: baths, and 9% loan assdumption to qualified buyer. $89,900.
ELEGANT HOME with yesterday's greatness. Just painted inside and ready for your inspection. Huge entrance foyer with grand staircase, large living and dining rooms, paneiled den, four bedrooms, 2 full and 2 half baths. It is unique, it is irreplaceable for
TIRED OF CITY Hvingl Come to lis special will delight your la
y
tri-level which
family. Greatroom, playroom, large kitchen and dining area, 3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, garage and 3/4 acre lot . $77,900.
REDUCEDI EASY LIVING at orktown Condominium. Greatroom with fireplace, formal dining and fully equipped kitchen. Three bedrooms, 2'/2 baths and excellent storage. Lovely decor throughout, just $45,000.
BIG OPPORTUNITY to own a 3 story farmhouse In Cherry Oaks. Filled with charm from the spacious kitchen with center Island
through the rustic greatroom, study and dining room - all with pine floors, 4 bedrooms, 2 full and 2 half ;, plus a playroom. $107,500.
756-1322 Anytime!
LYNNDALE Impressive to say the least, with six bedrooms and four baths. Gorgeous foyer with fountain, living room with fireplace,
ifr---------
spacious dmlng room, pretty 'kitch with breakfast area, family
that features great room with wood stove, large master bedroom and garage. $66,000. Call Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500, nights Rod Tuowell 753-4302
NEW LISTING Farmers Home assumption. Available on this 3 bedroom, IV: bath, brick ranch, $41,500. Call Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500, nights Rod Tuowell, 753-4302
RIVER FRONT TOWNHOUSE
Washington Harbor. 3 bedrooms, 21/3 baths, pool, tennis, and boat silo. Call 946-6127
THIS COZY home on an attractive Color
lot in
,olonial Heights area is great starter home! It has 3 bedi
Irooms, hardwood floors, oil
heat, and it's convenient to shopping. Approximately 1,050 square feet. Only $36,500! Call J L Harris a. Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758-4711
TOWNHOUSE FOR SALE by owner. 2 bedrooms, V/3 baths with finished basement. Ideal for family $45,000. Mr. Baker. 758 1799after 7
YOU'LL ENJOY fixing up this older home In Winterville wilh good 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, workshr large great room with 8' p<wl ta
id fi '
and fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 years old. Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced in the $50's. 758 0144 or 752 7663. _
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, 2 full baths, den and kitchen. Call after 6, 757-1489
207 NORTH LEE STREET, Ayden. $25,000. 756 2717._
111 Investment Property
DUPLEX on 1st Street, near uni versify, with a 1 bedroom and a 2
bedroom unit, in good condition, has 2 drives. Seller will
garage and 2 drives. Seller will consider financing part of price. Approximately 1,40(1 square feet, gross living area. $34,OO0. Call J L Harris 8, Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758-471L_
115
Lots For Sale
COUNTRY LOTS Large 1/2 to 3/4 acre, reasonably priced. Call for locations and prices. The Evans
Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756-5258, Winnie Evans, 752 4224
EMORYWOOD SUBDIVISION
located off Farmville Highway. $3,000. The Evans Co., 752-2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258, Winnie Evans, 752-4224.
LOT IN MILLBROOK Subdivision near Simpson. $8,500. The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258, Winnie Evans, 752 4224. _
ROSEWOOD SUBDIVISION
Country lots near Winterville. $7,500. The Evans Co., 752-2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258, Winnie Evans, 752-4224.
10 MILES east of Greenville. 2 acres. Well and septic tank. $13,000. 757 3964.
117 Resort Property For Sale
NICE BIG VACATION lot at Scup
pernong Village in Tyrell County. Call 749^4911 from6to8p.m.
WATER FRONT PROPERTY,
100x325 on Pamlico River at Bayview (near Bath, NO, contains
2- completely furnished houses. Price neodtlable; 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 tor year-round comfort, fully insulated, heat, air and fireplace.
Completely new, ideal for retirement. Contact Vance Overton,
923-2701 or 756-8697.
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnistied one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-free refrigerators. -
Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown Couples or
by appointment only, singles. No pets.
Contact J T or Tommy Williams _756-7815__
BRAND NEW - duplex townhouse 2 bedrooms, lVi baths.
ady AAay ' Memori
----- Jchool. De
and lease. $300 per month. Call
1 mile from Pitt County Memorial Hospital, and AAedical School, posit an
825-4931
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom fownhouses with IV} baths. Also 1 l^room apartments. Carpet, dishwashers
impactors, patio, free cable TV! washer-dryer ' '
hook-ups, laundr room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL. 752 1557
DUPLEX FOR RENT Refrigerator, stove, $125. 2006 Chestnut Street. Call 758 2025
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
All utilities Cable TV Telephone (soon) Furnished
With or without maid service
Weekly or monthly rates
.. ifh '
Starting $250 month and up
756-5555 Olde London Inn
FISCHER VILLAGE apartments Aurora, NC, available for oc
cupancy. Elderly, handicapped and Rent based on Inct
disabled. Rent based on income Barbara Miller, 322 4990 or 322 4913. Equal Opportunity Housino
FORREST ME NTS
MANOR APART
_1 and 2 large bedroom
apartments. New carpet, stove, refrigerator furnished. Pool privileges, close to college. Call 757-6824 8 to5, ask for Gall. 7 5577 after 5
Large
GreeneWay
2 bedroom garden ap, ments, carpe fed, dish
lart
washer, cable Tv, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. 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 pets. Call Judy at 756 6336 before 5 .m., Mondav-Fridav
One
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
and two bedroom garden
apartments. Carpeted, range,
" disjaosal
fri
rator, dishwasher, _
cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located |ust off 10th Street.
Call 752-3519
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment "----- with nature outside your
living
door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 56% less than comparable units), dlshwash-e^r, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable
y
TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security Its required, no pets. Call 4413 between 8 and 5
NEED STORAGE? We have
size to meet your storage need. Caf Arlington Self Storage, (3pen AAon day - Friday 9-5. Call 756-9933.
121 Apartments For Rent
room with stone floor and fireplace, wet bar, comfortable study. All bedrooms are large with ample closets. Screened porch, carport'. $160,000. Dutfus Realty Inc.,n56 5395.
lAAVIS BUTTS REALTY
758-0655
$42,900. PINERIOGE is the setting or this cute brick ranch. A wooded lot is only one ot the pluses in this 3 bedroom, IV} bath home. Also offers living room with free-standing wood burning stove, eat-in kitchen with sliding doors to patio. Assume this loan with only $8500 down and payments of only $379.71 $39.42
escrow.
$53,900. TWIN OAKS This charm ing home is loaded with old Williamsburg decor. 2 generous bedrooms, split bath, large great room with free-standing woodstove to deck.
and french doors
dining
room, large kitchen and heatpump. Assumable loan or new 95% 30 year
fixed rate I2V}%
$55,500. GREENW(X>D FOREST
New construction. You can have it your way if you hurry! All colors, patterns and stains can be chosen on this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home In the pines. Other features include
living room with fireplace, dining room with doors to salt-treated
deck, eat-ln kitchen, heat pump and carport.
$57,900. STANTONSBURG ROAD his home available for immediate
upancy! Owner anxious to sell > 3 bedri .....
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 8, Co:, Inc. Financial 8,
Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville. NC 757-0001, nights 753 4015._
SPECI/VLTY FURNITURE Shop. Enjoying brisk business. Very attractive. Well located lor high
brisk
_________ Well
traffic. Owner ha* been fransfered
W First street. 752-3575
TO BUY OR_.SELL a
?As"slSSSft
Brokers, 401 W First SI
I business. . Cor
dntact ,,, Licensed Street. 752-
795 PROFESSIONAL
BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and
.....iging finish).
rheetVbck "'>- 0 year*
sxperlence. Call 757-0678. If no answer 355 69a-
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Iroom, 2 bath home just 1 year old. Also features great room
with dining area and woodstove, tn bar, laundry area and
kitchen wi heat pump
$69,900. 315 ST ANDREWS Stylish brick Cape Cod features 3-4 bedrooms (use one for an offlcel), 2 baths, large great room with fireplace, dining area, eat-in kitch en, laundry room, french door* to deck, large lot and dual heat pumps.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT. Stan clll Drive 2 bedrooms, 1 bath duplex - $250.00 per month. Bryton HiMs - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath - $235.00 er month. Verdant St. - 2 edrooms, IV] bath duplex townhouse - $290.00 per month. All require 1 year's lease and security dejxisit. Duffus Realty, Inc., 756-
08
APARTMENTS FOR RENT: Stancill Drive - 2 bedrooms, I bath duplex, $250 per month. Bryton HiMs - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $235 per month. Verdant St. - 2 bedroom,IV2 bath duplex townhouse, $290 per month. All require 1 year's lease
and security deposit. Duffus Realty,
Inc. 756-0811
AVAILABLE AAAY 1. Energy effi cient 2 bedroom townhouse duplex. Carpeted, appliances, IV] baths, wood deck. Ridge Place. Call 756-2879.__
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING
''HKlt'iHiq Hmim AcV
C .1.. Lii])ton. Co
AA*vlBms......
.756-2851 .758-5463 7i2-7m
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.
Across f foiTi WHrhovia ('ornputof rontof
MiMTionai f)r ;.fs t,/*
MACHINE SHOP FOREMAN
Anwricai iRRdlng houMhoM brush maksr la now staking a highly skillad and axpaiiancad tootmakar. Planning and laadarahip abUitlaa a must. Knowladga of injactlon mold rapair a plus
Empira offart an opportunity to uaa your axpartlsa and ba paid commanaurata to axparianca. Attractiva vacation and banafit packaga Including diaabillty and ratlramant.
Plaasa sand lattar or raauma with work and pay history plus praaant waga raquiramanta In eonfldanca to:EMPIRE BRUSHES, INC.
Attn: Laon Wright, Paraonnal Managar P.O. Box 1606, Qraonvilla, N.C. 27834 til-7814111 An Equal Opportunity Employar
Wanted:
Job Opening
Full time position as Assistant to the Executive Director of Pitt County Red Cross. Qualificatipns: any combination of training and sxpariancs equivalent to graduation from college. Typing, dictation, filing, ex-parlance in Rad Cross not assentlal but desirabla. Sand Resume to Employar, Post Office Box 820, Qreon-
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1-5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
NEW TOWNHOUSE with fireplace to professional single or married couple. 758 6242 aHer 7 p.m
NEW 1 BEDROOM with patios. Water/sewer furnished. $210imonth. 756-7417._
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, dis pqsal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to PIH Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
I CRAFTED SERVICES
Quality furniture Reflnlshlng and repairs. Superior eening for all typo ehelro, largor eoioclion of cualom picluro framing, eurvey tlakeeany length, all types of paNots, hand-crafted rope ham-mocka, aalsclad fra reproductions.
framed
Eastern Carolina Vocational Center
Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 T8M1M IA.M.-4:30P.IIII.
QraanvHIa, N.C.
1980 AMC JEEP CJ-5
Renegade. Red with gold striping, saddle soft top.
WASHINGTON MOTOR CO., INC.
946-7798
121 Apartments For Rent
AVAILABLE MAY 1. New 1. 2 and bedroom apartments. Drapes, wal to wjUl carpet, ctnfral heatand air outside storage. Griffon are*. Offlci
^ ^.Office
boors 10 a.m. fo 2 p.m., Monday through Friday, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m Saturday and Sunday. Rhone 524 4239
ONE BEDROOM, furnished i or mobile homes for
apartments .. rent. Contact J Williams. 756-7815.
T or tommy
ONE BEDROOM furnish* apartment adjoining ECU Com pletely modern with central heat and air conditioning. Stadium per
and air conditioning. Sfadii Apartments, 904 E I4fh St. $1901 month. Call 752-5700or 756-4671.
ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near can^us. No pets. $215 a month
ONE BEDROOM apartment Partially furnished. 752 7M1_
ONE BEDROOM apartment tor rent. Located close to university. Call after 4, 756-0528
ONE BEDROOM aoartment, 1400 Hooker Road, $200. Call 756 36r
756-3936.
RENT FURNITURE: Living, din Ing, bedroom complete. $79,00 month. Option to buy. U REN
to:
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Ha
y Place To Live LETV
Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-
tar RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dry hook-ups, cable TV, pool, cl house, playground. Near ECCi
Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm 8, Willow
752-4225
TWO BEDROOM _____
available. No pets. Call Smith Insurances. Realty, 752 2754_
a^a^rtments
TWO BEDROOM apartment near ECU Appliances. {275 a month. Heat and water furnished. Phone 758-0491 or 756 7809 before9 p.m
TWO BEDROOM townhome, IV]
baths, flrep^lace, carpet, air condl
tion. 756 34)3or 758 2181.
UNIVERSITY AREA Upstairs duplex. Available May I. 2 bedrooms. $200. 1204 A Forbes Street. 756 0765.
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, iVj bath fownhouses Available now. S295/month.
9 to 5 Monday Friday
5 Monday Fr
756-7711
WEDGEWOODARMS
NOWAVAILABLE
2 bedroom, iV] bath townhouses Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.
756-0987
WINTERVILLE Three bedrooms, 2 ceramic baths, central heat and air. living room, dining room, kitchen, stove and refrigerator, large den, brick duplex, master bedroom. Very nice. $300 per month. Call 746-S69 office, 746 3541 house. Available May 1._
I BEDR(X)M APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn, $215. 756 0545or 758 063S
BEDROOM apartment. $130 Located on 608 West 4th Street. Call 757 0688.
2 BEDROOM apartment. Central
air, carpeted, appliances. 804 Willow Street, Apartment
758 3311.
$250
2 BEDROOM apartment. Central
air, caijieted, appliances. $250 month. Bryton Hills. 758 3311.
2 BEDROOM, carpet, refrigerator, dishwasher, air. 5 blocks from campus. $265 a month. 752-0180, 756 MIO.
BEDROOM DUPLEX Stove, re frigerator, central heat and air
Deposit and lease. No^1*- Avalla
ble May 1. $245 month. 756 2086.
2 BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM, 1 bath, close to ECU bus stop. $275 month plus deposit. Call toll free 800-446-3870, ask for Richard; Sat urdav Sunday 752 5462._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
JIMMYS PERFORMANCE
00 QEERAL AUTO REPAIR ALSO PERFORMANCE WORK Open 4 PM to 9 PM Weekdays All Day Saturday
758-7252
1978 AMC JEEP WAGONEER
4 door. Dark brown with woodgrain, 30,700 miles.
WASHINGTON MOTOR CO., INC.
946-7798
121 Apartment For Rent
2 BEDROOM apartment near catnpus. Some utilities included.
$240. 752 4989.
2 BEDROOM, V/3 bath duplex near campus. $265 month. Calf 756 ; Monday Friday, 9-5.
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, stove, re frigerator. central heat and air, de^if, lease, no pets. 7566834 after 3 p.m.
1 AND 2 BEDROOM
Available immediately.
apartme 752 3311.
122
Business Rentals
FOR RENT- 10,000 square toot building. Ideally located on 33 in Chbcowinity. Call
Donnie smith at 946-5887.
WAREHOUSE AND office space tor lease. 20,000 square feet available. Will subdivide. 756 5097or 756 9315
2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space
for lease in small strip shopping center. Contact Aldridge &
Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 756-5260.
125 Condominiums For Rent
TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available In Shenandoah. $300 per month, 12 month lease. Young couple preferred. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 756-6336._
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2
bedroom, 1>/] bath, carpeted, major ippliances furnished. No pets 2?; -
825 7321 after 5p.m.
127
Houses For Rent
COZY ONE bedroom. In a quite neighborhood. 1 block from tennis courts. 756 8160, 756 7768.
FOUR BEDROOMS, 1'j baths, carpeted, central heat and air conditioning. $330 a month. Avalla ble May 5. ill North Jarvis Street 752 4156, ask tor Loree.
FURNISHED HOUSE near univer sity. 3 bedrooms. Suitable tor small family or 3 students. $375. 210 North Library Street. Call 752-5373.
HARDEE ACRES 3 bedrooms, 1' 2 baths, lovely kitchen, garage, heat pump, dishwasher, refrigerator, stove, fence. $360 per month. 756 5587 or 756 0482. _-
Top quality, fuel-economical cars can be found at low prices in
Classified.
HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in
town and country. Call 746-3284 or 524 3180.
HOUSES FOR RENT: Lindell Road 3 bedrooms, 1 bath $350.00 per month. Memorial Drive 3
bedrooms, 1 bath $350.00 per
month. Greenville Blvd. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2000 sq. ft. $450.00 per month. Bethel 5
bedrooms, ' 3 baths $500.00 per
month. Grimesland 3 bedrooms, 1
bath - $250 per month. Forbes Street 3 bedrooms, 1 bath $265.00 per month. All require 1 year's lease and security deposit. Duffus Realty, Inc., 756-0811.
NEAR UNIVERSITY, 3 . bedrooms. No pets. Call 726 7615
or
NEW 2 BEDRCX3M duplex off Hooker Road. Appliances and hook ups. $295 plus deposit. No pets. Call Mary, days 752 3000, nights 756 1997^_
STRATFORD SUBDIVISION Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Formal living room dining room, den with fireplace, kitchen with dishwasher and breakfast area. Screened in back porch. Nice shade trees. No pets inside. $425. Refer enees and deposit. Call 756 7829.
SUPER NICE 3 bedroom, 2 bath, close to university. $375 month. 756 7417.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DQORS& AWNINGS
Remodeling Room Additions
C.L. Lupton, Co.
NO DOWN PAYMENT!
Discover the joys of Engag%-A-Car, thO common-sense alternative to BUYING a new car.
It's the modern way to drive any new car, van or truck your heart desires...foreign ot domestic. With Engage-A-Car, you can laugh at Inflation because NO IXJWN PAYMENT Is necessary and your MONTHLY PAYMENTS are lower! You owe It to yourself to get all the exciting details now.
Mid-Eastern Brokers
Pitt Plaza 757-3540
Shopping Center
Enjoy the benefits of working with us! We are
THE MESTIQUE AGENCY
and we are looking for individuals who want to enjoy the challenge of success! II you have a positive attitude and like dealing with the public, then you can qualify for our generous pay structure of between 18K and 30K. We otter flexible hours, excellent working conditions and an opportunity (or advancement. All serious inquiries should include resumes addressed to the above agency, P.O. Box 397, Washington, N.C. 27U9. We are an equal opportunity company;_
OFFICE MANAGER
Howells Child Care Centers Inc. is interested in interviewing applicants with at least 2 years office management experience. Candidates should have a BS in accounting or finance with demonstrated on the job managerial ability.
Howells offers competitive salaries, excellent benefits and a pleasant working environment in our new facility in Riverbend Plantation in New Bern, N.C. If Interested, please call or write:
Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel Director HOWELLS CHILD CARE CENTERS, INC. P.O. Box 607, LaGrange, N. C. 28551 919-778-3067The DaUy Reflector. GreenvUle, N.C.-Tuesday, April 26,1983-15
127
Houses For Rent
THREE BEDRCX3M home, nice lot. Call 752 3311.
3 BEDROOM, 1> 2 bath, dishwasher, carpet, central heat and air conditioning. 113 North Jarvis Street. $330month Call 758 7997.
3 BEDROOM BRICK home, large
living room with fireplace, eat in itr '
kitchen, den, bath, central heat and air. $295 a month. 5 miles west of Washington, Highway 264. Call 946 1678 after 1 p.m.
3 BEDROOMS, 1' 2 bath brick home with garage, fireplace, fenced in backyard tor ren/ In Ayden. Call after 5 MondayThursday. Friday Sunday anytime, 756 7247.
3 BEDROOM HOUSE, large kitch yard, brick
en, large tenced-in , garage, $390 month. Deposit Quireo. 756-9934 after 7 p.m.
3 BEDROOM HOUSE, 1'] baths, carpet, fireplace, heat, air, stove, refrigerator, washer/dryer hookup.
carport, large yard, 1 year lease and deposit required, no pets. 2
miles east of Greenville, Highway 33. $325 month._
3 BEDROOM HOUSE near univer sity 1 bath, garage, all appliahces furnished. 2412 Umstead Drive. $385 a month. Call 758 6200or 756 5217.
305 SOUTH MEADE Available May 17, 3 bedrooms. $400 per month, lease, deposit, no pets 758-1355 alter 7:30 p.m. or leave message 756 1281.
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom trailer for rent. Call 756 2602 _
135 Office Space For Rent
FARMVILLE Desirable office 12x14. Private bath $115 a month. 758 6797.
FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or com mercial 604 Arlington Boulevard. 756 8111.
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.
137 Resort Property For Rent
EMERALD ISLE beach house, bedrooms, 2 baths, central all Cable TV $300 a week. 919 354 3301.
138
Rooms For Rent
RCXJM FOR RENT
day or night.
Call 752 6583
ROOM FOR RENT share 3
bedroom furnished home near col lege. Businessman or serious stu dent preferred. 752 6888 days; 752 7564 nights.
405 WEST 4th STREET
bedroom. $300. Call 757 0688
4 or 5
133 Mobi le Homes For Rent
CLEAN, 12 wide, 2 bedrooms, air College Court, East 5th, students $150 plus deposit. 756 1455, 756 0222.
FURNISHED, 3 bedrooms, I'? bath, washer/dryer, air, $175 month plus deposit. Call after 5, 758 3954
PARTLY FURNISHED 2
bedrooms, I'j baths. Near Farmville. Contact 753 4206._
SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes $135 and
up. No pets, no children. 758 4541 or 756 9491._
2 BEDR(X)M Mobil? Home for rent. Call 756 4687._
2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pets, no children. Call 758 4857.
2 BEDROOMS furnished children, no pets. Call 758 6679.
2 BEDROOMS, completely furnished, washer/dryer, no pets Call 752 0196._
2 BE DROOM TRAILER Furnished, washer, central heat. Call 752 3839._
60X12, 2 bedrooms, air, washer, $170 month, $75 deposit. Call Tommy, 756 7815__
SINGLE FURNISHED room for discreet male student or young businessman. $125 month. Nice home near Pitt Plaza. 756 5667
142 R(X)m mate Wanted
RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE
needed for nice home in country $125 plus half expenses. 756 0344. leave name and number.
ROOAAMATES NEEDED, $65 rent, utilities. Call 758 9897or 752 3103
WANTED MATURE female roommate. Very nice condominium Centrally located. 756 9773 after 5
144
Wanted To Buy
APPROXIMATELY I acre of land 10 miles around Greenville $4,0<X) maximum. 746 4764 after 5.
WANT TO BUY used tractor. 8 N's Ford 600 or 800 series. Fords and Jubilees, Massey Fergerson 35, gas. Call 758 4669after 7p m.
WISH TO BUY G(XJD used carpet 752 2994 alter
tor several rooms. 6:30pm_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR REENS& DOORS
Hpmodi'linq-Room Addiliofv,
C.L. Lupton Co.
SPECIAL
Safe
Model S-1
Special Price
$12250
*-7
Reg. Price $177.00
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 s. Evans St. 752-2175
1979 AMC JEEPCJ-7
Renegade. White with blue striping and blue soft top.
WASHINGTON
MOTOR CO., INC.
946.n9>
1978 AMC JEEP CHEROKEE
4 door. 4X4. Copper.
WASHINGTON MOTOR CO., INC.
946-7798
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR & RESPIRATORY THERAPIST/TECHNICIAN
Or Eligible. Immediate openings available in our Respiratory Department. Procedures includes intubations, ABGs, hemodynamic monitoring, Pre Op pulmonary screening, PFTs, plus routine therapy. Assistant Director's responsibilities include coordinating all clinical activities, preventive maintenance program, inservice, quality assurance and other managerial duties. Join our progressive HCA team. Opportunities for education In EKG, cardiac st.ess testing and Holter monitoring.
Edgecombe General Hospital is an affiliate of Hospital Corporation of America. Enjoy our excellent benefit package including a stock purchase plan and tuition relnbursement. We
are located a short driving distance from the beach or mountains.
Lot us be the beginning of your future. Submit resume tathe Personnel Department:
EDGECOMBE GENERAL HOSPITAL
2901 Main Street Tarboro, N.C. 27886 or call Area 919-641-7156 Monday through Friday EOE
Mr. Farmer
PIK PIK PIK
(corn & wheat)
Contracting Daily
Call For Prices Ask About Cash Advances Now.
Phone 758-2141
Fred Webb, Inc.
North Carolinas largest CCC Warehouseman Greenville, N.C. 27834
BELIEVE IT OR NOT!
is: X 14 AZALEA MOBILE HOMES o,14,995?
Plus Tax
3 Bedrooms 2 Full Baths
Includps'
Deluxe Furniture Cathedral Ceiling Storm Windows
Deluxe Refrigerator
Total Electric
1 Mile Fiee Delivery
Greenville 756-7815 Chocowinity 946-5639 Williamston 792-7533
25 Years In The
JwOponln r,iiboio8Z3-71l)l
Business
Longest MobHe Home In N.C.IsAt AzaleaMobile Homes
'-.-TV','7/^
1
N. C. House Approves Steps To Shorten Sessions
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) Bills to shorten the legislative session by three weeks and realign power between lawmakers and the executive branch won unanimous approval Monday night In the state House.
Stream Watch
Program Grows
By The Associated Press The Arrowhead Property Owners Association in Chowan County, hoping to bring about a cleaner Chowan River, is joining 23 groups or individuals in the states month-old Stream Watch program.
The squeaky wheel gets the grease. said .Alfred Howard, a retired Navy captain and member of the 5-year-old association, which has "adopted the Chowan.
Groups seeking to protect a stream as part of the program include three Sierra Club chapters in Greensboro. Wilmington and Charlotte, said Meg Carr, coordinator of the program for the state Department of Natural Resources and Community Development.
Also, science teachers, fishermen amd canoeists are seeking to adopt streams, rivers and bays in the Neuse, Lumber. Yadkin-Pee Dee, Chowan, Cape Fear, Pamlico-Tar, Pasquotank, Hiwassee, White Oak, Watauga and New River basins, she said.
The Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation has donated $30,000 for Stream Watch groups in "minigrants of up to Sl.OOO for anything from newsletters to water quality sampling equipment.
Anne Taylor, deputy assistant secretary for natural resources, said some groups want to clean up trash-strewn riverbanks, while others want to sample
water for pollutants to put lead environmental officials to undiscovered polluters.
In Todd, which straddles the South Fork of the New River along the Watauga-Ashe county line in the mountains, residents with homes along the river plan to join Stream Watch.
They are concerned about trash along the banks, erosion threatening a riverside road and flooding that regularly washes out the bridge uniting the town, said Julia. Gurganus.
Her group of about 20 families wants a grant to rent equipment to remove logs that have washed downstream. They also want to buy grass seed for the riverbanks to control erosion and to pay for water testing equipment.
"Weve only just started to work, she said. Were getting a community organization going here.
At Appalachian State Uni-versity, in Boone, microbiology professor Francis Montaldi has applied to study water that drains from a sanitary landfill into a brook and then into the South Fork of the New River. He wants to determine the landfill drainages effect on water life.
Montaldi said students will work on the project, which will continue for several years.
In Swansboro, a chapter of the Izaak Walton League has signed up to adopt the White Oak River in Onslow County.
Open Hearings By Paroles Bd.
RALEIGH. N.C. (.AP) -An agreement Monday by the N.C. Parole Commission to open its business to the public may be opening the door for a "disruption to the parole process because of its large caseload, says a commission attorney.
"If a district attorney invokes (the written request privilege) in a substantial number of cases and the parole commission has to take the time to publicly consider each one, this could seriously disrupt the (parole) process and cut down on the number of cases reviewed, said Jack Cozort, who also is counsel to Gov. Jim Hunt.
"It's important to keep the
Gas Chamber
Has A Leak
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The new Central Prison gas chamber has been deemed "unsafe . . . to attempt to use because it leaks, prison warden Nathan A. Rice says.
Correction officials recently ordered a redesigned door for the yet-unused gas chamber after pressure tests with a smoke bomb showed that its freezer-type door isnt tight enough to prevent leaks.
A representative of the prison designer said that the original door would not endanger prison personnel or observers.
The gas would only seep into a vestibule that is part of the chamber and is effectively sealed off, John Duncan of J.N. Pease and Associates said Monday in a telephone interview.
After the imperfect seal was discovered, Duncan said. Pease designers turned to the microelectronics industry, which uses specially designed doors to seal clean rooms.
The new door and other renovations required for its installation will cost from $6,000 to $10,000, Duncan said,
J
cases moving, he said, adding that the commission considers 1,100 cases per month. We cant control the number coming in. But we can have some control on the number going out.
The commissions decision to make its meetings on inmates releases follows years of deliberations behind closed doors.
The commission, in a consent judgment signed by Wake Superior Court Judge James H. Pou Bailey, said it would cast votes on paroles and conduct hearings in public, except in cases involving confidential communications or a potential threattpa person.
The agreement resulted from a lawsuit filed against the commission this month by District Attorney Donald M. Jacobs of Goldsboro. He contended the commission violated a state law which requires the board to meet openly.
In the agreement, also approved by Jacobs, the commission modified its position that, after a public hearing, it legally could deliberate in private.
At issue was interpretation of the wording of a state law which since 1978 has directed that the commission publicly conduct its consideration of parole. The law applies only to cases in which a district attorney makes a written request for an open hearing and in which the inmate involved has served half or less of his maximum sentence.
Inmates also must have been sentenced between July 1, 1978, the effective date of the law, the June 1981, when the Fair Sentencing Act went into effect, abolishing the parole process for people sentenced under the act.
Although Mondays consent judgment applied only to a Wayne County case, the commission agrel to adopt regulations with 45 days to extend the procedure to all applicable cases.
I think we have an order we can live by and effectively administer, commission Chairman Walter T. Johnson Jr. said.
Rep. Jack Hunt, D-Cleveland, introduced the bill to shorten the legislative session at the request of House Speaker Liston Ramsey. Approval of the measure sets up a possible conflict with the Senate, which is considering a bill to cut the session length in half.
The other bill, prompted by a recent state Supreme Court ruling, would realign authority for setting state officials salaries and specify who has authority to modify the scope of capital projects and promulgate adminstrative rules.
Both bills now go to the Senate for consideration.
Hunt said his bill would set the convening date for the 1985 session for the first Tuesday in February. Existing law requires the session begin on the first Wednesday after the second Monday in January, approximately three weeks earlier.
This is a simple and reasonable manner and proper attempt to shorten the 1985 session by three weeks, Hunt said, noting that the bill would apply only to the 1985 session.
Rep. Frank Redding, R-Randolph, said he would like to see the bill go further and set a specific date for adjournment but said he supports the bill because it is a step in the right direction.
The Senate is considering a bill like the one mentioned by Redding. It proposes a 75^ay legislative session every two years with a short organizational meeting in January. The bill also would allow standing committees to meet between sessions.
Sen. Gerry Hancock, D-Durham, introduced the bill after a study of session lengths requested by Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green.
Rep. George Miller, D-Durham, introduced the other bill approved Monday by the House. He said it is a response to the Supreme Court ruling saying that lines between the executive and legislative branches had become blurred.
In 1982, the General Assembly reacted to the court ruling by removing legislators from state boards and agencies that have executive duties. This bill adds several other boards and agencies to the list. Miller said.
It also specifies who may set certain state officials salaries - the Legislature, the governor by himself or the governor after consultation with the Advisory Budget Commission.
Among the salaries to be set by the General Assembly are those of the Industrial Commission, the community college president, the revenue secretary and the state personnel director.
The bill also would allow the director of the budget, after consultation with the ABC, to decrease or increase the size of
a capital project. The budget director also could accept gifts or grant money for a construction project not authorized by the Legislature.
Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, said the bill was not grabbing power from the executive branch. He said it was a good compromise and urged its approval.
It is a question of how much of our power, in the interest of efficiently running the government, we want to delegate to the executive (branch), Adams said.
Jack Cozort, legal counsel to Gov. Jim Hunt, said the bill was truly a compromise.
Nobody got everything they wanted, he said.
In other legislative action:
Crime
A bill to establish a fund for compensating crime victims tentatively was approved in the House, 108-2. The bill would raise court fees by $2 to establish a fund to compensate crime victims for medical expenses, time lost at work or burial.
Money from the increased court fees would accumulate until 1984, when a five-member commission would begin awarding compensation.
The bills sponsor. Rep. Tom Womble, D-Forsyth, said the increased fees should generate $1.4 million a year and $457,000 is expected to be in the fund by 1984.
He said claims paid from the fund would range from $100 to $20,000 with the average claim expected to be $2,954. The maximum number of people expected to be paid by the fund in one year is 442, Womble said.
Womble noted that 36 states already have a victim compensation fund.
Death
The Senate voted 44-1 to approve and send to the House a bill making it easier for physicians to withhold medical treatment for comatose patients whose condition is found to be terminal, incurable and irreversible.
Current laws require that the attending physician and a majority of a committee of three physicians agree about the patients condition before treatment may be withheld. The bill approved Monday would require only the attending physician and another doctor to agree on the patients condition.
Sen. William Staton, D-Lee, the bills sponsor, said it is difficult, for physicians in small rural hospitals to find enou^ physicians to agree on withholding treatment.
Current laws also require that the patients family request .that treatment be withheld. The bill would allow the
withholding of treatment when the physician and famil agree. ,
It is always difficult for a member of the family to make request that Uie life support system be withdrawn, Stato said.
Sen. Conrad Duncan, D-Rockingham, was the only senato to object to the bill.
I dont think (the Almighty) intended for people to mak any decision when they (patients) should be taken away, Duncan said. I do not believe in anything taking human Iif< unless its capital punishment.
BUls
Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, introduced a bill to set aside $ million for renovating the old state art museum for use by th< state Museum of History. But Adams bill quires the stati Department of Cultural Resources to raise $2 million ii non-state funds before the money would be available.
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Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
BOX 100'si Less than 0.5 mg. "tar", less than 0.05 mg. nicotine. BOX; Less than 0.5 mg. "tar". 0.1 mg. nicotine SOFT PACK 85's FILTER. MENTHOL 1 mg. tar". 0.1 mg. nicotine.
SOFT PACK 100's FILTER. MENTHOL 2 mg. "tar". 0.2 mg. nicotine, av. per cigarette, FTC Repon MAR. '83.