Daily Reflector, April 28, 1983


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





INSIDE TODAYTHE LEGISLATURE

A measure to abolish the North Carolina death penalty Is given little or no chance by senator who offered it. (Page 12)

INSIDE TODAYFARM COMPUTER

One farmer found his computer is something more than his old conventional bookkeeping system, and explains why. (Page 21)SPORTS TODAYSTRIKEOUT KING

Nolan Ryan surpassed Walter Johnsons legendary record of 3,508 strikouts yesterday with his 3,509th. (Page 15)

Weather

Gear tonight with temperatures in mid-50s; partiy cloudy Friday with hi^ in thelow-SOs.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 10-Area items Page 11-Mixed reviews Page 22-Miller in China

102NDYEAR NO. 101

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 28, 1983

36 PAGES3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS

By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer The Pitt County Board of Commissioners Wednesday held the second in a series of preliminary budget workshop sessions, hearing requests from such agencies as Pitt Community College, the health and mental health departments, the Department of Social Services and Sheppard Memorial Library,

Clifton Everett Sr., chairman of Pitt Community Colleges board of trustees, asked commissioners to appropriate W91,061 for operations for 1983-1984 - an 8.66 percent increase over the current appropriation of $451,90, and

Asking Additional Money

$201,174 for capital outlay for the coming fiscal year (as compared with $111,717 this year).

Everett, saying PCC is still pushed for space, said part of the capital outlay money would go to purchase and install a modular classroom unit and the installation of two modular units which Burroughs Wellcome Co. has donated to the school.

He told commissioners that PCC will move to a four-day class schedule for the summer with longer days in an effort to save on the consumption of electricity required for air conditioning.

Ed Garrison, director of social services, asked com

missioners to approve a total budget of $4.45 million ($4.20 million this year), which would include $16,547 more in county funds than was appropriated for the 1982-1983 fiscal year.

Garrison said we have cut programs and shifted people to hold the budget as low as possible. However, he said, the requested budget includes five new positions - three of them eligibility specialists needed to handle the increasing number of applications for food stamps and other grant programs.

Dr. Robert Ehinger, director of the Pitt County Health Department, requested a total budget' of $1.36 million, compared to the present budget of $1.42 million. However, he told commissioners that the 1983-84 proposed budget included

$770,686 in local funds, while the present budget includes $806,217 in county money.

Ehinger also suggested that commissioners consider purchasing an incinerator for use in disposing of animal carcasses at the animal shelter.

He said the incinerator, installed, would cost $15,600, and told the board that the city of Greenville has expressed interest in the proposal.

Commissioners indicated that the city would be contacted about the incinerator and about a possible merger of the city

(Please turn to Page 20)Central America Policy Sees Early Test

Latins Cool To Address

By PETER EISNER Associated Press Writer CANCN, Mexico (AP) -Brazil rejected President Reagans claim that Nicaragua threatens U.S. security, but Honduras and El Salvador praised his Central American policies and his plea for more military aid to the region.

The official Nicaraguan news agency said Reagan, in his speech Wednesday ni^t, has not taken a step backward in his policy of aggression against Nicaragua and support for the dictatorial regimes of the region.

Nicaraguas foreign minister, Miguel DEscoto, told CBS Morning News today in an interview from Managua that Reagan was lying and he knew that he was lying when he spoke about 2,000 Cuban advisers in Nicaragua.

We dont have any foreign troops in Nicaragua at all. Foreign advisers? Hiere are very, very few in Nicaragua ... President Reagan said yesterday that theyve been trying to engage Nicaragua in dialogue. Again, this is nothingbutalie.

Brazilian President Joao Figueiredo and Mexican President Miguel de la Madrid, who are attending a summit meeting in this

Caribbean resort, agreed before Reagans televised address that regional negotiations were the best route to peace in war-torn Central America.

If the United States thinks the situation in Nicaragua represents a risk for their security, thats their problem, Figueiredo told reporters. And if they decide to intervene in Nicaragua, theyll be doing that without the support of Brazil.

The (Central American) region cannot be considered only from the perspective of ideological confrontation or by resorting to solutions of force, the Brazilian president said in a speech at a state dinner Wednesday night.

The U.S. State Department considers Mexico and Brazil, Latin Americas two most populous countries, to be the most influential in the region. Both depend heavily on U.S. loans, but have disappointed the Reagan administration by maintaining friendly ties with the leftist governments in Cuba and Nicaragua.

Mexicos recognition of leftist guerrilla groups fighting to overthrow the rightist, U.S.-backed government in El Salvador has particularly vexed the Reagan administration.

RKFLECTOK

flOTtinf

752-1336

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

Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.

PROBLEM PREGNANCY HOTLINE I understand the Childrens Home Society now has a toll-free number for counseling women with problem pregnancies. What is it? J. W.

The Childrens Home Society Problem Pregnancy Counseling Line number is 800-632-1400 and is answered in the Greensboro office of the CHS. Its been in operation since January and a CHS spokesman said it has greatly increased accessibility of CHS services. Its like having a Childrens Home Society office in every town in North Carolina, she said.

The CHS has a Greenville office at 223 W. 10th St.

By ROBERT PARRY Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Despite President Reagans warning that the safety of our homeland is at stake in Central America, his proposed military aid package for El Salvador remains under attack in Congress where lawmakers are also weighing an amendment to cut off covert support to Nicaraguan rebels.

In a rare foreign policy

address to a joint session of Congress Wednesday night, Reagan declared that a leftist guerrilla victory in El Salvador could undermine U.S. credibility around the world, and he called for bipartisan backing for his Central American policies.

The first test of the speechs impact could come as early as today. The House Intelligence Committee met today to debate a proposal to cut off any CIA aid to

insurgents fighting against the leftist Nicaraguan goV; ernment.

That proposal, sponsored by Rep. Edward P. Boland, D-Mass., committee chairman, would terminate covert U.S. support for the insurgents within 45 days and establish instead a public fund to help Central American governments stop leftist gun-running in the region.

House Republicans are trying to delay a vote on the

Traditional Foods

Pactolus Elementary students Kim Lee, Beth Mizell, An^e Robb and Tasha Mitchell, left to ri^t, sample traditional foods prepared by community residents for th schools celebration of North Carolina Heritage Week.

The old-fashioned food tasting featured bread pudding, Tom Thumb, sourdou^ bread, venison stew, plum pudding, ham biscuits and many other local specialties. (Reflector Photo ByMarySchulken)

proposal.

In his speech, Reagan renewed his call for congressional approval of an emergency $110 million military aid package for the embattled Salvadoran army, and declared that stopping leftist revolution in Central America was vital to U.S. national security.

He also said he will name a special envoy to help bring peace to Central America and work with Congress. In addition, he said the administration supports any agreement reached by Central American nations for withdrawal of all foreign troops and security advisers.

Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said today Reagan /dt veiy good about his speech ... and the reception to it.

The response in the chamber and the public response and congressional response following the address reflected a strong bipartisan flavor, Speakes said.

Within 90 minutes after the speech, the press spokesman said, the White House received 1,419 telephone calls he said were positive and 904 calls that were negative. By 7 a.m. today, the White House had received 607 positive telegrams and 230 negative.

It strikes us as a strong reaction, basically positive, Speakes said.

He added the administration would renew our efforts with Congress beginning today ... The president will be totally involved. But Speakes gave no details on exactly what Reagan would be doing.

Although some Democrats praised the generally moderate tone of the presidents speech, others disagreed with what they regarded as his over-emphasis on military assistance.

Sen. Christqiher Dodd of Connecticut, responding for the Democrats, called Reagans policy of increasing military aid to El Salvador and support for counter-revolutionaries in Nicaragua a formula for failure that can only lead to a dark tunnel of endless intervention.

Dodd, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a Peace Corps volunteer in the Dominican Republic from 1966 to 1968, urged instead a negotiated settlement to the Salvadoran conflict.

American dollars alone cannot buy military victory, said Dodd, who argued

UNITED STATES

GUATEMALA

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that the source of revolution in Central America was not Cuba or the Soviet Union, as the president has argued, but poverty and injustice.

The painfii truth is that many of our highest officials seem to know as little about Central America in 1983 as we knew about Indochina in 1963, Dodd said. We cannot afford to found so important a policy on ignorance.

Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., said he was deeply concerned that the presidents overall policy is a prescription for a wider war.

However, Republicans said they felt the presidents

PANAMA COLOMBIA

speech had helped him build support in Congress and around the nation.

There was a noticeable lack of support for those who would just turn their back and cut and get out, said Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-Ill., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said he thought the president definitely changed some minds because the American people have been believing the lies they read in the newspaper and now they have the truth.

Endorse 'Sharing'

WASHINGTON (AP) - A House panel has approved a bill requiring the federal government to share 10 percent of its oil and gas leasing revenues with the coastal states.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C., would provide about $7.8 million to North Carolina in 1984.

States would get the money in the form of block grants for use in coastal management planning, waterfront restoration, fishery research and related projects.

The House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, chaired by Jones, passed the bill 37-2. It goes to the full House.

Despite the lopsided committee vote, the measure is expected to face House opposition because it is opposed by the Reagan administration, which says the bill would siphon federal revenues to the states. The administration said it thinks coastal planning largely should be a state function.

Interior Secretary James G. Watt has proposed the sale in July of 5,718 oil and gas drilling tracts on the Outer Continental Shelf off North Carolinas coast.

Gov. Jim Hunt warned last week that North Carolina was willing to take the department to court to block the sale of 151 of the tracts on the basis that they would pose a hazard to the states environment and tourism.

Ask Area Highway Corridors Opened To Twin Rigs

Two highway corridors that pass through Greenville are among several additional routes that state officials are asking the Federal Highway Administration to open to twin-traller truck traffic.

The additional routes (Ht)posed by state Highway Administrator Billy Rose in

clude N.C. 11 from U.S. 70 in Kinston to U.S. 264 in Greenville, and U.S. 264 from U.S. 17 at Washington to U.S. 64nearZebulon.

Initially, only two highways in Pitt County were approved for use by doubletrailer trucks - U.S. 258.

which passes through Farmville and the westerr end of the county, and U.S. 64, which passes through Bethel.

The additions proposed by Rose include four-lane and two-lane highways intended to provide more direct routes for the trucks.

Rose asked that; 15 routes or portions of routes, mainly in the western section of the state, be deleted from the federally desi^ated system for twin trailers; seven segments be added to the designated system; and 15 new corridors be added to the list already approved for

twin-traller use.

All states are required, under the Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982, to allow twin trailers on interstate highways and federal aid arterial routes designated by federal officials, effective April 6. North Carolina was one of the states

that had previoulsy prohibited the twin rigs.

All 768 miles of interstate highways in the state can be used by the double units, while 2,631 miles of other roadways have been designated as routes for tlw trucks.

f





'jt-am

2-The Daily Renector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Thursdav. Anni

Secretaries ^ Day Observed

The Greenville Chapter of Professional Secretaries International held its Professional Secretaries Day luncheon Wednesday at the Greenville Country Club.

The theme of the event was Progress Through Professionalism.

Dr. Eddie West, superintendent of Pitt County Schools, was keynote speaker and spoke on the role of the secretary in business, industry, education and government.

Special tribute was given to the 43 professional members of the Greenville Chapter.

.Anne P Harrington, CPS, was awarded secretary of the year award by the chapter This award was based on education, business experience and PSl activities. She attained her CPS rating in 1982 and is executive secretary to John S. McGara, TRW, ^c plant manager She has been employed as a secretary for 19 years and has been a member of the local chapter since 1979.

.Amy C. .Mills was presented the outstanding member of the year award by the group which was based on her PSl activities. She has been a chapter member since 1974 and has served as director, corresponding secretary, vice president and parliamentary advisor. She is a secretary at Burroughs Wellcome.

Members of the chapter coordinating Professional Secretaries Week activities were Mary Kittrell. chairman, Barbara Gray, .Nancy Johnson, Yvonne Hardee, Dean Mills. Peggy James and Gale Skinner.

.Aj)proximately 225 executives and their secretaries attended theluncheon.

Safety Award Given Pitt Farm Bureau

The Pitt County Farm Bureau was presented an award by the N.C. Safety Councii at the 23rd annual Safety Conference held in Raleigh Friday.

The award was in recognition of' the organization's safety activities during 1982 which included farm equipment, railroad and bicycle safety programs.

County Safety Committee members were Alma Worthington, Lois Briley. Rebecca Davenport, Margie Hart and John Lewis.

.Mrs. Briley and Virginia Riggs represented the county at the conference.

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Wife Refuses To Chip In

By Abigail Van Buren

* 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate

DEAR ABBY; The present economy (hard times) has hit us to the point where my husband has been voicing some rather bizarre ideas on how to make some money. His most recent scheme still has me reeling.

He suggested that we take out large amounts of life insurance on some of our relatives. We pay the premiums and name ourselves as sole beneficiaries. My husband had in mind insuring relatives who are either sick or elderly. In other words, those who probably wont have too many years left to live. One is my father!

1 told my husband I would have no part in such a scheme. I also accused him of being insensitive and immoral. He said 1 was being silly that his plan was something like "gambling. He assured me that my father would feel good about leaving me $50,000 or so when he died.

Abby, what kind of a man am 1 married to?

WONDERING IN MISSOURI

DEAR WONDERING: He is both naive and unrealistic in addition to several other adjectives that come to mind.

One visit with an insurance salesman would straighten your husband out. An elderly and sick person who is not long for this world is not so easily insured. And please give your husband this message for me: The saddest day in the life of a man is when hes sure hes discovered a way to make money without working for it.    ,

DEAR ABBY: When I read about the woman who had been treated for herpes, and all that was wrong with her was an allergy to colored, scented toilet paper, I had to write.

I have been married for many years, but the first year of my marriage I was in and out of doctors offices all the time. The itching and burning were unbearable! I thought maybe I was allergic to sex. I was told 1 had "some kind of infection, but nobody told me what kind. The pain was so bad at times 1 could hardly walk.

hAnally, a nurse asked me if I ever used colored toilet paper, and I told her yes. She told me to stop using it and see if that helped.

In less than one week after I switched to plain white, unscented toilet paper, I was 1()0 percent well again!

Now, whenever I see colored toilet paper in the home of a friend. I warn her. Many have thanked me and admitted that they also had that kind of trouble too, but never knew what caused it. Thanks, Abby. You did a lot of good with one letter.

CHICAGOAN

DEAR CHICAGOAN: I was amazed at the number of letters I received from readers whose experience was the same as yours. Thanks (all of you!) for writing.

DEAR ABBY: While cleaning the basement today I once again had to move several boxes containing junk for garage sales next summer. Abby, this junk" is all new!

On every gift-giving occasion, my husbands parents and grandparents give us numerous non-returnable knick-knacks purchased at craft shows.

Although we have dropped hints as to practical things we need and would enjoy, they disregard them and buy instead objects to hang on walls or set around, none of which goes with our decor.

We regret that they have wasted their money, but what can we do? We live in a small apartment with limited space. We appreciate their thoughts but are . . .

UP TO OUR EARS

DEAR UP: I can offer only one solution: Quit dropping hints and tell them frankly what youve stated so well here.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE

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Associated Press Food Editor

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NCFWC To Have Annual Convention

RALEIGH - The GFWC North Carolina Federation of Womens Clubs, Inc. will hold its 81st annual convention at the Marriott Hotel here May 2-5. Make A Difference will be the theme.

A special luncheon will be held prior to the opening business session. Dr. Mary Turner Lane will be the keynote speaker. The opening night banquet is entitled Bismark Revisited and will be in appreciation of Juanita Martin Bryant, the first North Carolinian to be elected president of the Gen- eral Federation in its 93 year history. Mrs. Bryant will give the opening address.

During the convention other speakers will include Dr. Neill McLeod of Wake Technical Institute and Rae McNamara, director of prisons, N.C. Department of Corresctions.

On Wednesday, tours will be made of the N.C. Museum of Art, N.C. General Assembly and the exhibit of N.C. crafts at the N.C. Museum of History.

An awards breakfast will , be conclude the convention and awards will be given to both junior and general clubs in conservation, education, home life, international affairs and the arts.

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Watch Tells More Than Just Time

By GAY PAULEY UPI Senior Editor NEW YORK (UPI) - The way you react to time ticking off tells much about your personality, says a practicing psychologist.

I was two hours late on my scheduled call to Dr. Forence Rhyn Serlin. What does that tell you about me?" I asked her.

You were probably tired, she said kindly. 1 doubt if you are habitually late."

She let me off the hook -once. She was right. Im one of those people who characteristically get agitated if Im two minutes late for an appointment. But something had gone amiss that day; a series of minicrises had set in.

Dr. Serlin is a clinical psychologist and senior staff therapist and member of the Community Guidance Service, a non-profit public service organization. She was a guest of the Jewelry Industry Council, a trade and promotional organization, at its spring fashion show of trends in watches.

The trend is to the watch that is a piece of decorative jewelry as well as a timekeeper - and away from the digital - the council said.

Watches tell what we are, Dr. Serlin said. The same way that the pets we like, the cars we like, the clothes we like, kinds of furniture we like, offer clues to our personality.

We gravitate toward people who have similar likes and dislikes. Differences attract people, but being liked saves marriages.

Are you a compulsive on-timer for appointments? If so, chances are you are meticulous in other areas of your life as well. Dr. Serlin said. This carries over into your home, the way you dress, your hairdo and your makeup. You want to lead a well-ordered life where there is a time and a place for everything.

Do you keep friends waiting an hour or so when youve made an appointment? You are either an egotist, or tend to belittle your own worth, the psychiatrist said. The egoist feels that she is so important she is worth waiting for.

She tells herself. Dr. Serlin said, Ive paid my dues of stress and demanding personal roles. Now it is somebody elses turn.

On the other hand, the always-late may have a low opinion of her own worth and want to prove to herself that you like her well enough to wait for her.

We make a statement about ouselves in the watches we buy for ourselves, the psychologist said. More and more, jewelry is taking the place of the automobile as a status symbol, especially since the nation launched its energy conservation program and gas guzzlers feU from favor.

Of all jewelry, the watch is the most popular status symbol. A man who chooses an expensive watch is say

ing, Look what I am. Look what Ive achieved.

An expensive watch fre-quenUy is one of the first items a young person purchases on his or her own. It represents independence from ones parents.

The sexes repond to time differently. Dr. Serlin said. When a man looks at his watch, he notes the time to be 11:02 exactly. Its never 11:02 for a woman. Its half an hour after her dentral appointment, and two hours before her luncheon date, and a week from now at this same hour, the time she will be boarding a plane for a business trip.

Dr. Serlin is co-author with Agelo Provitera McGlynn of Uving With Yourseif, Uv-ing with Others: A Womans Guide (Prentiss-Hall).

The psychologist, who has been practicing for 20 years, said she has to be a compulsive one-timer, like it or not.

My work depdnds on it. Its a disfavor to keep a patient waiting.

Bridal

Policy

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

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

A 6-year-old male cat named Himmy set a record when it weighed in at 45 pounds, 10 ounces, according to the 21st edition of the Guinness Book of World Records.

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At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

Well, the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company has finally issued its new weight table for Americans. You know, the ones where they tell you what you should weigh if youre a certain hei^t.    ,

Its an excitement I usually reserve for an impacted wisdom tooth.

But not this year. For the first time since 1959, the tables have upped the, numbers on how much you can weigh and still be healthy.

Have you any idea what that means to a layperson? It means for the first time since 1959, I dont have to lie to myself about being a large frame instead of a small. I never knew what that meant anyway. Besides, why should I say Im a small frame and live with 16 extra pounds of guilt? Who needs that?

The study said the fact that Americans are heavier is no cause for alarm. It just means that a lot of heavier people are living longer than they did 24 years ago because of improved diets, lifestyle and exercise.

I prefer to think it is the first thread of sanity to be

woven into the fabric of the future. It was bound to happen. People are just plain bored to death with dieting. It used to be fun going to a gathering and talking about a brand new diet where you change fruits every hour and dance.

And then the books started coming out about how the only way to lose weight was to eat less. Anybody can do that. It^no fun anymore.

Its going tote interesting

to imagine what will dominate peoples conversations when they wont have those ten extra pounds to lose. Itll probMily translate to the following conversation:

You look wonderful! Are you on a gain?

Yep. Started last Monday. Im doing it slowly this time. .. all I can hope for is that I gain two pounds a week. Tliats great. That way you wont balloon out all at once and look old. Id love to gain a few pounds. Whats your secret?

I eat fast. I gorge myself. Snack between meals and havent touched a stalk of celery since the holidays.

I envy you. I was a blimp when I got married. Now look at me. All I do is lose. I thought when I had the baby Id keep the wei^it on, but I didnt.

It makes me a little giddy to even think about a nation

that isnt on a diet. In the same paper where I read about the insurance tables, I also saw a story that said a study was done on pijgs. It seems the more they exercised, the fatter they got.

There really is a God.

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The Daily ReOector, Greenville, N.C.-Thunday, April 28,1982-2

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Shop Monday thru Saturday 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Phone 756-BE-L~K (756-2355)





4-The DaUy Renector. GreenvUle, N.C.-Thursday, April 28,1983

Editorials

Quality, Not Quantity

The hue and cry has gone out. A longer school year will Jjje better. To that, we say phooey.    :

To quote C.D. Spangler Jr., the chairman of North Carolinas State Board of Education; I would say if I had to advocate something, it would be a basic 200-day school year. That would also enable us to pay teachers another-month, 11 instead of 10.

Mr. Spangler seems to follow the philosophy that more of something is an improvement. Sometimes it might be, but the more needed in public education isnt more days. We just simply need to make better use of the 180 days now available. Adding another 20 days with the same level of instruction would serve no purpose other than making the school year longer.

As for Mr. Spanglers comment on teacher pay: teachers can be paid for any length of service the state desires; they dont have to have a longer school year. And, if the money is available for that extra month, what in the world is wrong with leaving the school year at 180 days and increasing the salary paid teachers? They need more money anyway, whether its for 10 months or 11.

We concur wholeheartedly with recommendations by the National Commission on Excellence in Education that course curriculum additions and changes may be needed and that high school graduation requirements include four years of English, three years each of math, science and social studies and a half-year of computer science. We still wonder why the requirements for such subjects as English, math and science were dropped in the first place.

The state recently raised North Carolinas standards from 18 course units to 20 units, requiring students to complete four years of English, two each of math, science and social studies and one of physical education. There would be no problem in adding the extra science, math and social studies. Computer science would be nice, but is not really mandatory yet.

But along with those extra requirements, learning should be reinstated as a mandatory requirement for graduation not just attendance for 12 years. Even the national commission noted that, in the 37 states which use a competency test, schools have tended to make that test the maximum not the minimum level of education.

With a great deal of lip service, we require our children to attend school. Lets make it worthwhile for them to be there. It can be done without all the extra expense that Spangler and others seem to think is necessary.

New Concerns

Pitt County has had its second school bus wreck with personal injuries in little more than a week.

It raises new concerns about the safety of the children who ride the buses. It is certain that there will be accidents as long as there are so many buses traveling the highways of the county and muncipal streets. There is no avoiding that.

The question is how to make the buses safer in the event of a collisions. Seat belts? More padding within the buses? School bus safety is something that should be studied constantly and we should work toward making the ride to and from school safer.        .

Jam0s Kilpatrick^

Michael Pufzel

High-Tech President

W.ASHl.N'GTON (AP) President Reagan is a convert to Americas high-tech future.

He traveled to Boston to visit a computer keyboard assembly plant and told the assembled employees, This, this is the future, and you're part of it. This is where we're going."

And during a tour of an auto assembly plant near St Louis, he marveled at the robots putting cars together.

But the 72-year-old president doesnt pretend to understand the technology of the revolution.

"To many of us now, he said in his State of the Union address in January, "computers, silicon chips, data processing, cybernetics and all the other innovations of the dawning high technology-age are as mystifying as the workings of the combustion engine must have been when the first Model T rattled down Main Street, U.S.A.The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 Cotanche Street, Greenville, N.C. 27834

Established 1882

Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning

DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville, fH.C.

(USPS 14M00)

SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable In Advance Home Delivery By Carrier--^, or Motor Route Monthly 84.00 MAIL RATES (Prices Include ta> where appllctbisl Pitt And Ad|oining Counties 84.00 Per Month

Elsewhere in North Carolina 84.35 Per Month Outside North Carolina $5.50 Per Month MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Presa Is exclusively entitled to use for publication all nows dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publicallons of special dispatches here are also reserved.

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request.

Member Audit Bureau of Ckeulation

And after a tour of a Pittsburgh classroom where computers were being used to teach students how to repair computers, the president told the class, "I know this will kind of date ifie a little bit, but I want to tell you that having taken this tour and seeing all thats going on up here, I dont know a single thing about anything Ive seen.

Reagans ignorance of the intricacies of scientific advance is older than the computer age, however.

During an awards ceremony this week honoring two pioneers in nuclear physics who helped build the first atomic bomb, Reagan recalled his first visit to a nuclear power plant nearly 30 years ago.

"In one particular building where they were showing me through, why, we put on felt boots and we put on some gowns and then we went through. But then we had to peel afl of this off. And there was a slot machine there in which you put your hands and your feet, and there were four dials that started ticking away as to the amount of radioactivity that you might have acquired in your extremities. And mine all - on three of them stopped, but on my left hand, that dial kept ticking and it was getting up there toward where the numbers were red.

And I was getting a little concerned. And the manager of the plant looked over my shoulder, and he says, Oh, your left hand. He says, Always happens. He said, Thats the radium dial on your wristwatch. I was very relieved.

I was 200 miles away from there when I realized I dont have a radium dial, Reagan said, drawing a roar of laughter from the crowd. very once in a while,

I I still put my head under the covers and look to see if my hands lighting up.

But the president left his audience of technocrats with another story suggesting that knowledge does not wisdom make.

I feel a little bit like the old farm gentleman who was in a bar one day and two gentlemen with much more knowledge and sophistication than he had were discussing nuclear energy, Reagan said. And finally, aware of his presence and thinking theyd have a little joke, one of them said to the old fanner, Where would you like to be in the event of a nuclear explosion?

And the old boy 'said, SomeplSce where I could say, What was that?

Report On AM, poes Not Convince Rcider

WASHINGTON - This months rport from the Presidents Commission on Strate^C Forces, headed by Gen. Brent Scowcroft, jffovides a model for other commissions and task forces to aspire to. The report is brief; it is well-written; it argues cogmtly for the recommendations put forward.

But in the end, the report persuades but does not convince. The principal recommendation is that 100 of the giant (100-ton) MX missiles he deployed in hardened Mimiteman silos, and that we then proceed methodically with a new concept based upon small (30-ton) missiles with sin^e warheads.

The commission advances various argents that reflect the thinking of military professionals - for example, that a shelter containing only a single warhead would present a far less attractive target than would be the case with a silo containing a large missile with many warheads. The proposed small missiles could be deployed flexibly, perhaps on mobile launchers at existing Army reservations. Other arguments, less impressive, have to do with projected

costs. The commission believes that over the next fiyejiears its program might ot $8 billion less than the attemative missile deployment the administration has propped.

The principal- justiflcation for the recommendations, however, rests on neither military nor fiscal considerations. The justification is in large part psychological: The conunission believes that without such a program, Soviet leaders will ^rceive the United States as a weak'and timid nation that would be unwilling, in the crunch; to fight back.

Perception is everything. At bottom, our policy is a policy of deterrence. Our strategic forces, the commission reasonably contends, must be kept at a level that will convince the Soviets that the West has the military strength and political will to resist aggression; and that, if they should ever choose to attack, they should have no doubt that, we can and would respond until we have so damaged the power of the Soviet state that they will unmistakably be far worse off than if they had never begun.

In order for deterrence to be effective we must not merely have weapons, m must be perceived to be able, and prepared, if necessary, to use them effectively against the key elements of Soviet power. Deterrence is not an abstract notion amenable to simple quantification. Still less is it a mirror image of what would deter ourselves. Deterrence is a set of beliefs in the minds of the Soviet leaders, given their own values and attitudes, about our capabilities and our will.

This is the heart of the argument; How much is enough? The United States now has deployed 1,047 missile launchers with about 2,150 warheads. We have 34 submarines carrying 568 missiles with about 5,000 warheads. We have 270 bombers capable of delivering hundreds of additional missiles and warheads.

The combined destructive capacity of this strategic triad is beyond the imagination of man. The puny little atomic bomb we dropped upon Hiroshima in 1945 obliterated much of a city and killed nearly 100,000 persons in an instant. Todays warheads are marvelously more

efficient. As the commission gravely observes, todays weapons have changed the nature of warfare. They have ImbOed the rivalries of nations with peril unprecedented in human history.

How is this peril to be contained? The answer is unknowable, precisely for the reasons the commission itself advances, c We cannot know, we can only surmise, how the American character is perceived in the Kremlin. My own thou^t is that our existing strategic forces, subject to modest efforts at modernization, are enou^. If the Soviets ever should launch a massive nuclear attack, these forces are quite sufficient to vneak incredible devastation in return.

The one plausible way in which the peril mi^t be contained is by steadfast pursuit of a multilateral, verifiable agreement on arms reduction. To its credit, the Skowcroft commission repeatedly urges such an effort. But it seems to me illusory, to borrow a word from the report, to suppose that our develqiment of one more missile system will do much to alter the Soviet perception of American will.

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Paul T. O'Connor

All Of This, And No Lunch

ABERDEEN, MD. - Everybody loves a junket, now and then. You get out of the office and head off to someplace youve never been before.

But a press junket for seven North Carolina journalists arranged by the Army in mid-April has left a bad taste in my mouth. It all sounded like fun until I figured up what it cost the taxpayer for a little Army public relations.

By Army standards, the trip to Maryland wasnt extravagent. One of the traveling reporters had previously been around the world with the Army. The N.C. National Guard (NCNG), sponsor of this trip, had taken state reporters down to Panama a couple years ago.

And, there was a legitimate story to report. The Army is sending 63 M-1 tanks to a Raeford-based NCNG unit. These $1.8 million tanks are the newest and best armor our military owns and their deployment with NCNG is a significant

boost to the guard.

The Army put together an exciting day. Aberdeen may not be a glamor spot, but the chance to drive and fire the Armys new M-1 tank is a big deal to a guy who drives a 1977 Honda Civic to work everyday. Listening to generals talk about defense for six hours may not compete with sitting on the French Riviera, but its better than listening to legislators debate the annexation law revision package. For a day, at least.

But while I may have approached my day with the Army as just a change of pace from the General Assembly, it was immediately apparent that the Army had big lobbying plans for our press group.

The M-1 tank has been strongly criticized both in the national press and in the Congress. Complaints have ranged from fuel efficiency to maintenance problems. But those complaints havent stopped Army plans to buy 7,000 tanks.

The Army obviously hoped our small press contingent would help them with that appropriation.

So, a C-130B air transport was flown from Charlotte to Raleigh to pick us up. From there, we flew to Baltimore where two helicopters were waiting to ferry us up the railroad tracks to Aberdeen. In the air, we joined a copter flying in from Washington with a few military magazine reporters.

The brass was out in force. Three generals spent the day with us. Gen. William Ingram, NCNG commander, flew up with us. The nations top National Guard officer, Gen. Emmett Walker, was there along with base commander Gen. Jack Koehler. There were three or four colonels, a pack of other officers and enlisted men, and at least three public relations specialists.

We were given a demonstration of the M-1 and the older M-60, which it is

replacing. Each tank raced around ah obstacle course, firing four or five shell? at a target. Each one of the reporters then got a chance to fire one shell from the M-1. Gen. Koehler later told me each one of those shells cost in the range of $300 to $400. He also said that while we were the first regional press group to be brought to Aberdeen, many congressmen and congressional staff members had been there for similar demonstrations.

In late afternoon, each reporter got to steer the three-gallons-to-a-mile tank.s around an oval driving course the length of about four city blocks.

As we were leaving, Koehler said he hoped I had had a nice day. Yes, I certainly had. It was fun. But the Army spent a lot of money bringing me up there and firing off all those shells. I wonder if the taxpayers got their moneys worth.

At least I bought my own lunch.

John Cunniff

Amateurs Outperform The Professionals

NEW YORK (AP) - The smaU investor is back in the market these days, and that .means, the professionals say, that you can expect the rise in prices to peak, if only temporarily.

Such haughtiness, you have observed time and again, is a peculiarity of professional inv^tors, who generally view the amateur investor as a rather sad sort with big hopes and only desire to support the hope.

Ignoring this, the small investor has

gone his way over the years, winning some and losing some, often getting stripped of assets during sudden declines, but over the long term showing a rather high level of common sense.

And confidence too, as is shown in a survey of attitudes and practices by the American Association of Individuals Investors, a non-profit group based in Chicago that seeks to aid individuals through education and research.

The association sent questionnaires to

Elisha Douglas '

Strength For Today

The Old Testament ends with the word curse; and the New Testament ends with the word amen which means so be it. Amen is the solenm rdtifica-tion of ones faith in spiritual truth.

The New Testament is built upon the Old Testament. Anyone who has the idea that the Old Testament has little value for the Christian has not read the Bible with much discernment. But the difference between the X>kl and New testaments is. set forth in the words with which

they end.

The Old Testament is a stem reminder to men of the seriousness of Gods purposes; the New Testament is a joyful proclamation of the fact that God has forgiven men their sins.

There is much of the loving spirit of the New Testament in the Old Testament, and th*e is much of the sternness of the Old Testament in the New Testament. One without the other would be fragmentary. Togetheri-. 41ie^.-^ oonstitut& the WordofGod. v -

5,000 of its 70,000 members recently and concluded from the first 2,000 responses that 71 percent believe the individual investor can outperform the professional investment manager.

This, of course, does not imply that they Can outperform the pros, but they at least toink they can, the rather conservative association announced, underlining think.

Well, some of those people not only think they can do a very good job -although beating the pros doesnt always mean you must excel - but claim they have indeed done a very good job.

Fifty-two percent of the respondents said they had earned excess rates of return on their investments, the association said, without explaining what excess meant. And'only 15 percent felt their performance was subpar.

As always, money speaks louder than words, and while the association didnt say how how much their members made on their investmenta it did release their overall earnings. The average was in the $60,000 to $79,000 range, it said.

Compare that with an average family income of about $20,000 or so, and the $40,000 of the typical mutual fund shareholder, as revealed in an industry survey.

But no matter how the individual investor stereotypes the pro or the pro the individual invrator, this has been a pretty good half-year for investors in goieral.

In the six months ended March 31, the New York Stock Exchange Composite Index rose 27.2 percent, but at least 205 mutual funds beat that figure, some by rather impressive amounts.Public Forum

Tbtheeditor:    ^

Recently we were at a local fast food restaurant along with two other friends on a Saturday night. All of us were paying, well-behaved customers and were almost finished with our food when a city policeman came and asked us if wd were finished, wasnt it about time wd left? There was no reason given for thi$ action taken. This was very insulting and embarrassing.    1

Isnt this defeating the profit process by driving off customers? It would have been different if we were just loitering about being nuisances, but vriiy get riciM teen-agers who are contributing to buslj ness in a place almost empty? j

Just because we are te^agers, doe{{ that mean we dont have the same right^ -as adults do in this same situation? Wer think this treatment is tmfair. If agers, causing no trouble, are run from a public place, isnt that an of ones freedom?    '

Penny Joyn

RsyTaft    j

Ht^iSchoolSenion    i





Dogs Share Neuroses, Declares Veterinarian

By LEE CREIEIK Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Hans had a breakdown, caused by New Yorks street noise. A loneiy Pierre got hooked on television soap operas. Sandy suffered from psychosomatic illnesses. They needed professional help.

Dr. L.L. Vine, a Chapel Hill veterinarian, knows the pain that Hans, a German shepherd, Pierre, a poodle, and Sandy, a cocker ^aniel, endured. He treated them, as he has many dogs, for behavorial and emotional problems.

Two Collisions On Wednesday

An estimated (4,400 damage resulted from two traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Wednesday.

Officers said heaviest damage resulted from a 4:22 p.m. collision on Greenville Boulevard, 150 feet west of the Kirkland Drive intersection, involving cars driven by Robert Edward Hardesty of 1212 Red Banks Road and Teresa Jill Arthurs of New Bern.

Damage from the collision was set at $1,900 to the Hardesty car and $1,100 to the Arthurs vehicle.

A car driven by Sylvia Johnson Jarmon of 1910B Kennedy Circle and a truck operated by Roy Leon Simmons of Raleigh were involved in a collision about 2:08 p.m. on Dickinson Avenue, 20 feet east of the Memorial Drive intersection.

Investigators estimated damage at $1,200 to the car and $200 to the truck.

Vine, a veterinarian for 39 years, has completed a book, Your Neurotic Dog, and he says often dogs problem are caused by being around people.

Dogs are unfortunately getting more and more like their owners every year because of their close association, Vine said in a telephone interview. Dogs were originally hynters and ran in the fields, now they live in the house with people.

Ten percent of the neurotic dogs are bom neurotics. Vine said. The others are victims of their environments and about 10 percent of all dogs have some type of emotional or behavorial problem.

But Vine Mys a neurotic dog doesnt have to run in front of a car to spell relief.

There are tranquilizers used in many, many cases to help get the dog out of its neuroses or psychoses, he said. But, drugs are not the answer.

There are three ways of helping a neurotic dog, Vine said. The number one thing is seeing a veterinarian to find out if the dogs problem might be a physical one. Next is obedience training and third would be to take the animal to a dog psychologist who spwializes in treating behavorial problems.

Vine said the key is to determine whether a dog is neurotic or merely reacting

DUE AN ERUPTION?

KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) - Two people were killed in the mountains of Pakistans Sind Province in an expiosion which scientists believe may have been a volcanic eruption, the Pakistan Press International News Agency reported today.

to a situation, such as biting someone who stepped on its taU.

I try to help pe(^le find out why their dogs behavior has changed, he said. We have to differentiate between a dog that has really flipped his lid, so to speak, and one just reacting normally to a given situation.

Dogs suffer from many of the same behavorial and emotional diseases that bother people. Phobias, schizophrenia, fear and jealousy, perhaps caused by a new baby in the home taking away some of the attention, are as common in dogs as in people.

My advice to dog owners is that when their dog is behaving badly to try/and pinpoint why the dog is behaving that way, he said. When did it firt happen? Why did it happen?

I believe in talking to dogs and 99 percent of the people admit talking to their dogs, he said. It helps. My greatest advice to people in helping to avoid having neurotic dogs is that when you get home at night, take 10 or 15 minutes to talk to the dog and let him know hes still loved.

And for kitty lovers. Vines next book is. tentatively titled, Kinky Cats, the story of neurotic felines.

CMKnillll

On page 11 of the Sears Insert in the Wednesday, April 27 Newspaper. The compact floor jack advertised at special purchase, only $29.95, will not be available for sale.

We Apologize For Any Inconvenience This Might Cause You.

Sars,RiieliiclillnlCo.

Qreenville, N.C.

We Have A Few Remaining Class Vacancies

Sissy Weil

Color Me Beautiful Representative Will Be In Our Store.

Discover the Colors Best for You!

Whatever your style ^ mood,' youll glow in your special colors! Discover your natural beauty H^ugh the colors that make you look great and feel fabulous! Sissy Weil ^ help you develop your color personality. You will learn to perfect your makeup color, use color to solve specific figure problems, and save you money by designing a color-coordinated wardrobe for all occasions. What color season are you? Spring, summer, autumn or winter? If you dont know now, you need to learn and nows your opportunity!

Classes Held May 2,3, and 4

Monday, May 2 fcOO 0.00 pm. class filled

Tuesday, May 3 2:00-4:00 p.m.

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Wednesday, May 4 2:00-4:00 p.m.

6:00-8:00 p.m.

Mrs. Sissy Weil of Goldsboro, the only certified Color Me Beautiful Consul-' tant in our area, will conduct the sessions which will be limited to six in each segment. Registration is $50 on a first come basis. Call our Cosmetic Department for reservations. The number is 756-2355.

' Shop Monday through Saturday 10a.m. Until 9:30p.m.

-iPhone 756-B-ELK (756-2355}

The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Thursday, AprU 28,1983-5

NOW THRU SAT.!

Carolina east mall ^^greenville

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Module No. 1 lets you play Atari' games.

Special On GE Microwave Oven!

s:r'"    288.00

Model No. JET 200. One full year warranty.

Great Buy On GE Microwave Oven!

Special

Purchase  .....

Model No. JET 209. Five year warranty

368.88

Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9p.m. -Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)





Afffibcissador Will Addross Grads    designated

MmDUSSauui vvill Moaress \jraa ambassador to the United

States.

Blackmun, a St. Paul, Minn., native, was appointed, to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1970 after serving 11 years as a judge on the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -Sir Oliver Wright, Great Britains ambassador to the United States, and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun will speak at University of Nebraska commencement exercises May 7.

Wright will address the main commencement in the Bob Devaney Sports Center, and Blackmun will address

the separate commencement ceremonies at the College of Law.

Wright served 36 years in the British Diplomatic Service before retiring in 1981. Shortly after his re-

Now Open

Edgecombe Furniture Outlet

Fourth & Sater Streets

Pinetops, N.C.

Consult the Energy Services Department at Greenville Utilities Commission concerning ways to save energy in your home and business. Call 752-7166.

Buy Direct From Factory

And Save!

,-Sat.. 9-5: Fri. Nite-Til9 . 827-221

Cool Spot

STUDYING FOR EXAMS - East Carolina University coeds, left to right, Jackie Britt, Rita McGrone. Charlotte Metcalf and Karen Reason find a cool spot in the snaae lo siuoy lor final

exams Wednesday. A wandering dog found the girls friendly and visited for a while. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Motor Plants Say

No Toxic Wastes

ASHEVILLE. N.C. (AP)-Officials of the Outboard Marine Corp. said Wednesday two plants the company is opening in Yancey and Mitchell counties will not produce toxic wastes.

Outboard Marine has been involved in cleanup operations and federal suits since 1976 when Illinois and federal environmental agencies discovered that cancer-causing polychlorinated biphenyls -or PCBs - had been dis

charged from its Waukegan outboard-motor plant into a drainage ditch and Lake Michigan.

"The process were putting in Spruce Pine doesnt even exist within the company now. Outboard Marine General Plants Manager Ed Mullin said in a telephone interview Wednesday. Theres no byproduct at all except drinking water. The (North Carolina) Department of Natural Resources

Thank heaven for little dolls

For all the young ladies who love to collect dolls as frilly & fanciful as these. For a birthday or just because thcyU be among their best loved gifts.

Unulj'Slit IT MUUcenr" Stir U' Ciflenc- Sue II* Alrai Siieg*

gave it a clean bill of health.

The Spruce Pine plant will manufacture cast-aluminum motor components that will be assembled at a plant to be built in Burnsville.

Outboard Marine Corporate Secretary Hugh Thomas confirmed that the plant is expected to produce no hazardous wastes.

The Environmental Protection Agency six weeks ago asked that its suit forcing Outboard Marine and Monsanto to clean up the Waukegan harbor be stopped, and that federal agencies be instructed to clean the lake floor.

Monsanto, the only American manufacturer of the PCB-based hydraulic fluid, stopped production of it years ago, Thomas said, adding that Outboard Marine used it a last time in 1971.

The $10 million Spruce Pine plant - to be built with the help of a $338,000 block grant - will employ 100 people. Gov. Jim Hunt said in announcing the plans Tuesday.

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1903 Trlbun Company Syndicate, Inc

East-West vulnerable. East deals.

NORTH

Q752 <(2 1092 0 AJ92

107

EAST

KJ1064

0 K84

J4

the SURE FINESSE THAT LOST

Pitt Plaza

Oh! WhQt

Q beautiful price!

WEST

98 ^ J84 0 765

KQ952

SOUTH

A3 ^AK63 OQ103

A863 The bidding:

East South West North

1 NT Pass 2

2 ^ Pass 2 NT

3 NT Pass Pass

Pass Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: Five of 0.

UNDERGROUND

TM indc ales a irademark of Knickerbocker Tm Co, Inc Applause Divisnin of Knickerboocker Tin Co, Im C 1982

A-1 IMPORTS

THE INTERNATIONAL EMPORIUM GREENVRi^ SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER

756-5961

HOT SPRINGS, Ark, (AP) - More than 30 times the amount of water found in all the lakes, rivers and streams combined can be found under the ground, according to water researchers.

Rain water and melted snow that sink through the earths subterranean rock formations are filtered and purified by the earth as they travel downward slowlv.

Heres a hand that will be a strong candidate for the 1983 Bols Brilliancy Prize. It was played in the star-studded St. Jamess Invitation Pairs in Manchester. Our hero in the East seat is Robert Reip-linger of France.

After South opened the bidding with one no trump. North employed the Stay-man convention to check on the possibility of a 4-4 heart fit. With a near maximum opening. South naturally proceeded to three no trump over Norths invitation.

West set the stage for what was to follow when he started the ball rolling with a low diamond. Dummy and

I

East played low and declarer won the ten. A low heart was taken by Wests jack and back came another diamond. Declarer played the nine from dummy and Reiplinger ducked again!

After overtaking with the queen of diamonds, declarer cashed his hearts as East sluffed a spade, and now it seemed he was playing for overtricks. His best shot was to find West with the king of spades, so he tried ace of spades and a spade to the queen. East won the king and cleverly refrained from cashing the rest of his spades. Instead, he shifted to a club. Declarer hopped up with the ace and confidently finessed the jack of diamonds. Reiplinger finally got to win his king of diamonds and the defenders took the rest of the tricks for down two!

Needless to say, that was a top score. No other pair succeeded in defeating three no trumps two tncks. Indeed, at many tables that contract was made via an end play in spades.

Curt

Canvas shoe with rubber toe cap for durability. Padded heel collar. In navy and white. Reg. $15 to $20.

$1090

Small frye, S2CS 4 to 8

Childrens, sizes 8 1/2 to 4

Great school and play sports shoe for boys and girls.

Carolina east mall L^greenville

RObOTDCOUpE

The Original French Food Processor

Thl

The Robot^Coupe was the first food processor in the world, developed over 35 years ago in France, birthplace of fine cuisine. Through the years we have perfected our invention for use in the great restaurants of France and in the homes of cooks throughout the world.

This work-saver will become an invaluable kitchen aid - one that slices, shreds, chops, mixes, kneads, purees and otherwise accomplishes a thousand tedious cooking chores in seconds. The Robot-Coupe comes with a complete 179 page book filled with recipes for pizzas, pastas and breads, vegetables and salads and an array of tantalizing desserts and appetizers, as well as recipes for meat, fish, soups and sauces. There are a hundred and one things that you can do with this amazing work saver. Once you use this machine, you'll discover just how enjoyable cooking can be. Bon apptit!

The work bowl, cover, pusher and plastic blade are made of shatterproof, heat-resistant Lexan plastic. Steel' blades are manufactured to hold an edge for years. Slicing and shredding discs are also high-quality stainless steel. All parts are dishwasher safe.

88.88

A 120.00 Value

Robot Coupe Representative In Our Store. Silvia Ussery, a national Home Economist will be In our store on Friday April 29 5-8:30, Saturday April 30 10-4:00, to demonstrate the world reknown Robot Coupe Food Processors from France.

The power source of the Robot-Coupe 2000 food processor is a 500-watt, 115-volt direct drive induction motor, which allows you to do heavy duty jobs like mixing doughs. It simply shuts off to keep the motor from overheating and burning out. It also has an On/Off/Pulse switch for quick bursts of power or to let the machine run continually.

Just in time for Christmas

RC 2000...................88.88

RC2100W....... ........119.88

RC2100C................139.88

RC2800..................149.88

RC 3500..................199.88

RC3600 .................. 224.

n

kfty

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10a.m. Until 9p.m. - Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)





Deeds

Herbert H. Branch al TO Herbert Branch Enterprises Inc.NS Frank D. Dail al TO Sun-nysideEggs Inc 300.00 GALC Inc. TO Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. 100.00 -Hazel B. Garris TO Milton Lee Garris NS Greenbrier Realty Co. Inc. TO Herbert D. Powell al 12.00

Vernon Ashely Manning al TO Charles Tucker Wall al NS

Robert L. Oldham Jr. al TO Randall K. Edgerton al 17.00

James D. Paul al TO Daniel R. Sweeney al 69.00 John F. Singleton al TO Sammy 0 Bowers al 6.00 Branck Bk. TO James Allen Cartretteal 52.00 Erma S. Carr al TO City of Grvl 19.00 Eugenia Powell Conley al TO Wallace Fleming NS R E. Deans Jr. al TO Mark W. Shields al 112.50 Phillip L. Goodson Jr al TO City of Grvl 70.50 Johnnie Edward Martin III al TO Erma S. Carr 11.00 Elizabeth K. Moore TO Nellie B. Smith 24.50 Bessie B. Peaden al TO James Edard Harrell NS Gene H. Phillips al TO Hall Askew Byrumal 71.50 Shamrock Realty Co. of Pitt Co. Inc. TO David M. Quinn al 60.00 Nellie B. Smith TO City of Grvl. 14.00 Sudie S. Briley TO Housing Auth. of Grvl. 2.00 Harvey D. Bradshaw al TO Roland B. Williams al 16.00 Bullock Properties Ltd. al TO Janet H. Broady7.00 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO Marie M. Davis 63.50 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO Corinne M. Heath 49.00 Diane H. Doughtie al TO William Ralph Graftal 6.50 Laura F. Hall al TO Housing Auth. of City of Grvl. 3.00 Odessa P. Lockley al TO Housing Auth. of City of Grvl. 3.00 Katherine D. Paige al TO David G. Nichols Jr. 46.50 Robert D. Rouse III al TO Vanrack Inc. 10.00 Hettie C. Savage TO Housing Auth. of City of Grvl. 2.00 J.B. Spilman al TO Malcolm C. Williams Jr. al

87.50

James David Taylor Sr. al TO City of Grvl. 2.00 Malcolm C. Williams Jr. al TO James Clifton Paige III

84.00

Philip E. Carroll TO Shamrock Realty Co. of Pitt Co. 84.00 Bill Clark Const. Co. Inc. TO Hilda Buck Cox 49.00 Rebecca C. Lee TO United States of America NS Lela S. McLawhom al TO Stephen W. Tripp al 3.00 Lois H. Powers TO Charles T. Powers NS Charles T. Powerj TO Lois H. Powers NS A. J. Speight al TO David L. Jacobson 8.00 A. J. Speight al TO Timothy John McDonald al

8.00

A. J. Speight al TO Lanny Gray Morris al 8.00 Tyrone Taft al TO Clifton Earl Spellman al 6.00 Harvey D. Bradshaw al TO Hayward H. McKinney Jr. al

9.50

Jesse R. Brooks al TO Edward Allen Brooks NS John F. Moye Jr. TO County of Pitt 12.00

Correction

ECU NEWS BUREAU The names of two Pitt County high school students were omitted from the list of more than 100 award winners at the Eastern Regional Science Fair held recently at East Carolina University.

Tommy Mayo, a senior at Farmville Central Hi^ School, received the 2nd place award in senior physical science for his project Use Of Remote Automation To Operate A Shuttle System. He also received the Air Force Most Outstanding Project Award.

Scott M. Cross of Greenville received a 1st place award from the U.S. Navy for his project Computer SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test) vs. Written SAT. Cross is a student at D.H. Conley High School.

TELEVISED CLASSES PEKING (AP) - More han 100,000 Communist *arty and government oficiis are taking courses in lasic Marxist-Leninist heory via television, Chinas (inhua news agency says.

The DaUy ReHector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Thursday, April 28,1983-7

off

20%

Lady

Thomson

Spring twills iri beautiful colors. Pants & skirts only. (Excludes navy & Khaki twill)

Junior

T-Shirts

Only

99

Reg. $6. Beautiful solid T-shirts in V and U neck styles.

Entire Stock of Junior & Misses

Swimwear

20%

Thursday, Friday and Saturday!

Junior

Ocean Pacific Shorts

$1788

The famous corduroy shorts in enough colors to fill the rainbow!

Duckhead

Pants

$1588

Classic twillji pant with duckhead insignia on the back. In navy & Khaki.

Group of

Junior

Sundresses

20%

off

In assorted styles and colors.

Group of

Overdyed Denim Jeans & Mini Skirts

33Va

% off

Entire Stock of Misses

Koret Koretron

20%

off

Thurstday, Friiday & Saturday

M.

off

20%

Prestige Linen Skirts & Blazers

In Royal, White. Kelly and Azalea.

Misses

Skirts

$j^Q99

Orig. $25 and $34 Umbrella skirts in beautiful prints.

Misses

Pants

$1999

by Personal. Orig. $24. 100% polyester in jade, navy, khaki, plum, black & red.

Group of Misses

Coordinates

by

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Suburban

20% off

blue and white chamhray

. Misses T-Tops

5599

Orig. $9.00. Choose V-neck or U-neck. All colors.

Misses Cotton

Sweaters

$

16

99

Reg $22. Short sleeve U-ncck cotton sweater in turquoise, light blue, pink and orchid

25% off

Entire Stock of

Napier Surgical Steel Post Earrings

75 $]^Q13

to

Reg. $5.00 to $1.3.50

Estee Lauder brings you a special offer...

Make-

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Round

A $35.00 value. Yours for only $8.50 with any Estce Lauder purchase of $6.50 or more

Tanner Like Sweaters

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Girls

Ocean. Pacific Corduroy Shorts

88

15

Orig. $18.00 Choose from our wide assortment of fashion colors for Girls 7-14.

Girls Short-Sleeve Knit Tops

$c;49

kJ    and

$599

Orig. $7.00 and $7.50. Assortment of solid interlock tops with scallop detailing in pink, lilac, turquoise. white, red, royal and It. blue. Girls4-6x and 7-14.

Girls Summer Shorts

and

$599

$g99

Orig. 9.00 and 12.00. Choose from twill d-ring or paper bag waist shorts in a large variety of colors for Girls 7-14.

Her

Majesty

Panties

99c

Orig. 1.50 Sizes 4-14

Official Major League T-Shirts

S425

1* and

$C25

Orig. $5.50 and $7.00. Choose from t-shirts and pinstripe baseball shirts with Yankees, Braves and Orioles team logos for Boys 4-7

Toddlers Seersucker Sailor Suits

$799

Orig. $11.00. These 2 pc. outfits are suitable for boys or girls and are available in white with navy trim or red with white trim. Sizes 2T-4T.





Hammering Out A Compromise Drunken Driving Bill

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A conference committee hammering out a compromise version of Gov. Jim Hunts drunken driving package is progressing, but wont be finished for at least another week, a leading negotiator says. '

Were on our way. but weve got a way to go yet," said Sen. Henson Barnes. D-Wayne, Senate sponsor of Hunts legislation, after the House-Senate panel met jointly for a second time Wednesday without resolving any of the major disagreements between them.

Legislators predicted that committee discussions and backroom maneuvering would continue through next week and possibly longer.

'The governor's keeping up with what the committees doing, and hes satisfied so far, said Gary Pearce. Hunts press secretary.

Barnes, saying he wanted to get the stalled discussions moving, proposed several compromise positions on the less controversial points Wednesday. Conference committee chairman Rep. Martin Lancaster. D-Wayne, suggested the two sides meet privately and separately to discuss the proposals before next Tuesday s joint meeting.

Barnes proposals involved use of sobriety tests as court evidence, the definition of impaired driving, the mechanism of gaining a limited driving privilege after con-

viction, impounding vehicles, and factors a judge may consider when sentencing drunken drivers.

Im not sure what will come of these but at least they get us off dead center. Barnes said in an interview.

Both the House and Senate versions of Hunts proposals, passed last month, would raise the minimum age for drinking beer and wine from 18 to 19. A separate bill to raise the drinking age to 21 is before the Senate.

The bills would replace driving under the influence with 'driving while impaired. They would allow immediate. 10-day revocation of the license of any driver whose blood alcohol content is 0.10 or higher, and permit impounding the vehicle of owners caught driving impaired after an earlier drunken driving conviction.

The biggest differences include:

- Both bills impose civil liability on underaged drinkers, but the House bill extends it to sales to drunken patrons for on-premises consumption.

- The Senate bill has an amendnenf proposed by Sen. George Marion. D-Surry, that effectively would ban all drinking in cars.

- The House bill would permit roadblocks to catch drunken drivers.

- Under the House bill, anyone whose license is administratively revoked would be allowed hearing before a magistrate within three

days. Under the Senate bill, the hearing would be before a Department of Motor Vehicles officer within six days,

Both sides appeared unwilling to bend on the controversial Marion amendment.

Were standing by (it), said Barnes.

Im not sure there can be any compromise on that, said Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake. This is a matter of principle.

The committee did agree on provisions for revoking

licenses of military personnel and endorsed the Senate provision that license revocation apply equally to out-of-state federal court convictions and convictions in North Carolina federal courts.

Meanwhile, the House Insurance Committee heard supporters of a bill to require maximum insurance coverage for those convicted of drunken driving.

Drunk drivers cause more destruction and heartache than any other drivers

on our highways, said Rep. Charles Beall, D-Haywood.

Under his bill, drunken drivers would have to carry $100,000 bodily injury coverage, $300,000 accident coverage and $50,000 property damage coverage. They currently must carry $25,000, $50,000 and $10,000 respectively.

Rep. Hugh Lee, D-Richmond, questioned whether additional punishment was warranted in light of Hunts pending bill.

The only person thats being hurt, as far as I can

see, is the poor devil thats catching hdl at work and catching hdl at home and now hes going to catch it in between, he said.

A bill to pitrfiibit driving after drinking or using drugs by anyone aged 18-21 was fUed by Sen. WUliam Martin, D-Guilford. Violation would result in a $100 fine and a short jail term or community service, education and other measures.

15

OF^ ON COMPLETE PAIR OPOLASSES

(No Other CMipem i^RpllcaMa)

Cevfon Mwt Accompany Ordtr - Offer Enda AprH 30

T.'SittKdSK*

mm

piicians

ucMnMMun

POWKUW

Former Basketballer Is Bound Over For Trial

Save *60 to *1,000 on diamond solitaires!

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - A narcotics officer testified in Forsyth District Court Wednesday that he bought cocaine or marijuana from Michael Helms four times this year at his apartment.

The officer also said that Helms, a former basketball player at Wake Forest University, suggested a scheme for selling cocaine to students at the school.

Based on this testimony. Judge David R. Tanis found probable cause and bound Helms over to Superior Court for trial on 12 felonies ih-volving possession, possession for sale and sale

of cocaine and marijuana.

Helms, who is scheduled to graduate in August, was a starting guard for the Demon Deacons basketball team for four seasons from 1978-79 through 1981-82. He was the teams leading scorer in his last year.

Officer Sam Slater said he represented himself as a surveyor, and got toknow Helms through a neighbor. He testified he frequently discussed sports with Helms in developing a friendship.

Slater was asked if he and Helms smoked marijuana together in the apartment, and the officer replied that he simulated smoking marijuana.

On further cross-examination by Charles J. Alexander II, Helms attorney, Slater said that Helms suggested that Slater bankroll a scheme to sell cocaine to students on the Wake Forest campus.

Slater testified that Helms proposed to him that if Slater would furnish the money. Helms could distribute cocaine among the students and Slater could realize a profit of $100 to $200 a week.

LOW INCREASE TOKYKLO (AP) -Japans average consumer prices in fiscal 1982 rose by 2.4 percent from the previous year, the lowest increase in 23 years, the Prime Ministers Office said today.

Spring

Group Of

Spring & Summer Dresses

331/3 %

Several Groups Of Spring & Summer

Coordinated Sportswear

25%

Large Group Of

Stout Size Sportswear

25% OH

Large Group Of

Costume Jewlery

25% OH

Group Of

Discontinued Playtex Bras

Downtown Greenville Shop Daily 10 to 5:30

Carolina East Mall Shop Daily 10 to 9

Alexander raised the issue of entrapment. The attorney said that Helms had not shown any predisposition to sell drugs and agreed to do so only after Slater had made suggestions to him.

Lynn Burleson, the assistant district attorney prosecuting the case, challenged the validity of that argument. He said the entrapment defense was not appropriate for a proba-ble-cause hearing.

Tanis reduced two felony marijuana charges to misdemeanors and acquitted Helms on one of them and convicted him on the other. On the misdemeanor conviction, he ordered that Helms pay a $100 fine and costs.

On all other felony charges, he found probable cause and bound Helms over to Superior Court for trial. Alexander filed an appeal on the misdemeanor conviction, so all 13 cases will go to the higher court.

Tanis also modified the conditions of Helms $20,000 appearance bond so that he can spend two weekends each month at his home in Bassett, Va.

Right ncM- the magnificent diamond solitaires you always expect to find at Zales are even more beautifully priced'

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You'll see dozens of dazzling diamonds:

Round, marquise, oval, pear and emerald cuts in whatever size you re looking for.

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ZALES

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MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED: Zales MasterCard VISA American Express Carte Blanche Diners Club Illustrations enlarged

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The Grande... leather in navy and neutral.

The Brittany.. leather in whiskey.

Si/i's lOVz or over, add S2. per pair. Special orders, no extra charge.

.Some colors are special order.

Sizes & colors may i>arv at each store.

s -

N

M

VV

WW

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6>2-12

5-12

5-12

5-12

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Carolina East Mall Greenville 756-8944 Twin Rivers Mall New Bern 633-2141 Mon. to Sat. 10 am to 9 pm

Revelations" Made





GREENVILLE

WINDSOR

WASHINGTON

WE

ACCEPT

The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUle. N.C.-Thursday, April 28,1883-9

AHOSKIE KINSTON MT. OLIVE

We cash Payroll, Social Security and Social Services checks for customers with proper i. D.

SALE STARTS FRIDAY, APRIL 29TH!

MENS BASIC

KNIT SHIRTS

ANNIVERSARY SALE

Easy Care 65/35 Poly/Cotton Placket Model With Collar Long Tails Mens S-M-L-XL

BOYS SIZES 8 T018

SALE PRICE

Hush Puppies

o FOR

>V MEN

MENS SCREEN PRINTED

TEE SHIRTS

ANNIVERSARY 37 SALE I

Assorted Designs And Sayings On Front Of Shirts Slight Imperfects Of Reg. 3.99 Values

Two Classic Styles That Are The All Time Favorites Brushed Pigskin Med., Wide And Extra Wide

Mens Canvas

Boat Shoes

by^aia

LeTICRir TENNIS SHORTS formen

IQ88

ANNIVERSARY SALE

Classic Twill Short In Easy Care Poly/Cotton Adjustable Waist Band Large Color Selection

Reg. 20.00 Value

Moccasin styled shoe with double cushion arch in a natural color. Perfect for casual wear. Mens Sizes 61 /2 to 12.

CAROLE POLYESTER & COHON

GOWNS AND ROBES

Mfg suggested retail $12.00 & $13.00. Some slightly irregular. Sizes 40-42-^ 46 Anniversary Priced!

ENTIRE STOCK OF PAHIQREEN-PEGGY GEE AND ALLISON PAGE

LADIES

DRESSES

Junior-Misses-1/2 size REG. $19.99 & $22.95

ANNIVERSARY

SALE

EACH

IVY CLASSIC

DRESS SHIRTS

7

ANNIVERSARY SALE

MENS

FASHION JEANS

88

SPECIAL W

Heavy Blue Denim-Four Pocket-Designer Stitch On Rear Pockets

Sizes 28 To 38^_

EXTRA LARGE SIZE

BANDANNAS 2

bFOR I

LADIES CANVAS

TENNIS

OXFORDS

ANNIVERSARY

SALE

397

Ali White Or Navy. Sizes 5 To 10.

BOYS 2 PC.

SHIRT & SHORT SETS

ANNIVERSARY SALE

2 500

fa FOR V

S.S. Knit Shirt With Matching Shorts

Slight Imperfects Of Reg. 6.99 To 8.99 Values.

BOYS 8 T018

FASHION JEANSI

ANNIVERSARY

Eiani SALE

Heavy Blue Denirp Regulars 8 Slims Designer Stitch Pockets

VALUES

TO

1.19

ANNIVERSARY

SALE

FOR

Blue-Red and Assorted Pastels.

-FOR MOM- IMPORTED

STRAW

HANDBAGS

REG. 8.99 ANNIVERSARY SALE

ONE GROUP

BATH TOWELS

477

20x40-22x44 REG. $2.99

ANNIVERSARY

SALE

397

Button Down Collar Oxford Cloth Short Sleeves MensSizes14l/2To17

BOYS SIZES 8 TO 18

TENNIS SHORTS

I ANNIVERSARY SALE

Poly/Cotton Fine Line Twill Half Elastic Waist For Comfortable Fit    F

Tan, Lt. Blue, Navy or Maize

Natural and Colors Several Styles

MUSLIN LL SHEETING

48 In. Wide REG. 1.29

ANNIVERSARY SALE

? 000

kFORW

ONE GROUP 3 PC. TIER AND VALANCE

CURTAINS

Tiers 36" Long REG. 4.99

ANNIVERSARY SALE

YD.

I lush I\i|>pic\s

CITATIONS CLASSIC

DRESS SHOE

ANNIVERSARY SALE

Perfect For All Summer BIk. Patent Or Honey Smooth Med. & Wide Widths.

ONE GROUP SELF-LINED FOAM BACK

DRAPERIES

REG. $12.95

Slightly Irregulars

ANNIVERSARY SALE

PAIR

DECORATIVE

SCATTER RUGS

Size 20x32 REG. 3.99

ANNIVERSARY SALE

1

88

EACH

LADIES

FOOTWEAR

REG. 29.95 ANNIVERSARY SALE

1988

Entire stock ladles Hush Puppies in dress and casual sandals on sale during Anniversary Celebration.

^WASH CLOTHS

f ANNIVERSARY SALE

0 FOR ^ 00

CiONLY 1

DISH

CLOTHS

REG. 79' ANNIVERSARY SALE

7 100

C FOR 1

DISH

TOWEL

REG. $1.49 ANNIVERSARY SALE

99'.. 1

1ST QUALITY LADIES

PANTY HOSE 88^

REG. SI.29 AMNIVER^RYSALE

ANNIVERSARY SALE 220Z.

DISH DETERGENT

I

,2for1

00

VINYL

MAnRESS COVERS

FULL ON TWIN REQ.$1.N ANNIVfNSARYSALE

COBBLERS APRONS

Sizes Smatl-Med.-Large-X Large ANNIVERSARY SALE

REG.

EACH

CANDY

^ PEACH GOODIES . . ,|OZ..PKQ.REQ.99* .

ANNIVEfMARYSALE

69

BAG

BEES ByBEACON

SAILCLOTH ESPADRILLE

ANNIVERSARY SALE

S-|288

N, M, & W Widths. Navy, sand, black, green, red

RUBBING ALCOHOL

1PT.1SOZ.

ANNIVERSARY SALE

2,0,1

00

PRICELESS

SHAMPOO

REGULAR 89*

ANNIVERSARY

SALE

2for1

00

CLOTHES PINS

TTOPKQ.

V ANNIVERSARY SALE

2..1

00

FLATBROOMS

REG. 3.99 ANNIVERSARY SALE

1

99

EA.

CHILDRENS SHORT SLEEVE

DRESSES

Sizes 4/6X& 7/14 BUY ONE AT REGULAR PRICE SECOND DRESS FOR

1

00

LADIES S.S.

PLAID SHIRTS

REG. $10.95 ANNIVERSARY SALE

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10The DtUy Refiector, Greeqyflle, N.C.-ThurWay, April 28,1983

- Winferville Hires Director

Joey Baggett has been hired as Wintervilles recreation director for the summer.

I Baggett, a coach at A.G. Cox School, will direct and : coordinate recreational activities for Winterville Recreation Inc. from May until August. He was approved for the job by *    the towns recreation commission at a recent meeting.

The commission also accepted a house donated by the Charles Branch family of Winterville and designated it to be . used as a concession stand in the proposed recreation park.

: Group Schedules Bake Sale

i The Greenville chapter of the American Society for 1 Psychoprophylaxis in Obstetrics-Lamaze Group will hold a : bake sale at Overtons Supermarket Saturday from 9:30 a.m.

:    to 1 p.m. Proceeds of the sale will go toward the purchase of

'    the movie, The Perfect Gift, a film about infant car safety

-    seats.

I    Sunday at 3 p.m. the group will hold its annual ice cream

: social at Elm Street Park for parents, babies and young children.

ASPO-Lamaze is an organization designed to help parents prepare for childbirth and parenthood. It meets the first Tuesday of each month at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church Parlor from 7:30 to 9 p.m.

Gardens To Honor ECU Professor

The Historic Bath Commission has voted $10,000 for landscaping, plantings and beautification of the grounds of the restored Van der Veer house and will name the project the Herbert R. Paschal Jr. Memorial Gardens.

Paschal, who had written extensively on the history of Bath, was a member of the Historic Bath Commission at the time of his death in June 1982. During 24 years on the faculty of East Carolina University, Paschal served 17 years as chairman of the ECU Department of History.

Dr. Ira Hardy of Greenville is chair of the Bath Commission.

Jones To Speak To Democrats

Rep, Walter Jones, D-N.C., will speak at the Pitt County Democratic Convention Saturday.    '

The convention will begin .at 1 p.m. in the Superior Courtroom at the Pitt County Courthouse.' Included on the agenda is the election of county officers and members of the state executive committee.

Science Program To Be Presented

The Greenville school system has been invited to present its award-winning elementary science program, Developing Coping and Cognitive Skills through Science. to teachers in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Wende Allen, director of special projects for the Greenville schools and former director of the science project, will make the presentation.

Adapted for use by both handicapped and non-handicapped children, the program came to the attention of the Fort Lauderdale school system through a dissemination project on Science for the Handicapped conducted by Dr. Floyd Mattheis and Dr. Charles Coble of the East Carolina University Science Education Department. This project was funded by a grant awarded to Mattheis and Coble by the .National Science Foundation.

Picnic Held For Cherry Patients

The Mental Health Association in Pitt County held its annual picnic for Pitt County patients at Cherry Hospital recently at the Pitt County Wildlife Club.

The meal was catered by MHA volunteer Alton Warren. Singing and playing of rhythm instruments were led by music therapy students from East Carolina University. MHA volunteers, including a number of Pitt Community College students, assisted with the meal and the activities. About 170 persons attended.

Lanier Named To Committee

Dr. Gene D. Lanier, an East Carolina University professor of library science, has been appointed to the Intellectual Freedom Committee of the Southeastern Library Association. The association is the regional professional association for North Carolina and nine other southeastern states.

Dr. Lanier, an advocate of First Amendment rights, has served as chairman of the N.C. Library Associations Intellectual Freedom Committee since 1980. He was also recently appointed to the state advisory committee of the People for the American Wav.

Seek Dissolve Gold Exchange

MIAMI (AP) - Florida officials will seek to dissolve the International Gold Bullion Exchange and revoke its corporate charter, after Illinois authorities said the company accepted $200 million for precious metals it never delivered.

The exchange filed for reorganization Wednesday under federal bankruptcy

laws.

As many as 25,000 investors nationwide may have lost money they paid the Fort Lauderdale-based business, the Illinois attorney generals office said in a suit against the company. A lawyer for the exchange, Thomas Tew, said there was no way of knowing its total debts.In The Area

Student Wins Scholarships

Hih Song Kim of Greenville, a senior at the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics in Durham, has been awarded a John Motley Morehead Scholarship to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and an Angier B. Duke Scholarship to Duke University in Durham. She is the only North Carolina recipient of the Duke Scholarship.

Before attending the N.C. School of Science and Mathematics, Miss Kim was a student at Rose High where she was active in school affairs and in music. At Durham, she has been active in various local orchestras and is also a violin instructor with the Duke String School.

She is the daughter of Mrs. Jeng Ja Kim of Greenville.

Dance Raises $4,278 For Fund

The Dance for Heart aerobic dance event held last Saturday raised $4,278.20 for the Pitt County Heart Fund, coordinator Pam Hambidge said.

This amount is not all that was raised, however, she said. Participants who have not turned in their s|Mnsor forms and sponsor donations are asked to do so immediately. The forms and the money should be taken to Catherine Gray at the Main Branch of NCNB.

Nurses' Society Elects Officers

Faculty members of the East Carolina University School of Nursing have been elected to office in the local Beta Nu chapter of Sigma Theta Tau national honor society.

Lou Everett was elected president. Other ECU faculty officers include Martha Engleke, vice president; Eldean Pierce, treasurer; Sylvia Brown, secretary, and Karen Krupa and Carol Cox, counselors.

President elect is Betty Godwin of the Eastern Area Health Education Center.

West Wins Area Speaking Contest

Ed West of Greenville is the first place winner in the annual Area V Soil and Water Conservation District Public Speaking Contest.

West is the son of Edwin and Patricia West and is a seventh-grader at A.G. Cox School.

He won the local competition in February and will compete in the North Carolina State Association of Soil and Water Conservation Districts contest with first-place winners from the seven areas of the state on May 13.

ED WEST

Downing Makes Convention Presentation

A presentation by Dr. Clinton Downing, professor of education at East Carolina University, was featured at the recent annual convention of the National Association of Elementary School Pricipals in St. Louis.

Downing explained techniques and procedures for building popular support for school programs and suggested how to communicate with external publics effectively.

Business Students Win Scholarships

Four students in the East Carolina University School of Business have been awarded the first $250 Travelers Scholarships at ECU. The recipients are David Allen Bradley of Kill Devil HUls, Joan Grey Gillette of Wilson, Ellen Meekins of Elizabeth City and Lauren Studebaker of Paoli, Pa.

The Travelers Scholarship was established at ECU during the 1982-83 academic year by the Travelers Corp. The scholarships will be awarded annually to undergraduate students in the school of business who have expressed an interest in insurance as a possible career objective.

Senior Wins Scholarship

Amelia Craig Sutton, a senior in the East Carolina University School of Education, has been awarded the Gravely Foundation Scholarship in special education.

The scholarship, established through the ECU Foundation by the Gravely Foundation of Rocky Mount, recognizes academic excellence, qualities of good citizenship and dedication to ones chosen profession. The 1983 scholarship carries an award equal to a semesters tuition.

Mrs. Sutton is the wife of Joel Sutton of Greenville and the daughter of Ramona Craig of Washington.

Sweet Adelines Names Officers

Janet Rodgers has been elected president of the Eastern Carolina chapter of Sweet Adelines Inc.

Other officers are Brenda Ross, vice president; Faye Leggett, recording secretary; Mary Koonce, corresponding secretary; Helen Walter, treasurer; and Violet Blackwelder, Susan Danin, Retha Johnson, Jan Kittrell, Joann Lewis, Etsil Mason and Ruth Shaw, directors.

For information about Sweet Adelines, call Janet Rodgers, 756-3461, or Mary Koonce, 757-7305 or 757-6390.

Jaycees Holding JalhA-Thon

Hie Greenville Jaycees Danny Woods Memorial Jail-A-Thon is being held today and Friday at Carolina East MaU.

For $25 anyone can have anyone else arrested and taken to jail for a designated time. Hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day. AH prisoners wUl be released by 6 p.m. The fund-raiser wUl benefit the Pitt County Cancer Society.

This is the second such event held in GreenvUle by the Jaycees. It is named for the teen-aged son of GreenvUle residents Mr. and Mrs. Jim Woods who died of cancer recently.

CaU 756-8664 to procure a warrant for someones arrest.

Abeyounis Named Representative

Beaufort County industrial develc^r WiUiam R. Abeyounis of Washington has been named by Secretary of Commerce D.M. Lauch Faircloth as a state industrial development representative for northeastern North Carolina.

Abeyounis has been executive vice president of the Washington chamber of commerce for 16 years. He wUl join Roger Critcher in the states regional office in Washington on Julyl.

Stokes Man Is Arrested

GreenvUle police have arrested Rodney Carroll Greene, 25 of Route 1, Stokes, on breaking, entering and larceny charges in connection with an incident Wednesday.

Chief Glenn Cannon said Greene was arrested after a man entered an apartment at 1506A Fleming St. and took an estimated $50 worth of frozen meats and canned foods. The break-in was reported at 11:17 p.m. Wednesday.

Whitfield Observes Week

Students at G.R. Whitfield School are celebrating North Carolina Heritage Week with N.C. history exhibits, special guests and local history presentations this week.

Learning centers about North Carolina are set up in the media center along with books by N.C. authors and a collection of postcards and photographs from the state. Percussionist Christopher Deane, Pitt Community Colleges visiting artist, presented a program for the students. In addition, parents were served lunch that featured a menu of North Carolina products.

Individual classes were involved in various heritage activities including making booklets, student reports, a video history of Grimesland, nature walks, creative writing and a spelling bee on North Carolina words. Fourth-graders decorated the schools showcase with North Carolina-related items.

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Soil Conservationist Assigned To Pitt

David E. Harrison is serving as a soil conservationist in Pitt County for the U.S. D^artment of Agriculture Soil Conservation Service, SCS officials have announced.

Harrison, a native of Bear Grass, graduated from Bear Grass High School and North Carolina State University with a B.S. degree in wildlife biology. He started work with SCS in Surry County in 1979, then worked in Northampton County from 1981-83 before coming to Pitt County this month.

Harrison served in the U.S. Coast Guard from 1972-76 as a boatswains mate 2nd class. He was stationed at the U.S. Coast Guard Hatteras Inlet Station.

He will work primarily with farm planning in Pitt County, concentrating on the Indian WeUs and Clayroot areas of the Swift Creek Watershed Project.

He and his wife, Linda, have a son, Jonathan.

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Mixed Reviews Given Report On Education

The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, April 28,1983

-11

By Hie Associated Press A critical report on education released Tuesday the National Commission on Excellence in Education has gotten mixed reviews from educators.

The 29-page report said tougher standards, longer school days and higher teacher pay are needed to reverse a period of unthinking, unilateral educational disarmament.

The commission recommended that:

- School districts and

state legislatures consider lengthening school days to seven hours and school years from 180 days to 200 or 220.

- Requirements for high school students seeking a diploma be tightened to include four years of English, three years of math, three years of science, three years of social studies and a half-year of computer science; and for those planning to enter college it recommended two years rforeign language.

Colleges raise entrance standards.

Avers MADD Displays Unfair

' HALIFAX, N.C. (AP) - A Littleton attorney says courtroom displays by a group that monitors drunken driving cases unfairly affect the outcome of those cases.

Gilbert W. Chichester said Wednesday he plans to file a Civil action against the Halifax Chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving in the next term of Halifax County Superior Court, which begins May 31.

Chichester said he would task a Superior Court judge to bar members from wearing badges or tags bearing the name of the organization in state courts. If the request is approved, the order could apply statewide, officials said.

Ann Frazier of Roanoke Rapids, a representative of the MADD chapter in Halifax County, said in a telephone interview Wednesday that members of the organization are trying to increase public awareness of the court system and reduce accidents related to drunken driving. She denied that members intimidated court officials and said they plan to stick with their badges.

We think that if we save one persons life, then its worth it, Mrs. Frazier said.

A Halifax County district judge rejected a motion by Chichester to have MADD ^members or their badges removed from the courtroom during the April 8 trial of a DUI case. Judge H. Paul McCoy Jr. of Scotland Neck

ruled that the MADD members were exercising their right of free speech.

A mistrial was declared in the case because of a legal point unrelated to the motion involving MADD.

Chichester argued that the MADD members prominently displayed writing materials and discussing the court docket, actions he characterized as highly improper and prejudicial.

Chichester said the organizations activities have a direct effect on the ri^t to a fair trial by influencing the behavior of judges and other "court officials who know they are being watched.

He said defendants are also denied the appearance of a fair trial because many defendants are low-income people while the court monitors are usually prominent, influential people.

Mrs. Frazier said defense lawyers have a right to do everything they can for their client but the MADD members have a right to view it. She said the members only wear their badges in district court, where cases are tried by a judge, and they do not wear them in superior court where jurors are involved.

- Teachers assign more homework to high school students.

- Teachers get higher pay and 11-month contracts and that ineffective teachers be weeded out by an evaluation system that includes peer review.

- Citizens provide the money to cairy out the reforms and that parents demand more of their children.

C D. Spangler Jr. of Charlotte, chairman of the state board of education, favors increasing the school year. He says the school calendar is a holdover from the agricultural era when children had to work in the fields during summer months. He compares the 180-day North Carolina school calendar to that of Japan, where children go to school 240 days a year. American children cant grow up to compete in international markets with 33 percent less education, he says.

We already have it on the agenda for next week to discuss increasing the school year from 180 to 200 days, Spangler said Wednesday.

Concerned that beneficial but non-academic subjects like driver education are cutting into available time, SpangTer said an extended day is the only way to maintain standards. .

Cumberland County School Superintendent Dr. Jack Britt disagrees.

Im not sure a seven-hour day will accomplish more

than a six-hour day because of the students attention span," he said.

Britt said he doesnt believe the criticisms of the commission apply locally.

Im not sure where these people were from, he said. Its obvious they are not familiar with what North Carolina is doing and especially Cumberland County.

Britt agreed that more resources are needed, but he said test scores show local students above the national average. He said extending the school year is not practical because of the areas extreme temperatures. Only 40 of the systems 53 schools are air-conditioned, and Britt estimated it would take $20 million to weatherize all the schools for year-round use.

Dr. William H. Graves, associate dean of general education at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, was not surprised by the report.

We have been aware for some time that this was happening and trying to address the problem, he said. Back in 78 or 79 we put together a faculty committee to look at our own undergraduate curriculum. Part of that was because so many faculty members realized that many students were arriving here not prepared. Most colleges and universities are faced with the problem of how to assimilate a freshman class with such

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diverse preparation. No longer can you put all freshmen in English 101.

Graves said remedial courses are built into the university curriculum to help prepare freshmen for college-level work. He said he believes tightening of admission requirements at the university has sent out warning signals to high schools.

Graves dates the decline in student achievement to the Vietnam War era, when students demanded and got more freedom. But he said the biggest problem is that high school teachers are underpaid and overworked.

The value we attach to teaching is the fundamental issue, he said.

John Dornan, executive secretary of the North Caro

lina Association of Educators, said government officials cannot escape their responsibility for shortcoming in schools.

He said the rules which govern the educational system, the standards to be met and the funding levels for public schools are all decided by our lawmakers, and these individuals cannot condemn the system without condeming themselves.

Lawmakers at all levels of government have allowed teacher salaries to erode to the point that the profession cannot attract the best and brightest people, Doman said, and now the lawmakers want to blame educators for the quality of beginning teachers. They have frozen money for badly needed textbooks, and now

they are claiming the schools arent meeting the challenges of the 1980s.

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12-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, April 28,1983

The LegislatureAdmits His Anti-Daoth Penaity Biil Almost Futile

,    ByJOHNFLESHER

Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Sen. Bill Martin, EWiuilford, has filed a bill to abolish the death penalty, but he admits the measure has little chance in a Legislature having trouble adopting more humane means of capital punishment.

Martin said he wanted capital punishment to be debated regardless of the outcome.

There hasnt been an effort to abolish the death penalty in this state since 1975, and it was defeated, he said Wednesday. The issue has been in the news a lot lately and I think its a good time to try again.

The news has centered around a bill introduced by Sen. Bob Davis. D-Rowan, to use lethal injections in executions instead of the gas chamber. Davis contends injections are less painful and more humane, while opponents say making executions more palatable will only increase the chance of juries applying the death sentence.

North Carolina hasnt carried out a legal execution since 1964, but has 29 death row inmates.

Martin, the Senates only black, said the death penalty has been ordered for an unfairly high proportion of blacks.

It also has been argued that its needed because of the high cost to the state of keeping prisononers all their lives, he said. But when you consider the costs of the appeals filed by death row inmates, 1 think capital punishment is more costly.

George Gardner, executive director for the N.C. Civil Liberties Union, said he didnt expect the bill to go anywhere, but hoped it would inspire some intelligent discussion.

Gary Pearce, press secretary to Gov. Jim Hunt, said Hunt supported the death penalty and considered it a deterrent to first-degree murder.

If he needs to get involved in a lobbying effort against this - bill, he will," said Pearce. But his position is well known and 1 think it has a lot of support in the Legislature.

Davis refused to take a position on Martins bill.

Ive told both supporters and opponents of the death penalty that they should support my bill, because it really should satisfy both sides, he said. I dont want to speculate on the other bill because to do so might do violence to mine.

In other legislative action;

Unemployment Insurance A state labor leader criticized a bill designed to keep North Carolinas unemployment insurance fund healthy, saying reduced benefits would hurt the workers who can least afford the losses.

We are not interested in seeing the fund here in North Carolina go bankrupt, Chris Scott of the state AFL-CIO told the House Employment Security Committee, At the same time we are aware that the fund here in North Carolina is one of the more solvent ones in the country.

Charles Dunn of the North Carolina Textile Manufacturers .Association said he supports the bill although it will cost businesses $100 million more a year in contributions to the fund.

The bill increase the minimum weekly benefits for unemployment insurance from $15 to $30, eliminating 1,800 of the 512,000 now receiving benefits,

I think its bad to get them off the unemployment compensation roles and onto the welfare roles, Scott said, adding that many unemployed single men and women would be ineligible for welfare also.

Royall Disavows Bill Is Personal

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -State Sen. Kenneth C. Royall Jr. says he tried to steer clear of bills affecting Emerald Isle because it might appear he was pushing a personal interest,

Royall says he introduced a bill to develop a new town out of Emerald Isle only to cooperate with a constituent and to aid coastal lawmakers trying to solve the issue of an access ramp.

The new town of Inlet Dunes would include Royalls beach home, which is near the access ramp.

To be honest with you. Id never even seen the bill, Royall said Wednesday. "I knew, what it was about just in general. I stayed out of tbis because I didnt think I should get involved.

Residents on the western part of the island became concerned that a bill creating a new town promised them by area lawmakers might not be filed in time to meet the deadline for local bills. A representative of that group. Dr. Thomas Stokes of Durham, contacted Rovall. Knowing coastal lawmakers in the Sena j and the House were working on the bill, Royall said he checked with Sen. Joseph E. thomas, D-Craven, and after receiving Thomas clearance filed the bill.

^ Royalls bill is one of two l^rtaining to Emerald Isle pending in the Legislature. His measure would form a new town from a section of Emerald Isle. It would set up new town board to govern Qie area, including the motor Vehicle access ramp. The (amp has disturbed residents of the area who see it as a nuisance.

The House measure, ^nsored by Reps. J. Allen Adams, D-Wake, G. Malcolm Fulcher Jr., D-Carteret, W. Bruce Etheridge, D-Onslow and James P. Tyndall, D-Onslow, would close the ramp. However, it would .recommend construction of a public parking facility which has long been desire by Emerald Isle officials, as well as bathhouse facilities and a public pedestrian access.

That bill is pending in the House Committee on Natural and Economic Resources. Royall, meanwhile, has asked Sen. Charles Hipps, D-Haywood, to withhold consideration of his bill pending action on the related House bill.

But Employment Security Commission Chairman Glenn Jemigan said the workers affected had been employed only two days a mmiUi to collect the benefits and he wasnt sure the fund was established to help people who had worked so little.

Minerals

Lawrence Davis, an attorney representing the N.C. Aggregates Council, argued against of a bill requiring owners of mineral rights to list them for ad valorem taxes by Sept. 1, 1985, or lose the rights.

He told the House Water and Air Resources Committee that the existing laws, which take away a persons mineral rights if he fails to pay taxes on the ri^its for 10 years, are adequate.

The bill was referred to a subcommittee for more study. Condos

Rufus Forrest of the American Association of Retired Persons told the House Housing Committee that elderly citizens have a harder time than younger people in finding a suitable apartment.

Forrest said thats one reason he supports a bill that would would require a 120-day notice to tenants when their apartment is about to be converted to condominiums.

He said older people must find compatible neighbors to give them assistance, safe neighborhoods and apartments that are near grocery stores or shopping centers for those who do not drive. But Forrest said thats difficult because cities like Raleigh have only a 1 percent apartment vacancy rate.

The bill was sent to subcommittee.

Child Abuse

The Senate Finance Committee sent to a subcommittee a bill that would apply the proceeds from higher marriage license fees to local child abuse prevention programs.

lye think this is one of the best investments the state could make, said Charles Dunn, president of Child Watch, a statewide volunteer organization.

But several representatives of the N.C. Registers of Deeds Association opposed the bill, saying it would require counties to collect state money and that it was undesireable to penalize those about to marry.

Sen. Bill Redman, R-Iredell, said divorce fees should be increased to pay for child abuse programs.

Most child abuse is associated with broken homes, anyway, he said. I cant see making pe<^le,who are getting married, which is a positive thing, paying for a negative thing.

Session Lengths Sen. Gerry Hancock, D-Durham, told the Senate State Government Committee his proposal for shortening the legislative session and changing legislative operations would preserve the citizen legislature concept.

Hancock said North Carolina must choose between a full-time, professional legislature or the stepAe recommends that will make it possible for the average citizen to serve.

Under the bill, full sessions would be limited to 75 days with a possible 25-day extension if needed. There would be a six-day session in January to take care of committee assignments and other preliminary business.

Standing committees would work between sessions, eliminating the need for many legislative study committees. Bills could be pre-filed between sessions, and committees could study them without taking final action.

The committee took no action on the bill, but scheduled further discussions for next week. Utility Rates Twenty-five members of Citizens United for Fair Electric Rates protested utility prices in a demonstration in front of the legislative building.

We know our legislators hear often the utiity companys side of the story, said R.H. Beatty of Fayetteville, spokesman for the group and board member of the N.C. Federation of Senior Citizens. We came today to remind legislators that the customers know what is happening here in Raleigh, and are watching to make sure our needs are protected.

The demonstrators, many of them elderly, urged that utilities be limited in the frequency of rate increases and not be permitted to make customers pay for constructing new plants.

Farmworkers Commission A House committee approved a bill to establish a state council to find ways to improve the lives of North Carolinas farmworkers.

The House State Government Committee overcame objections by Rep. Allen Barbee, D-Nash, and Rep. Reid Poovev.

LORD'S JEWELERS

For Prompt, Reasonable Repairs On Watches - Jewelry

Carolina East Centre Phone: 756-8963

Fancy Wedding Set

Reg.    Now

$135.00 ..............

$158.00.............S-|-|QOO

$225.00.............^157

$295.00.............S200O

Diamond Heart Pendant

Reg. $149.95

SQQ95

Now

Diamond Solitaires

Tv

Reg. Now $103.00

12 Ct.......$219.00    153

25 Ct.......$780.00    ^545"

.33 Ct.......$864.00    ^600

Diamond Pendant

Reg.    Now

.03 Ct......$49.95    ^35

.10 Ct.....$135.00    ^94

.25Ct $292.00 ^204

.33 Ct.....$540.00    ^375

Diamond Earrings From $29.95

Reg.    Now

.04 Ct......$75.00    ^50

.08 Ct.....$110.00    ^75

.15 Ct.....$180.00    M25

.20 Ct.....$259.00    M80

Jewelry Boxes Gift Items

30%

Off

Mothers^Ring

Special

$4g95

Stones Extra

14 Kt. Wedding Band

Reg. Now

2mm..........$40.00    ^32

3mm..,.......$60.00    48

4mm..........$94.00    ^65

5mm.........$109.00    ^87

Diamond Anniversary Ring

Reg.    Now

.25Ct. ...$522.00 ^365 .45Ct. ...$995.00 ^695

Diamond

Clusters

Reg.    Now

.i.............*9400

7..0..........Mas"

.3.S..........*220

9s.............*485

Speidel

Bracelet

50/o 0..

Watch

Batter

OS'

14 Kt. Chain Repair S350

Per Joint

Watch Crystal

From

$400

R-Catawba, who said they were concerned the bill might adversely affect non-seasonal workers.

Rep. Malcolm Fulcher, IKarteret, who introduced the bill, said the council would simply advise the General Assembly and would not hurt any farmworkers.

Rules

The House Rules Committee approved resolutions that would help reduce the number of adminstrative rul^ in government, continue the study of college science equipment and authorize a study comparing state salaries with the private sector.

Rep. Billy Watkins, D-Granville, introduced the resolution to phase out 18,000 pages of adminstrative rules currently on file with the state attorney general.

The resolution would abolish all administrative rules as of July 1,1985. Any rules government agencies felt they needed would have to be filed with the Legislature as bills.

In other action, the committee killed a bill by Rep. John Jordan, D-Alamance, that wpuld have set a date before which all bills must be filed each session. However, Chairman Rep. Jack Hunt, D-Cleveland, said he would see that the bill was considered for possible addition to the House rules in the next session.

Appeals

A bill to reduce the number of criminal cases before the N.C. Court of Appeals and N.C. Supreme Court went back the Senate Judiciary I Committee after it encountered fierce opposition on the Senate floor.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe, would require that attorneys of indigent clients say in writing whether they think the appeal is valid.

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Pilot Dies In Harrier Crash

CHERRY POINT, N.C. (AP) - One pilot was killed and another was injured Wednesday when a TAV-8A Harrier aircraft crashed during a training flight at the Cherry Point Marine Corps air station.

Base spokesman Maj. Dennis Brooks said the crash occurred during a vertical takeoff at 9:20 a.m. when the plane flipped over.

The training instructor, Capt. Paul L. Spargo Jr., 30, of West Haven, Conn., was pronounced dead on arrival at the Naval Hospital at Cherry Point,

The training pilot, Capt. Dwight R. Motz, 28, of Northbrook, 111., was listed in guarded condition at the hospital.

Ifesterdaywas National Secretaries Day..

L

Call Today!

Ask about our Secretarys coffee caddy with flowers

Mylar balloon bouquets that say to a Star Secretary Coffee mugs filled with chocolates or jelly bellys

Jefferson Florist

W.5th St.

WALLC0VEBIN6

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Buy one single roll at reg. price, get second single roll

ANY IN-STOCK    $400

PATTERN OR SELECTED        VW

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WINDOW TREAIMENTS

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f 1983, The Sherwin-Williams Co.





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Thursday, April 28,1983-13

Ingram Claims His Dept. Harassed

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Insurance Commissioner John Ingram says Rep. Don Beard, D-Cumberland, is harassing his department in retaliation for a 1978 audit of an insurance company which employes Beard.

But Beard said Tuesday the dispute started in 1974 when he alerted reporters that a supporter of Ingrams Was allegedly offering to help companies speed up applications to do business.

Ingram said his department is being harassed by requests for confidential information from employees personnel files.

If he were not wasting taxpayers money and man-hours in his personal vendetta, some of his activities would be comical, Ingram said at a news conference Tuesday.

Beard said the requests for information about Ingrams employees were made on behalf of the joint Base Budget Subcommittee on

General Government, which he chairs.

The subcommittee has requested documents on employee salaries and travel expenses to identify possible cuts in the department for next years state budget, he said.

Beard said the average employee in Ingrams department earns $22,000 while the average salary for all

state workers is $15,000.

He has dragged his feet, sent us incomplete information and is not allowing individuals to respond to our questions, Beard said. He wants to keep the facts from the committee because they could be damaging to him.

Ingram said Beard, sales manager for Insurance Finance Co. Inc. of Fayetteville, is retaliating for a

1978 insurance department audit of the companys escheat fund - money the firm holds on behalf of its clients for various reasons

\

Autornotiwe M?chinp ShoiJ Fofeign-Oompslic

tngines Rpbuii

Auto Specialty Co.

917W sthst 758-1 131

SPRING COMES BACK ONCE MORE - For about the fifth time since March 21, the on-again, off-again visits of ^ring weather made yet another return bid on Wednesday in a day of warm, sparkling sunshine. To take advantage of this outdoor-beckoning weather, a group of East Carolina Universi

ty students gathered in the sun around the cluster of tables at the end of the Georgetown Shopping Center parking lot. On campus and on the MU at the womens dorm, other students stretched out in the grass in an effort to acquire their 1983 tans. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)

Says Disregard Was Deliberate

She Really Put Her Foot In It

DALLAS (AP) - A north Dallas woman really put her foot in it during a dispute with a neighbor and lost her shoes, to boot, police said.

Margie Cohen, 56, contended that a new wall was

actually being built on her property, so she stepped into the wet concrete, said police officer C.L. Goodwin. , She sat down and put her feet in the trench as they were pouring the concrete.

thinking that would stop the contractor, Goodwin said. It didnt. When we got there, she was still sitting there with her feet in the cement.

Goodwin said police convinced the woman to pull her feet free before it was too

late. But, the officer added, her shoes will be in there forever.

Leaf collection services are provided by the Citys Public Works Department. For information, call 752-4137.

HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) - Fairchild Industries Inc. showed intentional disregard for health and safety by illegally discharging hazardous waste at a Maryland plant, a judge said in fining the company $100,000.

Washington County Circuit Judge Frederick C. Wright III levied the fine Wednesday after a 13-day trial in which Fairchild was convicted on five coiints of unauthorized hazardous waste disposal and water pollution.

CloUiing , Wareliouse

Black Denim Sale

This Friday & Saturday Only

Ladies

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Open Every Friday Night Until 8:00 Next to McDonalds On 264 ByPass, Greenville. Phone 756-0857

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BOSTIC-SUGG HAS JUST RECEIVED TWO TRUCKLOADS OF LA-Z-BOY RECLINERS...ALL PURCHASED AT 1982 PRICES...SAVINGS HAVE NEVER BEEN GREATER! OVER 230 LA-Z-BOY CHAIRS NOW IN STOCK!!!

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222

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RETAIL PRICE $360.00 STYLE 227 LA-Z-BOY SWIVEL ROCKER

SALE $ O/t noo PRICE L^\J

Herculon Tweed. Choice of Two Colors.

RETAIL PRICE $315.00 STYLE 232 LA-Z-BOY SWIVEL ROCKER

SALE $ 1 PRICE X O 7

Antron Nylon Velvet. Choice of Two Colors.

RETAIL PRICE *340'' FULL SIZE LA-Z-BOY RECLINA ROCKER WITH TUFTED BACK

SALE PRICE

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Acrylic Velvet. Only Two To Sell.

RETAIL PRICE *426.00 STYLE 849 LA-Z-BOY RECLINA ROCKER

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Tall Back. Vinyl or Nylon Fabric.

RETAIL PRICE *518.50 STYLE 845 LA-Z-BOY RECLINA ROCKER

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Solid Maple Arms. 100% Nylon Tweed.

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STYLE 416 LA-Z-BOY RECLINA ROCKER

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Herculon Corduroy Fabric Two Colors.

SELECT YOUR LA-Z-BOY RECLINER FOR FATHERS DAY & BOSTIC-SUGG WILL HOLD IT TIL JUNE

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Tall Mans Chair. Vinyl or Nylon Tweed.





14-The Day Renector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, April 28,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 75 cents to 1.00 lower. Kinston 46.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill. Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level. Laurinburg and Benson 46.50, Wilson 46.00, Salisbury 46.00, Rowland

46.00, Spiveys Corner 46.00. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 43.00, Fayetteville

42.00, Whiteville 43.00, Wallace 43.00, Spivey's Corner 43.00, Rowland 42.00,' 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 41.25 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2':- to 3 pound birds. Too few percent of the loads offered have been confirmed. The market is higher 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 Thursday was 1,832,000, compared to 1,796,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices advanced slowly today in morning trading as the Dow Jones industrial average hovered near its record high.

The Dow Jones measure of 30 blue-chip industrials - off 1.06 points Wednesday after climbing 22.25 points Tuesday to a record 1,209.46 -was up 1.16 points to 1,209.56 after two hours of trading today. The measure was up more than 4 points early in todays session.

The Dow Jones utility average also edged higher, but its transportation average was off a fraction.

Gainers held a 3-2 lead over losers on the New York Stock Exchange, with energy, retail and airline issues mostly higher.

Big Board volume slowed to 39.25 million shares by noon EDT from 63.74 million at that hour W'ednesday.

Chrysler Corp. was down h at 25. A 500,000-share block traded at 24';; and a 472,800-share block crossed at24'H.

Warner Communications was off 24 to 26 after a 653.000-share block traded at 25*8.

Data Generals opening was delayed after the minicomputer maker soared 10to 73'4 on Wednesday. After Data General today issued a statement saying it knew of no reason for the sharp rise, the stock opened and promptly fell 6'- to 66"4.

The NYSEs composite index wasup0.16to92.84.

At the American Stock Exchange, the market value

index rose 1.61

to 420.

53.

\'KW YORK (API

-Midday slocks:

High

Low

Last

AMR Uorp

271;

27'

27%

AbbtLabs

46b

46".

46

Allis C'halm

13.

13".

13".

Alcoa

32'.

32'

.32'.

Am Baker

13'.

13'

13'

AmBrands

53

53".

53

Amer Can

38'.,

38',

38'

Am Cyan

42".

4Ih

42'.

AmFamily

18,

18",

18".

Am Motors

7%

7%

7".

AmSland

31'.

31%

31'.

Amer TiT

67".

67'.

67",

Beat Food

27.

27".

27".

Betb Steel

21'.

20.

21

Boeirig

39

38".

38",

Boise Cased

45'.

45

45

Borden

36

55".

56

Burlngt Ind CSX Coij) CaroPwLt

33'-;

33'-;

33';

64".

64

64".

21.

21 "4

21*'.

Celanese

61

61

61

Cent Sova Champ Int Chrysler

15".

15';

15",

27',H

27

27

25'.

24,

25

CocaCola

56';

56

56

Colg Palm

25

24",

25

Comw Edis

27'.

27

27'

ConAgra

28'

28'

28'

Conti Group

. 43".

43".

43".

DeltaAirl

43%

43'4

43',

DowChem

31'

30

31

duPont

45"

45'4

45';

Duke Pow

23"

23',

23",

EastnAirL

7%

7",

7%

East Kodak

81%

81",

81",

EatonCp

39';

39%

39%

Esmark s

63

62';

63

Exxon

34".

34",

34".

Firestone

21

21",

21",

FlaPowLt

37';

37%

37';

FlaProgress

FordMot

20

20

20

48"

48",

48';

For McKess

45

44'

44'.

Fuqua Ind GTE Corp

44

43"4

43".

43'

42

43

6:: meets 6:30 p.m Rotary Bldg 7:00 p.m

THURSDAY

pm - Exchange Club

- Jaycees meet at

- Greenville support group for the National PMS Society meets at Regional Rehabilitation classroom. Pitt County Memorial Hospital

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 Women of the Moose 8:00 p.m - VFW Auxiliary meets at Post Home

FRIDAY

7:30 p.m.-Red Men meet

tnUynam Gen Elec GenlElec wi Gen Food Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacIf Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculesinc Honeywell HosptCp s Ing Rand IBM

Intl Harv Int Paper Int Rectif Int TiT K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrogerCo

KrogerCo

IxK-Kheed

Loews Corp .Masonite n McDrmInt n Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB Cp NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou n .OlinCp Owenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid ProclGamb s Quaker Oat RCA

RalstnPur

RepubAir

Republic StI

Revlon

Reynldind

Rockwelint

4S-G

109

S6

44M

53%

iS%

35

41

29% 43% 33% 44'. 44 23, 334 35, I06'4 49"4 45'4 117 12', 55'-.

21'v

38, 34'-. 18'4 16 15, 37 118, 173 57'4

19',i

2S:Vj

85'-. 30', 90'-4 26'-4 35t, 27% 54% 31'4 32*, 65'4

42S, 43 33'S,    33':

RqyCrown StRegi

iegis Pap Scott Paper SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co Sper^ Cp SldOifCal StdOilInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide Uniroyal US Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart s

WeslPtP^

Westgh Weyerhsr WinnDix Wool worth Wrigley Xerox Cp

30', 64'4 35", 32'4 62 50>, 25"4 22", 8", 23 34't, 52", 56", 23'S. 32", 23'-. 41'4 584 24", 15'4 16', 36',. 39'4 46", 47'4 24", 69',. 35"4 55", II', T2'4 63'7 13", 23", 34'4 40" 4 61, 45", 44'4 40 50 34", 46, 46',

61",4    61"

50'-4    50'-.

25',    25",

22% 22",

8',

23

34

.52'

56'

H%

23

34

52'H.

56",

23>,    23",

32',    32",

23 >, 41

58",    58'4

24",    24",

15    I5'4

16

36',    36',

39'-..    39"4

46    46",

46'-..    47

24'4    24",

69'4 69'- 35',    35",

55'..

11',

71',    71"

63',    63',

13',    13',

23'..    23"4

33"4    34

40"4    40".

61'; 61" 45"j    45"

44    44',

39';    39"4

50

341,

46"4

45,

Following are selected market quotations: Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power & Light Collins iiAikman , Connor Duke Eaton Eckerds Exxon Fieldcrest Halteras Hilton Jefferson Deere Lowe's McDonald's McGraw Piedmont Pizza Inn P4G

TRW. Inc United Tel Virginia Electric Wachovia

OVERTHECOUNTER

Aviation

Branch

Little Mint

Planters Bank

II a m stock

46';.

21,

25",

20%

23%

39%

29"4

34"4

36

16

50\

32'i

37"4

39

68'4

44'!,

35'4

12",

el's.

21'-.

15",

40'4

26-26';

22'4-23

l-%

32,-33'-.

'Clandestine' Radio Rejected

WASHINGTON (AP) - An assistant secretary of state says the Reagan administration considered but later rejected establishing a clandestine radio station to broadcast to Cuba.

. Thomas 0. Enders, assistant secretary for inter-American affairs, made the statement Wednesday to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee during testimony on behalf of the administrations proposal for Radio Marti.

Radio Marti, named for Cuban patriot Jose Marti, would be an openly operated station that would broadcast news and entertainment to Cuba. It was approved by the House and by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last year, but did not come to a vote in the full Senate.

Fired Air Controllers Handed A New Setback

49';    '-'4

109'4 109/, 55",    55",

43"4    44'4.

53"4    53,

65',    65'j

35    35

40,    41

29'i,    29'"4

44'/4    44'S.

43"4    44

23"4    23"4

33'/.    33",

35's    35%

105"4 106', 49';    49-V

45',    45',

116", 116', 11"4    12

55'4    55'i

20'>, 21',

38,

34'/;

WASHINGTON (AP) -Thousands of fired air traffic controllers trying to win back their jobs got a setback because of critical rulings by a civil service board.

The Merit System Protection Board on Wednesday rejected the arguments of 128 controllers and reinstated three. But the rulings were expected to go far beyond those cases because they dealt with issues that board officials said are factors in

most of the appeals being considered.

The board was hit by an avalanche of appeals after President Reagan fired 11,400 controllers because of an illegal strike in August 1981.

It is considering nearly 5,000 appeals, most of them taken to the board by controllers who lost their arguments at the regional level.

18',    18'.4

16    16

15    15

36's    36",

118'4 118,

:r% 172%

57%    57',4

19    19',

25'-.    25'-;

85    851,

29,    30

89,    90'-;

26", 26", 34",    35,

27%    27%

54';    54"

31'

32",

65',

38

30',

64

CTST To End Telephone Sales

35',    35-'S.

31,    32'4

Carolina Telephone, which has faced increased competition for its share of the retail market as a result of federal deregulation of the telephone industry, plans to stop selling telephone instruments outright, a spokesman said today.

George Pate of CT&Ts Tarboro headquarters said that, as a result of the companys plans to exit the retail business, the Phone Shop segment of the Hooker Road operations in Greenville is being phased out.

Pate said he anticipated the company will be out of the retail business here in about 30 days. He said other phone shops in the CT&T system will also be affected although a few will remain open for a period of time to sell existing inventory. He said there may be some

consolidation of shops.

We are not going to buy any more telephones to sell, said Pate, adding that the Greenville retail business will end when local inventory is depleted. He said CT&T had already slowed purchasing in anticipation of the retail phase out.

Pate said the closing of the Phone Shop in Greenville will result in an employee loss of only one or two, if any.

The spokesman said that customer complaints, the receipt of telephone bill payments and customer service requests will continue to be handled at the 1530 Hooker Road facilities.

Pate said telephones are now available from numerous business outlets and CT&T, in trying to stay with a Cadillac instrument, could not continue to compete for the retail business.

Ministers At Seminar Here

ECU News Bureau

Twenty members of the clergy and lay church volunteers participated in a Young Adult Ministry Seminar sponsored by East Carolina Universitys campus ministers Wednesday.

The seminar featured an original one-act play, Journey Into Eternity, written by Stuart Aronson of the ECU Division of Continuing Education staff.

The play was performed by Richard St. George and Hazel Stapleton of the ECU faculty and was preceded by a 45-minute dialogue between the playwright and seminar participants.

Other seminar events included presentations by two of ECUs campus chaplains: Seers, Sages, and Sojourners, the Rev. Daniel Earnhardt, Methodist chaplain, and The Young Adult Predicament, the Rev. Robert Clyde, Baptist chaplain, as well as a panel discussion, Up the Tree in 83, moderated by the Rev. Stewart LaNeave, Presbyterian chaplain.

Participants were also involved in small group workshops on aspects of Christian education for youth. Sessions were held in the Baptist and Methodist Student centers, located near the campus.

Represented among the participants were Methodist, Presbyterian and Roman Catholic ministries.

Clergy and lay participants included the Rev. and Mrs.

Don Lee, Holy Trinity Methodist Church; Mickey Skidmore, Roman Catholic Newman Community, and the Rev. Gerald Anders, First Presbyterian Church.

Preparing To Fill ACCs Presidency

WILSON - Selection of a Search Committee assigned tlje task of finding a new president for Atlantic Christian College was announced today by T.J. Hackney Jr., chairman of the ACC Board of Trustees.

The committee is comprised of four trustees of the college, the regional minister of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in North Carolina, an alumni representative, a member of the college administration, two elected members of the teaching faculty, and a member of the student body.

Bruce W. Riley of Wilson, a trustee, was named chairman of the committee. Other trustees named were Naomi E. Morris of Wilson, William D. Schubert of Valdese and George Stronach of Wilson.

Bernard Meece of Wilson is

region minister of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). Jim Black of Win-terville will serve as the alumni representative. Serving as secretary and adminstrative representative will be Ben C. Hobgood, vice president for business and finance.

Named as teaching faculty representatives were Dr. Katherine H. James, associate professor of English, and Sue M. Robineete, assistant professor of nursing. Andrew C. Preston Jr., president qf the ACC Student Government Association, will be the stu-dent representative.

CAKES FOR MOTHERS DAY J

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Now make one stop to ^ Greenville Travel Center for your International tickets and Passport or Visa PicturesWe do all! We strive for perfection.

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Behind Bond* Sporting Goods

756-1521

218 C. Arlington Boulevard

Back in 1963

Rachel and Jack Edwards started the Book Barn on the corner of 5th and Cotanche Street twenty years ago. The Book Barn is a growing family business and we have worked hard to make our store the best in Greenville. We support the community and want to celebrate with you. Come down to visit us during our anniversary sale and take advantage of the terrific bargains we are offering for you this week. Thank you very much for your business over the past twenty years.

Storewide Sale

Now through Saturday

Convenient Rear Entrance

114 E. 5th St.

Obituaries

Among the findings Wednesday that are expected to play a prominent part in the other appeals were:

- A conclusion that the strike officially should be considered to have been in effect from Aug. 3, 1981, when the walkout was called, to Aug. 19, 1981. Some controllers had argued that the strike ended Aug. 6 when Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis declared it over and that they essentially were locked out after that date.

- That controllers had an obligation of communicating unequivocally to agency officials their desire to return to work. The board upheld the dismissal of a Boston controller who had claimed he had informed Federal Aviation Administration officials that he was ready and able to work.

- It was the obligation of controllers to seek clarification if they were confused about Reagans back-to-work order.

- Comments by Reagan, Lewis and FAA Administrator J. Lynn Helms should not be construed as compromising FAA officials who had to decide the initial requests for reinstatement.

- The FM was not required to provide six days written notice before ordering the dismissal as argued by some controllers.

- The consolidation of many cases did not prejudice the appeals process.

Of the 131 appeals the three which resulted in reinstatement included the case of two New York controllers who were found to have been on jury duty at the time of the strike and an Ohio controller whose dismissal involved procedural errors.

The Reagan administration repeatedly has rejected any consideration of allowing the fired controllers to return to work except in cases where the FAAs internal review has shown an improper dismissal or in cases where the FAA has been ordered to rehire a controller by the Merit System Protection Board.

Allen

Mr. Linwood Chester (Check) Allen, 76, of 2702 Jefferson Drive died Wednesday morning at Pitt County Memorial Ho^ital. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by John Simpson. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemeteiy.

Mr. Allen, a native of Pitt County, spent all his life in Greenville. A retired employee of the ABC Board, he Was employed by Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Greenville for 35 years.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Lillian Leggett Allen; two sons. Corky Allen of Grimesland and Roger Alien of Greenville; four sisters. Miss Beulah Harrington and Mrs. Bertha Jackson, both of Greenville, Mrs. Sarah Johnson of Portsmouth, Va., and Mrs. Mary Lee Richards of Norfolk, Va., and five grandchildren.

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

day at the Clear View Baptist Church in Newark by the Rev. Thomas H. Rankin. Burial will be in Newark.

Mrs. Gemons was bom and reared in Pitf County, N.C., but bad been a resident of New Jersey for the past 15 years.

Surviving are three sons, James Clemons, Lemon Clemons Jr. and Jesse , Clemons, all of Philadelphia; eight daughters, Helen Smith of Vanceboro, N.C., Queenie Daniels of Greenville, N.C., Bonnie Jones of Philadelphia, Bernice Little of Hillside, N.J., Lois Gay of Norwalk, Conn., Lee Paige and Lillie Carr, both of Newark, and Eula Clemons of the home; one brother, Willie Jones of PhUadelphia; 47 grandchildren and 38 great-grandchildren.

N.C., and a brother, James T. Wilswi Sr. of Greeville, N.C. Funeral services will be conducted Monday in New York.

Baker

Mr. George W. Baker, 69, died at his home on Route 2, Farmville, Wednesday. His funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 3 p.m. in the Saratoga Free Will Holiness Church by the Rev. Preston Lane and the Rev. Lonnie Humphrey. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mr. Baker, a Martin County native, had spent most of his life in the Farmville community and was a retired farmer. He was a member of the Saratoga Free Will Holiness Church.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Effie Wells Baker; three daughters, Mrs. Marie Corey of Saratoga, Mrs. Elva Nichols of Chicago and Mrs. Elizabeth Hardee of Farmville; three sons, George T. Baker of Tarboro, Robert Baker of Farmville and James Baker of the home; 15 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Cobb

Mrs. Lula Cobb died this morning in Edgecombe General Hospital. She was the mother of Mrs. Elizabeth Battle of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hemby-Willougby Mortuary in Tarboro.

Evans

WINTERVILLE - Mr. Eddie Ervin Evans of Jones Street died Wednesday at the Health Care Center in Washington. He was the father of Mrs. Evelyn Evans Best of the home.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott & Company Funeral Home in Greenville.

Knight

NEW YORK - Mrs. Lizzie Knight died Wednesday. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Rosa Wilson of Bethel,

Stackhous Mr. Herman R. Stack Stackhous, 67, of the Garks Neck community near Washington'died Wednesday in the Beauf(Hl County Hospital. His funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Jerry Rowe. Bu.ial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mr. Stackhouse was bom and reared in Bucks County, Pa. Retired since 1967 as a chief warrant officer, he served in the U.S. Marine Corps for 30 years and served in both World War II and the Korean conflict. He was a resident of Jacksonville for more than 10 years and moved to Pitt County in 1980. He was a member of the Addison Reformed Church of Richboro, Pa., the Bass Anglers Sports Society, the National Rifle Association and the Washington Moose Lodge.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Pattie McNamara Stackhouse; two daughters, Patricia Bullock of Jacksonville and Jodie Michelle Stackhous of the home; four stepsons, Bruce Burnette of Washington, William Burnette of Jacksonville, and Alvin Ray and Stuart Wayne Respass, both of Greenville; five grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. At other times they will be at the home on Route 3, Washington, except for Saturday when they will be at the home of Mrs. Doris Hatton, 2403 Umstead Ave., Greenville.

CORRECTION

Gemons IRVINGTON, N.J. - Mrs. Beatrice Jones Clemons, 79, died Monday at her home. Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Satur-

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Sports the DAILY REFLECTOR Classified

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 28, 1983Ryan Cruises Past Johnson's Mark

MONTREAL (AP) - The record book said Walter Johnson, 3,508 strikeouts. Best ever. The old newspaper clips said it was unmat-chable.

But in Nolan Ryans mind, the measure of a fastball was the one Sandy Koufax threw.

Its been so long since Walter Johnson pitched, I really know very little about him, Ryan said.

Ryan was resting comfortably in front of a bank of television cameras and a large group of newsmen. On a clear Wednesday afternoon in Montreal, the Houston Astros right-hander had broken Johnsons 55-year-old lifetime strikeout record. It was only natural to ask what this strikeout king thought of the old one..

The only thing I know about Johnson is what I have read in the newspapers, Ryan said. I looked him up once in the Baseball Encyclop^ia, but all that gave me was his stats. It didnt say too much about the man.

What that revered book of baseball statistics said about that original Hall of Earner was that he had struck out 3,508 batters in a 21-year career with the Washington Senators, ending in 1927. That was tops, until Wednesday, when the 36-year-old Ryan struck out five Expos for 3,509 in a career, which has just entered its 16th full season.

When I broke (Sandy) Koufaxs single season record, that meant more to me, Ryan said. I was a fan of Koufaxs when I was growing up. I watched him when I was in high school.

Among Ryans major league records are five career no-hitters and 383 strikeouts in the 1973 season, when he was with the California Angels. Both records broke old Koufax marks.

Ryan, who grew up and now lives in Alvin, Texas, some 10 miles from Houston, is a simple man. A cattle breeder and farmer, Ryan never was impressed with records. They

were numbers, not nearly so important as heads of cattle. He said he became aware that Johnsons record was within reach only when he notched his 3,000th strikeout on July 4,1980, and he didnt begin counting until he reached 3,500 on April 17 against the Expos.

Im really not record oriented, he said. I had the opportunity to break the record, and I feel fortunate to be in that position.

Ryan tied the record by striking out catcher Tim Blackwell, playing in place of injured Gary Carter, to lead off the eighth inning. He got Blackwell swinging wildly at a 3-2 fastball. The next batter was Brad Mills, who was pinch hitting for second baseman Doug Flynn.

Ryan had two quick strikes on Mills, both fastballs, then missed with his third pitch, 1-2. Ryans next pitch was a curve than came in toward the left-handed hitting Mills. Homeplate umpire Bob Engel called it a strike, and Ryan had 3,509.

I dont get too excited about anything, Ryan said. I was more relieved than excited when it happened. Now, I can sit back and relax and get more satisfaction out of it.

Mills, a 26-year-old utility infielder, was not happy to get into the record books in this fashion.

Id rather get in some other way, he said, but its history. I cant worry about that now. I thought the strikeout pitch was outside.

Mills said he was not even aware that he had become Ryans record-breaking victim. He had been in the tunnel warming up for three innings.

On the bench before the game, we were saying to one another, Its not gonna be me. Its not gonna be me. But we didnt talk about it during the game. More than being in the record book, thou^. Im disappointed that I didnt even get a good swing at him.

Blackwell was a strikeout victim twice. Ryans other victims were Tim Wallach and

Bryan Little. Despite not reaching his lifetime strikeout ratio of 9.46 per nine innings, Ryan pitched well in winning his second game with one loss, 4-2. He gave up just five hits and walked only one in his eight innings, and the game was finished by Frank LaCorte, who retired the side in order in the ninth.

Ryan began the season 15 shy of breaking one of those records that once was thought unbreakable. His first start was delayed when he was placed on the disabled list with an inflamm^ prostate gland. He did not pitch until April 17, when he struck out seven Expos at the Astrodome in a 6-3 victory. In his next start, last Friday night, he lost 6-3 to the Philadelphia Phillies, striking out only three.

1 didnt put as much pressure on myself today as I did against the Phillies, Ryan said. 1 got wrapped up a bit against them, and 1 was very disappointed. 1 got wrapped up in trying to do it at home, and 1 because 1 knew Philadelphia was the type of team that would really give me a battle.

Ryan gave up a first-inning run. Tim Raines singed, stole second, reached third on catcher Alan Ashbys throwing error and scored on Andre Dawsons sacrifice fly. ^

In the second, he fanned both Wallach and Blackwell swinging, but he did not get another strikeout until the sixth inning. Meanwhile, protecting a 4-1 lead, he had allowed another Montreal run in the fifth on consecutive one-out singles by Terry Francona and Blackwell and a ground ball by Flynn.

Little,|^winging at a 1-2 curveball, to get within one of the record.

In the middle innings, 1 didnt feel like 1 would do it, said Ryan, who had to have a blister on the middle finger of his throwing hand drained after the seventh inning. My fastball wasnt sharp, and my curveball wasnt as sharp as 1 wanted it to be. 1 was throwing well, but I wasnt sharp.

Finally, with one out in the sixth, he fanned

'Theres been a buildup, Ryan said of the pressure. 1 never realized 15 strikeouts could be so hard to come by.

The luckless Astros got two runs in the first inning and two in the third, allowing Ryan to work out of his troubles Wednesday. Dickie Thon and Phil Gamer drove a run each in the two innings. Gamers first RBI came on a solo homer off Scott Sanderson, 3-1, in the first.

Ryan says he still would like to reach the 4,000 mark in strikeouts because it would mean I'll be an effective pitcher the next couple of years. But he doesnt figure to hold onto the record.

Philadelphias Steve Carlton has 3,480, with 46 already this season.

I cant worry about that, Ryan said. 1 just have to win ballgames. If he continues to have the kind of years hes having. Im sure hell surpass me.

Ryan began his major league career with the New York Mets in 1966, when he appeared In just two games. He pitched his first full season for New York in 1968 but was traded in 1972 to the California Angels, where his career blossomed. He stmck 300 or more batters his first three seasons with California - a major league mark - and had five 300-plus strikeouts years - also a record - with the Angels before leaving via free agency after the 79 season.

That year, he journeyed home to Houston, where he would gain baseball immortality. He was then and remains now unaffected by his own accomplishments. It will dawn on him one day, but not today.

The Astros travel now to the Phillies home ground for a two-game series, and Ryan was asked how he would would celebrate.

By going to Philadelphia, he said.

As king of the strikeout artists.

Strike Out King Nolan Ryan

Three Resign Af ECU

Three members of the East Carolina University athletic staff, two of them sports medicine assistants, have turned in their resignations.

Liz White and Craig Baker, both assistant directors for sports medicine, leave their positions, effective June 30.

Mark Brand, assistant sports information director, has redgned effective ^tur-day.

Brand will become the new assitant sports information

director at Arizona State University.

A native of Muncie, Ind., Brand came to East Carolina in the fall of 1981 following graduation with a degree in Journalism and Public Relations in the School of Communications at Purdue University.

We are losing a great talent p Mark Brand, said Assistant'Athletic Director for Public Relations Ken Smith. Mark has just done a superb

Sports Calendar

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

Todays Sports Baseball Aurora at Jamesville Bertie at Williamston (7 p.m.) Williamston at Plymouth JV (7:30 p.m.)

Bear Grass at Columbia Nash Central at E.B. Aycock (4 p.m.)

Greenville Christian at Goldsboro SoftbaU Aurora at Jamesville Bertie at Williamston (7 p.m.) Bear Grass at Columbia Greenville Christian at Goldsboro Tennis

Farmviile Central at C.B Aycock (3:30p.m.)

Southern Nash at Greene Central (4p.m.)

Eastern Carolina Conference girls meet

Fridays Sports

Baseball    ,

C.B. Aycock at Ayden-Grifton (8

p.m.)

Farmviile Central at Southwest Edgecombe (4 p.m.)

Southern Nash at North Pitt (4

p.m.)

North Pitt at Southern Nash JV (4 p.m.)

Northern

job in every area of our operation. It is with great regret we see Mark leave, but certainly with the very best wishes for a fine position he deserves at Arizona State. The Sun Devil program has reaped well from the Pirates.

Among Brands accomplishments at ECU was the direction of all-America efforts for Lady Pirate basketball player Mary De-nkler, a first team selection this year. Also, Brand was instrumental in getting a regular column in Collegiate Baseball for Pirate head baseball coach Hal Baird. And, he had coordinated early efforts for national stories on all-America candidate Terry Long in football.

Brand is married to the former Lori Darrow of South Bend, Ind., and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Max E. Brand.

In August of 1977, she joined the staff fulltime as assistant director, whiile later being named an adjunct instructor in health and physical education.

Liz has been instrumental in the growth and success of both our sports medicine educational and service programs, said Rod Compton, Director of Sports Medicine. It will be very difficult to find someone as devoted and hardworking. She will be dearly missed.

White has been involved in athletics throughout her life, having been a basketball player and with plans early in college to coach. Her father, Raymond P. White, is a member of the Tidewater Baseball Hall of Fame and served on the Old Dominion baseball coaching staff at one time.

Wadkins Making Bid To Become Dominant Player In Pro Ranks

IRVING, Texas (AP) - Tom Watson, Ray Floyd and Cal Peete last season won a combined total of 11 titles, about one-quarter of the number of events on the PGA Tour.

This year they have won none.

Into the void has stepped Lanny Wadkins, who is making his bid to become dominant player in the game. At the moment, at least, his credentials say he holds that position.

He has won twice, a successful defense of his title last weekend in the prestigious Tournament of Champions and earlier in the Greensboro Open. Only Gil Morgan has won as many this season.

4p.l

Edenton at Roanoke

{apid Pitt at Cape Fear James Sprunt at Cape Fear Greenville Juniors at Chapel Hill Golf

Eastern Wayne at Ayden-Grifton (1p.m.)

Track

Conley, East Duplin, James Kenan at SouUi Lenoir (3:30 p.m.)

Northeastern girls meet at Tarboro

Nash at Rose (7:30 p.m.)

Baptist at East Carolina (7p.m.)

Havelock at Conley (7:30 p.m.)

Havelock at Conley JV (7:30 p.m.)

Plymouth at Roanoke (7:30p.m.)

Softball

Plymouth at Roanoke (4 p.m.)

Northern Nash at Rose (4 p.m.)

Farmviile Central at Southwest Edgecombe (4 p.m.)

C.B. Aycock at Ayden-Grifton (4 p.m.)

North Pitt at Southern Nash (4

p.m.)

Nash Central at E.B. Aycock (4 p.m.)

Havelock at Conley (3:30 p.m.)

Tennis

Northern Nash at Rose (3:30 p.m.)

Tobacco Belt Tournament at Nags Head

Track

East Carolina at Penn Relays

White, a native of Norfolk, is moving to Alexandria, Va., and plans to further her education this fall. A 1974 graduate of Florida State, White earned her M.A.Ed. from East Carolina in 1977. While working for her masters, she served as a graduate assistant in the ECU sports medicine program from 1974-77. At the time when she was certified as an athletic trainer in 1976, she became the first woman certified trainer in a five-state area.

Baker, a Knightdale native, will be moving to Wendell to become involved in private business.

A 1978 graduate of East Carolina, Baker also earned his M.A.Ed. from ECU, with early work on the degree done at West Virginia while serving there as a graduate assistant in the sports medicine program.

He returned to ECU in January 1980 as a fulltime assistant sports medicine director and adjunct in-

in the health and education depart-

structor physical ment.

Craig is an outstanding professional, Compton said. He provided a fine example for our students to follow and his care of the athletes was exceptional. I wish I had a dozen assistants like him. I will miss him as a fellow professional and friend.

Baker is married to the former June Yancey of Wendell and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Spruill Baker of Knightdale.

Wadkins has been second in two others, one of them in a playoff.

He leads the money-winning list with $229,048, and leads in the Sieko Grad Prix and Ryder Cup standings.

And hes second in stroke average, at 70.49.

Wadkins, 33, whose career has been interrupted numerous times by injury and illness, comes into the $400,000 Byron Nelson Classic, which began today on the new Las Colinas Sports Club course, with four positive factors working for him.

First of all, hes healthy. If you look at my record, and dont know the facts, it looks pretty inconsistent, he said. But the fact is, any year Ive been healthy. Ive always been in he top 10 (money-winners).

Second, hes currently playing well. The last four weeks have been pretty good to me, said Wadkins, who has won more than $165,000 in the period.

Third, he has a certain

familiarity with the Las Colinas course, which is being played this year for the first tjme. A resident of nearby Dallas, Wadkins has played the course on several occasions and made some suggestions incorporated into improvements and refinements on the course.

And fourth, hes victory hungry. I sort of set a goal for myself this year to improve on what I did last year (three victories, $306,827 in winning). With two wins and almost $230,000 already, in only 10 or 11 tournaments. Im in good shape to improve over last year.

And Im going to play a lot the rest of the season, too; play a lot and have a good time doing it.

Peete is not competing this week, but Floyd, the current PGA champion, along with Watson and Jack Nicklaus are in the field.

I havent won, but, actually, Ive played pretty well most of the year. Ive had chance to win almost every time 1 played, Floyd said.

Watson, who hasnt gone this deep into the schedule without winning since 1977, is trying to work his way out of a slump.

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Carlton Closing On Fan Record, Too

By The Associated Press

Ryans Express has overtaken the Big Train. But someone else is on the right track, too.

Nolan Ryan, the fastball pitcher for the Houston Astros, passed Walter Johnsons 55-year-old record for the most strikeouts in a career when he chalked up the 3.509th of his 16-season major league career in the eighth inning of Houstons 4-2 victory over Montreal.

"Im really not record oriented, said the big righthander. "1 had the opportunity to break the record, and 1 feel fortunate to be in that position.

Thats only 29 ahead of Steve Carlton. Philadelphias

silent southpaw. Lefty might well catch Ryan before the season ends."! cant worry about that,' Ryan said. My main goal is to be effective in as many games as I can for the Astros.

Dickie Thon and Phil Garner drove in two runs apiece for Houston, but the big attraction was, of course, Ryan, who had come into the season 14 strikeouts shy of the record and hoped to break the mark at home against Philadelphia last Friday night. But he managed only three of the eight strikeouts he still needed.

Its been such a buildup, said Ryan. I never realized 15 strikeouts would be so hard to come by. Im relieved and

very satisfied ... I wasnt sharp with my fastball and my curve wasnt as sharp as 1 would have liked it to be. I was getting two strikes on batters and not putting them away, just tike I was doing the last game.

Ryan is never particularly emotional. It was more relief than exaltation he displayed when he finally broke the record. 1 dont get too excited about anything, he said. Now, I can sit back and relax and get more satisfaction out of it.

But in the stands, his wife, Ruth, was exhausted. I was a lot more emotional than Nolan was, she said. Didnt you hear me screaming?

It wasnt Johnson, who

spent 21 years with the Washington Senators, who fascinated Ryan when he was a youngster. It was Sandy Koufax, who held the record for career no-hitters and single-season strikeouts before Ryan arrived.

Its been so long since Walter Johnson pitched, I really l^w very little about him,%yan said. I looked him up once in the Baseball Encyclopedia, but all that gave me was his stats. It didnt say too much about the man.

When I broke Koufaxs single-season record, that meant more to me. Mets2,Redsl

The Mets finally found a home away from home, in

Cincinnati. For the first time in 10 games, they won on the road, thanks to pinch-hitter Danny Heeps ninth-inning sacrifice fly.

Everybody was kind of kidding around before, saying, Lets win one on the road before April is over, Heep said.

Mike Torrez pitched eight innings of three-hit ball for his first victory in the NL since Sept. 27, 1974. And he got it partly because he got his first hit in the NL since that date, an RBI-single in the fifth inning. It was a dramatic turnaround for Torrez, shelled in his previous starts.

Ive finally got my feet on

the ground, he said. Now Im thinking about going out and pitching like Im capable of pitching.

Phillies 6, Braves 2 While the Mets were winning on the road for the first time in 10 games, the Braves were losing at home for the first time in 11.

Dick Ruthven checked the Braves on three singles through five innings, then gave way to relievers Porfi Altamirano and Ron Reed for the Phils. Garry Maddox drove in one run and scored one and Pete Rose had a two-run single for Philly.

Giants 3, Pirates 2 Bill Laskey of the Giants

Fike Girls Capture Big East Track Title; Rose Finishes 2nd

Farmville Takes Track Victory

won for the first time in 1983, snapping a personal six-game losing streak which dated back to last season.

It was a big win for me, because I was going nuts, he said. This is the first time Ive pitched with a lead and that helps.

Milt Mays single in the second inning and Tom OMalleys hit in the fourth gave the Giants a pair of runs, then Darrell Evans homer in the sixth pn^uced the winner off pitiless Rfck Rhoden.

Cards 7, Dodgers 6 Mike Ramsey ripped an eighth-inning triple off Alejandro Pena, then Darrell Porter greeted Steve Howe, the Dodgers ace reliever with a single that propelled the Cardinals past LA. Bruce Sutter, St. Louis fireman, was the winner.

Jose Morales hit a two-run homer for the Dodgers and

George Hendrick had a three-run homer and an RBI-single for St. Louis.

Cubs 5, Padres 4 Larry Bowa drove in two runs with a fourth-inning sacrifice fly and a lOth-inning double to give the Cubs their victory over San Diego. The extra-inning hit followed Steve Lakes his fifth consecutive hit over the past two games. Ruppert Jones had a home run for the Padres.

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WILSON - Wilson Fike outlasted Rose High School to win the Big East Conference girls' track championships yesterday."

Fike finished the afternoon with 176 points, while Rose had 117. Hosting Hunt had 59 to place third, while Rocky Mount was fourth with 40, Northeastern was fifth with 24. Beddingfield had 14, and NorthepNash,9,

Angie Michel of Rose was one of two double winners in the event, winning the 1,600 and 3.200-meter runs. The latter came just one race after she placed second in the 800-meter run.

The other double winner was Delores Baker of Rocky .Mount, who took the 100 and 200-meter dashes.

Rose had two other winners, as Doris Richardson won the triple jump and Jennifer Byrd won the 100-meter hurdles. Byrd also set a school record of :10.2 seconds in finishing second in the 200-meter hurdles.

Rose returns to action on Friday, May 6. in the sectionals at Williamston. Summary:

.Shot put .7 Davis iHi Dope iFi 31-7'i: Barnhill iR) 31-'i; .\ewkirk iHi 29-10-^; Barcliff i.N'E) 27-4'-, T Williams (R) 26-9')

Discus Pope 'Fi 98-'i: Davis

(Hi 97-8: T Williams (Ri 88-44; Wilkes (Ri 80-44; Barnes (RMi 77-84: Barcliff (NE) 76-94 Long jump: Alston (F) 16-8: Hale (H) 16-1; Tucker (F) 15-8; Newkirk (H) 15-7; Richardson iRi 14-11: Armstrong I NE) 14-6.

Triple jump: Richardson (Ri 34-10; Alston iF) 34-10; Newkirk (H) 34-1; Williams (F) 32-2; Carroll (NE)31-0; Vines(R)30-10.

High jump: Brook s (B) 5-0; Alston (F) 4-10; Deloach iR) 4-8; King (H) 4-6; Lee (Ri* 4-6; Breathwait 1F) 4-6.

100 hurdles: Byrd iR) 15.7; Lee (R) 16.7; Wada (Fi 16.7; Taylor (NN) 16.9; Creech iF) 17.2; Dorsey (NE) 18.8.

100: Baker (RM) 12.4; S. Williams (R) 12.7; Braswell (F) 12.8; Wilder (R) 12.9: Barnes (H) 13.1.

800 relay: Fike 1:47.6; Rose 1:52.0; Northeastern 1:54.0; Hunt 1:56.0; Rocky Mount 2:16

1600: Michel (R) 5:42; C. Moore (R) 6:01; Jolly (Fi 6:10.7; A. Moore (R) 6:10.9; England (F) 6:11. Battle (NN)6:17.

400 realy: Fike 50.8; Rose 52.0; Northeastern 53.4; Hunt 54.1; Rocky Mount 56.8.

400: Baker (RM) 58.9; Tucker* (Fi .59.3; Adams (Ri 61.9; Williams (Fi 64.9; Jones (R) 65.6; Deyton (R168.4

200 hurdles: Alston (F) 30.2; Byrd (R) 30.2 (school record); Lee (Ri 33.3; Taylor (NN) .33.6; Creech (F)33,6; Dorsey (NE) 35,1.

800: Pearson iF) 2:25.2; Michel (R) 2:27.3; Adams (R) 2:27.9; Richardson (B) 2:29.3; Pope (F) 2:31.6: Branch (R)2:41.3.

200: Baker (RM) 25.8; Anderson (F) 26.7, Braswell IF) 26.8; Joyner (F) 27.3; Brooks (NE) 27.8; Wilder (RI28.1.

3200: Michel (R) 13:09: England

(F) 13:43; Jolly (F) 13:51; Taft (R) 14:02; A Moore (R) 14:08; Hayes (F) 14:20

1600 relay: Fike 4:12; Rose 4:18; Hunt 4:31; Rocky Mount 4:39; Northeastern 4:43.

Jaguars Knock Rams Off, 6-5

FARMVILLE - Farmville Central upset Greene Central, 6-5, in an Eastern Carolina Conference baseball game yesterday, knocking the Rams out of sole possession of first place.

Greene Central grabbed the lead in the first inning, scoring three times, Warren reached on an error and Chris Suggs walked. Tommy Goff then cracked a three-run homer.

Farmville came back with a run in the bottom of the inning. That came on a solo homer by Wade Corbett.

Greene Central extended its lead to 5-1 with a two-run homer by Goff in the third, but the Jaguars then rallied for four in the bottom of the frame to tie it up.

In the bottom of the third, Tim Askew singled and Billy Godley walked. Randy Daniels also walked and Corbett tripled to clear them from

the bases. Alvin Baker then grounded out, scoring Corbett for a 5-5 tie.

The Jaguars then pushed over the winning run in the fifth. Corbett and Baker both walked and Bobby Carraway singled. Gerald Wilsons hit brought in Corbett with the sixth - and winning -Farmville run.

Corbett, Carraway and Askew led the Jaguar hitting with two each, while Goff had three for the Rams.

Farmville is now 7-7 overall and 3-4 in league play. The Jags return to action on Friday at Southwest Edgecombe.

Greene- Central is now knotted with Ayden-Grifton for the lead with 5-2 records. The Rams play host to North Pitt on Tuesday.

Greene C 302 000 0-5 5 0

FarmvilleC. ..104 010 x-6 8 4

Chase, Murphy (6) and Grant; Carraway and Baker.

Patriots Get Win Over Vikes

Bears Slip By Lakers, 11-7

HOLLYWOOD - What a difference a day makes!

Tuesday. D.H. Conley was on the giving end as it got a perfect game from Daryl Edwards against West Craven.

But yesterday, the Vikings found themselves on the receiving end of a two-hit shutout by West Carterets David Rose, in a 6-0 loss.

Rose, who struck out four and walked two, didnt allow a hit until the sixth inning when Mike Gurkins doubled. Eddie Roberson followed with a single, but that was it for Conley.

West Carteret got all it needed in the second inning, scoring three times. Rodney

Frazier singled and Jeff Patton walked. Both moved up on a passed ball and scored on William Grays hit. After two outs, Rick Nelson reached on an error, scoring Gray.

The Patriots added two in the third and one in the sixth for their six run total.

Frazier led the West Carteret hitting with three, one of them a double.

The Vikings slip to 7-8 overall and 1-3 in the Coastal Conference, while West Carteret is now 7-5,2-2.

Conley plays host to Havelock on Friday.

West Carteret .032 001 0-6 8 0 Conley 000 000 0-0 2 5

Rose and Gray; Hill and McCarter.

SWAN QUARTER - Bear Grass rolled up a 6-0 lead in the first inning, then had to go an extra frame to down Mat-tamuskeet yesterday in a Tobacco Belt Conference baseball game, 11-7.

The Bears pushed in six big runs in the first inning, but it wasnt to be enough. Roger Mason had a grand-slam homer to highlight the inning for the Bears.

Mattamuskeet rallied for two in the third and both teams scored single runs in the fourth. The Lakers then rallied with two each in the sixth and seventh frames to tie it at 7-7.

In the eighth, however, the Bears scored four times to put it away. Mark Taylor led off with a triple and both Mason

and Dave Cratt walked, loading the bases.-,Phil Peele singled in Taylor and Lawrence Watsons double plated two more. David Price then grounded out, scoring Peele with the final run.

Taylor and Mason each had' two hits, while Cratt had a solo homer in the fourth for the Bears. M. Sadler had two hits to lead the Lakers.

Bear Grass travels to Columbia today.

Bear Grass.. 600 100 04-11 7 1 Mmuskeet . 002 102 20- 7 7 0

Gardner, Leggett (7) and Fulford; Etheridge and O'Neal.

PINETOPS - Farmville Central completed its regular season boys track schedule yesterday with a romp over the other teams in the league. Farmville finished the afternoon with a total of 116 points, while Southwest Edgecombe finsihed second with 93.

Greene Central was a distant third with 33, while C;B. AycockhadlS.

Wesley Carmon was the lone double winner for the Jaguars, taking the 100 and 200-meter runs. The Jaguars also set a new school record of 3:34.2 in the 1600-meter relay.

The Jaguars return to action on Wednesday at the Eastern Carolina Conference meet at Southwest Edgecombe.

Summary:

EBA Second In Meet

New Bern took first place in a three-way junior high school track meet held at E.B. Aycock Junior High School yesterday.

New Bern finished with 90 points, while Aycock had 47 and Nash Central had 19. The Cubs won 10 of the 15 events, with Aycock winning three and Nash Central two.

Aycock set two new school records, however, as the 1600-meter relay team of Jeff Green, Kelby Cox, Zebedee Williams and Todd Peele finished in 3:48.92 and Tony Barnes ran a 23.9 in the 165-meter low hurdles.

Aycock returns to action on Tuesday, hosting Nash Central, Rocky Mount and Northeastern. Aycock is unbeaten against Big East Conference teams.

Summary of winners:

long jump: Smith (NB) 21-6-; high jump: Patrick (NB) 6-3; shot put: Thrift (NB) 53-ll'2; discus. Thrift (NB) 118-10; pole vault: Green (A) 7-6; 75 intermediate hurdles: Pugh (NB) 12.41; 100; Green (NO 11.1; 1600; Patterson (NB) 4:58; 400 relay: New Bern 45.5; 400; Williams (NO 55.5; 165 low hurdles: Patrick (NB) 23.7; 800: Williams (A) 2:17.9; 200-Green I NB) 23.1; 3200: Rosche (A) 12:23; 1600relay: NewBern3:46

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Shot put; Mayo (SW) 42-6; Jenkins (SW) 42-6; Wooten (SW) 41-6; Boone (FC) 41-6; Faison (FC)

40-6.

Discus: Faison (FC) 126-7; Boone (FC) 116-9; Edwards (GO 111-10; Eason (GO 109-2; Mayo (SW) 108-5.

Long jump: Ford (FC) 23-0; Joyner (FC) 19-2; Johnson (SW) 18-11; Carmon (GO 18-11; Hardy (GO 18-7.

Triple jump: Joyner (FC) 43-5'/i; Johnson (SW) 42-0; Clark (SW)

41-0; Hardy (GO 39-8; Johnson (SW 139-6.

High jump: Haskins (SW) 64; Forbes (SW) 64; Pettway (FC) 6-2; Hargrove (FC) 6-2; Edwards (GO 5-6.

Pole vault: Darden (SW) 9-6; Campbell (GO 9-0; Tyson (FC) 8-6; Thompkins (A) 84); Pitt (SW) 8-0.

High hurdles: Edwards (FC) 15.8; Evans (SW) 16.3; Moses (SW) 17.8; Barrett (FC) 19.7; Hamilton (A) 21.0.

100: Carmon (FC) 11.0; Underhill (GO 11.15; Grant (GO 11.15; Harris (FC) 11.19; Haskins (SW) 11.20.

800 relay: Farmville Central (Payton, Harris, Hargrove, Carmon) 1:31; SouthWest Edgecombe 1:34; Greene Central 1:42.

1600: Moses (SW) 4:45.0; Ryall (A) 5:02; Frizzell (FC) 5:05; Artis (A) 5:08; Robinson (GO 5:13.

400 relay: SouthWest Edgecombe (Haskins, Thorne, Hines, Johnson) 44.5; Farmville Central 44,9; Greene Central 48.0.

400: Williams (FC) 51.6; Clark (SW) 53 0; Pettway (FC) 53.2; Reed (A) 55.6; Staton (SW) 56.7.

Intermediate hurdles: Hargrove (FO 43.3; Edwards (FC) 44.8; Moses (SW) 45.1; Evans (SW) 46.9; Dawson (GO 47.2.

800: Owens (FC) 2:10; Ryalls (A) 2:12; Payton (FO 2:14; Joyner (FC) 2:15; Johnson (SW) 2:17.0.

200: Carmon (FC) 22.5; Haskins (SW) 23.0; Williams (FC) 23.2; Thorne (SW) 23.7; Harris (FC) 23.8.

3200: Bullock (SW) 11:06; Vines (FC) 11:11; Aycock (A) 11:57; Robinson (GO 12:11; Campbell (GO 12:43.

1600 relay: Farmville Central (Carmon, Pettway, Owens, Williams) 3:34.2 (school record); SouthWest Edgecombe 3:44.8; C.B. Aycock 3:50.4.

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Some Plays Make It, And Some Don't

by The Associated Press

Wade Boggs and the Boston Red Sox won with a slide at the plate. The Seattle Mariners and pinch runner John Moses lost the same way.

' Don't ever stop at third base." Boggs said simply.

He had given Boston the lead when he dashed home from second on a throwing error. Then Red Sox right fielder Reid Nichols preserved the 2-1 victory by throwing out Moses at the plate on final play of the game.

In other American League games. Milwaukee beat Chicago 6-2. New York blanked Kansas City 6-0. Toronto nipped Texas 3-2, Minnesota downed Cleveland ,>:i, Baltimore beat Oakland 6-0, and California hammered Detroit

Moses was pinch running for Ken Phelps, who led off the Seattle ninth by singling off Boston reliever Bob Stanley. Atter a fly out. Moses moved to second on a grounder.

Rick Sweet then singled to right, where Nichols uncorked his game-saving peg while catcher Jeff Newman blocked the plate.

"You have to send Moses all the way." said Seattle Manager Rene Lachemann.

Chimed in Mariners third-

base coach Chuck Cottier: "It was a perfect throw. If theres no outs or one out, we dont send him

And from Boston Manager Ralph Houk: "That was a helluva throw Nichols made and a helluva block Newman made.

Boston starter Dennis Eckersley, 2-1, scattered five hits during the first eight innings. He contributed to Seattle's run in the first when, with two outs, he walked A1 Cowens and Phelps. Pat Putnam singled home Cowens.

Stanley, who came in to start the ninth, was credited with his fifth save.

In the second, Seattles Julio Cruz had his consecutive stolen base streak stopped at 23 over two seasons when he was throw out at third by Newman. A pitch earlier, he had swiped second for his 12th theft this season.

The Red Sox went ahead in the sixth against rookie Matt Young, 2-3.

Ed Jurak started the inning with a single and Boggs was hit by a pitch. Both runners moved up on Dwight Evans' bouncer and Jurak scored on Jim Rice's sacrifice fly.

Tony Armas then grounded to Seattle third baseman Dave Edler, who threw high to first

for an error. Boggs kept running from second and slid in behind Sweet.

"Ill do that every time, Boggs said. You have to make the breaks.

Angels 13, Tigers 3 Daryl Sconiers and Fred Lynn belted grand slams and Doug DeCinces and Bob Boone also homered to lead the rout. Sconiers added a double and two singles as California finished with 16 hits.

Lynns slam, his sixth homer of the season, came in third inning as the Angels roughed up Milt Wilcox, who

had pitched shutouts in his last two starts. Sconiers slam and DeCinces solo Shot came in the seventh against reliever Bob James.

Boones two-run blast in the eighth capped the scoring.

Orioles 6, AsO Mike Flanagan ran his record at Oakland Coliseum to 9-0 by pitching the first five innings. Flanagan, who left the game with a pulled muscle, allowed four hits and reliever Sammy Stewart pitched two-hit ball the rest of the way.

Baltimore scored five runs

Soviets Fire Top Skating Coach

MOSCOW (API - Stanislav Zhuk, one of the worlds top figure skating coaches, has been fired from the Soviet national team for unethical behavior, a Soviet newspaper reported today.

Zhuk, 48, coached former Olympic pairs champions Irina Rodnina and Alexander Zaitsev, current womens singles star Yelena Vodorezova and other top pairs skaters.

The national sports daily.

Sovietsky Sport, said Zhuk was dismissed from the national team for "violating moral-ethical norms of behavior, and blamed him for the "deterioration in preparing athletes for international competitions.

"The Soviet Sports Committee acknowledged that it would be inexpedient to have Zhuk work in the capacity of the coach of the soviet figure skating team, the newspaper said.

in the sixth inning, aided by three Oakland errors. Gary Roenicke, knocked in two of the runs with a bases-loaded single and drove in a ninth-inning run by drawing a bases-loaded walk.

Yankees 6, Royals 0 Bob Shirley scattered eight hits for his first American League victory while Roy Smalley cracked a three-run homer and Steve Kemp added a two-run single.

Shirley, signed by the Yankees during the off-season as a free a^nt after six years in the National Lea^e, had pitched just 32-3 innings this season before the start.

It was only the second shutout in 125 major-league starts for Shirley, now 1-1 this season.

Twins 5, Indians 3 John Castino hit a two-run homer and Randy Bush singled in two runs as the Twins scored four times in the eighth inning against Cleveland starter Bert Blyleven and relievers Ed Glynn andDanSpillner.

Kent Hrbeks third homer of the season accounted for Minnesotas other run.

Blue Jays 3, Rangers 2 Ranee Mulliniks double -his third hit of the game - in

the top of the ninth inning snapped a 2-2 tie.

Ernie Whitt led off the ninth with a single off Texas starter Danny Darwin. Garth lorg came in as a pinch runner and moved to second on a sacrifice. Reliever' Dave Tobik

walked Cliff Johnson befwe yielding Mulliniks game-winning hit.

Larry Parrish homered for Texas.

Brewers 6, White Sox 2 Rookie Tom Tellmann, taking over for injured starter

Lady Rams Rip Farmville, 28-0

FARMVILLE - Greene Centrals girls softball team had little trouble with Farmville Central yesterday, as the Lady Rams crushed the Jaguars, 28-0.

Farmville managed only one hit off the pitching of Dalen Hertin, that by Christie Cobb.

The Rams pushed over five in the first to get all they needed, but they added two in the second, four each in the fourth and fifth, eight in the sixth and five in the seventh.'

Pat Woodard had a homer, Dixon, a triple, and Warren a double for the Rams, while Daniels had three hits.

Farmville Central plays Friday at Southwest Edgecombe, while the Lady

Rose's Byrd Tops 800-Meter

RALEIGH i.APi - A discus throw of 168 feet. 5 inches highlights in the li)(j-meter flash and an incredible throw of 168-.')' .. in the discus lead the this week's North Carolina Prep Track Honor Roll;

Reuben Davis of Greensboro Grimsley. who has led the discus the entire season turned in the throw in a recent meet in Greensboro. Davis is among 12 leaders who retained their top spots on the honor roll.

In the 100-meter dash, last week's leader. Fred-Smith of East Forsyth, has been dropped from the top spot because of an incorrectly recorded time.

The previous leader, Dllie Taylor of Greensboro Dudley, retains the number one .slot with an adjusted 10.,54. Again this week, times were adjusted to reflect fully automatic timing.

Among the five new event leaders, one event featured a four-way tie.

In the 110-meter high hurdles. Urban Bloomfield of Richmond, Izel Jenkins of Wilson Fike, Bruce Titus of Salisbury and Eric Watson of West Charlotte are all tied with an adjusted time of 14.84.

Other new leaders include Tun Harvey of Burlington Cummings and James Patterson of Fuquay-Varina in the high jump <6-8i, Kenard Bynum of Winston-Salem Reynolds in the 300-meter intermediate hurdles (39.64), Keith Chestnut of Durham Hillside, Delton Hall of Greensboro Grimsley and Tim Worlev of Lumberton in the

200-meter dash ('21,74) and Ronnie Tucker of Northeast Guilford in the 800-meter run 11:58.5).

Bloomfield, Jenkins and Patterson were leaders last week, but were tied this week by the new leaders.

Other leaders on the list, which is compiled by The .News and Observer of Raleigh, are Tommy Eckard of Hickory in the shot put (.58-41, Danny Peebles of Raleigh Broughton in the long jump (24-3'I), John Tillman of .Monroe Parkwood in the triple jump (49-5) and Tracy Fowler of Orange in the pole vault 113-101.

Also, Delton Hall of Greensboro Grimsley in the 400-meter da.sh (48.54), Jim Farmer of Raleigh Broughton, who along with Hall is the only double leader, in both the 1600-and 3200-meter runs with times of 4:16.2 and 9:22.3, respectively.

Team leaders are Wilson Fike in the 400-meter relay (42.241. Durham Hillside in the 800-meter relay (1:27.97) and Fike in the 1600-meter relay3:20.:l8.

Two of this week's best times came in Saturdays Charlotte Queen City Relays, where shot putter Tommy Eckard of Hickory and 100-meter dasher Smith set new standards for the meet.

Eckard threw the shot 58 feet, 4 inches to better his previous best for the season and remain in first, while Smith registered a blistering hand-timed 10.2 in the 100 meters. Smith's time was ad

justed, using the formula, to 10.44.

Other leaders from last week include Eckard, Reuben Davis of Greensboro Grimsley in the discus (165-4), Danny Peebles of Raleigh Broughton in the long jump (24-34), John Tillman of Monroe Parkwood in the triple jump (49-5), Tracy Fowler of Orange in the pole vault (13-10), Bloomfield, who is tied with Jenkins, Melvin Mims of Charlotte Garinger in the 300-meter intermediate hurdles (39.89), Ollie Taylor of Greensboro Dudley in the 200-meter dash (21.84),' Delton Hall of Greensboro Grimsley in the 400-meter dash (48.54), Farmer in the 1600 and 3200, Durham Hillside in the 800-meter relay (1:27.97) and W'ilson Fike in the 1600-meter relay (3:20,38).

The following Is the third North Carolina prep traek honor roll of the top 10 reported performances in boys' nigh seniKil track .Additions and corrections should be made by calling Richard Walker or Bill Woodward at The News and Observer of Raleigh at iai9i 829-4560 after 5 p m. on weekdays NOTK: The times for running events that are hand timed are adjusted using the following fomula lor 100-meter dash, 200 meter dash and 110-meter high hurdles. .24 seconds is added after rounding up; lor 400-meter dash, 200-intermediate hurdles and 400-meter re-lav. 14 seconds is added after rounding up and for all other running events, 20 seconds is added alter rounding up Also, 1XI denotes times under fully automatic liming

SHOT PUT 1, Tommy Eckard (Hickory) 58-4 2, Rodney    la?wis    (Jacksonville)    54-8    3,

Vincent    Steele    iThomasvillei    54-6    4,

Rodney Davis (Char Myers Pk.) 53-8 5, Daryl Oner (W    Mecklenburg)    53-6'i    6,

William    Waugh    (Gvl. Rose)    52-6',4.    7.

Reggie Wat.son (E Wakei 52-6 8. Cullen Iordan (Salisbury) 52-3 9, Steve Hull (Ral Sanderson I 51 7 10, Brian Kimball (New Ion Foard) 51-5'.

DISCUS

1, Reuben Davis lObo Grimsley) 168-5'_ 2, Frank Newman (Gbo Dudley) 162-4 3. Steve Hull (Ral Sanderson) 1.57-8 4, Stanley Monk (Jacksonville) 1.54 I 5. Tommy Eckard (Hickory) 154-0 6. Thomas Davenport (Washington) 158-9.

I. f nris Borden (Dur. Hiiisiaei tal-ll'j . 8. Reggie Watson (E Wake) 14911 9, James Briscoe (W Charlotte) 144-1 10, Greg Pippin (.Skyland Roberson1143-4 LbNGJUMP 1 Dunny Peebles iRal Broughton) 24 3 I 2. Nathaniel Peterkin (Richmond) 24 '    3,    Joe Samuels (W-S Parkland)

23-6    4,    Michael Hanks (Henderson

Vance) 233-4 5, (tie) Maurice Monk (.laik.sonvlllei and Brian Titus 23-3 -7, Terry Fortune iGbo Smith) 23-2 8, (tie) Darvez Hall iW-S Reynolds), Jonathan Hill (High Pt Central) and Chris WiLson (Gast Ashbrook)22'll

TRIPLE JUMP 1, John Tillman (Monroe Parkwood) 49-5    2,    Michael Hanks (Henderson

Vance) 48-6.3, Randy Marriott (E Wake) 46-3'I 4, Darvez Hall iW-S Reynolds) 46-2 5, .Maurice Monk (Jacksonville) 46-':. 6, Walter Byrd iW'ern Guilford) 45-9 7, Norman Harris (SW'ern Randolph) 45-8 8. Danny Peebles (Ral Broughton) 45-7'm 9, Derrick Battle (No. Nash) 45-7/i. 10, Thane Gash (Hendersonville) 45-0.

HIGH JUMP 1. (tie) Tim Harvey (Burl Cummings) and James Patterson (Fuguay-Varina) 6-8. 3, (tie) Matt Klenke (St. Stephens) and Chris Wilson (Gast. Ashbrook) 6-7. 5, (tie) Mark Dance iW-S Reynolds) and Tony Thompson (W-S Reynolds) 6-64. 7, (tie) Wayne Brown (Hi^ Pt Central), Walter Byrd (W'ern Guilford), Anthony Greene (Dur Hillside). Obie Martin (Eden Morehead), Tim Patterson (S Rowan). Roswell Streeter (Gvl. Rose), DeMorris Tucker (Dur Hillside) and Brian Woolen (Randleman) 6-6 POLE VAULT 1, Tracy Fowler (Orange) 13-10. 2, (tie) Arnold Charleston (W Mecklenburg) and Donald Long (Thomasville) 13-6. 4, Douglas Fuller (Orange) 13-4. 5. Mark Bishop (Richmond) 13-3. 6, Marc Cave (Char Myers Park), Roger Kraycirik (Burl. Williams). Largent (Hickory) and Tim Roebuck (N Rowan) 13-0 10. Winter (Ral Broughton) 12-7

IIO-METER HIGH HURDLES I, (tie) Urban Bloomfield (Richmond), Izel Jenkins (Wils. Fike), Bruce Titus (Salisbury) and Eric Watson (W Charlotte) 14 84 5, (tie) Wayne Brown (High Pt Andrews) and Lofton (New Berm 14 94 7, Melvin Mims (Char Garinger) I4.97x 8, Anthony Wilson (High Pt Central) 15 04 9, John Givens (Char Garinger) I5 08x 10, (tie) Kenard Bynum (W-S Reynolds), Ernest Cooke (Henderson Vance), Jimmy Elkins (Gast Huss), Delton Hall (Gbo Grimsley) and Randy Ussery (Hickory) 15.14

300-METER INTERMEDIATE

HURDLES

I, Kenard Bynum (W-S Reynolds) 39.64 2, Morgan (Rocky Mt.) 39.M. 3, Melviri Mims (Char Garingen 39 89x 4. Urban Bloomfield (Richmond) 3994 5, Bruce Titus (Salisbury) 40.04 6, die) Wayne Brown (High Pt Andrews). Izel Jenkins (WUs. Fike) and Eric Watson (W Charlotte) 40.14 9, Coroening (Rocky Mt.) 40.24. 10, (tie) llis Dillahunt I Jacksonville) and Preston Thorpe (Oxford Webb) 40.34

lOO-METERDASH 1, Ollie Taylor (Gbo. Dudley) 10.54. 2, Lee McRae (Pembroke) I0 63x 3, (tie)

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Raynard Brown (Gbo. Smith), sieven King (Gvl Conley) and Thomas Mashore (Sansbury) 10 74. 6. Daron Council (Leei 10 75x    7, Danny Peebles (Ral

Broughton) I0 82x 8, Edward Frazier (Gvl. Rose) 10.83X. 9, (tie) Ricky Davidsn iStatesville) and Carlton High (Ral. Athens) 10.84

200-METER DASH 1. (tie) Keith Chestnut (Dur. Hillside). Delton Hall (Gbo. Grimsley) and Tim Worley (Lumberton) 21.74    4, (tie)

Goldsby (Goldsboro). Izel Jenkins (WUs. Fike) and Ollie Taylor (Gbo. Dudley) 21.84. 7, Kelvin McRae (Thomasville) 22 04 8, (tie) Bobby Harris (Gbo. Smith) and Fred Smith (E Forsyth) 22.14. 10, (tie) Albert Dickerson (Wils. Fike), Edward Frazier (Gvl. Rose) and Danny Peebles (Ral Broughton) 22 24. 400-METCRDASH 1, Delton Hall (Gbo. Grimsley) 48.54. 2, Earl Bates (Ea Guilford) 48.94 3, Izel Jenkins (WUs. Fike) 49,04. 4, Nathaniel Peterkin (Richmond) 49.74. 5, Edward Frazier (Gvl.    Rose)    49.94 .    6. Keith

Chestnut (Dur Hillside) 50.14. 7, Antonio Jackson (High    Pt Central)    50.34 .    8,

Langford (E Forsyth) 50.44 . 9, Sam Jones (J'vUle    White    Oak)    50.54.    10,

Steven King (Gvl. Conley) 50.64. 800-METER RUN 1, Ronnie Tucker (NE Guilford) 1:58.5. 2, Jeff Maness (Roanoke Rimkls) 1:58.9. 1 John Byrd    (Gvl.    Rose)    1:59.7.    4,

verette Deans (WUs Hunt) 2:00.8. 5, Joe Willis (Gbo. Grimsley) 2:00 2. 6, Reggie Harris (Skyland Roberson) 2:01 1. 7, (tic) Arthur Braswell (Wils. Fikei and Matt Fete (W'em Guilford) 2:01.2. 9, Jim Farmer (Ral Broughton) 2:01.6.10, Willy Hargrove (Henderson Vancei 2:01.8. 1600-METER RUN r, Jim Farmer (Ral. Broughton) 4:162x. 2, Ronnie Tucker (NE Guilford)

4 I9.6X. 3, Allen Ford (Gbo. Grimsley) 4:20.7 4, Brian Ponder (Enka) 4:25 3. 5, Reggie Harris (Skyland Roberson) 4:25.7. 6, Dwight Bostic (Dur Hillside) 4:26.2. 7, Craig Warren iS. Lenoir) 4:28 3 8, Jonathan Drake (Chapel Hill) 4:29 5x. 9, Musa Williams (Dur, Hillside) 4:30.2. 10, John Erickson (SE Guilford14:3I 6.

3200-METER RUN 1, Jim Farmer (Ral Broughton) 9:22.3x. 2, Todd Sloan (Northside Acad I 9:33 8 3. Craig Warren (S Lenoin 9:37.7x 4, Pat Ambrose (Monroe Sun Valley) 9:40.4 5. Mike Moses (Gbo Grimsley) 9:42.2. 6. John Erickson (SE Guilford) 9:42.4    7,, Paul Hefternan

(Chapel Hill) 9:42.9. 8. Dennis McNamara (Chapel Hill) 9:43 7x. 9, Musa Williams (Dur. Hillside) 9:44.2. 10, (tiei Allen Ford (Gbo Grimsleyi and Frank Purser! Brevard) 9:45.2

400-METER RELAY 1, WUs Fike 42 24. 2, Gvl Rose 42 44. 3. Char. Myers Park 42.56x. 4, Kinston 42.70X, 5, Dur Hillside 42.89x 6, S Mecklenburg 42 94 7, Eliz. City N'eastem 43.04. 8, Jacksonville 43 12x 9, (tie) Char. Independence and FarmvUleCent. 43.24.

800-METER RELAY I, Dur Hillside l:27 97x. 2, WUs. Fike 1:28.8. 3, Char. Myers Park 1:29 12 4, Gvl. Rose 1:29.2.5. Richmond 1:29 7. 6, S Mecklenburg 1:29.8. 7, Char, Garinger l:30.49x. 8, Jacksonville 1 30.77X 9, Gho Smith 1:30.5. 10, (tie) Char. Independence, New Hanover and W Charlotte 1:30 9

1600-METER RELAY 1, Wils, Fike 3:20.38x. 2, Char, Garinger 3:238 3, Gbo. Grimsley 3:24.2. 4, High Pt. Andrews 3:24.3. 5, Richmond3:27.6.6, (tiei Dur. Hillsidee and E. Mecklenburg 3:28 9 . 8, Gvl. Rose 3:29.2. 9, Ea Guilford 3:30 2 10, Henderson Vance 3:31.1

Rams are idle until l uesday when they travel to North Pitt.

GreeneC. .520 448 5-28 13 3 FarmvUle . ,000 000 0- 0 1 15 WP - Dalen Herrin.

Bear Grass 13

Mattamuskeet 3

SWAN QUARTER - Bear Grass rolled up a 13-3 five-inning softball victory over Mattamuskeet High' School yesterday.

The Bears jumi^ on the Lady Lakers for five runs in the top of the third for all they would need. The Lady Bears then added one in the fourth and seven in the fifth.

Mattamuskeet scored twice in the third inning and once in the fourth.

The game was halted after five by the Tobacco Belts ten-run lead rule.

Lisa Taylor, Amy Lilly, Cindy Taylor and Amy Bell each had two hits to lead Bear Grass. Dereadt had two for Mattamuskeet.

The Bears return to action today, traveling to Columbia.

Bear Grass 005 17-13 11 4

Mattamuskeet... 002 10- 3    7    6

WP Lisa Davenport

Jerry Augustine, twir 51-3 innings for four-hit relief to get the victory. Augustine was forced to leave in the second when he was hit in the left forearm by a Carlton Fisk line drive. X-rays on Augustines arm were negative.

Another rookie reliever, Bob Gibson, bailed Tellmann out of bases-loaded threat in the seventh inning for his first save.

Ben Oglivie homered and singled to drive in two Milwaukee runs as Floyd Bannister, 1-3, absorbed the

loss.

Rose Bows . To Nosh

Rose High Schools golf team fell for the second time this week, bowing to Northern Nash yesterday, 320-333.

The Rampants earlier lost to Wilson Hunt.

Craig Davies of Rose was again the medalist for the day, carding a 76, but he didnt get that much help from his teammates. Jordy Smith had an 84, Tee Davies an 86 and Pete McCurdy, an 87.

Northern Nash was led by R. Buchanan with a 78, while H. Poland had a 79, E. Kidd, an 80, and D. Brady, an 83.

Rose plays host to Northeastern and Manteo on Monday.

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rLanier Paces Pucks By Boston, 176-95

By The Associated Press Theres still some good basketball left in the creaky knees of Bob Lanier.

The 13-year veteran, who has never been on a championship team, surprised everyone, including himself, with an almost-flawless performance as the Milwaukee Bucks beat the Boston Celtics 116-95 in their playoff opener Wednesday night.

I had an abnormal game. Even at 34 you can have an abnormal game, Lanier said after hitting 10 of 12 shots, scoring 21 points and pulling down 10 rebounds in 23 minutes as the Bucks took away Bostons homecourt advantage in the best-of-7 Eastern Conference semifinal series.

ECTA In Second Win

The Greenville womens team in the Eastern Carolina Tennis Association captured its second victory of the year yesterday, downing Goldsboro, 8-1.

Goldsboros only win came in the number one singles, where JoAnn Logan gained a victory over Frances Cain.

Summary;

JoAnn Logan (Gb) d. Frances Cain, 7-6 (8-8), 6-1.

Nancy Powell (G) d. Audrey Johnson, 6-2,6-1.

Carlle Wllle (G) d. Eva Erlich, 80,6-0.

Mary Angela Lee (G) d. Lynn Easley, 6-2,7-5.

Lia Moore (G) d. Sandy Yale, 84, 61.

Kay Crawford (G) d. Lille Mozingo, 62,7-5.

Powell-Wille (G) d. Logan-Easley,60,63.

Cain-Myra Hill (G) d. Johnson-Unda McDonough, 60,61.

Lee-Sydney Womack (G) d. Erlich-Mozlngo,64,60.

Elsewhere in the National overcoming a 2(H)0int deficit XJervin scored 30 points and Basketball Association to beat the Knicks 98-91 in the Johnnyiioore added 26 points Dlavoffs PhUadelphia took a other Eastern Conference- and a playoff-record-20 assists 2-0 lead over New York, semifinal. In the West, George as San Antonio beat Denver

Olympic Group Will Not Test For Certain Drugs

LOS ANGELES (AP)-The Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee will refuse to test athletes for caffeine and testosterone at the 1984 Games unless it sees conclusive scientific evidence that such tests are valid, says the groups medical director.

Such a stand is in opposition to the International Olympic Committees dope-testing policy, since the IOC has proposed that for the first time tests for caffeine and testosterone, a naturally produced male hormone, be made at the Olympics in Los Angeles.

Dope testing at Olympic Games was conducted only to determine the presence of anabolic steroids and stimulants.

Dr. Tony Daly, the LAOOCs medical director and a representative to the iOC medical commission, said Wednesday at a press conference that the testing, in his opinion, is arbitrary and scientifically unproven.

Our job is to protect the athlete against himself and to ^ard one athlete from gaining an advantage on another throu^ the use of dru^, said Daly. But more importantly, we must protect the athletes rights. We must have unequivocable proof that the athlete has taken testosterone

or caffeine.

Right now, theres a lot of dialogue going on with the IOC. They basically think the tests are valid and Im convinced they are not and that they wont stand up to legal challenge. If th IOC can prove scientific validity throu^ publishefl material well do it. Otherwise, we wont,

Approximately 15 percent, or more than 1,500 athletes, will be tested for illegal drugs at the Olympics, including the top four finishers in each event.

The tests for caffeine and testosterone are, in Dalys words," quantitative. Ac

cording to the IOC, an athlete would be disqualified should a test reveal a level of either substance in excess of Uk prescribed level.

Although Daly admits it would cost several hundred thousand dollars to test for the two substances, he insists that has no bearing on the Olympic Committees objection.

I dont know what will happen if push comes to shove, said Daly. But as far as Im concerned we have the final decision. Were putting on- the Games and were responsible. The balls in their court. They have to prove the tests are valid.

Ready To Sign

NEW YORK (AP) - John Elway is prepared sign a contract with the New York Yankees and forego a pro football career, the lawyer for the top National Football draft choice says.

After John has had a few days to reflect on everything that has happened we plan to meet with the Yankees with the intention of signing a contract, lawyer Marvin Demoff told the New York Times Wednesday. Johii will be prepared to execute that

deal, and we have no intention of shopping it around to football. We intend to sign a . contract at that meeting. Elway was chosen first in the NFL draft Tuesday by the Baltimore Colts, a team the All-America quarterback from,Stanford said he does not want to play for. He is noted more as a football player, but Elway played for New Yorks Oneonta farm team for six weeks last summer and the Yankees say he can be a star for them after some minor-league seasoning.

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126-109 for its second straight victory.

Boston led 38-31 midway through the second quarter when Lanier and the Bucks took control of the game. Lanier scored 12 points in the period and Milwaukee out-scored the Celtics 20-6 in one stretch to take a 51-44 advantage,

Two things set the tempo for the game, Milwaukee Coach Don Nelson said. One was the performance of Lanier. He has been looking just average in practice and I didnt think he would be as sharp as he was.

The other thing was our defense. I dont want to discuss our stratgey. People will have to make their own judgment on whether our game plan was to force them to shoot from outside.

We had about four or five minutes out there where we just plain quit, Boston Coach BUI Fitch said. Its hard to get that to roll off my tongue. I dont think our guys ever played that bad before and they didnt know how to react to it.

The Bucks were hungrier than we were, said Bostons Larry Bird, who dislocated a finger on his right hand while

Junior's In Net Win

. Greenvilles junior boys tennis team, sponsored by the Recreation and Parks Department, gained a 7-2 victory over Greenfield Academy of WUson yesterday.

The win boosted the GreenvUle record to 3-2. They travel to Culbreth Junior High of Chapel Hill today.

Summary:

Jim Rogerson (GA) d. David Lee, 8*3

Mike Diemer' (GA) d. Scott Davis, 62.

Richard Haselrig (G) d. Jeff Arens, 65.

Mike Herrin (G) d. David Kang, 63.

Ralph Harper (G) d. Michael Barshay, 64.

David McDonnell (G) d. Ed Daniel) 62.

Lee-Davis (G) d. Rogerson-Diemer, 8-6.

Haselrig-Harper (G) d. Arens-Kang, 65.

Herrin-Hickman (G) d. Culler-Barshay, 66.

Exhibitions: Burt Aycock (G) d. Bryan Peed, 60; Brian Wille (G) d. Brad Bass, 84; Kevin Fisher (G) d. Brian Ellis, 60; Resnik-Hines (G) d. Peed-Daniel, 8-2; Aycock-McDonnell (G) d. Bass-Ellis, 62.

SCOREBOARD

A

Bowling

Thuraday Night Owls W

HlghRoUer............75

L

41

Buddys Bunch.......

..65

51

Cornwell Builders ...

..62>/z

53>/z

Team 1..............

60

56

E.T.s...............

..57'^

58^4

Little Dippers.......

63',^

Strikeout...........

51

65

3 Steers..............

..41>^

74Vz

Joey Szilagyi 573.

High game;

Laura Flake 200, Doyle Matthews

238.

Shirts And Skirts Team 9................86

42

R.E. DeanOU........

84

44

Tar Landing Seafood. Planters wholesale .

..m

45>/ii

..82

46

Odd Ones...........

,.m

53>/ii

The Jokers..........

68

60

Camelot Inn.........

..65'/4

en'k

Cornwell Builders ...

..65

63

Big Macs...........

..64(<i

63>/ii

Pac Attack..........

.61

67

Family Affair.......

.58

70

Halos...............

..58

70

Playmates..........

Lucky Strikes........

..56

72

.56

72

On Time.............

m

72>/4

Hot To Trot..........

50

78

Dali Music Co........

83>/i

Strike Wishers.......

..41

87

Leading hitters: MC - D. Harris 63 (HR), Jim Shallow 63 (HR); UC - Wes Deal 63, Greg Watkins 34.

Metal Craft.........550    502    2-19

CIS.................300    030    2-8

Leading hitters: MC - Jim Shallow 4-5, H. Haddock 4-5.

Faith Pent...........200 005 0-7

Jimmys 66..........300 501 X9

Leading hitters: FP - Lloyd Jackson 2-3, Scott Brady 24; J -Charles Meeks 63, Linwood Brown 2-3.

Oakmont...........100    305    0-9

B-WellcomeiKl......230    046    x-15

Leading hitters: 0 - Chip Cay ton 63, Mike Brown 34.

Public Works 146 13(14)-29

Carolina Leaf. .....104    000    5

Leading hitters: PW - Dave Phiilips 3-5 (2 HR), Leonard Wiliams 66; CL - Jimmy Bond 2-3, Jim Ward 2-3.

Pantana Bobs 200 012 12-8

Airborne...........120 000 30-6

Leading hitters: PB- Craig Harmon 2-3, Scott Taylor 34; A Dave Burnett 24.

Edmonton 8, Chicago 4 Edmonton 8, Chicago 2 Edmonton at Chicago, Sunday, May 1 Edmonton at Ciiicago, Tuesday, May 3 Chicago at Edmonton, Thursday, May 5, if necessary Edmonton at Chicago, Sunday, May 8, ifnecessary Chicago at Edmonton, Tuesday, May

CONFERENCE (NY lalanders lead series 1-0)

NY Islanders 5, Boston 2 NY Islanders at Boston, Thursday,

^^ton at NY Islanders, Saturday. AprU30

^ston at NY Islanders, Tuesday. May

3

NY Islanders at Boston, Thursday, May S, if necessary Boston at NY Islanders, Saturday, May 7, if necessary NY Islanders at Boston, Tuesday, May 10, if necessary.

Boseboll Stondings

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W LPct. GB

5    643"-

1    .625    -

6 .600 8    467

10    .333    4>/i

.294 Vh

Leoguc Uoders

10

St. Louis Philadelphia Montreal    9

Pittsburgh    7

New York    5

Chicago    5    12

WEST DIVISION 13    4

5

Hi^ series: Buddy Henry 587, Sharon Matthews 586. High game: CecU Keel Jr. 224, Doloris Berg 240.

RwcSoftboll

Pre-Seaaon Tournament

ChurchofGod 000 103 0-4

1st Presbyterian 200 004 x-

Leading hitters: FP - Bobby Sasser 64, greg Neison 2-2, Garland Bector 2-3; CG - David Ross 63, Wayne WUliams 2-3.

Pair  ..........303    340 0-13

1st Presbyterian... *000 000 2-2 Leading hitters: FP - Ken Rakestraw HR; P - Stancil Hines 64, Bobby Bryan 34.

Calif. Concepts 233 Oil 3-13

Whittington i23 002 0-8

Leading hitters: CC MUte Windham 44, Ed Wells 24, A1

NBAPIoyoHs

ByTheAaioclatedPreM CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (BaatofSeveo)

EASTERN CONFERENCE .. (PhUadei^leadiieriesM) PhUadelphiaTl2,New York 102 PhUadelphia 98, New York 91 Philadelphia at New York, Saturday, April 30

railadelphla at New York, Sunday. Mayl

New York at PhUadelphia, Tuesday. May 3, Ifnecessary PhUadelphia at New York, Friday, May 6, if necessary New York at PhUadelphia. Sunday, May8,ifneCesaaiy

(Milwaukee vs. Boston) (MUwaukee lends Mrtes 1-0) MUwaukee 116, Boston 96

Heath 2-3, d WeUs 24, Tony Oakley 24; W - Terry Lovlck 34, Jeff Gordon 2-3, Mark Vestal 2-2,

p John Lancaster 2-3.

Calif. Concepto 500 42(15)-26

Unity FWB............000    100- 1

Leading    hitters:    CC    -    Walt

Davis 2-3, Mike Windham 34, A1 Heath 565, Clark May 65, Ed WeUs 4-5.

Pitt Hospital.........000    020    0-2

WachoWa...........223    Oil    x-9

Leading    hitters:    PH        Paid

RIstow 62; WB - John Rogers 63, Jeff Joyce 2-3, Ed Johnson 2-3, CaritonKarplnskl63.

GOR.................5(11)1    01-18

Wachovia..............000    00-0

hitters; C - Ronnie Joe Wing 64, Donnie Rlvenbark 24, Davi^ll 24.

Metal Craft...:.....730    200    0-12

UnionCarfoide......000 040 0-4

MUwaukee at Boston, Friday, April 29 Boston at MUwaukee, Sunday, May l Boston at MUwaukee, Monday, May 2 MUwaukee at Boston, Wednesday, May 4, if necessary Boston at MUwaukee, Friday, May 6, U necessary MUwaukee at Boston, Sunday, May 8, If

"****fe8TERN CONFERENCE (Los Angelas lands series 60)

Los AngeioTlS, Portland 97 Los Angles 112, Portland 106 Los Angeles at Portland, Friday, April

Los Angeles at Portland, Sunday, May

Portland at Los Angelee, Tueedlv, Ma> 3, If necessary Los Angelee at Portland, Friday, May

PorttonS^Los Angeles, Sunday, May 8, If necessary

(San AbUIo leads series 60)

San Antonio 182, Denver 123

Atlanta    13    4    .765    -

Los Angeles    13    5    .722    'h

Cincinnati    10    9    . 526    4

San Die^    8    11    .421    6

Houston    7    13    .350    Vh

San Francisco 6 13    .316    8

Tuesday's Games

Houston 2, Montreal 0 San Diego 10, Chicago 8

clndSnaf'7j^?oX^^^

Atlanta 10, raUadelphla 4 Los Angeles 3, St. LouUl

Wednesdays Games San Francisco 3, PUtsburgh 2 New York 2, Cincinnati 1 St Louis 7, Los Angeles 6 Houston 4. Montreal 2 Chicago 5, San Diego 4,10 Innings Philadelphia 6, AUanU 2

IhundaysGame San Diego (Show 2-1) at Chicago (Trout 1-2), 2:20 p.m.

Only game scheduled

Friday's Games Cincinnati at Montreal, 1:35 p.m.

Los Angeles at Chicago, 2:^.m.

San Diego at Pittabu^, 7:35p.m.

y The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (25 at baU)-Brett, Kansas City, .466; Carew, California, .441; Shelby, Baltimore, .436; Brookens, Detroit, .389: Gross. Oakland, .379.

RUN6Brctt, Kansas City. 17; Downing California, 18; Castlno, MlmiesoU, IS; Grich, California, 14; SmaUey, New York, 14; Yount. MUwaukee, 14.

RBl-Brett, Kansas Clty^ 19; Lynn. California, 18; Thornton, Cleveland, 17; KitU& Chicago, 16; Rice, Boston, 16.

Hll^arew, California, 30; Brett, Kansas City, 27; Castlno, Minnesota, 26; SHenderson, Seattle, 26: Molitor, MUwaukee, 25; Ripken, Baltimore, 25; Yount, Milwaukee,.

D0UBLE6Brett, Kansas City, 11; SHenderson, SeatUe, 8; Boggs, Boston, 7; Bush, Minnesota, 7; Cooper, Milwaukee, e; EOrd,.Baltimore, 6; Htnek, Minnesota,

TRIPLES-GWUson, Detroit, 4; 7 are tied with 2.

HOME RUNSCastlno, Minnesota, 6; Lynn, California, 6; Brett, Kansas (;lty, 5; DeCinces, California, 5; Rice, Boston, 5.

STOLEN BASES-JCruz, SeatUe, 12; WWilson, Kansas City, 10; Garcia, Toronto, 9; MDavis, Oakland, 7; Baylor, New York, 6; Collins, Toronto, 6; RHen-derson, Oakland, 6.

PITCHING (3 decisions)-Flanagan, Baltimore, 34, 1.000, 3.41; Forsch, California, 34, l.OOO, 3.10: Gura, Kansas City, 44,1.000,3.16; Moffitt, Toronto, 34, 1.(M, 0.00; Petty. Detroit, 34,1.000,2.01; Rawiey, New York, 34, 1.000, 3.00; Smithson Jexas, 34,1.000,1.74.

STRIKEOUTS-Stleb, Toronto, 29; Blyleven, Cleveland, 27; Zahn, California, 22; Barker, Cleveland, 21; Morris, Detroit, 21; RThomas, SealUe, 21.

Splllner,

RDavis,

Minnesota, 3.

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (25 at bats). Heep, New York, .400; T.Kehnedy, San Dleap, .397; Thomas, Los Angeles, .395; T.Perez, Philadelphia, .379; Hendrick, St.Louls, .370.

San Antonio 138 Jlenvsr 108 loan Antonio at Denve, Fridi San Antonio at Denver, Monday. May 3 Denver at San Antonio, Wedneeday,

, Friday, Art! 29 , Monday. May 3 mb), Wedneeday, May4,lfneoeaaary San Antonio at Denver, Friday,May 6, Ifnecessary Denver at San Antonio, Sunday, May 8, Ifnecessary

NHLPIoyoHt

By'nwAisodaladPraai OoniinneeFlnalB

Houston at PhUadelphia, 8:05 p.m. AUanU at New York, 8:05 p.m.

San Francisco at St. Louis, 8; 35 p.m.

AMERICANLEAGUE

EA8TDIVI8I0N

W LPct. OBI MUwaukee    lO    7    .588    -

Baltimore    lo    8    .566    V,

Boston    9    8    .529    1

Detroit    8    8    .500    116

New York    9    9    .500    IH

Toronto    8    9    .471    2

Oeveland    8    10    .444    2'^

WB8TDIVI8ION Callfomla    12    7    .632    -

Kansas City    9    6    OHO    1

Oakland    lo    9    .818    2

Texu    10    I    .518    2

MlnneaoU    9    II    .480    SV,

Chicago    7    10    4U    4

Seattle    7    15    .318    Otk

WaihMsdaysGamas MlnnesoU5,Cleroland3 MUwaukee 0,Chicago 2 New York 1 Kansu City 0 Toronto 3,'Texu 2 Callfomla 13, Detroit 3 Baltbnore 6, Oakland 0 Boston 2, Seattle 1

Detroit (Piy*?4f*ar Callfomla (Forsch 34), 10:30p.m.

Only game scheduled

Frlday'aOaiMS Chicago at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.

MUwaukee at MlnneaoU, 8:35 p.m. ClevMand at Kansu City, 8:35 p.m.

New York at Texas, 8:p.m.

Boston at California, 10:30 p.m. DstroUatOaUand, iO:35p.m.

BalUmote at SeatUe, lOiSp m.

Is Yoir.....

Delivery Okay?

W tak porticulor prid in the efficiency of our carriers who deliver the Doily Reflector to your home.

i

If the dally delivery of your Doily Reflector It let than satisfactory, please tell us about it.. Coll our Circulation Department and we will do our best to work out the problem.

752-3952

Between 8:30 A.M. and 6:30 P.M. Weekdays ond 8 'til 9 A.M. on Sundoyt

scoring only 17 points.

Lanier seemed ready and rested, not like I expected after reading all those stories about his knees, Bird added. He didnt have any trouble getting up and down the court.

The Bucks jammed the middle in an effort to neutralize Bostons strong front line. The stretegy worked as they outrebounded the Celtics 66-54.

We jhould have been the teain to come out rolling after the mini-series, Bird said, referring to the Celtics first-round victory over Atlanta. This game is very embarrassing. Its bad when the Celtics get beaten because they were outhustled.

Nate Archibald led the Celtics with 23 points, while Sidney Moncrjfef had 22 for Milwaukee.

Game 2 will be in Boston Friday ni^t.

76ers 98, Knicks 91 Philadelphia held New York to nine points in the third period, one more than the record low for the playoffs, to wipe out the 20-point deficit.

Moses Malone had 30 points and 17 rebounds for the 76ers, while Maurice Cheeks added 26 points and Julius Erving 20. Guard Andrew Toney didnt play for Philadelphia because of a bruised thigh, while forward Bobby Jones was sick with the flu.

New York led 59-41 at halftime and scored the first basket of the third quarter to go ahead by 20. But the Knicks hit just three of their last 17 field goal attempts in the period as Philadelphia out-scored them 24-9.

Its hard to believe that a team could play such two different halves, 76ers Coach

Czaja Is Top Golfer

East Carolina Universitys Chris Czaja was selected as the outstanding golfer on the Pirate golf team this year. Presentations of awards were made at a dinner for the team last night.

Czaja, a sophomore, was the most consistant Pirate during the year according to coach Jerry Lee.

Senior plaques were presented to Jon Riddle of Fayetteville and David Woodard of New Bern.

Billy Cunningham said.

Its a crushing defeat only in the minds of people who allow it to be crushing, Knicks Coach Hubie Brown said. Were going to play the next game at home and that should be a plus.

Games 3 and 4 will be Saturday and Sunday afternoons in New York.

Spurs 126, Nuggets 109 Moore became the first NBA player to register 20 assists in a playoff game to lead San Antonio past injury-plagued Denver.

Johnny Moore, Spurs Coach Stan Albeck said, gave the ball to the right people at the right time.

I just try to get my teammates the ball and its their job to put it in. They put the shots in, said Moore, who was second in the NBA in assists behind Earvin Magic Johnson during the regular season. I wasnt aware of the record until Tee (Gervin) told me to get him the ball.

Denvers Alex English, the NBAs leading scorer, didnt play because of an injured ankle, while center Dan Issel went to the Nuggets bench for good with 8:47 left in the third quarter after straining a tendon in his left leg.

We couldnt get the breaks, Denver Coach Doug Moe said. Even without Issel and English, I think we had a shot at winningthe game

tonight.

The Nuggets led 49-43 with 7:19 left in the first half, but a 17-2 spurt by the Spurs in the next 3>/2 minutes put San Antonio in control.

Denver fought back to cut the deficit to 106-101 late in the game, but the Spurs scored 10 of the next 12 points to regain a comfortable margin.

We got a little tight in the fourth quarter, but we made one mistake - which was letting Johnny Moore drive the middle, Moe said.

Five other players, including Bob Cousy twice, had 19 assists in one playoff game.

Game 3 of the series will be Friday night in Denver, while Portland, behind 0-2, plays host to Los Angeles on Friday in the other Western semifinal.

Elder In Putt Win

Allen Elder edged Henry Beacham by one stroke to capture his second win this season in the Wednesday Night Pro Tournament at Greenville Putt-Putt Golf and Games.

Elder shot an impressive 15-under-par 93 to slip by Beacham, who had a 94.

Laverne Mayo carded a 12-under 96 to finish third, while Jake Loften took fourth place with a 99.

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SAVES; SHowe, Los Angeles, 4; Garber, AUanta, 3; Lucas, San Diego, 3; Minton, San Francisco, 3; Minton, San Francisco, 3; Stewart. Los Angeles, 3.

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20The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Thursday, April 28,1983

Senate Panel Is Told Union Leaders Handpicked By Mob

ByDAVroGOELLER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - A man who admits to having helped skim millions of dollars from union benefit funds says reputed Chicago mobster Tony Accardo hand-picked" the presidents of two labor unions.

Hidden behind a screen Wednesday as he testified under oath before the Senate Permanent Subcommitteeon Investigations, Joseph Hauser identified the labor leaders as Ed Hanley of the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union and Angelo Fosco of the Laborers International Union,

"Mr. Hanley and Mr. Fosco were hand-picked by Tony Accardo. I know that for a fact. said Hauser, who formerly operated companies that sold health and life insurance to unions and their members.

Hauser, who described Accardo as "the boss in Chicago." told the panel that to get the business, he had to distribute to union leaders and organized crime figures from 20 percent to 30 percent of the, premiums his firms collected.

Hauser, who became a federally protected witness in 1978 following two union-related convictions, said premiums were $180 million one year when he was handling insurance for three unions - the laborers, hotel workers and Teamsters.

Spokesmen for people nabed by Hauser disputed histestimonv.

'Numb' Over A $1 Million Prize

COLUMBUS, Ohio lAPi -Housewife Mary Ann Becker says shes not too lucky at bingo, but that didnt keep her from winning the state lottery for a cool $1 million.

Asked how she felt after the announcement Wednesday, Mrs. Becker, 41, of Dover, replied, "Numb."

"It's more than I've ever seen. I cant even win at bingo, she told reporters.

Mrs. Beckers husband, Daniel, is a tool and die maker. He said he plans to keep his job.

Asked whether he thinks the couple will be plagued by people seeking money, Becker replied: "I dont think so. Weve got a lot of nice friends, and Mary Anns always been the type of person who helped other people."

Reiect Offer Jo Buy Off A Fine

SANTA BARBARA, Calif.

(AP) - County officials have rejected an offer from the son of a Saudi Arabian oil executive to pay $100,000 for canceling an arrest warrant stemming from a reckless driving conviction.

Tarik Abdulhadi Taher, 26, sought to have the warrant expunged after he failed to show up to serve a 45-day jail term.

To allow a defendant to buy his way out (of) jail time ... would not constitute even-handed enforcement of the criminal law, said Santa Barbara County District Attorney Thomas Sneddon in a written reply to Tahers offer, which was made last week.

Nader Crusade In Britain, Too

LONDON (AP) - Consumer advocate Ralph Nader is taking his crusade for citizen activism to Great Britain, in a three-day tour.

Our country has learned a lot about democracy from Britain, Nader, 49, said in an interview WeiJnesday. Its time to repay the compliment by importing citizen activism techniques into Britain.

Invited here by Friends of the Earth and Clear, Britains campaign for unleaded gasoline, Nader said he was lending his support to them and to a movement for a British version of the U.S. Freedom of Information Act,

Carl M. Walsh, a Chicago lawyer who has represented Accardo, said he did not think Accardo would comment. But Walsh said that in union-corruption trials cases where Hauser has been the principal witness, juries have universally disbelieved his testimony.

Victor Kamber, a spokesman for the laborers union in Washington, called Hauser a pathological liar. His aspersion on the character of Angelo Fosco is outrageous. It is outrageous the Senate subcommittee would use this man who has been so discredited throughout his witness career.

Telephone calls made to the hotel workers union headquarters in Ohio and its office in Chicago were not returned by anyone authorized to speak for the union.

Hauser told the subcom

mittee that his principal contact in the hotel workers union was Herman Blackie Leavitt, the general secretary-treasurer.

He testified that when Leavitt was a union regional vice president in Southern California, the payoffs to get me business ranged from $75,000 to $100,000 a year.

Leavitts introductions helped generate at least 75 percent of my business, he testified.

Hauser said money for the payments was generated by unions agreeing to pay more for insurance than the coverage would haye cost elsewhere.

Employers paid money into benefit funds jointly administered by unions and management, but, not wanting to risk labor strife, management left spending decisions to union trustees, according to Hauser.

Pitt Agencies...

(Continued from pagel)

and county animal shelter programs.

Mental Health Director Steve Creech submitted a proposed budget totaling $2.13 million, compared to $2.10 million appropriated for the current year.

Creech said the proposed budget includes a request for $178,931 in local money - $25,000 more in local money to maintain the same services, than the $153,931 in local funds received this year.

Willie Nelms, director of Sheppard Memorial Library, requested $143,368 from commissioners to help fund a $535,155 budget for 1983-1984. The library received $130,859 from the county this year to help fund a total budget of $516,493.

Helms said the library is losing a $27,100 federal grant. The budget for the coming fiscal year, he said, includes $154,887 for operating expenses, up 5 percent from the current year, and $373,268 for personal services, up 11.6 percent from the present budget.

Nelms said the use of Carver Library is up from past years and noted that the youngsters who come in there are motivated. He also said that the number of books loaned so far this year is 6 percent ahead of last year, while the number of library cards issued so far this year is 5 percent ahead of the same period last year.

Other requests heard by the board Wednesday came from: the Greenville Museum of Art, which requested $5,000 (compared with $3,500 this year) to help fund a total budget of $60,130 for 1983-1984; Pitt Soil and Water Conservation District, which asked for $42,445 ($41,893 this year); and the Register of Deeds office which requested $148,608 for the coming fiscal year ($127,027 this year).

County Fire Marshall Bobby Joyner asked for: $19,228 for the Department of Emergency Management (compared with $19,158 this year); $206,671 ($173,577 this year) for the Fire Marshalls Office; and $108,%5 ($102,776 this year) for rescue operations.

Joyner noted that the rescue budget included a 10 percent increase in the amount of money designated for contributions to rescue squads in the county.

The boards next budget workshop session will be Monday afternoon.

'Un-American' Claim Students

MAGNOLIA, Texas (AP) Its un-American to eliminate athletics and band as school-financed activities, say students who were suspended after they walked out of classes to protest the cuts.

The whole school is about ready to walk out, said Brandy Fletcher, 14, one of 30 students who were suspended after Tuesdays walkout at Magnolia Junior High School. School just isnt fun without all those things they cut out.

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An employer might agree to a $5 (per worker) increase in payments to the fund, but the (union) member may end up with only 10 cents in his pocket, Hauser testified.

He said hotel worker locals that resisted overpaying for insurance found themselves taken over by the international or merged into locals that cooperated.

Hauser said he was introduced to Hanley by Leavitt in the early 1970s.

Ed Hanley told me that the (organized crime) people in Chicago had told him about me and that I would be getting a lot of business, Hauser said. Mr. Hanley emphasized that Chicago was involved here and had to be taken care of.

Hauser testified that he paid Richard Kleindienst, an attorney general in the Nixon administration, $250,000 in fees to help arrange business with the Teamsters that resulted in annual premiums as high as $24 million.

He said that Kleindienst put him in contact with Allen Dorfman, an insurance consultant slain gangland style early this year in Chicago.

Observe Heritage Day

SOAP AND ELBOW GREASE ... Bethel Elementary students Terrence Staton, left, and Tony Hopkins, right, do their wash the old-fashioned way on Bethel Heritage Day. The school celebrated North Carolina Heritage Week Wednesday

with displays by local craftsmen, a performance of a Jack tale (a native Southern folk tale) and demonstrations of log-splitting, soap-making and old-time farming methods and implements. (Reflector Photo By Mary Schulken)

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Tbe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Thursday, April 28,1863-21

FARM COMPUTER - Oklahoma farmer Bill McVey invested $7,000 in his computer system three years ago

and says he can now tell where he stands financially at the press of a few buttons. (AP Laserphoto)

Farmer's Bookkeeping Benefits By Computer

By DOUGLASS DANIEL Associated Press Writer KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - For years. Bill McVey followed a popular and deceptively simple form of farm bookkeeping - write a check to pay a bill, sell some grain when the balance runs low.

But the system only told him how much money he had that day, not what he might expect to have in a year, a month or even a week.

Thats the worst thing a farmer can do, operate out of a checkbook, the Chickasha, Okla., farmer said. He cant be sure what hes doing. He doesnt ever know where he stands.

The problem was solved three years ago when McVey invested $7,000 in a home computer system and accounting programs. Now he can tell where he stands financially at the press of a few buttons.

It will be as much a staple as the tractor is today, McVey said. Its just like the four-wheel-drive tractors. They came, and the computers coming. Computers may be the fastest-growing item on farms today. Midwestern universities conducting conferences about computer use and farm management report growing interest among farmers who want to improve efficiency.

Farmers have found three major uses for their home computers - production planning, record keeping and collecting commodity news and information.

After making one set of production planning calculations, McVey discovered that the cost of planting, fertilizing and harvesting a particular field for wheat would be more than he would make from the expected yield.

You can have all of your information about the field on the screen and through several different programs, you can play a what if game, he said.

With soil fertilization known by soil test, you can input different crops as to their needs, input also

moisture and price, and the computer will compute all this out and tell you what to expect to make from that field.

As well as increasing knowledge of their own operations, farmers are using computer videotex services for information about markets.Using videotex, a farmer can send commands from one computer terminal to another computer, which then looks up the requested information.

Outfits such as AgriStar, based in Milwaukee, and Agritext, a service of Harris Electronic News in Hutchinson, Kan., offer their subscribers access to agricultural news and information 24 hours a day. Agritext charges a hasic rate of $15 per month, while AgriStar charges $39 per month plus other fees based on usage.

In these days everybody needs to watch how they market their goods a little closer, said Mike Hurd, editor and general manager for Harris Electronic News. Because of the technology, we can offer them more information more quickly than theyve ever had access to before.

Agritexts 145 subscribers need no longer wait for the noon radio report or the newspaper for dated information on commodity prices and trends. They need only punch commands on their computers to have the latest market trends, prices and other information fed to them.

We find that timely news is extremely important to making good decisions in marketing, said Judy Lester, an AgriStar subscriber who farms about 900 acres near Richmond, Mo. If you find out a week later, you might have missed an opportunity to sell.

Mrs. Lester cited trade talks last December in which the United States wanted to limit its import of textiles' from China.

And so they said theyll suspend talking to us about grain importing, and theyve been a big importer of our

grain, she said, When you hear that a major importer of grain decides not to do anything about it now, it hits the Chicago Board of Trade and the prices really go down.

Farmers who received that ne\^^ through their computers were able to market their grain more wisely. Those who relied on newspaper and radio reports may not have done as well, Mrs. Lester said.

The market reacted immediately, she said. If we had waited to read about it, we would not have understood what the market had done.

No one is saying that investing a few thousand dollars in computer equipment will automatically improve a farms production. A computer still needs someone to tell it what to do and interpret the information.

If youre about to go belly up, said Art Bamaby of Kansas State University, buying a computer isnt going to help you.

Barnaby, an assistant professor of agricultural economics, said not all farmers need computers. Many can get the same benefits indirectly from consulting firms, extension programs and other agencies that use computers to advise clients.

McVey, for one, believes the computer will someday be hailed as another milestone in modem farming.

I think it will be the horse, the tractor and the computer, he said. You.ve just got to have information. The better it is, the better off youre going to be.

SINGLE PARTY RULE KINSHASA, Zaire (AP) -President Mobuto Sese Seko told the nation Tuesday that Zaire had turned its back forever on multi-party politics and assigned the role of directing the nation to a single legal party.

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PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA

Public Notice

A proposed use hearing for General Revenue Sharing purposes will be held by the County Manager, H.R. Gray, as required by the Revenue Sharing Regulations on May 9,1983, for all interested Citizens of Pitt County. The amount of General Revenue Sharing Funds to be discussed for the fiscal year 1983-M is as follows:

1983-84Tentative Allocation ahd Presently Authorized $ 627,404.00 Allocation Anticipated to be Authorized by Congress    627,404.00

Estimated Interest Earned    25.000.00

$1,279,808.00

The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. for the purpose of discussion of possible uses of General Revenue Sharing Funds in the County Commissioners regular meeting room on the second floor of the County Office Building, 1717 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina. All interested Citizens will have the opportunity to give written and oral comment on use of the funds. Senior Citizens are encouraged to attend and comment.

H.R. Gray

Pitt County Manager

April 25,1983

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Arthur Miller Staging ^ew Wesf em Eoms ItS Spurs Play In Peking Theater

By VICTORIA GRAHAM

Associated Press Writer

PEKING (AP) -Simonizing, West Point, football guards, Filenes Basement, 25-year mortgages, Ebbets Field, Red Grange, Franks Chophouse on 48th near Sixth and silk stockings for a tart.

These are the trimmings on the American dream that playwright Arthur Miller explains to his Chinese cast as he directs Death of a Salesman which opens here May 7. But he doesnt have to explain dreaming or selling oneself or commiting suicide.

The universal messages of Death of a Salesman are not lost on a Chinesespeaking cast or audience, despite th( obligation of Chinas socialist moralists to interpret the play in terms of monopoly capitalism, The official Xinhua News Agency called Willy Loman, the plays title character, a weary figure loyal to a corporation which eventually makes him its victim.

Propaganda aside, Chinese spectators have wept as the rehearsal curtain went down - and not for the miseries of the American proletariat.

They said they were wiped out, they never saw anything like it on stage and they were swept up in the emotion, Miller said in an interview.

Miller, directing his own play in Chinese, said the audience is spared the incessant political messages of Chinese plays and permitted a private, emotional experience.

In China, he said, art and literature are just codes for politics and there is no real literary criticism. Plays are good if their messages are deemed socially valuable by whoever is making the decision at the time. Heroes are very good, villains are very evil and the really frail people of gray are seldom seen.

Rehearsals have gone ahead despite Chinas cancellation of a package of government-sponsored cultural exchanges after the U.S. granted political asylum to Chinese tennis star Hu Na.

Ninety percent of the time I dont need a script, Miller said. We have been over it so many times,

He said he feels like he is speaking Chinese without knowing a word of it.

Loman is not an admirable character - hes a womanizer, a liar and a braggart. And yet we are asking Chinese audiences to identify with him as the hero and see him as a human being, Miller said.

Miller expects a long run so that ordinary people, not just cadres and intellectuals, can see it.

His play The Crucible, the story of a New England witch hunt, was performed in China in 1981 and audiences saw it as a political allegory about the persecutions of the Cultural Revolution.

Today Death of a Salesman is readily understood for its apolitical statements about all human experience.

Miller had expected to have to explain the idea of a salesman - a forbidden capitalist occupation a few years ago. But China now encourages private enterprise and clamors for wealth and consumer goods.

ByFREDROTHENBERG APTdevlsion Writer NEW YORK (AP) - With all the westerns from yesteryear, the title Cowboy surprisingly is still available. CBS uses it Saturday night, and the gentle, contemporary movie about alienation and friendship wears the brand with style, like a favorite pair of jeans.

The term cowboy in this film takes on derisive, metaphorical and, finally, idealistic connotations.

When Ward McNally (James Brolin) drives into the dusty Texas town of Brevis, pop. 2,000, the welcome wagon isnt out. McNally is a disillusioned teacher from the North, returning to his boyhood roots.

FCC Running Out Of Vacant Channels

PLAYWRIGHT IN PEKING - Arthur Miller chats with Chinese actor Ying Ruocheng outside the Capital Theater in Peking where Miller is directing a production of his play Death of a Salesman, translated into Chinese by Ying. (AP Laserphoto)

Willy Lomans suicide, too, is readily grasped by the Chinese since hundreds of thousands were hounded during the Cultural Revolution, many of them driven to suicide.

Willys hopes for his childrens succe, and his need to leave them a legacy, are impulses the Chinese have understood for thousands of years and can appreciate again now that the days of political turmoil are past.

Every Chinese understands Willys handing his paycheck to his wife and cringing at her critical accounting of all the bills they ow'e.

Cultural differences account for a few misunderstandings, and the actor who plays Biff at first put on a set of football pads backwards.

Miller explains the American experience in terms the Chinese can understand. When Biff and Happy imagine the overnight success of

Sinatra Signs A Three-YearDeal

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Frank Sinatra has signed an exclusive three-year agreement to perform at Golden Nugget resorts in Las Vegas and Atlantic City, a casino official says.

Golden Nugget Chairman Stephen Wynn said Wednesday that Sinatra, who has already appeared at the companys Atlantic City resort, will also begin appearing at the Golden Nugget in downtown Las Vegas.

Wynn said the entertainer will also participate in commercials and other promotional activities and serve as a spokesman and ambassador for the Golden Nugget resorts.

Sinatra had been appearing at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, but that resort is abandoning its star policy to go to a revue show.

OPPOSE CONTROLS LUXEMBOURG (AP) -Common Market foreign ministers say they will lobby against President Reagans proposals to control sales of high technology to the Soviet Union.

the Loman brothers basketball team. Miller likens them to those who rose rapidly, like helicopters during the Cultural Revolution.

When Happy tries to impress a woman in a bar by saying he is from West Point, Miller asks the actors what they would say to impress a woman.

Id say my father is in Hong Kong, said one -meaning his family can then receive money, gifts and privileges from an overseas connection.

So he says West Point but he thinks My father is in Hong Kong to make the line convincing.

Miller admits, however, its difficult to get a proper Chinese actress to play a traveling salesmans sleazy trollop, enjoying the silk stockings that were intended for his wife.

Some observers say Chinese propagandists want to use Death of a Salesman to condemn American society and warn disillusioned Chinese youth who think socialism cant deliver the goods.

Miller say they cant succeed because audiences see through Marxist interpretations of political expedience to grasp the message common to all men.

Furthermore, he says, if they want to use his play as a socialist statement about America, It cuts both ways.

In 1949 failed capitalist salesman Willy Loman had a private house, a car, a refrigerator and earned $50 a week. He was far better off materially than most of socialist Chinas elite today.

By NORMAN BLACK Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - If a current trend continues, the Federal Communications Commission will run out of vacant commercial TV channels in the nations 100 largest cities in less than two years, a report shows.

The report, produced semi-annually by the FCCs Mass Media Bureau, shows the number of available channels allocated for regular commercial use in the largest cities declined from a total of 43 to 31 during the six months ending last Dec. 31.

Brennon Is Negotiating

EILEEN BRENNAN

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actress Eileen Brennan, severely injured in a car accident last fall, is negotiating a television contract and may go back to work in a month or so.

Shes moving about now. She can even move about without a walker, her publicist, Dick Guttman, said Wednesday. There are days when she feels good. There are days when its a strain.

He said Miss Brennan is now negotiating a contract with Warner Bros. Television for TV movies and series.

Miss Brennan, 48, was hit by a car Oct. 27 after she came out of a Venice-area restaurant with her friend, actress Goldie Hawn.

Both her legs were fractured, and she underwent extensive reconstructive surgery for broken facial bones. She still is undergoing orthopedic therapy, Guttman said, adding that her recovery was aid^ by daily workouts in a gym at her house.

The FCC has allocated a total of 619 VHF and UHF television channels to those 100 cities, the report shows, and 588 were either in use or had already been applied for as of Dec. 31.

Unless the commission decides to change its technical standards, there is little likelihood of many new channels being assigned to the top 100 cities.

The FCCs report, entitled Television Channel Utilization, deals only with TV channels that have been assigned to cities for regular full-power use. It does not attempt to track the number of vacant TV channels available for low-power TV stations, which have a very limited operating range.

The latest survey also shows the number of vacant TV channels in the nations smaller cities is declining, although at a slower pace.

With the exception of the cities ranked 201st or smaller in size, none of the vacant TV channels are VHF frequencies, the FCC said. Even in those smallest cities, there are only 47 vacant VHF channels compared to 67 vacant UHF frequencies.

The FCCs report also supports previous trends showing relatively slow growth in the number of hon-tommercial TV stations in the United States.

Of the 223 TV channels set aside for non-commercial use in the 100 largest cities, 70 remained vacant and unapplied for on Dec. 31 - the same number counted during the previous six months. Nationwide, 386 of the total 708 TV channels set aside for non-commercial use remain vacant, the agency added.

Johnny Cash Is 'Hit'In Hungary

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) - Country music star Johnny Cash won the hearts of thousands of Hungarian fans as he and his wife June Carter gave a rare Eastern European concert.

The superb concerts of country rock, Johnny Cash-style, must have recruited thousands of new Hungarian fans for ... this blend of old-style country with rockabilly and gospel, said the Daily News, Hungarys English-language newspaper, after Tuesdays concert.

The newspaper pra|sed Cashs backup band for its crisp, bold, fresh sound.

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But the townfolk taunt him with cowboy, saying that Brevis is neither his home, nor his lifestyle.

But McNally wont back down. He sets out to resurrect his dreams by rebuilding his childhood ranch, and thus becomes the prototypical Western outsider -stoic, independent and fiercely determined.

In the end of this clearly, defined morality tale, McNaUy is wearing the detergent-clean white hat. He embodies the glamorized cowboy of another era - and another TV season - who instinctively knows right from wrong, and stands up for his beliefs.

The hostility from the towns banker (George

TV Log

For complot* TV programming Information, consult your waakly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays OaHy Rsflactor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 Magnum P.I. 9:00 Simon & 10:00 T. Witch 11:00 News <1'30 Late Movie FRIDAY 2:00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8:25 News 9 :25 News 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11:00 Price Is

11:57 Newsbreak 12:00 News 12:30 Young and 1:30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 GuildingL. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A. Griffith 6:00 News9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 Dukes 9:00 Dallas 10:00 Mississippi 11:00 News9 11:30 AAovIe

WITN-TV-Ch.7

THURSDAY

7:00 Jettersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Fame 9:00 GimmeA 9:30 Cheers 10:00 Hill Street 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News

FRIDAY

5:00 Jimmy S. 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 Facts Of Life 10:30 Sale of the 11:00 Wheel of 11:30 Dream House 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days of Our 5:00 Another Wor. 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Dark Shadows 4:30 Little House 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 News 6:30 News 7:00 Jettersons 7:30 Family Feud .8:00 Matthew 9:00 Knight R.

10:00 Bare Essence 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 12 :30 Comedy.

1:30 Overnight 2:30 News

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

THURSDAY

7:00 Three s Lo. 7:30 Alice 8:00 Benson 8 :30 Condo 9:00 TooClose 9:30 It Takes Two 10:00 20/20 11:00 Actions News 11:30 Viewpoint 1:00 Harry 0 2:00 Mission FRIDAY 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 Good Times 10:30 Laverne 11:00 Love Boat 12:00 Family F. 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 AIIMv 2:00 One Lite 3:00 G. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 BJ/LOBO 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 Three's Co. 7:30 Alice 8:00 Baby Makes 8:30 At Ease 9:00 AAovie 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12:00 Harry 0 1:00 An Evening

DiCenzo), sheriff (Michael Pataki), and black-market merchant (Randy Quaid) is because theyre in a get-rich-quick scheme with McNaUys land. As quickly as McNally rebuilds the ranch, evil forces tear it down.

McNally has just two allies at the Alamo: a male compadre (every cowboy needs a sidekick) and a sympathetic women (even cowboys get lonely).

Ted Danson of Cheers leaves his Boston bar to play Brolins Gabby Hayes. Danson is Dale Weems, a broken-down ex-rodeo jockey who teaches McNally the facts of ranch life. One thing in common is that theyre both detested by the locals. Dansons mistake was borrowing funds from the general store, for which he was shot in the leg by the crooked sheriff.

Weems and McNally have an amusing and mutually needy Odd Couple relationship. McNally is an idealist and an environmentalist, and the more earthy Weems has similar pioneer spirit and values. Id ride it out with him til the buzzards, says Weems.

When Weems teases him about saddle sores, McNally says: I liked you a lot when I first met you. You didnt talk so much then. Real cowboys pride themselves on conserving words.

When Weems is kicked out of the store he once pilfered, McNally asks if any other shops are off-limits. Weems retorts that hes never met a man with more shopping lists * than McNally.

Danson is delightful, stealing the movie in this subordinate role. His wry smile - reminiscent of the way James Garner played Maverick - can speak volumes, and the man knows how to wear a cowboy hat.

Annie Potts plays McNallys love interest, a hash-slinger named D.G. Shes the cliched heart-of-gold, stand-by-your-man woman, but she does lend a sweetness to the proceedings.

The performances here are fine. Even Brolins stoneface routine works most of the time.

Cowboy is a soft-hearted sleeper from executive producer Eric Bercovici, who brought Shogun to television. Filmed in Texas, it creates a warm mood through stark photography, string music and a subtle script.

The story is spun, npt hammered out. We begin to realize that McNally was raised in these here parts, when h brushes the dust off a spot in the ranch house to reveal the initials W. McN. -1947.

Another clue is furnished later. When Weems asks why McNally chose yellow paint, McNally says thats the way it used to be.

Cowboy is an easy-going western that earns its spurs.

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THURSDAY 7 00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Previews 8:30 Inside Story 9:00 Geographic 10:00 Cosmos 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 Morecambe 12:00 SiqnOft

FRIDAY 7:45 AM Weather 8:00 Computer 8:35 WriteOn 8:40 Parlez Moi 8:50 Readalongl 9:00 Sesame Street 10:00 Jobs 10: 20 Word Shop 10 :35 Matter of 10:55 WriteOn 11:00 Feather 11:30 Carousel 11:50 Readalong

12:00 Ways ol the 12:20 TipTopTen 12:30 Word Shop 12:45 Electric Co. 1:15 Feather 1:45 Give and 2:00 Tuned In 2:15 Soup to Nuts 2:30 Advocates 3:00 Over Easy 3:30 Great Chefs 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 Stateline 8:00 Washington 8:30 Wall St.

9:00 I Claudius 10:00 Nova 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 Morecambe 12:00 Sign Off

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Todays Cryptoquip clue: E equals P.

Tlie Cryptoquip is a sinqde substitution cipher in whidi eadi letter u^ stands for another. If you think that X equls 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, did words using an apostrof can give you clues to locating vowds. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

VA Unwilling To Accept Theory

WASHINGTON (AP) -Legislation that would presume a connection between Agent Orange and certain diseases is needed because its been almost impossible to convince the Veterans Administration of such a link, a Vietnam veteran says.

Michael Milne, national director of Veterans of the Vietnam War, was among those testifying before a House subcommittee on behalf of a bill that would grant virtually automatic

benefits to Vietnam veterans suffering from three diseases: soft tissue sarcoma, a cancer of muscle and similar tissue; porphyria cutanea tarda, a liver condition; and chloracne, a skin condition.

VA Administrator Harry N. Walters opposed the bill on grounds that possible links between Agent Orange exposure and outbreaks of the diseases years after exposure are only theories and hypotheses.

Maybe Waiting On U.S. Action

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Soviet Union may wait for deployment of U.S. in-termediate-range nuclear missiles in Europe before agreeing to an arms control treaty with the United States, NATO Secretary General Joseph Lunssavs.

Luns made the statement after meeting with President Reagan, who strongly supports the missile deployment

and has been lobbying heavily against a propo^ nuclear freeze    resolution in Con

gress.

The official of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization said attempts in C<mgress to adopt    such a resolution

would    hinder U.S.-Soviet

arms talks because it would raise    questions about

Americas willingness to use the nuclear weapons against the Soviets.

Everest on 5th Avenue

This Sunday marks the 52nd birthday of the Empire State Building. Back in 1931, the world was in the midst of the Great Depression. But the 102-story structure inspired hope and faith in a new age. It was the tallest building in the world, and many looked to it as a symbol of mans technical and creative talents. One reporter called the 3,000 men who worked on the building each day the poet builders. The Empire State Building was built in record time, taking only a year and 45 days to complete. In all, the construction took seven million man-hours of labor. Today, the Empire State Building is still New Yorks biggest tourist attraction.

DO YOU KNOW-Which buildings, completed ten years go in New York City, are taller than the Empire State Building?

WEDNESDAYS ANSWER-PUSH stands for People United to Save Humanity.

4-28-83    .        VEC,    Inc.    1983

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY, APR. 29,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES; Today you find that those in positions of influence are in an amiable mood and are willing to go out of their way to be helpful. A good time to make plans for the days ahead.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19| You can easily express your creative talents and can take small risks with good success following. Relax at home tonight.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Improve the conditions in and around your home. A new interest can bring greater success and happiness.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Proper communications with others can bring the cooperation you need at this time. Make appointments with key persons.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Try new ways to increase your income so that you can keep up with the rising cost of living. Be alert.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Making plans for the weeks ahead is wise now. Enjoy romance quietly with the one you love. Happiness is within your reach.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Be yourself today and you can accompUsh a great deal. Ebminate a bad habit and success wiU bang on your door.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You are able to gain personal aims easily today, so be sure you know exactly what it is you want. Strive for happiness.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You can easily gain the support you desire from a higher-up. Handling a civic matter wisely brings fine results.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) There are many ways to advance now, so waste little time. New associates can be most helpful. Show appreciation.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Come to the right decisions where monetary matters are concerned. If in doubt, consult an expert.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Making new arrangements with an associate will lead to greater benefits and happiness in the future.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) If you improve your immediate surroundings, you can then tackle your job with new vigor and get far better results.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will require a good education to bring out the wonderful talents in this chart. There could be a great genius here. Make sure to encourage your progeny and to compliment for good work accomplished.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

C 1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

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ferrorisf Tactics Change

To Meet New Challenge

BySCOTTKRAFT Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP)-World terrorism is on the rise, despite some important victories for authorities in Italy and West Germany, and experts on the subject say terrorists are becoming better organized, better equipped and harder to stop.

Weve gotten better at protecting ambassadors and presidents and handling the big hostage situations, said Norman Antokol, State Department spokesman in the Office for Combating Terrorism.

But now were seeing more of the hit-and-run bombing situations, which by their very nature are harder to guard against.

A week ago, a car bomb exploded in front of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, destroying the embassys central section and killing 52 people, according to Lebanese police. A suicide terrorist had driven a bomb-laden pickup truck into the embassy driveway, witnesses told police.

A group called Moslem Holy War, believed to be made up of Shiite Moslem Lebanese extremists loyal to Iran, claimed responsibility for the attack.

There were 7 incidents of terrorism around the world in 1982, iq) from 709 in 1981, the State Department says. In 1968, the State Department counted only 1 terrorist acts worldwide.

Since the dramatic rescue of U.S. Brig. Gen. James L. Dozier from a Red Brigades hideout last year, the Italian government has launched a broad campaign to stem political violence. Authorities there have arrested hundreds of left- and right-wing terrorist suspects, including prominent members of the Red Brigades.

A few months ago, after a left-wing group claimed responsibility for killing a prison guard, the Italian Justice Ministry revoked a law under which suspected terrorists could seek reduced sentences in exchange for testimony against other terrorists.

Endowment Has Four Advocates

WASHINGTON (AP) -Four stars of stage, film, television and music told House members that without increased federal support for the arts, theaters will go out of business, artistic creativity will be stifled and the quality of American life will suffer.

It is strange to me that while we engage in an arms race, a race to outer space, a race to be No. 1 in just about everything internationally, we do not engage in an arts race, actress Jane Alexander told a House Appropriations subcommittee.

France suffered 112 incidents in a 30-day period last summer. On Aug. 9 in Paris, terrorists biirst into Jo Goldenbergs delicatessen and sprayed gunfire, killing six people.

International attention was riveted on terrorism in 1972, when Palestinian commandos killed 11 Israelis at the Munich Olympic Games. Some countries then began building anti-terrorist forces.

It wasnt easy. It was like building a Formula One racing car while hurtling down the track, said Arturo Chiodi of the Italian Interior Ministry.

After Munich, authorities in several countries such as West Germany and Italy mounted strike forces, agreed on anti-terrorist conventions and shared what they learned.

West Germanys Bun-deskriminalamt, the national police, uses computers that rout out safe houses for fugitives by analyzing electricity and telephone use patterns. In 1981, 35,000 Germans called police with leads, prodded by large rewards and a sense of social discipline.

In November, West German authorities arrested

the alleged ringleaders of the Baader-Meinhof gang, an ultra left-wing terrorist organization also called the Red Army Faction. That group has been linked to a bloody string of attacks against U.S. installations, ,Gierman business leaders and politicians.

Last month, authorities in West Germany arrested Gisela Dutzi, a 30-year-old Red Army Faction member. Rewards of $20,800 had been posted for information leading to the arrest of Miss Dutzi and 16 other top terrorist susp^ts.

Britains House of Commons adopted the Prevention of Terrorism Act in 1976, giving police special powers to combat Northern Ireland terrorism. Among other things, it allows police to hold suspected terrorists for seven days without filing charges.

Last month, U.S. Attorney General William French Smith gave the FBI more leeway in infiltrating and monitoring domestic groups that the bureau says condone violence as a tool for social and political change. The FBI counted 51 incidents of terrorism in the United States in 1982, up from 42 in 1981.

On New Years Eve, bombs exploded at four locations in New York City, injuring three police officers. The Puerto Rican terrorist group FALN claimed responsibility. Five people arrested in the case have not come to trial.

Terrorism is probably the most difficult crime because of the nature of the individual whos doing it. You cant

put a rational reason on his actions, said police Lt. Kevin Hallitfhn, commanding officer of New York Citys Federal Task Force on Terrorism.

Although some counterterrorist forces have succeeded in monitoring and even infiltrating terrorist organizations, those are the exceptions. Worldwide terrorism continues to grow.

Terrorists are better organized, better trained and better equipped than ever before, said Dr. Yonah Alexander, of the Georgetown University Center for Strategy and International Studies. And in the next two decades, he said, Were going to see a change in their tactics.

Bombing appears to be the most popular tactic now, but we should take into account really sophisticated methods, including chemical, biological and nuclear warfare, he said. We believe some groups are training in this direction.

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MADE IN JAPAN - This U.S.-designed F-15 jet filter constructed by the Mitsubishi company sits in a hangar in Nagoyoa, Japan. Mitsubishi now constructs the McDonnell Douglas aircraft at the leisurely rate of one a month to meet

Japanese defense requirements. A spokesman for the firm says it would be easy to increase production, but defense continues a touchy subject in Japan. (AP Laserphoto)

Ma'WELeARN TO DO TMI6 AT AN BARLV ACre.

Girl Who Robbed To Feed Her Stepbrother Given Probation

OP COURSE, 60ME 0PU9 ARBLW

BLONDIE

HOUSTON (AP) - A teen-age girl who said she robbed five people at gunpoint to buy milk and diapers for a baby half-brother born to her driig-addicted mother got 10 years' probation and a warning from jurors.

"We gave you a chance. We expect you to take it and make the best of it, jury foreman Robert Reicheck told Robin Marie Herod, 16, after the sentence was announced Wednesday.

Miss Herod pleaded guilty to five counts of aggravated robbery. Under instruction from State District Court Judge Ted Poe, the 12-member panel found Miss Herod guilty and set her punishment.

Poe said a jury had to decide punishment for Miss

Herod because Texas law prohibits a judge from granting probation in armed robbery cases.

Prosecutors argued that Miss Herod should spend time behind bars. The maximum sentence was life in prison and a $10,000 fine.

"Holding a gun to someone is not the action of a child, said Assistant District Attorney Joe Magliolo.

Poe ordered the teen-ager to be sent to a halfway house, to write letters of apology to the five people she admitted robbing at gunpoint between Sept. 27 and Sept. 30 and to make restitution to each. No one was harmed in the robberies.

to

Afterward, the shy teenager said she had learned

her lesson and vowed change her ways.

Pm going to get an education and get out on my own and make an honest living, said Miss Herod, who dropped out of school after failing the seventh grade three times.

Miss Herod, whg was certified to stand trial as an adult, expressed remorse about the robberies but said she felt she had no choice.

1 felt a responsibility to my little brother because there was no food and my mama needed to take her medicine, and if she didnt take her medicine shed git very sick. And 1 didnt know what else to do, she said.

"1 know what 1 did was wrong. I know I scared those people very badly. I pray to

God they forgive, she said.

The teenager said she used the money from the robberies to buy milk and diapers for her 18-month-old half-brother.

Two others - a brother and sister who live with but are unrelated to Miss Herod - were charged with participating in the robberies. Clyde Holmes was sentenced to 17 years in prison, and his sister Dora was judged to be mentally retarded and probably will be placed in an institution, authorities said.

Miss Herod was arrested Sept. 30, minutes after her last robbery. She was 15 at the time and observed her 16th birthday in February while in the Harris County Jail.

Rash Of Hate Letters Followed By Burning Of A Family's Home

SPRING HOPE, N.C. (AP) - Last fail a rash of hate letters circulating in the tiny Nash County community of Spring Hope warned that if William and Jan Palich didnt move "something could burn.

Early Tuesday morning fire gutted the home the Paliches built three years ago. The home had been on the market since last fall after a wave of hate letters, obscene phone calls, prowlers and vandlism,

"My first cry was not that my house was on fire but that theyve torched my house, Mrs. Palich said Wednesday.

Arson was immediately ' suspected, but by late Wednesday the State Bureau of Investigation had not come to a conclusion about the origin of the fire.

The Paliches had lived quiety in the community of 1,254 for nine years before the start oi the threats, which seemed to rise and fall

DRESSING FOR BIG DAY - Bil Bakaleinikoff of Petaluma (Calif.) straightens Robot Redfords tie foUowing head surgery on the robot Wednesday in Sunnyvale The roSt >^1 deliver the commencement address at Anne Arundel ^inmunity College in Arnold, Md. next month, the first of its kind by a robot, school officials say. (AP Lasopboto)

with the Paliches activism in school affairs.

Dr. William Paliche is a veterinarian and the assistant director of meat and poultry inspection for the North Carolina Department of Agriculture. His wife has taught in several Nash County schools and now teaches gifted and talented students at two elementary schools.

In 1977, Mrs. Palich, a former medical technologist with the NASA space program, applied for a science position at the high school. Denied the job, she threatened to sue the, school system, but dropped the idea of a suit.

Several times since then the Paliches challenged the school system over course offerings, use of school funds and a workers compensation claim by Mrs. Palich last December.

The familys fights with the school system are well known in the county. The teaching system down here is very regimented, said Mrs. Palich. Theyre not used to a teacher challenging the system.

School personnel have come to the feeling throughout the years that no matter what (they) do, it will be wrong as regards the Paliches perception of it, said Donald T. Lassiter, associate superintendent of Nash Cknmty schools.

But even the Paliches adversaries do not understand the the personal attacks against the family.

The hate letters last October were sent to 11 friends of the family, calling the Paliches Polacks and yankees, and threatening something would bum.

In November, a note stuck under the windsheild of their car read Youll be dead soon.

say, while the family was away.

Sunday night Dr. Palich was out of town when Mrs. Palich received three silent phone calls. Her porch light bulbs were taken, she said. Monday she asked to stay with neighbors. Early Tuesday she awoke to see her home in flames.

Theres concern about what this does to the community, said the Rev. Dennis Goodwin, pastor of the Paliches church. Theres disbelief that anyone ^ who could do this could live here. We squabble, among ourselves but we just squabble and let it die. Its not malicious.

FRANK A ERNEST

CREDIT

DEPT.

Exhibit To Cost Above Estimate

WASHINGTON (AP) -The government will have to spend more than first thought for a major U.S. exhibit of advanced computer technology at the 1985 Worlds Fair in Japan, officials say.

James J. Needham, who has been designated commissioner general for the U.S. exhibit, said the government allotment probably will be increased.

The exhibit, which is expected to cost about $20 million, was supposed to get most of its financing from private enterprise and $4 million from the U.S. Information Agency. But because it appears that much private financing is not available, USIA officials said, the government share will have to be increased by a yet-undesignated amount.

THB ONLY THiN6 I AUvaY/ MANaOB To KEEP feP A RAINY pAY \i A WINPOW OPEN.

i9PvNtAifU IMRfO uii P*l %1MC

THAves 4-16

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

UX)K AT 7H05G KID5 D/1NCIN& D06M THERE /

THBJ'RE AILPOPUUR AND PART OF THE 'IN'GROP/

IHEV'RE NOTHING BUT A BUNCH OF JERKS (UIIHaWRPED (aIHOTHINIC

rO SELL fW GRANOfvmieRTOBe DOON WERE WITH THEfV\

SHOE

Cigarette butts and beer cans appeared around the Paliches house. Household items were rearranged, they

CLASSIFIED ADS are as close as your telephone. Just dial 752-6166 and ask for a friendly Ad-Visor.

iw





PUBLIC NOTICES

ICE Is hersby glvtn tht the

IISWs

m rn u n i    *JS    P    P.    

Ityf GrMnville :.S,T.,ootMth

Cm

Omrtmsnt _    _____

Sriuntll II.00AM, E __________

dby of AAoy 1903, at City Hall, 301 Watt Fifth Wat, Greanvllla, North Carolina, recaivt saalad bldds for fha purchaia and devaopment of the

followingdescribedproperty located In the Central Business Olstricf Project Area known as Project N.C^-M,^^Grjenvllle, Pitt County,

^^GfhTlNG at the Intersection ot

018

Ford

1974 mustang II, automatic, air, power stwr^ and brakes. Good

condition.

.752 1705; 7S8-33I.

I97S MUSTANG II GHIA, . cylinder, automatic, fully equipped. $1475.752-6905.    >

.FORD Rancher ^alntj^jood tires. Mus

 Air,, new

lUSt sell I $3495.

020

Atercury

LN-7. 1902. 2 door, 3,000 miles, equipped. Orange, like new. Venters AAotors, Avden, 744-4171

fully

Leo

the eastern right of way line of t, iTexfef - -    

jordingoi ________

with the.southern right ot way line of

at the date of recording of this

listing

deed!

Eighth Street, if extenoeo (existing at the date of recording of this deed), from this point runs S 78 deg. 44 min. 54 E. lO.Od^feet toan Iron stake in the southern right of way line of Eighth Street, the Point of Beginning.

From this Established Beginning Point runs then along the southern

right of way line of E ighth Street S 78

_ .    deg.    22

47.28 feet to an iron stake; runs then

deg. 44 min. 54 sec. E' nail.

runs then S II

1.47 feet to a ' min. W

N 78 deg. 27 min. 43 sec. W 119.0 teet to an Iron stake In the eastern right of way line of Evans Street as described above; continues then

along the eastern right of way line ot Evans Street N 10 deg. 55 min. E

54.43 feet to an iron stake at a point of curve; runs then along a curve having a radius of 10 teet a delta angle of 89 deg. 39 min. 54 sec. and a tangent of 10.04 feet, a chord distance N 54 deg. 05 min. 03 sec. E 14.18 feet to the Point ot Beginning.

Being a lot described in a survey by James E. White, Jr., dated April II, 1983,. entitled "Survey for

Housing Authority of the Hty of Greenville, Oi^sltion Plat Block C, Lot 3 Greenville Central

Business District, Greenville, N.C.

The above described land is subject to the land use regulations and controls as contained in the Redevelopment Plan for said project and the covenants as contained in the declaration on file at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina.

Bidder may be any person, firm or corporation who agrees to conform in all respects with the provisions of bidding documenfs Including RedeveToper's Statemenf for Public Disclosure, Form HUD4004, and Redeveloper's Sfatemenf for Qualifications and Financial

esponsibility. Form HUO-4004A, opies of which may be obtained

copies or wnicn may be obtained upon request at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina. Any further information or copies ot the proposed disposal ent may be obtained at City I the property is redevelopmenf as I Parcel C-3 O 8, I,

apr^rnent may

In general the sold tor

being

follows: Disposal  ____ _ _ _

Office 8i Institution. Bids shall be accompanied by cash, cashier's check, or a certified check payable elopment

to the Community Development Department of the City ot Greenville

in an amount equal to five (5%) percent of the bid price.

Bids shall be opened at II :00 AM, E.S.T., on the 9th day of May, 1983, at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina. The Department reserves the right to

eparrment reserves the right waiver any irregularities in bidd and the right to r^ect any or all b submittecT The City also reserves rtt

ding

bids

the right to transfer thisproperty by a nonwarranty deed. Ali sales or other transfers of land shall be

subject to the appproval of the City Council ot the City of Greerivilie.

Contact the Office of the

Community Development oftr

Department of the City ot Greenville for further details.

Community Development Department of the City ot Greenviile 1983

April 21, 28, 19

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT James Worsley vs.

Angelina Worsley

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PRIXESS BY PUBLICATION

TO: Angeline Worsley TAKE NOTICE that a pleading

seeking relief against you has been filed In the above-entitled action on

the 22nd day of March, 1983. The nature ot the relief sought is as follows: Absolute divorce on one year's separation.

You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than the

5th day ot June, 1983, upon failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.

This the 19th day of April, 1983. OWENS, ROUSE 8. NELSON BY:

James A. Nelson, Jr.

Attorney for Plaintiff P.O. Box 302 Qneenville, North Carolina 37634 Telephone: (919) 758 4274 April 21, 38; May 5, 1983

WANT ADS 752-6166

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville.

Ol

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 754 1877, Grant Bulck. We will pay too dollar._

NEEDACAR?

Rent a used car and save! CALLRENT-A-WRECK 752-2277

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114.    _

012

AAAC

1974 AMC GREMLIN Great shape. $850.756 2471.    _

013

Buick

LeSABRE 1982. Fully equipped, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 744 3141

REGAL 1982. Low milea clean. Call Rex Smith ( Ayden. 744-3141.

(, extra evrolet.

1972 BUICK LeSABRE letters._

70441

1980 SKYLARK LIMITED 2 door, fully equipped. Excellent condition. $^. 714-9S20._

015

Chevrolet

CASH FOR yoi Sales. 754 7745.

CHEVETTE 1981.    2    door,

automatic, Excellent condition. One owner. 32,000 miles. 752 0098, 752 4405.

/MALIBU CLASSIC eering/brakes, AM/FM, air, $3450. 754-9378, ask for Susan,

1979

steerin

Power

cruise.

757-3508 or 754-7084.

1981 CHEVETTE AM/FM, air, new radials. $3950. 754-2448._

1982 MALIBU Stationwagon. Air, AM/FM stereo, cruise, tilt wheel. $7800. Call 744 2445after 4p.m.

017

Dodge

1974 DODGE AAaxI Van. Good condition. Call 752-5334._

018

Ford

1945 MUSTANG

cylinder, 3 speed.    ^

In an easily restorable condition $1750. Call 7j4 74Watter5p.m.

00 cubic Inch 4 ly original owner

1944

MUSTANG,

eed, new pa 400/best otter. 752 1705, 758 4321

389 engine, 3 Good condition.

1944 MUSTANG 4 cylinder.

automatic, completely rebuilt. -    70    days.

$2000. Call 754-17 nlohts.

days. 754-5791

1944 THUNDERF|Rb^ 6ood Ciindi-tion. AAoving, .t sell.^11 Ted,

758-7137 after

CLASSlFir HiS^LAY.

DOOR MATS

Forsalorrnt ALLTYPES AIR FRESHENERS

cumcpiK

rillrs,HeinMl

NiTnllrs,

OffloM. PrIcM competitive.

CALL 756-8273

1949 MERCURY MONTEREY

Good.condltlon. $5. Call 752 2321.

1977 A40NARCH

tion. 754-0975.

Excellent condi-

039

Trucks For Saie

CHEVROLET LUV 1980. 4 wheel drive. 29,000 miles, custom made roll bar and rear bumper, American Racing Aluminum Mags, AM-FM stereo 8-track. 825-1140, Bethel

DODGE D-SO PICKUP 1961. Uw mileage, good condition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Avden, 744-3141.

1978 CHEVROLET SILVERADO, automatic, air, power steering, tilt wheel, cruise, delay wipers, AM/FM cassette, sliding rear window, camper shell with sliding window. Excellent condition. $480(7 757 3160 or 752-0088.

1979MERURYMONARCH Colors French Vanilla. Michelin tires, power brakes, power steering, air

conditioning, rear giass defroster, AM/FM stereo racno. Very clean.

low mileaoe. $3850. 752 2582.

021

Oldsmobile

CUTLASS SUPREME 1983. 2 door. Extra clean, fully equipped. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 744 3141.

CUTLASS SUPREME 1982. 2 door, low mileage, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 744-3141

1979 CUTLASS Supreme. New tires.

cruise, air, burgundy, 54,000 miles Will sacrifice $4475. 757 1330

1980 OLDS CUTLASS Calis. Low miieage, loaded. Priced below NAPA retail. 758 2984 after 5.

TO PLACE YOUR Classified Ad, just call 752 4144 and let a friendly Ad'Visor help you word your Ad.

022

Plymouth

1974 VALIANT, 4 cylinder.

automatic, power, air, AM-FM, new

tin

fires. $1300 firm. 355 4149.

1978 PLYMOUTH HORIZON

Automatic, air, AM/FM, 47,000 actual miles, very clean, 30 miles per oatlon. $2200. 74 3974._

023

Pontiac

BONNEVILLE SAFARI Wagon. 1980. Fully equipped, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 744 3141._

FIREBIRD 1982. T top, 9,000 miles, fully equipped, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 744-3141._

1949 PONTIAC SAFARI

stationwagon, runs good, $225. 1970 Pontiac Safari Stationwagon, runs

lood, needs griil repair,

502 Thursday and Fi 6 and 9 p.m.; Sunday 9a.m. 9 p

550. 758 riday between

1983 PONTIAC Bonneville Sta fionwagon, AM/FM cassette player. Air. Excellent condition. 754-6820.

024

Foreign

AUDI 5000S, automatic, full'

miles. Call 754 5

'y

185

1982,    4

equipped.

door,

22,000

CELICA GT, 1978 Toyota liftback. $3795 or best offer. Call 754 2995.

PORSCHE, 1?49, 911T Coupe, #119122144. While, 44,000 miles. Good condition. $8,000. Greenville, 355-4881 between 8 and 10 p.m.

1975 AUDI FOX, 4 door sedan. Dark reen. Good condition with new Ires. 4 speed with air, AM/FM radio. 84,000 miles. Owner moving, must sell. $2,000 or best offer. 754 8714.__

1974 DATSUN B210. $1200. Call 758 3138.

Low miles.

1977 DATSUN B210. AM/FM, air, lOod condition. $1500 negotiable. 54-7794 anytime.

1977 MG MIDGET 30,000 miles. Showroom condition, new paint, Brittish racing green, top, AM/FM cassette. $3200 firm. 754-1447 after 4.

1977 300 SX DATSUN New paint ob, new interior. Good condition

all Debbie at 758 1844 days, 754 1759 nights.

1978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed.

good Condition, good gas mileage. Perfect car for young graduate.

1979 JAGUAR'XJ4, 4 door sedan. Excellent condition. 33,000 actual miles. 757 1321 or 523 1524 after 7.

1979 MERCEDES 300 D with sun roof. 4 door, cream, light tobacco interior, AM/FM cassette. $15,900. Call 919 758 0404._

1979 280ZX    2-12.    Gold. GL

package. Air conditioning, 33,000 miles, new tires. Excellent condition. Priced to sell immediately. 752 9725._

1981 DATSUN 280ZX, 2+2. loaded, 5 speed. Call 757 1321 or 523 1524 after 7pm

1981 DATSUN 200SX, like knew, low mileage. $4950. Call 355 6248 after 6 p.m

1981 VOLVO GL Loaded! 756 5385.

4 door Sedan.

1982 HONDA PRELUDE 5 speed, mdltion.

AM/FM stereo. Excellent coi 746-2124 after 9 p.m.

1982 VOLVO 4 door sedan, black

with gold interior. Call 757 1321 or 1524

523^1524 after 7 p.m.

032

Boats For Sale

14'/i' OUACHITA Bass boat. 25 horsepower Johnson. $1299. Call 757 34 after 5._

14' RIVER OX, 25 horsepower Johnson, trailer, $1500 or best offer. 14' Privateer Bay boat, 35 horsepower Evinrude, galvanized trailer, $3800 or best otter. 752-4715 after 5.

19' CHAPPARAL, 1974 model, 135 horsepower Chrysler outboard with power trim and tilt. $4295. Days 757-4411, ask for Frank. Nights 792-4758._

1972 GLASTRON 14' with 45 horsepower Evinrude and frailer. $1595. 355 2970.__

1973 D&M 22' sailboat. 4 sails, head, fixed keel. Book value $8,000. Call 754 1444.

1974 MEKEE BOAT, motor and frailer with 50 Mercury with all accessories. Excellent net boat. In good shape. 744 4017 or 355 2255.

1978 GLASSTRON family boat. Mercruiser inboard/outboard. 145 horsepower. Excellent condition. $5000. 758 0501._

1982 15' HAPPY Traveler Bass boat. 1982 40 horsepower Mercury. Both still under warranty. $2995. 753-5457 after 6 p.m._

24' TROJAN 1977. Fly bridge, head, bail 944-4127.

galley, and DF radio.

034 Campers For Sale

STARCRAFT hardtop pop-up camper. Excellent condition. Sleeps 8. 744 3530 days; 744 4203 nights.

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and ^rtsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774._

036

Cycles For Sale

1978 HONDA HAWK 400. 758 8999, Don.    _

198(7 HONDA CAA400T Good condi tion. 9,000 miles. $700 firm. Call after 4:30. 754 7334._

1980 YAMAHA 650 AAaxim I 1200 actual miles, 4 cylinder, shaft drive. $1800 negotiable. 752 2121, extension 307 days. 758 2784after 8 p.m.

1981 HONDACB 900 Custom, faring.

luggage rack, extras, 2900 miles; $2400.754-

.-7849 after 5.

1961 HONDA CM 400. Black, 2 helments. Excellent shape. $1000. 355-2584.

1983 HONDA XL 250, new, 600 miles. High powered onott road bike with extras. $1350. Call or come by 2606 Edwards St. 758-4446.

039

Trucks For Sale

4 cylinder

Very cic Call 753 i

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1982 DATSUN Pick up. Loaded, power steering, delay wipers, air, AM/FM. 5 speed, 9000 miles. Take up payments $171. Pay oft $6791. Take over loan. Call Robert 758 7540._

0S1

Help Wanted

HAIRDRESSER WANTED Apply in person at Great Expectations, Carolina East AAall._

AAANAGER NEEDED AAale or

female. For Photo Finishing    ,    I. Grea

ling to serve the public a plus. Send brief resume.

Service. Training i^ovided

llling to serve the

perosnality and wilTl

work hisi

itoiy, and Service, .reenvllle. NC 27834

to Photo

expected

MATURE LADY to live in with elderly gentlemen. Must have drivers license. Call 746-4321.

MUTUAL OF OAAAHA

We need one person who needs as much as $359.80 a week and more

040

Child Care

BABYSITTER Lots of love and

experience. Near Procter & Gam |h$ Wellcome; Pactolus

ble. Burr .area. 752-1

CHILDCARE Full time. Any hours or shift. 2 years and up. Large backyard and constant supervision. Close to all industries. Nice

neighborhood. Loads of experience. 7527784.

WILL KEEP infanfs and toddlers in my home weekdays. Located on Highway 33. 752-1783._

046

PETS

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVERS

Ready now. 355-6171 after 4 p.m.

AKC LHASA APSO

weeks old. $150. Call 754

AKC MINIATURE Long-haired Dachshund. 11 week old male, red with black overlay. 355-4476._

BEAUTIFUL AKC

PUPS. $75. 758 6912.

Irish Setter

EXPERT DOG OBEO.IENCE

g^c.

training and boarding. Call 758-5590.

ferrets for SALE Mink like animals. Albino, sable; male or female. $45each. Call 758-4857.

FREE TO GOOD home. Beautiful female caf. Has been spayed and has all shots. 752 0919._

SIBERIAN HUSKIES, registered, 4 red with blue eyes, 6 weeks old, wormed. $150. 753 4055._

051

Help Wanted

ALSO TAKING applications for full time cake decorator. Please bring along pictures of finished work. Apply in Mrson, Jerry's Sweet Shoppe, Pitt Plaza.__

ANNE'S TEMPORARIES is now

accepting applications for experienced secretaries. Must type 50 words per minute. Call for an appointment. 120 Reade Street, 7S6410.

AUTOMOTIVE SALES career. Excellent starting saiary and

ig    ,    .

benefits. Good working conditions Sales experience preferred

Carolina 754 4247

East

Lincoln-Mercury-GMC,

BOOKKEEPER Part time book keeper/receptionist with some real estate management experience needed. Call 758 6041 or send resume to PO Box 6024, Greenville, NC 27835.__

BRICK SALESMAN Experience in outside sales. Must know Pitt and surrounding counties. Base salary plus commission. Car and excellent jjenefits. Must have ability to creale contacts with developers, architects, and homebuilders. Pro

fessional and career oriented only Send resume to P

need to apply.

Drawer 458, Sanford, NC 27330.

DENTAL POSITION Need mature personable individual. Dental experience desired. Send complete resume to Dental Position, 203 Ravenwood Drive, Greenville, NC 27834.____

DUT TO PAST AND PROJECTED

growth Wendy's Old 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 4 months to 1 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._

EXPERIENCED SERVICE station help wanted. Local references. No phone calls. Apply in person. Holiday Shell, 724 South Memorial Drive.

FUNDRAISING CANDY SALES Kathryn Beich (Bike) Candies is offering an exceptional opportunity as a sales service representative for fund raising candy saies to schools, scouts, churches and civic organizations in the Greenviile-Williamsfon area. Leads furnished together with sales aids and samples. Not a get-rich-quick scheme but a steady, satisfying and rewarding job. Car needed. For interview, call collect Jinx Ratcliffe, 404 991 1844 or write KBC, 1844 Hyannis Ct., College Park, GA 30337

selling for Mutual of Omaha. Call for personal interview;

LeeW Weaver

756-1150 Greenville, N C

Lite Insurance Affiliate United of Omaha Equal Opportunity Companies M/F

NATIONAL PORTRAIT STUDIO

now hiring phone room appointment secretaries to help set portrait appointments for the local gift book

GRADY WHITE BOATS needs

person vvith at least 2 years

ence in basic carpentry or ca______

making. If inferested call 752-2111, extension 251 between 9 a.m. and 4 m. for an appointment._

HOMEWORKERS Wirecraft pr ler

duction. We train house dwellers. For full details write: Wirecraft, PO Box 223, Norfolk, Va. 23501.

,HUMAN RELATIONS SECRETARY: Immediate need for experi enced clerical professional in Greenville, NC area fortune 100 company (MFG Plant). Must have excellent clerical skills including typing, and shorthand. Experience and love ot personnel work a definite plus. Will also be working with coordination of benefits in

cluding insurance claims, processing. Please send resume to Human

Relations Secretary, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834. Equal Oppor-

tunitv Employer M/F

IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT both full time and part time positions available. Apply to Zip Mart in Greenville and Farmville. Atlantic Personnel Services, 919-4468853. Fee reimbursement program

INTERIOR DECORATOR with ex perience and a desire to excel. Salary and commission. Send resume to Decorator, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834._

JOB SEEKING SKILLS SEMINAR for the unemployed to be announced. If Interesfed call 758-9944 from 8 to 5.__

LADY TO CARE for our 13 month old daughter. Part time weekdays in your home. Prefer you keeping 1-2 other children. Call after 4 p.m., 754-2045._

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 Secretary, PO Box 802, Greenville, NC 27834 0802._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RECIAL ~ Executive Desks

60*30" beautiful walnut finiab. Ideal for home or office

Reg. Price S2S9.00

Special Price

$<|7got TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 s. Evans St.    752-2175

CONTROLLER

Division of a Fortune 500 corporation seeks a highiy motivated professional to join our financial area.

Applicants should have a degree in accounting and a minimum of 5 years experience. MBA/CPA a pius.

Responsibilities wiii inciude managing all financial matters.

Comprehensive benefits package. Send resume in confidence, inciuding salary history to;

CONTROLLER

P.O. BOX 1967 QREENViLLE. N.C. 27035

promotion. No experience neces sary. Will train, full or part time, 9 to 1, 5 to 9. Please contact Mrs.

Holmes, Parkway Studio, 702 South AAemorlal Drive. Apply in person.

Thursday froitt 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 5p.m.to9D.m._

NOW TAKING applications for full-time day time counter work, in person. Jerry's Sweet , PitfPU

lEi.

itoza.

PARTS COUNTER PERSON needed. Must have at least 1 year GM parts experience. Apply to

Jesse Boyd, Service Manager, Grant Buick, 603Greenville Blvi

POSITION AVAILABLE LPN/Receptionlst. No shift work.

Apply (Sreene County Halth Care, Inc., PO Box 657, now Hill, NC

DUA

28580, 747-8162. EOE

PROGRAAAMER Minimum 1 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, 783i

NC 27834.

ROBINSON & BRITTAIN

Incorporated is expanding and has the need for 2 additional .sales people. Electric background helpful. We are the security systems specialists. Call John Clark, 752 8694 tor Interview before

SALES REPRESENTATIVE AAan or woman to call on schools, churches, civic clubs, etc. Unlimited potential, 50% draw. Send resume to Carawan Distributors, PO Box 72. Greenville, NC 27834.

SAND BLASTER PAINTERS

Applications being taken at Robert s Welding Contractors, Highway 33 East. 758 0157.    _

SECRETARY/BOOKKEEPER for 4 hours daily. Possibly split shift. Experience with forms and titles of

Experience with forms and titles of auto dealership. Reply to PO Box 4255, Greenville, NC 27834._

SEEK PHYSICAL THERAPIST for

home visits in Hyde County (stroke patient). Fee negotiable. Call 944-

4180 or 944 4829.

SHI FT MANAGER

for

Ernie's Famous Subs & Pizza

911 S Memorial Drive Apply in person 2 to 5 pm, Saturday, Sunday and Monday.

SR

TYPISTS!

55 Words Per Minute WENEEDYOU! MANPOWER TEMPORARY Services offers you;

' Unique Fringe Benefits 'Top Pay

Flexible Schedule Call us tor an appointment We Are Not a Fee ^ency

MANPOWER

TEMPORARY

SERVICES

118 Reade Street

757-3300

WANTED - Electric motor repair shop manager. Must have 2 years college and 5 years experience. Please send complete resume to PO Box 471, Rocky Aitount. NC 27801.

WANTED EXPERIENCED storm window and door installers to work with Eastern Carolina's leading manufacturer. Salary, expenses.

757 1200 for

and fri ^ poinfmen

Call

1200 for ap

WANTED registered nurse for small business. Good hours. Call to make an appointment. 355-2470.

repre

WANTED:    Field sales .

sentative for solid established firm. Works approximately 3 counties. Excellent commission opportunities. Send resume and refer enees to Sales Representative, PO Box 130, Washington, NC 27889.

2 HAIRDRESSERS NEEDED

ly to Garr^ Whdley, 9 to 4,

Heads Up, 318 South Evans Street 758 8553.

CLASSIFIED DlbHLAY

POOU

Pool Construction A Supplies

4lBk)Guarci

SwxTXTkoq Poof Chemtcals

2725 E. 10th 75M131

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE LIcMMd tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free

cotting eftigha^ ANV TYP

stancll. 752-6331.

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR Carpentry, n years exper Jenm Harrington

Tiasonry and years experience in buildln<

R WORK

roofing. 35 Idlng. tall

752-7765.

pm.

CALL SEARS ROEBUCK & Co. for free estimates on siding, gutteri

tng.

mobile home roofover, insulation, interior and exterior painting and roof vents. Call 756-9700, exf 232. Mondav-Saturdav 10a.m. -9p.m.

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road Enterprises. 756-9123 day, 756 1007 night._

CLOTHING REPAIRS and minor alterations. Call 756-3584 aHer 4.

CLASSIFIED ADS are as close as your telephone. Just dia) 752-4144

and ask for a friendly Ad-Visor.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

059

WorkWantwJ

COMPANION FOR ELDERLY lady lighf npusework. 24 hours a

day, 7 days; a week, every other week. Refei^nces required. Call

752-3210

CREAtiVEHOME

m

IMPROVEMENTS CO

Quality construction and renova-tion. Pnone

struc

757-l[799after6om.

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will

pick up and, deMver. All Work nfei

guaranteed. Call 757-3353 after 4 p.m.. weekends anytime.

PAINT PROS

We specialize in use of Benjamin Moore paints. Residential or

commercial. Intertor or exterior. Plaster and wallpapering. Free estimate. 758-4155.

WE DO IT RIGHT

PARKIN CONTRACTING

ADDITIONS REAAODELING ^ REPAIR WORK Call 756-42W Evenings

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR SALE

40 Wide Screen GE Color Television

Reduced To ^2399.00

Goodyear Tire Center

West End Shopping Center

756-9371The DaUy Refletto-, Greenville. N.C.-Thunday, April 28.19BS-25

059 WorkWantad

RJR^DW^?5^G^at

and varnish renraved from wood

and metal. Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. All Items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques.

days. _ _____

Call for free estimate. 9123. NIoht 756 1007.

Antiques. Days 756-

HOMES PAINTEO-interior and exterior. 3 graduate students with experience In painting. We give excellent work with substantial icedi

savings over professional pricedi 756-8948 anytime or 752 8356 after 9:Mp.m

HOUSE PAINTING, remodelin

mg,

s^a^ buildings and garages built.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

059

Work Wanted

LAWNMOWING Other yard work Low prices. Call 757 0317 or 752-4680. ask tor Sam Junior.

itCKtTARY/BOOKKEEPER

would like job with well established business. Have general office skills well as ability to maintain

accurate books and records. Refer enees available. Call 758 7300 or 752 2738 (after April. 19831.

*_,RA,E Y 'S CLEANING SERVICE Have your home cleaned wMkly or monthly. We also do

windows and carpets. "Resldenta references offered.

and businesses ... 753-5908 after 3 p.m

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

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 919-778-3067

A-1 VALUE USED CARS

1983 Mercury Grand Marquis

Power windows, power seat, stereo, speed control, tilt wheel, medium gray metaiiic, 8,000 miles.

1982 Ford Escort

1982 Ford Escort

3 door hatchb^lLi|Mdlum red, rear window wiper, air condition, AM-FM radio, low back reclining bucket seats, 6200 miles.

3 door hatchback. Light spruce metallic, stereo radio with 8 track tape, air condition, tinted glass, rear window wiper, styled steel wheels, 3600 miles, 4 speed overdrive.

1982 Ford Escort GL Wagon

Fawn. Luggage rack, rear window defogger, stereo radio, automatic, power steering, air condition, 11,000 miles.

1982 Ford Escort

4 door. Medium blue metallic. Rear wiper, styled steel wheels, electric rear window defogger, air condition, Body side moldings, two tone paint.

1982 Ford Courier XLT Pickup

Long wheel base. Brown metallic, 5 speed, WS\W tires, rear step bumper, 3000 miles.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX Turbo

Automatic, power steering and brakes, air, power windows, power door locks, cruise control, tilt wheel, cassette tape.

1983 Ford Fairmont

4 door. Cream, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, tilt wheel, AM-FM radio.

1981 Buick Regal Limited

2 door coupe, silver with blue top and blue velour interior, automatic, power windows, cruise control, stereo radio, sport wheels, local car.

1983 Ford Fairmont

4 door. Medium blue, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, tilt wheel, AM-FM radio.

1981 AMC Jeep CJ-7

Renegade. Hardtop and canvas top. Stereo radio, power steering and brakes, white spoke wheels, all-terrain tires, extra sharp.

1982 Mercury Cougar XR>7

Medium pewter. Black vinyl roof, V-8 engine, electronic instrument cluster, tilt wheel, speed control, air condition, stereo radio, premium sound system, power door locks and many other options.

1981 Ford Mustang

stereo with tape, 4 speed, pewter metallic, local car.

1981 Ford Escort

4 speed, AM-FM stereo, local car. White. White letter tires.

1982 Ford LTD Country Squire V\(agon

Medium blue metallic glow. Illuminated entry system, WSW tires, tilt' wheel, rear seats, luggage rack, automatic temperature control air condition, stereo radio with cassette tape, luxury interior,, power windows, power door locks, cast aluminum wheels, many other options. 12,000 miles.

1980 Chevrolet Monza

2 door. Yellow, 4 speed, power steering and brakes, air condition, stereo...........................    *3000

1980 Coachman Travel Trailer

20 feet. Fully self contained, air condition. Electric or LP. One owner.

1982 Lincoln Continental

4 door. Automatic, air condition, power seats, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise'control, cast aluminum wheels, rosebud metallic..............................................*14,500

1979 Wilderness Travel Trailer

17 feet. Fully self contained with awning.

1982 Mercury Capri

Silver. 4 speed, power steering and brakes, air condition, AM-FM stereo with cassette, bucket seats, console.

1979 Plymouth Arrow Truck

Bucket seats, 5 speed, AM-FM radio, mag wheels, red. Rear step bumper.

1982 Mercury Capri

Red. Automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, AM-FM stereo with cassette tape, bucket seats, console, flip open air roof.

1978 Renault Gordini

2 door. Black, 5 speed, air condition, bucket seats, stereo, convertible top.

1978 Ford Fairmont

1982 Mercury Lynx GL

Red. 2 door coupe. Automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, stereo radio.

4 door. Tan, automatic, air condition, stereo radio with 8 track tape, vinyl top.

1982 Ford Thunderbird Heritage

Sunroof, cruise control, power windows, power door locks, power seat, stereo with cassette, air condition.

1973 Ford Mustang Grande

351 V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, stereo radio, mag wheels, new radials, low mileage. Blue with white vinyl top. A cream puff. Local car.

ASTING

Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass

Dealer No. 5720

758-0114 Greenville, N. C. 27834

BUYA TOYOTA COROLLA

as low as

>5595

Due to a special purchase of '81 & '82 Corollas, vve can sell these fully equipped cars, with a new extended warranty up to 5-years or 50,000 miles, starting atjust *5595. We'll have 40 to sell, with excellent financing available. So hurry, at prices like these they're sure to go fast.

109 Trade Street/GreerMlle/756-3228

I





IBTlw Daily Reflector, Ureenvuie, w.v.*u.a/, pni lo, vtoi

059 Work Wanted ^e!^ATM5^^n!crT^

as low as SS9.9S. Call Steva Atkins tor all your sign naads. 75* 117

TtftEO? NEED MORE somaone else do ina. Ask about introductory Call 752 37.

I MORE TIME? Lei k) your housaclaan introductory oftar.

TREES-TOPPED, trimnnad, takan down. John Perry, 758 4625

WE INSTALL VINYL SIDING and seamless gutters. Work guaranteed. Call 75? 56% or 758 3514 anytime.

060

FOR SALE

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J P Stancil,7S? 6331._

065 Farm Equipment

FARM MACHINERY Auction Sale. Tuesday, AAay 3rd at 10 a.m.. ISO tractqrs, 500 implements. We buy and sell used equipment daily. Wayne Implement Auction Corp.. PO Box 233, Highway 117 South, Goldsboro, NC 27530 NC M88 Phone 734 4234____

WANT TO BUY 12 to 14' grain dril Will trade tor Super A 754 3A23.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

065 Farm Equipment

067 Garage-Yard Sala

TDBACCD TRUCK CURTAINS Less than halt daalers price. Hat teras Canvas Products, 758 064), 1104 Clark Stract.

2 FAMILY yard sale. 300 Lancelot Drive, Camelot. Household it^s, clothes, toys, etc. Saturday, April 30.4.t.1.2- ,

3 PDINT HITCH broadcasl spreaders 600 pound capacity $249.95; 700 pound capacity $251.95; 850 pound capacity $254.95; 1100 pound capacity $278.95. Price indudes PTD shaH. Agitator $10.95. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752-

214 AND 217 BELVEDERE Driva. Several families. Singer sewing machine with cabinet; Infant, children and adult clothing. GM infant car seat, Infant swIng/bed, toys, books, bicycle, race track, housepaint and many other Items. Setur&i^y, Aorll 30. 7 ).

067 Garage-Yard Sale

3 FAMILY Yard Sale. Saturday. April 30. From 8 to 12. Lots of clothes and miscelleanaous items. 2709 Crockett Drive.

NEW PITT CDUNTY Fair Grounds Flea AAarket open Saturday and Sunday 8 til S. Attention all dealers. Dutside dealer spaces $2.00. Inside spaces $6.00. Call Bill 746 3541, Mike 746 3550, Fair Grounds 758 6916.

RAYNOR FORBES AND CURK

Flea Market open Saturdays 7 til 1, across from Moose Lodoe. 756-4090.

072 Livestock

cox STABLES has available stalls for boarding horses. Large green pasture. Reasonable rates. Riding area, WInterville. 756 2234.

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752 5237.

SATURDAY, 125 Vernon Avenue, WInterville, 7:30 a.m. until. Window shades, chimney brushes, golf clubs, curtains, drapes and fc>GdsprGdd$.

10 YEAR OLD Sorrell Gelding for sale to good home. Used primarily tor trail riding. Eastern or Western. 15.2 hands. $6. 752-6250.

YARD SALE Tools, furniture, clothing, tires, etc. 107 Tanglewood Drive, River Hills Subdivision. 8 to 12, Saturday.

074 Miscellaneous

L(X>SE PILLOW COUCH, 90 ", $100. Green chair, $15.355 6344.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

*

074

Miscellaneous

A SPECIAL Sij^alk Sala. Satur ly 10 to China,

argalns. Coin A itown Graanvllla.

8R"'

Man.

A TIME SAVERI Fifty used mans and womens wrist watches. Seiko, Pulsar, and others. Soma old, soma

Ilka new, soma wind, soma

automatic, soma Ouarts, soma solid ^d. $15 andjjp. Coin A Ring/Man,

[th and Evans, raanvllla.

downtown

ASSU/ME PAYMEI^S of $39.95 on a 6 place Western living r<^ suit.

Spfa^Vhalrrrockar, and 3 tables. I^rnltura World, 757-0451. M/e taka

.^urnltura

trade-ins

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

Mfhy pay retail whan you can save up to

and more on bedding and watarbads. Factory Mattress A Watarbed Outlet (Next to PIH Plaza). 355-262*.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and Installation. 919-763-9734.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758-3013. for small loads of sand, topsoll and stone. Also driveway work.

CAMERA 35mm Fugica ST901 with

S5mm lens, auto/manual, LD light

-    ,.^72

meter. $125. 756-9500, 8-6; 746 after 6

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1983 Oldsmobile Omega

Automatic, air condition, power steering and Brakes

'8614'2

Excluding tax & License

Amount Financed

APR

Finance Charges

Months

Payment

{U&O

$1720.48

$7500

$7000

IT

$1505.60

$177.20

$6500

48 _

mu

$1290.24

48

$151.88

$5500

9.9

$1183.94

$5000

_SJ

$113.91

o

$660.U

074

Mlscellaiwous

CARPET, CARPET, CARPETI Assorted sizes and colors, 9xirs, 9x15's, 12x12's, 12x15's. Priced to move. Financing available. Furniture World ^ 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 J9g4L

COFFEE MACHINE, $50. Call 756-2121

COLONIAL STYLE SOF/L floral print, 3 cushions, 2 years old. Good condition. $250.7M-2683 after 5.

COMPUTER FOR SALE Timex Sinclair 16K 10 2K games and 2 16K games. Cost over $200.    $150

negotiable. 752-3290,

CUT YOUR FOOD BILL Coupon Shoiwers Club. Free details. Send SASEto PO Box 2942, 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. Hatferas Hammocks, 1104 Clark Street. Greenvilie._

074 MIscbUatiboub

a fret

756m2

ROLL TOP DESK, 48x46x16. Butch; er bloci........

-.-Jk dinette table 48x36, 12" extension. Bookcase 36x25x9. All Items nearly new~Call 752-4104.

SAVE 20% on Mllllkin area rMS. Now at Larry's Carpetland, 3010

East 10th Street.

SEARS 800 PpUNp,weight bench, rowing machine, tricep bar, curl

bar, barbell, dumbells, weight lifting belt, and weights. %75. 746-3267.

Call

sell new RCA sets). 747-2412.__

FOR SALE 2 used Hobart 3,000 scales and other used market and restaurant equipment. 522-3424.

FOR SALE; Used washing machines. $85 or $75 with trade. 756-2479.__

FOR SALE: yellow collards and

756

bbade plants. Marion Mae Mills, 6-32^ or 355-2792.

FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS Call 758-5590.___

GRADUATION IDEA? Moffitt's Magnavox has 12" black and white

for only I Extenslo

ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers. Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memorial

Refrigeration Drive, 756-6417.

JOIN ABOFFITT'S MAGNAVOX video tape club. Greenville's first and largest. 2803 Evans Street Extension. 756 8444.

KELVINATOR deluxe upright freezer. Shelf area of 13.3 square feet. White. Lockable door. $250. Call 758-4176._

LARGE GAS heater. Good condi-tion. $75. 758 9749.

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 (SENIE ORGA' Like

new. Only $985. Call 756 8833.

LOWREY ORGAN, 2 keyboards. Excellent condition. Atlantic Credit

Corporation, 756 5185.

NEW SHARP coplerssale, lease, rent. Large selection of used

lers- Xerox, Sharp, IBM, Savin, 756 6167

ONAN-GENERATOR 10,000 wat tS'low hours. Excellent condition. $2900. Call 946 0432after 6._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS Rpmodelfnq Room Additions

C.L. Lupton, Co.

SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS

AND

PLANTS CABBAGE & COLLARDS TOAAATIOES& PEPPERS

Many Other

VEGETABLE PLANTS FLOWER PLANTS

Wt Spaclaliza In Your Garden

Kittrell's Greenhouses

2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT CALL 756-7373

SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rant shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company._

SOFA SLEEPER, dresser. Price negotiable. Must sell now! 752-0721. SOLID OAK American Drew bedroom suit, queen size, $650. 7 piece solid oak den suit, Herculon, $600. Call 756-5859.

TOBACCO PLANTS tor sale. Call Tommie Simmons, 912-839-3357 or Charles Sutton, 912 739-3476._

TOPSOIL, mortar sand, fill sand and gravel. Davenport Hauling, 756-5247.__

USED WOODWORKING TOOLS for sale. Table saws, radial arm saws, air compressor, mortising machine.

stroke sander, plus many other fools.......

hand and larger to _ than 1 year old. Must sell. Call after

All tools less

1 year

I., 756-.

WANTED: 3 or 3>/j horsepdvrer Clinton engine with horizontal shaft. Running or not. 746-6860.

12x15 GOLD SHAG carpet, $75. 9x12

brown braided    American

carpet, $20. Like new. 756-8781.

2 BEDS, $50. Kitchen table with 4 chairs, $30. 756 0723 before 1 and

after 9 p.m._

36" HARDWICK gas rai

36" HARDWICK gas range, 3 years old, price negotiable. Call after 5:30, fs3 4661._

4 CHANNEL VHF-FM mobile 40 watt transceiver. 132-174 MHz range. Auto-scan C T C S S and other features. V< wave antenna. $550 firm. 758-4948, 8:30 4:30 Mon day Friday

4 SLOT DISH RIMS for Volkswagen, fits 4 lug. Call 825-1816.

5 PIECE black wrought Iron . furniture. $125. Call W3-3410 after 6

p.m.

HORSEPOWER riding good shape. i32S. 746 6017 or 355-2255._

lawnmower. In

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

APPROXIMATELY 1 ACRE and

trailer for sale by owner in country. 12x65, 1976 Conner Tidwell, completely furnished with central air, garage/storage area (16x16). Price negotiable. 7-2692 between 7- n.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SERVICE MANASER SPECIALS

David Harris Servlc* Manager West End Store

Buddy Guthrie Service Manager Dicklnaon Ave. Store

TRANSMISSION WONT CHANGE PROPERLY

Correct The Problem With Our Coupon Special

CAR WONT START

Qat A Tune-Up Now At These Special Coupon I Prices.

4-Cyl. 6-Cyl.

I

ftI 29 W

COOO/F14JC

KM

I West End Shopping Center I    Phone    7W4371

Open8to6Mon.-Fri.,Sat.8to5

TIRE ^ CENTERI

729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 752-4417 Open8to6Mon.-Fri.,Sat.8to5

SPECIAL RANGER SALE

Just Received 23 Rangers For This Sale

$

sex

9.9%

APR

financing

Some Equipped With 4 Cylinder Engine And 4 Speed Transmission Some Equipped With 4 Cylinder Engine And Automatic Transmission/ Some Equipped With V-6 Engine And Automatic Transmission Some Equipped With Diesel Engines Some Equipped With 4 Wheel Drive

9.9%

APR

FINANCINGLimit One Per Customer First Come, First Served Come Early And Make Your Selection While They Last!YOU CAN AFFORD A FORD AT HASTINGS FORD

* Optional Equipment If Any, N.C. Sales Tax And License Extra,

H

ASTING

FORD

Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass

Dealer No. 9720

758-0114

S

Greenville, N, C, 27834

i

075 AAobile Homes For Sale    082 LOST AND FOUND

BRAND NEW t9U top of the line double wide. 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, many extras Including masonite siding, shlngM roof, frost free refrlgarator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much

more. Regular price, $21,995

Or --------

.imitad Time Only

$16,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and sat up includecT Hours, 8 AM tp 8 pm.

6301

(formerly AAebile Horrw Brokers) 3 West Greenville Boulevard

756-0191

BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home

loaded with extras, plywood floors, s,_total e

inge,

$12,995

plywood counter tops,'

refrigerator. Regular price.

Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up included; Hours, 8 am to 8pm. CROSSLAND HOMES tome Br<

(Formerly/Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard _7564)191

drooms, 2

OOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedro . baths, all appliances. Central air Underpinned. Barn attached. Set up on I acre of land. 946-8436._

SEE OUR NEW 1983, 76x14, 3 bedroom home. No gimmicks. No rebates. Just low, low prices. See Robert Lane at Thomas /Mobile Homes, 752-6068

12x65. 3 bedrooms, partly furnished. $3400 down and take up Call after 5p.m. 758 2409!

payments.

14 X 70 3 bedroom, 2 bath. $500 down. $191.10 month, 7 more years. 757-3964._

1967 COMMODORE 12x40. 2 bedrooms, set up in park. $2500. 752-3869._

1970 COBURN Low down payment. Low monthly payments. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, oil heat. Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes. 264 Bypass, Greenville.

1974 RITZ CRAFT

Ca

down. Call 757-0633.

12x65. $500

1979 CONNER Low down payment. Low monthly payments. 2 bedrooms, _1 bath, oil heat. Cali

756-9874. Country Squire Mobiie Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville

1980 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, unfurnished. $700 equity and take 18T.43.

up payments of $)8i 5:3(r 746 4615._

Call after

1982 TOWN AND COUNTRY 14x70 2 bedrooms, 2 baths with garden

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 ceiling. All tor $8995. Payment under $125 a month. Call 756-9874. Country Squire AAobile Homes, 264 Bypass. Greenville,

076 AAobi le Home I nsurance

AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance - the best coverage (or less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-

2754.

THOAAAS CALIFORNIA 267 organ with orchestral present and quadrathonic with color glow. Call 244-0991._

077 Musical Instruments

IBANEZ ARTIST GUITAR with a 60 watt Peavey classic amp. Excellent condition. 758 7200, ask for Matt._

KIMBALL CONSOLE piano. New pecan or walnut finish. $1,599 with bench, delivery and 10 year war ranty. Piano 8, Organ Distributors, Greenville, 355-6002;

078

Sporting Goods

44 AAAG SW MODEL 29, 8^ barrel. $450 firm. 357 SW model 19, 4" barrel. $300 firm. Serious callers onl V. 753 5988 or 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._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NO DOWN PAYMENT!

Discover the joys of Engage-A-Car, (he commorvsense alternative to BUYING a new car.

Its the modern way to drive any new car, van or truck your heart desires...foreign or domestic. With Engage-A-Car, you can laugh at inflation because NO DOWN PAYMENT Is necessary and your MONTHLY PAYMENTS are lower! You owe It to yourself to get all the exciting details now.

Mid-Eastern BrDkers

Pitt Plaza    757-3540

Shopping Center

LOST: small white long haired tmele dog in Dellwood vicinity. Named Cmdy. Child's pet. Call 754J2$L

LOST: White poodle, weighs about 25 to 30 pounds. Wearing brown collar with rabbi tag. $100 reward. 757-6193 or 758-3046.

LOST: M carat mans signet ring with Initial* TAP in flie beck

parking lot of (julxote Travel. $75 reward. Timmy Flake, Pegasus Restaurant. 826-4716.

LOST: 9 inonth old male gray tiger cat near Stancil Drive area. (Tall 752-0436._

085 Loans And Mortgages

2ND MORTGAGES by phone-commercial loans-mortgages bought. Call tree 1-800-845-392^

093

OPPORTUNITY

GIFT SHOP FOR SALE due to owners health. Immediate

Wweil^l 9 IIWIIII* I 9 I f I f Wl IO IV VW

cupancy. Reply to Gift Shop, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834.

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Consultants. Sarving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753-4015.

TO BUY OR SELL a business. Appraisals. Financing. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATE, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752 3575.

095 PROFESSIONAL

BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and sheetrock (hanging finish), 10 years experience. Call 757 0678. If no answer 355-6952.

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working

sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Cafl day or niohf, 753-3503, Farmville.

104 Condominiums For Sale

COMING

SOON!!!

Open House Week at BRCX)KHILL TOWNHOMES /Model will be open dally. Plan to see our affordable alternative to renting! Call (or details on our 2 and 3 bedroom units. Jane Warren at 758-6050 or 758 7029 and Will Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446.

MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

FIREPLACE in living room makes it cozy, yet it's spacious with 3 bedroorhs. 2Vs batns, patio with

storage, adjacent to pool and play  ......'    .    Call

area at Windy Ridge. $58,000.____

J L Harris & Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758 4711.

106

Farms For Sale

FARM FOR SALE 2 miles North of Vanceboro, 130 acres; 75 cleared, 35 acres clearable cropland, 30,000 pounds plus tobacco allotment, $192,000. Call CENTURY 21 Trent Properties, Ltd, New Bern, NC, 633 0314.

FOR SALE: 5,000 pounds of 1983 tobacco allotment, Pitt County, $3.50 pound. Call 752 6889.

58 ACRE FARM Good road fron (age on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details._

107

Farms For Lease

WANTTO BUY

CORN

Top Prices Paid for your corn. Worthington Farms Inc., 756-3827 Days, 756 3732 NIohts._

109

Houses For Sale

A SUNDECK ENHANCES this energy efficient 3 bedroom house, located In a quiet subdivision in Greenville. FHA 235 assumable loan. Total price $46,(X)0. 355 6314.

ASSUMABLE FHA 235,    3

bedrooms, I'/j baths. 10x14

workshop, TO*.. Burrington Road,

Sinoletree. $47,000. 355 i

BELVEDERE By owner. $62,500. 103 Staffordshire Road, 756-5545.

BY OWNER Sale or rent with option. Newly redecorated, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath brick ranch, carport, large lot. Near hospital. Rent/option, $425 month, $44,500. 758 5946.

BY OWNER College Court. 3 bedroom house. Assume 11>/2% VA

loan. $6^ down. Closing cost under

$200. Call 758 6200or 756 5217.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR LEASE 2500 Square Feet

PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON

BOULEVARD

756-8111

Aucno

nI

FARMLAND

Friday, April 29,1983 -10:00 A.M.

LOCATION: Tsks Highway 33 wmI Uom ChocowkiHy, N.C., go approxkmilsly 1 fflUe to Rural Paved Road 1196, turn left. Sala of aN tracta wW ba 1 mla on right.

Farm Land With Potential Developmant

Tract No. 1 52.40 Total Acres, 33.13 cleared, 16.32 woods, 9 acres tobacco 1983 Base 11,450 pounds

Tract No. 2 54.6 Total Acres, 46 acres cleared, 8.6 woode, 9 acres tobacco 1983 Base 11,450 pounds.

Tract No. 3 38.91 Total Acres, 27.52 cleared, 11.39 woode, 2.69 acres tobacco 1083 Base 6,160 pounds

Tract No. 4 89.20 Total Acres, 78 cleared, 7.20 woode, 4.81 acres tobacco 1083 Base 11,015 pounds.

Tract No. 9 81 Total Acres, 76 cleared, 5 woods, 3W acres tobacco 1983 Base 0,019 pounds.

Tract No. 8 - 191.01 Total Acres, 140 cleared, 50.81 woods, 7.31 acres tobacco 1083 Base 16,740 pounds.

Tract No. 7 - 4.2 Acres Woodsland

12 Roanoke 126 Rack Berne, 2 Powell Pre-Feb Bams To Be Sold After Land

TERMS: 10% Down Day Of Sale. Belenes Upon Cloaing. Bams: Caah Day Of Sale.

SALE SUBJECT TO COURT APPROVAL

Sals Conducttd by

1

OOUC CURKINS Cratnvlllt, N. C.

TU-IBTS    --------------- ----------------

WOT HtSPONSIBLt FOR ACClDtHTS

RALPH RiSPIttI^ J.

.V ,    .





109 Houses For Sale

BY OWNER 3. beUroom, 2 bath, fireplace, 2500 square feet, nice yard. In Farmvllle. $59,500. Call after 5 p.m.. 753-3030.    _

CHERRY OAKS Ready to start on this new home. Add your

perwnal touch by picking out paint, wallpaper, carpet and vinyl. Will pay four poinfs plus closing costs. M's. The Evans Co., 752 2I4. Faye Bowen, 754-5258, Winnie Evarts, 752 4224.

GREAT DEAL!

111 Investment Property

DUPLEX on 1st Street, near university, with a 1 bedroom and a 2 bedroom unit. In good condition, has

garage and 2 drives. Approximately 1,400 square feet, gross living area. $34,000. Call J L Harris 8. Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758 4711.

113

Land For Sale

3 ACRES OF LAND All rood

757;

Assumable 8Vj% loan with monthly payments of $170. 3 bedrooms, Vh bafhs, carport with shop/storage area. Brick veneer. In Weathington Heights, WInterville. Excellent A^^rlce._Mid;Eastern Brokers,

, nights 757 3529.

Cr7M-407'^

AAAVIS BUTTS REALTY

758-0655

$42,900. PINERIDGE is the settir for this cute brick ranch. A woode

lot is only one of the pluses in this 3 bedroom, 1'/2 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 wniiamsburg decor. 2 generous bedrooms, split bath, large great rpom with free-standing woodstove and french doors to deck, dining

room, targe kitchen and heatpump Assumable loan or new 95% 30 year

fixed rate i2'/2%

$55,500. GREENWOOD FOREST New construction. You can have it your way if you hurijy! All colors, patterns and stains tan 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 in kitchen, heat pump and carport.

$57,900. STANTONSBURG ROAD

Thi    .........

This home available for immediate occupancy! Owner anxious to sell this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home just 1 year old. Also features great room

with dining area and woodstove, (itn bar, laundry area and

kitchen wit heat pump

$49,900. 315 ST ANDREWS Stylish brick Cape Cod features 3 4 bedrooms (use one for an officel), 2 baths, large great room with fireplace, dining area, eat-in kitchen, laundry room, french doors to deck, large lot and dual heat pumps.

Jane Butts................. 754-2851

Shirley Morrison........... 758-5443

Mavis Butts................752 7073

fronfage. Small 3 rooiti house on it. 758-440 or 752-4017 anytime.

121 Apartments For Rent

FISCHER yiLLAGl ^ Aurora, NC, available

apartments, for

cupahcy. Elderly, handicapped and disabled. Rent based onmcome.

Barbara Miller, 322-4990 or 322-4913. Equal Opportunity Housing._

FORREST MANOR APART

ME NTS 1 and 2 large bedroom

115

Lots For Sale

</(> ACRE TO S ACRES, over 100 lots to choose from. Locations on Highway 43 south, Chicod Creek, Grifton area. Highway 33 south. Call 757 0277, after 5 P.m. 754-2482

COUNTRY LOTS Large 1/2 to 3/4

-------

acre, reasonably priced. Call for locations and prices. The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 754-5258, Winnie Evans, 752-4224

EMORYWOOD SUBDIVISION

located off Farmville Highway 752

$3,000. The Evans Co., Faye Bowen, 754 5258, Evans, 752-4224.__

2814.

Winnie

LOT IN MILLBROOK Subdivision near Simpson. $8,500. The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 754 5258, Winnie Evans, 752-4224. _

ROSEWOOD SUBDIVISION Country lots near WInterville. $7,500. The Evans Co., 752-2814. Faye Bowen, 754-5258, Winnie Evans, 752 4224

10 MILES east of Greenville. 2 acres. Well and septic tank. $13,000 757 3944._ _

2 AAOBILE home lots for sale. Location: Quail Ridoe. 758 5532.

117 Resort Property For Sale

ARAPHOE Lot on Dawson's Creek Set up for camper or trailer. $7000. 754 7173 after 4:30.

NICE BIG VACATION lot at Scup

pernong Village in Tyrell County. Call 74^4911 from 4'

1 to 8 p.m.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Securit deposits required, no pets 75-44l 3 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any

size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon-dav Friday 9 5. Call 754 9933.

121 Apartments For Rent

NEAR ECU 3 bedrooms, IVj baths $39,000. Work:    757    0042,    home

458 4040.__

NEW HOME in Camelot Buy week and you can still pick our your own colors, carpet and wallpaper Will pay four points plus closing costs. 50's. The Evans Co., 752 2814 Faye Bowen, 756-5258, Winnie Evans. 752 4224.

NEW HOUSE just started. Cedar siding, 3 bedroom, 1V} baths. E -300. Will pay four points and closing costs. Low 50's. The Evans Co., 752-2814. Faye Bowen, 754 5258, Winnie Evans, 752-4224._

NEW LISTING Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath comtemporary in Camelot that features great room with wood stove, large master bedroom and

garage.

Souther

$66,000. Call Aldridge &

herland, 754 3500; nights Rod Tuowell 753 4302

NEW LISTING Farmers Home assumption. Available on this bedroom, I':? bath, brick ranch, $41,500. Call Aldridge & Southerland, 754 3500; nights Rod Tuqwell, 753 4302

PRICE REDUCEDI Assume 8'/2% loan and. have total monthly pay ments of approximately $350. ; bedroom, 2 bath ranch in quiet Eastwood Subdivision. Owner ready

to sell! Call. Jeff Aldri^dge,

8. Southerland, 756 2807 or 756 A7

RIVER FRONT TOWNHOUSE Washington Harbor. 3 bedrooms, 2'2 baths, pool, tennis, and boat slip. Call 946 6127

SMART LANDSCAPING set off this contemporary home. Features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, loft, kitchen with dining area, solarium, 2 decks, patio, privacy fence, fireplace and heatpump. $55,600 Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758-0455

THIS COZY home on an attractive lot in Colonial Heights area is great starter home! It has 3 bedrooms, hardwood floors, oil heat, and it's convenient to shop-

fiing. Approximately 1,050 square eef Only $36,500! Call J L Harris a. Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758-4711.

TOO GOOD TO be true, this 4 year old home features 3 bedrooms.

baths, parquet foyer, sunken great room with fireplace and paddle fan, work kitchen has dining area with bay window, washer/dryer room.

garage, heat pump and wooded lot $58,500. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 7    5    8    0    6    5    5.

TOWNHOUSE FOR

owner. 2 bedrooms, f'j baths .....

finished basement. Ideal for family $45,000. Mr. Baker, 758 1799 after 7.

SALE by with

UNDER CONSTRUCTION If you

love to decorate, there's still time to take advantage of this opportunity. Builder has left all colors, carpets, etc. up to you. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home offers large great room with fireplace, dining room, utility room and deck iS9,900. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655.

UNIVERSITY AREA Duplex. Live in one side, rent the other or buy this for your student or as an investment. Two bedrooms, bath, living room, dining area each side. $59,500. Dutfus Realty Inc., 756 5395.

WOODED LOT AND pretty landscaping set the pace for this

lovely home offering foyer, living and dining rooms, eat-in kitchen, 3

bedrooms, 2 baths, carport with storage and central air, 12'/2% fixed

rate conventional financing avalla ble up to 95% loan. $51,^. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758-0655.

YOU'LL ENJOY fixing up this erville with

older home in WInterville with 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 & Sons, Inc., Realtors, 758-4711

10'/j% APR, FHA or VA - thirty

year fixed rate financing on new

homes to be built in Edwards Acres, Greenwood Forest, Cherry Oaks, Camelot, Pleasant Hill, Country Squire. For a limited time only. For iniormation call Duffus Realty Inc., 756 5395.

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, worksh(

cshop,

large great room with 8' pool table and fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 years old.

-

Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced in the $50's. 758 0144 752-7643.

2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, 2 full baths, den and kitchen. Call after 4, 757 1489.

207 NORTH LEE STREET, Ayden. $25,000.754 2717._

5 ROOM FRAME HOUSE Over an acre of land. 24x30 garage. 12x12 utility building. $26,000. 756 2053, ask for Leroy._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

APARTMENTS FOR RENT: Stan cill Drive - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath duplex - $250.00 per month. Bryton HiHs - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath - $235.00 er month. Verdant St. -    2

edrooms, IV2 bath duplex townhouse - $290.00 per month. All require 1 year's lease and security dej>osit. Duffus Realty, Inc., 754-

APARTMENTS FOR RENT: Stancill Drive - 2 bedrooms, 1 bath duplex, $250 per month. Bryton Hills - 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. 754 0811.

AVAILABLE AAAY I. New 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Drapes, wall to wall carpet, central heat and air, outside storage. GrIfton area. Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday through Friday, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunctay. Phone 524-4239.

AVAILABLE MAY 1. Energy efficient 2 bedroom townhouse duplex. Carpeted, appliances, IV3 baths, wood deck. Ridge Place. Call 754-2879._

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio

couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-tree refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact JT or Tommy Williams 754 7815

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IV2 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, wasner-dryer hook-ups, room, sauna, tennis court, house and POOL. 752-1557

laundry club

DUPLEX FOR RENT

Refrigerator, stove, $125. 2004 Chestnut Street. Call 758-2025.

DUPLEX/2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, central air and heat. Near universi-tv. $235 per month. 752-2040._

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

apartments. New carpet, stove, refrigerator furnished. Pool privileges, close to collM. Call 757-4824 8fo5, ask for Gall. 7-5577after 5.

FURNISHED APARTMENTS Also rooms and kitchen. Near College. Call 758-2201. _

GFIeneWay

121 Apartments For Rent

ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near nmgus. No pets. $215 a month.

ONE BEDROOM rent. Located close Call after 4. 754 0528

apartment for I to university

ONE BEDROOM apartment, 1400 Hooker Road, $200. Call 754-3411 or 754-3934.

TWO BEDROOM available. No pets.

iltv. 75

Insurance a Realty. 752-2754.

apartments Call Smith

Large 2 bedroom garden apartments, carpeted, dish

washer, cable Tv, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical

abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adiacent to Greenville Country Club. 754-4849

IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom

apartment. Appliances furnished No children, no pefs. Deposit and

lease. $195 month. 754 5007.

JOHNSTON STREET APARTMENTS 1 bedroom unfurnished

apartments Water and app pets. Call Judy

available immediate liances furnished. No

p.m., AAonday-Frldav.

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just off lOth Street.

Call 752-3519

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    1-5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

NEW TOWNHOUSE with fireplace to professional single or married couple. 758-4242 after 7 p.m

NEW 1 BEDROOM with patios. Water/sewer furnished. $210 month. 754 7417._

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, dis-sal included. We also have Cable Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, turnlshed apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 754 7815._'

ONE BEDROOM furnished

f>artment adjoining ECU Com-etely modern with central heat and air conditioning. Stadium Apartments, 904 E 14th St. $190 per month. Call 752-5700or 756 4671.

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 754 3842._

RE NT/sublease, 1 large bedroom apartment. Excellent location to campus. Furnished. $175 month. Low utilities. Frank, 752 5725.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Ccfll us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

SUB LEASE apartment. Available now! 752 9070.

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2,

and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer club

hook-ups, cable TV,

house, playground. Near

Our Reputation Says it All "A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

327 one, two and three bedroom tarden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appliances, centrai heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming poois.

Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

Allutiiities CabieTV Teiephone (soon)

Furnished

With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates

'Weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 monfh and up

756-5555 Olde London Inn

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

yO 'bIDROOM apartment near _U Appliances. t275 a month.

Heat and water furnished. Phone 758 0491 or 754 7809 before 9 p.m

TWO BEDROOM townhome, iVi baths, fireplace, carpet, air condl--34f3or 758 2181.

tlon.754-34t3or 758

UNIVERSITY AREA Upstairs dupiex. Available May 1.    2

bedrooms. $200. 1204 A Forbes Street. 754-0745._

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, iVj bath townhouses. Available now. $295/month.

9 to 5 Monday- F r iday

5 Monday-Fr

756-7711

WEDGE WOOD ARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, iVz bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available Immediately. 752-3311.

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water turnlshed. 201 North Woodlawn; $215. 754 0545 or 758 0435

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances. 804 Willow Street, Aparlment 4. $250. 758 3311._

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, cayzeted, appliances. $250 llfls.

month. Bryton Hlfls. 758 3311.

2 BEDROOM

campus. Some $240.752-4989.

apartment near util

filitles included.

2 BEDROOM, iVz bath duplex near campus. $245 month. Call 754 7755, Mondav-Fridav, 9-5.

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, stove, refrigerator, central heat and air, deposit, lease, no pets. 754-4834 affe -

'fer 3p.m.

2 BEDROOM, carpet, refrigerator, dishwasher, air. 5 blocks from campus. $245 a month. Also duplex. 752 (H80, 754 3210._

Fall

your used television Classified wayXall 752-4144.

the

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX 2 story.

1100 square feet on large wooded lot with creek in the back, E -300 energy etficient, brick fireplace with

woodstove, mansard roof, cedar cabinets, 7 closets. $325. Call 754-1447 alter 6.

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX, 2509 A East 3rd Street near Wahl Coates Elementery School and St. Peters Church. Nice kitchen with refriger ator and stove. Central air, yard, large attic for storage, driveway. Washer/dryer hookups. $285 per month. Call 758-0502 Thursday and Friday between 6 and 9 p.m.; Sunday 9 a.m. 9 p.m.

4 ROOM APARTMENT as is. Near ECU Married couple preferred. 754 5780.

122

Business Rentals

FOR RENT- 10,000 square foot building. Ideally located

Highway 33 in Chocowlnity. Call Donnie Smith at 944-5887.

WAREHOUSE AND oftice space for

lease. 20,000 square feet available. Will subdivide. 754 5097 or 754 9315.

2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space

for lease in small strip shopping center. Contact Aldridge &

Southerland Realty, 754-3500; nights Don Southerland74-5260.

125 Condominiums For Rent

TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah. $300 per month, 12 month lease. Young couple preferred. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 754-4334._

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2

bedroom, IVj bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished. No pets, ffy  ----

825 7321 after 5 p.m.

127

Houses For Rent

COZY ONE bedroom, in a quite neighborhood. 1 block from tennis courts. 756 8160, 756 7768.

FOUR BEDROOMS, baths, carpeted, central heat and air conditioning. $330 a month. Avalla 111

ble May 5 752 4154, ask for Loree

North Jarvis Street.

NEAR UNIVERSITY, 3 bedrooms. No pets. Call 726-7615.

CLASSiFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

Remodeling- Room Addthons

C.L. Lupton. Co.

YARD SALE

Tar River Estates

(Greenvilles Largest Apartment Complex) Saturday, April 30,8 am -12 noon Corner 1st & Oak Streets

@ aooo PRICE REDUCTION

WE REPAIR SCREENSiDOORS

Rem(nJfhnq - Room Addilioii

C l,. Lupton Co

OWN TOW OWN MtlONnjIAN ANOtPOmWIAN fTOM

National Company offara uni-quo opportunity sailing nationally advartlsod brands at substantial aavlnga to your oustomora. This Is for tho fashion mlndod person qualillod to own and oporato this high profit buslnass. 120,000.00 Invastmant In-eludaa baglnning Invantory, flkturaa, auppilas, training, grand opaning and air fara (1) parson to corporata training cantar.

FOR BROCHURE ANO INFORMATION CALL TOLL FREE 1-000431-0433.

Special Factory Incentive Makes it Possible For Us To Reduce Every Volkswagen sticker Price M,000 And More. All Models Included!

Plus

Weve Mad A Special Purchase Of Volkswagen Jetta Diesels With A ^700 Consumer Rebate PlusM,000 Price Reduction!!!

EPA Rated: 53MPG Hwy 43MPG City

Hurry, Supply Limited!

)oe Pecheles Volkswagen, Inc.

Gieiiiville Blvii

'5b 1135

Sc'i vinq Gtconvillo To The Coast For 18 Years

Iine uauy iteHector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Thunday, AdiU M, 1903-21

127

Houses For Rent

HAMDEfc ALKEb J bedrooms, IV}

bafhs, lovely kitchen, garage, heat pump, , dishwasher, refrigerator.

stove, fence. $340 per month. 754 5567 or 754-0482._

HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in

town and country. Call 744-3284 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    par month.    Bethel    -    5

bedrooms, 3 baths - $500.00 per month. Grimeslend 3 bedrooms, 1 bath - $250 per numth. Forbes Street 3 bedrooms, 1 bath - $245.00 per

rnonth. All r^uire 1_ year's lease

and security deposit. Duffus Realty, Inc., 754-0811

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex off Hooker Road. Appliances and hook

ups. $295 plus deposit. No petsl Cail Mary, days 753000;

1997.

nights 754-

SUPER NICE 3 bedroom, 2 bath, close to university. $375 month. 754 7417.

THREE BEDROOM home, nice lot. Call 752 3311

UNIVERSITY AREA 2 3 bedrooms, $250 month. Appliances.

Fenced yard. Deposit and year jease. Call 758-0491 or 754 7809

before 9 p.m.

3 BEDROOM, IV} bath, dishwasher, carpet, central heat and air conditioning. 113 North Jarvis Street. $330 month. Call 758 7997.

133 AAoblle Homes For Rent

ffSROU^

yer, air. On

3 __ dryer.

city. 754 0244.

I'baths, washwi, private lot close to

40X12, 2 bedrooms, air, washer, $170 month, $75 deposit. Call Tommy, 754-78t5.

Tommy, 754

135 Office Space For Rent

FARMVILLE Desirable office. 12x14. Private bath. $115 a month. 758-4797._

fOR RENT ^ square feet. Suitable for office space or commercial. 604 Arlington Boulevard. 756-6111.

- . .,_S FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756-7615.

137 Resort Property For Rent

EMERALD ISLE beach house. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air. Cable TV $300a week: 919-354-3301.

138

Rooms For Rent

AIR CONDITIONED room with

kitchen privileges tor summer term 2 students. 1/2 block from

for

college. Call 752-3546

FURNISHED, private bedroom with refrigerator, private entrance, across from colleoe. 758-2585,_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

3 BEDROOM BRICK home, large living room with fireplace, eat-ln kitchen, den, bath, central heat and

air. $295 a month. 5 miles west of Washington, Highway 264. Call 946 1678atterlp.m.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE, large kitch en, large fenced-in yard, brick garage, $390 month. Deposit re quired. 756 9934after 7 p.m

3 BEDROOM HOUSE, IV} 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 monfh.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE near university. 1 bath, garage, all appliances 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 after 7:30 p.m. or leave message 756-1281. _

133 Mobi le Homes For Rent

PARTLY FURNISHED 2

bedrooms, IV2 baths. Near Farmville. (Tontact 753 4206.

SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes. $135 and

up. No nets, no children. 758-4541 or 756 949r

TWO BEDROOM furnished, washer and dryer, good location. 756 2702 or 758 1048 after 6 pm

UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom frailer for rent. Call 756-2602.

1980 KNOX 14x60. Fully furnished, air condition, steps under pinning. Like new. Call Greg, 757-7227 days.

747 2052 nights

! BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent. :all 756-4687.

2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pefs, no children. Call 758 4657.

2 BEDROOMS, completely furnished, washer/dryer, no pets. Call 752 0196.

2 BEDROOM TRAILER

Furnished, washer, central heat. Call 752 3839._

2 BEDROOMS furnished. Located in city limits. $140 a month. Call 756 1900.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality fumltura Raflnithing and rapalra. Suparlor caning for all typa chaira, largar aalacllon of cualom piclura framing, aurvay afakaaany tangth, all typaa of pallata, hand-craflad ropa ham-mocka, aalactad fra raproductlona.

tramad

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Induatrial Park, Hwy. 13 75M1U    8A.M.-4:30P.M.

Qraanvllla, N.C.

138

Rooms For Rent

ROOM FOR RENT share 3 bedroom furnished home near college. Businessman or serious stu

dent preferred. 752 6888 days; 752 7564 nights

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE Pro fessional or grad studen to share 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Non-smoker preferred. Available May 10th. Call ?56 0655anytime

FEMALE ROOMAAATE WANTED

Close to campus. $112.50 per month plus'/} utilities. 756 3076._

RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE share townhouse. $125 rent and '/}

xpenses. Leave name and number, 'M0017.

ROOAAAAATE WANTED for sum

mer (May through August). 2 bedroom furnishecT apartment at Wilson Acres. 5 blocks from

campus. $150 plus utilities. In eludes: private room, cable TV, pool, sauna, and tennis court. Call after 2, 757 0359. Jim.

ROOAAAAATES NEEDED. $65 rent. 1/4 utilities. Call 758 9897or 752 3103.

WANTED MATURE female roommate. Very nice condominium. Centrally located. 756-9773after S.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

144 Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY used tractor. 8 N's Ford 600 or 800 series. Fords and

Jubilees, AAassey Fergersoo 35, gas. Call 758-4449 after 7p.m.

WISH TO BUY GOOD used caroet after

for several rooms. 752 2994 4:30p.m._

ing I

acres in country to build house on. 758 0157 days, 744-2574 niohts.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Wanted To Buy

LOT

Suitable For DOUBLE WIDE MOBILE HOME

In WInterville School District

894-3575 or 756-0075

GRANT BUICK-MAZDA, INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.d

We Have In Stock For Immediate Delivery (2) 1983 Chevrolet Custom Vans One white, one blue, both fully equipped and plush throughout.

Sporty:

1982 Mazda RX-7 Blue, 9,000 miles, sharp!

1980 Chevrolet Camaro Red, spoiler, rally wheels

1980 Pontiac Trans AM -y Turbo, Pace car, white. Oneof a kind!

1977 Buick Regal Landau Wire wheels, very clean.

Luxury:

1979 Buick Electra Limited 32,000 miies, nice can

1978 Buick Electra Limited Dark blue, loaded.

1981 Buick Regal Limited Silver and burgur.riy, sharp!

1978 Buick LeSabre Custom Loaded with options and sharp!

Economy:

1982 Mazda GLC 17,000 miles, like new!

1981 Mazda GLC Sport 19,000 miles, nice

1982 Honda Civic 4 door, 24,000 miles, priced to go!

1982 Mazda GLC Luxury 12,000 miles, nearly new.

1981 Honda Accord Burgundy, 38,000 mlles, very clean

1980 Pontiac Phoenix 22,000 mlles, pretty car

1979 Mazda GLC Wagon Bright silver, nice little car 1978 Toyota Clica Fuliy loaded, local car

1978 Datsun 510 48,000 miles, good car.

Low Priced Special:

1975 Chrysler Newport 40,000 actual miles, locally owned car, like new. Trucks:

1981 Mazda Pickup white, 12,000 mlles, sharp

1980 Mazda Pickup White, nice truck    ,

1980 Mazda Pickup Blue, special ................   $2995.00

1978 Chevrolet LUV Pickup Light blue, clean truck    '

1978 Ford F-150 Pickup Green and white, local truck 1977 International Scout 4X4,48,ooo miies.

Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00

Phone: 756-1877

GRANT MAZDA

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

1983 MAZDA TRUCKS

All Models NOW THRU MAY31ST

DEALER COST

Plus N.C. Tax!!

NO HIDDEN COST!!

NO SALES GIMMICKS!!

JUST COST plus N.C. SALES TAX

Dont Wait Move While The Selection Is Good!

Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 . Saturday 9:00 to 2:00

Phone: 756-1877





Objections Linger Over FBI's New Spy Powers

By MICHAEL J.SNIFFEN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -FBI Director William H. Webster has given his agents a narrow interpretation of the bureaus new powers to spy on domestic political groups, but critics still worry that the right to dissent could be infring.

Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calif., chairman of the House Judiciary subcommittee on civil and constitutional rights, doubts the new investigative powers are needed and has called Webster to justify them at hearing today.

U.S. District Judge Susan Getzendanner has permanently barred the FBI from carrying out in Chicago its new authority to open full investigations of public statements allegedly advocating crimes.

The new powers are contained in looser guidelines for FBI domestic security investigations which Attorney General William French Smith issued on March 7. But Edwards and Ms. Getzendanner also have seen a teleprinter message which Webster sent to all FBI offices on March 17.

Smiths guidelines replaced those issued during the Ford administration by Attorney General Edward Levi to prevent abuses uncovered by Congress.

The congressional probes found that in the 1960s and 1970s the bureau spied on and harassed citizens legally dissenting from government policy on Vietnam and civil rights.

Keeping Gool On Protests

Sent after protests over the new guidelines began, Websters message has received no public attention, but it ordered agents to interpret the new powers narrowly.

FONTANA, Calif. (AP) -A Florida protest against school dress codes prohibiting shorts has spread to California, but administrators here are keeping cool about the demonstrations.

About 60 male students at 2,500-student Fontana High School wore dresses and miniskirts Wednesday to protest the rule, but school officials jid they wouldnt discipline the protesters.

"Theres technically nothing in the dress code against boys wearing skirts," principal Tony Lardieri said, adding the protesters were absolutely orderly/ They behaved as they would on a normal school day.

He said there were good reasons for the ban on shorts.

Students were arriving in bathing suit bottoms and jogging shorts, he said. Where do you draw the tine?

Student Council president Jeffrey Miller, a 17-year-old who borrowed a maroon miniskirt for the occasion, said the rule was unfair because the girls can be comfortable ip miniskirts when its warm, but we cant.

Wednesdays action was similar to a similar protest by high school pupils in the St. Petersburg, Fla., area, where some students were suspended after refusing to end a miniskirted demonstration.

Because of Websters narrow instructions, Ms. Getzendanner decided not to block other provisions of the new guidelines immediately but scheduled a June hearing on whether they should be banned.

Webster said the new guidelines would improve the bureaus ability to detect violence before it occurs.

But even before they took effect, Sens. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., Joseph Biden, D-Del., and Walter Huddleston, D-Ky., wrote Smith questioning his intent.

They particularly questioned the authority to investigate public statements and the new authorization to use infiltrators and informants during preliminary inquiries. Those are defined as limited probes undertaken when there is not yet a reasonable indication of criminal activities.

HAVE PETS TO SELL? Reach more people with an economical Classified ad. Call 752-6166.

HEALING ARTS In an effort to bring the cost of medicine down and rediscover the soul of the healing arts. Dr. Edward A. Taub, a clinical professor at the University of Califomia-Irvine medical school, has started an insurance health-care program that combines holistic medicine with orthodox methods. Health, Taub says, is much too important to be left to science. But its also much too important not to be scientific about. (AP Laserphoto)

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Last week when she banned investigations of public statements, Ms. Getzendanner noted that Websters message to agents narrowed the guidelines language somewhat, stating that an investigation should not commence unless 'the statement of advocacy taken in context presents a credible threat of harm.

niey have not proved the need for changing the Levi guidelines, and particularly, why they seem to want to investigate speech as well as criminal conduct, Edwards said.

But Webster refined to say compelling circumstances were necessary before infiltrating or developing new informants in domestic groups.

Edwards wants to know if the FBI idans to resume cdlecting information about people not suspected of crimes. Ms. Getzendanner will review this provision too.

But she still ruled that the provision violated a 1981 consent decree signed by the government and the American Civil Liberties Union to put an end to abuses of political rights by the FBI in Chicago.

The Chicago consent decree was based on proposals sent to Congress by Webster himself in 1979. Although Congress has never passed them, Ms. Getzendanner said the agreement was a legally binding contract in Chicago.

In an interview Tuesday, Edwards cited a long list of administration testimony that the Levi guidelines had served the bureau well.

He added that if Websters interpretations are satisfactory they ought to put them into the guidelines.

Among the other new provisions which have drawn protests or questions are;

-The , authority to use what the government calls highly intrusive techniques, like the undisclosed recording of a conversation by one party or the use of a locator transmitter hidden on a car, in preliminary inquiries under compelling circumstances. Websters message to agents defined compelling circumstances as those when the technique was required to check out a threat to life, potential serious property damage, possible destruction of evidence or serious harm to an investigation.

Jerry Berman, legislative counsel for the Civil Liberties Union said, If they can infiltrate agents where there are no compelling circumstances and without a reasonable indication of criminal activity, then the guidelines pose a significant threat to First Amendment ri^ts and to privacy.

-Authority for the FBI to keep informants in groups which have become inactive.

Websters message explained that this would be done to the extent necessary to determine wliether there is any change in the criminal objectives of the enterprise. But Edwards said, This could involve them in collecting information about lawful activities.

Both Edwards and Ms. Getzendanner will examine the standards for using informants and infiltration.

-New authorization for the FBI to collect publicly available information so long as it does not violate the Privacy Act. Websters message said that, pending further study, this collection will be limited to material about cases already under preliminapr inquiry or full investigation.

PUBLIC NOTICE

County of Pitt Cityof Greonville

NOTICE OF SPECIAL CALL MEETING OF BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A special call meeting will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Harmony Foods, Inc. whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a Special Use Permit under the provisions of Section 32-59 (d) of the City Code, in order to install playground equipment at 321 East Greenville Blvd. (Burger King Restaurant). This pro-perty is zoned for "CS usage.

'* meeting will be

5:00 PM, Monday, May 2,1983 In the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

Lois D. Worthington City Clerk

m

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a-- "* -


Title
Daily Reflector, April 28, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30434
Date
April 28, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
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