Daily Reflector, May 15, 1983


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





CLOUDY

LEBANON

MARY DENKLER

Partly clou(jy Suntjay, high in upper 80s. Showers Sunday night and Monday, low in upper 60s.

Lebanon endorses the proposed troop withdrawal plan despite Syrias rejection. The story is on A-12.

ECU basketballer Mary De-nkler has been named the Reflectors Top Female Athleteof the Year. (Page B-1).

Today's Reading

Abby........

D-14

Classified

D-2-8

Arts.........

C-8-11

Crossword

D-14

Bridge.......

A-16

Editorial.......

A-4

Building

B-11

Entertainment..

. .C-12-14

Business

B-13-15

Opinion.....

......A-4

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102ND YEAR

NO. 115

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE JO FICTION

SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 15, 1983

60 PAGES9 SECTIONS PRICE 50 CENTS

Drive Seeks 'Jenkins Medical Center'

ByCAROLTVER Reflector Staff Writer Greenville Jaycees are spearheading a petition drive to have the Pitt County Commissioners name the medical complex that includes the East Carolina University School of Medicine and Pitt County Memorial Hospital the Leo W. Jenkins Medical Center.

The aim of the drive, according to co-chairman Gary Danford, is to encourage and assist the people of Pitt County in voicing gratitude for the former East Carolina University chancellors leadership in the establishment of the ECU School of Medicine, which serves eastern North Carolina. The Jaycees say they will begin this week to provide petitions in business places throughout the county to signed by anyone who wishes. Civic organizations will also be asked for endorsements

The area to be designated the Leo W. Jenkins Medical Center is the area bounded on the north by N.C 43, on the east by Moye Boulevard, on the south by State Road 1200 (the Stantonsburg Road) and on the west by the property known as Doctors Park, Now situated in this approximately 100-acre plot are Pitt County Memorial Hospital, the Brody Medical Science Building, the Eastern Area Health Education Center and the Pitt County Mental Health Center. A radiation therapy facility is under construction.

The names of the hospital and the medical science building and others would not be changed Jaycee projad co-chairman Joel Johnson said. This would be a clesignation for the whole area.    

The Jaycees hope to win recommendations fron the hospital board of trustees, the ECU trustees and other oificial boards.to the County Commissioners to effect the naming, the

co-chairmen said Jenkins is a Greenville resident who served 18 vears as president and chancellor of East Carolina 1 niversity He has recently announced that he is seriously considering running for governor of North Carolina in 1984.

Bill Dansey, a proponent of the effort said, "About two or three months ago the momentum really started building to do something for Dr, Jenkins to show him in some manner ho\^ much eastern North Carolina appreciates the way he gave of himself to provide a university and a medical sc'hool for our region. 1 am a believer in letting people know while they 're liiiing how much theyre loved and appreciated.

"We want to complete this in the near future in the hopes that Dr. Jenkins will truly realize how much his contributions to eastern North Carolina are acknowledged by us all," Dansevsaid.

Dr. Leo W. Jenkins

   '    i'l    .    .

Demo Sees Budget Deadlock

Interest May Return

Higher

U.S. Prepares To Ease Stand On Missiles

By BARRY SCHWEID Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States, heading into a new round of arms talks with the Soviet Union, is prepared to ease its stand on medium-range nuclear missiles. But the Kremlin has already predicted an impasse and U.S. officials say a breakthrough before the end of the year is unlikely.

'The talks open Tuesday in Geneva, Switzerland, and will focus on an offer by President Reagan to drop his demand for the immediate scrapping of the 600 missiles the Soviets have targeted on western Europe.

Instead; Reagan has authorized U.S. negotiator Paul H. Nitze to seek an interim accord - one that would sharply reduce the Soviet arsenal but not eliminate it entirely.

In return, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies would deploy an equal number of U.S. missiles, instead of the 572 cruise and Pershing 2 rockets that are scheduled to be installed by early 1988.

Nitze will approach the Soviets with "an open portfolio, prepared to bargain over the number of allowable misses if the Soviets accept the idea of an interim agreement, said a U.S. official who asked not to be identified.

Althou^ the Reagan administration still wants to push for the elimination of all missiles - its zero-option - an interim a^eement is being sought as a first step to scaling down missile strength.

Reagan also has pledged to give serious consideration to an offer by Yuri V. Andropov, the Soviet leader, to use warheads, as well as the number of missile launchers as the basic accounting units.

But Pravda, in an editorial Friday, called the U.S. and Soviet positions incompatible and said the two sides had not drawn closer even by a millimeter in the year and a half of talks in Geneva.

Despite the sour signals from Moscow, officials here expect a change in attitu^ once the Soviets are up against the December deployment of 16 U.S. cruise missiles in Britain and nine in West Germany.

Barring an agreement, eventually 108 Pershing 2 rockets, capable of reaching Soviet territory in about 12 minutes, are scheduled to be installed in West Germany. The 464 slower-moving cruise missiles are to be deployed in West Germany, Britain, Italy, Belgium and the Netherlands.

The Soviets consider the Pershings the bigger threat, although they are incapable of reaching Moscow.

They dont want the Pershing deployed, said another U.S. official, who agreed to be interviewed if his name was withheld. The only way they are not going to be deployed is if the Soviets come to us with some reasonable solutions in Geneva

By DONALD M.ROTHBERG AP Political Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - The chairman of the House Budget committee said Saturday that Congress is faced \yith paralysis over the federal budget that could lock the government into record high deficits and send interest rates back up to the sky.

Speaking to a Democratic Party meeting. Rep. James Jones of Oklahoma said the economy is in a pereiod of recovery but that it is not as vigorous, it is not as bold, it is not as strong as most had hoped or projected. Referring to the current deadlock in the Republican-controlled Senate over the budget, Jones said, "What were facing in Congress now to a great extent is paralysis, is a stalemate.

If that continues, Jones predicted the federal budget deficit would be billion-in October 1984 and more than $300 billion by 1988.

With those deficits, he said. Interest rates are bound to go back up to the sky.

Jones was one of several Democratic Party leaders attending a meeting of the partys National Strategy Council who questioned the strength of the economic recovery.

The discussion of possible alternatives to Reagan administration policies centered on the need to develop an industrial policy to boost trade and industry, to toughen trade policies toward foreign competitors and to make the tax system more equitable and provide greater incentives for investment and plant modernization.

And one senator warned that Democrats may have to give bad news to their traditional constituents, particularly organized tabor.

We have to tell unions there is such a thing as quality control, Sen. Paul Tsongas of Massachusetts told the meeting.

The reason Honda sells well is because its

a damned good car, added Tsongas.

Another speaker. Rep. Geraldine Ferraro of New York, predicted that the American workforce of the 1990s would be "more female, more minority and less unionized

It was the third meeting of the partys strategy council since it was established in 1981 when the Democrats still were reeling from the Republican landslide of 1980 that swept Ronald Reagan into the presidency and gave the GOP control of the Senate for the first time in 25 years.

The discussion of how the Democrats'should approach issues concentrated on the economy. There were calls for development of a new mduslnal policy to revlVallxe Vteavy Industry, as well as a degree of protectionism to force other countries to open their markets to U.S. products.

Rep. William Alexander of Arkansas said that some people had asked him whether the

Democrats are wasting their time in light of recent evidence of economic recovery.

But the congressman argued that the administration was ignoring trade and budget deficits, and that its failure to develop an industrial policy would choke off the current recoverv.

After a few months of modest gains in some economic indicators, the president has proclaimed that the long night of the Reagan recession is over, said Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia. Democratic leader of the Senate. Tragically, millions of Americans in many devastated regions of the country will be

bypassed tay Uwfiu-callMl KGovery

Byrd urged the party to recognize that "economic nationalism does not have to be a dirty word. Economic nationalism does not have to mean blind protectionism or economic isolationism.

Chile Arrests Hundreds

SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Soldiers brandishing submachine guns seized about 1,000 people in pre-dawn raids Saturday and carted them off to soccer stadiums and police stations in apparent retaliation for the first widespread protests against President Augusto Pinochets military regime.

An estimated 300 soldiers in battle uniforms, backed up by an" estimated 300 policemen and plainclothes agents, went two shantytowns in southern Santiago shortly after midnight.

They surrounded the neighborhood before five in the morning and ordered through loudspeakers that all

men over 14 years old go to the soccer field, said a 55-year-old man from one of the shantytowns, who said he feared reprisals if he were named.

"Two hours later they let me go. but my two sons are still being held, he told The Associated Press.

Witnesses estimated 1,000

residents of the Joao Gouiart and La Victoria districts went into the streets and were marched to soccer fields for identity checks. They said some were let go and others bused to police stations from the stadiums.

At midday, reporters could see several hundred boys and I Please turn to A-8)

And These Little Piggies Went To College

BIG TURTLE - Ray Bascus of Shreveport, La., holds a 131-pound loggerhead turtle caught in fishermens nets in a smaU lake near the Sabine River. The big tortoise, which is five feet long and estimated to be 150 years old, is being kept alive in a tank at a Shreveport fish market. (AP Laserphoto)

FULTON, Mo. (AP) - Although most little piggies probably would rather stay home, the truth is that most go to market. But then theres the 10 who went to college-and graduated.

The parents of Pork Chop, Hamlet, Porky, Piggy, Wiggy, Ralph, Sam, Beau. Dudley and Sweet Meat would have been proud had they seen their 11-week-old offspring honored Friday after passing a four-week course at William Woods College in Fulton.

Dr. Julian Hertzog, an educational psychology professor at the central Missouri college, required each of the 10 students in his intellectual development

course to adopt a pig donated by Callaway County farmers Lester and Larry Ausfahl and to study its learning habits.

The students grades in the course hinged on their ability to teach the pigs to respond when their names were called, to wind their way through a maze to reach food, to obey commands while on a leash, to recognize a specific shape or design and to learn tricks.

Theres nothing pig-headed about them, Hertzog said of his class, noting that other experiments have documented the.intelligence of pigs, 1 believe a lot can be learned from our experiments.

Friday was test time.| As Hertzog, students, the colleges dean of students and a commencement speaker looked on. the pigs showed they and their trainers had learned well.

Each pig responded to its trainers call. One piglet pulled a cart, another pushed a toy tractor, and one porker dived into a childs wading pool.

Then, as bystanders hummed Pomp and Circumstance. each pig proudly stepped foreward when its name was called to accept a cookie while Nancy Werst, dean of students, presented diplomas to the student trainers.

Medicine Health Care Is Big Business In Pitt

By STUARTSAVAGE

I    Reflector    Staff    Writer

Medicine is big business in Pitt County,

Before the early 1920s there was no hospital and very few doctors. The sick or injured had to be carried over rough dirt roads, or wait for trains, to go to hospitals in Kinston, Rocky Mount, Washington, Norfolk, Richmond.

Then in 1923, Drs. Charles OHagan Laughinghouse, Karl B. Pace, E. T. Dickerson and W.l Wooten raised $85,000 to build a 42-bed hospital on Johnston Street. Anxious to begin their work, they rented space over H.L. Hodges store on East Fifth Street and set up a temporary hospital - with five employees - while construction work on the new facility was underway.    -    ,

Pitt Community Hospital (later Pitt General Hospital) opened in 1924, and was expanded to accomodate 20 children in 1933.

-A bigger and more modem ho^ital became more of a reality when Pitt County voters, in 1947, approved issuing $311,900 in bonds to help fund a new, county-owned facility which would be known at Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

That $1.41 million facility opened on 17 acres of land on West Fifth Street in February 1951, with a medical staff of 38 doctors.

Since that first hospital opened in the 1920s, the number of

patients has continued to increase; the number of physicians, nurses and other health-care providers has grown to meet the needs; and facilities have expanded to include many times more private doctors offices, a new Pitt County Memorial Hospital with 524 beds (which opened in 1977 and now has a medical staff of 236 physicians and 100 residents); and schools of medicine, nursing and allied health professions have developed in the county to train people to give the highest quality of health care.

That means big money and lots of people.

Take the new PCMH for example. The investment in the building and land now amounts to $26.4 million dollars, and a $6.4 million expansion program is in the planning stages at the present time.

Another $7.6 million is invested in equipment at the hospital.

Its a big business. The present annual operating budget for the facility totals $77.5 million, $34.2 million of which goes directly to the 2,248 part time and full-time employees (including 1,163 nursing service personnel). Most of those people pay for housing, food, clothes and other necessities in Pitt County.

The same is true of the 750 employees (including 100 physicians and 68 nurses) of the ECU School of Medicine,

which has $26 million invested in building and land and $10 million worth of equipment. Some $16 million of the schools present annual budget of $32.5 million goes for salaries.

Add that up. Its 2,998 people earning some $50.2 million from just two employers.

There are other employers - more than 45 offices in Pitt County staffed by one or more physicians in private practice who hire nurses, receptionists, bookkeepers, and who purchase services locally.

A survey of just six of those private offices last week showed a total of 67 employees earning more than $1,02 million a year. -

According to officials at ECUs Regional Development Institute, the $51.22 million payroll of the hospital, medical school and the six private offices alone has an impact of some $153.66 million on the community. RDl Director Janice Faulkner said, Every dollar in basic Income turns over three times.

But thats not all. Mrs. Faulkner said, Every new job will generate three new service related jobs in the community.

Do you want to figure the payroll of the other doctox's offices in the county; the salaries of teachers in medically related fields at ECU and Pitt Community College; the income of physicians engaged in private practice (about 136 of them in the county); the money paid to employees of

uniform shops, medical supply businesses, health insurance companies, county health and mental health department workers

Or, do you want to figure who benefits from the services and supplies the medically relate facilities have to buy^ PCMH pays about $330,000 a year for telephone service, and last year paid $1.4 million for utility service, while the medical school's phone bill runs t^tween $2,000 and $3,000 a month. The utility bill amounts to more than $1 million a year.

The countys vast medical complex also impacts on the quality of health care that is available. County residents can now receive treatment near their home for problems they once had to travel to other hospitals for.

All the department chairmen at the medical school are recognized as leaders in their fields. Other physicians have pioneered techniques in surgery, contributed much in the field of nerve pathway research, are noted for their work related to angina chest pain.

Dr. Charles Rob, for example, at one time Winston Churchills private physician, developed all work on early techniques in vascular surgery.

Dr. Walter Pories is editor of "Operative Surgery, an 18-v#lume reference text for surgeons.





Obituary Column

AMERICAS FAMILY STORE

Bass

ROCKY MOUNT - Mr, Hillman D. Bass of Rocky Mount died Thursday. Graveside Services were conducted Saturday in the Pinevjew Cemetery of Rocky Mount.

Mr. Bass was a division service center mananger for Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Co.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Pe^ Strickland Bass; a son, Hillman (Denny) Bass Jr. of Rocky Mount; a daughter, Miss Robin Leigh Bass of Greenville; two brothers, Luther D. Bass Jr. of Tarboro and Joseph B. Bass of Rocky Mount, and two sisters, Mrs. Leota B. Hux of Rocky Mount and Mrs. Lillian D. Hart of Doraville, Ga.

Funeral arrangements were handled by Gay-Yost Funeral Home of Rocky Mount.

Carlton

FARMVILLE - Funeral services for Mr. Bennie Carlton, who died in a Washington, DC., hospital Friday, will be held Monday at 2 p.m. at Union Grove Free Will Baptist Church near Farmville. Burial will follow in Sunset Memorial Park.

Mr. Carlton was born and reared in Pitt County, where he attended the area schools. He was a former resident of Farmville, but had made his home in Washington, D.C., for several years where he was a foreman for a construction company.

He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Esther Carlton of Farmville; two brothers, Linwood Carlton and Billy Carlton, both of Farmville, and five sisters, Mrs. Bertha Gay, Mrs. Lula Joyner, Mrs.

Velma Williams, Mrs. Eva C. Tyson and Mrs. Margie Baptist, all of Farmville.

The body will be on view Sunday at Joyners Mortuary from 5-8:15 p.m. Family visitation will be from 7-8 p.m. Sunday. The family will assemble at the home of Mrs. Eva C. Tyson, 408 Vines St., Farmville, at 1 p.m. Monday for the funeral procession.

Cherry

WINTERVILLE -Funeral services for Mr. William Henry Cherry, who died Thursday at his home on'' Weatherington Street, will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m. at Flanagans Funeral Chapel in Greenville by the Rev. David Hammond. Burial will follow in the Branch Cemetery.

Mr. Cherry was a native of Pitt County and spent most of his life in the Winterville community.

He is survived by four sons, Isiah Cherry of Lakehurst, N.J., Moses Cherry of Orlando, Fla., and Donald Nobles and Stanley Nobles, both of Greenville; five daughters, Mrs. Ethel Gardner, Mrs. Mary Stevenson, Mrs. Retha Carmen and Mrs. Velma Ward, all of Greenville, and Mrs. Ruby Corey of Washington; three brothers, Pete Cherry of Ayden, James Earl Cherry of Statesville and Neil Cherry; two sisters. Miss Mildred Cherry of Greenville and Miss Mabel Cherry of Ayden, and 13 grandchildren.

The family will receive friends Sunday from 7:30-8:30 p.m. at Flanagans Funeral Chapel. At other times, the family will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Stevenson, 2113 Montclair Drive, Greenville.

Clark

Funeral services for Miss Marion Doris (Pete) Clark of Philadelphia will be held Monday at 4 p.m. at St. Rest Holy Church, Winterville. Survivors include two sisters, Miss Shirley Clark of Winterville and Miss Phyllis Clark of Philadelphia.

Frizzell

Funeral services for Mrs, Joyce Blow Frizzell, 28, who died Thursday at Duke Medical Center, will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Antioch Holiness Church in Bell Arthur by the Rev. James Lewis. Burial will follow in the Bell Arthur cemetery.

Mrs. Frizzell was a native of Pitt County and spent her life in the Farmville and Greenville areas. She was a 1973 graduate of Farmville Central High School.

Surviving are her husband, Bobby Frizzell of Greenville; a son, Terrance Frizzell of the home; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Blow of Greenville; two brothers, Alton Blow of Bell Arthur and Pvt. Larry Blow of West Germany, and a foster sister, Ms. Tanya Tyson of Farmville.

The family will receive friends Monday from 8-9 p.m. at Flanagans Funeral Chapel.

Manning FOUNTAIN - Mr. Joseph Hubert Manning, 64, of Fountain died Saturday morning in Wilson Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 3:30 p.m. from the Church Street Chapel of the Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Bruce Jones. Burial will follow in Queen Anne Cemetery in Fountain.

Mother Shoots Gunman Who Threatened Child

LAVONIA, Ga. (AP) - A gunman ordered a woman to come out of a motel bathroom or see her child killed, so she opened the doOr and shot him in the head, authorities said Saturday.

The man, who was critically injured, was one of two armed robbers who broke into the room Friday night hours after robbing another family at an Interstate 85 motel, Franklin County Sheriff Joe Foster said.

Carol Patterson of Enterprise, Ala., was not injured during the shooting but her husband, James Howard Patterson, suffered a fractured skull during a scuffle when the men broke in.

The second gunman got

away.

Patterson jumped one of the men when they broke in and, while he scuffled with them, Mrs. Patterson grabbed one. of their guns and ran to the bathroom, Foster said.

One robber went to the

Meeting

Place

MONDAY

12 Noon - Greenville Noon Rotary Club meets at Rotary Bldg.

12:30 p.m. - Kiwanis of Greenville-University Club meets at Holiday Inn 5:30 p.m. - Greenville TOPS Club meets at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m. - Rotary Club meets 6:30 p.m. - Host Lions Club meets at Toms Restaurant 6:30 p.m. - Optimist Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m. Eastern Carolina Chapter of Sweet Adelines meet at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p.mr - Woodmen of Uie World Simpson Lodge meets at community bldg.

7:30 p.m. Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Bldg.

8:00 p.m. - Lodge No. 885 Loyal Order of the Moose

TUESDAY 7:00 a.m. Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a.m. - Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 6:30 p.m. - Greenville Claims Association meets at Three Steers 7:00 p.m. Family Support Group at Family Practice Center 7:30 p.m. - Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbyterian Church

7:00 p.m - Post No. 39 of American Legion meets at Post Home

7:30 p.m. - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. Toughlove parents' support group at St Pauls Episcopal Church 7:30 p.m - Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study group at HON Warren St.

8:00 p.m. - Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous at AA Bldg., Farmville hwyi

door and told her to come out or he would kill her sleeping child. Mrs. Patterson "came out, but she came out shooting and she got one of them, Foster said.

The other robber escaped, but Foster said authorities "think we know who he is.

The Pattersons 7-year-old daughter, Briana Patterson, slept soundly even though half a dozen ^nshots were fired, Foster said.

They emptied their other gun back at her, but she didnt get hurt at all, Foster said of Mrs. Patterson. "One of them ran out the door and ran back in and snapped his gun at her husband, but it was already empty.

The man shot by Mrs. Patterson was taicen to Talmadge Memorial Hospi-

Senators Slain U.S,

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania said Saturday there is a sound case against five national guardsmen charged in the 1980 murders of four U.S. churchwomen.

Specter, visiting El Salvador with fellow Republican Sen. Steven Symms of Idaho, met with Defense Minister Carlos Eugenio Vides Casanova Saturday to discuss the case. The United States has been pressuring the government to prosecute the guardsmen and also those accused of the 1981 slayings of two American land reform advisers.

Both trials have been delayed.

Bernardo Rauda Murcia, the judge in the case involving the 1980 murders, has said he expects the trial to begin soon. The senators met the judge on Friday.

I have studied the trial and I think there is a sound case, Specter said after meeting with the defense minister. The exact date of a trial cannot be determined, but the case is moving forward and I think there is going to be a trial.

The victims were Maryknoll sisters Ita Ford and Maura Clarke of New York, and Ursuline sister Dorothy Kazel and lay worker Jean Donovan, both of Cleveland.

Specter said the case is very important as Congress considers requests to help the Salvadoran government

tal in Augusta, where he was in critical condition after head surgery, the sheriff said. Authorities said they were unable to identify him and would fingerprint him.

Patterson was taken to Athens General Hospital.

The Pattersons were traveling to Washington and had stopped to spend the night at theLavonia motel.

Foster said the robbers left a briefcase in the Pattersons room containing jewelry, watches and cash taken in a robbery of another family at a motel in Banks County at Interstate85andU.S.441.

The sheriff said no one was seriously hurt in the Banks County robbery, although several members of the family were treated at a hospital for bruises.

Discuss . Women

in its 43-month-old battle with left-wing guerrillas.

Critics of the Salvadoran government also complain about delays in the case of the murders of Mark D, Pearlman of Seattle and Michael P. Hammer of Potomac, Md. The two Americans and Rodolfo Viera, director of the El Salvador Land Institute, were shot to death in a hotel coffee shop in San Salvador.

A judge recently dropped charges against some of the people named in that case, saying Salvadoran law prohibits defendants from testifying against one another. The judges decision has been appealed to the Supreme Court.

Two guardsmen confessed to the crime and are awaiting trial. They claimed national ^ard Lt. Rodolfo Loi^z Sibrian ordered the killings and planned it with the help of two businessmen.

SELL YOUR USED TELEVI-

SION the Classified way. Call

752-6166.

Mr. Manning, a life-long resident of Fountain, was employed by the James I. Miller Tobacco Co. in Wilson. He was a member of the Kings Crossroads Free Will Baptist Church.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Rubelle Harper Manning; a son. Harper Manning of Greenville; his parents, the Rev. and Mrs. L.B. Manning of Fountain; a sister, Mrs. Noah Barefoot of Benson; two brothers, John / Edward Manning of Atlanta and L.B. Manning Jr. of Alabama, and a grandchild.

Smith

Mr. Alex Lester Smith of Route 1, Hookerton, in the Brick Kitchen Road community, died Saturday at his home. He was the husband of Mrs. Bertha Hardy Smith. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Norcott Funeral Home in Ayden.

Stevens RALEIGH - Mrs. Pearl Hudson Stevens, 90, died Friday. Her funeral service will be held Monday at 10 a.m. at Emmanuel Baptist Church, Raleigh. Burial will be in Montlawn Memorial Park here.

Surviving are two sons. Dr. Charles E. Stevcqis of , Greenville and Raym^ H. Stevens of Roswell, Ga. i two daughters, Mrs. Truett Whipple of Miami and Mrs. Carolyn Crutchfield of Raleigh; 12 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m. at Brown-Wynne Funeral Home , St. Marys St. Memorial contributions may be made to Emmanuel Baptist Church, 2100 Noble Road, Raleigh, N.C. 27608.

MIGUEL ALEMAN

ExMexican Leader Dies

MEXICO CITY (AP) -Former President Miguel Aleman, who in 1946 became the first non-military head of state of modem Mexico, died early Saturday at his Mexico City home after suffering a heart attack, a government spokesman said. He was 79.

Aleman died at 2:15 a.m., said a spokesman for the presidents office, Manuel Alonso. Alemans body was to lay in state at his home until a burial scheduled for 11 a.m. Sunday in the Spanish' Cemetery here, Alonso said.

Aleman was hospitalized in January at Methodist Hosital in Houston for a checkup. He was believed to have been ill for some time, but he asked the hospital not to disclose his condition.

Before Aleman took office in 1946 for a six-year term, Mexicos presidents were drawn from the military.

His administration strengthened the position of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which has dominated Mexican politics for more than 50 years, and advanced Mexico towarf its goal of becoming a major Third World industrial producer.

After his term expired in 1952, Aleman became one of the giants of the tourist industry and remained highly influential in Mexican politics.

In Appreciation

We Appreciate The Participation And Support Of The Community In Making Our Barbecue Chicken Dinner A Success.

Simpson Volunteer Fire Dept.

-----------

^

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Item availability may vary at select stores.





La Leche Schedules Two Meetings

The La Leche League, an organization for women who breastfeed or who plan to, will meet twice Thursday - at 10 a m. and at 7:30 p m. For information, call Judy Beckert, 7,56-4197. Babies mav attend with their mothers.

Rose Class To Hold Reunion

The J.H, Rose High School class of 1973 will hold its loth-year reunion June 25 at the Greenville Moose Lodge.

Dancing is scheduled from 8 p.m..-l a.m. with music by Five Degrees South, The cost to attend is $15 per person and $30 per couple.

Members of the class of 1973 who did not receive invitations may call Valerie Cox at 756-6223. The deadline for reservations is May 31 and the class requests that checks should be payable to "Class of 73. No money will be accepted at the door.

Phoenix To Meet Thursday

The local Phoenix organization will hold its final meeting until September at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Riverside Restaurant on North Greene Street. Phoenix is the statewide organization which focuses attention on all areas of criminal justice within individual communities.

Youth Revival Starts Monday

Youth revival services will be held at Saint John Free Will Baptist Church in Farmville Monday through Friday at 7:30 nightly. The Rev, Walter Boston Jr. of Rocky Mount,-pastor of the First Baptist Church in Powellsville, is the evangelist

tor the services. Various choirs will render music.

Senior Citizens Program Planned

The Greenville Recreation and ParksDepartment wilsl meet Monday at 2 p.m. at South Greenville Recreation Center to formulate plans for a Senior Citizens Program.

The department has invivited individuals 55 years old and older to take part. There will be a representative of the department to answer questions and give information on the program. For more information, call 752-4137, Ext. 253.,

Barbara Luce Receives Scholarship

Barbara Luce of the East Carolina University sp|ecial education faculty has received an annual scholarship to complete doctoral level studies.

The award was given by

the N.C. unit of Alpha Delta Kappa sorority, an international sorority for women educators. It is presented each year to a North Caroliniah whose planned doctoral research is likely to be of help to the development of education in North Carolina.

Ms. Luce plans to research the influence of educational ad-ministrators attitudes upon teachers, and the resulting effect upon pupils. She will begin her studies in August at the University of South Carolina, taking a leave of absence from ECU.

A member of the faculty at ECU for nine years, Ms. Luce is director of the ECU Remedial Education Activity Program. She holds undergraduate and masters degrees from the ECU School of Education.

BARBARALUCE

Municipal Clerks Hold Meeting

Municipal Clerks of Pitt County, meeting in observance of "Municipal Clerks Week, heard a discussion of current activities by the North Carolina Association of Municipal Clerks. The'discussion was led by Greenville City Clerk Lois Worthington, president of the state association.

Ralph Ford of Ayden, association director, explained plans for a regional meeting of city clerks. The area group offered program suggestions that will be forwarded to the program and education committees of the state association.

Attending the meeting, in addition to Mrs. Worthington and Ford, were Martha Mewborn, Bethel; Margie Tripp, Farmville; Nan Smith, Grifton; Leslie Edwards, Simpson; and Elwood Nobles, Winterville. Patricia Thigpen, deputy clerk in Farmville, was a guest.

Alumni Meeting Is Scheduled

The Grenville Industrial/Eppes High Alumni officers, members and interested persons will hold a business meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Ms. Shelia Latham, 111-B Phillips Circle (adjacent to Colonial Trailer Park). Call 757-1729 for more information.

Eppes Parade Scheduled July 2

The Eppes Industrial High School of GreenvilleVill hold its annual parade July 2 at 2:30 p.m. The proposed route will be from West Fifth Street to the Tom Foreman Park. This years theme will be Westward Bound, The Bulldogs.

Sponsors are asking participants and spectators to wear western style clothing.

Revival

May 15-20 7:30 Nightly

Rev. R.L. Downing

Evangelist

Special Singing Nightly

Pastor of the Benson Pentecostal Holiness Church, Rev. Downing is one of today's most dynamic preachers in the Pentecostal Holiness Church. You will be blessed by God if you come hear this 20th Century Evangelist preach 1st Century Pentecost. Come be with us as souls are saved, sanctified and filled with the Holy Ghost.

Gethsemane Pentecostal Holiness Church

Hwy. 33 Grimesland, N.C.

Robert J. Forehand, PastorIn The Area

Senior Art Award Presented

Revival Will Start Monday

Guest To Explain Training

Leslie Wilmouth of Winston-Salem, a May graduate of the school of art at East Carolina University, was winner of the Most Outstanding Senior Award in the painting and drawing area of the fine arts department.

Ms. Wilmouth is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P.E. Wilmouth of Winston-Salem. Graduating with a bachelor of fine arts degree, she is the first student to reveive the award in the new administrative department of the school of art.

Revival ^rvices will begin at Winterville Free Will Baptist Church Monday and continue through Friday. Services will begin at 7:30 nightly and a prayer room will be open at 7:15 p.m.

The Rev. Ray Williamson, pastor of Gum Swamp FWB Church, will be the evangelist for the services. He will be assisted by the Rev. Ed Taylor, pastor of Winterville FWB Church,    

A home guest seminar to familiarize Greenville area residents with the est Training will be held at 1610 E, 14th Street Extension .Monday at 7 p.m.

Joni Popchek from Richmond, Va., will tell about the Training. Anyone wishing to u,..-nd may call Carol Tyer, 753-5732, or Dee .Morris, 7,52-,3616, for more information.

Minister To Be In Washington

Eldress Hattie Cobb will preach at Bethel Chapel Church in Washington, .N.C,, Sunday at 3 p.m. She will be accompanied by the congregation of St. Matthew 's Church. Greenville.

Last Sign

Death Sentence

Kervin Conway (right) and Agrippa Moore erect the first sign on the proposed 100-acre site for Cypress Glen Retirement Community. The si^ is also the last one to be painted by Conway, who has been painting such signs in Greenville for the past 45 years. Also shown is Conways dog, Joe Clifton, who Conway says is his secretary. Dedication ceremonies for the retirement communitys site at Fourth and Hickory streets will be held Monday at 6 p.m. (Reflector photo by Angela Lingerfelt)

J

Painter Puts On His Last Strokes

By ANGELA LINGERFELT Reflector Staff Writer

As Kervin Conway hammered the last nail into a sign for the proposed 100-acre Cypress Glen Retirement Community on Fourth Street, he may have been thinking about his own retirement. After 45 years of painting signs around Greenville, this sign may be his last.

Although Conway officially retired in 1976 when he was 62 years old, he has been painting on the side and serving as an adviser for his son, Robert Conway, and a young prospective sign-painter, Agrippa Moore.

Even though Conway says the sign business has been mighty good to him, he has now decided to stop painting signs, settle down and spend some time with his wonderful woman and wife, Jessie.

Ive always tieen interested in signs, Conway explains, I guess my earliest recollection is of a guy in Morehead City who was painting a sign of a hotel. 1 laid

there all day watching him paint. I never really started painting myself until I moved from Morehead to Greenville. Conway said when he came to Greenville, he moved across the street from sign-painter John VanWaganen. He enjoyed going over to his house at night to watch him letter signs.

At the beginning of his painting career, Conway didntget a chance to letter signs as he had watched his neighbor do.

"At first, I painted doors and windows. I wasnt very good, but Lthought I was, Conwav commented.

When World War 11 came around, Conway landed a job in Cherry Point painting signs with six of the best (sign painters) in the state. With the exception of the three years he worked in Cherry Point, he has spent the rest of his sign-painting years in Greenville,

After returning from Cherry Point, Conway went into business for himself out of his home. He said he worked from his car mostly.

Conway eventually became successful and has now painted signs from Baltimore to Florida for businesses such as Holiday Inn and Stuckeys.

When asked if he had a favorite sign he had painted, he replied, "My favorite sign I painted was sitting down. When 1 could sit down to paint a sign, it was my favorite.

Conway added that he didnt have a particularly favorite sign because he had never painted one he was satisfied with. "If I ever paint a sign I am satisfied with, it will be the last one 1 ever paint, emphasized Conway.

Even though Conway is going to stop painting, he says he will keep on doing something. To stay young, youve got to act young and keep working. Ill age but I'll never get old.

From now on Conway says he is going to spend his .time trying to make his wife happy. "Were just going to ride around and do whatever we want to. Were not independently wealthy, were just independently healthy.

Set By Jurors

BOONE, NC. I.API -Phillip Lee Young has been sentenced to death after his first-degree murder conviction in the death of a former taxi driver.

Young was convicted by a Watauga County jury Thursday of first-degree murder, burglary and armed robbery in the death of John Oscar Cook, 64, in February.

Friday the same jury recommended Young be put to death. Young will also serve a 29-year sentence on the burglary and robbery convictions.

Youngs conviction hinged on the testimony of two alleged accomplices,

Dwight Dale Jackson, 22, arid David Presnell, 19. said Young accompanied them to Cook's house Feb. 8 to buy liquor.

Pitt County Mental Health Center

Alcohol/Orug Counseling Psychological Evaluation Individual Therapy Geriatric Ihpatient Family Therapy Consultation Group Therapy Education Partial Hospitalization Mental Retardation Employee Assistance

\

Thought Youd Like To Know 752-7151

A Review

'Struttin'Southern'Offers Night Of Fun

Everyone had fun at Fridays opening performance of "Struttin Southern. Everyone, perhaps, except a few nervous performers.

With sometimes less than four hours rehearsal for most numbers, the actors were too busy counting to remember to smile. But the audience was grinning from ear to ear as friends and relatives danced or sang through ^ this high-stepping musical review. The show was sponsored by the Greenville Service League to benefit the Laughinghouse Hospital Fund.

With some 30 numbers in two hours, the fast-paced show left little time for regrets or rejoicing. It had everything, including commercials sponsored by advertisers who made further donations to the fund.

Despite a weak opening, the show got off the ground with the second number as Teresa Moore and company, with the help of a rear view projection screen, gave us City Lights of New York.

How can you resist a bunch of kids singing Food, Wonderful Food, while wearing T-shirts advertising a supermarket? Their grandmas and grandpas loved it. Cameras flashed everywhere.

Hazel Stapelton brought down the house with her off-hand rendition of Were In The Money, backed by couples doing a near slow-motion Charleston.

When Janey Ferguson sang Hard-Hearted Hannah with her authentic Southern accent, it put Yankee renditions to shame.

No show of this kind is complete without guys in wigs and long dresses. For sheer bravery, these feather-boad boys deserve a mention: Gerry Anders, Ed Janosko, Wayne Kendrick, Herb Perry, A1 Ferguson, Arch Manning, Bob Sheffield, Wayne Mercer, Jeff Smith, Jim Lewis, Jim Carter, James Hudson, Dick McKee, Leon Moore and Percy Cox. All lOs.

Norwin Pierce, with flaw

less timing, then sang to the real thing - Girls, Girls, Girls.

Former Mayor Don McGlohon. his partner and others, one-two-three Waltzed Away in costumes that were less striking than those in the rest of the show.

Without a doubt the star of the evening was Carolyn Ipock. She all but walked off with the show giving a solidly professional performance of "Irma La Douce.

Comic relief was provided throughout by Mary Wesly "Izitmyturn Harvey, whose patience was tried by director Don Imperator. Imperato managed to convince her, however, that she had a place somewhere in the show.

Act II again started on a low note, but by this time, the audience knew there was better stuff ahead. Sure enough, on came Broadway Babies to make up laughs with their creative bodyworks.

Theyre Playing Our Song with Bonnie Isaccson

and Allan Jones, gave us a good taste of the musical by the same name that will be playing in July at the ECU Summer Theater. Jeff Krantz finally hit his stride in the simply-staged but beautifully sung number. I Write The Songs.

In "The Big Finish, TuTu Queen, Mary Wesley Harvey, finally gets her big moment and whirls dizzily across the stage in front of the ballon-clad chorus, singing "Its not where you start, its how you finish, and youre going to finish on top. And the cast of "Struttin Southern proved it. And all for a good cause.

- Maxine Carey Harker and Patsv Baker OLeary

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GREENVILLE COUNCIL

Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce, Inc. Invites You To Attend A

With:

Howard J. DuBois

Vice President Of Group & Health Dept. Georgia International Life Insurance Co. Atlanta, Georgia

Topic:

Your Health & Healthcare Costs

Time:

5:15 P^M.

It

Tuesday 1 May 17,1983

Place:

Willis Building

Sponsor:

Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company

For Phone Reservations Call The Pitt>Greenville Chamber Of Commerce At 752-4101

Pepsi Break is a Free Service to Chamber Members and Interested Citizens.

The Greenville Chapter of the Full Gospel Business Mens Fellowship is happy to invite you and your friends to hear

GORDON BROWN

MONDAY, MAY 16.1983

RAMADAINN

, 264 BY-PASS 7:00 p.m.Dinner 7:30 p.m.Meeting

Stirred by a series of visions at 16 years of age. Gordon began proclaiming the urgent message God placed in his heart to anyone who vvould give him an audience in his home town of AzIe. Texas

His calling as a messenger has led him into a wealth of ministry experience, ranging from; pastoring a successful Assemblies of God church in Ft. Worth Texas, to street ministry with Teen Challenge, to city-wide crusades as well as speaking and singing in revivals, schools, and conventions across the country

Gordon is also a recording artist and is host to his own radio and television program In 1971. he married the former Miss Rhonda Gray of Louisville. Kentucky.

Their marriage and ministry has been filled with the supernatural, including the miraculous healing o their 10-year-old son Andrae . of brain and heart tremors

The burden of his message and the experience of the power of God is guaranteed to,challenge young and old alike.

This is one meeting you will not want to miss"

MEN'S PRAYER BREAKFAST - EVERY TUESDAY AT 6;30 AM. TOMS RESTAURANT - WEST END CIRCLE

Men, Women and Children of all ages Invited. Ramada Inn Restaurant Meal $5.00 per person.





A Marina Could Be In Greenville's FutureOpinionRiver Marina Would Serve Boat Interests

As weve remarked in this space before, Pitt County is populated by thousands of people who enjoy boats.

A recent report from the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission showed 4,008 boats with gasoline engines registered in the county. There are" also sailboats and canoes, rowboats and boats powered by electric motors.

With all this interest in boating plus an old waterway (the Tar River) its pretty much a foregone conclusion that one day therell be a commercial marina to serve the thousands of current boating enthusiasts and future enthusiasts.

Some years ago, local use of the Tar as a freight route carried with it enough interest to establish a Port Authority. The ports facility did see an infrequent barge tie up, but the idea died.

Still the river is there; people do cruise on to Washington and from there can make their way to any point on the Atlantic coast. Most, wed assume, would be satisfied just cruising to fishing spots, or the sounds where regattas and races and skiing competition or just partying are seasonal highlights.

Any way you look at it, a good docking and storage facility would be welcome to a lot of people. So, too, would be a nearby outlet for supplies and^iel and equipment... to say nothing of rentals and sales outlets.

Someday those things are going to be accepted as a matter of course. They are part of the scene in a multitude of large and small communities with easy access to water. It will happen here, too.Increased Demand For Pitt Services Face Tight Budget

Pitt County is a growing and prosperous county, but with that comes new demands on county services.

The Pitt commissioners are hearing that now as they consider the budget for 1983-84.

One request for additional funds came from Sheriff Ralph Tyson who is asking for an appropriation of $971,609 for the coming fiscal year compared to $755,247 this year. The sheriff is asking for 10 additional people and he noted an 11 percent increase in crime this year. Sometimes its impossible to follow up on the cases that we have, he told the commissioners.

Most would agree that more sheriffs department staff is needed. Yet the commissioners are having to balance limited funds against the increased needs of the sheriffs department as well as other agencies of the county government.

The commissioners hope to keep total spending about the same next fiscal year as for this year at $23 million, and that means hard decisions will have to be made about any increases in county services.

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, N.C.

(USPS145-400)

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

Payable in Advance Home Delivery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly 54.00 MAIL RATES

(Prlc*i Includ* lax whart appllctblal

Pitt And Adjoining Counties 54.00 Per Month Elsewhere in North Carolina 54.35 Per Month Outside North Carolina 55.50 Per Month

MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.

Nicholas

TatroSyria

ZMm/ KffACTVA

Alvin

Taylor

Sunday Morning Notes

The Waffle House has a sign among many on the wall. It says that patrons not wearing shirts will not be served.

Late one recent night a young man ran across the highway from a nearby motel. He had on no shirt or shoes.

He took his place at a counter seat and the waitresses were soon in conference.

Im sorry, one told the potential customer as she pointed to the sign. No shirt, no service.

' The young man left without a fuss and ran back across the highway. I Soon he was running back. This time he was dressed impeccably coat, neatly tied tie... and even shoes.

He got his order.

Mrs. Cora Streeper commented on the opossum column

and wondered if it were her possum.

We didnt know, and she went on to explain that a white baby possum took up at her mothers house on Cotanche Street. She didnt know what to feed it and finally settled on Parkers barbecue, which the possum ate with relish.

Finally the possum disappeared.

No one else had seen the possum, and white ones are rare, so Mrs. Streeper settled on the name Harvey (after the imaginary rabbit of Broadway and movie fame).

Anyway her sister called one night to say the white possum, Harvey, was barring the way to the garage door and thus she was convinced it existed.

Where Harvey is now no one

knows. Even though the newspaper office isnt far from the Redditt home, we can say the possum which occupied our back door tree wasnt Harvey. Our possum was the run of the mill variety.

The U.S. Air Force had its first flight to cross the Atlantic with an all-female crew last week. The huge C-41 had a seven-member flight crew and the planers pilot described it as fairly routine, although she said she was a little nervous about the attention.

Thats not surprising. The news report said 11 journalists, two Air Force publicists and a five-member medical team made the trip with the crew.

With all those people looking over the pilots shoulder it is a wonder the flight was routine.Paul T. O'Connor

Spending Isn't Winning

RALEIGH - For all the hoopla last year about the amount of money spent on North Carolina congressional races, the state had only one of the 30 most expensive campaigns in the country.

A survey of Federal Elections Commission reports by The New York Times shows that Bill Cobey of Chapel Hill was 22nd in spending for the U.S. House races. Col^y spent $683,917, the Times reported, in his unsuccessful bid to take 4th District Rep. Ike Andrews seat. Cobey's loss was one of the biggest shockers in recent state political memory because Andrews was convicted of drunken driving less than a month before Election Day.

Of the top 30, Cobey and seven other candidates lost. Adam K. Levin of New Jersey, a Democrat, was the top House candidate spender. He paid $1.65 million for the privilege of getting beat. The top spender in Senate races, Mark Dayton, a

Minnesota Democrat, also lost. He spent $7.7 million.

. Cobey was in the Legislative Building recently and he refused to ascribe his defeat to his large campaign treasury. Many political observers think he turned the electorate off with his high volume of TV ads. He said he lost because he failed to turn out the Republican vote.

Sen. Bill Reman, R-Iredell, ought to know better than to invest his money across party lines.

Redman likes to play the stock market and hes apparently pretty successful, usually. So, a couple months ago, when Rauch Industries of Gastonia went public, he bought 1,000 shares at $11. The firm is owned by Sen. Marshall Rauch, D-Gastonia.

The very day Redman bought the stock, it dropped $2 in price. Hence, a $2,000 loss for Redman, on paper, in just

a few short hours.

A few days later, when the two senators were informally debating a legislative issue, Redman was overheard jokingly telling Rauch, to "go home and run your company, I mean, our company.

The stock market went up a short time later and his stock is now worth its original price.

The legislative staff is doing some bragging these days. One of their own has gone to glory.

Carl Franks, who was a part-time legislative security guard for three sessions, is burning up the new U.S. Football League as a running back for Tampa Bay. The youngster studied at Duke and impressed the staff during his working hours as "a fine Christian young man. Just the nicest fella, one staffer said.James J. Kilpatrick

We Get What We Pay For

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request Member Audit Bureau of Circulation.

SCRABBLE, Va. - The National Commission on Excellence in Education released its report on April 26, and a week or so later the board of supervisors of Rappahannock County met to consider our local budget for the public schools. The board proceeded to cut the requested school budget by $116,000, which made the appropriation for 1983-84 about $28,000 less than the appropriation for the current year.

The figures are of little interest beyond the borders of our Blue Ridge Mountain county, but I suspect our local supervisors might well go by the name of legion, for they are many. Across the nation, with a few gratifying exceptions, our public school systems have squandered the legacy of community support they once enjoyed.

The commissions report already has faded from the news columns^. For the record: The commission found that our schools are drowning in a rising tide of mediocrity. An estimated 23 million American adults today are functionally illiterate; they cannot pass the simplest tests of reading, writing and numbers. The averaqe achievement of high school students is lower than it was at the time of Sputnik 26 years ago.

The commission made a series of recommendations; Course requirements in basic instruction, notably in mathematics and science, should be strengthened. Textbooks should be upigraded. School districts should strongly consider 7-hour days and a ^ to 220-day school year. Teachers should be required to meet high educational standards and should be paid accordingly.

Our county has a population of 6,093. we have only two schools - an elementary school with 644 pupils and 38 teachers, and a high school with 470 students and 26 teachers. Relatively speaking, ours is a poor county. Most of the lifelong Rappahannockers are small fanners, living off their cattle and their apple orchards. In recent years a substantial number of affluent outlanders have moved in, but most of the are retired couples with no children of school age. The younger newcomers tend to send their children to a private school near Flint HUl.

^ Our county supervisors are lifelong Rappah'bnnockers. They identify with the small farmers and they accurately inflect the

attitudes of their constituents. These constituents abhor higher taxes, and while they care for their public schools, they dont care for them very much. In point of fact, our taxes are embarrassingly low: A $400,000 property pays $800 a year in real estate taxes.

Here in Rappahannock, a teacher starts at $12,192; after nine years the salary goes to $14,548, and after 17 years to $17,594. Few of the teachers stay here for more than four or five years. We are blessed with several devoted teachers who love the county and love the children, but for the most part we get about the level of instruction we pay for.

Does all this sound familiar? My guess is that in hundreds of school districts the same condition exist. A general apathy is intensified by hostility to higher taxes. The legislators in charge of adopting a school budget are not passionately concerned about the findings and recommendations of national commissions. Our local school board had asked for an additional teaching position, so that another instructor in math could be employed. The idea was to require three units of math, instead of two, for graduation. Such an additional requirement had no appeal to our supervisors. They denied the request, and they saved the $12,0t!(j.

If the recommendations of the national commission are to be widely adopted, local governing bodies will have to appropriate more money for the schools. Teachers cannot reasonably be expected to teach for 200 days at the salaries now being paid for 180 days. But 1 venture the suggestion that more money isnt the whole of the answer. Over the past 10 years Americans have more than doubled their annual expenditures for the public scIk from $70 billion to about $182 billion, and the quality of euucation is no better. It is worse.

The pathetic - indeed, the dangerous level of our public schools will not be lifted until parents and taxpayers rise up in wrath and voice a politicaly overwhelming demand for improvement. This has to be done locally, county by county, city by city. More money eventually will have to be provided, but bold leadership comes first. I dont see it in the Blue Ridge Mountains. I dont see it anywhere.        *

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

Even though Secretary of^tate George P. Shultz is confident that Syria eventuallywill withdraw its troops from Lebanon, President Hafez Assads government has reasons to maintain the status quo at least for now.

By keeping 50,000 troops either inside Lebanon or poised on the border, Syria can in the short term pressure the fragile Lebanese government of President Amin Gemayel to grant Damascus similar security guarantees to the ones Israel obtained in the U.S.-mediated agreement.

In the long term, Syria also:

-Keeps in check Israeli forces in Lebanon. Ambushes are claiming Israeli casualties almost daily, and those losses are building inqiatience in Israel that Syrians believe could lead to a pulleut even without a corresponding withdrawal by Syria and the Palestine Liberation Organization.

-Prevents Lebanon from becoming a stable pro-Western country that could join with Jordan. Egypt and Saudi Arabia in forming a moderate alliance that would reduce Syrias influence in the region.

-Protects Syrias soft underbelly from a flanking attack by Israel that could sever the highway linking the capital of Damascus from industrial and agricultural centers in the north.

A more optimistic forecast has been made by some U.S. officials who argue that by agreeing to withdraw from Lebanon, Syria would get the Israelis out of artillery range of the Syrian capital. The nearest Israeli troops are now only 20 miles west of Damascus in the Bekaa Valley.

"1 am confident in the end that will happen, Shultz told reporters in Washington of the prospects for a pullout of Syrian and Palestinian forces.

Shultz argued that the moderates in the Arab camp supported the Lebanese-Israeli terms for withdrawal and that Syria would find it hard to resist such pressure.

Syrian officials, who have criticized the U.S.-mediated withdrawal pact but not slammed the door on a pullout, say Syrias main condition is that Israel not be rewarded for its invasion last June with an agreement that paves the way for normalized relations between Israel and Lebanon.

They fear such relations would encourage King Hussein of Jordan and possibly other moderate leaders to join Egypt in making peace with Israel.

In this strategy, Syria appears to be encouraged by Moscow, which urged PLO chairman Yasser Arafat and Assad to reject Reagans Sept. 1 peace plan for the Middle East. They seek to block the U.S. strategy of using a Lebanon agreement as a springboard for an American-brokered settlement of the overall Arab-Israeli conflict.

Many observers believe the Syrians, backed by the Soviet Union, will hold out until they are guaranteed that their influence in the area will be undiminished and until a role for the two countries is assured in any future peace negotiations.

Moscow, embarrassed by the beating Soviet hardware suffered at the hands of the Israelis in last summers fighting, poured in millions of dollars worth of replacements and added Soviet advisers and advanced anti-aircraft missiles. The aim was to shore up Syrian confidence and prevent renewed warfare by increasing the stakes.

The risk is that if Israel attacks Syrian forces, even in Lebanon, they could kill Soviet advisers and trigger a direct Soviet involvement in the fighting. With U.S. Marines and other NATO troops stationed in Lebanon, such a conflict could bring Soviets and Americans into a direct confrontation.

Even though the threat of renewed warfare in the Middle East is real, observers believe that most of the recent Syrian and Soviet warnings are saber rattlings designed to insure that Syria gets what it wants in the bargaining that lies ahead.Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

Bill

WASHINGTON - For some members of Congress, old wars never die.

Colorados junior senator, William Armstrong, is one who feels that way about Vietnam. At the price of punishing Vietnamese civilians, he wants the United States to tighten its economic embargo on the Hanoi regime.

Armstrong has introduced legislation (Senate bill 747) that would prohibit cash transfers from anyone in the U.S. to friends and family in Vietnam. So far, hearings on the bill have been neither held nor scheduled. Despite private oppostkm from the National Security Council, however, an Armstrong aide said that the bill could become a rider to the Export Administtion Act revision now in Senate committee.

In the minds of Armstrong and others, a currency restriction would force Hanoi to all but eliminate its steep import duties on care packages sent by Vietnamese exiles. (According to Richard Walden, whose Operation California is a major conduit of humanitarian aid to Vietnam, the package trade amount to about $60 million per year from the United States alone.) It would also, supporters believe, expedite Hanois action on remaining POWs and MIAs, alleged use of Vietnamese labor in Siberia and the withdrawal of Vietnamese troops from Kampuchea (Cambodia).

Unfortunately, Armstrongs thipking is flawed. Hanois surcharges on selected goods - cosmetics and blue jeans, for example - are far surpassed by the black market prices for such items. As the Washington Post reported recently, many Vietnamese families simply arrange with black market merchants to underwrite the tariffs in return for a percentage of the goods. Its doubtful that a halt of cash transfers will put much of a dent into this Rube Goldberg manifestation of an economy.

More likely, a prohibition would endanger the lives of many Vietnamese who depend oqcash from abroad to buy essentials on the black market. Despite free health care, for example, understocked Vietnamese hospitals often require patients to buy their medicines elsewhere.

This hazard, as well as a possible threat to the fragile-but-successful orderly departure program for Amer-Asian children, cannot be ignored in the name of playing rough with the commies.

Laos will soon allow U.S. officials to inspect selected areas where American military aircraft crashed during the Indochina war. In return, the U.S. is expected to upgrade diplomatic relations between the two countries to include an exchange of ambassadors.

Only coincidental? Just as the National Commission on Excellence in Education was calling recently for dramatic measures to improve the quality of American teachers and studsnts, a computer company was issuing press kits boasting the beiMfits of computer-aided learning.

Largely due to administrators fears about potential legal and budget implications, approximately 40,000 public school? remain to be inspected for possible asbestos contamination, , witnesses revealed to a House subcommittee recently. Unless Congress moves to beef up the Environmental Protection Agencys field staff, they said, many children will remain exposed to the once widely-used fire retardant. The EFa estimates that, to date, between 100 and 7,000 American school children have suffered excessive exposure to asbestos.

More taxes? This summer the Supreme Court will rule on ' the case of Prasynski vs. the United States, in which a federal distnct court in Wyoming decreed that the windfall profits tax on crude oil is illegal. Should the High Court uphold the ruling, the U.S, mi^t have to repay American oil companies as much as $100 billion. American taxpayers would undoubtedly bear ' the expense, which may be one reason why the budget- ' conscious Reagan administration is actively defending the tax.

Copyright 1983 Field Enteiprises, Inc.    '





Public Forum

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

Budget Process May Be Buried

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. NX Sunday, May 15,1983A-5

To the editor:

To Mr. Martin and other lawmakers who feel the death penalty law of our state should be debated in our State House of Representatives. We wholeheartedly agree it is past time to debate it. The state currently has 31 individuals on death row, put there after being judged guilty by due process of law, appeal after appeal, and expenditure of countless hours of work and thousands of dollars.

Until Dec. 23,1982, we read the paper and listened to news reports of many of these heinous crimes. Our thoughts were, how terrible, We really need to do something about all this crime, only to have forgotten about it five minutes later. It was happening somewhere else to someone else.

On Dec. 23, 1982, in the storage room of a business establishment in Winston-Salem, someone in cold blood took a 20-guage shotgun, put it to the head and neck of two young people and pulled the trigger - all for some $2,500 - much less than the cost of one cocktail party at the Governors Mansion.

One of the victims was our only son.

Some 60 days later someone was charged.

W'e have been brought from unconcerned, uncaring darkness to light. What will it take to wake up our governor, our politicians, our lawmakers? Will it be necessary for their sons to be blown away, their daughters to be raped, judges heads to be bashed in, lawyers to experience such pain and heartache, and our jurors to be subjected to such crimes. All of us are guilty. We allow a few people assisted by a civil activist group to govern us. They go their way robbing, murdering and raping. We work hard to catch them, sentence them, and then keep ourselves busy building plush holiday hotels for them to lounge in and watch color T'V, since in our age of affluence it is inhuman treatment to have them bush the roadways. If we, the law-abiding citizens, dont wake up and wise up, the uninhibited, uncaring and undisciplined few will eliminate us.

Diane and Dick Adams

Grifton

To the editor:

How hard it is when youve already messed up so many times, especially when you dont feel good about yourself. 1 dropped out of high school in 1977 when I was a junior. I got married at age 16. At this date Im no long married nor a high school dropout. I will soon be graduating from college - on May 26. .The last three years of my life have been the greatest.

1 started to Pitt Community College in June 1980, shortly after graduating from high school. I went into the human service curriculum, which relates to mental health. It provided m;e with growth and development and helped me to find mysi^fA

Ive livedalone for the past three years, meaning away from parents. Out of all the decision about my life Ive made myself. Ive not made one I've regretted yet! Now Ive made mistakes, but there hasnt been one that 1 havent learned from. Had it not been for mistakes, I might not be where I am today. During my three years of school. Ive also had to work at a job full-time. Being a student and a worker is hard, but Ive succeeded.

Sad! I applied for nursing at PCC last year, wasnt accepted. If you want something bad enough, youll work for it. Ive just received my letter saying I am accepted this year. Anyhow, when I didnt gel accepted last year, it gave me a goal to work for. So to me, graduation is only a beginning. I am very proud of myself and all the p ile in my life who have supported me through it all - m parents, friends and teachers and administrators of programs at PCC.

Many older people say wistfully: I wish I wer your age again. Id do thing differently. Would they rea. I'; this just another case of the greener grass elesewiiere? it ems to me they must have set their courses knowledgeai and determinedly, at least on the basis of the standar U.J that prevailed, standards they accepted. Does one ever really reach a point where he can no longer change his way? It would seem to me that the door is always open to higher goals, to a better life - unless one lacks the courage or the faith to make a change. Thanks to all for not letting me carry weights that werent unnecessarily heavy.

Barbara Garris Forrest

To the editor:

Dr. Sarah Morrow, speaking at the migrant health conference on April 28, opposed House Bill 684 which establishes the crime of involuntary servitude. Briefly Dr. Morrows reasons were: Suppose a farmer learns, at the time that the crops are ready for harvest, that his crew leader is holding someone against his/her will or The fines are loo severe on the firm or corporation convicted of involuntary servitude; or How could a farmer prove his Innocence when his crew leader, trying to lessen his own guilt, accuses the farmer of also being responsible? (When reminded that U.S. law holds that a person is innocent until proven guilty. She smiled, saying that we both know that this is not the way things really are.)

I was shocked that the secretary of the N.C. Department of Human Resources, an agency serving the marginated of our society, could and would diminish her own human dignity by denying or rationalizing away the human dignity of another who will fall victim of slavery. I hear Dr. Morrow (by opposing the bill) saying that slavery is permissible under certain conditions, namely: when the crops are ready to be harvested, or that the victim is one of the marginated of our society, and that as long as the person who ultimately has the power to stop slavery in this state is not held accountable for being KNOWINGLY and WILFULLY involved.

The proposed House bill reads in part: Any person who KNOWINGLY and WILFULLY employs any person with the knowledge that the employee is holding others in involuntary servitude... With this wording, I cant understand how anyone who considers slavery an evil can oppose this bill. Innocent farmers cannot be hurt by this bill; it can help restore their reputation. Only farmers who KNOWINGLY and WILFULLY hire a crew leader who enslaves people will have any cause for concern.

Martin W. Boone, CFX

Minister for Migrant Affairs

Roman Catholic Diocese of Ralei^i ^

Letters submitted to Public Forum should be no longer than m words. The editor reserves the rig/if to edit longer letters.

Noel

Yancey

WASHINGTON - Even as Senate Republican leaders struggled to pass their budget resolution against solid Democratic opposition, word seeped out of the administration that President Reagan might well ignore the version finally enacted - effectively burying the congressional budget process.

According to well-placed officials in the administration, a compromise congressional budget resolution embodying none of Reagans goals would be the same as no budget resolution at all. Nor is there any current sign of last years intense concern that a breakdown of the process would ruin financial markets. Thus, the 1982 chain of events that transformed tax-cutter Reagan into taxincreaser Reagan is not in sight for 1983.

The only genuine concern about the process comes from Senate and House members whose status in Congress depends upon the process. Consequently, the attempted systematic congressional control over spending begun with such high hopes in 1974 is bankrupt.

David Stockman, director of the Office of Management and Budget (0MB), appears unwilling to man the barricades to save the budget process. Stockman may well have played the last card of this years budget hand during last months well-publicized Cabinet session when he predicted economic recovery will be aborted by out-year budget deficits if the budget process derails.

That led indirectly to the Senate Budget Committees Republican chairman. Sen. Pete .Domenici, joining with the Democratic minority to

send to the floor a resolution calling for a $15 billion tax increase this year. In that remarkable move. Senate GOP insiders saw Steve Bell, Domenicis staff director, working hand-in-glove with Stockman.

With this seeming to put the presidents economic program in jeopardy, conservalive business lobbyists came down on Domenici with a vengeance. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce targeted key resource people back home in New Mexico on the budget chairman. Robert Thompson, the Chambers interim national chairman, engaged in a conversation with Domenici described as sizzling.

The result was an about-face by Domenici that took anti-tax House Republican leaders by surprise when they confronted his new

attitude at a White House leadership session. He agreed to a two-year resolution calling for virtually no higher taxes that achieved none of Stockmans deficit-lowering goals but did not breach Reagans anti-tax dike.

That put the burden on Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker to corral at least 51 of the 54 Republican senators for the new Republican version, but the entire exercise is viewed with something less than breathless anxiety inside the administration. Even if the Republican version passes the Senate, the Senate-House conference to resolve it with the House resolution (calling for a $30 billion tax increase in Fiscal Year 84) consists of budget committee members determined to save the process Any compromise, therefore, is likely to couple a hefty

immediate tax increase with no new spending reductions.

That culmination would be no more congenial to Stockman than to lax-cutting supply-siders who have become his arch-enemies. Since the out-year (Fiscal 1986) tax increase that was Stockmans last deficit-reducing hope is out of the question, the 0MB director has seemed to retire from the game.

The talk from 0MB as well as elsewhere in the administration is that the president might well ignore the end product of the laborious budget process, opposing any Fiscal 1984 tax increase mandated by budget resolution. To conservatives in Congress, that only confirms the bankruptcy of the process that in the 'past decade has coincided with massive increases in federal spending and deficits,

Last summer s insistent White House drumbeat that financial markets demanded a congressional budget resolution is sounded this year only by the pleaders for high taxes. We will really have chaos out in the markets" without a resolution, insists Sen. Lawton Chiles of Florida, the. Budget Committees senior Democrat.

Domenici agrees with Chiles, but conservative Republicans on the Budget Committee - led by Sen. Bill Armstrong of Colorado - do not. They perceive an irrelevant choice between a meaningless resolution and one mandating recovery-killing tax increases. Unlike last year, the Reagan administration seems to agree.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises. Inc.

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George

Gallup

Poll

PRINCETON, N.J. - Although evidence of recoverv from the recession dominates the economic headlines, unemployment continues .to be perceived by Americans as the most urgent problem facing the nation.

In the latest imid-April) Gallup survey, 54 percent cite unemployment as the nations top problem,' three times the 18 percent who name inflation or the high cost of living as most urgent. Other concerns in the forefront of voters' minds are fear of war, mentioned by 11 percent, the poor shape of the economy in general i8 percent), and excessive government spending (5 percent).

The proportion of the public who now feel unemployment is the greatest cause for national concern has slipped'bv eight percentage points since October, when 62 percent said joblessness was the most pressing problem.

As in past surveys, unemployment is cited more often by Easterners and Midwesterners than by persons living elsewhere in the nation. However, the percentages are lower now than in October in all geographic regions, as shown below: Most Important Problem (Percent naming unemployment)

Craig

Webb

Debate On Babies

April

October

...54%

62%

62

71

58

58

RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) - Imagine a hospital nursery full of gurgling, bright-eyed newborns - exceptone.

That other baby was born -handi-* capped, suffering from a ohysical deformity that will surely kill it unless doctors operate. But the mother is still repulsed by the sight of her abnormal child, and she doesnt want the baby.

.She orders the doctors to cancel the operation and remove the intravenous tube feeding the child. The baby wastes away, and within days there is another crib open at the nursery. '

This story was fiction, but a real child known to the world as Baby Doe suffered a similar fate in Indiana last year. Now two House members want to make sure North Carolina doesnt have its own Baby Does.

Reps. Sam Beam, D-Gaston, and Louise Brennan, D-Mecklenburg, have introduced a bill forbidding hospitals receiving state aid from withholding nutritional sustenance or life-saving medical treatment to a handicapped

child. The bill will be debated this Thursday in the House Human Resources Committee, which Mrs. Brennan chairs.

Theres nothing on our General Statutes that says an infant has a right to food and water, Beam explained recently. The emotion reaction ri^t after such a biitOi^is that the parent might say I dont wantjthat child. We dont think that decision snspld be taken that early So if its a case where you have to have food and water, we think you ought to provide it, he added, And then if the parent wants the child, OK. If not, then . the state should take care of it.

Mrs. Brennan said she views the bill almost as a infant protection law.

What 1 see happening is thaf were allowing people to make life and death choices for infants where, if they were at home, theyd be charged for murder, she said. ...It scares me to think we care so much about humane treatment of animals and then have this attitude about children.

Beam and Mrs. Brennan make a relatively odd couple in the Legislature.

Beam is a nurse and lormer rest home operator from Cherryville who is valued for his opinions on health care and the aging. Mrs. Brennan may be a grandmother, but she has distinguished herself as the Legislatures expert on day-care centers.

Beam believes in death with dignity for the elderly, but said handicapped infants are a different case. Mrs. Brennan supports abortion, but believes in infants rights once a child has been born.

The Baby Doe case that inspired Beam to draft the bill started in Bloomington, Ind., when a baby was bprn with Downs Syndrome (a chromosonal disorder also known as mongolism). The parents told physicians to withhold feeding the infant.

An area prosecutor asked the Indiana Supreme (?ourt to intervene, but the court said it didnt have the authority to order that feedings resume. The baby died shortly afterward.

Steve Morisette, lobbyist for the North Carolina Hospital Association, said his group considers the bill to be vague and wrong on principle.

NATIONAL.................................

East.....................................,,,56

Midwest.....................................62

South................................

West................................

Blacks, unskilled workers, persons whose formal education ended at the high-school level and Democrats continue to regard unemployment as a more serious national problem than do persons from different backgrounds.

The proportion of voters citing the possibilitv of war as the greatest national problem, though still at a'relatively low level, has grown significantly, from 3 percent in October to 11 percent in the current survey. Among ta-to-iA-year-o\ds, tear of war is more acute, mentioned by 19 percent, making it second only io unemployment 158' percent) as the most pressing national problem'

Fear of war is not restricted to young men, many of whom would be eligible for a possible military draft. In fact, 21 percent of women 18 to 24, compared to 17 percent of men in this bracket, name the chance of war as the most important problem facing the U.S.

Democrats Better Able To Handle Problems In the latest survey, 41 percent of all voters say they believe the Democratic Party is better able to deal with the problems they consider uppermost while 20 percent name the Republican Party. Another 39 percent perceive no difference between the parties or dont express an opinion. The 21-percentage-point advantage now held by the Democrats over the Republicans is the greatest difference between the parties recorded since October 1977. At that time, the Democratic Party enjoyed a 38-to-14 percent lead over the Republican Party, a 24-point advantage. As recently as October 1981, the Republicans held a small but significant 32-to-29 percent edge over the Democrats on this issue barometer."

Timothy

Harper

Nation's Lawyers Are Feeling Growing Pains

NEW YORK (AP) -Ethically and financially, from sex discrimination to high technology, the nations lawyers face new trials and tribulations in court, on campus and in their own offices.

Many of those problems are due to the growth of the legal profession, according to participants in a wide-ranging American Bar Association seminar here Thursday.

That growth prompted criticism last month from Harvard Universitv Presi

dent Derek Bok, himself a lawyer and former dean of the Harvard Law School. He said too many gifted students are going into law instead of other fields.

Far too many of these rare individuals are becoming lawyers at a time when the country cries out for more talented business executives, more enlightened public servants, more inventive engineers, more able high school principals and teachers, Bok said.

There are 612,593 lawyers practicing in the United

States at last count, up from 465,000 five years ago. American law schools turn out about 30,000 new lawyers every year.

Are we supposed to say bright people are not supposed to come into the legal profession? Harry J. Haynsworth IV, a University of South Carolina law professor, said. Other participants at the ABA seminar said society must pay higher salaries for those other professions.

The problem is not the legal profession, Richard

.Allen of Chicago, the editor of the ABA Journal, said. The problem is how society wants to reward and use the best and the brightest."

A new survey by the ABA Journal, the monthly for the associations 350,000 members, said their median income is about $57,000 a year.

William R. Hudson, whose 200-year-old Philadelphia firm of Rawle & Henderson is the oldest in the country, said inflation and increased reliance on computerization have raised the average lawvers annual break-even

point to $70,000 a year in legal fees.

He warned of ethical dangers as more lawyers use public relations and advertising to compete for business.

For instance, Hudson said, Pennsylvanias ethics code prohibits lawyers from claiming legal specialties. Yet in a news release, Rawle & Hendersons New York public relations firm described him as a specialist in corporate and securities law - a possible violation of the ethics code. And I told them

not to do that, "he said.

Lawyer advertising was rare until six years ago. when the U.S. Supreme Court said states could not flatly ban it. Since then, legal ad's have become common in newspapers and, in some states, on radio and television, Hyatt Legal Services alone spent more than $2 million on television commercials last year.

One of every seven lawyers in the ABA survey buys advertising, and a similar number said they use public relations firm's.Lumbees Found Precedent In Bandit

When a band of Lumbee Indians broke up a Ku Klux Klan rally near Maxton the evening of Jan. 18,1958, some historians gave a lions share of the credit to Henry Berry Lowry, leader of an outlaw group of Lumbees which kept Robeson County under a reign of terror during Reconstruction days.

Historian W. McKee Evans wrote that, after a group of about 100 well-armed Klansmen set up their microphone and an electric light bulb on a truck bed, the Indians surged forward shouting, We want Cole! (The Rev, James W. Catfish Cole, the Klan ^and wizard). The Lumbees began firing their rifles in the air; a sharpshooter shot out the light bulb. Cole and the Klansmen fled, leaving the Indians in sole possession of the field.

Evans, a Robeson County native, who won his Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said the young Indians who routed the Klan had been nurtured on the stories about the exploits of Henry Berry and his men.,

Some of them undoubtedly could have related what had once happened at Wire Grass Landing - when Henry Berry, alone, came swimming down the Lumber River, using his canoe as a shield, firing over the edge as he came, until at last a detachment of 18 militiamen, panic-stricken by his boldness and marksmanship, had fled from their position.

When Capt. Charles McRae and his men arrived at militia headquarters after their ignominous retreat, they found that other detachments in a series of raids had captured several prisoners, including Henry Berry Lowrys wife, as well as the wives of three other members of the Lowry outlaw gang. The four women and other prisoners were lodged in jail at Lumberton.

The Lowry gang bided its time for three days. As the authorities and armed citizens were continuing a feverish search to round up the outlaws, Henry Berry, his brother, Steve, and brothers-in-law, Andrew and Boss Strong, appeared at the plantation of John McNair and

informed him they had come for breakfast which was promptly served.

After eating, Henry Berry told his host to go to Lumberton and tell the sheriff that if their wives were not released by Monday morning (three days later) ... the bloodiest times will be here that ever was before - the life of every man will be in jeopardy. On the day set by Henry Beriy, the sheriff and other civil authorities capitulated and freed the women without consulting Col. Eli Wishart, the militia commander who was later slain by the outlaws.

The Lowrys outlawry possibly could be traced back to 1835 when the North Carolina General Assembly had deprived the Indians along the Lumbee River of the rights to vote and bear arms. As a result of these and other discriminations, many of them tended to side with the North when the Civil War broke out. Their Northern sympathies were intensified during the war when the Confederate authorities conscripted many young Indiams

near Lumberton and packed them off to fever-devastated Wilmington.

Many of the young Indians, including Henry Berry, and his brothers began hiding out in the swampy woods near Lumberton to avoid such service. With so many Indians lying out in the woods, there was not enough growing corn. They got so hungry that the Lowrys shifted from a policy of subsisting on their poor kinfolk to one of living off the affluence of their white neighbors. In pursuit of this policy, the Lowrys raided the fields of a wealthy neighbor, James P. Barnes, and killed two of his finest hogs, Barnes protests brought ill feelings that culminated in the Lowry band ambushing the white man.

The Lowry gang then turned its attention to a Confederate official they detested even more: James Brantley Harris, a white merchant and liquor dealer who served as the local Confederate conscription officer. After Harris had slain three of their cousins, the gang ambushed his buggy with a bprrage of

gunfire that killed him. Two w'eeks later they raided the Robeson County Courthouse, where they seized arms and ammunition intended for theiiocal militia. For provisions, they began a series of raids on the more prosperous planters.

In retaliation for these raids and the deaths of Barnes and Harris, the local Home Guard company was reorganized

During the decade that followed, Henry Berry and his men terrorized the Robeson County countryside, robbing and killing. Twice Henry Berry was arrested and lodged in stout jails. Each time he escaped.

.Although the other members of the Lowry gang were killed one by one - some in battle with the militia, some by bounty hunters and one by hanging - Henry Berry was never apprehended again; he simply disappeared. No one ever came forward to claim rewards totaling upwards of $18,000 which the state and countv offered for his arrest - dead or alive.





Washington's Support Divided

W. WILSON GOODE

FRANK RIZZO

Philadelphia Downplays Race In Mayor's Contest

By LEE LINDER Associated Press Writer PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The battle for the Democratic mayoral nomination between a white former mayor and his favored black opponent dominates Philadelphia's primary election Tuesday, where race is visible but deliberately downplayed.

In the wings, however, looking toward .November, are three men fighting for the Republican nod. Although outnumbered 5-to-l in voter registration. Republican leaders here believe a splintered, possibly racially divided opposition gives the GOP its best chance since 1941 to recapture City Hall.

Race will always be a factor, but as far as being the issue, 1 think we are beyond that in this campaign," said Democratic candidate W Wilson Goode, who served three years as city managing director under retiring Mayor William Green and is seeking elective office for the first time.

Frank L, Rizzo, who served two terms as mayor in the 1970s but was barred by the city charter from seeking a third consecutive term, agreed that race hadnt created the divisiveness that afflicted Chicago in its mayoral campaign this spring.

'It's not happening here. said Rizzo, a law-and-order cop for 30 years before he became police commissioner and later mayor.

"We're two Americans trying for the highest office in this city, and youll not hear me mention race," said Rizzo, struggling to catch Goode who is running as much as 20 points ahead in some of the published polls. 'This is the City of Brotherly.Love. Race and religion don't mean a thing, I wish we were both American Indians.

Goode, too, said Philadelphia's campaign didn't resemble Chicago's, in which a black mayor. Harold Washington, was elected for the first time,

"We are 1,000 miles apart and different in 1,000 ways, Goode said, insisting that the issues were leadership and who could best unify the city, bring in new businesses and provide a lot more jobs.

Already the campaign is the most expensive primary in city history, with Rizzo reporting having raised $2 million and Goode $1.5 million, and the three Republicans together more than $1 million.

Four minor candidates on the Democratic ticket are expected to spend less than $100,000.

Rizzo has launched a $200,000 television blitz in the primary's closing days aimed especially at undecided voters, estimated by pollsters at about 20 percent of the Demoe^ats who planned to vote,

Goode will spend $100,000 for last-ditch TV spots, while spending nearly half of his remaining campaign time in white neighborhoods. Rizzos campaign stops late last week included a nightclub in a black

Marijuana Ring Is Broken

CHICAGO (API-Federal agents arrested 13 people and were hunting for 12 more allegedly involved in a ring that distributed an estimated $100 million worth of marijuana annually in six states, thel'.S, attorney says.

Twenty-five people were charged after a year-long inquiry in which' authorities uncovered an "extremely sophisticated effort involving pilots, bookkeepers, couriers, distributors and marijuana imported from Colombia, U.S. Attorney Dan K. Webb said.

The two alleged ringleaders, John M, Araneo and his brother, Kevin, whose hometowns were not disclosed, were charged with conducting a continuing criminal enterprise and could draw a life sentence if convicted, Webb said.

He said the 25 people charged are from Illinois. Florida, New Jersey, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Kansas Thirteen are in custody and the others are being sought.

neighborhood, and his commercials included one that emphasized racial harmony.

Seeking the GOP mayoral nomination are former U.S. Rep. Charles Dougherty; former city controller, state legislator and professional basketball player Thomas Gola; and Philadelphia Stock Exchange President John Egan, the party-endorsed candidate who left the Democratic Party to enter the race.

The Democrats claim about 880,000 registered voters, their largest registration ever, according to city party chairman Joseph Smith, a former congressman and a Rizzo supporter.

Leaders of the citys registered Republicans; who number 177,000 or 16 percent of the citys 1.1 million registered voters, express little concern that theyve fallen to their lowest level ever. They note instead that more than 25,000 of their number registered as Democrats to vote in the primary.

Blacks make up 45 percent of the Democratic registration, their largest signup in history, and Goode is counting on collecting at least 95 percent of their votes, plus a good portion of white voters in Rizzos strongholds in the Jewish and Catholic northeast and among Italians in south Philadelphia.

Smith, however, said he believed Rizzo would win in a tight race.

You can see the enthusiasm building throughout the northeast, the river wards, and South Philly, Smith said. "I also think there will be a good number of votes for Rizzo in the black communities.

If we get out the vote theres no way we can lose, said the 62-year-old Rizzo. Ill tell you why were going to win. Compare my record with that of my opponent, who has no record.

Rizzo, never forgetting he spent most of his working life as a police officer, like his father before him, is also highly critical of the citys crime rate, and recent charges of police corruption.

He pointedly ignores that when he was mayor the federal government filed a lawsuit charging that the Philadelphia police were brutal and used excessive force in some arrests, violating the civil rights of citizens, which Rizzo denied. The lawsuit was dropped after Rizzo left office.

Goode, who supervised the police department as managing director, said he would not condone either corrupt or brutal officers and rejected Rizzos efforts to saddle him with responsibility for the record of the Green administration.

He is trying to make me into a public official that I was not, said Goode.

You have to set a moral tone that says whats wrong is wrong, and anybody that sticks their finger in something illegal will be fired and prosecuted, he said. I intend to set that tone as mayor.

By SHARON COHEN Associated Press Writer

CHICAGO (AP) - Harold Washington thought 668,176 votes gave him the power to run the nations second-largest city. But Chicagos first black mayor came up five votes short.

After a three-way primary and a general election -both of which were supposed to decide who would rule the city that works - the former congressman has found himself up against an Old Guard faction of the City Council that wont buy his reform program.

The result is what has been called government by chaos, with shrill City Council meetings in which aldermen have accused Washington of trying to run Chicago as a dictator by sending police officers to their homes at midnight with messages from the mayor.

Although Washington has been in office for less than a month, the battle lines have already been clearly drawn. The Old Guard, led by Cook County Democratic Party Chairman Edward Vrdolyak, has the support of 29 of the councils 50 members, including some newcomers. The mayor has lined up only 21 - 16 blacks and five independent whites.

That leaves Washington five votes short of a majority - a shift of five aldermen would split the council 26-24 in his favor - and without a free hand to carry out his

promises to dismantle Chicagos notorious patronage system and reform the citys Democratic politics.

But although the Old Guard has a majority, it, too, finds itself short in votes -without the 34 needed to override mayoral vetoes and absolutely control the city.

It is an old-fashioned political war in a city accustomed to such politics. The stalemate already has caused one council meeting to drag on for hours because the feuding factions could not muster the votes either to act or adjourn. At another meeting, two spectators nearly came to blows.

Its a basic struggle for power, and the outcome of these decisions will affect the entire four years, says former independent Alderman Dick Simpson, who worked on Washingtons transition team. Its not just a matter of personality or those kinds of superficial issues.

Chicago is organized under a weak mayor form of government, with most power reserved for legislative oversight. But since the days of the late Mayor Richard J. Boss Daley, the council has been little more than a rubber stamp, and the mayor has held absolute sway over the citys 30,000 jobs and $2 billion budget.

Those days of iron rule are over, says the Old Guard, which struck three days after

Washington took office last month. When Washington walked out after adjourning his first session with a quick gravel May 2, Vrdolyaks faction seized the opportunity to reorganize the council to its liking.

We want the responsibility to organize our own body, says Vrdolyak, titular head of the citys political machine, which gave Washington only half-hearted support in his 48,520-vote victory over Republican Bernard Epton.

Washingtons analysis; The reorganization plan is illegal, and the rebel uprising is a nervous reaction to the prospects of reform.

Independent political strategist Don Rose concurs that resistance to reform is the strongest ingredient in Chicagos impasse. People who have the power fear theyre going to have it diluted..., he says. Theyre afraid of losing their patronage, potential contracts.

Washington may have gotten himself into the predicament by dealing away the trump card past mayors have used to control recalcitrant alderman -patronage jobs.

In his inaugural address, Washington assailed former Mayor Jane Byrne for padding the payroll with llth-hour appointees, expressed alarm about an enormous city financial crisis and

pledged a job freeze and budget cuts.

The next day he said he would give up 20 percent of his $60,000 salary to help the city - and also move quickly to rid the payroll of as many as 540 patronage workers added in Mrs. Byrnes final weeks.

He dealt away his most important bargaining chip when he said thered be no patronage, said Alderman Roman Pucinski, a former congressman and a Vrdolyak supporter.

But Rose says theres another factor in the political war - race. The reorganization split the council along racial lines, stripping black aldermen of powerful committee assignments and naming 26 white chairmen out of 29. In turn, traditional black machine aldermen have switched allegiance to the mayor, with Simpson

saying theyre afraid of losing their power base.

Rose says the black-white council division continues to inflame the racial tensions that arose in the general election campaign.

In recent days, both factions have been trying to negotiate a settlement in private peace talks. Nevertheless, both sides have asked the courts to determine whether the council realignment was proper; a ruling is due Monday.

But most agree the clash will end only in a compromise.

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Former D.A. Is Favored To Win In Denver's Race

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DENVER (AP) - A former district attorney who has failed twice to oust the incumbent has emerged as the favorite in the six-way race for the job Mayor Bill McNichols has held for 14 years.

The latest polls show McNichols long-standing opponent. Dale Tooley, with a substantial lead before Tuesdays non-partisan election.

The administration of McNichols, 73, a Democrat and son of an Irish immigrant, has been compared with that of Chicagos late Mayor Richard Daley, including charges of cronyism and ineptitude.

The slogan of Tooley, 49, is a pointed reference to criticism of McNichols: No Special Favors - Just Good Government.

Tooley, a Democrat, has conducted a low-key campaign based on improving the job base and fighting crime, and said of his third try, Everything just feels right this time.

David Fogel, the former Denver Democratic Party chairman, says that despite the polls, a defeat of McNichols would be quite an upset.

You have to remember the city is in pretty decent shape. It is run pretty well, its grown incredibly under McNichols, he said. The problems ... are not earth-shattering.

I guess there are people

who would like a more dynamic leadership, Fogel said. But this is the most powerful job in Colorado. You are talking about knocking off a king.

Also running is Federico Pena, 35, a lawyer and former state legislator, who is bidding for the Hispanic vote.

Four other candidates, all of them trailing substantially in the polls, are former state legislator Wellington Webb, two-term state Democratic

Party Chairman Monte Pasco, independent Steve Schweitzberger and Socialist Workers Party member Harold Sudmeyer.

A runoff between the two top vote-getters will be held June 21, unless one candidate gets 50 percent of the vote plus one.

McNichols says of the criticism that his younger opponents expect to step in there in the mayors office and wave a wand and do all the things in the world.

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EUGENIO R. MARTINEZ

Watergate

Pardons

Rejected For Hunt, Magroder

By MICHAEL J.SNIFFEN Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan denied pardons to convicted Watergate figures E. Howard Hunt and Jeb Stuart Magruder at the same time he pardoned Watergate burglar Eugenio R. Martinez, administration officials said Saturday.

The officials said in each case Reagan followed the recommendation of the Justice Departments pardon attorney.

One official, who was involved in the decisions but declined to be identified by name, said Martinez was pardoned because he truly was an ordinary burglar with no J(nowledge of broader crimes. The others were involved in wider activities.

Martinez, 60, was one of seven men originally charged in the Watergate break-in that triggered a scandal leading to President Richard Nixons resignation two years later. Martinez pleaded guilty to conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping and served 15 months in prison before his parole in 1974.

Hunt, 64, was a member of the White House plumbers unit and served as lookout during the the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters. at the Watergate complex in Washington on Jupe 17,1972. Hunt had recruited Martinez and three other Cubans he had worked with previously during his career with the CIA.

Hunt pleaded guilty to conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping in the Watergate break-in and served 32 months in prison before his parole in 1977. He was granted immunity for testifying about his role in the 1971 break-in at the Los Angeles office of Dr. Lewis Fielding, psychiatrist to Daniel Ellsberg, the former Pentagon official who leaked the Pentagon Papers.

Magruder, 48, was deputy director Nixons re-election committee and pleaded pilty to conspiracy, admitting that he had helped plan the Watergate burglary and lied both to the Watergate grand jury and at the original trial as part.of the cover-up. He served seven months in prison before his release in 1975.

Reagan did not announce his decisions, which were made Wednesday. Acting Justice Department pardon attorney David C. Stephenson disclosed the Martinez pardon in response to questions Friday night. On Saturday, deputy Justice press secretary Arthur Brill disclosed the denial of pardons for Hunt and Magruder in response to questions.

Explaining the Martinez pardon, Justice press officer Judy Pond said, Aside from the Watergate connection, there was nothing unusual about this. Martinez has been shown to be an excellent community member since his release.

Martinez, now leasing manager of a Miami car dealership, thus became the first man convicted in the scandal to win a presidential pardon.

Of dozens convicted or involved in Watergate, Nixon has been the only other person to receive a pardon. President Gerald R. Ford pardoned Nixon shortly after he resigned although he had not been charged with any offenses.

The Daily Renector. Greenville. .\,C -Sunday. May 15,1983-A-7

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A-8-The Daily ReHector, Grgenville, NT^;^Sundaj[JlajM5^

In The World I    Awards    Degrees    To    3,300    Graduates

Vandals Deface Stonehenge

SALISBURY, England - Vandals on Saturday sprayed soccer slogans in blue paint on five of the ancient monoliths at Stonehenge, a mysterious prehistoric circle of altar-like stones that is one of Britains top tourist attractions.

Two men were being questioned by police in connection with the incident at the monuments on Salisbury plain in Wiltshire.

The slogans, in six-inch high letters, say *'PFC, the initials of Portsmouth Football Club, Pompey, the clubs nickname, and Kick to Kill Pompey."

A custodian at the monuments, which date back to 2,100 B.C. and which archeologists believe may have been built by ancient astronomers, said only time will tell whether the paint could be removed.

He noted that a slogan painted 15 years ago was still visible on wet days and that another painted four years ago saying "free the ponies" had also resisted chemical removers.

Veteran Celebrates Anniversary

EPHRATA, Pa. - In 1944, Bertha Brossman Blair promised her dying father that she would stay with his telephone company as long as she could.

Still keeping that promise, she celebrated her 70th year with the Denver and Ephrata Telephone Co. last week, saying she has no plans to retire.

"My mother and father taught me that whatever you do, you should do it well, and I've always trid to follow that," said Mrs. Blair, president and chairman of the board. She turns 92 in September.

Violence Breaks Out Again

LONDONDERRY, Northern Ireland - Youths hurled rocks, bottles and gasoline bombs at police early Saturday in a second day of street violence in the Roman Catholic Bogside district of Londonderry. Police said there were no injuries or arrests.

Early Friday, about 70 youths bombarded security patrols and set fire to several vehicles. Police fired plastic bullets to disperse the youths, but there also were no injuries or arrests reported.

Police said they did not know what sparked the latest violence. A spokesman said the Bogside had been tense since May 5, the second anniversary of the death of hunger-striker Bobby Sands.

Sands was the first of 10 Irish nationalist guerrillas to starve themselves in Belfasts Maze prison in 1981 in an unsuccessful bid for political prisoner status.

Blacks Told To Become Involved

RICHMOND, Va. - The Rev. Jesse Jackson, speaking at a conference sponsored by the National Black Leadership Roundtable, called on blacks Saturday to work toward getting more involved in the U.S. economy and the business sector.

Jackson, the founder of People United to Save Humanity, emphasized the importance of black involvement in the business sector in terms of running franchises, obtaining distributorships and owning businesses,

Jackson told the conference at Virginia Union University here he would kick off his southern crusade for voter registration and voter enforcement in Raleigh, N.C., on Sunday.    ^

Astronauts Test Equipment

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Three of the astronauts chosen for next month's space mission joined specialists in an equipment test aboard shuttle Challenger, Kennedy Space Center officials said Saturday,

Spokesman Jim Ball said the test gave crew members the opportunity to inspect crew equipment in the cabin and check out equipment to be used during the flight." Things went "just fine, he said.

Pilot Frederick Hauck ind mission specialists Sally Ride and Norman Thagard flew in from Houston for the test. They returned to Johnson Space Center Saturday, Ball said.

Sharon's Son Is Injured

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Former Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon cut short a visit to the United States Saturday after his son Omri, a 19-year-old soldier, was injured in a car accident in Tel Aviv, Israel Television reported.

It said the car in which Omri was traveling collided with a taxi at 3 a.m. Saturday and the young man suffered hip fractures, but his life was not in danger.

The former defense minister spoke to the National Press Club in Washington on Friday.

Peace Conference Ends

BERLIN (AP) -'Peace activists from around the world ended on Saturday a six-day conference called to oppose the deployment of U.S.-built nuclear missiles in Western Europe later this year. Conference organizers said the event was attended by 3,000 delegates from 25 countries.

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization plans to begin deploying 572 medium-range Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in Western Europe unless the Soviet Union agrees to reduce the number of new missiles it has stationed in Eastern Europe.

New Veterans Cemetery To Open

WOODBRIDGE, Va. The Veterans Administration, running out of burial space for the nations veterans, will dedicate a new cemetery Sunday on what was once 725 wooded acres of the Quantico Marine Base.

Thirty-fiv^iles south of the nations capital, the property has the cap^ty for 353,000 grave sites.

By The Associated Press Bill Monroe, producer of NBC TVs Meet the Press offered hope during commencement exercises Saturday to some 3,300 North Carolina^ State University graduates who will soon enter the nations job market.

"I would guess that in 100

years from now historians will look back and call it Americas greatest century, Monroe told the graduates and about 10,000 others at Reynolds Coliseum.

The United States still is the most productive country in the world, he said, noting that the nation has survived

Vietnam, Watergate and the stranglehold of the OPEC oil cartel.

Monroe told the graduates the country has its share of problems, but a superpower is nothing if not a magnet for super trouble. He also said the national will have a great, pluralistic future.

N.C: State officials, who

granted a total of 3,536 degrees, said more degrees were awarded this year than before in the schools history.

In other commencement ceremonies across the state, the University of North Carolina at Wilmington awarded degrees to 808 students. Dr. Stephen J. Wright, former president of Fisk University

and former president of the United Negro College Fund, was the speaker.

Peace College granted 197 associate degrees as Wendy Sue Cox, student body president, gave the commence ment address.

Ninety-one associate de grees were awarded at St. Marys College, where Judith von Seldeneck, president of Diversified Search Inc., addressed graduates.

Southeast Baptist Theological Seminary presented 195 degrees as Dean of Faculty Morris Ashcraft spoke to graduates.

About 1,850 degrees were awarded at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Dr. John Hope Franklin, James B. Duke, professor of history at Duke and Janet Hobbs, outgoing president of the student body delivered commencement addresses.

On Friday, commencement ceremonies for 171 students at the University of North Carolina at Asheville were moved indoors for the first time in 20 years because of rain. The guest speaker was John G. Coli, president and chief executive officer of Akzona Inc.

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(Continued from A-I) men still waiting in the stadiums for security agents to check their identity cards.

The Santiago military command called the army-led operation a search for subversive and common delinquents and for arms and explosives that it said had been used against the police. The written communique did not say what the soldiers found.

The two shantytowns were the scene of clashes Wednesday between police and demonstrators taking part in the first nationwide protests against the regime since it came to power nearly 10 years ago in a coup against the late Marxist President Salvador Allende.

Six labor unions that organized the Day of National Protest called the demonstrations a peaceful appeal for dialogue between an authoritarian regime and critics demanding greater political freedom. They vowed to repeat the protest once a month.

Responding to the protests with characteristic toughness, police shot two people to death and arrested 350 others during the street marches. Interior Minister Enrique Montero threatened legal action against further demonstrations.

Pinochet then signed a decree that banned news broadcasts and comment by Radio Cooperativa, an independent network, saying its reporting on the protests created the sensation of an artificial climate of agitation.

Thousands of Chileans registered their discontent Wednesday by blowing car horns, banging pots together inside their homeis and

keeping their children out of school.

The nature of the protest made it hard to judge claims by Rodolfo Seguel, leader of the copper miners union, that 70 percent of Chiles 11 million people took part. Absenteeism was at least 70 percent in some Santiago schools. J

The I din of horns and banging pots was heard for more than an hour Wednesday night in both rich and poor neighborhoods of this capital city, recalling the pot-banging demonstrations by housewives that preceded the 1973 coup against Allende.

After the coup, many Chileans were willing to overlook Pinochets harsh campaign against leftists because he also brought rela-

tive prosperity through free-market policies that attracted foreign credits and consumer goods.

Riding the crest of an economic boom, the army general won 70 percent voter approval for a 1980 constitutional proposal to keep him in power until 1989 and possibly longer.

Pinochets popularity slipped, however, when the world recession hit Chiles economy, cutting the national product by 14 percent in 1982 and pushing unemployment i^) to 25 percent. The results of government-sponsored Gallup polls that had given Pinochet high ratings became secret last year.

Former supporters who had hoped for greater participation in a transition to constitutional democracy

have turned against Pinochet, saying only a broader-based government can solve the economic crisis.

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Man Booked For Shooting Spree

VERTICAL LIFT - The JVX vertical lift aircraft, shown above, combines the maneuverability of a helicc^ter nd the speed of an airplane. It is a joint venture of the Bell Helicopter unit of the Textron Corp. ami Boeing Vertol Co. The Naval Air

Systems Command has awarded the partnership a design contract which may lead to production of 1,000 aircraft for the armed forces. (AP Laserphoto)

'Spruce Goose' Goes On Display

LONG BEACH. Calif. (AP) - Thousands lined up Saturday to get the first gander in 36 years at the Spruce Goose, the wide wooden seaplane commissioned by late billionaire Howard Hughes during World War II that flew once, then was hidden away until now.

Theyre calling it the oh-my-God plane because cverj^y; when they first see it, says. Oh my God! said Gerry Huckaby, spokesman for Wrather Port Properties which owns the plane and the adjacent Queen Mary yacht-hotel.

The Spruce Goose, 219 feet long with a 319-foot win^an, was unveiled for public viewing inside its domed display hall. The building, 415 feet in diameter and 130 feet tall, is the worlds largest free-standing dome, Huckaby said.

Between 8,000 to 10,000 people showed up* for the grand opening of the exhibit, which cost some $12 million to prepare, Huckaby said. He predicted the days total turnout would reach 20,000. Tickets cost $6 for adults.

We were hoping we would be so successful in terms of the crowd that wed regret it, he said. Theres so many people out there its almost impossible to keep ticket lines straight ... They're just pouring in.

The festivities began with an airshow over the harbor featuring vintage aircraft from both world wars, and the release of 9,000 red. white

and blue balloons. Actor James Stewart, Long Beach Mayor Tom Clark and Wrather Corp. Chairman Jack Wrather shared ribbon-cutting honors.

Its quite an experience for me, and it looks like its going to be a wonderful thing in years to come for people to see, said Stewart, who knew Hughes and remembers the seaplanes only flight.

The eccentric billionaire commissioned the Spruce Goose as a World War 11 troop and armor carrier, but the government didnt order it into production.

On Nov. 2, 1947, Hughes launched the seaplane on its only flight, a 60-second, 1,700-yard flight cruise 70 feet above Long Beach Harbor. Afterward it was locked in a heavily guarded hangar for decades until it was moved to the domed exhibit hall.

Huckaby said the eight-engine, 200-ton plane cost at least $25 million to build -$18 million from the government and some $7 million from Hu^es.

The aircraft is mostly of birch and plywood, with scarcely any spruce.

Huckaby said it was dubbed the Spruce Goose in 1947, when a senator charged during a congressional hearing "that it was nothing but a spruce goose meant ta funnel money into the Hughes Aircraft Co.

Hughes then replied that if it didnt fly, hed leave the country and never come

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back. Four weeks later he flew it, he said.

Recalling that day, Stewart said, Nobody knew exactly what was going to happen, arid that was one of the wonderful things about it. My bet was that he (Hughes) was going to take off, fly across the country, land in the Potomac and turn the plane over to the government.

But after the short flight, the Goose never flew again. Huckaby said any possible U.S. need for huge seaplanes was eliminated by construc

tion of many airfields around the world during World War II.

In the ensuing years, 300 employees worked on the flying boat, adding an auxiliary hydraulic system, new throttles and engines. But in 1962 the Spruce Goose family was cut to 50 workers.

When Hughes died in 1976, the seaplane almost was chopped up for kindling. It escaped when Hughes Aircraft Co. officials donated it to the Aero Club of Southern California for loan to the Wrather Corp.

SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) - A man who barricaded himself in a house for 28 hours with an array of weapons and shot and wounded his mother and daughter while drinking heavily has been booked on two counts of aggravated assault.

Ohmer Bobby Cox, 52, was put in jail Friday night when he could not make the $100,091 bond.

Cox began shooting Thursday after an ar^ment with his wife, police said, and kept the siege going as he drank more and more alcohol.

But after Cox surrendered Friday, his wife and he came in here, arm and arm like two little love birds, Lt. Roy Tabor said.

The standoff ended when Coxs brother convinced him to give up. Another daughter and three grandchildren, ages 2, 6, and 10, hid in a closet for 2*2 hours before they could dash to safety.

Up to 40 police officers surrounded the house at times and neighbors were evacuated.

Cox had moved furniture to the front door for a barricade, and had a high-powered rifle, a shotgun and

a pistol. Police Chief Cliff Heap said.

Friends and neighbors said the trouble started when Cox, an unemployed mechanic and painter, argued with his wife, Janice. A neighbor said she persuaded Cox to free his wife and his mother, Odell, 69. before police showed up. His mother received a minor hip wound from a ricocheting shotgun pellet.

Cox also released his daughter, Debbie Williams, 29, who owns the one-story frame house. She was hit in the shoulder by a pellet.

Maj. Sam Bqms, the chief of detectives, said a phone call by Coxs brother convinced him to surrender.

He just talked to him like a brother, Burns said. He told him he loved him.

Capt. Robert Merolla. head of the police departments Special Response 'Team, said Cox apparently began sobering up and the alcoholic content of his body was coming down to normal. He was more rational; he had convinced himself that he didnt want to get himself hurt.

Heap said it was decided early not to rush the house or fire tear gas because Cox posed no public threat and

time was on the side of police.

We are apparently dealing with an alcoholic who is in an alcoholic state, and who has a large quantity to drink still with him, Heap said at one point during the standoff

Several radio and television stations carried live broadcasts from the

neighborhood but stopped after becoming concerned that Cox was using them.

"As we got deeper and deeper into the story we asked the question, Was what we were doing contributing to the situation'? said Andrew Pontz, news director at television station KTBS

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Shokers, Inventors Of Things That Endure, Face Extinction

By SCOTT KRAFT

Associated Press Writer

CANTERBURY, N.H. (AP) - They created the clothespin, the flat broom and the slat back chair, simpie things that worked and endured, like the people who made them.

But now the Shakers face extinction. They are down to eight people, two villages and one disagreement: whether to let their 200-year-old religion live or die.

At the Canterbury village in New Hampshire, the two ruling eldresses of Shakerism live in an acropolis of colonial American architecture surrounded by fragrant forest and farmland.

They have closed the Covenant, the Shaker membership book, and locked it in a safe. It was a reluctant decision, but a firm one.

It does make me sad. Id

like to see every village just in full bloom, said 88-year-old Eldress Gertrude Soule, her blue eyes surveying the empty white buildings that once were home to 400 Shakers. The only Shakers living here now are the eldresses and Sister Ethel Hudson. 86.

The physical aspects of Shakerism will die, but the spiritual things will never die," said Eldress Bertha Lindsay, 85.

The religion is trying to survive 100 miles northeast of here, where five surviving Shaker sisters also live in tidy white buildings on a hillside of farmland and forest at the Sabbathday Lake village in Maine.

These Shakers consider membership stiil open, and they have allowed four new believers to call themselves Shakers. One of the new Shakers is Theodore Johnson, a village resident

for 24 years.

Everyone has come to believe that it is best to let those in New Hampshire go their way and do their thing and we will go our way and do our thing, said Johnson, 51, a portly man with a full white beard.

The two groups stifled their dispute long enough to file a lawsuit recentiy in Albany, N.Y., to keep a $1.2 million minor-league baseball stadium from being built in Colonie, N.Y., next to the cemetery where Shaker founder Ann Lee, who died at the hands of a mob in 1784, is buried.

A state judge dismissed the case last week, but the Shakers said they wouid appeal. Construction continues on the stadium.

Ironicaliy, the Shakers internal disagreement comes as interest in their simple, elegant handicraft and devout, celibate life is resurg-

ing. Twelve Shaker museums in the eastern United States expect record numbers of visitors this summer.

The world is beating a path to their door, said Charles Thompson, curator of the Shaker museum at Canterbury for 25 years. Last summer, 18,000 visitors from all 50 states and 30 foreign countries signed his guestbook.

The Shakers, formaliy the United Society of Believers in Christs Second Appearing but nicknamed because they trembled with emotion while praying and singing, grew from a humble settlement in upstate New York in 1774 to 6,000 members and 21 communities from Florida to Maine in the 1850s.

But their numbers dwindled. Their vow of celibacy was partly responsible, but tirhes were changing and fewer people were attracted to communal

religious societies.

The Shaker membership had grown by taking in young orphans, many of whom joined the sect. But . the states began operating schoois and homes for orphans, and the Shakers pool of new members evaporated.

In 1957, when the Shaker sister handiing finances died, the sect discovered it was worth several million dollars, much of it from the sale of villages at Hancock, Mass., and Colonie.

About two dozen Shakers remained, none hardy enough to work the land at Canterbury or Sabbathday Lake.

We were all getting older, Eldress Bertha said. "We hadnt had any applications in many years, but we wanted to keep our doors open so people could visit our homes.

So they hired attorneys and financial consultants, and set up a trust to protect their money and preserve the villages in Maine and New Hampshire. Then they closed the b^k on new members.

Abdut that time Theodore Johnson came to Sabbathday Lake to write a book on the Shakers and soon decided he wanted to join.

The sisters in Maine were eager to have him; they wanted to keep the village alive. They opened the door, and today Sabbathday Lake is the only operating Shaker village in the world.

The younger members in Maine cull firewood and wood pulp from the 1,900 acres of pine, birch and maple trees. The land also produces apples, cherries, vegetables and herbs. The herbal teas are sold in specialty shops as far away as New York City.

ONE OF THE LAST ... Eldress Bertha Lindsay, 85. sits in a rocker m the Canterbury, N.J., village of the Shakers, a religious group founded in New York in 1774. She is one of three Shakers living in New Hampshire, with fewer than 10 others living in Maine. (AP Laserphoto)

V^andals Behead Church Statues

SANTA CLARA, Clif. (APi - Vandals beheaded statues of the Virgin Mary and built bonfires with stacks of hymnals and prayer books in three attacks on Catholic churches here last week.

Police believed the vandalism was the work of the same people - two young men and a girl wearing a parochial-school uniform - but authorities had not been able to trace the trio by Saturday.

In the first attack, a statue of the virgin was smashed and a fire set on the main altar last Sunday at Queen of Apostles Church in San Jose. A ring of devotional candles was left burning around the demolished statue.

It kind of gave you the impression of a ritual, the churchs pastor, the Rev. Richard Fry, said.

At mid-morning Wednesday, a church employee saw two men running from Santa Clares Catholic Church with a length of pipe and a stick.

Inside, many fires were burning, fueled by prayer books and hymnals. The head had been knocked off a lifesize statue of the' Virgin .Mary, and another religious statue had been smashed.

The Rev. .Martin Rock said the fires caused about $10,000 in damage, while repairs to the statues would cost several hundred more.

Shortly after the attack at St. Clares, the two men and the girl stood up in the middle of an afternoon service in Our Lady of Peace Church in Santa Clara and knocked the head O a statute o the virgin, About 30 parishioners sat stunned as the three fled.

Free Housing Offered Families

PACIFIC, Mo. (.AP) -Government officials Saturday offered six months of free housing to 28 families being moved out of a trailer park where tests showed dioxin levels 1,100 times higher than considered safe.

But residents of Quail Run Mobile Manor - including three families who already fled dioxin-tainted. Times Beach - listened with skepticism, saying shelter was only one of many needs that would arise from the evacuation.

Officials from the Federal Emergency .Management Agency told the families of the park, in Gray Summit in Franklin County, that they could be moved immediatelv

into a hotel at government expense.

We are prepared at this point in time for those of you who wish to to meet with our staff this afternoon to get into transient housing, said Bob Bouffard of the agency. "All of this is going to be free of charge.

Bouffard said the next step would be to find more permanent living quarters for the residents. He said his agency was able to offer the residents up to six months of free housing under federal emergency powers.

The action came after the Environrnental Protection Agency announced Friday that the highly toxic

chemical byproduct was found in about half of 150 soil samples taken at the scenic trailer park 40 miles southwest of St. Louis.

The highest level is about four times higher than any found in Times Beach, a town of 2,400 where the government' has offered to buy out all homeowners and businesses.

I got moved out of Tjmes Beach, now youve moved me out of Quail Run, Steve Blair told the meeting Saturday. Im still waiting for my money for Times Beach and its been a real long time.

Dioxin was originally found at the park in .March,

but new samples found the highest levels in soil under a paved road.

Its most fortunate that the highest levels were found underneath a pavement seal, said Art Spratlin. deputy director of the EPAs Kansas City regional office.

But he also said that test results showed dioxin present at levels up to 150 parts per billion along the shoulders of the parks only road, 12 parts per billion in some yards and at low levels in some of the trailers themselves.

Federal officials have recommended cleanup at sites where dioxin was found at a level of only one part per billion.

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Eastern To Offer Bonds

MIAMI (AP) - Virtually all of Eastern Airlines 39,000 employees will be asked to accept part of their salaries in bonds that eventually can be converted into stock, company officials say.

The program could save Eastern hundreds of millions of dollars aiKl help the ailing Miami-based carrier regain

School Equipment Smashed

LOS .ANGELES (.APt -Three children smashed equipment, broke windows with baseball bats and splattered wblls with paint and glue during a $15,000, vandalism spree at their school, authorities said Saturday.

1 guess they didn't like going to clay class, police Sgt Christopher West said.

An unidentified 11-year-old girl and two unidentified boys, ages 10 and 12, were under investigation of felony vandalism after the spree about 9:30 p.m. Friday inside the 93rd Street Elementary School, said Mel Brown, assistant chief of security for the Los Angeles Unified

School District. They were released into their parents custody.

Brown said damage was pretty extensive and estimated the cost at between $10,000 and $15,000,

The children apparently entered through a window and used baseball bats to break windows, televisions, typewriters, clocks, film pr^ectors and other equipment. Brown said. File cpinets were toppled.

'About nine of the schools /40 classrooms were damaged, said Tom Ward, a security watch commander for the district. Brown said the children spent 35 to 40 minutes in the building before a silent alarm was

noticed by two security agents, and youngsters were captured as they tried to flee.

School district investigators plan to inten'iew ^the children within the week and seek restitution from their parents. Brown said.

the favor of its lenders, officials said.

If the banks do not agree to release more, funds from Easterns credit line, the airline could run out of cash by the end of June, officials said.

Last week, the Air Line Pilots Association recommended that its 3,980 members at Eastern accept the stock-for-salary program.

In lieu of $54 million to $74 million in pay raises scheduled for this year and next year, the pilots would receive

debentures that pay 5 percent interest and eventually could be converted to common stock.

One ALPA leader said the pilots might eventually own as much as 21 percent of Easterns stock, but company and union officials say that cant be estimated.

As originally structured, the debentures could not be converted into common stock until 1986, and then only 25 percent of the total issu. Similar blocks could be converted in 1987 and 1989.

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Attempt Fails To Divert Lava From Mount Etna

CATANIA, Sicily (API -Experts exploded a half-ton of dynamite on Mount Etna early Saturday in hopes of making a river of lava flow into a special canal. But nature rebelled, the molten rock just oozed and steamshovels may be brought in to finish the job.

The explosives experts tried to destroy a dam that was built to check the lava flow, and to divert enough of it to keep the main stream from mountain villages. After the explosion, parts of the dam were still standing and the lava appeared to be

keeping to its course.

Etna, Europes most active volcano, looked like a science fiction movie set Saturday. Spotlights flickered in the brilliant orange-red glow of steam hissing from the lav and helicopters circled overhead with blinking blue lights.

The final preparation for the blast was heralded by flares and a bugle call. Journalists, officials and dozens of vulcanologists from all around the world were herded into wooden bunkers with bulletproof glass about 300 yards from

the dam.

Suddenly, at 4:09 a.m., there was a quick flash of red and white, then billowing smoke and then three low pops.

For minutes nothing was visible as the crowd waited in silence for the smoke to clear.

Slowly a thick red wave oozed though the swirling sulfurous cloud.

"Its an absolute success, said a beaming Civil Defense Minister Loris Fortuna.

But as time passed and the lava flow never picked up steam, the initial enthusiasm

dwindled.

Professor Renato Cristofolini, a leading volcanologist who helped plan the unique venture, walked closer to the danal with a glum look over his face.

"Its not exactly what we expected, he said. "The lava is not moving as fast as it should.

Cristofolini said the project was only a partial success because not enough lava had been diverted into the canal to slow down the main lava stream.

Ernesto Grossi, a

Campaigning

Britains Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher gestures during a speech at a conference of Scottish Conservatives in Perth, Scotland. It was her first trip out of London since Mondays announcement that Britain will hold elections June9. (APLaserphoto)

: LONDON (AP) - Prime '^Minister Margaret That-'^ers Conservative Party -charged Saturday that un-tetnployment would soar to 5 Craillion if the Labor Party ^wins general elections next ^itionth. Labor countered by

saying a Tory victory would lead to 6 million jobless.

On the.second day of the four-week election campaign. unemployment - now near a post-World War II high at 3.17 million or 13.3 percent - joined defense as

a key issue in the June 9 vole.

Mrs. Thatcher opened the campaign Friday with a speech in Perth, Scotland, in which she said Labors policy of unilateral nuclear disarmament would leave Bri

tain defenseless and ensure the Soviets dont negotiate seriously with the United States at missile talks in Geneva, Switzerland.

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spokesman for the local prefects office which is coordinating the project, said experts were studying the possibility of using steamshovels and bulldozers to remove impediments to the lava flow in the specially dug canal.

Professor Amedeo Sbac-chi. in charge of building the canal, told a news conference that more explosives also were being considered to eliminate remains of the dam between the lava stream and the canal.

But it will first be necessary to study the results of

what we have already done, he said.

The explosion was originally scheduled for early Friday afternoon but unexpected waves of molten lava poured over the dam throughout the day and postDoned the effort.

Dozens of experts worked into the night under powerful spotlights to repair the damage so the dynamite could be installed in metal tubes in Theidam.

However, the lava forced several last minute changes in plans, said Swedish explosives expert Rolf Len

nart ADersten, brought in to supervise the project

He said he could not place any charges on the bottom of the 50-foot-long dam because of the lava spills, which also caused the wall to double in thickness to 20 feet.

As a result, portions of the 15-foot-high dam remained intact to block the lava flow, said the Swede - who before the blast had been dubbed "the daredevil and "the magician by Italian newspapers.

The $4.9 million plan was designed to channel a major portion of the lava flow into

the 1,650-toot canal and then to an uninhabited basin.The lava has been pouring down the southeastern slope of Etna since M^rch 28 and has covered nearly five miles.

When the plan was first approved it was feared that the lava might reach several nearby villages, but scientists said the flow slowed down so much that the villages would not have been in any danger even if the canal had not been built.

Officials justified continuing work because they said it would provide invaluable experience for the future.

Brazil Denies It's Seeking Loan

NEW YORK (AP)-The president of the central bank of Brazil denies speculation that his country - already the third worlds largest debtor - is seeking new loans to over come its financial problems.

"We have no desire and no need to ask the banks for any new medium- or long-term loans, Carlos Geraldo

Langoni told The Associated Press.

Langoni, who arrive here Friday, described his objective in the United States as prodding banks simply to accelerate receipt of already-committed funds.

He conceded that Brazil is suffering from what he called "a liquidity squeeze

and is about $550 million behind in its foreign payments.

Langoni said the average payment delay is 12 days, and described the situation as "a passing phase due to seasonal export problems " He predicted that by September Brazil would be up--to-date on the payments.

Langoni spoke against the background of published speculation in Brazil and the United States that Brazil would need extensive new loans to overcome its financial problems, and that the International Monetary Fund I IMF) may be having second thoughts about its role in a financial bailout program for Brazil.

Ice May Hold Clue To Sun's Heat

Employment Becomes Issue For British ::

ROCHESTER, N Y. (AP)

Ancient ice from Greenland, stored in a frozen food warehouse in Buffalo, soon will help University of Rochester researchers probe the suns heat. ]

David Elmore and two associates recently received a National Science Foundation grant to test chunks of the ice core - some of it an estimated 130,000 years old

- for two rare radioactive isotopes.

The isotopes indicate sunspot activity. By measuring them, Elmore hopes to discover cycles of sunspots that could give clues to past climates - and perhaps a

look at the future.

"Its amazing how little we know about changes in climate. Elmore said Sat-(jrday in a telephone interview.

A Merchants Refrigerating Co. warehouse in Buffalo is the repository for the ice, which has also been used by other researchers in the United States, Denmark and Switzerland.

Soon Elmore and his colleagues will have segments i of the 10-inch-round ice core I placed in refrigerated boxes

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A-12-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, May 15,1963Lebanese Endorse Troop Withdrawal

By ROBERT H. REID Associated Press Writer

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The Cabinet on Saturday unanimously endorsed the draft troop withdrawal a^eement with Israel, despite Syrias vigorous condemnation of the pact, and launched a diplomatic push to win support in the Arab world.

A statement issued after the emergency session said all 10 ministers voted for the agreement, which lays the groundwork for withdrawal of 25,000 Israeli troops in Lebanon.

Israel has approved the accord in principle but neither country has signed it, and it wont take effect until Syria and the PLO agreed to withdraw their forces The Lebanese Cabinet empowered chief negotiator Antoine Fattal to sign the accord "in due time."

There was no immediate comment from Israeli officials on the Cabinet action.

In Damascus, sources said Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasser Arafat paid an ei^t-hour visit late Friday to PLO units in the Bekaa Valley of eastern Lebanon. It was Arafats first reported visit to Lebanon since PLO forces were evacuated from west Beirut last August during the Israeli siege.

The sources, who asked not to be named, provided no details on Arafats trip.

After the Cabinet meeting in Beirut, President Amin Gemayel asked Economy Minister Ibrahim Malawi and Housing Minister Baheddine Bsat to visit various Arab capitals to muster support for the plan in the face of the strong Syrian opposition.

Syrian President Hafez Assad told

visiting Lebanese Foreign Minister Elie Salem on Friday the agreement with Israel weakens Lebanese sovereignty, threatens Syrias national security and constitutes "a reward to Israel for its invasion of Lebanon

In another sign of Syrian displeasure, several leading political rivals of Gemayels administration met Saturday in the Syrian-controlled town of Zghota and formed a National Progressive Opposition Front to oppose the agreement with Syrian backing.

They included former Christian President Suleiman Franjieh; former Prime Minister Rashid Karami, a Moslem; Socialist Party and Druse leader Walid Jumblatt, and Communist Party General Secretary George Haoui.

Despite Syrias objections, the Cabinet statement said Gemayel would appoint a "working group to continue talks with

Damascus on the troop withdrawal issue.

The independent newspaper An-Nahar said Moslem Prime Minister Shafik Wazzan probably would head the working group and that it would travel to Damascus soon for further talks.

Salem conferred Saturday with various Arab ambassadors, presumably to brief them on his talks with Assad. Syria and Lebanon do not have ambassadors in one anoUiers capital.

Sources in Beirut said the withdrawal agreement was expected to be initialed Sunday by Israeli and Lebanese officials at a meeting in the Israeli town of Netanya, north of Tel Aviv. The agreement could be signed as early as Tuesday.

Beirut newspapers said Gemayel would seek endorsement for the pact in the Lebanese Parliament, Parliamentary

approval is not legally required under emergency powers granted Gemayel last year, but government sources say he wants a strong endorsement to demonstrate widespread support for the accord.

Once Gemayel has an endorsement in hand, the sources say, he will formally ask the Syrians to withdraw their 40,000 troops from Lebanon. Syrian troops entered Lebanon in 1976 under an Arab Lea^e mandate to stop the Moslem-Christian civil war.

The Israelis have said they will sign the agreement, but will consider it suspended until Syrias estimated 35,000 soldiers and the Palestine Liberation Organizations 10,000 guerrillas agrw to leave Lebanon, where they are stationed in the eastern Bekaa Valley and around the northern city of Tripoli.

' U.S. officials claim the Palestinians and the Soviet-backed Syrians have been

reinforcing their units in the Bekaa to strengthen their positions in advance of a possible Israeli pullout.

The moves have heightened tensions in the area and some officials fear renewed Syrian-Israeli fighting may develop.

In New York on Friday, Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger warned the Soviet Union against trying to thwart the withdrawal agreement through what he called belligerent words and provocative actions.

Weinberger said any Soviet-backed aggression from Syria would be met with a retaliatory force. He did not elaborate on the statement - a departure from his prepared speech to the American Jewish Committees annual meeting.

U.S. officials said last week the Soviets had moved 2,000 advisers into the Bekaa Valley to reinforce the Syrian stronghold.

Lebanon Faces Many Problems Still Unresolved

EDITORS NOTE - A formal agreement appears imminent between Israel and Lebanon on the withdrawal of Israeli troops. But once that hurdle is cleared, a host of others remain for a government trying to rebuild its country from the ashes of a civil war and an invasion.

By TERRY A. ANDERSON Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The troop withdrawal agreement being finalized with Israel is only the first of the difficult problems Lebanon must solve to end nearly a decade of violence and war.

The U.S-sponsored agreement will mean nothing unless Lebanon can persuade both Syria and the Palestine Liberation Organization to accept it. The Syrians turned it down Friday, but the Lebanese Cabinet approved it Saturday and Israel has given its approval in principle.

Even if the Syrians and PLO eventually do agree, and the 80,000 or so foreign troops that occupy three-fourths of Lebanon leave, the government of President Amin Gemayel still will have to tackle the problem of establishing its authority over the rest of the country.

This would be necessary to halt the sectarian divisions, mistrust and open v^arfare that threaten to bring on a renewal of the 1975-76 civil war, which pitted leftist Moslems and Palestinians against rightist Christian Phalangists.

GemayeFs government alsolmust face the question of what it will do with the estimated 4M,000 Palestinian civilians that remain in Lebanon. Entwined with the way that problem is solved is the issue of relations with the rest of the Arab world.

Of major importance to the United States is the question of how long Lebanon will need to be propped up by the Western allies, and especially the multinational peacekeeping force, made up of American, French, Italian and British troops.

The tentative agreement by Israel to pull its 25,000 troops out ot southern b^anon has tahen nearty six months ol intensive effort, led by the United States. But the withdrawal wont begin until Syria and the PLO agree to remove their forces - an estimated 35,000 Syrians and about 10,000 . Palestinian guerrillas - from northern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley.

Gemayel and Foreign Minister Elie Salem have only just begun that effort, and Western diplomats here and in Damascus, the Syrian capital, say it could easily take weeks or months.

Syria has labelled the troop withdrawal agreement with Israel a surrender by Lebanon and claimed it threatens both Syrian security and Lebanese sovereignty, as well as rewarding Israel for invading Lebanon last June 6.

President Hafez Assad of Syria has not said he will never agree to pull out, but so far has not made clear what price he will exact if he decides to do so.

PLO officials, as well, say they will have some concessions to extract from the Lebanese before they agree to leave -mostly involving the security and treatment of the thousands of Palestinian civilians.

They claim Gemayels government is refusing to grant work permits to Palestinians, and uses the security police and the arriiy to harass them in the camps. They also blame the rightist Christian Phalange, Gemyels political party and the PLOs bitter enemy, for a spate of attacks on Palestinians and Palestinian-owned businesses.

There is little question that the government would like to see the Palestinians leave. But it must be careful how the problem is handled, because of the danger of angering other Arab states on whom its economy depends - especially Saudi Arabia and Syria.

Top Lebanese officials have been suggesting recently that while Lebanon will remain in the Arab bloc, it will be a neutral country - meaning the government must elude the efforts of its Soviet-backed neighbor Syria to make sure Lebanon stays in the Syrian orbit.

If and when the withdrawal actually takes place, it will leave Gemayel with the immediate problem of extending control over the Lebanese territory now occupied by the Israelis. Syrians and Palestinians.

Gemayel has reportedly agreed in the pact with Israel to station at least two and possibly three brigades of the Lebanese army in the south to ensure Palestinian guerrillas will not return to the area. That will involve 9,000 to 12,000 men from his 22,000-man army.

While a national draft and major expansion program for the army was begun early this year. Western observers say, the army will be hard-pressed to stretch its presence over the rest of the country, even if the multinational peacekeeping force here backs it up.

No one is sure how long the United States, France, Italy and Britain will maitain their commitment.

Gemayel must also somehow end the periodic outbreaks of vicious factional fighting - between the rightist Christian and leftist Druse militias in the central mountains, and between Sunni Moslem and pro-Syrian Alawite Moslem militias in Tripoli.

Finally, the new Lebanese president must address demands by many Moslem and Druse leaders for a political restructuring of Lebanon - a reworking of the three-decade^)ld power-sharing agreements that allot posts and powers from the presidency on down to the various religious groupings, and leaves the Christians holding the largest share of power.

Under the system, the president is always a Maronite Christian, like Gemayel, and the prime minister is a Sunni Moslem. The speaker of Parliament is a Shiite.

WEDDING MANILA, Philippines (AP) - President Ferdinand E. Marcos and his wife Imelda announced Saturday the wedding of their youngest child, Irene, to prominent Manila businessman Gregorio Araneta III on June 11.

DISSENTER JAILED BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - A Roman Catholic priest in the coast city of Split has been sentenced to five years in jail for urging parishoners to reject Marxism and socialism, the Belgrade daily newspaper Politika reports. -

Reinforcement

A column of Israeli tanks moves north through the port city of Sidon in the direction of Beirut, Lebanon. The American-built M60s and Israeli Merkavas were later reported heading toward the Central Mountainss facing Syrian positions

as tensions increased between the two countries. Syria has rejected a proposed agreement calling for the withdrawal of Israeli and Syrian troops from Lebanon. (AP Laserphoto)

Study Projects Decline In Total Count Of Jews

By EDITH M.LEDERER Associated Press Writer

LONDON (AP) - The worlds Jewish population outside Israel will shrink by up to one-fourth by the year 2000 due to reduced fertility, intermarriage and cultural assimilation, according to a demographic survey published Saturday,

The Jewish population of Israel will rise 47-57 percent during the same period because of the relative youthfulness of the nations population and the virtual absence of intermarriage, the survey added.

The projected rise in Israels popula* tion, from less than 3 million in 1975 to 4.4 million to 4.7 million in 2000, wont counteract the expected decline in the Jewish population outside Israel, from 10 million to between 7.4 million and 8.2 million, the survey said.

By the end of the century, the total world Jewish population - estimated at close to 13 million in 1975 - will fall to between 11.8 million and 12.9 million, the survey said.

If no fundamental alteration takes place in the demographic trends, the ...

decreases will accelerate after the turn of the century, said Prof. Usiel Schmelz, director of the division of Jewish Demography and Statistics at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

Schmelz projections were published in Studies in Jewish Demography, Survey for 1972-80, a combined effort of the Institute of Contemporary Jewry at Hebrew University and the Institute of Jewish Affairs in London.

Israel represented only 23 percent of the worlds Jews in 1975, but its share is projected to rise to 36 percent in 2000 and it is likely to keep on growing thereafter, the study said.

The United States, with the worlds largest Jewish population - at 5.6 million in 1975 - had 43 percent of the worlds Jews in 1975 and was expected to maintain that percentage in the year 2000 with 5.32 million, the survey said.

American and Canadian Jews represented 60 percent of the Jews outside Israel but in 2000 they will represent 70 percent.

In most Jewish communities recently researched, Schmelz said, the fertility rate is lower than the general population

"and the average nupiber of children per woman is less than the minimum - now approximately 2.1 in the developed countries - which is needed for demographic replacement.

He said the proportion of Jews marrying non-Jews is over 20 percent in most populations outside Israel and in some over 50 percent.

This has meant losses for Jewish communities in most regions because less than half the children of mixed couples are Jews, he said. There is, however, conflicting evidence on this matter from the United States.

Schmelz said Israel publishes satisfactory official statistics on Its population "but the statistical evidence on the Disapora Jews is not only widely scattered but also markedly deficient in both quantity and quality.

Schmelz said the greatest change was a^new 1975 estimate of Jews in the Soviet Union, which has the worlds third largest Jewish community. It was revised downward from earlier forecasts of 2.68 million to 1.95 million, in keeping with Soviet census figures, he said.

Prince Casts Doubt On Peace Plan

WASHINGTON (AP) - Jordanian Crown Prince Hassan Ibn Talal appeared Saturday to invite President Reagan to change his plans for a Middle East settlement, saying the United States "should not initiate a policy which it cannot implement.

Hassan, speaking for his brother, Jordans King Hussein, gave no specific indication of any changes that he favored in the presidents plan. His remarks were prepared for delivery here to the National Association of Arab Americans.

The crown prince is scheduled to meet with Reagan on Monday at the White House.

In his speech, Hassan said the spirit of Reagans Mideast peace initiative offers the broad delineations within which a just and lasting settlement must be found.

My faith in the presidents resolve and his unquestionable good intentions remains strong, Hassan said.

He added: "I believe the administration concurs that the United States should not initiate a policy which it cannot implement. The risks are too high and the repercussions are extremely dangerous; for what is at stake is American credibility, not just in the Middle East, but throughout the world.

The recent visit by Secretary of State (George P.) Shultz to the area is a clear indication that the president intends to persevere in spite of the difficulties enountered so far, Hassan said. Though our joint efforts have been thwarted for the time being, it should go without saving that our

commitment to peace with dignity is paramount.

Last Sept. 1, Reagan offered self-rule in association with Jordan to the Palestinians now under Israeli control. He did not call for a Palestinian state, which the Palestine Liberation Organization has demanded with the virtually uqanimous support of all Arab governments.

The participation of Jordan has been key to the plan, but it received a major setback when Hussein announced April 10 that talks with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat had broken down.

The prince, discussing the need for progress toward a solution of the Palestinian problem, said: Time is running extremely short. The situation is growing ever more desperate.

He said that Israeli settlements and other changes introduced by Israel in the West Bank threaten the very existence of the Palestinian people there.

Hassan urged America to make an unequivocal commitment to a broader peace process.

Our vital interests will have to be defended whereby extremists are unable to dictate the future course of events, Hassan said.

Without referring directly to Syria, the PLO or other specific forces, he warned that our region is threatened by strident populist radicalism of various shades of political (pinion.

U.S. Uses Stern Soviet Warning To Flag Concern

By GEORGE GEDDA Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Secretary Caspar Weinbergers stem warning to the Soviet Union to exercise restraint in the Middle East is being viewed here as a reflection of American concern over Moscows military and diplomatic strategy in the area.

Until Friday night, the administration had remained generally muted about Soviet military activities in Syria and thus Weinbergers unusually harsh remarks represented a departure from previous policy.

In an appearance before the American Jewish Committee in New York, Weinberger was asked what the United States would do if the Soviet Union converted Syria into a launching pad for military adventures.

The simplest way to deal with a problem of that kind is to make it very clear to the Soviets or to any proxies they may have in Syria that any aggression by them would be met by a retaliatoi7 force, Weinberger said.

The response would be strong enough, he added, that it would destroy any kind of hope of gain to the aggressors.

An administration official, yaking on the condition that he not be identified by name, said Saturday that Weinberger was referring to Israel when he wahied that a retaliatory force would respond to any Soviet-sponsored aggression in the Middle East.

He basically was stating the obvious: that Israel would certainly respond were there any attack, the official said. There would be a strong response by Israel.

Other officials, however, say they are doubtful the Soviet military buildup in Syria, including the installation of new SA-5 missiles, presages a new outbreak of armed conflict in the region.

These officials, who asked not to be identified, said Soviet strategy is more likely aimed at retaining its influence with Syria, Moscows major ally in the Middle East.

In addition to the SA-5, there are an estimated 5,000 Soviet military personnel in Syria.

The officials also believe Syria, after suffering heavy losses at the hands of Israel last summer during the Lebanon war, is not eager to do battle with the Israelis again.

Weinbergers statement also may have reflected U.S. frustration over what officials here regard as the obstructionist role Moscow has played in U.S. efforts to achieve the withdrawal of all foreign forces-from Lebanon.

The Soviets have launched a campaign to descredit the Lebanese-Israeli troop withdrawal agreement - negotiated by Secretary of State George P. Shultz - calling it a gross violation of Lebanese sovreignty, claiming that it rewards Israeli agression.

U.S. officials believe Moscow is worried that agreement by Syria and the Palestine Liberation Organization to undertake a joint withdrawal of forces with Israel would further undercut Soviet influence in the Middle East.

The Soviets have been on the defensive in the region, because of its continuing military occupation of Afghanistan and because of the expulsion of a number of Soviet personnel from Iran recently.

Nicaragua Repels Attack By Rebels

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI) Two task forces totaling some 500 rebels Saturday were repelled by Nicaraguan troops in a major battle in northern Zelaya province, an official communique said.

The communique, issued by the Defense Ministry, said the two rebel task forces, of about 250 men each, invaded Nicara^a early Saturday in the region known as Llano Bawisa in northern Zelaya province some 180 miles north of Managua.

The advance has been contained in going any further into our territory, the communique said, claiming the rebels had been stopped, but providing no more details on casualties.

The communique also detailed fighting the past week on the southern border with Costa Rica, claiming 25 rebels killed in several clashes with guerrillas near the Rio Indio region of the Rio San Juan province, some 120 miles southeast of Managua.

Nicaraguan troops confiscated several AK automatic rifles, seven knapsacks and 12,000 Costa Rican colones, that countrys currency, from the rebels, the communique said.

In other news, the progovernment newspaper Nuvo Diario published an account by members of Sandinista reservist units who survived a rebel attack last week on a Nicaraguan boat on the San Juan river

that forms the border with Costa Rica.

In that incident, rebels under the command of renegade Sandinista war hero Eden Pastora attacked the boat Bremen, kidnapping four passengers, Nicaraguan authorities had said last week.

Pastora, who is known as Commander Zero, became disillusioned with the Sandinista government and went into self-impo^ exile in Costa Rica. His rebel units claim to have invadd Nicaragua from Costa Rica last month.

Luis Enrique Gutierrez Cujdra, 22, the head of .a column of Sandinista rfe-servists, told how he and five companions who were guarding the Bremen sitf-vived the attack. The boat was donated by the West German city of the same name to transport peasants on Lake Nicaragua.

Gutierrez was quoted by Nuevo Diario as saying the guerrillas showered the boat with mortar fire believing Sandinista troops to be n board. He and the other five reservists hid in the nearby bushes.

Gutierrez claimed 12 rebels were killed in ie figh't-ing and the boat was destroyed.    :

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The Day Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Sunday. May 15,1983-A13

Adopt-A-Pet i Docior Suggests Alcoholism May Be Inherited

   !    CHARLOTTE. N.C. (AP) scientific studv been done to oared with four of the 78.    ppnps saifi irma Hnffman - of i73 nf tuinc    r

. The Adopt-a-Pet of the Week is Rascal, a small spayed 'female inside-outside dog, gentle, loving, has all shots. '756-5167.

Also being sought homes by the Pitt County Humane Society are the following:

Three 6-week-old gray, gray and white kittens. 752-9978.

Four 6-week-old kittens - three orange and white tabbies (2 male, one female) one tan male. 756-0988.

Seven 5-week-old puppies that will be medium-sized dogs. 758-0672.

A black spayed female Labrador retriever, obedience-trained, house-trained, excellent with children. 355-6977.

A spayed female part-German shepherd. Good watchdog. Has all shots. 758-1461.

Three 6-week-old gray tabby kittens, one a long-haired male. Also a 2-year-old long-haired gray tabby and white female cat. 355-2956.

A 1-year-old long-haired calico female. 756-6382.

An 11-week-old mostly white kitten. 752-4440.

Four indoor cats 8 months to 12 years old. All shots. 752-1877.

A 5-month-old male solid black part-cocker spaniel. All shots. Good with children. 758-7312.

A white male cat and a black neutered male 2-year-old cat. 752-0226.

A 5-month-old female brown and white mixed breed puppy. Owners moving. 757-1614 after 3 p.m. Sunday.

Lost in Pitt Plaza area - black cat with white feet. Has broken leg. 756-3323.

Three female 8-week-old small-sized Labrador retriever puppies, wormed and shots. 355-6061.

A black male cocker spaniel, outside dog. Very friendly. .Humane Society. 756-9427.

. A white male older poodle. House-trained, Humane Society, 7564813.

An 8-month-old gray spayed female tabby cat, declawed, spayed, shots; a 2-year-old neutered mate orange tabby cat, declawed, shots; a black and silver female spayed female German shepherd, with papers, house-trained; a 10-month-old black and brown male German shepherd, with shots; an 8-month-old male black and brown German shepherd; an 8-week-old female shepherd-collie puppy, shots and wormed. Humane Society, 756-1268.

Four kittens, one black, two tabby, one calico. 758;6621.

Two Catahoula leopard dogs - a black and tan female 5 months old and a white and gray male 1 year old. Need fenced-in or coiwtry living. 355-2377. .

Two 8-week-old Irish setter-Labrador retriever .red fuzzball puppies. Shots started, wormed. 756-3251.

Five 6-week-old kittens. 758-0703 or 758-0428.

A 1-year-old male golden retriever; a 6-month-old black male mixed-breed dog with all shots; a yellow part-spitz one-year-old male dog; and black male shaggy dog. All may be seen at the Pitt County Animal Shelter on County Home Road I State Rd. 1725) Monday through Friday from 3:30 to 4:30p.m.

To place an animal for free adoption throu^ this column, published free of charge each Sunday, call Elizabeth Savage, 7564867; Bobbie Parsons, 756-1268; Janet Uhlman, 756-3251; or Carol Tyer or Mary Schulken, 752-6166.

Tests Planned

ROCHESTER, N.Y. JAP) - The University of Rochester Medical Center will test the effectiveness of the drug interferon on genital and plantar warts.

Venereal warts are thought to be the third most common sexually transmitted disease, with more than 800,000 new cases a year, and plantar warts.

which grow on feet bottoms, are also a common ailment, said Dr. Richard Reichman, a member of the research team.

Interferon, which is a protein produced by white blood cells, is also being tested at the medical center for the treatment of two types of cancer.

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Alcoholism may be as inherited as heart disease and people with a family history of alcoholism have to watch what they drink, according to a Charlotte physician.

Alcoholism runs in families, said Dr. James F. Alexander, an internist and gastroenterologist. This fact has been recognized for many centuries. However, not until recently has any

scientific study been done to determine if the cause is social, environmental, heredity or mixed.

Alexander said studies indicate that if parents are alcoholics, the chances are far greater that their children will be alcoholics. He cited one study that said 55 men with an alcoholic parent were compared to 78 men without an alcoholic parent. In that study, 10 of the 55 were alcoholics com

pared with four of the 78.

But, not all alcoholism is inherited, he said.

There are people who get addicted to alcohol with no genetic predisposition at all, Alexander said.

But for those who to have a tendency toward alcoholism, Early intervention leads to much more successful therapy, he said.

There is a whole body of information that alcoholism is getting passed on in

genes, said Irma Hoffman, associate director of the Charlotte Council on Alcoholism. People who come from families where alcoholism is present are at a much higher risk, if they choose to drink, of developing alcoholism.

- Of 174 sets of twins where at least one twin was an alcoholic, 54 percent of the identical twins were alcoholic, compared with 28 percent of fraternal twins.

In a paper written for the Rutgers Summer School of Alcohol Studies, Alexander cited studies revealing the iollowing:

- Children of an alcoholic parent are just as likely to become alcoholics whether brought up by natural or nonalcoholic adoptive parents. He cited a study which said 18 percent of both groups become alcoholics

State's

Revenue

Climbs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) State leaders remain cautious despite a report in a Raleigh newspaper that the states April revenue collections are 8.8 percent higher than in April 1982.

The News & Observer of Raleigh quoted legislative and administration sources as saying the growth in tax collections is an indicator of the economic recovery Gov. Jim Hunt has projected.

Hunts budget proposal includes revenue projections about $80 million higher than projections of legislative analysts, creating talk among lawmakers about major tax increases which Hunt opposes.

Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, House Appropriations Committee co-chairman, said he and other budget leaders were unprepared to * accept Hunts optimistic projections.

I dont think were ready to come all the way to Hunts projections, but I think we could come halfway, he said.

Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, Senate Appropriations Committee chairman, said the projected improvement could lessen the amount of tax increases needed.

Hunt hasnt said what Aprils revenue figures are, but he said Thursday he remained confident the state could lift a freeze on state salaries without a tax increase.

His budget proposals include reviving 5 percent automatic pay raises for teachers and similar merit raises for about two-thirds of the states employees.

This years fiscal budgets, which the Legislature approved last summer, had projected an 8,9 percent revenue growth. But the recession forced Hunt to cut state spending by 6 percent for state agencies and 2 percent for public schools.

Hunt has projected that revenue growth during 1983-84 should be 8.8 percent compared to the Legislatures forecasted revenue growth of 7.2 percent.

- Grandsons of alcoholics have a threefold higher

chance of becoming alcoholics.

Alexander said one reason heredity increases the likelihood of alcoholism stems from biochemical evidence that people of some races metabolize alcohol differently than others.

"Physicians can better handle intervention knowing the genetic facts, he said In people who have the tendency. "physicians, friends and family must all stop being enablers and intervene as soon as possible when alcoholism does appear,

Farmer And Financiers Discuss

I

Debt Problems Facing Growers

By MADELYN MILLER Associated Press Writer TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Farmers, financiers and state officials have given each other some ideas on how to keep growers from being plowed under by mounting debts.

We want agriculture financiers to give new hope to those people in agriculture, said Florida Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner.

Its easy to say that our farmers got overextended and the plight they got themselves in is their own doing, the commissioner said. But if farmers had anticipated the economic downturn, they wouldnt have gone out on a financial limb, he added.

Fifty-two percent of Florida growers who borrowed from the federal Farmers Home Administra

tion are delinquent on their loans, state director Mitchell Drew said at a conference last week.

Florida is the second-most delinquent state in the nation, Drew said. Georgia is first.

Despite the growing number of farmers behind in payments. Drew said, foreclosures have stayed the same for the last few years. The administration has adapted its lending policies to the point where well stick with as many borrowers as possible, he said.

Florida is third in the nation in net farm income, Conner said, but farmers still facecash-flow problems.

In addition to raising crops like citrus, Conner urged farmers to turn to specialty items like pecans and honey for an untapped source of cash.

Rodney Roundtree, with the'Federal Land Banks in Orlando, said many of the farmers problems stem from overexpansion during the economic boom of the 1970s. Farmers werent prepared for the hard times that followed, he said.

Compounding the dilemma, Roundtree said, is the reluctance of growers to take tough action, such .as selling land. Farmers love land and dont want to get rid of it. They are going down with the'ship, Roundtree said.

As lenders we share some of the guilt because we kind of went along with this, Roundtree added.

To help pull farmers out of debt, Roundtree urged the use of better management and accounting procedures, and increased reliance on computers.

Drew said that as interest rates and inflation fall, he sees some hope for farmers. But, he added, It took a long time to get where we are at and itll take a long time to get out of it.

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Windmill May Remain

BOONE, N.C. (AP) - The two highest bidders for a power-generating windmill overlooking Boone say they will leave the structure in place if the government agrees.

Boone area residents who want to keep the experimental windmill as an area landmark are trying to change the terms of sale for

the structure, so it can be left in place.

McBess Industries Inc. of Bessemer City, a synthetic yam manufacturer, won the rights to the windmill with a bid of $51,600 to the General Services Administration. However, the sale does not become final until 30 days have expired and it is approved by a congressional committee. Once the sale is approved, the owner has 45

days to remove the 600,000 pound windmill.

Both McBess Industries and Charlotte businessman John S. Proctor, the second-highest bidder, have offered to leave the tower in place if the GSA agrees. The expected $200,000 removal cost was one of the reasons the government auctioned off the windmill, which seldom functioned since its completion in 1979.

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Horses Should Be Vaccinated

- North Carolinas horse owners should vaccinate their hoses before summer begins to protect them again.st sleeping sickness, the state Agriculture Department

savs.

iiepartmental animal health officials said Friday that the diseases known as eastern and western equine encephalitis can cause blindness, fever, depression, incoordination and walking in circles. The eastern type has a 90 percent fatality rate, while fewer than 50 percent of the horses with the western type die.

Horses are infected by mosquito bites, said Dr. T.F. Zweigart, state veterinarian. The mosquitoes pick up the virus from birds. However, the disease cannot be transmitted directly from bird to horse, from horse to horse, or horse to human.

Extended Benefits Cut Off

RALEIGH - Extended unemployment insurance benefits tor an estimated 21,000 North Carolinians were cut off Saturday, the state Employment Security Commission announced.

The extra benefits were started 13 weeks ago under a program that automatically starts when North Carolinas rate of unemployed workers with insured benefits exceeds 5 percent They are paid to people who have exhausted their eligibilitv for regular claims.

Because the rate at the end of the 13-week period dropped below 5 percent, the program has automatically stopped, commission officials said. .An estimated $24 million in benefits were paid during the period.

North Carolinians who have lost their extra state benefits still might be eligible for up to 10 weeks' worth of extended federal benefits, the commission said. Those who would need the aid are advised to contact their local Employment Security Commission office.    ^

Raleiah Man Is Charaed

RALEIGH - A 27-year-old Raleigh man was in the Wake County jail Saturday without bond on a charge he stabbed a mother of two in a room where her children slept.

Frederick Leon Tuck, a carpenter at North Carolina State ( mversity. was arrested and charged with murder about five hours after Glinda Sanders, 26, of Raleigh died at Wake Medical Center from multiple stab wounds. Tuck lived in the same four-room boarding house where Mrs. Sanders resided.

Rest Home Seeks Injunction

RALEIGH - A Raleigh rest home whose license has been revoked by the state has gone to court in an attempt to keep the Wake County Departtnent of Social Services from encourapjng m homes residents to move.

Mansor Home filed a request for a temporary restra.r.:;,, o-'ucr Thursday in Wake County Superior Court. Manson's license was revoked May 1 by the state Division of Facility Services for violating state guidelines, including neglect of residents.

The home said in its request it is appealing the revocation and can operate until the appeal is decided.

Chase.Ends In Theft Charge

R.ALEIGH - Cary police charged a Virginia man with bank robbti-y and auto theft Friday after they were led on a lO-mile car chase that ended in a three-vehicle collision just south of Raleigh.

Arthur Glenn Sclv cbman, 51, of Richmond. Va., was being held in the Wake - ^ i .'y Jail Friday night in lieu of $85,000 bond

The incident began i iday morning when a man wearing a mask a carrying what appeared to be a handgun demanded money at the Cary Village Mall office of Southern National Bank,

Wake Forest Spending Approved

rON-SALEM - The trustees of Wake Forest .. have approved a report that recommends speiiUiiig millions of dollars through the end of the century to improve university buildings and programs,

C.C. Hope Jr., chairman of the board of trustees, said the report would not immediately be made public, but said it includes recommendations to modernize the mens dormitories and build a student union.

The trustees also, approved a record university budget of $113.8 million for fiscal year 1983-84.

Silver Medal Is A warded

RAI.EIGH - Caron Ashby Geier was awarded the Royal Society of Arts Silver Medal at North Carolina State I'niVersitys commencement Saturday.

Ms. Geier, a magna cum laude graduate in textiles, received the award for academic excellence, peer standing and talent in her chosen field.

In 1977 the society authorized the awarding of one of its medals at North Carolina State in recognition of the university's design program.

N. C. State Faculty Recognized

RALEIGH - Sixteen faculty members at North Carolina State University have been elected to the universitys Academy of Outstanding Teachers.

The 16 teachers were selected by polling students, faculty members and alumni. They were recognized at commencement ceremonies Saturday in Reynolds Col iseum.

WANCHESE, N.C (AP) - Shallow waters in Oregon Inlet has forced the only tenant of the states $7,1 million seafood, industrial park to close its operation.

The announcement was the second of that type this week as Roanoke Island Steel and Boat Works, a ship-building firm and one of Dare Countys largest employers, earlier announced plans to move to Beaufort because of hazardous conditions at Oregon Inlet.

In the latest closing, officials said Wanchese Ship Lift Inc. was designed to serve the new breed of 100-foot steel trawlers, which require 14 feet of water to operate. Oregon Inlet frequently is plagued with shoals that reduce the channel depth to less than 10 feet.

Its kind of like a truck stop with no road, said Buddy Davis, company president. I made a business decision based on Oregon

Inlet and it was a bad one.

. Davis said when his business began in 1981, the firm serviced 167 boats and ships compared to only 40 in the last 11 months.

This was a ship lift built and designed for the commercial fishing industry, Davis said. We have no business left, we have no boats left. Wanchese Ship Lift is for sale.

Because of problems keeping the inlet channel passable, commercial ships are going to other ports, Davis said.

"As far as were concerned, it isnt a new development, just a culmination of something that was bound to happen, said Robert WilliamSj executive secretary of the state seafood industrial park. We do see it as a catastrophe in that some very fine people went in and invested their good faith and good money.

State Fishermen Want Trawling Rule Changed

= R.ALEIGH, N.C. lAP) -North Carolina will seek' changes in federal plans that restrict trawling for bluefish and the sale of king mackerel, a state official said.

Commercial fishermen oppose the plans because bluefish and king mackerel are economically important to the states fishing industry, and the plans could hinder sport fishing where the catch is sold to tournament sponsors to help cover the cost of the offshore trips.

The most controversial of the plans is the proposed restriction on trawling for bluefish. said Edward G. .McCoy, assistant director of the state Division of Marine Fisheries.

That restriction is unnecessary because the bluefish population should be reduced, according to some commercial fishermen. Willi Etheridge of Wanchese said in a telephone interview that bluefish reduce populations of valuable small fish including spot, croaker and flounder.

The best thing that could happen to the fishing industry would be for them to be wiped out, Etheridge, said.

Dare County fish dealer Ron Tillet said there was no shortage, of bluefish and, although they arent the most valuable catch, they are good commercial fish.

The bluefish proposal will be a topic at hearings Thursday and Friday by members of the South Atlantic Fisheries Council, a federal advisory group.

Meets Bishops

VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope John Paul II met in separate audiences Saturday with five bishops from Nicaragua, where the pontiff received a turbulent reception two months ago while on a Central American tour.

The meetings were private and the Vatican did not disclose the subjects discussed. The bishops are in Rome on one of the trips that prelates are expected to make here every five years.

Director Kicked

GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) - A mob of angry miners kicked and punched the director of the National Coal Board in Scotland after he announced the closure of a depleted mine.

Al)out 200 men surged forward to attack Albert Wheeler after he made the announcement Friday in a hall near Cardowan Colliery, on Glasgow's outskirts.

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CITY OF GREENVILLE PUBLIC HEARING

The Greenville City Council is exploring the feasibility of additional sources of City revenues through the establishment of a refuse collection fee. A public hearing has been scheduled for Monday, May 23,1983, at 7:30 p.m. in the City Council Chambers, third floor of the Municipal Building, to receive citizen comments on the proposed fee.

The proposal under review by the City Council is as follows:

Monthly Fee

Residential Refuse Collection Fee    $3 per residential

household

Business, Commercial, Institutional,    $12 per container

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All citizens of Greenville are encouraged to attend this public hearing at which time they will be afforded an opportunity to present written and oral comments on the feasibility of establishing a refuse collection fee.

May 15 and 22,1983

The National Marine Fisheries Service last week announced 'that hook and line commercial fishing for king mackerel would be banned because the regional quota of 3.9 million pounds had been reached in April. The ban will be in effect until June 30,

the end of the fishing year.

The federal ban does not affect fishing within three miles of the coast, which is under the states jurisdiction. .McCoy said the action meant fishermen could catch fish by hook and line methods, but could not sell them.

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House Considers Choice Of Benefits for State Workers

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) An innovative cafeteria-style tenefit system thats gaining popularity in the private sector may be just whats needed to boost state employee morale, lawmakers and lobbyists say.

: Under the system, workers would be allowed to assemble their own package from a list of available benefits - as though they were choosing dishes in a cafeteria. Presently all stte employees get the same benefits, including paid holidays, vacation and sick leave, retirement benefits, health insurance, a disability salary plan, overtime pay and other provisions.

- Rep. Margaret Hayden, D-Alleghany, last week introduced a resolution calling for the Legislative Research Commission to study the feasibility of a cafeteria system for North Carolina workers.

Many private companies are using cafeteria-style benefit programs and a number of state governments are considering them, but thus far no state has embraced the idea, Ms. Hayden said in an interview Friday. The system might not work in North Carolina but it deserves a long look, she said.

The system we have now really is obsolete, Ms. Hayden said. "Its designed to meet the needs of a family with one wage earner and another spouse who stays at home and cares for the children. Thats not typical of state employees families any more.

For example, she said, many workers have no need for maternity benefits but must pay for them under the existing health insurance plan. On the other hand, those workers would welcome dental insurance but the state hasnt been able to afford it.

Additionally, many femiale state employees are covered by their husbands health insurance policies and willingly would forego their own health insurance in exchange for extra leave time or earlier retirement.

The whole idea is tailoring the benefits to fit each employees needs, said Ms. Hayden. It would stop duplication and waste and make the people more appreciative of what they get.

- Its unclear whether a cafe^ria-style program would cost or save money, she said. Her resolution indicated that each employees package would retain its current value regardless of how its contents change.

The cost is one thing wed have to study, said Ms. Hayden. "But (the cost of) employee benefits is increasing 32 per cent a year. We might realize savings eventually through better morale and increased productivity.

Leaders of two state employee organizations endorsed the proposed study but were cautious in their appraisal of the cafeteria system.

I havent heard enough to take a stand yet,* said Emmett Burden, director of the 27,000-member N.C. State Employees Association. But (the program) has some attractive features. A studys the proper way to go.

Burden said he wasnt worried that workers would lose benefits with the cafeteria plan. But he said many employees knew little about their benefits and might have problems assembling the best possible package.

Wed need to have some seminars and prepare booklts to educate people, he said.

-John Doman, executive director of the 40,000-member N.C. Association of Educators, said the existing benefit program offers good variety but agreed that some benefits were of little use to certain employees.

Some of the things theyre offering in these cafeteria programs are really great, said Dornan. I hope they do decide to do this study.

The Day Reflector, GreenvJe. N.C.-Sunday, May 15,1983-A-15

DX Workers Suspended

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Dorothea Dix Hospital officials have suspended three employees as part of the hospitals investigation into complaints of patient abuse.

A patient abuse incident has occurred, said Mabel Homey, hospital information director.Our management is investigating.

Hospital Director A.G. Tolley has declined to comment on a statement by former patient William E. Faulkner of Fayetteville, who accused hospital employees of beating another mental patient, threatening him with a knife.

Mrs. Homey said three hospital employees were suspended as a result of the indicent, one of whom she identifed as Alton L. Artis, 26, who was arrested

April 28 and charged with assaulting a handicapped person at the hospital.

E. Susan Edwards, assistant district attorney, said the alleged assault victim was too upset to testify so she presented no evidence. Charges were dismissed May 10.

She said the assault was the same incident witnessed by Faulkner.

Faulkner, who was being treated for severe depression, said he saw two employees knock a patient to the floor April 16 and kick him repeatedly.

The patient was attacked by the two employees and they continued to strike him even after he began crying out that he had had enough, Faulkner said in a statement to the Wake County District Attorneys Office. , .

A third employee watched the beating but didnt take part, said Faulkner, who said he saw another patient being beaten by other hospital employees on several occasions.

Celia Mansaray, a paralegal assistant for Carolina Legal Services for the Mentally Handicapped, said Friday she had talked with other Dix patients who witnessed similar incidents.

Weve talked to several patients who have either seen abuse or been abused, she said. They indicated people there (at Dix) are very much intimidated

Ms. Edward said the District Attorneys Office is looking into other allegations of patient abuse and might call for an investigation by the State Bureau of Investigation.

House Approves Bill To Boost Employers' Tab For Jobs Fnd

TERMINALLY ILL - Evangelist Ruth Carter Stapleton of Fayetteville, sister of former President Carter, says she has an illness diagnosed as terminal cancer of the pancreas. Mrs. Stapleton, shown here on the dock of her lakefront cottage near Fayetteville, says she will depend on faith in God to heal her. Her mother, Lillian Carter, has experienced a total remission of breast and bone cancer, the 53-year-old Mrs. Stapleton said. (AP Laserphoto)

Delay May Kill Plan For Lottery

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Gov. Jim Hunt has thrown his political weight behind an effort to scuttle the proposed statewide lottery, worrying supporters of a bill to let the states voters decide the issue.

The Senate voted 38-4 Friday to postpone until Wednesday final action on the bill. Its sponsor. Sen. Richard Barnes, D-Forsyth, sought the delay fearing key senators were absent or had changed their minds from the previous day, when they tentatively approved the bill 26-21.

Barnes attributed the sudden shift to a flurry of

lobbying by Hunt and his lieutenants, including top legislative liaison Zeb Alley, and complained that it was interference. Visibly frustrated, he said the bills prospects were uncertain.

The vote Wednesday could go either way, said Barnes. Im very concerned at this point.

But Sen. Ollie Harris, D-Cleveland, a leading opponent, said he believed the bill was doomed,

I think the people would rather have their taxes raised than have North Carolina in the gambling business, Harris said.

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) -Employers would pay $92 million more to the states unemployment insurance fund while the jobless would receive $60 million less in benefits under a bill approved Friday by the state House.

North Carolinas unemployment benefit system is said to be the third most solvent in the nation but it has dipped to about $315 million compared with more than $500 million at the sam.e time last year:

The bill aimed at raising the amount in the unemployment insurance fund to its original levels tentatively was approved 89-4 without debate. A final vote could be held Monday.

A companion bill that adjusts some of the rules af

fecting payment of benefits was approved 93-3 an^ sent to the Senate.

the unemployment insurance fund has run into trouble because the state is paying about $10 million a week in benefits and collecting about $15 million a month from employers.

The federal government has estimated that the state will have to borrow $146 million in 1984-85 unless some changes are made soon.

^The first bill would put employers contributions to the fund on a sliding scale tied to average yearly wages. There is an emergency escalator clause that would raise the contribution rate during times of high unemployment or whenever the fund dips to very low levels.

The change is expected to increase employers con

tributions by 17> percent the first year and by lesser amounts in following years.

The bill also would reduce the existing benefit rate from 66 23 percent to 60 percent of the wage. But it includes a mechanism, similar to the emergency escalator, that would reinstate the current benefit formula when the fund is healthy and employers assessments drop to normal levels.

In addition, the bill would change the way benefits are calculated to base them on the highest income paid during six months of the previous year instead of during three montljs of the previous year.

The second bill )lals with regulations on payment of

unemployment claims

insurance

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Complaints Lead To Investigation

YORK, S.C. (UPI) - Complaints by some Catawba Nuclear Station workers who say their supervisors ordered them to falsify plant documents have prompted a Nuclear Regulatory Commission investigation, officials said.

The NRCs office of inspector and auditor has started looking into the complaints, spokesman John Kopeck said in reports published Saturday.

That office is going to look into the matter, Kopeck told a Charlotte, N.C., newspaper. Theyre looking into the Catawba matter and thats all they can say at this time.

The charges were made public last month by the Palmetto Alliance, a Columbia-based anti-nuclear group.

Palmetto Alliance obtained NRC the documents as part of its effort to prevent the Duke Power Co. plant near York from

operating. The nuclear facility is under construction.

Kopeck said NRC officials would not comment on the scc^ of the investigation or when it began.

In any undertaking that they have, you Just dont discuss what it is youre doing, he told hie Charlotte Observer.

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1983 TriDuHe Company Syndicate, Inc

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DEAR READERS: We have had many requests over the years for those hands that we consider to be our favorites. That makes quite a list. For a while, therefore, we are devoting the Sunday column to a series of famous hands. At the end of the series, we will go back to our weekly question and answer column.

East West vulnerable. West deals.

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KQ10643 The bidding:

West North East Pass Pass Pass Pass 2 Pass Pass 4 Pass Dble Rdble Pass Pass

Opening lead: Ace of 0.

This famous hand comes from the 1963 World Team Championship. The Italian Blue Team, which had taken the title for five straight years, was finding unexpectedly strong opposition

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ing into the second half of the match, it was still anybodys title, when this hand came up.

In one room, the U.S. team had bid the North-South cards to a slam in hearts, down one. In the-other. South was Eugenio Chiardia of Italy. His two club opening bid showed a hand of no more than 16 points with a club suit and possibly a long major suit as well. The rest of the bidding was natural.

To the delight of the Italian spectators, their team ended in four hearts redoubled, and it looked as if the match was over.

West led the ace of diamonds and continued the suit to dummys king as declarer sluffed a club. Another club went on the ace of spades, and two spade ruffs in the closed hand provided the entries for two club ruffs on the table. Declarer) returned to his hand with another spade ruff.

Declarer led another club and ruffed low in dummy. East overruffed with the nine and returned a diamond. West, who had passed originally, had shown up with the ace of diamonds and was S marked with the ace-jack of clubs. Therefore, he could I not hold the king-jack of | hearts as well. All declarer | had to do to make his contract was to ruff low and either cash the ace of trumps or ruff a club in dummy, I which would force the king of | trumps. Instead, he ruffed with the ace and then tried to S ruff a club in dummy. East overruffed and returned another diamond, and Wests Jack of trumps was promoted to the setting trick.

At the end of the session, Chiardia was benched. The Italians showed great poise in recovering from this setback to go on to win the title. Chiaradia, however, had played his last hand for his country. He was dropped from the team.

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NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -Iraq has warned Japan against repairing a war-damaged Iranian petrochemical complex near the northern tip of the Persian Gulf, saying the complex was a military target that would be bombed again if repaired.

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Opening Indy Trials Hit By Rain

ECU Cager Mary Denkler

Mary Denkler Is Top Female Athlete

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor

When one hears the term student-athlete a chuckle might be heard - in some cases outright laughter. Being a student and an athlete are not thought of as really going together these days.

But when one talks of student-athletes and the name of Mary Denkler is brought up, theres no laughter. Denkler truly embodies all that the term means.

Because of her achievements on the basketball court - and her honors in the classroom - she received a NCAA post-graduate scholarship, one of ten given nationwide to women basketball players. It marked the first time such an event -'in any sport - has occurred at East Carolina.

For her achievements, Denkler has been named Day Reflector Female Collegiate Athlete of the Year.

Jody Schulz, ECU all-American in football, was named last week as the Male Collegiate Athlete of the Year.

Denkler is the second to receive the award. Last years honor also went to an ECU woman basketball player, Sam Jones.

The Alexandria, Va., native let people know early in her freshman year that she would be a star of the future. While she did not start a game that season, she played in 31, averaging 7.4 points and 5.2 rebounds.

Then, as a sophomore, she started in all but four games, averaging 14.4 points a game and 6.8 rebounds. As a junior she upped that to 20.1 point and 8.6 rebounds.

Her senior season saw her average

22.5 points and 7.8 rebounds. Her scoring average was 14th best in the country.

That all winds up to a 15.7 career average and a 7.0 rebound mark.

In her final game, she scored 31 points and pulled in 13 rebounds to cap a career with 1,789 points, second in school history.

Her 586 points this year was the fourth besf for an ECU woman; her

22.5 average was the third best for a season. She stands sixth in career scoring average at 15.7 and fourth in career rebounding-with 800, sixth in average with 7.0 per game.

She has the second best single season field goal accuracy mark with 54.8 in

1980-81, and third best with 54.6 this past year. She is first in career field goal accuracy, hitting 50.9 for her four years.

She is fourth and fifth in free throw accuracy for a season with 75.4 in

1981-82, and 74.4 in her senior year, respectively. She is second in career free throw accuracy with a 73.4 percentage.

And she stands eighth in career blocked shots with 20.

Only twice during her senior year did she score less than 10 points, in back-to-back games against Old Dominion and UNC Charlotte.

However, she held 6-8 Anne Donovan of Old Dominion to less than ten points in both meetings this year - and Denkler is only 6-0.

She concluded the year by making the first team of the Womens Basketball News Service All-America team, and gaining honorable mention on the National Sportswriters All-America team.

All this naturally led to her being named the teams Most Valuable Player as voted by her teammates at the end of the season.

Then, when she was chosen for the NCAA scholarship, that topped it all. That, Denkler said at the time, meant more than anything else.

This is another great honor for Mary, ECU womens basketball coach Cathy Andruzzi said. And another great honor that she has brought to our basketball program. She certainly deserves it.

Shes been such a hard worker that words cant describe what shes been for our program.

Andruzzi had earlier said, when presenting Denkler with her MVP award at the teams awards program, When people talk about East Carolina basketball in the future, the name of Mary Denkler will certainly come up. She will not be forgotten.

For this years Female Collegiate Athlete of the Year, nothing could be closer to the truth.

Also considered for the award was Nan George, an outstanding swimmer and all-American at ECU.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Rain Saturday washed away the first day of time trials for the 67th Indianapolis 500, although the track did dry out long enough to get in some practice time and allow seven drivers to get in taps over 200 mph.

More rain was predicted for Sunday, when the second of four days of qualifications for the May 29 race is scheduled. But Chief Steward Tom Binford told crews not to worry about the forecast, which called for a chance of rain and thunderstorms through Sunday.

Six or seven hours of good weather will qualify everybody who wants to qualify. Hopefully, well get a good day tomorrow (Sunday) or a good weekend next week, he said.

Fourteen drivers hit speeds of more than 200 mph during a week of practice in preparation for the four-lap, 10-mile qualification runs, and seven of them led the way late Saturday afternoon after the 2'--mile asphalt oval was opened to the open-wheel Indy-cars for an hour of practice.

The drivers over 200 Saturday included

Indianapolis .Motor Speedway qualilymg record-holder Rick .Mears, Don Whittington, former record-holder Tom Sneva. Mike Mosley, A1 Unser. Bobby Rahal and Italian Teo Fabi

-Mosley was the fastest of the day in a -March, hitting a lap average of 2U3.989 mph. Whittington's 205.198, turned in practice earlier in the week, remains the fastest lap so far this month.

The last time the first day of time trials was rained out was in 1979. That year, the second day was clear and 2.5 cars managed to qualify. The first two days of

qualifying were washed away in 1978. but the second weekend of time trials was not marred by weather problems.

A complete washout of the first weekend could turn out to be a break for Johnny Rutherford. Gordon Johncock and Mario Andretti - six Indy 500 victories among them, who have* been struggling just to reach the high 190s

There is little doubt the struggling trio will rnake the 33-car starting lineup, but the problem foi; them is that starting back in the field will just make it that much more difficult to go for the victory, even over 500 miles.

Erving Leads 76ers To 3-0 Lead

MILWAUKEE (AP) - So much for the rumors that Julius Erving is slowed by bad knees.

Erving, playing like the vintage Doctor of yesteryear, fired in 18 of his 26 points in the second half Saturday.

Moses Malone added 25 points and 14 rebounds, leading Philadelphia to a 104-96 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks as the 76ers took a 3-0 lead in the National Basketball Association Eastern Conference playoff finals.

Malone scored five of his points in the final 2:50 for the 76ers. who can sweep the best-of-seven series and advance to the NBA championship series with a victory here Sunilay afternoon.

if there were any questions about Julius Erving, they were answered today, 76ers Coach Billy Cunningham said.

Erving left the Arena before reporters could question him, but others had plenty to say about the superstar forward.

Doc is a 12- or 13-year veteran, and hes our leader, Malone said. When it gets to be tight, we look for him. Doc was open because they were double- and triple-teaming me, and he took over the game.    ^

I thought Doc was superb, Bucks Coach Don Nelson said. Weve done a good job on him, but he got his openings today and took care of them.

The 76ers, now 7-0 in two playoff series this season, rallied behind Erving and Malone after the Bucks led by seven points early in the fourth quarter.

I thought the fourth period was the best weve played in quite awhile, Cunningham said. For the first time in seven games we were tking the ball and being aggressive offensively and defensively. And for the first time in this series we had the tempo the way we wanted in the last minutes.

In the last nine minutes everyone played absolutely flawless basketball after we were down by seven, he said.

Theyre awfully good. Ill say that, Nelson said. I guess I need some help to come up with something new. Theyre just very solid defensively. They sure can put the clamps on you when they need it. Theyve done it every time.

Junior Bridgeman led the Bucks with 24 points.

Bridgeman connected from long range and rookie Paul Pressey scored on a bank jumper and a dunk as the Bucks opened a 78-71 lead with 10 minutes left to play as the 76ers went scoreless from the

field for nearly 4* 2 minutes.

But -Maurice Cheeks responded with seven straight points, including a layup to tie the game at 78-78. After three more ties, a jump shot by Erving and a dunk by Bobby Jones on a feed from Clint Richardson put the 76ers ahead 92-88 with 3:55 to play.

Brian Winters countered with a long jumper for the Bucks, but Malone converted a three-point play and scored from inside to help the 76ers mount a 97-90 advantage with l :48 left.

Bridgeman scored after a steal by Sidney Moncrief, but two free throws by Erving on the 76ers next possession made it 99-92 with 43 seconds left.

The Bucks Alton Lister scored from inside and was fouled three seconds later. However, Lister missed the free throw, and two free throws apjece by Malone and Andrew Toney gave Philadelphia a 103-94 spread with 30 seconds left.

The Bucks, clogging the middle on defense and dominating the boards in the early going, broke to a 9-1 lead.

Milwaukee defenders double- and triple-teaming Malone, twice stole the ball from the big center, and the Bucks converted at the other end both times to build their lead to 21-10.

Bridgeman scored eight points and Bob Lanier seven for the Bucks in the first quarter, which ended with Milwaukee ahead 28-23.

But with the Bucks -Marques Johnson and Winters shooting cold from outside, the 76ers rallied and took their first lead-at 40-38 on a jump shot by Jones with 4:01 left in the first half.

But Winters hit his first basket seconds later and Moncrief added two free throws to help the Bucks regain the lead at halftime at 48-45.

PHILADELPHIA (104)

Erving 10-16 6-8 26, lavaronl 0-2 2-2 2 -Maione 9-16 7-7 25, Toney 6-15 3-4 15. Cheeks <16 2-2 16, Richardson 3-6 0-0 6, Jones 6-8 0-0 12, Edwards 0-2 0-0 0, C.Johnson 0-0 0-0 0 R.Johnson 1-20-02. Totals 42-83 20-23 104 MILWAUKEE (96)

Bridgeman 11-19 2-3 24, M Johnson 6-20 0-0 12. Lanier 7-10 2-4 16, .Moncrief 6-14 7-9 19 Winters 2-12 04) 4, Lister 3-8 2-3 8, Criss 3-3 0-0 6. Pressey 2-7 1-2 5, Catchings 1-2 0-0 2 Totais41-9514-21 96.

Philadelphia...............23 22 26 33-104

Mdwaukee.................28 20 24 24- 96

Fouled out-Lanier Rebounds-Philadeiphia 61 (.Malone 14), .Milwaukee 44 (Moncrief 10). Assists-Philadelphia 24 (Cheeks 9), Milwaukee 25 (Winters 7) Total fouls-Philadelphia 22, Milwaukee 25 Technicals-Lanier, Milwaukee Coach Nelson, A-11.052.

Crashing The Boards

Philadelphias Marc lavaroni (8) lets out a yell as he comes away with the rebound under the Milwaukee basket during

first quarter NBA playoff action Saturday in Milwaukee. Defending on the play is the Bucks Sidney Moncrief (4). (AP Laserphoto)

Five Deadlocked In Colonial Golf

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - Bobby Wadkins found some small consolation in the no-birdie, 4-over-par 74 he contrived in difficult conditions Saturday.

Its one of the few times you can shoot a 74 and still be tied for the lead, Wadkins said Saturday after the long days play in the third round of the $400,000 Colonial National Invitation Tournament.

The round lasted almost six hours, including a lengthy delay while lightning flashed and heavy rain drenched the Colonial Country Club course.

im just glad to be finished. It was a long, tough day, Wadkins said of the conditions that ranged from heat to cold, from dead calm to gusty wind, from dry to wet. As an illustration of the difference in the playing conditions, Wadkins said he hit a 7-iron on the par-316th Friday, and was short of the green with a 2-iron on Saturday.

1 was sweating when we started play, and you could see your breath on there on the 16th hole, Wadkins said.

Wadkins, younger brother of Lanny Wadkins, a two-time winner this season, was the leader alone entering the days play. Even with a 4-over-par effort, he managed to retain a share of the top spot at 206, four strokes under par.

Going into Sundays final round of the chase for a $72,000 first prize, he was tied for the lead with Jim Colbert, former Colonial winner Fuzzy Zoeller, Mike Reid and Peter Jacobsen.

"Kind of bunched up, isn't iU? Colbert said. We ought to have us a real golf tournament tomorrow.

Colbert, a 42-year-old veteran who scored the last of his eight tour victories three years ago, birdied his last two holes for a round of par 70.

I was two over par after nine holes, but Id made up ground on the leader.

/

Sad Ruttman Takes M-D Pole

Patience is a big thing on a day like today. I just thought, dont panic and try to scratch out a couple of birdies and youll be right there, he said.

Jacobsen closed up with a 67 in the fickle, shifting, changing conditions. Zoeller, winner of the Heritage Classic earlier this season, shot 68. Reid matched par 70 on the course that was dubbed "Hogan's .Alley after the legendary Ben Hogan won tfiis old event for the fifth time.

Play was held up for 1 hour and 12 minutes by lightning and heavy rains, which preceeded a cold front that dropped the temperature from 80 degrees to 59 in a matter of minutes.

We were in a sauna bath on the fourth green and I was putting my windbreaker on in the very next fairway," Reid said.

The leaders played most of the round in a misty, drizzling rain, with shifting winds.

Joe Inman was alone at 207, a single shot off the pace, after a 69.

Bruce Lietzke, John Mahaffey, Garv

Hallberg and Thomas Grav were at 208, two shots back. Mahaffey lid a 69, Gray 71, Lietzke 72 and Hallberg 75.

Bobby Clampett, in the first group off the tee. played his round in calm, mild conditions before the bad weather hit. He romped around the course in 65, a score that lifted him from 13 shots off the pace to a position only four strokes back at 210.

Jack Nicklaus, the defending title-holder, continued to have his difficulties. He could do no better than a 74 and was at 215.

Colbert, who had an erratic effort that included six birdies, six bogeys and six pars, got his share of the top spot with birdie putts from the 10-12 foot range on the last two holes,

Zoeller got to four under par with a 20-footer on the 17th, then made a saving parfromabunkeronthel8th, ,

Jacobsen joined the leaders with .an excellent 5-iron shot, which he had to cut around a tree on the 17th. He got it within five feet of the flag and made birdie.

Colonial Scores

DOVER, Del. (AP) Joe Ruttman won the pole position for the Mason-Dixon 500 Grand National stock car race in a record speed of 139.616 miles per hour Saturday, but his first ever pole proved bittersweet.

Ruttmans father, who follows his sons racing career closely, died Friday of a heart attack suffered last week prior to the Marty Robbins 420 in Nashville, Tenn.

After he had the heart attack. I

wasnt sure about racing, said an emotional Ruttman. But the last thing he told me was that he wanted me to race. Hed always been at all the races for me and he didnt want to see men give up.

Ruttman, who was the first driver to qualify for Sundays I5th-annual Mason-Dixon 500, eclipsed Ricky Rudds previous record of 139,385 miles per hour set before last falls CRC Chemicals 500.

Three times this year, Ruttman, of

Mason-Dixon Qualifying

The following are the results of the Mason-Dixon 500 qualifying round Saturday. The race NASCAR stockcar race will be held Sunday.

Joe Ruttman, Pontiac, 139.616 inph; Ricky Rudd, Chevrolet, 138.905; Tim Kichmomi, Pontiac, 138.841; Darrell Waltrip, Chevrolet, 138,297; Terry Labonte, Chevrolet, 138.042; Bill Elliott. Ford, 138.021; Ron Bouchard, Buick, 137.657; Geoff Bodine, Pontiac, 137.510; Morgan Shepherd, Buick, 137.462; Bobby Allison, Buick, 137.232;

Cale Yarborough, Chevrolet, 137.200; Benny Parsons. Buick, 137,122: Nell Bonnett, Chevrolcl, 136.851, Richard Petty, Pontiac, 136.820fcyle PeUy. Pontiac. 136.379; Harry

Gant, Buick, 136,157; Dale Earnhardt, Ford, 136.090; Dick Brooks, Ford, 135.880; Buddy Baker. Ford, 135.731; Dave Marcis. Chevrolet, 135.726;

Ronnie Thomas, Pontiac. 133.899; Trevor Boys, Chevrolet, 132.333; Ronnie Hopkins Jr., Chevrolet. 131,772; Buddy Errington, Dodge, 131.738 ; Tommy Gale, Ford, 131.622; Sterling Martin, Pontiac, 131.253; Jerry Bowman, Ford, 131.214; J.D McDuffie, Pontiac, 131.066; D.K. Ulrich, Buick, 130.482; Jimmy Means, Pontiac, 130.262;

Jimmy Ingle, Buick, 128.365; Jocko Mag-giacomo Jr.. Oldsmoblle. 128.269; Rick Newson, Buick, 127.587; Cecil Gordon, Chysler, 126.993; Nick May, Ford, 128.046; John Callis, PonUac, 123.r

Newell, N.C., has been second in qualifying - at the Richmond 400, Northwestern Bank 400 and the Winston 500.

Theres no question going first had to be a big advantage, said Ruttman. In the past, I felt like I should have won some poles before, but 1 guess today was our day.

In my mind, I was probably as confident as Ive ever been to win a pole, he said. We knew we were running good and after we drew the first position, we realized if we could get one

THE

DAILY

REFLECTOR

SUNDAY MORNING MAY 15, 1983

of the two laps in good, wed be hard to beat.

Alongside Ruttman in the first row will be Rudd, who had been the fastest qualifier in four grand national races this year. Rudd went 138.905 miles per hour in his qualifying session.

1 think our car ran extremely well for the time of day we ran, said Rudd. The time when qualifying early in the day is an advantage are days like today. Later in the day, the track will heat up, so going early before it does is a real advantage.

Tim Richmond will start from the third position and Darrell Waltrip fourth in Sundays race. Current Winston Cup point leader Harry Gant will start from the 16th position.

In addition to> winning his first pole position, Ruttman is looking for his initial NASCAR Grand National victory. He won the Late Model Sportsman 200 at Dover last May, but has never finished higher than sixth place in three previous tries here. *

FORT WORTH. Texas

(AP) - Third-

Bruce Devlin

round scores Saturday

in the $400.000

Bill Rogers

Colonial National Invitation Toumamerit on

Brad Bryant

the 7,190-yard, par-70 Colonial Countrv Club

Chip Beck

course (a-denotes amateur)

Peter Jacobsen

George Archer

70-69-67- 206

.Mike Nicolette

Fuzzy Zoeller

68-70-68 - 206

Larry Mize

Jim Colbert

69-67-70 -206

Dan Halldorson

Mike Reid

67-69-70- 206

Jerry Heard

Bobby W adkins

68-64-74- 206

Mark McCumber

Joe Inman

66-72-69-207

Tom Weiskopf

John .Mahaffey

71-68-69- 208

a-Brandel Chamblee

Thomas Gray

70-67-71-208

Andy Bean

Bruce Lietzke

69-67-72-208

Mark Pfeil

Gary Hallberg

66-67-75-208

Charles Coody

Lon Hinkle

70-72-67-209

DougTewell

Andy .North

69-72-68-209

Denis Watson

Mark McNulty

70-67-72-209

Mark Lye

David Edwards

70-68-71-209

Peter Oosterhuis

Bobby Clampett

72-73-65-210

.Miller Barber

Al Geiberger

71-70-69-210

Jack Nicklaus

Frank Conner

70-69-71-210

John Fought

Hale Irwm

67-72-71-210

Leonard Thompson

Gary Koch

69-69-72-210

Woody Blackburn

.Mike Sullivan

68-70-72-21(1

.Mike Donald

Rex Caldwell

67-68-75-210

David Graham

Ed Fiori

69-66-75 - 210

Dave Stockton

Jim Nelford

68-67-75 -210

Pat McGowan

Howard Twitty

69-74-68-211

Fred Couples

Danny Edwards

71-71-69-211

Bob Gilder

Tom Kite

68-73-70-211

Barry Jaeckel

Keith Fergus

69-70-72-211

Donnie Hammond

Gil Morgan

68-69-74-211 '

Bruce Fleisher

Bob Eastwood

69-68-74 - 211

Jay Haas

Bob Murphv

70-66-75 211

Victor Regalado

DanPohl

68-73-71 212

Ken Crenshaw

Mike McCullough

67 72-73-212

Larry Rinker

John Cook

, 70-68-74-212

Jim Thorpe

Ed Sneed V

70-70-72-212

Mark Hayes

73-69-7

72-73-69

7U-74-7

72-72-70

69-73-72

68-74-72 72-70-72-

72-70-72-71-71-72-67-72-75-

73-66-75-75-70-70-

70-74-71

71-73-71-

74-70-71-

71-73-71-

72-71-72-T2-70-73-70-72-73-

73-69-3-66-75-74-

70-7-74-7.5-70-71-73-71-72-

71-7:1-72

75-69-72-' 73-70-73-

72-70-74-

73-68-75-

71-73-73-

76-68-73-

72-71-74-

73-69-75-

72-73-73-71-72-75-

69-69-80-

77-68-74-69-75-75

73-72-75

-212

-214

-214

214 -214 -214 -214 ^214 -214 -214 -214 -215

215 -215 -215 215 215 215 215 215 215

215

216 216 216 216 216 216 216 217 217 217

217

218 218 218 219





Sooner Cage Reserve Dies After Operation

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -Bruce Lee, a reserve forward on the University of Oklahoma basketball team, died Saturday of complications following a routine tonsillectomy, hospital officials said.

Lee, 21, was pronounced dead at 11:14 a.m., said Margaret Barrett, a nursing supervisor at Deaconess Hospital. The woman said Lees cause of death has not been determined.

The Edmond native had been admitted to the hospital for a tonsillectomy and apparently developed complications just after the surgery was completed, Oklahoma Coach Billy Tubbs said.

"I went to the hospital this morning because I got word he was having problems, Tubbs said. T got there about 11:15 or so. We went up hoping for the best, but when we got there, we learned the worst. Lee was a 6-foot-8,220-pound forward who saw limited action for the Sooners last season when the team finished 24-9 and went to the second round of the NCAA playoffs.

He was a three-year let-terman at Edmond High School, where he received all-city and all-state honors as a center his senior year.

Lee would have had a chance for a starting job at one of the forward positions in the 1983-84 season. Tubbs said.

I felt he had a chance|to

Lady Tigers Top Vikes

WILLIAMSTON -Williamston pushed across five runs in the fifth inning to erase a 1-0 deficit and give the Tarboro Vikings their first loss of the 1983 Northeastern 3-A Conference softball cam- . paign.

Hope Hopkins had a double and a pair of singles in three trips to the plate for Williamston, while winning pitcher Sharon Hopkins, Wanda Price and Shirley Godard each posted a pair of hits in three at bats. Jan Mills went 2-4 for the Lady Tigers.

Sharon Hopkins led off the fifth with a single, and after one out, Jan Mills singled and Lynn Mills walked to fill the bases. A single by Wanda Price drove in Hopkins and Jan Mills, and Valerie Smiths single scored Lynn Mills and Price.

Timberljr Rodgers and Hope Hopkins singled to load the bases again, and Godard plated Rodgers with a single for the final Williamston run.

Williamston. now 12-2 in the conference, host the Washington Pam Pack Tuesday.

Tartwro 001 000 0-1 4 6

Williamston .000 050 x-5 14 3 WP-Sharon Hopkins

play a lot this year. Bruce made a great contribution. He was always a guy that worked hard in practice and always gaveus 100 percent, Tubbs said.

He pushed the guys and made the guys who were playing above him a better player . he was just an

outstanding guy, and a man I had a tremendous amount of respect for.

Barrett said Lees cause of death had not been determined late Saturday. She said hospital reports indicated only that the death had come after, not during, the tonsillectomy.

Little Rod, Bi^ Fish

Walter Earl Salisbury of Rt. 6, Greenville, shows off an 11-pound, 3 ounce catfish (left) and a 14-pound, 2 ounce carp he caught while fishing at Yankee Hollow in Grimesland. Both of the fish were caught on ten-pound test line on the small rod shown with a Zebco reel. Reflector Photo)

Williamston Takes 8-7 Win i

WILLIAMSTON -Williamston High School stalled a rally by Tarboro just in time Saturday afternoon and held onto an 8-7 Northeastern Conference baseball victory.

The Tigers grabbed the lead in the first inning scoring twice. Williamston added one in the third before Tarboro got its first run in the fourth to trail, 3^1.

Then, in the bottom of the fourth, Williamston pushed over five big runs to run the lead out to 8-1. Tommy Wynne led off reaching on an error. Walter Wilier then singled him in. James Ward singled and stole second, with both runners scoring when Les Keel reached on an error. Gray Thomas and Kevin Lee both

singled, loading the bases. A single by Glenn Hardison brought in Ward, and Keel scored when Troy Raynor walked.

Williamston then had to scramble to put out a rally in the top of the seventh as Tarboro scored six times to pull within one run of tying it up before finally bowing.

Keith Perry had three hits to lead Williamston, while Thomas and Ward each had two. Leslie Boyd led Tarboro with a pair of hits.

Williamston is now 9-8 in Northeastern play and 10-7 overall. The Tigers play host to Washington on Tuesday.

Tarboro 000 100 5-7 7 1

Williamston. . 201 500 x8 10 4 Getsinger, Weaver (4) and B.'-idges; Thomas and Mobley

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Herr Finds Poetic Justice In Game's End

ST. LOUIS (AP) - For Tommy Herr, who thought he was cheated out of a base hit that was called foul, Saturdays ending for the St. Louis Cardinals was poetic justice.

"I like the way it ended up anyway, Herr said after his tie-breaking bases-loaded single with two out in the bottom of the 11th inning.gave the. Cardinals a 3-2 victory over the .Montreal Expos "That would have been a cheap hit, and the one I got wasnt cheap.

Herr, who had only a walk in four previous trips, fell behind on the count 0-2 with twoout and the bases loaded.

After fouling off two pitches, he rapped a sharp grounder down the third-base bag which was ruled foul by umpire Lanny Harris. Two pitches later, Herr hit the ball much

more decisively to the warning track in right field.

"Im always looking for the fastball, Her said of the pitch on which he connected. I was just trying t foul off the breaking ball and go for the fastball.

Cardinals third base coach ChuCk Hiller concurred with Herr in disputing the foul call

by Harris.

1 was right on top of the play, but 1 saw the bag under the ball, said Hiller. 1 told Tommy he got two hits on one time at bat. Thats no mean feat.

In addition, Herr got a second chance when Montreal first baseman A1 Oliver slipped going after a pop foul

that would have ended the inning.

Herrs hit came off Montreal relief ace Jeff Reardon, 1-1, and made a winner of St. Louis star Bruce Sutter, 4-1, who entered in the 10th.

Ken Oberkfell singled to start the 11th and went to third on Keith Hernandezs one-out

MONTKEAL

ab r h bi

Kaines If 4 m U W ohlfTd rf i 0 I u Da\son cf ) u I u Carter lb .vO ii o Wallai'b :ib 4 u ii ii .''peier ss 3 M u Karnuii c Oliver uh Khnn ib Kogers p I'romff ph I rt'l j Keardiin p 0 u u u

STLOLIS

ab r h bi

MuOee tf    4    !    U    l)

Oberkfl    ib    4    1    3    1

lorg rf (000 Hendrck rf    1    o    o    0

KHrndz    lb    .i    0    2    0

:i 0 I 0 .ill) 4 I) 1 I) I) <11)

Porter

Braun

Creen

Sutter

!irk

Tulala 38 2 8 2

4 111 2 0 10 10 10 0 0 0 0 Uuirk ph 10 0 0 Herr 2b 4 0 11

0.smith Si 4 0 1 0

1.aPoint p 3 0 0 0 Lastrnth If 10 0 0 Totals 37 3 9 3

Fair Catch

Matthew Krause of Carolina Beach, 18 months old, finds a new use for a baseball glove as he was waiting for his dad to finish softball practice. (AP Laserphoto)

Montreal    ooo    000    002    OO- 2

ScLouis    100    000    100    01-3

Twooul hen inning run scored Cam-W inning RBI Herri2i K-Hamijs DP .Montreal 2. StLouis 2 I,OB-.Montreal 8. .StLouis 8    2B--

iberklell Wohliord. KHernandez

HR-Porter .1 S- Rogers

Montreal

Kogers Reardon L i t StLouis LaPoint Sutter W.41

SB-McCee i3i. Green IP H R ER BB SO

2 2-3 4    1    1    I

2 2

HBP lorg b\ Rogers l.aP oint WP LaPoint A 23.8tr

3    2

10 0 0 Wallach bv T-3 14

Reuss, Chicken Lift L.A.

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Even the San Diego Chicken couldnt stop Jerry Reuss from pitching the Los .Angeles Dodgers to a 4-1 victory over the Padres Saturday,

"The Chicken is there for fun. and I wish 1 could have sat there and watched him perform. said Reuss, who on several occasions continued his warm-up pitches while the Chicken went through his antics just a few feet away, He sets those things up before the game and I told him its fine with me but just dont come too close

Padre hitters werent coming too close to Reuss. either. Reuss, 5-1, allowed five hits an struck out six in pitching

his first complete game of the

season.

"I did everything a pitcher looks to do when he takes the mound. said Reuss. I was able to get ahead of the hitters and then work them in and out My location was excellent and I was able to maintain my intensity in the late inning.

Home runs by Mike Scioscia and Greg Brock backed Reuss pitching as the Dodgers posted their eighth victory in the last 10 games.

Reuss, who ran his lifetime record against the Padres to 17-5, retired the first 10 batters he faced before Gene Richards beat out a high chopper to first base with one out In the fourth for the first San Diego

hit. Juan Bonilla doubled Richards to third and he scored on a grounder by Steve Garvey.

San Diegos Eric Show, 4-2, gave up only five hits in seven innings, but two of them came in the second when Ron Roenicke singled and Scioscia belted his first home run of the season to give the Dodgers a 2-0 lead.

Los Angeles got only two more hits off Show, including Brocks seventh homer leading off the fourth.

The Dodgers final run came in the eighth off Floyd Chiffer. Steve Sax extended his hitting streak to 10 games with a leadoff single, was balked to second, moved to third on a

grounder and scored when Pedro Guerreros grounder to short skipped off Mario Ramirezs glove for an error.

LOS ANGLS SAN DIEGO

ab r K*bi    ab    r    h    bi

SSax 2b    4    110    Wiegins cf    4 0 1 0

Landre cf    4    0 10    Ricnrds If    4 I 1 0

Baker If    3 0 0 0    Bonilla    2b    4 0 10

Guerer 3b    4 0 0 0    Garvey    lb    4 0 0 1

Brock Ib    3 111    Lezcano    rf    3 0 0 0

Roenke rf    4 1 2 0    TKendy    c    3 0 0 0,

Sciosa e    2 112    Salazar    3b    3 0 1 0

Yeager c    2 0 0 0    MRmn    ss    3 0 0 0

Andrsn ss    3 0 0 0    Stiow p    2 0 10

Reuss p    4 0 0 0    Chiffer    p    0 0 0 0

Bevcua ph 10 0 0 Thrmnd    p    0 0 0 0

Totals    33 4 6 3    Totals    31 1 5 1

Los Angeles    030    100    Old-    4

San Diego    000    lOO    000-    1

Garnet inning RBI Scioscia 11) E-MRamirez DP-San Diego 1 LOB- Los Angeles 5. San Diego 3 2B-Landreaux HR-Scioscia ii). Brock 17)

Los Angeles

Reuss Wl-l San Diego Show L,4-f Chiffer Thurmond

IP H R ER BB SO

BK-Chiffer T-2 18 A-34.M7

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double. Reardon intentionally walked Darrell Porter to load the bases and struck out pinch hitter Jamie Quirk. But Herr ripped his game-winning hit after Oliver slipped and fell on

the rain-drenched warning track while chasing his pop foul,

St. Louis starter Dave LaP-oint carried a five-hit shutout and a 2-0 lead into the

ninth inning. However, with one out he walked Chris Speier and surrendered a pinch single to Oliver Speier and Oliver advanced on Doug Flynns grounder and both

Germain Hopes For 2nd Win At Virginia Classic

SUFFOLK, Va. (AP) -Veteran Dot Germain, who has won only one tourney in nine years on the LPGA tour, fired an 8-under-par 64 Saturday for a 36-hole total of 137 and a 4-shot lead in the $150,000 United Virginia Bank Classic.

Five shots off the lead after Fridays opening round. Germain had two birdie runs of three holes in a row. The 35-year-old president of the LPGA Player Council finished her round over the 6,200-yard Sleepy Hole Golf Course with nine birdies and one bogey

LeAnn Cassaday, who has made the cut in onlv one of

eight tournaments this season, and Stephanie Farv^ig were tied for second at 141. Farwig shot a 68 Saturday and Cassaday, who said her best previous round this year was a 71, had a 69.

First-day leader Alice Miller, still looking for her first tour victory, soared to a 74 after her opening 68 and was tied for fourth at 142 with Debbie Massey, who added a 69 to her opening 73.

There was a four-way deadlock at 143, 1 under par going into Sundays final round, among Betsy King and Leonore Muraoka, Myra Van Hoose and .Mary Dwyer.

One of the pre-tournament

favorites, Beth Daniel, shot her second 72 and was tied at 144 with Silvia Bertolaccini and Kathy Postlewait.

The only former winner of this tournament. Jan Stephenson - who holds the record with a 14-under-par 205 two years ago - shot a 77 for a 152 and barely made the cut, which was at 15*3.

Depending on how it s figured, Germain tied the tournament record for. one round. Nancy Lopez had a 64 three years ago at Elizabeth .Manor, but that was 9 under par. Last years winner: Sally Little, shot a 65 at Sleepy Hole when the par was 73.

scored when pinch hitter Warren Cromartie singled.

Willie .McGee walked to open the St. Louis first, stole second and continued to third when catcher Bobby Ramos bounced his throw into center field. Oberkfell then sliced a sinking line drive to left and when Tim Raines tried for a shoestring catch the ball went off his glove for a double as .McGee scored.

.Montreal starter Steve Rogers then checked the Cardinals until Porter belted his fifth homer of the year in the seventh for a 2-0 lead.

It was St, Louis fourth straight victory, including three in a row over Montreal.

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Shirley Struggles, Yanks Hold Off Sox

NEW YORK (.API - For seven innings. Bob Shirley had coasted along with a two-hit shutout while the New York Yankees built a 7-0 lead over Chicago.

But that changed quickly as the White Sox faught back with five runs in the next two innings before reliever Rich Gossage stopped then).

'I just ran out of steam, said Shirley, 2-2, following the Yankees 8-5 victory Saturday that extended Chicago's losing streak to five games. "Maybe I did lose some concentration. Im mad about that

Gossage, who struggled earlier in the season, came on with the bases loaded and none out. He retired two batters before pinch hitter Rudy Law poked a two-run opposite-field single but picked up his .fourth save in his last four appearances.

"Im beginning to get guys out now, Gossage said after the Yankees 12 hits and eight runs broke them out of a

three-game batting slump in which they scored only six runs while managing just 16 hits.

"It feels good to be back in the ballpark, said Manager Billy Martin, who had been suspended for those three games. But it feels better to see those runs and hits on the board.

Jerry Mumphrey collected four hits, including a triple, boosting his average to .244.

"This is a big psychological lift for me. said the center fielder, whose four-hit effort was only the second of the season for the Yanks. "And it was a really big lift for the team.

Shirley blanked the White Sox on two hits until the eighth, when he lost his shutout bid and was nicked for three runs after issuing his only two walks. Shirley struck out five and left after Ron Kittles leadoff single in the ninth.

The Yankees took a 1-0 lead in the first inning when Bert

Campaneris walked with one out and Dave Winfield tripled off Britt Bums, 0-2, who lasted into the seventh inning and was charged with four runs. Last year. Bums posted a 2-0 record against New York and

CHICAGO    NEW    YORK

abrbbi    abrbbi

Gray 3b    4 111 Rndlph 2b 5 M I

Walker ph    1 0 0 0    Cmpnrs    3b 4    2    2    2

Brmrd &    4 0 2 2    Winfield    If 5    1    2    1

Baines rf    4    0 0 0    Baylor    dh    3    0    i    i

Kittle If    4    110    Piniella    rf    2    0    0    0

Paciork lb    4    I I 0    Smaiiev    Ib4    o    0    o

Luznski dh    2    1 0 0    Cerone    c    4    0    12

VLaw pr    0 0 0 0    MuphO'    cf 4    3    4    0

Fisk c    4 0 0 0    Robrtsn    ss 2    1    1    I

Kuntz cf    3 0 0 0

Hairstn pb    I 0 0 0

Dbzski ss    2 I 1 0

RLaw ph 10 12

Totals 34 S 7 S Totals 33 S 12 8

Chicaso    000    000    032-    5

New York    110    000    Six-    8

Game W'lnnmgRBI - Winfield i6) E-Piniella LOB-Chicago 5, New York 7 2B-Bemazard. Baylor. Campaneris 3B-Winfield, .Mumphrey SB-Dybzinski ill, Mumphrey Ui S-^-Robertson SF- Baylor

H R ER BB SO

Chicago Burns L.0-2 Lamp Tidrow New York Shirley W.2 2 Frazier Gossage S.4

6    4    4    3    3

4    3    3    0    1

2    110    0

1 I

0 0

Bums pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. Shirley pitched to 1, batter in the 9th. Frazier pitched to 2 batters in the 9th HBP Pimella by Lamp T-2 57 A-

30.031

did not allow an earned run in 181-3 innings.

The Yankees added a run in the second inning when Mumphrey singled, stole second and scored on Andre Robertsons single.

New York put the game away with a five-mn seventh, capped by Rick Cerones two-mn single. Mumphreys leadoff triple and a walk to Robertson chased Burns. Willie Randolph and Campaneris laced RBI singles off Dennis Lamp and Don Baylor delivered a sacrifice fly. Campaneris doubled home the Yankees final .mn in the eighth.

Seattle............4

Oakland..........1

OAKLAND, Calif, (AP) -Another rookie left-hander assumed the stopper role Saturday when Seattles Matt Young pitched the Mariners to a 4-1 victory bver the Oakland As.

Oaklands Bill Krueger had

Crashinq Home

ig

Toronto Blue Jays runner Barry Bonnell (left) crashes into Cleveland Indians pitcher Bert

Blyleven as Bonnell scored Torontos first run on a passed ball in the fourth inning. (AP Laserphoto)

Akeem Still Cougs' Dream

beaten Seattle 9-2 Friday night, but it was Youngs turn Saturday as he scattered four hits in eight innings to improve his record to 4-3, the same as Kruegers. Both young hurlers lead their teams in victories.

"Him (Young) and Kmeger - theyre the best two young left-handers Ive seen since (New Yorks Dave) Righetti, said Seattle Manager Rene Lachemann. I think Matt right now throws a little harder. But they both are doing the things good pitchers do.

"Weve kind of been chasing each other all year, said Young. 1 was looking at his (Kmegers) stats before the game and we both had the same amount of innings, walks, and strikeouts. It was amazing.

Dave Hendersons three-run homer in the fourth inning gave Young the support he needed and made a loser out of Oaklands Rick Langford, 0-4. Since coming off the disabled list May 4, Langford has allowed 12 earned runs in less than seven innings and may be taken out of the rotation.

Im just not capable of telling you wht the problem is, said Langford. Against Henderson, I had him 0-2, but when I tried to bust him high and inside, I threw the ball right over the plate instead. That was the strategy involved. You know the outcome.

The Mariners nicked Langford for a run in the first inning on a walk to A1 Cowens and Pat Putnams triple. With one out m the fourth, singles by Putnam and Ken Phelps preceded Hendersons fourth home run of the season.

Oakland scored an unearned run in the sixth. Bill Almon walked, went to third on a wild pickoff throw by Young and scored on Jeff Burroughs single.

Young, 4-3, allowed all four Oakland hits, walked four and* struck out six in eight innings before Bill Caudill came on to earn his seventh save.

SEATTLE    OAKLAND

abrbbi    abrbbi

SHndsn If 3 U    I 0 RHndsn    If 2 0    0    0

.Moses If 2 0    0 0 MOavis    rf 4 0    0    0

JAIIn 3b 4 0 0 0 Almon 3b 3 110 Cowens rf 3 1    0 0 Bur^    dh 3 0    2    1

Fulnam lb 4 I    3 1 .Murphv    cf 4 0    1    0

Phelps dh 3 1    I 0 K.Moore    lb 4 0    0    0

Edler dh 10 0 0 Lopes 2b    4    0    0 0

DHndsn cf 4    l 1 3 Keamev c    3    0    0 0

Sweet c 4    0 0 0 Meyer 'ph    10    0 0

TCruz ss 4    0 10 Phillips ss    2    0    0 o

MCstilo 2b 2    0 I 0 Gross 3b    0    0    0 0

JCruz 2b 0    0 0 0

Totals 34 4 8 4 Totals 30 1 4 1

Seattle

OaUand

100 300 OOO- 4 000 001 000- 1

HOUSTON (AP) - .Akeem Olajuwon, the 7-foot center who led Phi Slama Jamma into the NCAA basketball final, said Saturday he'll return to the University of

Bolling Leads GoldbCup Golf

CH.ATTAijfeoGA. Tenn. i.APi - Reigning South .African Open champion Charlie Bolling turned in a 3-under-par 68 Saturday to take the lead after three rounds in the $150,000 Chattanooga Gold Cup Classic at Valleybrook Golf and Country Club.'

Bolling holds a 2-shot edge over Gavin Levenson, who shot a 67 Saturday, with a three-round total of 201. 12 under.

Three strokes back at 204 are Tommy Aaron, Jeff Mitchell and Skeeter Heath.

Aaron moved into contention by tying the course record of 63 with a nine-birdie, one-bogey round.

Houston rather than turn pro and forgo his junior year.

Olajuwon, who had been wavering all week, announced his decision just hours before the National Basketball Associations midnight Saturday deadline for underclassmen to notify the league of their intention to leave college.

Im definitely going to stay in school, he said in a CBS interview during halftime of the Philadelphia 76ers-Milwaukee Bucks NBA playoff game.

He said he had conferred with his family in Lagos, Nigeria, before making his decision and they want me to stay in school, so 1 decided to stay in school.

Earlier this week, Memphis States Keith Lee, Georgetowns Patrick Ewing and Earl Joms of the University of the District of Columbia, said they also would stay in school another season. Lee is a 6-10 junior forward, while Ewing and Jones are both 7-foot sophomore centers. Olajuwon said Houston

Coach Guy Lewis was out of town and did not aware of his final decision.

He thought 1 was going to go, Olajuwon said.

Houston teammate Clyde Drexler, a junior forward, announced Friday that he would turn pro.

Other underclassmen who have decided to turn pro so far are center Russell Cross of Purdue and guards Ennis Whatley of Alabama, Byron Scott of Arizona State and Derek Harper of Illinois. Whatley is a sophomore while the others are juniors.

Its my childhood dream and I was not going to let the opportunity pass me by, Drexler said Saturday.

Olajuwon said he had three goals: to be an All-American, to get his degree and to win the national championship. The Cougars almost did last month, losing 54-52 to North Carolina State in the final seconds on a dunk while Olajuwon was out of position.

Drexler was a second-team All-American and was the teams No, 2 leading scorer

with a 16.3 average. Olajuwon led the Cougars with 67 dunks and'was among the nations leading rebounders with an 11.2 average last season.

Drexler said he advised Olajuwon he had to make his own decision and not follow Drexlerslead.

Clyde told Akeem, Dont do anything just because Im doing it, Houston attorney Jerry Bonney said. "1 think that helped.

The Cougars advanced to the Final Four of the NCAA tournament two years straight with Drexler anij Olajuwon as the backbone of the team

Game-Winning RBI - Putnam I2i E-Young. .Almon DP-Sealtle 1. Oakland 1 LOB-Seattle 6, Oakland 7 2B- TCruz, Burroughs 3B-Putnam HR DHenderson 141

IP H R ER BB SO

Seattle

Young W.4 3    8    4    1    0    4    6

Caudill S,7    1    0    0    0    0    1

Oakland Langford L,0-t    3 2-3    5

Conroy    51-3    3

HBP-.MCastillo by Lan bv Young T-2 39 A-17,09

4    4    10

0    0    12

zford. Phillips

Toronto...........8

Cleveland.........1

CLEVEUND (AP) - Luis Leals flirt with immortality was dashed by something truly immortal - Mother Nature.

Leal pitched five hitless innings against Cleveland Saturday before a long rain delay forced his removal. Roy

Lee Jackson came on and yielded one hit - Chris Bandos eighth-inning line single to left - as the Blue Jays defeated the Indians 8-1.

"The 1-hour, 42-minute rain delay came with Toronto batting and leading 6-0 in the top of the sixth.

"1 said to myself, Rain, oh well, I dont care. 1 just wanted us to win anyway we could, Leal said after evening his record at 3-3, (Manager ) Bobby Cox and I talked during the delay and we figured a couple of hours was just toolong to sit. He said hes bringing in Roy Lee and I said okay

Leal, a 26-year-old righthander. didnt strike out a batter while walking four. The effort was his third straight victory. Ironically, Leal was the losing pitcher May 15, 1981, when Len Barker of the Indians threw a perfect game at the Blue Jays in Cleveland Stadium.

Cox explained that the long rain delay wait made it "too long for him to continue. 1 talked to him a couple of times during the delay and he said it was up to me as to what we would do. He had a long way to go (for the no-hitter), too.

His last two starts before this were outstanding with just super stuff. Cox said, adding, You should have seen him his last time in Chicago if you want to talk about no-hit stuff.

The Blue Jays provided Leal and Jackson with more than enough support in a six-run fourth inning, putting together seven consecutive hits with two out to pin the loss on Bert Blyleven, 3-4.

Jackson retired the Indians in order in the sixth and seventh, but walked George Vukovich with one out in the eighth. Bando followed with his single and a walk to Mike Hargrove loaded the bases. Vukovich scored on Rick Mannings grounder.

Jackson issued another walk in the ninth, the seventh by the two Toronto pitchers. Neither Leal nor Jackson struck out a batter.

Leal came into Saturdays contest with a 4.07 earned run average having allowed 42 hits and 19 earned runs in 42 innings but with complete-game victories in his last two outings.

Leal walked two batters in the first inning, but retired Pat Tabler on a grounder to end the threat. He walked Rick Manning with two out in the third and picked him off first:

Manny Trillo drew a leadoff walk from Leal in the fifth. After Julio Franco flied out,

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Vukovich ripped a line drive slightly to the left of center field. Moseby, who was playing Vukovich to pull, made a running, diving catch and Bando lined sharply to first baseman Willie Upshaw for the third out.

Toronto started its fourth-inning uprising against Blyleven with two-out singles by Barry Bonnell and Hosken Powell. Bonnell scored on a passed ball by Bando, Alfredo Griffins double made it 2-0 and Ranee Mulliniks RBI single produced the third run.

After a single by Garth lorg, Upshaws two-run triple made it 5-0 and chased Blyleven. Pinch hitter Cliff Johnson greeted Ed Glynn with an RBI single. The Blue Jays added a run in the sixth on another passed ball by Bando and Bonnell doubled a run across in the ninth.

There have been only four combined no-hitters in baseball history. The last came when Blue Moon Odom and Francisco Barrios of the

Chicago White Sox teamed ijp to stop the Oakland As 2-1 on July 28,1976.    ;

TORONTO

ab rh bt .Mullnks 3b 3 1 I I Klutts 3b 2 0 0 0 lore 2b 5 12 0 Lpiaw lb 4 2 2 2 Orta dh 2 0 0 0 CJhnsn dh 2 1 2 i Moseby cf 5 0 1 0 Whitt c 5 0 0 0 Bonnell If 4 12 1 Powell ri 2 12 0 Barfield rf 3 0 0 0 Griffin ss 4 1 1 1 Totals 41 8 13 6

CLEVELAND

abrhbi Har-rv lb 3 0 0 0 Mannng cf 2 0 0 I Perkins If 4 0 0 0 Thmtn dh 2 0 0 0 Tabler 3b 4 0 0 0 Trillo 2b 3 0 0 0 Franco ss 3 0 0 0 Vukvch rf 2 1 0 0 Bando c 3.0 4 0

Totals 26 I I 1

Toronto    000 601 001- 8

Gevelaod    000 000 OtO- I

Game-Winning RBI - None E-Manning, Glynn. Bando DP Toronto 1 LOB-Toronto 9, Cleveland 5 2B-Grif(in, Bonnell 3B-L'pshaw SB-I'pshaw (31

Toronto Leal W.3-3 RUckson S.2 Geveland Blyleven L.3-4 Glynn Waits Spiilner

IP H R ER BB SO

3 2-3 9 2 2 2 1-3 1 I

PB-Bando2 T-2 42 A-15,505

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The Day Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C -Sunday. May 15,1983-B-5

Saturday Youth Baseball Roundup

Little leogue

Carroll & Assoc.....5

Pepsi-Colo.........3

Julius Smith hit a two run homer in the fourth inning and helped Carroll & Associates to a S-3 victory over Pepsi-Cola yesterday in the Tar Heel Little League.

Carroll & Associates took the lead in the second inning, scoring one, but Pepsi came back with two in the top of the third. Carroll came right back with two in the bottom of the frame, regaining the lead, 3-2.

Then, in the fourth, C&A got the winning runs. Travis Williamson walked and after two outs. Smith connected for his roundtripper, powering Carroll into a 5-2 lead.

Pepsi came back with one in the fifth, but could muster no more runs.

Smith led the C&A hitting with two, while Peter Rivera and Bill Blizzard each had two hits for Pepsi.

Wellcome came back with three in the third, however, to move ahead for good, 4-2. Blake Stallings reached on an error and Judd Crumpler singled, moving up on the throw. Brown reached on a fielders choice, scoring Stallings. Adam Nobles then sacrificed in Crumpler, and after Brown took third on a passed ball, he scored on Jared Dancys grounder.

The other run came in the fifth.

Brown was the only hitter with more than one for Wellcome, while no one had more than one for True Value.

more scored in the fifth.

Union Carbide picked up two more in the third and one in the fifth.

Brewington led the Sportsworld hitting with three, while Moore had two. No one had more than one for Union Carbide, which got only three hits off the combined pitching of Moore and Brewington.

Bobe Ruth leoyue

sixth for Pepsi with a single and Kelly Parisher walked.

Wachovia Bonk .... 7 Brown & Wood 3    ^

Wachovia Bank rallied for

homers and drove in five runs

in leading Sportsworld to a

12-4 North State Little League

victor) over Union Carbide

yesterday.

Union Carbide scored first

with one in the top of the first,

R Sportsworld came up with Wellcome.........5    f,,r    jjjg

Coco'Colo.........6

Joycees  ....4

Coca-Cola pushed out into an early lead, then held off a Jaycee rally in the sixth inning to take a 6-4 North State Little League victory

Sportsworld 12    

Union Carbide 4

Timmy Moore cracked two

True Value 2

Chris Brown had two hits apd scored two runs to lead Wellcome to a 5-2 Tar Heel Little League victory over True Value Hardware Saturday.

Wellcome scored once in the first inning as Browns first hit brought in the run. True Value, however, moved ahead, 2-1, with a pair of runs in the third.

four in the bottom of inniing, two on Moores first homer.

Sportsworld then added the two that counted most in the second, insuring the win with a 6-1 lead. Ledowick Johnson walked as did Moore. Both moved up on a wild pitch and Jamie Brewington singled both of them home.

Sportsworld added three more in the third, all on Moores second homer. Three

Coke gained the lead with three in the first inning and added one to it in the second.

What proved the difference scored in the fourth. Derrick Hines led off with a single and took second on an error on the play. Michael Smith reached on an error and Kevin Jordan walked, loading the bases. Bill Gorham singled in Hines, and Todd Taylor grounded out, driving in Smith for a 6-0 lead.

The Jaycees then rallied for four in the bottom of the sixth, two of them on a homer by David Gordon and a third on a solo shot by Carlester Grumpier, before Coke finally put out the fire.

Hines led the Coke hitting with three, while Gorham added two. Neal Creech and Gordon each had two hits for the Jaycees.

five runs in the sixth inning and gained a 7-3 victory over Brown & Wood in the opening game of the Greenville Babe Ruth League campaign Saturday.

Brown & Wood took the initial lead, scoring once in the first. They added a second run in the third inning.

But in the sixth, Wachovia rallied for five to charge ahead for good. Lee Eakes reached on an error and Larke Weatherington walked. Anthony Coward singled, scoring Eakes and Weatherington. Tim Bland walked with one away, and Mike Sasser singled in Coward. Mike Joyner singled to score Bland, and a hit by Steve Morris brought over Sasser.

Wachovia added two more in the seventh to wrap up its scoring, while Brown & Wood scored once in the bottom of the frame.

Sasser led the Wachovia hitting with two, while William Smith and Patrick Kanetzke each had two for Brown & Wood.

pitch, loading the bases, Brian Walsh walked, forcing in Wilson, and Earl Wooten singled in Parisher. An error on the play let Edwards score, and another brought in Walsh for an 18-10 edge.

Everettes rallied for two in the sixth then scored four more in the seventh before finally falling one run short.

Parisher and Edwards each had two hits for Pepsi, while Axel Smith. George Saad. Robbie Erhman and Lee Lewis each had two for Everettes.

Laker 'Magic' Too Much For San Antonio

J SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) - Los Angeles Earvin TMagic Johnson scored 13 points on Friday the 13th.

^ Everything else went his way.

' Johnson had a team-high 11 rebounds, game-high 13 assists and blocked three shots Friday night as the Lakers crushed the San Antonio Spurs 113-100 to take a 2-1 lead in the National Basketball Association Western Conference finals.

The fourth game of the best-of-seven series is here Sunday afternoon.

: Spurs Coach Stan Albeck sounded close to superstitious about the "Magic ^ard. i "Im almost positive that since Magic has been in LA, Che Lakers have won the first game on the visitors floor in every series. Albeck said. Hes uncanny.

The two teams split the opening games of the series played in California.

Forward Jamaal Wilkes was game-high Friday with 26 points for the Lakers, and center Kareem Adbul.-Jabbar added 25.

Wilkes scored 12 of his ' points in the decisive third quarter, when the defending NBA champion Lakers out-scored San Antonio 34-19 to nail down the lead for good.

: Johnson did iwt score a Single point in the third quarter - but it was his favorite part of the game.

' "We got our lead up to 13 or 14 points in that quarter, he said. "Then I could start feeling more comfortable. I enjoyed the rest of the game.

Both teams have specific missions in this series, besides winning.

The Spurs want to atone for last years Western Conference finals, in which Los Ahgeles humiliated them by sweeping four straight games.

The Lakers want to become the first team to repeat as NBA title winners since the Boston Celtics did it in 1968 and 1969.

San Antonios hopes to save face were slapped Friday night when guard Johnny Moore, who has shone throughout the playoffs, suffered a deep bruise on his upper left calf.

MoOre played most of the game and had an off-night, finishing with only nine points. Team doctors said they did not know if he would be able to play Sunday afternoon.

"Somebody just knocked into me, Moore said. "I dont know how it happened.

The Spurs went up 29-28 at the end of the first period, and led most of the first half.

San Antonio gained a 21-16 margin on a layup by George Gervin with 4:20 left in the first period, and stayed comfortably ahead until Bob McAdoo came in late in the quarter and scored six quick points to cut the deficit to 27-26.

The Lakers tied the score twice late in the second quarter at 4949 and 51-51 and grabbed a one-point lead when Norm^ Nixon sank a free throw!

But Edgar Jones was fouled by McAdoo and hit both free throws with 14 seconds left to

give San Antonio a 53-53 halftime edge.

After Los Angeles third-quarter streak, the Spurs never got closer than 10 points, which they managed at %-86 with 7:46 left in the game.

Nixon finished with 22 points for the Lakers, followed by McAdoo with 12 and Michael Cooper with 10.

Pepsi-Cola........18

Everette's........17

Pepsi-Cola outlasted Everettes Pest Control, 18-17, in the opening Babe Ruth League game of the year for the two teams.

Pepsi pushed over nine runs in the top of the second, three of them on a homer by Sterling Edwards, but Everettes came back with four in the bottom of the frame. Pepsi picked up three more in the third, while Everettes scored one in the inning. Pepsi scored two more runs in the fourth, with Everettes rallying for five, three on Curtis Perkins home run.

That made it 14-9 in favor Of Pepsi at that point.

Everettes scored once in the fifth, only to see Pepsi get-what proved to be the difference in the sixth,. scoring four times.

Maurice Wilson led off the

Planters Bonk 14

Coca-Cola .....9

Planters Bank downed Coca-Cola, 14-9, as the two teams opened the 1983 Babe Ruth League baseball season Saturday afternoon.

Planters jumped on Coke early, scoring seven times in the first inning. Coke rallied for three in the bottom of the frame, however.

Planters scored three more times in the second, sewing it up. Tom Taylor led off with a triple and Tyrone Jones walked. A wild pitch let Taylor score and moved Jones to second, and he came on to score on an error on the play. Jimmy Gillahan walked and stole second. He scored when Clark Stallings reached on an error.

Planters then added two in the third and two more in the sixth. Coke came back with one in the fourth, one in the fifth and four in the seventh.

Eric Jarman led the Planters hitting with three, while Taylor and Monty Atkinson each had two. Ervin Best, Anthony Cobb and Van Alston each had two for Coke.

Prep league

Garris-Evans..............14

Hendrix&Dail ........ .0

M. Holloman tossed a three-hit shutout as Garris-Evans rolled to a 14-0 victory over Hendrix & Dail Saturday in Prep League action.

The win left both teams with 1-1 records on the young season.

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Garris-Evans got all it needed in the first, scoring twice. With two away. C. Crandell singled and stole second. R. McDonald singled him in, and scored on an error on the play.

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McDonald had two hits to led the G-E hitting, while no one had more than one for H&D

once more, with two in the bottom of the fifth. 9-9.

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B-6-The Daily Reflector. GreenvUle, N.C-Sunday, May 15,1983Evans Enioying Early Hitting Streak

By The .Associated Press In his 12-year major league career. Darrell Evans has hit 239 home runs and sometime next season he should be closing in on 1,000 runs batted in. But he has rarely, if ever, been on a streak like the one he's on now.

Evans has hit safely in 12 consecutive games and a .577

streak over the last six games '    l5-for-26    - has boosted his

batting average to .330, a heady figure for a slugger who came into the year with a .251 career mark and has never hit higher than .281 over a full season.

1 dont know what Im doing, said Evans, who ignited San Franciscos

Rose Locks Up Playoff Berth

Rose High Schools Rampants, despite losing their first game of the season to Wilson Fike Thursday, found themselves back in the state 4-.A playoffs Friday-night

Wilson Beddingfield rolled to a 12-0 victory over Wilson Hunt, eliminating the Warriors from the title picture The Bruins are now 8-4 with two games left to play, while Rose is 11-1. Rocky Mount is now-alone in second place with a, 9-3 record, but lost both of its games with Rose.

That gives Rose the league's lone playoff berth

regardless of the outcome of the next two games for the Rampants or Rocky Mount. A single Rose win in the final two contests -or a single Rocky Mount loss would clinch the Big East baseball title outright for the Rampants, who have now earned no worse than a tie for the crown.

Roses softball team, meanwhile, remained tied with Hunt for first place in that race. Northern Nash dropped out of a tie with a loss Friday. Rose and Hunt meet Tuesday in a game that could very well decide the championship.

eighth-run fourth inning with a double and capped It with a two-run homer - he also had a single - as the Giants defeated the Cincinnati Reds 8-5 Friday night for their eighth victory in the last nine games.

I dont think Ive ever been in a better streak as far as hitting the ball hard.Even in batting practice Im hitting the ball hard. Until it stops, Im not even going to try to think about what Im doing.

In other National League games, the Chicago Cubs hammered the Philadelphia Phillies 10-2, the San Diego Padres turned back the Los

Angeles Dodgers 6-4, the Houston Astros downed the Atlanta Braves 5-2, the St. Louis Cardinals nipped the Montreal Expos 5-4 in 12 innings and the Pittsburgh Pirates edged the New York Mets2-1.

With Cincinnati leading 1-0, Evans doubled to lead off the fourth inning against Rich Gale. Doubles by Chili Davis and Max Venable put the Giants in front 2-1 and Duane Kuiper and Johnnie LeMaster contributed two-run singles before Evans seventh home run of the season completed the scoring.

Evans hitting has drummed

Rampants Win Fourth Straight

Farmville Central Upsets Aycock, Conference Race

PIKEVILLE - Farmville Central continued its role of giant killer Friday night, outlasting Charles B. .Aycock. 7-6, to throw the Eastern Carolina baseball race back into a virtual tie.

Aycock has now completed its league schedule with a 9-3 mark. .Ayden-Grifton, 8-3, has a game remaining with North Pitt on Tuesday, and can pull into a tie for the title with a victory in that contest. A loss, however, would let .Aycock take the title alone.

Aycock jumped into the lead in the game with two runs in the first inning. Farmville .came back to score once in the second, and both teams scored single runs in the- fourth to lead .Aycock ahead. 3-2.

In the top of the fifth. Farmville put together a four-run rally, moving into a 6-3 lead. With one out. Randy Daniels walked and Wade Corbett reached on an error. -Alvin Baker doubled, driving in Daniels. Bobby Carraway walked, loading the bases, and Gerald Wilson grounded out.

Corbett scored on the play, and when the Falcon first baseman tried to pick off the runner at second, he threw the ball away, allowing both Baker and Carraway to score,

Aycock then rallied for three in the bottom of the fifth, tying it at 6-all.

But Farmvilles Corbett cracked a solo homer in the sixth, giving the Jaguars a 7-6 lead and then held on for the rest of the game to pull out the win.        

Baker led the Farmville hitting with three, two of them doubles, while Taylor Walston and Billy Godley each had two, Tyndall had a pair of hits to lead Ayxock.

Farmville. which earlier dropped Ayden-Grifton out of first place in the league race, is now 10-8 overall and 6-5 in the lea^e The Jaguars finish up their season on Tuesday, hosting Southern Nash.

FaravleC.........010 141 0-7 9 2

C.B.AyctJCk 200 130 0-6 6 4

Carraway, Godley i5< and Baker: .Nichols, Summerlin i5i. Thomas i6i and Tvndall

WILSON - Rose High Schools Rampants won the Wilson Sectional Track and Field Championships for the fourth strai^t year Friday, easily capturing the title with 96 points,

Tarboro finished in second place with 75 points, while Wilson Fike. the host team -and co-champion with Rose of the Big East Conference, was third with 74.

Rose qualified for regional competition in ten events, while Roanoke advanced in three and Farmville Central in two.

Edward Frazier was the big gun for the Rampants, winning one event and finishing second in two others. Frazier took first place in the 400-meter dash with a time of 49.3 seconds, and added second place finishes in the 100 and 200-meter events.

Roanokes Donnie Wallace won tiicx) events during the competition. He captured first place in the shot put with a heave of 58 feet, 8 inches, and added the discus title with a throw of 157 feet, 6 inches.

Rose claimed first place in five events. Roswell Streeter took first in the high jump with a leap of 6 feet, 74 inches, anew Rampant school record. Tommy Sparkman also set a new school standard with a leap of 45 feet, 34 inches, as he won the triple jump.

John Ormond added the title in the 1,600-meter run, finishing in the time of 4:25.8. He was also second in the 3,200-meter run in 10:09.

Roses 880-yard relay team of Frankie Carr, Craig Dupree, Kevin Michaels and Roderick Harrell, also took first place, with a time of 1:28.3.

Other Rampants qualifying for the regionals included: William Waugh in the shot, second in 50-54; and John Byrd, third in the 800-meter run in 1:59.23.

Also qualifying from the area were Farmville Centrals Wesley Carmon, third in the 100 and third in the 200; and Roanokes Ricky Highsmith, third in the long jump.

The top three qualify in each event.

Non-qualifiers placing in the sectionals were: Roses Donnell Lee, fourth in the high jump at 6-4; Conleys Steven King, fourth in the 100 and fourth in the 200; Conleys Chester Paramore, fifth in the 3200; Farmvilles Faison, fourth in the discus; Conleys James Roach, fourth in the 300-meter intermediate hurdles; Conleys 3200 relay team of Roach, King, Rodney Speight and Gary Nichols, fourth; and Roses'440-yard relay team of Carr, Dupree, Rodney Smith and Harrell, fourth in 42.9.

Rose missed out on another qualifier when, Burney Carraway, one of only two pole vaulters entered, in that event failed to clear the starting height. Carraway had broken his pole earlier in the week and had not gotten used to the new one.

Following the top three schools in the team standings were: Rocky Mount 44, Northeastern 29, Roanoke 28, Bertie 24, Washington 19, Conley 18, Northern Nash 18, Farmville Central 16, Hunt 14, Bed-^ dingfield 14, Roanoke Rapids ' 10, Warren County 10, Williamston 8, Southwest Edgecombe 5, and Ahoskie 3.

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up memories of his 1973 season with Atlanta when he hit 41 homers and drove in 104

runs.

Even in 1973 and 741 dont remember being this consistent for this period of time, he said. Its been two weeks, and I dont think Ive had a bad game during that time.

I think hes surprised everybody the way hes hitting the ball so consistently, said Manager Frank Robinson, a Hall of Fame slugger.I think hes surprised himself a little, thats how hot hes been. Im sure even he has to be somewhat surprised.

Cubs 10, Phillies 2 Keith Morelands two-run homer capped a five-run fourth inning to lead the Chicago Cubs to their third

straight victory and hand the Phillies their third loss in a row. With Chicago leading 3-2, winning pitcher Steve Trout singled for his first major league hit with one out in the fourth off- loser Larry Christenson and one out later Larry Bowa walked.

Bill Buckner singled to score Trout and Bowa scored on a passed ball by Bo Diaz. Leon Durham singled to score Buckner and Moreland, who singled home two runs in the first, greeted Porfi Altamirano with his fourth homer. The Cubs broke a 2-2 tie in the third when Buckner doubled, took third on an infield out and scored on Ron Ceys sacrifice fly.

Padres 6, Dodgers 4

Gene Richards and Sixto

West Craven Tops D.H. Conley, 11-4

VANCEBORO - West Craven pounded the D.H. Conley Vikings for seven runs in the second inning and went on to take an 114 decision in the battle for the cellar of the Coastal 3-A ..Conference baseball race.

Its kind of bad when you lose to a team thats lost 14 m a row, said Conley coach Gerald Gamer. But they really pounded the ball well.

Winning pitcher Ray Elks led the Eagles with a pair of hits in four at bats, while Calvin Phillips paced the Vikings with a double and a pair of singles in four trips to the plate.

It appeared early in the game that West Craven would have its 15th loss in as many outings, as Conley jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the top of the first.

Randy Mills opened the game with a sin^e^for the Vikings. Chris Via reached first on an error, allowing Mills to move to third. After Via stole second, Fred Bryant singled in the runners to give Conley the early edge.

But West Craven retaliated in the second with six of the seven Eagle hits of the night. Elks slapped a leadoff single. Jay McLawhom was hit by a pitch and a sacrifice advanced

the runners to second and third. A single by Roy Adams drove in both runners, and Willie White followed with another single.

Mark Gambles single plated Adams and White. Roy Thomas reached first on an error and later stole second, and a single by catcher Chuck Daugherty pushed across two more runs. A single by Chuck Moore drove in Daugherty to end the scoring barrage.

Conley bounced back for a run in the top of the third. Phillips and catcher Stacy McCarter singled, advanced on a sacrifice and Phillips scored on a wild pitch.

After West Craven put the game out of reach with four more runs in the sixth, Conley added a lone run in the seventh, as Phillips doubled and later scored on a single by Richie Overton.

West Craven improved its record to 1-14 overall with a 1-8 mark in the conference. Conley holds an identical 1-8 conference record, while 7-13 overall.

The Vikings travel to league-leading Havelock Tuesday.

Lezcano hit two-run homers in San Diegos four-run first and the Padres held on. Dave Dravecky, 6-1, the NLs first six-game winner, scattered 10 hits and was relieved by Luis DeLeon in the ei^th.

After Alan Wiggins drew a leadoff walk in the bottom of the first, Richards homered off Burt Hooton. Two outs later, Terry Kennedy walked and Lezcano followed with his homer. Wiggins scored in the second on Steve Garveys sacrifice fly and again in the fourth on a sacrifice fly'by Juan Bonilla after the Dodgers pulled within 54.

Astros 5, Braves 2

Houstons Dickie Thon ignited a four-run first inning with the first of two run-scoring doubles as the Braves lost a third consecutive game for the first time this season. With one out in the first, Terry Puhl singled and scored on Thons double. Loser Rick Behenna balked Thon to third, Phil Gamer walked and Jose Cmz made it 2-0 with an RBI single. The Astros added two more runs on Harry Spilmans run-scoring single and Alan Ashbys RBI grounder. Puhl singled with two out in the second and scored on Thons double. Winner Mike LaCoss scattered seven hits, including Dale Murphys solo homer in the fourth. The Astrodome was the only ballpark in which

Murphy had not previously homefed.

Cardinals 5, Expos 4

George Hendrick led off the bottom of the 12th against Bryn Smith, fhe fourth Montreal pitcher, with his seventh homer of the season and his first since April 27. The Cardinals tied it for the fourth time with a run in the bottom of the ninth on Darrell Porters RBI double, taking starter Joaquin Andujar, who has lost five in a row, off the hook.

Warren Cromartie and Tim Wallach homered for the Expos and starter Chris Welsh, making his debut in a Montreal uniform, allowed nine hits and three mns in 7 1-3 innings.

Pirates 2, Metsl

Mike Easier, who doubled home Pittsburghs first mn in the fifth inning for his first RBI of the season, singled home the winner with one out in the bottom of the ninth. Dave Parker opened the inning with a single and stole second.

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Rose Girls Win, 4-3; Set Up Battle With Hunt For Crown

Wilson - Rose High Schools Rampettes downed Wilson Pike, 4-3, in a Big East softball game Friday, retaining a share of first place in the league standings.

The Rose win, coupled with a Hunt victory over Bed-dingfield, left the two tied for first place with 9-3 records. Northern .Nash, which went into Fridays games also tied for first, lost to Kinston and drops to third.

Rose scored three times in the top of the first inning against the Golden Demons to take the lead for good, but it was a single run in the second that eventually made the difference.

That came when Lisa Leggett reached on a two-out single, moved up on a hit by Amanda Smith and scored on

Karen Carrawayshit.

Fike rallied for one in the fourth and two more in the seventh before Rose finally got the door slammed shut.

Laura Vincent, Smith and Carraway each had two hits for Rose, one of Vincents a triple. Tammy Keen had two hits to lead Fike.

Rose and Hunt could settle it all come Tuesday when the two meet in a 4 p.m. game at Guy Smith softball field. The winner of that game will move into first place, pending one more game that will wind up the year for each. Rose needs one victory to assure itself of one of the leagues two playoff berths.

Rose.........310    000 0-4    11 4

Fike..........000    100    2-3    3    2

WP - Amanda Smith.

Jamesville Tops ven, 10-0

^fieiha

^ JAMESVILLE - A three-nrn error in the fourth inning helped the Jamesville Bullets take a 10-0 win over Belhaven in an abbreviated Tobacco Belt 1-A Conference basebaU game.

Jamesville maintains its unblemished 14-0 conference mark with the win, while 16-2 . Overall.

t Rex Bell and Whit Brown , led Jamesville with two hits in ; three trips to the plate, while

Toriste ONeal and Barry Sadler slapped a pair of singles apiece for the only hits

; given up by winning pitcher ; Tim Norris.

: Jamesville got on the board I in the second inning when IKevin Perry drew a &ase-on-balls and moved to third by way of a sacrifice and

* a passed ball. Whit Brown squeezed him home for the

first run of the contest.

Norris opened the fourth with a sine for Jamesville, while Rusty Holliday followed with a walk and Brown a single to load the bases. A sacrifice fly by Matthew Moore drove in Norris before the important error was committed.

Greg Hardison singled to right, but the ball rolled to the fence allowing Hardison to race around the path for a 54) advantage. Richie Ange walked and scored on a single by Rex Bell, and Bell crossed the plate on a passed ball.

Belhaven slipped to 2-13 in the conference.

Jamesville travels to Mat-tamuskeet Tuesday.

Belhaven 000 00- 0 4 0

Jamesville 010 63-10 8 0

Sadler and Mason: Norris and Perry

Youth Baseball

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:Optimsts .......15

IKiwanis .......4

; The Optimists romped to a North State Little League Victory over the Kiwanis Friday, banging out 13 hits along the way.

The Optimists picked up four runs in the first inning, then added a pair in the second to up the lead to 6-0.

In the second, Terrance Smith led off with a sin^e and stole second. Park Williams then singled, scoring Smith. Williams moved on to second on an error on the play. He took third on a passed ball and scored on an error.

The Optimists added two more in the fourth, on a Nelson Galloway homer, picked up three more int he fifth, and finished up with three in the sixth.

The Kiwanis got two in the second and two more in the fifth.

Williams, Galloway, Kevin Hardee and Dominick Daniels each ahd two hits to lead the Optimists. The Kiwanis were led by Jon Chambliss with two hits.

Exchange.........6

Moose ........4

The Exchange held off the Moose and gained a 6-4 victory Friday afternoon in the Tar Heel Little League.

Exchange scored first, ^t-ting three runs in the third inning. The Moose came back with one in the top of the fourth, but Exchange scored twice in the fourth to wrap it up.

Kevin Sugg opened the fourth, walking with two away. Daryl Moore singled and Maurice Battle got a hit, loading the bases. Duane Williams then singled to drive in both Sugg and Moore.

The Moose rallied for three in the fifth, all on a homer by Chris Christopher. The Exchange added an insurance run in the bottom of the inning.

Battle, Williams and Grant Harmon each had two hits for Exchange, while the Moose got only three off Moores pitching.

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Williamston 14

Roanoke..........2

ROBERSONVILLE -Williamston High Schools girls softball team remained in the race for the Northeastern Conference''s two playoff berths with a 14-2 romp over Roanoke yesterday.

Williamston, now 11-2, was tied for second place with Plymouth going into a Saturday game with league leading Tarboro.

The Lady Tigers pushed over five runs in the first and aided four more in the second fo| a 9-0 lead before Roanoke bnke the ice with two in the bltom of the second.

Williamston added one more in the third and three in the fourth to cap the scoring.

Wanda Price had four hits and Timberly Rodgers had two to pace Williamston. Each had a homer and drove in four runs.

Williamston 541 30-14 12 2

Roanoke 020 00 2 6 7

WP Sharon Hopkins.

Conley...........35

West Craven 11

VANCEBORO - Sometimes when you get something started, you just cant quit.

That was the case Friday when D.H. Conleys Valkyries romped to a 35-11 softball victory over West Craven.

The Valkyries scored a modest five runs in the first "inning, then eased over one more in the second for a 6-0 lead. West Craven cut that in

Tigers Rip 'Skins, 8-1

ROBERSONVILLE -Williamston collected five runs over the first five innings to pave the way to an 8-1 victory over Roanoke in a Northeastern 3-A Conference baseball matchup Friday.

Tommy Wynne went the distance on the mound for Williamston.

The Tigers jumped on Roanoke for a run in the top of the first, as James Ward reached second on an error of a grounder and scored on a two-out single by Keith Perry.

Williamston made it 2-0 in the second frame. Kevin Lee opened with a single, stole second and scored on a single by Jeff Whitley.

Gray Thomas singled and Perry doubled to open the big third-inning rally for Williamston. Glenn Hardisons doubled in both runners, and a double by Lee drove in Hardison.

Lee and Thomas went 3-4 on the day, while Perry had a pair of singles In three at-bats for Williamston.

The loss leaves Roanoke with a 2-8 conference mark, while Williamston improved to 8-5 with a 9-7 overall tally. The Tigers host Washington Tuesday.

WUliamstOD .113 012 0-B 12 0 Roanoke. . . .0 010 0-1 3 2

Wynne and Mobley; Wilson and Casj^r

half with a three-run rally in the bottom of the frame.

Then, in the third, Conley exploded for 12 big runs, storming out to a 18-3 lead. And, after resting for the next two frames to catch their breath, the Valkyries came back in the sixth to score 17 more times for their 35-run total.

West Craven added six more in the fourth to cut the lead back to 18-9 at the time. The Lady Falcons closed out their scoring with two in the sixth.

Michelie Kittrell and Lori Kandrotas each had four hits to lead Conley, while Lisa Mills and Irish Barnhill each had three. Kandrotas, Karen Barrett and Darlene Cannon each homered for Conley.,

T. Singleton had two hits to lead West Craven.

Conley travels to Havelock on Tuesday.

Conley . 51(12) W(17)-35 20 13 West Craven. . . 030 602-11    8    15

WP-LisaMUls.

C.B. Aycock 7

FormvilleC........0

PIKEVILLE - Farmviile Centrals winless girls softball team forfeited to league-leading Charles B. Aycock on Friday, thus giving Aycock the Eastern Carolina title.

Aycock finishes the year with a 9-3 league record, one game ahead of Southwest Edgecombe.

Farmviile has one game left on the schedule, against Southern Nash on Tuesday.

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195/75R14.............!;;;!"!;!:::::::;48!95

205/75R14 .......... 49    95

215/75R14..........  [.[[[['.[[[[[['.SUS

205/75R15............ 5195

215/75R15............  5495

225/75R15......................

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Plus F.E.T. Of 1.53 to 3.01

LIMITED SUPPLYI

RADIALS IMPORTED FROM GERMANY

Y13SI7F$ ^Q95

ANY13SIZEV INSTOCK bW

PLUSF E T OF SI 40 TO S2 00 If it rolls on a wheel, we sell it

-FORLESS-

Southern Tire Brokers

t orni-i III CharlfN Houlpvard <ind (ircenvillp Hmilcvrtid

1^ OPINMON I KI 8 S 10 SAl 8 1 00 f "

Blvd & Charles 5lh 4 Market KT I.    .    Next To Pitt Plaza    Washington, N    C

^    ^    756-5023    946.<linn

MUVbRTlSED ITEM POLICY Each Of these advertised Items IS required to he readi IV available for sale in each Kroger Sav on except as specifically noted in this ad if we do run out of an item we will offer you your choice of a comparable item when available reflecting the same savings or a ramcneck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within 50 .days

Items and Prices Effective Sun. May 15 thru Wed. May 18, 1983.

2000

HOW TO PLAY...

Pick up a FREE game ticket and collector card at any participating Kroger Store today and play Kroger Centennial Bingo! Limit one ticket per family per visit per day No purchase necessary. Adults only eligible (18 years or older). You can bingo and win S2,000 $1,000, $200, S100, S20,'$10, or $5. Or win one of more than 108,000 $1 instant prizes,

FREE GROCERY DRAWINGS

Some Came Tickets will contain a marker which states "YOU QUALIFY FOR A WEEKLY FREE GROCERY DRAWING. If you receive one of these markers, you are eligible to enter one of the weekly drawings where someone will be awarded FREE groceries for a year FROM KROGER ..a $5,200 value. There will be one winner each week for thirteen weeks. But remember, there s a new drawing every week and you must qualify each week to be eligible to win. Each entry is valid for one drawing.

No Purchase Necessary. See Complete Details At Participating Kroger stores.

Odds vary dapanding on the number of Game Tickets you obtain. The more tickets you collect, the better your chances of urinning.

OOOS CHART EFFECTIVE APWL 24, 1M3

ODDS CHART

CASH WINNERS OF

2,000, $1,000 $200, $100, $0, $10,

$5 or il

IA 5 ttravn'R^ ' each

Copyright 1983 Kroger Sav-on Quantity Rights Reserved None Sold To Dealers

emn

VM.UE-

NUMSER

Of

eaint

OOOS FOR OME SAME T1CRET

OOOSFOR 1I0AME TICKETS

0008 FOR MQAHE TICKETS

tJOOO

35

Iini7 858

iin 13 682

lin 8.841

1000

TO

tin 88 929

lin 6 841

lin 3 421

300

210

lin 29 843

' 1 in 2 281

lin 1141

100"

280

>in 22 233

lin 1711

l.n SM

20

roo

1 in 8 893

lin 885

tin 343

to

1 400

1 in 4 447

lin 343

1 in ,72

5

TOOO

lin 890

1m 89

lin 35

1

10S.500

1 in 58

1 in 5

1 in 3

TOTaL

118195

lin S3

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OOdi to ooum a frtt Qrocary O'awing Ouaiilit' and t aiigibia lor a Fra Grocery Drawing ara one in 53 However, odd! to win a Free Grocery Drawing depend on the numOSr ol eniriee received Kroger Cenienniai Bingo eenea iDUSl it Oemg pleyed in 35 perticipaling Kroger (tores in Greenville. Wiimingion, Fayatiaviiie COerlolte deitonie Hickory. Seiisbury. Monroe Meitnewe. Pineviile end SheiOy, Nonn Ceroiine Irmo. Columbie. Florence. Sunder Rock Hiii. Summerville Ml Pieesam Goose Creek Myrtle Beecn end COtrietton South Carolina, and Savannah Xjeorgia

Schaduled larminalion data ol Ihia promotion la July 23.1U83. however game ollicially ende when ell Game TickeK have Oaen dittributed

4-7 LB. AVG. WGT.

U.S.D.A. GOV'T INSPECTED FROZEN YOUNG

Turkey Breast

I

Lb.

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Breyers Ice Cream

$

199

i

UminD

Milk

YOUR CHOICE KROGER CHOCOLATE, BUTTERMILK,

2% LOWFAT MILK, SKIM MILK, ACIDOPHOLUS OR HOMOGENIZED

Whole Milk

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open Mon. Thru Sat. 8am to Midnight Sun. 9am to 9pm

600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville

i





Reggie Reaches The Wrong Plateau

By The Associated Press Reggie Jackson did what he does the best - or at least the most. He struck out.., again .. and again... and again.

His three strikeouts Friday night in Californias 11-inning 5-4 loss to the Minnesota Twins made him the first major leaguer to fan 2,000 times in a career.

1 dont look at it like a magic number or anything, said the Angels slugger, "Two thousand is too many, 1 guess. But you can justify it because ! hit home runs.

Well, not that many this season. Hes got only four homers and 11 runs batted in so far and is in the throes of a slump that has dropped his batting average to .213.

Right now, he said, "1 cant hit a beachball. The only thing important to rfte is trying to get a hit.

Three Angels - Doug De-Cinces, Bobby Grich and Tim Foli - did homer, but it was an llth-inning double by Len Faedo which gave the Twins the victory.

Elsewhere in the AL it was Baltimore 8, Texas 1; Kansas City 5, Detroit 2; Cleveland 5, Toronto 1; New York 3, Chicago 1, and Oakland 9,

Seattle 2. Bostons game at Milwaukee was rained out.

"If Im hitting well, the strikeouts dont bother me, said Jackson, who has struck out 34 times in 89 at-bats this year. But striking out does bother me now because Im not swinging the bat well. I dont feel comfortable.

It is,' of course, a tribute to Jackson that hes been around long enough to strike out 2,000 times. Youve got to be pretty good to for managers to keep putting your name in the lineup, he observed.

And what does this kind of record mean to him? It means I did nothing but miss the ball for four full seasons, he once said.

Faedo, who sat out several games earlier this week, pounded a Mike Witt pitch into the gap in left-center field for the Twins winning hit. "Im jijst trying to stay on top of the ball, he said. Ive been hurt for four days and I just want to help the team out any way I can.

Orioles 8, Rangers 1 Storm Davis, the Mr. Everything of the Baltimore pitching staff, checked Texas on eight hits through seven innings and Ken Singleton and

Woody

Pel

Chips and putts from area golf courses:

Ayden Golf and Country Club The Ayden Golf and Country Club has two tournaments coming up shortly.

The club will hold the annual Ayden Ladies Invitational Tournament on Tuesday. Then, on May 28-29, the club will hold its annual Member-Member Tournament. The field has been closed for the womens tournament, but is still open for the Member-Member, and those wishing to play can sign up in the pro shop.

Brook Valley Country Club B1 Fleming recently had his best round ever with a 45-43-88. He was playing with Kenny Mitchell at Brook Valley when he had the round.

Brian Hill aced the 12th hole at Brook Valley. He used an 8-iron from the blue tees, 169-yards. He was playing with Spencer Hill when he made the ace, his first.

Bill Bellesheim had his best nine of the year with a 38 on the back side.

The next Jack and Jill will be held on Wednesday at 5:15 p.m. Sign up in the pro shop by 6 p.m. Tuesday.

Spaces are still open for the Member-Guest Tournament, May 27-29. Entry blanks are available in the pro shop.

Indian Trail Country Club A Cold Feet Superball Tournament was held at Indian Trails Country Club recently. Taking first place were Vern Davenport, Tony Caprara, Bill Patrone, Allen Lancaster and Willie Bailey with a ten-under 62.

The Ladies Association will hold their monthly meeting on Monday.

The first mens Stag Night is set for Thursday. There will be a nine-hole superball tournament, followed by dinner. Sign up in the pro shop.

John Lowenstein provided the power that propelled the Orioles into first place in the East, one-half game ahead of Boston.

What can you say about a guy as young as he is who pitches the way he does? Baltimore Manager Joe Altobelli said of Davis, who has been both a long and short reliever and, as the replacement for injured Jim Palmer, has moved into the starting rotation,

He hasnt had a bad outing since the exhibition season, and hes done it the hard way

- in relief, as a spot starter, whatever we needed, said Altobelli.

Singleton hit his fourth and fifth homers of the season and Lowenstein hit his fourth. They drove in three runs apiece.

Royals 5, Tigers 2 If luck is the residue of design, as baseball philosopher Branch Rickey once observed, Kansas City pitcher Dennis Leonard is an extraordinary designer.

He gave up 11 Detroit hits and four walks and left 12 Tigers on base in 7 2-3 innings

- and still managed to be the winner.

Id call it a miracle,

Leonard said. My slider was awful. My curve was worse. Ill be the first to admit it -1 was terrible. I was just awful lucky that when I needed a good pitch, they happened to hit it right at somebody.

Hal McRae and George Brett had two hits apiece and Willie Aikens drilled a two-run double to pace the Royals.

Indians 5, Blue Jays 1 Clevelands Juan Eichelberger, obtained from San Diego in an offseason trade, pitched his second complete game in his second start for his first AL victory. Manny Trillos two-run single helped the Indians win for ie ninth time in 12 games.

Blue Jays pitcher Mike Morgan was literally knocked out of the game m the fourth inning, hit on the cheek by a Bake McBride line drive.

Colt Owner Is Reprimanded

DENVER (AkPi - National Football League Commissioner Pete Rozelle has reprimanded Baltimore Colts owner Robert Irsay for a vague threat he directed at John Elway, whom the Colts recently traded to the Denver Broncos.

Rozelle told Irsay on Friday he did not condone those kinds of remarks and demanded an explanation, said Dick Maxwell of the NFL public relations department.

Irsay had said m Chicago Thursday that the Colts would get Elway and that Elway would never be any good. <

Elway was drafted No. 1 in the first round of the NFL college player draft by Baltimore, but said he would play professional baseball before he would play for the Colts.

Kitchen remodeling adding air conditioning or insulation, closing in the porch, paving the driveway...it's the language of home improvements. And you need to speak it to expand.

We speak Home Improvements.

We make short, in-termediate, and long-term loans to farmers and nonfarmers for repairing, remodeling, building and adding to a home in the country or a rural town with a population of 2,500 or less. Our rates are

competitive, and our payment schedules are reasonable. And theres no penalty for prepayment.

Call or come by today.

HOME

IMPROVEMENTS

spoken here.

Pitt-Greene Production Credit Association

EQUMHOUSMG

LENDER

Greenville 100 E. 1st St. 758-1512

Farmville 264 ByPass 753-5567

Toronto Manager Bobby Cox said the injury was not serious.

Yankees 3, White Sox 1 Designated hitter Oscar.

Gamble, in his second start and 11th at-bat this season, hit a tie-breaking homer in the seventh inning to end the Yankees three-game slide

and extend Chicagos skid to four games.

Don Zimmer, the Yanks third-base coach, managed his final game as the replacement

I

Ex-Vike Johnson Seeks

for Billy Martin, suspended for three games after kicking dirt on an umpire. But it was Martm who suggested before the game that Gamble get a shot. Graig Nettles also homered for the Yanks while Ron Kittle hit one for the White Sox.

As9, Mariners 2 Mike Davis homer highlighted a four-run third inning and Dwayne Murphy and Bob Kearney homered in a five-run sixth as Oakland routed the Mariners. Rickey Henderson had a two-run single for the As.

Help In Olympic Bid

Former D.H. Conley wrestler James Johnson, considered a strong contender for the 1984 Olympics, is seeking financial aid for his bid.

Johnson, a 1976 Conley graduate, would wrestle in the 198-pound class in the Greco-Roman event.

While a senior at Conley, Johnson won the state title, and placed third in the national high school championships. He signed a wrestling grant with the University of Kentucky, and after completing studies for a degree in social work and earning a graduate degree, he returned to the Charlotte area as a high school coach and now works in the Wilson area.

He resumed competition again in 1982 and finished

fourth in two national tournaments. Later than year, he was invited to the U.S. Olympic Training Center to prepare for the World Games, but was sidelined with an injury while standing third among those in his class.

While Johnson has been paying his way to most events he competes in, he must travel to San Francisco later this month, and then to the trials for the National Sporti Festival in June. A total of about $1,000 is needed to finance these trips.

Contributions may be made to JJs Trust Fund and sent to USA Wrestling, 405 W. Hall of Fame Ave., Stillwater, Okla., >74074. Gifts are tax-deductable.

cotact Johnson at 243-3675, or 237-8886, or Milt Sherman, 756-3440, or 756-3080.

^    itiirtMt-    i

For further information.

James Johnson

L





SCOREBOARD

TheDai y riei.rr,r r    v    Sur,.j,iy    Mc-y    i5    '.3K>-

Sports Colendor

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

Mondays Sports Golf

Sectionals at Jacksonville Baseball Rose at Hunt JV (4 p.m.)

Babe Ruth League Everetts vs. Coca-Cola Little League Union Carbide vs. Jaycees Pepsi-Cola vs. Wellcome Softball W'omens League PTA vs. Prep Shirt Copper Kettle vs Fred Webb Greenville Travel vs. Wachovia Pitt Memorial vs. Players Retreat

Industrial League East Carolina*! vs. CIS Greenville Utilities vs. Empire ' Brushes*!

Carolina Leaf vs. Grady-White Burroughs-Wellcome *1 vs. Wachovia Enforcers vs. East Carolina *2 WNCT-TV vs. Belvoir TRW vs. Pitt Memorial Empire Brushes *2 vs. Cox Armature

City League PTA vs. Metal Craft Liberty vs. Pantana Bob's Jimmys 66 vs. Airborne Subway vs Ormonds Tuesdays Sports Baseball Jamesville at Mattamuskeet Bear Grass at Chocowinity Ayden-Grifton at North Pitt (4 p.m.)

Southwest Edgecombe at Greene Central (8 pm.)

Southern Nash at Farmville Central (4 pm.) ^

Greene Central *at Southwest Edgecombe JV (4 p.m.)    ,

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

North Lenoir at Conley JV (7:30 pm.)

Roanoke at Roanoke Rapids (7:30 m.)

Washington at Williamston (4

p.m.)

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

Washington at E.B. Aycock (4

p.m.)

Little League Lions vs Coca-Cola First Federal vs. True Value Hardware    

Prep League Garris-Evans vs. Shop-Eze Foodland

SoftbaU

Jamesville at Mattamuskeet Bear Grass at Chocowinity Southern Nash at Farmville Central (4 p.m.)

Greene Central at Southwest Edgecombe Ayden-Grifton at North Pitt (4 pm.)

Conley at Havelock (4 p.m.)

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

Washington at Williamston (7:30 pm.)

Hunt at Rose (4 p.m.)

Hunt atE B. Aycock (4p.m.)

Church League Memorial Baptist vs. First Presbyterian First Free Will vs. First Pentecostal Oakmont vs. Peoples Baptist Immanuel vs. Trinity First Christian vs. Grace Black Jack vs. Church of God Jarvis vs. Mt. Pleasant St. James vs. Faith Pentecostal

Co-Ed League Western Sizzlin vs. Ervins

Bonds vs. Bills Goodies Wednesdays Sports Tennis Regionals at Wilson Hunt.

SoftbaU Womens League Copper Kettle vs. Wachovia Fred Webb vs. Players Retreat Greenville Travel vs. Pitt Memorial

Burroughs-Wellcome vs Prep Shirt

Industrial League Belvoir vs. TRW

Coca-Cola vs. Burroughs-Wellcome *2 Empire Brushes #2 vs Grady-White

Vermont-American vs. Enforcers CIS vs. Pubiic Works Pitt Memoriai vs. Cox Armature Fire Fighters vs. Union Carbide East Caroiina *2 vs WNCT-TV City League J.A.svs. Sunnyside Eggs Whittington vs. Subway Pair vs. Caiifomia Concepts BasebaU Babe Ruth League Wachovia Bank vs. Pepsi-Coia Little League Kiwanis vs. Sportsworld Exchange vs. Carroll & Associates

Thursdays Sports BasebaU Jamesville at Bath Creswell at Bear Grass Williamston at Edenton (7:30 p.m.)

Rose at Northeastern (4p.m.)

Little League Optimists vs. Jaycees Moose vs. Wellcome Prep League Hendrix & Dail vs. First State Bank

SoftbaU

Jamesville at Bath Creswell at Bear Grass Williamston at Edenton (7:30 p.m.)

Rose at Northeastern (4 p.m.)

E.B Aycock at Northeastern (4 p.m.)

Church League Unity vs. Memorial Baptist Mt. Pleasant vs. First Free Will First Presbyterian vs. Immanuel First Pentecostal vs. First Christian

Church of God vs. St. James Faith Pentecostal vs. Oakmont Trinity vs. Biack Jack Peoples Baptist vs. Jarvis Co-Ed League Western Sizzlin vs Bills Goodies Ervins vs. Bonds Tennis Regionals at Wilson Hunt Track

Regionals

Fridays Sports BasebaU Roanoke at North Pitt (4 p.m.)

Babe Ruth League Browp & Wood vs Planters Bank Little League Coca-Cola vs. Union Carbide True Value Hardware vs. PepsiCola

Track

G iris State Meet at Hoke County * SoftbaU Church League Arlington St. vs. Unity Grace vs. Maranatha Industrial League Public Works vs. Fire Fighters Carolina Leaf vs. Empire Brushes*1 Union Carbide vs. Burroughs-Wellcome *2 WacliDvla vs. East Carolina #1 Coca-Cola vs. Vermont-American Greehville Utilities vs. Bur-roughs-^Wellcome *1

City League    i

Sunnjside Eggs vs. Whittington Califoi^ Concepts vs. J.A.'s Pair vs. Ormonds

i

Saturdays Sports Track

East Carolina at 1C4A Meet at Viilanova

BasebaU

Little League Sportsworld vs. Optimists Lions vs. Kiwanis Carroll & Associates vs. Moose First Federal vs. Exchange Prep League First State Bank vs. Garris-Evans

Hendrix & Dail vs. Shop-Eze Foodland

Babe Ruth League ^ Pepsi Cola vs. Coca-Cola Planters Bank vs. Wachovia Bank

Brown & Wood vs. Everetts Sundays Sports Track

East Carolina at IC4A Meet at Viilanova

City League

Jimmys66............m    531-17

PantanaBobs.........620    000-2

licading hitters: PB - Ken Reece 2-2, John Vestal 2-2; J - Terry Clark 3-4, Mike Congar2-2.

Boseboll Standings

PTA................003 010 6-10

Airborne...........000 234 09

Leading hitters: PT Doug Phillips 3-4, Mike Hogan 2-3; A -John Taylor 3-4, Ken Braxton 2-3.

Baltimore

Boston

Toronto

Cleveland

Milwaukee

iNew York

IJetroit

By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet.

18 12 17    2

16 i:i

17    14    648

1.6    13    ,5:!6

14    16

12 16

428

Metal Craft............513    010-10

Liberty................020    040- 6

Leading hitters:    MC     N.

Cabaccar 3-3, Guy Water 2-3 (HR); L Robert Moseley 2-3.

581

,533

.519

516

429

4(16

Calif. Concepts 608 8325

Whittington.............000 30- 3

Leading hitters: CC - Chris Parrish 44, Ed Wells 4-5; W -Mark Vestal 2-2, R. Zucha 2-2.

WEST DIVISION Calilornia    I8    13

Texas    16    14

Kansas City    14    13

Oakland    I6    15

Chicago    12    16

Minnesota    13    19

Seattle    ii    23    324

Friday s Games Cleveland 5. Toronto I New York 3. Chicago 1 Boston at Milwaukee, ppd rain Kansas City 5. Detroit 2 Baltimore 8, Texas 1 Minnesota 5. California 4. II innings Oakland 9. Seattle 2

Saturdav's Games

Chicago I Bums 0-11 al .New York I Shirley l -2i Toronto (Leal 2-31 al Cleveland iBlyleven3-3i Seattle i Young 3-31 at Oakland I Langford 0-31 Boston (Hurst 3-li at Milwaukee (Porter0-11, ini Detroit (Rucker l-Oi at Kansas City (Splittorffl-ll.ini Baltimore (.McGregor 3 2i at Texas (Smithson3-11, mi Minnesota (B Castillo 1-2) al California (Forsch3-1), mi

Sundays Games Chicago at New York Toronto at Cleveland Boston at Milwaukee ITetroit atKansasCity Baltimore at Texas .Minnesota at California Seattle at Oakland

New York

9    20

WEST DIVISION

.310    7-,

20

710

645

484

459

457

.455

Philadelphia St Louis Montreal Pittsburgh Chicago

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet GB

.571

.556    I.,

536    1

444    3'.,

367

Ixis Angeles Atlanta San Francisco

San Diego    15    17

Hou.ston    16    19

Cincinnati    15    18

Friday's Games Chicago 10, Philadelphia 2 Pittsburgh 2. New York 1 San Francisco 8, Cincinnati 5 SI Louis 5, Montreal 4,12 innings Hou: ton5, Atlanta 2 San Diego 6, Us Angeles 4 Saturdays Games Montreal (Rogers 5-li at St Louis LaPoint 2-01

Philadelphia (Bystrom O-Oi al Chicago Jenkins l-3i

Us Angeles (Reuss 4-h al San Diego ''Show4-li

New York (Allen 0-4) at Pituburgh McWilliams3-2), mi San Francisco (Laskey 3-41 at Cincin nail iPastore24i, mi Atlanta (Camp 3-3i at Houston iRuble 0-11, mi

Sunday's Games New York at Pittsburgh Montreal at St Louis

San Francisco at Cincinnati Philadelphia at Chicago Atlanta at Houston

Los Angeles at San Diego

I Please turn to page B-IO>

"^COUPONCOUPONCUPON

IA $2.00off reg.priceANY GIANT PIZZA i $1.00off reg.priceANY LARGE PIZZA AT

COUPON EXPIRES JULY 31,1983

Summer Stcmdings

Through Friday City League National Division W

Jimmys66............ 4

PTA................... 3

Metal Craft............ 3

Airborne Onight.i.... 1 Liberty Warehouse .... 1 PantanaBobs  0

nu&&p

American Division

Pair Electronics  4

SunnySideEggs,  3

Ormonds............. 2

J.A.s Uniforms  2

Calif Concepts  2

Subway ............... 1

Whittington............ 0

Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available (or sale below the advertised price in each A4P Store, except as specifically noted

in this ad

at oA

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU WED . MAY 18 AT 703 GREENVILLE BOULEVARD A4PIN GREENVILLE, N.C.

ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS

coinsniiiE

WITH DOWN HOME PRICES!

Industrial League 4, American Division

Empire Brushes*!  4

Public Works.......... 4

TRW.................. 4

Union Carbide  3

Cox Armature  3

Burroughs Wellcome #1 3

Coca-Cola............. 3

East Carolina*!  2

Grady White........... 2

WNCT-TV............. 1

Enforcers...........  1

National Division

Carolina Leaf.......... 3

Fire Fighters.......... 3

Pitt Memorial  3

Vermont-American.... 2

Empire Brushes *2..... 2

C.I.S................... 1

G. Utilities..........   0

Wachovia Bank  0

East Carolina *2....... 0

Burrough-Wellcome *2. 0 Belvoir................ 0

Box-0-Chicken

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH

2 in a bag Limit 2 bags, Please

Fryers

lb.

39

Church League National Division

Unity.................. 4

Grace................. 4

Church of God  3

1st Presbyterian  3

Faith Pent............. 3

Trinity................ 2

Peoples'............... 2

1st Pentecostal ........ 1

Mt. Pleasant........... l

American Division

Blackjack............ 4

Memorial Baptist  3

Oakmont..........;... 2

1st Free Will...  1

1st Christian........... l

Jarvis................. 1

Immanuel Baptist  l

St.James..........  0

Maranatha............ 0

Arlington St    0

Womens League

PTA...............  3

Copper Kettle.......... 3

Greenville Travel  3

Pitt Memorial  2

Players Retreat  2

Fred Webb............ 1

Burroughs-Wellcome.. 1

Prepshirt.............. l

Wachovia Bank  0

Va Pork Loin

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM

Sliced

Meat Franks

A&P QUALITY

12 oz.

pkg.

98

Co-Ed League

Ervins Auto........... 3    0

Bill's Goodies.......... 2    1

Western Sizzlin  1    2

Bonds/Hodges  0    3

Little League North State League

Sportsworld  ....3

Union Carbide  3

Coca-Cola............. 2

Jaycees............... 2

Optimists.............. 2

Kiwanis............... 0

Lions...............  0

Tar Heel League

First Federal   4

Wellcome............. 2

Exchange............. 2

PepsiCola...........   1

True Value Hware . . . . 1

Carroll & Assoc  1

Moose................. 1

Margarine

PARKAY

2100

1 lb. I

pkgs. Hi

Green Peppers

GREEN ONIONS (BUNCH) CUCUMBERS

sp

^for I

^only H

Prep League

1st State Bank  ...1    0

Hendrix 4 Dail  1    0

Shop-Eze.............. 0    1

Garris-Evans.......... 0    1

Rec Softball

Church League

Immanuel..............000    00-0

Faith Pent..............419    5x-19

Leading hitters: FP Chris McDaniel 3-3, Mike Williams 3-3.

Trinity ....000 000 0-0

Memorial..........300    313    x10

Leading hitters: T Walt Gurganus 2-3, Josh Porter 2-3; M Henry Kidd 3-3 (HR), Charles Tomlison 2-3.

Industrial League

Empire Brush *2......102 111 0-6

WNCT-TV...........002 001 0-3

Leading hitters: WN Luther Williams 2-3, Keith Whitney 2-4; EB - Aubrey Harrison 3-3, Milton James 3-3.

GUCO...............100    200    2-5

Cox .................002    020    2-6

Leading hitters: GU - Wayne Bryant 3-3, Larry Lewis 2-3; C -Joe Williams 4-4, Donald Cannon 3-4, David Beim.

TRW..................600    342-15

Carolina Leaf..........000 145-10

Leading hitters: TR - Doug Haddock 3-4, Van Sealy 3-4, Terry Monday 3-4; CL - Jim Ward 3-4.

Coca-Cola..............026    63-17

ECU *2 ................. 200    00- 2

Leading hitters; CC    -    Ronnie

Garris 4-4, Dan Gay    3-4,    Terry

Duncan 3-4, Kirk Smith 3-3, Bob Wooten 3-4,

Wachovia...........010 002 2-5

Grady-White 103 023 x-9

Leading hitters; W - Kinny Powell 2-3; GW - Allen Cobum 2-3, Robert Bunn 2-3, A. Smith 2-2.

CIS.................010 040 0-5

B-Wellcome*!......215 081 x-17

Leading hitters: BW - Mike Landley 3-4, Fred Keith 3-4, N, Dixon 3-4; Cl Blake Price 33, Duane Nobles 2-3.

OPEN 24 Hours A Day Monday 7:00 A.M. To Saturday 12 Midnight Open Sunday 7:00 A.M. To 10:00 P.M. 703 Greenville Boulevard Greenville Square Shopping Center Greenville. N.C.

)

t





OUTDOORS

With Joe Albea

1

Allison Defends Mason-Dixon Title

A Complex Situation - The following is an account of the problems that Florida biologists had recently in controlling a major natural wildlife disaster involving deer.

The problem that developed because of the interference by humane groups, such as the Fund For Animals, reveals the need for more public awareness into the complexities such a disaster brings with it.

There often comes a time when a reduction in the number of deer in an area will create better conditions for the remaining deer.

Hunting and the subsequent herd control by wildlife biologists will keep the herd in peak shape.

In North Carolina a problem of htis magnitude has not occurred. The possibilities are always there that a problem could arise. The one question we have to ask ourselves, when and where something like this begins in North Carolna is whether we will be ready to handle such a clomplex situation.

There were all the classic elements of a confrontation. On one hand, hunters with air-boats and half-tracked swamp buggies. On the other side was Cleveland Amory and his Fund for .Animals. Highlighting the occasion was the national media. And the issue was the Florida Everglades deer herd.

The flurry of publicity and lawsuits surrounding the Everglades deer hunt last summer put wildlife management on the evening news - in a very unflattering way. The proposal? An emergency hunt to thin deer herds in two flooded state wildlife-management areas in the Florida Everglades. The Fund for Animals, and other humane groups, quickly gained national media attention and sympathy by calling the hunt a slaughter. It wasnt that simple.

Flooding is a fact of life in the Everglades, and periodic die-offs of deer occur when the animals are isolated on small islands of habitat and most of their food supply is underwater. This was the situation last summer. Two major tropical storms had water levels rising rapidly, and all vehicular traffic had been prohibited to reduce stress on the deer herds. Based on past studies, Florida wildlife officials knew they could expect a severe die-off and habitat damage if something wasnt done. A similar situation occurred in 1978-79, and a majority of the deer in the flooded area had died of starvation. Over-feeding had also caused severe damage to the vegetation.

Florida wildlife officials decided to hold an emergency hunt - 2,000 animals would be removed from the flooded areas. An adequate food

supply would remain for the thinned herds, and the habitat would not be destroyed by over-feeding. The smaller herds would come through the flooding in good health, and high reproductive rates would allow the deer to recover rapidly. This was based on past experience. An emergency hunt in a similar floodd area a few years prior had removed 600 deer, and the remaining herd had shown no mortality.

However, a local humane organization quickly filed suit, charging that the hunt was a slaughter. It would be a simple matter, the group argued, to feed the deer. An injunction was granted, and the hunt was stopped.

The humane group chose to ignore history. Wildlife officials had tried massive supplemental feeding programs for deer strandedby flooding in 1958, 1960, 1966, 1968 and 1970. The logistics of locating and feeding the deer had been impossible. Also, biologists found that the abrupt change in the diets of the animals didnt allow the deer enough time to develop the micro-organisms essential to their digestive process. By the time the deer had adapted to their artificial diets, most had died of starvation, disease or stress.

Enter Cleveland Amory and his Fund for Animals. Amorys lawyers filed a flurry of ill-fated suits (none of them held up in court ) and gained national attention. The solution to the problem? Amory and his supporters claimed it would be a simple matter to rescue the deer and move them tetter habitat. Once again/>^tory was ignored. The Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission had attempted this in the past, and relocation efforts had been dismal failures. Many weakened and diseased deer died from the stress fo the capture. Often, deer that were relocated to higher ground returned to their flooded home ranges. However, a judge granted an injunction against the hunt while the rescue took place.

Amory had claimed that he would have 90 volunteers with airboats available the first day and confidently added that an average of 250 deer could be relocated per day. The 2,000 deer would be relocated in eight days - ending the problem. On the first day, seven volunteers with airboats showed up - and rescued a total of 14 deer. On the second day, only three volunteers with airboats were present and four deer were moved.

The courts quickly allowed the emergency hunt to take place in one of the wildlife-management areas, and hunters removed 723 deer. Later, biologists monitored the herd and found that mortality in the remaining animals was 23 percent and little damage was

DOVER, Del. (AP) - A record crowd of more than 41,000 is expected Sunday to watch Bobby Allison try to defend his Mason-Dixon 500 title at Dover Downs International Speedway.

Allison hopes to become the first driver in 11 years to win back-to-back spring races at Dover Downs.

Allison, currently second in the NASCAR Winston Cup Grand National point standings to Harry Gant, won last years Mason-Dixon with an average speed of 120.136 miles per hour. It was the fastest winning time since Cale Yarboroughs 1977 victory at a speed of 123.237 miles per hour.

Allison finished three laps ahead of runnerup Dave Marcis and led 486 of the 500 laps.

It was Allisons first Mason-Dixon victory since 1980, and it tied him with David Pearson for second on the all-time winners list at Dover, one behind Richard Petty, who leads with six victories.

Petty, meanwhile, hasnt won a Mason-Dixon 500 in 13 years, but a victory Sunday would mark a milestone for the veteran driver. He enters Sundays race with a career total of 196 victories, 92 more

done to the habitat, so the deer herd would soon recover. In the other flooded area, the hunt had to be cancelled because of legal delays. Mortality in this deer herd topped 65 percent, and habitat damage was severe. Because food was so scarce, biologists even noted cannibalism in wild dogs.

There were no winners in the confrontation in the Everglades except, perhaps, Cleveland Amory, who gained additional coverage from the national media. There were some clear-cut losers, though - the deer that slowly died of starvation in the flooded swamps of the Everglades. Renew Your Boat Registration Locally - Are you itching to put your boat in the water? Dont forget to register it first with the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission. For greater convenience, boat registration renewals may be handled through local agents. Most marine dealers offer this service.

Boat registrations may also be renewed by mail through the Wildlife Commissions Moterboat Registration Section. However, the mails are always swamped with registrations and renewals in the spring and early summer and, processing these often takes several weeks. Its far more convenient for boaters to handle renewals through lacal boat registration agents.

The Wildlife Commission has a toll-free hotline which offers boaters information on the registration agents in their area. Simply call 1-800-662-7350 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Locally, you may renew boat registrations at Vanns Hardware on N. Greene Street in Greenville.

Radio

/haek

EXPANDED

DEPARTMENT

than any other driver. A victory would give him earnings of $5 million, a level no other driver has reached.

Petty, who is only $9,190 from reaching the $5 million mark, did not win a NASCAR Winston Cup race in 1982. He

entered the 1983 season with a 40-race losing streak.

But he ended the drou^t earlier this season by winning the Warner W. Hodgdon Caro

lina 500 at Rockingham, N.C., the third race of the year.

Two weeks ago. Petty won his second race of 1983 when he captured the Winston 500 at

Talladega, Ala., to become the first driver to win all races that have been on the NASCAR schooled for at least two seasons.

Qualifying for the Winston Cup event begins here at 10 a.m. Saturday, with the $240,000 race getting underway at noon Sunday.

TANKIFNAMilM

Elkins May Play Again

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -Two weeks ago, quarterback Rod Elkins had gotten his life back to normal after a disappointing senior year at the University of North Carolina. However, Elkins has the itch again.

A painful knee injury cut short the Greensboro natives 1982 season and virtually ended any chance for a future in the sport. He had acccepted coach Dick Crums offer to become a student-coach and had even delayed his graduation to December.

Now, Elkins is thinking differently.

I want to play again, Elkins said. What I want to do is get the operation and 1 want to stren^hen the leg as much as possible and make it as strong as it ever was before and I want to try out for a team.

Rekindling his decision was last months National Football League draft of college talent. He sat in front of a television with teammates David Drechsler and Greg Poole, watching the proceedings on cable television.

The Green Bay Packers took Drechsler, an offensive lineman, while defensive back Poole signed as a free agent with the Cincinnati Bengals. The Los Angeles Rams picked linebacker Mike Wilcher.

In the days prior to the draft, several teams had called Elkins and others had mailed him information about their organizations. When the final player was chosen, Elkins had heard from the Chicago Bears and the Denver Broncos, both of which are interested in Elkins as a free agent.

It was real tough to watch the draft and sit in the room with Drechsler and Wilcher going in the second round, Elkins said. It was real exciting for me to be in the same room with David when he got the call from Green Bay. And then to see Greg go to Cincinnati was exciting.

But it was a real disappointment to me not to be able to do that. So, Ive just made up my mind that I want to get that operation, I want to give it a shot, he added.

He said there are a couple of roadblocks, including his layoff from the game for almost two years. Pro teams also are leery of football players with knee problems.

Theres nothing that says my operation is going to be successful. Ill have to see how my knee does after the operation, and Ill have to see how my leg reacts to it and go from there, Elkins said.

When Poole returned from the Bengals mini-camp two weeks ago, that was the clincher for Elkins.

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SCOREBOARD

Continued from page B-9)

Baseboll Leaders

By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING (55 at batsi: Carew, California, 462, Brett. Kansas City. 425; Thornton. Cleveland. 369: McRae. Kan.sas Citv, 367. Yount. Milwaukee,

:!66.

RUNS Brett. Kansas Citv. 24; Castino, Minnesota, 24; E Murray. Baltimore. 23; DeCinces, Calitornia. 22:    Ford,

Baltimore. 22 RBI: Brett, Kansas City, 27; Kittle, Chicago. 27; Rice, Boston. 26; Ward, .Minnesota, 26; Thornton, Cleveland, 25 HITS: Carew, California, 49: Ford, Baltimore, 41; S Henderson, Seattle, 41; Yount, Milwaukee. 41; Castino, Min-ne.sota, 40

IMIUBLES: Brett, Kansas City, 12: Bernazard, Chicago. 11; Ford, Baltimore. II. Hrbek, Minnesota, II, S Henderson. Seattle, 10 TRIPLES: G Wilson. Detroit. 4 Evans, Boston. 3, Griffin, Toronto, 3: Herndon, Detroit, 3, Tabler, Cleveland. 3; Winfield, New York, 3

' HOME RUNS DeCinces, Calllornia, 10, Brett, Kansas City, 8; Lvnn, California. 7; Winfield, New York, 7; Yount. Milwaukee. 7 STOLEN BASES: J Cruz, Seattle. 21; W W'ilson. Kansas City, 14, Garcia. Toronto. II; M Davis, Oakland. II, R Henderson, Oakland, 10, RLaw, Chicago, 10; Sample, Texas, 10 PITCHING 13 decisions): Flanagan, Baltimore. 64). 1.000. 2 73; .MoUitl Toronto, 3-0. 1 000, 0 00: Slaton, Milwaukee, 4-0, I 000, 2 08; Righetti. New York. 5-1, .833. 3.59; Sutcliffe. Cleveland, 5-1. 833.3 74 STRIKEOUTS Slieb, Toronto, 51; Morris, Detroit, 44; Blyleven, Cleveland, 43. Kison. California. 37 Rawley, .New York, 36.

SAVES:

Stanley, Boston,

Splllne'r, Cleveland, 5. Beard, Oafiland. 4; Davis, .Minnesota, 4, Heaton. Cleveland,

4; 0 Jones, Texas, 4; Tobik. Texas. 4

San Francisco,.23 RBI: Murphy, AtlanU, 30, T.Kennedy. San DiMo, 28; Hendrick, St Louis, 26; Bench. Cincinnati. 24; Dawson. Montreal. 24

HITS; Bonilla. San Diego, 45. Cruz Houston, 43; Thon, Houston. 42; TKen nedy. San Diego, 41; Dawson, .Montreal, 40

DOUBLES: J Ray. Pittsburgh, 14: Dawson, Montreal, 10, Buckner. Chicago,

necessary

Sunday. May 22 Milwaukee at Philadelphia. TBA. necessary

sary

WESTERN CONFERENCE Los Angeles vs. San Antonio

(Los Angeles leads series 2-1) Sunday,1

9; Five are tied with 8 TRIPLES: Moreno, Houston, 5 Dawson, Montreal. 4; Green. St Louis, 3; Raines, .Montreal, 3; 18 are tied with 2 HOME RUNS: Murphy, Atlanta, 10: Guerrero, Los Angeles, 8, Evans, San Francisco, 7; Hendrick, SI Louis, 7 Horner, Atlanta. 7, Schmidt

ay, Mays

Los Angeles 119. San Antonio 107 Tuesday. May ID San Antonio 122. Los Angeles 113

Friday, May 13

Los Angeles 113, San Antonio 100

Sunday, May 15

Los. Angeles at San Antonio

Pacific

Los Angeles 5    5    O    500    163    188

.Arizona    4    6    0    400    178    241

Denver    4    6    o    400    141    173

Oakland    4    6    o    400    176    161

Saturdays Games Los Angeles 23, Boston 20 Michigan 21. Arizona 10

Sunday's Games Chicago31, Washington 3 Philadelphia 6, Denver 3 Tampa Bay 17, Oakland 10 Monday 's Game

Wednesday, May 18

Ani '

day'i

Birmingham 22, New Jersey 7 Saturday. May 14

Philadelphia, 7.

STOLEN BASES Lacy, Pitfsburgh, 15,

E Milner, Cincinnati' 13; Moreno Houston. 12, SSax, Los Angeles, 10 Thon. Houston, 10; Wilson, New York. 10 PITCHI.NG (3 decisions I! .Monge Philadelphia, 3-0, 1000. 6 17: P Perez Atlanta, 5-0, 1000.    1 43; Stewart,    Los

Angeles, 30, 1000, 1 40: Dravecky,    .San

Diego, 6-1. 857 , 3.05; Rogers, Montreal, .5-1,833,2,65,

STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia. 70; Soto, Cincinnati, 47; McWilliams. Pittsburgh, 46; Berenyi, Cincinnati, 45; Candelaria, Pittsburgh. 38. Seaver. .New York. 38; Valenzuela. Ixis Angeles. 38 SAVES S Howe.    Los Angeles,    6,

Hume. Cincinnati, 5, Bedrosian, Atlanta, 4, DeLeon. San Diego, 4, Forster, .Atlanta, 4, Lucas. San Diego 4 USmith, Chicago,    4: Stewart.    Los

Angeles. 4

San Antonio at Los Angeles, (nl Friday, May 20 Los Angeles at San Antonio, mi. if necessary

Sunday. May 22 San Antonio at Los Angeles, if necessary

Los Angeles at Birmingham, (n)

Sunday, May IS

adelphia

Chicago at Philad Arizona at Tampa Bay

Monday. May 16 Denver at Boston, m) Jersey atMichigan, (ni Washington at Oakland, mi

NHlPlgyoHs

By The Associated Press STANLEY CUP FINAL Edmonton vs. New York Islanders (New York leads series2-01

Transactions

Tuesday, May lo

N Y Islanders 2, Edmonton 0

Thursd, May 12

N Y lslanders6, Edmonton3

Saturday. May 14

Edmonton at ,\ Y Islanoers, mi

Tuesday, May I,

Edmonton at N Y Islanders, mi

N Y Islanders necessao

Thursday. May 19

if Edmonton, in), if

By The Associated Press BASEBALL National League

HOUSTON ASTROS-Signed Nolan Ryan, pitcher, to a two-year extension of his conlract PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Placed Joe Morgan, second baseman, on the 15-day disabled list and activated Dave Roberts, catcherinfielder.

FOOTBALL

National Football League

VIKINGS-Signed

NBAPloyoffs

Saturday, May 21

Edmonton at N Y ' '

uarterback, to

Quisenberry, Kansas City, 8: ioston, 8; Caudill, Seattle, 6,

By The Associated Press CONFERENCE FINALS I Best of Seven I EASTERN CONFERENCE (Philadelphia leads series 2-01

Islanders,    mi,    if

necessary

Tuesday, May 24    

NY    Islanders at Edmonton,    (ni,    if

necessary

MINNEAPOLIS Tommy Kramer, oua two-year extension of nis contract.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Signed .Michael Haddix. fullback, and Glen Young and Victor Otis, wide receivers

ngar

United sutes FooUmU League

ARIZONA WRANGLERS-Activated

Sunday. May 8

Philadelphia 111. Milwaukee 109. OT

USLF Standings

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING 155 at batsi: Hendrick. St Louis, .368; Dawson, Montreal, 357; T.Kennedy, San Diego, 347; Schmidt, Philadelphia. .337; Bonilla. San Diego. 331, Cruz. Houston. .331.

RUNS Schmidt, Philadelphia, 27; GarvOy. San Diego, 26; Murphv, Atlanta, 26 leMaster. San Francisco. 54 Evans.

Wednesday, Mayli

' 'lilwi

Philadelphia 87. .Milwaukee 81 Saturday, May 14 Philadelphia at Milwaukee

Sunday, May 15

Philadelphia at Milwauke

Wednesday, May 18

Milwaukee at Philadelphia, necessary

Friday, May 20 Philadelphia at Milwaukee.

Philadelphia Boston New Jersey Washington

Chicago I Tampa Bay'i .Michigan Birmingham

By The Associated Press AtlanUc W    L    T

9    I    0

5    5    0

3    7    0

1    9    0

Central 7    3    0

7    3    0

6    4    0

5    5    0

Pet.    PF    PA

.900    198    86

500    226    204

.300    164    240

100-    123    258

700 252 700 194 600 201 500 165

132

Dan .Manucci. quarterback, aiid sent Todd Krueger, quarterback, to the development team NEW JERSEY GENERALS-Slgned Don Harris, free safety

COLLEGE FORT LEWTS-Announced the re-signaton of Chuck Walker, basketball coach, and named him assisunt athletic director and men's tennis coach. Named Jean A. Rhea as assistant women's basketball coach and women's head tennis coach.

KANSAS STATE-Announced the resignation of Dave Baker, head baseball coach





long-Term, Fixed-Raie Home Mortgage Returns

ByJOHNCUNNIFF AP Business Analyst

NEW YORK (AP) - It is rare that something pro- flounced dead a few years ago should arrive back among the living, quietly step into its old role, and go about its business as if nothing had happened,

^ But the rarity has occurred: The fixed-rate, long-term home mortgage is back among us. Just ask your local banker, or look in his newspaper ads.

That this should occur seems to amount to a con

siderable mystery, especially when you recall that many a lender said good riddance to the critter as if it were a despicable criminal of the most dastardly kind.

There was a reason for that. The long-term, fixed-rate mortgage got a lot of lenders in serious trouble. Here they were with 8 percent loans on their books when they, themselves, were paying more for money to keep alive.

As interest rates rose the situation worsened. Lenders

were losing on those mortgages every day, and , yet they couldnt get rid of ' them. No sane borrower would pay off such a mortgage in advance. No, not even the president of the U.S. League of Savings Associations, who held a 6 percent home mortgage and who reacted in horror to the suggestion that he retire it early.

Many savings institutions went under or were forced to merge with others. It was understandable: They were paying 15 percent for their

money and earning only 8 percent on their mortgages. Never again, they said.

Never didnt last, and among others. Saul Klaman, president of the National Association of Mutual Savings Banks, is deeply concerned. Some institutions, he says, have dangerously short memories.

To make such loans, and then hold them in the banks own investment portfolio rather than reselling them, said Klaman,. "amounts to playing Russian roulette with

interest rates and the future of the institution."

An economist with a memory, a memory of savings institutions begging the federal government for help, Klaman told the annual meeting of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati a week or so ago that bank managers have an overriding fiduciary responsibility not to bet the bank in this way."

The penalty for being wrong on interest rates, he said, is death." And the interest rate cycle, he re

minded them, was far from dead.

It almost goes without saying that nobody can foresee where interest rates will be 30 years from now. Or in 20 or 10 or five or in one year. But some lenders are out there with 30-year commitments.

Why?

For a combination of reasons. One reason becomes obvious when you consider what would happen if interest rates fell to 8 percent or less. It would be the reverse of the situation that earlier

had caused so much trouble.

A second reason is that fixed-rate, long-term mortgages are probably the easiest of all to sell. Customers are accustomed to them. They like them.

The third factor in the decision is revealed by any mortgage rate book, "

One example will do. On a $24,500 loan at 13.75 percent for 30 years the monthly payment amounts to $285,46. How much of that do you think goes to build up equity, or ownership^ About $5 a

month, or $60 in the first year.

The rest, about $280 a month, is interest, because interest is concentrated "up front, particularly so as the term becomes longer.

Now consider this: Most people who take out a 30-year mortgage never keep it that long. Many of them will sell the house or remortgage -after having paid all that interest up front, or in advance.

And when they do that, the effective interest rate rises enormously

Wood Turning Is Useful, Versatile

Q. There is a foul-smelling seepage coming from a wound    *

Q. There is a foul-smelling seepage coming from a wound near the base of an elm tree in my yard. What is wrong? jL.F., Bessemer City)

A. The foul-smelling, unsightly seepage from wounds in the bark or wood of various shade trees is known as slime flux. It occurs most commonly on profusely bleeding trees such as birch, elm and maple, expecially those declining in vigor. iSlime flux is more common in some years than in others. There are two types of slime flux: brown and alcoholic. Brown slime flux originates from the heartwood sap. Before reaching the wounded surface, the sap is a clear watery fluid containing several nutrients. On the surface, it changes to brown, slimy ooze. Alcoholic slime flux develops from the sap of bark and sapwood. It is white and frothy and usually forms near the base of the trunk. Botb types of slime flux are attractive to insects. Because of this, some people think that insects have caused the problem when really they are only a secondary party. There are no preventive or corrective measures known for slime flux. Old methods of treatment probably did as much harm as good.

Q. Can you eat nasturtium leaves' My husband thinks Im crazy, but Im sure Ive read that you could. (L.P., Greensboro)

A. Most people think of nasturtiums only as decorative flowers, but the young leaves have a delicate pungent flavor and are good in salads and sandwiches.

Q. What causes catfacing of strawbeiTies? (L.R., Alexis)

A. Catfaced, or misshapen strawberries, may be caused by pollination problems, frost, insect damage or some combination of these factors. Low temperatures and rainfall this spring have not been conducive to honeybee and bumblebee activity. Bees are the major agent of pollen transfer for strawberries. Early fruit harvests this season are likely to have more misshapen berries than normal because of the poor weather and poor pollination conditions. If you notice small, sunken, green seeds on the surface of the fruit that are very close together, this is due to lack of pollination. (Apollo can be particularly affected.) Frosts can also cause misshapen berries as well as kill the flower parts and receptacle tissue outright.

Q. Can I grow cucumbers in a hanging basket? (C.C., Robersonville)

A. Bush-type cucumbers do well in hanging baskets. The )lants are attractive and strong enough to support full-sized ruits. Keep them picked to promote more fruit productions and a continuous harvest. Other vegetables and herbs can be grown in hanging containers. Small-fruited tomatoes are colorful and productive additions to hanging vegetable garden. New Zealand spinach and Malabar spinach will stand summer heat and thrive in partial shade as well as full sun. Herbs such as lemon balm, chives, sweet marjoram, parsley and thyme are nice to grow in baskets. Proper watering is essential for success with hanging plants because they dry out much faster than those grown in the ground. Water the plants whenever the planting medium feels dry. This may be moreJhan once a day in hot, sunny weather.

Supplied by the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service

Here's the Answer

ByANDY LANG

AP Newsfeatures Q. - Could you please tell me something about mahogany? I am somewhat confused by the various statements I read about it. 1 have heard that it is a hardwood, yet a do-it-yourself book I have just finished said that it actually Is soft. Also, whats the difference between regular mahogany and Philippine mahogany? I expect to be working with mahogany soon and would like to know whether it is difficult to work with? Thanks in advance.

A. - Reblar mahogany is a hardwood, but is not as hard nor as difficult to work with tools as other hardwoods. It is a strong wood that conies in various tones of brown. Philippine mahogany is not a true mahogany in the strict meaning of the word, although there is some controversy about this. It is cheaper than the so-called real mahogany. It is also lighter in color.

Q. - A guest of mine recently set down a water glass on oiir hardwood floor next to his chair. After he and the company left, 1 discovered a white ring there. Some of it came off easily, but there is still a faint trace of the ring that will not disappear no matter how much I rub it. I am leary about using one of the commercial cleaners because I am afraid it might make the stain even worse. What is your advice?

A. - White spots of that kind - that is, caused by water -usually can be removed by rubbing with denatured alcohol or camphorated oil or lemon oil or a little oil with cigar ashes. If the mark resists all efforts to remove it, you then will have to rub with a fine grade of steel wool, again with a little oil. In Jlhe latter case, you may have to touch up the area.

Q. - We put up a metal mailbox a few years ago and now would like to take it down and replace it, but we cant seem to get loose one of the bolts that goes through the wooden post and comes out the other side. One end of the bolt has a square head and must be turned with a wrench, but when we do it the whole bolt turns and does not separate from the nut. Is there some knack to this that we dont know about?

A. - No. Saturate the nut and threads with a penetrating oil and don't do anything for an hour or two. You must then hold the nut in place (or have someboily else do it) while you turn the bolt head with a heavy-duty box wrench or socket wrench. You may have to give the nut three or four treatments before this method works.

The Answers

WORLDSCOPE: 1-Syria; 2-b; 3-deficit; 4-false; 5-against NEWSNAME; Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton If- J4ATCHW0RDS: 1-b; 2-d; 3-a; 4-c; t: iteWSPICTURE: c

PEOPI^WATCH/SPORTLIGHT: 1-b; 2-Arthur Miller; 3-false; 4Man^rs; 5-Philadelphia76ers

By BARBARA MAYER AP Newsfeatures What skill is it that can turn out anything from a bowl to a baseball bat, from a bropm handle to an architectural element?

The answer is wood turning. And on lathes that have not changed in principle for more than a century, a growing number of individuals are producing wood objects that are both useful and beautiful.

Some are professional wood turners, but a surprisingly large number are amateurs who have turned to the lathe as a hobby, says Paul J. Smith, director of the American Craft Museum.

The. museum recently spdnsored an exrabition of wood turning that put the craft in its historical ^rspecti^ and showed the state of the art at present.    ^

Smith conceived of the exhibition after participating in an international seminar organized in England by John Makepeace in June 1980. Preparing a report of wood-turning activity in the United States which he delivered at the conference. Smith discovered how widespread the interest in the traditional craft had become here.

In the exhibition, which closes In May at the American Craft Museum, examples of current wood turnings run the gamut from architectural elements such as newel posts and balustrades produced by Gail Redman for restored Victorian homes to elegant wooden bowls in exotic woods by craftsmen such as Ed Moulthrop and Bob Stocksdale. Delicate decorative boxes by Frank Knox are juxtaposed against

r

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Adaptable to a 50-foot lot, this small cottage boasts an exterior of horizontal siding, brick, and shutters, as well as a cozy interior. Entry is directly into the living room, splashed with light from plentiful windows. Large

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Pva & Andy McLawhorn 3.5 miles south of WIntervllle, just beyond Dews Berry Patch, on N. C. 903. You can find the field 500 yards down the dirt road behind the Renston Corn Mill.

pieces created by artists such as David Ellsworth and Mark and Melvin Lindquist.

According to Christopher Wilk, guest curator for the exhibition, wood turning in its simplest form can be described as the shaping of a piece of wood with a gouge or chisel as the piece revolves between two fixed points. The use of a lathe keeps the piece stable and allows it to revolve.

Although a few innovations occurred in the 20th century, such as the use of steam engines to power large-scale wood turning, lathe technology remains largely the same today as it was in the early 19th ceniury, says Wilk.

The most prolific use of turned elements in architecture in the United States occurred in the mid-19th century when Victorian gingrbread" architecture was composed mainly of wood elements turned on lathes. Posts, columns and architectural screens as well as staircase posts and balusters are examples of wood turnings.

The current interest in renovation of these 19th-century houses - especially in San Francisco has created a market for the skills of artisans like Gail Redman of San Francisco.

The popularity of Shakqr furniture and other objects has also been a force in the revival of the craft. In the 18th and 19th centuries, the Shakers perfected simple but elegant turnings which they used as elements on la'dder back chairs and other furniture, in toys and tools and to make bowls and mortars and pestles.

Wood turning in this country began with emigration of woodworkers from Holland and England in the 17th century. Everything from chairs to bookstands were made with elaborately turned parts beginning in the second half of the 17th century.

Hand turning continued to be important in the production of many objects of everyday use until the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century superseded it.

Today's hobbyist has his counterpart in Europe of the 16th through 19th centuries. Wood turning was adopted as a hobby by kings and gentlefolk from the 16th century. The Hapsburg emperors, beginning with Maximilian 1 were "among the earliest to take to wood turning. But the most famous royal wood turner was undoutedly Louis XVI.

The demise of Louis in the French Revolution led to the transfer of the royal phase of the hobby to England, which became the center for both amateur and ornamental turning and for the transformation of wood turning from a craft into an industry in the 19th century.

In previous centuries, the lathe was viewed as a time- and work-saver. But today, those who choose to work on lathes do so with an eye on the past, says Christopher Wilk.

Working wood in a manner that can be achieved only by hand is an important aspect of the satisfaction derived from wood turning today, he said.

By ANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures

Which is the most important tool in your workshop? The hammerd The screwdriver? The portable electric drill?

Actually, its something you might not think of as a tool. But it really is. Its the workbench. Without it, you really dont have a workshop. When you have one of the proper height and equipped with vises and so-called bench dogs, you have a tool of inestimable value.

While some persons make their own workbenches.

HOUSE

more and more woodworkers are choosing to purchase them from among the wide variety of styles and sizes now available. The key factors in selecting a workbench are sturdiness in terms of weight and construction; the ability of its fixtures to hold your work firmly and securely in various positions; a smooth, large bench top and an adequate tool tray.

Because a quality bench is a major investrhent, an authority on the subject, Garretson Chinn, president of Garrett Wade Co., was asked which three questions a pr(|spective purchaser should get answers to before buying a workbench.

His reply; How much can you comfortably spend? How much space do you have available? Will you need a small or large bench in

Tips On Disease Control

By EARL ARONSON AP Newsfeatures There are are some commonsense practices to help keep diseases in check in our home vegetable garden.

Diseases vary in severity from year to year, depending on environmental conditions, susceptibility of plants and the abundance of certain organisms. The diseases may range from simple leaf spots that dont do extensive damage, to destructive wilts or rots that kill the plant before harvest time.

So we have some suggestions from plant pathologist David Schroeder at the University of Connecticut. He says careful selection of seeds and plants is extremely important. Plant only varieties recommended

for your part of the country. More and more varieties are being bred for resistance to diseases. Check when you buy.

When buying plants, look for vigorous seedlings free of disease and insects. Infected transplants can introduce some persistent soil-borne diseases to gardens.

Dont plant the same or closely related crops in the same area of the garden for several years. Rotate the crops whenever possible. Planting the same vegetables in the same place constantly might result in a buildup of a serious fungus or nematodes, or cause diseases that may persist in the ground or crop wastes.

Practice sanitation. Weeds may harbor insect pests and

disease-causing organisms. Insects and mites often spread disease to plants. All severely diseased plants or parts of plants should be destroyed as soon as the diseases are apparent.

Plants raised in well-prepared soil, in full sun, with pr(5per soil moisture and space for good air circulation are less likely to suffer from disease problems.

If you apply fungicides or bactericides, remember that most of these chemicals are designed as protectants. They cant cure infected plants. The chemicals must be on the plant before the disease-causing organisms get there.

terms of the work you are doing now and the work you will be doing in the future*

Classic workbenches have two vises and a bench dog system, consisting of a shoulder vise on the front of the bench and a tail vise on the right erid. Slots along the front of the bench accommodate steel bench dogs, which are simple mechanical devices for holding, gripping and fastening. The vises make it possible to hold the wood stock in vertical and horizontal positions for all types of filing, boring, sawing and planing.

Top quality workbenches have steel or wooden vises that are premounted to the bench. Better steel vises have built-in, quick-release mechanisms to adjust for the varying thicknesses of wood to be clamped. Many good benches often provide bench dog slots in the movable parts of vises for extra clamping efficiency.

Vises should be checked for precision handling. A good vise will hold a sheet of paper as easily as a 3-inch-thick piece of wood. It will not move under pressure from using any type of tool.

If you buy a quality workbench and maintain it over the years, it should last aUigtilUg^

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THE QUIZ

Answers On B-11

I THE WEEKLY QUIZ IS PART OF THIS NEWSPAPERS SCHOOL PROGRAM

worldscope

(10 points for each question answered correctly)

1 After nearly two weeks of shuttle diplomacy by Secretary of State George Shultz, Israel agreed in principle to remove its troops from Lebanon, if PLO forces'and forces from the nation ofare removed simultaneously.

2 British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher called for new elections 11 months early to consolidate her party's power. Mrs. Thatcher is the leader of Britain'sParty.

a-Labour b-Conservative c-Socialist

3 Representatives from the U.S. and 23 other nations gathered in Paris for a meeting ot the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to discuss a variety of trade issues. At present, the U.S. has a significant international trade (CHOOSE ONE: deficit, surplus).

4 Following a long debate, the House of Representatives voted on a resolution calling for a "mutual and verifiable " nuclear weapons freeze, TRUE OR FALSE: The Senate has already approved a nuclear weapons freeze.

5 Speaking in Phoenix, Arizona. President Reagan, who was shot two years ago, made his strongest statement yet (CHOOSE ONE: in favor of, against) gun control.

newspicture

(10 points it you answer this question correctly)

The rate of un(>mplnsment fell to 10 2 pen ent in April, down .1 percent from March But unemployment among blacks climbed m April to a record 20.8 percent. Among black teenagers, unemployment rose to almost percent.' a-25    b-35    (-50

peoplewatch/sportlight

newsname

(10 points it you can identity this person in the news)

As one of the world's best-known actresses, I recently opened in a new Broadway show, "Private Lives," that also stars an actor who happens to be mvformer husband. Who am I, and who is my co-star in "Private Lives?"

matchwords

(4 points lor each correct match)

1-allude

a-mislead. deceive

2-elude

3-delude

4-deluge

5-delete

b-suggest, imply c-flood

d-avoid, evade e-cancel, erase

(2 points tor each question answered correctly)

1 The artist Christo; best-known for constructing a 20-mile-long nylon "fence" on the California coast, was at work "wrapping "

11 islands oft the Florida coast in pink fabric. Born Christo lavacheff, the artist is a native of..?..

a-the Soviet Lmon b-Bplgaria c-the U.S.

2 "Death of a Salesman." one of America's best-known plays, premiered in Communist China recently to enthusiastic audiences. Playwright (CHOOSE ONE: Edward Albee. Arthur Miller) directed the Chinese production.

3 CanadiarV-born 'Sunnv's Halo" crossed the finish line two full lengths ahead of "Desert W ine " to win the 109th running of the Kentucky Derby, TRL E OR FALSE: "Sunny's Halo " is the first Derby winner ever born outside the U.S.

4 The New York Manders and the Edmonton Eskimos met to decide this year's Stanley Cup (hampionship. The (CHOOSE ONE: Islanders. FskimosI entered the competition as defending champs.

5 In a poll of his fellow players,,Moses Malone of the (CHOOSE ONE: Boston Celtics. Philadelphia 76efsl was named NBA Player of the Year for the third time.

roundtable

Family discussion (no score)

If you could go on a "dream, vacation" this summer, where would you go? Explain your choice.    1

YOUR SCORE: 91 to 100 points - TOP SCORE' 81 to 90 points - Excellent 71 to 80 points - Good 61 to 70 points - Fair

eVEC. lnc .616-83

from the Carroll RIghttr Institute

FORECAST FOR SUNDAY, MAY 15,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Until noon you wind up making yourself more acquainted with knowledge or information to help a present venture. Spend more time at home with family members.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Solve any personal problems today. Make phone calls to people who are vital to your well being. Be sensible.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Improve monetary status and take a Sunday trip. Study property for any possible repairs and plan to make them later.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Handle personal affairs. Plan the week ahead by making out a schedule that can be easily followed. Strive for harmony with others.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Use early morning for meditation. Go after personal wishes. Gain your family's cooperation. Express happiness.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Friends welcome you with open arms today. Devote the evening to the one you love most to find further happiness.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Improve your image with the public. Go after personal goals. Evening is best spent with good friends.    y

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Seek advice and excellent ideas for help in practical matters. Think about possible career moves in the future.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Clear up perplexing situations. Clear up a perplexing situation. Seek new interests. Fascinating love interest comes your way.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Be aware of the needs of others. Do some volunteer work and gain good will. Spend more time with loved one.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Love interests become more serious today. Consider your future and plan for it wisely. Express your appreciation to others.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Concentrate on recreation and relaxation today. Spei|i4 the evening planning your week. Strive for harmony with close ties.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Get out and socialize today. Family Ind friends prove to be great company. Have a good time together.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) AU those small tasks can be handled quickly. Take any health treatment you may need. Improve appearance.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Sit quietly and mediute over the worries which have caused you some lost sleep. Seek any advice which might be necessary.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Make sure you handle your business affairs wisely. Tonight you can socialize with friends and have a great time.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Use caution and discretion in discussions with those in authority. However, make sure you get your point across.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Dont leap impulsively into that new project. Study it first. Use this evening for relaxation. You need your rest.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Make sure your mind is open to what your loved one is trying to tell you. The evening is great for communicating.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Stay on top of those who are handling business affairs for you. Heed your loved ones perceptions.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Use precision in handling all your daily routines. Discuss your finances with those who can be helpful to you.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Your finest ulent can be improved by a different approach to it and more success can be yours. Be punctual today.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wUl comprehend what others are thinking and be sensitive to them. Direct education along lines of psychiatry, medicine, social service and the like. Teach early to be objective. Theres musical talent in this chart.

"The Stars impel, they do not conpel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

Postal Survey Results Released

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will have the ability to reason things out logically, as well as expressing interest in the arts. Send to college and provide cultural advantages. Make sure the diet is good and encourage exercise to help the body.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

FORECAST FOR MONDAY, MAY 16,1983

Directors of the Bethel Council of the Pitt Greenville Chamber of Commerce heard Bethel Postmaster Ben Jones report Thursday on results of a postal services survey which called for renovation and enlarging of the present Bethel Post Office building with 18 parking spaces off the street and a handicapped ramp.

Danny Norris announced that Memorial Day would be

GENERAL TENDENCIES: You will have aU kinda of opportunities to put things into motion to improve your surroundings and family bfe. Your attitude becomes more well rounded which aids your ambitions.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Gain the basic data necessary to improve your unusual and fundamental affairs for more success in the future.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Handle letters and other correspondence wisely. Improve your routines in some way. Drive very carefully.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Study every detail of your monetary affairs and plan a new budget you can ll^ow more easily. Minimize expenses.

i

Revival

Annual spring revival services will begin Monday and continue through Friday at Saint James Free Will Baptist Church.

The speaker for the week is the Rev. Jasper Tyson. .Various choirs will sing

lightly.

L

the first time the downtown flags donated by Woodmen of the World will be displayed. A Veterans of Foreign Wars speaker, a National Guard unit and a trumpeter from North Pitt High School will be on hand for flag dedication ceremonies.

Norris reported that Bethel's new recreation director, Walt Gurganus, has begun his duties.

Results of a townwide survey for suggestions on Pepsi Break speakers revealed that education, medical and money management are subjects of the most interest. A fall Pepsi Break on education was discussed.

Toby Timberlake announced plans for a membership drive in June.

Dave Speir reported that Monday at 10 a.m. has been set for the May "Coffee with the Legislators" in the Wachovia Bank board room.

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Business Notes

NEW BROKER

- Cornelius J. Harris, president of C.J. Harris & Co. Inc,, financial and marketing consultants of Greenville, announced ;the association of Martha N. Woodall of Raleigh as a business -broker in the business and real estate brokerage division.

Harris said Mrs. Woodall, a North Carolina native, has -been involved in the business brokerage business for several years in the Research Triangle and eastern North Carolina business markets,

Ms. Woodall received a bachelors degree at the University ^f North Carolina at Greensboro. She is married to architect Charles Woodall, formerly of Greenville, and they have two sons.

:    '    SALES    INCREASED

Tandy Corp announced that consolidated sales for April were $196,203,000, an increase of 22 percent over sales of 3160,759,000 reported a year earlier.

: Tandys U.S. Radio Shack division recorded a 23 percent ;gain to $155.311,000 during April from $126,183,000 in April -1982.

Sales of Radio Shack stores in existence more than a year Tose 18 percent during April, the company said.

:    AGENT    APPOINTED

Sunskins Southeast Inc., which represents Sun Systems Prefabricated Greenhouses of Commack, N.Y., announced the appointment of Harold Creech of Greenville as sales ; agent for the eastern Carolina region.

The firm said Creech will work with dealers, contractors and developers in the region and will maintain an office at 2723 E. 10th St. Creech also- represents The Market Place, which specializes in commercial real estate.

: Bill Wright of Greenville is vice president for sales for Sunskins Southeast.

FINISHED COURSE Karen E Kale of Greenville completed a two-week course recently at the Investors Diversified Services sales training center, Chaska, Minn. The company said Kale is now an accredited IDS sales representative in this area.

: The school is designed to prepare new IDS sales representatives for careers in providing financial services for individuals and businesses, the Minneapolis based comany said.

;    QUARTERLY    REPORT

: Hampton Industries Inc. reported that sales volume for the quarter ended March 26 totaled $22,860,000, compared to $23,200,000 in 1982.

. Net eamiflgs increased to $297,000, or 12 cents per share, as tompared to $267,000 of 11 cents per share the previous year.

Prepshirt of Greenville is a division of Hampton Industries, which is headquartered in Kinston.

JOINED FIRM Century 21 B. Forbes Agency announced that Lem Wallace has joined the firm as a real estate broker.

Wallace, who retired from the Coast Guard after 22 years service, completed the instructors training course, A.J. Strickland advanced sales course. Century 21 241 training program, and the VIP referral/relocations program He and his wife, the former Annette Smith of Greenville, have two children and reside in Greenville.

;    OFFICE MANAGER

Steve Evans, president of Steve Evans 4 Associates Inc., announced that Sandra Baker is now serving the Greenville firm as office manager.

: Evans said the company, founded in 1978, offers real estate, insurance and investment services.

; Offices are at 130 E. Greenville Blvd.

TRAINING SESSION ' John S. McGara, manager of the TRW Steering 4 Suspension Divisions Staton Plant in Greenville, will attend a productivity college Tuesday through Thursday in Atlanta,

^ The program, sponsored by the Cleveland, Ohio, based TRW Inc., is aimed at training and developing a network of productivity coordinators and providing them with tools and techniques to measure and manage productivity programs in both factories and staff departments.

TRW managers from throughout the country will attend the Conference.

BUSINESS EXPANDS Mary Ann Stephenson, office manager of Aquasystems Inc., 1001E. Fourth St., announced that in addition to offering the certified water quality laboratory for drinking water and wastewater analyses, as well as research and design of environmental pollution control equipment, the firm has added an environmental planning service.

Zachry Lee Nichols, a graduate of East Carolina University in urban and regional planning, has been appointed an associate of the firm in charge of the new service.

   INVESTMENT    OFFICER

Alexander B. (Lex) Howard Jr. has been named an ; investment officer by Wheat, First Securities in Greenville, ; which said the designation is awarded to Wheat brokers to recognize outstanding performance to their clients.

^ Howard, a graduate of Arendell Parrott Academy in I jiinston and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, joined the firm in 1979. He and his wife, the former Mary Melinda Raymer of Statesville, attend Jarvis Memorial Church.

" Wheat, First Securities has 16 offices in North Carolina.

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DPMA MEETING

The Coastal Plains Chapter of the Data Processing Management Association will meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Dondis in Goldsboro.

Ed McGee of Carolina Telephone 4 Telelgraph Co. will discuss DP Communication Changes

RELOCATED OFFICE Utelcom Inc., a subsidiary of United Telecommunications Inc., announced the relocation of its mid-Atlantic regional office to Raleigh from Greenville.

The subsidiary specializes in the sale, installation and maintenance of business telephone systems.

Reagan Predicts Small Business To Steer Nation

SERVICE TECHNICIAN

Creech 4 Jones Business Machines announced that John Barkand, formerly with MetalCraft, is now associated with the Greenville firm as service technician. Barkand recently attended a two-week training school in Atlanta.

The firm said that Curtis King is now associated with Creech 4 Jones as service representative. He worked with Paul B. Williams Co. in Raleigh for several years before moving to the Greenville area.

CONSULTANT NAMED Merian F. Guthrie, who holds a masters degree from East Carolina University, has joined the Atlanta office of Peat, Marwick, Mitchell 4 Co., the international professional accounting firm, as a management consultant.

Formerly of Jacksonville, Ms. Guthrie was a compensation specialist at the United Virginia Bank in Richmond prior to joining Peat Marwick.

EMPLOYEE CITED

Eileen Cowan, teller in the commerical and marketing department of Carolina Telephone 4 Telegraph Co. in Greenville, received an emblem recently in recognition of 10 years service with the company.

A Pamlico County native, she resides in Greenville with her husband, Jesse, and their two children. They attend Pactolus Missionary Baptist Church.

INCOME UP

Peoples BanCorp Inc, reported income before securities transactions for the three months ended March 31 of $1,286,000 compared to $1,216,000 for the same period in 1982.

Net income for the three months ended March 31 was $1,283,000, an increase of 5.3 percent over the $1,219,000 earned during the same period in 1982.

Total assets of the company on March 31 were $521,780,000 compared to $426,156,000 on the same date the previous year.

TOP TEN AWARD

E.F, Craven Co. Inc., a Greensboro based construction equipment distributor, has been recognized by Fiatallis as one of the construction machinery manufacturers top ten North American dealers for 1982.

The sales achievement award was presented at a recent meeting held in connection with the Associated Equipment Distributors convention in Atlanta.

E.F. Craven has a branch office in Greenville.

REVENUES ROSE

Western Steer-Mom n Pops Inc. of Claremont, franchisor of 166 Western Steer Family Steakhouses, reported consolidated revenues of $28.2 million for the year ended Feb. 25, up 5.5 percent over the $27.3 million reported for the prior year.

Operating income increased 131 percent to $1,551,168 in 1983 from $669,425 a year earlier.

Net income decreased to $866,141 for the year ended Feb 25, from $1,008,367 in 1982.

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan, praising entrepreneurs as the forgotten heroes of America, said Saturday that small businesses will help point the nation toward economic recovery.

In his weekly radio broadcast, the president said small firms "will provide most of the new jobs to bring down unemployment.

Noting that Saturday was the last day of Small Business Week, Reagan said: "Every week should be Small Business Week because America is small business.

Small firms account for nearly half our jobs, they create some 60 percent of new jobs and theyre on the cutting edge of innovation, providing products and ideas for the future " Giving the Democratic response. Rep. Barbara Mikulski of Maryland said the ideas generated by small business "come from... having a good basic education.

Urging more money be spent on schools and noting a congressional panels approval last week of money for the MX missile, she said, "The Republicans want to spend money for bombs and the Democrats want to spend money for books.

"The president says we need that money to build weapons to make the Soviets think twice before theyll attack, she said. "But there is another enemy that threatens this country, that enemey is illitaracy.

"If we have to chose "between rockets and rulers, lets make the best choice. Lets teach basic values and old-fashioned skills, Ms. Mikulski said, "Our greatest defense against communism is with people who can read and write and make decisions for themselves.

Speaking from the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md Reagan said 85 percent of the nations 13 million small firms pay taxes by personal rates, not corporate rates. He took the opportunity to remind Congress again that he will not tolerate repeal of the third year of the tax cut.

HIGHEST INCREASE

Food Lion Inc., Salisbury based supermarket chain, reported that it showed the highest sales increase among North Carolinas 20 largest public companies during 1982.

The company said it posted a 42 percent sales increase over the previous year, ranking seventh in the state in sales with $947 million.

Food Lion operates 192 stores in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Georgia. ,

Po

pe Says No To Politics

rcAN CITY (AP) - This supposes unions

VAT

Pope John Paul II told a delegation of Swiss labor unionists Saturday that unions have to be independent of political power to be able to defend workers interests.

The pope, speaking to 650 delegates of the Christian Labor Union from Valais, Switzerland, said: You have to defend the interests of workers in all areas where their rights are in question.

supposes autonomous of political power, in which workers associate freely, seeking equitable solutions, without violence.

John Paul said union members should engage in firm and mutual dialogue, with a keen sense of their responsibility without overlooking their countrys economic conditions and the needs of the common good.

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B 14-The DaUy Rettector, GreenvUle, N a,.Week's Stock Markets

\H W VOKK \1 Sevi York Stock Kxihaioif trading; for the week selected Issues

Sales

PE hds High Low Last Chg

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fopyright by The Associated Press 1983

31S

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)RK lAP) - Weekly Investing I giving the high, low and last the week with the net change

NEW YORK Companies prices for ti irom the previous week's last price All quotations,    supplied by    the National

.Association    of    Secunties    Dealers, Inc.,

reflect net asset values, at which securities could have been sold

High Low Last Chg 31 fc 31.51 3162-> 31 21 50 21    21 21 42- 08

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Copyright by The .Associated Press 1983

AcomFd n ADV Fund n AfutureFd n AIM Funds ConvVld Greenwav HlYield AlianTch AlphaFnd n AmBirthTr' AmExpGth American Funds .AmBalan AmcapFd AmMutI BondFd Fundmlnvs GrowthFd IncomeFd InvCoA NewPerspFd TaxExpl WshMutlnv Amer General: Cap Bond Enterprise HiVldlnv X .MuniBond x VentureFd Comstock Fd ExchFd n FundOlAm Growth n Harbor Fd Pace Fnd ProvidentFd .Amer Growth AmHentge n Amlnsln Am Invest n Am Invine n Am med.Asc n Am NatGrth .Am Natlnco .Amway MutI Analytic

ArchGvt n unavail Axe Houston Fund H IncomFd StockFd BLC GthFd BLC Inco Bab.sonlncm n Babsonlnvt n BeaconGth n BeacimHill n Berger Group 100 Fund n Mil Fund n BosC.Apr n Bust Fndatn ' Bull 4 Bear Gp CapGlh n Equill Golconda n Calvert Group Equil.v Inco Social Calvin Bullock AggresGth BuIlockFd CanadianF'd DividendShr HilncoShr Monthlvlncm Natn W'deSec TaxF'ree Cap TNT n Cardinal CentGrth Chancellor Group Equit NwDecd

14.70 14 59 14 66 * 09

14 31 14 15 14 27-r 11 10 87 10 85 10 86-I- 02 22 75 22.16 22 51- 04 26 46 25 96 26 10- 31 16 96 16.78 16 90

15 73 15 58 15 73+ 15

11 25 11 20 11.22- 04 864    8    45    8    49

14 91    14    74    14 75-    15

13 75    13    72    13 72-    .03

II 79    II    57    II 61-    21

13 63    13    51    13 57-    02

11 02 10 93 1124 II 09

8 61    8    53

10 13 1010

9 70    9    60

10 94- II

11 13- 12 8 56- .03 1010- 02 961- 11

7 42    7    41    7    42+    01

15 78    15    63    15    72 +    06

10 70    10    58    10    58-    .11

18 49    18    31    18    31-    16

32 97    32    52    32    61-    09

14 21    13    93    14 06-    15

44 72    44    24    44 38 -    06

14 69    14    51    14    55-    08

33 14    32    57    32 58 -    43

15 86    15    80    15 84 *    01

20 34    20    22    20 31-    04

5 94    5    89    5    92 +    01

9 64    9    56

4 28    4    15

6 48    6    40

11 32 11 12 1142 1131 27 35 27 11 6.00    5    91

21 12 20 86 20 98-

9 60-4,28+ 14 6 46 * 02 II 32* 21 1142+ 02 27,26 - 09 5 98 * 03 13

6 82    6    87*

134 47 133 97 134 20

04

10.66 10 56 4 85    4    84

14 93 14 77 18 81 18 61 16 20 16 10 t 60 I .59 14 41 14.89

10 60- 05 4 84 - 01 14 93* 28 18 68- 12 16 20 + 04 160+ 01 14 19 14 19- 22 14 70 14 75- 16

16 22 16 10 16 10- 14

20 31 19 99 20 31+ 24 14 05 13 93 14 05 * 01 27 08 26.88 27 02- 10 12 84 12 78 12 83

16 62    16    46    16 62 +    23

11 56    II    49    11 51-    05

14 77    14    50    14 67 +    29

19 26    19 I?    19    17 -    01

16 00    15 95    15    99 +    05

17 80    17 73    17    80 +    25

Surveyor Engyltil n Evergreen n EvrgTtI FarmBuro Gl Federated Funds: Am Leaders ExchFd n Hi IncmSe TaxFree ISGvtSec Fidelilv Group Asseilnv n CorpBond n Congress n Confrafnd n DestinyFd Equtlncm n ExchFd n Fredm

Magellan x .MuniBond n Fidelilv n GovtSec n HilncoFd n HighYleld n Lid Muni n Mercury Puritan n SelErgy SelFncI SelHlth -SelMetl SelTech SelCtil Thrift n Trend n Financial Prog Bond

Dynamics n FficlTx n Industrl n Income n Fsl Investors Bond Apprc Discovery Growth Income IntlSec NatResc Option Tax Exmpt FlexFd

44 Wall Eq '

44 Wall St n Fostr,Mar Fndatn Grwth Founders Group Grwth n Incom n Mutual Specl n Foursquare n Franklin Giup AGE Fund DNTC Growth NY Tax OptioriFd

19 05 18 79 19.01 + 21 71 21 43 21.71 + 44.20 43.82 44 11* 1519 15.13 1516+

1181 1171 1176-32 74 32 58 32.70+ 12 72 12 70 12.70-9.63    962    9.63

8.75    8 72    8.75 +

23 .56 23 48 23 .S5+ 7 36    7 33    7 33-

52 85 52 18 52.21-13.44 13.30 13 33-1518 15.04 1517* 26.95 26.71 26 86* 43 08 42 61 42 70-12.00 1189 11.98*

7    26 20 15

9.85 9.33 II 92

8    37

7.21    7,21-

19 91 20 05-9 81    9    83-

9.31    9    Si

ll 86 1186-8 36    8    36

13 29 13 19 13 25 + 13 48 13 42 13 48+ 8 98    8    76    8    98 +

16 63 16 56 16 63*

16 23 15 82 16 11 * 24,55 23 91 24 27-13 42 13 35 13 42* 10 16 10 14 10 14-37 92 37 48 37 73-

49    7    45

15 40 15 11 15,33-5 60    5    53    5 57-

9 46    9 48-

956

1501 18 33 11 12 7 03

14 92 15 01 * 18 00 18 33* II 01 1107* 7 01    7 02*

14 85* 8.17* 6 44*

14 85    14    1

8 48    8    08

6 47    6    42

9 05    9    02

12 15    11    99    12    04"

12 40    12    06    12    40 +

19 73    19    47    19    T3*

6 33    6    30    6.32-

5 16    5    13    5    16*

10 28 10 20 10 27* 14 76 14 65 14 69 -

11 22 1109 11 lo

ll 54 1147

12 42    12 18    12    42+    36

19 25    19 06    19    14 -    02

9 36    9 24    9    26    03

3 38    3    39    04

12 18 12,19 C3 1196 1196 II 06    11    13-    10

10 15    10    15    02

10 26    10    29 *    03

1178 1181* 06

3 42 12 21 II 99 II 21

10    17 10.29

11    85

79'; '26 .

Uuallv

Tax.Afngd

18'.* S I.5S- ', 1.5'i

21'.+ '4

23S- S 28S + 1', 26S-1 I2':*,l'.

12'.- '4 6',- '. 60', - '4

40'

,B *. -1' 4

'( oilind 18(1    1972 I',

I iilGas 3 02 7.1827 10'.

I inbKn 184 8 2567 .16'. (mdln I8 9-22.5 U95', (niwE ,1 7 11727 27',-I'mnsat 2 ll(M2 x2294 69-. (nKdsl88 7 10171 23 I    iinFcIs    2 .12    7    4815    42'.

(    nsN).s 2    8    1128    27

C.nislw 2 44 7 11296 20'. f ml) p 2 6)1117795 IH'. (nlUirp 2 60 9 1460 43 . i nntlll 2 24:5404 25'.

1 nlTel    I    )H    II    x24U:B u24'

( llwia    60    I 4    20589 u.57'4

1 ,K,pr 1 52 20 460:5 33

I iirnG 2 112 17 11989 81

( rm'kN 2 40 10 ,512 33',

)    rwnCk    II    991    IH'.

I rw/.el 1    2236    u3ir.

I    uriW    12011    3IH    49',

D-D -

ll,)na)'p    I    60    28.4:H6 .BS

|i.,rlKr    5    84    II    X.57IB72',

ii.M.n.n .57 1286.5 69-. li.iM'i, Mi l.'al HS 12'.

iMvllud 1 20 17 :52.52 72 I'avll'l. 2 7 2230 18 I )oerc 1    5601!    39',

Ih'H.lAr 1    7035    48-4

|).'tiru. )H 1 1 1.532 15'. I'elFd 1 )'B 8 7976 1,5'.

I Hams 1 76 13 .16397 25' Digital    21) 24108 122-,

DiMifV ! 20 24 111894 HD, DrI'cup 4 .H X1I906 14'. l8,'Alb ! 0 21 2C98U.H'. Di,w,l|i s')4i ,H 1617 -50''.

0 9 10967 19'.

2 40 1,1 9,181! 47>.

2 28 7 2W28 23'.

2 10 1436 ,18', - E-E -F.,.| \ir    6024    9'.

1- ,,.M,F I til 8 1884 21'. F.Kiiil la 12 68293 77', Falun 80    2739 u4li

Kchim iH 15 4940 18-, Klt'a.ii 68 8 15138 15',' F.mrsFI 2 Ml 14 7189 62 . FiLcrch I SI 9 .HIll 21 -.

23 '. 24 +

24', 27S-44', 44-.-SJ'i 3SS+II, 31'. 32.* '. 2))'. '20S* '. 3<)'4 31':-Is. 23    25'; *2',

.511    ,53'.-21,

23'. 23'.

22", 24'.* I', IB': 39 29'29'.

.15'. 36S + I 87'-. 90-4*

41

32',

I5S

26'.

37'.

S

NutMP 1.92    47 17S    n>:

NorSo 0 2    80    11 4817 58    56S

Nortek    08    8 626 HI',    Ml'.

NoAPhl 1    70    12 163 U66 .

NoeslltllB 7 7432 UI3', MndPS 1.50    15 7028 14

N(XStPw 2    74    7 1128 33'.

Norlrp 1    80    38 1010 U86 ,

Nwsl.'Air 80 500 5137.51 j Nwtlnd 2 68 8 2977 40',

66':

66',-23 *

Norton 2 58 ,x.520 u4.5 .- 43-. NorSim 1 08 17,1917 26'. Z5 Norwst 1 80 10 1798 UIH. 31 - 0-0 -

40". -2' 26'"- ', 2S-3I':-2'. 42'

; I (ICC I Pel 2.50 80 9589 21':

(IhluEd 1 80 8 5102 U16 OklaGEIS4 8IH75UI9S Olm I 20 14 ia57u32'j Omark I 34 269 24S ONEOK 2 40 8 490

23'.-

25':-

24'.

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1 20 30 1887 U46'.

J4 .

44''. '. i

, 23' V)'.

23':*

.56 *4",

Owenlll

1 (B 27 X.3317 u:16 - P-Q-

:B';

:13': -1

31'.

31". I.

IPG

2:16I4r20| 6,5'.

It! .

63', -1 '

78'.

79',

PacGE

, 3 7 89) U.12 ,

:12',

32".* ',

:C

X! *

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3 7 1446 UX>

30':

31'.* '.

:n".

'34 -

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2 16 8:19:19 22".

22'.

22',

:12',

33':* ',

PaoAm

4;!6.57 u6'.

6'.

6',* ',

43';

4: *D,

PanhEf

2: 6'2097 29

27 I

28'.*!'.

' Parson

111 12% 25',

24

24', '.

:16".

:B - .

Pennev

2.16 11 11593 61'..

59

60'.*1'

69-,

70 -2

PaPI.

2.40 8 1893 24',

24

24-.* 1

.56

,59",-9,

Pennzol ,2 20 11 9995 40",

37'.

40'; *2-,

12'.

12'J-

PepsiCo 1 62 18 1749U :19',

:i7

:!7'" 1-, ;

69';

71'.+ '.

PerkEl

..50 22 8418 27

25

26 D, 1

17';

17',* ',

Pfizer

2.32 19 x8274 84'.

81'.

Xf'.- '.

.B'.

:b'.

PhelpD

3608 32",

ill".

4.5

45",-3

PhilaEI

2.12 8 6955 U18',

17",

. 18',* '. :

H'l

SS-".*

PhilMr

2 90 10 11118 66',

6)',

64'. 1 .

14".

1.5 + ',

PhilPel

2.20 9 19499 34'.

Xi

,H'.* ",

23

24',- ",

PiLsbrv

2.48 10 4572 59'-.

55', - 3',

Market Analysis

Dow Jones 30 Indusfri.ils

May 9 13 13.84

High 1229.68 I owl 214.40 Closed 1218.75

1230

1220

1210

III..

M T W T F

1250

1200

1150

1100

1050-

1000

950

AP

D* J 82

191

- Market In Brief

NYSE Issues Consolidated Trading Friday, M.iy13

Volume Shares 93,847,260

Issues Traded 1,984

Unchanged 351

NYSE index

95.07 4 0.42

S &P Comp

164.904 0.65

Dow Jones Ind

AP 1.218.7544.35

MARKET ANALYSIS - The Dow Jones industrial average closed at 1218.75 Friday, down 13.84 from the previous week. (APLaserphoto)

I14'"-6'4 Pioneer 1 16 17 x3114 u25 76'.-S'S I PitnyB 1,84 14 1167 u66';

Dri'sr

mil'iinl

DukcP I luql.l

4',* '

32 '. -11

Pilnv WI    iBuiU-

Pltlsln 2(1    12963    16-" n

I'neum s .50 15 X3I2 u28'. 24'

19':*

46',-

23':-

111-

25-,

8',-

21'.*

r.smrk

s|.4 Ml 866 66',

63

65'.*2'>,

RalsPur

Ftlr.l .

8 1,598 20

19

19'.*

Hamad

Fv.inP

1 "71 x72(. 12',

Ml'.

12', *2'.

Raneo

FvCcIo

1 60 M) 59.iu:!2 'i

31' .

31':-

Rangri)

Fwoil

3 7\4i)278:'

. :h

34'.-

Ravthn

- F-F -

ReadBI

1- \M

1 ' 9 4316 042

:19'.

42 *2",

ReiehC

F.iirchd

IU lh:i6 22'.

21',

Rep.Stl

Fcilers

%:b u 7',

5-1

"7 *1 '

Revlon

Fe>IN.\I

16 117% ,10'.

28-,

29',

Revnln

1',ilD.M

2 2111.1,1291 6'i',

59

60', 2:

RevMtl

f iisB.ii

813 10'.

9".

10 *

RiteA s

Fire.'lri

60 6.1 6902 U2.'i

22

22'"

Robins

f I1KH.I

1 118 1(1 69 23'1

24',

24'

Rockwl

HM'hrl

' .10 514,'> 29',

27'.

28", ',

Rohrin

t'slChie

1 .11 .3 1290 26',

25',

26

Rorer

Fln'.'te

2 11 7,10'.' ,19'-

,B

B'.

Rowan

HeelK '

. Hi ;il 5290 U.12.

29",

B * '.

Rffos

f ligl.M

16 20 147" 12".

27',

'29 ,-3'.

Hovll) :

F.iPl,

3:16 8 7671 .17 ',

37':

:17'',

R.v'derS 1

Fl.iPrg

192 9 48,-;! 1,21'.

20'.

2D.+.1

MwGen

23.13 -14 .

12',

12.- ',

Sf.M

f till ir

> 12 XW 24 >

22'-.

22 , - 1

Safwv s

Koril.M

19878 52',

49 '

.51',

SlRegis 1

l-.irMK

2 40 14 288.', 4.5".

44'-.

45''. 's

SF'elnd

F rpl.Mi

(HI 28 \7179 02.5

Xi'i

24*D,

.SehrPIo 1

F rui'ht

4" 1.5.H :H -. G-G -

X'M;

34',- ",

Schlmb

.SeotIP

(.\F

0:5) 17 4826 19

17',

17' - .

SearleG

(.TF

2 92 9 19094 46

44',

44':-!':

Se'ars

1    Poland    1    44    .5638

!    PortGE    1 78    6    2060

i    ProctG    S2.40    II    12230    59-,

I    PSvCol    1.84    9 8210 U17'-

i    PSInd    2 76    6    5217    26',

I    PSvKG    2.56    7    11232    24', 2.3\

PugetP    I 76    8    1920    1.5',

Pvro    13    3303    6'.

QlidkO    2 45 3303 49

yuakSO 80 11x1937 19'

90 17 20832 u28''. 26 20 58 x175 12'.

IL".

16',*

Weekly Stocks In Spotlight

26',*

24'.

Centr.vShr n ( barter Fund ChpsdeDollr n ('hestnu'M n CIGN A Fund.-, (irowth MiVId Income MumBd Colonial F'unds Fund

(irwth ShiS High Yield Income dpi ion Tax .Mangd ColumhFix Columb(,rl>i n Comwltb '.vB I'omwlih C'ompo'M B S FAind Tax ConcordFd n Con.slellGth n ConlMullnv n Cople.v

CountrvCapGr Dean Witter DevlGth DivGth-HiVld IndValu NtlRsc TaxEx Delaware Group Decalurlnc DelawareF'd DelcheslerBd TaxFree Pa Della Trend DepslCap DepstTr DirectCap n DodgCoxBal n rXidgCoxStk n DrexIBumh n Dreyfu.s Grp A Bonds n Dreylus Leverage No Nine n Specllncm n TaxExmpt n ThirdCntrv n EagieGlh Stis Eaton Vance EH Balancd EH Stock Growth HlYield IncBos Invest SpecEqty TaxMgd \'S Income VS Specl Ftberstadt Group Chemical Fd EngvRes

Opt 10 I'tilil

Income Slk I SGovt Sec Resh Capill Resh Equity CalTFr Fd ofSW Fund.s Inc Comrceinc Inviyual Pilot Fund Sunblt GIT HYId GT iacific n (iatw vOptn n Gen lec Inv FiirunTr n EllunTxEx n Si.S n S&S l/ing n GenSecurit n GinlelErisa GBT Fd n Growth Ind n GrdnPkAv Ham HDA HartwellGth n HartwllLevr n Herold n Horace .Mann n Hutton Group ' Bond n 1.5 35    15    24    15 33 -    02    1    Emerg

10.54    10    53    10 54+    03    I    Gwth n

7 54    7    50    7 50-    .03    j    LSI Group

769-    03    Growth

Income

13 63    01

10 50-    06

69- 08 7 43- 01 9 34 -    39

3 99    3    99    3 99

23 69 23 44 23 52 + 11 49 11 42 1143-10 36 10 29 10 29-6 86    6    81    6 85*

5 74    5'79*.

2,14    2    15*

7 51    7    54    *

3 09 13 41 *

6 62 6 66-6 67 6 67 -

5 79 2 15

1349 6 73 6 68

15 59 15,15 15 59

16

Growth n

1170

11 54

11 60 +

02

31

Research n

20 01

1991

19.96 +

03

16

Lindner n

19 12

1888

1912 +

24

04

Loomis Sayles

- 05

Capital n

26 62

26.23

26 53-

06

Mutual n

19 73

1941

19 48-

26

03

Lord Abbett

10

Affiliated X

1003

984

9.84-

18

12

Bond Deb

II 26

11 23

11 26 +

04

Devel Gth

30.56

30 19

30 47 +

15

04

Income

325

324

3 24

Lutheran Bro:

03

Fund

14 04

1394

13 99-

03

05

Income x

906

898

8 99-

06

83

i Municipal

7 41

7,40

7 40-

01

13

i I'SGovt Sec

9.54

949

9.54 +

06

07

' Mass Finance

06

MIT

12 93

12,76

12,83-

12

35

MIG

1477

14 54

14 61-

n

03

MID

19 48

19 31

19 33-

13

1 82

MfD

1253

12 33

12 48*

02

.04

MEG

15 19

15 06

15 19*

18

05

MFD

15 36

13 17

15 31*

02

03

MFB

1354

13 48

13 48-

05

02

MMB

9 69

9.63

9 63-

06

03

MFH

789

7 8.5

7 89*

06

IntTrBd

II 01

10 94

10 98*

02

15

.Mathers n

23 50

23 30

23 50*

25

07

Merrill I.vnch

O i

20

Basic Value

14 31

14 40

14 50*

10

Capital

20.36

20 27

20 36*

12

09

Equi Bond

II 69

II 65

II 68

40

Hi Incom

8 58

8 57

8 58*

01

18

Hi yualtv

II 05

II (H

11 IH

05

IntTerm

10 98

1095

10 95

01

02

LtdMat

988

9 87

9 87-

01 :

05

MunHiVId

9 45

9 42

9 42

1

Muni Insr

7.H

7 31

7 31-

02 !

04

Pacific

12 62

1254

12.54*

07 1

01

Phoenix

11 48

11 43

11 44-

01 1

06

SciTech

9 5.3

- 9 4,5

'9 47 -

03

02

.Sp Val

14.51

14 36

14 50*.

13

07

Mid Amer

BOO

794

7 97->

01

MSB Fund n

21 69

21 H

21 62-

08

14

.Mutual Benefit

13.81

1372

13 78*

03

45

MdwlGvt

10 53

10.50

10 51-

(12

13

Mutual ol Omaha

02

America n

1021

10 19

10 21 *

03

28

Growth

6 52

6 48

651*

01

41

Income

894

8 91

8 93*

05

10

Tax Free

10 49

10 44

in 44

ft5

03 1 .Mutigua! n

15 69

15 ,59

15 69*

09

06 ; .Mull Shrs n

50 10

49 74

50 10*

32

33

NaessThm n

63!

62 76

62 76*

21

23

NatAviaTec n

II 02

10 81

10 89 -

10

01

Natllndust n

13 61

13 52

13 5;)

II

02

Nat Securities

Balanced

13 39

13 26

13 26-

15

05

Bond

3 71

3 70

3 70 -

01

07

CalTxE

12 34

12 26

12 26-

05

16

Growth

10 98

1088

1(197*

10

.07

Preferred

7 48

7 41

7 48*

II

0!

Income

7 :i9

7 36

7 19*

01

Stock

9 78

9 71

9 71

09

Tax Exmpt

8 82

878

.8 78-

04

02

TotRet

6 45

6 40

'6 41-

(16

06

Fairfield Kd

II 43

II 30

11 43 +

17

06

NatTele

14 76

14 69

14 76*

08

02

Nationwide F'ds

05

NatnFd

Ml 41

10 :14

10.38-

05

01

MGwth

839

8 30

8 :i.5

02

NtBond

9%

9 93

9 93-

03

46

NEI.ife Fund

07

Equity

22 21

21 73

21 90-

33

01

Grov.fh

25 53

25 07

25 35

15 ,

Income

11 4

11 07

11 09-'

(M '

4 05    4.03    4    04    *    05

14 23 14 18 14 23 * 07

10 70    10.60    10.64 -    01

19 64    19.52    19 62*    13

12 98    12 90    12 98 *    07

Kainbow n RochTax Safeco Secur Equity n Growth n Incom n StPaul Invest Capital Growth income Special n Scudder Funds CommnSlk n X 15 79 15 54 15 58-,12

14 20 14 02 14 12- 02 16 20 16 08 16 18+ 12 11 02 10 98 11 00- 02" 25 31 25 12 25.27+ 15

10 79    10    71    10 79 +    05

10 67    10    48    10 48-    17

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18 70    18 56    18    70*

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01

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15 57 15 95 +

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40 .52    40 18

4 00    3    99

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2 03    2    02    2    03+

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7 85    7    81    7    84*

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13.60

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5,14

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20 79

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10 67

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11 56-

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364

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01

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Inv Stock

22 33

22 06

22 12-

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8,52

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11 31*

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6 57

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14 69

14 58

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1383

13 93

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f S Govt

8 65

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8 65*

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9 66

966

966

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82

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X

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869

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1088

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13.80

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MunicpBnd

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831

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1330

12.79

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27.21

26 83

26 97-

13

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15 10

14 83

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07

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X

1576

1552

1562

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fSGvt

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9 28

918

920-

08

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Keystone Mass

HlYield

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16 94

16 91

16 94*

01

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20 53

20 45

20 53 +

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892

889

8%*

01

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9 29

9.22

9 28-

01

Convert x

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9 03

890

8 95-

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HiGrCom SI

21 78

21 45

21 56-

21

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10 47

10.35

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936

9.20

931

01

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529

5,24

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TaxFree

8.20

819

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02

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14 29

14.12

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11

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LemnnCap

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17 78

17 63

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05

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24 30

24 04

24.30+

'28

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I.everage n

11 42

11 26

11 29-

Option

Lexington Grp

Tax Exempt

Corp Leadrs

13 90

1372

13 72-

07

V'isla

Goldfund n

4 83

4 74

4 80*

08

.Voyage

GNMA Inc n

7 93

7:91

7 92-

01 1

(Jua.sar n

28 25 27 67 9.54    9-47

10 57 Ml 44 20 60 20 56 24 58 24 41 23 71 23 44 20 06 19,86 7 94    7    92

23 51 23 36 14 91 14 72 111 % 31 61 13,50 13 37 1152 1147 9 38    9    29

6 12 6 02 12,30 12 23 9 73    9)H

28H* 26 9.54* 07 10 56- 01 20 58 * 03 24 46 01 23 54- 19 20 06* ,28 792

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6 12* 14 12 30* 15 I 9 71

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68 22

67 37

67 84-

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14 70

1450

14 55

15

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12,62

12 28

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32

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20 36

20 25

20 25-

06

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'8,33

828

8 28-

04

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808

8 03

806

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834

8 31

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03

Equity

8 30

8 08

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1077

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11 46

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9.22

9 Id

9 18-

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23 10

22.93

23 05*

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; CapitFd

13%

13 73

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787

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7,79-

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12.54

1246

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9 74

9 69

9 71

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653

650

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17 62

17.50

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17 48

17 25

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02

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34 68

34 45

34 4.5-

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26 19

25 95

26 03-

95

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Appreeiatn

17 46

17 19

17 19

23

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20 28

20 24

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19.02

18 97

19 01-

(>1

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1393

13 79

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16,94

1671

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9 37

8 91

9 02 +

09

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15 65

15 49

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08

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12 07

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12 13

12 07-

04

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8 07

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15 22

15 07

15 07-

21

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14 36

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I6'12

16 14

16 16-

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10 24

10 15

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32

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1828

18-20

18 28*

10

Swstnlnvinc n

4 92

489

4 91*

02

Sovereign Inv

18 75

18 58

18 62*

03

Slate Bond Grp

- '

Commn Stk

6 41

6 32

6:i7*

01

Diversifd

6 45

6 37

6 39

05

Progress

10 99

10 94

10 99*

(15

StatFarmGth n

11 70

II 56

11 54*

07

StatFarmBal n

15 17

15 02

15 07*

03

StSlreet Inv

ExchFd n

&5 16

34 14

84 33-

46

Growth n

56 97

55 76

56 05-

29

Invest

76 60

TdB

75 45 -

30

Steadman Funds

Amerind n

4 12

4 02

406

. .Associated n

1 07

1 06

1 07

Invest n

1 76

1 71

1 71-

05

Oceanogra n

7 25

7 10

7 15-

03

1 Stem Roe Fds

I Balance n

24 65

'24 56

24 58-

03

1 Bond n

9 43

939

8 39-

.07

i Capflppor n

32 04

31 51

31 81*

19

Slock n

23 63

23 38

23 58 +

13

i Slein|mFd n ' SteinTax n

16,55

16 43

16 52*

22

8 16

8 12

8 12

05

1 Cnivrse

83 31

82 42

83 31 *

92

Strateglnv

12 11

11 79

12 11*

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18 31

18 11

18 20*

18

1 SunGrwth

I3:i7

13 23

13 27-

V*

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15 10

15 03

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1)5

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Globe

35 74'

35 rr

15 66*

:i8

Growth

921

9 14

9 16*

>13

World

11 99

11 93

II 94

-

Transam Cap

11 17

11 (16

11 07-

1)6

TransamNew n

8 75

867

8 67

Travelrs Eqts

12.69

12,53

12.53-

16,

TudorFd n

22 92

22 59

22.81-

13

20lh Century

Growth

16 16

1592

16 04-

01

Select

25,26

25 03

25 19*

J7

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9 19

9 14

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J5

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100 IS 100 12 M8'14-

06

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1595

15 81

15 91*

03

03,1

12 11    12 02

19 76    19 65

14,92 14 74 10 51    10.50

14 61    14 48

16 78    13 6.3

12 93 12 89 6.IU    6 08

8 79    8    76

9 66    9    64

21 99 21 80 16 42 16 31 12 47 12 27 2! 16 21 01 15 69 15 55

22 41 21 85

HighVld Income n Snblt n TxElt TxESh Fnified Mgmnl Accum n Gwth MutI n Cmled Fund.s Accumulliv B'ind    I

InllGlh Com Income FiducSh High Income Income .Municpl SciEn\ Vanguard ; 12 91* 05 I I'tdSvcGold n Value Line Fd Bond n Fund n . Income n

12 39 12 15 12 35- 02

11 14 11 08 11 14* 04

18 49 18 25 18 27 - 07

1165 1163 1163-10 36 10 36 10 36

7 67    7    64    7 67 +

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II

10 :

12 02-19 74- 04 14 77- 16 10 50 - 01 14 59* 10 13 65-3 04

6 09*

10 07    9    95    10    01*    II

6,01    6    00    6 00-    05

18.00    17    65    17 89 *    02

14 19    14    02    14 07-    9

32 30    32    00    32.22*    .35

14 87    14    65    14 85-    01

13 32    13    18    13 23-    (19

6 67    6    63    6    63 -    08

11 48    11    34    II 39-    07

20 10    19    77    19,%-    20

9 55    9    30    9    34*    07

7* 01

9 64    01

21 99* 20 1641* 11

Levrge Gth n Specl Sit n

Specl

12 17* 25 1 \ ance F'xchange 21 03- (12 I CapExch I n DeposBst I n Divers I n

12 84    12    80,    12 62-    01

15,07    14    91    14 95-    .01

7.56    7    48    7    51-    01

21 16    21    IH    21 08-    08

18 15    17    53    17 53-    30

15 .59 22 36

63 63 63 17 63 23*1 04 42.00 41 69 41.69 * 32 69 02 68 20 68 20* ,54

15 92 13 65 12 82 12 69

8 72    8    69

12 49 12 36 17 77 17 66 19 23 19 03

9 25    9    24

15 69    20

1271- 11

8 70

12 36- (16 17 77* 10 19 18+ 21

9 24

12 70 12 51 10 71 10 .H 9 17    9    12

12 57 - 10 10 54 . 12 I 9 14* 01

10 39    10    32

10 72    10    70

14 IH    14    30

13 84    13    &5

10 33- 06 10 70 - 01 14 30 * 01 13 69 - 18

16 03 15 78 14 30 14 23 22 28 21 99

17 81 17 70 15.55 15 48 12% 12 86 20 66 20 39

18 71 18 70 7 25    7    22

12 .56 12 27

13 33 13 27 22 68 22 46 20 95 20 %

19 95 19 62 62 02 61 65

15 83 - 20

14 2S- 07* 22 05- 12 17.74 - 08

15 49- 05 12 88 - 08

F7xchFd f n

102 65 101 .58 ini 58*

92

FlxchBst f n

88 61

87 70

87 70*

57

F'lducEx f n

37 85

.57 43

57 54 *

78

. SecFidu f n

61 79

61 40

61 40 +

52

Vanguard Group

1 Explorer n

42 32

41 59

42,32*

83

I ImJexTnist n

20 79

20 57

20 62-

16

; GN.MA n

9 51

947

9 47-

03

IvestFund n

1766

17 52

17 59*

09

Morgan n ' MuniliYd n

13 53'

13.40

13 49*

03

9,59

9.54

9.54-

(15

1 MumShrt n

15 24

1523

Id 23-

VI

i .Munilnt n

11 14

11 09

11 09-

06

1 Munilaing n

9 91

986

9 86-

06

1 QualDivI n

1655

16 47

16 55*

07

, l^ualDvIl n

8 49

844

8.49*

,05

ShrlTrm

10 23

10 21

10 21-

03

1 TrslCom n

37 25

36 98

37.17*

05

, Wellesley n

13.27

1323

13.2-

03

' Wellington n

13.11

1301

13 03-

04

IG Bond n

8.52

8 49

8 49-

02

HiY Bond n

9.51

9 47

9 47-

03

W indsor n

12 05

12 02

12 W-

02

Venturlnco

11 60

11 56'

II 57

: WallSt Growth ,

9 76

9-56

9 76*

05

' W'eingrtnEq n 1 Wisrfncm n

40 44

39 92

40 39+

40

384

383

3 83-

01

1 Wood Struthers

deVeghM n

44 59

44.05

44 59 +

67

Neuwirth n

21,06

20 79

20%-

08

PineStr n

1528

15.16

15 21-

09

12 33-    23 I

13 28-    05

22 46-    16

20 95    02

19 78    (.19 '    n-    .No    load    fund f-    Previous    dav^s    quote

62 02 +    77    Copyright    bv The    Associated    Pres.s

46

\f:w YORK APi - Yearlv high-low. weekly sales high, low closing price and net change of the 20 most active stocks trading for more than $1:

High Low Sales High Low Last Chg

KCA RLC n

28'.-

12'

49

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8.078,500

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6.829,300

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74'.-

3';

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PanAm

4.165,700

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6".

6",+

70'1

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4,103,00(1

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2

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Exxon

4.U27.80

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3.933,500 28",

24",

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3,816.600

31",

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3.318,700

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2.5'.

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3,061.900

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3.031.700

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2,903,200

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Signa]

CSSfeel

2.773.300

3D:

29".

30':-

D,

25 .

16

2.763,200 25

23",

24'.+

D.

24

20', DuWeP

2.642,800

23'.

23

23'2-

26 .

16 ;

DiamS

2.639.700

25'-:

23

24",-

3,

42'.

22V InlTT

2..5M.800

42'

37'.

39'.-

66'.

26".

GnlnsI

2.557,600

54':

45'.

47 V-

5V

17'1

11

SonyCp

2,553,000

I6>.

15';

15. -

V

42'

18'.

.Soars

2.528,000

42

:19;

40'-:-

IV

2 88 6 7439 44'. 4'M. 44'

2 12 392 37'. 40 9 7765 28 12 33 1343 33'; I 13 X6704 28

29". 29". 10'. 28 > 25'.

,37'-. 27', 30'. 26

168 13    6536    47",    44'-

% 11    30317    46';    44".

1 15    1692    24",    23.

52 17    7228    44".    42

1.52 15    25280    42    39'-.

180 9    3828    44',

1 94 7 IB 30':

1 60 15 2245 31".

90 20 27753 31':

I.5 3328UII 'k lOe 4782 U32'.

48 45 54I4U28',

2 60 12    10887    69'.

I 30 6    2921    29

16e 29    25550    16".

2 8    19.50    20",

SCalEd 3.52 7 9750 37'-. .SouIhCo 1 70 7 10465 16'.

, SouPac 2 60 12 5.578 6!

1 Sperrv I 92 14 5736 ,B', SquarD I 84 17 2113 u39', Squibb I 34 15 16712 49', StOilCI 2 40 9 L5436 39'. StOInd 2 80 8 21407 47', 44". .StdfXlh 2 60 7 XI4989 U49 45-'n Slauft'h'l 44 18 28811 26'. 24's. SlerlDg I 12 12 7595 27    25",

Stevn.l I 20 17 1872 23'. 22", SunCO 2 30 10 3275 U40+. 37". Sybron 1 08 136 x4371 24". 23

37':- ' 28' " *D 30. 2'

Weekly Stock Dollar Leaders

ShellD

ShellT

Shrwin s

Signal

SimpPl

Singer

Skyline

SmkB

.Sonat

41". 42".+ 30    .10',

NEW YORK aF The following is a list of Ihe most active stocks based on the dollar volume The lolal is based on the median price ol Ihe stiK'k traded multiplied by the shares traded

ToKtlOOOl Sales(bdsi Last $51I.:H3 68293 74

30' .    '.    !    Name

jO'.".-    O',    '    Ea.st    Kodak

lO"',    ',    !    IBM

30'.    I'.    I    DigilalEq

),. + )). AmerT&T

.SonvCp

SCrKfi

25'.

:H:

1    60    10    10.549    .17    36

76    20    .17(1    44'.    42',

88    24    2907    46    44

I    16    644    47    45

IH    126.51    25'.    22':

Hen uls I    32    19    7082    19'.    37",

llewlT'k    .U)    2.5    18217    61'"    77'.

H(,h<l;n    .84    25    6486    ,50'.    47".

HolhS        I    5(81    42''.    36-'S

IlnislK s:    2(1    43    I2B4    UIH*.    Ill

Honwll I(iO 128114 Ul24>. D8'

.s:2()

5'.+ I-, 366- 'N 43', - ", 44'S,+ ' 45 -D; 23.+ 1 :B':    n

78':-2 47".- 2', 42-n + 5', 34 +3'.

27'-; 1.5'. 19'-. 37 15. 60 36': 37 45 B',

I';

2U'. * 117'.

I5i

Synlex    1 40    14    x6939 59".    56':    .56".

Sysco s    32    19    1364 37    35,    36 S.

- T-T -TECO    2 04    8    1460 23',    22-s,    23

TRW .    2 60    14    X2865 73".    69",    73

TacBt S    34 2.535    18';

Tallev    768 ulO'.

Tandv    24 14017    u64'

Tndyi'ft    16 225    ul8.

1 22,6680    74',

60". -37.    '.

IB.* I", 46',+ .

a*-'.

47".+2". 48'; *2': 25',+ 26".-- ", 23'v- '. 40'4 + 2': 24'

Merrill Lyn

MonsanU)

HewlellPk

Exxon

Si'hlumbrg

Gen Motors

Genlnsi

Mobil

Gen Elt'c

ConlrData

Disney W

$287,737 24672 116'j $282.063 24108 II4-$280,542 41030 67'-. $173,164 17829 94', $172,782 20179 \ $146,191 16217 78'-. $139.462 x40'278 34. $137.942 30317 46 > $136,827 19830 69'. $127.240 25576 47". $117,617 IBI66 30", $111.742 10170 109. $111,180 20.589 .56 $107,331 13894 76'.

2-",

I

Weekly Amex Dollar Leaders

2.

Tndycfl

Tektmx

Teldyn

Telex

124

12 4594 147    140': I43':- 2

14 6857 24': 23    23.+

Tennco    2.72    7 x6829 38':    37':

Tesoro    40    6 1402 16    15'.

Texaco    3    7 x18624 36',    34,

TexEsI    4    10    II x40:>8.56i,    .55 ,Vi

TexInsI    " 2    29 4944 158',    148    150"

Texinl    153 5057 6',    5",    6'

TxlHlaS    28    14 589:1 U41    IB',    40'

16",

9. 10 N +

60', 61'n +

17    18.* 1". I Name

66    70 +1'; I WangLabB s

NEW YORK (APi -The following is a I list of the most active stocks based on Ihe dollar volume i The lolal is based on the median price , of the slock traded multiplied by the I shares traded

TotillOOOl Salesihdsi Last | $45,445 11326 40'. |

IB -15',-3.5 -

DomePlrl Champ Ho SterlSfl n Imp ('hem Resrllnl A Nat :alenl Verb Amri.l \ATf

,rllnl,

K

n

s

$29,312 59746 $25.559 40094 $20,033 12424 $20.009 28084 $I9..540 64X1

$18.315    94.53    21'*

$17,977    :l%2    44':

$13,298    2714    48'-.

$12,311    1647    77':

JIM PRIN

S

AN

DOW Jones Averages

NEW YDRK (API The following gives the range of Dow Jones averages for the w eek ended May 13

STOCK AVERAGES Open    Hi* Low Close    Chg

Ind 1228 23 1229 68 1214 40 1218 75-13 84 Trans    549 40    550 75    543 92 547 89-4 21

fills    129 11    129 61    128.55 129 61+0.50

65 Stks    481 34    482.00    476.78 479 06- 3.97

BOND AVERAGES 20 Bonds    77 78    77 80    77    29    77 29-0 55

fills    78 53    78 88    77    %    77.96-0.59

Indus    77 03    77 03    76    62    76 62 -0 51

COMMODITY FUTURES INDEX

148 67 151 10 148 55 149 28 + 0.32

PERSO

COM

\/VITHl

4Al and

RCIAL A

PRINTIf

UALITY

USINESS FORMS ^INDUSTRIAL

THENEWi COMPUTi

LElrl

Glutton

Prp^pnt^

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75,000,000

Limited Partnership Units

A seminar will be held:

Time: 7:30 p.m.

* Place: Ramada Inn Date: Wednesday, May 18 For reservations, call Michelle at 756-2000 or 1-800-682-3620

Silver Screen partners is an unleveraged limited partnership organized to finance and own feature-length motion pictures.

The Partnership intends to negotiate distribution and licensing arrangements in the U.S. and abroad However the Partnership has relicens-cd certain television rights to a subsidiary of Home Box Office Inc for a price determined by a formula designed to assure the Partnership a return of not less than 100% of its investment in each completed film on a fllm by-film basis

There is a $5,000 minimum investment. (In some stales, $2,000 for IRAs)

E.F. Hutton & Company Inc. is acting as managing underwriter and exclusive sales agent for the sale of these 1 imited Partnership Units Offering made only by Prospectus and in jurisdictions where permitted

. I will be unabk to attencj Hut would like a free copy of the prospectus

Name______________

Address.     ....    ____

City  ____._.State_

Zip_---^:-----

Business Phone____

^Home Phone_

EF Hutton Account Number-

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PHuttwi

Ken Hutcherson .327 Arlington Blvd. Greenville, N.C. 278.34

When E.F, jiutton talks, people listen.





Major Bankruptcy Cases Approach Deadlines

By ROBERT BURNS AP Business Writer NEW YORK (AP) - As corporate bankruptcy cases go, Braniff International Corp. and Manville Corp. scarcely could be more different. Yet their tribulations have stirred a similar sense of drama as each nears a critical deadline.

For an estimated 2,000 Braniff employees, the suspense hit a new peak this past week when the airline announced - one year to the day after it halted operations - tentative agreement on a plan that could get it airborne by October.

The agreement, with the Hyatt Corp. hotel chain, still

faces sizable obstacles -including the need to win the approval of its creditors by June 18.

Manvilles countdown is even shorter. By May 23 it must submit a plan of reorganization that satisfies its creditors plus representatives of the thousands of people suing Manville for

Cattle Futures Poised To Renew Strength Soon

By KEITH GAVE Associated Press Writer Cattle futures prices are poised for a surge after closing lower in quiet trading Friday on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

The U.S. Agriculture Departments monthly cattle on feed report, released after Fridays close, showed larger-than-expected April marketings. That should provide impetus for futures prices to advance on Mondays opening, said Mary Schultz, a meat and livestock analyst in Chicago with Cargill Investor Services Inc.

The report showed that marketings in April were 104 percent of marketings a year earlier in the seven largest cattle states, compared to an average prerelease estimate of 101.2 percent, she said.

Normally a seven-state report wouldnt have this kind of an effect, Ms. Schultz said. But the market is looking for some direction, and I think

this mi^t give it the direction its looking for.

Cattle placed on feed during April totaled 100 percent of a year ago, compared with the average pre-report estimate of 95.8 percent. She described the placement figure as a little bearish, but said it probably would have little affect on prices.

Pork complex futures rallied early in the session on expectations that cash prices would rise next week. However, gains were offset by selling bas^ on forecasts of rainy weather, which could limit fieldwork and allow farmers to increase their runs of hogs to market, Ms. Schultz said.

Trading otherwise was lack-luster Friday, closing a vei7 quiet week, Ms. Schultz said.

Weekly Stocks Ups And Downs

NEW YORK lAP) - The foilowing list shows the New York Stock Exchange stocks and warrants that have gone up the most and down the most in the past week based on percent of change No securities trading below $2 or 1000 shares are included Net and percentage changes are the diffehence between last week s closing and this week's closing.

UPS

Name

Last

Chg

Pci

1

2

AmAgro Pueblo Int

2\

+

+

4

1

HP

Up

,40,0

'273

3

Wainoco

7',

+

P

Up

26.1

4

Pantry Pride

8*4 +

1*.

Up

25.6

5

GerberSci

24*4

+

5

Up

25.3

6

GtWslHosp

17'

F 3'

Up

223

7

Collins Aik

31*4

+

5*4

Up

22.1

8

SavinCp

7\

+

1*

Up

22.0

9

Scot LFd

7*

+

1*

HP

Up

22.0

10

Elect Assoc

IP-

Hr

2

21.9

11

DravoCp

RegalInU

I6'4

+ 2',

Up

21.5

12

2'

+

*

Up

214

13

Evans Pd

12'4

+ 2'

Up

21.0

14

TelecomCp

4*,

+

*4

Up

20.7

15

RecognEq

16*

+ 2*4

HP

Up

19.8

16

FtCityProp

9,

+

1*

19.7

17

WillmsEl

I5I4

+ 2',

Up

19.6

18

NVFCo

31

+

'

Up

19.0

19

Peabody Tiger Int

12

+

1

Up

18.5

20

8

+

1*

Up

18.3

21

Pengoind UnPark Mn

3*4

+

'2

Up

18.2

22

3>4'

+

'

Up

18.2

23

AARCp

14

+ 2>

Up

17.9

24

Aileen Inc

4'

+

*

Up

17.9

25

Tymshare ^

23'

+ 3h

Up

17.9

WWNS

Name

Last

Chg

Pet

1

Gdrich pfC

31S,

6X

Off

17.3

2

LLCCorp

6

P

Off

158

. 3

UnBmd plA

10*4

1*4

Off

14.0

4

Data Genl

59*4

9.4

Off

13.4

5

Brigu Strat Go^nch

31*

4*

Off

12.2

6

38'4

5

Off

11.6

7

MitelCp

17'

2

Off

10.3

8

Thackeray

7*

'

Off

10.3

9

Genlnst

47\

5*

Off

10.2

10

NutnSy n

23*

2S

Off

101

n

EAL wtO

4'

Off

lO.O

12

LLCCorp pi

IP4

1*4

Off

lO.O

13

PrimeCm

28*

3'

Off

9.9

14

IntlHarv wt

5

--

*

Off

9.6

15

SeaContam

26

2*4

Off

9.6

16

FlightSfty

29*4

3',

Off

9.5

17

BrockHtl

10

1

Off

9.1

18

IntlHarv 3p(

.37*4

3*4

Off

9.0

19

Int Rectil

26'

2*

Off

9.0

20

Overhd Dr

19'

1'

Off

8.9

21

Monsanto

82*

T*.,

Off

8.7

22

LeucadN'tl s

18'9

IN

Off

86

23

viMnvl 5 40pl 29>4

2*4

Off

8.6

r

NBI Inc

34*4

34

Off

86

25

Valley Ind

6*

-

*

Off

8.6

Live cattle futures prices closed .40 cent to .62 cent low-er, With the contract for delivery in June at 66.27 cents a pound; feeder cattle prices were 1.15 cents lower to .03 cent higher, with the May contract at 66.62 cents a pound; live hogs were .68 cent lower to .28 cent higher, with the June contract at 50.37 cents a pound; and frozen pork bellies, the raw material from which bacon is made, closed 1.45 cents lower to .50 cent higher, with the May contract at 68 cents a pound.

Grain and soybean prices closed mixed to sli^tly higher in very light trading after a week-long decline on the Chicago Board of Trade.

The heavy selling that knocked prices down in recent sessions may have been over-done, said A1 London, a grains analyst with Con-tiCommodity Services Inc.

Were due for a bounce, and maybe we saw part of it today, London said.

2/2 cents higher, with the May con tract at $6.18^ a bushel.

Sliver prices rallied to close sharply higher and gold posted small advances in quiet pre-weekend trading on the Commodity Exchange in New York.

Len Alpert, an analyst of precious metals in New York with ContiCommodity Services, said a short-covering rally pushed precious metals prices higher immediately following the open. Thereafter, trading was dull, except for the silver buying linked to advances in the stock market, he said.

Gold settled $2.40 to $2.50 an ounce higher, with the contract for delivery this month at $441.20; silver rose 19 cents to 21.5 cents, with the May contract at $13.155 an ounce.

Platinum was $3 to $4 higher on the New York Mercantile Exchange, with the May contract closing at $453.80 an ounce.

Nevertheless, buyers remained scarce. Forecasts of cold, wet weather that could delay planting this weekend helped push com and soybean prices higher at the open, but it couldnt sustain the rally in the com pit, London said.

Wheat futures prices settled 1 cent to 3*2 cents higher, with the contract for delivery in May at $3.47 a bushel; com prices were unchanged to h cent higher, with the May contract at $2.99*>'4 a bushel; oats were 1 cent lower to *4 cent higher, with the May contract at $1.59*'2 a bushel; and soybeans were 1'^ cent to

CHICAGO (APi - The range of commodity futures this past week on the Chicago Board of Trade was ;

Wk. Wk. Open High Low Close Chg. Interest

WHEAT

5.000 bu minimum; dollars per bushel

May    3.56    3 4114=3.47    -    074    1.080

Jul    3.64    3 484    3 534    -.09    22,902

Sep    3.734    3.584    3.634    -.084    3.903

Dec    3 874    3.744    3 784    - 07    5.486

.Mar    3.984    3 86    3.904    -.064    1,362

May    4,02    3.92    3.93 4    - 07    152

Jul"    4 00    3.93'-4    3 95    -.05    9

Fn to Thurs sales 63,652.

Total open interest 34,894 CORN

5.000 bu minimum; dollars per bushel

May    3 164    2 974    2.99^4    -.174    1.595

JulV    3.17    3.004    3024    - 15    63,207

Sep    3.09',    2.93    2.94'-,    -.154    13.421

Dec    3 04    2 864    2.88'4    -.154    61,

Mar    312    2.954    2 974    -.15

May    3 194    3 04    3 054    -.134

Jul    3 241,    3.10    3 11    -.134

Fri to Thurs. sales 237,372 Total Open interest 161,540 OATS

5.000 bu minimum, dollars per bushel

May    1.61',    1.584 1 594    +    00',    160

Jul    166'4l.6l    1644    -i-014    5,217

Sep    171    1.64ijl 68    -1-02 4

Dec    1 81    1.75    1 78',    -+ 014

Mar    191    1.854    1884    + 004

Fri. to Thurs sales 6,749 Total open interest 9,858.

15.886

4,044

1.499

2,120

1,912

449

Total open i SOYBEANS

5.000 bu minimum; dollars per bushel May 6.28 6.IOV4 6.184 -.104    1,446

6.424 6J44 6.314 -.124 49.290 6.48 6.31    6.374 -.12    4,961

6.544 6.364 6.434 -.124    3,575

6.65 6 474 6.554 -.114 77,728 6 77    6.60    6.684 -.104    3,736

6.894 6.744 6.814 -.10 7.004 6.86 6 914 -.11 7.10    6.92    7,014    -.104

Fri. to Thurs. sales 221.943.

Total open interest 92,243.

SOYBEAN Om

60.000 lbs, dollars per 100 lbs

Jul

Aug

Sep

Nov

Jan

Mar

May

Jul

1,197

190

120

May

Jul

Aug

Siep

Oct

Dec

Jan

Mar

May

Jul

1967 19.93 20 08 20 24

-.27

-.30

-.27

-.28

-25

-15

rs per

1914 19.23 19 38 19 49 19.51 1962 19 65 19 76 20.38 19.80 19.85 20 70 20.10 20.24

20 90 20.35 20 43 21.10 20.60 20 75

21 60 21.01 21.10 21 70 21 25 21 45

Fri. to Thurs sales 61.801 Total open interest 56,553 SOYBEAN MEAL 100 tons; dollars per too May 184 60 176.10 179.20

187.00 181.00 183.80

188.50 182.50 185.30

190.00 184.50 187 50 -3.40 191.60 186.50 189 00 -3 50 1%.50 190.50 193.90 - 3 10 199.80 192.50 196.20 -2.80 203 00 196 00 200 00 -4 00

205.50 200 00 202 00 - 5 50 207 00 203 00 206 00 -4 50

Fri to Thurs sales 74,184 Total open interest 42,943.

- 32    2,443

-.29 29,614 - 28    7,

3.922

2,K9

8.242

2,050

495

13

Jul

Aug

Sep

Oct

Dec

Jan

Mar

May

Jul

-5 30    472

-4 00 20,828 10    5,476

3,820 2,062 7,004 2,217 921 117 26

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Sixteen offices in North Carolina Other offices in Virginia. West Virginia, South Carolina, Maryland and Washington. D C.    .

illnesses blamed on asbestos produced by Manville,

The company itself has admitted it is far from agreement with the creditors and litigants. And to add to the drama, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Burton Lifland will not rule on Manvilles request for extra time until the day of the deadline.

Corporate bankruptcy cases have soared in recent years as economic recession pushed more companies toward insolvency. Yet the Braniff and Manville cases stand out - and not just because they are among the biggest in bankruptcy court.

In the heady days after the airline industry was deregulated in 1978, Braniff became one of the fastest growing and most ambitious carriers in the world. So its nosedive into bankruptcy court on May 13, 1982, was especially spectacular.

Braniff was the first - and is still the only - major U.S. airline to file for bankruptcy court protection. By filing under Chapter 11 of the federal bankruptcy code, the company was freed of the obligation of paying off any debt.

On Thursday, Braniffs board of directors approved a Hyatt proposal that would ensure the reorganized Braniff as much as $70 million in cash contributions and loan guarantees. In return, Hyatt would get an 80 percent stake in the new Braniff and could use more than $300 million in Braniff tax credits.

^or Manville, cash is not the problem. Its businesses were relatively healthy when

it filed for court protection on Aug. 26,1982. The companys chief executive, John A. McKinney, said the next day: We have a tremendous amount of cash.

Manvilles motive in filing was to win extra time to grapple with the asbestos litigation, particularly the problem of its obligation to asbestos workers in whom the asbestos-related diseases are expected to emerge in later years,

Manville says that about

16.500 asbestos lawsuits have been filed against it so far, and it predicts a total of

48.500 by the end of the century. By the time the cases are settled, it expects to have paid about $1.9 billion in damages.

To cope with that future burden, Manville suggested on Thursday that it split the company in two. The new operation would take the companys non-asbestos businesses, including forest products and carton manufacturing. It also would contribute part of its profits to the old Manville company to help settle the asbestos cases.

Although the Braniff case appears to be nearing a climax, the Manville case may dra| on for months, or even years. If Manville does not reach agreement with its creditors and litigants by the May 23 deadline, it may be given an extension. If no extra time is allowed, the other interested parties may submit a reorganization plan, or they may ask the court to force Manville to liquidate its assets.

In other business and eco

nomic developments this past week:

-Eastman Kodak Co. named a new chairman and a new president, and told its shareholders the company was making fundamental changes in its business approach. On July 1, Colby Chandler will take over as chairman and Kay R. Whitmore will become president, The current chairman, Walter Fallon, told shareholders the company was searching for new ways to cut costs, although it expected no more layoffs. Earlier this month it announced the layoffs of 1,600 workers.

How can I pay off Ms and still keep cash on hand?

Barclay sAmerican means moneN.

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105 E Arlington Blvd 756-7111

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Rafes Remain Driving Force Behind Stocks

By STEVEN ROSENFELD AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - The course of interest rates continues to be the driving force behind the stock market, even though nine months have passed since declining rates first turned Wall Street gloom into euphoria.

In August 1982, with the stock market at its lowest level in more than two years, the prospect of lasting relief from hi^ interest rates and double-digit inflation triggered a rally that has sent the value of stocks soaring nearly $700 billion.

Some of the hopes that launched the rally have been realized.

Long-term interest rates have since fallen to their lowest levels in three years, lifting the housing and automobile industries frqm depressed levels.

But interest rates still remain high when inflation is taken into account. And analysts say consumer borrowing charges must fall further if the recovery is going to spread and strengthen.

If interest rates dont come down further it is very questionable the economy could sustain its growth, said Greg A. Smith, director of research at the New York investment firm Pruden-tial-Bache Securities Inc.

If people start questioning the sustainability of recovery, the games over, Smith said. We dont need dramatic progress, but we need continued progress on interest rates to keep the market going.

Julius Westheimer, a partner at Baker, Watts & Co. in Baltimore, said he has become wary about how much higher the market can go

If we get another upward spike in interest rates... the market could topple 150 to 200 points, Westheimer said. Weve had a lot of fun, lets protect ourselves.

Concern over preserving profit and cashing in on the rally was apparent this past week as stock prices slipped from the record heights reached May 6.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks closed out the week with a net loss of 13.84 points at 1,218.75. Despite its dip from the all-time high of 1,232.59 at the end of the previous week, ^he blue-chip average was still up 441.83 points, or 56.9 percent, from the 776.92 level it had fallen to on Aug. 12, 1982.

The Wilshire Associates 5,000 Equity Index, the market value of 5,000 issues

traded on the New York Stock Exchange, American Stock Exchange and over-the counter markets, stood at $1.741 trillion, down $2 billion from May 6 but up $690 billion from the start of the rally.

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B 16-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C -Sunday, May 15,1983

Georgia Poultry

Decry

Growers Foreign Subsidy

By WILLIAM E. SCHULZ Associated Press Writer

BALDWIN, Ga. (AP) - Georgia.s poultry growers are among the worlds most efficient farmers, but they are losing foreign markets to European growers who get government subsidies.

The worst offenders are the European Common Market, France and Brazil," said Joe Hatfield, president of Fieldale, a major north Georgia chicken processing company.

"Growers in Europe can deliver their product to the Middle East for what It costs us to deliver to coastal ports, said Hatfield, noting that the Middle East is one of the worlds growing poultry markets "They want to eat better and chicken is the most efficient way to do it. said Hatfield, who is past chairman of the board of the National Broiler Council. "It takes only two pounds of feed to produce one pound of chicken while it takes four pounds of feed grain to produce one pound of pork and eight pounds to produce one pound of beef .

Georgia is the nations leading poultry state, ranking second in both chicken production and egg production, and its farmers need foreign markets for greater prosperity, according to Abit Massey of the Georgia Poultrv' Federation.

On any given day, 90 million or so chickens are growing up to frying size in Georgia. About 2.5 million of them are processed into 9.2 million pounds of broiler chickens or chicken parts during any business day.

The federation has joined the National Broiler Council and other poultry trade groups in petitioning the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, requesting help in combating subsidized European growers.

Those subsidized exports, for example, have c.ut the United States share of the Middle East market for whole broilers from 30.000 tons in 1976 "to essentially zero, according to a letter to trade Ambassador William E, Brock signed by Georgia Sens. Sam Nunn and Mack Mattingly.

Georgia producers had exported 10 percent of their production. Now its probably down to 2 percent. Massey said.

"We want to see the subsidies eliminated, Massey said. We feel like they violate the subsidies code and the tariff agreement. Wed like to all play by the same rules

We will probably have to litik it up with other issues, said . Hatfield. "The U.S. trade ambassador is working on it. but it may take a trade war to solve the problem

Despite foreign competition, the U.S. broiler industry is growing at about 1 percent per year. Hatfield said That is due to mechanization and efficiency, which means Americans pay less for chicken today, despite inflation, than they did 30 years ago, Massey said A broiler chickens life is regulated by the day, pound and ounce from its first hours as an egg. Its parents are specially selected for the qualities which will show up in their offspring.

Some 18,000 roosters and hens live in a henhouse. The eggs are collected several times a day and placed in incubators which precisely control temperatures and humidity. Egss are turned several times a day.

The day before the eggs are to hatch, they are taken off incubator racks and placed on trays in hatchers. Day-old chicks are vaccinated against disease as fast as workers can press the chickens backsides against mechanical inoculating machines.

'^hen the chicks are boxed. 100 at a time, in cardboard CT es and hauled to the growout houses, which usually are r ed by a farmer who subcontracts to the processor to raise U.c chickens.

The average growout house is 400 feet long and 36 feet wide. Eighteen thousand chickens will spend the rest of their seven-week lives there.

Almost all broilers are grown by farmers or other subcontractors working for large poultry producers, Massey said. "There are few if any independent broiler growers. There were some a few years ago. but if you were to ask me to find one now, I don't know if 1 could.

In the growhouse, the chickens are fed mechanically and the temperature and light is controlled. Lights dim as the chickens grow older so they will be less inclined to move around and fight.

, The less energy they use to move, the more they put on in meat.

When they are the right size - 3.6 pounds if they are to go to most chicken restaurants, 4.3 pounds if they are to go to a grocery - a catching crew arrives.

The house is opened, the mechanical feeders and watering troughs pulled to the ceiling and the roundup is on. A good catcher can catch and carry eight chickens at a time to waiting coops, each about the size of a milk crate. The house isemptiedin22to3hours.

In the most modern processing plants, the chickens are plucked and cleaned mechanically. The cleaned birds hang by their drumsticks, swinging down a disassembly line, with each worker slicing off one or two parts until all thats left is the drumsticks.

Then the meat is chilled and sent off to grocery stores And. if Georgia growers have their way. more and more will be shipped overseas to feed a hungry world.

Testing A New Allergy Remedy

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -Allergy researchers have an offer for hay fever sufferers thats nothing to sneeze at.

The University of Iowas College of Medicine is looking for allergy sufferers willing to tr>' out a new antihistamine called azelastine. The drug could eventually go on the market, depending on the results of tests here and at other medical research centers.

The university is recruiting 100 hay fever victims who will be paid $50 each to undergo tests on either June 4-5 or June 11-12, said Dr. Murali Sharath, one of the researchers.

CLASSIFIED AM will go to work for you to find cash buyers for your unused items. To place your ad. phone 752-6166.

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STORYTIME...is a favorite with the children in Jane Dodges Elmhurst After-School program.After-School Programs Kyed For Protection, Fun l^earning

By CAROL TVER Reflector Staff Writer

Greenville schools have made inroads into the ranks of the citys latchkey children by providing an after-school day care program for kindergarten and prmary-school-aged children whose parents work afternoons.

Placed in the Third Street and Elmhurst schools, the two programs now being offered serve children throughout the city. Those who need to be are bused to the assigned school.    /

Elmhursts program is conducted by Jane Dodge; Third Streets by Ann Sayetta.

The kindergarteners start arriving about 1:30 p.m. each day and the first-through third-grade participants come in as they get out of school. The program stays open until 6 p.m. to accommodate the children of those parents who must work late or come from some distance.

The cost is $15 per week.    '    '

Both Mrs. Dodge and Mrs. Sayetta have a wealth of classroom experience. Both say they love working with these younger children in such an informal, yet educational atmosphere.

These children have been in school all day, Mrs. Sayetta said, so we try to create an atmosphere of fun, not just study. But children this age find fun in learning. So many of our activities are educational. We have a lot of outings, a lot of outdoor playtime and some fun group and independent activities, too.

Some of the time at the after-school program is spent providing assistance with homework. This can vary from buckling down to learning math to lying down on a carpet and reading books from ones own school library or from the collection kept borrowed from Sheppard Memorial Public Library.

Apparently the children dont dislike school too much, Mrs. Sayetta said with a smile. Do you know what one of their favorite activities is? Playing school!    <

Mrs. Dodge said she makes it a point to keep parents of her after-school children informed as to whats being read to their children during story time. She mimeographs a dated list of all books read and sends one home with each child.

Nutritious snacks are provided for the children.'Regular trips to the library, to special childrens movies, and outings like farm and industries and businesses and ECU facilities are planned at regular intervals.

We make believe a lot during these trips, Mrs. Dodge said. My children let their imaginations run wild when they visited the ECU stadium just a few blocks away. They were right out there on that playing field scoring for ECU.

Many games and toys are kept on hand and class projects like plays and puppet shows are carried out. Of course, the children love to sing.

Parents and other members of the community are urged to share their interests and enthusiasm with the children. Weve had everything from model plane ;    enthusiasts to banjo pickers visit us, Mrs. Dodge said.

J A favorite of Mrs. Sayettas class is their weekly French lesson taught by East Carolina University foreign language major Jackie Thompson. Ms. Thompson began the French course for the children last semester as part of an internship '    program. She has continued it this semester on her own time out of love for the

children, Mrs. Sayetta said.

Both Mrs. Dodge and Mrs. Sayetta say theyre gratified by the personal attention the school principals, Leslie Washburn and Esther Warren, have provided the children. And theyre pleased that some of the parents find time to stop in and share themselves, not just with their own children, but with others in the program.

Plans for next years program are under way. Further information and application forms are available at any kindergarten-through-sixth grade school in the city or from the City Schools Office, 431W. Fifth St.Photos By Esther Warren and Carol TyerASSISTANCE WITH HOME WORK... is one of the ways Ann Sayetta (standing) assists the participants in the Third Street After-School program and their parents.OUTDOOR PLAY...is always a part of both After-School programs in good weather. The children at Elmhurst enjoy running games like dodgeball.MAKE-BELIEVE...is creative fun. James Ebron and Brook Dunn don costumes kept on hand for impromptu plays in the Third Street After-school classroom.A TALKING BOOK...is enjoyed by Dylan Ray in the Third Street After-School classroom.FRENCH LESSONS...have been an important part of each week all year at Third Street, with ECU student Jackie Thompson (top left) volunteering instruction.





Engagements Announced

ir

RIF Week To Be Observed

JANICE ELIZABETH BYRD...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Lee Byrd of Route 2, Grifton, who announce her engagement to Richard Steven Harman, son of Mrs. Carol Jones of Kinston and Walter Steven Harman of Newport News, Va. A July 2 wedding is planned.

KATHRYN ANN SPIEGELBERG...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Spiegelberg of Cumberland, Md., who announce her engagement to Kenan Jackson Fleming, son of Mrs. Louise C. Fleming oT Greenville and the late Burney M. Fleming Sr. ^ July 23 wedding is planned.

Reading Is Fundamental Week will be observed Monday througi Friday at St. Gabriels Catholic School. The program is sponsored by the Iota Kappa Omega Chapter of the Aipha Kappa Alpha Sorority in connection with the nationwide federal R.I.F. program.

The sorority has raised month in order that each child at the school will be given three free books. Jean Carter, librarian at South Greenville Elementary School, is the local R.I.F. committee chairperson in charge of distributing the books.

The school has planned a week of motivational activities to encourage the children to read. A puppet show for the children and their parents will take place Monday afternoon. Darcey Sanderson of Sheppard Memorial Library will present a classic fairy tale for the program.

The theme for the week is Famous Fabulous Fairy Tales. Also on the Monday, the children will be dressing as their favorite fairy tale character.

Nancy Bray will tell the children about the summer reading proram available

here through the public library on Wednesday afternoon. On Friday afternoon, two plays will be given. The third g^ade students of Ginny McDonnells reading resource class at the school will present The Little Red Hen.

The Rose High Drama Club will present one of the famous fairy tales.

Students involved in Fridays performance will include Melvin McLawhom, Keysha WUkes, Donna Braxton, Martreece lYson and Shane Rogers from St. Gabriels. Participating from Rose will be Amy Van Scoy, Josie Wilhelm, Brenda Stanton, Kipper Hair, Brett Hursey, Josie Keller, Carol Ambert, Lisa Pories and John Pringle.

Lordy, Lordy

Jane

Roberson

Is Forty!

At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

A child psychologist ventured a "new theory to television viewers the other day. He said, Modern-day parents dont discipline their children because they are afraid of them.

You bet your sweet whip and chair we are. Where has this guy been"? Twirling around in a teacup at Disneyland

Parenting isnt for sissies. Never has been, its like playing poker with strangers. You never know if youve got a "bluffer, one with a "killer instinct or one who changes rules in the middle of the game.

Children are born with natural weapons that would bring any foreign power to its knees. Ever try to ignore an angry baby and time how long it can hold its breath and turn blue between cries?

1 am one of those parents who always had "visions of headlines: ,"MOTHER WATCHES GENERAL HOSPITAL AS BABY BLACKS OUT FROM NOT BEING PICKED UP.

I was terrified of my kids from the moment they were born. 1 never trusted "one of them with a mouthful strained peas. Even after stopped pinching their lips together and watching them swallow, 1 was afraid to take my eyes off them lest I get it all back in my face. "MOTHER DROWNS

STRAINED PEAS: BABY PLEADS BRUTALITY!

And what mother has not been terrorized by the biggest source of energy since Hoover Dam ... a childs mouth? "Aunt Margaret, my mother says if you had a brain, youd be dangerous.

Did,you ever question why everyone belives a child who still believes the tooth fairy writes post-dated checks on his Dads bank account?

I had children who were "eaters. They ate everything... chairs, turtles, blankets, hymnals, shoes and anything else that didnt fight back. I never slept behind a door that wasnt locked.

I watched my son play tennis at a nice club one day wearing cut-off jeans with boxer shorts hanging out of the legs and the top to his pajamas. I was horrified he would give his right name. "SEARCH CONTINUES FOR MOTHER OF

ABANDONED DERELICT IN CENTER COURT.

Most parents admit to apprehension in disciplining their children because they fear they will run away from home and they Will never see them again. We all dread that day when the U-Haul pulls up and empties our home of beds, linens, TV set, typewriter, bathroom heater, dishes and appliances. "UNARMED PARENTS CLEANED OUT BY SIBLINGS. SUPREME COURT RULING NEEDED ON SEARCH AND SEIZURE!

Most kids raise their parents by intimidation. They say parents turn out better that way. Is that the phone? Let it ring.

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CROWNED MOTHER-OF-THE-YEAR

Mrs. Rosa Lee Bradley was crowned "Mother-of-the-Year at Sycamore Hill Baptist Church, Sunday in the regular morning ^worship service by Mrs. Launa Brewington, president of the Senior Ladies Auxiliary. Mrs. Brewington also performed the crowning ceremony.

Mrs. Bradley, the wife of the late Clarence Bradley, is the mother of five children. She is a member of the Deaconess Board and the Sunday School. She is owner and operator of the Rosa Bradleys Home for the Aged on Highway 11.

She enjoys fishing, working in her garden and flowers as well as cooking. "Let the work I do speak for me" is her motto.

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Lauren Cosmetic Clinic...

We will have a clinic featuring Lauren Cosmetics on Thursday, May 19, with a limit of no more than 15 participants. Session will be from 2:00 P.M. until 4.00 P.M. Mary Ann Williams, skin care specialist, will be here to introduce the new skin care line. The charge is $10 payable in advance ond is redeemable towards the purchase of any Lauren Cosmetics. Come see and learn about the designer cosmetic line by Ralph Lauren. Call Marci Gallinato at 756-2355 for reservations.

Free Monogram For Men...

Beginning tomorrow, Monday, May 16, we will monogram any regular price dress shirt free! you have a choice of block or script letters. This is on excellent way to remember Dad on his day or the graduate at this special time of his life. Give that special man 'in your life a gift that is personalized. This offer good through Saturday, June 18.

Flower Arrangements Available...

The response to our fresh flower arrongements in our Garden Shop has been overwhelming and we thank you very much. If you hove not seen the bud vases, the bouquets, and the fresh_ single stems of roses, carnations, and inses, please do so the next time you are in our store. If you need something special, |ust tell us and we'll get if mode up for you. Remember, we deliver free to the hospital ond funeral homes daily.

Sperry Topsider Clothing And Shoes...

Come in to see our new line of Sperry Sportswear for men designed for the man on the go. These ore located in our In Gear Shop next to Sporjing Gooqls. Also, wander across the aisle and look at the complete line of Sperry Topsider shoes for the casual look. This is |ust another endeavor to give you the newest and latest at Belk-Tyler,

Izod Putting Contest...

Don t miss out on our Izod Putting Contest on June 11 from 10:30 A.M. until 4:30 P.M. Each contestant could win a great prize! Three putts per person. Also, don't forget to register for an Izod outfit-shirt, slacks, visor - to be given awoy at 4:30 P.M. No purchase necessary. Need not be present to win.

Wedding Gowns, MOBs,

Bridesmaid Dresses...

They are arriving doily - our offering of wedding gowns, Mothers-of-the-bnde dresses, and bridesmaid dresses m our Regency Roomand more will be forthcoming. Come talk with Eleanor Snell and let her help , you plan that special day m your life. We have it all the Bridal registry, invitations, flowers (both real and silk), clothing for everyone in the wedding party including the men. Remember, if your groom rents six or more for his attendants, his tuxedo is complimentary.

EtienneAignerForMen...

Etienne Aigner, the most wonted line for ladies, has designed especially for men a line of gifts including wallets, key chains, and belts - all with Aigner signature. Come see these in our Men's Gift Born.

Fieri Roberts Ciinic...

Victoria Hardwick, representative for Flon Roberts, will be in our store on Friday, June 10, and Saturdoy, June 11 to conduct clinics on the use on the most wanted color and treatment line for block women. There is^ $10 registration fee redeemable towards the purchase of any of the Flon Roberts products. The session on Friday night is from 6:30 P.M. until 8:30 P.M. and Saturday morn'ing from 11:00 A.M. until noon. Call Mariorie Nobles at 756-2355 for reservations.. Each clinic is limited to 15 participants.

Formai Wear For Speciai Occasions...

Our Men's Department offers a complete selection of formal weardinner lackets, tuxedos, or toils for weddings, proms, or other special occasions. Come compare Our selection and prices before making a decision. You'll be glad you did!

if You Pian To Decorate...

Come see us. We have two schooled interior decorators to discuss your needs and wishes. We will do a window or an entire house or business. Come browse through our many wallpaper books and drapery samples. Also, we have a great selection of corpet samples beginning at $8.50 a square yard. Whether your taste is traditional or contemporary, we have furniture that will satisfy your taste and budget. Visit our Interior Design Deportment soon. The welcome mot is always out for you!





Harris-Little Vows Said Ifresented By Sorority

Ella Mae Little and Ulysses Harris Jr. were united in marriage Saturday at 2:30 p.m. in a double ring ceremony performed by the Rev. Clarence Gray at the home of the bride.

The bride is the daughter of Ms. Ella Langley Clark of Greenville. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Virginia Harris Langley of Greenville.

The bride was given in marriage by Withe Pittman. Linda Little of Raleigh, daughter of the bride, was maid of honor and bridesmaids were Ethel Gardner and Mary Stevenson of Greenville, cousins of the bride.

The flower girl was Tamika Little of Greenville, daughter of the bride. The ring bearer was Cedric Little of Raleigh, grandson of the bride.

James Earl Harris, brother of the bridegroom, was best man and ushers included Marvin Harris, brother of the bridegroom, Kenneth Ray Langley, stepbrother of the bridegroom, all of Washington, D C., Eddie Glast and Jesse Ray Hardy of Greenville.

The bride wore a blue gown with pearl designs at the neckline. She wore a blue hat and her bouquet consisted of white roses and babys breath with with ribbon.

The maid of honor wore a formal gown of blue chiffon and her bouquet was of white roses and blue ribbon. The bridesmaids wore peach and pink spring colored gowns and carried bouquets of white roses with peach and pink colored ribbons.

The flower girl wore a white dress tied at the shoulders with a matching jacket. She carried a wicker basket of rose petals.

A reception followed the ceremony.

Actress Sarah Bernhardt refused to trust her money to a bank. She carried the gold coins she demanded for payment in a chamois bag. She died in 1923.

The Delta Kappa Gamma Sorority recently honored two scholarship winners and a deceased member.

Mrs, Doris Rasberry presented grant-in-aid scholarships to Joyce Roberts, a business education major at ECU, and Paula Witzke, a special education major.

Mrs. Elizabeth Mims paid memorial tribute to the late Margaret Lewis Speight, a former member of the sorority. Mrs. Speights daughter, granddaughter and two sisters were present.

Members Sue Branch and Bettie Sue Forrest discussed the future of public and private education in the state. Mrs. Branch, representing the public schools, discussed four major areas

in which public schools will be affected: reduction in federal and state funds, an-tiicipated 37,000 teacher shortage by the end of the 1980s, stiffer graduation requirements for students, and strong trends toward high technology.

Mrs. Forrest, representing private schools, said that, as of 1982, there were 58,600 students enrolled in private schools in North Carolina. Of this number, 30,000 attend church schools. In Pitt County there are eight private schools, seven church-related. She spoke on the impact on public education that would result if suddenrly 58,600 students were added to the public school rolls.

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 tp the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.

Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the se-

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N .C -Sunday, May 15,1983C-3 cond week, just as an an-    Reflector" one week prior to

nouncement. Wedding forms    the date of the wedding. All

and pictures should be    information should be typed

returned to The Daily    or written neatly.

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Engagements Announced Couple Marries In Hamilton

HAMILTON-St. Martins Episcopal Church here was the scene of the high noon wedding ceremony of Jennifer Bryan Thigien and John Howard McKnight. The double ring ceremony was performed by James Horton on Saturday.

Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Thigpen of Williamston and the bridegroom is the son of Mr..and Mrs. C.J. McKnight of Greenville.

Janet Thigpen Mills of Charlotte, sister of the bride,

was honor attendant and the bridesmaid was Trudy H. Miles of Los Angelos, Calif.

The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers were Bob McKnight of Greenville, brother of the bridegroom, and Tom Slade of Raleigh.

A program of harp music was presented at the wedding and Robin Dailey was the soloist.

The bride was given in marriage by her father.

The couple will live in Greenville.

The bride graduated from Meredith College and received M.A. and certificate of advcanced study from East Carolina University. She is a school psychologist with Pitt County Schools. The bridegroom received a B.A. from the University of

Maryland and M.A. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He received a certificate of advanced study from ECU. He is an assistant superintendent with Pitt County Schools.

The couple will live in Greenville.

A reception followed the ceremony and was held at the Roanoke Country Club in Williamston.

MARTHA BEAVANS...S the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam C. Beavans of Enfield, who announce her engagement to Jacob P.ostma, son of Mrs. Cornells Postma of Greenville and the late Mr. Postma. The wedding will take place June 11.

V    B

AMY ELIZABETH COBB...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cobb of Route 1, Rocky Mount, who announce her engagement to Dr. Dennis ONeal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard ONeal of Sellersburg, Ind. The wedding is planned for June 18.

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Births

Turner

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Michael Turner, Farmville, a son, Mark Evan, on May 6,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Smith

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Willie Ray Smith, Ayden, a daughter, Lisa Shonette, on May 8,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

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MRS. JOHN HOWARD MCKNIGHT

Dotson Born to Mr. and Mrs. William Mitchell Dotson, Williamston, a daughter, Brett Ashlie, on May 7,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Scholarship To Be Given

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Weant

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Newton Weant, 329. Green Mill Run Apartments, a son, Patrick Newton, on May 7,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Anderson Born to Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Wayne Anderson, Greenville, a son, Christopher Lee, on May 9, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Yvonne C. George, of Pitt Community College, will speak to the Pirate Charter Chapter of ABWA Tuesday at 7:15 p.m. at Shoneys Restaurant.

Warren

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Warren, Route 4, Greenville, a son, Jeffrey Allen, on May 9,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Chapter President Nina Redditt said that in observance of the groups month of May as scholarship month, the program will be on education. The chapter

scholarship will also be given.

Woman of the year for the Pirate Chapter will be selected based on her outstanding contribution to the chapter during the past year.

The meeting date has been officially changed from the third Monday to the third Tuesday of each month. For^ information concerning the' chapter call 752-6410.

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319 Cotanche St. Greenville. N.C. 27834 Phone 757-0234

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Best

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Earl Best, Robersonville, a daughter, Shameka Nicole, on May 7, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Fair

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Haskell Fair, 106-B N. Meade St., a daughter, Cornelia Worth, on May 9, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Call One Of our Professional Stylists For An Appointment Today!

Owners & Operators Carolyn Nichols

Gibbs Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Wade Gibbs, Route 2, Greenville, a daughter, Melissa Ann, on May 7,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Keys

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Lewellyn Keys Jr., 119 Holliday Court, a son, Jason Patrick, on May 9, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Fox

Born to Mr. and Mrs. David Weaver Fox, Route 6, Greenville, a daughter, Margo Dawson, on May 8, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Fox is the former Jane Mayo.

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Wedding Vows Solemnized

MOUNT OLIVE - Sharon Lou Gurley and Neal Owen Benton were united in marriage at 3:30 p.m. Saturday in the First United Methodist Church here. The Rev. Jerry J. Juren and the Rev. Frank Turner conducted the double ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Glenwood Gurley of Mount Olive and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Owen Benton of Fremont are parents of the bridegroom.

A program of wedding music was presented by organist Mrs. Paul Garrison. Carolyn Gurley, sister of the bride, sang Weve Only Just Begun and the father of the bride sang I Love You Truly. Mrs. Barton Baldwin sang The Wedding Prayer.

Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of white organza over peau de soie designed with a high neckline encircled with scalloped silk Venise lace. A sheer yoke of illusion accented with silk Venise and beaded schiffli lace enhanced the fitted bodice. Scalloped silk Venise lace encircled the waistline and the sheer bishop sleeves were fashioned with matching lace appliques and finished in cuffs of organza overlaid in lace. The modified A-line skirt and attached chapel ^ train were accented with a flounced hemline of Chantilly lace bordered in silk Venise lace. She wore a double tiered fingertip veil of illusion edged in silk Venise lace held in place by a Juliet cap overlaid in satin accented with floral silk Venise lace. Her only jewelry was an emerald ring and pearl earrings. She carried a bouquet of silk plum colored roses, stephanotis, lilies of the valley and gypsophilia.

Carolyn Gurley, sister of the bride, was maid of honor and bridesmaids included Laura Odom of Fremont, Mary Beth Herring and Laura Williams of Mount Olive, Doris Lane and Elaine . Precythe of Faison and Gail Darden of Stantonsburg. Millicent Paige Mooring of Mount Olive was flower girl and Adam Webester of Selma was ring bearer.

The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers included Mike Benton

of Hampton, Va. and Gary Benton of Fremont, brothers of the bridegroom, Ed Hester of Chadbourn, Pete Ed-mundson of Pikesville, John Turner of Fremont and David McKeever of Buffalo, N.Y.

Lou Crisp, aunt of the bride, presided at the guest register and the wedding was directed by Mrs. Joseph Ray Mooring Jr.

After a cruise to the Bahamas; the couple will live in Fremont.

The bride and bridegroom are graduates of East Carolina University.

Immediately following the ceremony the brides parents entertained at a reception in the church fellowship hall. Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Reinhardt.

Mrs. Harold Ellis served wedding cake and punch was poured by Mrs. Frank Dowdy. Both are aunts of the bride.

Mrs. Lee Pittard presided at the guest register.

Good-byes were said to Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Dail and rice bags were distributed by Holly and Kristy Cotton, cousins of the bride.

A wedding brunch was held at the Goldsboro Country Club for members of the wedding party and out-of-town guests. On Friday evening after the rehearsal, parents of the bridegroom entertained the wedding party at a dinner at the Steak Barn.

The bridesmaids luncheon was given by Mrs. Lee Pittard, Mrs. Joe Herring, Mrs. Vernon Whetsell and Mrs. Cletus Brock at the Goldsboro Country Club Thursday.

The Daily ReOector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, May 15,1983-C-5

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor HAWAIIAN BUFFET Coconut Chicken & Rice Broiled Zucchini & Rolls Island Parfait & Coffee . ISLAND PARFAIT The pudding is very sweet, so we suggest small portions, 14-ounce can sweetened condensed milk 20-ounce can crushed pineapple in pineapple syrup, drained Salted macadamia nuts, whole or chopped Into an 8-inch cake pan, pour the condensed milk: cover with foil: place in a 10-inch round cake pan of hot tap water (the water should come up as high as the milk). Bake in a preheated 425-

degree oven unto thick and light caramel color - about 1 hour. Chill. Divide among 6 sherbet glasses, using 3 generous tablespoons for each. Top each with a generous U cup crushed pineapple; sprinkle with macadamia nuts. Makes 6 servings.

strawberries: reser\'e berries. Add enough orange juice to strawberry juice to make I'-.-cups liquid: turn into a I'j-quart saucepan with tapioca and sugar: let stand 5 minutes. Over medium heat, stirring occasionally. bring to a boil. Off heat, stir in reserved strawberries. Makes 2 cups. Turn into glass dessert dishes: chill overnight. iFor non-carlorie-

watchers, this is delicious topped with sweetened whipped cream.) Makes 4 servings

Eastern

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10-ounce package frozen strawberries halved in syrup, thawed but undrained Orange juice 2 tablespoons quick-cooking tapioca 1 tablespoon sugar Into a 2-cup glass measure, drain the juice from the

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A New Role

Initiated Into Honor Society

RALEIGH - The /n.C. State Univesity Chapter of Alpha Lambda Delta Honor Society has initiated Ishan Sehgal into membership.

The national honor freshman honor society recognized students who achieve a quality grand point average of 3.5 or better during their first semester or first two semesters.

Sehgal will became an active member during the next academic year.

NEW YORK (AP) - Entertainer Gene Kelly, star of more than 40 Hollywood movies including Singin In The Rain and An American In Paris, is taking on a new role.

Famous as a movie actor, dancer, singer, choreographer, director and producer, Kelly has been signed

by RCA as spokesman for its VideoDisc system, which shows movies and other material through any TV set.

Kelly appears in five movies available on videodisc - "Thats Entertainment, Singing In The Rain, Brigadoon, An American In Paris and The Pirate.

ACj)

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When you look good, you feel good. It's as simple as that! And for skin that glows with health and vitality (what good looks are all about) - Prescribed SkinCare, have beautifiers that work above and beyond the call of duty. If your skin is normal to dry, you would try our Special Balancing Soap, 6-oz.; Activating Clarifier, 8-oz.; Moisture Balancing DayCare, 2-oz.; and Optimum Balance, 1-oL For normal to oily skin, try our 6-oz. Special Refining Soap, 8-oz. Extra-Strength Clarifier, 2-oz. T-Zone Controller, and 2-oz. Oil-Dissolving Night Formula. And the new makeup is simply breathtaking! Eyeshadow trio in Champagne, Roses & Caviar or Earth, Wind and Fire; Instant LashBuilder in black, brown or A Newer Navy; Color-Perfect Accent Stick in Perfectly Violet and Perfectly Kohl, and Cheekglow in Spiced Apple or Peach Chiffon. Add the finishing touch with our heavenly Charles of the Ritz E.D.T. Spray, 1.9-oz. and you're ready! Really, you're ready to put on the Ritz with lots of style! Come by our Charles of the Ritz counter today!

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





(-6-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, May 15,1983

Sharon L. Isenhour Marries On Saturday

HICKORY - Ascension Episcopal Church here was the scene of the wedding ceremony Saturday afternoon at two oclock of Sharon Leigh Isenhour and Jeffrey Paul Sarvey. The double ring ceremony was conducted by the Rev. J. Barney Hawkins IV

Edward T. Ward presented a program of classical music.

Daughter of Cmdr. and Mrs. William J. Isenhour of Route 5. Hickory, the bride was given in marriage by her

parents ana escorted by her father. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Sarvey of St. Michaels, Md.

Michelle Isenhour of Greenville, sister of the bride, and Anastasia Isenhour of Silver Spring, Md., cousin of the bride, were honor attendants and bridesmaids included Mrs. Douglas Matson of Hickory and Mrs. Ross Miller of Greenville.

Ross Miller of Greenville was best man and ushers included John T. Annerson of

MRS.MEFFREY PAUL SARVEY

Darlington. S.C., Joe Bet-thauser of Asheboro and Scott Luce of Greenville. Jeffrey Gustav Sarvey of Greenville, son of the bridegroom, was ring bearer.

The bride wore a formal gown of white organza over peau de soie designed with a split V-neckline outlined in rochelle lace. The fitted bodice and cuffs were overlaid with matching lace. The full circle skirt fell from a fitted waistline encircled with rochelle lace. The attached chapel train was accented with matching lace at the edges. She wore a waltz length mantilla edged in matching lace and motifs of rochelle lace enhanced the illusion. She wore her great-grandmothers pearl necklace and earrings. The bride carried a cascade of white roses centered with butterfly iris accented with spider plants, English ivy and babys breath.

The honor attendants wore formal gowns of teal chiffon over taffeta designed with an open neckline, rolled shoulder straps and a fitted bodice. The sleeveless gown was complimented with a chiffon jacket with a high neckline of gathered chiffon. Sheer bishop sleeves and a fitted cummerbund enhanced the jacket from which fell the gathered skirts. They carried cascades of daisies and button poms accented with myri claudis and yellow streamers.

The attendants were dressed identically.

A champagne reception was held after the ceremony at the Cedar Rock Country Club in Lenoir. Guests were greeted by Dr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Isenhour, aunt and uncle of the bride.

Mrs. James Whitworth and Mrs. Bill Charlolee, aunts of the bride, served wedding cake. Mrs. Dolan Huffman, Mrs. Erwin Huffman and Mrs. L.C. Huffman, aunts of the bride, poured punch.

The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip to Williamsburg and Virginia Beach, Va.

The bride is a staff nurse at Pitt County Memorial Hospital and graduated from East Carolina University School of Nursing. The bridegroom is director of operations. Expressway Foods in Rocky Mount. He graduated from ECU.

Aitch-Too-Oh

HOT SPRINGS, .Ark. (AP) - One of the most widespread misconceptions is the use of H-2-0 as a term for water in the belip^ that all water is con.posed exclusively of hydrogen and oxygen.

Actually, almost none of it is, say researchers at Mountain Valley Spring, Water Co. They point out that all the fresh water on earth is about 99.7 perfect H-2-0. The remainder is made up of some or all of 60 separate substances, mostly dissolved minerals.

Pure H-2-0 is used in chemistry, in industry for boilers and electric irons. While it may also be consumed by humans, it is usually not desirable for regular use unless medically prescribed.

Miss Fuchs, Mr. Phelps Are Married

10-6 Monday - ThoruMy 10-9 Frldt^

10-4 Salurdi^

1-5 Sunday

Lower ievef North Rdge Stroppmo Center 6162 Falls 01^ Meuse l^oad 872-6S37

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INORTH RIDGE S/C

On Saturday afternoon at five oclock, Nancy Elizabeth Fuchs became the bride of James Anthony Phelps in a candlelight ceremony at Salem United Methodist Church in Simpson.

The Rev. Edward M. Walker of Greenville and the Rev. Billy Cuthrell of Stokes officiated at the double ring ceremony.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Fuchs of Stokes and Mr. and Mrs. James H. Phelps of Greenville.

A program of nuptial music was presented by Gail Crisp of Stokes, organist, David and Becky McGowan of Greenville, who sang "Endless Love. He sang Ava Maria.

Escorted by her father and given in marriage by her parents, the bride wore a .formal gown of white silk-ened organza over'peau de

soie. The gown was fashioned with an open Queen Anne neckline outlined in floral silk Venise lace. A miniature ruffle of organza edged in a silk Venise lace border accented the neckline and extended over the shoulders to a scallop in the gown back. A border of silk Venise lace enhanced the modified empire waistline and the full sheer bishop styled sleeves featured fitted cuffs trimmed in floral lace. Floral appliques of silk Venise lace centered the back of the gown with covered buttons extending below the waist. The full skirt extended to an attached chapel train. The bride wore a strand of pearls which was a gift to her mother from her father on their wedding day. She wore a fingertip illusion veil edged in Venise lace border with appliques of lace trimming the veil. It was attached to a

MRS. JAMES ANTHONY PHELPS

Cooking Is F un

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Aviated Press Food Editor DINNER F.ARE Lamb Chops 4 Potatoes Green Bean Slaw & Rolls Strawberry Cream Cake GREEN BE.AN SLAW Old-time - and as good as ever.

4 strips bacon 1 small onion, chopped medium fine

3 tablespoons flour 1-pound can green beans,

undrained L cup cider vinegar -4 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon prepared mustard 1 tablespoon sugar

4 cups shredded cabbage, H^itly packed

6 radishes, sliced very thin

In a 10-inch skillet, over low heat, cook bacon until crisp; drain, leaving drippings in

skillet: crumble bacon and reserve. Cook onion in hot drippings until wilted: stir in flour until blended. Drain liquid from beans into skillet; stir constantly over moderately low heat until thickened and boiling. Stir in vinegar, salt, mustard and sugar until smooth. Stir in beans: heat through. Into a large serving bowl turn cabbage, radishes and reserved bacon; add hot bean mixture; toss lightly. Serve warm. Makes 4 to 6 servings.

Teapots with broken spouts and decorated mugs without handles make attractive plant holders.

Use cardboard tubes from giftwrap or paper towels as inserts for tall boots to keep them standing upright in the closet.

Juliet headpiece appliqued in matching lace beaded with pearls. The bride carried a silk colonial bouquet of white roses, gardenias, stephanotis and babys breath interspersed with white lace ribbon and satin streamers.

Judy Bazemore of Greenville was maid of honor and wore a formal gown of yellow organza over taffta designed with a scallt^ neckline. The full skirt had a double ruffled hemline flounce which extended into the back waistline to form a bustle. She carried a silk colonial nosegay of yellow roses, violets, yellow and white daisies and babys breath with yellow satin streamers.

Amanda Phelps, sister of the bridegroom, was bridesmaid and wore a dress identical to that of the honor attendant and carried similar flowers.

Honorary bridesmaids were Lisa Briley, Silsan Spain, Patti Andrews and Joan Newberry, all cousins of the bride.

The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers were Steve Fuchs, brother of the bride, and Scott Buck of Greenville.

The mother of the bride chose a formal gown of sea spray green polyester with a matching fingertip coat. The mother of the bridegroom wore a formal gown of mauve chiffon. Both wore corsages of white silk roses. Grandmothers of the couple were remembered with similar corsages.

The wedding was directed by Shirley Russell of Greenville.

Immediately follolwing the cerembny the brides parents entertained at a reception at the Brook Valley Country Club. Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs.' Milton Spain, aunt and uncle of the bride Luerain Buck presided at the register and Ann Margaret Haddock presented rice bags to the guests.

The brides table was overlaid with a white lace cloth and centered with a silver epergne of silk roses and daisies with silver candelabra holding lighted tapers.

Cake was served by Rosemary Sperl and Erline Fuchs, aunts of the bride, poured punch.

Good-byes were said by the host and hostess.

After the rehearsal, the parents of the bridegroom entertained at a dinner party at the King and Queen Restaurant. A bridesmaids luncheon was held at the home of Mrs. Page Watson, who was assisted by Mrs.

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A pig picking was held for the wedding party and out--of-town guests Friday night at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Spain. Lisa Briley, Mrs. Charlie James Jr. and Susan Spain assisted. A dance followed at the Windy Ridge Clubhouse.

The couple will live in Simpson after a wedding trip to Atlantic Beach and Hilton Head, S.C.

The bride graduated from Peace College and East Carolina University. She is a

staff accountant at North State Savings and Loan Corp. The bridegroom attended ECU and served in the U.S. Navy. He is now owner aqd operator of Professional Auto Beauty Service in Greenville.

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Couple Speaks Vows In Saturday Ceremony

Couple Marries Saturday Morning

The DaUy Reflector, GreenvilJe, N.C -Sunday, May 15,1983-C-7

AUTRYVILLE - Sheila Jane Faircloth, daughter of Mrs, Jane Horne of Autryville, and the late Capt, Donnie C. Faircloth, and Frederick Royce Frye were married here in the Long Branch Baptist Church by the Rev. Dennis Guy Saturday at 4 p.m.

The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Judith Nipper of Lillington and Royce Frye of Greensboro.

Given in marriage by her uncle, Randall Hall, the bride wore a long white flowing organza gown styled with a high neckline and bodice of lace and pearls. Lace appliques embellished the full bishop sleeves and the train was edged with lace. Her Venise cap headpiece was attached to a two tiered lace edged veil and she carried a bouquet of white and pink roses with babys breath, accented with greenery.

Daphne Faircloth of Autryville, sister of the bride, was maid of honor and wore a pink pleated gown with spaghetti straps and cape of pink chiffon flowers. She carried a bouquet of pink and white roses with babys breath and greenery.

Tammy and Felicia Faircloth of Autryville, cousins of the bride, and Donna Green of Angier, sister of the bridegroom, were bridesmaids. Lisa Steiner of Autryville, cousin of the bride, was flower girl.

The best man was the father of the bridegroom and Jason Home of Autryville, brother of the bride, was ring bearer.

Ushers were Stanley Frye of Fuquay-Varina, brother of the bridegroom, David Lasater of Lillington and Randy Hall of Fayetteville, cousin of the bride.

Gail Marie Stanfield and Donald Andrew Wallace were united in marriage in the First Christian Church here Saturday at 10 a.m. Dr. Will Wallace performed the double ring ceremony.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. E M. Stanfield of Murfreesboro and M.H. Wallace of Rochester, Mich, and the late ^Dorothy Wallace.

Gigi Walter of Greenville was matron of honor and the best man was Rod Wallace of Greenville, brother of the bridegroom. Stephen Wallace of Kodiak, Alaska, brother of the bridegroom, was the usher.

A program of wedding music was presented by Diane Bridger, organist. Mrs. J.D. Wilson of Greenville sang One Hand, One Heart and Evergreen.

The bride wore her mothers wedding dress. It

was a formal gown of ivory satin designed with a sweetheart neckline enhanced with a fitted bodice and long fitted satin sleeves with calla points. The satin skirt was accented with a flounce that extended to form a chapel length train! She wore a fingertip veil of illusion held in place by a tiara overlaid in Chantilly lace beaded with pearls. The bride carried a bouquet of white daisies and babys breath.

The attendant was dressed in a pastel pink dress with three-quarter sleeves, scooped neckline and bell skirt. In her hair she wore a matching pink bow and carried a bouquet of daisies and pink carnations.

The mother of the bride wore a peach dress with a square neckline. The mother and grandmothers wore corsages of white daisies.

A reception was given by the brides parents and was

held in the church parlor. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dill welcomed guests and presided at the bridal register. Mrs. Cleveland Moore served guests and Debbie Briley poured punch

The father of the bridegroom entertained the wedding party and friends with a rehearsal dinner at the King and Queen Restaurant.

The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip to the Outer Banks.

The bride graduated from J.H. Rose High School and East Carolina University. She is employed by Pitt County Schools. The bridegroom is associated with the M.H. Wallace Co. in

Greenville. He graduated from Adrian College and Michigan Technological Institute in Michigan.

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Amalie Williams, organist, and Gwen Williams, vocalist, presented music for the ceremony.

The attendants were dressed like the honor attendant.

The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip to the coast.

The bridegroom is a graduate of Central Carolina Technical College and Fayetteville State University. He is a patrolman for the Citv of Greenville. The bride

will graduate in December from East Carolina Universi-t}' and is a member of Alpha Phi Sigma and Gamma Beta Phi, honor societies.

A reception followed in the church fellowship hall.

A rehearal buffet dinner followed the rehearsal and Was held in the church fellowship hall.

The invention of iced tea is credited to Richard Blechynden, an Englishman. He served the beverage cold after finding visitors to the 1904 St. Louis Worlds Fair did not want a hot beverage.

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SWIM LESSONS for children age .' and up of all ability levels CLASSES are taught in groups of d to 6 students by certified instructors CLASS^ run    Monday through Friday the 1st week and    Monday    through

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Crossword Puzzles Now Available On T-Shirts

; 'M

ByDAVEMEISTER Reading Eagle

REINHOLDS, Pa. (AP) -Some people will go to great lengths to solve crossword puzzles. They may even ask for the shirt off your back.

Then again, you could just buy the addict his own T-shirt complete with a wash-and-wear crossword puzzle, the latest in word apparel.

Get fed up with this puzzle - no problem. Just toss it in the wash, run it through a couple of cycles, dry and get back to the acrosses and downs.

The avid crossword puzzle player can flash his shirt with pride with all the white boxes filled.

The man behind this novelty Is Jack W. Winter of Lancaster County.

Winter, a crossword ad

dict, decided about a year ago to silk-screen a puzzle onto a T-shirt so he could keep his favorite hobby close to his heart.

But no ordinary puzzle would do. For $300, Winter obtained exclusive rights to a puzzle created by Tap Osborn, a man who has created a number of puzzles for The New York Times Sunday edition - known for printing some of the toughest of puzzles.

Getting the shirts silk-screened was a snap for Winter, who is a salesman for a manufacturer of printed apparel.

Thanks to some well-placed advertisements -including a plug in the national periodical Games magazine - Winter and his wife, Jean, began receiving hundreds of orders for the

Riverspree '83

SOLD FOR RECORD PRICE - This suit of armor made for King Henry II of France was sold for a record-breaking price of $3,022,250 at Sothebys in London on Thursday. An anynymous American collector bought the armor, part of a collection of treasures from Hever Castle, England. (AP Laserphoto)

ELIZABETH CITY -RiverSpree 83, the annual celebration in Elizabeth City, the /northeastern port town on (the broad Pasquotank River, gets under way Friday night and continues through Sunday, with a number of activities scheduled to be held along the waterfront and in the streets of the old port town.

Festivities will kick-off Friday night with a street dance at Southgate Mall, with music by local country and western musicians.

On Saturday, stage performances by singers and dancers will take place at the mall, and on Sunday, the mall back lot will be the site of the lift-off for a hot air balloon.

Other attractions will include a strolling banjo player, a juggler and enter-

Springtime Festival

FITNESS STAMP - The U.S. Postal Service will issue a 20-cent stamp recognizing physical fitness activies in America on May 14. The stamp will be issued in Houston. (AP Laserphoto)

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WINDSOR - Springtime on the Plantation, an entertainment and food event to welcome in the warm weather of mid-May springtime, will be held Saturday at Historic Hope Plantation near Windsor.

Scheduled events are to begin at 5:30 p.m., with a barbeque supper to be served

Tall Ships Ceremony

BEAUFORT - Two events, one of them covering portions of two days, are scheduled to take place this week at Hampton Mariners Museum, 120 Turner Street in Beaufort, downtown near the waterfront.

On Wednesday, a field trip by ship to Shackleford will leave from the museum at 9:30 a.m., with return due at 4:30 p.m. Fee for the trip is $12. with reservations required in advance (call 728-7317).

On Wednesday, International Museum Day, the role of Hampton Mariners Museum in attracting tall

ships to the area will be noted, with the tall ships Appledore and Harvey Gamage due to arrive in the Beaufort Harbor for their semi-annual musuem visit. This will be followed on Thuesday by a 12 noon Welcome Tall-Ships Ceremony. The public is invited to be on hand for the tall-ship events.

following a concert of blue-grass music and a clogging exhibition. Guided tours of Hope House, the Federal-Georpan early 18th century mansion of Governor David Stone, will be available until 6:30. Music, dining and dancing will continue through 11 p.m.

A 12-man Cashie Cooking Club will be in charge of food preparation, with Windsor's Explore Scout Troop in charge of parking.

In the event of rain, Springtime on the Plantation wUl be held at the National Guard Armory, located one mile south of Windsor on U.S. 17.

Reservations are required for this subscription event. For more information and reservation details, call 794-3140 or write to: Historic Hope Plantation, P.O. Box 601, Windsor, N.C., 27894.

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puzzling shirt.

Since April 1982, the Winters have received more than 700 orders for T-shirts, some of the orders coming from as far as Alaska and Hawaii. ' True to Osborns style, the T-shirt puzzle, Fun and Games, is a toughie. Winter does not include the solution when shipping the T-shirt. Puzzled T-shirt wearers must send a request for the answers.

Jean Winter advises

customers, If youre not a puzzle buff, dont write on the shirt. But, if youre pretty sure of yourself, go ahead and give the shirt a try.

However, if you are the type who insists on completing the puzzle on the T-shirt every time before you wear it, you had better keep track of how many times you wash the shirt.

The clues start to fade after 50 launderings.

tainment groups from two churches - the Blackwell Memorial Baptist Church Bell Ringers and the Cann Memorial Presbyterian Church Muppets.

Among bands to perform are Out in the Cold, C & W Unlimited and the Midnight Flyers. Local high school jazz and pep bands will play, and the Tidewater Pipes and Drums will add their own flavor of band ipusic.

Dance performers will include The Tidewater Ballet, the Libby Allen Dancers members of the Elizabeth City School of Dance, and square dance groups.

One of the hi^ili^ts in festivities planned is the water race Anything Thatll Float But A Boat race. Another contest will be a tug-of-war between teams vying for trophies.

'BRANCHS BEAUTY salon'

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WHITEWALL WHITEWASH - A sign painter paints over a Tireman advertisement on a billboard at Parker Field in Richmond recently. The painter had no trouble whitewashing the sign despite what seems to be objections on the part of the hero of the sign. (AP Laserphotol

Miss National Pre-Teen Pageant

Mlaa Shannon Renae Batts, age 10, daughter of Johnny & Gloria Medlin Batts, Rt. 1. Greenville, N.C., and granddaughter of Mr. & Mrs. L.F. Batts. Greenville and Mr. & Mrs. James R. Medlin. Grimesland, has been selected as a finalist in the 1983 MISS NORTH CAROLINA NATIONAL PRE-TEEN PAGEANT to be held at the Radisson Inn, in Charlotte. N.C. on August 19 & 20. The Miss North Carolina National Pre-Teen Pageant is affiliated with the Miss National Teen-Ager Pageant now In its 11th year.

The winner of the pageant wlU receive a cash scholarship, crown, banner and a round trip flight to the National Pageant to compete with other finalists lor the title of Miss National Pre-Teen of 1983. Contestants will be {udged on % poise-personality, A talent. V* interview, and A appearance.

Miss Shannon Renae Batts is being sponsored by Brinkley Moore Motors. Greenville. First State Bank. Greenville, Ace Equipment Company, Greenville. Itallo Pizza; and B & J Machine Works. Inc.. Scuffletim.

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The Daiy Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Sunday, May 15,1983-C-9

Sea And Land Battles To Be Fought In Bath

CRAFT DAY IN THE SUN - Arts and crafts festivals are very Swansboros 200th anniversary celebrtion, a young man tries much a part of the American scene today, and eastern North on a handcrafted leather belt and a woman in colonial costume Carolina has its ample share of these events during warm chats with a weaver at her loom. (Reflector Photo by Jerrv weather months. Here, at the recent festival that was part of Raynor)

Coastal Conference Scheduled

BATH - On Saturday and Sunday members of the Second North Carolina Regiment of Foot, men and women, fully costumed in the mode of two centuries and more from the past, will take over the historic village of Bath.

Playing the role of regiment members from several units - including the Third North Carolina Regiment, Guilford Militia, Kentucky Militia, Second South Carolina Regiment, and Fraisers 71st Highlanders, the occupying contingents will be camping out colonial style at Bonner Point overlooking the junction of Bath and Back Creeks on Friday and Saturday nights.

While living the open air life on the hi^ ground above the creeks, the men and women will live history as it was long ago, carrying on daily activities along the streets of Bath - which, incidentally, have remained unchanged since the towns earliest days in the 1700s.

Highlight of the colonial forces occupation will be a land and sea battle between American and British factions off Bonner Point. Actual cannons will be used, with two battles to be staged, one on Saturday afternoon, the second on Sunday afternoon.

Other events include a parade at 11 a.m. Saturday, complete with a flag

ceremony, and on Sunday morning troops will attend worship services at St. Thomas Episcopal Church the oldest church in North Carolina.

All during both days guided tours of historic buildings in Bath can be arranged. Free parking is available throughout town except at Bonner Point, site of the encampment, and picnic facilities are also available.

Crafts people specializing in colonial type crafts are invited to come with wares for sale and display tables. There is no fee for spaces which will be assigned on a first-come, first-served basis.

Persons wanting more information on any of the events are to call 923-3971.

High School Art At Gray Gallery

The annual North Carolina high school art competition exhibit is now on view at Gray Gallery, Jenkins Fine Arts Center on the East Carolina University.

Approximately 40 pieces by students from schools all over the state are being shown and will be on view through May 25.

Gallery hours are 10 to 5 weekdays, closed weekends.

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SWANSBORO - A Conference on Navigating Coastal Values, in conjunction with the first annual meeting of the North Carolina Coastal Federation, Inc., will be held Friday, Saturday and Sunday in the Swansboro Town Hall.

Among topics to be discussed and examined at the event ^ are coastal history, music, folklore, society and politics, important coastal issues, roles that citizens can play in coastal management, and success stories - where citizens have made a difference.

Open to any interested person, it is being held for an intended audience of coastal residents and visitors, students, members of public interest organizations, and public officials.

The conference begins at 7:30 p.m. Friday with a talk by Jim McGowan of UNC-Wilmington. followed at 8:30 p.m. by Maurice Ballance and Edgar Howard of Ocracoke on "Folk Songs of Caostal North Carolina

At 9 a.m. Saturday a panel discussion on "Charting Community Change will be

Benefit Boat Race Set For Wilmington

WILMINGTON - Saturday is the date for a big southeastern North Carolina water event - the Augustus Charles Hobart Hampden Sailboat Race, which will tenefit the New . Hanover County Museum Foundation. Inc

Hampden, known during his career as Captain Roberts, was commander of the twin-screw blockade runner Don, which successfully outmaneuvered the Yankee Blockade on many occasions. This Captain Roberts achieved by laying close to shore, blending into the coastline, and running for the port on moonless nights at high tide.

The Don, was finally captured in the Cape Fear River after a noble career in support of the Southern states. The captain deftly eluded capture, surviving the Civil War as a respected Southern seaman.

Registration fee for those taking part in the race is $5 in advance, and $10 on the day of the race. Boat classes for the races will be Sunfish, Lasers, Hobie 16, and a handicapped class. Registration fees will be donated to the Foundation and are tax deductible.

A skippers meeting will be held at noon. The races will get under way at 1 p.m.

Persons wanting to register early for the $5 fee and to get more information may write: Race Committee. New Hanover County Museum Foundation, Inc., 814 Market Street, Wilmington, N.C., 28401. Anyone wanting to enter early can send a check for $5 made payable to the New Hanover County Museum Foundation,

held with Harry Watson of UNC-Chapel Hill; Tucker Littleton, Swansboro historian: and Jim Sabella of UN-C-Wilmington.

At 11 a.m. Janice Faulkner, director of the East Carolina Regional Development Institute, Greenville, will talk, and a catered lunch will be served at noon. Afternoon sessions include a 1:30 p.m. lecture by Gene Purcell of Atlantic Christian College; a movie. "Carteret County at 2:30 p.m., a talk by Jonathan Howes of UNC-Chapel Hill at 3 p.m., with Purcell speaking again at 3:30 p.m. The final discussions will be at 4:10 p.m. with Purcell, Todd Miller of the N.C. Coastal Federation; Ann Hooper, Carteret County Crossroads; and Ralph Cantral, N.C. Office of Coastal Management. There will be a conference evaluation at 4:40 p.m., adjournment wilt be at 5 p.m., and dinner served at 6 p.m.

The one event scheduled for Sunday is the board of directors meeting at 11 a.m. to which the public is invited.

Basic registration fee is $7, which includdes lunch and coffee breaks, (with a $3 surcharge for registrations

received after Tuesday). Registration can be made by sending a check for $7 to: N.C. Coastal Federation, Rt. 5. Box 603 (OCEAN), Newport, N.C., 28570. More details, including motel or camping facilities can be made by calling 393-8185. Checks or money orders are to be made payable to: N.C. Coastal Federation.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, May 15,1983

A Review

THE SILHOUETTE... of a girl against sea grass and sparkling ocean waters graces the cover of The Girls of The Grand

Summer To Summer Calendar

Joe .Albea. an avid out-doorsman and photographer who writes a Sunday outdoors column for T^e Daily Reflector, has prov-ta that hes equally adept focusing his camera on subjects other than birds, fish and raccoons.

The subject for .Albeas detour from his more usual photographic efforts remains outdoor creatures only in this case they are creatures U a summer kind - young ladies viewed along the beaches of Myrtle Beach just a little bit south of North Carolina.

The 14-page publication contains a girl for each month of the year plus an additional one silhouetted on the cover of "The Girls of the Grand Strand Beach Calendar. Myrtle Beach, S.C. This is not your familiar chronological calendar that begins in January - rather it starts off with the prime girl-viewing season of June and continues in full circle to May 1984.

Purists of a publication's conte.xt might take exception to these young ladies not . getting into fall and winter attire for their photos - say irom October thorugh .March.

Women may find this calendar a handv reference

to styles in bathing suits, and all users will find practical the abundant full page calendar space allotted beneath each brilliantly colored photograph.    Vy

"Most of the girls are college coeds and are students in five different un- iversities in North and South

Carolina, Albea explained.

In addition to producer and photographer Albea, those involved in producing the calendar are: George Wilkerson, associate producer; Diane Woodley, production assistant, and Karen .Mills, choreographer. Ive never before heard of a

calendar choreographer -but its an intriguing title, whatever it mi^t mean.

The 84 X II inch calendar is priced at $2.95 and is available now in four Greenville locations - University Book Exchange, Bonds Sporting Goods, Central Book News, and Eastern Office Supply,

Jerry Raynor

Publisher Being Honored

WINSTON-SALEM - John Fries Blair, a Winston-Salem publisher, will soon join Paul Green, Gertrude Carraway, Albert Coates, Sam Ragan and Sam J. Ervin in the select list of North Caroli-,, nians who have been honored as recipients of the North Caroliniana Award.

At the North Caroliniana Societys banquet in Chapel Hill on Saturday, Blair will become the sixth Tar Heel to receive the award since its inception in 1975, The award is given to honor men and women who have contributed unusually distinguished service to the state over a period of years.

Blair, who established an independent publishing company in Winston-Salem

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more than 28 years ago, is being honored for his support and preservation of the historical, literary and cultural heritage of North Carolina.

A native of.Winston-Salem, he still lives in the house in which he was bom during the presidency of Teddy Roosevelt. After receiving an undergraduate degree from Haverford College. Pa., and a law degree from Harvard, and spending 12 years practicing law, Blair decied to pursue his literary inclinations and took an M.A. in English from Columbia University. He taught briefly at Moravian College, then moved to Chapel Hill where he was an assistant director and editor for the Institute of Government and an actor with the Carolina Playmakers.

It was later, while serving as an editor for the UNC Press, that Blair became

"hooked on publishing. In 1954 he established a publishing house in Winston-Salem. Since then he has published more than 120 books, many of them either about North Carolina or penned by North Carolina writers.

Blair books have won numerous awards in state and regional competitions, and special efforts are made to keep the books in print. They include histories, novels, biographies, collections of short stories and verse, and cookbooks.

Archie K. Davis, president of the North Caroliniana Society, Dr. H.G. Jones, former director of the State Department of Archives and History, and Albert Coates, former head of the Institute of Government, will be among speakers at the reception and dinner. The main address will be given by a surprise Friend of John Fries Blair.

Greenville Poet Has Work In New Book

Poems by Greenville poet Gerda Nischan as well as translations of poetry by other women born in Germany appear in the latest updated edition of In Her Mother's Tongue.

The anthology, also titled "Reisegepaeck Sprache in German, is a 395 page large format paperback edition published by Emerson Press, Inc.of Denver, Colorado.

Mrs. Nischan, who was born in Frankenthal (Palatinate), Germany in 1940. came to the U.S. in 1%7 and has lived in Greenville for several years. She is the wife of Dr, Bodo Nischan, a faculty member at East Carolina University.

Editors biographical notes for the anthology' point out

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that she "distinguishes herself from all the other writers presented because she is the only one who has treated the experience of World War II in Germany in her Doems as well as the problems which immigrants face.

It is further noted that she is the only one of the German-born women who has used English as the primary means of expression, and later translated her poems into German.

Mrs. Nischan is the author of a volume of poems, Red Sky in the Night, and currently is at work on a second volume, The Immigrants.

In this edition of In Her Mothers Tongue, four poems by Mrs. Nischan have been included - I am a Number; Christmas Eve 1944; Dead Spring and Trainmates.

The two poets whose work she has translated for the volume are Margarethe Kollisch and Gertrud C. Schwebell.

HAMILTON PRIZE ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - The 1982 Hamilton Prize was recently awarded to Anthropology Professor Sally Price of Johns Hopkins University for her book Co-Wives and Calabashes; The Social and Artistic Life of Saramaka Women.

The prize is awarded annually by the University of Michigan for the best book-length scholarly manuscript on women.

The book is to be published bytheU-M Press.

New Tar Heel History Books Bring To Life Ordinary People

Strand summer to summer calendar, vriiich features photographs by Greenville wildlife photographer Joe Albea.

The Way We Lived in Nori Carolina. Chapel Hill. Published by the University of North Canriina Press for the North Carolina Dqiart-ment of Cultural Resources. Sydney Nathans, General Editor. Illustrated. Each volume 84 x 11, doth, $11.95 per volume, paper,$6.95 per volume. (If not available locally, order from: The UNC Press, P.O. Box 2288, Chapel HLN.C., 27514).

(Volume One: Natives and Newcomers, before 1770, by Elizabeth Penn and Peter Wood; Volume Two: An Independent People, 1770-1820, by Harry Watson; Volume Three: Close to the Land, 1820-1870, by Thomas Clayton; Volume Four: The Quest for Progress, 1870-1920, by Sydney Nathans; Volume Five, Express Lanes and Country Roads, 1920-1970, by Thomas Par-ramore.)

In time to join the T-shirts and beer mugs on sale during the celebration of the 400th anniversary of the settlement of North Carolina, the State Department of Cultural Resources has published a five-volume history of the state, The Way We Lived in North Carolina. Long after the shirts are forgotten in the bottoms of drawers and the beer mugs lost in the sand, the history will be read and reread.

In general there are two kinds of histories. Pro-, fessional histories delight ^holars with extensive detail and exhaustive notation. Popular histories are full of pictures and people but are often short on substance. General editor Sydney Nathans and historians Elizabeth Fenn, Peter Wood, Harry Watson, Thomas Clayton, and Thomas Par-ramoor have combined the best features of both. The Way We Lived, in North Carolina is both complete and entertaining.

The writers believe that the past can be most fully comprehended through the combined impact of two experiences: reading history and visiting historic places. Throughout the five volumes photographs of historic sites open to the general public fill the wide margins and illustrate the text. These photographs and the assumption that readers, should visit the sites make the series a true living history, one designed to be used as well as read.

Photographs and drawings used to illustrate life in North Carolina include plantations, taverns, mill villages, tobacco factories, farms, country stores, and the Biltmore House. Haunting in themselves, like Walker Evans famous photographs in Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, they bring the past alive in a way no words can.

Even more than through the photographs, the states long and colorful history comes alive through the people in the series. The writers of The Way We Lived in North Carolina avoided a trap for the historian -compiling a chronicle of the

rich and famous. The statesmen, businessmen, soldiers, and pioneers are included, of course, but the series is rich in description of the lives of ordinary men and women, and it is their lives that make the most interesting reading.

Historical forces are often large and impersonal, but as the writers clearly show,, it was individuals who were caught up in the conflicts.

One was the Reverend Charles Pettigrew (1774-1807). Elected the first Episcopal bishop of the Diocese of North Carolina, Pettigrew was also the owner of ^narva Plantation in Washington County. He wished there were no slaves in the world, but his plantation needed them. The excerpts from his letters and diaries show him wrestling with his dilemma.

Ella May Wiggins was another person caught in history. A textile worker in Gastonia, she was killed in the famous Loray Mill strike of 1919, leaving behind a union ballad sung at her funeral.

Readers will meet other people throughout the five volumes. The people of North Carolina are its history, and the writers include as many as possible - white, black, and Indian, men and women. The cast of characters is wide-ranging; Washington Duke and R.J. Reynolds of tobacco fame; Thomas Wolfe the novelist, George Moses Horton, a slave who wrote

poetry for the students of Chapel Hill; Billy Graham; and Pauli Murray, a black attorney and one of the first women ordained as an Episcopal priest.

North Carolina history is rich in diversity, diversity of people and diversity in geography. The Way We Lived in North Carolina illustrates this diversity

clearly and invites readers to experience it. It is a collection for schools and libraries, and it is a collection for the home.

JimHolte

(Dr. Holte is an assistant professor in the department of English, East Carolina University, and teaches journalism.)

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C,-Sunday, May 15,1983C-11

By WILLIE NELMS

There is a time in almost every young mans life when his imagination is captured by an automobile. A desire to own and operate the vehicle becomes the driving force in his life.

Stephen Kings new book, Christine, provides a courious and macabre twist on this no uncommon development. In the case of Christine, the car comes to own and-operate the young man.

King, the author of Carrie, The Stand, The Shining and other chilling horror tales, has the ability to exaggerate normal and fairly common fixations into stark stories of terror.

Set in Pennsylvania in 1978, Christine has three primary characters. Arnie Cunningham is the perennial high school loser, who is the constant subject of derision and ridicule by his classmates. Dennis Guilder is Arnies closest friend and a high school athlete. Christine is a rusty 1958 Plymouth Fury which Arnie buys and plans to restore.

The history of the 58 Fury and its previous owner, a retired soldier, take Arnie and Dennis on a bizarre series of adventures that reach far beyond the normal boy-loves-car story. Christines unique qbility to repair herself and to wreak havoc on all who threaten her and Arnie dominate the book.

Mixed into this story are verses from a variety of rock n roll automobile songs of the past which add an interesting accent to the book. Anyone who has owned a car which seemed to require more time, money and attention than the people around it will find points of identification in Christine.    /

In the early 1960s, certain T-shirts were popular. They featured the exaggerated caricature of a 58 Plymouth hot rod emblazoned on them with the inscription "Hell Hath No Fury Like Plymouth printed on the front. After reading Christine, this expression carries new meaning.

Arts Council Dinner

WHITE PROMISE FOR LATER RED - The many thousands of briarberry bushes now putting forth sprays of white carry a promise of tasty dark red berries in July. The briarberry, also known as blackberry, is one of the areas prolific producers of tasty wild food. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)

The fourth annual arts awards dinner of the Pitt-Greenville Arts Council will be held on Thursday at the Greenville Country Club. The reception will begin at 7 p.m. with dinner to be at 8 p.m.

Entertainment will be presented following the dinner - with performances by Edward Glenn, Antonia Dalapas and Brett Watson scheduled. Individuals and businesses will be honored at

the dinner for their support of the Arts Council and its member groups. Those receiving awards will be a given a limited edition print by East Carolina University faculty artist Michael Ehlbecic.

Persons interested in attending the Pitt-Greenville Arts Couincil annual dinner and reception should call the Arts Council at 757-1785 for reservations no later than Monday.

SPRING ART ARRIVES Once more, its time in Greenville for the arrival of that colorful carnival of creativity, the annual shows of student art at the Greenville Museum of Art. Currently, the museums galleries are devoted to an exhibit of art by students from the Greenville City Schools, grades

kindergarten through high school. Pictured here is one area showing the handiwork in paintings and small sculpture of some of the younger students. (Reflector Photo by Angela Lingerfelt)    ,    ^

Artist Has To Rghf Off Beggars

'83 Arts Fund Plan Announced

JLnder the leadership of chairman Jerr>' W. Powell the 1983 Arts Fund recently kicked-off its campaign at the East Carolina University School of Arts Gray Gallery.

Working for all the ArtV is the theme of the Arts Fund this year. Contributors to the fund are providing direct operating support for the Pitt-Greenville Arts Council and its funded member arts agencies.

These supported agencies include the Ayden Theater Workshop, the East Carolina

Orchestra and Chamber Music Association, Green Grass Cloggers, Greenville Boys Choral Assocication, Greenville Choral Society, and the Society for the Preservation of Barbershop Quartet Singing in America Association Inc., among a long list of member agencies.

A gift to the Arts Fund also supports many valuable programs which are offered to the public at no cost, events such as the Eastern Carolina Arts Festival; receipt of CIRCA, the journal

Rose Arf Students Busy

Rose High students were busy during the month of April exhibiting examples of their work in various competitions and at diverse localities locally, in-state and out of state.

In the Southern Flu-Cured Tobacco Festival Art Competition, Rose students won first, second and third place ribbons. In this event they competed against art students from North Carolina and six other states.

The work of one student, Carolina Pereas mixed

media piece titled "Cowless Cowtown, was selected by the city school superintendent to hang in the state Capitol building. Three other Rose students, had pieces exhibited in New York in the Scholastic Arts Awards competition.

Additionally, three students from Rose won prizes for entries in the Doodle Art Contest, in which more than 400 students entered scrib-blings and sketches as part of the Rose Art Clubs activities.

of local arts; the annual Springfest celebration; Great Sounds Downtown; a Traditional Music and Dance Ni^t; the Youth Art Competition; the Youth Creative Writing Forum; artists-in-schools program and the Pitt County Arts Directory.

Powell is city executive for Branch Banking and Trust Co. He has a history of active involvement in community, education! and professional groups. He has served as past chairman of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce, the Pitt County United Fund and has worked with the Pitt County Development Commission, BB&T Center of Management Development at East Carolina University, the Salvation Army and East Carolina University Alumni Association.

Powell has recruited a team of division captains who will work with numerous other Arts Fund volunteers. Contributors supporting the 1983 Arts Fund will, received the award-winning journal CIRCA and will be recognized publicly. Those

contributing $1,000 or more will receive a limited edition of a print by Michael Elhbeck and will also be honored at the annual dinner on Thursday. All gifts to the fund are tax deductible. For membership information contact the council at 757-1785.

By JOHN WINN MILLER Associated Press Writer ROME (AP) The hardest part of Kurt Wenners job is fighting off the beggars trying to cash in on his work.

Wenner draws monumental icons and action scenes on sidewalks. The beggars like to take the credit and, coincidently, the tips from admiring passers-by.

The Santa Barbara, Calif., native is one of dozens of

CHILDRENS TV MEXICO CITY (AP) -Production of a childrens television project has begun with the taping of programs in a new Plaza Ssamo series that will be aired later this year in 18 Central and South American countries.

The 130 half-hour-show series is a direct descendent of the earlier Plaza Ssamo progams seen in the early 1970s.

Like Sesame Street, its American namesake, the series is aimed at young children and attempts to teach as well as entertain.

artists who literally scratch out a living by changing a piece of cold cement into warm, enchanting pictures.

Theyre called Madon-nari, loosely translated as painters of the Madonna a tag that came about because most of the artists concentrate on religious subjects, particularly the Virgin Mary.

Wenner is a little different from the others because he uses original designs - and thinks big.

On a recent cloudy day on a busy corner in the heart of Rome, Wenner completed a massive 9-by-12-foot portrait of St. George on a charging

steed doing battle with a twisting dragon. Few passed without dropping a coin or a bill into cups near the picture.

The 24-year-old artist studied at Pasadena, Calif., and the Rhode Island School of Design before setting out to live in Rome. But once in a city already swarming with artists he found it tough to make enough money to continue his studies or to find work.

1 saw a couple of Germans doing this about six months ago and at first wasnt interested at all because I didnt think I could use chalk. But then I decided

to give it a try, he said.

"It normally takes three days to finish a picture, if I can finish it, he said with a woeful glance at the skies that threatened to burst open with a liquid eraser. Few of them get done.

Because of the vicissitudes of weather and using a busy sidewalk for a canvas, Wenners art form is necessarily brief.

Wenners efforts have won him a first prize at last years Madonnari contest in Verona, and he has been commissioned to do an altar piece for a local church and occasional scenery for theaters.

JERRY POWELL

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New Officers Are Elected

New officers have been elected for both the Greenville Art Society and the Greenville Museum of Art Guild.

At the recent annual meeting of the society hosted by Mr. and Mrs. James Cheatham, two new officers and four new board members were elected. These are: prkident, John Howard, and vice president, Yvonne Deyton.

The new directors are: Peg Hardee, Betty Tanzer, David Womack and Michel Voors.

Two other directors were named to replace board members Grover Maxwell, Jr. and James Fxklin, who have resigned. The two replacements are James Black and Barbara Tucker.

The effective date of office for new officers and board members is July 1.

Officers elected for the Greenville Museum of Art Guild are: president, Eleanor Ruffin; vice president, Jill Camnitz; and 5ec-retary-treasurer, Mary Taylor Mosier.

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TO PERFORM AT CAROWINDS - Kevin Rowland and Dexys Midnight Runners will be in concert from 5 to 11 p.m. Saturday at Carowinds in Charlotte. Come On Eileen, the Runners hit single, has recently been the

Simon & Simon Steams Ahead After Slow Start

By JERRY BUCK AP Television Writer

LOSANGELES(.APt-By all rights, the CBS series Simon & Simon shouldn't even be on the air, let alone be a hit.

"Simon & Simon," like the movie Rocky, got off the canvas and came back a winner.

In the 1981-82 season, its first year on the air, it plummeted to the bottom of. the ratings. All that remained was writing its obituary. Then someone at CBS put it on the schedule behind 'Magnum, P.l. It reversed directions and shot to the top of the chart.

Philip DeGuere, the creator-producer, smiles and says, It certainly has had an unusual history. DeGuere, with long dark hair, a drooping moustache and tinted glasses, adds, My primary opinion is that its a good show, a show that people will like. So its success is not all that surprising tome.

Hospitality House Today

WASHINGTON, N.C, -Guests on Kay Curries Hospitality House today will come from Mount Olive. Bath and Williamston, The program is broadcast each Sunday over WITN-TV, Channel 7, Washington, from noon until 12:30p.m.

Dr, Burkette Raper, president of Mount Olive College, will discuss the college's expansion to a four-year curriculum. Kay's second guest, Fran Critchfield, chairman of the Regiment of Foot, will give details on a historical re-enactment of revolutionary events in Bath, which will take play Saturday and Sunday.

Today's last guest is Lucia Peel of Williamston, organizer of Northstate Heritage Tours, who will given information on upcoming trips to various historic sites in eastern North Carolina.

The decision by CBS to try to salvage the sebies is an example of what is happening at allithree networks. The networks are sticking with . shows that in the past would have been given the gate because of marginal ratings. Mostly, it's an economic decision. The networks can no longer afford to throw away the huge investment made in a series. And experience has shown the new shows rarely do any better.

Sometimes, as in the case of NBC's "Hill Street Blues and Simon & Simon, it pays off.

Simon & Simon stars Jameson Parker and Gerald McRaney as two detective-brothers who are at opposite extremes yet have a sort of ' mystical Corsican brothers relationship. Parker is a conformer who looks like an up-and-coming Wall Street stockbroker. McRaney is the outlaw-as-hero.

The series was set on a mythical island in the Florida Keys. But the logistics - for instance. U.S.

I is the only highway in the Keys ^ and the high costs forced them to shoot on the mainland in Florida. The problems of running a production a long distance away from Los Angeles also became a factor.

CBS was looking for. a blue sky adventure, but it settled on Hawaii-based Magnum, P.l , and Pirates Key was dropped.

The show, as it turned out, was not dead. It became "Simon & Simon and the locale was moved to San Diego. Ill

BRONZE RELIEF

LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Italian Baroque bronze relief Triumph of Neptune and Europa by the Florentine sculptor Antonio Mon-tauti was recently acquired by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art,

The museum says the work is 'considered the finest Italian Barpque bronze relief in this country,

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Despite all these setbacks, why did the show succeed 1 'I think it's a mix of four or five very interesting elements, says DeGuere. Theres the chemistry between the two leading characters, and there's the relationship we writers maintain toward them. I think when we made them brothers we tapped into a kind of relationship thats never been done on television before,

I feel the series is unique because of the kinds of stories we do and the way we tell them. Its one of the few series where th^udience doesnt know what its going to get. Some episodes are funny, some serious, some melodramatic. We have no formulas. The writers write their own kind of show. DeGuere also is working on two projected series. One, Whiz Kids, for CBS is about kids who solve crimes with their computers. The other, Nightingale, for NBC, is an adventure with a woman lead.

Top Ten

1. Beat It, Michael Jackson

2. Come On Eileen. Dexys Midnight Runners

3.Mr.Roboto,Styx

4. Lets Dance, David Bowie

5. Der Kommissar, After the Fire

6. Jeopardy, Greg Kihn Band

7. She Blinded Me with Science, Thomas Dolby

8. Billie Jean, Michael Jackson

9. Even Now, Bob Sieger and the Silver Bullet

10. One on One, Hall & Oates

N.C. Performing Groups Are Selected

RALEIGH - Thirteen performing arts groups and seven solo artists have been selected to tour statewide as part of the North Carolina Arts Councils Touring Program. Each will be available in 1983-84 for community performances on residencies sponsored by local groups with funding assistance from the council.

Announcement of the

selections was made by Sara W. Hodgkins, secretary of the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources.

Chosen to take part in the program in various categories of entertainnient are:

Chamber music - Stan Bumngarner, guitar, Taylorsville; Ciompi String Quartet, Durham; Ned Gardner, trumpet, Raleigh;

Summer Theater Tickets On Sale

James Hotdik, saxophone, Winston-Salem; Matrix Brass Quintet, Winston-Salem; Marilyn Thompson, soprano. La Grange, and Gary Towlen, piano, Charlotte.

Dance - The Easy Moving Company, Raleigh; the Green Grass Cloggers, Hendersonville; the Frank Holder Dance Company, Greensboro; the N.C. Dance Theater, Winston-Salem; and Marcia Pleven Productions,

Winston-Salem.

Folk music - David Holt, Asheville; Phil and Gaye Johnson, Tryon, and Paula Larke, Winston-Salem.

Jazz - Howard Hanger Jazz Fantasy, Asheville, and Loonis McGlohon Trio, Charlotte.

Theater - The Curtain Call Company, Wilmington; the N.C. Shakespeare Festival, High Point, and Touch, The Mime Trio, Chanel Hill.

top song on Billboards pop charts. Tickets, good for the concert and admission to the park, are $10.95 in advance and $11.95 on the day of the concert.

Are you old enough to remember when Tea for Two was a brand new song by Vincent Youmans for a big Broadway show, No, No, Nanette back in 1925? Or are you in the majority of those more familiar with something more recent -like "Send in the Clowns from A Little Night Music?

Whatever the age group

Remember

TOP TUNES 40 YEARS AGO YHour Hit Parade May 15,1943

(NOTE: The number in parenthesis following each song indicates the number of weeks the song has been in the top ten listing).

1. As Time Goes By (9)

2. That Old Black Magic

(12)

3. It Cant Be Wrong (7)

4. Dont Get Around Much Anymore (8)

5. Taking A Chance .On Love (10)

6. I've Heard That Song Before (13)

7. Coming In On A Wing And A Prayer (2)

8. ItsAlwaysYou(l)

9. Youll Never Know (2)

10. In The Blue of Evening (1)

Top Country

1. Amarillo By Morning, George Strait

2. Comman Man, John Conlee

3. Jose Cuervo, Shelly West

4. Youre the First Time Ive Thought About Leaving, Reba McEntire

5. Whatever Happened to Old-Fashioned Love, B.J. Thomas

6. You Take Me For Granted. Merle Haggard

7. Save Me, Louise Mandrell

8. If Youre Gonna Do Me Wrong, Vem Gosdin

9. Foolin, Johnny Rodriguez

10. Lucille, Waylon

Julian Mitchell, Flo Ziegfelds favorite director of musical extravaganzas, was hearing-impaired. To judge steps or rhythm, Mitchell would place his ear to the piano or stage.

you may fall in, the four musicals coming to Greenville for the 1983 season of the East Carolina Summer Theater should have something to appeal to your own preference in musical entertainment.

During the month of July, four-musicals will be on stage at Messick Theater Arts in the renovated theater which opened last year.

Pippin opens the season with a run from July 4 through July 9, to be followed by A Little Night Music July 11-26. On July 18, No, No, Nanette, a 58-year-old hit recently revived, will be playing through July 23, and the season will conclude with a July 25-30 presentation of Theyre Playing Our Song. All seats are reserved, with both single and season tickets for Monday nights already sold out. Single and season tickets for Tuesday through Saturday night performances are still available -- at $10 for a sin^e seat and $34 for a season ticket for all four shows.

Tickets can be purchased by calling the box office at 757-6390, or by mail. Persons ordering by mail may send a check or money order made payable to East Carolina Summer Theater for the desired ticket or tickets to: General Manager, East Carolina Summer Theater, East Carolina University, Greenville, N.C., 27834. Mail orders are to include 25 cents for return postage handling.

To Mark Museum Week

WILMINGTON - To mark National Museum Week being observed May 15-21, museums and other institutions in the Lower Cape Fear area of North Carolina will celebrate Wednesday as Museum Day at Independence Mall in WHmington from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m.

The site of the celebration will be in a location at Independence Mall near Belk-Berry Department store. Participanting agencies will exhibit a sampling of their numerous and varied programs. Staff members will be on hand to ^ve information on the services they provide.

The eight museums and institutions to have staff members on hand are:

The New Hanover County Museum.

Brunswick Town State Historic Site.

Fort Fisher State Historic Site.

Poplar Grove Plantation.

Museum of Living History, Cape Fear Technical Institute.

North Carolina Marine Resources Center.

St. Johns Museum of Art.    ^

The USS Battleship North Carolina.

Artists selected for the program were evaluated on artistic excellence, strength of management, touring history and other criteria relating to professional achievement.

Community organizations interested in arranging performances and residencies by any of these artists will be able to make booking arrangements until June 1. For information, contact the N.C. Arts Council, Department of Cultural Resources, Raleigh, N.C., 27611, or by telephone 733-21L.

Dixie, a rallying song for the Confederacy during the Civil War, was written by a Northerner, Dan Emmett of Ohio.

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Carolina Today

A country singer and a singing salesmen are among guests to appear on the Carolina Today program during the coming week. Slim Short and Shauna Bamaby are co-hosts for the show, which airs weekday mornings from 6 to 8 a.m. over WNCT-TV, channel 9, Greenville.

The calendar for the week is:

Monday - 6:40 a.m., country singer Del Reeves; 7:15 a.m.. New Bern toastmaster Johnnie Lopes; 7:25 a.m., Drs. James A. Bailey and Leo Jenkins with details on a retirement center; 7:40 a.m., the Jones County 4-H May Festival.

Tuesday - 6:40 a.m., Healthbreak with Dr. Lynn Barchert; 7:15 a.m., Mary Livengood with facts on the Riverspree; 7:25 a.m., the Vanceboro Rescue Squad Benefit Day; 7:40 a.m., Fran Critchfield with information on the 2nd Regiment A-Foot.

Wednesday - 6:40 a.m.. Education Spotlight focuses on community education; 7:15 a.m., the Wallace Family with music; 7:25 a.m., details on the Pinetops 300 Tractor and 4-Wheel Truck Pull; 7:40 a.m., Thelma Chadwick on senior citizen founders day.

Thursday - 6:40 a.m., Gerald Goodwin, the singing salesman, is the guest; 7:15 a.m.. Dr. Barbara Vosh, coordinator of childrens service, part of May as Mental Health month; 7:40 a.m., a home extension agent will be the guest.

Friday 6:40 a.m., Millie McGrath and Helen Parks give details on. micro-computers; 7:15 a.m., Howard Dawkins, winner of a national Distinguished Service Award is the guest; 7:25 a.m., Cathy Jessen talks about the Epilepsy Association; 7:40 a.m., plant doctor Eddie Harrington.

WOOW Classics

This year marks the150th anniversary of the birth of Johannes Brahms, born in 1833, and Karen Hause, along with other music celebrants worldwide, is honoring the 19th century giant. She will air one of Brahms major works on her WOOW Classics program today. The program will be heard over WOOW Radio, 1340 on the radio dial and may also be heard on channel 9, local cable television.

Selections chosen by Mrs. Hause for todays program are:

Concerto in D minor for Two Violins by J.S. Bach, violinists Itzak Pearlman and Isaac Stem with the New York Philharmonic conducted by Zubin Mehta.

The Brahms German Requiem, with soloists Teresa Stich-Randall, soprano, James Pease, baritone and the orchestra and chorus of the Hamburg Symphony, Carl Bamburger, conducting.

Mendelssohns Symphony No. 4 (The Italian), the Royal Philharmonia with Hans Vonk conducting.

Suite in A minor for Flute and Strings by Teleman, James Galway, flutist with the I Solisti de Zagreb.

The Enigma Variations by Elgar, Sir Adrian Boult conducting the London Symphony.

Consort music from the English Renaissance performed by the Extempore String Ensemble.

BANCROFT PRIZES

NEW YORK (AP) - A study of witchcraft in early New England and a biography of labor leader Eugene V. Debs recently won the Bancroft Prizes at Columbia University.

The 1983 awards went to John P. Demos for "Entertaining Satan: Witchcraft and the Culture of Early New England (Oxford University Press), and to Nick Salvatore for Eugene V. Debs: Citizen and Socialist (University of Illinois Press).

Each winner received a prize of $4,000.

ENTRIES DATED

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) - Merriam-Webster Inc. says it will publish in June the first American dictionary to date main entries, showing when words entered the English language.

Entries in Websters Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary show a date when the first sense of the word entered written English. Vaporize, for instance, dates to 1634, while typewriter goes back to 1868, and waistband to 1584.

North Pitt Athletic Booster Club

Chicken Dinner $3.00 Donation At North Pitt High School May 15,1983 11:00 A.M. Until 2:00 P.M.

Delivery Points

North Pitt, PactolusFire Dept., Bethel Fire Dept., Belvoir Fire Dept., Stokes Fire Dept., & Staton House Fire Dept.    ^

BIG SING-OUT - Singer Irma Thomas asks the audience to join in a May 8 outdoor New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. An

estimated 220,000 attended the two-weekend affair in this Mississippi River city. (AP Laserphoto)

Initiated Into Society

Thirteen students and one faculty member of the school of music. East Carolina University, were initiated into the Pi Kappa Lambda society in ceremonies held recently at Mendenliall Student Center.'The society is considered the most prestigious of honor societies in music and recognizes both men and women in all fields of music.

Dr. Rosalie Ann Haritun, president of the Beta Zeta Chapter of Pi Kappa Lambda, presided over the ceremony and banquet.

Students initiated and their home towns are:

Juniors - David Garza, Woodbridge, Va.; Janis Hiley, Falls Church, Va.; Denise Miller, Colerain; Laurie Pahel, Zanesville,

TAKING A GAMBLE - Franco Zeffirlli, the Florence, Italy-born director, designer, writer and creative force called by some as a gambler of the arts, is offering audiences another work of art, a film version of the 150-year old Verdi opera, LaTraviata. (AP Laserphoto by WallyFong)

Ohio; and Penny Pittman, Fairmont.

Seniors - Richard Crane and Donald Stewart, both of Woodbridge, Va.; Elaine Godwin, Benson; Brenda Phelps, Rieglewood; and Michael Rogers, Camden, S.C.

Graduate students - Kay Belangia, Winterville; William Freeman, Heuvelton, N.Y.; and Melodie Jones, Greenville.

Dr. Robert Stine, a faculty member from Gastonia, was the single faculty member initiated this year.

Elly Ameling, a noted soprano, from The Netherlands, was earlier this year initiated as an honorary member.

Each year, the society awards certificates of honor to outstanding students in the lower level classes who have distinguished themselves musically and scholastically. Two sophomores were awarded these certificates this year - Daphane Dunston and Laura Sabados.

Dr. Walter Pories, chairman of surgery at Pitt County Memorial Hospital, was the guest speaker. Entertainment was provided by the Sweet Adelines, directed by Carolyn Green Ipock, a graduate of the ECU School of Music and a member of Pi Kappa Lambda.

Georges Carpentier, the Orchid Man of France, fought in every boxing division, from the flyweight ranks to the heavyweight.

HOLBEIN SHOW NEW YORK (AP) -Holbein and the Court of Henry VIII, an exhibition of 70 drawings and one painted miniature by Hans Holbein the Younger, is on view at the Pierpont Morgan Library through July 30.

The drawings from the Royal Library at Windsor Castle are being shown for the first time in the United States.

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High Ratings Awarded

At the annual Solo and Ensemble Contest held May 7 at the school of music. East Carolina University, 14 band students from the Greenville schools received high ratings.

The students, their instruments, ratings, and schools they represent are: South Greenville -Tristin Jones, clarinet, superior; Meg Evans, clarinet, superior.

Ponce de Leon discovered the east coast of Florida in 1512.*

Wahl-Coates School -Cindy Ross, alto saxophone, superior.

Greenville Middle School - Ann Thornton, flute, superior; Robbie Barnes, alto saxophone, superior.

E.B. Aycock School -David Kim, clarinet, excellent; Valerie Poust, flute, superior; Christy Garrison, flute, superior; David Kim, clarinet duet with Gavin Sunwald of A.G. Cox School, excellent.

Rose High School - Beth Parham, clarinet, excellent; Stacy Hamilton, alto saxophone, excellent; Ginny

Close, flute, excellent; Evan Hause, percussion, superior; Lewis Roberson, percussion, superior; Page Griffin, flute, superior; Beth Parham and Stacy Hamilton, clarinet and saxophone duet, superior.

Students from schools throughout eastern North Carolina participated in the event.

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Vance A Little Closer' Is 13th For Lerner

ByJAYSHARBUn AP Drama Writer NEW YORK (AP) -Thirteen generally is considered an unlucky number. But not for Alan Jay Lemer, whose Dance a Little Closer has come to town. Its his 13th Broadway musical.

When Brigadoon opened

quite a while ago, some time before the Crimean war, I was told our opening night was March 13, recalls the 64-year-old lyricist-librettist.

They asked, was I superstitious? I said no.

I went home and suddenly realized there were 13 people in the cast, 13 songs, 13 sets and I had 13 letters in my

name. The show opened and got unanimous good press. And from that day on 13 became my lucky number. The year was 1947, the Brigadoon composer Frederick Loewe, with whom the short, dapper. Harvard-educated tunesmith went on to write Paint Your Wagon, Camelot and that fairest of megabits, "My

Fair Lady.

Lerner, whose last visit to Broadway was in 1979 with Carmelina, which died fast despite a lush, romantic Burton Lane score, has written the book and lyrics for Dance. Hes also directing it.

His collaborator on this go is Annie composer Charles

Jimmy Celebrating 75th Birthday

A GIFT FROM HIGH WATERS - A slender briar branch at the edge of a Greenville pond displays a temporary gift, a banner of dried debris left behind by receding high waters. In time, wind and rain will deteriorte the ragged fragments, leaving the branch stripped bare again. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)

By JOHN OBRIEN INDIANA, Pa. (UPI) -Jimmy Stewarts hometown will culminate its love affair with its most renowned native son with two days of festivities marking the superstars 75th birthday on May 20.

Part of the May 20-21 hoopla, which includes a parade featuring the Academy Award-winning actor and his wife, Gloria, will be the unveiling of a 9-foot, bronze-colored fiberglass statue of Stewart outside the Indiana County courthouse.

There will be a film festival, square dance, antique car show. Boy Scout camporee, dinner dance and re-enactment of the French and Indian War.

On Indianas orderly main drag, Philadelphia Street -Stewarts Oscar coincidentally came for his 1940 per-formance in The Philadelphia Story - you see his fate on a movie

ptoster for The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance in a newsstand window.

A Jimmy Stewart Devonshire sandwich is featured at the nearby Classroom restaurant, appropriately named because 12,500 students attend Indiana University of Pennsylvania in the town, which has 16,000 other residents.

Two stone memorials mark his birthplace. The local Jimmy Stewart Airfield was named for the retired Air Force Reserve brigadier general.

The actor himself gave a typically Stewart reply when asked what made him one of filmdoms,most popular and enduring figures.

Youd have to ask somebody else, he said by phone from his Los Angeles office. I havent come up with any ironclad decision about that.

"Thats one of the things thats always been one of the excitements about the

picture business. Along with the glamour, there is sort of a mystery about the whole idea of picture making. And in this way its an advantage: It keeps you looking to do something better.

Stewart said he was flattered and grateful for the coming events.

Linda Moore, who heads the Jimmy Stewart Statue Committee that is forking out more than $30,000 for the statue and related costs, said the idea came from her dad, Frank, a longtime political power in Indiana.

The money is being raised via donations and sale of commemorative medallions and booklets. One 18-inch replica of the statue by California sculptor Majcolm Alexander was sold for $4,875.

Miss Moore said the committee hopes to raise another $80,000 to cap the statue in bronze before it disbands. Stewart will get his first look at the statue May 1

in Santa Barbara, Calif., at a reception with more than 100 friends, including Miss Moore, her parents and committee secretary Nancy Otto.

Miss Moore explained she was watching the televised Rose Bowl Parade on Jan. 1, 1982, and Stewart, the ^and marshal, mentioned Indiana.

My father said. You know, there is nothing significant in downtown Indiana on display that people can know that this is the birthplace of Jimmy Stewart. And he said, Linda, for your 1982 resolution why dont you do something to change that? she said.

Strouse, and the leading lady is Lemers wife, Liz Robertson, whom the oft-wed lyricist married in 1981 after her triumph in a London revival of My Fair Lady.

Dance, scheduled to premiere Wednesday, May 11, is based on Robert Sherwoods Pulitzer-winning 1936 comedy, Idiots Delight, which was set in a Swiss hotel on the eve of World War II.

Weve updated it to a day in the avoidable future, Lerner says, adding the plot now has a singer traveling with three female backup vocalists in Europe with the prospect of a major war still looming.

Its kind of aCasablanca love story. I tried to adhere to what Sherwood said when he wrote it - he tried to write a serious play and wound up writing an entertainment.

Lemer, born in New York, has two Tony awards, one for My Fair Lady, the other for Gigi, the Gallic delight that played Broadway in 1973

after first appearing in 1958 as a movie musical.

And, from Hollywood, three Oscars, one for the screenplay of An American in Paris and two for the screenplay and lyrics of Gigi.

But he considers himself a theater man, first and foremost, having worked on Broadway for 40 years come November.

As with every other top name on Broadway, Lemers had his share of downs as well as ups, the most recent downs being Carmelina and the 1976 Leonard Berns-tein musical, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, dead after sevn performances.

But he says hell always keep trying. There was a period after Paint Your Wagon in 52 when people said I couldnt write any more. One critic said I should stop, I cant write musicals at all. And I went four years before I wrote a play.

And then I did My Fair Lady.

Miss Moore, 29, the countys auditor, said the idea for a statue and 75th birthday celebration quickly caught on, Stewart enthusiastically agreed to attend and the 10 committee leaders have met once a week to iron out the details.

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7 Drawer Double Dresser

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7 Drawer Double Dresser    __

Framed Wing Mirror    S07700

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68 Inch Triple Dresser

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w

m





[

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, May 15,1983-D-i

For 20 Years Community Colleges Have Been Serving Tomorrows Needs Today

North Carolinas community college system will celebrate its 20th anniversary May 17 and Pitt Community College is joining the celebration.

On May 17, 1963, the North Carolina General Assembly created a system of two-year, post-high school education institutions offering vocational, technical, college-parallel and adult basic education.

Two years before, in March 1961, Pitt Community College College was chartered and designated by the North Carolina State Board of Education as an industrial education

center. In 1964, the name of the school was changed to Pitt Technical Institute and in 1979 to Pitt Community College.

In 1963, 52,000 students were enrolled at the 24 community colleges across the state. Today, 600,000 adults attend classes at 58 campuses.

At PCC in 1964, nine curricula were offered to a total of 96 students. Today, 26 technical programs, 14 vocational programs, three certificate programs and three col- x lege transfer programs are available.

Welding Tomorrow In Place

Roy Lanier, head of the welding department at Pitt Community College, puts the finishing touches on a job as students watch. North Carolinas community colleges, PCC

included, began as technical institutes and still stress techmcal training.

ELECTRICAL INSTRUCTION ... Greg White, (left) a student in PCCs electrical installation program, works on a hydraulic system with instructor Jarvis Tripp (right). The program has

grown, say PCC officials, through the years to include electrical maintenance and industrial skills.

Text and Photos By Mary Schulken

CONQUERING THE HOWS AND WHYS OF CIRCUITS ... Mike Lewis and Steve Tyburski

work on a circuit in PCCs electronics lab as Jim Hoover, head of the department, looks on.

BRICKLAYING IS BASIC ... A fundamental skill, bricklaying, was taught from the beginning of the community college and is still strong in demand. Above, left to right. Rose

Beasley, Robert McQoud, Mary Elizabeth Braxton and Mitchell Warren line up a sidewalk.

ELECTRONIC DATA PROCESSING EXPANDS ... Because of large demand by the public, PCC is expanding its computer course offerings this summer to include labs geared to novice computer users. Up until now, said department chairman

Millie McGrath, (extreme right) courses, because of need, have been designed primarily for professionals who choose data processing as a career.





D-2-The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, May 15,1983

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HE'S MY SCCTHER-IN-LAW, ONCE REMOVED

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PUBLIC

NOTICES

NOTICE TOCREDITORS Having qualified as Co Administrator ot the. Estate of Carrie Williams Mooring, late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned, whose mailing address is 3013 West Rosalind Avenue, Baltimore. Maryland 2121S on or before the 9fh day ot November, 1983, or this Notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate wilt please make immediate payment fo the undersigned.

This the 10th day ot May, 1983.

Lee O. Mooring John Frank Mooring Ulysses AAoorIng 3013 West Rosalind Avenue Baltimore, Maryland 21215 Michael A. Colombo JAMES, HITE, CAVENDISH a. BLOUNT Attorneys at Law Post Office Drawer 15 Greenville. North Carolina 27835 0015

May 15,22, 29; June 5, 1983

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car. call 758 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay top dollar._

NEEDACAR?

Rent a used car and save! CALL RENT-A-WRECK 752-2277

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autotinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 01U

1975 OLDSMOBILE WAGON, air, AM/FM radio, good condition. 5500. 1973 Dodge truck, good condition, 5995. Camper tor sale, fits all 6' trucks, 550. 758 4933.___

013

Buick

REGAL 1982. 2 door Low mileage, fully equipped. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden. 748-3141

1975 RIVERA, pretty car but blown head gasket. Make me an offer. Call after 5, 758 9928 _

1977 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED

53,000 miles. 758 3988._

014

Cadillac

CLASSIC

1983 CADILLAC coupe May be driven or kept as a show car 510.000 Negotiable. 752 0349.

1978 CADILLAC SeVille. mint con dition, silver. 58500 negotiable. Call 757 0273_

015

Chevrolet

CAPRICE 1982. 4 door, tilt wheel, cruise, power door locks, AM FM stereo, extra clean Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Ayden. 748-3141.

CASH FOR your car Barwick Auto Sales 758 7745.    _

CELEBRITY 1982. 4 door, low mileage, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Avden, 748 3141

MALIBU 1982. 4 door. 14.000 miles, like new. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Avden. 748 3141

1977 IMPALA STATIONWAGON 3

seats, tilt, cruise, power door locks, air, AM/FM stereo. Real nice! 752 3438._

1983 CHEVETTE, 2 door automatic, air, AM FM, 4500 miles, candy apple red. 5400 and take over payments Call 758-9874.    _

016

Chrysler

1973 CHRYSLER, Newport. 4 door mechanically perfect. First 5500. Call 758 9874.

017

Dodge

1978 DODGE COLT Excellnt con dition, good gas mileage. 52600. 758 9273 after 8 p.m. _

018

Ford

COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON 1982 Ford Executive Car. Fully equipped. Light blue Call Leo Venters Motors. Avden, 748-6171.

033

Boats For Sale

CAROLINA SALES LIQUIDATION

Sale See our advertisment this section

SAILBOAT 25' CAL Draft 4'8", sails, diesel, instruments, propane, shore power, more. Ideal coastal cruiser. Excellent condition. Owner must sell. Price negotiable. Call 758 8098 __

SAILBOAT- 18' with trailer 55000 or best otter. Must sell. Call 758 9132 after 8 pm.___

SAILBOATS AND ACCESSORIES Now On Sale at the Rag Bag Sailor. Highway 284 East. Call 757 1333

1- 18' FIBERGLASS BOAT, 25

horsepower Johnson and trailer. SIOOO, negotiable. 748 4208 after 4.

13' CHRYSLER Fiberglass Day Sailer with trailer. 18' mast and sails, 5850. 758 0428 or 758 0703

15' CLOSED BOW ski boat, 135 horsepower Evlnrude. power tilt and trim trailer, carpet, new seats, tape deck. Best otter over 53.000 before May 14. 758 2334._

15' FISHER MARINE BOAT 25

horsepower Evlnrude motor and toot control electric motor 51400. 748 2222._

18' JOHNSON Tri hull, 125 horse power inboard/outboard. 748 3906 atter8o.m

17' GLASSPAR, twin 40 horsepower Evlnrude, long landem trailer 752 5907_

18' NET BOAT, good condition, new paint, excellent shrimp, crab, oyster or oio boat. 5475. 758 8812.

1972 GLASTRON 18' with 85 horse power Evlnrude and trailer. 51595. 355 2970.    _

1978 COX TILT trailer, 17' GW deep Vee boat, 115 horsepower Evlnrude motor, power winch with mxnv extras. Good shape. 752-4837.

1981 HOBIE CAT for sale Call 758 8834

21' GLASTRON. 455 Oldsmobile engine, Berkley jet drive, 55500, Call 752 1197.__

28' TROJAN 1977 Fly bridge, head, galley, and OF radio. Call 948 8127

28' CARVER Twin screw Bridge. head, galley, sleeps 8. Call 758 1388.

034 Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsm'bn tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleioh, N C 834 2774

TRUCK COVERS Sea Hawk. Cobra. All colors and sizes. Camotown R V's, Avden. 748-3530.

1974 9W CAB over camper tor pickup truck Sink, stove, ice box, and bathroom Good condition 51000. 758 9443 after 5.

1978 DODGE TRANS-VAN Fully electric, air conditioned, central heat, gas range, electric refrigera tor. kitchen sink, tabie and studio couch makes into a king size bed Excellent condition 748 3542 or 758 5027.__

1979 31' COACHMAN Travel Trail er Excellent condition. Fully equipped. Including air, 10' retrig erator, and awning. Call 527 8102

1983 COLEAAAN popup trailer. Sleeps 8, stove, sink. Never used. S25O0. 757 1130 after 5 p.rh_

FORD LTD, 1972 Air, AM/FM radio. Excellent condition. 5850. Call 757 0778 after 5

TAKE UP PAYMENTS, no down payment. 1982 Escort. Excellent condition. 758 7755 days or 758-3792 nights

1 1968 MUSTANG 289 engine, fair condition. 51200 firm. 748 08 after

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed proposals, so marked, will be received in the office the Director ot Greenville Utilities Commission, Greenville Utilities Building, 200 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina, until 11:30 a.m. (EDST), on June 2, 1983, and immediately thereafter publicly opened and read tor the furnishing ot: Employee Uniforms Instructions tor submitting bids and complete specifications for the equipment or materials to be provided will be available in the office ot the Manager, Support Services, Greenville UtiHties Building. 200 West Fifth Street, Greenville. North Carolina, during regular office hours.

Greenville Utilities Commission reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive informalities. GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION May 15, 1983

ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING ON THE WIC PROGRAM AND SPEAK OUT

A series ot five public meetings on the WIC Program are being held across the state during May to solicit input from the public on any aspect ot the program. WiC, which stand tor Women, Infants and Children, Is a federally funded/state administrated nutrition and supplemental food program for low-income pregnant women, nursing and young children.

schedule of the

mothers Below Is meetings:

Date May 17; Place, Reynolds Health Center, Conference Room D, 741 Highland Avenue. Winston-Salem, N.C; Time, Noon-3 p.m.

Date May 18; Date, Archdale Building, Ground Floor Hearing Room, (Room G170),    512 AT

Salisbury Street, Raleigh, N.C.; Time, 10a.m. 1 p.m.

Date; May 19, Place, New Hanover County Health Dept., 2029 South 17th Street, Wilmington, N.C.; Time Noon 3p.m.

Date. May 23. Place, Appalachian District Health Dept., Conference Room, Bamboo Road, Boone, N.C.; Time2 5p.m.

Date, May 24, Place, Burke County Commissiners Meeting Room. Human. Resources Building, 700 East Parker Road, Morganton, N.C ; Time 10a.m.-Ip.m.

Persons who are unable to attend and wish fo submit comments may send a written statement by May 31, 1983, to:

Barbara Ann Hughes, R D., M.P.H., Head

Nutrition and Dietary Services Branch

Division ot Health Services P O Box 2091 Raleigh, N.C. 27802 Standards for participation in the WIC Program are the same tor everyone regardless ot race, color, creed, national origin, political beliefs, sex or handicap.

May 15, 1983

1987 PLYAAOUTH Valiant Good dependable transportation, 5300. 758 2285._

1968 FORD TORINO Rons good, fair condition, no title. 5225. 758 4933

1972 TORINO STATIONWAGON

Automatic, air, power steering and brakes, radio. Excellent running condition, 5750. 758 4733._

1974 MUSTANG II 8 cylinder. 4 speed with air. power steering and brakes. Low mileaoe. 758 4738

1978 MUSTANG Air, automatic, good condition. 51400. Call 753 2245

1978 PINTO AM/FM radio, 4 speed transmission, extra clean. 51250. 758 1103 after 5. _

1978 THUNDERBIRD Many extras. Good condition. 355-8215.

1977 PINTO Loaded, 49.000 miles. 51750. 758-0988 after 8p.m._

1978 FAIRMONT, 4 door, automatic, air, AM/FM, power steering and brakes, very clean, new radials. 52895 negotiable. Call 355 2181 after 8 p.m_

197V FORD FAIRMONT FUTURA Air, automatic, AM/FM stereo. Good condition. $3100. 752 5377 atter

1981 ESCORT GL WAGON, silver, 26,000 miles, automatic, air, cruise, AM/FM stereo. 758 4137 atter 4:30.

019

Lincoln

1974 LINCOLN Continental. 4 door. You must see to appreciate at this price, 51850. Call JsStun._

020

Mercury

1970 AAONTEGO MX, 351 Cleveland, 2 barrel, new 50 month battery, rear brakes just rebuilt, driven dally, 95,000 miles, uses no oil. needs booy repair. 5525 negotiable. 757 3382.

021

Oldsmobile

1965, 98 A classic all original. 52.000 actual jniles, power windows and seats. Have to see to appreciate. 52250. 758 0094.

036

Cycles For Sale

AMF MOPED Low mileage. 5200 firm. 753 2241 atter 8.

HONDA, 1973, CB3S0F, 4 cylinder, good condition. Call 748 3387

SPRING AND SUAAMER SPECIAL

1974 Honda 450, with hi-rlse bars and sissy seat. Runs like new and much more. You must see fo appreciate at this price, 5550. Will trade tor car or truck of equal value. Call 758 0492. _ _

WANT TO BUY expansion cham bers lor 1972 Kawasaki H2, 758 7580

1 HONDA MOtORCYCLE, MT 125 Elsonor. 5400. Good condition 748 4208 atter 4.__

1988 HONDA DREAM, 5300 MX 80 motorcycle. 748 8955 atter 8.

1971 HONDA CL350. In good shape, motor in very good shape, only 7,440 iles. 5300. Call 758 5439 after 8.

1977 TRIUMPH 750 SPIDER

Excellent condition. 3,000 miles. $1200. Call 752-9455 atter 9:30 p.m.; 758 2892 atter 8 p. m

198C CAA400 HONDA Excellent condition. Call 758-9938 anytime.

1980 YAMAHA 850 SPECIAL New seat, Cissy bar, crash bar. new rear tire, cruise control, low mileage. 51500 or best otter. 758 7585, keep calling!_

1980 YAMAHA 850 Special. Immac 2 9888

ulate. 51150. Call 752 9888 atter 8.

1982,850GL SUZUKI

2300 miles. Petect condition. 52500. Call 758 1843._

1982 YAMAHA Seca 750, cate tar ing. luggage rack, crash bars, less than 900 miles. 52,700 negotiable. Call 758 8792 atter 4 p.m

1983 HONDA 750 SHADOW, plus 2 new helments and new rain gear. Must sell! 52500.948 8183.

039

Trucks For Sale

JEEP, 1979 Wagoneer, 40,000 miles. Mint condition. Excellent tires. Many extras. 752 4719.    _

JIAAMY BLAZER, 1977. 4 wheel drive. 4 speed. 350 engine. 53500. Call Chris Joyner days 753-3232.

1989 CHEVY PICKUP Ugly. $700, 758 8833 or 758 1188.

1971 FORD BRONCO Radial tires, AM/FM cassette, air shocks. 8 cylinder 80 model engine. Extra nice 53500. 748 2222 atter 5

1971 OLDS CUTLASS FOR PARTS No tires, no rims. Motor and transmission in real good shape Call 758 8983after 8 30 P.m

1973 DODGE PICKUP, utility body. Have fenders to convert back to pickup body. 758-7130._

1977 CUTLASS SUPREME

Brougham. Volure interior, power steering, power brakes, air, tilt, cruise, "tape, power windows, power door locks. Excellent condition

758-8987 after 5.

1980 OLDS Cutlass Supreme. Most options. New radials. Sacrifice. 55300. 758 7417.

1981 CUTLASS SUPREME Brougham, loaded, spotless, V-8 diesel, 2 door, low mileage. 758-7588 atter 5 p.m._

022

Plymouth

1973 PLYAAOUTH SCAMP 2 door, automatic, radio, heater. Good condition. 5700 negotiable. Call 758 7453 atter 8 p.m

1978 PLYMOUTH FURY 440, new laint, radial tires, etc. Runs good. U275. 758 3958._

023

Pontiac

REDUCED, 1980 PHOENIX 4

speed, air, stereo radio, wire wheels, low miles. 54075. 758 5821.

1977 GRAND PRIX, air, AM/FM, automatic. One owner, good condi-tion. Call 758 8850.

1980 PONTIAC SUNBIRD, 4

cylinder, 4 speed, air, tilt wheel and more. $2950. 752 8490 atter 5 o.m

1980 TRANSAAA, T top, excellent shape. Small equity and take up payments. 748-37te._

024

Foreign

002

PERSONALS

DISCOVER ANOTHER

Well-established club tor friends. Almost 200 members. Write: PO Box 1828. Sanford. NC 27330._

007 SPECiALNOTiCES

FREE I Stop In and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall for free gift to be given away weekly. No purchase necessary

ONE WAY DELTA AIRLINE ticket from Ralelgh-Durham to Seattle. Good thru May 28    5160.    Call

758 2559._ __

WE PAY CASH tor diamonds. Floyd G Robinion Jewelers. 407 ^ vans Mall, Downtown Greenville.

1959 PORSCHE 358A convertible. New top, radials, clutch. Runs good. Front fender, bumper damage. 53500.758-8158

1987 VOLKSWAGEN Runs well. Good tires. 5800. Call 948-9494 atter 8

p.m._ _

1971 VOLKSWAGEN Dune Buggy. 5800 firm. 748 4174.

1972 VOLKSWAGON BUG Very good shape. Asking 51950. Call 524 5710atTer7p.m._

1973 MGB Excellent condition. Asking 52500. 757-3887.

1974 AUDI 100 LS 1 owner. 44,000 original miles, power steering, power brakes, air. Will consider trade. Excellent condition. 758-9032.

1974 TOYOTA CORONA Stationwagon. Very good condition. 5950.752-9078.    _

1975 SUBARU 4.000 miles on rebuilt engine. Good condition. $1750 negotiable. Call 758-7848 anytime.

1975 TOYOTA COROLLA 5 speed Very good condition, 51300. 752^78. 1975 VOLKSWAGEN Super Beetle convertible. 4 speed, sound body and mechanics. Very clean. An appreciating classic. 758 7572.

1975 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE Good shape, S1300 753 2381 or 747-

m_

1977 BMW 330 I Excellent condi-tion. 758 5034 after 8 o.m tor details. 1977 DATSUN B310. AM/FM cassette, good condition. $1850. 758 0255 or 758 0810.

1979 DATSUN 210. Air, excellent condition. 53195. Call atter 5, 523 9182._

1982 JEEP WAGONEER. Limited, low mileage. Ali options. 514,000. .975 2012. 758 0439 atter 8 pm._

040

Child Care

INFANTS up to 8 years kept in my home. Cali 7S2 4903 _

MOTHER and former teacher's aid will babysit In my home Monday through Friday. Located in Shady Knoll, 752-3290.

041

DAY NURSERY

MOTHERLAND DAY CARE ages 1 month thru 13 years Plenty of sumer fun. Rates 125 tor one cnild, 540 for 2. Phone 752 2743.

046

PETS

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups All shots, dewormed. 5100. Call Jerry, 752 8019._

AKC GOLDEN Retriever pups tor sale. All shots. Good hunting stock. 5100. Call 748 4888 after 8.

AKC MINIATURE Longhaired Dachshund. 11 week old male, red and black. 355-8478. Greenville.

AKC REGISTERED SIBERIAN HUSKIES Excellent blood line. Beautiful masking. 5125 and $150. Call 753 2081 (day or nioht)

BLACK AND RUST Dobermans. 2 females, 1 male, 7 weeks old. Call 355-2227 days; 758-7828 nights

FOR SALE:    York    Schnauzer

beautiful puppies. Grooming for all

breeds. Call Bullock's, 758-2M1.

GOLDEN RETRIEVER puppies. AKC registered. Have both par>hts. 753 3074 days; 753 2270 nights.

LABRACkJR RETRIEVERS AKC puppies. Field trail and gun dog stock. Wormed, shots, and de wclaws removed. 1-242 6529 or 1 242 4830.    _

AAALE OOBERA4AN PINCHER 11

months old, tail cut, 5100. Owner leaving town. 758-7904anytime. MALE SHIH TZU, AKC Call 355 8344 or 758 7943.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

D46

PETS

ONE AKC POMERANIAN, female, 18 months, blonde, house trained, 5100. 752 8149.

PURE BRED Springer Spaniels, $50. Must sell. Has papers from mother and father. 758 2087._

SIBERIAN HUSKIES, registered. 4 red with blue eyes, 8 weeks old, wormed 5150 752 5333_

4 MONTH OLD % black Lab poppy to good home. All shots, wormed male, needs lots ot room and love. Call 758 5071 atter 5_

051

Help Wanted

ACCOUNTANT It you possess a degree for 2 to 4 years of accounting experience handling income quartly tax reports, this position is deti nitely tor you. A possible partnership could be yours after a limited time ot work with company. Call Ted, 758 0541. Snelling & Snell ino Personnel Service.

ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY

Leadership ability and good office skills needed tor this busy office. Excellent opportunity for advan cement and outstanding benefits. Call Gertie. 758-0541. Snelling 8. Snelling Personnel Service.

AMBITIOUS HARDWORKING

sales agent wanted in this area

' " ------- iht deal

le your .peciaify Advertising. Calendars, and Executive Gifts.. Every Business A Prospect.

sdies aycni wonicu iii rnis

Sorry, not a get rich-overnigh but in time you will double income.. Sell Specialty Ad'

Saleable High Commission Items ^ Cy Prisyon Company, Inc. PO Box 128, Valley Stream, NY

Write The

ASSISTANT PHYSICAL Therapist Ideal job for recent graduate Must be licensed. Super benefits. Call Judy tor interview. 355-2020. Heritage Personnel.

ATTENTION I Immediate part time

openings. We have several positions open Monday through Friday 5 to 9 p m., Saturday 10 fo 2 p.m. in our telephone advertising draartment. Very good pay (54 to 58 a hour) plus

7 -

working conditions. Ideal |ob for housewife, retired persons, and students. Job requires good con-

versationlist and enthusiasm. Apply ly to LeAnn at Olan f Studio, West End Shopping Cent Monday 12 to 5

in person only to LeAnn

Mills Portralf Studio, Wl_. ----

Center, Greenville, NC

AUTOMOTIVE SALES career Excellent starting salary and benefits. Good working conditions. Sales experience preferred. East

Carolina Llncoln-Mercury-GMC, 758 4287

BODY SHOP TECHNICIAN

needed Must be experienced, i^ply to Buck Sutton. Hastings Ford. 758 0114___

BULLDOZER operator. At least 3 years experience. Call 825 9911. COMMISSIONED SALES person for local area. Will train. Average 518,000 up. Must have car. Call tor appointment. 752-3557.

CONSTRUCTION SUPERIN TENDENT wanted. Only qualified superintendents need apply. Send resume fo Carl Mills: Wimco, P Box 121, Washington, NC 27889. COST ACCOUNTANT Top manufacturing firm is seeking to Ihe

assistant to me controller. Prior experience dealing with payroll. and computer b '    "

Fee paicT 5I5K :

budget, and computer background helpTuI Fee paicT 5I5K 520K Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling

Personnel Service.

CUSTOMER SERVICE representative Full time position. Experience desired in credit management Typing skills required. No phone calls apply at Greenville Cable TV, 517 Arlington Boulevard on Monday. May 18th, between 1-4

p.m We are an equal opportunity employer.

DENTAL HYGIENIST wanted part time 2 or 3 days a week in Washington, NC Send resume to Dental Hygienist. PO Box 1987, Greenville. NC 27834._

DIRECTOR POSITION

Beaufort County Developmental Center. Inc. has an immediate opening Position entails Directing a center for ADAP, Child Day Care MR and Group Homes.

Minimum Qualification Requlramenti A Master's Degree in Special Education, Vocational Rehabilitation or' related Human Services or a Bachelor's Degree in the aforementioned disciplines with three years experiences in an ad ministration capacity in an agency serving exceptional adults and children.

Salary Range 515.(XI0 - 818,000

Send resume to: Tom Umphlett. Chairman ot Search Committee, 1534 West 5th Street, Washington. NC 27889.

Application must be submitted by June 15, 1983.

Affirmative Action/Equal Opportu nitv Employer and Service.

DYNAMIC OPPORTUNITY

National company now expanding in Greenville area. We are looking tor 10 people to start immediately. No experience needed. 51000 per month guarantee. Quarterly vacations offered and rapid advanca-menh into management. For appointment call 758-5140. Monday, May 16th, 9 a.m.- 8 p.m. Ask tor Mr. Woolard._

EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY

Will You Earn $18,000 $36,000 This Year And More In Future Years?

International company in it's second 50 years of growth needs sales representatives in this area.

ARE YOU:

Sports Minded

21 Years Ot Age Or Over

Aggressive

Anibitious

In Good Health

High School Graduate Or Better

Bondable With Good References

Have Successful Sales Experience

it you quality you will be guaranteed:    *

Guaranteed Income To Start Two Weeks Expense Paid Training

Hospitalization And Profit Sharing

Unlimited advancement opportunity, no seniority. Opportunity to advance into management as rapidly as your ability warrants. Act today tor a secure tomorrow

Call Now For Appointment And Personal Interview

Call Mr. Johnson Mon., Tues.,orWeds. 9a.m.to5p.m. 758-3401

EXPERIENCED UPHOLSTEROR

needed. Must be able to cut materl-' al and sew Call days 758 3278, nights 758-(X)41.

E X P E R I

salesperson. 752 0117.

ENCEO AUTO Irownie Motor Sales,.

RESIDENT COUNSELOR poslttop.* Background In human services' preferred. Payment in-kind (room, utilities, telephone provided in exchange tor hours worked). Contact Mary Smith, 758 4357 for in terview._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1979 AAAZDA RX7 LIMITED, sun roof, air, AM/FM cassette, 88,800. 758 4300 or 355 2370 atter 8.

1980 BMW S28, derk blue with camel interior, automatic, sunroof, AM/FM cassette, power doors and windows. 355-2245 or 355-8422.

1983 HONDA CIVIC 4 door Metalic brown, 5 speed, AAA/FM cassette; 4

speaker stereo. Call 748 4887._

1982 SCIROCCO GL, dark grey metallic. 7,000 miles, AM FM cassette, air. power windows, cruise. Under warranty until Dec. 1983. Atter 5. calT758 3384.__

NSTCOimKX

IPECIM!

celebrating our name change from Efirds to Spencer Pest Control

*35

mili.il IriMlnH'nl on annij.il ( ontr.ul one lime treatment Itleas, roache,'', mite, antsi Offer Good Through May 31,19S3

Tspence^

\PCTC0N11I^

752-6440

were on time or the job son us'





051

Help Wanted

EXPERIENCED PERSON for

layout and tapeup of very high density printed circuit boards, part time or nights at home Must

Provide references Apply to avout, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834

EXPERIENCED SHEET METAL workers only. Apply in person at Larmar Mechanical Contractors between 8 and 9am only

FIELD SERVICE

REPRESENTATIVES

DatagraphiX is the worlds leading of Computer Output

the domestic and internation^

manufacturer

Computer Outpu Microfilm (COM) products. Servin'

markets, we also produce a sophisticated High Speed Laser Printer

Due to expansion, we have im mediate openings for qualified Service Representatives to main tain our equipment in the Greenville area

Requirements include:

3 years field service experience in a DP environment or 8 years military electronics experience Thorough knowledge ot digital circuitry

Troubleshooting ability to com

ponent level Electr

lectro mechinical aptitude

Positions also available in most U S Cities

051

Help Wanted

INSURANCE AGENT Opening for

2 licensed agents Experience in uti

L&A&H executive offices Excellent compensation package, advances. Broad port folio of products includ

ing modified whole life and univer saT life plans, in house computer .....ilii

provides same day illustralions

Advancement opportunities. Send to PO Box 7065.

brief resume Greenville. NC 27834

INTERNATIONAL COMPANY

seeking 6 ladies to demonstrate non surgical face lift. Career manage ment. we train. 946 1494._

JOIN OUR COMMUNICATIONS team. We otter good pay, advan cement opportunities and excellent

retirement plan If you are a high hool,. graduate. 1/ 27 years old.

'V

and quatify for our program we will train you. No experience needed Call I 800 662 7419, 8am 4pm, Mon day Friday

LEGAL SECRETARY Experienced, salary negotiable. Send resume to Secretary, PO Box 5091, Greenville. NC_

LEGAL SECRETARY No experi ence required Send resume to

Legal Secretary, PO Box 1967,

'va-

Greenville. NC 27834

LOCAL COMPANY needs sales oriented person, preferably in Farmville and Snow Hill area due to expansion Full fringe benefits, starting salary 5300 per week.

average salary' in agency 1650 per week Send resume to PO Box 26,

Farmville. NC 27828

LPN POSITION available for indi vidual to work in renal dialysis

setting Excellent salary and benefits with every Sunday off

Employees receive formal com pany sponsored training. We otter highly competitive salaries, plus auto allowance and benefits package with company paid life insurance, retirement, medical, dental, and prescription drug plans Tuition prepayment and stock savings plans are available

Contact Sandra Green, RN Greenville Dialysis Center,

Greenville. NC 752 1520_______

LPN's NEEDED part time to work 3 11 or 117 Competitive salaries Shift differentials 3 11 and 117 Interested persons contact L Morgan. RN.758 7100

MAINTENANCE PERSON needed

tor apartment complex Must be knowledgeable in all areas ot gen

For immediate consideration, please send resume to. or call GIL ABERNATHY, 7 Woodlawn Green, SUite 218, Charlotte, NC 28210, (704 ) 525 4 262

eral maintenance, which includes heating, air conditioning, and

DatagraphiX, Inc

A General Dynamics subsidiary

An Equal Opportunity Employer FRAMING CREWS WANTED Report job sites. Highway 11 and 102. Ayden, NC__

FRONT DESK Your days will tly by at this active front desk Meet

and greet everyone in plush but trienoly surroundings Lots ot room

for growth Must have good typing skills. Great benefits Call Gertie,

758 0541. Snelling 8, Snelling Personnel Service

plumbmg Salary plus an apart ment AAu:.......

Aust be able to live or. the

property Send description of .,uali lications and work experience to

Maintenance. PO Greenville. NC 27834

1967.

MANAGEMENT/SALES

Established Greenville Company experiencing growing pains Im mediate need tor responsible person with knowledge ot construction with supervisory and sales background

College preferred Fee negotiable Call Judy for interview, 355 : Heritage Personnel

I 2020,

MANAGEMENT POSITION

Honesty plus bookkeeping and carpentry experience will land you this outsiancling position Opportu

GIRLS-GUYS START WORK TODAY TRAVEL ENTIRE USA

exists lor the right individual Housing furnished Call Ted. 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling Personnel_

MANAGER '

$65,000 CALIBER

National Organization Manage 4 6 Salespeople Contact E'^stablished Accounts

a I Org. 4 6Sa

Have openings tor 8 to travel and work with group Transportation furnished Training program with I expenses paid Adventure job with | rapid advancement Earnings to be j discussed at interview Must have I some high school and be free to I travel. For personal interview see I Karen Blackburn Monday only

Bob Thomason

alespeople Xccoui 213 327 7980

MANAGER FOR CONVENIENT

store and gas combination ilO.OOO

with commission Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South Memorial Drive.

Greenville

May 16, II am until 4 pm at the Holiday Inn No phone calls, please Immediate departure Parents welcome at interview.

MANAGER TRAINEE Dont just change your job change your life! It you have what if takes to supervise and motivate employees, I have a career with rapid promotions! Call Gertie, 758 0541. Snelling & Snelling

Personnel Service

IMMEDIATE JOB OPENING for

office personnel Duties will include typing, filing, light bookkeeping.

making deposits Salary IKj itaC "

Hospitalization and retirement plan Please send resume to Job, 3ox 2245, Greenville, NC

MORTGAGE CONSULTANT

Agressive marketing company has

INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER IE

degree, or equivalent, 2 to 4 years I on hand experience in needle trade j or textiles Self motivated. Dynam I ic company Excellent benefits Reply to Industrial Engineer, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834    I

jpening for 2 representatives to specialize in mortgage plans Through equity excellerator pro epresentative will be

gram

assisting home owners save interest on mortgages For interview only call 756 8539.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SALES PERSONNEL WANTED!

We are looking for individuals who are sales oriented, who like to deaf with the public, and can qualify for our generous commission structure of between 18K and 30KI We offer flexible working hours, excellent working conditions and an opportunity for your advancement and personal satisfaction. All serious inquiries shouid include resumes addresses to:

THE MESTIQUE AGENCY

P.O. Box 397 Washington, N. C. 27889 Entry level positions available. We are an equal opportunity company.

MULTILINE CLAIMSAMAN 1

needed for Greenville NC area Large company opening new office. Should have minimum of 5 years experience Good benefits, com i pany car Excellent opportunity Call (404) 325 2480

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

J&D

PAINTERS

Professional Painting At Reasonable Rales

Spring Special

S2750

ONE ROOM ANY SIZE

Call today, receive a free gilt

756-4955

NOW AVAILABLE

Finely appointed 2 year old

OFFICE BUILDING

for rent. Near downtown. Reception area, 10-16 offices. 1,000 square foot auditorium (or 6 offices). 600 square foot conference room, kitchen, 4 baths plus manv extras.

Call 752-5048 Anytime

DESIGN ENGINEER

Eastern N. C. Capacitor Manufacturer We are seeking an engineer for a design position in our company to supervise the electrical laboratory, bill of materials processing, engineering drawing preparation, and become involved in product design. Our company manufactures fixed paper, paper and film, and meialized film capacitors. A B.S. in mechanical engineering or a B.S..in Industrial Technology preferred. A working knowledge of electrical fundamentals, computer operations and engineering drawings would be desirable. Good benefits. Salary commensurate with experience and background. Send resume to:

Personnel Manager ELECTRICAL UTILITIES CO.

309 Anderson Avenue Fsrmville.N.C. 27828

An Equal Opportunity Employer

POSITIONS AVAILABLE

RESEARCH

TECHNICIAN

_needed to study the mechanisms of insulin action in the liver for endriconology laboratory in medical school. Requires Bachelors Degree in biology or chemistry with strong background in biochemistry or ceil biology. Salary commensurate with training and experience.

i Send detailed resume to:1 uc Uauy Keflector, Greenville. C,-.Sunda\. .May 15.1983-D-3

051

Help Wanted

051

Help Wanted

NEED AAONEY FORA SUAAAAER VACATION

Sell Avon and start saving! Work in your own neighborhood, earn up to 50%! Call 752 7006._.

NEEDED: Mature woman to assist in housekeeping and cooking. Tern porarily tor ill patient in her home. Call 756 8219_

NUCLEAR POWER trainees wanted. S2,000 Cash Bonus. Posi tions are available now for high school graduates (age 17 23) in nuclear propulsion. Excellent training package includes salary,

SR

TYPISTS!

55 Words Per Minute WE NEED YOU' MANPOWER TEMPORARY Services offers you:

Unique Fringe Benefits

Top Pay

Flexible Schedule

benefits and a cash bonus upon completion of program Call

Call us for an appointment We Are Not a Fee ^ency

AAANPOWER

1 800 662 7419, 8am 4pm, Monday Friday.

OFFICE ASSISTANT Prestigious company has immediate need for the person who likes variety in the office Salary DOE Excellent

TEAAPORARY

SERVICES

118 Reade Street

757 3300

benefit package. Call Judy. 355 ilagePi

2020. Herilaoe Personnel

OVERSEAS, Cr,uise Jobs. 520,000 $60,000 year i    -    .

6000 Ext.J 8751

SALES MANAGER

$60.000 year possible Call 80S 687

  .2,_

PART TIME REAL ESTATE broker needed. Must be experi enced and willing to assist in managerial duties on the weekends

Salary and commissions (or your ' def...... -    -

confidential interview Call Ann Bass, 756 6666

PART TIME anatomy and physiol ogy, mathematics. English

Sulzer Escher Wyss Inc , a leading manufacturer of paper machines and stock preparation equipment has a need tor a regional sales

manager vie f

nq I

helpful to the successful candidate

Knowledge ot and/or experience with paper making and paper making machine sales wifi be

as would other capital equipment sales experience

psychology, and Spanish instructors tor the summer quarters June 8 July 14 and or July 17 August 24 18 hours, graduate level work in discipline required Contact Dr Frank B Gaines, Dean of College Transfer. Coastal Carolina Com

051

Help Wanted

059

Work Wanted

SECRETARY Start the summer off right with this splendid position Top skills, word processing, and an

lufg

outgoing personality earns $12K

Silus excellent benetits Sounds in eresting? Call Gertie, 758 0541, Snelling 8. Snelling Personnel__

T-SHIRTS PLUS

"World Leader In Custom Shirts " now has an opening for AREA SALES representative

Join an established company in selling the most commonly used products sought after by new and old businesses and clubs!

Carolina East Mall, 756 9709

061

Antiques

I 074

Miscellaneous

FOR TREE REMOVAL, Call Tony i Brown's Lawn and Tree Service i 756 6735    i

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment formally of Dip and Strip All items returned within 7 days Tar Road Antiques Call lor free estimate. Days 756 9123. Night 756 1007

GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways Call ' 752 7341

TELEPHONE OPERA TOR/CASHIER' needed for established local firm Experience desired but not necessary Must have own transportation and be ready to go to work immediatel'

ready to go to work immediately Apply to Telephone Operator, P O Box 1967, Greenville. N C 27835

WANT A NEW CAREER? Energetic person who is determined

to make money Prefer someone settled with college degree Com pany will train Call Mr Lee (or

settled with coil

details Call 355 2020, Heritage Personnel

WANTED part time Micro computer Software Instructors Teaching experience preferred Send resume to: Instructor, PO Box 1682. Greenville, NC 27835

It you nave an interest in being i considered (or this position, send | your resume to

munity College, 444 Western

ks .....-    -    -    ^

Boulevard. Jacksonville. NC 28540, 919 455 122) An equal opportunity employer_______

Bernard F Burdzinski II Associate Vice President for Human Resources

Physical Ther^y

SULZER ESCHER WYSS INC P O Box 509 MIDDLE TOWN .OHIO 45042

SfAFF PHYSICAL THERAPIST

I An Equa! Opportunity Employer

SUPERVISORS

St Francis Xavier Hospital is a private, acute care 362 bed hospital located in the coastal resort area of historic Charleston S C We are currently seeking a qualified Regis

tered or Registry eligible Physical

Therapist tor a lull Time position

is an integral part ot the hospital and our staff is organized to handle new techniques of patient re habilitation with special attention focused on the difficulties ot each individual case We otter an excellent' benefit program and competitive salary For additional inlormation. please contact the Personnel Department

Wish to train sharp homemaker, to interview, hire and supervise to demonstrators, part time July December Excellent in home

commissioned Income Background of teaching, business or party plan helpful Call collect I 919 232 2935 for Maxine

RETIRED COUPLE to manage income producing property Expe rience in bookkeeping and meeting public necessary. Living quarters provided Send qualifications to Retired PO Box 1967. Greenville. NC 27834

RN'S, LPN'S and OR Technicians

Pungo District Hospital needs you Contact Barbara McDonald.

ST FRANCIS XAVIER HOSPITAL

135 Rutledge Ave

ton,3C

Charleston. SC 29401 (803 ) 723 6194 EOF-    -    M    F/H

Director ot Nursing, (919) 943 2111. SALES Outstanding person needed to sell computer accessories and office equipment supplies. Salary of

$I5K $20K plus expenses Fee paid

Sni

Pitt County Employment OPPORTUNITIES

Call Ted 758 0541, Snelling & Snell inq Personnel Service.

MAIL CLERK    $8,940-59,324

Main responsibilities include

pictpup, sorting, and delivery of post olfice and courier mail to Pitt County Departments and the daily

inspection of motor vehicles in the County Motor Pool Successful

applicant must be able to work independently upon receiving direc lions, and be willing to fill in on

SALES Top insurance company is seeking career minded individuals Fabulous benefits $15K Call Ted 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling Personnel Service

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

Local branch ot national corpora tion is seeking a salesperson Starting salary up to $1500 per month with income up to $30,000 annually within three years Sales management opportunity, complete

other jobs when needed .Some heavy lifting will be required peri odically High. School diploma or equivalerit is required and two

training program, group insurance, retirement plan, slock purchase

! MATURE PERSON to care (or my i [ child in my home Own trans j portation preferred 8:30 to 6 00,

I Monday Wednesday Possibly full I I time later. 752 6139      \

years experience in an office situa III

'ion or an equivalent combination of education and experience

SECRETARY III $8,940-59,324

Must have considerable knowledge of general office practices, pro cedures, and ability to operate general office machines Should be able to type at least 60 words per minute and have the ability to take dictation using shorthand and transcribe from dictation machine, making independent decisions re garding form and arrangement

overnight travel College degree preferred but an aggressive, self confident individual will be con sidered If you desire opportunity tq increase present income , meet our qualifications, and are willing .to follow instructions, please send complete resme to Sales Repre sentdtive, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834    _

SALES REPS AND dealers wanted Ground floor opportunity with revo

ducts For more information call 704 821 9009

High School diploma or equivalent and two years of clerical experience or an equivalent combination ot education and experience

SALES REPRESENTATIVE Ma

|or national company has an open ing for a Sales Associate in the Greenville area Prior sales experi ence not as important as ability and willingness to learn    Salary

negotiable    Excellent benefit

Please apply at the Pitt County Finance Office, First Floor, Pitt

package For a confidential in terview i

County Office Building, 1717 West Fifth Street, Greenville, N C 27834.

Telephone (919 ) 752 2934 (Extension 30))

terview send resume to MANAG ER, PO Box 1985 Greenville. NC 2 7835 Equal Opportunity Employer

An Equal Opportunity Employer

SCREEN PRINTER, experienced only, in all aspects ot printing Apply in person 758 0517 tor direc tions__

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

A&MUSEDCARS

Have moved to their new location 3014 S. Memorial Drive

Across From Wachovia Computer Center 756-6953    Greenville,    N.C.

COMPUTER SALES REPRESENTATIVE GOLDSBORO LOCATION

Established company has immediate need for experienced sales person to sell Business Computer Systems. Prefer data processing background but would consider experience in selling business forms, office machines-word processors, etc. Excellent opportunity for the right person. Business degree or certificate required. Work out ot Goldsboro covering eastern North Carolina. Send resume to Personnel Manager. Box 2087, i Goldsboro, NC 27530.

FAIRMONT VILLAGE APARTMENTS

TIRED OF PAYING HIGH UTILITY BILLS

Come to Ayden-where lower utility rates, energy efficient heat pumps plus free water will insure you savings each month. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom Colonials, fully carpeted with range and refrigerator furnished, washer/dryer/cable hook-ups, large play area with well maintained grounds. Only minutes from Carolina East Mall, on old Hwy. 11, Ayden.

We Have Two Bedroom Vacancies Starting At $180 OFFICE HOURS 2-4 WEEK DAYS OR

CALL 746-2020

Equal Housing Opportunity

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT

East Carolina University

GREENVILLE,

NORTH CAROLINA 27834 919-757-6352

\nt K,.if    Ml.n , A'I;mt:,i!; . A.'ion f "ipli h. ,

ECU

MACHINIST

Ajax Magnethermic Corporation, An International Leader In The Production Of Induction Heating And Melting Equipment Is Now Accepting Applications For A Qualified Machinist, All Applicants Must Have A Broad Knowledge Of Machining Technology And Long Term Experience, Including The Ability To: Set Up And Operate Conventional And Special Purpose Machine Tools, (Such As Boring Mills, Milling Machines And Lathes), Work From Complex And Involved Blueprints And Specifications, And To Work With A Minimum Of Instruction.

Ajax Offers An Excellent Benefit Package And Competitive Wages. Interested Applicants Must Apply Through The Greenville Employment Security Office.

Ajax Magnethermic Corporation

Winterville, N.C.

Equal Opportunity Employer

M/F

WANTED, a non smoking live in housekeeper to care for elderly woman Salary plus room and board Health certificate and refer enees required Call 756 9658 or 756 1222

WOULD YOU LIKE to live in a luxurious home, drive a new car in 90 days? Free details Write Jonesco, PO Box 918, Winterville, NC 28590

HOME MAINTENANCE Lawn, ! minor carpentry, plumbing and i electrical Window screens re I paired All work guaranteed 756

6887__

IF IT'S IN \ YARD, we II do it' Call Tony Brown's Lawn and Tree ! Service, 756 6735

ANNOUNCING North Carolina's Finest THE WINSTON SALEM    |

ANTIQUE EXTRAVAGANZA Show and Sale May 27 to am 9pm May 28 10 am 7pm May 29 Noon 6pm Memorial Coliseum Over 150 quali | ty dealers displaying

ANTlOUESANDOLD COLLECTI8LESONLYI    i

$2.00 admission $l SO with this ad DEALERS AND COLLECTORS DON T MISS IT! 919 924 8337, 919 924 4359.919 924 8956

AIR CONDITIONER Sears 4 000 BTU with variable tan speed and temperature controls $75 Call 756 toao _

AIR CONDITIONfcH 4000 BTU with thermostat runs like new reduced lo$l25 Call 752 4348

AIR CONDITIONER 23 000 BTU

Hotpoint Excellent condition $265 752 3619

LAWN MAINTENANCE Any type Call 756 9938 anytime__

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We

guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after 4 pm, weekends anytime__

LAWNMOWING Other yard work Low prices Call 757 0317 or 752 4680, ask tor Sam Junior

PAINT PROS

We specialize in use of Beniamin Moore paints Residential or commercial Interior or exterior Plaster and wallpapering Free estimate 758 4155 _WE DO IT RIGHT

PAINTING

No |ob too small Interior and exterior Low rales McEarl Paint Co

757 3604

PAINTING/GUTTER WORK, etc 6

years experience Call 758 7034____'

PARKIN CONTRACTING

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons Trimming, cutting and removal Free estimates J P Stancil, 752 6331

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and rooting 35 years experience in building Call James Harrington after 6 pm 752 7765    _

CALL RAY ANGE Mobile Home Repair, 752 1503 or 752 6471 Now is the time to seal and repair roofs

ADDITIONS    REMODELING

REPAIR WORK INSURED

Call 756 4296 Evenings _____

SANDING and finishing floors Small carpenter lObs, counter tops Jack Baker Floor Service 756 2868 anytime. i1 no answer call back

SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59 95 Call Steve Atkins tor all your sign needs 756 9117

STUDENT INTERESTED m lawn cutting Reasonable rates Call before tOa m 758 3216

conditioners We do all types ot Mobile Home Repairs_

WILL CLEAN OUT your attic or garage for a small tee Write PO Box 1483. Greenville, NC

CALL SEARS ROEBUCK & Co tor free estimates on siding, guttering, mobile home roofover. insulation,

interior and exterior painting and roof vents Call 756 9700, exY 232

Monday Saturday 10a m 9p m

CARPETCLEANING

2 Rooms & Hallway Special

Truck mounted steam cleaning tor deeper, longer lasting clean H&H Clean Care    756    9076

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

ANTIQUE TABLE, center painted fjles, 18 X 30 X 21 Italian Ate imported marble table. 40" round, height 13 " Winepress 2' high Henrydon contemporary solid walnut corner table, 36 " Loveseats in brown Sofa and chair. Mission

1 ne v-arpei ijoctor CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use Eliminate creosote and musty odors Wood stove specialist, Yar Road En terprises 756 9123 day, 756 ) 007 night

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more lime? Let someone else do your housecleaning Call 752 3758

oak style Tables, tamps, desk, small bench, cordinated furniture 2 casual leather chairs, side chair, golf cart, clubs Goll bag is top quality, like new Desk and chair, hand painted Desk lamp and draftsman lamp, heavy metal safe Copper lanterns, solid brass pieces, and miscellaneous Large Coleman freezer chest 756 0 799 Sunday anytime, weekdays 5 to 8 p.m J & J's ANTIQUES operating at Woodside Come out and brouse Don't forget Antique Show & Sale, June 5 James Allen and Jenny Move.

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired,, need more time? Let someone else do your housecleaninq 752 3758

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SCRVICE WRIIER

Send Resume To:

Service Writer P.O. 60x1967 Greenville, N. C. 27835

We Need Two

very qualified

INDUSTRIAL SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS Now!

Prefer experience with serging machines. Must be capable of putting together a complete garment. For appointment call

756-1044 Between 4 & 5 PM

SALESMAN

Need at once - Due to expansion, an experienced salesperson with at least 5 years proven sales background -perferrably Industrial Paper and Janitorial Supplies. We would like some college education with strong character. We offer excellent benefits including dental and we are the best paid program in the industry.

REPLY IN COMPLETE CONFIDENCE TO:

,,    SALESMAN

P.O. BOX NO. 1967 GREENVILLE, N.C. 27835

ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH POSITIONS

ARCHAEOLOGIST

needed to conduct field and laboratory research for recently awarded grant. Requires MA in anthropology with specialization in archaeology, two years of field experience, previous research experience in Northeastern North Carolina, and ability to assume responsibility for both field and lab operations.

ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSISTANT

needed to assist in conducting field and laboratory research for recently awarded grant. Requires BA in anthropology with specialization in archaeology and one year of field experience. Research experience in the Southeast and or middle Atlantic regions preferred.

Salary commensurate with training and experience. Send detailed resume to:

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT

East Carolina University

GREENVILLE.

NORTH CAROLINA 27834 919-757-6352

ECU

REWARD FOR RETURN ot ten

stained glass windows or arrest and conviction ot thieves Windows were stolen from church building at corner ot 5fh and Put Streets on or about May 8 1983 Windows stolen include 3    29" x 33 rectangular 1

29" X 42' rectangular 2

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS air

conditoners, freezers ranges washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale Call B J Mills Authorized Appliance Service

746 2446 at Black Jack__________

AM/FM STEREO with 8 track tape recorder record player and

player recorder record player and 2 speakers Gocart Man s bicycle 752 5518

half round 4    30'        60    half round

Sizes include wooden frame Con tact Gerald Bunch at 758 9884 (nights). 752 3571 (days) or Greenville Police Department__

ANTIQUE Solid oak 42 round table with leaf and 4 chairs 758 1618 or 752 3619

APPLE //e Starter Systems Brand new $1695 Also Apple accessories 15% discount Call 757 3820

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood for sale J P Stancil, 752 6331_

ASSUME PAYMENTS ot $39 95 on a 6 piece Western living room suit Sota chair rocker, and 3 tables Furniture World 757 0451 We take trade ins

065 Farm Equipment

BABY CARRIAGE/STROLLER

combination by Sears Like new 756 7038

ATTENTION BOATERS!

Alert locate distress signals kit with 3 meteor flares launcher and 3 hand held flares $25 49 kit with 3 meteor (lares launcher and 6 hand held flares $29 49 Extra flares distress (lags, lite vests and other boating supplies in stock Agri Supply. Greenville NC. 752 3999

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

and more on bedding and waterbeds Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pill Plaza), 355 2626

DROP NOZZLE FITTINGS 16

drop pipes with nylon fittings $2 34. with brass fittings $3 34 Nylon

swivels single nozzle $2 91. two nozzle $3 68 Nylon caps 19c, nylon nozzles 8003 and 8004 $3 49 per pair Agri Supply Greenville NC 752 3999

BIG RED AIRLESS sprayer extra hose, tips pole gun $600 (irm Tennant 42E Sweeper 3 new brushes still in box Needs bat tenes First $500 fakes it 758 0416 5 to lOp I

BRODYS HAS an AB Dick Copier

for sale Very good condition $250 Call Janet. 756 3)40

LAWN MOWER SUPPLIES Briggs and Stratten motors 3 5 horse power vertical shaft $122 49 y horsepower horizontal shaft $163 95 8 horsepower horizontal shaft $219 95 Lawnmower batteries $31 49 Blades throttle cables pulleys and other parts in slock A^i Supply Greenville NC. 752

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL

Tables Cash discounts Delivery and installation 919 763 9734

call CHARLES TICE. 758 3013 for small loads ot sand lopsoil and ! Stone Also driveway work

SUBSOILER POINTS Prices (or 5 or more John Deere SS2 bolt on $7 99 each Blanton $4 38 each, Taylorway $7 99 each Paulk at laches with roll pin $8 39 each Bush hog $9 99 each Points to fit other I subsoilers available Agri Supply. Greenville, NC, 752 3999

CARPET, CARPET, CARPET!

Assorted sizes and colors 9x)2's. 9xl5's 12x12 s, 12x15 s Priced to move Financing available Furniture World 2808 East 10th

Street. 757 0451 ____ ______

^ 758 2704,

SOD

CENTIPEDE

4994____

MACHINE,

752

COFFEE

756 2121

$50 Cal

COMPLETE GOLF OUTFIT British pull cart with club drivers hood seat 3 Ben Hogan woods

072

Livestock

Spalding cushion neck irons, Bobby Jones autograph register model

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables. 752 5237

rpitching wedge sand wedge putter umbrella balls $123 50 Bonus 3

Kroydon woods and putter tree 758 6657

LEATHER REPAIR

North Hills Saddlery 746 2134

DELUXE ELECTRIC hospital bed Like new Used only 3 months $1000 Table. $50    758    9000    or 523

9460    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Tired Of Housework?

RENT-A-MAID*

For At Littlw As $20 Pm-Wk

For More Information Call Us At

758-6066

Hours: 8-5 Offffico Located At:

113 W. 3rd St., No. 6

Division Of Eakes Enterprises

POSITIONS AVAILABLE

CYTOGENETICS LABORATORY SUPERVISOR

needed to supervise full service clinical cytogenetics laboratory in medical sohool. Requires either a Masters Degree in Genetics with 2 years of experience cytogenetics or a Bachelors Degree with 4 years of experience in cytogenetics. The successful candidate must have extensive supervisory experience in all phases oi diagnotic cytogenetics (prenatal diagnosis, blood karyotyping, tissue culture, etc.).

CYTOGENETIC TECHNOLOGIST

needed to perform cytogenetic studies on amniotic fluid cell cultures. Requires a Bachelors degree in biology, or a related field and 2 years of experience in clinical cytogenetics.

Salary commensurate with training and experience. Send detailed resume to:

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT

East Carolina University

GREENVILLE.

NORTH CAROLINA 27834 919-757-6352

Ar [C);    p    Ai.'luh f-.-ipiou"

ECU

SALES

Agricultural

Chemicals

(Eastern North Carolina)

0

C'/u.r-r ,* \    it-'*    t-^e

, -(r, ,r'    "efj    C'

St'Rf;1vt- ' 'r-

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C: "        L,.]k5    31.'

C 'A KK>

COLUMBIA NITROGEN CORPORATION

PO Bc.k 48S





TOYOTA EAST

83 Mark III Luxury Vans

Fully equipped Vans for just 99 cents over invoice!

Prices start at $14,919.99.

6 to choose from.

Toyota

Trucks

Any new Toyota truck i n stock, including Trail Blazers, just ^99 over invoice.

Toyota Trucks

3/4 Ton cabin chassis : with utility bed. Regularly 9650, Now 7695.    ^

I 1., A JO

3 to choose from.

81 & 82 Toyota

Corollas and

Tercels

Starting at *5595. 30 to choose from All models with 2 year-20,000 mile warranty, some with 5 year-50,000 mile warranty available.

New Toyotas

Good Selection, Good Price! If we dont have it, Well get it!

TOYOTA

EAST

Authorized Mercedes-Benz Dealer

109 Trade Street Greenville, NC 919/756-3228





074

Miscellaneous

XTRA LARGE DESK lor sale (4fi x60' ), 7 drawers and 2 pull outs on both sides ot desk, lots ot utility and a real conversation piece Call 752 4348_____

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

093

OPPORTUNITY

FACTORY 2nds NOW available 1 direct trom manulacturer Hand '

1979 CONNOR 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, new furniture, excellent condition 90 day warranty Payments under S150 Call 754 9874 Country Squire Mobile Homes 264 Bypass

109

Houses For Sale

OPPORTUNITIE

woven rope hammocks, $19 95 to 1 $53 Hatleras Hammocks

large

1980 KNOX 14x60 Fuliv furnished. | enclosed mall in Kinstoi

       ijg,.    _    _    j    j

Clark Street. Greenville

1104

condition, steps under pinning Like new Call Greg, 757 7227 days 747 2052 nights_

FOR EXPERT TV repair, bring set

to Four Way TV in Hookerton (We sell new RCA sets) 747 2412

1980 14 X 70 three bedrooms, 1 bath Some equity and assume loan of $181 per month Call Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841

FAST FOOD OPERATION IN Mall Well established in large, modern. Owner

needs to sell due to other time consuming business interests Oual ified buyer may take over with small down payment and easy pay back terms

I A RARE FIND Very seldom tor i sale Mobile home located on over I an acre lot in city with additional mobile home spaces to be rented out for additional income We have it! Call Davis Realty. 752 3000, 756 2904. 756 1997

FOR SALE: yellow collards and cabbage plants Marion Mae Mills, 756 3279 or 355 2792

FOR SALE:    Avocado    drop    in

1982 ALL AMERICAN Family, double wide, 24 X 60, 3 bedroom, 2 reat room, gas heat.

uuuuit; wiu

I full baths.

$100 746 22

masonite s down paymen 752 5310. ask tor Mike

no, shingle roof Small nf assume loan Call

FOR SALE: Wooden rocker good condition $85 Call 752 1912.

FOR SALE : New Sears weights and

weight bench 752 1973_

fJjR sale : Timex Sinclair 1000

computer with 16K Ram memory and 2 instruction bcxiks Excellent condition Selling lor $111 or make an otter Call 752 2330 after 5p m FORMAL GOLD CURTAINS with tie backs and swag cornice Will fit up to 122" window $50 752 8894

1982 NEW 14 X 70, 2 bedrooms, 1 . baths, large rooms Payments un I ests der $190 Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes 264 Bypass 982 14x70 TOWN AND COUNTRY 2 bedrooms, 2 baths with garden tub Call 756 4 376after6:30D m 1982 24 X 64 Parkway $500 down Assume loan at 12% interest Call Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841

PROFITABLE RESTAURANT Opportunity in Greenville At mosphere, location, established clientelle. outstanding service, mixed drinks and goocf food, this restaurant has it all Full service restaurant seats 70 and 30 seat bar has all ABC permits Owners selling due to other time consuming inter

BRICK RANCH situated on a wooded lot Excellent neighborhood Winterville school district No city taxes. 3 bedrooms. 1'2 baths, recently painted inside. Only $56,900. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997.

GEORGIA RED _____

sprouts $25 tor 1,000 Cal ays 756 7159 nights

GOOD USED washing machines $100 each or $85 with trade in Call 756 2479

GRADUATION IDEA? Moflitt s Magnavox has 12 ' black and white TVs tor only $74 95! 2803 Evans Street Extension. 756 8444

HOTPOINT washer and dryer (5 years old) $350 pair Call 758 5486

1983 REDMOND New Moon mobile home Set up in park in country with pool 2 bedrooms, I'l baths, cathredal ceilings, wooden steps,

flarden tub Pay equity and assume oan 758 6104 after 4 or 746 3174 anytime___ _

I PROFITABLE AND WELL I ESTABLISHED WHOLESALE

I Seafood business for sale Established clientelle, both suppli ers and buyers Located in at tractive and friendly little town ot the coast Owner needs to sell due other time consuming business in terests

076 Mobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money Smith Insurance and Realty. 752 2754

OTHER BUSINESS 8. REAL ESTATE opportunities for sale, priced trom $10,000 up, some with owner financing. For information, contact Harold Creech, Business 8. Real Estate Broker with

The Marketplace, Inc.

752-3666.

TO BUY OR SELL

Appraisals. Financin

business

Contact

ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers Sale 40% ott Barkers i Refrigeration, 2227 Memorialf

077 Musical Instruments

Appraisals. Financing Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES. Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street 752 3575

Drive, 756 6417

ITEMS FOR SALE Jenn air oven. Kitchenette unit with stove, refrig erator sink and oven gas powered i generafoC' 110 220 gas powered* pump, ^Vhorsepower, 50 foot of nose spotn '

BALDWIN SPINET PIANO, pecan finish 4 years old $600 Call 752 l025 after4D m_

hose spolnails. 8D and 16D 7755, Monday Friday, 9 5

FOR SALE Yamaha Studio con sole piano Like new $1,350 Call 756 0^ anylime __

GUITAR amp Music man 210 HD 130 ExcellenI condition 758 1326

JOIN MOFFITT'S MAGNAVOX j alter s___

video tape club Grenville s first, SPEAKERS Infinity Pos li s $100 and largest 2803 Evans Street 758 1326 afters E xtension. 756 8444    -------------

KING SIZE box spring $50 Giveaway used king size mattress 355 2850_

USED PIANOS AND ORGANS

Yamahas, Wurlitzers, etc The Music Shop Greenville Square Shopping Center, 756 0007

095

PROFESSIONAL

BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAI and

7sf:

drywalt Call 757 0678 or After 6 355 6952

I 2689

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolinas original chimney sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Cafl day or night, 753 3503, Farmville

100

REAL ESTATE

LARGE LC3ADS of sand and topj WINTER SPINET PIANO with I

soil, lot cleaning backhoe also available 756 4742 alter 6 p m . Jim Hudson_

LAWNMOWERS New and used for sale parts and service, trade ins accepted Rentals on lawn garden and equipment Call 756 0090 nights and weekends _

bench, beautiful cabinet $550 Piano & Organ Distributors, Greenville, 355 6002_

7 PIECE SET ot Blue Tama Drums I snare drum, 4 mounted tom toms, I floor tom, I 22" base drum, 3 ziidien cymbols. high hat with 2

104 Condominiums For Sale

CONDOMINIUM SALE

Dresden Place

NEW LISTING Well kept ranch home otters great room with fireplace, dining room, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, fenced backyard. Take advantage now at $49.9(10 Call Ball & Lane, 752 0025, or Richard Lane, 752 8819

NEW LISTING ' Belvedere Roomy thkee bedroom ranch with recre ation room, wooded lot. $55,500. Call Ball & Lane. 752 0025. or Lee Ball 752 1646

NEW LISTING 606 Eleanor Street Unique contemporary in Cherry Oaks 3 bedrooms, 2' 2 baths, large great room, and garage, $79,5<50 Call Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500. nights Rod Tuowell 753 4302

NEW listing Qualify can be easily detected in this well deco rated, 3 bedroom, 2 bath home Large corner wooded lot provides attractive setting for bay window in kitchen Tremendous great rtxim with fireplace and wood stove

Price only $68.500 Call Davis Real ty 752 300<i, 756 2904 Or 756 1997

NEW LISTING on wooded lot in the country. Almost like new 1 Story home with 1500 square feet 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large den with

kitchen, heat pump, well land scaped lawn Only $65.900. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997

COUNTRY LIVING can be yours Over 1400 square feet modular home on brick foundation, ' 2 acre lot, heat pump. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances remain Only $43.900 Call Davis Realty, 752 3000,

2904. 756 1997.

752

756

COUNTRY LIVING can be yours Over 1400 square feet modular home on brick toondation, '2 acre lot, heat pump 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances (emain Only $43.900 Call Davis . Realty, 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997

MARY KAY cosmetics 756 3659 to reach your consultant for a facial or reorders

zildien cymbols Price negotiable Phone Call 758 0206atter6_

MOVING! 25" color console TV, has' 080 sharp picture and beautiful cabinet ' only $185. like new 8,000 BTU,

INSTRUCTION

Conveniently located near the Uni versify, at the corner ot Charles and nth Street

2 Bedrcxims, 1% baths, 1000 square feet with 12% Financing $43.600

y,,,,    ...Nc .,cw    .'"    I    NEED TUTOR IN management

Sears air c(jnditioner,_ works like* accounting, graduate student Call

new, only $125 Call 756 0492

MOVING SALE Must sell living room and bedroom fprnifure, lawn equipment kitchen etc Call 752 2755    _

ing. gradi 752 4586

Why pay rent when you can own your condominium Shown B)

vn By Appointment Only Call W G Bloun* & Associates

756-3000

"DOWNHOME c6uNTRY

Feeling ' in this new saltbox style home with wooo siding nestled among the trees on a large lot outside city limits Otters fireplace in living room, 1 downstairs bedroom and full bath, quaint country kitchen/dining room with vaulted,ceiling up to balcony hous ing 2 bedrooms and full bath, front porch and rear deck FHA, VA and conventional financing available $56,500 Call CECO Realty, Inc ,

$56,5uu can ctLU Keaity, Inc , 355 6889 or Elaine Troiano. 756 6346

OAK FINISHED dining room table with 2 leaves Country look good condition $260    4    ladder    back

chairs. $25 each 758 4917 after 5 15

085 Loans And Mortgages

2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans mortgages

bought. Call tree 1 800 84$ 3929.

ODYSSEY II GAME with 7 cartridges $80 756 6004_|

OFF WHITE corduroy couch and' chair Like new $220 756 6468

093

OPPORTUNITY

PIANO AND trash compacter Calli 746 4150    I

CONDOMINIUM Excellent loan assumption Private lot and loca tion in one ot Greenville's most popular areas Steve Evans & Associates. 355 2727or 758 3338

NEW TOWNHOMES for sale, Oakmont Drive 2 and 3 bedroom units available J R Yorke Can struction Co , Inc., 355 2286.

BUSINESSOPPORTUNITIES

RAINBOWS cartoons, nursery scenes murals painted on walls, also signs 758 8113    _

REFRIGERATOR 19 cubic toot. G frost tree with ice maker E xcellent condition. $285 7 52 3619_

MOTORCYCLE SHOP Maior line Profitable Some owner financing Eastern NC

THE TALK OF THE TOWN

TOWN 81 COUNTRY RESTAU RANT Stokes. N C Perfect for counfry food seafood or barbeque Party room

PIZZA SHOP On busy highway. Eastern North Carolina

ROSE BUSHES

ARE

20% Off

BEGONIAS IMPATIENS lot^tlon some financing available TOMATOES & PEPPERS l candy shop Excellent location

I Is Open House Week at Brookhill I Townhomes. See our affordable 2 1 and 3 bedroom townhomes! Call ' Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029 or Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 ' for more details

EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Excellent location 3 bedrooms, large family room with fireplace, garage, deck, pafio. extra large room for office, study or etc Some equity (possible owner financing) Only $42.500 Call Davis Realty, 752 3OO 756 1997

756 2904.

GRACIOUS AND HOMEY! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wood stove, and large workshop Low $60's. CEN TURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7008

HIGNITE, REALTORS

744-2448

$27,500. Three bedrooms, one bath, ving room, fireplace, kitchen, and utside covered in aluminum sid ng

Many Other Bedding Plants ANDGARDEN SUPPLIES

Eastern NC

MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

Open Sunday 1 30 to 5 PM

Kittrell's Greenhouses

CONVENIENT STORE Eastern NC Very profitable Some tinanc ing

2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT   CALL 756 7373

SEARS 3 horsepower garden tiller $50 758 3175 or 756 3109

PRINT SHOP Eastern N C Well established, profitable Priced to sell

SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company    _

SEA FOOD Profitable, grossing $500,000 Eastern N C Some tinanc ing available

SUNBEAM VACUUM CLEANER,

$30 Flat guitar, $70 Weight

NOVELTY SHOP Greenville Very profitable

INDY RIDGE 3 bedroom ustomized townhouse Near lubhouse Sauna, pool, and tennis ourts $54,500 Call 756 8794 after 6 p m or weekends_

$28.900 Two bedrooms downstairs

this a deal for the big ^mily Living room, den and kitchen combination.

$34,900. FmHA home located on Edge Road in Ayden, N C Three bedrooms and one bath priced right Farmers Home loan is available to the right person

$37,900. FmHA home located on Edge Road in Ayden Three bedrooms, one bath and this one can be rented or sold Just freshly painted

$43,900. Four bedrooms, I'z baths.

106

Farms For Sale

bench, $15 75

i after 5

SUPER XL HOMELITE CHAIN

saw with bow and bar, 2 chains, good condition. $175 1 GE washing machine, $75 752 8149

THE MLM COMPANY Eastern NC Very profitable, token invest ment needed local management will train

58 ACRE FARM Good road fron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house St Johns Community Call for more details Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details_

large kitchen with eat in area, varf new

living room and wall to w. carpet, all located on a big corner lot and all fenced in.

$59,900. Nine trailers included with this trailer court on two lots. Fine investment and owner financing.

109

Houses For Sale

$74,900. Nice brick home located on big lot 2 miles outside the city limits with tour bedrooms and 2'3 baths Formal areas and nice kitchen with built in appliances. Den with fireplace and deck on rear of house

TOPSOIL, mortar sand till sand! Plus many others and gravel. Davenport Hauling,

756 5247

TREE & STUMP REMOVAL

Reasonable prices Insured Work guaranteed Call 752 4060 for tree estimate_

CONFIDENTIAL BROKERS

756 0664

Look What's Home! classified display

TRS80 MODEL I Level II I6K Exafron stringy floppy data storage Cassette gla^er, monitor

Many programs

issues and!

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co , Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville. NC 757 0001, nights 753 4015

continuing subscriptions to C LOAD and 80 US 752 2730    I

New house under construction in beautiful Baytree Country charm with city convenience in this com fortable. affordable house with a touch of luxury

GALL 758-6410

Diversified Financial Services. Inc. Or your REALTOR

SWIMMING POOL

Cash Or Monthly Payments Above And Inground

Seaboard Home Center

UPRIGHT ADMIRAL FREEZER 9

years old Excellent condition, $225

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

602 Grimes Rd Washington, N C 946-2156

years oic 758 5619

WASHERS AND RANGES for sale $125 and up Refrigerators $150 and up Guaranteed and like new Call B J Mills, 746 2446

WEDDING DRESS for sale, $150 Jr size 4 5, white with chapel train and veil Originally $280 746 3063

WEIGHTS 300 pounds, bar bells, etc $25 758 7326

WINDOW AIR conditioner Gibson. 12,000 BTU Excellent condition First $100 Call 756 9874

WOULD LIKE to buy used retrig erators. air conditioners, freezers, and ranges that need repair 746 2446

YOU CAN'T BEAT THIS deal %

carat diamond solitaire in a 6 prong   17520

14K gold setting $500 Call 752 i after 6 p i

10x10 WOODEN DECK $200 3964

19" COLOR TV Rent to own $23 11 per month Furniture World 757 0451

25 CHIMNEY BLOCKS, 2 joints of flue liner 6' galvanized chimney extension Alitor $25 752 6967

4 10.50 X 15 Firestone All Terrain tires on 8 " white spoke rims Excellent condition Call 758 6 519 after 7 o

5 PIECE Early American bedroom suit $300 firm Call 756 5497 after 6 pm.

55 GALLON AQUARIUM with stand and accessories for $175 Call 758 0775

4 FOOT ocean Pacific surf board with tin and ankle strap New Never used $375 Call 758 2979

7500 BTU HOTPOINT energy effi cient air conditioner. Used 1 sum mer Must sell! Call 758 0048 after 5

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

BEAUTIFUL USED home 65    3

bedrooms, 2 full baths $147 per month See Thomas MtJbile Homes, 752 6068

BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof, frost free refrigerator, garden tub. cathedral ceiling and much, much more Regular price, $21,995 Limited Time Only

$16,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up includea Hours, 8 AM to 8 pm CROSSLAND HOMES (formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756    0191_

DOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedrooms, 2

baths, all appliances. Central air.

ned Barn attached. Set up

Underpin on I acre of land. 946 8436

IT'S A STEAL! A beautiful 1977 Oakwood 12 X 56, front kitchen with big bay window, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, new carpet and draises. House type windows with storm windows Frost free refrigerator, deluxe range Must sell $8,500 $850 down. $142 per month tor 8 years Will move Iree up to 25 miles Days, 756 2929 Nights. 756 8771    __

MARLETTE, 8 X 40 2 bedrooms. I bath, ideal for fisherman, hunter or student Payments under $55 per month Call 756 9874 Country Squire Mobile Homes 264 Bypass

AAOBILE HOME FOR SALE 12x60 Call 758 4234_

SUPER CLEAN 12x45 Conner 2 bedrooms, front kitchen $109.85 per month Thomas Mobile Homes. 752 6068

12x60 OAKWOOD 2 bedrooms, bath, carpet, central air. and appli anees All rooms closed off $6500 Call 756 5372_

14 WIDES for as low as $190 per month Ca .....'    -----

.all or come by Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841_

14x70 3 BEDROOMS. 2 baths $500 equity and assume payments ot $191.10 757 3964_

1960, 10x60. 3 bedrooms. I'z baths, furnished. $2500 Call after 6, 752 4841

1979, 14 x 65 Oakwood. 2 bedrooms, 2

baths, heat pump, unfurnished MOO take ui

LIQUIDATION

SALE

Carolina Sales Marine Division

Corner 14th & Evans Street Greenville, N. C.

ALL TYPES OF MARINE ACCESSORIES AND SUPPLIES

20% TO 40% SAVINGS

On Over $250,000 of Merchandise

SKI EQUIPMENT

Hydro slides, ropes, vests, skis (slalon combo tricks)

MARINE ELECTRONICS

Depth finders, VHF radios, CB radios, marine stereos

SAILING ACCESSORIES

Blocks, line shackles, battens, T-tracks

SAFETY EQUIPMENT MARINE PAINT MARINE SPORTSWEAR

BOAT, MOTOR & TRAILER

Parts & Accessories

BRAND NAMES: Taperflex, Cypress Gardens,Puritan, Ski Master, Lowrance, SMR, Cybernet, Sampson, Nicrofico, Schaefer, Woolsy and International.

Also Available: SANYO Kerosene Heaters

CASH, MASTERCARD OR VISA ONLY

SALE HOURS: 12-7 P.M., MONDAY - FRIDAY 9A.M.-1 P.M. SATURDAY

For More Information Call 752-4915

and

up payments Call

109

Houses For Sale

109

Houses For SaleThe Daily Renector, Greenville, ,\ C -Sunday, May 15,1983-D-5

109

Houses For Sale

109

Houses For Sale

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOAAESAWEEK SOAAETIAAES FOUR

BRICK VENEER DUPLEX reduced fo $48,(XX) Assume 93.% loan. Cash flow Owner financinq

$80's

CLUB PINES Be the first to see this elegant home in one of Greenville's best neighborhoods Large family r<x>m, 2 car garage, loaded with extras AM formal areas. 8?<i% assumable loan Mid $80's. Call today.

possibly equity. Almost 3 years ole Heat pump 2 Jiedrooms, l bath,

HIGNITE, REALTORS

746 2448

each side Call Today! Davis Real tv. 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997

BY OWNER 3 bedroom, 2 bath fireplace, 2500 square feet, nice yard^ln Farmville $59,500 Call after'%.m ., 753 3030_

$85.000 Four bedroom home with game room and plenty ot storage two full baths and formal dining room, den with fireplace Lake Ellsworth For rent or sale

( IDEAL HOME tor young family Located on large lot in country 3 , bedrooms deck Assume loan plus equity (owner will finance equity) only $34.500 Call Davis Realty

752 3000 7M ?904j;5_197____

NVESTRST Duplex approx

mately 1440 square feet One side remodeled other side was used as

BY OWNER 1718 square toot, brick ranch 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, close to

A DREAM COME TRUE! Country home located on an acre ot trees, azaleas and camelias abound This beautifully decorated 3,000 square toot home has been completely renovated with central heat and air conditioning. 2'z baths, formal dining, living room with fireplace, chairrail and crown molding, tour bedrooms, 19' x 36' family room and double car garage Conveniently located within twenty minutes of industry in Robersonvil le, Wiliiamston and Greenville Of fered at $88,(XX)

schools, shopping, den fireplace and woodstove. living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, extra room, 12 X 14, perfect tor shop or game room. Large lot Assume 1V']% VA loan $75(X) equity. Call after 5 pm 752 6448

FARM in Chocowimty lOO acres and 10,000 pounds of tobacco $159,000

church Good possibiities Mid $20 s CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7008

ilh house New $94,500

th access ott

24 ACRES Wooded Highway 33 $17 000

BY OWNER 3 bedroom house, fenced in yard, woodstove Lots ot extras. 746 3161

5 ACRES State Road 1126 $19 000 LOT in Cherry Oaks $12,500

LOCATED NEAR HOSPITAL Neat Brick Veneer starter home Re cently decorated, new carpel For less than $3500 You may purchase and close this home Only $38 500 Call Davis Realty, 752 3000    756

2904, 756 1997

BY OWNER 3 bedroom. 2 bath ranch Large greatroom with fireplace, garage and sundeck Assumable ll'j% loan $53,900 756 8715.

LOT in city. $3,900________;

HOUSE, BUILDING, and lot tor | sale S R 1551 2 2 miles on right past caution light at Stokes $13 000. j

Contact Charles M Vincent 758 'i 4000

NEW LISTING University Area Immediate occupancy is available in this choice home Floor plan otters 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen living and dmmq rooms enclosed solarium sunporch fireplace woodstove and detached

woodstove and detached garage Must see to appreciate' Call Mavis

Butts Realty, 758 0655 or Shirley f/orrison 758 5463

DREXELBRCXJK Immaculate best describes this 3 bedroom hme with all large rooms and spacious back yard not to mention the rear screened porch Over 2000 square feet in one of Greenville's most prestigious areas. New heat pump and roof. Call today Offered in the upper $80's.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC

REALTORS

756-633

Gene Quinn ON CALL

Marie Davis.............

Tim Smith  ..........

Ray Holloman...........

Sharon Lewis.........

John Jackson Teresa Hewitt

Toll Free 1 8(X) 525 8910, ext F43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$40'S

9% FmHA LOAN assumption available in Hollywood Acres One ot the finest FmHA homes on the market Over 1128 square feet ot heated space plus carport Won't last long at this interest rate Call today. Low $40's

9V,% VA available

LOAN assumption Griffon with total

payments of less than $350 (X) This home has 3 bedrooms.

bath,

Jamily rcxim with fireplace Home is heated and cooled by heat pump Call today Offered at $40.000

WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom ranch with fenced back yard and assumable loan it you qualify Flexible terms to suit your financial needs Call total tor your personal

nearly 1250 square feet

WINTERVILLE This FmHA assumption may be yours it your income meets FmHA requirements It otters 3 bedrooms, I'l baths, carport and fenced backyard. Call today tor more information and appointment. Low $40's

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC

REALTORS

756-6336

Gene Quinn ON CALL

Marie Davis.............

Tim Smith............

Ray Holloman.........

Sharon Lewis       _.

John Jackson ..............756    4360

Teresa Hewitt.............. 756    1188

Toll Free ! 800 525 8910, ext AF43

756 6037 756 5402 252 9811 Z53 5147 756 9987

An Equal Housing Opportunity

Searching tor the right townhouse" Watch Classified every day

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Looking For An Impressive Driving Machine? Look No Longer!

Thinking About A New Family Car Think Plymouth Reliant

^750 Cash Rebate Or

9.8% APR Financing

Joe Cullipher ,

Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Peugeot

GRANT MAZDA

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

1983 MAZDA TRUCKS

All Models NOW '^THRU MAY31ST

DEALER COST

Plus N.C. Taxi!

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

i





D-6 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C.-Sunday, May 15,1983

109

Houses For Sale

Look What's Home!

New house under construction in beautitui Baytree Countrv charm with city convenience in this com tortable. attordable house with a touch of luxury

CALL 758-6410

Diversified Financial Services,Inc.

or your REALTOR____

LOVELY OLDER HOME, Universi ty area $55,000 Call Joe Bovven. East Carolina Builders. Inc 752 7194__

LYNNDALE Very unique 2'2 story home otters superb living areas plus study, playroom. 2 tireplaces and screened porch Reduced to $114 900. but take a look and make an otter' Call Ball & Lane. 752 0025 or Richard Lane. 752 8819_

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

CAME LOT Under construction, this Cape Cod has 1612 square teet, 3 bedrooms and deck on wooded lot An exceptional buy at $72,500 Call today To be completed in June tor you to select your own decor

CLUB PINES Luxury abounds in this new 3 bedroom home to be completed in May Wet bar, extra molding and excellent tioor plan Select your own decor in style' Ottered at $61,600 Excellent financ ing available

FANTASIC FOR FAMILY living Located in one ot Greenville's most

firestigioAs areas and on a well andscaped corner lot, this home is ideal tor entertaining and family living Quality built with 5' bedrooms or I bedroom downstairs with built ins can be used as a study 3 full baths, fenced in back yard Close to the university A must see priced in the upper $90 s

RUSTIC BEAUTY A touch of country m Windermere Over an acre ot wooded lot surrounds this cedar home built for the warm ot heart Four bedrooms, three baths, C07y kitchen with eat in area and separate dining room Garage plus large fronr porch and wooden deck out back    loan    assumption

Call today Low$100's

REALTY WORLD . CLARK-BRANCH, INC

REALTORS

756-6336

Gene Quinn Marie Davis Tim Smith Ray Holloman Sharon Lewis John Jackson Teresa Hewitt

ON CALL

756 5402

752 981t

753 5147 756 9987 756 4360 756 n

Toll Free 1800 525 8910. ext AF43 _ Equal Housing Opportunity_

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

50'S $60's

THE PINES, Ayden New home available with 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths and over 1450 square feet of living space This home has a large family room with fireplace, sepa rale utility room and an energy efficient heat pump Call today Ottered in the $50's

LOOKING FOR AN executive home? Need 2576 square feet. 4 bedrooms and 3 full baths but can't really afford the prices in Greenville Take a look at this with all the modern conveniences Large country kitchen with oak cabinets and center bar with Jenn Aire range plus breakfast nook and formal dining room Large family 1 room with fireplace plus formal I living room vitn fireplace Extra: large closets and baths Call today! I Convenient to Greenville,I Farmville. Wilson and Tarboro i Ottered in the mid $60's

-REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

REALTORS

756-6336

Gene Quinn ( Marie Davis Tim Smith Ray Holloman Sharon Lewis John Jackson Teresa Hewitt

756 6037 756 5402

752 9811

753 5147 . 756 9987

756 4360 756 1188

Toll Free 1800 525 8910, ext AF43 An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

S30'S&$40'S

NEW LISTING 2 bedrooms, baths New construction Townhouse with 12% fixed rate financing Less than $2000 equity required Available in May Select your own decor Off Hwy 43 near the Med school Offered in the mid $30 s

NEW LISTING Save time and money and assume this FHA loan ot 8' 2% with payments of $292.87 on this 1500 square feet home conve niently located to the university Spacious great room with fireplace dining room, fenced in back yard with a garage Ottered in the $40 s

NEED A TOWNHOUSE, but pay ments like rent Assume this loan on a two bedroom fownhome In Windy Ridge and move in March Fixed rate I2ix% plus owner financing if necessary Offered at $42,000

SIMPSON Don't ignore this home If you're looking for a spacious home in a woodedi country setting it may be the one This solidly built brick 3 bedroom home is carpeted throughout and has beautiful stained woodwork, living room and cozy den and family kitchen $48.500

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC

REALTORS

756-334

Gene Quinn Marie Davis Tim Smith Ray Holloman Sharon Lewis John Jackson Teresa Hewitt

756 6037 756 5402

752 981 1

753 5147 756 9987 756 4360 756 1188

foil Free I 800 525 8910, ext AF43 - An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

C.L. Lupton, Co.

FLEMING FURNITURE & APPLIANCE

Now Sendee*

Crosby Appllencet Kelvlnetor Apptlence*

Speed Queen Laundry Fedden Air CondHtoner*

1012 DIcklntan Ae.    7S2-3ltM

CONCERNED ABOUT RADIATION LEAKAGE

from your

MICROWAVE OVEN Call 355-2712 M-F

HAVE IT TESTED

PA TIO COVERS S CARPORTS STORM WINDOWS A DOORS

Lloyd L. Wells

ALUMINUMS VINYL SIDING CONTRACTOR

FREE ESTIMATES

PHONE: 747-3261 SNOW HILL, N.C.28580

IT

109

Houses For Sale

IDEAL FOR FAMILY with son or daughter at East Carolina Universi fy or Pitt Community College Large attractive brick house with 4 bedrooms and 3 baths (1 bedroom and 1 bath are located away-from others with private entrance to allow coming and going without disturbing others), central heat and air conditioning, large attractive yard All this and more for just $68.900 in conveniently located Westhaven Subdivision

SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE for just $54,900. 1422 square feet includes 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen and 2'2 baths. Swimming pool and tennis courts. Conveniently located in Quail Ridge

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED brick house in Farmville within walking distance of downtown and all schools. 1948 square feet with extra large den.'recreation room (over 27 feet long), 3 bedrooms and )'2 baths, tolly carpeted with central heat and 2 fireplaces Priced to move quickly at just $37,500

TURN OF THE CENTURY home in Robersonville. Well built older home in good condition and ready to live in. but you can fix it op further yourself Large living room with fireplace, 3 or 4 bedrooms, large open front porch, hue newly screened side porch, central heat, large front and back yard with lots ot room for garden. Priced at just $32,500

For Additional Information

CallREAL ESTATE BROKERS

752-4348 or 757-1798

STARTER HOME 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, fenced in backyard )(!% financing available with small down payment Steve Evans & Associates. 355 2727 or 758 3338    __

NEW HOME in established neighborhood Cedar siding. 3 bedrooms, 1>2 baths. Low 50's. Pay up to 4 points plus closing The Evans Co , 752 28)4 Faye Bowen, 756 5258 Winnie Evans. 752 4224

NEW LISTING Under construction in Horseshoe Acres Buy now and

ick out all colors. Traditional 3 edrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace 60s Call Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500. Nights. Rod Tuqwell. 753 4302_

owner 3 years old, 3 bedrooms, baths, contemporary, great room with fireplace, eat in kitchen, formal dining room, garage with workshop, fenced yard, possible loan assumption, $64,900    756    753)

tor appointment.__

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109 Houses For Sale

NEW LISTING- 207 N Harding Street. Large, corner lot gracefully shaded by trees is the setting for this brick veneer ranch home in the university area. Features include front porch, living room with fireplace, separate dining room, kitchen complete with range and breakfast bar, 3 bedrooms, i bath, enclosed garage with washer/dryer hookups and attic access The 4 year old heat system, new paint/wallpaper, and 9% fixed rate loan assumption with total pay ments of $230 78 makes this one worth seeing! $47,SIX) Call CECO Realty, Inc., 355 6889 or Elaine Troiano. 756 6346.__

NO CITY TAXES! Beautitui 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on corner lot. Large fireplace CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7008.

NO QUALIFYING, assume fixed rate FHA loan, $14,500 to assume loan balance in low sSO's. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump, fireplace, dining room, large lot. 756 5621 evenings. Owner/broker.

OWNER ANXIOUS to sell! 3 bedroom brick ranch. Living room, kitchen combination Approximate ly 1142 square feet. Low $30's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7008._

PRICED TO SELL! 3 bedrooms, living room, utility, ceiling fan. and hardwood floors. High $20's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7008.

PRIVACY OF THE COUNTRY IN TOWN! Brick Veneer in Stratford. 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace and wood stove, living room, kitchen with breakfast area, large screened porch, utility, carport, fenced backyard, central air and heat, wooded lot Ideal location near shopping and schools $60'S. 756 3627 or 756 5314

109    Houses For Sale

STARTING NEW HOME in Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room. High 60's. Paying up to I points plus closing costs. Buy now pick out your own colors, wallpaper, carpet, etc. The Evans Co., 752 2814 Faye Bowen, 756 5258 Winnie Evans. 752-4224._

TOWNHOUSE SALE

Village East

Conveniently located near downtown and the University, Library. Recreation Center and the Jaycees Park at Cedar Court.

Two bedrooms, IVj baths, all brick construction with outside storage building. 10% Financing.41,W0

Shown By Appointment Only. Call W G Bliount& Associates

756-3000

WINTERVILLE Corner lot. new >root. new paint, 2 bedroom house. Central location. Excellent rental history $I8,(XXI. Call owner after 5, 756 4980.    _______

YOU'VE SEEN THE rest Now buy

the best! This home currently under construction in Cherry Oaks has the elegance and warmth only a true Williamsburg home can otter. Distinctive features Include oak floors in foyer and formal dining room, oversized brick used on exterior and fireplace in 15 X 20 great room, painted ceilings throughout, cheery Bay window in breakfast room. Also 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 full baths, patio, E 300 insulation, heat pump. Buy now and choose your decor. Fixed rate Conventional financing available up to 95% loan. $74,90(r Call CECO Realty, Inc., 355 6889 or Elaine Troiano, 756-6346._

109

Houses For Sale

2403 EAST FOURTH STREET 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 1214 square feet of living area Very nice neighborhood $38,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615

111    I n vestment Property

BY OWNER Investment Property. Two story, very large home re modeled into two apartments, half a block from ECU Excellent condi tion. Over 700 per month income. Mid 70's Call 757 6715 or 756 0788.

NEW TOWNHOMES for sale. Oakmont Drive. 2 and 3 bedroom units available. J R Yorke Con struction Co., Inc.. 355-2286._

OWNER

Nursery

FINANCING ,

all equipment, stock, two

fiossible ock, twt

trucks,' doublewide and singlewide

mobile homes. 7 Greenhouses, and 10 wholesale routes. $275,000 CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency 756 2121 or 756 7008

113

Land For Sale

PRIME PROPERTY in prime area 9.4 acres near hospital Ideal tor condominiums. Property surveyed for subdivision. Will sell acreage or lots. Commercial Lot $77,500. Call for details. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty 756 6666_

115

Lots For Sale

RED OAK, Cul De Sac, 4 bedroom, 2' 1 baths, living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, sunken den with fireplace insert, garage. $67,500 . 8% assumable loan. 756 5371 after 4 p.m except weekends._

STANTONSBURG ESTATES Hard to believe you can purchase a new 1400 square foot contemporary home with all the features this home has t.o otter for only $59.900 Ottering foyer, dramatic 14 6 X 18 great room with fireplace, separate dining room, step saver kitchen complete with dishwasher and solid birch cabinets, laundry/mud room, 3 spacious bedrooms (master measures 12.6 X 16.-4 with walk in closet, 2 full baths, concrete patio FHA, VA, conventional financing available. Call CECO Realty, Inc., 355 6889or Elaine Troiano, 756 6346

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, 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 150's. 758-0144 or 752 7663

2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, 2 full baths, den and kitchen Call after 6, 757 1489    _

4 BEDROOMS. 2 baths, living room, dining room, central heat, well built older home, new roof, on large lot. garage Must sell.

1 WAREHOUSE Metal, concrete floor with office, approximately 4000 square feet On I'/i acre Streets on three s'des. 60.(XX) pound concrete platform scales. Asking $47,000.

Ayden Loan & Insurance Co.

748-3761    746-6474

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Drive A New

1983 Datsun Pickup

For As Little As

per month

Based on selling price of $6265.00. State taxes not included. Down payment or equvalent trade $900.00.9.9 Annual Percentage Rate, 48 monthly payments, finance charges $1180.28, Total of payments'$6665.28.

Datsun Deluxe Lil Hustler

HOLTOLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd

Greenville

756-3115

ACRE LOT Wooded North of Griffon $5200. Call 756 1857_

Vj ACRE TO 5 ACRES, over 1(X) lots to choose from. Locations on Highway 43 south, Chicod Creek, Gntton area, Highway 33 south. Call 757 0277, after 5 p.m. 756 2682

BAYTREE SUBDIVISION

Attractive wooded lots within the city. 90% financing available. Call 758 3421.

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

115

Lots For Sale

BEAUTIFUL LOT in Cherry Oaks, $15,500. One acre lot ideal for mobile home on SR 1762, $6,500. Lot in country, $7,500 Brandy Wine, $9,000. Beautiful lot in Brook Valley, $19,9(MJ. Oakhaven Subdivision, $6,000 SR 1728 $11,000, Millbrook Drive $10,900. Brook Valley Windsor Road $22,000, River front property, % acre $25,500 CEN TUR Y 21 Bass Realty 756 6666

BROOK VALLEY, on golf course. High and dry, trees, beautitui view. Best lot available In Greenville. $25.000. Call owner/agent Louise Hodge (804 ) 794 1532 (evenings) or Mike Aldridge, Aldridge & Southerland Realtors, 756 3500.

COUNTRY LOTS on Eastern Pines water system and in Winterville School District Approved tor houses and mobile homes. Call the Evans Company, 752 2814. Winnie Evans. 752-4224 or Faye Bowen, 756 5258.

EVANSWOOD Wooded building lot on quiet street. $14,000. Call Ball 8, Lane, 752 0025

HUNTINGRIDGE Large lots con venienf to Hospital and Med School. Restricted, FHA and VA approved subdivision with community water. 752 4139. Millie Lilley, Owner Broker.

LAKE ROYALE wooded building lot, Mohawk Drive, 75 x200'. $600(7 756 8722 before 10 p.m

NEWLY DEVELOPED wooded lots now available for building In Tucker Estates. Call The Evans Co , 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258 Winnie Evans, 752-4224.

ORCHARD HILLS 3 lots, FHA/VA approved. 10<X) square feet house minimum. 752 6715 after 5p.m.

READY TO BUILD a home for you on lots in a variety of established areas. Call The Ewans Co., 752-2814. Faye Bowen. 756 5258. Winnie Evans. 752 4224.

2 ACRES, well and septic tank. $13,000. 757 3964

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

For All Your New And Used Car And Truck Needs, Come To HASTINGS FORD. Ask For DALLAS TRIPP And Ill Get You A Good Deal. Well Sell Your Car Or Truck For You. Call Me At 758-0114.

Pool Construction

All Shapes and Sizes

Pool Supplies Chemicals Maintenance

No more expensive weekends or travel. RELAXATION, EXERCISE, AND TOTAL FAMILY ENJOYMENT is what you get when you install an Inground Swimming Pool. Free Estimates

FINANCING AVAILABLE

Greenville Pool & Supply Co.

^BioCuar

758-6131 2725 E. 10th Street

Swimming Pool Chemicals

Portabe

Sportabes

from Bob Barbour!

Why just (drive a car when you can (drive a Jeep! When you go in a Jeep, the fun goes with you!

And were making the fun even better!

No matter where can take a

Buy any Jeep and get a FREE 48-Quart Igloo Cooler!

your Jeep adventures take you, you long all the refreshment youll need, with a FREE Igloo Cooler.

Register to win a portable Video Recorder & Camera!

With this versatile VMS video system the fun never ends. You can record the action wherever you go, and keep it for years to come! Theres no purchase necessary, so stop by & re

(Licensed drivers only.)

register!

BobBarbour

mWAMC/Jeep/Renault

117 West Tenth Street Greenville, NC 758-7200

1-

115

Lots For Sale

8 WOODED ACRES 7 minutes east of Greenville. Owner financing. Good buy!!!!! Darden Realty. 758 1983; nights and weekends 758 2230._

117 Resort Property For Sale

BAYVIEWCOTTAGE

For Sale. Just in time for summer. Hackney High, Broker. Call 946 5586 after 6 p.m

BEACH LOT on Kilby Island Large natural sandy beach. One ot the tew lots left near Bayvlew $25.(XX> Call 756 0046 after 5 30

DUCKS UNLIMITED Pamlico County, 8 acres prime waterfowl waterfront on Goose Creek Island. State road frontage included. Sacri-fice at $3500 per acre. Call 745 3402.

WATERFRONT PROPERTY

Pamlico beach, large lot, $23.000. Captain's Walk, Blounts Bay, $24,000

Bath Creek. Saw Mill Landing. $28,500.

Bath Creek in Bath. NC. $28.000 2 story. 2 bedroom, Pj, bath, Gaylord's Bay, 157,500.

3 story, 3 bedroom, 2 baths. Bay Hills. $130.000.

Call Buckman Realty, 946-2112

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

120

RENTALS

LIST YOUR RENTAL pn with Grier Rental Agency, Charles Boulevard, phone 7'52-S700. We specialize in property manage-ment.______

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call "4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage. Oper day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933

121 Apartments For Rent

AVAILABLE AAAY 1. New 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Drapes, wall to wall carpet, central heat and air, outside storage. Griffon area Office hours 10 a m to 2 p.m., Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. Sunday by appointment only Phone 524 4239 or 524 4821.

IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment. Appliances furnished. No children, no pets. Deposit and lease. 1195 month. 756 5007_,

JOHNSTON STREET APARTMENTS 1 bedroom unfurnished apartments available Immediate. Water and appliances furnished. No pets Call Ju(fy at 756 6336 before 5 p.m., (Wonday Friday._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SWIMMING POOLS

Chemical & Supplies

INGROUNO    start    at    $3,900    Cash

or $390 down and $103.10 per month ABOVE GROUND, 18 Round.    $999.99    Cash

or $89.99 down and $40.18 per month MANY SIZES AND SHAPES

SEABOARD HOME CENTER

602 Grimes Road, Washington. N. C.

946-2156    Call For Appointment

SHOP THE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1982 Plymouth Sapporo ^

2 door, silver with silver veluor interior, 5 speed, loaded, one owner, 11,000 miles.

1982 Datsun4X4Truck

Long bed. White with blue interior, 19,000 miles, one owner.

1982 Olds Delta 88 Royale

Brougham. 2 door. Loaded, diesel engine, 36,000 miles, gray with gray velour Interior.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX

Copper with tan leather interior, T-top, 5 speed,loaded, one owner.

1981 Volvo

4 door, 21,000 miles. Automatic, air, AM-FM stereo, Brown with saddle interior.

1981 Mazda 626

White with gray velour interior, 4 door, automatic, air condition, AM-FM, one owner, 38,000 miles.

1981 Datsun4X4Truck

Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.

1981 Plymouth TC-3

Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.

1981 Mercury Marquu

4 door, tan and brown, beige

beige cloth interior, loaded, 22,000 miles, one owner.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX

2 plus 2. Dark brown, tan leather interior, loaded, one owner,

21.000 miles.

1981 Honda Accord

4 door. Silver, burgundy interior, loaded.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX Turbo

Gold with tan leather interior, loaded.

1981 Datsun 210 Coupe

2 door, 5 speed. AM-FM radio, silver with black interior.

1981 Datsun 210 Hatchback

2 door. Light blue with blue cloth interior, 5 speed, air.

1980 Ford Fairmont

Two tone blue, blue vinyl interior, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, one owner, 40,000 miles.

1980 Buick Skylark Limited

Yellow with light brown velour interior.

1980 Pontiac Sunbird

Silver, burgundy vinyl interior, 4 speed, air, AM-FM stereo,

34.000 miles, looks new.

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.

1980 Pontiac Firebird

Silver with white vinyl interior, automatic,/ air, tilt wheel, AM-FM, one owner, 39,000 miles.

1979 Honda Civic

Silver, 2 door, 4 speed. AM-FM radio, good transportation.

1979 Datsun 210 Wagon

White with blue vinyl interior, 48,000 miles, automatic transmission, air condition, AM-FM stereo, one owner,

1979 Datsun 280-ZX

2 plus 2. Brown with saddle interior, 5 speed, GL package,

20.000 actual miles, like new, one owner.

1979 Olds Delta 88

2 door. Blue with white landau top, white interior, 44,000 actual miles, looks new.

1978 Lincoln Mark V

Yellow, burgundy interior, loaded. 49,000 miles.

1977 Chevrolet Nova

Brown with beige velour interior, automatic, air, AM-FM radio,

56.000 miles, one owner.

1975 Datsun 210

4 speed, air, AM-FM radio, one owner, 52,000 actual miles, red. with black interiorT ^

DISCOUNTS UP TO $2500.00 On These Company Demonstrators AH Vehicles Carry Full Factory Warranty

1983 Olds 98 Regency

4 door, loaded^ moon roof, silver with beige top.

4 door, diesel. Loaded. White with blue top with matching blue interior.

1983 Olds 98 Regency Brougham

4 door, diesel. Loaded. Beige with maroon top with matching maroon interior.

1983 Olds 98 Regency

4 d(X)r. Loaded. White with sable brown top with matching sable interior.

1983 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon

Loaded. Silver sandstone with woodgrain.

1983 Olds Cutlass Ciera Brougham

4 door, diesel. Loaded. White with tan top and matching tan' interior.

1983 Olds Cutlass Calais

Loaded. Light gray fern, bucket seats.

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115





121 Apartment For Rent

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newesi and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen sije beds and studio couches

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-free refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets

Contact JT or Tommy Williams _75*    7815

121 Apartment For Rent

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden

UKW I    i/CXIi    <A>IM    ydl    UCll

apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator,_ dishwasher, disposal

and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located iust oft 10th Street

Call 752-3519

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex. Shenandoah Subdivision 754 5389

uplex.

295

LOVE TREES?

BRAND NEW DUPLEX townhouse 2 bedrooms, IVj baths, l mile from med school and hospital. Available May 15. Deposit and lease *300. 825 4931

CARPETED 2 BEDROOM apartment with patio, near ECU Energy saving heat pump. Appli anees include dishwasher, water, and sewer furnished *250 752 01A3

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'j baths. Also I bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL. 752 1557

UPLEX Near ECU 2 bedrooms, 1 bath *235 per month No pets 752 2040.

DUPLEX 1100 square feet, 1 block from campus. *185 References required. 355 2444

EASTBROOK AND

VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTAAENTS

121 Apartment For Rent

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

121 Apartment For Rent

Two bedroom townhouse apart . Dish

ments. 1212 Redbanks Road washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available

756 4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 754 7815    _

ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus. No pets. *215 a month 754 3923._

ONE BEDROOM close to universi tv. Call after 4. 754 0528. _

Qualify construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash

er, washer/dr^er hook ups, cable

TV,wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Sdturddy    i    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd. 756-5067

NEW TASTEFULLY decorated townhouse 2 bedrooms. I'3 baths, washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump. Efficient *310 per month. 752 2040 or 754 8904

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex apart ment with appliances, washer/dryer hookups, carpet.

central heat and air No pets 754 1821

NEW 3 bedroom duplex near ECU Heat pump, double pave windows, well insulated, ample storage, dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups. no pets. *330 754 5346. 1___

327 one, two and three bedroom

?larden and townhouse apartments, eaturing Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning. clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

SMALL ti-FlLIENLY apartment Student or professional person 754 8785

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

' CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases Furnished

With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates

WE REPAIR GREENS & DOORS

weekly or monthly rates Starting *250 month and up

756-5555 The Heritage Inn

C.L. Lupton Co.

7,,2 61 Ih

ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment, 1 block from university. F(eat, air and water furnished

Short or long term lease. No pets 758 3781 or 754 0889

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. *79 00 per . r REN.fo,

month. Option to 754 3842

SINGLE APARTMENT *140 rent, *140 deposit. Call 758 9 758 evenings

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABl

ILETV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Callus 24 hours a day at

756-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

I. 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex"

1401 Willow Street Office Corner E Im & Willow

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

752-4225

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NEED RADIAL TIRES?

Only

$2500

Down Per Set We Finance Hundreds To Choose From Come In Today

COGGINS WHOLESALE TIRE DIVISION

320 W. Greenville Blvd. 756-1370

121 Apartments For Rent

t AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available immediately. 752 33U.

TOWNHOUSE, 2 bedrooms, I'3 baths, over 1.000 square feet, quiet residential neighborhood. No pets. Couples preferred. *320 per month. Call 754 7314 After 5, 754 4980

TWO BEDROOM apartments available. No pets Call Smith Insurance A Realty, 752 2754

CLASSIFIED DISPLAYThe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, May 15,1983-D-7

121 Apartment For Rent

TWO BEDROOM apartments near college Call 752 4391

TWO BEDROOM duplex apartment        -    -    4317.

and garage in Avden. 744 <

TWO NICE spacious apartments in quiet neighborhood near college 5 room duplex includes washer and dryer hook ups. *260. 2 bedroom apartment Includes water and sew age. *250 754 5991

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartments For Rent 121 Apartment For Rent

VILLAGE EAST : WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, V/i bath townhouses Available now. *295/month 9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

WALK TO UNIVERSITY l

bedroom, utilities furnished *220 per month 754 7417_

NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom. I'j bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer .'dryer hookups, pool, tennis court

756-0987

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY | CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

4.82

Per Day

NO GIMMICKS!

New 1983 Lynx 2 Door

EFFICIENCY 1 bedroom, maid service. *70 week Call 754 5555, Heritage Inn Motel._

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable Tv, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with

abundant parking, . economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 754 4849

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY '

30 X 60 DESK

^169

UMUMOFFKEEIIOIPHIIICO.

4 Corner of Pitt t Green SI.

NO DOWN PAYMENT!

Dtscovex the joys of Engage-A-Cr, the common-sense alternative to BUYING a new car.

If s the modern way to drive any new car, van or truck your heart desires...foreign or domestic. With Engage-A-Car. you can laugh ai 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 Brokers

Pitt Plaza    757-3540

Shopping Center    '3'

NEWOIDS

FIRENZAGT

JUST

S944600*

Low 9.9% financing available to qualified buyers

Here's what a sporty cor ran be when its on OidsmoMe.

The Oids Firenza GT-Hs sporty nside ondout.

RKUNING BUOn SEAIS SPEQFK INTERIOR DOOR TREliMBfTS SPORT STHRINC WHEEL WITH LEATHER GRIPS BOLD RED ACCENTS ON INSTRUMENT PANEL

SPERA RED EXHRIOR WITH SILVER TRIM AND MUCH MORE

Does Not Include Tax And Tags

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

Greenville

756-3115

FREE SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE

5 Wc Make Things Simple!

Discount...............^800.00    V

'    1. Excellent Discount $800.00

Sales Price  .........^6209.00    2. Low Down Payment $500.00

Downpayment..........^500.00    3. Low Interest Rate 9.9%

^vU.wDaUvPav.enf4.82

Buy a new Lynx this month and receive Free     $5709 Oil    o    o<v a in

Scheduled Maintenance for the next 12 months or    4g month tP^ * * t Annual Percentage Rate.

12.000 miles    term,    total    of    payments    $6936.96.    finance

charges $ 1227.96. N.C. Sales Tax not included.

   EAST

TRUCKS

CAROLINA

LINCOLNMERCURY-GMC West End Circle    Greenville.    N.C.    756-4267

GMC

Front Wheel DriveJoe Cullipher Is Growing Again!

Four Wheel Drive

Now Theres

SUBA_RU OF GREENVILLE

A ITS WHAT YOU ALWAYS NEEDED IN THE CLUTCH

jC

A Subaru exclusive the clutch that keeps you from rollmg backwards when stopped on an incline Standard on many manual transmission models

SUBARU GL HATCHBACK STANDARD EQUIPMENT

Rugged roads and poor weather conditions are no problem with the exclusive Subaru Dual Range "On Demand 4-Wheel Drive. Get 46% extra pulling power at the drivers option. Available on GL manual transmission models. See one today.

SUBARU GL HARDTOP STANDARD EQUIPMENT

' Rear window defogger ' Rear wiper/washer ' AM/FM stereo radio with 4 speakers ' Quartz digital clock ' Fully reclining bucket seats Split fold-down rear seats ' Tinted glass ' Tachometer/Voltmeter Resettable trip odometer .Hill-Holder And more

1800 cc engine

Electronically controlled carburetor Standard transmission Power assist front disc brakes Glove compartment vanity mirror Quartz digital clock Tachometer/Voltmeter Resettable trip odometer AM/FM stereo radio with 4 speakers Fully reclining bucket seats And more

SUBARU GL 4WD STATION WAGON STANDARD EQUIPMENT

GRAND OPENING

May 19-21

' Dual Rangetransmission ' Adjustable front and rear suspension ' Tinted glass ' Rear wiper/washer AM/FM stereo radio with 4 speakers Tachometer/Voltmeter Resettable trip odometer Rear window defogger Hill-Holder

Dual halogen headlights And more

Meet The Family Of Subaru And See The Subaru Difference!

SUBARU GL 4-DOOR SEDAN .STANDARD EQUIPMENT

Subaru The Front Wheel Drive Experts ~ Inexpensive. And Built To Stay That Way.

1800 cc engine

Electronically controlled carburetor

Standard transmission

Power assist front disc brakes

Tinted glass

Tachometer/Voltmeter

Resettable trip odometer

AM/FM stereo radio with 4 speakers

Fully reclining bucket seats

Quartz digital clock

And more

SUBARU GL4WD BRAT STANDARD EQUIPMENT

Subaru Of Greenville

605 W. Greenville Blvd.    Greenville,    N.C.

Authorized Parts And Service

Dual Range transmission Tinted glass

' AM/FM stereo radio with 4 speakers ' Tachometer    '

' Hill-Holder

' Telltale graphic monitor Warning chimes Tilt steering wheel (8 position) Temperature gauge Low fuel warning light And more    '

Four-Wheel-Drive Available On All Models Shown Except Brats.

T

Phone 756-8885

Four-Wheel-Drive Available On Hatchbacks, Wagons And Brats.

'f'.    





D-8^The Day Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Sunday, May 15,1983

121 Apartment For Rent

1 BhUROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water turnished. 201 North WOodlawn. S21S 7Sa 0545 or 758 0635 1 BEDROOM, almost new UOO Hooker Road. J19S 756 3611 or 756 3936

2 BEDROOM apartment Central air. carpeted, appliances 804 Willow Street, Apartment 4 $250

758 3311

2 BEDROOM apartment Central air carpeted, appliances $250 a lilis, 7

month ^vton Hifls 758 3311

2 BEDROOM near ECU, utilities Appliances $300 a month. Deposit No pets Available June 1 758 0491 or 756 7809betore9p.m._

2 BEDROOM duplex Energy efti cieni Washer/dryer connections. Excellent location $275 Call 757 0001. 753 4015.

2 BEDROOM apartment $325 per month. Call 756 7647 _

2 BEDROOM, carpet, retrigerator, dishwasher, air 5 blocks from campus. $265 a month. Also duplex. 752 0180,756 3210.    _

2 BEDROOM, furnished. Near ECU No pets or children 756 0173

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT Battle Street $140 a month No children. 758 2546    _ _

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Meade

Street near ECU Central air, range retrigerator, hook ups, $270

7J6 7480    ___________

3

SPACIOUS APARTMENTS

Ayden 746 4978_

121 Apartment For Rent

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, stove, re trigerator. central heat and air

deposit, lease, no pets 756 6834 after 3

3 p.m.

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX 2 story, 1100 square feet on large wooded lot

with creek in the back, E 300ener^^

efficient, brick fireplace wi woodstove. mansard root, cedar cabinets.. 7 closets. $325. Call 756 1447 after 6._ __

122

Business Rentals

FOR LEASE: 3,000 square foot prime retail or office space on Arlington Boulevard. For additional information, call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348

FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocqwinity Call "    '    Sr

Donnie Smith at 946 5887.

FOR RENT Prime retail space. Arlington Boulevard 4500 square feet $4,50 per square foot. Call 756 9315 or 76 5097__

FOR SALE OR LEASE Building in downtown Greenville. Over 5,000 square feet. Call Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 Nights Rod Tuoweil, 753 4302

WAREHOUSE AND office space for lease 20.000 square feet available. Will subdivide. 756 5097 or 756 9315.

2,000 SQUARE FOOT office or retail in Ayden New interior Bookkeeping vault $350 756 7196

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

122

Business Rentals

2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space

for lease in small strip shopping center. Contact Aldridge &

Southeriand Realty. 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 756 5260._

125 Condominiums For Rent

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2

bedroom, IVj bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished. No pets. 82^$ 7321 after S p.m._

127

Houses For Rent

AVAILABLE JUNE 1. 4 bedrooms, 1 block from Pitt Plaza, Oakmont

756 9142 or 756 3500._

FOUR BEDROOM, 2 story older home, 2 baths, 2 kitchens, large back yard. $1M per month. Call 756 9874.    _

LirMICC Cr/*\D DCUT XiAar- a/

HOUSE FOR RENT Near college 3 bedroom, 1 bath on corner lot. Call

756 5824 or 756 1538.

OUTSIDE CITY LIMITS on Mum ford Road. 3 bedroom house, air, $175 per month. 752 7323after 6.

PRIVACY IN COUNTRY Newer 3 bedroom house, also small log cabin. 524-3180_

THREE BEDROOM home in quiet family neighborhood, 3 blocks from University. 110 South Harding Street. Living room, large dining room, wall to wall garpet. Available immediately. Family or mature 758    "

party. $325. 758 5299.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

127

Houses For Rent

TWO BEDROOM HOUSE near University. Available June 1. 756 5077 after 6__

2 BEDROOMS, fireplace, all electric. No pets. Hillcresf Drive. Available June 1. Call 726-7615._

3 BEDROOM HOUSE, 2 baths, living room, family room, double carport. Near Carolina East Mall. $400 Call 758 6200or 756 5217.

3 BEDROOMS, carpeted, stove and refrigerator. Approximately 3 miles from city limits. $210 a month. Call 756-1900,_

3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, kitchen, dining room, living room. Close to

campus. $400 a month plus deposit.

4 ROOM HOUSE with bath for rent. 9 miles south on 43. Call 746-6741.

129

Lots For Rent

SPRING VALLEY ESTATES

Haddock's Crossroads. First month free $40 and $45. 756 7196._

VILLAGE TRAILER Park. Ayden Paved streets, city water, sewage, trash collection. First month free or

c pay moving expenses. 746 2425 752 7148._

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

FOR RENT OR SALE 1973 Bowen. 52x12, 2 bedroom trailer. Call 756-7067.    ___ _

SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes. $135 and

GRANT BUICK-MAZDA, INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

We Have In Stock For Immediate Delivery

LUXURY

1980 Buick Electra Limited 7- 36,000 miles, nice, local car. 1979 Cadillac Coupe De Ville Silver, sharp car!

1979 Buick Electra Limited 32,000 miles, very nice!

1980 Olds 88 Royale Brougham Loaded, very clean. 1980 Chevrolet Caprice Classic Every available option! 1977 Buick Electra 40,000 miles, local car, extra clean.

INTERMEDIATES 1982 Pontiac Bonneville W.hite and burgundy, sharp!!

1982 Olds Cutlass Supreme 4 doo^ burgundy, very clean 1981 Olds Cutlass LS 4 doir, silver and burgundy, low mileage 1981 Buick Regal Limited 2 door, silver, lots of equipment 1981 Buick Century 4 door, beige, cruise. AM-FM with cassette 1979 Buick Century Wagon Light blue, good solid car.

1979 Chrysler New Yorker Fifth Avenue edition, loaded and verv :lean. 12 months, 12,000 miles warranty available ......M495.00

ECONOMY

1982 Honda Civic 4 door, low mileage, very clean 1982 Mazda GLC 2 door,, 12,000 miles, like new!

1981 Honda Accord 2 or, burgundy, pretty car!

1981 Mazda GLC White, nice little car!    

1981 Olds Omega Brougham Cruise, low mileage.

1981 Buick Skylark Limited Every option offered!

1980 Pontiac Phoenix 2 door, white, very sharp!

1978Datsun 510 2 door, low mileage, good car.

SPORTS DEPARTMENT (2) 1983 Chevrolet Custom Vans Both loaded with equipment

1982 Mazda RX-7 Low, low mileage, very sporty

1981 Mazda RX-7 Sunroof, sport wheels, 29,000 miles, like new ' 1981 Chevrolet Custom Van Brand new conversion.

1980 Chevrolet Camaro Red, spoiler, sport wheels.

TRUCKS

1978 Chevrolet LUV Light blue, clean!

1978 Ford F-150 Pickup 48,000 miles, regular gas!

Open; Weekdays 8:30 to 5:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00

Phone: 756-1877

up No pets, no children. 758-4541 or '6 9491

TWO BEDROOM, furnished. No children. No pets. 758 6679.

2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent. Call 756 4687._

2 BEDROOMS, all electric, 6 miles out on New Bern Highway. No pets. 756 0975 _-

2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pets, no children. Call 758-4857. _

2 BEDROOM mobile home tor rent. Furnished, no pets. Deposit re quired. Available May 15 . 752-4008 or 752 5262._ _

2/3 BEDROOMS $135 or $175 Lease, deposit. No pets. Good loca lion. 752 3286, nights 825 5391._

135 Office Space For Rent

DOWNTOWN, just off mall. Singles and multiples. Convenient to courthouse call 756-0041 or 756 3466:

FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or com mercial. 604 Arlington Boulevard. 756 8111__

OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT

Large and small offices in 2700 block of East 10th Street, (Colonial Heights Building). Utilities and janitorial services included. If de sired. Extremely reasonable rates. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348.

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756 7815 TWO OFFICES located on Hwy 264 Business. Just under 300 square feet, $125.00 per month each. Call Clark Branch, Realtors, 756-6336.

137 Resort Property For Rent

ATLANTIC BEACH/ EMERALD ISLE

SUAAMER RENTALS

3/4 bedroom. 2-1- bath units com pletely turnished, most with TVs Sleeps 6 12 on ocean or with fan tasticview. Families only.

Call KETTERER REALTY 1-354-2254

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL

Safe

Model S-1

Special Price

$12250

Reg. Price $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S. Evans St.

752-2175

Rent To Own

CURTIS MATHES TV

756-8990

No Credit Check

JUST RECEIVED

32

1983

Chrysler Corporation Executive Cars WAGONS, 4 DOORS AND 2 DOORS

Fully Factory Equipped

$AVE

5 Year/50,000 Miles Protection Available On These Cars

THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER SAVE HUNDREDS

Joe Cullipher

Chrysler-Plymouth^Dodge

Peugeot

3401 S. Memorial Dr.

Greenville. N.C

I

137 Resort Property For Rent

BEECH MOUNTAIN Condo by day, week or month. Golf, tennis.

swimming.(919 ) 946 3248 days, (919) infg'

946-0694 nights.

BEECH MOUNTAIN condo tor rent by the day, week or month. Tennis, golf and swimming. Call 946 3248 lavs, 946 0694 nights

ESMERALO ISLE Beach house. 2 bedrooms. 2 baths, central air. Weeks of May 29, June 5, August 7, and September 4. i300 a week. 354 3301 _ _

Fully Outfitted CONDOMINIUM

on the ocean at Atlantic Beach for 2, 4, or 6. 752-2579.

NAGS HEAD Remodeled large

cottage, 5 bedroom, 2 baths, ideal fa

for 2 families. Located on the Beach Road, mile post I). Rent Satur day Saturday, month of June, by week or month. $5(X) per week, $1800 month. 975 2748after 7 p.m._

SOUNDVIEW

Four bedrooms. baths. Call 726-7648 or 726 2056.

138

Rooms For Rent

144

Wanted To Buy

USED REFRIGERATOR, 60" high, 30 " wide. Call 758 4254.

TO PLACE YOUR Classified Ad, just call 752-6166 and let a friendly Ad-Visor help you word your Ad.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

BEDROOM, carpeted, air, heat, private entrance. 2 blocks from Ecu Super for male student. References please. 752-3069

LARGE ROOM for rent. $25 week. Rent payable every two weeks or once a month. Hot and cold water. Light cooking. 758 7904 anytime. ROOM FOR RENT share 3 bedroom furnished home near college Businessman or serious stu

dent preferred. 752 6888 days; 752-' nights

7564

SINGLE FURNISHED room for discreet male student or young businessman. $125 month. Nice home near Pitt Plaza. 756-5667.

2 UNFURNISHED ROOMS for rent, $125 month. Share rqst of house, next to ECU Call Steve nights and weekends 758 1406._

142

Roommate Wanted

FEAAALE ROOAAMATE to share house. $140 month Includes utilities. Call Janet 757 7342, 758 4467 after 5.

FEMALE ROOAAMATE wanted fo

share upstairs 2 bedroom apart ment. 4 blocks from ECU Rent

$62.50 a month plus 'it utilities. Call Loretta, 758 6228._

RESPONSIBLE MALE roommate wanted fo share 3 bedroom home with 2 others. 756-5431 days and ask tor Mike, 752 1579 after 6 p.m._

Want fo sell livestock? Run Classified ad for quick response.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

752 61 16

To Buy Or Sell A Business In Confiilence

contact Harold Creech

The Marketplace,

he.

2723 E. 10th St. 752-3666

144

Wanted To Buy

BEASLEY LUMBER Products wilt pay up to $150 per M for good grade standing Pine Timber. Also top

prices paid for good grade Pine logs delivered to Gotland Neck mill.

Call Gene 826 4203.

Baker 826 4121 or

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

144 Wanted To Buy

WANT TO BUY WATER BED

756-5030.___   T

WANT TO BUY outside rabbit cage 752 8288 after 5 30.___

WANT TO BUY used telescope or microscope. Call 756 8681._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Greenvilles Finest Used Cars!

(Located At Hon-*< Store)

1982 Honda Accord Hatch

back

Silver with dove gray interior, 5 speed, air, stereo, hatch release, digital clock, radial tires, 19,(XX) miles.

1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Landau

Light blue with dark blue landau roof, loaded.

A one of a kind car.

1982 Toyota Clica ST

Medium blue with blue interior, 5 speed with 10,000 miles.

(Located At Volvo Store)

1983 AMC Jeep Wagoneer

1982 Honda Prelude

Wine with wine interior, 5 speed, air, stereo with cassette, digital clock, trunk release, rear speakers and alloy wheels.

1981 Honda Civic Hatchback

4 door, chocolate with tan interior, 5 speed, air, stereo, radial tires, trunk release.

1981 Honda Prelude

Silver with maroon interior, 5 speed, AM-FM stereo, radial tires, trunk release, digital clock, and 29,000 miles.

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Light green metallic with greel vinyl roof, fully equipped, a real nice car.

1980 Chevrolet Chevette

Green, 4 speed, air condition, stereo radio, cheap to own.

1979 Toyota Corolla

2 door, white, 5 speed, AM-FM, cheap to own and operate.

1979 Pontiac Firebird

Formula

Silver with maroon interior. An exceptional car. Maintained perfectly.

1978 Honda Civic Hatchback

Limited

Slate blue, like new.

1982 AMC Jeep Scrambler

Low mileage, loaded.

1980 Volkswagen Rabbit

Diesel. Air condition, good mileage, very inexpensive.

1980 AMC Concord Wagon

Nice car. Well taken care of.

1980 Jeep Renegade

Low mileage, blue, 4 speed transmission, sharp.

1980 Renault LeCar

Air condition, stereo radio.

1980 Volvo GLE

Sunrcxjf, air condition, stereo with cassette, leather seats.

1979 Pontiac LeMans Wagon

In good condition, automatic, air condition, nice car.

1978 Audi Fox

Sunroof, air condition, extremely sharp car.

1976 Ford Thunderbird

Power windows, power seats, air condition.

Medium brown, 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo cassette, 57,000 miles.

Bob Barbour

BobBarbour

VOLVOA.VK'Jeep Renaull

300 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500

il7 W Tenth St Greenville 758-7200

The

Real

Estate

Corner

Lexington Square Townhomes

Phase II

Near The GreeaviUe Athletic Club

Open House 1-4 P.M. Sunday, May 15th

2 And 3 Bedroom Units Offered

J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.

3552286

534 CRESTLINE BOULEVARD This lovely 5 year old, two story brick Williamsburg home has 3/4 bedrooms, 2'/t baths. Youll love the spacious rooms, especially the 257"x17'2" Great Room with fireplace & large eat-in kitchen with built-in appliances plus formal dining room. The 24(X) square foot area is equipped with two heat pumps. Attached double carport & storage area. Portion of back yard has board fence. Assumable 9*<^% V.A. loan makes this a very attractive buy for $100,000.

Open House Every Saturday & Sunday 1-5 P.M.

Weekdays call for appointment, 756-8953 No Real Estate Agents, Please.

BETHEL, A NICE PLACE TO LIVE

Three beijroom home with 1V2 baths. Only 4 years old. $40s

825-5631

JAMES A. MANNING AGENCY

Jeannette

Agency, Inc.

Proudly Presents This New Offering

Cherry Oaks Where Life Is For Living

Summer fun for the family will be a dream come true if you become the proud owner of this home only steps away from the pool and tennis courts. A well designed floor plan provides three bedrooms, two baths and formal areas for entertaining. A pretty den with fireplace and adjoining screened porch plus a tremendous playroom ready for any activity. Call today for all the details. $71.000.00.

Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc.

m

ALTOR*

756-1322 Anytimel

BUILDING

LOTS

% moving in .S/ the right ^ direction

toil

moving

too

slow!

Dont wait idb late, like this guy! Only a few lots left. Rosewood Subdivision- paved streets, city water. State maintained streets, FHA and VA approved, restricted covenants, only a five minute drive from Greenville.

Priced from $7,500 to $12,500. Only a few left at this price.

Call us today. By appointment only.

752-3557

Pollard Construction Co., Inc.

East Carolina University Condominiums

The W.G. Blount & Asscwiates announces a new offering. Affordable new brick 2 bedroom, I/i bath condominium locatecfwithin walking distance to the university. 90% financing at 12% is available to qualified purchasers. We have only 6 units that are now available. Why pay rent when you can take advantage of tax deductions and real estate appreciation. An ideal investment for alumni, parents of students and real estate investors. These units are offered at $43,000.

Call

w.g. Mount & associates

756-3000

I





rThe Real Estate Corner

The DaUy ReHector, Greenville, N C.-Sunday, May 15,1983-D-9

OPEN HOUSE SUN DAY 2-4

Red Oak ,    Subdivision

MOM WILL LOVE THE INSIDE - Dad and the

I kiddies wiill love the outside. This charming brick rancher offers 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, living and dining area, eat-in kitchen, carport, central air and convenience! Priced to please-Only $51,900.

Your Hostess: Jan^Butts

NEW LISTING

CONVENIENT TO UNIVERSITY and downtown areas. Th'is 3 bedroom, 1 bath home offers eat-in kitchen complete with range and refrigerator, living room with fireplace and study. All drapes included in this too good to be true deal. Ready for immediate occupancy - a steal for only $41,000.

MAVIS BUTTS REALTY 758-0655

Shirley Morrison 758-5463

Jane Butts 756-2851

HUMTINGRIDGE

Large Residential Lots     Restricted

Convenient Country    . fha-VA Approved Living

Cleared & Wooded Lots Community Water

Ideal Location Near Hospital Complex

Come Out And See Huntingridge MILLIE LILLEY, OWNER/BROKER    752-4139

OPEN HOUSE

TODAY 2:00-5:30 PM

3004 PHILLIPS ROAD

LAKE ELLSWORTH

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Tennis court, swimming pool, and club house facilities. Excellent condition. Assumable FHA loan. Come see today. Hostess; Blanche Forbes 756-3438

REDUCED! Lovely 3 bedroom ranch. Living-dining combination, kitchen, fireplace, utility, and fence in back. Low 30s.

THE WHOLE FAMILY WILL enjoy this 4 bedroom home. Living room, dining room, fireplace, and game room. Low30s.

QUIET COUNTRY living! 3 Bedrooms^ 2 baths, great room with fire(5lace, large storage building. Over 1/2 acre lot. FHA loan assumption, no qualification necessary. High 30's.

VERY SELDOM you find a home for sale in this neighborhood Over 2200 square feet with 3 bedrooms. Huge lot with lots of privacy, many trees, shrubs, sprinkler system, and fenced backyard.

TIRED OF city living? See this beautiful 3 bedroom home. Living room, patio, and carport. Excellent condition. 91/2% VA loan assumption, balance approximately $35,660. High 40s.

WHAT A BEAUTY! This 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch has living room with wood stove, carport, and workshop. Fenced yard. 8% VA loan assumption, balance approximately $32,000, payments $301 PITI.

LOOKING FOR a Contemporary home with a loft? This 2 bedroom, 2 bath home has it. Family room with fireplace, deck,- and garage. $60,500.

UNUSUAL VALUE in low 60 s 3

Bedrooms. 2 baths, den with fireplace, patio, 2 car garage, and more, on large comerlo!.

LOG HOME IN Country! Be the first to own this beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Living room with fireplace. Over an acre lot. MideOs.

YOULL BE PROUD to call this home! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, family room, wood stove, and storage. Immaculate condition. LowTO's

See Our Line Ads

OniUK

B. FORBES AGENCY

756-2121

2717 S. Memorial Dr.

Greenvilles First Century 21 Location OFFICE OPEN TODAY 1-5

Each Office Independently Owned and Operated

GRAND OPENING

and

OPEN HOUSE WEEK

SUNDAY MAY15TH THRU SATURDAY MAY21TH

tBROOK ^llLL TOlDllHOmES

(264 By-Pass West)

2 Furnished Models Open Daily

Sat. & Sun. 2:00-6:00 PM Mon.-Fri. 4:00-7:00 PM

SHARED-EQUITY FINANCING AVAILABLE

Low Down Payment No Closing Costs Payments Less Than Rent

AFFORDABLE TOWNHOMES FROM $42,500

Pool

Tennis Courts Private Patios Convenient Location

t

Energy Efficient Spacious Floorplan 2-2 V2 Baths Fireplace

MOORE&SAUTER

110 s. Evans 758-6050

I

BY OWNER DREXELBROGK-OAKMONT

4 Bedrooms, formal entry foyer, 2 full baths, formal living and dining room, den with fireplace, screened porch, central air, carport with storage room, storm windows, beautiful lot.

Mid 70s INVESTMENT PROPERTY

Two story, very large home remodeled into two apartments, half a block from ECU. . Excellent condition. Over $700 per month income.

Mid 70s CALL 757-6715 OR 756-0788

OPEN HOUSE

SUNDAY 2-6 P.M.

BAYWOOD

Truly unique contemporary featuring 3 bedrooms, great room, all custom kitchen with every modern convenience, massive stone fireplace, 3 large decks and glass panels that provide a magnificent view of the surrounding woods.

Hostess: Betty Beacham, 756-3880

w.g. blount & associates

756-3000

WE HAVE JUST MADE HOUSING AFFORDABLE AGAIN!!

Williamsburg ^Manor

AS LOW AS 539,900

Low Down Payment

$1500.00

Closing Costs Paid By Builder

LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS

303

Principal & Interest

12% APR Fixed Rate FHA 245B Financing

Quality Construction By: Bowser Construction Co.

756-7647

CENTURY 21 Bass Realty 756-6666

. [a

Kay Davis.........

Nanette Whichard.

Sue Henson.......

Thelma Whitehurst Catherine Creech . Deborah Hyiemon.

756-6966

756-7779

756-3375

756-0070

756-6537

752-1809

Sue Castelloiv.... Charlene Nielsen. Anne DuHus .....

Jack Duffus......

Evelyn Barousse..

756-3082

752-6961

756-5395

756-5395

758-9878

SOUTH FORBES

Cornet lot. Three bedrooms, bath, living room breaXlasi area, garage. $23,000 Fix-nup

This three bedroom and bath home on Thirteenth Street needs fixing up Just right tor the handyman Living room, dining room Selling in as is condition $23 000 UNIVERSITY Walk to the university and lorgel about parking! Four bedrooms, bath, living room lamily room, carport $27,500

NEAR DOWNTOWN This cute three bedroom home has been reduced Ideal tor your college siudenl Three bedrooms, bath, living room, dining room, pas heat $29,000

STOKES

Cute bungalow style home near Stokes with three bedrooms, bath, living room, dining area in the kitchen Oil heal $3t,900 CONDOMINIUM Buy a condominium for your student and they will not have to worry about housing. Two bedrooms. 1W baths, living room, dinina room patio $30.900

** CONDOMINIUM Buy this to live in, as an inveslment. or lor your student Two bedrooms, Ite baths, living room, dining area, refrigerator, patio $32,000 UNIVERSITY CONDO Great location. Two bedrooms. t'Y baths, living room, dining area, patio, stove, refrigerator anddisbMMitierjnW j lOmfiHWAI

jranchliorT^ Living

hElsdau

Possible FHA loan assumption Three bedrooms, bath, living room. Iireplace, dining room Quiet street. Use as an investment ot as your home, $39.900

REDUCED

This three bedroom and 1'/5 bath ranch on Pans Avenue has been substantially reduced Living room, recreation room, fireplace Fencing $38,500

WITH WORKSHOP

Just right lor the handyman. Workshop with electricity and sheds lor extra storage. Ranch home with three bedrooms, l'/5 baths, dimng area, living room, garage, central air $40,500 TOWNHOME A really great lownhome with a possible loan assumption Two bedrooms, t'd baths. Irving room, dining area, unfinished basement Wildwood Villas $42,900

AFFORDABU Tou can still buy a home at this low price Yes, three bedrooms and two baths Living room, dining area, garage Hardee Acres $43,000 UNIVERSITY Walk to the university Irom here Three bedrooms, bath, living room with fireplace dining room, patio, slotage. Eastern Street $45.000

CORNER LOT

And a ranch home with three bedrooms and V/i baths. Living room, dining area, carport, central air, storage, fenced rear yard Greenbriar. $45.500.

CAROUNA HEIGHTS Three bedroom and bath, brick ranch home. Living room with fireplace, lamily room with wood stove, carport $46.000

COUNTRY SQUOtE New homes with 10'-i% APR (inancrng. Three bedrooms, IW baths, living room, kitchen Closing costs and points paid

COUNTRY UVING anch home on a large lot with three bedrooms bath, living room, family room, wobd stove. Neat Conley High School, $46,500 COLONIAL HEIGHTS Reduced In price and with four bedrooms and bjo^lhs Living room, dining area, palio

FARMVIUE

Corner ranch home with three bedrooms. baths, foyer, living room, dining area, family room with woodslove, carport $4 7 900 REDUCED-AYDEN This duplex in a choice area has been reduced Two bedrooms, bath, living room, dining room, family room on one side. Two bedrooms, bath, (amlly room on other side Double carport $47,900

COGHIU

Three bedroom , and bath anch home on Collen Road Living room with fireplace, dining area, carport Nice area. $49.000 DUPLEX

In Colonial Village with two bedrooms, bath, living room and kitchen on each side Central air Both sides rented Possible investment opportunity $49.900

CONDOMINIUM FUT Perleci tor the couple starling out. or the couple retiring Two bedrooms, bath, living room, dining area, bay windows, refrigerator patK) $51,000

PAMUCOBEACH '

Here is jrour vacation collage' Three bedrooms, 'bath, Irving room, dining area and sunpofch With some lurnishings

low * APR PLEASANT RIDGE New homes to be built in Pleasant Ridge, Ayden, Three bedrooms. tVi baths, living room, dining area, heal pump Closing costs and points paid $51.900,

EDWARDS ACRES About a year old with living room, dining area three bedrooms and IW baths Paneled garage, central air with heal pump $52.500

KAY DAVIS ON DUTY THIS WEEKEND

EDWARDS ACRES

New homes to be built with tOW% APR FHA or VA, 30 year, fixed rale Imancing Three bedrooms. 1W baths, living room, dining area, garage. Points and closing costs paid $51,900 or $52.900 on wooded lot.

MARYLAND DRIVE You can buy this pretty ranch home under FhA or VAtinancing. Interest tale is only 12% APR Seller wril pay points! Three bedrooms, baths, living room with fireplace, family area central air, gas heat, carport $52,900 STANTONSBURGROAD Near the hospital and medical school Three bedrooms, two baths, loyer, living room, family room with fireplace and buill-ms Fenced yard $53,000

EDWARDS ACRES

Pretty home and pretty lot Three bedrooms, tW baths, living room, dining area, garage. patK) Possible loan assumption $53,900 EDWARDS ACHES New and on a cul-de-sac. Three bedrooms, 1W baths, living room with tireplace. dining area, wood deck, garage FHA or VA, Closing costs paid.

EDWARDS ACRES

New with 10W% APR FHA or VA, thirty year, fixed rale linanclng. Three bedrooms, I/i baths, living room with Iireplace, dining area, deck, garage $54.600

AVDEN

Ideal ranch home with three bedrooms and two baths Living room, dining area, family room, breakfast area. Two car garage, fencing, garden and grape vine. $55,000 HILLSDALE Possible VA loan assumption at 9% APR with payment ol the eguity Loan balance ol approximately $40,500 and payments ol $421 00 Living room with Iireplace. dining room, family room, three bedrooms, bath, three car garage $55.000

KffllUAND DRIVE

Convenient area. Possible loan assumption Three bedrooms and two bath ranch home Foyer, living room, kitchen-dining combmation carport $55.900

N. EASTERN STREH You will like the location and the home Brick ranch with three bedrooms and bath Living room, dining area family room, $56.500 A COUNTRY PUa Impressive older home Lots ol room with approximately three acres ol land Three bedrooms, two baths, living room with fireplace, dining room, family room, country kitchen, carport. Assumable VA loan, $56,900 FOUR BEDROOMS Three or lour bedrooms m this home close to the university Living room with tireplace. dining room, lamily room, 2'd baths $57.000 PLEASANT RIDGE Three bedroom and two bath larmhouse style home on the edge ol Ayden, Great room with Iireplace, dining room, heat pump, garage, deck, tending Possible loan assumption $57,000

GREENWOOD FOREST

10W% APR. lixed rate, thirty year, FHA or VA linanclng on itew homes to be built in Greenwood Forest. Come in and talk to us about floor plans and tinancing,

READYTOSEU Owners wants to sell now' Pretty contemporary Wooded lot. Three bedrooms, two baths, living room, Iireplace. dining room, storage Possible assumption. $57,500 LEWIS STREH Perfect three or four bedroom, two bath home lor university faculty Living room with fireplace, dining room, family room, master bedroom upstairs with bath and study Central air, fencing See this now! $56.500 UNIVERSITY Three bedrooms and two baths withm walking distance ol the university Foyer, living room, lamily room with fireplace, dinino room, fencing $58.900

COUNTRY

Near the hospital and medical school. Foyer, great room, fireplace, dining room, three bedrooms, two baths, breakfast area, barn type storage bolkling. Only a tew years old $56.900

BaVEOERE-REOUCED

This choice rench home has been reduced in price Three bedrooms, two baths, living room, paneled family room, carport, wood deck, new furnace and air Fenced yard $56.900 FIFTHSTREn Three or four bedrooms. IW baths, living room, fireplace, dining room, solarium Walking distance ol the university $59.500 UNIVERSITY AREA DUOEX Live in one side, rent the other Or buy this tor your student or as an investment Two bedrooms, bath. Iwing room, dining area eacn side $58.500

HARDEE ACRES A larger Hardee Acres home with spacious living room with liroplace, dining area, three bedrooms, two baths, lovely screened porch carport Immaculate $59.900.

COLLEGE COURT A ranch home on East Wnghl Road Three bedrooms and two baths, living room, family room, dining area, screened porch, carport $58,900

OWNER SAYS SEU

And the price ol this home in Pmeridge has been reduced Not tar from the medical complex with three bedrooms, two baths, foyer, living room, wood stove, solarium, solar and electric hot water $58.900

WINDY RIDGE

Possible FHA loan assumption. Two story condominium with three bedrooms, 2'^ baths living room, dining room, pretty kitchen Recently painted Fenced patio Very nice $58 900

HORSESHOE ACRES

Less than two years old This delighitui ranch has three bedrooms and two baths Foyer, great room with firepiace, dmmg room carport Near the hospital and medical school $62.000

RIDGE PLACE DUPLEX

Possible loan assumption on this nice duplex Two bedrooms, 1W baths, living room, dining area on each side Reduced to $62.500 RIVER HUS A ranch with everything! Spacious, appealing and neat Three bedrooms and two baths Foyer, living rrxim. formal dining room breakfast area, lamily room with Iireplace Recentlypainled, Fenced rear yard $64,900 WESTHAVEN Nicely landscaped corner lol and a pretty ranch home Three bedrooms, two baths, foyer, living room, formal dmmg room family room with Iireplace, Carport, fencing $65,000 FOREST HILLS Three bedroom and two bath ranch home Foyer, living room, fi.eplace, family room, dmmg room, carport, garage $65,000 CONTEMPORARY If you always wanted a beautiful contemporary on a very nice wooded lot. look no further, this is It! Foyer, great room with Iireplace. dmmg area, three bedrooms, two baths, garage Wood deck Possible assumption Lake Glenwood $67,400

BAYSIDE SHORES Here IS your vacation home and not tar Irom Greenville Three bedrooms. 1'T baths, living room, dining area, garage, deck Heat pump, central air. pier $68.000

CAMELOT

Pretty Three bedrooms, two baths loyer with parquet floot. great room with Iireplace. dmmg room, wood deck Solar hot water system Dorolhy.s Originals drapes and curtains $69 900

ENQlfWOOD

This ranch has it all' Three bedrooms, two baths, living room with fireplace, dmmg areb. family room with tireplace, glass enclosed palio, double carport Separate building has office and storage Beautilully landscaped rear yard $69.900

DEUWOOO

Possible owner linancmg on this desirable corner ranch Three bedrooms, two baths, living room, dmmg area, family room with Iireplace. woodstove. double garage utility shed Fenced $69.900

ELMSTREH Great location and with five bedrooms and 2T baths. Foyer. Iivmg room with Iireplace family room, carport, large lol $71,500 RIVER HOIS For the large or expanding family Four bedrooms and 2'T baths Foyer, livrng room, formal dmmg room, family room with Iireplace. breaklasi area $72.500

FOUR BEDROOM CONDO And these are dilficult to Imd' Foyer, living room, lamily room with fireplace Vn baths fenced patio Close to recreational areas Wmoy Ridge $72,500

POSSIBU ASSUMPTION Pretty three bedroom, two bath larmhouse style m Camelol Foyer, great room with tireplace, lotmal dmmg room, wood deck, Jenn-Aire range Corner lot. $74.500 CHERRY OAKS Two year old corner ranch home. Three bedrooms, two baths, foyer, greai room with fireplace, dmmg room, garage Short walk to recreational area $74,500.

POSSIBLE OWNER FINANCING On this home in Forest Hills Owner may finance at 10% APR lor five years amortized over twenty years Twenty to thirty percent down. Three bedrooms, two baths, loyer, living room, dining room, family room with Iireplace carport $75,000

COUNTRY UVING Three bedrooms and two baths Great room with fireplace, Oming room, spacious kitchen double garage, workshop, m-grouno pool, deck and patio About one acre, possible assumpiioh Reduced to $75,000 REDUCED

Four bedrooms and T'd baths m Gritton Foyer living room, ulnmg room, breaklasi area, family room with Iireplace. garage $75.000 CAMaOT

A nice ( home

Enlranu 'tllA gre

dmmg    _____

STANTONSBURGROAD

A three bedroom and 2'd baiti ranch on a nicely landscaped lot Living room, dmmg room, family room, two fireplaces wood stove insert Double carport, gas tieal. 32 x 28 outside building with electricity and hall bath $78.000

CHERRY OAKS Spacious ranch Three bedrooms, two baths foyer, living room, dmmg room family room with fireplace, garage $78.500 GREAT AREA And I great ranch home in Drexelbrook Three bedrooms, two baths, foyer living room tormal dmmg room, family room with Iireplace carport. $79,900

CONTEMPORARY

In Wesinaven III Great room with tireplace dmmg area, three Dedrooms' two baths ottice wood deck carport Possible loan assumption $82,500

CAMELOT

A beautiful ranch on a nicely landscaped lot A home ihal you can be proud ol Three bedrooms, two baths, loyer great room with fireplace dmmg room, wood deck qaraoe $84 900

WESTHAVEN

An immaculate Williamsburg with three bedrooms and 2'i baths Foyer with parquet floor living room tormal dmmg room family room with tireplace and built-ins, beautitui kitchen and breakfast area with Jenn-Aite range and custom cabinets storage builOinq $85.500

FOREST HILLS

A perfect area lor you A lovely three bedroom and two bath ranch tiome Foyer living room dining room, family room with tireplace, 'ecreation room, wooded lot. All this for only $86,500

LOVaY RANCH

In Tucker Estates Triree bedrpoms. two baths, loyer. great room with fireplace, tormal dinng room double garage large wood deck $87 500

CONTEMPORARY

Lake Ellsworth A great area to live and an impressive contemporary Three bedrooms. 2'-! baths, greal room with fireplace, dmmg room, breakfast area, playroom garage iwo decks, convenient to hospital areas $89.500 TtVO STORY TKAOrnONAl With tour bedrooms and 2-! baths m Brook Valley Foyer, living room, formal dmmg room, family room with fireplace, wood deck, oil heal and hot water, wood stove Possible loan assumption $92.500

COIUMBM.NC

Great lor retirement or peace and quiet On Albemane Sound Five bedrooms. 3'r baths living room, dmmg room family room, two lireplaces, screened porch, about 14 acres Renovation needs to be completed $95,000

FOUR BEDROOMS In Brook Valley Entrance toyer. Irvmg room tormal dmmg room, family room with Iireplace large closets and attic area, two baths double garage, wooded lol $99 ,500

BROOK VALLEY REDUCED This pretty ranch home has been reduced price Across Irom the pool and club house but secluded by trees it has four bedrooms and 2'i baths Recreation room or tilth bedroom, loyer, living room, dmmg room, family room with Iireplace large double garage $99.900

QUADRIPLEX An investment lor you' Four units each having two bedrooms; i'-r baths, living room and kitchen-dmmg combination Patios Possible loan assumption $130,000

BROOK VALLEY Spacious Williamsburg with four bedrooms and 2'i baths Foyer, iivmg room tormal dining room, family room with fireplace Pegged lloors m master bedroom and den Kitchen with many cabinets Extra wide crown molding and charraif nine tool ceilings Large wooded lot $132,000

McGREGOR DOWNS

Extra spacious and delightful contemporary with four or five bedrooms and 2't baths Foyer, living room, dmmg room large family zoom with fireplace pretty kitchen breaklasi area, wood deck screened porch, garage Large wooded lot $150 OOO

LYNNDALE

Impressive Six bedrooms four Paths Foyer with fountain living room with fireplace dmmg room breaklasi area family room with fireplace and wet par. comlortable study, screened porch, carport $160.000

FIVE BEDROOMS in Lynndale Foyer, living room extra large dmjng room, family room two fireplaces screened porch, garage Perleci for the larger lamily Additional areas that can rte Imished $169 500

GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB

. One of a kind Fpyer with tne tioor sunken living room spacious dmmg room, family room with fireplace, lour bedrooms. 3'/; baths, sun porch brick patio garage one acre wooded Beautiful $165,000

HOUYHILLS Miniature Estate Three beautilu' landscaped acres Fabulous ranch with lour bedrooms, irtree baths, foyer sunken iivmg room, torrnal dmmg room lamily room solarium two lireplaces garage decks targe fenced swimming pop!

LOT FOR SALE

Only 25'% down and possible owner Imancmg on rememfler Choice comer loi m Branoywme Subdivision $11.000

AYDEN CRIFTON LOT Between Ayden ano Gnllon this lol may be lust what you are looking tor' $7 OOO McGREGOR DOWNS Large and wooded lot Space galore tpi your nice home $14 50C

COMMERCIAL LOT This lol on Commerce Street already has the parking lot installed $20 000 .

RED OAK LOT Spacious ipl with nice trees Buiid your new homenere $9,500

DUFFl

JS REALT

YINC.

OPEN SATURDAY

756-5395

OPEN SUNDAY

9 TIL NOON

201 Commerce Street

1-5 P.M.

Greenville. N.C.

T





L) lt)-TheDaily ReHector,Greenvle,*iay 15,1985

The Real Estate

Corner

STEVE EVANS & ASSOCIATES

INC.

SAVE CLOSING COSTS!

Assumable loan at 9%% with payments of 293.72. bedrooms. Vh baths, fireplace in den, outside patio with storage A beautiful well kept condominium.

NEAR ECU

Convenient to all schools, shopping, etc., 3 bedrooms 2 baths, livingroom with fireplace, basement area, study, with screened in porch for those summer cookouts

WANT TO GET AWAY FROM THE CITY HUSTLE 4 BUSTLE?

3 bedrooms, bath or large, lot. Owner will finance at 10%. Only 24,900 00. Extra lot available also.

FARMERS HOME

3 bedrooms. 1 bath, large lot. no city taxes payments could be as low as $150 00 per month if you qualify

IDEAL STARTER HOME

1100 square feet. 3 bedrooms, fenced in yard, no city taxes for only 37.500. ,

REAL ESTATE INSURANCE & INVESTMENTS

919-355-2727

[S

NOW

Is The Time To Build Your NewiHoiiie

Build Now While Interest Rates Are Sown Build Now Before Material Prices Increase

Let Bowser Construction Company Quality Construct Your New Custom Home. We Have Building Lots Available In The Following

Subdivisions:

Club Pines Bedford Lake Ellsworth Cambridge

BOWSER

The Name Of Quality Call Now For Details

756-7647

Jeannette

COX

Agency, Inc.

*225,000

147,800

MEMORIAL DRIVE - 4 bedrooms, .3 12 baths, exquisite..........

LYNNDALE - 4 bedrooms, 3 1^2 baths, playroom .................

RIVER - 4 bedrooms, greatroom, pier, sandy beach....................140,000

FOREST HILLS - 4 bedrooms. 2 1 '2 baths, sun porch    133,900

COUNTRY CLUB - 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, great floor plan...............130,000

BROOK VALLEY - 4 oSOliOioms, 3 baths, unique contemporary . 120,000 LYNNDALE - 3 bedrooms, 3 haths. playroom.............*.........;    120,000

BROOK VALLEY - 4 or 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge family room . COUNTRY - 4 bedrooms. 21,2 baths. Florida room ... FOREST HILLS - 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, recreation room'......

BEDFORD - 4 bedrcomQ[/0baths. Under Construction.....

BROOK VALLEY - 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, garage......

119.000

115.000

111.000 110,000 109,000

BROOK VALLEY - 4 bedSOU 1 2 baths, garage....................109,000

CHERRY OAKS - 4 bedrooms. 3 12 baths, farmhouse.....

CLUB PINES - 4 bedrooms. 2 1 2 baths, garage..........

BROOK GREEN - 4 bedrooms. 212 baths, contemporary......

COUNTRY - 4 bedrooms. 2 1 2 baths. 3 1 2 acres.................

CLUB PINES - 4 bedrooms, 2 1 '2 baths, garage.......

CLUB PINES - 3 bedrooms. 212 baths, greatroom .............

BETHEL - 4 bedrooms. 2 1 '2 baths, beautiful moldings and floors COUNTRY - 4 bedrooms. 2 1 2 baths; 3 acre lot on lake..........

TUCKER ESTATES - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage...............

CHERRY OAKS - 3 be^i^JjiJ) 2 1 2 baths, screened proch........

RIVER - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. cieckjQfii^r.

CHERRY OAKS - 4$OtoD^^ 3 baths, recreation room.......

CHERRY OAKS - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wooded lot.............

WESTHAVEN 3 bedrooms. 2 1 2 baths, garage.......

STRATFORD - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, contemporary.............

STRATFORD - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Salt Box QUAIL RIDGE - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, flat. ,

CHERRY OAKS .I bedrooms. 2 1 '2 baths. 1() 1 2'ii loan assumption .

CHERRY OAKS - 3 bedrooms. 2 haths. playroom............

LAKE GLENWOOD - 3bedrooms, 2 baths, greatroom..............

RED OAK - 3 bedroorns. 2 baths, screened porch..................

WESTHAVEN - 3 hediJQ^sO baths, garage ............

ti

TUCKAHOE - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage UNIVERSITY Duplex, 3 years old-excellent investment

HORSESHOE ACRES - ,3 bedrooms. 2 baths, carport  ................. 63,500

SPEIGHT SUBDIVISION - 3 heu&GNLD baths garage    :    59,900

COUNTRY 3 bedrooms, 2 haths. greatroom.............. 52,900

YORKTOWN - Fownhousc. .3 bedrooms, 2 1 '2 baths .    49,900

HILLSDALE - 3 ncdrorSiO.LE^th, remodeled    35,900

OFFICE BUILDING OakmcSOLD    150,000

CHOICE OF BUILDING LOTS IN BROOKVALLEY AND HOLLY HILLS.........

107,500

101,900

100,000

99,400

94.500

91.500

89.900

89.900

89.900

89.000

87.500 85,600 85,300

85.000

82.900

81.900

79.900 73,800

71.000

69.500

69.500

68.500

65.900

64.000

Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc.756-1322 Anytime!

#

1P/i% FHA/VA financing available! New home in Camelot subdivision nearing completion. In just a couple of weeks you can move into this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, cedar siding home. Fireplace in activity room, separate dining room. Will pay up to 4 points plus closing costs.

Call US now at 752-2814

Or

Winnie Evans 752-4224

The Evans Company

Faye Bowen 756-7426

tSw.

Of GreenviUe Inc

I Dfvetopn Ae#7f<yj

701 W. Fourteenth St. Greenville. N.C.

e MIES!! NEW PRICES!!

NEW SHIES!! NEW LISTINCS

A DUPLEX IN THE COUNTRY. Nearly one acre of land and lots of room to roam go with this neat duplex to be built near the Hospital Complex. Over 1800 square feet of heated area with living room, two large bedrooms, dining area, kitchen, storage area and deck. FHA-jA|f inpWn| avataWe at the new low rate of 11'/2%. SELLER p1m| |LLf i|CO|n1pOINTS AND CLOSING COSTS at the prMliiwil(iU ^

BRAND NEW LISTING AND ANOTHER ONE OF A KIND. A real contemporary located within walking distance of the University. Nearly 2200 square feet of heated area in this Unique trilevel with large living-dining room with fireplace, great kitchen with lots of cabinets, den with fireplace, three or four bedrooms, study or work area, three bedrooms, two full baths. LOTS OF EXTRA'S like large patio, 6 wooden fence for privacy, wooded lot, lots of glass, leveler blinds. Must see to appreciate. Priced to sell at $65,000.

GREAT LOCATION, NEAR SCHOOLS, CHURCHES, THE UNIVERSITY. Just like a doll house inside and a great little yard and fenced in area for the kids. Plan features great room with fireplace and wood stove insert. Dining room with built-ins, kitchen with worlMua^Wk tivee haWooms. two full baths, large carport with stAteeffseplte wrRhop with electricity:

THIS HOME IS TOO GOOD A DEAL TO LET PASS BY. Yoi

couldn't begin to match the quality of construction in this home at today's prices. Located at 104 Ragland road in Winterville this fine home features almost 1800 square feet of heated area with foyer, large formal living and dining room, kitchen with lots of cabinets and eating area, family room with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, extra large garage with good storage area, enormous corner lot, partially fenced in with room for a garden this summer. Priced tp sell at $65,900. PEOPLE KNOW THAT THIS IS A GOOD BUY, that's why there's so much activity. Located at 300 Westhaven Road in convenient Westhaven Subdivision. House has appraised tor more than the asking price, but owner has transferred and needs to sell. Almost 1600 square feet of heated area plus a garage. Floor plan features foyer, formal living and formal dining room, large kitchen with eating area, family room, three bedrooms, two full baths, nice corner lot with fenced in back yard. Priced to sell at $59,900.

THE PRICE HAS BEEN GREATLY REDUCED on this great buy at 1103 Cortland Road in Orchard Hill Subdivision. A real bonus is the extra large lot (most of which is fenced in), lots of room for pets or a garden. Good floor plan with living room with fireplace, kitchen-eating area opening onto a deck, three bedrooms, two full baths. Garage. Possible VA Loan Assumption with balance of approximately $45,500. Priced at $51,900. NEW LISTING AND ITS ONE OF A KIND. Approximately 3V2 acres of land on a hilly lot only minutes from downtown Greenville. Located at 102 Chippendale Drive in Oakhurst Subdivision. Lots of glass and light abound in this plan which features large family room with cathederal ceiling, spacious kitchen with separate eatinMt|a^i^|| dirji^room, foyer, sunken living room, three belliKBs, wJfulllatB, tremendous deck, small basement for    $104,500.

NEW LISTING NEAR THE UNIVERSITY. Schools, churches and the college all nearby this one owner home at 802 Forest Hills Circle. There are many features such as a separate den or study with fireplace, large foyer and formal living room with fireplace, formal dining room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Nice hardwood floors throughout. Located on a wooded corner lot. Nearly 2000 square feet of heated area priced at $72,000.    '

TWO NEW HOMES UNDER CONSTRUCTION in Orchard Hill subdivision. These homes similar to those pictures above offer floor plan unique to the area. Just being started you may still pick out colors, etc. for these floor plans which feature walk around fireplace, dining area, great room, nice kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. SELLER PAYS ALL DISCOUNT POINTS AND CLOSING COSTS ON FHA-VA FINANCING PLANS. Prices start at $54,900. Call for more info.

TWO DECKS ON THIS TWO STORY HOME are a great place to spend the spring and summer. Yes, one deck off master bedroorin, and another large deck off the back of the house. Very functional floor plan with foyer, formal living and dining rooms, great kitchen with extra large eating or sitting area, family room with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, garage for car or storage. IF YOU HURRY there's still a 10/2% fixed rate loan assumption possible. Loan balance of approx. $49,000 with payments of $544.00 PITI. Priced at $69,500.

IN A CLASS BY ITSELF! This custom built home has lots of extras worth paying extra for. Like a kitchen skylight, wood-stove insert, ceiling fan, extra large deck and many other features. Great room with fireplace, dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, large heated utility room. $63,500.

WE KEEP TELLING YOU SO YOUD BEHER LISTEN! You just cant find a buy as good as this home at 264 Circle Drive in popular Hardee Acres Subdivision. Owner wants to sell and he's priced it accordingly. Plan features living room, large kitchen-dining area, three bedrooms, 11/2 baths, garage, nice lot. Another plus is a possible 8% Fixed rate FHA loan assumption with payments of $262.12 PITI and loan balance of approx. $27,800. Priced at $48,500.

NEW HOME UNDER CONSTRUCTION in Section II of Orchard Hill Subdivision. A really different floor plan with lots of different features such as walk-around fireplace, skylight and work island in kitchen. Plan features great room, dining room, very convenient kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths, patio. Lots of privacy SEl^ LL iH^OUNT POINTS AND aOSING COSTS.    11V2%. Priced at

McGREGOR DOWNS. Good buy on a contemporary in McGregar Downs Subdivisions. Located near the hospital and medical school yet lots of land and privacy. Unique floor plan offers large entrance foyer, sunken living room, formal dining room, kitchen with loads of cabinets, two bedrooms and a study. Lots of windows, Big double garage. A good price for this area at $72,500.

JUST LISTED. IN A CLASS ALL BY ITSELF. Lovely two story southern colonial on a big beautiful lot in Brpok Valley Subdivision. Lots of care went into this home with over 3600 square feet of heated area alone. In addition there's basement area hard to find in this area. Marble foyer accents a curved stairway which leads upstairs to three large bedrooms and two full baths. Downstairs includes formal living and dining room, large family room with fireplace, big kitchen with loads of cabinets and big eating area, master bedroom and bath, large utility room. Lots of features such as cedar lined storage, slate floors, double garage, balcony, golf course lot. Located at 218 Churchill Drive. Priced at $175,000.

The D.G. Nichols Agency

752-4012

752-7666

I

OPEN HOUSE

SUNDAY, MAVIS and MAY 22 2:00 to 5:00 PM

CLUB PINES

547 Crestline Blvd. Greenville, NC

TWO-STORY CEDAR-SIDED CONTEMPORARY Heated Interior - 1856 sq. ft.

Double Oarage - 500 sq. ft.

Decks-    200    sq.ft.

Wood-parquet floor - large entry closet GREAT ROOM WITH DINING AREA Carpeted, cathedral ceiling, large brick fireplace with glass doors KITCHEN

Eating area, dishwasher, disposal BATHS-2M2 BEDROOMS-3

Master Suite-1st floor 2 bedrooms - 2nd floor STUDY/PLAYROOM WALK-IN, FLOORED ATTIC STORAGE HEAT PUMP

THERMOSTATICALLY CONTROLLED VENTILATION FAN -AHIC LARGE WOODED LOT - Many American Holly Trees LOW$90s

Shown at other times by appointment. Call Carmen or Greg Goodmon 756-9332

JEANNETTE COX AGENCY

REALTOR

756-1322

1516 Greenville Blvd.

IF YOU ARE MOVING TO GREENVILLE

Call 756 13J2 or write P 0. Box 667, Greenville, N .C. for yoor free copy of "Homes For Livinp", a monfhly publication packed wifli pictures, details and prices of homes and available iKally.

IF YOU ARE A60VING TO A NEW CITY

Get yoor free copy of "Homes For Livine", in the city you are going to. Know the real estate market before you get there Your copy Is in our oHice. We can help you buy, sell or trade a home any place in the nation.

$79,900-Did you know an 8 1/2% VA loan still existed? Ideal location in country. No traffic and plenty of play room. 2856 square feet, 4 bedrooms,. 2 1/2 baths, extra large recreation room,.family room with fireplace, formal dining room, large utility area. Heat pump, 28x40 detached building. Ideal for workshop, beauty shop.

$62,900 - We're proud to offer you this super nice home. Absolutely immaculate inside and out. Versatile plan. Features 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, family room, dining room, carport and beautiful extra large backyard. Central heat and air. Located near all schools. Assumable 9% loan.

$30,900 You wont find a better buy anywhere. Make an offer and youll see. Payments approximately same as rent. Appliances furnished. Why not build equity and enjoy the Interest tax writeoff.

$31,500 - Just married and transferred makes this affordable condominium for sale. Ready lor occupancy. 2 bedrooms, baths. Near pool for your summer enjoyment.

NEW LISTING - Priced In the S30's, Family room, kitchen-dining combination, 3 bedrooms, carport. hardwood floors, brick exterior. Located in country subdivision. No city taxes lowers your payments.

f





THE REAL ESTATE CORNERThe Daily Renector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Sunday, May 15,1983-D-ll

w.g. blount & associates

REALTORS - DEVELOPERS

756-3000

GRAYLEIGH-lf you like Williamsburg, you will love this. Large den with fireplace, dining and brmal living room, 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, garage with deck, $110.000.

STATELY SOUTHERN MANSION Completely renovated, located in a small town near Greenville. 4 bedrooms, V/i baths, 4 fireplaces, screened porches. Must see to appreciate. Price reduced to $120,000.

UNIVERSItO^ lEa^lth Street Excellent pro^ktt/y\iMnLMsl^afeople.

CLUB PINES-targe great room witn ouiit in cabinets, fireplace, large desk. 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths. Garage, all brick, energy efficient. Call for details.

NEW LISTING - Perfect for the family that prefers a small town. Large corner lot, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage $69,500.

VILLAGE EAST TOWNHOUSES

We are pleased to offer 7 townhouse units located near the university at Cedar Court. Each of these units have 2 bedrooms. IV2 baths, all kitchen appliances, storage building and patio with privacy fence. New brick with central heat and air - G.E. heat pump. 1050 square feet. Special financing on these. Call for details. $41,900.

LOTS

Evanswood Subdivision From $9.000 $12,000

Belvedere Subdivision $13,900

Club Pines Subdivision $16,500

Grayleigh Subdivision From $23,500 $24,000

Bedford Subdivision From $20,000 - $27,000

Moving? Anytown, U.S.A.

Call Our Relocation Center 1-800-523-2460 Ext. G-704

We have trailer tracts, farms and commercial properties for sale, lease or we will build to suit. Call us for all of your real estate needs.

Bob Barker. ...975-3179^ Bill Blount 756-7911

Betty Beacham . 756-3880 Stanley Peaden. 756-1617

Let

Home Federal show you the way heme.

Now is a good time to buy. When youre ready, remember THERES NO PLACE LIKE HOME.

HOME FEDERALS 77 years of experience helping customers with complex real estate matters is reason enough to get your HOME LOAN with us. But, we also offer FIXED-RATE, LONG TERM FINANCING to qualified borrowers, and FRIENDLY, PERSONAL SERVICE.

HOM FDRAL SAVINGS

AND LOAN ASSOOAHON

OF EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA ,

HOME Of FICE    IVJJi*

543 Evans Siraal, Graanvilla, N C 7583421

RANCH Of FKES

216 Arlington Boulavard, Oraanvilla. N C T5&2772

206 E WatarStreal. Plymouth. N C 793-9031

205 W Railroad Straat, Bathal, N C 8258781

ESTATE REALTY COMPANY

752.50S8

10%FHALOAN...

Assumable with payments less than rent; two bedroom home with fenced corner lot. Call for details-only $28,500.

YOU WILL LOVE...

The large family room; three bedroom home with heat pump plus lot of other fine features. Assumable loan with total payments of only $350 -sales price $32,900. Griffon area.

VERY ATTRACTIVE HOME WITH...

Large living room, dining area, one - car garage, central air - excellent condition. Only $42,900 in Aydenarea.

NEED FOUR BEDROOMS?...

Then read on: large family room, two baths, fireplace in living room, central air, corner lot with fenced backyard - only $56,500.

APPROXIMATELY 13 MILES WEST...

Three bedroom home with two baths, large living room with fireplace insert, detached garage, swimming pool, fenced backyard. Country living for only $67,500.

SPACIOUS FIVE BEDROOM HOME WITH...

3Vz baths, all formal areas, family room, two - car garage; situated on 1.2 acres. Call for additional details.

Jarvis or Dorlis Mills 752-3647

<# Billy Wilson 758-4476

e

INVESTMENT PROPERTIES

29.500Near E.C.U.1st Street, rental. 4 bedrooms, down payment of $6,000, payments less than monthly rent. Good tenants.

45.000Duplex. University area. 2 bedrooms. 1 bath each side.

48.500Investment property near ECU.. 2 story home, remodeled into 3 apartment units. Net rent $500.00 per month. Ten blocks from campus.

49.900106 Emmas Place. Duplex, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath each side. $400 per month income.

55.000Grimesiand. Service station with 5 acres of land. T9.

55.000DUPLEX. $6,000 per year income, close to ECU. good condition, excellent return. C12.

59.500Riverbluff. Duplex. 1550 square feet total. 2 bedrooms each side, assumable financing, balance of $37,000.00. Age 2'/! years.

65.000Commercial building, Dickinson Avenue. 8640 square feet heated, large paved parking lot.

220.000Eight unit apartment building, walking distance from E.C.U.. Excellent construction, low maintenance.

We have A Number Of Locations For Multi-Family Property

205.000Homes of this caliber are not available in the Greenville area very often. Located around several outstanding properties at Route 9, the home has 3800 square feet, sits on 4 acres ol land with horse stable, riding area, and swimming pool. Interior features 3 bedrooms with potential (or 5.' format areas, huge family room with fireplace, recreation room, many extras.

121,900Prestigious four bedroom home featuring all formal areas, office, playroom, 2 full and 2 half baths. Lovely color scheme, many extras.

110.000Farmville. Beautiful Williamsburg under construction. All formis, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, gigantic fireplace in den, large lot. detached double garage, over 2500 square feet.

99,500Tree Tops. The country lifestyle with city convenience'. 3 bedrooms including master suite, office, great room with fireplace, fdrmal dining room with stained hardwood floors. Almost new and immaculate. Only a transfer makes this home available.

I SHEUiHBOlLH YILLUGE

loSLi

2BPRM1

ALDRIDGE & SDUTHERLANO Phone 756-3500

Shenandoah Village Townhouses Begin At $39,900

Builder Pays Discount Points And Closing Costs

Down Payment Only $2000.00

Monthly Payments Comparable To Rent

Over 1,000 Square Feet Of Heated Area Excellent Location

Frost Free Refrigerator With Ice Maker

G.E. Appliances

Professionally Landscaped And Decorated

No Exterior Maintenance Or Landscaping

Private Patio

With Conventional Financing, Buyer Paying Closing Costs. Price as low as $36,500.

98.500Rock Springs. Over 4,000 square feet of elegance, including 5 bedrooms, 3 full baths, and 2 half baths. Formal entry foyer, gracious traditional design. Kitchen equipped for the gormet with sunpy breakfast area, banquet sized family roomi triple carport area.

92.500Brook Valley. Unbelievable contemporary styling! View of golf course from elevated deck. Family room wilh cathedral ceiling, 3 bedrooms. 3 full baths, private office. Guaranteed to knock your socks off I

92.500Assumable VA loan! 2 story traditional home located in Tucker Estates. 4 bedrooms. 2V2 baths, lovely kitchen with Jenn-Aire range, family room with fireplace and formal areas. Only 3 years young.

.89,900-Brook Valley. Dramatic contemporary ranch! 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, all formal areas, den with fireplace, deck, playroom and beautiful fenced back yard.

89.900Peace and quiet. Beautiful home on over an acre sized lot. 2100 square feet of heated area, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large family room wilh fireplace, formal areas, double garage. Low interest financing available.

89.500Over 5,000 square leet within walking distance of the downtown area. Excellent house for fraternity:

85.000Lakewood Pines. Very desirable home in this beautiful area. Wooded and landscaped lot. richly paneled interior, immaculate attention to detail. Includes oltice with fireplace!

84.900Country living with convenience. Abundant acreage with beautiful Williamsburg, located only 5 miles from Greenville. This 4 bedroom home could be the one! Call for details.

83.000Contemporary Wooded, private setting. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, high ceilings, 2 fireplaces, spacious deck under shady trees. If you are a contemporary lover, youve got to see this one!.

82.500Rustic contemporary situated on 1 acre wooded lot. Large great room with vaulted ceiling and fireplace, with loft overlooking room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge deck, garage and storage room. Just lovely!

79.900Aydens finest! Over 2500 square feet of heated area, with extras too numerous to mention! 4 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, huge rec room thats fantastic! Musi see!

79.900The Pines. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large country kitchen, formal dining room, family room wilh fireplace-woodstove. and lovely lot.

79.500Cherry Oaks. Sunken great room with fireplace, feeling of space as great room opens into kitchen with eating area. 3 bedrooms, including master suite. Really super interior!

79.500Camelot. Dramatic contemporary on heavily wooded, private lot. The best is in every room, from kitchen wilh built in microwave and Jenn-Aire. to the spacious bedrooms with wonderful view of downstairs den, or the trees outside. Includes double garage and plenty of decks.

79.500Drexelbrook. 4 bedroom ranch, formal bnlry foyer, formal living and dining room, den with fireplace, double garage, wooded lot.

79.000"The Pines Ayden. Nearly 2000 square feef on a beautiful wooded lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with fireplace as well as a den with fireplace. 2 car garage and extra insulation installed overhead and underneath the floors.

78.000Cherry Oaks. 9*/o assumption! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, sunken great room wfth old brick fireplace, slate foyer, super floor plan!

77.900Tucker Estates. Beautiful Williamsburg!3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, ftuge kitchen with separate eating area, family room wilh fireplace. E18.

76.900Tucker Estates. Williamsburg! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room with fireplace, kitchen wilh eating area, well decorated, better hurry on this one!

74.900Westhaven. Fantastic is the only word for this family rOom. Double sized with bay window, also 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, formal areas, screened porch, fenced yard, new carpet and energy efficient.

74.500Lake Ellsworth. Large 4 bedroom, 2 bath ranch. Formal living room and ining foom, den wilh fireplace, roomy kitchen with separate breakfast area. Assumable loan with low equity. J45.

ON DUTY THIS WEEKEND RAY SPEARS.................758-4362

756-3500

Aldridge r' Southerland Realtors

LOOKING FOR A HOME?

Dial PHONE A HOME and leam all about our newest listings 24 hours a day!

756-5522

74.500Tucker Estates. You wont believe this one! Fantastic describes this home and this location. Formal entry foyer, living room and dining room. Huge family room with fireplace, modern kitchen with eating area. 3 bedrooms including master suite. Dont miss it!

72.500University rea. Located in solid residential area but still close to E.C.U. 3 bedrooms. 2V2 baths, formal areas, cozy family room, kitchen with many nice features, beautiful Jot.

71.900Location! Perfect for shopping, close to everything! Formal areas. 4 bedrooms, huge workshop, garage and carport.

69.900Right on the 14th Green! Beautiful view, lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with all formal areas. J41.

69.500Dellwood. Assumable loan, 3 bedrooms, 2 full balhs, formal living and dining rooms. Completely remodeled kitchen, family room wilh fireplace, rec room, new carpel throughout, huge back yard.

67.500Belvedere. Well cared for 3 bedroom ranch. Great room with fireplace, formal dining area, kitchen with eating area. Beautiful landscaping!

67.500Westwood. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch in mint condition. Large den with fireplace and built-in desk and bookshelves, covered patio and double garage.

66.900Red Oak. Almost an acre lot on quiet, traffic free circle. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace.

66.900Convenient location. Alexander Circle. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, separate office for dad. great room with fireplace, gourmet kitchen, enclosed porch area, double garage. Super interior!

66.500Red Oak. Custom built ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den with fireplace, double garage, lots of extras!

66.500Oakhurst. Beautiful split level in this quiet, popular area. Huge family room wilh fireplace wilh room for playroom or office. 3 bedrooms. 2V2 baths, formal areas, fenced back yard.

66.000Camelot. 3 b^Yfkori^lilth cfflf^porary that features Great room MUMfoodltJve, llrgJmaster bedroom and garage. T10. V../ L.

65.900Lake Ellsworth. 3 bedrooms, including gracious master suit.;, bright and sunny kitchen, huge great room with firu^rlace, immaculate interior.

65.500Red Oak. Formal entry loyer, living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, 3 bedrooms. 2 lull baths, fenced yard, huge detached garage or workshop!

65.500Assumption. Extra nice brick ranch style home, 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths all formal areas, detached garage-workshop. super L ndscaping, 744% assumption.

65.500Four bedrooms in this affordable price range. Located in Lake Ellsworth, with pool membership available. Interior features formal areas, family room with fireplace and roomy kitchen wilh separate eating area. A real bargain.

65.000New Duplex. Over 1000 square feet in each side! Live in one side and rent the other. Each side has 2 bedrooms. 1Vi baths, family room and kitchen. Shenandoah 083.

65.0009V2% VA loan assumption. 3 bedrooms. 2V2 bath 2 story. Den with fireplace and formal areas. Beautiful landscaped yard.

64.900St. Andrews. Wonderful location close to everything! 3 bedrooms. 2 lull balhs, great room with fireplace, formal dining room, well landscaped lawn. Less than 5 years old and like new!

64.900Riverhills. Split level, approximately 1700 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, sunken family room plus formal room and heat pump.

64.500Westwood. Excellent all brick ranch on well landscaped lot. All formal areas, 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, garage, covered patio. Owner will sell FHA, VA or conventional.

64.500Horseshoe Acres. New home under construction. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, great room with fireplace, formal dining room. Still lime to pick colors.

61.900Camelot. Ideal location in growing neighborhood. 3 bedroom contemporary ranch. Entry foyer, formal dining room, great room with woodslove. wooded lot. wood deck. E-300; energy efficient.

60.00026 acres. Bethel Highway.

59.900Contemporary close to schools and shopping. Decks and glass galore! Huge great room, step saving kitchen, two large bedrqoms. 2 full balhs, loft area and full basement.

59.900Stratford. Central location, 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, family room with fireplace, formal areas, 12% financing available! Make you appointment to see it!

59.500Belvedere. Cute L-shaped ranch! Family room with fireplace, formal living room, kitchen ith eating area, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great area.

59.000Ragland Acres. Large 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet cul-de-sac. Well landscaped lawn, double carport. Interior features 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, kitchen with eating area, den wilh fireplace. 086.

58.900Cambridge. Really special 2 story in this convenient location. 3 bedrooms, 2% baths, formal areas, den wilh fireplace, deck tor these delightful evenings!

58.500Brentwood. Roomy brick ranch in excellent area! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas and den with fireplace.

58.500Double your pleasure with a two story home! Beautiful fenced backyard, den wilhffireplace. huge eat-in kitchen. 3 bedrooms, great condition.

59.900Red Oak. 4 bedroom ranch like this one is hard to find. Formal entry loyer and living room, family room, garage with automatic door opener. Now the best part. 9'/2% assumable loan with low equity. Better hurry!.

57.900Red Oak. Youll love this floor plan and lovely lot! All brick, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, intercom, garage door opener. 9/^% assumption.

57.900Eastwood4 bedrooms, terrific area and super price! Family room with fireplace, kitchen fit for the gourmet, fenced back yard, and quiet dead-end street!

57.000Twin Oaks. _Ready for imme^ale occupancy. This convenienlj^lc^fT^ I corflTlteorary features 3 bedrooms, 2 BlN|^d i Aal ro^ vlth a cathedral ceiling and AnnIcVi^ 1 L-/

55.900Westhaven. 10% assumable loan. 3 bedrooms, formal areas, cozy den, kitchen with eating area, garage, wonderful area!

55.900River Hills. Contemporary! Wooded setting, energy efficient E-3O0 rating. 3 bedrooms, super great room wilh lireplace. quarry tiled kitchen and eating area, deck lor these spring evenings.

55.900Ayden. Choice brick rqnch on large fenced, corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den with fireplace, kitchen wilh eating area. A lot tor the money!

55.900Hardee Acres. FHA 245 10%! Yes, you can afford it. Cute as a button, 3 bedrooms. IV2 balhs. beautiful deck and pool. Dont miss it!.

55.000Grimesiand. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, den with fireplace, formal living room, fenced back yard, double detached qarage.

54.900Grilton Country Club. Better than new 3 bedroom. 2 bath home at the Country Club. Features beautiful great room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace, spacious dining area, and inviting deck. M9.

54.500E.C.U.. Walking distance from campus. 3 bedrooms, roomy den with fireplace, private office, over 1800 square feet. Really special!

53.500New Listing. Charming all brick ranch in Pleasant Ridge. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, great room with fireplace, kitchen with many built-ins. Almost new!

53.500Pamlico Beach. Get ready lor the summer! 4 bedrooms. 2 full baths, large front screened porch, riverfront, private pier.

52.900University area. Really nice 3 bedroom, iv? bath brick home. Large kitchen with bar. fenced lot. carport.

51.900Orchard Hills. Affordable brick ranch with many nice features, family room, kitchen with roomy breakfast area. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths and deck!.

51.900Windy Ridge. This beautiful home features 3 bedrooms. 2V2 baths, family room with fireplace, kitchen with many extras, and private patio area.

49.900Griffon. Lovely brick ranch, living room with fireplace, formal dining room, large kitchen, 3 bedrooms, move-in condition. M11.

49.500ECU area. 4 bedrooms. 2 full baths, family room, kitchen with eating area. Quiet area close to campus!

48.900Convenient location, close to schools and shopping, very attractive bungalow styling. 3 bedrooms, family room with fireplace, excellent condition.

47.500Grifton. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath ranch. Living room with lireplace, excellent condition, energy efficient. Will consider rent with option.

47.000Pittman Drive. Less than 10% assumption. 3 bedrooms, family room, modern kitchen, central air, gas heating

' system, double garage.

45.000Super nice all brick 3 bedroom home.' Living room with fireplace, pine paneled den. garage and workshop. J33.

43.500E. 4th Street. University area. Attractive cottage style, 2 bedrooms, family room wilh fireplace, parquet kitchen floor, double lot.

43.000Super cute 2 bedroom, one bath home completely remodeled! New roof, new heat pump, the works!

42.500Colonial Heights. Cute 3 bedroom brick ranch. 1 bath, kitchen with eating area, shady, fenced back yard. Cl.

42.5005 acres with 20 stall horse stable; 200 feet of highway road frontage. New Belvoir.

42.500Farmville. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal living room, family room with fireplace, carport, assumable financing.

41.500Farmers Home assumption available on this 3 bedroom. 1/! bath brick ranch with carport. Tit.

41.000Ayden. You cant beat this one for price and condition! Over 1500 square feet, all brick. 3 bedrooms, many extra features. Call for appointment to see this fine home.

40.500Ayden. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths. Farmers Home financing available.

39.500Jefferson Drive. Assumable 10% financing, payments like rent! 3 bedrooms, bath, kitchen wilh ealihg area, tastefully decorated interior, detached garage.

39.000E.C.U. Area. 3 bedrooms, den with lireplace. formal dining room. Could be starter home, or investment property.

38.0001132 square feel 2 bedroom, 1 bath home on 90 x 165 fool lot. Also, located on the lot is a 34 x 30 loot building suitable for business or storage.

38.000Colonial Heights. 3 bedroom bungalow for the young couple. Family room, kitchen wilh eating area, beautiful wooded lot.

37.500University area. 3 bedrooms. 2 full balhs. family room, kitchen with eating area. Ideal starter home or rental property.

37.000Grifton. 3 bedroom ranch, over 1400 square leet ol heated area, carpet over hardwood floors, extensive remodeling in the kitchen, new heating system.

27.900MacGregor Downs. Over 3 acre wooded building site in this fine area.

10.500 Mobile home and lot.

OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2-5 P.M.

Grifton Country Club 111 Niblick Drive

Move in condition! This home features beautiful great room with cathedral ceiling, fireplace with insert and Ian. Extra large master bedroom wilh built in bookcase and much more!! Asking $54.500. Your Hostess: Myta Day.

Peggy Monteon...

Dick Evans.......

Jean Hopper.....

.756-0942 JuneWyrIck _____

.758-1119 Myra Day.......

. 756-9142 Ray Spears .

Mike Aldridge..........................756-7871

Ioa IIiZ    Don Southerland.......................756-5260

AlltaCanoll...........................756-8278

758-4362    Aldridge...........................756-2807

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NEW OFFERINGS

WINTERVILLE

3 bedroom ranch with fenced back yard and an assumable loan if you qualify. Flexible terms to suit your financial needs. Call today for your personal showing. Offered in the mid $40 s with nearly 1250 square feet.

WINTERVILLE

This FmHA assumption may be yours if your income meets FmHA requirements. It offers 3 bedrooms. IV? baths, carport and fenced back yard. Call today for more information and appointment. Low S40s.

COUNTRY LIVING

3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch now available with over.1600 square feet and an acre ot land If you're looking for a good buy. this is it. Call for an appointment today Located south of Greenville.

Listing Broker Tim Smith 752-9811

REALTY WORLD I

CLARK-BRANCH REALTORS ^    756-6336

Moseley-Marcus Realty

THE FIRST STEP TO BETTER LIVING

^    Office 746-2166

BRAND NEW LISTING. Present owners love this home and neighborhood but job transfer require they sell now. So come on out today and take a look at this super well maintained home in Ayden. Theres a big 12x17 living room, 13x24 family room, formal dining, convenient kitchen, 2 well arranged bedrooms, good size bath, large upstairs with plumbing can easily be made into 2 more rooms, double carport, utility room, and big corner lot. A good buy at $43,500.

NEW LISTING. Designed to fit your family needs and budget is this home in Ayden. The neighborhood is Kiddie Perfect and there's plenty of room in this spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Formal living room with fireplace, meal preparing will be a breeze in the kitchen and dine with a charming view through sliding glass doors that lead to a large back yard. $47,500.

CHECK ME OUT. Our handsome brick ranch is waiting for you.' Situated on ^ nice lot this home features 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, family room with wood burning stove, compact kitchen, dining room, heat and air. Call today. $45,500.

ASSUME THIS LOAN. 10% Annual Percentage Rate with payments of $263.28 P&l. Features 3 bedrooms, living room with fireplace and dining area, den, basement, screened side porch and 200x100 lot, Grifton $41,500. COME HOME TO SOMETHING SPECIAL. This charming home features 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, and a cozy den with wood burning stove and heat pump. T^i^w^s^re|Uhumb is evident in the lovely, landscEdp*|us|a|l completely fenced in back. You shlul ii^hfcMilMday. $45,000.

THE ONLY THING BETTER THAN THE ADDRESS IS THE HOUSE ITSELF. This charming brick ranch with its well landscaped back yard backs up to the 14th tee at the Ayden Country Club. This property is super neat and boasts 1800 square feet, featuring 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, large den with fireplace, attached garage with electric door opener anb cabinets and much more. Call for an appointment today, $67,500. RECIPE FOR HAPPINESS. TAKE one nice 3 bedroom brick home and add a large wood deck, fenced back yard and detached garage. Give it a country atmosphere and your dreams will come true. This home has formal areas, large kitchen with eat-in area, den with wood burning stove and many extras. Call and let us show you this tastefully decorated home located between Ayden and Winterville. $77,500.    )

SPRING IN THE COUNTRY. Neat 2 bedroom home between Ayden and Winterville featuring living room, den with wood burning stove, large eat-in kitchen, range with built in microwave oven, central back up heat $29,900.

MOBILE HOME 1978 COUNTRY MANOR double wide 60x24., features    f^aths, living room,

den, kitchen, centitft, f| Lolr^t $40. month. Loan can be assumed.    Lm    uJ

IT HAS THAT "WELCOME HOME FEELING with the' feeling of luxury throughout. Custom built 2 bedroom brick home with large basement, big ceramic bath boasts 2 sinks, slate foyer, Texas size living room, 2 fireplaces, ceramic tile kitchen with bar and cooking island, large screened porch and B-B-0 and tree studded lot, $57,900 Grifton,

LET THE RENT pay part of your mortgage in this duplex in Ayden close to most everything. Each unit has 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and bath. Located on a corner lot in town this investment you should look into. Call for more details. $35,000.

COULD YOU USE A LITTLE tax shelter with a good return on your investment? Then call and let us give you details on this fourplex we have listed in Ayden. In town, convenient location theres three 2 bedroom apartments and one 1 bedroom unit. Mortgages can be assumed with some owner financing. Priced at $38,500. Shown by appointment,

NEW LISTING. Approximately 7 acres just outside of city limits. City water. $56,000.

Open Sunday 1 to 5 On Call Today Louise H. Moseley QRI

Non-Office hours 746-3472

The Real Estate Comer

^'cHfimaU in

752-3000

OPEN HOUSE

2:30 TO 4:30 PM

Lyle Davis, HOSTESS

DAVIS REALTY

~li

752-3000

NEW LISTING - EXCLUSIVE AGENCY. Assume FMHA 10%% loan to qualified buyer. Almost like new and well cared for 3 bedroom home, IV2 baths. Bright and cheerful kitchen with utility room, cozy den, extra large lot (beautiful back yard for spring garden).

$41,900

DIRECTIONS TO HOUSE: Gel on New Bern Highway 43. go straight, 5'/imiles from Pitt Plaza, go about 1V? miles from (lashing light on Highway 43 near D.H.Conley.and Blackjack intersection. Keep straight. Go bout 10 miles, take 1st paved road. Hollywood Acres. 6th house on right. Sign in yard

Call Davis Realty, 752-3000,756-2904,355-2574

BRAND NEW PATIO HOMES For Only

$37,500

AT

HERITAGE VILLAGE

Superb Location Off 14th Street Near Red Banks Road YOITLL BE AMAZED AT WHAT $37,500 CAN STILL BUY! CALL

ball & lane

752-0025

OPEN HOUSE

Sunday, May 15 2:00 to 5:00

HOST: Jim Veeder - 756-2753

Country, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, heat pump. $69,900.

Directions; 14th Street to SR 1725. Turn ieft and go to stop sign past Cherry Oaks. Turn right on SR 1726 Porter Town Road. House located Vh miles on right.

Lily Richardson Realty

752-6535

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

When you first enter Tt^topS; you think you are entering a gracious country estate.

Innovative design, prime location, ecstaticaUy exciting, carefi^ living and affordable quality construction are only a few of the accolades which have been used to describe this new concept in gracious living.

Homes nestled in this beautifi environment are enhanced by natural landscaping creating a park-like atmosphere.

Tt^eetops is designed for people who value good design and fine workmanship at affordable prices.

Quiet cul-de-sacs add to the liveability, privacy and security.

The floor plans include both a one level and a two level design and can best be described as a villa or townhouse. There are two bedroom plans with two baths and three bedroom plans with two and a half baths. Prices start at $53,900.

Visit Tt^tops today and leam how you can afford to be part of this exciting community.

Prices Start at 53,900.

Chapin And Associates, Inc./3106 S. Memorial Dr./Greenville, N.C. 27834

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'lake GLENWOOD-This 1560 square home is located on a beautiful wooded lot. Very light and roomy-Fireplace in greatroom, built to E-300 specifications, deck, and 2 car garage - Excellent condition! Call for all the details. No. 538. Mid 60s. Listing Broker: Brian Jones 756-5030.

NEW LISTINGS

SAVE CLOSING COSTS on this FHA Assumption! Three bedrooms, 2 baths, large greatroom, dining room and energy efficient heatpump. This home has been well maintained. Owner has transferred and is ready to sell. Will consider some owner financing! $55,900. Listing Broker: Mary Chapin 355-2295. No. 535.

FARMVILLE-Conveniently located to a great town! This 1400 square foot home features a family room, kitchen roomy breakfast area, 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths and a beautiful yard. Just a Homey" setting! $48,500. No. 539. Listing Broker Til Sowden 756-6674.

UNIVERSITY AREA-Ready for occupancy! 4 bedrooms, 2 bath home has 1800 square feet plus an 8% FHA assumable loan with payments of $263.68 PITI. Freshly painted inside. Just five minutes from campus-save that gas! Some Owner Financing! $54,900. Listing Broker: Dcinny Hemby 756-4364. No. 537.

WINDY RIDGE-Spend your time doing the things you really want to do! No grass cutting, no painting-just leisute time. This three bedroom with 2 bath townhouse is waiting on you. Call now for all the information on condominium living. Offered at $55,500. Listing Broker: Ann Bass 756-9881. No. 536.

PUCE ON THE WATER-What could be better than relaxing on your back deck and looking at the water. This double wide could be your get-a-way spot or your permanent residence. $40s. Np. 540. Listing Broker: Ann Bass 756-9881.

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Don't miss your chance on this beautiful home Its )ust waiting for you and your family to move in

you'll be when you enter this four bedroom home, a few of the extras Owners transferred so this

this lovely one and half story home Four iful wooded lot. Owners have moved and GREENVILLE

139.900LYNNOALE Buy your last home now! Four bedrooms, all formal areas, large kitchen, den ^ with fireplace and wet bar. Many extras! No 407.

135.900LYNNOALE - Upper bucks! Don't miss your chance to see this four bedroom home with ^ playroom, formal areas, den with fireplace and wet bar. No. 341

1U,900GRAYLEIGH - This 2400 square foot has been reduced Features formal areas and spacious ^ kitchen with all the extras for Mom. Double garage and Savannah style porches No. 530

115.000CHOICE IS YOURS - This 2824 four bedroom home has many extras for a family including ^ formal areas and country kitchen; better yet. zoned commercial-priced below commercial rates with

warm atmosphere for office or shop No. 421.

^ 110,000CLUB PINES - UNDER CONSTRUCTION. This fp.ur bedroom will be loaded with all extras including all formal areas, large den wIthWreplace, wrap around porch, sundeck and circular drive No. 522

99.500BROOKVALLEY - REDUCED! Five bedrooms, den with fireplace, all formal areas, new carpet and paint Beautifully landscaped lot located near golf cpurse. No 526.

101.500BROOK VALLEY - IMPRESSIVE! Tliis five bedroom home has spacious rooms, great floor _ plan, formal areas, double car garage, and located on a beautiful corner lot

99.900CLUB PINES - This one looks like something out of Better Homes and Gardens Owriers relocated and will rent with an option to buy or help with the closing costs No. 256.

98,000 TEE OFF IN THE BACKYARD of this 4 bedroom home in Brook Valley Large bedroom downstairs next to bathroom with a sunken tub Greatroom with fireplace and screened in porch for casual dining. This Williamsburg beauty is priced for quick sale No. 533.

96.000BUILDER'S CHOICE - That's right - he built it for himself but we ve talked him into selling it You should see all the extras Trade that smaller home for this spacious beauty surrounded by trees No 434.

94.950CLUB PINES - Located on one of the most cfesirable lots in the area Greatroom with tots of built-ins, tastefully decorated and has a split-system heatpump for energy savings.

93.950CHERRY OAKS - Entertain formally with pride in this lovely custom four bedroom home Owners have transferred and Must Sell! Beautifully landscaped lot No 292can ftid the ri^ buyer for your home.

89.900CHERRY OAKS - Impress your friends! Prestigious two story with four bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace, garage and too many extras to I'st in this small space Better see this one today No 486    -

89.900CHERRY OAKS - OWNER SAYS SEL

located only a stones throw from pool and tenr and make it home. No. 360.

89.900CLUB PINES - Treat Yourself! Impressr Skylights, casablanca fan and greenhouse art can be yours. No. 481.

84.500CHERRY OAKS - Build Happy Memories bedrooms, all formal areas, and a two car garage. B< lous to sell. Call today. No. 478.

81.900CLUB PINES - EVERYTHING IS HERE! Spacious two story home with family room with fireplace and sunny eat-in kitchen, all formal areas, four be ooms, outside storage and even a garden plot. What more could you ask for? No. 477.

85.900CHERRY OAKS - Sloping wooded lot - custom built brick ranch - what more could want for your dream home. Over 2000 square feet of living area. All formal areas and den with a fireplace No. 426

79.900CHERRY OAKS - LOOKS ARE DECEIVING! You just can't tell how spacious this home is until you've been inside. Three bedrooms, lovely fireplace in den, spacious living room with dining area and sunny kitchen with nook. No. 490

79.500CHERRY OAKS - OWNER FINANCING on this lovely three bedroom home. Or with rent with option to buy. Formal areas, greatroom with fireplace, and two and half ceramic baths. Call today for more details. No. 212.

79.500TUCKER ESTATES - Not your ordinary two story! A real classic located on beautiful wooded lot. Designed for gracious living. Three bedrooms greatroom with fireplace and it has been reduced' No. 441.

78.900CHERRY OAKS - SOMETHING DIFFERENT - Tired of ho-hum houses? See this custom-built 3 bedroom with contemporary flair. Features formal areas and cozy den with fireplace Assume low interest loan. No. 505.T^e CENTURY 21 syst^ is Number 1 in adverasing.

74.900PRACTICALLY NEW! Only a year old with energy saving heatpump. formal areas plus den, located in a great neighborhood for walking, riding bikes, swimming, playing tennis Call for showing. No. 423

73.500RUSTIC! This cedar contemporary has a greatroom, lots of built-ins, a deck up and down with so many extras like thermopane windows, heatpump-just Mme on over and see it! No. 488

69.900A DREAM COME TRUE! Can you imagine having the^opporlunity to swim anytime day or nigh* and not having to worry about pool hours. Take advantalfe of this great benefit while you enjoy thebeautyofthisinterior. No, 435.    '

69.900SUPER STAR! That's what you'll be when you purchase this beautiful contemporary home in Cherry Oaks. Cant beat the kitchen lor work ability and space, spacious greatroom No. 479

69.500CONVENIENCE - This home is located just minutes from the mall, grocery stores - save time and gas. 2,000 square feet and ready to be occupied. Where else can you find a home like thisi No 507

69.500SOMETHING A LITTLE UNIQUE! Large greatroom with kitchen and island for snacking and raised dining area for formal entertaining. Area outside could be a showcase! Swimming pool with separate bath house, plus a hobble room. Come take a peak and let your imagination go No. 512

69.000UNIVERSITY AREA - This looks like a single family home but it is really a duplex One side has three bedrooms with a fireplace in the master bedroom Live in one side and rent the olher side. Watch your investment appreciate. No. 432.

68.900This rustic 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath home has a great floor plan and is tastefully decorated throughout this split-level with heatpump and deck. No. 532.

66.900BEAUTIFUL CONTEMPORARY - 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, wood siding home with deck Vaulted ceiling in greatroom with fireplace, spacious one-car garage, eanhtone colors, and unique indirect lighting. No. 487.

65.900RECIPE FOR HAPPIkiESS Take one nice 3 bedroom home, add a den with fireplace and formal areas and you have the making for years of sweetness for your family Spacious yard with a split rail fence. No 499.

65,800IMMACULATE - Yes, this home Is perfect! Decorated very well with all the colors you'll love. Owners are moving out of town and are ready to sell. Come on over and let's get you settled in for the summer! No. 469.    ^    .

65,750LAKE GLENWOOD - This 1560 square home is located on a beautiful wooded lot Very light and roomy - Fireplace in greatroom, built to E-300 specifications, deck, and 2 car garage ' Excellent condition! Call for all the details! No. 538. Listing Broker: Brian Jones 756-5030.

62,700CONVENIENT TO THE HOSPITAL - This home has 1600 square feet, chairrail, wainscotting, beamed ceiling in greatroom, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and low utilities with its heatpump. excellent condition No. 447.

61.900BUYER TAKES ALL even the washer and dryer. Yes, this family is moving and moving fast. 3 Bedroom. 2 baths with formal areas. Priced to sell! No 504.

61.900BELVEDERE - You'll love the formal areas with hardwood floors and the spacious den with wood stove. The jungle gym will delight the kids! Convenient to everything!

60.900LIKE NEW! This owner has just repainted and recarpeted the entire house just for you Now, It's up to you. come see today! No. 515

59.900BELVEDERE - ONE OF THE BEST resale areas in Greenville. This home has all you need plus a double car garage Needs some of your individual attention! No. 513.

59.900OWNER NEEDS TO SELL! Take advantage of the situation and buy while the rates are down' This home can be yours now. Call for appointment and see just how well this home can fit your needs No. 313,

59.900SILENCE IS GOLDEN - This home is located convenient to the hospital in an area that is very peaceful. All formal areas with fireplace in den, heatpump for savings and a garage Ready now for occupancy . No. 461.

57.900Assume this FHA 245 loan of 10% with payments of $439.45 PITI. No qualifying necessary. Very reasonable utilities on this 3 bedroom, two bath brick home No 508.

57.500LAKEWOOD PINES - This contemporary has a large loft upstairs, spacious greatroom and bedrooms. Just minutes away from downtown, the mall, and Pitt Plaza If time is of essence this home would be just right for you. Located on a wooded lot with lots of privacy.

55.900SAVE CLOSING COSTS - on this FHA Assumption! three bedrooms, 2 baths, large greatroom. dining room and energy efficient heatpump. This home has been well maintained Owner 'has transferred and is ready to sell. Will consider some owner financing! Listing Broker: Mary Chapin 355-2295 No. 535

55.500WINDY RIDGE-Spend your time doing the things you really want to do! No grass cutting, no painting - just leisure time This three bedroom with 2 bath townhouse is waiting on you Call now tor all the information on condominium living Listing Broker: Ann Bass 756-9981 No. 536

54.900UNIVERSITY AREA - Ready for occupancy! 4 bedrooms. 2 bath home has 1800 square feet plus an 8% FHA assumable loan with payments of $263 68 PITI. Freshly painted inside Just five minutes from campus - save that gas! Some Owner Financing! Listing Broker Donny Hemby 756-4364.

54.900DISTINCTIVE CONDO UNIT is the word for this one-of-a-kind townhouse in Windy Ridge It has the square footage of a 3 bedroom unit but was designed with 2 master bedroom suites. Downstairs, the Craft wood-burning fireplace insert keeps you snug and saves a few dollars. No. 436.

54.900SPLIT LEVEL ON A SLOPING LOT. A rare gem just outside of Greenville Downstairs unfinished and waiting for that someone that has that special talent Three bedrooms, 2 baths and lots of goodies. No. 446.    .

54.900READY FOR SPRING? Enjoy this flower filled yard with room for city garden. Spacious family room, three bedrooms, den with fireplace and located in College Court. No. 470

53.900DESIRING HOME LOOKING FOR LOVING OWNERS - Sellers have outgrown this cozy, 2 bedroom starter home with hardwood floors, country kitchen. Well insulated. Home needs a new family. No. 440.

52.900This 3 bedroom ranch is conveniently located to the university and all shopping areas. Great VA Assumption. No 518.    1

52.500Here's a home where the kids can play their hearts out and you can relax in the den and keep close eye on them. No. 472

52.900BEST VALUE IN TOWN! Owners are ready to move and want quick sale on this three bedroom, two full bath home with excellent floor plan. No, 445

51.000EASY LIVING - That's what this beautiful three bedroom townhouse will give you. No grass to cut, just relax or lounge around the pool. Entertain casually on your private patio or snuggle close to the fireplace in your greatroom. Owner will rent with option to buy. No 489.

49.900REDUCED - Assume this FHA loan of 9 112% with payments of $359.91 PITI on this 4 bedroom ranch near the hospital. Woodburning stove remains. Call now! No. 449.

49.000OWNER WILL finance part of equity -4 bedrooms with 2 baths and lots of potential. Great for large family or rental property. Outside barbeque grill for family outings plus screen porch. No. 372.

48.5003 Bedrooms and 2 baths with lots of potential. Great location. Moving on up. Call for details today. No. 517,

48.500REDUCED! This older home has so much to offer. Sun porch, study off of greatroom, deck, workshop and plenty of fruit trees. You need to see thisone to appreciate. No. 474.

47.900UNIVERSITY- Reduced! 10% VA loan assumption, corner lot. Immaculate condition. What else could you possibly want. No 448

46.900SELL THE CAR, you'll be able to walk every placed from this lovely bungalow In.the university area. Living room is large, featuring fireplace with built-in bookshelves on each side. Large kitchen, sun porch and 2 or 3 bedrooms New gas furnace and well maintained home. No. 444.

46.500GREENBRIAR - Convenient location is a big advantage to this home. 3 bedroom ranch with eat-in kitchen, fenced-in backyard and more, more, more! No. 501.

46.500WILLING SELLER - Yes, this is the most cooperative Seller you will every meet, (within reason of course) 3 Bedrooms with 11/2 baths and energy saving heatpump. No. 369.

45.500REDUCED - This Farmers Home is not your average home - many more extras. Qualify on your income - payments as low as $106. Call for details. No. 471.

42.900This VA loan assumption is easy to assume on this 3 bedroom brick ranch with hardwood floors and patio. Call for more information. No. 380.

42.900TIL NO BLARNEY! Why pay rent? You can be the proud owner of this two bedroom townhouse with a basement at such an affordable price. Owner will consider leasing with an option No. 408.

42.900This home is ready for a new owner. Seller is moving and wants to leave his home in the hands of someone who really cares about the country kitchen and his pride and joy, the workshop with all the electrical wiring necessary for whatever hobbie you might have. Come by and see this one. Don't forget the 8 3/4% FHA loan assumption with payments of $310 PITI.

39.9003 Bedroom brick ranch with lots of, extras like the four car garage that is being used for carpentry classes, the garden plot nearby. No. 502.

39.900This is a very reasonably priced 2 bedroom townhouse conveniently located in good area No. 247

38.500HANDYMANS SPECIAL - Someone started this project and at this price you can afford to finish it. Great opportunity-located in a well established neighborhood with trees! No. 394.

37.900This home needs an owner now! Call for all the details and we'll work out the financing for you. Theres a home for everyone! No. 509.

35.000UNIVERSITY AREA - This neat starter home could be just for you. It features 11/2 baths, central air, 3 bedrooms and the owner will consider any offer. No. 459.

35.000Investment Property - Recently remodeled and in good condition You can buy one, two or three in a great saving package. No. 457.

35.000Take the chance and invest a few minutes to look at this property convenient to the university. Worth looking at. No. 458

32.500VA Loan Assumption of 8% with payments of $239.81 PITI. This three bedroom home has much to offer with a garage included. No. 454.

32.000This 3 bedroom home located in the university area has 1586 square feet and has heatpump. Call for more details. No. 452.

30.000This 3'bedroom home is just right for a starter - even has the white picket fence and garage for this price. No. 378.

29.900Freshly painted inside and out. Eat-in kitchen with greatroom and ready for you to move in. No. 298The CENTURYZlsystemis best known, most preferred in the industry. /COUNTRY

85.900GOOD BUY CITY! HELLO COUNTRY! This two story home just pastiCherry Oaks offers four large bedrooms, enormous kitchen, formal dining and greatroom for casual entertaining All located on football field size lot No. 346.

85.000HIDDEN TREASURE Picture this home which is only partially'completed, on a 10 acre lot with all your own ideas for completion Features complete Solar capabilities Call now for more details. No. 160.

81.900SOUTHERN CHARM describes this roomy plantation style home White columns, spacious grounds, stables, split rail fences and an assumable loan. Whatmore could you ask for"* No 451

79.900LAKE GLENWOOD TEXAS SIZE LOT wiih house to matcti. This brick ranch features three

bedrooms, recreation room, craft room, and detached garage Seeing IS believing! No 404

79.900PORTERTOWN - Spacious three bedroom Cape Cod home Features all formal areas, over 2000 square feet on first floor. Second floor unfinished Owner will finance Call today No 438

69.500MINUTES FROM INDUSTRIAL PARK! Large wooded lot Greatroom with bar and a kitchen with every appliance imaginable. Additional land available No 403

64.9001-3/4 acres of trees surround this 1700 square foot home just five years old with heatpump fireplace, two car garage and 12x25 deck Take that drive to the country No 529

59.900CONTENTNEA CREEK - Don't miss your chance to see this lovely home If away frorri the hustle and bustle of city life is where you want to be, then this is the home for you No 5i i

55.000-BLACK JACK-OWNERS HAVE HAD IT! They say sell and sell quick so we've reduced the price for this three bedroom ranch with double garage. South side of Greenville. Here is your chance to get that good deal you've been waiting for. No 294

59.500COUNTRY SETTING - Three bedrooms, wooded lot with privacy and seclusion Step saving kitchen. Outside patio for casual entertaining under the tall pines No 483

49.900FHA ASSUMPTION - with payments of $400 PITI. 3 bedroom. 2 bath home located near Pitt Community and just 3 miles from Greenville City Limits. Greatroom with fireplace and storage building. No. 525.

46.500love a fruit ORCHARD? Then this is the home for you. Three bedrooms, formal areas, greatroom with fireplace and plenty of fruit trees and a grape arbor This is the home for fruit lovers No. 465.

38.900OWNER DESPERATE - Will sell, rent with an option to buy or whatever it takes, you can even stay rent free for the first year This is a cutie on a wooded lot just minutes from Greenville No. 331.

35.900GET OUT OF TOWN, but not too far with this three bedroom, two bath home on approximately an acre of land. No 314.

11.500LOOKING FOR A HANDY MAN TO COMPLETE THIS ONE!! It has only been partially constructed. No heat and no air. Door is unlocked so come on out and see what you can get for so little. No. 204.can help a buyer find the right financing./    WINTERVILLE

^1,500WINTERVILLE - Looking for the perfect homei Well this could be it    Three    bedrooms,

greatroom with fireplace. Even has a space tor that summer garden No 503

58.900Need one acre of land? Then this home is for you Cedar ranch with three bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace, eat-in kitchen. Nestled among the tail pines. No 483.

49.900CEDAR FARM HOUSE in a country setting among tall pines Perfect starter home has a greatroom with fireplace, three bedrooms, cozy kitchen plus a carport No 464

47.500OWNER HAS SPRUCED UP THIS ONE AND ITS ready to sell Freshly    painted    outside.

Redecorated on the inside. Four bedrooms. No. 274.BETHEL

74,9<X)Charming Older Home. Circular drive, three bedrooms, all formal areas, family room with fireplace. Must see to appreciate. No. 455GRIFTON

65.000Looking for a perfect home the family who loves horses Then this is the one for you. Has horse stalls and plenty of land to ride. No. 311.

47.900CONTEMPORARY HOME with Cathedral ceilings, fireplace insert and much more Great VA loan assumption. No. 494The CENTURY21 system hi^)S sell an average of over i    5,000homes a weekmakmg themafibrdable.AYDEN

48.500CHARMING AND DELIGHTFUL! Expect to be envied by your friends when you buy this like new brick ranch. Hardwood floors have just been refinished New paint job inside and out Plus it has an assumable FHA loan. No 516.

42.000SO MUCH FOR NOT SO MUCH! This Farmer's home is available immediately Offers three bedrooms, two baths, large kitchen and woodstove in family room No. 462

41.500SUNNY LANE - This home will bring sunshine into your family - Three bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, much more. No. 495.

40,800GREAT VA LOAN ASSUMPTION - 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, study and much more No 419

23.000GREAT STARTER HOME - Two bedroom bungalow Eat-in kitchen, fenced in backyard. You really need to see this one. No. 514.FARMVILLE

39.900Four bedrooms, country kitchen, formal areas, walk-in closets. Super location A Real Deal' Call for more details. No. 375

48.500FARMVILLE - Conveniently located to a great town! This 1400 square foot home features a family room, kitchen roomy breakfast area, 3 bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths and a beautiful yard Just a "homey setting! Listing Broker: Til Sowden 7566674 No 539

59.900COLONIAL FARMHOUSE - Three bedrooms, two baths, formal areas and large detached workshop. Island in kitchen. No. 389ROBERSONVILLE

64.900LOVELY HOME Three bedrooms, two baths, greatroom with fireplace. You really need to see this one to appreciate No. 415

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OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2:00-5:00

2205 Jefferson Drive

This charming 3 bedroom ranch has extra built-ins,-conveniently located in Colonial Heights. Excellent VA loan assumption with total payments of $432 PITI. Owner being transferred-MUST SELL. No. 518.

$52,900

HOSTESS: Janet Bowser

OntuiK

OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2:00 - 5:00

Southern charm describes this roomy plantation style home featuring white columns, spacious grounds, stables, split rail fence. Formal areas, cozy kitchen and even a warm, private library. This type of unique property is seldom seen-especially at this price with 2 acres! Directions: Hwy 33 to Simpson turnoff-continue through Simpson to Galloway Xrds. Take left-1 1/2 miles on right, come by and Browse. $81,900 host: Eddie p.i.

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756-6666 or 756-5868

2424 s. Charles St.

105 Greenville Blvd.

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39 One-liner 42 Eggs 44 Challenging

48 got your number

49 Dry

50 Finished

51 West of HoUywood

52 Rescue

53 Soloing

54 Everyone

55 Pod items

56 Poets enough

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4 Desk feature

5 Arachnid

6 Actress Anderson

7 Ran off

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10 Planted

11 Ruffian

20 Coat feature

22 Rocket type

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35 Marketplaces

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43 Long live cheer

45 Bards river

46 Western city

47 Penciled

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Yesterday's Cryptoquip: THE NICE CIRCUS ACROBAT FUPS FOR THE PLEAS.\NT ROUSTABOUT.

Todays Ciy ptoquip clue: Z equals L.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout 'he ouzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apcsirophe can give you clues to loceting vowels. Solution is a ci'Mplished by trial and error

-A'urei SyfiJica'f i-

Life As It's Lived

ByGAILMlCHALS 1 have often written about Megs libertarian streak in this column. She simply does not feel that any adiiit has the right to interfere with her freedom. Of course, this attitude was bad enough when she was 2 and 3 and abolutely irrational about what she wanted. But now that shes older and supposedly mor' reasonable, her attitude ... infinitely worse.

Why should 1 clean my room she will ask me. 1 don't care how it looks. Thats painfully obvious. But I do care about how it looks.

But its my space,' she argues.

And its my house.

Its our house, or at least thats what you keep telling me. And besides, if it is your house, then why should I feel responsible for keeping it clean

If she were being deliberately disrespectful, I could punish her and let the matter rest. But shes merely trying to understand the logic behind my requests. Naturally, she has concluded that there is none.

And if shes having trouble understanding my logic, Im

Fans Augment Energy Saving

NEW YORK (AP) -Americas concern for energy conservation has brought attention to two new words in the industrial lexicon - stratification and destratification, according to Energy User News.

Stratification, explains the publication, is the normal tendency for warm air to rise to the ceiling where it is trapped and the heat lost through the roof. When this happens, the thermostats register colder ground temperatures and turn on additional heating to make up for the lost heat.

(Destratification is accomplished by using long-bladed rotating fans that allow users to bring the ceiling-level warm air down to the ground where it is mixed with cooler air to provide more even temperatures.

finding that coping with her logic is absolutely impossible. If people like me theyll forgive me,she says in defense of her table manners. "And if they dont like me, theyll find something else to criticize.'

That observation applies to parents even when they do like her. I try to improve one thing, she complains, and you find something else to bug me about. You dont even like the way 1 wear my clothes.

Shes right. Then again, I find it discouraging to send her to school dressed like a Madame Alexander doll only to have her return looking like Mickey Rooney in a Saturday afternoon TV matinee. Half her buttons are undone, her knees are invariably grass-stained, her shirt tail is always out, and if shes wearing jeans, her navel is usually showing.

"For goodness sake. Mother, she says when I lament her appearance. I have to live in them, dont

r

It goes without saying that her play clothes are in a worse state of disrepair than her so-called school clothes. So on those rare occasions when Phillip and I are courageous enough to venture out in public with the children, we insist that Meg wear one of her few dresses which have escaped the general condition of the rest of her wardrobe.

I hate wearing dresses to restaurants, she told me the last lime we went out. My legs stick to the seats.

As usual, 1 tried to reason with her. Sometimes its necessary to do what we dont like. Id rather wear pants, too, but you see that Im wearing a dress tonight:

Yes, she sighed. But the difference is that youre in control, and Im not,

If she only knew.

ti^es

MASONIC NOTICE There will be a regular communication of Greenville Lodge No. 284 A.F. & A.M. Monday at 7:30 p.m. All Master Masons are urged to attend.

Joseph Rouse, Master James S. Wells, Stry

Poky Widows Arent Up to Mans Speed

By Abigail Van Buren

( 1983 by Univerul Press Syndicile

DEAR ABBY: The lonely widow is she a myth?

The older women I know seem to think sex is messy, disagreeable and very tiring. Their indoor sports consist of cards, bingo and bragging about their grandchildren.

Outdoor sports? They have none. I have yet to see one walk 20 steps from her automobile.

Twenty years ago, as a happily married employee of a large retirement facility, I used to feel sorry for the many brokenhearted widows. Now Im beginning to wonder if perhaps they dont prefer it that way. As a 70-year-old widower, I have made several moves, only to find myself facing a wall of indifference. Here is a sample of the responses Ive had when Ive called to invite a lady out;

1. "Sorry. Im leaving for St. Paul to see my grandchildren and wont be back for a while.

2. "I have to work in the church kitchen all afternoon, and by evening Ill be exhausted.

3. I cant go to the dance with you I broke my leg yesterday. (I never did check that one out.)

I would enjoy going to a good restaurant, sitting across the table from a pleasant, good-humored lady and discussing all manner of things.

I would like friendly company at a lively square dance, for a bicycle ride or for a walk in the park.

Am I expecting too much? Or is it me?

LONESOME IN A SMALL TOWN

DEAR LONESOME: 'The first thing you mentioned was how these ladies feel about sex, which leads me to believe that for openers you come on too strong in that department. Think about it. That could be your problem.

DEAR ABBY; Some time ago I read in your column that there were tours for non-smokers.

At the time my husband and I were not interested because we smoked. Since then, he has quit (doctors orders) and so did I, so he wouldnt be tempted to start smoking again.

Now were interested in taking a tour this summer with other non-smokers. Where do we write for information?

LOUISVILLE FANS

DEAR FANS: Write to: Non-Smokers Travel Club, 8928 Broadmore, Bethesda, Md. 20034.

DEAR ABBY; I am a 39-year-old woman, and my mother is a very youthful-looking 1. When I introduce my mother, people invariably say, You look just like sisters!

I find this statement very uncomplimentary (to me), since my mother is 22 years older than I.

How should I handle this situation?

YOUNGER SISTER

DEAR SISTER: Look proud (even if it kills you) because you should be proud of a 61-year-old mother who looks that great.

If its a compliment you want, you must have been a very good daughter, or your mother would probably have looked her age.

CONFIDENTIAL TO ON THE FENCE IN WAUKEGAN: A woman who marries a widower who says, Remember my children come first, should expect the worst. And shes rarely disappointed.

DEAR ABBY: I am a 29-year-old school teacher, living and working 1,.tOO miles from my hometown.

Last year I fell in love with a wonderful man, and we plan to marry this summer. My parents know of our plans, but they have never met him. (They have spoken on the phone.) He is 33, also in education, and, Abby, hes the kindest, sweetest, most wonderful man Ive ever known!

I have put off introducing him to my parents because I know they would never accept him. You see, he is half-Indian and half-black. Hes also a Southern Baptist. He looks like a cross between Wayne Newton and Sidney Poitier.

Should 1 wait until after we are married, then bring him to meet them? Or should I write and tell them so they wont be too shocked? Ive been agonizing over this for the last three months. How should this be resolved?

WHITE AND CATHOLIC

DEAR WHITE: I suggest that you write and tell your parents that your fiance is half-Indian and half-black. Also, that hes a Southern Baptist, (Send a picture along.) But more important, tell them that hes the kindest, sweetest, most wonderful man youve ever met and you love each other. .

School Menus

Menus for Greenville elementary schools this week as announced are:

Monday - breakfast: cheese toast, fruit juice and milk; lunch: sloppy joe on bun, french fries, mixed fruit, cookie and milk.

Tuesday - breakfast: blueberry muffin, fresh apple and milk; lunch: grilled cheese sandwich, baked beans, pickle strip, chilled peaces and milk.

Wednesday - breakfast: french tgoast and syrup, fruit juice and milk; lunch; spaghetti and meat sauce, green beans, applesauce, roll and milk.

Thursday - breakfast: hot buttered roll, fruit juice and milk; lunch; tacos, tossd salad, Spanish rice, chilled pears and milk.

Friday - breakfast; unannounced; lunch; barbecue on bun, coleslaw, french fries, cherry crisp and milk.

Lunch menus for Pitt County schools this week as announced are:

Monday - grilled ham and cheese sandwich, potato salad, pickle spear, sliced peaches and milk.

Tuesday - barbecue pork on a bun, french fries, catsup, coleslaw and milk.

Wednesday - fried chicken, mashed potatoes with gravy, garden peas, hot rolls and milk.

Thursday - braised beef on rie, com on cob, tossed salad with dressing, hot rolls and milk.

Friday - fish portion, french fries, catsup, coleslaw, hushpuppies and milk.

J

PRICES EFFECTIVE MON.-WED. MAY 16-18

^nprton

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Supermarket. Inc

MOOT

VUiL.

211 Jarvis St 2 Blocks from ECU

Home of Greenville's Best Meats QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

DOUBLE COUPONS-DOUBLE SAVINGS'

EXAMPLE:

Double coupons Tuesday, May 17 only, on all food orders 510.00 or more. Manufacturers coupons will be redeemed for double the face value on purchase of the product as stated. Restrictions: Redemption value may not exceed purchase price. Maximum face value allowed before doubling is 50"( Coupons over 50 may be redeemed for face value only. No cigarette, drink, free item coupons or trial sizes eligible for double value. Limit 15 coupons per customer per day. Limit one coupon per item per customer. No rain-checks available during the special double coupon days.

COUPONS OVERTONS

^ DOUBLE VALUE

30'

50'

75'

60'

M.OO

75'

FRESH FRYER PARTS

FRYER BREASTi

99'    lb79'

OVERTONS FINEST FULL CUT

ROUND

STEAK LB.

LEGS THIGHS

I

LB.

GWALTNEY REGULAR OR HOT

PORK

SAUSAGE

FAMILY PAK SPECIALS

PORK NECK BONES   .s-tlb pkg lb 29'

PIG FEET..................5-7LB.PKG.LB.39'

PORK CHITTERLINS...   iqlb pkg

JUICY LOCAL

STRAWBERRIES

QUART

98

FRESH WHOLE

MAOLAMILK

1/2 GALLON one

GOLDEN RIPE

BANANAS 28'

LB.i

FLORIDA FRESH DONALD DUCK

PAPER CARTON 99'

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89

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LIMIT 4 YOUR CHOICE 2 LITER BOmE

EACH

99

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BROWNIE MIX

.

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---^

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40 oz.'*' 1 BOX

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE

LB. ALL BAG GRINDS

$919

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CHARMIN

TOILET TISSUE 4 ROLL PKG.

98

G.E. SOFT WHITE    C    ^    70

LIGHTBLBS r/V

PURINA

DOG CHOW

5 LB. BAG

89

ORANGE lUICE

1/2 GALLON PAPER CARTON

99

MR. PS FROZEN ASSORTED TYPES

PIZZA

10 oz.

PKG.

69

HAPPY HOST FROZEN

ORANGE JUICE

12 oz.

CAN

69

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DOMINO

SUGAR

5 LB. BAG

49

HI-DRI SALE-SAVE NOW! HI-DRI

PAPER TOWELS

LIMIT1_

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ROLL EACH

59

1/2 CASE $7.75 (15 ROLLS) FULL CASE $14.99 (30 ROLLS)

INGLENOOK NAVALLE RHINE OR C A H O

CHABLISWINEvo7^"^2^

CLIPTHIS COUPON

PEPSI,

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DEW

16 OZ.

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PLUS DEPOSIT I

with this coupon and $10.00 food I order excluding advertised items. | Without coupon 51.79 plus | deposit. Limit one carton of your choice. Expires 5-18-63.

GRADE A MEDIUM

EGGS

2 DOZEN

With this coupon and 510.00 food order excluding advertised items. Without coupon each 69'. Limit 2 cartons at coupon price. Expires 5-18-83.

CLIPTHIS COUPON

KRAFT

MIRACLE

WHIP

QUARTJAR

99

With this coupon and 510.00 food order excluding advertised items. Without coupon $1.68. Limit one per customer. Expires 5-18-83.

CLIPTHIS COUPON

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22 oz. BOTTLE (20* OFF LABEL)

99

with this coupon and 510.00 food order excluding advertised items. Without coupon $1.29. Umit one per customer. Expires 5-18-63.

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1





Renews'

Cheers

Series

By Peter Meade

When Ted Danson was chosen to star as the ex-baseball pitcher and alcoholic turned barkeeper on NBCs 'Cheers." his selection seemed more than slightly illogical.

His roles in the heavy,duty movies "The Onion Field" and Body Heat hardly featured a comedic talent, plus Danson admits he rarely drinks and is a terrible baseball player.

Although he may not have a major league arm, Danson has proven this year on Cheers" that he has an all-star comedy delivery. He is the most valuable player on this seasons top comedy, playing Sam Malone, the owner of "Cheers, the bar where everybody knows your name.'

Danson realizes everybody seems to know his name now. The first-year series has required more time than expected to gain a steady audience, and still hasn't found its way to the top echelon ratings-wise, but NBC recently announced the half-hour has been renewed for a full order of 22 episodes for next season.

None of us were surprised, says Danson of the renewal. NBC has been committed all along. They could have renewed us for six or 13 (shows), but they chose 22."

Danson thinks that winning the recent Peoples Choice award as the favorite new comedy has helped the shows popularity.

Weve always done well in the big cities, he explains. But weve had trouble in the midwest Familiarity has a lot to do with viewing habits and when we won the Peoples Choice it said, its OK to watch the show. Its fun to be involved in a word-of-mouth show.

Danson had no doubts he would succeed in the comedy series. He felt the role of Sam was IS right from the start, although he later learned they bad interviewed everybody and their uncle. The main ingredient in the series, the relationship between bar owner Sam and his educated cocktail waitress, Diane (Shelley Long), seems to spark most of the shows witty dialogue. The pair originally auditioned together and the chemistry was excellent then and it continued all season long.

Ted Danson and Shelley Long star in NBCs Thursday night comedy Cheers.





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Bristol, CN.

18

Nickelodeon

19

Weather

20

Showtime

24

CNN

Atlanta

25

Music TV

26

Cable Health Network

27

SPN

NYSE

28

29 Daytime Arts

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Tune in this week: May 16-22

usfl-live!

Trvo grejl USFL m.itcti-ups this week ,

Monday: The NJ Generals vs Michigan Panthers a!

8 PM

Saturday: Oakland Invahers j vs Tampa Bay Bandits at PM

NBA PLAYOFFS-LIVE!

983 Con'e'ence Fmai Pigyph i'.ednesday xhern local listm 3' lo' start tirne

F.A. SOCCER SPECIAL

The'102nd Ann.iai F A Cap Final will pe live horn Wembley England Saturday at 9 30 AM

LIVE TENNIS FROM ITALY

The 1983 Italian Open Final live from Rome S.mday at 8 AM

HORSE RACING SPECIAL

Four hoars of prehmina'y races leading to the Preakness from Pimlico Race Track Saturday beginning at 1? PM

SPORTSHErwrn

Greenville Cable TV 756-5677

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7M Yoa Cii't Do TVt 0 Tokvkka 7:M TV Advmtarm Of Black Boaaty IM TV Tomarrow Poopk IMTVTMtdByo MIKlrlTeKMMWa

THURSDAY MAY It. IMl IMToday-iSptckl l:M DmtyiTroaVme Ml Todays Spadal t:M Dasty'sTrsMaam 4.M TV AdvaoCarm Of Black Baaaty 4:N TV Tooiarrow Paopk SMAtalaatTVOddi SMUvewtra

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7:M TV Advaalarm Of Black Baaaty I.M TV Tomorrow Pwrpk IMAfsiikTVOddi IMUBolkEpogm    _

Sunday Daytime

0 Agriculture U.SA Q) Kenny Foreman

5:30

0 Health Field 0 Sunday Maas 0 Eagles Nest    '

6:00

0 John Wesley White ONews

Moneyworks

01 Love Lucy ORev.C-D.MacNeU 0 Celina Dimensiou 0 Wedi In Review

0 James Robison

6:30

OThe Deaf Hear ought Unto My Path Private Secretary OGo^Sing O Charia Young Revival 0ABetterWay 0 Gospel Singing Jubilee

7:00

ONewsight OBreathOfUfe O (D The World Tomorrow Jimmy Swaggart O Charles Young Revival O700aub

0 Lone Ranger / Zorro 0 Human Side

7:30

O Jewish Voice Broadcast O Leonard Repass O Church Of Our Fatben O Jimmy Swaggart O Kenneth Copeland 0Kwicky Koala HisLove

8:00

O Zola Levitt OPaulftowD O Robot SchuUer O Day Of Dist^ery

FRIDAV MAYM.1M1 I.VTodsy'sSpHVl I.M Dotys TrmksMC S:M Todays Spwdsl IMDiVysTrssVms i:M Yflw Csst Do TVt 0 TekrlkOB 441 TV AdwBttrm Of Blsck Bmity 4:M TV Tomorrow Pwipk 5.41 TV TVd Eye SMUvewtra

l:M WVt Win TVy TUsk Of Neit7 7:M Yoe Caat Do TVt Oa Tskvkka

7 41 TV Adveatares Of Black Botky 141 TV Tianotrow Poopk IMTVTVdEye

141 Omar EokoKkka: Portrait Of TV AitW SATURDAY MAYll.lMl l4IPtawVal 1144 EldsWritm 11:N TV Tomomw Psopk IMl Yoa Caat Da TVt Oa Tokvktaa 1S4I Staadby... U|Ma! Cimma! Actka! t:M ApkktTVOdds Ml TV Adveatarm Of Black Baaaty AMUvewtoe AM Spadal DeUvety 4:M Yoa Caal Do TVt Oa Tekvkka S4I AfakatTVOdds S:M TV Advtatm Of Black Bmky 144 Real* SacVoas World Of Sports 7:MSpsdalDaUvy 7:MSpsdalIMIvery IMTVTMNEye Ml PekrGrlmm

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0 Kidsworld

0 Amazing Grace Bible Class

QThe Lesson OOQOral Roberts O Christian Viewpoint For Your Information Jim Whittington

9:00

O Kenneth Copeland ODayOfOiscova?

OIlM Waltons Jerry Falwell QThe King ChUdren O Jimmy Swaggart O0 Sunday Morning 0 Robert Schulla

9:05

Lost In Space

9:30

OThe World Tomorrow O Willie B. Lewis 10:00 o Lloyd Ogilvie O David Paul O Day Of Discovery Tom And Jerry QGoodNews ORezKumbard 0 Jerry Falwell 10:05

UgbterSide

10:30

O Larry Jones O O J^ Falwell O Spiritual Awakening Movie "Captain Sinbad" (1963) O Jim Whittington O Ehnest Angley 0 Movie Maracaibo (1958)

10:35

(B Movie "The Far Country (1955) 11:00

O Jimmy Swaggart O First Presbyterian Church OEmest Angiey 0 First Baptist Church 11:30

QRobatSchnUa O The World Tomorrow O JimBakker

0 This Week With David Brinkley 12:00

O D. James Kennedy OProAndCon

Movie It Happened To Jane o I Love Lucy O Hospitality House O Southern Sportsman Children's Classic 0 diurcfa Triumphant

12:30

O O This Week With David Brinkley

OO Meet Tbe Press O Filling Fever 0 Face 'e Nation 0 First Sunda^^^Mcial Edition

0 Jacques Cousteau Special

"Cries From The Deep Captain Jacques Cousteau visits the Grand Banks of Newfoundland and the Labrador Peninsula to encounter natural beauty and the stark reality of the struggle for existence between men and animals. (2 hrs.) 1:00

O Ministry Special O Young Peoples Special Anoth

er Stupid Kid A fourth-grader ha? trouble in school and is labelled stupid by his teachers who are unaware that he has dyslexia. QPraiseTlme

O 0 NBA BasketbaU "Conference Final (Starting time is subject to change) (2 hrs., 30 min.)

0 This Is The USFL 1:30

O 0 USFL Football At press time, the scheduled game was Chicago Blitz at Philadelphia Stars (3 hrs., 15 min.)

O Movie "Return To Boggy Creek (1978) o Wild Kingdom O Pishing With Roland Martin 2:00

O Beyond The Horizon: U.S. / Japan Magazine

Movie Last Of The Red Hot Lovers (1972) o Putt Putt Golf O Baseball Bunch Guest: Cal Ripken, Jr.

2:30

OO BUI Dance Outdoon 2:35

0 Baseball Atlanta Braves at Houston Astros (3 hrs.)

3:00

O Movie "Aunt Mary (1980)

O Ringside Roosevelt Green / John Mugabi 10-round Junior Middleweight bout (live from Las Vegas, Nev.).(l hr.)

OHeeHaw

3:3B

O 0 PGA Golf "Colonial National InviUtion Final round (live from Fort Worth. Tex). (Starting time is subject to change) (2 hrs., 30 min.)    ,

4:00 O Wagon Train

Movie "The War Between Men And Women (1972) OOSportsWorM

4:30

o The American Sportanan Cartoons

.    5:00

OThe Waltons KungFu 0 D. James Kennedy 0 National Geographic Special

5:35

0 Undosea World Of Jacques Cousteau

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6:00

O Travellers World O O News

d) Movie Claudine (1974)

O Dance Fever O Wild Kingdom O0CBSNews 0 ABC News Q) Jerry Falwell 60 North Candna People (SPN) Japan 120

6:30

O American Trail OOABCNews OONBCNews OToBeAnnoonced 0 Reel Perspectives 0 In Search Of...

0 Tony Browns Jonmal

6:35 0 Nice People

7:00

O Flying House

O 0 Ripleys Believe It Or Not!

OSoUdGoM

OOCHiPs

O0MMinntes

Good News

0 Austin Qty Limits

7:05

0 Wrestling

7:30

O Swiss Family Robinson 0 Camp Meeting, U.SA

8:00

e Movie Cops And Robbers" (No Date) Narrated By E.G. Robinson.A historical look is taken of the shoot out for law and order between the good guys and the bad guys from the Keystone Cops to the real A1 Capone. (1 hr.)

O O 0 David Frost Presents: The Guinness Book Of World Records David Frost and Randi Oakes host a look at a fascinating array of new exploits, uncommon endeavors and the bizarre things people do. (1 hr.)

CDHealthBeat

O O Movie Urban Cowboy (1980) John Travolta, Debra Winger. A blue-collar worker who fancies himself a modern-day cowboy falls in love with a girl he meets in a popular country-and-westem bar. (3 hrs.)

O 0 Archie Bunkers Piece Mr Van Ranseleer convinces Archie to join the boys for a night on the town at a singles club. (R)

0 Cosnios "Blues For A Red Planet Dr. Carl Sagan looks at the Viking Lander in Death Valley and demonstrates the machinery that has sent pictures and measurements from Mars back to Earth starting in 1976. (R) g (1 hr.)

(SPN) Scandinavian Weekly

8:05

0 Nashville Alive! Guests: Louise Mandrell, Crash Craddock, Ronnie McDowell, Rei Allen Jr. (1 hr.)

8:30

Film

Developing

Special

Sunday Evening

d) Millers Court

O 0 Newhart Dick reveals an uncanny ability to embarrass Joanna no matter how hard he tries to do the right thing. (R)

Oral Roberts

9:00

0InToA

O O 0 Movie Rough Cut (1980) Burt Reynolds, Lesley-Anjie Down A British socialite lures an international jewel thief out of retirement to help her steal 830,000,000 in diamonds. Q (2 hrs.) d) Merv Griffin Guests; Charlotte Rae, Fubar the robot, Marvin Gaye, psychologists Dr. Joyce Mills and Dr. Richard Crowley, Mark Kiefaber, restaurateur Michel Richard. (1 hr.)

O 0 1116 Jefferson George confidently bets Florence that he can do all her work for the day in only three hours. (R)

JlmBakker

0 Masterpiece Theatre Sons And Lovers'Eileen Atkins, Karl Johnson, Leonie Mellinger and Lynn Dearth star in a seven-part dramatization of D.H. Lawrence's autobiographical novel. (Part l)g(l hr.) (SPN) Telefrance U.S.A. Special: French-American Perspective / Theater Gala: Lulu / Other People, Other Places - Paris: Poetry Of An Urban Landscape (3 hrs., 30 min.)

9:05

0 Week In Review 9:30

O 0 Alice Alice enlists Meadowlark Lemons help when Tommy decides to quit the basketball team.

10:00

OBenHsden

d)News

O 0 Trapper John, M.D.

Trappers ex-mother-in-law, believing he is still married to her daughter, brings a puzzling medical case to him, and Gonzo poses as a nurse fora week. (R)(l hr.)

Robert Schuller The Good Neighbofs

10:05

0News

10:30 O John Ankerberg d) Odd Couple Dave Allen At Large

10:35

0SportsPage

11:00 e The Klittli Coining OeO00News

d) Movie The Fan (1949) Jeanne Crain, George Sanders. In Victorian England, a lady of questionable virtue uses her daughter to cover up for her mistakes and enhance her own social image. (2 hrs.) OGoodNews OCBSNewf

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GeneScoH Twilight Zone

11:05 0 Jmy FalweU

11:15

OO0ABCNews O Jack Van Impe

11:20

0CBSNews

11:30

OContact

ORmergency

O Movie Checkered Flag Or Crash" (1977) Joe Don Baker, Larry Ragman. Ruthless men vie for $100,000 in a long-distance car race in the Philippines (1 hr., 55 min.)

O Movie Of Mice And Men (1981) Robert Blake, Randy Quaid. Based on John Steinbeck's novel. An itinerant ranch hand tries to protect his strong, retarded friend from his innocent but often near-tragic failings (R) (2 hrs., 30 min.) O Jim Whittington 0 Entertainment This Week A report on how the National Enquirer operates and an interview with its publisher. Generoso Pope Jr.; interviews with Pat Benatar, Roy Scheider. (1 hr.)

0 Movie Soldier Of Fortune (1953) Clark Gable, Susan Hayward. An American photographer is rescued from imprisonment |n Red China by a gunrunner. (2 hrs.)

0 TwiUght Zone

11:45

O Movie The Grapes Of Wrath' (1940) Henry Fonda, Jane Darwelt. Based on the story by John Steinbeck. The great Okie migration to California during the Depression leaves a lasting impression on young Tom Joad. (2 hrs., 15 min.)

12:00 OLairy Jones O Charles Young Revival Jim Bakker

12:05

0 Open Up

12:30

O American Trail O Bradford Evangelist Assoda-tion

0For Our Times

(SPN) Mediterranean Echoes The

music and dance of Greece is presented. (2 hrs.)

1:00

eZda Levitt d) David Susskind In Touch

1:05

0 Ifovie A Bullet For Joey" (1955) George Raft. Edward G. Robinson (1 hr., 45 min.)

1:30

O Jewish Voice Broadcast 0News

2:00

0700 Club

O CBS News Nightwatcfa Jim Bakker

2:30

(SPN) Movie Garibaldi" (1961) Renzo Ricci, Paola Stoppa. (2 hrs.)

2:50

0 Movie Two Guys From Texas" (1948) Dennis Morgan. Jack Carson. (1 hr., 50 min.)

3:00

ORys*t

Kenneth Copeland 4:30

(SPN) Movie Secrets Of A Coed (1942) Otto Kruger, Tina Thayer. (2 hrs.)

RodStewerf Moves To Clean Image

By Ian Harmer

HOLLYWOOD - Hes putting the finishing touches to a new album, hes about to embark on a six month road tour, and rock superstar Rod Stewart is busily cleaning up his image.

Its not his act onstage or off - that needs spit and polish, insists Rod its the publics percption of him, fueled by countless printed exposes portraying him as everything from a pervert to a loudmouthed drunk

But now. Rod Stewart is a happily-married man and a doting dad. Hes 38, and he figures its time to set the record straight.

He told me: "There was a time in my life when I really did believe that I was Gods gift to women. 1 believed my own publicity, and there was an annoying arrogance about me, which 1 know for sure has gone now.

"My wife and kids are the most important things in my life now, and I am not having them exposed to the sort of things that people have been saying about me in print for years.

Theres always an element of truth in the stories, but the rest of it is always lies made up by someone who wants to make a bit of fast money.

Stewart has already filed suit against one mass-circulation daily in his native Britain, and he is now surrounded by tough-talking lawyers hired to zap lies with rolled-up briefs.

Said Rod: Once, 1 didnt care: Id read the stuff and laugh.

"Now, Ive grown up, and its not just me who is hurt

SUNDAY

Celeste Holm guest stars on the Sunday, May 15 rebroadcast of CBS Trapper John, M.D. She portrays the opinionated ex-mother-in-law* of the title character, played by Pernell Roberts.

(Stations reserve the ri^t to make last-rflinuie changes)

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Monday Friday Daytime

Movies This Week

5:00

ONew8(TBe-Pri)

O Jimmy Smggart (Fri)

QJimBaidmr

0Bewitcbed

Q) PH Chib (Preach) (Tie) Pattern For Laving (Wed) Gods News Behind The News (Thu, Fri)

5:10

0 World At Large (Moo)

5:30

O Another Life O Jimmy Swaggart O News (Moo)

O Dark Shadows (Moo-Tha)

0 Its Your Bnsiiiess (lion) Winners (Wed)

0 PTL Club (Italian) (Toe) In

Touch (Wed, Fri) Westbrook Hospi-

tal(Thu)

5:35

0 World At Large (Thn)

6:00 O Romper Room O O AJBC News This Morning d) Panorama

O Carolina In The Morning O Almanac O (Carolina Today 0 Mary Tyler Moore 0 Ag Day / Farm Report 0News

0 The Blackwood Brothers (Moo)

Jewish Voice Broadcast (Tue) The Kroeze Brothers (Wed) Revival Fires (Thu) Sound Of The Spirit

(Fri)

6:30

O Jimmy Swaggart 0 (JBS Eiarly Morning News 0 ABC News This Monung 0 Ben Haden (Moo) Oral Roberts

Tue) The LaHayes (Wed) Stan Rosenthal (Thui Bible Pathways

(Fri)

6:45

O Country Morning 7:00

O Movie (Mon) China Gale' O O 0 Good Morning America (d Great Space Coaster OO Today 0 Morning News 0 JimBakker

7:05

0 Funtime

7:30

d) Bull winkle

7:35

01 Dream Of Jeannie

7:45

0 AM. Weather

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8:00

(SBHiBmiiy And Friends O Morning News 0 Christian Foran 0 Planmng For Success (lioa)

Magic Of Decorative Painting (Tue) Building With The Sun (Wed) Victory Garden (Thu) Computer Programme (Fri)

8:05

0My Three Sons

8:15

0 Members In Particnlar 8:30

d) Tom And Jerry 0 Peter Pt^ (Hon) Jim Bakker (Tue) Westbrook Hospital (Wed) Jewish Voice Broadcast (Thu) Contact (Fri)

8:35

OHazel

0 Educational Programming 9:00

B Battle For The Family Telethon O The Waltons B Bov Magazine d) ILoveLncy O0 Donahoe O Richard Simmom 0 Jimmy Swaggart 0 Sesame Street

9:05

0 Movie (Mon) SUge Struck

9:30 d) My Three Sou O AH In The Family 0 Contact (Moo) Shiloh Christian Retreat (Tue) Frederick K. Price (Wed) Light And Lively (Thu) Heri-Uge U S A. Update (Fri)

10:00

B Battle For The Faimly Teletboii

(Coatd)

B Tk Tac Dongh 0 Frog Hollow d) Leave It To Beaver O JimBvns O The Facts Of Ufe (R)

O 0 The New |U,000 Pyramid 0Good limes

0 Time Of Deliverance (Moo) Sing Out America (Tue) Power Of Pentecost (Thu) Revival Fires (Fri)

0 EdncatioDal Programming 10:30

OB Edge Of Night d) Andy Griffith O O Sale Of The Centnry O0CbUdsPIay 0 Laverne & Shi^ <[ Company 0 Bat Haden (Mon) Gods News Behind rhe News (Wed) In Touch (Fri)

0 What On Earth? (Moo)

11:00 0B0LoveBoat(R) d) Tom Cottle; Up Close OO Wheel Of Fortmie O 0 The Price Is Right 0 JimBakker

0 Educational Programming (Mon) Come Alive (Wed) 19th Century Literary Biography (Thu) High Feather(Fri)

0TheCatlins

11:30 0 Another Life (DNews

O O Dream House

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11:35

01hatGiri

0 EdncaUoiial Programming (Tha)

12:00

O Moyie (Moo) Timherjack

OBOONem

d) Panorama OFhmOyFead 0 Lester Snmrall Teaching 0 Educatkmal Programming (Mon-Wed, Fri) Advocates In Brief (Thu)

12:05

0PeopieNow

12:15

O Midday

12:30 B O 0 Ryans Hope OiO Search Fv Tomorrow O0 The Young And The ResUen 0CampMe^U,SJL 0 Edncatiooal Programming 12:45

0 Electric Company (R)

1:00

OO0AU My Children d) Movie (Mon) Ninotchka" (1939) 08 Days or Ov Uves 1:05

0 Movie (Mon) The Bliss Of Mrs. Blossom (1963)

0 Perry Maaon (Toe, Wed)

1:15

0 Edncatiooal Pn^amming (Moo-Wed) Come Alive (Thu) High Feather (Fri)

1:30

O 0 As The World Turns 0 Good News America 1:45

0 Edncatiooal Programming (Thu, Fri)

1:50

0 Short Story Showcase (Mm)

2:00

B Yov IXrilars Worth (Mon) Sewing Etc. (Tue) My Uttle Margie (Wed, Thu) American Baby (Fri)

O O 0 One Life To Uve OBAnotherWwU 0 How Can I Uve? (Moo) Good News (Tue) Sound Of The Spirit (Wed) Jerry Falwell (Thu) Jimmy Swaggart (Fri)

0 Case Studies In Small Business (Tue, Thu) Equal Justice Under Law (Wed)

2:05

OOo-DeckCircJe(Tue,Wed)

2:20

0 Baseball (Tue, Wed)

2:30

B At Home With Beverly Nye (Moo) Family Chef (Tue) Fresh Ideas (Wed) Cleaning Up Your Act (Thu) Together: Shirley And Pat Boone (Fri) d) Insight (Fri)

O0 Capitol

0 The Lessoo (Moo) Oral Roberts (Tue) Pattern For Living (Wed)

0 What On Earth? (Toe) Introductory Principles Of Nutrition (Wed) Educational Programming (Thu) Advocates In Brief (Fri)

2:35

0 Eidncational Programming (Moo)

3:00

B Battle Fv The Family TeleUioo O O 0 General Hosfutal d) Popeye And Friends OB Fantasy O0GuidmgU0t 0PTL Seminar

0 Ow Easy (Mon, Fri) Creativity With Bill Moyers (Tue, Thu)

3:05

0 Fontime (Moo, Thn, Fri)

3:30

3) Tom And Jerry 0 Magic Of 0 Painting (Mon) Building With The Sun (Tue) Everyday Cooking With Jacques Pepin (Wed) Planning For Success (Thu) Great Chefs Of New Orleans (Fri)

3:35

0 The Flintstones (Mon, Thn, Fri)

4:00 B Another Life O What's Happening!! '    

SUNDAY'S MOVIES MAYlS,lttS

5:30

(SPN) Three Steps To Love

10:30

S) CapUmSinbad(1963)

0 Maracaibo (1951)

10:35

0 The Far Country (1955) 12:00

d) "It Happened To Jane (1959) 1:30

B Return To    Oeek

2:00

d) Last Of The Red Hot Lovers

3:00

B Aunt Mary (1980)

0 Ob, Susanna (1936)

4:00

d) The War Between Men And Women (1972)

B Woody Woodpecker And Frieods

d) Happy Days Again B Littie House On The Prairie O Whitney The Hobo O The Waltons 0 Alice (Moo, The, Thn. Fri)

0 Movie (Wed) Inspector CTouseau (1968)

0Cartoons

0 Today With Lester Sumrall (Mm) Kenneth Copeland (Tue) Time Of Deliverance (Wed) Calvary Temple (Thu) Ford Philpot (Fri)

0 Sesame Street

4:05

0 The Monsters (Mod, Thu, Fri) 4:30

OBultaeye B CHiPs Patrol BGood Times d) WekomeBacfc, Kotter O Little House On The Prairie 0 The Jeffersoos (Mon, Tne, Thn, Fri)

0BJ/Lobo

0 Signs Of The Times (Wed) Revival Fires (Fri)

4:35

0 Leave It To Beaver (Mon, Thn,

5:00

0 Oain ReactiM 0 Sanford And Sm d)Mork And Mindy 0Peo|des Court O Beverly Hillbillies 0 Threes Conpany (Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri)

0100 Huntley Street 0 Mister Rogers (R)

5:05

0 The Brady Bunch (Mon, Thn, Fn) 5:20 0 News (Tne, Wed)

5:30

e Lets Make A Deal 0BJ/Lobo BO Andy Griffith (S Carol Burnett And Friends BNews QLie Detector 00 Peoples Court 0Powerbonse

5:35

0 Starcade (Mm) Bewitched (Tue-Fri)

5:00

0 Utah (1945)

6:00

d) Claudine(1974)

MONDAY'S MOVIES MAY1I,1M3

6:30

(SPN) Cyclone Cowboy (No Date)

7:00

0 China Gate (1957)

9:05

0 Stage struck (1957)

12:00

0 Timberjack(1954)

1:00

Ninotchka (1939)

1:05

0 The Bliss Of Mrs. Blossom"

6:30

0 China Gate (1957)

TUESDAY'S MOVIES MAY 17,19S3

6:30

(SPN) Cheyenne Rides Again

7:00

0 The Fighting Kentuckian

9:05

0 Perfect Gentleman (1978) 12:00

0 Kansas Ciiy Confidential" 1:00

One Summer Love (1976) 6:30

0 The Fighting Kentuckian WEDNESDAY'S MOVIES MAY 18,1983

6:30

(SPN) "Gone To The Dop

7:00

0 Run Like A Thief" (1967)

9:05

0 Strangers: The Story Of A Mother And Daughter (1979)

12:00

0 The Avenger (1961)

1:00

Honky Tonk(1941)

4:00

0 Inspector Clouseau (1968)

6:30

B Run Like A Thief (1967)

raURSDAY'S MOVIES MAY 19,1983

5:00

(SPN) Billy The Kid In Texas

6:30

(SPN) Devil Riders (1935)

7:00

6 Mrs. Mike (1949)

9:05

0 Harlow (1965)

12:00

B "Love Lauglis A(^y Hardy 1:00

Dont Make Waves (1967) 1:05

0 The Paratrooper (1954)

6:30

0 Mrs. Mike (1949)

FRIDAY'S MOVIES MAY 20,1983

6:30

(SPN) The Big Race (No Date)

7:00

0 Texas Lady (1956)

9:05

0 No Man Of Her Own (1932) 12:00

0 The Capture (1951)

1:00

Divorce Hers" (1972)

1:05

0 White Comanche (1967)

6:30

0 Texas Lady (1956)

SATURDAY'S MOVIES MAY 21,1983

5:30

(a*N) Deadline (No Date)

8:35

0 Mighty Joe Young (1949) 10:00

0 Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936) 10:35 0 Drum Beat (1954)

11:00

Flame Over India (I960)

1:00

0 rhe Desperados Are In Town Tentacles (1977)

O The Affair (1973)

1:30

B Horror At 37,000 Feet (1972) 0 Whos Minding The Store? 0 Sidekicks (1974)

3:00

B Roaming Cowboy (J937)

Dr. Phibes Rises Again (1972)

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Monday Evening

6:00 BTicTacDojuh oeooo<D0 News OneDayAtATiine Q) Orele Square SDoctorWho (SPN) Telephone Auction

6:05 0 Andy Giifrith

6:30

O Movie "China Gate (1957) O0ABCNewsn Alice ^ OONBCNews OOCBSNews 0 Good News Amalea 0 Sherlock Holmes And Dr Watson

6:35

0GomerPyle

7:00

B WKRP In Cindnnati BABCNewsg 0 Threes Gmpany OOTbeJeffersons B Jokers Wild 0 Entertainment Tonight 0 JimBakker 0 MacNeil / Lehrer Rqwrt (SPN)Movieweek

7:05

0 Carol Burnett And Friends 7:30

B 0 Threes Company 0 PM. Magaone M*A*S*H O0Alke O Family Fend BTicTac Dough 0 Father John Bertolucci 0 North Carolina People (SPN) Pet Action Line

7:35

0BobNewhart

8:00

BI%

0 0 0 Movie "Death On The Nile (1978) Peter Ustinov; Bette Davis. Based on the novel by Agatha Christie Belgian detective Her-cule Poirot investigates a murder among a party of eccentrics aboard a cruise ship. (3 hrs.)

Star Trek

O Love, Sidney A beautiful young woman falls in love with Sidney while working on an advertising campaign with him. (1 hr.) o Little House On The Prairie O 0 Its An Adventure, Charlie Brown Charles M. Schulz introduces an anthology of animated adaptations from his favorite "Peanuts newspaper strips. (1 hr.)

0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A.

0 Frontline g (SPN) Photographers Eye

8:05

0 Movie "Pittsburgh (1942) John Wayne, Marlene Dietrich A man loses many friends in his relentless

drive for power in the steel industry. (2 hrs.)

8:30

(SPN) Moneyworks 9:00

0 Battle For The Family Telethon (I) Merv Griffin Guests: Bob Hope, George Bums. (1 hr.)

O O Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever Entertainers including Michael Jackson, Richard Pryor, Diana Ross, Lionel Richie, Smokey Robinson, Linda Ronstadt and Stevie Wonder celebrate the 25th anniversary of Motown Productions. (2 hrs.)

O 0 M*A*S*H The 4077th's plans for a Halloween night costume party are interrupted by incoming wounded from the front and from Rosies Bar (R)

0 Jim Bakker

0 Great Performances Life On The Mississippi Kurt Vonnegut Jr. hosts a film adaptation of Mark Twains imaginative evocation of his experiences as an apprentice riverboat pilot in the days of the great Mississippi steamboats; Robert Lansing and David Knell star. (R)(2 hrs.)

(SPN) Telefrance UAA. Fiction: Young Girls / Entracte: The Little Woman / Tele-Stories: The Sign Of Four / Artview: A City At Chandigarh - Le Corbusiers Modem Metropolis (4 hrs.)

9:30

O 0 One Day At A Time Ann and

Sam both have some nearly disastrous second thoughts just before their wedding.

10:00

B Battle For The Family Telethon (Cootd)

News

O 0 Ca^iey L Lacey Chris and Mary Beth are chosen to head up a special task force to crack a robbery ring preying on wealthy beauty salon patrons. (R) (1 hr.)

0 Lester Sumrall Teaching

10:05

0 News

10:30

BStarTime 0 Jerry Savelle

11:00

O0OOO00News

Soap

0 Introduction To Life 0 Alfred Hitchcock Presents

11:05

0 All In The Family 11:30

0 Another Life

O 0 0 ABC News Nightline

Kojak

O O The Best Of Carson Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Charles Nelson Reilly, Slim Whitman. (R) (1 hr.)

UNFINISHED

FURNITURE

O Trapper John, M.D (R)

0 Charlies Angels 0 The Blackwood Brothers 0 Morecambe L Wise

11:35

0TheCatlins

12:00

B Bums And Allen 0 Jim Bakker

12:05

0 Movie "Evidence Of Power (1979) Alan Hale, Gordon Jump. (2 hrs.)

12:30 B Jack Benny BOneOnOne 0 More Real People News

O O Ute Night With David Letterman Guests: author-humorist Fran Lebowitz; Jim Peterson, "Playboy magazine adviser, backwards singer David Fhrer. (1 hr.) 0 The Rockford Files 0 Starsky And Hutch

12:40

QColumbo(R)

1:00 BI Married Joan B Rat Patrol 0News 0Faithline (SPN) TraveUers World

1:30

B My Little Margie BNews

O O NBC NewsOvonight 0 Mission; Impossible (SPN) Movie Buckskin Frontier (1943) Richard Dix, Jane Wyatt. (1 hr., 30 min.)

2:00

B Bachelor Father BNews

Private Secretary O CBS News Nightwatch 0 Jim Bakker

2:05

0 Movie The Naked Streiet (1955) Anthony Quinn, Anne Bancroft. (1 hr., 45 min.)

2:30 BLifeOfRUey OAU In The Family O0News

3:00

B Battle For The Family Telethon ONews

0 Robert Schuller

(SPN) Movie Police Call (No

Date) Nick Stewart. (1 hr., 30 min.)

3:30

ONews

3:50

0 Movie Marco" (1973) Zero Mostel, Desi Arnaz Jr. (2 hrs., 10 min.)

4:00

B Battle For The Family Telethon (Cootd)

0News

0 Today With Lester Sumrall

4:30 BRossBagley OAUInTheFamUy

Ib

9

10

11

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Il7

The Daily Reflfcfor.Greenvaie. N .C.-Sunday, May 15,1983-TV-5

Jack P(i(ir (iuoHls

Jack Paar will make only his .second appearance on "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson." since exiting NBC-TVs late-night show as host in 1962. when he appears with Carson Tuesday. May 17.

Paar's other appearance with Carson was on May 13, 1968, when the program was originating from New York.

Paar was host of the show from July 29, 1957, until March 30,1962. From April 2,1%2, until September 28,1962, various guest hosts took over the program, Carson became host October 1, 1962.

'I^alldir SiMjiicI

George C Scott has agreed to star in a sequel to his Oscar-winning Patton" movie. Filming will begin in Hungary as soon as he completes his role in China Rose" with Ali MacGraw.

By DANIEL M. MARVIN

ACROSS 1 Square

5 Mr. Newhart 8 Mr. Sharif

12 Actress Francis

13 Actor Gossett

14 Dispatched

15 Kermit's cousin

Hernando

40 Always: contr.

41 Actress Sophia

43 Folk singer Bob

46 Roy Rogers' partner

47 Auction bid

49 Actress Gray

16 Siamese coin 51 Actor Griffith

17 Yield    52    Boundary:

18 Actor Robert comb form 20 Incredible! 53 Miss Foch

22 Article

23 Days of Lives

24 Jason's wife

27 Actress Jillian

28 Koppell or Knight

31 A Gabor

32 Bake

34 Women's Lib aim

35 Mr Nimoy, to friends

36 Lewis & Clark Acad.

37 Hagman or Wilcox

39 Uncle

54 The Bee

55 Caviar

56 Actress Barbara

DOWN

1 Songstress Benatar

2 Sonny Shroyer role

3 Tiny insect

4 Unruffled

5 Baretta st|

6 Out: Scot,

7 Comedian Red

8 Movie award

9 The Press

10 Ifs, , or buts

11 Map abbreviation

19 Country music's Pride

21 Newsman Chet

24 Vic Tayback role

25 Actress Arden

26 Actor Aykroyd

27 Motorists'

grp

28 Three: prefix

29 Wander

30 Actress Laraine

33 He's Archie Bunker

38 Miss Dahl

39 Three-spots

40 Albert or Bracken

41 Singer Abbe

42 Ye-Shoppe

44 Dry

45 Baseball team

46 U.N. first name

48 Gold:Sp.

50 Miss Fabray, to friends

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Rx For Fear

SOLID OAK CHAIRS

20 STYLES OF CHAIRS AVAILABLE

Ed Begley Jr., who co-stars as Dr. Ehrlich in "St. Elsewhere, believes that the realistic depiction of the tremendous burdens faced by those in the medical

profession will have a positive' (SPN) Movie Sporting Chance" j f

mThe long ru. it'll be helpful, said Begley. We show Trio Of Stars doctors trying to do a real job.

Producer Aaron Spelling is    the publics fear of

filming a new pilot for ABC. The    unknown. Despite their prob-

potential series stars Edie    St. Elsewhere shows that

Adams, Billy Dee Williams and doctors have a high batting aver-Parker Stevenson.

Eveiything you need to wear this summer. The Sun Survival Kit only $12.50 with any $9.50 purchase of Merle Norman Cosmetics. A tote bag full ol your summer needs like: Automatic Lip Sunshine, Body Moisturizer, Lip Soother Plus, & Color Mist With Sunscreen. Now At:

('arson In Mo>ie

"Tonight Show" host Johnny Carson will appear in the film "The Eileen Ford Story, Carson will play the husband of model and cover girl Eileen Ford. Lauren Hutton will pi?' the title role.

It's Carson's first feature film.

KIRSCH

Tame the SOMMER SUN

SALE

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TV-6-The Daily Renector, Greenville, NC -Sunday, May 15,1983

Tuesday Evening

Home Box Office

6:00 ' . o Tic Tac Doi^ OOOOOO News (S One Day At A Time Q) Pirate Adventures Doctor Who

(SPN) Microwaves Are For Cooking

6:05

(D Andy Griffith

6:30

O Movie "The Fighting Kentuckian" (1949)

O0ABCNewsn (DAce ^

OO NBC News O0CBSNews S) Good News America 0 Sherlock Holmes And Dr. Wat-

6:35

0 Gomer Pyle

7:00

OWKRP In Cincinnati OABCNewsn (D 0 Threes Company O O The Jeffersons O Jokers Wild 0 Entertainment Tonight 0 Jewish Voice Broadcast 0 MacNeil / Lehrer Report

7:05

0 Carol Burnett And Friends 7:30

O 0 Threes Company O PM. Magazine d) M*A*S*H O0Alice O Family Fend OTic Tac Dough 0 Oral Roberts 0 Almanac 7.35

0BobNewhart

, 8:00

OlSpy

000 H>ppy Doys

announces her plans to move to Chicago permanently to continue singing with Chachi. (R) g StarTrek

O O The A-Team The A-Team are hired to protect a veteran policeman who is convinced that he is the target of a SWAT team made up of corrupt fellow officers. (R) (1 hr.)

O 0 Movie "Playing For Time" (1980) Vanessa Redgrave, Jane Alexander A bizarre concentration camp orchestra inside Auschwitz struggles against all odds to spare themselves from death at the hands of their Nazi captors. (R)(3 hrs.)

0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A.

Nova Goodbye, Louisiana A report on the staggering water problems of southern Louisiana is presented. (R)g(l hr.)

8:05

0 Its A Long Way To October An

inside look at the Atlanta Braves' division-winning 1982 baseball season is presented. (Part 1) (2 hrs.)

8:30

000 Joanie Loves Chachi

Bobby Arnold, Chachis former rival for Joanie's affections, shows coat Delvecchio's.

9:00

O Battle For The Family Telethon 000 Threes Company Jack has to get a tooth extracted by a

O O St Elsewhere Dr. Morrison sw*v may is, ins

must treat a remorseless terrorist, i:M Moti* ZuIu Dawn iisrs) Bun Uncas and Dr. Craig browbeats an indeci- r    ,

sm patat m. h.,ig .ripie bypass surgery. (R) (1 hr.)

dentist who was recently jilted by QOuinlnimi

Torri R\r-|    M    W

0 Lester Sumrall Teaching 10:05

0News

10:30

OStarTime 0 Revival Fires

0 Comedy Tonight Guest: ventriloquist Ronn Lucas

11:00

000 0000 News

TheLaHayes

0 Alfred Hitchcock Presents

11:05

0AUInTheFamUy

11:30

O Another Life O O 0 ABC News Nlghtline O O Tonight Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Jack Paar, Albert Brooks. (1 hr.

Terri. (R)g d) Merv Griffin Guests: Deniece Williams, Betty White, Maya Angelou, Dr. William Shoemaker, Jean-Paul Vignon. (1 hr.)

O O Remington Steele Laura and Remington have to compete with each other when two different clients hire them to solve a jewel heist. (R)(l hr.)

0 Jim Bakker

0 Charlie's Angels Good News Morecambe&Wioe

11:35

0TheCatlins

12:00

O Burns And Alien 0 Jim Bakker

____ 12:05

0 American Playhouse "King Of ffl Movie The Master Of Bailan-America In 1915, a young, strong- trae " (1953) Errol Flynn, Beatrice    Pandemocmm    (i982)

willed Greek sailor jumps ship in Campbell. (1 hr, 55 min.)

ll.NVIdwJNtbox ll:NPn||leRMfc 114* MovW Zulu Dawn 11979)

IMMsvte Dead Men Don i Wear Plaid '(1982) Steve Martin. Rachel Ward l:N Vldao Jikatox 4.-NMoii Victor Victoria" (1982) l:W a Yaui Of Jdrrjr Lm - A CaWntloa 7:Wrrmi(Rock

IMHovI* "Richard Pryor Live From The Sunset .Strip (19821 Richard Pryor aw Not NwMnrUj TW Nti ItMHovit "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid " (1982)

ILMMovto "The Boogens (1981) Rebecca Balding, Fred McCarren 1:11 Hovte "Zulu Dawn (1979) l:lt Movie "Richard Pryor Live From The Sunset Strip(1982)

4:U Movie "Paradise (1982) Willie Aamei. Phoebe Cates

MONDAY MAY II, IIU

l:MneRemeiteMe Rocket 7M NaUootl Gaofrepkic Spadil liNTwobABoi

l:M Movie Going Ape!" (981) Tony Dania, Jessica Walter llrN Movie " Continental Divide (1981) John Belushi. Blair Brown IIM Movie MounUin Family Robinson (1979) Robert Logan, Susan Daniante Shaw SMTwoIbABoi

1:M Movie Cannonball Run (1981)

4:W Nettooal Geofrapkic Spedel SiMTkeRemeikable Rocket l:N Movie "Going Ape'" (1981) 7:NPre|gieRoek

I.-N Movie'"Continental Divide (1981) lldM Movie Pandemonium " (1982)

U:M Movie Stripes" (1981) Bill Murray, Harold Ramis ISO Movie "Cannonball Run ' (1981)

12:30

O J*ch Benny OOneOnOne O More Real People O O Late Night With David Letterman Guests: radio personaii

On The Premises Repair Service

Pear! Restringing    Watch Repairs

Chain Soldering    Stone Setting

Remounting    Engraving

Appraisals    Ring Sizing

Free Estimates

(SASLOWS

JemltTs

Pin PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER GREENVILLE 756-7112

(Ihr.)

0 The Rockford Files

New York Harbor hoping to make a new life for himself in America. (R)

0(1 hr, 30 min.)

9:30

0009 To 5 A chance meeting with her former in-laws causes Violet to drop her new boyfriend like a hot potato. (R)

10:00    ^

OBate For The Fanuly Telethon 0 Starsky And Hutch 000 Hart To Hart Jonathan    12;40

and Jennifer investigate the sup- Q McMillan & Wife (R) posedly staged robberies and gun-    ...

fights at a Western amusement    ,

p.*rMmg,lhr.,    girX

ONewi

0 Westbrook Hoepital 1:30

O My Little Margie ONews

O O NBC News Overnight 0 Mission; Impossible 0 The Camerons

2:00

0 Bachelor Father ONews

CD Private Secretary O CBS News Nightwatcfa 0 Movie "Across The Pacific ;i942) Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor. (2 hrs.)

0 Jim Bakker

2:30

OLifeOfRUey

QAUlnTbeFamUy

3:00

ty Dr. Demento, Pee Wee Herman O Battle For The Family Telethon

ONews 0 Good News

(SPN) Movie Prisoner Of Japan (1942) Alan Baxter, Gertrude Michael. (Ihr, 30 ihin.)

3:30

ONews

0 Oral Roberts

mSDAV may 17, INS

M Hui CkrMu Andnaai Mific Adwn-tv(

7:N Movie 'The Night The Ughts Went Out In Georgia " (1981) Kristy McNicbol. Mark Hamill

f:N CooMiDar Repart PnMott IMS PklUp MirioM: Private Ejfc

llM Movie "MeatbalU" (1979) Bill Murray.

Chris Makepeace UN Movie Victor Victoria " (1982) Julte Andrews. Robert Preston.

S4S Movie The Night The Lights Went Out In Georgia (1981)

S4t Hue CkriaUaa ABdenoa'i Miftc Advao-tve

IS* Movie Mea(balls(I979)

ISO PkiUp Miriowc: Privitc Eye MO Not NecaaMrily lie Newi

ON Movie Whose Lie Is It Anyway"" (1981) 11:N Movie " Victor Victoria"" (1982) l;4i Movie Partners (1982) Ryan O'Neal, John Hurt A straight cop and a gay police clerk go undercover as a homosexual couple to find the murderer of a male model "R"

8:U Movie Visiting Hours ' (1982) Michael Ironside, Lee Grant WEDNESDAY MAY II, INS

S.N PkUip Mariowe: Private Eye INATtkOfPovWINai 7:NTkeRaaiaftibieRoekri lOO PrmleRock

l:N U Yam or Jerry Lee - A Cele^tiOB ON Video JNabox

ItOk Movie "St Helens" (1981) Art Carney. David Huffman An 80-year-old man refuses to leave his small resort after a geologist predicts a volcanic disaster PG

IIN Movie Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid 1:N Movie The Pursuit Of D B Cooper" S:N tt Ynn Of Jerry Lae - A CeletnUoB 4JIPraaleRock SNATaleOfPowWINai l:N Movie "St Helens (1981)

S:N Movie "Silent Rage (1982) Chuck Noms. Ron Silver

ION Movie Richard Pryor bve From The Sunset Strip " (1982)

ILN Hooker

1S:N Movie Qead Men Don ! Wear Plaid " SN Movie The Boogens " (1981) Rebecca Balding. Fred McCarren Ancient tenta-cled creatures terrorize the inhabitants of house that is connected to the monsters' subterranean lair "R"

S:4S Booker

4:4S SS Yeen Of Jerry Lee - A Calehrttka THURSDAY MAY 1, INI

IN NMkotl GooFifkic Spodal

7MAlklBWoadariiad

ON ChuqilaH Of Anericaa Sport

ION Movie "MounUin Family Robinson IIM Movie Zulu Dawn" (1979) Burt Lancaster. Peter OToole The English wage a bitter war against Uie Zulu nation in 19th. century Africa "PG"

24* Philip Merioire Private Eye l:N dompiooe Of Aniarieu

44* NAdoed Oeeyepkic Spedil

ON Movie "Mountain Family Robinson 7 :N OampiOH Of AnMricM Spori

ON Movie The Poetman Always Rings Twice (1981) Jack Nicholson, Jessica Lange A young woman and her lover plot to murder her husband "R"

114*PkiUpMarlowe:Private^ ,

114* Movie "Whose Life Is It Anyway"*" (1981) 14* Movie "Stripes" (1981) Bill Murray. Har old Ramis

t:M Movie " Mounuin Family Robinson

PRIDAY MAYM.ltU

ON PMIlp Mariowe Privdt Eyo ON Haae CkriitiaB Aadem'i Magic Adveo-twe

*4* Movla The Nighl The Lights Went Out In Georgia' (1981) Kristy McNichol. Mark Hamill A brother-and-sister longwnting duo have many adventures while trying to eke out a living on the country-westerr circuit PG" lONMovit " Pandemonium " (1982) ILNCiMBiierRoportaPtwMs

114* Movit Going Ape'' (1981) Tony Danza Jessica Walter LNMovia Missing" (1981) Jack Lemmon Sissy Spacek

IN Duyl Han t Joko Ottai la Coaeett

S4*TteRamaikabitRoefcot

ONPraiglaRock

(4* CooMBiar Raportf ProMrii

ON Movla "Pandemonium (1982)

ON Movie "Paradije " (1982) Willie Aames Phoebe Cates Two teen agers come of age in 1823 Baghdad "R"

1*4* Daryl Hall A Jcka OatM la Coeeert ll:N Not NoeeairUy The Nowi 114* Movie Missing" (1981)

IN Movie Visiting Hours'" (1982) Michael Ironside, Lee Grant 1:M Movie "Paradise" (1982)

SATURDAY MAY11,1**1

Vlt Cageaner Raporti PreMBte OUNotNecMurilyneNcwi

ON Movie Cannonball Run (1981) Burt Reynolds. Dom DeLuise Various oddball characters compete in a coast to-coasi auto race PG ON Oumptoai Of Americaa Sport ION Movie " Victor ' Victoria " (1982) Julie Andrews, Robert Preston 11:N Video Jafcekox IN Movie Modem Problems" (1981)

I N U Yean Of Jerry Lee - A Criebratloo ON Movie "Cannonball Run" (1981)

ON Video Jikekox

(N Movie "Dead Men- Don t Wear Plaid 7:N CkampioM Of Amerieao Sport

ON Movie "Richard Pryor Live From The Sunset Strip (1982) Richard Pryor This , filmed concert performance is highlight-ed by the comedian's views on sez. marriage. grison life and a chilling though humorous account of his catastrophic experiences with cocaine dependence "R ION Hoekw

11:M Movie "Modem Problems (1981)

1:1* Movit "Victor Victoria" (1982) l:N Movie "Personal Best (1982)

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Wednesday Evening

6:00

OOOOOO News (SOoeDayAtAllme Q) Mr. Mnstacfae And Company Doctor Who

(SPN) Connie Martinson Talks Books

6:05

(B Andy Griffith

6:30

O Movie Run Like A Thief (1967)

O0ABCNewsn (SAlke ^ OONBCNews O0 CBS News 0 Good News Anoerica 0 Sherlock Holmes And Dr. Watson

(SPN) Lofton And St. John In Washington

6:35

0GomerPyle

7:00 '

O WKRP In Cincinnati OABCNewsn il) 0 Threes Company O O Hie JeffersQos O Jokers WUd O Entertainment Tonight Q) The Kroeze Brothers 0 MacNeil / Lehrer Report (SPN) Medicine Man

7:05

0 Carol Burnett And Friends

7:30

O 0 Threes Company O PM. Magazine d)M*A*S*H O0 Alice O Family Feud O Tic Tac Dough 0RezHumhard

0 Stateline: The General Assembly

(SPN) Money Talks

7:35

0BobNewhart

8:00

0 The FaU Guy Colt becomes a pawn for a New York City policeman who wants to nail a top mobster. (R)(l hr.)

(D Movie Piranha (1978) Bradford Dillman, Heather Menzies, A school of man-eating fish is accidentally released in the vicinity of a seaside resort where dozens of vacationers are relaxing (2 hrs.) oo Real People More highlights of the Real People train trip from Los Angeles to Chicago include segments on a Most Perfect Body contest, Abe Lincoln look-alikes, and a St. Louis brewerys famed Clydesdale horses (R)(lhr.)

O 0 E.T. And Friends; Magical Movie Visitn Robin Williams takes an informative and humorous look at how our views of extraterrestrials and life in the cosmic future have changed over the years. (R)(lhr.)

0 Camp Meeting, U.S.A.

0 All Creatures Great And Small

n

(SPN) American Baby 8:05

0 Its A Long Way To October An

inside look at the Atlanta Braves division-winning 1982 baseball season is presented. (Part 2) (2 hrs.)

8:30

(SPN) Nikki Haskell 9:00

O Battle For The Family Telethon O O 0 Movie "Travis McGee (Premiere) Sam Elliott, Gene Evans Travis McGee becomes involved in a web of intrigue when he tries to help an old friend regain his reputation following a boating accident. (2 hrs.)

O O The Facts Of Life An argument with her adoptive mother prompts Natalie to think about locating her natural mother (R) g O 0 Country Comes Home Mac Davis hosts this annual celebration of Americas country music with guest stars including Alabama, Glen Campbell, the Oak Ridge Boys, Charley Pride, Roy Rogers, Ricky Skaggs, Lacy J. Dalton, and Shelley West. (2 hrs.)

0 JimBakker

0 The History Of The S.S. The development of Hitler's S.S., the "protection squad," from its beginnings to its ultimate destruction, is traced with archival footage and interviews with former S.S. men, historians and victims (1 hr.)

9:30

OO Taxi Jim has to convince his family that he didn't squander his inheritance when he bought the restaurant next door to the garage.

10:00

O Battle For The Family Telethon (Cootd)

(DNews

O O Quincy Quincy's attempts to investigate the slaying of a smalltown bully are complicated when six residents try to take credit for the deed.(R)(lhr.)

0 Lester Sumrall Teaching Blitz On Britain World War II newsreel and documentary footage illustrates the history of the Battle of Britain. Alistair Cooke narrates. (1 hr.)

10:05

0News

10:30

OStarTime 0 John Ankerberg

11:00

OOOOO00News

Soap

0 Bible Pathways 0 Alfred Hitchcock PresenU

11:05

0 Woman Watch Featured: Cheryl Steams, the first woman member of the Golden Knights Army precision paratrooper team; Letitia Bal-ridge, Jackie Kennedys White House social secretary; Cynthia Gourley who tutors the children of circus performers.

11:30 B Another Life O O 0 ABC News Nightline

Kojak

O O Tonight Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Bob Newhart, Anthony Quinn. (1 hr.)

O NBA Basketball "Conference Final (If necessary) (2 hrs., 30 min.)

0 Charlies Angels 0 Sound Of The Spirit 0Morecambe&Wise

11:35

0TheCatlins

12:00

0 Bums And Allen 0 Jim Bakker

12:05

0 Movie "The Sea Chase (1955) John Wayne, Lana Turner. (2 hrs., 30 min.)

12:30 B Jack Benny BOneOnOne O More Real People News

o o Late Night With David Letterman Guests author Rita Mae Brown, creative composer Kirk Nurock. (1 hr.)

0 The Rockford Files 0 Starsky And Hutch

1:00 BI Married Joan B Heres Lucy BNews

Gene Scott (SPN) First Nighter

1:30

B My UtUe Margie BNews

O O NBC News Overnight 0 Mission: Imnoasible 2:00

0 Bachelor Father

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Monday thru Friday 10 AM to 4 PM Saturday by Appoinltnem |_J

Michele Will Tell

By Michele Marks

UKAR MK'HKLK: Can you please settle an argument? 1 think that Ashley Abbott on The Young and the Restless and Trey Clegg on "Capilol are married in real Iffe, but my mother sa\s they're not. Whos right? MISSY UMBERGER, lli( KORY, N.C.

TO .MISSY IN HICKORY Your mamas right' Eileen Datidson (.Ashleyi and Nicholas Walker (Treyi are not married.

DEAR MR HI.E; Could I please have some information on Dorothy Lyman, who plays Opal Gardner on "All My Children. Is she married, and where do I write to her? PRIS( ILL.A ( ARSON, RAEFORD, N.C.

TO iRISCILLA IN RAEFORD: Dorothy is a veteran of five daytime television shows "Edge of Night." "A World Apart.'

Search for Tomorrow.' ' .Another World." and currently "All My Children For her role of Opal Gardner in AMC.' Dorothy won the 1981 Emmy Award as Best Supporting Actress. Currently she is juggling two roles, her daytime role of Opal and in primetime she portrays Naomi -n NBC's comedy series : .Mama's Family. " The Minneapolis. Minnesota, native at-,, tended Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville. New York. Dorothy added to her theater skills when she directed the off-Broadway show "A Coupla White Chicks Sitting Around Talking." in 1980. and later. "Frugal Repast. " at the Actors and Directors Theater. Dorothy is single, resides in New York, and IS a member of the New York Theater Studio s board of directors. Write to Ms Lvman in c o ".Mama's Family," NBC-TV, .30 Rockefeller Plaza', N.Y.. N.Y.. 10020.

DEAR .MICHELE: Could you give me some information on Heather Locklear? Where is she from? I heard she was from Pembroke, .North Carolina. ROGER BAILF^Y, LLMBERTON, N.C.

TO ROGER IN .LUMBERTON: Heather Locklear is the embodiment of the "California Girl. " Slender, blonde and tanned. Heather is a native of Los Angeles, born September 25. who is as at home surfing at the beach or pursuing a racquet ball on court Heather enrolled at UCLA, where her father is currently director of admissions, with an eye to majoring in psychology. Her college friends encouraged her to take a course in commercial acting. Her first commercial was for a hair rinse. With some commercial experience under her belt. Heather began to get offers from episodic television. She made her series debut as Sammy Jo Dean on " Dynasty," then landed the role of Stacy Sheridan on " T.J. Hooker" Heather admits to being undisciplined about exercise and nutrition. " I'd eat M&Ms for breakfast." she admits. She keeps in shape with sports and dancings plays racquetball twice a week and once a week rides her bike from her home in West Los Angeles to the beach and back She also joves to play softball with her younger sister's team on weekends. Fans should address correspondence to Heather Locklear in c o "T.J. Hooker," ABC-TV. 2040 Avenue of the Stars. Los Angeles. Ca.. 90067.

I FOR ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT TV SHOWS AND PERSON ALITIES, WRITE TO MICHELE, c o The Greenville Daily Reflector, P.O. Box 30, Hopewell. Va. 2;J860.I

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3:00

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(SPN) Movie Dangerous Assignment" (No Date) Greta Nissen. (1 hr, 30 min.)

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TV TATTLE

Sons and Lovers

Leonie Mellinger portrays a beautiful woman whose adolescent love for sensitive son of a poor British mining family is pitted against his rare devotion to his mother in "Sons and Lovers. The seven-part dramatization of D.H. Lawrence's autobiographical novel, To premiere on "Mobil Masterpiece Theatre. Sunday, May 15 on PBS. (Air dates may vary; please check local listings.)

"Sons and Lovers" was published in 1913, some 15 years before the equally Controversial "Lady Chatterley's Lover ' The story is basically the author's real-life saga, of tensions within his family, the love-hate relationship of his parents, the intense mother-son situation and the , .traumatic effect this had on the sons dealings with other women.

Eileen Atkins portrays Gertrude Morel, the miner's wife who seeks from her sons what she did not realize from her husband (played by Tom Bell). Karl Johnson is Paul. Lawrence's fictional counterpart. Lynn Dearth plays Clara, who along with Miss Mellingers character, Miriam, cannot break Paul's Oedipal-like tie to his mother.

Sons and Lovers, filmed in Lawrences own town of Nottinghamshire, England, is presented on PBS by WGBH, Boston,

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TV--The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.C -Sunday, May 15,1983

Thursday Evening

6:00 O Tic Tac Do^ OOOOOO0News

(S One Da; At A Time Q) Inside Track Doctor Who

Star Trek    ern Metropolis (4 hrs.)

O O Fame Julie tries to reunite    g.jQ

her divorced parenU, and Leroy QomAmandas thinks he may leave the School of q q Hot-tempered Carla ^ts ^r good. (R) (1 hr^)    ^    gj,    obnoxious

-nin    r. i.-    MagDum,    PJ. Magnum and    york Yankees fan at the bar.

(SPN) Microwaves Are For Cookmg TC try to protect a Navy buddy who believes that the three of them are marked for death by an old war    10:00

enemy, (R) (2 hrs.)    O Battle For The FamUy Telethon

O)CampH0eting,U,SA    (Coatd)

Sneak Previews Neal Gabler 00020/20 and Jeffrey Lyons host an informa- News tive look at what's new at the mov- O O Hill Street Blues Furillo ies.    investigates a brutal attack on a

1 (SPN) Travellers Wwld    nun, and Hill and Renko encounter

.    an adulterous lover trapped by

and

Paul Newman, Gwrge Kennedy. A    ^    og.dead

young man on a Chain gang with an    j^at he

unquenchable thirst for freedom suddenly reappeared asking her for

6:05

0 And; Griffith

:30

e Movie "Mrs Mike" (1949) O0ABCNewsg

Alke OONBCNews O 0 CBS News 0 Ckwd News America 0 Sherlock Holmes And Dr. Watson

(SPN) First Nighter

6:35

0 Corner Pyle

7:00

OWKRPInCDdmiaU O ABC News

OQTheJeffersoos O Jokers WUd 0 Ehitertainment Tooigbt 0 Together With Love 0 MacNeil / Lehrer Report (SPN) Pet Action Line

7:05

0 Carol Burnett And Friends

7:30

O 0 Three's Company O PM. Magazine M*A*S*H 00 Alice O Family Feud O Tic Tac Dough 0 Power Unlimited 0 Stateline: The General Assembly

(SPN) Prnonal Computer 7:35

OBobNewhart

8:00

OlSpy

o O 0 The I Love TV Test

Gavin McLeod, Robert Mitchum, William Shatner, Nancy Dussault, Catherine Bach and Jamie Farr mvite viewers to match wits with a live studio audience in a nostalgia-filled television trivia quiz. (1 hr.)

defies all authority, gaining the money. (R)(l hr.) admiration of his fellow convicts. (2 gg Sumnll Inching hrs., 40 min.)    ^    ..gjues    A    Red Plan-

8:30    et Dr Carl Sagan looks afthe Vik-

Inside Story Hodding Carter ing Lander in Death Valley and hosts an examination of press per- demonstrates the machinery that formance on national television has sent pictures and measure-(SPN) Sharper Ima^ Living Cata- ments from Mars back to Earth log    sUrting in 1976. (R) g (1 hr.)

9:00    10:30

O Battle For The Family Telethon O Star lime O O 0 Too Close For Comfort 0EaglesNest ^

Henry. Muriel and Iris tell Jackie    10'45

widely varying stories about the jHews courtship of her parents. (R)

Merv Griffin Guests Lou    H:00

Rawls, Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Rus-' OeOOO00News sian and American gymnasts and Soap U S Olympic coach Don Peters, Dr. 0 Today In Bible Prophecy Lars Vistnes, Dr Roger Gorski. (1 ffi Alfred Hitchcock Presents hr)    11:30

O O Gimme A Break Samantha 0 Another Life becomes overly concerned about Q O 0 ABC News Nightline death after her father is accidental- Kojak ly shot in the hand (R)    q g Tonight Host: Johnny Car-

JimBakker    son. Guests: Peter Strauss, the Dave

0 Naonal Geographic Spwial Brubeck Quartet. (1 hr)

"Rain Forest An exploration of the g Quincy (R) rich variety of plant and animal life g Charlies Angels in the rain forests of Costa Rica is gj Contact

o * .c. . ffi Morecambe ft Wise (SPN) Telefrance U.S.A. "Fiction

Young Girls" , "Entracte: The Lit-    11:35

tie Woman / "Tele-Stories: The 0TheCatIins

Sign Of Four ' Artview: A City At    12:00

Chandigarh - Le Corbusier's Mod-

SUNDAY MAY IS. IMS

SMMoric Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid " (1912)) Steve Martin. Rachel Ward.

748 Motrto "Surbirds" (No Date)) Animated liWUeTit "Dot And The Kangaroo ' (1978)) Animated Directed by Voram Gross. IMI Mmrlt Victor ' Victoria" (1982)) Julie Andrews, Robert Preston 1S:M Movie Missing" (1981)) Jack Lemmon.

Sissy Spacek IJI Movie Where The Boys Are" (190)) Dolores Hart. George Hamilton til Movie "Dot And The Kangaroo" (1978)) Animated Directed by Voram Gross S:M Movie "Victor Victoria" (1982)) Julie Andrews. Robert |^too 14* Paper Ckaee; Tke Seeoad Yoir MSGaOa^S&KklaTkeMi IMS A New Day b Ida ISiSSANewDajbUaa IISS Movie "Personal Best" (1982)) Mariel Hemingway. Patrice Donnelly 1:11 Movie "Missing " (1981)) Jack Lemmon.

Sissy Spacek 1:11 Movie "Mother's Day" (1980)) Nancy Hendrickson. Deborah Luce,___

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0 JimBakker

12:05

0 Movie "Wind Across The Everglades (1958) Burl Ives, Christopher Plummer. (2 hrs.)

12:30 OJRck Benny OOneOnOne O More Real People News

o O Late Night With David

Letterman Guests: comedian Brother Theodore, actor Daniel Stem. (1 hr.)

0 The Roford Files

0 Starsky And Hutch

12:40

OMcCkNid(R)

1:00

01 Married Joan O The Real McCoys ONews

0 Jewish Voice Broadcast (SPN) Sharper Image Living Catalog

1:30    

O My Little Margie ONews

OONBCNews Overnight 0 Mission; Impossible 0 Good News

(SPN) Movie "The Private Life Of Don Juan (1934) Douglas Fairbanks Sr., Merle Oberon. (1 hr , 30 min.)

2:00

O Bachelor Father ONews

Private Secretary O CBS News Nightwatch 0 Jim Bakker

2:05

Movie Elephant Gun " (1959)

' Belinda Lee, Anna Gaylor. (1 hr., 45 min.)

:    2:30

OLifeOfRiley OAUInTheFanoUy O0News

3:00

O BatUe For The FamUy Telethon ONews 0 Jerry Falwell

(SPN) Movie "His Sob Story (No Date) Albert Burton. (1 hr., 30 min.)

3:30

ONews

3:50

0 Movie The Story Of Vernon And Irene Castle (1939) Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers. (2 hrs., 10 min.)

4:00

O Battle For The Family Telethon (Coatd)

ONews 0The Camerons

4:30

ORonBagley O All In The Family 0 Revival Fires

(SPN) Movie Dangerous Masquerade (No Date) John Warwick. (2 hrs.)

MONDAY MAY ie,iees

IM Horte Starbirds" (No Date)) Animated e:M SoawoMi b Tte Kitcfea Witk Junlt

TaeMort* "For Your Eyes Only" (1981)) Roger Moore, Topol e:MAoUdM

leM Moult "Right Cross" (1951)) Dick Powell, June Allyson 11:M SooiMM'i b 1W UtdMO Witk JuUe IHe Moule "Fighting Back" (1982)) Tom Sker ritt, Patti Lupone AwiMctas

IM Movie "For Your Eyes Only" (1981)) Roger Moore, Topol (:9e Movie "Moscow Doesn't Believe In Tears" (1980)) Vera Alenlova. Aleiei BaUlov

$M Movie "For Your Eyes Only" (1981)) Roger Moore. Topol

leiWBInm

llSeMovIt "The Bitch" (1979)) Joan Collins;

Michael Cobyi. llMMovb "S O B " (1981)) William Holden.

JuUe Andrews Ue Movie "Fighting Back" (1982)) Tom Sker-ritt, PalU Lupone 4:MMovti "The Bitch" (1979)) Joan Collins, Michael Coby

TUESDAY MAY 17. lesi

e.se Soowao'i b Tht KMckoo With Jamb eje Tte PfeHOOMoa 0( Bi^

7SeDo Mi A Pavnr Aad DooT Vote Por My Mom

e^eMovb "The Patsy" (19*4)) Jerry Lewis. Ina Balin

leMMovb They Shall Have Musie " (1919)) Joel McCrea. Walter Brennan Itee Movb "Smokey And The Bandit" (1977)) Burt Reynolds, Sally Field 2Ve Morit "The Patsy" (1944)) Jerry Lewis, Ina Balin

4M Do Mo A Pavw Aad DmI Vote Par My Mom

l-ee PaporCbMK TteSacoad Yoar Me Movb "The Elephant Man" (1980)) John Hurt. Anthony Hopkins CM Movb "Smokey And The Bandit" (1977)) Burt Reynolds. Sally Field 1040 Ptpw CkMO 1W Soeead Yatr ILSe Levl^ Ptbab Aad Pwfoet Coapbi iLWANtwDtyblda 1140 Movb "The Elephant Man" (1900)1 John Hurt. Anthony Hopkins 140 Papor Chioo: IV Soeoad Yoar ZMMmb "The Boogens" (1981)) Rebecca Balding. Fred McCarren

WEDNEBIAY MAY 10,1001

1.40 Do Mt A Favor Aad Doat Vote Por My Mora

040 TV Pkoaoobaoa Of BopJI

0:M Movb "Across The Great Divide " (1976)) Robert Logan. Heather Rattray OiWPaarbTabTVairo 040Aorot4ebt

1040 Movb "I Want You " (1952)) Dana Andrews. Dorotby McGuire 1140 Movb "Across The Great Divide" (1974)) Robert Logan, Heather Rattray t40AbaUebe

}40Movb "WhereThe Boys Are (1960)) Dolores Hart. George Hamilton 4:MCarbttoABdSoa S40FaorbTabTVaUc

1.40 Movb "Missing " (1981)) Jack Lemmon, Sissy Spacek

140 Movb " Personal Best (1982)) Manel Hemingway. Patrice Donnelly lOrMMovb Lady Chatterley s Lover |1981)| Sylvu Kristel. Nicholas Clay 12:MMovb " Missing" (1981)) Jack Lemmon.

Sissy Spacek i:MMovb Visiting Hours' |1982|| Michael Ironside. Lee Grant

4.40 Movb "I Want You (1952)) Dana Andrews. Dorotjiy McGuire

THURSDAY MAY 10, lOU

l:MMovb Heartbeeps" (1981)) Andy Kaufman, Bernadette Peters 140 Movie "The Man From Cover Grove" (1973)) Cheryl Miller, Ron Masak 1040 Movb The Reluctant Debutante" (1958)) Rex Harrison. Kay Kendall 12:00 Movb Tarzan. The Ape Man " (1981)) R)chard Harris, Bo Derek 240Ciadiy.8tiUf AodNo*

440 Movb Heartbeeps " (1981)) Andy Kauf man, Bernadette Peters S:MlraoeMovib

040 Movb "The Kid From Brooklyn" (1846)) Danny Kaye, Virginia Mayo 040 Movb "Tarxan, The Ape Man " (1981)) Richard Harris. Bo Derek 1040 GlOblkb: Steek b TW OOi 11.40 Lovl^ Prbadi Aad Porfoet Coopta ILMANowDoybldm 1140 Craby.aUOi Aad Nmfe 240 Movb "Mother's Day " (1900)) Nancy Hendrickson, Deborah Luce 2:M GaUaihb: Slack b TV'Ob 4:M Movie "The Kid From Brooklyn" (1944)) Danny Kaye. Virginia Mayo

FRIDAY MAY M. 1001

0:10 Fiteb Tab TVatra 740 Movb "the Patsy" (19*4)) Jerry Lewis, Ina Balm 0:10AUeta

1040 Movb "All Fall Down" (I92)) Eva Mane Saint. Warren Beatty 1240 Movb "Eye Of The Needle ' (1981)) Donald Sutherland. Kate Nelligan

IM Saoaaati b TW Kltetao Witk Jamb 140 Movb The Patsy" (IK4)) Jerry Uwis. Ina Balm

240 Movb "Smokey And The Bandit" (1977)) Burt Reynolds, Sally Field 740FatebTabTMn 040 Movb "Paradise" (1982)) Willie Aames.

Phoebe Cates 1040 Movb "Private Lessons " (19801) Sylvia Kristel. Howard Hesseman 1240 Movb "Smokey And The Bandit " (1977)) Burt Reynolds. Sally Fiejj,

240 Movie "Paradise" (iSSJ)) Willie Aames.

Phoebe Cites 1:40 Movb "Eye Of The Needle" (1981)) Don-aid SuUierland. Kate Nelligan

SATURDAY MAY II, lOU

l: Saoboaes b Tka Kltctaa Wllk Jaata 0:M Tka PkaMBbMo Of BaoJI

740 Do Ma A Favor Aad Doat Vote For My Mom

1:00 Movb They Shall Have Music " (1939)) Joel McCrea, Waller Brennan 1040 Movb That Midnight Kiss" (1949)) Mar 10 Lanza. Kathryn Grayson 1140 Movb Victor Victoria" (1982)) Julie Andrews. Robert Preston 2:10 Movb "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid" (1982)) Sieve Martin. Rachel Ward 4.40 Movb Affairs Of Dobie Gillis " (1953)) Debbie Reynolds. Bobby Van 140 Do Me A Pivte Aad Doat Vote For My

740 Tkt PkooomoBoa Of Boaji

740 Movb "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid" (1982))SteveMartin. Rachel Ward '

040 Movb Victor Victoria" II982|) Julie Andrews, Robert Preston ILMBbarrt

1140 Movb "The Bitch " (1979)) Joan Collins.

Michael Coby 1:20 Movb "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid" (19821) Steve Martin. Rachel Ward 140 Movb Fighting Back " (1982)) Tom Sker-ntt, Patli Lupone

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6:00 ITicTacDo^ |OOOO00News

) One Day At A11106 I Herita^UJS^ Update (Doctor Who (TelepbooeAoctioo

6:05

I Andy Griffith

6:30

I Movie Texas Lady (1956) )ABCNewan (Alice

iQNBCNewi 10 CBS News (Good News America I Sherlock Holmes And Dr. Wat-

6:35

(GomerPyle

7:00

(WKRP In Ciadimati (ABCNewsn 0 Threes Company QTheJeffmoDS Jokers WUd Entertainment Tonight Larry Allen

MacNeil / Lehrer Report Senior Citizen Report

7:05

Carol Burnett And Friends

7:30

O 0 Threes Company P.M. Magazine M*A*S*H 00 Alice O Family Feud ,

O Tic Tac Dough 0TheCamt>DS

0 Stateline; The General Assembly

(SPN) Investors Action Line

7:35

0 Okefenokee: The Land Of Mystery A documentary revealing the true nature of the mysterious Okefenokee Swamp is presented. (1 hr.)

8:00

B Superbook

O O 0 The New Odd Couple

Felix and Oscar begin to fear what the future holds for them after Murray reads their palms.

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tiJ Star Trek

O O The Powers Of Matthew Star Matthew and Walt are asked to find out why big-time gangsters are mysteriously dying before the authorities can arrest them. (R) (1 hr.)

O 0 The Dukes Of Hazzard Just before a big drag race, Boss Hogg hypnotizes Luke into junking the General Lee. (R)(l hr.)

Camp Meeting, U.S.A.

Washington Week In Review (SPN) Home Based Business

8:30

B Swiss Family Robinson O O 0 At Ease Baker and Valentine pose as big-city gamblers to help Maxwell win back the money he lost in a poker game 0 Wall ktreet Week "The View From Vienna' Guest: Dr Hannes Androsch, chairman, board of management, Creditanstalt.

(SPN) First Nighter

8:35

0 Baseball Atlanta Braves at St. Louis Cardinals (3 hrs.)

9:00

0 Battle For The Family Telethon O O 0 Movie The Legend Of The Lone Ranger " (1980) Klinton Spilsbury, Christopher Lloyd. The Lone Ranger and Tonto pursue their arch-enemy. Butch Cavendish, who has kidnapped the president of the U.S. (2 hrs.)

Merv Griffin Guests Susan Sullivan. Mort Sahl, B.J. Thomas, Dr Charles Wilson, Children of Gays founder Liana Lloyd, gay father of two Joe Killinger and Cal Thomas of The Moral Majority discuss whether divorced homosexuals should get custody of their children (Ihr)

O O Knight Rider Michael Knight helps the daughter of a wealthy and powerful magazine publisher find out who killed her father. (R)(l hr.)

Offi Dallas J R schemes to get a look at Jock's will, which has been sealed until it can be revealed to the whole family. (R)(l hr.)

Q) Jim Bakker

ffi The Three Letter Word: Tax

Host Louis Rukeyser looks at the controversy surrounding the proposed constitutional amendment to balance the federal budget. (1 hr.) (SPN) Telefrance U.S.A. ' Cine-Club, The Devil Probably" "Entrante: The Genii Of Fire And Untamable Whiskers " "Fiction: Young Girls Entracte: The Little Woman" (4 hrs.)

10:00

O Battle For The Family Telethon (Coatd)

News

o o The Kids From Fame Members of the cast of "Fame,"' including Debbie Allen, Lee Curren and Gene Anthony Ray, tour and perform throughout Great Britain. (R) (Ihr.)

Q 0) Falcon Crest The wealthy and mysterious Richard Channing arrives in San Francisco to take over his father's newspaper. (R) (1 hr.)

Q) Lester Sumrall Teaching 60 The History Of The S.S. The development of Hitler's S.S., the "protection squad," from its beginnings to its ultimate destruction, is traced with archival footage and interviews with former S.S. men, historians and victims. (1 hr)

10:30

BStarllme Ben Haden

11:00

eoooo00N*^

Soap

Q(K-Dimensioa Magazine Allred Hitchcock Presents

11:30 O Another Life O O 0 ABC News Nightline

o O Tonight Host: Johnny Carson Guest: Suzanne Somers. (1 hr.) O NBA Basketball Conference Final (If necessary). (2 hrs., 30 min.)

0 Blow Out At Billy Bobs Country stars Alabama, Donna Fargo, Merle Haggard, David Frizzell and Shelly West, Lacy J. Dalton and George Strait perform from Billy Bob's Texas nightclub in Fort Worth, Tex (2 hrs.)

0 Lifeguide 0 Morecambe & Wise

11:35

0TheCatlins

12:00

O Bums And Allen 0 Jim Bakker

12:05

0 Movie "Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (1956) Kevin McCarthy, Dana Wynter (1 hr, 40 min.)

12:30 O Jack Benny O One On One ORockNRoUTonite Movie "The Mysterious Monsters" (No Date) (2 hrs.)

O o SCTV Network Guest: Crystal Gayle. (R)(l hr, 30 min.)

0 Starsky And Hutch

1:00

01 Married Joan o Heres Lucy 0 Zola Levitt (SPN) Nikki HaskeU

1:30

0 My Little Margie ONews

0 Evening At The Improv 0 Heritage U.S.A. Update (SPN) Movie "Black .Market Rustlers" (No Date) "Crash" Corrigan. (1 hr.)

1:45

0 Movie "Killer Grizzly" (1976), Christopher George. Andrew Prine. (2 hrs)

2:00

0 Bachelor Father O News

O O NBC News Overnight 0 Jim Bakker

2:30

01ifeOfRUey

Movie "The Premature Burial" (1962) Ray Milland. Hazel Court. (1 hr., 30 min.)

0 News

(SPN) Movie Don't Bet On It" (No Date) Reginald. Denny (1 hr., 30 min.)

3:00

0 Battle For "The Family Telethon Q ONews 0 Jimmy Swaggart

Do TVs scirfi writers really have it easy?

By Ruth Thompson

Science-fiction scripters may have the easiest slot on television today. They deal with the future, sending crews off on spaceships that havent been invented yet to galaxies none of us has ventured toward. So how hard can you quibble?

What about the authenticity needs of other communicators Well, blame or credit television. The world woes and wars come to us nightly from the scene. Right now its all sides of Central America s traumas, on-the-spot interviews with guerillas, government spokesmen and the helpless civilians caught in the middle We may not understand the issues, but the geography becomes clearer. Back when author James Hilton created his enchanted and enchanting "Shangri-La, a general knowledge of the Himalayan mountains from reading was all he needed to use them as backdrop for his mythical enclave. He had never traveled there. Setting the mood was enough. But now" Has sophisticated news coverage challenged other communicators to be accurate and

3:30

O All In The Family 3:45

0 Movie Blondie's Lucky Day" (1946) Penny Singleton, Arthur Lake (1 hr, 30 min.)

4:00

0 BatUe Fm- The Family Telethon (Coatd)

OQNews

Movie "A Tale Of Two Cities" (1935) Ronald Colman, Elizabeth Allen. (2 hrs., 30 min.)

0 Jack Van Impe

(SPN) Movie "Crazy Affair (No

Date) George Wallace. (1 hr.. 30

minj

4:30 0Ro6sBaglcy 0 Signs Of The Times

The ABC Friday Night Movie for May 20 features The Legend of the Lone Ranger. Klinton Spilsbury (I.) stars as the masked crusader with Michael Horse as his trusted companion, Tonto.

iSuiions reserve the right to nuke last-inuiuU ctunges.)

ting the feel of what it's like to be on a tow-boat and capturing the varying flavors of cities and towns - the ones where the lawyer he plavs comes out of retirement to tackle tough cases as they pop up. They seem to pop up ever-ytime he takes shore leave. Unlike Collins. Ralph Waite s womenfolk interior decorator wife and 12-year-old stepdaughter - havent joined him in his adventuring except for flying in to meet him in New Orleans for an occasional weekend reunion

specific? For instance. Dieter Plage spent tnonths trailing rare Asian elephants for his last documentary and plans to spend two years putting together his next, zeroing in on rare rhinos. Other wildlife filmmakers are similarly zealous about authenticity.

Fiction writers, too, get factual when dealing with places

Location shooting, easier now with improved small cameras, got its first big television promotion when producer Sheldon Leonard look his tennis-playing secret agents (Bill (Tosby and Robert Culp) all over the globe for the

Gary Collins

"I Spy' series. Gary Collins, now host of the Hour Magazine syndicated series took..his wife and daughter with him when he did a season of "Born Free for televrsion Now. for fiction, its Ralph Waite, formerly the father of "The Waltons." whos not depending on guide books and studio back lot simulations for "The Mississipi series he's been trying out this spring on CBS. No sir. He's been playing that big riveV for months get-

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Saturday Daytime

5:00

O All Id IV Family Eagles Nest

5:15

NicePeo|rie

5:30

ONews O Telestory

Today In Bible Pn^ihecy (SPN) Movie Deadline (No Date)

5:45

(D World At Large 6:00

O The Blackwood Brotben OQBNews

O Little Boose On TV Prairie 0 Great Space Coaster 0 Zola Levitt

6:30

O Jimmy Hooston Ontdoon OMv Three Sons (S Vegetable Soap OUttk Rascals 0 Captain Kangaroo 0 Dr. Snaggles 0 Pirate Adventures

7:00

B Life In The Spirit B JoyOfGardaiing 0 Post S Reports (DNensbag O0Cartoons OABetterWay 0 Captain Kaiyaroo 0 JimBakker (SPN) Post Time

7:05

0 Between TV Lines 7:15

B Satnrday Fnnhoose v 7:30

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7:35

0RomperRoom

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B 0 0 Soperfriends (DPopeye And Friends 0 0 TV Flintstone Funnies 00Popeye&Olive 0 Mr. MustacV And Company 0 Threat Of Nuclear War

0 PUnning For Success (SPN) Jimmy Houston Outdoors

8:35

0 Movie "Mighty Joe Young (1949)

9:00

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(SIncredibieHnIk

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9:30

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0 Ifovie "Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936)

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0 Magic Of 0 Painting (SPN) NanM Of TV Game Is Golf

10:30

0 O TV Gary Coleman Show 00TV Dukes 0 Magic Of Decorative Painting (SPN)^Life

10:35

0 Movie Drum Beat (1954). 11:00

000Mork & Mindy / Lveme & Shirley

S) Moivie Flame Over India (1960)

0 B Incredible Hulk / Amazing Mder-Man

0 0 Bugs Bunny / Road Runner 0JimBakker

0 Everyday Cooking With Jacques Pqdn

11:30

0 Great Chefs Of New Orleans (SPN)TVAPUy

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0 Father John Bololncci 0Supersoccer (SPN) Financial Inquiry

1:05

0 Ike: TV War Years Robert Duvall, Lee Remick and Dana Andrews star in this film that follows Eisenhower in England from the tense weeks leading to D-Day through the culmination of the bat-tl that turned the tide of World War II. (4 hrs.)

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0 Wrestling

B Movie Horror At 37,000 Feet (1972)

O Wild Kingdom 0 Baseball Bunch Guest; Cal Ripken, Jr.

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2:30

0 Call Of TV West B PBA Bowling $100,000 Houston Open (live from Houston, Tex ). (1 hr., 30 min.)

(SPN) Home Based Business 3:00

0 Movie Roaming Cowboy (1937)

0 TV World Of Racing

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(1972)

0 TV Road To Los Angeles Olympic hopefuls profiled are Stephanie Hightower and Candy Young (track and field). Grant Kenney (kayak) and Bruce Baumgarten (wrestling).

0 Athletes In Actioo (SPN) Scandinavian Weekly

3:30

0 Southern Sportsman O 0 raAA Special Men's Volleyball Championship (from Columbus, Ohio).(l hr.)

0Z(da Levitt

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0 American Adventure

4:00

0 Wyatt Earp

O 0 0 Wide World Of Sports

Grand Prix of Monaco (from Monte Carlo); a pre-Preakness report; the Black Eyed Susan Stakes (for three-year-old fillies live from Pimlico in Baltimore, Md.).(lhr.) 0PTLanb(^>anish)

0Vjktory Garden (SPN) Ifediterraoean Echoes

4:30 O WagonTrain

O 0 PGA Golf Atlanta Classic Third round (live from Atlanta, Ga). (1 hr., 30 min.)

0 Almanac

5:00

B 0 0 TV Preakness The second jewel in horse racing's Triple Crown, one-and-three-sixteenths miles for three year olds (live from Pimlico Race Track in Baltimore, Md.).(lhr.)

SoolTriin O Six Million Dollar Man O Wrestling 0 Eagles Nest 0 Woodwrights Shop

5:05

0Thb Week In Baseball 5:30

0 Lowell Lnndstrom 0 Last Chance Garage

5:35

0 Motorweek Htnstrated

ESPN

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Texan Horsley finds a home in Houston

By Peter Meade

Hes wealthier than Magnurq, dresses better than Columbf, has a prettier assistant than Mannix, a nicer car than Barnaby Jones, more money than Simon & Simon, but Lee Horsleys "Matt Houston has just one problem its all these comparisons,

"Im always being compared to somebody, says Horsley. "Tom Sellecks mustache, James Garners voice... I feel like taking off my boots and saying compare these!

Well, his feet are bigger than Remington Steeles. The copious comparisons didnt help when Horsleys Sunday evening series got off to a slow start in the ratings. But at least if I've got to be compared, he adds, "it was to good people.

Lee Horsley

Compared to the early going, Houston has now climbed into ratings respectability, allowing ABC to win the time slot for the first time in seven years.

"I dont worry about the ratings, says Horsley. "Ive got to keep punching out the product. The network says it usually takes nine shows to

find an audience, it took us 14.

It certainly wasnt because Horsley hasnt worked hard. Being the star of his own hour-long series means 14-to-16-hour days, mostly on location. This also means that od most mornings he leaves home at 5 a.m.

Its not all blondes and limousines, says Horsley, who became a father for the second time on St. Patricks Day. It always floors me when people ask what I do the rest of the week.

I have fought so hard the first season, he says, because it means so much. Its just that sometimes the ratings dont make any sense.

I need to have input because the series has my name on it, says Horsley. There are 60 guys in the crew and Im their bread and butter. Ive tried to interject what we now call Houston-isms. Mostly theyre memories of my boyhood in Mule Shoe, Texas.

But are there any big differences between Lee Horsley and Matt Houston

Matts tailor is better than mine, says Horsley, laughing. But these boots are mine. But I tell ya, running in these boots is a killer.

\ot \ \t Kase'

John Vargas, who stars as Cardinel, an enlisted man in the ABC At Ease comedy series, assumes a different kind of military title in a production of Richard III opening June 2 at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles. In addition to performing three roles in the play which stars fellow Carnegie Tech alumnus Rene Auberjonois, Vargas is assistant stage combat choreographer.

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Sports This Week

Merlin Olsen Is Host

SUNDAYSSPORTS MAY 15,1983

12:00 OSontbern Sportsman12:30

O Fishing Fever 1:00

O 0 NBA Basketball Conference Final (Starting time is subject to change) (2 hrs 30 min.)

This b The USFL (SPN) Match Bass Fishing1:30

0 USFL Football At press time, the scheduled game was Chicago Blitz at Philadelphia Stars. (3 hrs., 15 min.)

Q Fishing With Roland Martin (SPN) Name Of The Game b Gdf

2:00 O Pott Putt Golf

O Baseball Boncfa Guest: Cal Ripken, Jr.2:30

O O Bill Dance Outdoors2:35

Baseball Atbnta Braves at Houston Astros (3 hrs.)3:00

O Ringsicb Roosevelt Green John Mugabi 10-round Junior Middleweight bout (live from Las Vegas, Nev.). (1 hr.)

(SPN) Billy Westmorland Fishing Diary3:30

O PGA Golf Colonial National InviUtion Final round (live from Fort Worth, Tex ). (Starting time is subject to change) (2 hrs., 30 min.)    "4:00

O O SportsWorjd Scheduled: Bobby Chacon / Cornelius Boza-Edwards 12-round WBC Junior Lightweight title bout (live from Las Vegas, Nev.); UCLA Track and Field InviUtional Meet (live from Los Angeles, Calif ). (2 hrs.)

(SPN) Bill Dance Outdoors

4:45

O The American Sportsman (Season Premiere) A 13-member Ger-man-American team attempts to scale the south face of Mt Everest, the world's largest peak; Stefanie Powers journey to Mt Kenya Game Ranch, initiated to preserve endangered species. (1 hr., 15 min.)7:05

Wrestling

10:35 Sports Page

TUESDAYS SPORTS MAY 17,19832:05

On-Deck Circle 2:20

Baseball Atlanta Braves at Chicago Cubs (3 hrs.)7:00

(SPN) Match Bass Fishing 7:30

(SPN) Jimmy Houston Outdoon

8:00 (SPN) Post Time8:05

Its A Long Way To October An

inside look at the Atlanta Braves division-winning 1982 baseball season is presented. (Part 1) (2 hrs.)

WEDNESDAYS SPORTS MAY 18,1983

2:05 On-Deck Circle2:20

Baseball Atlanta Braves at Chicago Cubs (3 hrs.)8:05

Its A Long Way To October An

inside look at the Atlanta Braves' division-winning 1982 baseball season is presented. (Part 2) (2 hrs.)11:30

O NBA Basketball "Conference Final" (If necessary) (2 hrs., 30

FRIDAYS SPORTS MAY 20,19838:35

Baseball Atlanta Braves at St Louis Cardinals (3 hrs.)11:30

O NBA Basketball "Conference Final" (If necessary) (2 hrs:, 30 min.)

SATURDAYS SPORTS MAY 21,19836:30

O Jimmy Houston Outdoors

7:00 (SPN) Post Time8:00

(SPN) Billy Westmorland Fishing Diary8:05

Baseball Bunch8:30

(SPN) Jimmy Houston Outdoors 10:00

(SPN) Name Of The Game b Golf

11:30 (SPN)TheAPUy12:00

(SPN) Rayo Breckenridge 12:30

O ACC Sports Centor Sport Fishing

(SPN) Fishing With Roland Martin 1:00

O Fishing With Roland Martin Supersoccer1:30

O Wrestling

O Baseball Bunch Guest: Cal Ripken, Jr.2:00

O O Baseball Regional coverage of Chicago White Sox at Kansas City Royals or San Diego Padres at Philadelphia Phillies. (3 hrs.)

(SPN) Post Time2:30

O PBA Bowling $100,000 Houston Open (live from Houston, Tex ). (1 hr., 30 min.)3:00

O The World Of Racing The Road To Los Angeles Olympic hopefuls profiled are Stephanie Hightower and Candy Young (track and field), Grant Kenney (kayak) and Bruce Baumgarten (wrestling), (1 hr.)

Athletes In Action 3:30

O Southern Sportsman O NCAA Special Mens Volleyball Championship (from Columbus, Ohio). (1 hr.)4:00

o o Wide World Of Sports

Grand Prix of Monaco (from Monte Carlo); a pre-Preakness report; the Black Eyed Susan Stakes (for three-year-old fillies live from Pimlico in Baltimore, Md.). (1 hr.)4:30

O PGA Golf AtlanU Classic" Third round (live from Atlanta, Ga). (1 hr., 30 min.)5:00

o O The Preakness The second jewel in horse racing's Triple Crown, one-and-three-sixteenths miles for three year olds (live from Pimlicotilace Track in Baltimore, Md.),(lhr.)

O Wrestling5:05

Thb Week In Baseball5:35 "

Motorweek Illustrated6:00

O O Wide World Of Sports

Grand Prix of Monaco (from Monte Carlo); Indianapolis time trials reports (from Indianapolis, Ind.)6:05

Wrestling7:00

Wrestling8:05

Baseball Atlanta Braves at St. Louis Cardinals (3 hrs.)

By Debra Morgenstern Katz

"Most middle-aged husbands get to sleep at night by imagining theyre striking out the entire batting order of the N Y. Yankees

That quote by James Thurber opens the program "Champions of American Sport." on HBO this week (May 19). It describes how strongly we believe in our heroes, how personally we clutch them to our lives.

Former football great Merlin Olsen hosts the show, which is created around the Smithsonian Institution's National Portrait Gallerys exhibition of America's greatest athletes.

Says Olsen, in a telephone interview: "One of the great releases from the drudgery, pain and frustration of ordinary existence is to take leave of our11:30

O WrestlingSunny's Halo In Preakness

By Mark Nolan The second jewel in horse racing's Triple Crown, the Preakness, will be televised live bv CTV Sports on Saturday. 'May 21. CTV will transmit ABC's feed of the race from Pimlico in Baltimore, Md.

At least one Canadian horse is a definite candidate to be in the running for the '83 Preakness crown. Sunny's Halo won the Rebel Handicap and the Arkansas Derby in his two only starts this year and only a serious injury will keep Sunny's Halo out of contention for Saturday's race.

On April 16. the horse won the $293,000 Arkansas Derby in near record time. Before a crowd of almost 68,000 fans, the largest ever assembled for a sporting event in the state of Arkansas, the colt ran the 1-1 8 mile course in 1:49.25, just missing the track record by four-fifths of a second.

Two days prior to the Arkansas Derby, Sunny's Halo's trainer, David Cross, expressed some unhappiness with the No. 13 post position the, horse .had drawn for the race.

surroundings and launch into fantasy and dreams - very often in sports. We become the heroes '

If this documentary is any indication, we have a rich source of fantasy from baseball to horse racing to basketball to figure skating to football to swimming, America's athletes have been "models of strength, of speed, of grace, courage and desire.

Many have overcome great odds: Babe Ruth, son of a saloonkeeper, in reform school at age 8; Bill Russell, cut from his high school basketball team; three-time gold medalist Wilma Rudolph, one of 19 children, rejected by her friends as a child.

They all pursued their dreams. If they had anything in

common, sayS Olsen, il was an inner confidence that allowed them to meet all challenges "Even though they were told. Nobody's ever done this before. they didn t believe it and they went out and did it.' says Olsen Much of what it takes to be a champion is mundane, he says - the practice, the blisters, the bad shots.

"A lot of people have the talent to be great." he says, "but not a lot of people have the desire and opportunity to capitalize on It."

Those people did Mark Spitz, with 23 world records for swimming and seven gold medals; Red Grange, who turned pro football into serioiis business; Arthur Ashe, the first black to win the U.S. Open

USA Network

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U N Night Flight Take Off    On    Tour

Interview The Fix'    The    London

Rock And Roll Show" Sing For Your Life    Video Gallery    Peter Tosh

' Space Patrol I N Night Flight Take Off    On    Tour

Interview The Fixx    The    London

Rock And Roll Show Sing For Your Life    Video Gallery    Peter Tosh

Space Patrol

SATURDAY MAYII.UM

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IftN Movie The Big Cage llrNMovie 'et Em Have It

I N SckoUfltic Sparta Academy I N Are Yob Anybody*

IN Ovation The Fifth Estate Grain Of Dissent Whicker s World Vienna S:N Ttme-Ont Theater Forty Strokes Pressure Cooker Goodnight Miss Ann l:N Co-Ed

I N Yon Mngaiioe For Women 7N Sporta Probe 7:MSporULook

I N NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Finals Bos ton Bruins or New'York blandees vs Chicago Black Hawks or Edmonton Oilers .If necessary subject to blackout surtmg time IS subject to change)

U N    Night Flight Take Off    On Tour

Interview Jimmy Cliff    The Comic

Mike Eagan    David Johansen    The

Video Artist    Video Gallery    Ttm*'

Wave Theatre    Tales Of Tomorrow

Astonishing Odyssey Space Cadet IN    Night Flight Take Off    On Tour .

Interview Jimmy Cliff    The Comic

Mike Eagan    David Johansen    The

Video Artist    Video Gallery    New

Wave Theatre    Tales 01 Tomorrow    *

Astonishing Odyssey Space Cadet

Now you cnn...eam tax-defened interest at current rates on life insurance cash values in excess of Jl, 000-change amount and frequency of your life insurance premium payments receive annual reports showing by month every transaction made in your life insurance account Now you can make your life insurance a UnlvcrsaLlfe^. For more informa tion on our version of a product called "an almost ideal policy" (Money Magazine 7,'81) and a "better deal" (Wall Sbeef Journal 5, 4 811 Current Interest Rtle 10.13%.

Call or Visit David L. Harrell 103 Oakmont Drive Greenville, N.C. 919-355-6157

GeondalntenvrtionalUfe

(M Hunting?

-!r .-.''ur .imc !' rriritip.i;, head -hh htrccr t>' M- :j Printer-, In- Thct hj'vc rhc pr-'tc".'    1.

Jc;\-ndahlc -c"'.. .c vou'rc hannnc :- r

752151 211 \V. 9th St.





6:00 BlVliooroes

O O Wide Worid Of Sports Grand Pris of Monaco (from Monte Cario); Indianapolis time trials nmorts (from Indianapolis, Ind.)

S3 Kong Pn OOiDNews

6:05

C Wrestling

6:30

O More Real People ONews ONBCNews OCRS News OReflectioas Bin Search Of._

7:00

oio^HeeHaw

O Carolina Satnrday 33 Threes Company    '

B Dance Fever O Love. Sidney QSoUdGold 0 Wrestling

7:30    

O More Rea] People X M*A*S*H O Americas Top Tai Rock Church

8:00

O Movie ' Indiscreet " (1958) Cary Grant, Ingrid Bergman O O 0 T.J. Hooker Hooker s investigation of teen-age drinkers who steal to support their habit leads to the son of Romano s best friend (R)(l hr.)

X Movie "Airport 1975 ' (1974) Charlton Heston, Karen Black oo Diffrent Strokes Arnold and Dudley are befriended by a generous merchant who has ulterior motives (R)g(l hr )

O 0 Walt Disney 0 Nature Of "Things

8:05

0 Bas^ll Atlanta Braves at St Louis Cardinals (3 hrs.)

8:30 0 Jack Van Impe

9:00

O O 0 Love Boat OO Mamas Family

O 0 Movie Back Roads ' (1981) Sally Field, Tommy Lee Jones 0 Jim Bakker

0 Mystery! Father Brown The Three Tools Of Death" When a kindly philanthropist's daughter is accused of murdering her father, the girl's fiancee confesses to the crime (R) 5(1 hr )

9:30

O O Teachen Only 10:00

O Children; The Worlds Most Fab-Ions .Resource Dean Jones discusses the needs of forgotten children in Third World countries (1 hr)

X News OOMooitor

0 Kenneth Copeland 3 The Avengers

10:30

1 Page Five

11:00

O Rock Church Proclaims OQOOO00News

X Odd Conple In Touch 0 Twilight Zone

11:05

0NewsSaturday Evening

0 Movie Freebie And The Bean " (1974) James Caan, Alan Arkin. Two freewheeling San Francisco cops are plagued by runaway cars and elusive ladies in their crosstown race to protect the man they intend to arrest (2 hrs.)

0 Movie The Great Escape (1963) James. Garner, Steve McQueen British, American and Canadian POWs plan a massive breakout from a Nazi camp (3 hrs,, 45 min.)

Lowdl Lundstrom Twilight Zone

12.-00

0 Sing Out America O Best Of Midnight Special Jim Bakker (SPN) Looking East

12:05

0Tuah! Deja Vu "(1 hr.)

12:30

O Movie Crooks And Coronets 41969) Telly Savalas, Edith Evans (2 hrs.)

1:00

O American Trail O Ebony / Jet Celebrity Showcase Odiristopberaoseup O Solid Gold PTL Club (Spanish)

(SPN) Joe Bui^ Jazz

1:05

0 Movie "Dark Command ' (1940) John Wayne, Walter Pidgeon. (2

hrs.)

X Movie 'WUSA (1970) Paul, Newman, Joanne Woodward (2 hrs.)

O Music Magazine QNewt

0The Story

2:00

O AU In The Family Jim Bakker

(SPN) Movie Napoleon II - LAi-glon (1961) Jean Marais, Bernard Verley (2 hrs.)

2:30

OONews

3:00 OCmon Along ReiHnmbard

3:05

0 Movie ' Conflict " (1945) Humphrey Bogart. Alexis Smith (1 hr,

55 min)

0 News

3:15

3:30

O Westbrook Hospital X Movie They Were Expendable" (1945) Robert Montgomery. John Wayne

O All In The Family Phil Arms

1.30

O700aub O Carolina Showcase

4:00

0 Heritage Singers OONews

D. James Kennedy (SPN) Movie "House Of Danger" (1934) Janet Chandler, Onslow Stevens (1 hr;, 30 min)

BRossBagley

4:30

TV Chatter

11:15

OO0ABCNews

_    11:30

O Blow Ont At Billy Bobs Country stars Alabama, Donna Fargo. Merle Haggard. David Frizzell and Shelly West. Lacy J. Dalton and Gor|e Strait perform from Billy Bobs Texas nightclub in Fort Worth. Tex. (2 hrs.)

O WrcMliiig

X Movie Hang 'Em High" (1968) Clint Eastwood, Inger Stevens O O Saturday Ni^t Live Host: Lou Gossett Jr. Guests George -Wwrogood and the Destroyers (R) (1 hr.. 30 min.)

ODaoce Fever

B\ Polly Vonetes

Dynasty > Blake t'arrington will be looking fora new major (iomo next vear I.KK BKR(,KRK. who has been starring in the tole Joseph. ha> decided to leave the cast It's a mutual agreement, he says I ha\e done everything I can do with the part - I will miss the camaraderie with the cast and it is the mo>t money I have ever made in my career, but I have not been >ati'tied with mvsell I ve got to do some more significant lokN '(ould this be a clue as to whom was the villain that set the tire in the season s finale i

ROBKRT HORTON, millionaire Whit .McColl on .As the Uorld Turns, may be starting to take his role too much to heart hor his wife.s recent birthday. Robert presented her with a gorgeou.' new mink coat and a week later, for their 22nd wedding anniversary, he gave her a full-length Canadian Ivn.x coat - and that s how the 'world turns for some people '

(H.ARLK^ PRIDE, who take;; great pride lahis 21-vear-old 'on Dion will be showing him off on this week s CBS special (ountrv Comes Home The two will perform together ifor the lirst time on television i when thev sing Tennessee Girl" -thi> you will not want to miss

things comes the rumor that PR1N(E R.A.MER has given his blessings lif not the

HsNr.v.x

KD.SSELINI S planned September wedding DE.A."S .MARTIN has extended his London appearance at the Apollo Victoria Theatre from one week to ten davs Having ne\er pertormed on a London stage before, he was amazed When the tukets were sold out within 48 hours His biggt fans are t^he Oxford and Cambridge Lniversity students who are pun hd.'ing blocks of tickets and traveling quite a distance to jome in tor his show Dean should have known evervbodv loves >omebody sometime        '

LEE .MAJORS is adding a wing onto his Malibu home that neighbor BLRGESS .MEREDITH finds estheticallv objec-tionanle - in fact it is so objectionable he is having a huge wall constructed between the two properties Upon its completion, artist Dong Kingman has been commissioned by Mr Meredith 1^0 cover the wall with a mural. (A man s home is his castle - no disputing that. I

J.A.A1E8 DARREN has been signed for a starring role on J_ Hooker He will become a regular on the series next fall

as Officer Jim Corrigan

The smallest star on the daytime show "Another World is B B Dano. LINDA D.ANOS tiny toy spaniel It is listed as B B Gallant, pet of her character Felicia. When asked how she keeps aB quiet during taping, Linda joked: "Comatose is a wav of life for B B . she s 17 vears old.

oflftnani

MENS WEAR

Hart

Schaffner

&Marx.

nd

CUSTOM TAILORING SERVICE

/l;'- .

The Hart Sclaaffner & .Marx castom tailoring service makes it easy to meet your.requirements for a special fit or distinctive tastes. The result is a suit or sport coat that is uniquely vouis Simply come into our store and select your preferred style and faluic Our tailors take vour ex-act measurenle^t^. then Hart Schaffner & .MarxS expert c.a tsnien tailor the garment to your specifications [ ook to the Hart Schaffner & Marx custom tailoring -erv^-e fo-suits and sport coats as individual a< you are

At All Of Our Fine Stores

mens wear

rDowntown Greenville Carolina East Mall-Greenville Tarrytown Mall-Rocky Mount





tlKEl

Big Savings of Up to 27% on Men'sTennis Shorts & Shirts!

YOUR CHOICE

Shirt, Regular 14.00 Shorts, Regular 15.00

Andhurst short sleeve knit shirts in a variety of patterns and colors. Andhurst tennis shorts of polyester/ cotton. Non-slip grip waistband, zip front, pockets and leg vents. Solid colors. Men's sizes. Shop and savel

\

Ph.

tt

-Hlgi _ Sty^

Terrific Buy on Men's 'Panama Jack'

T-Shirts!

20OFF

Regular $10 to $15 '

Large selection of men's crew neck T-shirts in a variety of solid colors. Picture of 'Panama Jack' completes the looki Machine wash and dry. Shop todayl

V

Xnft

fe-

\

w7

iKMalk

. s'*'

/

Fantastic Savings on Comfortabie and StylishMen's Swimsuits!

%

$18 to $26 Values

Large assortment of men's swimsuits made by Hobie, <    Ocean Pacific and Birdwell.    Get

i \ up and go in colorful freestyle \    fashion for the city, the shore

or your own backyard. Surfer shorts, swim trunks and more!

Available in several styles, colors and designs. Stock up while our prices are right!

K

A.

Vi

X

'





THIS WEEK ONLYI SAVEI

^.l H

Attention Men! Fantastic Savings of Up to $5 on

Dress Shirts and Slacks!

YOUR CHOICE

11.88

Shirts, Rag. $15 and $16

Large assortment of Arrow dress shirts made of polyester/cotton. Long and short sleeve styles. Solid colors. Machine wash and dry. Hurry while supplies lasti

levis

'

*

r/i

Slacks,

^.$23...17.88

Large group of Andhurst polyester/cotton poplin and canvas casual slacks available in belt loop and beltless models. Sizes S, M, L, XL. Khaki, navy, kelly green, white, yellow colors and more. Stock up and savel

0C8#igs

$6 on t'

fy

fA'

SALEENC6 SATtilfl

'm

todayf

Amazing Savings on ComfortableCrew Socks for Men!

.t -r

Large group of Orion/ stretch nylon socks in solid colors. Machine wash. Reinforced toe.

Terrific Savings of Up to $8 on Men's

Famous Name Denim Jeans16.88

LEVI'S Jeans19.88

Lee Jeans, Reg. $2329.88

Jordache Jeans, Rag. $38

m'm

17.88

Vienna Jeans (Not Shown) Reg. $25

29.00

Calvin Klein Jeans, Reg. $38

Large selection of men's i Lee, Calvin Klein, Jordache, LEVI'S^ and Vienna. Now you can look stylish, while looking casual I Whether you are walking, biking, hiking or just sitting around ... jeans are in fashioni Easy-care. Men's sizes. Stock up while our prices are right and supplies last I The longer you wait, the less you'll have to pick from I

Terrific Prices Men's Hanes*

Briefs & T-Shirts!

8.88

3T-8hirts Stg.8.79

6.88

SBriafs Rag. 7.59

group of num's 100^ eotton T-sMrts and ImMs mada to iasti Madiina wash afiddry. WMta color. Ctawiiadi T-shirts in sbaa 8, M. I, XL. Knit Malclnsliaa28to42. Huny wh8a supplas iastI

on

V..

/

\

* ,





to $8 on Men's

&

%

ik^

'4i

'fo ^

Terrific 7.00 Savings on Men's Converse''

'Jimmy Connors' Shoes!

32.88

Leather oxfords complete with perforated upper, cushioned innersole, non-skid sole. White. Hurry in and save!

Great Buy on Men's ConverseS

Skid Grip" Shoes

Regular 19.00 ..

16.88

Canvas athletic shoes complete with herringbone outersole.for high traction, circular vamp upper for toe comfort and reinforced toe. Shop today!

QconVERSE

Tremendous Savings on Rrst Quality Cross^

Pens and Penciis!

20^0FF

Your choice of Cross pens and pencils in both gold and chrome colors For yourself or as a handsome gift! Not to be missed!

Save Over 5.00 on Landmark

n's Siu^lasi^l^l

jv: - WNNnOil llltlal

/ - <m8 I^BMlQ ifM tlteiwliiitlanf;'

ssr**

Attention Men! Special Buy on Stylish

Men's Thirsty Tube Socks

||q^Amazina Savings on Men's Bass'* Genuine Leather

'Penny' Loafers!

49.88





>    -*r    ^    UK

-

r

V'

Y

\

Attention Men! Great Prices on

Stylish

Clothing

Shorts, Special Value

Selected group of cotton shorts complete with work pant stytirfg, belt loops, four pockets, duck head emblem. Solids. Stock upli .!; a

SMn, Rg. *18

Polyester/cotton oxford cloth shirts with short sleeves, button-down collar, duck emblem on pocket. Save!

#

Pants

if^ t '

-<5'>

fes* ',.'

'^4:Savings of Over $45 oh

Large selection of 100% cotton casual pants with work pant tailoring, four pockets, beK loops, straight leg styling and duck emblem. Men's sizes. Shop and save!

Adjustable Beit..........................

Adjustable canvas belt with duck emblem. Solid colors.

Lint Brush................................

Handcrafted bisque porcelain decoy with lintbrush base. .......... "rimTin

Men's

12 *

I iMMia ala rsAtn*

LarMsiNouiNNiof man ampiPB wahtrt suits reada of polyiitir/ wool. AvaNaUa atylaa and colora.

!

wool. AvaNaUa to ofwiatv Of

fifc

OTtopmnQFi

Great Price Now On These

Men's Biazers

Regular $100

Andhurst 55% polyester745% wool hopsack blazers with two-button front and center vent. Navy and green colors. Shop todayl

\'/" XIhi \i

%





Sale starts Monday, May 16; ends Saturday, May 21,

unless otherwise specified Most items at reduced prices

Im

M

m

XhK

m.

'II

sVx

m

<

TW

'.t.

M-

'SM

r

' '

%![ J: ::sm

u.

m.

sses Dresses

12

99

each

Regular $19

Colorful polyester knits - all are great values! And look at the selection of solid colors, prints, stripes, combinations for misses and petites. But hurry! Quantities are limited.

Regular $20 Half-sizes.......................14.99

In our Dress Department Ask about Sears Credit Plans

Styles shown are representative of Searsassortment.

i//\N

a

25% off

PRE-SEASON COAT SALE

SAVE on our entire stock of fall and winter coats for misses and |uniors

Alt the latest 1983 misses and junior styles. Choose from versatile storm coats, rabbit and fake furs, stadium coats, fur trims, quilted jackets and more. All for less. At 25% off, its a sale you can really warm up to. Take today or ask about our Lay-Away plan. Available now though July 16 in the Coat Department and Junior Bazaar.

Regular 1983 prices will be in effect after July 18,1983

Fur products labeled to show country of origin of imported furs.





Sale starts Monday, May 16; ends Saturday, May 21,

unless otherwise specified Most items at reduced prices

'r-j'

/ 'it' m ik ^ k

h "til 7    ^    *

Save ^6

Misses Dresses

Regular $19

Colorful polyester knits - all are great values! And look at the selection of solid colors, prints, stripes, combinations for misses and petites. But hurry! Quantities are limited.

Regular $20 Half-sizes.......................14.99

In our Dress Department Ask about Sears Credit Plans,

Styles shown are representative of Sears assortment.

25% off

PRE-SEASON COAT SALE

SAVE on our entire stock of fall and winter coats for misses and uniors

All the latest 1983 misses and junior styles. Choose from versatile storm coats, rabbit and fake furs, stadium coats, fur trims, quilted jackets and more. All for less. At 25% off. Its a sale you can really warm up to. Take today or ask about our Lay-Away plan. Available now though July 16 in the Coat Department and Junior Bazaar.

5/15/83





Save on family fashions During our Carnival of Values

1/2 Price

Men's Perma-Presf short sleeve dress shirts

CLOSEOUT'' Were $13' 1983 Spring Gen. Cdt.

6

50

each

Whether its a gift to someone or to yourself, these mens dress shirts are the perfect answer. Perma-Prest shirts of polyester and cotton broadcloth come in many fashion colors. Mens popular sizes.

In our Mens Store

Ask about Sears Credit Plans

25 % off

Men's sport shirt assortment

Reg. $7.99

5

99

each

The look of casual comfort is yours when youre wearing one of our easy-care polyester or polyester and cotton sport shirts. Choose from solids and yarn-dyed plaids in sizes S-XL.

^5 off men's

stretch woven

slacks

Perma-Prest stretch woven slacks of 100% polyester move with you, wont bind. Stretch Ban-Rol, shirt-gripper waistband. Mens sizes.

Reg. $16

1 or

Save 25%

All children's summer nightwear

Save MO

on

Dream-come-frue savings on pjs, nightshirts, gowns and sleepers...all our summer nightwear. For infants, toddlers, little and bigger boys and girl,s.

Fieldmaster^'^ leather work shoes with 9-month wear warranted soles

For little kids

16.99 Little girls character-print gown, 3-6x $7.99 Little boys pajamas, 3-6x $6.99 Toddlers pajamas, 3-6x

Oxford, reg. $46.99

36

For bigger boys

$9.99 Long-leg style pajamas, 8-20..................7.41

$6.99 Short-leg style pajamas, 8-20.....< ;#.........4.M

For bigger girls

$7.99 Novelty print nightshirt, 7-14........... 5.M

$7.99 Novelty print baby doll pajamas, 7-14..........5.M

Rugged work and outdoor shoes with fully cushioned Insoles and padded collars. Oil treated leather uppers. Goodyear welt construction. Steel shanks. Non-marking, oil resistant warranted polyurethane soles. Mens sizes.

$51.99 6-inch shoe.......................,..,41.99

$54 99 Steel-ice        ;____44.99

$56.99 8-lnch boot.............................45.99





-

V

-

Exclusive Dual-Action agitator gets large loads uniformly clean.

2-speed motor. Slow" speed for washing delicate fabrics.

Wrinkle Guard feature helps prevent wrinkles in synthetic fabrics.

Save ^220

on this deluxe Kenmore large-capacity laundry pair

/

Washer, reg. $479.99

Dryer, reg. $399.99

379 279

2-speed washer has 4 cycles, including knit/delicate and permanent press. 3 wash/rinse temperature combinations, 4 separate water levels. Sale ends May 28.

Large-capacity electric dryer has two temperatures and an end-of-cycle signal. Has automatic termination. Handles really big washload. Sale ends May 28, hurry to Sears.

There is an installation charge for washers and dryers.

Stay cool and comfortable this summer with a quality Kenmore window air conditioner

Save M10!

High-efficiency 7,800 BTUH unit

349

High-efficiency, 7,800 BTUH unit with powerful Super Thrust feature, 4-way air flow, 3-speed fan, adjustable thermostat 115 volts. 7.5 amps. Reg. $459.99.

Save MOO!

High-efficiency 12,800 BTUH unit

High efficiency 12,800 BTUH. Super Thrust feature, 4-way air flow. Impr'oved Power Saver switch. 3-speed fan. Slide-out chassis. 8.8 EER. 115 volts. Reg. $549.99.

Air conditioners on sale until May 28

449

Touch n Tune selection lets you jump instantly to any channel.

All electronic tuner is accurate and dependable All solid-state.

*120 off! Touch 'n Tune color TV379Regular $499.99. Big, 19-in. diag. meas, picture. Reliable electronic tuner with Touch n Tune selection. Automatic One-Button Color system. Sale ends May 28.

Easy-to-use electronic touch controls acti-,vate settings.

*100 off I Kenmore microwave oven299Regular $399.99. Turn frozen foods into a piping hot meal. Cook and serve in the same dishes. Reheat foods fast when youre busy. Removable oven tray cleans easily. Thru May 28.

200 off

21.0 cu. ft. icemake Kenmore refrigerator

649

Regular $849.99. Frost-free 15.0 cu. ft. refrigerator, 6.0 cu. ft. freezer with automatic icemaker. Meat pan, twin crispers help keep foods fresh. Textured steel doors. Thru May 28.

Icemaker hook-up extra.

Large items such as appliances are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled for delivery or pickup, delivery is extra.

130 off

Kenmore Power-Mate vacuum with edge cleaner

Ask at)out Sears credit plans

Was $369.99 March itta Loaded with power and faatoraaC. Very powerful 3.9 peak HP auction (1.30 HP VCMA), beater bar with double brush-to-wafl edge cleaning, 4-heights, cord reel nd more. While Quantities LsstI;

_

Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised.

Sears Maintenance Agreements let you buy tomorrow's service at toda/s prices

Sears

Service





1991

29805

1051

1072

22593

1165

MOO off Croftsman bench power tools

10-in. table saw outfit. 1-HP motor develops 2-HP. Includes steel leg set and 2 table extensions.

10-in. radial saw outfit. Rough sands for shaping, fine sands for finishing. With steel stand.

Bench pawer tools require some assembly

Ask about Sears credit plans

Your choice

M50 off Craftsman 10-HP

electric-start riding mower

899

25617

3-speed transmissions; inline gear box. Iso-Vib engine .mounts. Sinrgle lever adjusts 7 cutting heights. 30-inch deck. Reg. $1049.99 83 Spring General Catalog.

Thru May 21.

26354

129    1599

MOO off hauling

cart attachment

10-cu. ft. capacity hauling cart for adu n riding equipment. Reg. $229.99.

25374

*600 off Craftsman 18-HP electric-start garden tractor, 2-cylinder engine

Six-speed transaxle; two reverse speeds. Spring-assist master lift. Reg. $2199.99. Thru May 28.

,7

AnnadMo* landnga

orkrMMlsnMl, eonoeleii, weether 1 .TiMniMt Mrylc coat

2. Prolacthachremata canvanlon coating

3. liMtna zinc coating

4. 2lnc-fiel< Oiganle hitaiiar coating

RIBBED

FOR ADDED STRENGTH

Save 50%

on Armadillo 11'/a-go. chain link fence fabric

when you buy fittings plus new Armadillo V posts

and top rail at wears regular low prices

Ivew ribbed steel framework for improved strength. Triple-coated for rust resistance. Choose from 36, 42, 48,60 and 72-inch heights. Thru May 28, dont miss this Great Value at Sears.

Ask about Sears Authorized Installation. FREE ESTIMATES!

1091

^30 off Craftsman portable power tools

Vs-in. variable-dpeed drill. Reversible for removing screws. V3-HP.

V.-HP dual-motion pad sander. Orbital or straight-line action. Vz-HP.

V4-HP variable-speed sabre saw. Blade swivels 360.

7'/4-in. circular saw. Includes combination' blade. I/z-HP.

Your choice

$9.99, 14-pc. screwdriver bit set

6.99

$24.99, 15pc. high-speed drill bit set

17.99

99

Regular $69.99

$10.99, 14-pc. sabre saw blade pack

6.99

1^1

**nor satin

Weotherbeoter 1 -coat exterior latex *7 off

^99

30005

Flat finish, gal.

Our fine quality Weatherbeater exterior latex. Outstanding durability in 1-coat. 46 colors. Reg. $16.99. Thru May 28.

$19.99 Satin finish  gal. 12.99

For one-coat results, all Sears on-coat paints must be applied as directed.

399

99

17621

1-HP Craftsman

compressor *200 off

Craftsman. 7.0 SCFM at 40 PSI/100 PSI max. 12-gal. air tank, more. Reg. $599.99. Thru May 28.

93005

i99

79005

9*^ ^ Easy Living matte flat or

ceiling white, Reg. $15.99 gal.

*5-*7 off Easy Living

1-coGt interior latex paints

Our best interior latex. Washable in 23 colors. Resists spots. Thru May 28.

$16.99 Eggshell enamel..................gal. 11.99

T

81941

NEW AT SEARS!

We Now Service Most Major Brands Of:

Furnaces

Central Air-Conditioners

^        Water    Heaters

CALL Sears Service Center Today

30,200 Btuh

$1199

$899

34,400 Btyh

$1299

$999

42,000 Btuh

$1499

$1299

46,000 Btuh

$1599

$1399

Save ^300

^799

# # # 23,600 Btuh capacity Reg. $1099 Sears residential/mobile home central air conditioning system

This system is a dependable whole house cooling system which helps shut out noise and air pollutants. Thermostat, ducting and installation extra. Thru May 28.

Ask about Sears Authorized Installation. FREE ESTIMATES!





-

Save *10 DiHard marin* bottry

65 exchange

Reg $75 99 exchange. On sale until May 21   With carrying handle

Ask about our starting charging protection package $5

42,000-mile wearout warranty

Sove *18

Sears 48 car battery provides - excellent starting power!

39

   ^    Exchange

Reg. 57.99 exchange. Has 410 amps of cold cranking power. Group 24/74. For most American-made cars, many imports. Installation included. While they last.

off

1983 Spring Gen. Catalog prices

Silent Cushion Rodiols

Kevlar^ aramid belts are stronger than steel yet very smooth riding. Hurry while quantities last!

Mounting and rotation included

Sears low*priced Guardsman tires

A7&-13,

F.E.T. $1.44

. Limited warranty'against tire wearout

For the specified miles Sears will replace the tire or give a refund charging only for the miles used.

each

tire

Sdve ^30 on a roomy 8x10-ft.

Hillary tent

99

Reg. $149.99 in '83 Rec Vehicle Catalog. Cotton and polyester tent is water repellent, flame resistant. Sewn-in polyethylene floor and 2 nylon screened win-dovvs. Thru May 21.

Save on Sears

Heavy-duty

shocks

I'fl* iMPflOlrtl

>Qll.

L'>TMIIT

Reg. $5.99. If your car shimmies or bounces after it hits a bump, you may need new shocks. 1 3/16-in. diam. piston. Thru May 21.

Save *3 on Heavy-duty Plus shocks

Reg. $11.99    8ewh

thru My 21

Save *5 on Heavy-duty RT shocks

Reg, $16.99    lle.ch

thru May 21

Save on STP oil and gas treatment

99*

BwrmOne

=r

B

ea. Your choice

Reg. $1.49, Oil treatment; Reg. $1.39 Gas treatment. Thru May 17. Limit 6 per customer.

$30 off, Spood control

Reg $99.99. Helps JtAff you keep constant Or speed Installation extra. Thru May 21

$20 off, Chargor

Reg $8999 Slow, last, timed and Or maintainer charge.

Thru May 21

$20 off, X-Corgo

Reg $79 99 15<u It. capacity with 2 Keys included Thru May 21.    Or

30% off

RoodHondlor^ Sport rodiols for tmoll and import cart

Big footprint for quick, ^ responsive handling with import and domestic ^ small cars. Thru May 28.

52.99

59.99

^55R1J_

165R13

P275/7o^

P185/70R13

175R1^

l^/7qRl7

165R15

65.99

68.99

77.99

79.99

75.99

84.99

79.99

Sale price ea. blackwail

36.99

41.99

46.19

48.29

54.59

55.99

53.19

59 49

55.99

ptusF.ET each and old tire

1.35

1.22

1.40

1.48

1.61

1.81

1.92

1.90

1.72

Sears Guardsman Light Truck tires

Rugged and long wear for light trucks and vans. H76-15, Highway Guardsman LT, plus $3.79 F.E.T.

only...........74.99 each

H78-15, Traction Guardsman LT, plus $3.45 F.E.T.

only...........79.99 each

10-15 Traction RV Guardsman LT, plus $4.34 F.E.T. only  ..........79.99 each

73621

BIG BUY!

39

Portable Pak-a-Potti II toilet

Reg. $69.99 in '83 Spring Cat. 2-pc. portable flush toilet. While quantities last.

18741    18751

Save ^20-^30

Boskotboll backboard or motol pola

Backboard, reg. $79.99. Pole, reg. $89.99. Assembles easily. On sale until May 21.

Fre Spirit 10-speed racer

Reg. $129.99-Si39.99. Choose 24 or 26-In. model for men or women. Dual position side-pull caliper handbrakes. Thru May 21. Partially assembled.

*20-*40 off 39

w # weight set

*20 off! 132-lb. woight set

Reg. $59.99. Inciudes barbeil bar, two (18-in.) dumbbeii bars. On sale until May 21.

99

w m weight bench *40 off! Incline weight bench

Reg. $139.99. 800-lb. capacity bench (user plus weights). 5-position back. Thru May 21

Video Arcade with Poe Man

Reg. $129.99. Enjoy arcade favorites at home. Incudes 2 joysticks, 2 remote paddle controllers. Also cornea with Pac Man cartridge. On sale until May 21.

Take o look at Sears special catalog on Recreational Vehicles and Camping Equipment and get ready for Summer Fun!





DON'T MISS THESE FANTASTIC HOME FASHION SAVIN^S^During Our...

Large items such as furniture are inventoried in our distribution center and will be Scheduled for delivery or pick-up. Delivery extra.

NOW ONLY

YOU SAVE *440!

Beautiful 5-pc. Cinderjack Family-room Group

Enjoy a whole roomful of furniture for one low price. Cinderjack 5-pc. suite includes 82-in. sofa, chair, ottoman and 2 end tables. With nylon and polyester covers. Thru May 31. Reg. $1139.95.

Furniture not available in: Concord, Danville, Goldsboro, Greenville, High Point, Rock Hill

SAVE *100

1M88

Handsomely crafted Brawny Twin Size Bunk Beds

Reg. $299.99. Spacesaving! Made of solid pine for long-lasting durability. With 2 mattress boards, built-in ladder and guardrail. Mattresses are extra.

SAVE *70

32988

Beautiful Country-styled S-pc. Homesteod Dining Room Set

Youll love this homey dining room set with 42-in. round table and 4 chairs. In oak, maple or pine color. Reg. $399.99.

SAVE *300

699

Country-Styled Revere Court II 4-pc. Bedroom Group

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FREE LINING with ony

Custom Drapery Purchase

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SAVE 30%-50% on vertical and horizontal blinds in 1-in. aluminum, wood-look or fashionable fabrics.

SAVE 30%-40% on custom woven woods In Roman shade or roll-up styles.

SAVE 30% on decorative custom shades In a variety of styles and fabrics.

Cushion and installation extra

YOU SAVE 20%-36%

Opan Horn* Bad and Both Fothlons

99

SAVE 30%-35%

Carpet Spectacular!

899

K,.yd. SAVE4-*5 K,. yd.

599 Bath Towels SAVE2

Of 100% combed cotton terry. Reg. $7.99.

W.99 Hand Towel, Save $1.....    3.99

$2.99 WasTicloth, Save$1 .......1.99

Other bath accessories also on sale.

Your choice of Summer Glow, Twilight Shadows or Footlights Supreme II. Available in a wide array of coiors and patterns. Reg. $12.99 to $13.99 s^. yd. Save thru May 31. Shop Sears for value!

SAVE36% on Twin

Size Sweet William Sheets

699

Save M, Twin Reg. $10.99

Cushion and installation extra

$14.99 Full, flat or fitted  ..... 9.99

$19.98 Queen size, flat or fitted.......13.99

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WV: Barboursvilla, Peckley, Bluefield, Charlaaton





ctand

SummerStatement of Philosophy

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department believes that recreation serves as a catalyst within the commmunity to create a climate for developing leisuretime activities that enhance the quality of life and meet the basic needs shared by all human beingsto belong, to achieve, to be recognized, to have status, to acquire and use skills, and to have a creative outlet. Recreation develops sportsmanship, leadership, cultural arts and environment Recreation creates opportunities to promote family unity and develops understandmg and-positive interaction among people.RESERVATIONS

Picnic Shelter Reservations: can be made by calling ext 202 Picnic shelters that can be reserved are located at Elm Street Park (3), Kiwanis Shelter (indoor grill, deck, picnic tabies) behind Elm St Gym, Greensprings Park, Peppermint Park, and Jaycee Park

Tennis Court Reservations: The City tennis courts (6) at Elm Street can be reserved for 1 i;2 hours, 7 days a week. To reserve a court call the administrative offices. 752-4137. Ext. 202, at least one day in advance The River Birch Tennis Center (8 courts) is also open for free reservations 7 days a week, 756-9343 Courts may be reserved on a same day basis. Coffrts at the center may also be rented by groups for a nominal fee In addition, there are four courts at Evans Park, four courts at Jaycee Park and two courts at Thomas Foreman Park, not on a reservation system All lighted courts have light timers/coin meters-Rental Policy The department maintains a facility and equipment rental policy Details, prices, and agreements can be obtained from fhe Jaycee Park Office, Mdnday-Friday from 8;00-5:00 (752-4137ext. 202)    \

There is an 11 PM curfew at all parks and facllitl^.

No Alcoholic Beverages are allowed in any facilities or In the Parks.

GYMNASIUMS Summer Free Play Gym Hours:

West Greenville    752-4137.    ext.    252

Monday-Friday 9:00-12:00, 2:00-9:45 Saturday 11:00-4:00

South Greenville    752-4137.    ext.    253

Monday-Friday, 9:00 AM-9:30 PM and Saturdays, 10:00 AM-3:00 PM

Elm Street    752-4137,    ext. 220. 248, 259

Monday-Friday. 9:00 AM-7.00 PM After 5:00 PM 752-0302

Each Center director can offer other programs if there is enough interest Any organized activity has precedence over gym free play.1983 Programs

City Of Greenville

North Carolina 27834

Recreation & Parks Department

P 0 Box 202 Phone (919)752-4137. Ex! 202

May 14,1983

Dear Citizens of Greenville:

It IS with great pride that the City of Greenville offers you a summer recreation program second to none. With the availability of more leisure hours and the need to keep fit, we have tried to plan something for everyone. We hope every citizen will take the opportunity to participate in at least one activity this summer The Recreation and Parks Commission and staff stand ready to make this your most enjoyable summer ever. Come out to the parks and recreate!!

Sincerely.

(.

Boyd Lee, Director Recreation & Parks Departn^^ntTELEPHONE NUMBERS

City of Greenvilletall departments)............ 752-4137

Jaycee Park Offices.............   Gxt.    200-204

262-265

Community Building (Senior Citizens)........ ext, 246

_    (Arts & Crafts) ext. 250

South Greenville...................... ext 253

West Greenville......... ............... ext. 252

Elm Street Gym...........................gxt.    220, 248

259

Elm Street Gym (after 5 P.M. and Sat.).......... 752-0302

River Birch Tennis Center ...................756-9343

Tennis Court Reservations (Elm St.)........... ext 202

Picnic Shelter Reservations...................ext 202

Maintenance Center  ......  ^    gxt,    254 205

River Park North..............................758-1^

Park Ranger (after 5 P.M.).................. 752-0302

(or Police Dispatcher)NON-RESIDENT POLICY

All programs are available to residents of Greenville. Non-residents who live in Pitt County must pay'a nonresident fee if they desire to participate in any Recreation and Parks programs. The non-resident fee may be paid for a 6 month period or a 12 month period and may be paid on an individual basis or a family basis The following are the inclusive times of fee coverage: September 1 to March i, March 1 to September i or September 1 through August 31. This fee is in addition to any program fees and can be paid at the Recreation and Parks main office located at Jaycee Park 2CKX) ''iar Lane.1983 RECREATION AND PARKS COMMISSION

Mrs. J. Knott Proctor. Chairman

Mrs Janice Buck, Mayor Pro-tem

Mrs Julia Davis

Dr Robert G. Deyton

Rev. Daniel T Earnhardt

Dr, Alfreds, King

Mrs WillianE McDonald

Dr. Carl Wille

Mrs. Sydney WomackRecreation and Parks Department StaH

   Boyd    Lee.    Director

Hecreation Division

Charles Vincent. Superintendent of Recreation

Ben James, Recreation Coordinator

Bill Twine. Recreation Coordinator

Bobby Short. Recreation Supervisor

Carol Whiteford, Recreation Supervisor

Chip East, Recreation Supervisor

Lesley Ball, Recreation Supervisor

Robert Johnson. Recreation Supervisor

Nancy Evans, Recreation Supervisor

Henry Hostetler, Recreation Supervisor

Lucille Sumrell, Recreation Specialist

Patsy Denson, Recreation Assistant

Alice Moore. Recreation Assistant

Alonza Price, Recreation Assistant -

Eleanor Scheipers. Administrative Secretary

Judy Beaman, Clerk Typist, III

Ronnie Purvis, Gym As^stant

Barbara J. Bass, Part-time Gym Assistant

Mary Ann Archie, Part-time Recreation Assistant

Pearlie M. Brown, Part-time Gym Assistant

Parks Division

Walter Stasavich, Superintendent of Parks Srsor'^""^"''    ^"'"'enance/Landscape

Edward Grant, Landscape Supervisor David Daniels, Parks Building Maintenance Supervisor Julius Harris. Park Ranger Paul Strother, Park Ranger Jim Parker, Parks Development Coordinator Franklin Porter, Maintenance Technician ^nald Reese, Maintenance Technician II Ronnie Crandol, Equipment Operator Fenner Godley, Equipment Operator Faye Wnitfield, Parks Shop Attendent Jessie Miller, Laborer II Donald Reese. Laborer II Albert Clark, Laborer II Linwood Atkinson, Laborer II Mark Dixon, Laborer I ' Annette Staton, Custodian Marvin Jarman, Part-time Laborer Connor Merritt, Part-time Laborer Mike Campbell. Part-time Laborer Ted King, Part-time Laborer

Sltft Of tutnm





Summer Playground Information

Registration*

Monday, June 20, is the official opening day for the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department s Summer Program. Registration in most cases, will be June 13 through June 17 or at the'first scheduled session. Individuals may only register for programs on assigned days (indicated in program description) and following days. Please notice carefully, program registration dates and places! No one will be allowed to register early or over the phone. Individuals may sign up for other people (maximum of 2), providing they have the proper information. This year registration will be from 5:30 PM until 8:30 PM, to aid working parents. Please realize this does not assure you a place in our programs as they are filled on a first come first served basis. If a fee is involved, it must be paid in full the day of registration. Ail programs are available to residents of Greenville. Nonresidents who live in Pitt County must pay a nonresident participation fee to be able to participate. Most programs operate from June 20 to August 5.

For further information concerning any of the programs, or additional programs, please call the department at 752-4137, Ext. 202.

Day Camp

Jaycee Park Day Campa-This year there will be two Day Camps at Jaycee Park. One day camp will be for children having completed Kindergarten, 1 and 2 grades-a separate day camp will be held for youth finishing 3, 4, 5, 6, 4 7 grades. Each day camp will be limited to 30 participants per session. There will be 4 sessions. (Children can only attend one session).

1st-June 20-July 1 2nd - July 5 - July 15 3rd-July 18-July 29 4th - August 1 - August 12 Camp meets from 9:00 AM until 2:45 PM, Monday thru Friday. Activities tor the day camp include games, sports, crafts, nature study, canoeing, fishing, putt-putt golf, roller skating, bowling, swimming, and possibly horseback riding The children are asked to bring bag lunches everyday. The charge is $5 00 per session and the children will need to bring money when they go on special outings. This should not exceed J10.00 total for the two weeks. Both day camps will travel together for some of their outings. Registration will be at the Recreation and Parks Administrative Building on Tuesday, June 14 from 5:30 PM-8:30 PM South Greenville Day Camp - A similar day camp will be held at South Greenville Recreation Center. Children ages 6-13 can attend. Swimming, putt-putt golf and other activities will be offered. Children meet from 9:00 AM-2:45 PM. They should bring bag lunches. Registration fee IS $4.00 per session. Extra money will be needed for special outings. Camp runs in 2 week sessions. They are the same as the Jaycee Park Day Camp. Registration is June 13-17, at South Greenville from 9:00-5:00 PM. West Greenville Day Camp-A day camp will also be held at West Greenville Recreation Center. Children ages 5-10 can attend. Swimming, putt-putt golf and other activities will be offered. Children meet from 9:00 AM-2:45 PM They should bring bag lunches Registration fee is $4 00 per session Extra money will be needed for special outings! Camp runs in 2 week sessions. They are the same as the Jaycee Park Day Camp. Registration is June 13-17, at West Greenville from 9:00-5:00 PM. River Park North Day Catnp-This summer we plan to have a new day camping experience at River Park North Camp will run in one week sessions rfljchildren will meet from 8:00 until 12:00, Monday thru Friday, They will camp overnight one night during the session. Included will be basics of canoeing, camping, fishing, and nature study Camp is limited to 12 participants per session, ages 9 to 12. (Please refer to schedule below for appropriate sessions for particular ages.) Cost is $5.00 per session and children can attend only one session. Pre-register Tuesday, June 14 at Jaycee Park Administrative Buildirig from 5:30-8:30

Ages 9-101st sessionJune ?0-June 24 Ages 11-122nd sessionJune 27-July 1 Ages 9-103rd sessionJuly 5-July 8 Ages 11-124th sessionJuly 11-July 15 Ages 9-105th sessionJuly 18-July 22 Ages 11-126th sessionJuly 25-July 29 Ages 9-107th sessionAugust 1-August 5 Ages 11-128th sessionAugust 8-August 12

PLAYGROUND PROGRAM (Mobile Recreation Program)

The Recreation and Parks Department will operate one mobile recreation unit during the summer. There will be four instructors traveling with the unit who are specialists in sports and games, arts and crafts, music and pre-school age children. The mobile unit will be carrying a variety of items such as games, musical equipment, athletic equipment, arts and crafts supplies and other recreational supplies. This program offers structured and organized activities for children all ages. Various areas throughout the city will be visited totaling nine locations a week. There will be no required advanced registration and there is no registration fee involved Registration cards will be filled out the first day the unit visits a neighborhood or park. All ages are welcomed but parents are urged not to bring young children under age 5 unless they plan to stay with them. The schedule for the mobile unit will begin June 20 as follows:

Mon. 9:00-12:00West Meadowbrook 2:00-5:00-Woodlawn Tues. 9:00-12:00Lynndale Neighborhood 2:(X)-5:0OMoyewood Park Wed. 9:00-12:00Greenfield Terrace 2:00-5:00Bel ved ere Thurs 9:00-12:00-Peppermint 2:00-5:00Agnes Fullilove Fri. 9:(X)-12:00Cambridge/Fairlane

Sport and Games Mini Sesslons-Will be held at Jaycee Park for youth Ages 6-9. Boys and girls will meet for 1 1/2 hours from 3:30 until 5:(X), Monday thru Friday for two weeks and learn basics of different sports or games Included will be soccer, baseball, relays, golf, badminton, croquet and frisbee. Class meets from 3:30-5:00 at Jaycee Park. Cost for the session is $4.00 Pre-register June 14, Jaycee Park, 5:30 to 8:30 P.M. Class size limited to 12.

1st sessionJune 20-July 1 2nd sessionJuly 5-July 15 3rd sessionJuly 18-July 29

Basketball Clinic: Meets each Monday and Wednesday at 10:00 AM from ages 13-15. Meets each Tuesday and Thursday at 10:00 AM for ages 9-12. Classes will begin Monday, June 20 and Tudsday, June 21. Will meet at West Greenville Gym.

Youth Baseball-A baseball program involving instruction and competition will be offered for girls and boys ages 7 to 12 years of age (ages as of August 1, 1983) begins June 20. Reoistration will be held Wednesday, June 15, from 5:30 PM-fi:30 PM at the Recreation and Parks Administrative Building. The first of the program will be spent on techniques and fundamentals and the remainder of the program will be spent playing games between the various teams. There will be a $4.00 registration fee for all baseball programs. The schedule will be as follows:

Small Fiy-9:00-10:30 AM for 7 year olds or those having completed first grade.

Big Fiv-10:30-12:00 noon for 8 year olds or those having completed second grade.

Big Ten-1 ;00-3:00 PM for 9-12 year olds, (those having completed third grade.)

The baseball fcirograms will be held Monday through Friday (until schedules are made) and will meet at Elm Street Park. Each participant must furnish their own glove and shoes; the Department will furnish bats and uniforms. A similar program at South Greenville can. be initiated if there is sufficient interest. There is a $4 00 registration fee (or each program.

Glris Softball-Will be held at Jaycee Park on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday mornings. Girls ages 9-12 meet at 10 AM and girls ages 13-15 meet at 11 AM. The first couple of weeks will be spent on fundamentals and practice. Games are being scheduled with area Recreation Depts. There is a $4.00 reoistration fee and preregistration will be June 15,1983, 5:30 PM-8:30 PM.

SUMMER SPECIAL EVENTS Cartoon Nlght-July 5, Recreation and Parks Administrative Building, 7:30 PM; July 6. West Greenville Recreation Center, 7:30 PM: July 7, South Greenville Recreation Center, 7:30 PM. Free cartoons will be held for children 3 to 12. Refreshments will be served. Bugs Bunny, Road Runner, etc. will be shown. No charge. Kids Dog Show-Tuesday,'July 19 . 6:30-8:00 PM Will be held at Elm Street Park. Dog owners 4 to 14 years of age can enter their pets in categories such as best trick dog, best (poking, smallest, largest, funniest, best costume, and others A Trophy is awarded to the best of show Canoe Race-Saturday, July 2,10:30 AM, 2 man teams will race from Falkland Boat Landing to the Gteenville Town Commons, Trophies awarded to top 3 teams Jaycees will sponsor races, fireworks, street dance, bingo, and others. Pre-register by calling 752-4137, Ext. 200 Magic and Craft Show-Wednesday, July 27, 6:30-8:00 PM. Will be held at Jaycee Park Administrative Building Children participating in our summer programs have a chance to show their crafts. Ribbons are awarded A magic show will be held for entertainment.

Super Swim Day-August 5, 9:00-12:00 PM. This will be held at the City Pool. Races, relays and games will be held for any children 5-15. Prizes are awarded Watermelon, free swim, and races.

Ice Cream Fling Blng-August 22 at 6:30-8:00 PM Will be held at Elni Street Recreation'Center, South Greenville Recreation Center, and West Greenville Recreation Center. Celebrates the beginning of school with ice cream sundaes, bingo, and frisbee contest,,

Cheerleading Camp-A cheerleading camp (or upcoming 3rd, 4th, 5th, 4 6th grzide girls will be held at Jaycee Park. Girls will meet each Monday thru Friday from 3 00-4:M. Girls learn such things as chants, cheers, and other routines. Ojst for the session will be $10 00

Registration is June 15 from 5:30-8:30 PM.    '

1st sessionJune 20-July 1 2nd sessionJuly 5-July 15 An advanced session of cheerleading will be held July 18-July 29, from 3:00-4:30. Students who have taken previous cheering sessions are eligible Cost is $10 00 and class meets from 3:00-4:30 at Recreation and Parks Administrative Building.

Youth Theatie-This group meets Monday through Fri-M    '    children 7 to 16. This year

there will be three different age groups 7 to 9 2 00-3 30 10 to 12, 10:30-12:00; and 13-16, 9:00-10:30. All groups meet in the auditorium of the Recreation and Parks Administrative Building. Youth will learn about acting pro-duc ion, making props, and each group will put on a production at the end of the session. Registration (or this pr^ram wHI be held Tuesday, June 14, from 5:30-8 30 PM, at the Recreation and Parks Administrative Building (Jaycee Park). There is a $4.00 registration fee. Class size IS limited to 17 students per age group.

needlework class will be held for i! 'o'* ''''    1:30-3:00 PM at the 2nd

floor of the Community building This class will last for 2 Friday. Youth will learn basics of M    and stenciling. Cost will be

WOO for the 2 weeks. Class limited to 10 people Registration June 16 from 5:30-8:30 PM at Recreation and Parks Administrative Building 1st sessionJune 20-July 1 2nd sessionJuly 5-July 15

Tot Lot - This program is for pre-school children ages 4 and 5 (ages as of or before October 15). The program is held at Elm Street and will be limited to 40 children for each session. One session will meet Mondays. Wednesdays, and Fridays, from 9:00-11:45 AM Cost for this session is $5.00 for seven weeks. There will also be a Tuesday - Thursday session costing $4.00 for 7 weeks This session also meets from 9:00-11:45 AM. Planned activities include arts and crafts, games, outdoor activities, singing and more. Registration for this program will be Monday, June 13 at the Recreation and Parks Administrative Building from 5:30 PM until 8:30 PM





OUTDOOR RECREATION AND ADVENTURE PROGRAM INFORMATIONTennis Programs

Parks Department on the following Federal. State and Private Campground facilities, historical, and vacation attractions. Fishing information, ferry schedules and accomodations state wide. Call ext 259 Elm St Gym

Green Springs Exercise Trail A trail with 20 stations is

constructed in Green Springs Park This 1 i mile trail is designed for all levels ol exercise OnE 5th Si River Park NorthNewly developed 338 acre Park on Mumlord Road will open tor public usage in June pedal boats, shelters and pond fishing will be available for a tee Nature trails, restrooms & river fishing will also be available Camping for groups may be approved, requests need to be made well in advance by call ext 202 No private boats will be allowed in the ponds No alcoholic beverages are allow'ed in any city park Backpacking: Several backpacking treks will be offered this spring. Trips vary from weekend hiking to a weexlong hike No experience is necessary All equipment, food, transportation, and orientation sessions provided College credit can be earned on some trips niinimum age is 18 years. Date and basic information May 14-17

From Iron Mtn. Gap, NC to Nolichucky River at Erwin Tenn., 18 miles total. Fee $35. 2/2 days hikings3 nights camping Depart 7 AM Saturday, returns late Tuesday June 4-11- "A Week on the Trail"

From Laural Fork Gorge to several mountains over 5.400 teel with Roan Mtn. (6.285 ft.) the highest Fee $75 6'r .days hiking/7 nights camping. Depart 6 AM Saturoay June 4 and return late Saturday, June 11 For additional information on backpacking trips call Ext 201 Whitewater Rahing: Our third annual Fourth of July weekend Whitewater Raft trip This year on the French Broad River (Class III, IV, V) near Hot Springs Fee tor raft trip $30 Some transportation and meals can be provided at additional cost. Motels and free camping m Hoi Springs Ext. 201 for additional information Rock Climbing: July 22-24

Basic knots, rappelling, belaying, and other climbing techniques are taught by experienced instructors No experience necessary tor this beginner s class Call tor additional information and fees. Ext 201

BACKPACKING AND WHITEWATER RAFTING:

August 11-14; hike twelve and a half miles of the Appalachian Trail and end your adventure with a raft trip down the wild and beautiful Nantahala River Fee is $60 00 for 2 days hiking, Vz day rafting. 3 nights camping Depart6;00 AM Thursday and return late SundayBASIC HORSEMANSHIP/HUNT SEAT RIDING

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department and Ram Horn Acres is co-sponsoring two classes, one Basic Horsemanship and one in Hunt Seat Ridmg Basic Horsemanship is designed to present the fundamentals of Hunt Seat riding. It will also acquaint the beginner with the equipment and terms used by the Hunt Seat riders This course will not include jumping Times and age groups will be arranged by the instructors Children through adults are welcome. <

Hunt Seat riding is a more advanced course being offered and is designed to present more of an understanding of forward seat riding. This course will include jumping at the discretion of the instructor This class is also open to children through adults

Registration for the summer session of both courses will be held on June 13,14, & 15, from 5:30 to 8 30 P M All classes lasts for 6 weeks, and the cost is $48 Each lesson last for one hour Registration will be held at Recreation and Parks Administrative Building

Eor further information contact Beth Bright. 756-8290 or Tommy Thompson at 756-9224. or Ram Horn acres.

Inc at 758-1889.LESSONS

For all Youth Tenms Programs the child's age as of Remst a n !    '    the    proper    age    group.

8-10 horl q A T    ffograms    will    be    June

8 10, from 9 AM 7 PM at the River Birch Tennis Center

Lessons: For beginners are available in two t8ree week sessions beginning June 13 and July e'

1    ^    ^    session    per    child

schedule    ^ according to the following

Ages 7-9 Tue&Thurs    8-9 AM

Ages 10-13 Tue 8 Thurs,    9-10 AM

^ Ages 14-18 TueSThurs, 11-12JUNIOR NOVICE TENNIS LEAGUE

A junior novice tennis league is offered with 4 City teams composed of boys and girls ages 9-15 Each team will compete within its respective age group

This program is for beginning players who have had some instruction before and know how to keep score, he teams will practice Monday and Wednesday mornings with rjialch day being on Friday, There is a limit of 15p'a/ersperteam

The season lasts from June 13-July 29 (excluding week of July 17-Juiy 23) There is a $4 fee. Each member will receive a T-shirt    ,JUNIOR ADVANCED TENNIS LEAGUE

. An advanced junior tennis league is offered with 4 city teams composed of boys and girls ages 9-17. Each team will compete within his respective age group

This program is for players who have had at least 2 years of competitive experience, or who have played on a school team or a Recreation Department team. The teams will practice on Monday mornings. Match day will be on Wednesdays There is a limit of 12 players per team

There will be an all star team of 12 players and 3 alternates selected from the advanced league to participate in the State Playoffs State ranked players may participate in the local advanced league, but may not be chosed for the all star team

The season lasts from June 13-July 29 (excluding week of July 17-231. There is a $4 fee Each member will

receive a T-shirtRANKED JUNIORS

For all junior (Slayers any age that are ranked or are interested in becoming ranked in North Carolina, here are a few of the nearby sanctioned junior lournaments. Greenville will also be sponsoring a junior sanctioned tournament II enough juniors are interested in participating in any of these tournaments, there is a strong possiblity that transportation may be provided to these tournaments. You may receive entry blanks and more information at the River Birch Tennis Center.

Spooner s Creek Junior Tournament Atlantic Beach, NC-June 20-22

Kinston Janior Tournament Goldsboro Junior Tournament Kinston, NC-July 6-9 Goldsboro. NC-July 25-27 SUMMER ADULT TENNIS Pre-registration is at the River Birch Tennis Center (RBTC). 9 AM-6 PM. May 30-June 2 There is a $4 fee. Each class has limited enrollment,

1st session: June6-June30 2nd session: July 5-August 2

Beginner: Someone who Is competely hew to the game. Mon &Wed, 5:30-6:30 RBTC Tues & Thurs 5.30-6:30 RBTC

Advanced Beginner: Someone who has had formal instruction but IS still a beginner Mon. 8 Wed -6 30-7:30 RBTC

Intermediate: A player with 2-5 years experience,

Tues & Thurs. 6:30-7:30 RBTC

TOURNAMENTS AT RIVER BIRCH July 8-10 Greenville City Championships (Adults) Singles and Doubles July 21-24*

Greenville/Wneat First Securities Championships (sanctioned)

Aug. 4-7 Eastern Carolina Adult Closed (Adults-sanctloned)

Aug. 12-14 Greenville City Championships Mixed Doubles

l=or more Information on any of the preceeding programs contact River Birch Tennis Center, 756-9343.June is Recreation MonthSWIMMING POOL

Th City Pool, a 300,000 gallon, 25 yard x 25 meter, 7 lane pool with a separate diving tank, is located at Guy Smith Park on Myrtle Ave, one block in front ol Bojangles Restaurant

OPERATION HOURS: June 4th and 5th, 1:30-6:00 PM Saturdays, 1 and 2:00-6:15 PM Sunday. Wednesday, June 8th-August ,21 Monday-Fridays 1:30-6:00 PM and Saturdays 1:30-6:15 PM, Sundays 2.00-6:15 PM. Daily admission IS $1 Season passes-Children $8, Adults $15. Family $25.

SWIMMING LESSONS: Pre-registration for alt lessons will be held at Elm Street Gym the week of May 23-May 27 from 3:00-6:00 PM There will be a $10 pool use tee for each session. Other times of registration will be handled by phoning the City Pool.

INFANT LESSONS: Newborn thru 5 years old. Classes are held each Saturday from Noon til 1:00 PM beginning June 18th.

YOUTH LESSONS: Ages 6-14 years old (5 year old accepted on a space available, height, and abilitv hasis) Classes available from beginner swimmer to u .. swimmer levels.

1st Session 2nd Session 3rd Session

June 13-July 1 July 6-July 26 July 29-Aug18

Students may sign up tor the following time periods:

1st Session: 9:30-10:10,10:15-10:55, 11:00-11 40

2nd Session: 9:00-9:40. 9:45-10:25.10:30-11:10.11:15-11:55

3rd Session: same as the second session

ADVANCED LIFESAVING; Ages 15 and over, classes held Tuesday and Thursday nights from 7:00-9:00 PM beginning June 14th. Course will last for 6 weeks.ADULT SWIMMING LESSONS: Ages 15 and over. Classes will meet Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday nights from 7:00-8:00 PM.

1st Session June 13-July 11 2nd Session July 18-August 15

"Please note; All swimming students are skill tested and are taught at their appropriate skill level. Students who successfully complete the required skills in a^ particular swirnming level will receive Red Cross certificates tor that level. Students may attend more than one session or time period on a space avajlable basis. Nonresident tees (if applicable) are in addition to Swim Lesson Pool User fees.

Swimming pool phone number will be available after May 15,1983.GREENVILLE SWIM CLUB: Youth wishing to join the Club may try out at any practice or call Coach John Richards at 756-1683.





SUNDAY IN THE PARK

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department proudly announces Sunday In The Park concert series This year promises to provide area citizens with the best summer program yet, and, as usual, the concerts are free and are meant for the entire family So bring a blanket or a folding chair and join us on the grassy slopes of Reade Street between 3rd and 4th Streets. All the concerts begin at 7:00 PM and in case of inclement weather a substitute' date, wherever possible, will be announced. Begins June 5th.

SPECIAL POPULATIONS

CAMP SUNSHINE DAY CAMP: A day camp for han-v dicapped youngsters. Four 2 week sessions will be held this summer First session from June 20 to July 1; a second session from July 5 to July 15, third session from July t8 to July 29 and the fourth session from August 1 to August 12. The camp meets from 10:00 AM until 2:00 PM. Monday through Friday at the Elm Street Gym. Activities include swimming arts and crafts, bowling, canoeing, skating, music, games, movies, and field trips. The campers are asked to bring bag lunches everyday, drinks are provided The charge,for the camp is J3.00 For information or applications, call 752-4137 ext. 201.

4

CELEBRATIONCelebration is co-sponsored with the Association for Retarded Citizens/Pitt County. Social activities for handicapped adults. Tentative schedule. June 23& Aug. 25

Special Olympics Swim DayA day of swimming and special events for Greenville Special Olympians to be held at the City Pool on June 3.

Swimming lor Special Populati^Meets each Monday. Wednesday, and Friday from 12 noon to 1:30 P M. and on Tuesday from 7:00-8:00''P M. at the City Pool. Begins June 14.

Bowling lor Special Populations: Handicapped adults meet on 2nd and 4th Wedoeedays of each month at 4:00 P M at Hillcrest Lanes Participants are eligible to compete in Special Olympics Bowling tournament.

Greenville Sleelwheela: Wheelchair basketball lor any person not physically able to participate in stand-up basketball. Games are played with teams from other cities. Call Richard Hudson at 758-1224 or 752-4137,

201 for more inlormalion.

ARTS & CRAFTS-SUMMER PROGRAM COMMUNITY BUILDING CORNER OF FOURTH & GREENE

WEAVING-Learn to weave-new session begins Monday, June 13. Classes will meet Monday and Wednesday, from 10-2 PM Registration fee J15.

VACATION WORKSHOP-A variety of new craft ideas, combined Quilting and Trapunts Embroidery, Basketry, Pierced Lampshades. Counted Cross Stitch on straw frame and restoring old picture frames will be offered Beginning Wednesday, June 22, 9-12 noon. A new craft will be offered every two weeks. Start your Christmas gift list early. Registration fee $15.

SENIOR CITIZENS ASSORTED CRAFTS Beginning Wednesday, June 22, 9:30-11:30 AM. an eight week session of crafts will begin. Crafts to be offered-Swedish ^ Weaving (pillow) Embroidery (Trapunts),-small rag doll and a stenciled candlewick pillow. Registration fee $1, plus supplies used.

UNSTRUCTURED PAINTING-lnterested persons (n painting with oil or water colors with a group, sketching outside landscapes, buildings, etc. and painting pictures at the Community Building. Beginning Thursday June 23, from 9-3 PM, Contact 752-4137, Ext. 250. Free, no instructor provided.

FABRIC PAINTING CLOTHING-A class in mixing colors, shapes, working desired designs and puttings designs on finished products. Six week session begins Tuesday, June 14, from 9-12 noon. Registration fee$15.

SELF PORTRAIT PAINTING WITH PASTELS In each class a protrait will be done studying the bone structure, flesh tone, lights, shadows, lip and eye observance. Class begins Tuesday, June 14, 1-4 PM for six weeks. Registration fee is $15.

FASHION ILLUSTRATION-Class beginning Monday, sis'*    hoon,    in mini advertising. Registratioikfee

Embroidery and Quilting Guild will not meet after May meetings but will continue again in September Chess Club will meet during summer on Monday nights

OLDER ADULTS PROGRAMS

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department Junior Citizens Center is located at the corner of Fourth irjd Greene Streets in the Community Building, Ext 246.

The Center is not a club, but a community center for all senior citizens in the city. It is the intention of the Center to provide an atmosphere tor friendship and activity.

The Center is open 5 days a week, Monday thru Friday from 10:00 AM fo 2:00 PM

OLDER ADULTS EXERCISE: for individuals 50 and over; meets twice a week and will start early in June; this is a year-round program that may be joined at anytime For more details please call 752-4137, ext. 259 Nutrition Program-A good hot lunch program for those citizens 60 years or older This program is for any Senior Citizen regardless of income. The meal is on a contribution basis and is served 5 days a week, Monday through Friday at 12:00 noon.

Early Pregnancy Exerclae-Mondays S Thursdays. 5:30-6:15, at Jaycee Park Administrative Building in the auditorium. 5 weeks, 10 lessons, fee is $15. This program is open to any expectant mother. Included will be relaxation, general muscle toning and aerobics tailored to the pregnant woman. Begins June 20.

Modem Jazz, Tap, Ballet Exercise, & Acrobat Classes Classes of Modern Jazz, Tap, Ballet Exercise, and Acrobatics, Attention will be giveri to poise, awareness, movement and coordination as well as intricate steps and routines, depending on students abilities This six week session will be held on Tuesday evenings beginning June 21, at Jaycee Park Auditorium Each class will be one hour long with the basic schedule as follows:

Ages3&4-5:15-6:15PM 5-10 - 6:20-7:20 PM Cost is $10.00 for 6 weeks, pre-register June 13-15. from 9:00-5:00 PM at Recreation and Parks Administrative Building. This class does continue throughout the year in 6 week sessions.

CO-ED VOLLEYBALL: meets on Mondays from 7:00 to 9:00 the Elm Street Gym This program is organized free-play, not leagues. There is a $3 program fee PROGRESSIVE GYMNASTICS: Held at Jaycee Park on Mon., Wed., and Fri. afternoons youth ages 3-14 years old. Classes will last for 2 weeks for $15 Pre-registration will be Monday, June 13 and Tuesday. June 14 from 5:30-8:30 PM at Jaycee Park.    s

Men Exercise (Cross-court basketball)-Held at Elm

Street Gym year around on Monday, Wednesday, and Fridays from 5:30 to 6:45 PM. This is organized basketball where the men draw numbers and play 12 minute cross-court games There is a $4 participation fee which runs for a twelve week period. This class can be joined anytime. West Greenville's program meets on Tues at 7 PM.

30    & Over Men's Exercise (Cross-court

basketball) Held at Elm Street Gym year around for men 30 years old and over, or for those who are terribly out of shape. It is held on Tuesday and Thursday from 5:30 to 6:45 PM. There is a $3 participation fee which runs tor a twelve week period This class can be joined at anytime.

Udie. Exercise-held at Jaycee Park, Tuesday and muvio*'^    ^    'fi'ended    to    toneThemltJtf    yourself

There is a $4 participation fee which runs for a twelve

at PM    od    Wednesday

ADULT SUMMER BASKETBALL LEAGUE: Begins Wednesday, July 6. This league is designed tor nonvarsity college players. Games will be held on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays. There will be a $2 registration fee for all players Individuals should register the first day of class

CLOGGING CLASSES: Details will be available in mid-June. Call 752-4137. ext. 200.

This Publication was made possibleby the following Sponsors Donations

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If you arc interested in making a donation or being a sponsor for a Recreation Program contact the department for the Gift Guide, 752-4137 at 202





THE DAILY REFLECTOR

GREa^YlU^ N.C

m-

UP IN IDAHO BY MARIEL HEMINGWAY

From Astronauts Wife to First Lady in Waiting

Bv Kathleen Maxa





or any other political wife, the luncheon speech before the 300 women who gathered at the Skyland Pines Country Club in Canton, Ohio, would have been one of those routine command performances. You say a few words about what a great job your husband is doing, thank everyone for her support and fade back into the shadows of your husband's career until the next womens club luncheon invitation arrives.

But for Annie Qenn, the wife of Ohios Senator John Glenn, that speech she gave three years ago was about as far from routine as her astronaut husbands space flight some 21 years ago. That speech marked the day that this diminutive, dark-haired woman with the warm, dark eyes showed the world she had The Right Stuff.

Her hands trembled ever so slightly as she stepped to the dais and, with a quavering voice, began slowly, tentatively: As some of you know, 1 have been a stutterer all of my life, as was my father befoie me. it has taken many, many, many years for me to reach the point where 1 am able to stand here today and give a speech. She continued for nearly 20 minutes, talking about the difficulties she had encountered throughout her life as a stutterer who stumbled over 85 percent i of the words she spoke. To pronounce her own last name used to take what seemed like an interminable time as she struggled to get out the "g." She used to regard the telephone as "a rhonster. And she told them about the revolu- I tionary' speech therapy she began in | 1974 at Hollins College near Roanoke, Va., which had. she said, made it possible for me to be here with ail of you today and to do so many things 1 never thought 1 would be able to do. When Annie Qenn finished, there wasn't a dry' eye in the dining room of the Skyland Pines Country Club. Senator Qenn, who remained in Washington so as not to detract from his wifes special moment, also wept when she phoned him following the speech.

"Every one of the women in that room came by afterward to shake her hand and say a few words, recalls Sophie Usner, a Canton city employee i





who was in the audience. They knew the courage it took for her to stand up before them, that getting up to give a speech even without an impediment takes a lot. She touched a lot of lives out there that day.

On a rare quiet afternoon at her suburban Maryland home, Annie Glenn, 63, reflects on how her life has changed since that day in Canton, as she curls up on an oversized sofa in the paneled family room.

Being a stutterer, 1 guess 1 never even dreamed of having the possibility of Being able to do the things Im able to do now, she says, speaking slowly but clearly, as if carefully measuring each word. 1 always thought 1 had a complete life. But now that I can.talk, I realize how much I can help other people.

The person she is helping most these days is her husband, who has been closing in on Walter Mndale s lead in the race for the 1984 Democratic nomination for President.

As John Glenns unpaid but full-time staffer, she can usually be found during

Even before she overcame her speech impediment, Annie was a popular campaigner, known as John*s **best weapon.*'

working hours in his Senate office, sitting in on meetings with visitors and staff or answering the requests of constituents back in Ohio. Although she a included in everything on the ^nators schedule, Annie Qenn prefers to remain in the background.

Im just there for my own education, she says. And because its extremely interesting to me to meet these people. 1 have an intense interest in what is going on for my own knowledge, not ^ause I intend to play a role in writing out issues or putting my yes or ,no in the conversation.

But it is out on the campaign trail that she has contributed the most to her husbands political future. In contrast with John Qenn, who has had to work to overcome his stiffness with strangers, Annie Glenn is a natural at the meeting and greeting side of politics. She doesnt just meet people. said an Ohio political acquaintance, she warms to them. You can see it in her face.

Even before she overcame her speech impediment, Annie Qenn was recognized as an effective and popular campaigner who was known among her husbands Ohio political rivals as John Glenns best weapon.

Although John Glenn sometimes calls Annie his co-pilot, she has no flights of fancy about being a tower controller.

The key to her charm, says a former Glenn aide, is that no person is too common to be approached. Night after night, day after day on the campaign trail, I would see her go up and grab a hand and initiate conversations. And people would be extremely patient and courteous and wait for her to finish what she had to say. You could see them moving their heads and struggling with her as she groped for the word.

Now, as her husband stumps before such diverse groups as the Wall Street investment banking firm Lehman Brothers and the Iowa Beef Council, she accompanies him, often working one side of the room shaking hands and making conversation, while he works the other. Though she refrains from discussing issues in public, aides say that she fi^uently engages in interesting dialogues with Glenn privately.

While he tends to view issues on a national scale, says a Glenn insider, she humanizes those issues by relating the individual experiences of the constituents she talks with to John and his staff. She may tell them, I met Mr. Jones during the party and he gave me some examples of what has happened to his natural-gas bill and the difficulty hes had in paying the bill.

Qenn, the former Marine Corps fighter pilot and Friendship 7 astronaut, sometimes refers to his wife as his co-pilot. But unlike Rosalynn Carter, who sat in on Cabinet meetings when her husband was President, or Nancy Reagan, who is said to have

strong opinions on her husbands White House staff appointments, Annie Glenn draws the line between co-pilot and tower controller.

I dont think its up to me to give him political advice, she says flatly.

At a time of public ambivalence about what a First Lady should be a socially conscious Presidential helpmate or a glamorously gowned Presidential appendage Annie Glenn is regarded as capable of striking a balance between the two extremes.

Annie focuses Johns attention on the human side of the issues. says a Glenn insider. But she is not someone who is going to intrude and try to force her views on the nation through her husband.

Her style of dress is more cost- than label-conscious, although her preference for simple, tailored designs gives her an understated elegance. A trim size 6, she buys her clothes off the rack rather than from designer houses and says she doesnt care if people see her in the same outfit from year to year.

Shes small town but in a sophisticated way, says Suzanne Ruf, the director of development who organized the Qeveland Hearing and Speech Centers annual meeting at which Annie Qenn spoke last year. 1 think women would be able to readily identify with her as First Lady.

Still, the cut of her clothes or the depth of her social consciousness is not nearly as important as what a Presidential candidates wife conveys about her husband, observ'es Washington lawyer Harrv McPherson.

What the public wants to know is what kind of person is going to be counseling him and helping him carr>' that very substantial office," says McPherson, an informal adviser to Waiter Mndale and behind-the-scenes figure in Democratic Party politics for nearly 30 years. I believe Annie is the sort of person who conveys such an integrity of personality and that it will go down to the Senators great benefit. She is true in the sense that a piece of wood, an axe handle is a true thing.

Anrwe Qenns character has b^n forged frorh Presbyterian prudence, small-town values and the upending forces of fate. During 40 years of married life, childhood sweethearts John and Annie Glenn (they began dating in eighth grade) have gone through more together than most couples would experience in 20 lifetimes: two wars, outer space and the attendant fishbowl existence of the NASA astronaut program, and the rearing of two children. David, 37, is an anesthesiologist who resides with his wife and the Qenns' only gjrandchild in San Francisco. Lyn, 36, divides her time between Vail, where she lives with her physician husband, and campaigning for her father.

If not for World War 11, today Annie Qenn might be the wife of John Qenn the plumbing supplier in tiny, rural New Concord, Ohio a possibility neither of them seems to have lost sight of.

Instead of joining his fathers business, John Qenn, swept up in the patriotic fervor of the times, joined the

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In John i office ~The person she is helping most these days a her husband

ANNIEGifNN

Manne Corps as a fighter pilot. And Anna Castor left the secunt>- of Nw CocKord for the uprooted life of a nuliiar>- v%ife mamed to a combat flyer, tesi piio< and astronaut whose every ftttssjon was a potential rendezvous with death

Annie Oenn has survived it all. And along the way she has managed to retain a dear sense of who she is and to derive strength and optimism from those enormous adjustments and ' uncertainties.

She don't remember the negative side of anything even stuttering. says daughter Lvn There is something in her that aivsavs makes her turn around with a smile and go on. even when people were cruel to her."

Although Annie Glenn stuttered from the time she began to speak, the first time she became consdous of it . was during an madent in sixth grade.

pch of us was asked to get up in front I of the dass and recite a poem," she I l^ls. "When it was my turn and I began to redte, somebodv in the dass laughed at me. "

But Annie Glenn never allowed her speech problem to deter her anvinore than ^e allowed it to depress her Instead ^ learned to adapt or "to tough It out " by- speaking as best she could when husband John suffered an ear in-fury from a fall in the bathtub shortly Mer he had announced his candidacv for the Senate in 1964. Annie Glenn bravely earned on her husband's first campaign.

, Raogniang the problem her stuner-^ po^, she enlisted her best friend ^ Carpenter, whose former hus-band, So^, had also been one of the L. ^ Mercury astronauts, ni shake the hands. Qenn told Carpenter, "and you make the

Sp66Ci)CS.

During the early 60 s when reporters

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followed astronaut John Genn bodyguard patrol, his wife had managed to gel through it bv limiting her remarks to a repertoire of phrases -"Gee whiz," "IlCbe darned The kids are wonderful and bv smiling a lot Because ofher seeming reluctance to speak, she often had been misunderstood and underestimated. During that ill-fated 1964 campaign - John Glenn eventually was forced to drop out of the race reporters who didn t know she stuttered descnbed Annie Glenn as shy. Finally she called a press conference to set the record straight.

She walked into that room full of reporters knowing that this was one speech she would have to make alone but determined to have her sav Carpenter recalls.

"A 144-lot of you, Qenn began haltingly, it hurt m-m-m-my f4+ feelings b4>b-because a lot of p-p-p. people have called me shv B-b-b4)ul i'm not shy. I st-st-st-stutter.

^V'hen she finished, Carpenter says, "there were tears streaming down the faces of those reporters Despite periodic therapy sessions in the years after her mamage it wasnt until 1974, when she enrolled in Hollins College's revolutionan program for stutterers, that her speech noticeably improved. The Precision Ruency Shaping Program, directed Dr. Ronald Wetter, teaches stutterers to control the more than 100 muscles involved in speech through rhvthmic drills designed to slow down and help them to analyze their speech 'and breathing exercises.

As an 85 percent stutterer. .Annie Glenns speech problem was bv far the most severe in her therapy group. Aithoi^h she saw dramatic improvements immediately, it took another session at Hollins to reduce her disfluency to 13 percent and several more years of almost daily therapy.

Now-, she boasts,' the last time she her speech therapist was in October. But she still spends a half hour a day on her own practicing.

I make three phone calls each morning to practice. she explains. Til call the airport and ask for a weather tqxirl or a friend to chat and then Ill tape my part of the conversation so I can hear if I make any errors. And I practice talking out loud while Im driving. even though I know other drivers must think Im a little strange.

Glenns newfound garrulih has made her a popular sp^er aiid subject for interviews. She says she welcomes the opportunity to demnstratelo other stutterers that if she can overcome it, th^ can, too.

Ind^, Johns bea weapon has her sights set firmly on the White House, currently the home of another Great Communicator. FW

Kahleen Maxa is 'a Washinffon-based u nier tihose work appears m numerous national maznes.





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dealer Foi ixompi payment seW this coupon to Ximlierl|r^3arti Corporation Boi 2 Omton lowa 52734 For each coupon you accept as out agent we will pay you face value phis 7c handling chaige prowdtd WU aw youi customers hwe complied wnn me terms oi mis coupon Any other use wn^xs haud imxxces sWwmg purchase oi sufhcitnt slock to cover all coupons submitted must be Shown unon -eguesi Vox) where gohoiied or resiticW Ybut customer must pay ly sales lai inwhefl OlllijpM orty ih the 5C Unued States and tpr military petscnnel with APO fVo addresses CesA viiue 1 of i * t Reots lirw liademxk ol Ximoetiy C&i Coip C 1983 ACC AO 4372 Limit one coupon mi package Gmomy on kLEmEX Sim o*T ttwHm ftejwi Any omer use IS haudWem

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SOME SOUND ADVICE ABOUT EAR CAREBy Randy Steele

Last year Americans spent between $1 billion and $2 billion for earache remedies. Earaches are not only painful and expensive, but also threatening to one's hearing.

When trouble-free, the ear works wonders. Its wide outer portion collects and funnels sounds into the middle ear. But problems can plague this intricate system. They fall roughly into two categories: those you can touch with your finger, and those you can't. Swimmer's ear is probably the most common kind of outer-ear infection (the type you can usually touch). As you dunk your head repeatedly in water, your ears lose their protective layer of wax. Once an infection sets in, your ears will hurt, itch, swell and can get wonse. If you have water in your ear, do your best to shake it out. If you swim a lot, clean the outer ear with a diluted solution of rubbing alcohol.

Other causes of problems in the outer ear include: foreign objects (doctors are forever finding pencil erasers stuck in children's ears): insects; and over-vigorous cleaning. 'Mothers of small children feel that wax is a dirty, harmful secretion and are hell-bent on getting it out, " says Dr. Ralph Naunton, an ear specialist with the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke. "But ear wax should usually be left alone. '

If you have a lot of problems with (the outer ear itching, swelling you could be washing your ears too thoroughly. When an earache

by Dr. Charles Bluestone, director of the department of otolaryngology at the University of Pittsburgh's Children's Hospital, more than two-thirds of all children suffer with middle-ear ailments before age 3. Parents often dismiss the problem in infants

comes in two forms. Acute otitis media is marked by pain and fever and often has spread from a cold or other upper respiratory ailment. If this acute infection persists, doctors may tackle it with antibiotics. Ironically, in one sense you're lucky if you canThiibagofALPO'dry hai as much meal protein as10lbs.ofslrloin.NboH

c 1962 AUEN PBODOCTS COMPANY INC

Randy Steele is an editor tor a national rncuiuzine

strikes, take aspirin and use a heating pad and ear drops. If your ear continues to pang after 48 hours, see a doctor immediately.

Earaches that you can't touch usually hide in the middle ear, the area behind the eardrum. AccdVding to a study

as only a cold or teething pain. "That's a dangerous assumption to make," says Dr. Naunton. If left untreated, this could lead to hearing loss.

Doctors have labeled these middle-ear maladies which also occasionally plague adults otitis media. It

feel an earache: You re aware that something s wrong.

The other, more insidious form of otitis media is called O.M.E. (otitis media with effusion). Although doctors don't completely understand why, fluid sometimes builds up behind the eardrum. O.M.E.

produces no obvious symptoms no pain, no fever except for hearing lo.ss. Adults can readily detect their own hearing loss, but children, particularly infants, can't recognize any problem. (One clue for parents: Children suddenly seem less attentive.) Severe cases of O.M.E. can eventually cause deafness.

Mild cases of O.M.E. can often disappear without treatment. Ear .specialists usually wait three to five weeks before treating a patient, in hope that the fluid will drain by itself. Until recently, nine out of 10 ear specialists prescribed decongestant-anti-histamine drugs for O.M.E., but in another, three-year-long study by Dr. Bluestone's team, these drugs were found ineffective for children between

If you have problems with your ear, it could mean you're washing your ears too thoroughly

the ages of 7 months and 12 years. (Dr. Bluestone stresses, however, that decongestants may help patients with nasal congestion.)

Although antibiotics can ease other middle-ear infections, they don't have much success against O.M.E. Doctors usually opt for surgery^' The surgeon pierces the eardrum and attaches a tube to drain the fluid from the middle ear. Hearing often returns immediately. Unfortunately, this procedure treats only a symptom, not the disease; fluid buildup recurs in nearly half the patients who undergo the surgery. However, most children tend, to outgrow these problems.

The inner ear is also susceptible to problems. Ailments of the inner ear don't usually cause your ear to ache, but they can be critical. Nerve deafness is often rooted in the inner ear. Unfortunately, there's no cure for nerve deafness, whose symptoms range from mild to severe hearing loss to vertigo or tinnitus, which is a consti^t ringing sound inside the head or ear. If you suspect that you have any type of ear ailment, consult vour doctor. RV





Our QieaG^h(ogy Offer

A personal analysis of your handwriting, computer-printed to cut the cost down to an affordable $10!

ITrite to Its for your aiudysi*!

It s simple. Just cut out this page and use your normal handwntmg to copy the letter below. Be sure to use a ball-point or fountain pen, not a pencil or felt-tip pen.

bear Womans Day,    ~

Please tell me what my handwriting reveals about my personality, tastes a^\ cai^ilhics. My (raphological loKlmis will. I mdenaiid. be Itealed in Uriel oonndeace. Many of your readen will take this opponunity lo And out mote about themselves. My order form is completed below.'    j

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(Dont forget your signature! If you use two different signatures, please ind^^ A-f/.)

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VOUC/lA' WRITE TOR OWN SUCCESS STORY

By Dorothy Schoenfeld

With a few strokes of his pen,John Hancock made it perfectly dear that he had no doubts about the future independence of the 13 American colonies. You don t have to be a graphologist to see that i the size and boldness of Hancocks name, now a synonym for signature," indicated absolute conviction.

Not all strokes can be interpreted by the untrained eye as readily as those of Hancocks. To a ^aphologist, however, your ps and qs are fair game for dissecting your char-ader. The way you close your as (or fail to dose them) or dot your is (or fail to dot them) reveals plenty, though only when considered with other words, size, spacing, even pen pressure.

Think of handwriting as gestures in print," says graphologist-psychologist Carlos Pedr^al. "But it's a more accurate expression of a person than physical gestures, since it is unconscious; gestures can be forced.'"

A graphologist (who might be the personnel manager at the company where you're seeking a job or a banker you hope will O.K. a loan) studies dl elements, rather than isolated letters because identical ways of forming letters and words can have different meanings, depending on the overall context. Pedregal cites signatures as an example: One with many extraneous loops can reflect either self-centeredness or romanticism: a dot at the end of a name can show meticulousness or distrust.

Although opinions differ as to how scientific graphology is, its widely used to judge character. Having your handwriting analyzed (see offer at left for an analysis by Carlos Pedr^al) can provide knowledge thats good to have before someone sees more in your signature than you intend to convey.

10 Family Weekly may i lits'





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Offer eipim June 30. t94

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No-Pest" Test Refund Request

$1.00 refund    compteted    certificate    along    with    the    n^MieigM    statements    from    the

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1. HOME INSECT CONTROL kills-roaches and other crawling insects without    lupies

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IDAHO

-    '>r    \    .    *    "

,    ...w    /.'*-,        ',    -    ...    i    . I

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In which the movie star granddaughter of an enduring American novelist reflects on her lifelong love affair with the outdoors. Earnestly!By Mariel Hemingway

My grandfather traveled from the plazas of Paris to the veldts of Africa, yet every year he returned to,the quiet beauty of Idaho. 1 never met my grandfather. He died the year 1 was born. I know him only through the stories he wrote and the stories my father tells. Their stories share something 1 find within myself; a passion for the outdoors.

1 have spent mo.st of my 21 years in Sun Valley. Idaho. This is the second greatest gift my parents have given me. The first is themselves. My mother is a native Idahoan. She grew up in Pocatello, one of Idaho's first big railroad cities. Mining was still the state's big business and her people had pioneer souls. My maternal grandfather was the first druggist in Idaho. My mothers name. Puck, comes from the Indian puckinuck, or, "little one." She got her name from selling s<xlas to the Shoshone Indians at her fathers drugstore fountain. She served one soda to a tall, good-looking fellow named Jack Hemingway.

My father, I believe, is the best fly fisherman in the

FAVill.t Wkkki.>

13

,





In a tradition of superlative craftsmanship more than 500 years old...On the Crest

An original sculpture... handcrafted of the finest Venetian glass... hand-signed.... issued in limited edition.

Available exclusively from Franklin Heirloom Glass, at the very attractive price of $150. Reservation Deadline: May 31, 1983.

The royal palaces of 16th-century Europe held many treasures. Rare tapestries and ornately carved furniture. Lavishly embroidered robes of state. Rich ornaments of gold and silver. And, perhaps most treasured of all cristallo, the wonderful glass of Venice.

Cristallo was the triumph of the Venetian glass-makers with an unmatched transparency and brilliance. It was the supreme achievement of these master aafts-men, reserved for their finest objets d'art.

Inspired by these beautiful works of antique^ cristallo, Franklin Heirloom Glass has commissioned a beautiful new work of Venetian glass. An original sculpture that has a clarity and brilliance reminiscent of the cristallo so coveted by the royal art patrons of Renaissance Europe. But that possesses the strength, the simplicity of line so appreciated by today's collectors.

On the Crest is an original and dramatic work portraying a magnificent seagiil poised on the crest of an ocean wave ... created entirely by hand by a master craftsman in the famed Venetian glass center of Miurano. No two will be exactly alike. Each will be a true original, and each will be hand-signed and dated by the skill^ master who created it. ,

A limited edition work of exceptional beauty

On the Crest is being issued in a single, firmly limited edition. The total edition will be linaited forever to the exact number of individuals who order the sculpture by the close of the issuing year1983.

The issue price is $150, a most attractive one for an original handcrahed work of this quality. And you may pay for your sculpture in 4 convenient monthly installments of $37.50 each.

To enhance your home with this superb work of art, you need only return the attached Reservation Application to Frankn Heirloom Glass, Franklin Center, Pennsylvania 19091, by May 31,1983.

OUR PROMISE TO YOU We at FrankUn HeirliJom Glass take pride in the high qualit)' of the works we produce. But we believe that our efforts should also be judged by the peopie we serve. Any work acquired from us may be returned for any reason within thirty days for your choice of replacement or a full refund.

SHOWN SMSLLlaiHAN St ILALM/f SCLl m RE MFASLRtS APPSOXIMATFLS IVHK.H - WIDE

-RESERVATION APPLICATION

On the Crest

Franklin Heirloom Glass Franklin Center, Pennsylvania 19091

Please accept my reservation for On the Crest. This original hand-signed sculpture will be handcrafted for me in Venetian ^ss.

I understand that I need send no money at this time. I will be billed in 4 equal monthly installments of $37.50* each with the first payment due before the work is sent to me.

p/us Bv il*lt salts tax

Signature^

Valid only if postmarked by May 31, 1983.

Limit: One per collector.

Mr.

Mrs.

Miss______

Address

City,

ALC AP*UCATfOM Alt MVJtCT TO ACCCFTAMCC

State, Zip,

3145





and (he beasts: "The ftrst snow embraces you like the first note of a symphony."

HEMINGWAY

world. We reads a stream or a sky the way most people read a road map. Thoughts of my father are peppered with images of nature. He never tells a story without describing the smell of the air, the season, the light. My best memories are of our times together in the wilds hunting or hiking, and he has passed on to me his insatiable love for the outdoors in true Hemingway tradition.

Interestingly, my father wasnt allowed to fish when he was a kid. He could only watch. His father thought that he should learn by watching. TTien when he actually got to do it, he went crazy, and he hasnt gotten over this craziness yet. My mother, my older sisters, Mi^fet and Maigaux, and I all know how to fish, but were so spoiled by him. If he wants a fish, he can go out and get something in three minutes. When we dont catch a fish within two seconds, were totally upset.

So usually when I went fishing with my dad, I ended up in an innertube, riding down the river, having to be very quiet so I wouldnt upset the fish. In fact, fishing was the only time our family was quiet. Otherwise we were yelling ha^y yelling, though.

I go hunting, too; fm not a bad hunter, either. I dont go hunting for big game, though, just birds. But I end up getting sympathy pains for them, so I cant do it for a long tirhe. A Couple of times when we accidentally stunned birds, like doves, I would take them

Usually when I went fislung with my dad, / ended up in an innertube, riding down the river, having to be very quiet so I wouldn't upset the fsh.

home as pets, attempting to nurse them back to health.

My perfect day in the woods is to put some apples and carrots in a backpack, swim the river, go for a run, swim the river again. Maybe go horseback ridinjg. These are a few of my favorite things.

Like most kids, I was always outdoors. My mother would have to call me three times before I'd come in. Our house is five miles north of town, so I usually played alone. I hiked through the sage and overgrown grass of my backyard and into the woods and made friends with nature. I still walk and run everywhere, all terrains, all seasons. I think about work when Im out walking. I think about a million things. Because I like what I do, I dont have to get away from thinking about it. It just makes it so much more pleasurable to think about it in that environment, and it helps me get my priorities straight.

Family WEEm*MAns 19*3 15

" f' .S:

DdSWDR IITO





You iwaV but.

t believe itV. fe-

Believe it or not, you CAN save as much as $58,000 on a new home, built on your property and financed by Jim Walter. What's more, your home will be paid for in 20, rather than 30 years, and your monthly payment to Jim VNfalter will be less... MUCH LESSl It sounds unbelievable, but its TRUE! It's a FACT and we can prove it! While most other home financiiw is 13% or more, Jim Walter's annual percentage rate is still only 10%. For comparison, your monthly payment on a $35,000,30-year mortgage at 13% would be $387.17. The monthly payment for a home with this cash price, built and financed by Jim Walter, would be only $337.70... almost $50.00 less. That's fifty of your hard-earned dollars, and for only 240, not 360 monthly payments. Based on this comparison, the TOTAL SAVINGS on your mortgage will actually be

MORE THAN $58,000. ITS A FACT\\\

Jim Walter can build your choice of beautiful homes with two, three or four bedrooms and one or two baths, from a selection of more than 20 models. Financing can be arranged in a matter of days, rather than weeks, and there will be no points" or closing costs to inaease what you will pay.NO DOWN PAYMENT PRRs

Jim Walter can be^n construction almost immediately, almost anywhere that you own property. We'll complete the outside and, if you like, stop ri^t there so that you can finish the interior at enormous savings. Or, we II finish the inside, up to 90% complete. You tell us how much or how little you want to do. Remember, however, the more inside work you do for yourself, or with friends, the more money youll save at todays labor costs.

Call, send the coupon, or visit the display park nearest you to get all the facts. We want you to know exact costs and what your monthly payment will be before construction even begins. We want to explain the many money-saving methods you can use to k^ costs within your budget. When you have all the facts, we truly believe youll choose Jim Walter. Then, together well build on your property to give you more home for less money than you might have imagined.

CHOOSE FROM MORE THAN 20 MODELS BUILT ON YOUR PROPERTY FROM THE SHELL UP TO 90% COMPLETE

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I JIM WALTEi HOMES m.;i    83

H I would like to hove more infornnation ond tfie cost

of building on my property. I understand there would be no obligation to buy and that you would give me H these facts free of charge.

NAME_____

BS

TtoSSXr

ADMESS. CITY_

Telephone (or neighbort).

STATE,

-HP,

H rurol route pleose give directk

I own property in.

.County.





lu,f-;.'

Personal boots: An Oscar nominee for Manhattan, Martel's next lm is Star 80.HEMINGWAY

Trekking through the silver-green plains. I am happy. Idaho is magnificent all year round. It's dusty in the early fall the little creeks are dry and the air IS sagey sweet. The golden aspens on the surrounding hills are a halo. You can smell an approaching thunder-.storm Rain at this time of year is straight and gentle, and the thunder is more musical than threatening. This ram is autumns quiet farewell. The skies give no warning; snow might come any day.

The first snow embraces you like the first note of a symphony. Waking up to winters first white thrills me. I'm out walking while morning is still beaming and the world sparkles. I used to take the shortcut: Id jump out of my window. Of course, in Idaho any serious winter walking requires snowshoes. Snowshoeing is a wonderful wav to get someplace, its magic. Even somebody six feet tall can walk on top of the snow. There is a newness in early winter that even spring cannot equal. In the bright sun. the ^wiooth Mountains scratch a clean line across a violet sky. Their faces are bearded by the fuzzy green pines. Pacing across a blank field, my lone footprints match the mountain stillness.

After six months of winter, spring is most welcome. Green creeps over the landscape slowly. The first sign that it's coming is little patches of black pavement showing through the ice in the road. When I was little, I would try' to crack the ice on the driveway, hoping to hurry' the season along. 1 can't think of springs advent without the tac, tac, tac' of ice melting outside my bedroom window. Spring is a muddy affair in Sun Valley, and my dogs and I would bring the outside inside. The best thing about spring in Idaho is that suddenly I can remember, Hev, there is such a thing as summer!

Summer is my favorite Idaho season. June's green hills are splashed with

WEEkO M WA tool for all seasons. Free.

Want a tool you can use all year? Want it free? Then take this coupon to your nearby Georgia-Pacific Registered Dealer for the 1983 isvsue of Great Possibilities'* Magazine. Normally a $1.00 value.

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Titjind the deaJer nearest you, call tollfrt^e S00/W-28S2(except Alaska and Hawaii). In Illinois call 800/322^400. Hut hurr>, supplies are limited.

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HEMINGWAY

yellow daisies, blue lupine and Indian paintbrushes. One small cloud floats across a wide sky. The days are so long and so bright. Gusty winds temper hot days. 1 liked to sing while walking alone in the woods. I remennber one particular performance. I was about 10 and I was on the edge of our property. There was a hush.. .then suddenly wind filled my pine-tree orchestra with music. 1 conducted furiously and accompanied the trees with a ver>-. verv high soprano aria. When the music ended. I turned triumphantly to take my bows. My sister was standing behind me. I realized that my backyard was really too, small for concerts of such magnitude.

Mountain summers are wonderful because the nights are always cool. The skies are magic bri.stling with meteor showers ju.st before a lavender dawn. Summer air pushes me up. I like to climb mountains. My climbs often take me past the green and into the gray rock faces. Dr\- air and the sight of an occasional wild-flower impossibly rooted in rock keep me going. 1 find

Bears and snakes live on my land But everybody knows his place. You stay off their territory; they stay off yours.

myself scaling the mo.st imposing shale slide. Deep blue flints of rock give way and fall down 1^ waves behind me. As 1 reach solid rock, the wind slaps my face and the whole world lies spread out before me. It takes my breath away. It brings me to my knees then quickly to my behind (pebbles make a lot of little dents in your knees).

1 have my own house now. 200 miles from my parents and 20 miles from the nearest town. There are bears and snakes on my land. But they're really more scared of you than you are of them. Everv'body knows his place. You stay off their territory; they stay off yours. I don't gel

As I reach solid rock, the wind slaps my face and the world lies spread before me.

lonely or frightened out there by my.self. 1 probably get lonelier in the city and much more frightened.

My w^ork takes me away from home, but I carry Idaho with me in mv heart. And in

1

A

At home in Idaho: Ihe second greatest gift my parents have given me."

New York City the pleasures of the outdoors are not lost. On a nice day in Central Park,

1 can lie flat in the gra.ss, stare up at the sky and listen to the clover bees buzz around me. But Idaho is so much a part of me, so much a part of my family. Weve been terribly spoiled by living there. When 1 m working in New York or Los Angeles, 1 can find places to escape to. But it's never the same. For me, as for anyone, theres no place like home. RV

Favi Wr>-iu.v MAS !. iwi 19

GETMMHOr FROMTHE WU Un AND INTO 1ME WUDERNESS.

Aparty in the Winnebago next doOT isnt the kind of wiki life most campers are looldngfer.

But its what youll find at camp^unds that offer everything.

Everything except a Me peace and quiet.

Nowadaj^, to really get away, you need the H(xida CniO and XLSO.TVa bikes that can take you far from the maddening crowd.

The CTUO comes with an automatic dutch, swivd-lock handlebars and a

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AS GRANDPA SAW!

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   '*    name    and    address    are on back    ^

Cannot be used with any other coupon discount    .iS

S    Of special offer

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In /JB eight novels and more than 50 short stories. Emet Hem-btguoay, Mariel's grandfather, put biceps on the English language and marched it off to war. He won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1953 and the Nobel Prize for literature the following year. With his unique lean style, he expressed the beauty and power of nature in many of his works. In the following excerpt from the 1925 story Big Two-Hearted River, young Nick Adams returns from World War I and attempts to find peace on a fishing trip.

For some time as he walked Nick had been in sight of one of the big islands of pine standing out above the rolling high ground he was crossing. He dipped down and then as he came slowly up to the crest

20 FAkHUr WEEKUf MAY IS 1983

Birds of a feather: Hemtngum hunts with pat Gary Cooper anil, left, displays one of the lures of Sun Valley.

of the bridge he turned and made toward the pine trees.

There was no underbrush in the island of pine trees. The trunks of the trees went straight up or slanted toward each other. The trunks were straight and brown without branches. The branches were high above. Some interlocked to make a solid shadow on the brown forest floor. Around the grove of trees was a bare space. It was brown and .soft underfoot as Nick walked on it. This was the over-lapping of the pine needle floor, extending out beyond the width of the high branches. The trees had grown tall and the branches moved high, leaving in the sun this bare space they had once covered with shadow. Sharp at the edge of this extension of the forest' floor commenced the sweet fern.

Nick slipped off his pack and lay down in the shade. He lay on his back and looked up into the pine trees. His neck and back and the small of his back rested as he stretched. The earth felt good against his back. He looked up at the sky. through the branches, and then shut his eyes. He opened them and looked up again. There was a wind high up in the branches. He shut his eyes again and went to sleep."

Excerpt from "Big Two-Heartac) River" by Ernest Hemtngwey is reprinted with the permission of Charles Scribner's Sons from In Our Timt. Copyright 1925 Charles Scribner's Sorts; copyright renewed 1953 Ernest Hemingway.





COOKING AND CAMPING SECRETS FROM DIAN THOMASS^ KNAPSACK

1 pkg. (18'/2 oz.) cake mix

1. Drain fruit, reserving pineapple juice. Line Dutch oven with foil. Grease foil. Arrange pineapple with cherries in center of each slice on top of foil. Sprinkle brown sugar and 3 tablespoons of reserved juice over fruit. Prepare cake mix according to package directions. Pour over fruit. Put

cover on Dutch oven.

2. To bake, place in fireplace I inch above coals. Legs of oven should keep bottom of oven 1 inch above coals. If oven does not have legs, place on bricks. Use tongs or shovel to arrange coals on lop of the Dutch oven. Bake 25 to 30 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in center of cake comes

By Marilyn Hansen

If you wanted to give credit to one person who has given new life and vitality to the family camping experience, Dian Thomas would probably win hands down. Dian, author of Roughing It Easy. A Unique Ideabook for Camping and Cooking, has appeared regularly at the invitation of Tom Brokaw, himself an avid backpacker, on the NBC Today show to demonstrate many of her own tried-and-true camping hints and recipes.

.As Dian says, I look at camping like an artist looks at a painting: Its an opportunity to create memories for people to share, plus a fabulous way to break away from the tensions of everyday life."

MEAT LOAF IN AN ONION

1 lb. lean ground beef 1 egg

Vi cup cracker cnunbs Vi cup tomato sauce \ teaspoon black pepper Vi teaspoon salt, or to taste Vi teaspoon dry mustard 6 large onkms, peeled

1. Cut six 12 X 14-inch pieces of heavy-dut)' foil; set aside. In a medium bowl, mix beef, e^. crumbs, tomato sauce, pepper, salt and dry mustard. Set aside.

2. Cut onions in half horizontally and remove centers, leaving 'A-inch shell. Chop onion centers. Mix 2 tablespoons into meat mixture. Spoon meat mixture into 6 onion halves, rounding on top. Place remaining onion halves on top of filled onion halves.

3. Place 1 filled onion on each piece of foil. Bring ends of foil up over onion. Fold foil down in small folds. Press sides of foil close to onion. Ratten ends and roll toward onion. Cook on coals 14 to 20 minutes on each side.

Makes 6 sewings

UPSIDE-DOWN CAKE IN A DUTCH OVEN

1 can (16 oz.) pineapple slices and Juice

2 tablespoons butter or maraarine

1 jar (8 oz.) maraschino cherries

Vi cup packed brown sugar

mAGuuuunBs

nmeooDmus.

O

o

o

o

0

camp-America If, within happvwith arenmd.

You cant have a good time at a bad ground. Thats ^hy Kampgrounds of gives you this Good Times Guarantee: one hour after check in, youre not 100% our services or facilities, well give you

Thats right. You get hot showers, clean restrooms, level campsites and the like, or you get your money back.

If thats not reason enough to camp KOA, heres one more. You could win one of $50,000 worth of prizes by playing KOAs Kamping Kaper Sweepstakes.

So the next time youre camping, turii in to KOA. Were the only campgrounds in North America where the good times are guaranteed.

O

o

Clean, friendly,    guaranteed.

/A

KOA,

out clean. Cool 8 minutes in pan. then invert onto platter. Carefully peel away foil. Makes 8 sewings

ENCHILADA PIE

2 lbs. ground beef 1 teaspoon salt, or t^ taste 1 medium onion, chopped

1 can (lOAi oz.) condensed tomato soup

2 cans (10-oZ. size) mild enchilada sauce

1 cup water

9 (8-inch) flour tortillas

2 cups shredded Cheddar or mozzarella cheese

1. Working over an open fire, brown ground beef with .salt and onion in a Dutch oven; drain off drippings Add condensed soup, enchilada sauce and water. Simmer 5 minutes. Spoon of the mixture into a medfum bowl

2. Arrange 2 to 3 tortillas over mixture remaining in pan. .Alternate meat, cheese and tortillas in 3 layers. Replace lid on Dutch oven. Simmer 7 to 10 minutes, or until cheese melts and tortillas soften, Serve pie with remaining tortillas as side breavt

Makes 6 la 8 sewings

CAMPING TIPS

1. If the wind blows too hard to start your fire, u.se a V2 x 10-inch strip of '00 size or finer steel wool. Place two batteries on top of each other and make sure both are in an upright position. Place one end of the fine steel wool on the bottom of battery and brush the other end across the end of the top battely. Hold next to the tinder and blow sparks to start the fire.

2. Need to boil water? Fill a honwaxed, non-Styrofoam cup with water and place into cals. The cup will not burn because the water inside keeps the paper below its combustion point.

3. Make a quick fire starter. Fill the cups of a cardboard egg carton with lint from your dryer and pour paraffin wax over it until cup is half-full. Break off one cup and place under fuel to start fire. :

4. You can improvise a raincoat with a large garbage bag. Just cut a hole for your head and arms in the bottom of the bag and slip right into it.

5. Soap the outside of pans before placing over coals to cook. After cooking, just wipe the pan bottoms clean.

(Selected recipes printed by permission from: Roughing It Easy by Dian Thomas. Copyright 1974 by Brigham Young University Press, Provo. Utah.)

Family Weekly may is mi 21





WE HEARD IT THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE

Twenty-five years ago Berry Gordy put down his tools at the Ford assembly line and began manufacturing some of the best popular music ever made. From a bedroom office in Detroit, and with 750 borrowed dollars, he launched Motown Records.

Soon everyone was "dancing in the streets" to the Motown sound, and Gordys "love child" became a corporate giant, producing the biggest soul acts around.

So get ready for NBCs two-hour special on Monday night celebrating Motowns 25th an-

Seeing The Temptations again should pul soul fans on Cbud 9 "

niversary. Smokey Robinson once said that "working at Motown is like getting a Ph.D. in soul," and some of the great soul graduates who will be performing on the show include The Miracles, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, The Supremes, The Temptations, Mar\ Wells. The Four Tops, Ashford and Simpson, Martha Reeves and Michael Jackson.

To the uninitiated, how can one best describe the Motown sound? As Susann de Passe, president of Motown Productions, puts it. "Above all, it was, and is, a feeling."

MOMS ON MARRIAGE

The idea of mothers pushing their children to get married seems, well, rather outdated. Perhaps because Mom is out dating herself. And two University of Michigan researchers report a significant change in the way grown women regard single life.

Nearly 1,000 boys and girls age 18 and their nx)thers were asked if it would trouble them greatly if the girls never gef married. Of the young people themselves, equal percentages say it would bother them a lot to stay single, and that it wouldnt bother them at all. But four times as many mothers say they dont care if their daughters never wed.

The researchers say that adult women find the idea of wedded bliss far less engaging than before because so many have gone through divorce or comforted relatives or friends who have.

FLUSHING

OUT

HOLEY

SHIRKERS

If this is how Japanese businesses get top performance from their workers, no thanks! Or, to put it another way, no tanks.

Take the rather vigorous training

program of Japans. Mister Donut franchise. Please. First to develop community spirit and a sense of service, new recruits must gp door-to-door    in    a

residential district and offer to scrub toilets. (Why you would want to buy doughnuts from these guys later on is an interesting question.)

Then the poor trainees who, by this time, might well be wondering what all this has to do with the price chocolate crullers in Tokyo are sent off to (honest) Donut University for five weeks of intensive management training. There they subsist almost entirely on doughnuts and coffee. According to Chain Marketing & Management newsletter, Japanese executives believe that unless future franchises can live on doughnuts for five weeks, they wont be able to serve up their holey delights with the proper pride.

They must be doing something right: Mister Donut is the largest fast-food chain of its kind in Japan.

HOT AIR LUNCHES

It isnt ail lau^s, me dallions of veal and a martini or three at those business lunches, you know. Theres stress and strain and illness. No tears and sympathy are expected here, but one doctor says that business people have been literally making each other sick with all their wheeling and dealing over meals.

While corporate men and women are bursting the buttons on their blue suits trying to get a leg up on the competition, they are gu//> ing down their food. And when that happens, explains Dr. James Roth, director of the Institute of (jastroenterolc^ at Presby-terian-University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, "air is swallowed with it. In addition, human beings take in extra air subconsciously as a reaction to worry, hurry or tension."

All this leads to severe gas pains and nervous indigestion, says Roth, who advises his patients to take leisurely, constructive lunches away from your work associates.

IT'S TAXING

TOREAN

ALASKAN

aybe you had to take out a loan to pay the I.R.S. on April 15, but the Tax Foundation Inc. informs us that the average American actually paid about $105 less in Federal income taxes this year

than last. (All together now, America; Thanks a million, Uncle Sam!)

U.S. citizens paid an aver-a^ of $2,482 per person for 1982, a 4.1 percent decrease, caused largely by the lowering of income tax for individuals and by the recessions reduction of taxable corporate income.

Those who paid the most (based almost entirely on average income) were from Alaska ($3,832 per person), the District of Columbia ($3,334), Connecticut ($3,330), New Jersey ($3,115) and Illinois ($2,921). Meanwhile, Federal tax burdens were l^htest for folks in Mississippi ($1,626), Arkansas ($1,746), South Carolina ($1,797), Vermont ($1,827) and Alabama ($1,871).

BIRTHDAYS

(Sun.-Fri., Taurus; Sat., Gemini) SundayJoseph Cot-ten 78. MondayOlga Korbut 28; Liberace 64. Tuesday Sugar Ray Leonard 27. Wednesday Perry Como 71; Pope John Paul II 63; R^ie Jackson 37. ThursdayDavid Hartman 48. Friday Jimmy Stewart 75; Cher 37. Saturday Raymond Burr 66.

1 i 8CJ*DW*r St ,v r'JW

Fainilv >M'cklv

Pope John Paul II, Cher

PiMMMIt Mia PuMWWr

PatricK M. Linskey

vie* PrieMenl end Ad Director

Gerald Wroe vie* Pi**M*nt and Qenl. Mgi

Jonathan Thompson

Editor

Arthur Cooper Chelrman Emrito*, Morton FranK .

"'O"- ^*0" D'rtoitot Robert Altemus. Artiele* Editoc Kate Whrte; Senior Editors, Patnce Adcroft. Eiioi Kaplan. Rosalyn Abrevaya Food Editor Manlvn Hansen

VR-Mfg. A Ole of Operations, Richard Miiien, Prod, oit, Christine Garman. Planning, Michael Montemurro. Makeup Mgr, William Kenny Typogr^ther Debra Rose

2'"    Of-.    Lewis    G.    Green    DIt.    Client    &    Agency    Relation*.    James    B    Powers.    Assoc.    Eastern Mgt, Richard K Carroll Southern Mor. Kenneth J

22 FaMIL-i WeEKLV may I.Y 193





'X '

^}.tt-' K; )^-'V*

Ii> '

i BENSON & HEDGES t    locns

6 mg tar;' 0.6 mg nicotine av. per cigarwte. by FTC method.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Only 6 mg,yet rich enough to be called deluxe. Regular and Menthol.





EXTREMELY COMFORTABLE!

Ladies ! No need to suffer with unhappy feet, just to get the look you want I Here it is, fields of flowers and flattering feminine lines, zingy new spring colors, full support non-slip heel and sole with the comfort and security of a good back strap, full cushion insole, and fully adjustable buckle straps for your individual comfort ! Perfect Fitters I Sandals like this are a summer lady's Best Friend, but usually cost so much! Now Haband the mail order people from Paterson, NJ. want to show you what big savings are possible when you shop direct. So we offer this real sharp bargain price as an introduction! 3 pairs for only 19.95, and an absolute NO RISK GUARANTEE!

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PAIRS

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Sin: send paire for S_

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VISA UASTERCARO Aeci ____

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COLOR

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SIZE

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WHITE Two BueUe*

BONE Two BucfeWa

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TAN Two BnddM

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84W-E48

I pairs 25.95

Minimum

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HELLO.

' I MUST BE GOING!

ObptOiiXimilbp 10 Tou Can'f f Lorn I Don't Can A/^flnore.

Greatest hits; CoUAs lce*Doube Vision: Hot Blooded: Urgent, others.

Heavy rocW-Cash Box. Top 1 Separate Mibys (HVorMs AparOr I

II HI I OHD'.OH lAfl MOH K 1*1 U', '.IIIIMMNI. HANIJl INC. WIIH MI Mill HMIII' IN III! I CM DMIIIAMI ( (iHllA lAI'l I I llll M I in lAlt IN'.lDt





318733* MEUSSA [msT* ] MANCHESTER318717* PETER NERO J^^JPeter Goes Pop

315135* 0K5IN*tBROADM(rCAST

DREAMGIRLS

308148* ROSANNECASH " * Seven Year Ache

300046 * WILUE NELSON

SINGS KRISTOfFERSON

306563 Barry Manikm 55 BARRY

311050*    omamu. I0UN0T1UCK

ARTHUR"313049    '    Barhra    Streisand

MEMORIES

313080* KENNY ROGERS THE GAMBLER

315176

TOTO

Icocuwul

7DT0/V

311076

NEIL DIAMOND

L-SiJ

LOVE SONGS

Watertoo. ChtquHti Dancing Quaen; femando; Super Tror^ter, elc.

298612

HERB ALPERT

l4Mi

RISE

318303*

Itnc vncMi

CULTURE CLL Fissms

TO 8 CLEVER

318162*

ICOLUMSul

RAT CHARLES ISHYOtJWEK HEPETOHICHT

315028

the ALAN RMOONS

ETETlUTsAr

306589

LINDA ROMSTADT

4S1LU

GREATEST HITS.

V0L2

310920* MICKEY GILLEY YOU DONT KNOW ME

311084 AL JARREAU r BREAKIN'AWAY

312686* FRANK SINATRA She Shot Me Down

* Sateclnn* tnahiad wiih a star M nor awaMto in rM 9M

318634* WEATHER REPORT PROCESSION

318618*

rci

MOLLY HATCHET No Guts...No Glory

315010

[tn|

AIR SUPPLY Now And Forever

310953

! tlfKTU {

EDDIE RABBITT STEP BY STEP

. 309476* ImmchmosI

MARSHALL TUCKER BAND'DEDiCATEO"

294744*

les.

Chartie OanteH Band I Million Mile Reflections J

297036

1 WOCOMCl

BOSTON POPS ORCHESTRA ARTHUR FIEOLER CONO SATURoar NIGHT HEOLER

298596

EAGLES THE LONG RUN

301549

.COCUIH

BOZ SCAGQS MIDDLE MAN

315184* DIONNE WARWICK FRIENDS IN LOVE

315218* RICK JAMES THROWIN DOWN

315226*

THE CLASH

Lci

COMBAT ROCK

BILLY J(^

THE

NYLON

CURTAIN

includes Biy-sh Pressures MerWum Lmra, Goodnigtt Saigon.

315275* SURVIVOR

Eye Of The Tiger

318550* DEF LEPPARD PYROMANIA

306571* BOZSCAGGS colum*' GREATEST HITS

292912* THE BEST OF

BARBARA MANOREU.

305045* AC DC

BACK IN BLACK

317875*

COMMODORES

MOTO!

AU riNeGAfATESrWTS

317933* CRYSTAL GAYLE TRUE LOVE

318071*

ISKWIONG'

LED ZEPPELIN CODA

-

314245*

1 **T* 1

JEFFLORBER ITS A FACT

313304* 1 UaiATT 1

ferrante t TEICHER GOLDEN PIANO HITS

313197*

1 CM A(lltC< 1

SHEENA EASTON TOO COULD HAVE

linTU AAC

^ccfe wi 1 n Me

310946* SLIM WHITMAN ^    MR. SONGMAN

306365* frank SINATRA | MM.    OLBLUEEYes    I

,5 SACK291773 * The Best Of Peter,  J^ Paul And Mary291849* SEALS* CROFTS ^ GREATEST HITS

318451 RAWtL BOLERO

r^ p*VMe DtpmtsCTCHioe I2SJ PATVW LOMOOMSrUPtKMr

305581* RAVCONNIFF feotuMta' Pertect 10' Classics

310938* RITACOOLIDGE t] HEARTBREAK RADIO

317990* merlehagcabd

A WILLIE NELSON PONCHO *N0 LEFTY





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If you join the Columbia Record & Tape Club now and agree to buy 8 more selections (at regular Club prices) in the next 3 years

Snwh fVe Got >1 Rbcft W ftaf Nsoft CmaaSmr,Mn76oiag)ammafB.

318030* RAYPARKEaJr. ^    GREATEST HITS

314708

JO^ COUGAR

AMERICAN FOOL

310334*

Rickie Lee Jones

IWUMCIIMKM !

PIRATES

300095 Electric Light Orch.

ELOs Greatest Hits

291435*

LEDZEPPEUN

306662 * STEVIE WONDER ^au] Holler Than July

306449* REOSPEEDWAGON Jnc    HI    INRDEUTY

310342

JOURNEY

_CO(.UtUj

ESCAPE

310649* HERBALPERT r..*1    MAGIC    MAN

318006* HERBC HANCOCK cotmiiA    Quartet

/totrt*onfcoeine<a5

31(^9* ^jj(jjBROTHeeSB*NO BBOTMEROfTMCROAB

318063*

fLfHTlUl

LEE RITENOUR RITI2

./ 318048*

1 [ AMISTA 1

GREATEST HITS

otrrLwrs

314443 1 ccmtu 1

NEIL DIAMOND

12 GREATEST HITS-..

a 310367*, \ wMwwoy

ZZTOP EL LOCO

307801

iSa]

STYX Paradise Theater

306688 *

VMnOUSAimSTS,VOL s Broachaay Magic

291195

lASYUatl

UNOA RONSIAOT LMnglnTheU.SA

291302*

hwUMdlSMOsI

JAMES TAYLORS GREATESTHITS

NEIL YOUNG

EIM33. ESSa

^

TRANS

"Xkmatcr-Hlflltfiit mum

Thing CetedUam Mr. SoutxMmn.

314435

ELTON JOHN

1 <" 1

JUMP UP

317735* SAGA

WORLDS APART

317784* PETER GABRIEL SECURITY

307835 *

RITACOOUDGE

GREATESTHITS

317792* HENBYMANCINI

uwnTirl TMIL OPTHe PtNK PMTHeft

310433* ORIGINAI.SOUNOTIUCR

ENDLESS LOVE

317842* SAMMY HAGAR THREE LOCK BOX

315648

GO-GOS

liilJ

VACATION

315630*    BEST OF

JENNIFER WARNES

315580* STATLER BROTHERS [S^ THE LEGEND GOES ON

310599*

ARTGARFUNKEL

|ca*.uau|

SCISSORS CUT

307843 JAMES TAYLOR icoiiwm*! Dad Loves His Work

288332

CtUMWA

BILLY JOEL 52ND STREET

288472

AMlS^

AL STEWART Time Passages

290155 *

ICAMWCO*!

THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND GREATEST HITS

300335*

Icoumawl

aaOAOWAY MAGIC the atST Of THE GREAT BROADWAY MUSICALS

307868

IcoLuawul

WILLIE NELSON SOMEWHERE OVER THE RAINBOW

314419*

LJ

HERBALPERT

FANDANGO

315572*

iMARMfMINO* i

DAVID SANBORN AS WE SPEAK

nilTlMrick ocasek^ ^    E332ia

a. T    '

- '

X ismwJbeatitu<

-*POwaHUr'-Cash Box. Hk Some-mig Jb Grab For; JktwnyJirnmyiec.

314344* Melissa Manchester I^WSTA ] HEY RICKY

310235* The Oak Rktoe Boys GreatestHits

317685 MAHLER: SYMP NO 4

r-^    AMEUNG: PREVIN

LiSitj PtTTSSURGH SYMPHONYSI^A^PER

310482* STEVIE NICKS BELLADONNA

314351* JOHNNY MATHIS I FRIENDS IN LOVE

A SMicSons mailMd nei a M m not I

314401

VAN HALEN

1 AMHEAIMC 1

DIVER DOWN

anraMMpa*





THE COLUMBIA RECORD & TAPE CLUB INVITES YOU TO TAKE

ANYtlALBUMS-1

M you join now and agree to buy 8 more 8rt:tion (al regular Club prices) in the coming 3 year

tupping

tundUng

315895* STRAY CATS l5LP**c*l Buitt For Speed

STEVE FORBERT

...... - .... 1

315853* MarahaU Tucker Band i TUCKERIZED

315812* CHUCK MANGIONE Icoupwu] LOVE NOTES

313502* KENNY ROGERS LSi Share Yow Love

ALDO NOVA

SafCnONS WITH TWO NUMBERS ARE 2-RECORO SETS OR DOUBLE-LENGTH TAPES, AND COUNT AS TWO SELECTIONS -WRITE EACH NUMBER IN A SEPARATE BOX

288670 BARRY MANILOW ^ 306597-396598 EAGLES 398677 *' GREATEST HITS 1 LIVE

310219-390211*JOHNNY MATHIS

'cOLUMftAi TN PMB7 tta#0

1 anniversary album j

311001*

391003^^

^ }

311373*

391375L*2lJt>^A!;^^^

303339* Great American r?; 393330 Rock & Ron Revival

302265 392266 FRANK snutra immm tyulooy:nut PRESENTtnmMc

312173 [notowwI DIANAROSS-392175 AH The Great Hits

313007- 393009 cismastrwos ' MOZART: Violin Concerti No. 3,4,5: more-ISAAC STERN

313650* SmONtGARFUNKEL 393652 ^.*0.

313221* SHIRLEY BASSEY 393223 nSSTTl GREATEST HITS

314997* STEVIE WONDER'S 394999lTwtu| OrenalMusiouahum 1

317131* KRIS. Wiue. DOLLY A 397133 ImwwntI BRENDA

'-' nCaiMNINGHANC

317552* OZZY OSBOURNE 397554 Speak Of The Oevd

318147* GEORGEJONES 3981AQiI?1 ANNIVERSAAY-TFN

JVHi4aii2J ri/utsorwrs

318584* --- - _:_k

3 985861 1 DREAM PCCES

314294 Icou| jane FONDA'S 394296* WORKOUTRECOfD

309757* OMOMumcMowncjisT 399758 GHnFRTaSULLIYWr^ THE PBATES OF PENZANCE

ssectBminewWuwirittiwn

Iiwwpei

317578* JONI MITCHELL Wild Things Run Fast

317560* DEVO I >! OH NO! ITS DEVO

313445*

JOHN LENNON YOKOONO DOUBLE nUTDkSY

311548* PATTI AUSTW

r5Wiin e'"''on

SHOULD Hve.ne

317677 SCHUBERT SYMR NO 8 luiGi, I DOSAuuNoe 0eRnjRt. ere RMujAN aem.mRm.HJumoN>c

301432* The Oak Ridge Boys TOGETHER

310151* EngrtMrt HmpanSndi

ooNTrc

ftwc,

rrouLOveitE

ANYMORE?

311597 THE POLICE [HEI Ghost In The Machine

311M2 * BARBARA MANDREU.

lJ*j    UVB

QUARTERFLASH

317537* soejAMESt earlkllksh TWOOfAKim

' Top 10 hits The Other Guy: Lonesome ; Loser: Reminiscing: Cool Change: more

P G BENATAR NERVOUS

T t*. T

~ 1 atxjm with Grammy-w# smash Truly: Top 10 hit You >

mw-winnina    CYf    iTi

Gramrny-winning smash Shadows Of The Night MUWe Too Late: a\ers

CHRISTOI

C(

^^J^317867* f

ANOTHER

PAGE

Richly textured mekxjie; People HA AH Right Lone





SIJPIRTRAMP

\    PTl

ES22Q

...famous last words.

EARTH. W1ND6FIRE

/Emm POWERLIGHT f

Fiery1-8iboanci. Hit Fall In Lom With Me: The Speed Of Love

\\f-IO^

I    CHOOSE    I

S    FROM    s

S OVER 285 S B SELECTIONS S

FOR EVERY | MUSICAL TASTE!

317396* JUICE NEWTON QUIET LIES

317370* BILLY SQUIER Leiol Emotions In Motion

317271* LAURABRANIGAN I BRANIGAN

317313* :t2?CASlN0 LIGHTS ' 1 wMNfn wot raconofo uvt ar

1-- HOMTHfuI tWITZWLANO

317263* DONALD FAGEN |an.wot{ THFNIGHTFIY

314062* CHARLENE [motowTI 'VE never been to me

315671 CHICAGO

FUUHOOM WAIWnWOt 1 IE

-----

311498* JOHNNY LEE ["a-tSyl Bel Your Heart On Me

310094* OAK RIDGE BOYS FANCY FREE

310029* ALCAIOLA

309963* MANHATTAN TRANSFER

fiLMTic' MECCA FOR MODERNS

303578* MICKEV GILLEY CMC ThMiMThMMjdinlbM*

300590 ABBA *T GREATEST hits, m, '

301473* CHRISTOPHER "

iMMWHWOSj ORnSS

302042 LINDA RONSTADT MAD LOVE

300525* THE BEST OF rTSSl EDDIE RABBITT

309989* CARPENTERS 1"1 Made In America

LiSMSJ MUPPET CAPER

311340 BILLY JOEL [iuAMu 1 Songs In The Attic

311209* THEKENDW.LS

1 HEHCU* 1 LCTTIM rtxj mont FCLIN

311456 BARRY MANILOW If 1 Should Love Again

315986* OWGINAi. SOUND TTUCK riGil STAR TREK II

309039* AEROBIC DANCING

1 0*Tty 1 (INSTRUCnONAL)

307918# JIM CROCE Li.itoNc Down The Highway

, sir* EDDIE MURPHY

313692* BARBARA ANN AUER

1 araur | AWancad JtaraOc Owong. W* Nm

^6661 ..

1 COLUMBIA MASTfNWOMRS MiMF

317180* THE OSMOND :uTwcuntl BROTHERS

318022* GrowrWBMwKiton.Jr.

|tLi TtC KITS YET TO COME

317651* PLACIDO DOMINGO fARIAS FROM AIDA. i=iJ KMJST ETC

318097* BILL COSBY l-oTowl HIMSELF

HtAvMiaUe on fvcardi Id c

lorty

E





EDDIE RABBITT

308486* JWCE NEWTON [^I    JUICE

300681 NEIL DIAMOND SEPTEMBER MORN

-3^6257* AN EVENING WITH ROGER WILUAUS

317206 MARVIN GAYE MIDNKSHTLOVE

317222* EMMYLOU HARRIS

LASTOATE

* SMcaoiw iMriMd wWi a Mrn not I

316034*

MEN AT WORK

ICOUMul

Business As Usual

- *.,

316133*

LACY J. DALTON

Icoiuwul

16TH AVENUE

EAGIS GREATEST HITS VOL . 2

ASYLUM

311779* LOVERBOY L?5y5-!U GET LUCKY

RADIO ROMANCE

SfcDngl"-CMhflQ)f. TbplONbum;

#1 I^Abd/wNhOyNalGiMt.

317172* STEVE MILLER BAWD :CAMTQL. ABRACADABRA

317164* UNDARONSTADT GETCLOSER

308916*

RICK JAMES

loo!

STREET SONGS

305268 CRYSTAL GAYLE THESE DAYS

311 720 WMWTT! PBEMK

I    I    RAM    VEMN    ANUS

I ^*^1 LASCAUORCH..ASaAOO

2W866 BOSTON JL^    Oon    t    Look    Back

316315 NEIL DIAMOND 55^ HEARTUGHT

317198i

UBERACE [utunctMmnnv,'] TONIGHT

286682 *

Abba sGfcamt Hits

304907 *

MmOUS ARTISTS

1 COLINMUI

BROAOWNY MAGIC

MX It

3^2231* Earth, Wmd 4 Fire

Lg;tag^.<=l raised

317149* DANFOGELBERG

i~aiSS!-p>c| GREATESTHITS

O 316182*

^ |OPW|

DONNA

SUMMER

^ 316166*

AEROSMITH

ROCK M A HARO PLACE

W:

BH I COLUMN* 1

g 309534* RONNIE ALDRICH H [*' ONEFINEDAY

MANILOW

^ THE

^15* BROADWAY MAGIC

31^19* KMCKEV GILLEY 'twc! nrroiMimAmm

316158*

lQik*I

SANTANA

SHANGO

309427

Amsuppur 1

nmomTMAriouLOt I

286740

iYLUM|

UNOA RONSTAOrS GREATESTHITS

278648

*AMj

Captam a Tennkle's Greatest Hits

279067*

S

^as

THE BEST OF JOAN BAEZ

283887*

cotumei*

WILLIE NELSON STARDUST

301515

[column]

BILLY JOEL GLASS HOUSES

316877*

RUSH

SIGNALS

304394* GEORGE BENSON Give Me The Night

316893* QAORGEJOMS ANO MERLE ri='    HAGGANOA    USTFOE

YfSTETOArSrNf

386914 * FLEETWOOOMAC RUMOURS .

286864 * JACKSON BROWNE l**"<*l Running On Empty

303818

CARLY SIMON COME UPSTAIRS

303966 *

SEALSacnOFTS the LONGEST ROAO

311^0* DON WILLIAMS Especially For Ybu

309419* COMMODORES INTHEPOCKET

tmrMMpw

^03 * EAGLESwnnrs Their Greatest Hits

315945* THE GAP BAND

iTOTALPWWItllCtI    IV

316901* CONWAY TWITTY

iTIkKTlul CONWA Sl CLASSICS

3J2306 THE CARS SHAKE IT UP





312660

xTuumc

THE VISITORS

312322

:cDiuHsu>|

NEIL DIAMOND

ON THE WAY TO the SKY

316653*

COiUUBia

LARRV CATUN t

316620*

(HC

LUTHER MNOnoSS FOMveR FoaALwws FORLOVC

304204

_ASrjj^

JACKSON BROWNE HOLD OUT

224043*

COlJMSI '

ANNIE

ORIGtMALCAST

275743

. C0LUII1I ;

BARBRA STREISAND Streisand Supemian

277491 *

COIUMSU

BILLY JOEL THE STRANGER

277954

."Mcir

STEELY DAN AJA

304253*

ELEKTIU

EDDIE RABBITT HORIZON

304378*

[AWftTAj

Altman Brothers Band Reach For The Sky

312389 AC/DC FOR THOSE ABOUT

TO ROCK WE SALUTE YOU

316711* HANK WiaiAMS. JR. [t.tum, cut:    GREATESTHITS

312314* CHICAGOS GREATEST HITS,

30^919 * AIR SUPPLY LOSTIN LOVE

2869^8 THE EAGLES Hotel California

269209*

BOSTON

271809 JIM CROCE S !LiftoiQl GREATEST HITS

316455* BELLAMY BROTHERS !wHwot cubTI GREATEST HITS

1983 Cokjmbte Hou

OR-IF YOU PREFER YOU MAY TAKE A SPECIAL TRIAL MEMBERSHIP AND RECEIVE

6FDR1CENT

269605

LOGGINS & MESSINA

1 C01.UMSH '

BEST OF FRIENDS

304360* wauenelson

re II..' ERfCE

lcouu SMtAmomoRost

304196*

Charlie Daniels Band

FULL MOON .

316703*

MELTILLIS

GREATESTHITS

316208*

DAVID FRIZZEL the fASMUrS FINE

iWAABenexos v.y

'* 'BUT THIS ONE S ALL MINE

plu* ihipptng harxiling

H you are just an occasional record or buyer if

you prefer not to obligate yourself to purchase eight more selections or if you cannot find 11 selections you want right nowhere s a perfect opportunity to "try out the Club on a special trial membership basis'

Just fill in the special Trial Membership Application" at the right-and we II send you ANY 6 records or tapesALL 6 for only 1C, plus shipping and handling In extthange, you simply agree to buy as few as four selections (at regular Club prices) during the coming three years Think of itonly four selections and you have three whole years m which to buy them' And that s all there IS to it' '

As a trial member, you II enpy all of the benefits of regular membership as described on the following pagebut without any lengthy commitment ..you may cancel at ahy time after buying just four more selections So if you d prefer to enroll now under this special get acquainted' offer-mail the special application today, together with only Si (X) (that's 1C for your 6 introductory selections plus 99C to cover shipping and handling) Read the advertisement for details on how the Club works

Special Start-Your-Membenhip-Now Offer: you may also crioose your first selection right now-and v^e ll give it to you for at least 60'^ off regular Club prices (only S2 99) Enclose payment now and you II receive it with your 6 introductory selections This discount purchase reduces your membership obligation immediately-you II then be required to buy just 3 more selections (instead of 4) m the next three years Just check box in application and fill in number you want

Here is the Gold Box" you've seen on TV fill it in to get an extra selection...

NOTE: all appUcations are MJbject to review and CokimUa I    House reserve* the right to reject any application.

I TRIAL MEMBERShTp'aPPlTcATION ~

Columbia Record & Tape Club. P.O. Box 1130 Terre Haute. Indiana 47811

Yes I d like to try out the Clubso I m enclosing check or money order tor St 00 (that's 1C for my 6 introductory selections plus 99c for shipping and handling) Please accept my trial membership application under the terms outlined at the left I agree to buy four more selections (at regular Club prices) during the coming three years-and I may cancel membership at any time after doing so Write In numbers of the 6 setections you warrt now.

Send my selection in this type ol recording (be sure to check one):

8-Track Cartridges " Tape Cassettes ~ Reel Tapes ~ Records My main musical interest is (check one):

_ ifi:;' / am a/ways nee to cnooie hom any tare<joiyi Easy Listening Teen Hits Classical Country (no reel tapes) _ Jazz (no reel tapes)

Mr.

Mrs.

Mi  _

rtease Pnnr-    First    Name

Address __________^_________

Last Name  Apt No.

City_

Slate -

Zip.

Do You Have A Telephone? (Check one) _ YesNo 692 S3

otfei not avaiiaoic m APO FPO Alasha Hanan Puerto Rico m.tetoi retails of aiternative.oller Canadian residents 'i' oe serviced tram loronto

AteoiMidiiiyMi

-----------,---s    tor    at let

 a (8% dtecowtrt. lor which I am also

enclosing additional payment of S2.99 I teen need buy only 3 more selecbons ( regular Club prices) in tee next three yeafs





I am anclctslng dwch or monoy ordor (or $1.86 (whch includes 1C tor my 11 selections, plus SI 85 tor stiipping and handling) Please accept my membership application under the terms outlined in this advertisement I agree to buy eight more tapes or records (at reg-^ ular Club prices) dunng the coming three years-and may cancel my membership anytime alter doing so

Cokmbia Record 6 Tapa Chib, P.O. Box 1130 Terra Haute. IrKiana 47811

Writoinnuinbm

ofllMtodkMis

Send my selections m this type ol recording (be sure to check one):

a 8-Track Cartridges Tape Cassettes Reel Tapes Records

My main musical interest is (check one):

(Bui I am always tree to choose from any category)

Easy Listening Teen Hits Classical C Country (no reel tapes) Jazz (no reel tapes)_Mr.

Please Prmt AddiM*_

Last Name -Apt -

Cky.-np-

9m    ____ _

DoViouHa*eATelephona?(Chachona)GYES aNO

OHer not available in APO fPO AiasAa Hawaii Puerto Fhco write lor derails ol alternalive oHer Canadian residents will be serviced from Toronto H2 SI3

Also send my first selection lor at least a 60% discount, tor which I am also enclosing additional payment ot $2 99 I then need buy only 7 more selections (at regular Club pnces) 10 the next three years

Yes. heres a juke bo* that will play your favorite music for hours on endl Just "push the buttons tor the 11 albums you want and write in their numbers on the application Then fill in the entire application and mail it. together with your check or money order for $1 86 as payment (that's 1C (or your first 11 selections plus $1.85 to cover shipping and handling) In exchange you simply agree to buy 8 more tapes or records (at regular Club prices) in the next three yearsand you may cancel membership anytime after doing so How the Club operates: every four weeks (13 times a year) you'll receive the Club s music magazine, which descnbes the Selection of the Month for each musical interest plus hundreds of alternates from every field ot music In addition, up to SIX times a year you may receive offers of Special Selections, usually at a discount off regular Club prices, for a total of up to 19 buying opportunities If you wish to receive the Selection of the Month or the Special Selection, you need do nothing-it will be shipped automatically If you prefer an alternate selection, or none at all. fill in the response card always provided and mail it by the date specified You wiH always have at least 10 days to make your decision And if you ever receive any Selection without having had at least 10 days to decide, you may return it at our expense The tapes and records you order dunng your membership will be billed at regular Club prices, which currently are $7 98 to S9 98-plus shipping and handling (Multiple-unit sets and Double Selections may be somewhat higher.) And if you decide to continue as a member after comjSeting your enrollment agreement, you'll be eligible lor our generous money-saving bonus plan

10-Day Free Trial well send details of the Club s operation with your introductory shipment If you are not satisfied for any reason whatsoever just return everything within 10 days for a full refund and you will have no further obligation So you risk absolutely nothing by acting now'

Special Slan-Your-Membership-Now Offer: you may also choose your first selection right now-and we II give it to you for at least 60% oft regular Club prices (only S2 99) Enclose payment now and you II receive it with your It introductory selections This discount purchase reduces your membership obligation immedi-ateiy-you II then be required to buy )ust 7 more selections (instead ol 8) ih the next three years Just check box in application and fill in number you want

Here s the Gold Box you ve seen on TV-use it to gel an extra selection

MAC/BJ    MAO/AF    MAE/ZE    MAF/2F

NOTE-aH applicalioiw an aubjMtt to twfMT and ColumMa Houat rtMivM Itw right to redact any application.

316414 the who

/rs HARD316372* DON HENLEY [ RtYLUWl    I Can't Stand StUI312926W PAUL ANKA LIVE '    a    BLACK    TIE2^5 CARPENTERS

The Stop* J969-19732^60 CAT STEVENS GREATEST HITS

312835* THELETTERMEN 1>*^I LOVE IS...

313528* Gordon LigWfoot' lJ shadows

313700

1 uaTv 1

KENNY ROGERS GREATEST HITS

312991*

GO-GOS

BEAUTY AND TW BEAT

265447*

BILLY JOEL

. [couiutuj

TURNSTILES

316430*

MICHAEL McOONAiO

'

fwiMlllOS 1

IfTHATS WHAT IT TAKES

316331*

[5^

MCK> SMOGS

316323

Icoxuiieul

Bnjco Springsteen

NEBRASKA

1'

315515*

IcouMsial

ROSANNECASH SOMEWNERE M YNE STMS

f 312967*

1 ~I

TERRI GIBBS I'M A LADY

187088 BAftBIU STREISAND'S GREATEST HITS219477 SMONftGARFUNKELS GREATEST HITS

260638

CHICAGO IX

1 COUHNUI

CmCAOO S OAEAIEST HITS

TKjgo 41 egawree

312801*    JOANJETTA

I    ,    TMeaiACkHEAIITS

I owiovam |    I LOVE ItOCK N OU

313635* OAK RIDGE BOYS BOBBIE SUE31^2 REOSPEEDWAGON GOOD TROUBLE316364* KIM CARNES VOYEUR-

* Selection marked with a flar are not available m reel tapesOR-IF YOU F^F-iFFEf^ A TRIAL FyiFMbFRSHIR -SET .SF^FCIAL OFFER ON RRFCt IN. fW.l





THE DAILY REFLECTOR

GREENVILLE, N.C.    PEANUTS

SUNDAY, MAY 15, 1983

THERE I WAS, SOUNP

Asleep... suppENLY, i

HEARP A CHOCOLATE CHIP \WOKIE calling ME!

by Charles Schulz

/ AS I WAS WALKING AWAY, I HEARP ANOTHER COOKIE 5AV, "HEY \WU FORGOT ME!"

ANDY CAPP

by

SHE ASKS ME 1F SHE CAN QO ON A COACH TRIP TO -< DURHAM, I'M GOOO ENOUGH TO SAY YES - THEN SHE-* ASKS /ME F' THE MO/VfY-

BEETLE BAILEY

by Mort Walker

EVER SEE THEIR APS OM TV?

THEY PON'T JUST READ THEIR REPORTS, THEY DRAMATIZE THEM I

You're iH show eusis/ESs./ SUSARCOAT Your report.' /MAKE IT SPECTACULAR./

PKESENti/s/S "AH IH-PEPTH STUPVOFTHE ? OVERUSE OF THUAABTACKS OH BULLETIN BOARDS" y





bw

M I

C K E Y

M

O U

S E

sIt

5Donl^HTE

mHOCUS-FOCUSCAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYESf Th.rt art at Itast six diHtr-encts m drawinfl dttails bttwawi top and bottom pantls. How qotckly can you find ttiomf Chock answtrs with thoso btlow.

(UJJd))iO M|la iaiJOK', SI K)rfu S JSJOH (UdJrfU'PSI JWO  t P-AOuiSipMgs,na I ,up;^,ps,-0M,:,aN , si.u^.^.cQ

o STRANGE WORD

IS the middle. Is the

MYSTERY

STORY

It all happened in a brightly lighted, elegantly appointed room Dozens of eyes were on them as they flew together, kissed But then, a man with the tire of victory in his eyes deliberately raised the stick he car Tied and sent the pale one spinning.

The other neither screamed nor fainted There was no sign of heartbreak, resent menf; not even a mur mur was heard from the crowd, because ?

Can you "explain" this mystery?

siicq pjt' iiia PV| to Ajpis dq, ,snl s.ti

! There is an English word of more than two letters of which "la" beginning, and is the end, although there is but one "a" and one "I" in its entirety. What is the word?

PUU Du UJ Drf .1^,V H'PP Ui Uu. s ii- puv.s P-iUV.H,]

ALL THUMBS! Using your thumbs and no other tingers, unbutton a button of your shirt Then, if you succeed, try to rebutton it similarly

   Sum Fun! There are five consecutive numbers that add up to exactly 50. What are they? Answer in one minute, without peeking below.

%?*    <*u u tuD'j

   Riddle Me This! What TV shows result trom too many laugh tracks? Saturation comedies What was Attila the Hun's tavorite sweet? Horde candy Why is it best not toscratch poison ivy? It's a rash action

FLOWER SHOW! Apply the following colors neatly to the scene above: 1-Red. 2-Lt. blue. 3-Yellow. 4-Lt. brown. 5-Flesh tones. 6-Lt. green. 7-Dk. brown 8-Dk. green 9-Pink.

ON THE ROCKS! What can you draw to complete the picture above? To find out, add lines from 1 to 2, 3, etc.

SPELLBINDER

scot t<t Htr ung pll th# ................""'

.....

.t-f!

Cj>

THIN scofp2 p0iHfiM^% Air FT%

^ ^j#0 ^ >%

V'





, 'i

|iftL ftiJiR,

' ^

\ L SyLv;;;:.^

j jU

:R

Our Soru: VALETA 15 60NE. SHE HAC? SHAMELESSLY POUSLE-CRC55EP KAREN ANP TOYEP WITH ALPS AFFECTIONS. SMITTEN WITH REMORSE, SHE SLIPS OUTOF5ALONAE. HER ABSENCE IS NOTEPAT PU5K. PRINCE VALIANT LEARS THE SEARCH AS VALETA. MILES AWAY, SLUMPS IN PESPAIR. MYAr A    YOU HAVE BEEN!SHE ACCUSES HERSELF.i/i Ht; fiy ' I

A

LOST IN HER LOATHINS. VALETA POES NOT SEE THE SHAPOW APPROACH. IT IS 'the WANPERER.' WME, come, " THE OLP WOMAN SAYS IMPATIENTLY.

SHE PULLS THE 6IRLT0 HER FEET. '^MANY CENTURIES A60; THE WANDERER RECALLS, "THERE NAS A WARP/OR NANEP5AR60. PAYAfTERDAV HIS LE6I0NS HAP F0U6HT ONE ENEMY AR THEN THE NEXT UNTIL TtREPANP HUN6RY ANP OUTNUMBEREP THEY FACEP THE FIERCEST FOB OF ALL.

''5AR60N SPOKE TO HIS MEN. *THE ENEMYS BEST GENERAL IS CALLEP PESRAIR. LET US SLAY HIM ANP VICTORY IS OURS.' IN TME/R EASERNE5S TO ffNP TNE GREAT general, SARGONS LEG/ON5 FELL UPON THE FOE. they non AfUCH SLORY THAT PA)' YET THE BOPY OF GENERAL PESPA/R NAS NEYER FOUNP.

"'YOU WLL NOT FINP HIM,' SARGON TOLO HIS TROOPS. 'I SAN H/M CHA SEP FROM THE BATTLEF/ELP BY GENERAL HOPEj"

WITH THOSE WORPS THE WANDERER DEPARTS. AND FOR 5CW\E REASON VALETAS SPIRITS REVIVE. SHE PL0Q5 HOMEWARD. ANP AT CITY'S j^E IS PLUCKED FROM THE ROAD BY AN ANXIOUS FATHER. THE HARDEST FART COMES LATER-WITH KAREN.

2414

11983 King Features Syndicate. Inc World nglits reserved

5-I&

"CHILPREN," F WEARY PRINCE VALIANT SIGHS. THE MISTY iSlES-ANDALETA'S DISCPLINE-SEEM INVITING, ANP VAL HAS MADE PLANS FOR THE RETURN. GALAN LODGES A PROTEST.

NEXT WEEK: TKC Clock

PONYTAIL

by Lee Holle

WEV'WHAT HAPPENED TO YOU j -PONVTAIL CAUSHTME LC^KINO 6HE WONTHAve TO ATOTHEI?GIRLS/    NdOlSTTURT  1 ANVMORe'





REDEYE

MERE VOU AR

A MICE SURPRISE

by Gordon Bess





Wx)e^ wpe THg

CA

fENCIN'

eee

by Brant parker and Johnny hart

WnAwr... 'THg ,

\

T THE (NHERrrwce WX

IfflflT

Tiry

i

A

G

A

R

h

)le

bv -pix: BRWN5

tOhlDOfJIS rJiCE, 50 IS POME... eUTAFTEP ALL.... r

NW>, I'M t^4g KJC^A m?    SOMt

AKTTi- w coe>' Rui^s. rr MieAioe^ RAK:iKj&a>iWT rc? P^W i?a)G>MlMG> TU kICKa? R?as.

MCW    kip& eoM6 TO SE

flePAREp eop'ZONjE: TMeAt(2lCAL& AMQ (^TJAL GCtXjP MIGM-Pve AP^TEI? itfev

e^Kic^ fpe

0E MBCPIkJGR?^

KJl\^tfV 15 OO^MO

rue PPAMA P:Ai?TVieMT!

[S^





lJL ONE PIECE!

974Pineapples for the fuller figure! Crochet jacket from the neck down in one piece. Use 3-ply fingering yam. Sizes 32-46 included.......$2.50

FRESH ANO FEMININE

4927 Attractive cape cellar and hem band. Misses Sizes 8-18. Size 12 (bust 34) Ukes 3 yds. 60-in. fabric.

4927 Printed Pattern ... $2.50

FASHIONS-TO-SEW CATALOG. Choose from over 100 styles of Todays" fashions. Ptu's FREE COUPON for any pattern in catalog. Send $1.50 now!

NO WAIST SeUNt

4962 Airy dress. Multi-Size pattern gives 4 sizes on one tissue. Half Sizes (lOV^, 12V^, 14'/j, 16Vi); (18Vi. 20Vi, 22V2, 24V5L Order your regular size. 4962 Printed Pattern ... $2.50

EtfiHT TOPS FOR YOU

4771An easy-sewing. Misses Sizes 8-18. Size 12 (bust 34) round yoke 2Vb yds. 45-in; basic shirt 2Vb yds. 45-in.

4771 Printed Pattern ... $2.50

700SHe can bo used as a TV hassock or Just a playmate for your child to onjoy. Pattern pieces: directions for iSVi 119" cushion $2JR|

y ^atlHon CaUlog (S S) $150 01983 Needle Catalog 1 50

PATTERNS $2.50 each

Add 50e lor each pattern tor postage and handling

Order 3 Books-choose 1 FREEH Order 6 Books-choose 2 FREE0

^ CRAFT B00KS-S2 00 each

   135-16 OOLLS and CLOTHES

   134-14 QUICK QUILTS

   132-OUN.T ORIGINALS

J 130-SWEATERS.SIZES 38-56

   126-CRAFTY FLOWERS L 125-PETAl QUILTS

L 123-STITCH N' PATCH QUILTS

   121-PILLOW SHOW-OFFS

   120-CROCHnAIMROROBE

   118-CROCHET WITH SQUARES

Pattern No Sue

4827

974 4771

4962

7005

L IIB-NlrJT FIFTt QUILTS 115-RIPPLE CROCHH For catalogs and books, please add 50( each tor postage, handling

Send to: LET'S SEW c/o This Newsp Box 133,0 Mew York,

amount enclosed s

^ . 5-W5^93 aper

Id Chelsea Sta.

M.Y. 10113

No*

Addrfti

0

C.ty

S'oit ( Sum TO uS TOun zie 7,p

FLASH GORDON

' 2j^rkov and crew mTCH, HELPLESS. \ ASTmiRSHiPiS : RED Ucep TO SCRAP I and carried off.

by Dan Barry


Title
Daily Reflector, May 15, 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.) - 30451
Date
May 15, 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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