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Raising interest ceiling on retail store credit card-use receives final Senate consideration today. Support indicated by earlier vote. (Page 13)
INSIDE TODAY
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At least 53 alleged Soviet spies have been expelled by Western governments since the beginning of April. There are always more,
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Rose High Schools Rampettes tied for the Big East softball title (Page 17), and Ayden-Grifton tied for the ECC baseball crown (Page 18).THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 118TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 18, 1983
72 PAGES4 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS
Libya Protests Lebanon Pact
Syria Says Habib 'Unwelcome'
By The Associated Press
Syria announced today it will not receive U.S. presidential envoy Philip C. Habib, calling him "one of the most hostile American officials, and Libya recalled its ambassador from Beirut to protest Lebanons troop withdrawal pact with Israel.
But Syria, which has denounced the Lebanese-Israeli
accord signed Tuesday, also eased its blockade of Lebanons roads to the rest of the Arab world.
President Reagan dispatched Habib to the Middle East for an effort to pCTSuade Syrian troops to puli out of Lebanon. Unless Syria and the Palestine Liberation Organization agree to withdraw their forces, the
Israeli-Lebanese agreement will not take effect.
A statement issued in Damascus through Syrias official news agency said the government would not receive Habib because we have nothing to discuss with him, and especially because he is one of the most hostile American officials to the Arabs and their caiises.
According to the Beirut newspaper Al-Amal, which is affiliated with the Christian Phalange Party of President Amin Gemayel, Habib was to go to Damascus on Thursday.
As the Habib ban was announced, the Libyan Embassy in Beirut said that Col. Moammar Khadafys government had recalled Am-
Commission Recommends RezoningOf Large Tract
By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer
The Greenville Planning & Zoning Commission voted Tuesday night to recommend that the City Council approve a petition for rezoning a large tract of land located west of N.C. 43 and south of the Greenville Athletic Club.
The board, in voting to endor^ the request by Ralph C. Tucker Jr., suggested a change in one of the zoning designations sought by Tucker for the parcel, which contains some 72.71 acres. Jim Walker of Olsen & Associates, appearing on behalf of Tucker, concurred with the change.
Planning board members recommended that the council rezone the property from a residential-agricultural designation to office and institutional and R-6, which allows for high density residential development. Tucker had also sou^t rezoning to a shopping center (CS) classification for a portion of the property but the commissioners expressed concern about CS development along the proposed Arlington Boulevard.
Commissioner Wallace Wooles suggested that the CS portion be rezoned to office and institutional but Walker said traffic problems could result if both sides of the intersection are developed with O&I uses. Walker said the petitioner would prefer to extend the residential designation instead.
Staff planner Skip Browder said the Tucker proposal is generally in keeping with land development trends in the area, although some concern had been expressed with the requested shaping center zone for Arlington Boulevard. He said there was concern about strip zoning along the southwest
REFLECTOR
32-1336.
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.
MOALADDRESS
Please repeat the address you gave a year or so a^ in Hotline of a place you can write for assistance with getting mail-order foulups cleared up. I used it in the past and it worked promptly and well. A.T.
Mail Order Action Line is a service of the Direct Mail/Marketing Association provid^ free of charge to consumers with mail order complaints. The address is Mail Order Action Line, c/o Direct Mail Marketing Assocation, 6 E. 43rd St., New York, N.Y. 10017,
When you write, carefully describe your situation and include dates of transactions if available and include copies (absolutely dont send off your originals) of any canceled checks or other pertinent material such as sales slips, order forms or credit care invoices. MOAL then contacts the company to discover the cause of the problem.,
As soon as the company responds, the consumer receives notification from the DMMA as to the outcome.
According to Federal Trade Commission rules, a mail order company has 30 days from the receipt of an order to fill it. If the complaint is non-receipt of merchandise, the consumer is advised to aUow 30 days to pass before filing complaint.
Member and non-member companies are dealt with by the DMMA.
comer of the proposed boulevard intersection at N.C. 43.
Lee Murphy of the engineering department said the proposed ali^iment of Arlington Boulevard through the Tucker property has been changed to swing the corridor below the tract. Murphy said he was happy with the new alignment.
Murphy explained that as property is subdivided, right-of-way for Arlington Boulevard is set aside by the property owners and the developer builds that particular segment of the corridor at his cost.
Commissioners recommended that the council approve a request by William C. Shivers to rezone 1.057 acres, located north of State Road 1421, east of State Road 1401 (Old River Road), and west and south of the Ada S. Parker and Jcrtin Hardy property, respectively. Shivers is seeking to rezone his property from residential-agricultural to neighborhood commercial in order to operate a convenient store and grocery now on the site as a conforming use.
Walker, who also represented Shivers, said the petitioner inherited the property and would like to earn his livelihood at the store. He said the building has been there for some 48 years and Shivers discovered he can not expand the facility since it is in a residential zone.
Bobby Roberson, planning director, said the staff would like to take a look at removing a strip of shopping center zoning in the area which has never been develqied. The board, in endorsing Shivers petition, agreed that the shopping center tract should be studied.
A request by Samuel Roberts and others to rezone 3.6 acres, located south of Mumford Road and Greenville Utilities property, from industrial to a residentiai-mobUe home designation, was also endorsed.
Faryce Goode, planner, said Roberts and his neighbors are seeking to rezone the property in order to allow existing land uses to be in conformance with zoning requirements. Ms. Goode said single family units and mobile homes generally make up the land uses and the property is across the road from similar residential-mobile home zoning.
Three preliminary plats were approved by the planning board, including: Oakmont Office Center, located on the west side of N.C. 43 just south of Oakmont Drive, involving 12 office units on 2.4 acres; Doctors Park Apartments, phase two, located west of Arlington Boulevard adjacent to phase one, involving 83 units in four clusters; and (ourt E of Twin Oaks Townhomes, located at the southeast comer of the intersection of Laura Lane and David Drive, involving 25 units developed with a central courtyard effect and having parking in the center.
Commissioners, as a result of a request by a local minister to increase the size of informational sipis for churches, approved an amendment to the zoning ordinance increasing the size of church signs allowed in residential zones from 12 square feet to 36 square feet. Bobby Parker, pastor of Temple Free Will Baptist Church, had asked that an increase be considered.
Planner Jack Simoneau said a survey of some of the local church signs indicated that the 12 square foot limit is restrictive. He said the araendinent calls for a setback of 10 feet from any ri^t-of-way line or property line and 25 feet from any street intersection right-of-way line. The amendment allows for illumination of the sign.
Commissioner Chuck Ziehr suggested that some limitation be place on the height that would be allowed on the church
(Please turn to Page 16)
bassador Saleh Drouki from the Lebanese capital.
It said the Libyan government also had asked Lebanese Ambassador Nizar Farhat to leave Tripoli, the Libyan capital.
The leftist Lebanese newspaper As-Safir, which reported the recall before it was confirmed, said Libya also has asked the Arab League to apply against Lebanon the same measures taken against Egypt wheii it signed its peace treaty with Israel - measures which included an economic boycott.
Meanwhile, Lebanese police reported that Syria had relaxed a day-old blockade of road traffic between Lebanon and the rest of the Arab world.
Police in Beirut said the coastal highway linking the capital with Syrian-controlled northern Lebanon was reopened for normal traffic at daybreak today.
Local taxicab services in Beirut reported trips to Syria on the northern highway resumed. But they said travel on the main international highway through Syrian-controlled areas of the central Lebanese mountains remained suspended for a second straight day.
Lebanon and Israel on Tuesday signed a U.S.-mediated agreement calling for the withdrawal of Israels 25,000 troops from Lebanon. The agreement will
not be implemented until Syria and the Palestine Lib-eration Organization withdraw their estimated 50,000 troops from Lebanon, and Syria thus far has rejected the accord.
Syria and Libya, both allied with the Soviet Union, were the only Arab countries to react an^ily to the signing of the withdrawal accord. Other Arab countries either have declared support for Lebanon or kept silent.
Habibs mission was endorsed" Tuesday night by President Reagan, who told a news conference he is optimistic about a Syrian withdrawal because of pressure from other Arab nations.
I cant believe that the Syrians want to find themselves alone, separated from all of their Arab allies, Reagan said.
Reagan also recalled that Syria has promised repeatedly to leave Lebanon once Israel agreed to do so. Nonetheless, Syria has vowed to do all it can to foil the a^eement on grounds that it enables Israel to maintain military domination over Lebanon.
In another development, informed sources said the United States offered Israel written assurances Tuesday that the troop withdrawal agreement was final and could not be renegotiated regardless of Syrias objections.
-i/.
Sgt. RANDY NKniOLS
The Optimist Club, as part of its observance of Respect for Law Week, has recognized Greenville Police Department Sgt. Randy Nichols and Pitt County Deputy Sheriff Billy Tripp as officers of the year.
Willis A. Talton, chairman
Deputy BILLY TRIPP
of the Optimist project, said the officers were selected for the award by a vote of their respective departments. He noted that the awards are given annually by the club to members of the police and sheriffs departments.
(Please turn to Page 16)
PRIMARY WINNER - W. WUson Goode hugs his wife Velma in their Philadelphia hotel early Tuesday evening as they awaited results in Phila<lelphias mayoral primary. (AP Laserphoto)
Winner In Philadelphia
Officers Of The Year Announced
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -W. Wilson Goode, a sharecroppers son nominated by Democrats as their first biack candidate for mayor, pledged today to build a city for everyone" after turning back ex-Mayor Frank L. Rizzos bid for a political comeback
Goode will face Republican John Egan in Novembers general election in a city where Democrats outnumber Republicans by a 5-to-l margin.
No concessions, said a disappointed Rizzo, who insisted on getting a good nights sleep while awaiting the final figures today Goode had been favored to defeat the tough-talking former policeman, who served two terms as mayor from 1972 to 1980 but was barred by law from seeking a third consecutive term.
Returns from 98 percent of the citys 1,794 precincts put Goode ahead by more than 42,000 votes - 312,219, or 53.2 percent, against 270,115, or 46 percent, for Rizzo. Four other candidates in Tuesdays Democratic mayoral primary shared 20,000 other votes.
If you work hard and keep the faith, you can achieve great things in life, Goode, 44, said on the final day of the six-month campaign that led to his primary victory Tuesday over former Mayor Frank Rizzo. "If you work hard, youll be lucky.
Goode, former managing director of Philadelphia and former chairman of the state Public Utility Commission, has never forgotten his first
job 38 years ago . a 6-year-old boy behind a mule-drawn plow in a North Carolina field.
When Goode moved to Philadelphia at 15, his guidance counselor advised him not to go to college, he recalled. But Goode went anyway, finishing not only college but earning a postgraduate degree in public administration from the Wharton business school.
WEATHER
('loudy. wind) tonight. 30 percent,chance of ram lempcTalures m upper 50s Occasional ram and wind) Thursday with higTi, near It).
Looking Ahead
Chance shower> Fn day and .Satu.rday, party cioudy .Sunday Highs m Bos Friday, cinonng to 70s Sunday U's Friday in 60s, eixding to 5os by Sunday
Inside Reading
- Area urns Page lb i.ibituaries Pact It- i kj atPV5 age " I ric' u. ,ut Page - Hn>A ihf \ \ led
Hospital Housekeeping Contract Is Awarded
By CAROL TVER Rdlector Staff Writer The Pitt County Memorial Hospital Board voted Tuesday night to award a contract for housekeqiing to Crothall American Inc. of Denver, Colo.
Cost of the service for the coming year will be $168,984, a reduction of $52,000 from last year. The hospital will have to hire one manager, it was pointed out, but the savings should still be substantial.
Facilities Management Vice President Ral^ Hall reported that Phase I of the facility expansion plan of the hospital has gone through the
stage of developing room layout and equipment layout and the architects are now putting together construction documents and drawings. He said it is anticipated that bids on the new construction in the radiology, emergency and surgery departments can be let around June 30, with bids for the renovation work to be taken later in the fall.
The Health Facility con-sultants, Hamilton Associates, are continuing to develop Phase II, he said. They are meeting with all departments of the hospital to collect data which they expect to have compiled in
September. He stressed that planning of facility expansion continues to be based on what turns out to be needed and what is financially feasible.
He said the program for the minimum care-psychiatric addition is basically completed by the architects, Dudley, Shoe and Hite.
Nursing Service Vice President Betty Trought said that 100 nurse extems are now at work at the ho^ital. These are rising seniors in baccalaureate programs from throughout North Carolina and the nation. Twenty five are from mit-of-state and all
baccalaureate programs in the state are represented. She said 80 percent of last years extems later came to work for the hospital and she hopes many of these will also. Some 115 new nurses have recently been recruited, she said, bringing sufficiency of nurses at the hospital as close as its been in several years.
Director of Computer Services John Ennis reported that 32 of the 36 nursing stations in the hospital are now computerized with more than 400 persons trained in the use of the new terminals. He said new capabilities are being added all the time and
that PCMH has the third largest hospital computer system in the stale President Jack Richardson reported on discussions held recently about cost containment strategies. Among the things that will be tried are improved utilization review and medical audit procedures, improved relations with other health care facilities for extended care of patients, joint purchasing by groups of hospitals, in creased efficiency by use of computers, and teaching of lifestyle improvement for employees of the hospital and for patients and potential patients
Capital expenditures approved were a homing bed and a high risk homing bed for labor and delivery at a cost of $16,200, a ventilator system for Special Services at a cost of $15,458 and a TV monitor system for Critical Care Unit I at a cost of $19,670. The Greenville Service League will assist with the TV monitor system purchase.
Dr. Howard Dawkins Jr., chairman of the Quality Assurance Committee of the hospital, reported on his committees work. He said the committee sees its func-
(Please turn to Page 8)
Jordan-Williams Vows Said
MRS. LLOYD HAROLD JORDAN JR.
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ANTIQUE SIL VER...purchased for the state history museum includes a cup, Palmer-Ramsay, another cup, Traugott Leinbach, Salem, and punch ladle, Lemuel Lynch, Hillsborough.
Antique Silver Purchased
RALEIGH - Three pieces of antique North Carolina-made silver have been purchased for the State Museum of History.
It was purchased through funds provided by the museums 5,000 member statewide support group, the N.C. Museum of History Associates.
According to Mary Reynolds Peacock, editor of "Silversmiths of North Carolina, the silver purchases include two pieces of N.C. holloware, a footed cup, handcrafted by Salem silversmith Traugott Leinbach (1796-1863), and another cup made by the partnership of John C. Palmer and Walter J. Ramsay of Raleigh.
The Leinbach cup is embossed and engraved and is further embellished by beading on the top rim and chasing on the bottom edge, Mrs. Peacock said.
Mrs. Peacock noted that less than 30 pieces of North Carolina-made holloware are known to exist. The ladle, made in the typical fiddle style by Lemuel Lynch (1808-1893) of Hillsborough, is another rare find because Mrs. Peacock said she has recorded only 25 antique N.C. punch ladles.
The new acquisitions were announced by Mrs. Baxter Richardson, Pitt County chairman for the Museum Associates. Others serving
SInc 1923
PrsonaliZ6d Cosmetics Especially Formulated ForEKh Skin Type
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PlMM CHp For Future Rolorenco
on the committee are Mrs. Connor Merrit, Mrs. Robert L. Mills, Mrs. W.S. Corbitt, Mrs. Howard Dawkins Jr., Mrs. Less Worthington, Mrs. George Garrett, Mrs. Ross Shupling, Mrs. Michael Weaver and Mrs. Mark Tipton.
Eastern
Electrolysis
1330AKM0NT DRIVE, SUITE 6 PHONE 75W034,GREENVILli,NC. permanent HAIR REMOVAL certified ELECTROLOGIST
PLYMOUTH - Patti Ann Williams and Lloyd Harold Jordan Jr. were married here in the First Baptist Church Sunday at 3 p.m. by Dr. Dennis Burton.
Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Waverly Williams and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Jordan, all of Plymouth.
A program of nuptial music was presented by Angela Coates, organist, and Mark Sexton, soloist.
For the double ring ceremony, the bride was given in marriage by her father. She wore a formal white chiffon and silk Venise lace gown designed with a high neckline, sheer V-yoke outlined with silk Venise lace etched with pearls and iridescents and drop shoulders. The short puffed sleeves closed with lace edged ruffle cufflets. Matching lace encircled the natural waistline. The circular skirt flowed into an attached cathedral train. The bride wore a white bridal hat trimmed with silk Venise lace accented with pearls and a Dior bow with lace edged in illusion extending down the back. She carried a cascade of white roses, daisies and spring flowers.
Jennifer Johnson of
Greenville was maid of honor and bridesmaids included Heather Price of Plymouth, Debbie Lamb of Savannah, Ga., Faye Wainright of
Wilkesboro, Laura Morrison and Joy Frey, both of Greenville.
Jessica Huftqn of
Plymouth was flower girl.
Rodney Dotson and Allen Lee of Greenville, Jimmy Bean and David White of Wilmington and Thomas
Maloney of Plymouth were ushers. The best man was the father of the bridegroom.
The honor attendant wore a formal gown of huckleberry faille taffeta designed with an open portrait neckline accented with a double ruffle of matching taffeta. The gown was fashioned with short pouf sleeves and a full gathered skirt. A tie sash enhanced the modified natural waistline. She wore a matching garden hat in braid trimmed in ribbon and carried a white wicker basket with spring flowers.
The attendants were dressed like the honor attendant in orchid faille taffeta with matching garden hats. They carried similar baskets.
The flower girl wore a formal gown designed with a white Chantilly lace bodice, high neckline encircled with
ruffled Chantilly lace and orchid satin ribbon. She carried a white wicker basket with spring flowers.
The mother of the bride wore a formal gown of dusty rose lusterglo knit with a V-neckline. The mother of the bridegroom selected a formal gown of tinesta knit in blue styled with a high neckline bordered in matching Venise lace. They wore double cymbidium orchids.
Grandmothers wore cymbidium orchids.
A reception followed the church and was held in the ' church fellowship hall given by the brides parents. Doris Price, aunt of the bride, served cake and Pat Hart, aunt of the bride, poured punch.
The table was decorated with a centerpiece of spring flowers and candelabra.
The couple will be living in Greenville after a cruise to the Bahamas.
The bride is a radiologic technologist employed at Pitt Memorial Hospital and attended Pitt Community College. The bridegroom graduated from East Carolina University and is an auditor with Blue Cross Blue Shield.
Ruby Booth of Plymouth was mistress of ceremony.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Jordan entertained with an afterrehearsal dinner at the Parish House in Plymouth.
Aunts of the bride gave a bridesmaids luncheon at the Plymouth Country Club.
Cooking Is Fun
KAILUASAUCE Its as good on spareribs as it is on duck.
I4 cup firmly-packed dark brown sugar 1 tablespoon cornstarch >72 cup white rice wine vinegar 8>/4-ounce can crushed pineapple in heavy syrup, undrained 1 large green pepper, seeds and membranes removed,
> diced (>i inch)
In a U^-quart saucepan, stir together brown sugar and cornstarch; gradually stir in vinegar, keeping smooth. Stir in pineapple and green pepper. Cook over moderate teat, stirring constantly, until clear, thickened and boiling. Serve at once with roast duck
Styles Unlimif
May-September Romances: A Matter Of Taste
By Abigail Van Buren
1983 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: This is regarding Heartsick Mother, whose good-looking, intelligent, 18-year-old son admitted that he was having an affair with the mother of one of his friends. (She was 41 and divorced.)
You told the mother to point out the pitfalls of such an affair or ask his older brothers to. What pitfalls? That arrangement can be the best thing that ever happened to her son.
Im a happily married middle-aged man. I was a painfully shy 18-year-old boy when I went away to college. A buxom little widow in her 50s the landlady in the rooming house where I stayed helped me overcome my shyness. She also taught me how to be a lover and a gentleman.
I have no regrets. She filled my needs and filled hers. Every 18-year-old boy should have the kind of deal I had IT HAPPENED IN CAMBRIDGE
DEAR IT HAPPENED; The mail is running 10-to* 1 in your favor. Read on:
DEAR ABBY; "Heartsick Mother doesnt know when shes well off. That 41-year-old woman has probably taught her son a lot. But theres something every man should learn, and apparently her kid hasnt learned it yet: how to keep his mouth shut. I
TIGHT-LIPPED IN LOUISVILLE
DEAR ABBY; Whats wrong with a 41-year-old woman keeping company with an 18-year-old boy?
Any single woman over 40 knows thaf-most single men over 40 are eccentric, selfish, cheap and intimidated by a contemporary woman.
Eighteen-year-old men are delightful companions. They are open, honest, warm and unaffected. And theyre wonderful lovers!
I am a 40-year-old widow, but you may sign me . . .
LIKES EM YOUNG IN LA.
Now lets hear it from a Parisian:
DEAR ABBY: As a Frenchwoman I belong to a culture where a love affair between a young man and an older woman doesnt shock anybody. In fact, it is the best way for a young man to learn about sex and life. It is also understood that such an affair is not intended to last forever.
The older woman is more mature, more sensitive and more realistic than a teen-age girl. Sqch an experience can be enriching without leading to one of those silly marriages between two inexperienced, immature teen-agers.
(Of course, there are exceptions.)
My advice to Heartsick Mother would be: Try not to identify with the woman your son is having the affair with, and examine your rather natural but ambiguous jealousy. Of course, that means facing real feelings instead of responding only to puritanical ethics imposed upon society and cultural environment. ' y
I am 43 and do not especially wish to have an affair with an 18-year-old boy. But this is a matter of taste and circumstances.
MADAME M. IN BERKELEY
Birth
Baldree Born to Mr, and Mrs. Larry Lee Baldree Jr., Kinston, a daughter, Samantha Lee, on May 4, 1983, in Lenoir Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Raldree is the former Tina Marie Suit of Kinston.
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Prices Good At All Family Dollar Stores' Through This Weekend While Quantities Last. Quantities Limited On Some Merchandise. No Sales To Dealers.
Harris Shopping Center Memorial Drive
Open Mon.-Sat. 9-9 Closed Sundays
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor
PARTVTIMEFARE Chicken Nuggets & Cheeses
Choice of Beverages
CHICKEN NLGGETS Linda Anderson of DeKalb. Ill. has sent us another convenient recipe 2 chicken breasts, each about 1 pound '4 pound stick butter, melted 2 tablespoons vodka cup dried homemade bread crumbs '4 cup grated Parmesan cheese I teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon crushed dried basil
1 teaspoon paprika '4'teaspoon ground thyme Chutney Dip, homemade or prepared
Skin and bone chicken: cut into I'rinch squares In a small bowl stir together butter and vodka In a shallow bowl, stir together crumbs. Parmesan, salt, basil, paprika and thyme Dip chicken into butter mixture, then into crumb mixture, covering well Arrange on a foil-lined cookie sheet Bake in a preheated 400-degree oven, turning once midway, until golden - 12 to 15 tninutes. Serve hot with Chutney Dip .Makes about 50.
Members
Initiated
The Alpha Nu Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa held its meeting last week at the Ramada Inn. An initiation ceremony for new members was conducted
The candlelight ceremony was presented by Shirley Moore, president, Barbara Parker, Mary Irma Moore and Evelyn Finch. Initiated were Vdnlora Teel. Janice Hardee, Emmy "Whitehead and Janet Knox.
Juanite Elks, chairman of the altruistic committee, read a letter of thanks from the groups adopted child. The women will also provide financial assistance to a fellow teacher.
Mrs. Moore reported on the state convention held in Greensboro. She presented a certificate of achievement for the first place award, for the archives, in the state to the historian. Mary Irma Moore,
Special guests for the meeting were Rebecca Godley of Farmville Central High School and Janet Little from D.H. Conley High School, applicants for the sorority scholarship.
Club Has Installation
The Greenville Business and Professional Womens Club recently installed their elected officers for 1983.
Officers are: president. Pam DaviS; first vice president. Anne Jackson; second vice president, Patrice Alexander; treasurer, Elizabeth Deal; recording secretary, Carol Hignite; and corresponding secretary, Pam Parrott.
Outgoing officers are Louise Congleton, Doris Marlowe, Pam Davis, Louise Whichard, Clara Carr and Mary Lib Thompson.
Special guests were Ms. Davis parents from Winston-Salem.
The next meeting will be June 9 at the Ramada Inn starting at 6:45 p.m. Details for the N.C. State Convention will be finalized for June 9-12 and it will be held at the Holiday Inn-Four Seasons in Greensboro.
For information, or reservations call 758-7728 or 752-2917.
CORRECTION
In today's paper The Sears Garden and Hardware Sales Section has inconect art illustration on page 11 lor the No. 23636 Kenmore Portable Gas Grill advertised at 1199,98. This Griil does not have a redwood bottom shelf. This Grill has a side wire rack. On page 2 the No 25374 18 H P Garden Tractor advertised at S1599 99 will not be available lor sale.
We regret these errors and hope they cause no inconvenience
Sears Muck & Co.
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EditorialsSystem Is A Mockery
Weve heard much in the last few years about the capacity of capital punishment to deter crime. We tend to agree with that theory, but the whole question becomes a mockery when you consider a parole system such as ours.
It is easily understood that prisons are overcrowded, that money to build new confinement quarters is difficult to find and that something must be done. The solution, for the most part, appears to have become parole consideration from day one of a sentence.
When a state District Court judge was convicted of accepting a bribe in Columbus County a few weeks ago, the prosecutor said he was technically eligible for parole immediately. That was in a case sufficiently serious enough to have the judge barred from ever again sitting on a judicial bench.
Now comes case involving a convict sentenced in Robeson County in 1972 for as heinous a crime as one can imagine. Ten years later, hes eligible for parole.
Lets look at that one. The convict pleaded guilty to second degree murder in a plea bargain. His crime: he had killed an 18-year-old youth, then cut off his hand because it was deformed, and then burned the body beyond recognition so that it could be substituted for a confederates body. The purpose was to collect life insurance on the confederate.
The decision to accept a plea bargain in such a case should be questionable; the law that makes him eligible for parole consideration at this point is illogical.
Such laws that make these types of parole possible certainly do not constitute a deterrent to crime. They may relieve the prisons of overcrowding but, if thats the reason for them, why go to the expense of prosecuting the criminal in the first place?
Relatively speaking, the punishment constitutes little more than a slap on the wrist.Vice Chancellors Needed
Two vice chancellors were formally approved for East Carolina University at the UNC Board of Governors meeting last week.
Dr. Angelo A. Volpe was approved for the position of vice chancellor for academic affairs and James L. Lanier was formally named vice chancellor for institutional advancement.
' Volpe has been filling the position on an acting basis since Dr. Robert H. Maier moved to the medical school. Lanier, an ECU alumnus, has held positions at Louisburg College.
The formal appointment of Dr. Volpe, who has been a member of the ECU faculty since 1977 and recently dean of the college of arts and sciences, should strengthen the important position of vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Likewise the appointment of Lanier as vice chancellor for institutional advancement is important to East Carolina University's development.
Paul 7. O'Connor
Motel Colleges Sell Their Degrees
Robert BurnsSteady Ahead
NEW YORK (AP) - When you hear talk of inflation these days it usually is cheery. After all, consumer prices in the first three months of this year rose at an annual rate of less than 1 percent the smallest increase in nearly two decades.
Economists expect inflation to remain low at least through the end of the year. But in one important category - food prices - the outlook is less optimistic.
Here are some questions and answers to help explain why food prices are expected to surge late this year and in 1984 while other prices increase more slowly:
Q. Why is inflation so low?
A. One of the biggest reasons for the slowdown in inflation is the recession, which started in July 1981 and is believed to have ended in December 1982. The slump in economic activity, and thus in peoples incomes, meant manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers had to cut or hold down prices in order to keep up sales. Similarly, the dropoff in industrial activity helped reduce the nations use of energy, thus creating an oversupply that
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forced oil producers to cut prices.
Q. How can inflation be going down if food prices are going up ?
A. Inflation, in the usual sense of the word, means an overall increase in prices from some base period. It does not mean the prices of all goods are rising. In the most common measure of changes in retail prices - the governments Consumer Price Index food accounts for nearly 20 percent of the total. In March the index was up only O.l percent from the month before, even though fruit and vegetable prices rose 4.4 percent and egg prices rose 7.7 percent. The higher food prices were more than offset by lower prices for other goods.
Q. Why are food prices going in the opposite direction?
A. One reason is weather. A wet spring, floods and a lingering winter in some parts of the country have wiped out early plantings and delayed crops, especially fruits and vegetables. Economists also point to the anticipated effect of the governments Payment-In-Kind program, which is designed to boost farm imcomes.
Q. What does the farm program have to do with inflation?
A. Merrill Lynch economist Jack Lavery predicts the side effects of the program will add a half percentage point to overall food inflation this year and next. Lavery says food price inflation will jump from 2.8 percent this year to 5.3 percent in 1984.
The governments farm program this year could idle as much as one-third of U.S. cropland. The plan is the largest land-retirement program in American history. Under terms of the plan, farmers who agree to leave land idle will be paid in the commodities they are not planting. Those commodities will come from government stockpiles or from reserves farmers have pledged as collateral for crop loans.
Q. Does this mean we are going back to the kind of inflation we saw in the 1970s?
A. Few people think so. Overall inflation, at the current annual rate of less than 1 percent, compares with 13.3 percent in 1979 and 9.0 percent in 1978. As for food prices, the Agriculture Department is forecasting an increase of between 2 percent and 4 percent for this year - the smallest increase in 15 years.
Although food price inflation is expected to accelerate next year, few economists foresee a return to the doublertligit increase of the 1970s, when prices were influenced by increases in labor, transportation, packaging and energy costs.
RALEIGH - Could you benefit from an advanced degree? Do you have a couple weekends to spend earning one.
A number of universities are operating weekend graduate schools in North Carolina where graduate degrees can be earned in far less time than would normally be required. You pay your money, attend a few classes and, all of a sudden, youve got an M. A. or Ph. D.
State education officials and the attorney generals office think were all getting ripped off by these diploma mills and theyve asked the General .\ssembly to close these schools down. Legislation is now in the pipeline which would require these schools to either bring their curricula up to snuff or get out of the state.
Hers how it works. Such and such university from out of state comes into your town and rents a motel room or other facility for a couple weekends. They advertise that local classes can
lead to an advanced degree. The fee is generally in the range of $2,500 for a Ph.D., say officials in the attorney generals office. After you finish the required course work, the university confers the degree upon you back in their home state even though you did all your work in North Carolina.
Several of these schools are operating right now, Betsy Running of the attorney generals consumer affairs office told the House Higher Education Committee recently. Some are better than others. Some have very qualified instructors. Others have Bozo the Clown teaching advanced physics. But, all lack any permanent facilities. No labs, no libraries. And all offer the degree with far less work than would ever be expected of someone in a licensed college. (A masters degree generally takes one or two years beyond college; a Ph.D. two or more beyond the masters.)
These are not the schools involved in
the Dipscam scandal that FBI agents broke earlir this month. These schools dont actually sell you a degree. They do require some work out of you.
How does anyone get hurt? First of all, therere the people who actually go out and ^nd four years earning a Ph.D. Their work is cheapened by the increased availability, on the job market, of people professing to have the same degree, even though they did far less work.
Second, the student himself gets ripped off. Hes getting a degree but not the education he might have thought would come with it. (Although its hard to imapne anyone being duped this way.)
Third, the taxpayers and the public get taken. Many government jobs automatically pay more for advanced degrees. In the North Carolina public schools, for example, a masters degree brings a 5 percent pay riase, a Ph.D. another 5 percent, said Tom Davis, spokesman for the Department of Public
Instruction. -J4ep. DR. Mauney, D-Gaston, says he knows of five teachers with quickie degrees who get this extra money. Private employers can get duped when they hire someone with an advanced degree, pay him more, but dont get the benefit of his having done advanced work.
The legislation would require that every college operating in North Carolina get a license through the UNC Board of Governors. (Currently, only those schools granting degrees within the state need licenses.) Those colleges which have been operating in the state since 1972 - which include all of the states provate colleges - would not be covered.
The board of governors would be responsible for checking the programs offered by these schools to make sure theyre the real thing. If they are, theyll get the license. But, they wont be handing out any doctorate degrees for a few weekends of work anymore.
Art Buchwald-
PIK And The Agricultural Circle
Hello, Farmer Jones, hows business?
"Just fine. son. Got a good crop of grain this year.
I dont see any grain on your farm. Its right here on this piece of paper. The government is giving me this grain, if I promise not to raise any.
Why would the government do that? They got too much grain. So in order to use up what they got stored away, theyre giving us this payment in kind. Its called PIK. We get 95 percent of what we ordinarily raise, free, from Uncle Sams warehouses.
What are you going to do with the grain that you get from the government? Sell it as fast as I can. Uts of farmers out there are walking around with PIK paper so I got to unload mine before the price drops.
What do you do all day, now that youre not farming?
Ride around and make sure no one is planting anything on my land. Got to keep it clear if I want my PIK paper. Then I go down to the coffee shop and sit around with the other boys talking about what great crops we didnt raise this year. You deserve a rest. Farmer Jones. I hope the government doesnt get rid of its grain for awhile..
Thats their problem.
Hello, Dealer Smith. Hows the feed and fertilizer business?
Just awful. Ever since the government started giving away free grain, nobody wants to buy any seed or fertilizer from me. Im about to go bankrupt.
Sorry to hear it Cant you get some of that PIK money going around?
Thats only for farmers who dont raise any crops. We should get some too, because if it wasnt for us there wouldnt
be any surplus grain in the government bins.
How would the government do that? Pay us for the grain and fertilizer the farmers dont use to plant anything. That could get expensive.
Well, if they dont do something soon there wont be seed or fertilizer stores left when the farmers have to go back to
Elisha Douglas
Strength For Today
Some people think that, because of an apparently increasing interest in religion as evidenced by mounting church attendance today, we are on the verge of a religious revival.
But interest in religion and religious revival are quite different things. A religious revival is characterised, first and foremost, by a willingness, if not to say eagerness, to repent; and this does not necessarily accompany the interest in religion we see today.
To repent means to change
ones mind. It means more than being sorry for ones sins; it means forsaking these sins and thereafter taking an attitude of hatred and aversion toward themi. Today most people give very little attention to repentance. They think they can be religious without going through the experience of repentance.
But to try to do so is futile. Jesus began his teaching by saying, Repent ye, for the Kingdom of God is at hand. The Christian life begins here and nowhere else.
planting again. There wont be any tractor dealers either.
, What do you do all day long without customers
Hang around the coffee shop, hoping some dumb farmer doesnt want a handout from the government.
Hello, Banker Reedy. Whats going on with you?
I got good news and bad news. The good news is that all the farmers in these here parts are paying back their loans. Whats the bad news?
The farmers dont want to borrow any money from me this year. They say they dont need it because theyre not strapped for cash to tide them over until they harvest a crop. How can a bank stay in business if nobody wants to borrow any money from it?
What about loaning money to the seed and fertilizer merchants, and the tractor dealers? They seem to be hard up.
I cant loan money to them. Theyre all going belly up because the government dont want the farmers to plant anything.
Hello, Secretary of Agriculture Block. When do you think the American farmers will go back to work
Beats me. It all depends on how much grain the Russian farmers dont plant this year.
(c) 1983 Los Angeles Times Syndicate
Joseph B. Frazier
4*
Salvadoran Rebels Are The Law
LA PALMA, El Salvador (AP) Government soldiers patrol the streets and highways of El Salvador, but in some areas they have abandoned, like this town in northern Chalatenango province, leftist guerrillas are in control.
They stroll about in broad daylight, establishing their own laws and restrictions for the 5,000 inhabitants.
Comandante William, the local guerrilla leader, told a visiting reporter the rebels have arrested and punished people they consider guilty of a variety of crimes.
We have our own jails, said William, bearded and bespectacled and about 30 years old. He said he drove a bus in the capital until he joined the insurrection seven years ago.
Most of the townspeople do not seem either to support or oppose the rebels. They just try to get along and refuse to disclose their sympathies, at least openly.
Many know the army could drive the guerrillas out anytime, and that could mean death for anyone who openly supported the rebels.
Its not clear how this thing is going, Mayor Guadalupe Sola said. We are between the sword and the wall.
People who openly support one side or the other in the 3f^-year-old civil war could, he said, go to bed and not wake up.
Sola said that when the guerrillas walked in four months ago, they ordered him to give them the key to the town hall, searched the offices but took nothing, and returned the key the next day.
Some said I was a guerrilla for giving them the key, Sola shrugged. What would they have done if I hadnt? I just trust in God, and, besides, where can I go where death wont get me?
Residents say that every few days, groups of guerrillas come in from the countryside to shop and pay for what they take.
The rebels allow beer to be sold, but they have banned the sale of hard liquor. They also regularly patrol the streets at night to guard against burglaries and other crime.
La Palma is a rural community, surrounded by pine-covered hills, on the main north-south highway to the Honduran border - a bare six miles away -and 51 miles from the capital.
Its only industry is 25 smaU factories, employing 700 workers who make small, brightly colored paintings of local scenery and wildlife on wooden ornaments and even these are exported.
Life is routine, except frequent cases when a pwer line is damaged by fighting In the aria and the electricity goes off, sometimes for as long as three weeks.
That is the thing that bothers us, when the power stops, we stop producing, said Orland Lopez, head of the Seed of God, a cooperative and the towns largest ornament factory.
A clerk who identified himself only as Frankie said the guerrillas hold dances and other community events where they give propaganda speeches and draw large crowds.
The guerrillas say they feel secure in the area.
The insects dont want to come up here because they know weU fight, a 17-year-old guerrilla said, referring to government soldiers. He said his name is Pedro and that he joined the insurrection four years ago.
Of course thats just my war name, he said. Pausing, he shrugged and said, Its ray real name too.
Pedro also referred to the military aid being provided by the Reagan administration to the Salvadoran army, saying: They gave them everything but guts.
At an abandoned farmhouse off the highway, a rebel who identified himself as Orlando, and some fellow rebels claimed numerous people quietly help the guerrillas. But he said the guerrillas make a point of not asking for any aid.
They offer a lot... bread, that radio, sometimes money. Even 100 colones, he
said. One hundred colones is equivalent to $40, a lot of money in El Salvador.
As he spoke, a taxi stopped at the farmhouse, a bearded passenger handed Orlando several packs of cigarettes, and the vehicle sped away.
The rebels said they had 800 men and women deployed in the area, and 6,000 nationwide.
So far, they have not interfered with traffic on the highway, but they warned they will block it and blow up bridges If government troops enter the area.
William said that recently, a bunch of unarmed Salvadoran soldiers and at least one American military adviser in civilian clothes passed by on their way to the Honduran border customs post.
We let them pass. We dont want them. We want their guns. Its the guns that kill innocent people, he said.
Referring to so far unsuccessful proposals to get the Salvadoran government and the guerrillas to negotiate, William said, If the government wants to talk, well talk, But we arent laying down our arms first. These arms cost us a lot of blood.
He claimed the leftists are not interested in sharing power. We want all the power or none, he said If we share power with the government, we will be under the domination of the United States, and wedontwantthat. ,
Rebellion In Ranks Over Stern Scandal
HAMBURG, West Germany (APr- Stern magazines top executives met through the night with rebellious employees demanding that the publisher and business manager resign because of the Hitler diary scandal.
Representatives from both groups said the meeting broke up shortly before daybreak today with no progress and that talks would resume later in the day.
"The publication of next week's Stern is in danger, said Rainer Fabian, a spokesman for the employees editorial advisory council.
The dispute will not affect delivery of this weeks Stern, which was on its way to distributors Wednesday. Stern is West Germanys largest newsweekly, with a circulation of 1.6 million during the first quarter of this year.
The employees have occupied the editorial offices of the magazine, though not yet hindered production, and are demanding that publisher Henri Nannen resign.
The employees contend that the decision to purchase and publish the diaries, which turned out to be fake, has devastated morale at the ' magazine and that Nannen must share responsibility.
They also are demanding the resignation Business Manager Gerd Schulte-Hillen, who represents the publishing company Gruner & Jahr, which owns Stem.
The employees also demanded that newly appointed! chief editors Johannes Gross and Peter Scholl-Latour be barred from taking up their duties. Gross was to start work today.
The employees say the two editors hold conservative views that could affect the magazines liberal reputation. I
The vacancies were ' created May 7 when top editors Peter Koch and Felix Schmidt resigned for their part in the affair.
On Tuesday, in a separate but stormy session preceding the meeting with Stem executives, the employees decided to continue occupying the magazine.
There" are about 200 editorial employees at Stern.
The Stem issue that appears Thursday describes how reporter Gerd Heidemann took delivery of one package of the phony papers.
Stern said the first payment for'the diaries, 200,000 marks, ($83,000) was made on Jan. 27, 1981, and the last three weeks ago, on April 29, one day after the magazine began what was to be a 72-week series on the journalistic scoop of postwar history.
On May 6, the West German government declared the diaries were fakes. Stem fired Heidemann and asked the government to determine whether he should be indicted for fraud.
Stems report did not say who forged the diaries. But Nannen said in an editorial they were duped by professionals.
Nannen was named Tuesday in two criminal com-plaints charging he purposefully misled readers by printing the excerpts from the fake diaries that Stem published before the government denounced them.
One of the complaints also accused the 69-year-old publisher of violating the law against disseminating Nazi propaganda.
ILLEGALEXPORT NEW DELHI, India (AP) - More than 100,000 snake-skins worth about $300,000, were discovered being illegally exported in the guise of towels and bedsheets, the United News of India reported Tuesday from the port of Madras
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The Daily Refiector. Greenville. Wednesday. May 18.1983-
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Alternative Aid Plan Is For Dentists
By ELISSA McCRARY Associated Press Writer CHAPEL HILL, N.C, (AP) - When Dr. Charles T. Barker of New Bern lost his eyesight last year, he had to decide whether to temporarily close his dental practice and lose his patients and income or try to sell his business.
The unique alternative that Barker chose was to temporarily turn his practice over to Dental Support Associates Inc., a Chapel Hill-based dental support group, A dentist from the group kept Barkers practice going until he decided to retire.
it literally saved my practice, Barker said.
Dr, Jim Hodges, president of the organization, came up with the idea for a dental-support group five years ago while traveling in Australia. Doctors in that country had set up a health-oriented support service called the locum tenens concept that allowed doctors to step in and take over a collea^es practice in case of vacations, illness or death.
Hodges began putting together his dental support group last February.
It is the only one of its kind in the country.
It makes such logical sense that its hard to understand why no one else has come up with the idea before. said Norman Block,^ a Chapel Hill real estate^ agent and vice president of Dental Support Associates. It make such sense that if a dentist is ill or wants to go on vacation, that a qualified dentist take over his practice temporarily.
The organization has two full-time dentists and five part-time dentists on staff, with plans to hire more dentists as demand increases.
The company introduced itself to the state's dental community by sending out questionnaires to North Carolinas 1.700 licensed dentists. More than 100 of the dentists have registered their practices with the group for temporary help during vacations this year.
The response from dentists was very positive, said Dr. Forest irons, executive vice president of the company and a former professor in the University of North Carolina School of Dentistry. Some of the dentists say they havent attended seminars or gone on vacation for years because they didnt want to close down their practices for two or three weeks.
Heres how the dental-support program works: W'hen a dentist wants to schedule a vacation, he calls Dental Support Associates to arrange for a dentist to take over his practice. He sends along as much information on his practice as possible In the case of death or illness, a dentist from the group can step into a practice immedi ateiy.
''The only problem we're working with riglii now i.s that we have a limited number of denti!d.v <o scheduling is tight,' Hlmk said.
The company, which car ries its own malpractice insurance, charges a minimum of $1,500 a day for its services.
The firm also has branched out into brokerage services for dentists. If a dentist or his family decides to sell a practice because of disability or death. Dental Support Associates will appraise the practice for the value of its equipment and patient load.
While marketing the practice nationally, the group will keep the business open to minimize patient loss.
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Shop Monday Through Saturday 10A.M. Until9 P.M.
Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
' ?' T': i
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Strategy On Tobacco Set At Meeting
By The Associated Press Flue-cured tobacco leaders emerged from a day-long meeting Tuesday with an agreement to support a two-year freeze oijL government price supporo and and end to the lease-transfer system.
The closed meeting was attended by about 50 people representing all tobacco-producing states, including Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and Rep Charles Rose, D-N.C.. the two key tobacco leaders in Congress.
"1 think we passed the Rubicon pretty well as of today." Helms said in an interview after the meeting.
"I think we are very close now to the legislative stage," said Rose.
Tobacco leaders in Congress are expected to begin drafting legislation imm^i-ately. The leaders hope to get a bill passed in Congress before the season begins in July.
The discussions revolved around proposals by the House Agriculture subcommittee on tobacco and peanuts, headed by Rose, that would revise the program to meet some of the main objections of tobacco critics.
Government contributions to tobacco price supports have ranged up to $600 million annually in past years, but the program was rev'amped last year to limit federal spending essentially to administrative costs.
Critics have claimed escalating support prices have damaged American leaf in competing with foreign tobacco. They have also attacked high lease rates for tobacco allotments and ownership of the right to grow tobacco by non-farming interests.
Tobacco growers pay into a fund used to maintain tobacco prices at minimum levels.
The package proposed by Rose calls for an immediate two-year freeze on price support levels and phasing out the leaf-transfer system.
This is our best shot at what we think the industry, the companies, the farmers and the farm organizations are saying to us, Rose said at a recent news conference.
The changes introduced by Rose would:
- Freeze price supports this year and in 1984 at the 1982 level of $169.90 per hundred pounds. Price supports would also be frozen in 1985 if the price support formula does not increase an average of 5 percent a year
in 1982-84.
- Eliminate the federal 7-cents-per-pound no-net-cost assessment on tobacco allotment owners in 1984.
- Require allotment owners to begin sharing in the risk of growing tobacco beginning in 1984. Allotment holders would have to sign agreements with farmers to base their lease rates on the percentage of profit the farmer makes when he sells his crop in the fall.
- Abolish all lease and transfer of allotments away from the owners farm, starting in 1986.
The package has already received support from N.C. Agriculture Commissioner Jim Graham and by James Oliver, master of the N.C. Grange.
Heims said he had some reservations about some aspects of the program, mentioning that he supported a one-year freeze instead of a two-year freeze.
We had a choice between a consensus, which probably nobody likes in its entirety, and the threat of losing the program," Helms said. I think out of this will come something I think we can get through the Senate and the House."
Rose said he must have the support of Helms and Sen. John East, R-N.C., before introducing the measure in the House. He said he must also win support of congressmen from the burley-growing states of Kentucky and Tennessee, adding that he would ask the bill be applied only to flue-cured tobacco if he cannot win the support of burley-state lawmakers.
Helms later said he recently met with Sen. Walter Huddleston, D-Ky., a leading burley-state senator, and received indications that burley interests would not objecUo the bill.
Reg. Prices
Famous maker long sleeve and jacket styles. Limited quantities. Sizes 6 to 241/2.
8-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C -Wednesday, May 18,1983
Basic Phone Costs In Homes Will Rise
FIREMEN BATTLE BLAZE - Pitt County firemen battle a blaze at the home of Roger and Ann Harris of Route 3, Greenville, Tuesday night. According to Harris, he and his wife were in the front portion of the wood-frame house when his wife smelled smoke. Harris said he went into the kitchen at the rear of the house and saw a portion of the
ceilmg on fire Harris said he, his wife and their three small children left the house uninjured. Firemen from Simpson, Black Jack and Eastern Pines responded to the call. Firemen on the scene said the house was heavily damaged during the blaze. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)
The cost of basic telephone service to homes will increase and the cost of long distance service is expected to decrease because of the deregulation of the telephone industry, a Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Co. spokesman told elected officials and news media representatives from Pitt and Greene counties Tuesday night.
George Pate of Tarboro said that, since the Communications Act of 1934 established the telephone industry as a regulated monoply, telephone companies have attempted to provide universal service at affordable rates.
He said that, in order to, make residential service available to the largest number of people, rates were set at below cost. Rates for long distance service and rental charges for telephone equipment were set at
TOURISM PAID LONDON (AP) - Tourism in Britain earned the country more than $6.2 billion in foreign currency last year. Tourist Authority Chairman Sir Henry Marking says.
artificially hi^ levels in order to subsidize the low charges made for basic service.
Under deregulation, according to Pate, telephone companies will no longer rent equipment to customers and in CT&Ts case, will no longer sell equipment. He said, too, that after Jan. 1, 1985, telephone companies will no longer wire houses or businesses for telephone service.
Under deregulation, Pate explained, telephone companies will operate similar to electric utility companies in that they will provide service to the outside of a home or business. Everythng inside the building w be the responsibility of the customer.
In such a situation, Pate said, rates for basic service will increase, while long distance rates will decrease, to reflect the actual cost of service.
Pate said he expects rates for basic service to double
rates will drop by about 25 percent.
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P*" n Hearing On Hazing
(Continued from Page 1) W W
Appeal Scheduled
(Continued from Page
tion as addressing major problems, not dealing with every tiny one He gave two examples of changes made this year that he feels have improved the quality of care at the hospital. One. he said, is that patients are now being clustered according to ailment or type of surgery, the result being that the same nurses and the same doctors tend to work together for extended times, giving a community hospital atmosphere in a large medical complex. The other example, he salTT is that nurses on night shifts are now drawing blood from patients themselves, rather than waiting long times for lab technicians to do this. Appropriateness of care, he said,, is being addressed, along with quality and quan-tity-ofcare.
Chief Finance Officer Warren .McRoy said the budget for the next fiscal year is to be a hold-the-line one figuring in no inflation and no new activity, except what is already slated. He said revenues are expected to go up 9.7 percent and expenses 13.9 percent. So far this year, he said, the hospital is 3.2 percent under budget on revenue and 8.2 percent under budget on expenses.
Correction
Winners in the -Creative Writing Contest printed in .Monday's edition listed two named incorrectly. They were Michael Shane Hancock and Deborah Ann Evans, both first place winners from Falkland Elementary School.
An appeal of a District Court ruling that North Carolina's hazing law is unconstitutional is scheduled to be heard in Pitt County-Superior Court next week.
Fifteen East Carolina University students were charged with hazing after Tony .Michael Jones, a 2-year-old freshman pledge of bmega Fsi Phi fraternity, told investigators he suffered head, neck and back injuries during induction into the fraternity.
It is illegal to scold, abuse, harass or play harmful tricks
Will Investigate Divers' Report
NORFOLK. Va. i.AP) -The U.S. Bureau of .Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms said Tuesday it will investigate a report from divers who said they were chased from the site of the .Marine Electric sinking by a boat full of men carrying automatic rifles.
But William Clowser. agent in charge of the ATFs , Wilmington, Del. office, said he doubted his agency could do anything about Saturday's incident :50 miles east of Chincoteague, Va
'It's not a violation under our jurisdiction at :5() miles out." he said. "If there's a violation there we will investigate anything within the three-mile limit " of U.S. waters.
on a student under the hazing statute.
District Court Judge E.
Burt Aycock last week held that the hazing law was unconstitutional and ordered charges against Gregory T. Benson. Donald G, Gatling and Clinton Andre Crawley dismissed.
The ruling was appealed by the district attorneys office and the appeal is scheduled to be heard in Superior Court on Monday.
In declaring the hazing law-unconstitutional. Aycock agreed with defense attorneys that the statute violated the Fifth and 14th amendments to the U.S. Constitution in that the amendments prohibit depri-|J vation of liberty without due^ process.
The attorneys also argued that the law violated ri^ts of free speech in that it was vague in attempting to regulate speach-related activities.
One of the students was convicted of assaulting Jones but acquitted of hazing.
Trial of the others charged in connection with the incident was continued until Mav 25.
The fraternity was suspended by the university-pending an investigation into the, hazing and assault charges and the outcome of the court cases.
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Ladies' Oxford Cloth Shirts
Ladies' Cool Knit Shirts
8.97
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Short sleeye oxford shirts, available in white, pink, blue, yellow and lilac solids. Sizes 10 to 18. Great buy!
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Men's Screen Print T-Shirts
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Ladies' Jersey Knit Tank Tops
2.88
^ Reg. 3.97
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Variety of Ladies' Tops
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Crew neck, V-neck, scoop neck and tank knit tops.* Sizes S, M, L.
Ladies' Sheer Pantyhose
88
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Ladies' Reigning Beauty Briefs
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3.2.44
Comfortable, soft and absorbent slim-cut briefs for ladies. Easy-care wash 'n wear acetate. Your choice of white, blue, pink and yellow colors. Sizes 5 to 8.
Men's Famous Maker Knit Shirts
If Perfect 18.00....
12.88
Men's short sleete knit shirts by Saddlebred and Player's Club. Collar and placjet model. Terrific solids! 100% cotton, polyester/cottori Slightly irregular. Sizes S, M, L, XL.
Men's Famous Maker Dress Shirt
If Perfect Values U|fto $1910.97
Men's short sleeve dress shirt. Complete with regular and button-down collars. Choose from basic solid colors and stripes. Slightly irregular. Sizes 14 to 17 neck.
Mens FruitOf The Loom Underwear- 4.27
Every Day Low Pric...........
Briefs & T-Shirts In 190% Cotton.get storeShop Monday through Saturday 10a.m. Until 9p.m. Phone 7^-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
Carolina east mall ^^greenville
Attention All Men! Dress for Success in Famous Maker Shirts
Andhurst Dress Shirt, Regular $14.............9.88
Arrow^" Shirts, Regular $16 to $18____ 10.88
Gant- Dress Shirt ........25.00
Polyester/cotton short sleeve Andhurst shirts in solids and stripes. Sizes 14/j to 17. Arrow polyester/cotton .shirts in solids and stripes. Sizes 14to 17,
, . , Sizes 14'/2 to 17/z.
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Andhurst Casual Slacks, Reg. $23____ 12.88
Andhurst* Casual Slacks ......23.00
LEVI'S Casual Slacks ........26.00
Haggar Casual Slacks Reg.$28-$30.00 .. .. 19.88
Saddlebred Casual Slacks ......30.00
Izod Lacoste Casual Slacks... 35.00 to 39.00
Handsome polyester/cotton straight leg slacks in a variety of terrific solid colors. Belted or non-belted, belt loops. Machine wash. Sizes 30 to 42 waist.
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Haggar* Dress Slacks, Regular $28..... 19.88
Jaymar* Dress Slacks, Regular $38 .. 20%off
LEVI'S Dress Slacks..............26.00 tO 32.00
Jaymar' Dress Slacks ____36.00 to 72.00
All famous maker slacks! Polyester, polyester/wool. Your choice of handsome solid colors. Sizes 29 to 44 waist.
Stock Up on Casual Knit Shirts for This Spring and Summer!
Famous Name Brand, Reg. $14 and $15 . 9.88
Arrow Solid or Stripe ^..... 17.00
Saddlebred Stripe Shirts ____19.00
Munsingwear Solid or Stripe 20.00
Player's Club Solid Or Stripe 23.00
Izod Lacoste Solid Shirts 27.00
Top it off right! Solid and stripe knit shirts in a rainbow of colors. Cool hort sleeve shirts of 100% cotton or polyester/cotton. Some with chest pocket. Sizes S, M, L, XL.
SaddlebrtdShop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m.'Until 9p.m.Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
Deeds
Edgar Dalton Murphrey Jr. TO Edgar Dalton Murphrey JralN'S.
Maurice E. Sherman Jr. ai TO Lamar T Blankenship al 71.00
Ben Louis Stocks al TO Anna Dorothy Dollberg 10.00 Edith Simons Weathington al TO Rayford D. Kennedy al NS
Edith Simons Weathington al TO Johnny James Weathington al NS Johnny James Weathington al TO Kate W Kennedy alNS Blount & Ball Realty Co. lnc.,^0 Stanley Peaden Builders Inc. 23.00 Paul S. Braxton al TO City ofGrvl.NS A C. Monk & Co. Inc. TO John M. Hines al 16.00 Charles C. Murray al TO Kenneth L. Stallings al 60.00 Neil Realty Co. TO Jerry Wesley McRoay al 57.50 State of NC TO Gladys Beaman Brown NS
Martha Perkins TO A.J. Speight al 53.50 Marie Moore Pittman al TO Mitchell L. Keel al 13.00 Randolph Enterprises of Pitt Co. Inc. TO Charles C. Murray al 85.00 C.L Westbrook al TO Stanley Reid Gaskins Sr. al 26.00
Curtis 0. Whitehurst al TO Calvin E. Briley al .50 Lomer H. Whitehurst al TO Arthur J.Dellanoal 12.00 Daniel J. Wisehart al TO Mark Dellasegaal 99.00 James Earl Akers Jr. al TO Donald Martin Morese al 35.00
Gary W. Brown al TO Merrill Lynch Relocation Mgmt Inc. NS Robbin Brinkley Bryan TO. Ronald Ray Bryan NS Wayne L. Byrd al TO Mark C. Wooles al 58.00 Webster B. Carter Jr. al TO John Joseph Schultz al 97.00 Eugenia P. Conley al TO Gerald Tripp Jr. 10,00
Recital Set By Dance School
The Marie Wallace School of Dance will present its annual dance recital, "Lights - Camera - Action. in the D.H. Conley High School Audotorium Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 4 p.m.
The following Greenville dance students will perform: Group 1 - Audrey Roberts, Wendy Durham. Carly Hall, Courtney Hill, Mary Charles Branch, Josina Lawrence, Paige Gillikin., Jenny Burrows, Amy Johnson and Sara Law.
Group 2 - Keli Decker, Jennifer Cox, Janette Park, Stacey- Murphrey, Natalie Thompson, Katie Williams, Kelly Tetterton, Amy Hill, Janet Buck, Tanya Buck. Sue Anne Bundy. Crystal Gorham and Kimberly STallings. .
Group 3 - Anna Shappley, Salley Seigler, Bonnie Seigler, Jenny Moore, Lee Goldfarb, Marty Parker, Emily Waters, Melissa Haddock, Amy Lewis and Melinda Buck.
Group 4 - Sarah Drake, Jayme Bell, Cindy Elks, Lyn Lincoln, Sarah King, Dawn Brinkley, Christis Mills, Wndy Dixon, Amanda Vincent and Holly Webb.
Group 5^ - Meg Evans, Ainsely Avery, Ina Herrin, Amy De Cuzzi, Josie Saad, Jennifer Olrogge. Kimberly Parker, Allison Rogers, Marsha Drake, Michelle Drake, Tricia Peaden and Jason Drake.
Group 6 Shannon Howard, Cate Shappley, Rene Adams, Janet Banks, Ann Carpi Stocks, Trudy Oakley, Amy Hardee, Ingrid Ross, Deborah Law, Paula Lynch, , Katie Norman, Samantha Adams; Debbis Kay Craft and Jamie Durham.
Group 7 - Anne Bramley, Emily Fleming, ELizabeth Christopher, Christie Everett, Amy Shive, Kim Joyner, Shaye Fidler, Emmy eChesson Taft.
Group 8 - Julie Simmons, Stacy Parker, Amy Paramore, Elizabeth Allen, Lindsey Mathis, Mary Kathryn Clark, Bridget Stocks, Betsy Bullock, Melissa Haley. Christy Lewis and Heather Adams.
Group 9 - Susan Bamley, Gloria Taft, Holly Durham, Diane Dorney, Peyton Dildy, Elise Fleming, Susan Law, Carrie Emory, Lisa Young, Julia Ann Piephoff, Valerie Vincent, Tanya Biagini, Leslie Gray and Susan Jackson.
Group 10 - Kathryn Taft. Kelly Eakes. Nell Shappley,
Laura Young, Julie Smith, Melanie Haddock, Christa Smith, Julie Garrison, Dawm Hines, Jennifer Gilmore and Kristin Duff.
Group 11 - Diane Dorney, Meg Evans, Ina Herrin, Elise Fleming, Hathryn Taft, Susan Bramley, Melanie Haddock, Nell Shappley, Teresa Lambe, Amy De Cuzzi, Julie Smith, Susan Harris and Christa Smith.
Group 12 - Sherry Daughtridge, Jamie Durham, Melanie Hardee, Paula Lynch and Amy West.
Group 13 - Julie Jones, Stephanie Moore, Elizabeth Smith, Andrea Stround, Susanne Swearinger and Juliana Whitehurst.
Group 14 - Kathy Allen, Kimberly Allen, Susan Carawan. Amy Dail, Farrah Dixon, Heather Goodall and Shelly Todd.
Group 15 - Chad ONeal, Gil Whitehurst, Larry Willis and William Willis.
Group 16 - Hennifer Avery, Julie Avery, LeeAnn Bacon, Brandy' Binkley, Katie Clark, Brooke Dunn, Suzanne Hardee and Wendy Smith.
Area Winners In Horse Show
The following riders were winners in the second Eastern Hunter Association Horse Show held recently:
Missy Daughtry, 1st in hunter horse under saddle and working hunter under saddle and 2nd in junior hunter under saddle; Amy Hazard, 1st in low hunter over fences; Alexis White, 1st and 2nd in junior hunter and champion in green hunter; Lynn Nobles, 3rd in pleasure pony and 2nd in equitation on the flat; Emily Nobles, 1st in short stirrup and 2nd in hunter pony under saddle.
Jennifer Whichard, 1st in go as you please; Denise Bright, 1st, 2nd and 3rd in low hunter and champion in tow hunter division, 3rd in small and medium pony and 3rd in equitation on the flat; Kara Thompson, 3rd in hunter hack; Saralyn Thompson, 2nd in pleasure pony and 3rd in short stirrup; Kristy Kirkpatrick, 3rd in low pony and 2nd and 3rd in short stirrup.
Headquarters Beauty & Barber Salon
West End Circle
756-0769 Summit Curl Special
(with coupon)
*45.00
Headquarters Has Something New For You Joe Brown has just returned from the North Carolina State Beauticians & Cosmetologists Association Convention in Greensboro. N C where he studied haircutting under Dr llanda Nelson, a well-certified doctor of hair
^Come By To Get The New Punk Rock Style. Special at $12.50
Come Meet Our Fine Staff:
Carolyn Green & Tim Ward
Fannie Gatlin AasUtant Manager
Joe Brown Owner & Manager
Headquarters Has Openings For ^wo Qualified Cosmetologists.
Freddie Redwan TO Samuel R. Cox Sr. 57.00 Dessie Lee Bowen Jones TO d. Glenn Bowen Jr. al 6.00 Joseph D. Joyner al TO Mark R. Pierce ai 44.00 Dixie R KingTO W.C. King NS
W.C. King al TO The King and The Queen 34.00 Tommie L. Little al TO William L. Tripp NS Tommie L. Little al TO William L. Tripp NS Tommie L. Little al TO William L. Tripp NS Tommie L. Little al TO William L. Tripp .NS Merrill Lynch Relocation .Mgmt al TO Carl V. Averette alNS
Merrill Lynch Relocation .Mgmt al TO Daniel P. Blank al 53.50 Kenneth E. .Morris al TO Mark S. Hines al.NS Neil Realty Co. Inc. TO Ronnie L. Daniels al 36.50 H. Macon Page Jr. al TO Phillip W. Bryant al J.OO Preferred Properties of Gr\'l. Inc. TO Bruce H. Clark al 16.00 Roland L. Roebuck TO Charles Beverly Whitley al
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J R. Yorke Const. Co. Inc. TO Kimberly Lane Respass
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Harvey D. Bradshaw al TO Sidney Bruce Newsome 21.00 Jennis M. Coggins al TO Helen Joyce David Bissette NS
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John Wayne Evans al TO Louise Evans NS M & M Farms Inc. TO A. Scott Buck 7.50 A. Scott Buck TO A. Scott Buck al NS MSS Partnership al TO Kay M Mills al 41.50 Donald L. Toler al TO Gertrude Edwards Toler NS Vanrack Inc. TO Jeanne A. Palmer 66.50 Roger C. Venters TO Roger C. Venters al 75.50 Wade H. W'haley al TO Henry H. Whaley all.50 James B. Belcher al TO WIBEDIInc.NS Mae Belle Tripp Cox TO Doctor Glenn Bowen Jr 135.00
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George Saad 3.50 Ethel Mauney Ellis TO Freddie Lee Brock al 40.00 Phillip K Flowers al TO Ed N. Warren alNS Ernest G. Grigsby al TO
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The JCPenney Catalog Shopping Service Shop-By-Phone 756-2145
MEMORIAL DAY SALE
Shop 9:30-9:30Phone 756-1190Pitt Plaza
. 'at
12-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, May 18,1983
In The Area
Section Of NX. 43 To Be Widened
The State Board of Transportation has approved the widening of N.C. 43 from Falkland to the Edgecombe County line in the next fiscal year, which begins July 1.
Transportation Board member George Harper of Kinston said today the project, estimated to cost $300,000, will widen the existing 20-foot pavement to 22 feet and resurface the 3.6 miles of roadway. Harper said the narrow bridge over Otters Creek, between Falkland and the Edgecombe County line, will also be replaced to accommodate the wider roadway.
Contracts to widen the the 18-foot wide section of N.C. 43 from Bruce to Falkland, to 22 feet, have already been awarded.
GUC Continues Budget Discussions
Members of the Greenville Utilities Commission continued work Tuesday night on a preliminary budget for 1983-1984. which totals some $55,1 million. The proposal, which does not include an expected pay increase for employees, is $5.8 million more than the budget for the present fiscal year.
breakdown of funds shows the proposed budget for the electric department at $43 million as compared with $40 million this year, while the budget for the gas department is projected at $7.2 million as compared with a current budget of $6.3 million.
Water department expenditures are proposed at $3.2 million as compared with $3 million this year, and sewer department expenditures are projected at $1.7 million for 1983-1984 as compared with $1.6 million for 1982-1983.
Included in the proposed budget is aa turnover to the city of some $1.45 million, $250,000 more than the $1.20 million turnover to tlte city this fiscal year.
Council On Aging To Meet
Directors of the Pitt County Council on Aging will meet Monday at noon. The sesssion will be held in the councils offices at 1717 W. Fifth St. and will be open to the public,
Pitt Group Gives.Reception
The Mental Health Association in Pitt County recently gave a staff appreciation reception for personnel of the North Carolina Special Care Facility in Wilson.
The Special Care Center, housed in the old tuberculosis sanatorium in Wilson, is one of the first facilities of its kind established in the United States by a state. It is a state-owned skilled and intermediate care facility operated by the Department of Human Resources for the care of geriatric patients who are former residents of Dorothea Dix and John Umstead hospitals.
Pitt County volunteers who participated were Nora Lee Craft, Dot Dail, Margaret Shelton, Alton Warren, Bette Alford, Dr. Richard Warner, Judy Christopher, Patsy Worthington, Frances Young, Brenda Gray and Jame Ormond.
Purse Taken From Car
A purse containing $150 in cash was reported stolen from a car at Pitt Plaza Shopping Center about 3:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Chief Glenn Cannon said Jacquline Smith Heath of Route 1, Farmville. told officers the pocketbook was taken from her car while she talked with the occupants of another vehicle about 30 feet away. She said the door of the car had been left open.
Insurance Women Recognized
Greenville Mayor Percy R. Cox has signed a proclamation in observance of National Insurance Womens Week, May 16-20. There are more than 22,000 women involved in insurance careers.
City Sweeper Hits Parked Car
A parked car owned by James Lacy Turnage of 611 Ford St. was struck by a city-owned street sweeper about 11:16 a.m. Tuesday on Ford Street, 100 feet north of the Fleming Street intersection.
Police, who identified the driver of the sweeper a Tony Earl Dixon of Route 2, Greenville, estimated damage to the car at $500. No damage resulted to the sweeper.
Pitt Wildlife Club To Meet
The Pitt County Wildlife Club will meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the club house located a mile south of Falkland.
Following supper, a slide presentation on wildlife will be presented by Joe Albea of Greenville, who writes an outdoor column for The Daily Reflector. A sports equipment swap shopis also planned.
Exercise Classes Start Friday
The Greenville Recreation nd Parks Department will offer a mothers and babies exercise class starting Friday. The class is open to mothers and babies anytime after they have had their six weeks check-up or a doctors approval. Babies should be non-walking. The class meets Tuesday and Friday mornings at Jaycee Park from 10:30 to 11:15 a.m. for five weeks. Those attending are to wear comfortable clothing and bring a blanket. To preregister or for more details call 752-4137, ext. 200.
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Grooms Is Spotlight Speaker
Frank Grooms will be the speaker for the third Mental Health Association in Pitt County-sponsored lunchtime 'Spotlight talk to be held Thursday at noon at the Greenville Parks and Recreation Administration Building, 2000 Cedar Lane.
Grooms topic will be "Feeling Trapped: Ways Out. He will talk about job burnout, what you can do when you are bored with your job, when the negatives seem to outweigh the positives.
Grooms is an employment relations manager for Eaton Corp. and is^ a former school counselor.
The Spotlight series, being held each Thursday this motith, IS free to
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contact the Mental Health Association, 752-7448.
Greenville Student Graduates
Johnna Kay Hines of Greenville received the B.A. degree from Bob Jones University during recent commencement exercises. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Hines ofRoutel, Greenville.
Money Taken At Hospital
Greenville police today were investigating the theft of $146 from the patient account department at Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Chief Glenn Cannon said the theft of the money was reported about 9:33 A M Tuesday. Cannon said the money was taken from a cash drawer where it had been left overnight.
Student Wins Business Award
Jason Rogers of Smithfield, a senior in the East Carolina University School of Business, has been presented the Fieldcrest Management Award. The award carries a stipend of $520 and is given each year in recognition of outstanding academic achievement in the field of management.
Rogers completed all work for his bachelor of science in Business Administration degree in Ih years and maintained an academic grade point qverage of 3.87. He is a member of Beta Gama Sigma honor society in buisness.
Student Is Elecled Secretary
Kenlyn Riggs of Greenville has been elected 1983-84 secretary of Guilford Colleges student legislature, the Community Senate. She is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Stanley R. Riggs of 805 Forest Hills Circle.
Sophomore Serves As Page
Babbi Stanley of Greenville is serving this week as a page in the North Carolina House of Representatives. A sophomore at Rose High School, she is the daughter of Ms. Lois Stanley of Greenville.
Craven School Reunion Scheduled
A second reunion for Newbolds School in Craven County (now West Craven High School) will be held July 2. The schedule includes a religious service at 2 p.m., a banquet at 4 p.m.andadanceat9p.m.
Tickets for the days ctivities are $30 for couples and $20 for singles. Tickets must be obtained by June 15. To make reservations, contact - in Vanceboro: Aaron McCarter, Route 1, Box 49, tel. 244-1758, or William Chapman, Route 1, Box 401-A, tel. 244-1612; in Grifton: Melvis Hardy, Route 1, Box 248-A, tel. 524-4095, or in Cove City: Dorothy Wilson, P.O. Box, tel. 633-5658, or Carlton Crouell, P.O. Box, tel. 633-2855.
Morgan To Be Guest On TV Show
Former U.S. Sen. Robert Morgan will be the guest at 1 p.m. Sunday on "Tarheel Portrait, WITN-TVs public affairs program hosted by Dr. Leo Jenkins, chancellor emeritus of East Carolina University. Topics the two will discuss will include N.C. politics, education and tobacco regulations.
Youth In Guarded Condition
Edroe Arnold, the 7-year-old Plymouth youth injured by a tornado Monday afternoon, was listed in guarded condition this morning at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Arnold was transferred to PCMH after being treated at Washington County Hospital in Plymouth for head injuries sustained when the mobile home in which he lived was destroyed in the storm. ' -
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WITN-TV Subvscribes To New Service
Associated Press Television, the first wire service designed especially for television, has been installed at- WITN-TV, Channel 7, Washington. The service delivered by satellite on a high-speed printer at 1,200 words a minute.
WITN-TV is one of only three television stations in North Carolina to use the 24-hour service. Stations in Greensboro and Charlotte also subscribe to the service.
Engineers Organize Society
The Coastal Plains chapter of the Society of Manufacturing Engineers was organized Tuesday. Ed Walker of the Pitt County Chamber of Commerce spoke to the group about Attracting New Industry in Eastern North'Carolina.
The chapter swore in officers for 1983-84, followed by an induction of the chapter as a sub-chapter of the Piedmont sub-zone. Officers are Joe Humensky, chairman; Delores Gurganus, secretary; Beth Kelly, treasurer, and Ray Mayo, chairman-elect.
The purpose of the organization is to promote education of engineers by keeping them informed of up-to-date methods and state of the art practices being used. Persons interested in membership may contact Delores Gurganus or Joe Humensky at 758-7411.
Congregational Meeting Planned
Mount Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church will hold a congregational meeting Thursday. The meeting will begin at 7p.m.
Musical Program Planned Sunday
Church school will be held at Rock Spring Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 9:45 a.m. followed by morning worship at 11 a.m. The No. 2 Choir and ushers will be in charge of the service.
At 4 p.m., the No. 2 Choir will have a musical program. A rehearsal will be held Saturday at 2 p.m.
Revival Under Way At St. James
Revival services are being held at the St. James Free IVill Baptist Church this week. Various choirs are participating, including the St. Paul Senior Choir tonight and the Waterside Senior Choir on Thursday.
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Symposium On Care Of Elderly Offered
An annual symposium on care for the elderly will be held at Sea Level May 25-28 to provide updated information for invited primary care physicians from eastern North Crolina.
The symposium will be cosponsored by the East Carolina University School of Medicine, Duke Univeritys Center for the Study of Aging and Human development and Sea Level Hospital, a division of Duke Medical Center. Also sponsoring the program is the Sailors Snug Harbor in Sea Level, a retirement home for merchant seamen which will serve as the site of the conference.
The conference schedule will consist of lectures from
14 experts in different fields of gerontolo^ as well as panel discussions on selected topics.
ECUs roll in the conference has been coordinated by Dr. James G. Jones, chairman of the school of medicines department of family medicine; Dr. Harold Kallman, head of the departments geriatrics section and Dr. Joel E. Vickers, deputy director of the office of continuing medical education.
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An A.G. Cox vocational education teacher has been fired by the Pitt County Board of Education for what board members term an inadequate performance for the 1981-82 school year.
Christine Jetter of Greenville, who began her career in Beaufort County in 1961 and has taught for 20 years in the Pitt County school system, was dismissed Tuesday by board members in a special meeting after a week of deliberation following a six-hour personnel hearing last week.
Based on the exhibits presented (at the personnel hearing) and on a week of deliberation Mrs. Jetters performance for the 1981 school year is inadequate, said board member Jim Black.
I move that her
employment be terminated at the end of the 1982-83 school year because her performance was not up to standards, he added.
The board voted un-
anamiously in favor of Blacks motion.
According to Board
Chairman Mark Owens, the board heard evidence from Superintendent Eddie West , and from the staff and principals at A.G. Cox, then considered evidence and exhibits from Mrs. Jetter, her attorney and numerous witnesses.
The board felt (last week) we needed time to visit the
premises and to review the exhibits, and we did so. said Owens. "Our decision is based'on what we saw and heard.
Mrs. Jetter had no com; mentn the decision.
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Legislative RoundupCredit Card Interest Bill Faces N.C. Senate Test
By MARY ANNE RHYNE
Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Holders of credit cards issued by retail stores could pay up to 21 percent interest on charge accounts under a bill facing final Senate consideration today.
The Senate tentatively approved the measure 29-12 Tuesday, after supporters said the current ceiling of 18 percent might hurt retailers.
William Rustin, a lobbyist for the North Carolina Merchants Association, said merchants desperately needed the higher limit.
The cost of our money is above prime (rate) plus the cost of operating exceeds 18 percent even in todays market and when the interest rates go back up it gets even worse, he said.
Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, said the proposed change began as an amendment to a lengthy bill restoring the states power to control interest rates. It originally would have allowed merchants, like banks, to charge an annual fee for credit cards.
But the amendment was dropped when opposition developed and the federal deadline for opting out of national interest rate regulation began to approach.
Merchants later decided to seek higher interest rate limits rather than credit card fees.
Meanwhile, bank officials have estimates that 25 percent of their credit card customers will give up their cards rather than pay the annual fee of up to $20 granted under another bill.
Rustin said merchants use the card to bring in customers and could not stand a shrinking credit market.
In other legislative action;
Hazardous Wastes
Rep. Billy Clark, D-Cumberland, asked that his bill to regulate hazardous waste landfills in North Carolina be sent to the Appropriations Committee, temporarily avoiding a confrontation on the House floor.
"i dont anticipate it being in appropriations long at all, Clark said, adding that he expected opponents of the bill to bring up its fiscal impact if it was debated on the floor.
He said the bill will need about $40,000 to pay for a chemist who will establish in what concentrations certain hazardous wastes may be stored.
The bill bans some chemicals from landfills while allowing others to be stored underground only if they are below threshold concentrations set up by the state. It was approved by the House Water and Air Resources Committee over a bill that would have prohibited nearly all landfills.
Clark said he did not expect much opposition in the House despite some sentiment for a tougher bill.
Tuition
Legislators considered two plans to increase tuition for out-of-state students attending University of North Carolina institutions - one by $300 and the second by $1,000.
Rep. Parks Helms, D-Mecklenburg, told the House Higher Education Committee his bill would require that nonresident students attending any of the 16 UNC schools pay tuition comparable to nonresident tuition charged by other states.
He said North Carolina would base its charges on those levied on out-of-state students by schools of similar size in other states, a
move expected boost the average nonresident students tuition by about $300 per year.
But Rep. D R. Mauney, D-Gaston, said the bill would produce no tuition increase unless UNC was required to report to the Legislature - a requirement he offered as an amendment. ^
Helms said it wouldnt be appropriate for the Higher Education Committee to set specific tuition figures.
Its easy to say youre going to raise $40 million by raising tuition, he said. But that ignores the value of out-of-state students and what they bring to our state. Theyre not a burden; theyre an asset.
Meanwhile, Sen. William Martin, D-Guilford, briefed the Senate Higher Education Committee on a bifl to impose an across-the-board tuition increase of $1,000 while providing a $1,000 tuition grant to North Carolina residents to nullify its effect on them.
Martin said the bill offered compromise solutions to controversies over aid to private college students and how much to charge out-of-state students.
Money from the increase would finance a $200 increase in aid to students attending private North Carolina colleges and universities - a loan that would have to be paid back i.nless the student remains and works in North Carolina for five years after graduatfon.
No action was taken on either bill.
The House Finance Committee approved a Senate bill to require that owners of sailboats 14 feet and longer join motorboat owners in registering their boats for an annual $5.50 fee.
Social Workers A bill to establish a board to certify social workers was approved 21-17 by the House Finance Committee, which voted against approval several weeks ago.
The bill would not require that social workers be licensed in order to practice, said Rep. Martin Lancaster, D-Wayne. Rather, it would enable them to be recognized as having a certain level of competency.
But Rep. John Jordan, D-Alamance, called the bill a first step toward restricting the number of people who can enter the field of social work. He said social workers, most of whom work for federal, state or local government, eventually would use the board to demand higher pay.
Black social workers organizations fought the bill, saying it would harm minorities.
Fair Housing The Senate Judiciary II Committee approved a bill prohibiting racial or sexual discrimination in housing after defeating a proposal by Sen. Elton Edwards, D-Guilford, to let people who are sued for alleged housing discrimination recover costs and attorneys fees if they are aquitted.
Victiih Compensation A bill that would increase criminal court costs by $2 and earmark the money for a program to compensate crime victims was approved by the Senate Judiciary II Committee.
The approval came despite protests from Franklin Freeman, director of the Administrative Office of the Courts, who said he spoke on behalf of state Supreme Court Chief Justice Joseph Branch.
Freeman said court fees should not go to any
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particular program not directly associated with the courts. Currently, court fees go the states General Fund, although they can be appropriated to the court systems budget.
But Rq). Tom Womble, D-Forsyth, said some court money already is earmarked for a law enforcement officer retirement fund.
Senate The state Senate approved bills establishing a N. C. Energy Development Authority, increasing the fine for parking illegally in a space reserved for the handicapped from $10 t(f $25, allowing spouses of nonresident military personnel to drive without a North Carolina license, and requiring that odometer readings be placed on the rear of carstitles.
A bill encouraging the University of North Carolina system and the states public schools to exchange teachers also was approved.
Case Dismissal Prosecutors would have to obtain judges approval before dismissing any criminal case under legislation approved by the Senate Ways and Means Committee.
Currently, prosecutors can dismiss cases at their own discretion.
Execution Sen. Ollie Harris, D-Cleveland, filed a bill that would eliminate the required hearing to set an execution date following any defeat of a condemned prisoners appeal.
Under a 1981 law, any time . a condemned person loses an appeal a new execution date must be set, effective at least GOxlays after the hearing.
Mike Carmichael of the state attorney generals office said that provision makes executions all but impossible to carry out.
This would get rid of a roadblock and make it less easy for people to delay the inevitable through legal technicalities, said Sen. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe.
Annexation The Senate Local Government Committee approved a rewritten bill changing the states laws governing annexation. The modified version of a bill introduced by Sen. Aaron
Plyler, D-Union, is expected to go to the Pensions and Retirement Committee before reaching the Senate floor.
Sen. Charles Hipps, D-Haywood, said the bill now contains remedies for the citys failure to provide services as promised as well as ways for cities to hold down the cost of annexation proceedings and assurances that the investments of time and money by volunteer fire departments will be protected.
Plylers bill originally would have allowed property owners to seek de-annexation if water and sewer lines were not built within two years and the city would have been required to refund ad valorem taxes with 8 percent interest.
The modified bill says that if a rural fire department was providing fire protection to an area when it was annexed, the city must try to negotiate a five-year contract with the department. The original bill would have limited that requiremmentto departments serving 10 percent or more of the valuation of real property.
Juveniles
An amended bill that would give judges access to certain juvenile records when sentencing them was approved by the Senate Judiciary I Committee. The latest version of the bill narrows the cases in which the records may be examined.
Jack Nichols, legislative liasion to Gov. Jim Hunt, said the bill would affect only 1 percent to 2 percent of the juvenile court cases. He said it was aimed at the bad apples who continue to commit serious crimes.
The bill would give judges access to a juveniles record if they have been committed of a Class A, B or C felony. Those crimes include first degree murder, rape, burglary and arson.
It changes a tradition of keeping juvenile records
confidential that began in 1919.
Exploitation
The Senate Judiciary I Committee approved a bill aimed at preventing the sexual exploitation of children after deciding not to change the definition of a child from 18 to 16 years old.
The committee also deleted a section of the bill that would have made it a felony to engage in child pornography for anyone at least 14 years old and, for an adult, to show or sell material de-picting children commiting a sex act.
A similar bill already has been passed by the Senate and is awaiting action in the House.
The bill would make it a felony;
- to commit a sexual act with a child. It authorizes the court, after finding the convicted person is emotionally disturbed, to send them to a psychiatric facility for treatment.
- to promote child prostitution and makes it a misdemeanor for a child at least 16 years old to commit a sexual act for payment. The court could order the child be sent to a psychiatric facility for treatment.
Jurors
The House Courts Committee referred to a subcommittee three bills that would increase jurors pay by varying amounts.
One bill would raise the pay from $8 to $15 a day for court trials, from $12 to $15 for grand juries and from $2 to $4 for a half-day of work. That would cost the state $2 million a year.
Another bill would raise the jurors pay from $8 to $12 a day at the cost of $1.2 million a year.
The third bill would raise
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Safe Drivers
A bill to change the way automobile insurance rates are affected by accidents and speeding violations sparked debate in the House Insurance Committee but no final action was taken.
Rep. Mary Seymour, D-Wake, had moved that the bill, a committee substitute made from four pieces of legislation, be broken up. But that attempt was defeated
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Deportation Of Alleged Russian Spies Has Soared
ByED BLANCHE Associated Press Writer
LONDON (AP) - Western governments have expelled at least 53 alleged Soviet spies since the beginning of April. Intelligence and diplomatic sources say the surge of deportations may have stemmed from the new Kremlin regime's aggressive espionage activity or from the East-West chill.
It could be that with (new Communist Party Chief Yuri V.) Andropov in power, theres a kind of contest to come up with the most and best information they can find, said-mie NATO source in Brussels,^o asked not to be identified.
NATO sources also say increased espionage is evidence of Kremlin concern that President Reagans efforts to stop the leakage of secret technology is working.
The intelligence, government and diplomatic sources who provided this information declined to be identified by name or, in many cases, by nationality, for reasons of intelligence security and diplomacy.n In the past 15 months, at > least 77 Soviets have been expelled from Western nations on espionage charges. The spate of expulsions in April began in France. President Francois Mitterrands Socialist government ordered 47 Soviets out of France on April 5, the biggest cleanout since 1971 when the Conservative administration of British Prime Minister Edward Heath expelled 105 alleged KGB agents.
Said one French source;
The Soviets were just getting too blatant. Its really a question of enough is enough. The Soviets are trying to steal anything they can get their hands on.
It was a purely French decision, officials said, but nevertheless formed part of the wider pattern.
The United States, Britain, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Scandinavian countries have ordered out or arrested at least 30 Soviet diplomats, airline officials, trade delegates and journalists since January 1982.
The total could be higher because many unmasked East bloc spies are sent home without fanfare. Unconfirmed reports said at least eight have been quietly shuffled out of Italy over the last year.
Italian newspapers said recently that the Defense Ministry has drawn up a list of 100 more suspected spies, many of them from the Soviet Union and other Communist countries. A ministry spokesman told The Associated Press that the reports may have been exaggerated, but did not deny that a list was drawn up.
Australia and Iran have also moved against alleged KGB agents in recent weeks. Ten Soviet diplomats expelled from Tehran on spying charges trooped onto an airliner in April while a mob of Islamic revolutionaries chanted Death to the traitors! -
Some Western diplomats link the wave of expulsions to the East-West chill over Afghanistan and Poland,
services agents to obtain scientific, technical and technological intelligence.
The United States expelled three Soviet diplomats in April for seeking to obtain classified high-technological data and for trying to recruit an aide to R^ublican Rq>. Olympia Snowe of Maine.
Lt. Col. Yevgeny Bar-myantsev, the expelled assistant military attache at the Soviet Embassy in Washington, was reportedly gathering intelligence on military laser technology. President Reagan has urged the development of laser weapons for use in space.
William Webster, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said more than 900 of the 3,000 Soviet bloc diplomats in the United States are suspected agents.
Interior Ministry spokesman Hans-Guenter Kowalski In Bonn estimated that up to 40 percent of the Soviets working in West Germany are spies, with one in five specializing in uncovering high-tech secrets.
Roger Wybolt, former head of the French counter
espionage service, said the agents blend well into the diplomatic community.
They are always courteous people who maintain friendly relationships with all those who interest them. They arrange to have friends in certain circles and make sure they are invited to cocktail parties and receptions where they can converse with p^le who may become their future contacts,'Wybolt said.
So far, the Kremlin s response to the expulsions has
been muted - three Britons expelled in apparent retaliation.
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stalled nuclear arms limitation talks and fading expectations that Andropov, the former KGB chief and new Soviet leader, would emerge as a liberal. Authoritative sources said Mitterrand, like other Western leaders, was partly motivated by domestic political considerations.
But underlying these factors is the apparent growth of the KGB, the Soviet secret police and espionage arm. Western intelligence officials believe the KGB has 50,000 personnel in various capacities and operates a global network of 6,000 spies. Soviet military intelligence, the GRU, also has escalated its operations, sources say.
Security authorities in Paris claim that at least one-third of the 700 Soviet officials in France are involved in espionage.
Former French Interior Minister Michel Poniatowski has^estimated there are 600 Soviet intelligence agents in France, each responsible for 15 to 20 recruits.
The general rule is that a third of the diplomatic personnel are with the KGB, he said. This third represents a third of the total KGB framework, with the rest of the agents primarily found in Aeroflot (the Soviet airline) and Intourist (travel service), he said.
Britain has expelled eight
Soviets in recent months -seven for alleged spying and one in retaliation for the ouster of two Britons from Moscow on March 31.
We had to show the Russians there are some limits, a senior Foreign Office source explained.
Italian Defense Minister Lelio Lagorio said last month that all governments tolerate a certain level of espionage.
But he declared: When you exceed that, you get a reaction. We Italians said basta (enough) when the (KGB) intrigues of the Bulgarian connection came to light.
He was referring to Italian allegations that the KGB, through Bulgarian intelligence, was behind the attempt to assassinate Pi^Ye John Paul II in Rome in May 1981.
Intelligence sources and diplomats, including Americans, say much of the Soviet spying centers on high-technology secrets.
Ulrich Hubacher, spokesman for Switzerlands Justice Ministry, reported a "shift in emphasis to economic and political espionage by the KGB and its satellite a^ncies. The Swiss have thrown out three alleged Soviet spies this year.
In February, the Italians arrested two Soviets - an Aeroflot official and an oil company executive - along
with an Italian businessman carrying secret military documents and plans for NATOs new Panavia Tornado fighter plane.
The Tornado, being built by Britain, Italy and West Germany, is to become the backbone of NATOs air defenses.
A West German engineer who worked on the Tornado was jailed in Munich last year, as was his wife, for selling plans of the fighter to East Germany.
A senior executive of Aeritalia, Italys aerospace company working on the Tornado, noted: Our British Aerospace colleagues have too often caught Soviet fishing trawlers monitoring their activity in the North Sea.
NATO sources said an increase in Soviet efforts to obtain technical secrets stems from concern in the Kremlin that President Reagans drive to staunch the flow of critical technology to the East is becoming more effective.
Announcing Aprils expulsions, the French cited a systematic attempt by several USSR secret
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Paid Pol.
The JIM HUNT Record
Subject: Tax Dollars For Politics
A report to the taxpayers on how Jim Hunt uses State equipment and your tax dollars to build the Jim Hunt Political Machine
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11 NEW FORD
ESCORTS
Governor Jim Hunt Greets Citizens After Arriving in MarioikBy Helicopter
Gov. Hunt Opens Headquarters
Governor Jim Hunt arrived by helicopter dair ' Tuesday to officially open the McDowell r County Democratic Headquarters.
Hunts helicopter landed in the parking lot y
tell the story about J
I Prices
* After $300 Caeh Assistance plus N.C. Sales Tax And Fees. Some equipped with 4 speed transmissions, some with automatic transmissions, and some with air condition. 7 - 2 door models, 5 - 4 door models and 9 wagons to choose from.
FACT: Jim Hunt has repeatedly used the State helicopters and State airplanes to attend Hunt political events.^ ^^
North Carolina Taxpayers Are Paying The Bill For The Jim Hunt Political Machine
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1 The MrOowfll News. lO..32 The Aihenlle Ciliipn 10-5.82
3 The Blowing Rofkel. 10-8-82 3 Sandhill Ciliaen. 10-20-82
Democrats for Helms... A Man of Character
Paid lof by HflMS lot Senate Mark Stephens. Treasurer
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ASTING
FORD
Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass
Dealer No. 5720
758-0114
Greenville, N. C. 27834
Sale Ends Saturday
iWeek Underlines Motorcycle Safety
By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer Every week would be motorcycle awareness week if Dr. Alfred King of East Carolina University had his way, but Gov, Jim Hunts proclmation of May 15-21 as motorcycle safety awareness week will have to suffice.
No problem in motorcycling is minor, according to Or. King, who teaches a motorcycle safety course at ECU. Cyclists should be aware of all the problems they will face on the open road.
- Jlowever, safety con-^ousness is not only the cyclists domain, automobile Operators need to make themselves aware that this is the time of year that cyclists iome out of hibernation and be ready to cope with additional traffic hazards, King said.
: Motorcycle drivers are five times more likely to have a fatal accident than automobile drivers and the tnost common accidents involve cases where the operator of a car has not seen a motorcyclist.
: The {^le operating the automobiles and trucks are usually violating the law when an accident involving a motorcyclist occurs, Sgt. Glenn Swanson, traffic safety information officer for the North Carolina Highway Patrol, Troop A, said. The usual excuse is i didnt see him, I dont think the excuse is contrived but both parties being more watchful could help eliminate the problem. The major problem motorcyclists should be concerned with is having to deal with the four-wheel vehicle on the highway, King said. Cyclists have to look out for a number of things, but the major pco-bfems arise when a automobile makes a left hand turn in front of the motorcycle.
There are two problems involved in this kind of situa-tito. One, the driver doesnt a(Jually see the motorycycle driver until it is too late and, second, automobile drivers arent consciously looking for motorcyclists.
When youre riding a . motorcycle you feel youre very obvious because you can hear and see very well. It appears to you that automobile drivers would do tiff same, but they dont, King said. Cyclists should be aware of the fact theyre II& being seen, and drive at f&luced spe^s in possible ceas of conflict.
^jJther safety measures enlists would be prudent to pbserve, King said, include clearing light-colored clothing and, if doing night Sfiving, reflectorizing every-S^g they wear. Cyclists ^idd not wear helmets with tifited face shields at night ^11 because vision is 4minshed, King advised.
: -In the summer, you see a io*l of cyclists wearing pCactically nothing. That in self is dangerous, Sgt. Swanson said, but even impre dangerous than the Tifik of getting badly scraped ^ is that you cant see the ijclists at night.
" -The new bike owner ^uld also leam how to ride Jfiat thing well off the street so that he becomes so accustomed to the controls that ie can go to the brakes, the jMm and shift gears without ^king, freeing his eyes up ttfscan traffic, King said.
- :Motorcyclists planning
Voters Reject ^ucation Tax
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -Itoters in six Buncombe iiounty school districts Tuesday overwhelmingly ^feated a proposed opplemental tax that could Jitve provided up to $5.8 :uuliion in additional school Tilnds. Roberson District voters narrowly defeated a iffx for only their district. Jhe final vote for the peuntywide tax was 2,972 in iftvor to 6,675 against the tax, cording to the county ^ard of elections.
he proposed supplemental tax for the JCbberson District lost by ooly 42 votes, with 968 voting It favor of the tax and 1,010 loting against it.
,-Turnout for the referen-|Am was light, with only 1,047 of the 72,600 registers l^ers casting ballots.
X ;Only two of the 40 precincts jTQted in favor of the coun-tlwidetax.
tours should never travel in groups numbering more than four because larger groups bring about problems with passing motorists. King said. Motorcyclists should also plan their trips just like anyone, take regular stops, be aware of fatigue, and if they travel in the cool of morning or evening, they should be aware that hypothermia is a possibility.
Cyclists who do not wear proper clothing in cool tem-P|eratures experience a reaction slow down because of
body heat loss. According to King, Cyclists should wear warm clothing and be aware that they can loose body heat without knowing before its too late.
Greenville 0^e Chief Glenn Cannon advises bikers to be aware of all regulations concerning helmets, running lights and be extremely cautious when pulling onto highways or in front of vehicles. Cannon said, however, that Greenville has been fortunate not to have had very many motorcycle accidents over the years.
Perhaps the best advice King has to offer new bikers is to take a course in motorcycle safety. Such courses are offered througout the state by the Motorcycle Safety Foundation with one of these courses offered by King at East Carolina University.
Although it doesnt happen very often, drivers sometimes will not give way or be conscious of safety around cyclists because of a bad image associated with bikers. But, this image is rapidly changing according
to King. "The old image of the Hells Angels is fast slipping into the past and being replaced by a new breed of motorcycle operator. The new breed is composed of commuters, tourers, and the ones that just let the good times roll. There are the ones that bike strictly for
fun, off-street bike riders and others, all I gess who could be classified as reputable people, King said.
Motorcycling has caught on and is here to stay, so all of us motorists will just have to leam how motorcycles fit into the traffic pattern, he said.
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Sleavad nogatives for auparior protMtion.
Sale Prices Good Thru Sat. May 21st. we reserve the right to limit quantities.
Item availability may vary at select stores. ,
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center 0 Rivergate Shopping Center
VISA
16-The DaUy Reneclor, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, May 18,1983
Stock And Market Reports
Hogs
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was steady to 25 cents lower Kinston 47.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville. Dunn, Pink Hill, Cfiadbourn, Ayden. Pine Level. Laurin-burg and Benson 46.75, Wilson 46.75, Salisbury 45.50. Rowland unreported, Spiveys Corner 45.50. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 43.00, Fayetteville 42.00, Whiteville 42.00, Wallace 43.00, Spiveys Corner 42.00, Rowland unreported, Durham 42.00.
N.C. Eggs: Market lower on all sizes with the greatest decline on smaller sizes. Supply adequate. Demand light to moderate. Weighted average prices for small lot sales of consumer grade eggs in cartons delivered nearby retail outlets: A large white 77.67, A medium white 68.01, A small white 59.33.
Grain: No. 2 yellow shelled corn higher at 3.22-3.54, mostly 3.42-3.52 East; 3.32-3.55, mostly 3.35-3.52 Piedmont. No. 1 yellow soybeans lower at 6.18-6.48, mostly 6.24-6.48 East; 5.95-6.27, mostly 6.21-6.27 Piedmont. Wheat 3.30-3.60, mostly 3.36-3.47; Oats 1.25-1.45. (New crop - com 2.66-2.93; soybeans 6.13-6.40; wheat 3.05-3.35). Soybean meal f.o.b. N:C. processing plants per ton 44 206.50-214.50. Prices paid producers for grain delivered in bulk to elevators as of 4 p.m. Tuesday. (Cora and soybeans) Cofield 3.54, 6.48. Conway 3.38, 6.26. Creswell 6.18. Dunn 3.40, 6.34. Elizabeth City 3.22, 6.28. Farmville 3.55, 6.30. Fayetteville 6.48. Goldsboro 3.50, 6.33. Greenville 3.37-3.42,
6.24. Kinston 3.42, -.6.24. Lumberton 3.43, 6.30. Pan-tego3.42,6.24. Raleigh 6.47. Selma 3.50, 6.32 WhitevUle 3.43, 6.30. Williamston 3.42,
6.24. l^ilson 3.50-3.52, 6.24. Albemarle 3.32, 6.21. Barber 3.52, 6.27. Mocksville 3.40. Monroe 3.40-3.55. Mt. UUa
43i<
56'j
NKW YORK lAPi -Midday stocks
High Low Last AMRCorp
Abbtl..abs Allis Chaim Alcoa Am Baker AmKrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmKamily Am Motors AmStand Amer T&T Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Corp CaroPwLI Celanese Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAirl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress Ford Mot For McKess Fuqua Ind GTE Corp GnDynam Gen Elec GenlElec wi Gen Food Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculesinc Honeywell HospfCp s Ing Rand IBM
Inti Harv Int Paper Int Rectif Int T4T K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrogerCo laKUieed Loews Corp Masonite n McDrmInt n Mead Corp MinnMM .Mobil Monsanto NCNB Cp NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorRkSou n OlinCp Owenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhihpMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RCA
RalstnPur RepubAir Republic SU Revlon Reynldind Rockwelint Rockwel wi RqyCrown SlRegisCp Scott Pap
FULL SCHOLARSHIPS TO PCC STUDENTS ... The Coastal Plains Chapter of the Professional Constructors Estimaters Association has presented three full scholarships to Pitt Community College. Ahove, left to right, are Bill Marshburn,
president of the Coastal Plains PCE, and PCC students receiving the first scholarships - Marc Cozzens, Parris Coats and West Epley - along with George Mathis, chairman of the education committee for the PCE.
108h 107^4 108
54^4 54 54N.
43'4 43^14
56', 5'7
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X\ 36' 38'S.
43v 42:^4 43'4.
28 28'-. 28.
41N. 41', 4l'i
335. 321, 33\
47. 47,
45:^4 454. 45",
23\ 23'i 23\
36', X'* Xh
38 371, 38
1204, 11N. 120 49'., 484, 49',
474*. 47 47',
1144, 114'/, 1144. 104. 104. 104.
544. 53. 544,-
25
26'. 254,
41 40
324, 32'
17
14. 14.
16 16
40. 32'7 174, 17,
14,
16
41'v 41'. 41'
117 116 1164,
168 168 168
524, 52'7 524,
194. 194. 194.
28'.4 28 28'.
864. 85'. 85.
304, 304. 304
83'7 824, 83
264. 264. 264.
36'7 361. 364.
284, 28'7
56'7 56'.
31'
Local Students Cl^im Jr. Historian Awards
284,
56'7 31'7
31
34 334. 34
594, 584, 594,
374, 37',
314. 30.
644. 64
354. 35
324, 32', 324.
57', 564, 57',
48', 48
374.
314.
644.
35'.
30
48'. 294. 294,
214, 21', 214.
8 74. 74.
23. 234. 23.
34', 33. 34'
53 56
28', 28'.,
524, 531.
55. 55.
Scott Paper SearsRoeb
6.23. Roaring River
3.35.
Shaklee Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co
SlatesvUle 3.45,5.95.
Following are selected II a m stock market quotations
Sperry Cp sidOifCal StdOiiInd SIdOilOh
Ashland prC
414.
Burroughs
514,
Stevens JP
Carolina Power It Light
m.
TRW Inc
Collins & Aikman
3U,
Texaco Inc
Connor
21'i
TexEastn
Duke
22
UMC Ind
Eaton
40\
Un Camp
Eckerds
32'
Un Carbide
Exxon
33
Uniroyal
Fieldcresl
34
US Steel
Halteras
16'i
Unocal
Hilton
564
Wachov Cp
Jefferson
Deere
Lowe's
McDonald's
36'
38'
254
654,
WalMart s WestPtPep Westgh D Weyerhsr WinnDix
McGraw
46'
Woolworth
Piedmont
35
Wrigley
Pizza Inn
12
Xerox Cp
PliG
56
TRW. Inc
72'
United Tel.
224
Virginia Electric
14
Wachovia
41',
OVERTHE COUNTER
Aviation
26 26'4
Branch
22', 2244
Little Mint
1-4.
Planters Bank
164,-17
- . - - 28>/4
254, 244, 24.
314. 31
234. 23'7
41'. 40.
684, 68
28'. 271. 28'.
IS. 154, 15.
15. 154,
36.
314.
234.
41
684,
37'.
394. 39
484. M
15.
37'.,
39'.4
48'.,
48'
4>7 48
234. 234. 231.
72', 72'. 72'.
354. 35'. 354.
57'. 56
12 12
70'. 70
68'. 67'.
144 14',
254, 25',, 254.
354, 35', 35',
414. 41'., 41>..
72. 72'. 724,
464, 461, 461,
474, 474. 474,
40'. 39. 39.
494, 49
32, 324,
57>.
12
70
68'.
144
49',
32.
NAMED VICE CHANCELLOR ... James L. Lanier Jr. of Louisburg has been named vice chancellor for institutional development at East Carolina University. Lanier, 36, director of devel^ment and alumni affairs at Louisburg College, was appointed by EC^ Chancellor John M. Howell and was a{^roved by the UNC Board of Governors last week. The appointment is effective July 1. (ECU News Bureau Phirto)
POLICEMAN SLAIN BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) - A gunman shot and killed an off-duty policeman outside his home, then fled on a motorcycle police reoort
RALEIGH - About 500 Tar Heel Junior Historians were in Raleig^ Monday and Tuesday to claim three dozen prizes and awards for their years work on local history projects. The awards were presented by the N.C. Literary and Historical Association.
Again this year, junior high students from Greenvilles E.B. Aycock Junior High and from Williamstons E.J. Hayes School received a lions share of the annual awards.
In the photography division, awards are given for first, second and third places. In most divisions, only first place and one honorable mention is given, and in a few divisions, such as genealogy, only one award is given.
Greenville.
Awards and recognitions in various categories accorded to Aycock Junior High students at the annual event are:
Photograph Contest -Houses, Debbie Seykora, third place; Baras, Becky Kirkland, second place. Special Achievement -
50'-, 50'. 50,
454, 45'7 45'7
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market staged a broad advance today, aided by signs of a strengthening economic recovery.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 8.22 to 1,214.01 in the first half hour.
Gainers took a 5-2 lead over losers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
As the market opened, the government reported that personal income rose a seasonally adjusted 0.8 percent in April from the month before, for its biggest increase since last July.
Analysts also observed that traders were encouraged by the markets steady showing since it took a sharp drop on Monday.
On several occasions this week, the Dow Jones industrial average has dipped below 1,200, but each time it has quickly climbed back above that round-number level.
Among actively traded blue chips, American Telephone & Telegraph rose \ to 67; Eastman Kodak gained 2 to 75*4, and U.S. Steel was up *'4at25*/4.
On Tuesday the Dow Jones industrials gained 2.81 to 1,205.79.
Ten stocks rose in price for every seven that fell on the NYSE.
Big Board volume reached 79.51 million shares, up from 76.25 million in the previous session.
The NYSEs composite index was up .29 at 94.48. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index rose 3.65 to 449.85.
Solar Fraction
The solar fraction for this area Tuesday, as computed by the East (Carolina University Department of Physics, was 88. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 88 percent of your hot water needs.
Planning-Zoning..,
(Continued from Pa^l)
signs but commissioners approved the amendment without a specified limitation.
The board endorsed a proposal to extend the citys extraterritorial jurisdiction in the area east of Greenville Boulevard, northeast, around Eaton Corp. The extension, approved by the Pitt County Board of Commissioners last April, would include the property of John Moore, south of State Road 1529. Moore had asked the city and county to extend the limit to take in his property, which was split by the present boundary.
Board members agreed that a meeting should be scheduled with the county planning board to discuss the extraterritorial boundary. The planning staff will contact the county board and set up a meeting date.
Copies of a proposed zoning ordinance update were presented to the commissioners for review and discussion at the June meeting.
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DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE 751-3421 ARLINGTON lOUlEVARD 754-2772
Individual Literary, Christine Simpson, first place; Jim Hester, honorable , mention; Group Literary, students at Aycock, honorable mention; Individual Media, Tom Harwell, first place; Group Media, a tie between two Aycock group media projects with Aycock receiving two honorable mentions, no first place awarded; Groiq) Arts, students at Aycock, first place.
Genealogy Award, Christine Simpson.
Williamston
Awards earned by students at the E.J. Hayes School in Williamston, which also includes an elementary division for seventh graders, are:
Elementary Division -Individual Arts, Chad Duke, honorable mention; Group Literary, Hayes students, first place; Individual Media, Anne Roberson, first place.
Artifacts Search Contest Nine awards given statewide. Two of the nine awards went to students at Hayes School - Sarah Anne Rawls and Anne Roberson.
Among workshops attended by students during the two (lays included ones on the battleship USS North Carolina, Techniques of Oral History, Cherokee
Indian Touch Talk, U.S. -Life Saving Service, and Americas 400th Anniversary Celebration.
Betty McCain, immediate past president of the N.C. Museum of History Associates, gave a talk on "North Carolinas Seed Cora. Special guests at the meeting were Dr. William S. Price, director of the N.C. Division of Archives and History, and Sara W. Hodgkins, Secretary of the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources.
Joan Mndale To Visit N.C.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Joan Mndale, wife of former Vice President Walter Mndale, was scheduled to visit two North Carolina museums and attend a dinner honoring Gov. Jim HlmTon Wednesday.
Mndale is one of at least six Democrats seeking the 1984 presidential nomination.
Mrs. Mndale, known for her interest in the arts, was to be in town for the Mental Health Association dinner honoring Hunt but requested to tour the museums also.
Officers...
(Continued from Pagel)'
Nichols, a Pitt County native, graduated from Farmville High School in 1966, attended East Carolina University for a year, then attended Pitt Community College where he received a degree in police science in 1%9.
He joined the police departments uniformed division in 1969, was transferred to the detective division in 1974 and was promoted to sergeant in 1976. He returned to the uniformed division in Au^st 1982 and is an assistant shift supervisor.
Tripp, also a Pitt County native, graduated from Rose High School in 1961. He joined the Greenville Police Department in 1966 after working several years for The Daily Reflector and receiving a diploma in scientific crime d^ection from the Institute of Applied Science in Chicago.
He joined the Pitt County Sheriffs Department in 1977 after serving for 12 years with the city-county bureau of identification (operated by the police department), and is now supervisor of the sheriffs departments identification division.
Tripp is presently serving as second vice president of the N.C. Division of the International Association for Identification.
RECEIVED DEGREE Mary Beth Carraway of Snow Hill received a bachelor of science degree at North Carolina State University, Raleigh, in the commencement exercise held May 14.
MASONIC NOTICE Mount Calvary Lod^ No. 669 will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. All Master Masons are asked to be present.
Julius Phillips, Master Abram Lang, Secretary
Obituaries
Douglas
Evelyn Veraice Douglas, 26, of Route 4, Greenville, died this morning in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Flanagans Funeral Home.
Taylor
AUGUSTA, Ga. - Mrs. Helen Scott Taylor died Monday. Her graveside service will be held Thursday at 2:30 p.m. in the Riverside Church Cemetery on Route 2, Grifton, N.C.
A Pitt County, N.C., native, Mrs. Taylor is survived by her husband, Dr. Charles Whitfield Taylor of Augusta; two sons, (Aarles Chuck Taylor of Augusta and Richard Scott Taylor of Atlanta; a daughter, Mrs. Betty Daniele of Poughkeepsie, N.Y.; a brother, Howard Scott of Potsdam, N.Y., and two grandchildren.
The family will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taylor on Route 2, Grifton, Thursday at noon.
'Death Parade' For Students
WALL TOWNSHIP, N.J. (AP) - A Parade of Death staged for 6,000 students - complete with crumpled cars and black balloons - was intended to help stop the slau^ter on the hi^ways, organizers said.
Were heading into the worst time of the year for drinking and driving,said Robert Anastas, founder of Students Against Drunk Driving, who warned students from Ocean and Monmouth counties about traffic hazards during the event at a local stadium Tuesday.
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Sports the DAILY REFLECTOR ClassifiedWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 18, 1983
Rose Ratties Aiong For Conference Title
Kinley, who started and got out of the infield. And. the short hv Kirklanrf snpwiinann The Warrior shortston had reached when his grounder onnnah _ h,, air^nc aiH. . o.
By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor
Rose High Schools baseball Rampants continued to rattle along like an ancient locomotive over a seldom-used set of tracks - shanking and clanking - but getting the job done.
Last night, the once-beaten Rampants downed Wilson Hunt, 8-5, on what could go down as a "gem as Mike Kinley and Kenny Kirkland held the Warriors hitless. But with five runs allowed, any conotation of a gem would be "slightly flawed.
Hunt
Durham.lb
Vick.2b
Rodnss
Walston.c(
McClurelf
Hinnani.c
Pope.p
Duiui.pli
Lemmons, rf
Williams.ph
Skinner 3b
Dorsey, ph
R ardson.pr
ToUls
ab r h rb Rose
3 10 0 Slalls.lb
3 10 1 Fuqua.a
4 0 0 0 Warren.d
110 0 Kirkland.ss 3 0 0 0 KInley.p
3 0 0 1 Fischer,2b
ab r h rb
3 I I 0 3 II 0 2 2 12 3 0 11 3 0 0 1 0 10 0
2 0 0 0 WoodworUl.C 2 0 0 1
1 0 0 0 Nover cr
10 0 1 laboni.rl 0 10 0 Johnson.rf
2 0 0 0 Walsh.rf
0 0 0 0 Wilson.lf
0 10 0 Buie.3b
23 S 0 3 Totals
0 10 0 2 0 0 0
1 I I I 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0
2 10 0 14 < 5 I
Kinley, who started and got his eighth win against one loss, lasted until the seventh, when he finally left with the bases loaded and one out. To that point, he had struck out eight, walked five and hit three Kirkland then came on to get the side out. but not before two more runs scored to close the gap to the final 8-5 margin. Kirkland walked one before the ninth batter of the frame grounded back to him to set up a double play.
"I thought Kinley pitched well until the end, Rose Coach Ronald Vincent said, "then he lost his control.
"Fortunately for us, we had a good rally in the sixth (when Rose scored seven times to break a 1-1 tie). 1 just hope our bats have woke up for a while.
Rose, however, got only five hits, three of them not even
out of the infield. And, the seven run rally saw only four hits, helped along by four Warrior misplays - one of which allowed a runner to circle the bases.
The victory did clinch the 1983 Big East Conference baseball title for the Rampants, who had sewn up the leagues playoff berth last week despite losing for the first time this year to Wilson Fike.
Rose will travel to Gamer on Monday for an 8 p.m. game in the first round of the playoffs. Gamer brings an 18-3 record into the playoffs, while Rose is now 16-1 with one game left to play before that.
Rose scored its first mn in the opening frame. With two down, Randy Warren walked and stole second. He then scored on an infield hit to deep
short by Kirkland, speeding on home as the ball was relayed late to first, and sliding under the relay on from first.
Hunt threatened in.-the second, putting two on on walks, but Rose got out without damage.
In the fourth, however. Hunt tied it up. With one down. Tommy Walston walked and Darin McClures fly to right was dropped by Mike laboni. Then, after a second out, Brent Pope walked, loading the bases and Kinley hit Lee Lemmons, forcing in Walston.
Rose finally put it all together in the sixth to score seven times and put the game on ice-or so it seemed.
Bobby Buie led off with a walk and Rudy Stalls beat out a bunt down the first base line, putting two on. Traye Fuqua then laid dowp another bunt which rolled past the mound.
The Warrior shortstop had rotated to second on the play, leaving the field open, and by the time the third baseman -who had hugged the bag hoping for a throw -managed to chase it down, the bases were loaded.
Warren then followed with a single into center, scoring both Buie and Stalls and moving Fuqua to third. Warren advanced to second on the relay. With one down, Kinley reached when his grounder to first was errored, scoring Fuqua, Eric Woodworth also
reached when his grounder was dropped at first, scoring Warren. Courtesy runner Toby Fischer then raced home, scoring on an error on an attempted double steal, which moved Woodworth's runner - Marc Nover - to third. He easily scored when Bill Johnson singled to center.
On Johnsons hit, the ball went through the fielder, and the runner sped on, circling the bases to score under a high throw on the relay, giving Rose its 8-1 lead.
That should have proven
enough - but almost didn't as Hunt rallied for four runs in the top of the seventh.
Pinchhitter Eddie Williams was hit by a pitch and David Dorsey walked, being replaced by Tony Richardson on the base. Both moved up on a wild pitch and Paul Durham walked, loading them up. Carlton Vick then hit one between Kirkland's legs to score both Williams and Richardson, and with one down, Kinley hit Walston.
That brought on Kirkland, who got McClure to ground to .
second. But the umpire ruled Fuqua bobbled the ball and called Walston safe as Durham crossed the plate Stevie Hinnant then walked, forcing in Vick before the final batter grounded back to the mound to start the, game ending double play
The victory ieaves Rose with a 12-1 Big East record, while Hunt falls to 11-8 overall and 8-5 in the league.
Rose will close out the regular season on Thursday, traveling to Elizabeth City io face .Northeastern
Huai o 1 4- 5
Rok ...................100 7 1-8
E-labom, Kinli). Durlum 2, Vrck. Walston. Fuqua. DP-Hunt. Rose LOB Hunt 8. Rose I, SB-Warren, Kirkland, Hinnant Walston, Fis Cher .Nover, S- Vick
Pitching
Hunt
PopeiL,7H
Rose
Kinley (W,8li Kirkland
Ip h r er hi) so
8 5 8 4 4 5
61, 5 1 5 8
0 0 0 I 0
Patient Little Draws Walk, Keys Victory
HBPb) Kinley iLemraons, Williams, Walstoni, WP-Kinley PB-Woodworth.Save-Kirkland
By The Associated Press Bryan Little of the Montreal Expos figured that after nearly 4'2 hours, he could
Juggling Act
Chicago Cubs second baseman Ryne Sandberg bobbles the ball as Atlantas Claudell Washington safely steals the base during seventh inning at Wrigley Field. The Cubs won the game, 4-3. (AP Laserphoto)
Sports Calendor
Editors Note: Scheduies are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todys Sports Tennis Regionals at Wilson Hunt Softball Women's League Copper Kettle vs Wachovia Fred Webb vs Players Retreat * Greenville Travel vs Pitt Memorial
Burroughs-Wellcome vs Prep Shirt
Industrial Uague Belvoir vs. TRW
Coca-Cola vs Burroughs Wellcome 182 Empire Brushes #2 vs. Grady-White
Vermont-American vs. Enforcers CIS vs. Public Works Pitt Memorial vs. Cox Armature Fire Fighters vs. Union Carbide East Carolina *2 vs. WNCT TV City League J.A 'svs SunnysideEggs Whittington vs. Subway Pair vs. California Concepts Baseball Babe Ruth League Wachovia Bank vs. Pepsi Cola LitUe League Kiwanisvs.Sportsworld Exchange vs, Carroll & Associates
Thursday's Sports Baseball
JamesvilleatBaUi Creswell at Bear Grass Williamston at Edenton (7:30 p.m.)
Rose at Northeastern (4 p.m ) Ayden-Grifton at North Pitt (8
p.m.)
Little League Optimists vs. Jaycees Moose vs. Wellcome
Hendrix & Dail vs. First State Bank
Softball
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,X)akmont Trinity vs. Black Jack Peoples Baptist vs. Jarvis Co-Ed League Western Sizzlin vs. Bill's Goodies Ervins vs. Bonds Tennis Regionals at Wilson Hunt Track
Regionals
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afford to stand around a little longer.
So when he went to the plate to face Los Angeles Dodgers reliever Tom Niedenfuer in the bottom of the 15th inning with the bases loaded and two outs and the game tied 2-2, he was thinking about drawing a walk. And about how cold, tired and hungry he was.
"1 just wanted to go home, Little said. "1 knew he had to groove some strikes or the game was over. When he fell behind 3-0,1 was going to take two pitches.!
Little did take two, the second being a ball four that forced in Andre Dawson with the winning run.
In other National League games, Chicago beat Atlanta 4-3, Cincinnati nipped Pittsburgh 2-1, New York downed San Diego 6-4, Philadelphia edged San Francisco 2-1 and St. Louis topped Houston 8-4.
"You never like to lose a ballgame like that, griped Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda. "You always want to make the other club work for it.
Montreal indeed had to work for victory after ovecoming a 2-1 deficit in the bottom of the ninth with a two-out rally against Fernando Valenzuela.
Ron Roenicke singled in both Los Angeles runs in the first inning and Valenzuela took a three-hitter into the ninth, but^ Gary Carter -hitless in his previous 19 at-bats - doubled and Tim Wallach singled in pinch runner Jerry White.
The game remained tied until the bottom of the 15th, when Dawson opened with a single off Steve Howe, 2-1, the fourth Los Angeles pitcher. Dawson moved to second on A1 Olivers groundout and Niedenfuer replaced Howe.
Bobby Ramos walked, Wallach struck out and then an error by Dodger third baseman Pedro Guerrero on Chris Speiers grounder loaded the bases and set the stage for Little.
Youre always worried about walks, said Montreal Manager Bill Virdon, who saw his pitchers issue 10 bases on balls - including five to Greg Brock, tying an NL record. "Thats what drives a manager crazy.
Cubs 4, Braves 3 Leon Durhams two-run homer in the sixth inning snapped a 2-2 tie and helped break Pascual Perezs nine-game winning streak. Perez won his final fCHir decisions last year and started this
season with five straight victories.
Perez, who gave up two Chicago runs in the first inning, retired 14 in a row before Bill Buckner singled with one out in the sixth. Durham followed with his fifth homer of the season.
Reds 2, Pirates 1 . Mario Soto continued his success in Pittsburghs Three Rivers Stadium by firing a three-hitter and striking out nine. Soto, 5-2, is 54) lifetime at Three Rivers and owns a 7-2 career mark against the Pirates.
The ri^t-hander did not allow a hit after surrendering Mike Easlers first homer of the season in the fifth inning.
Gary Redus was Cincinnatis hitting star. He singled in the games first run in the fifth inning and drilled a homer in the eighth to snap a 1-1 tie.
Mets6, Padres4 Rookie Darryl Strawberry belted a three-run homer, his second blast in two days, to give New York and Tom ^aver the victory.
Seaver, 3-2, pitched six innings and allowed three runs on seven hits. Strawberrys homer in the sixth wiped out San Diegos 3-2 lead.
The Mets survived a ninth-inning San Diego threat as the Padres loaded the bases with two outs. Reliever Doug Sisk retired Steve Garvey on a fly ball to record his third save.
Phillies 2, Giants 1 Right-hander John Denny hurled seven scoreless innings and drove in his first run since 1979 with a single.
Denny, 4-2, was making his first start since being hit in the right thumb by a line drive during his last start six days ago. Denny, who spent most of the last three seasons in the American Lea^e, delivered his RBI single during Philadelphias two-run second inning.
Reliever A1 Holland pick'ed up his first save despite allowing Bob Brenlys homer in the ninth.
Cardinals 8, Astros 4 Bob Forsch took a big lead into the ninth inning partially built with his run-scoring single and sacrifice fly - as St, Louis won its sixth straight game.
St. Louis led 8-1 going into the ninth, but Forsch left with one out ) go after giving up RBI doubles to Alan A^by, Jose Cruz and Bill Doran.
Lonnie Smith belted a
two-run double and Ozzie Smith contributed a two-run single for the Cardinals.
Rampettes Clinch Berth
A pair of home runs by Sheila Carmon and a 14-hit offensive barrage gave the Rampettes of Rose High School a 12-1 victory over Wilson Hunt and clinched one of the Big East 4-A Conference berths to the state softball tournament.
The Rampettes have assured themselves of at least a tie for the conference title, and a win over Northeastern Thursday at Elizabeth City would give them the title outright. Rose trounced Northeastern, winless in the conference, 31-7 in the two teams first meeting.
Janet Mizelle finished the day with three hits in as many at-bats for Rose, while Carmon and Wendy Jones went 3-4 at the plate, Linda Winstead slapped a pair of singles in three trips to the plate.
Rose jumped on the Lady Warriors in the bottoiri of the first for a pair of runs. Winning pitcher Amanda Smith and Karyn Carraway drew walks and Linda Winstead singled to load the bases. Mizelle singled to score Smith and Laura Vincents sacrificei fly drove in Carraway.
Carmon rapped a solo homer in the second for a 3-0 Rose lead.
But the Rampettes pounded Hunt for eight runs in the third to put the game out of reach. Jones, Winstead and Mizelle singled to load the bases, and Vincent ripped a triple to push across all three runners. Carmon slapped her second homer of the (lay for two more runs.
After two out, Lisa Leggett singly and Smith and Carraway walked to once again fill the bases. A single by Jones drove in Leggett, a base on balls plated Smith and Carraway scored on a walk to Mizelle.
Teresa Bass had a pair of singles for Hunt, which scored its run in the fourth.
Rose is now 10-3 in the conference and 12-6 overall.
the Coastal Conference softball race.
The win left Conley and Havelock with 7-3 records and set up a one-game playoff between the two for the right to advance into the 4-A,3-A playoffs next week. That game will be held today at 4 p.m. at Conley.
The Valkyries got the lead in the first inning, scoring four times, and they added as many in the second to put the game out of reach. Conley added one in the third, four more in the sixth and one in the seventh.
Havelock scored single runs in the first and fifth frames.
Lisa Mills and Lori Kandrotas each had three hits to lead Conley, while Vonda Stokes had two. No one had more than one hit for Havelock.
Conley is 13-5 overall.
Conley 441 OM 1-14 12
Havelock.... 100 010 0- 2 5
WP-Lisa Mills
L
.30
Hunt........000 100 0- 1 5 1
Rose........218 010 x-12 14 2
WP-Amanda Smith.
Conley......... 14
Hovelock..........2
HAVELOCK - D.H. Conley romped to a 14-2 victory over Havelock yesterday, pulling into a tie for second place in
Jamesville____
Mattomuslceet 2
SWAN QUARTER -Jamesville, which has already wrapped up the 1983 Tobacco Belt softball championship, romped to a 30-2 victory over Mattamuskeet yesterday.
The Lady Bullets scored 13 big runs in the first inning and put the game away. They added one in the second, nine in the third, five in the fourth and two in the fifth and final inning. Mattamuskeet scored both of its runs in the fourth.
Kim Floyd led the Jamesville hitting with five, while Selita Cross, Kim Hale and Robin Manning each had three. Lori Hardison, Donna Coburn, Cathy Williams and Robin Gardner each had two hits.
Floyd hit two home runs in the game, while Gardner, Manning and WiUiams each had one round-tripper.
Jamesville is now 15-0 in conference play and 164) overall. The Lady Bullets close out their regular season against Bath, then enter the 1-A,2-A playoffs next week, facing the number two team from the Albemarle Conference in the first round.
JamesvUle ...(13)19 52-30 26 1 Mattamuskeet.. . 000 20 2 3 7 WP - Robin Manning
Williamston 21
Washington 0
WILLIA.MSTON - A two-run homer in first inning by Wanda Price set the scenerio for a 214) victory by Williamston over Washington in Northeastern 3-A Conference softball action.
Price, Timberly Rodgers and Regina Rodgers each finished the game with two hits in three at bats for Williamston, while Jan Mills had a pair of singles in five trips to the plate. Williamston utilized 14 hits and 15 errors by Washington. .
Sharon* Hopkins went the distance on the mound for Williamston.
Lynn Mills walked to lead off the bottom of the first before Prices home run. Hope Hopkins later singled in Timberly Rodgers, who had singled and advanced on a walk to Regina Rodgers.
Williamston added six in the third arid seven in the fifth for the bulk of its offense.
Williamston, now 12-2 in the conference, travels to Edenton Thursday.
Washington. 000 000 0- 0 2 15 Williamston 336 270 x-21 14 4 WP-Sharon Hopkins
Southern Nash .... 17 FarmvilleC 0
FARMVILLE - Southern Nash romped to a 174) victory over Farmville Central yesterday in softball, winding up a year without a win for the Lady Jaguars.
Southern scored twice in the second and added three more in the third. The Ladybirds picked up six in the fourth, Hve in the fifth and one in the sixth to close out their scoring,
S. Jones led the. Southern hitting with four.
Farmville was led by Hope Gorham, Martha Sat-terthwaite, Christine Bynum and Michelle Medlin, each with two.
The game closed out the year for Farmville.
s. Nash 023 651 0-17 19 1
FarmvilleC .000 000 0- 0 li 5 WP-C. Brown
Chocowinity 20
Bear Gross........3
CHOCOWINITY Chocowinity High School romped to a 20-3 softball victory over Bear Grass yesterday.
Chocowinity scored twice in the first inning then scored five times each in the next two fram.es for a 124) advantage. The Squaws picked up three each in the fourth and fifth and scored twice more in the sixth.
Bear Grass got two in the fourth and one m the fifth for its total.
Harvey and Mizelle led the Chocowinity hitting with three each, while Ingals, Congelton, Ellis, Williams and Clark each had two. Lisa Taylor had two for the Bears,
Bear Grass plays host to Creswell on Thursdav.
Bear Grass (X)0 Chocowinity 255 WP-W Elk.s
0- 3 X-20
Southwest.........5
Greene C..........0
PINETOPS - Southwest Edgecombe clinched second place - and a berth in the 4-A,3-A softball playoffs -with a 54) victory over Greene Central yesterday.
The Lady Cougars scored once in the first inning and added two each in the fourth and fifth, while Pam Morgan held the Rams scoreless.
No one on either team managed more than one hit -in fact. Southwest got only one hit.
Greene Central winds up the season with a 14-7 overall mark and a 7-5 league record.
GreeneC 000 000 0-0 5 8
Southwest 100 220 x-5 1 3
WP - Pam .Morgan
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I
Chargers Tie For Title; Face Playoff
- By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer
BETHEL - Ayden-Grifton catcher Roger Moye slammed a pair of homers, including a grand slam, and drove in eight runs to lead the Chargers to a 13-4 victory over North Pitt and a share of the Eastern Carolina 3-A Conference baseball title.
The win forces a one-shot playoff game at C.B. Aycock Thursday at 8 p.m. The Falcons had an opportunity Friday to lock up the conference championship in the game against Farmville Central, but the Jaguars made things interesting with a 7-6 win in Pikeville. The teams finished with identical 9-3 conference marks, while the Chargers are 17-4 overall.
Starting pitcher Tyrone Gay
Ay-Gnf at) r h rti North Pitt ah r h rt)
Coiway.ss 4 110 Hines.cl 3 10 0
.)ohn.son.3b i I :> 0 BBnle>,:!b 4 0 0 0
' ,3300 GBriley.ss 2 0 0 0
Ga> p 3 4 2 2 Keel C 3 112
Kennedylb 13 11 Whitehrsl.lb 2 110
Mnye.e .3 2 2 8 .Mamiing.2b 3111 Garre rf .3010 Rollins.lf 2 0 0 1
Hardeelf 4 0 11 Lewis.ph 10 0 0
.Mitfhell db 4 0 10 Ayers.p 0 0 0 0
3enlerh2b o o 0 0 Hobbs.p 10 0 0
Raula.dh 3 0 0 0
Gnmes.rf o 0 0 0
Totals 32 13 1112 Totals 23 4 3 4
scored tour runs for the Chargers, while driving in a pair with an inside-the-park home run in the seventh. Joey Kennedy got a hit in his only official at bat, but four walks allowed him to score three runs for Ayden-Grifton.
Gay struck out four and allowed just one hit in the two innings he pitched before being lifted for Doug Coley, who pitched four frames and gave up the other two Panther hits while recording his ninth win in as many decisions.
Gays been having some problems with a sore back, said A-G coach Allan Wilson. "We had already decided that if we had a lead going into about the third or fourth, we were going to take him out. But hes probably going to start Thursday against Aycock.
Ayden-Grifton took advan
tage of four errors in the field and nine walks by the Panthers pitching staff to put the game away.
After two out in the top of the first, Doug Coley got to second on the first of the North Pitt errors. Gay was intentionally walked to create the force play, but a wild pitch allowed both runners to advance. The first base^in-balls to Kennedy loaded the bases to set up one of the unusual plays of the game.
Panther starter Chris Ayers ran the count to 3-2 on Moye, and Ayden-Grifton coach Alan Wilson started the runners in an effort to generate early runs. North Pitt catcher Daniel Keel stepped forward to make the tag on Coley and believing that to be the third out, flipped the ball toward the mound and headed to the dugout. Gays courtesy runner
scampered home to give the Chargers a 2-0 edge.
Keel made up for the error by blasting a two-run homer in the bottom half of the inning to knot the score at 2-2. He drove in center fielder Jay Hines, who reached first on an error to lead off the inning.
In the top of the third, Gay drew a base-on-balls and
Kennedy singled for the Chargers. Moye ripped the ball over the fence in right
field to put Ayden-Grifton
ahead to stay.
Hines walked to open the third for the Panthers. But
Brian Briley followed by ripping a line drive to Kennedy at first base, who scrambled to tag the bag for the force at first.
"That got us out of the inning, said Wilson. They had the momentum at the time.
Ayden-Gnftoo 203 SOI 2-13f
NorthPitt 200 200 0- 4
K B Briley 2. Keel. Wliileburst Conay Goley DP-Ayden4inllon 2 LB-Ayben Gnfton 8. North Pill 4 2B-Manning HR-Keel Move 2. Gay SB Conwav
Islanders Sweep Series From Oilers For 4th Cup
Piichini Aydeo-Gnfloo
Gay Goley Garrett North Pitt Ayers L.4-4'
G Bnley Hobbs
WP-Avers. Golev PB-Move
ip h r er bti M
2 I 2 I I 4
4 2 2 2 5 2
I U 0 0 0 I
3 5 7 5 5 1
I 2 3 3 I I
3 4 3 3 3 0
UNIONDALE. N Y. (AP) -Billy Smith didnt glow in the spotlight, he seethed.
It was Smiths goaltending as much as anything that catapulted the New York Islanders to a shocking four-game sweep of the -Stanley Cup finals from the Edmonton Oilers.
In winning their fourth
iM
Youth Baseball
but fell a run short.
, Miller and Walter Gatlin
Thompson Ins 7 jjjjg to lead the
Winterville LL
Pizza inn ......5
WINTERVILLE Thompson Insurance pushed across three runs in the top of the sixth and held on to defeat Pizza Inn 7-5 in Winterville Little League baseball.
Terry Williams and Fred Streeter had a pair of singles for Thompson Insurance.
Williams led off the sixth with a single, and a base hit by Streeter scored Williams. Billy Parker followed with a sine, and a throwing error allowed Streeter and Parker to score the winning runs.
Pizza Inn scored three runs in the top of the first, but Thompson came back with three in the bottom half of the frame. Thompson scored one in the second, but Pizza Inn retaliated to knot the score at 3-3 in the third.
Pizza Inn took a 5-4 lead in the fifth before Thompson rallied for the win.
Edwards Auto 19
Sunshine Garden.. 14
Edwards Auto defeated Sunshine Garden Center 19-14, however details of the game were not made available.
little Leogue
Coca-Col 13
Lions ...........12
COca-Cola outlasted the winless Lions, 13-12, yesterday in the North State Little League.
Coke picked up two runs in the first, only to see the Lions come up with one in the bottom of the first. Coke then added three in the second for a 5-1 lead. The Lions erased most of that in the third, scoring three times.
Coke pushed over five runs in the top of the fourth, moving out to a 10^ lead, but the Lions scored four times to cut it back to 10-8.
Coke then putjt away with three in the fifth. Derrick Clark led off with a single and Derrick Hines reached on an error. Andy Miller doubled to ' score Clark, and Mike Smiths sacrifice fly brought in Hines. Miller scored on Kevin Jordans single.
The Lions tried to rally in the fifth, scoring four times.
Coke hitting, while Monty Measamer had three and Mike Harris had two for the Lions.
First Federal 8
True Value........5
First Federal remained unbeaten in Tar Heel Little League play with an 8-5 win over True Value Hardware yesterday.
First Federal scored twice in the first inning to take the lead, but True Value matched that in the second, then scored once in the top of the third to move ahead, 3-2.
First Federal then responded with five in the bottom of the frame, moving back out, this time for good. Frankie Pu^ reached on a fielders choice as did Trey Dansey. Jon Bolen singled in Pugh, and Maurice Dyer doubled to drive in both runners. Lee Watson reached on an error, scoring Dyer. Watson moved on to third on a wild pitch ans scored on a passed ball.
First Federal got its other run in the fifth, while True Value picked up two in the top of the fifth.
Bolen led the First Federal hitting with two, while no one had more than one for True Value.
S.P. Bambino
Bears .........9
Hornets...........7
CHICOD - The Grifton Bears downed the Chicod Hornets, 9-7, yesterday in a Southern Pitt Bambino League game.
John Deaver hurled the win, while Gene Stancil hit a three-run homer. Eric Sparrow added two hits, one a triple, while Dwayne Lylely had two also. Gray Mills led the Hornet hitting with two, one a double, while Dale Sutton also had a double.
Prep Uogue
Shop-Eze.........11
Garris-Evans.......8
Shop-Eze Foodland gained a 11-8 victory over Garris-Evans in the Prep League last night.
Details of the game were not made available.
ATLANTIC
CHRISTIAN
COLLEGE
TENNIS CAMP
BOYS AND GIRLS 10-18 FIRST WEEK JUNE 12-18 SECOND WEEK JUNE 19-25
Ed Clojfd-OifKtor Tom Pirhim, tesoc. Dir.
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consecutive National Hockey League championship, the Islanders used the stingiest defense in the game to hold the highest scoring team in league history to six goals in four games. They shut out Wayne Gretzky, limiting him to four assists and neutralizing the greatest offensive player in hockey.
Mainly, they had Smith acrobatically protecting the net in winning 2-0, 6-3, 5-1 and, finally on Tuesday night, a 4-2 to clinch it.
But Smith, who won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the Stanley Cups most valuable player, expressed as much bitterness as satisfaction after leading the Isles to Cup No. 4, matching Montreals streak in 1^76-79 and one short of the Canadiens 1956-60 title run.
ive never been so hurt in all my life as from the abuse I took in this series, said Smith. After what happened in Edmonton (slashing incidents with the Oilers Glenn Anderson in the first game and Gretzky in the second), I couldnt walk the streets out there. I had to look over my shoulder all the time.
Smith was especially upset
by the coverage those episodes got in the Edmonton newspapers. -
But it made me have stamina I never had, fuel Ive never had, more desire than I ever had.
It put fuel in my body and thats why I performed the way I did out there. It got me more motivated than I imagined I could get.
Smith admitted he had plenty of help.
"1 thought this was my best series ever, said the only remaining original Islander, who has backstopped the team to all four Cups. But the guys played the best they ever have in front of me.
Indeed, the Islanders were practically perfect in shattering the Oilers dream of becoming the first former World Hockey Association team to win the Cup. The Oilers, who collected a ,record 424 regular-season goals, outscored opponents 74-33 in becoming the first former WHA squad to make the finals. But they couldnt get anywhere against the more experienced, better balanced and more intense champs.
Vikings Bow To Rams, 3-1
HAVELOCK - Calvin Phillips slammed a solo homer in the third and Darryl Edwards struck out 13, but Havelock utilized errors for three unearned runs for a 3-1 win and a share of the Coastal 3-A Conference baseball title.
Havelock and White Oak finished tied with 8-2 conference records on the season, but the Rams defeated White Oak in the teams two meetings to lock the playoff berth.
Catcher Tpm Young singed and Ray Carter reached first on an error to open the third for Havelock. After two outs, Danny Clark singled in Young for a 1-0 lead for the Rams.
Phillips homer in the fourth proved to be the only hit by Conley.
In the bottom of the fourth, Doug Downie walked and Jay Colly reached first on an error. A passed ball scored Downie from third, and a
sacrifice fly by D.J. Fleming drove in Colly.
Darryl Edwards had an exceptionally good game, said Conley coach Gerald Garner. He pitched about as well as you can - he only gave up four walks and struck out 13.
I was real proud of our kids; they had a chance to fold, but they kept fighting back.
Conley finished the season 1-9 in the conference and 7-14 overall.
Conley .000 100 0-1 1 2
Havelock......001 200 x-3 5 0
Edwards and McCarter; Clark and Young.
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Errors continued to haunt North Pitt in the fourth frame, as Gene Johnson and Coley reached first on two more by the Panthers. A single by Gay loaded the bases, and a walk to Kennedy drove in Johnson. Moye confidently stepped to the plate a hooked the ball over the fence give A-G a commanding 10-2 advantage.
North Pitt bounced back for a pair of runs in the bottom half of the inning, as Ken
Whitehurst singled and Lee Manning doubled him home. An error on a grounder by William Rollins allowed Manning to score. A double play got the Chargers out of the inning.
Walks to Kennedy and Garrett and an infield single by Terry Garrett loaded the bases for Ayden-Grifton in the sixth. Kennedy raced home on an infield fly by Wesley Hardee.
Gays round-tripper came in
the seventh after Jackie Conway singled to open the frame. After two outs. Gay ripped the ball deep to center where the fence protrudes to approximated 450 feet.
We hit the ball well, said Wilson. Moyes two home runs really made the difference in this game.
Well have to hit well to beat Aycock. I think we have better pitching than Aycock, but maybe they have a little better hitting.
In the two teams regular season contests, Aydeh-Grifton lost at Aycock 5-3 and later rebounded for a 6-3 win at home.
Greene Ends Year In Victory
Bullets Clinch Tie For Title
SNOW HILL - Greene Central closed out the 1983 baseball season last night with an 8-3 victory over Southwest Edgecombe. The win left the Rams tied for third place in the conference standings.
Southwest picked up a run in the top of the first, but the Rams came back with two in the bottom of the frame.
Then, in the third, Greene Central pushed over three for a 5-1 lead. Richie Chase and James Moore both walked and moved up on a wild pitch. Todd Grant grounded out, scoring Chase, and a wild pitch let Moore score. Clayton Joyner reached on an error, moved up on a passed ball and scored when .Michael Warren grounded out.
The Rams added two in the fourth and one in the fifth, while Southwest picked up two in the fourth to wind up the scoring.
Southwest got only one hit off the pitching of Rusty Murphy, who struck out seven, walked seven and hit two. The lone hit was a two-run single in the fourth, while a hit batsman with the bases loaded brought in the run in the first.
No one on either team had more than one hit.
The Rams close out the year at 7-5 in the conference and 13-7 overall.
Southwest.....too 200 0-3 1 7
Greene C......203 210 x-8 5 3
Naylor, Drake (5) and Vamell; Murphy and Grant.
SWAN QUARTER -Jamesvilles Rex Bell tossed a no-hitter at Mattamuskeet yesterday, 13-0, as Jamesville clinched at least a tie for the leagues championship.
The Bullets are now 15-0 in the league and has one game left, Thursday at Bath, which is one game behind the Bullets. A victory there by Jamesville would sew up the title, while a loss would mean a tie between the two.
Bell, in going the distance, struck out 11 and walked just four. He earlier tossed a two-hitter, but this was his first no-hjtter of the year.
Jamesville got all it needed in the first inning, scoring twice. Matthew Moore reached on an error and stole second. He scored on Bells single. Terry Perry then singled to drive in Bell.
Jamesville went on to score one in the third, four in the fifth, two in the sixth and four
more in the seventh for its 13-run total.
Bell led the Bullet hitting with three, while Moore, Richie Ange and Perry each had two.
Now 17-2 overall, the Bullets go for the title Thursday at Bath.
Jamesville . 201 042 4-13 13 2 Mmuskeet . 000 000 0- 0 0 4
Bell and T Perry; Calhoon and O'Neil.
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Farmville Downs Southern Nash, 4-0
By ALAN WOOTEN Reflector Sports Writer
FARMVILLE - It may have been the final game of their career for the seniors but it was a sophomore who stole the show in Farmville on Tuesday afternoon.
Billy Godley ran his streak of scoreless innings to 24 with a route-going shutout performance, enabling Farmville Central to whip Southern Nash, 4-0. It was the Jaguars third straight win.
Godley also chipped in at the plate with a run scored in the first inning and an rbi double in the fifth.
Its been a real good season, FC coach Billy Davis said afterward. I couldnt
have asked more out of them They began to jell about half-way through the season and played extremely well. Ive enjoyed these guys more than any other Ive worked with. They are all hard workers and dedicated.,
The Jaguars finished the season at 7-5 in Eastern Carolina Conference play and 11-8 overall, good for a tie for third place with Greene Central. Southern Nash finished 3-9 and 4-15.
Godley allowed just four hits while striking out nine and walking just one in lowering his team leading ERA to 2.09. Godley did not face more than four batters in an inning except the seventh.
Im glad weve got him back two more years, Davis said. He started to settle down about half-way through the season and really came on down the stretch. He started getting ahead of his batters, mixing his pitches, and increasing his velocity and that made the difference.
I hate to see any of my seniors go, Davis continued. Theyve been an excellent group for my younger kids to look to. They had good leadership and thats a quality. They will be missed.
Farmville Central got things going in the first inning. Godley reached on an error. He advanced to second when
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Members of me Greenville Tennis
bLigh
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Association USTA/Michelob Light League Tennis championship team are: (first row, from left) Bobby Short, Leon Johnson, Robert Johnson, (second row) Nelson
Staton-captain, Marvin Hardy, Richard Harrison, (third row) Ben Johnson, Don Ensley. The team, sponsored by the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department, leaves Friday for the state playoffs in Greensboro.
ACC Seeks Shot Clock From NCAA Next Year
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP)'- The Atlantic Coast Conference liked last seasons brand of rapid-fire basketball so much the league is asking the NCAA for permission to use a shot clock again next year.
League athletic directors and school faculty representatives decided Tuesday to ask the National Collegiate Athletic Association to approve use of a 45-second shot clock that would be turned off in the last four minutes of the game.
Under a series of options proposed by the NCAA Rules Committee, two conferences will be allowed to use a clock turned off in the last four minutes. Two others will be permitted to use a clock the entire game. The NCAA will announce its decision in September.
The ACC coaches earlier proposed a box restricting movement of coaches along the sideline. But the league wont ask permission to use the box because of concern the NCAA might not approve both the shot clock and the box.
We have to make a decision; we made the one we thought best for the basektball
program, s^id conference Commissioner Bob James.
But he said the league would like to see wider use of shot clocks. ,
Part of our request is we are going to ask the committee to allow all those conferences that experimented with the clock last year to use it in some form this year, James said.
Eight Division 1 conferences used the clock last season. The ACC used both a 30-second clock and a three-point field goal.
The NCAA options would not allow a conference to use both a shot clock and three-point goal next season.
Next years ACC mens basketball tournament is set for the Greensboro (N.C.) Coliseum March 9-11.
Durham (N.C.) Athletic Park is the site of next years conference baseball tournament. League officials approved a coachs proposal to move the event from North Carolinas home field.
There was a feeling on the part of our coaches to have a neutral site, James said. The tournament has been held in Chapel Hill, N.C., for the past four seasons.
Chuck Neinas, the executive director of the' College Football Association, briefed league officials on the latest developments in a lgal battle over NCAA.iootball television contracts.
The general guess is theres a 50-50 chance now that therell be an NCAA program next fall, James said.
Its by far our preference, that we remain under the NCAA program for this year, he said, adding that a tremendous amount of rescheduling has to occur should the games be aired under a different setup.
The league set March 2-4 for the womens basketball tournament.
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Southern pitcher Eddie Bailes tried to pick him off after he broke for second. The throw from first to second was dropped by shortstop Dexter Harris. A fly by Randy Daniels moved him to third and he scored on Corbetts single to centerfield.
The Jaguars added another run in the third. With one out, Corbett walked and stole second. The throw to second went into centerfield and Corbett advanced to third. Baker flew out to rightfield to score Corbett fora 2-O.lead.
Farmville added two more insurance runs in the fifth. Freshman Dennis Tripp singled and went to second on a passed ball. Godleys double scored him. Daniels then flew out to rightfield. Godley tried to advance to third but a perfect throw nailed him for the second out,
Wade Corbett hit a fly bail into short-rightfield for what seemed to be the final out. Corbett started to jog half way to second but the ball was dropped, allowing Corbett to reach second. Baker reached on an error and Carraway singled up the middle to score Corbett for a 4-0 cushion.
Southern Nashs only serious threat came in the final inning. Kevin Shearin singled to center. A fielders
choice moved him to second. Skyler Smith singled but Dexter Harris fielders choice got him out at second and moved Shearin to third. Harris stole second but Thomas Robbins struck out to end the game,
Pitching has definitely been the key these last three games, Davis said. When you keep the other team from scoring, you win ballgames. We havent left a lot of men on base like we did early in the year.
"I just hate to see these boys go, Davis continued, Theyve been an excellent group. They deserve a lot of praise.
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Totals
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3 0 19 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 110
Totals
23 4 5 4
Southern Nash.................. 000 000 0-0
Farmville Central lOl 020 o- 4
E-May, Hams 2, Blackmon. Wilson Smith. DP-Southern Nash, LOB-Soulbem Nash 6, Farmville Central 5, 2B-May. Godley SB-Corbetl Richardson, Hams. S-Walston. SF Baker
Pitclung Southern Naafe
Bailes iL,0-51 Farmville Central Godley I W.Mi ,,
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6 5 1 3 2 3
7 4 0 0 1 9
PB-Blackmon
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20-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, May 18,1983Boddicker Replaces Palmer, Wins 5-0
By The Associated Press
Mike Boddicker is 12 years younger, four inches shorter and 20 pounds lighter than Jim Palmer. He doesnt do underwear commercials, either.
But in taking the injured Palmer's place in the Baltimore rotation he undressed the Chicago White Sox with a five-hit shutout in his first start of the season.
"Hey, Boddicker is a darn good pitcher, Manager Joe Altobelli said after the rookie
right-hander blanked the White Sox 5-0, enabling the Orioles to sweep Tuesdays twi-night doubleheader. He had already worked his way into a starting job with us and he beat the Yankees last year. Its not like hes a veteran pitcher, but hes got a few years under his belt in Triple A ball. Hes not in awe out there, and he showed that. He pitched a hangup game. Another rookie, Leo Hernandez, homered in each game, with the Orioles taking
the opener 7-2. In other American League action, the Boston Red Sox downed the Kansas City Royals 4-1, the Milwaukee Brewers outlasted the Toronto Blue Jays 9-6, the New York Yankees nipped the Detroit Tigers 7-5 in 11 innings, the California Angels beat the Seattle Mariners 3-1, the Texas Rangers edged the Cleveland Indians 6-5 in 12 innings and the Oakland As nipped the Minnesota Twins 7-6.
The 5-foot-ll, 172-pound
Boddicker, who has been up with Baltimore briefly in each of the last three seasons, walked one and struck out eight in his second major league start - the other was a losing effort in the second game of a doubleheader against Cleveland on Oct. 4, 1980 - and 12th appearance.
"My curve was walking real well and so was my changeup, which is a forkball, Boddicker said. Normally, I dont get my curve over that much. My slider is usually my
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4 WU, MA-Sdte giUYBALL'S V /i2Toppii?r-KioiMe-' m/eMiOMAL ANP
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Bowling
Thursday Night Mixed
W L
High Timers 4 ..0
Team #9...............4 0
Western Sizzlin' 3 1
Team 8................3 1
Team!...............3 1
Home Cleaners........3 1
Team .12...............2>: 1-.
Shoneys...............1 -j 2
Team 7...............1 3
Sweet Revenge.........1 3
Team 2................1 3
Hanging Gang 1 3
HangTen ......:...0 4
Team 1 0 0 4
Men's high game, Johnnie Harrell. 224: men's high series, Ed Uiehl. 590; women's high game and series, Jean Foreman, 233,584.
Rec Softball
Baltimore 7-5. Chicago 2-0 Boston 4. Kansas Citvl New York 7. Detroit 5,11 innings Milwaukee!!. Toronto 6 lexasb, cievelanns, 12 innings Oakland 7, Minnesota 6 > California 3. Seattle 1
Wednesdays Games Oakland i Krueger 4-31 at Minnesota I Viola 0-21 Toronto (Leal 3-31 at Milwaukee iSut ton41i
Kansas City i Leonard 4-3i at Boston iBrown3-2), in)
New York iRighetti 5-li at Detroit iRuckerl-0), (n)
Chicago I Dotson 4-3) at Baltimore (Davis2-0i, in)
Cleveland i Sorensen 2-5) at Texas (Hough2-3), (ni California iZahn 3-2) at Seattle iStod-dard2-5i, in)
Thursday's Games BaltimoreatToronto, in)
M innesota at Boston, in)
Texas at Detroit, in) CaliforniaalSeattle, in)
NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
Church Lague
1st Pentecostal.....004 061 011
1st Free Will........000 002 0-2
Leading hitters; FF - Jeff Cox 2 2; FP - H L. Austin 3-4, Bill Pilgreen 2-3, Greg Duncan 2-3, Gerald England 2-3.
Trinity Oil OOO 0-2
Immanuel ^ 051 003 x9
Leading hiwrs. 1 - Dennis
Winstead 2 2 Men Haigler 3-4, T -Maury Harri* 3
Church of Gol 401 OOO 0-5
Blackjack f...... 101 600 x-8
Leading hitters; BJ - Jr. Hardee 2 3, Billy Kittrell 3-3, Dixon Page
2-3; CG - David Ross 2-3.
Faith................(13)43 30-23
St. James.............. 100 506
Leading hitters: SJ - Jimmy Creech 2-3, Jay Whiteford 2-3; F faul Brafford 2-4. Tim Edwards 2-2-
1st Presbyterian 3.50 010 000-9
Memorial ........203 301 001-10
Leading hitters: FP Joe
Garzik 4-5, Jeff Scarborough 3-5;
.MB - Ted Peele 5-5, Doug Boyette
3-5.
Feoples 002 040 0-6
Oakmont 200 222 x8
Leading hitters: P - David Harris 2-3; 0 - John Cheek 3-3. A1 Dickens 2-3, Bobby Nichols 2-3, Mike Brown 2-3, .-Vshl'ey Ferrell HR.
Grace..............620 000 3-11
1st Christian 000 010 0-1
Leading hitters: G Haywood (Jutland 3-4. Wayne Bailey 3-4.
Mt. Pleasant 420 004 o4lO
Jarvis.............002 030 4-9
Leading hitters: MP - AJ .Stancil 3-4, Troy Perkins 3-4^, Chip Daniels 3-4, Jerry Simpson 3-4; J Jeff Aldridge 4-4, Sam McDonald 3-4.
Co-Ed League
Ervins............ 525 101 1-15
Western Sizzlin' .302 020 0-7 Leading hitters; WS - Stan Joyner 3-3. Lynn Davidson 4^; E -Alvin Frazier 3-4, Barry Sealey 3-4.
BillsGoodies 123 140 4-14
Bond's............214 070 0-7
Leading hitters: BG - Bill Brown 3-4, Tony Perkins 3-4, Tommy Grove 3-4, Rick Dillion 2-2.
Boseboll Stondings
By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W L Pet GB
Baltimore 21 13 618 -
Boston 19 13
Toronto 18 14
Milwaukee ' 17 15
Cleveland 17 17
New York Delniit
WEST DIVISION
W L Pet.
GB
Philadelphia
18
12
.600
-
St. Louis
18
12
.600
Montreal
16
15
.516
24
Pittsburgh
12
18
400
6
Chicago
12
20
.375
7
New York
12
20
375
7
WEST DIVISION
Los Angeles
24
10
706
Atlanta
22
12
647
2
San Francisco
17
17
500
7
Cincinnati
16
20
444
9
San Diego
15
20
429
9'z
Houston
16
22
421
10
.Minnesota. 26. Rice, Boston. 2b; Thomlon, Cleveland. 26, Winfield, New York. 26
HITS Carew, California 53, Ford. Baltimore, 46, Castino. Minnesota, 45, Yount, .Milwaukee, 45, Ripken. Baltimore. 43 DOUBLES Bernazard, Chicago, 12. Brett, Kansas Citv. 12; Ford, Baltimore. 12, Hrbek, Minnesota, 12. Bush, Min nesota. 11
TRIPLES: G Wilson, Detroit. 5, CMoore, Milwaukee. 4. Winfield, New York. 4, Seven are tied with three HOME RUNS DeCinces, California, ID. Brett. Kansas Citv, 9 Winfield, .New York. 9. Barfield. 'Toronto, 7. Lynn. California, 7; Yount. Milwaukee. 7 STOLEN BASES J Cruz. Seattle, 21; W Wilson. Kansas City. 14, M Davis, Oakland. 13; R Henderson, Oakland. 12. R Law, Chicago. 12 PITCHING 13 decisions) Flanagan. Baltimore, 6-0. I.IKIO, 2 72, MotfiU.
Toronto, 3-0, 1 000. 0 00; Slaton,
.Milwaukee. 4-0, 1,000, 2 49, Kison,
California, 5-1, 833. 3.62; Righelti, New York. 51, 833, 3.59, Sutcliffe, Cleveland. 5-1, .833.3 96 STRIKEOUTS Stieb, Toronto. 60,
Blyleven, Cleveland, 47; Morris, Detroit, 45, Kison, California, 41; Rawley, New York, 38 Tudor. Boston. 38, Wilcox, Detroit, 38 SAVES Stanley. Boston. 9; Quisen berry, Kansas City. 8, Caudill, Seattle. 7, R Davis, Minnesota, 6; OJones, Texas, 5; Spillner, Cleveland, 5
Oakland 5 6 0 455 207 188
Arizona 4 7 0 364 192 261
izenver 4 7 0 364 150 190
Saturdays Game Birmingham 35. Los Angeles 20 Sunday s Games Philadelphia 31. Chicago 24 Tampa Bav 20, Arizona 14 Monday 's Games Boston 17. Denver 9 Michigan 31, New Jersey 24 Oakland .34. Washington 27 Saturday, May 21 Oakland at Tampa Bay, in)
Sunday. May 22 Boston at Washington Chk-agoat New Jersey Los Angeles at Denver Philaddphia at Arizona, ini Monday, May 23 Birminghamal.Michigan, in)
Tronsoctions
By The Associated Press BASEBALL
American League
OYALS-
that owner Ewing Kauffman has sold 49
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Announced Ew
percent of the team u> Tennessee real-
NBA Playoffs
Tuesdays Games Chicago 4. AUanta 3 Montreal 3, Los Angeles 2.15 innings New York 6, San Diego 4 Philadelphia 2. San Francisco^l Cincinnati 2. Pittsburgh 1 SI Louis 8. Houston 4
Wednesdays Games Houston iScott 0-11 at St Louis iAndujar2-5i Atlanta iBehenna 3-11 al Chicago I Trout 2 5/
Los Angeles iHooton i-2i at Montreal iGullickson54), ini San Diego i Dravecky 6-11 at New York iTorrezl-5). ini San Francisco iKrukow 1-2) at Philadelphia i Ruthven I -2), i n)
Cincinnati iBerenyi 3 3) at Pittsburgh iRhoden l-3i. in)
Thursday's Game San Diego at New Y ork. i n >
League Leoders
By The Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING 155 at baUi: Hendrick. St Louis, 354, Flannery. San Diego, 351. Easier, Pittsburgh. 345; Dawson. Montreal, 344; Evans, San Francisco, 333
RUNS Murphy. AUanta, 30; Garv^, San Diego..29; Evans, San Francisco, t. Schmidt, Philadelphia. 27, LeMaster. San Francisco, 26 RBI .Murphy. AUanta, 33, T.Kennedy, San Diego. 29. Bench. Cincinnati. 26; Hendrick. St Louis. 26; Dawson. .Montreal. 25 HITS Bonilla. San Diego, 48. Thon. Houston, 47: Cruz, Houston. 46. Bench, Cincinnati, 44, Dawson, Montreal. 44, Oesler, Cincinnati, 44 DOUBLES J Ray. Pittsburg, 13, Dawson. Montreal. II. Ashby. Houston. 10, Bench. Cincinnati, 10, Four are tied with nine
TRIPLES Moreno, Houston, 5. Dawson, .Montreal. 4, Brooks. New York, 3, Green, St Louis, 3: Raines. Montreal.
3
HOME RUNS Murphy, Atlanta, 11, Guerrero. Los Angeles. 10. Evans, San Francisco, 9; Brock, Los Angeles. 7, Hendrick, St Louis, Homer, Atlanta, 7, Garvey, San Diego. 7. Schmidt Philadelphia 7 STOI
Moreno,_______
14; E Milner. Cincinnati. 13. SSax. Los
vy, odii I. oviiiiiiui,
idelphia 7
JLEN BASES: Ucy, Pittsburgh, 15, no, Houston. 14, Wilson. New York,
By The Associated Press CONFERENCE FINALS (Best of Seven)
EASTERN CONFERENCE I Philadelphia leads series 511 Sunday. May 8 Philadelphia ill. Milwaukee 109, OT Wednesday. May 11 Philadelphia 87. MilwaukeeSI Saturday, May 14 Philadelphia 104 .Milwaukee 96 Sunday, May 15 Milwaukee 100. Phiiadelphia 94 Wednesday, Hay 18 Milwaukee at Philadelphia, in)
Friday, May 20 Philadelphia at Milwaukee, (n). if necessary
Sunday. May 22
Milwaukee at Philadelphia, if ne<es sary
WESTERN CONFERENCE Los Angeles vs. San Antonio I Los Angeles leads series 511 Sunday. May 8 Los Angeles 119. San Antonio 107 Tuesday, May 10 San Antonio 122. Los Angeles 113 Friday, May 13 Los .Angeles 113. San Antonio Ipo Sunday, May 15 Los Angeles 129. San Antonio 121 Wednesday. May 18 San Antonio at Los Angeles i n
Friday. May 20 Los Angeles at San Antonio, mi, if necessary
Sunday. May 22 San Antonio at Los Angeles, if necessary
USFL Standings
By The Associated Press AUantic W L T Pet. PF PA Philadelphia 10 1 0 909 229 110
Boston 6 5 0 545 243 213
New Jersey 3 8 0 273 188 271
Washington 1 10 o 091 150 289
Central
Tampa Bav 8 3 0 727 214 202
Chicago 7 4 0 636 276 163
Michigan 7 4 0 636 232 210
Birmingham 6 5 0 545 200 144
Pacific
Us Angeles 3 6 0 4.55 183 223
estate developer Avron B Fogelman NEW YORK YANKEES-Placed Butch Wynegar. catcher, on the 15-day disabled lis't Called up Juan Espino, catcher, from Columbus of Ihe International League.
SEATTLE MARINERS-Called up Ricky Nelson, outfielder, from Salt Lake of the Pacific Caast League. Optioned Jim .Maler. first baseman, to Salt Lake Natioaal League ATLANTA BRAVES-Senl Rick Mahler, pitcher, to Richmond of the International League. Recalled Donnie Moore, pitcher, from Richmond NEW YORK METS-Activated Bob Bailor, infielder-outfielder Optioned Wally Backman. Infielder, to Tidewater of the International League BASKETBALL NaUonal Basketball Association CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Rehired Tom Nissalke coach.
DETROIT PISTONS-Named Chuck Daly coach GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS-Named John Bach head coach.
FOOTBALL Nathal Football League BUFFALO BILLS-Signed Jimmy Payne, defensive end, ana Matt Vanden Boom, safety NEW YORK GIA.NTS-Signed Terry Kinard, defensive back, to a series of one year contracts
United States Football League LOS ANGELES EXPRESS-Signed George Achica, middle guard, to a multi vear contract
SOCCER Maior Indoor Soccer League PHOE.NIX INFERNO-.Named Ted Podlesk! presldeitf and^neral manager
HARV.ARD Named Lisa C Hansen head coach of women's crew LONG BEACH STATE-Named Bill Hodges assistant basketball coach.
C.NIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH-Named Walter D Bryant director of alumni giving
NHL Playoffs
By The Associated Press STANLEY CUP FINALS Edmonton vs. New York Islanders (New York wins series M) Tuesday, May 10 NY Islanders2.Edmonton0 Thursday, May 12 N Y Islanders6, Edmonton 3 Saturday, May 14 N Y Islanders 5, Edmonton 1 Tuesday. May 17 N Y Islanders 4, Edmonton 2
531 3
500 4
17 17 . 500 4
14 18 437 6
Calilornia 19 15 559 -
Texas 19 15 . 559 -
Oakland 19 16 .543 ^
Kansas City 14 16 .467 3
Minnesota 15 21 417 5
Chicago 13 19 .406 5
.Seattle 12 25 324 8'i
Tuesday's Games
Angeles, 13 PITCHING (3 decisions): Monge. Philadelphia, 50.1.OOO, 6.!7; Stewart. Los Angeles, 3-(J, 1 000, 1 30; Dravecky. San Diego. 6-1. .857 . 3.05; McMurtry. AUanta. 5-1, 833, 3 06: P.Perez, Atlanta. 51, 833. 180; Reuss, Los Angeles, 51, 833, 307, Rogers', Montreal, 51, 833,2 60 STRIKEOUTS Carlton. Philadelphia. 73. Soto. Cincinnati. 56; McWilliams. Pittsburgh, 49; Berenyi, Cincinnati, 45, Candelana, Pittsburgh, 44 SAVES SHowe. Los Angeles, 7, Hume, Cincinnati. 5, Bedrosian. Atlanta, 4; DeLeon, San Diego. 4. Forster. Atlanta, 4; Lavelle, San Francisco, 4, Lucas, San Diego, 4, Minton, San Francisco. 4. Le.Smith. Chicago. 4. Stewart. Los Angeles, 4.
AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (55 at batsi: Carew, California. 449; Brett. Kansas (City, 404. Thornton, Cleveland, .357; McRae, Kansas City. .355; Shelby. Baltimore, .353, '
RUNS: Brett, Kansas City. 27; Castino. Minnesota, 27; Ford. Baltimore, 26, Ripken. Baltimore. 26. E Murray, Baltimore. 25.
RBI Brett. Kansas City, 29, Kittle, Chicago. 27; Ward, Minnesota, 27; Hrbek,
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best pitch, but that was a little flat. I just went out there and relaxed and just pitched my game.
Consecutive home runs by Hernandez and Rick Dempsey in the second inning staked Boddicker to a 3-0 lead.
Red Sox 4, Royals 1 Veteran catcher Gary Allenson doubled home two runs with his first hit of the season in a three-run second inning and Boston got combined three-hit pitching from John Tudor and Bob Stanley. The Red Sox parlayed three of their seven hits along with a walk to score three runs in the second inning off Larry Gura, who lost his fourth straight game. Hal McRae homered for Kansas Citys run.
Brewers 9, Blue Jays 6 Cecil Cooper, whose batting average had dipped to .227, drove in two runs with a homer and single and Don Money knocked in three, including his first home run of the season, to pace a IS-hit Milwaukee attack. Cooper singled a run home and scored on Ted Simmons sacrifice fly as the Brewers scored three times in the third for a 3-2
lead. They made it 6-2 in the fifth highlighted by Coopers homer and Moneys RBI double. Money added an RBI single in the sixth and homered in the eighth.
Yankees 7, Tigers 5 Steve Kemp, who spent five years with Detroit, craved a two-run homer with two out in the 11th inning. The homer, Kemps fifth, landed well back in the upper right-field seats and came off Aurelio Lopez, the third Detroit pitcher. Dave Winfield, who drove in three runs with a pair of homers, was on first via a two-out single, his fourth hit. Willie Randolph also hit a two-run homer for the Yankees, while relief ace Rich Gossage worked the final 4 2-3 innings and allowed two hits while striking out five.
Angels 3, Mariners 1 Bruce Kison scattered five hits in recording his fourth consecutive victory and second straight complete game as California broke a three-game losing streak. Kison lost his shutout bid in the bottom of the when Pat Putnam homered to tie the game 1-1. The Angels regained the lead
in the seventh on singles by Bobby Clark, Tim Foli and Bob Boone. Juan Beniquez and Ellis Valentine hit consecutive doubles in the eighth for the Angels' final run. Californias Rod Carew collected three hits in five at-bats to raise his league-leading batting average to .449.
Rangers 6, Indians 5 Singles by Larry Parrish. Dave Hostetler and Jim Sun-dberg produced the winning run in the 12th inning off Cleveland reliever Ed Glynn. Andre Thornton had tied the
score for the Indians with an eighth-inning homer. Parrish had an RBI single and scored on a double by Hostetler in the first inning.
As 7, Twins 6 Jeff Burroughs hit a three-run homer in the first inning for Oakland and Bob Kearney belted a solo shot in the sixth that proved to be the winning run. Starter Chris Codiroli. who went 5 1-3 innings. was the winner. Kearneys home run was his fifth of the season and third in the last five games.
Bear Grass Tops Chocowinity, 8-4
Tigers Pound Pam Pack, 10-4
WILLIAMSTON - Troy Raynor slapped a pair of doubles and Tommy Wynne went the distance on the mound as Williamston [Kiunded Washington KM to tighten the Northeastern 3-A Conference baseball race.
The win by Williamston sets up a possible five-way tie for the conference lead at the end of the week.
Les Keel ripped a pair of singles in three trips to the plate, while Raynor and Wynne each went 2-4. Brian Goodwin had two singly in four at bats.
Williamston jumped on the Pam Pack for four runs in the third, added two in the fourth and three more in the fifth to pave the way to victory. Washington scored its runs over the final three frames.
Keel singled. Gray Thomas walked and Keith Perry
reached on'an error to load the bases in the third for Uie Tigers. A single by Glen Hardison drove in Keel and Thomas, and Raynor later doubled in Perry and Hardison.
Willimston scored the winning run in the fourth inning, as James Ward and Keel singled to open the rally. Perry reachcj first on an error to score Ward, and Kevin Lee drove in Keel when his grounder eluded the defense for an error.
Williamston is now 10-5 in the conference with and 11-7 mark overall. The Pam Pack of Washington is now 11-6 with the loss.
Williamston travels to Edenton Thursday to close out its regular season campaign.
Washington.. 000 012 1 4 7 5 Williamston .004 231 x-10 10 3
Stephenson. Ange i4) and Whit-tenburg; Wynne and Mobley
CHOCOWINITY - Bear Grass jumped on Chocowinity for five runs in the second inning and went on to record an 8-4 win over the Indians yesterday in a Tobacco Belt baseball game.
Chocowinity eased out into a 1-0 lead in the first inning, but couldnt hold off the Bears in the second.
Barry Fulford, Craig Gardner and Phil Peele all drew second inning walks for Bear Grass, loading the bases. Dave Cratt then singled, scoring Fulford. Ed Holliday reached on a fielders choice which got Gardner at the plate.
Mark Taylor then tripled in
the three baserunners and scored himself on Tony Leggett s single for the 5-1 lead.
The Bears picked up two more in the third and one in the fourth. Chocowinity came back with one in the sixth and two in the seventh.
Taylor and Gardner each' had two hits for the Bears, with Taylor arid Peele hitting doubles. Harding had two hits for Bear Grass, with Woolard adding a double.
The Bears travel to Creswell on Thursday.
BearGrass 052 100 0-8 6 2 Chocowinity . 100 001 2-4 4 2 Watson. Gardner (6) and Fulford; Tyree and Squires
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President Shows Toughening Attitude Over Budget
By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan, displaying a toughening attitude toward Congress over the budget, says it is time to draw the line on defense cuts and greater domestic spending.
At a news conference Tuesday evening, he also had strong words for the San-dinista leaders in Nicaragua: Theyre ndt minding their own business. They are attempting to overthrow a duly-elected government ima neighboring country, he said.
Reagan, after a three-month break in his formal news conferences, told the nationally broadcast session with reporters that Syrias Arab allies are urging the Damascus government to pull its troops out of Lebanon when the Israeli forces are prepared to leave.
"1 cant believe that the Syrians want to find themselves alone, separated from all of their Arab allies, the president said, reaffirming his optimism that a Syrian withdrawal can be achieved. He also said he did not know how long the U.S. Marine contingent would remain in Lebanon, but it could be there for quite a
WantSBI
Investigate
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Dorothea Dix Hospital officials have requested an SBl investigation into alleged patient abuses in a Kirby Building ward, and two more ward employees have been suspended, according to a hospital spokesman.
Spokesman Mabel W. Homey said Dix officials asked the Wake District Attorneys office Monday to request the SBl probe.
We understand there will be one, Mrs. Homey said.
Wake District Attorney J. Randolph Riley could not be reached for comment. SBl Director Haywood R. Starling said Dix officials had approached his office directly Monday and that he had referred them to Riley.
I told them the D A. would have to make a proper request, Starling said in a telephone interview. We conveyed their reiquest to the D.A., and that is where it stands at this time.
Two health care technicians in the Kirby Building ward were fired Monday in connection with the alleged April 16 beating of a ward patient. Mrs. Homey said Tuesday that two employees in the ward had been suspended without pay in connection with alleg patient abuse: a health care technician suspended May 6 and a nurse suspended May 12.
Neither employee was identified.
Ground Broken For New Hotel
Developers of the prqwsed Sheraton Hotel complex here joined area officials this morning in breaking ground for construction of the new four-story facility on Greenville Boulevard.
Among those on hand for the ceremonies were Roddy Jones of Raleigh, presi(Jent ,of First Greenville Properties Inc., owners of the facility; Mayor Percy Cox; Pitt County Commissioner R.L. (Bob) Martin; Ed Walker, president of the Pit-t-Greenville Chamber of Commerce, and David Duffus, chairman of the chambers board of directors.
The Sheraton will be built on a 5.75-acre tract at the corner of Greenville Boulevard and Landmark Street. First Greenville Properties will build 120 rooms' initially and have expansion capabilities of an additional 160 rooms, according to Jones.
ARREST DAUBERS
PARIS (AP) - Police arrested four members of the Communist Revolutionary League yesterday after about 30 of its militants demonstrated outside the Chilean Embassy and daubed paint on the building.
period.
In an opening statement, the president said he had tried supporting a proposed compromise to cut defense spending and raise domestic allocations beyond the goals he su^ested for fiscal 1984, but this was to no avail.
It is time to draw the line and stand up for the people, he said. I will not support a budget resolution that raises taxes while we are coming out of a recession. I will veto any tax bill that would do this.
Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said today that Reagan has gone the last mile and had compromised as far as he can on the budget.
Reagan, asked whether the anticipated budget deficit of approximately $200 billion would drive up interest rates, predicted that in the very near future, we are going to see a further drop in interest rates.
Reagan is doing battle with Democrats and Republicans as Congress tries to pare the
anticipated deficits. So far, he has failed to muster a majority of Republicans to support his overall budget goal.
The Democrat-controlled House has approved a plan calling for a $30 billion tax increase in fiscal 1984, to cut the deficit, while the Senate is trying to break a deadlock over the size of a new tax increase.
The president also stepped back from previous threats to veto a repeal of withholding of income taxes from interest and dividend payments, saying that he would wait and see if a compromise is reached with congressional opponents of the withholding plan.
The president reserved some of his tou^est language for discussion of his reason for not openly supporting the guerrillas fighting the Nicaraguan government.
He said that the Nicaraguans were training and supplying, arms and everything else that is
needed to guerrillas that are trying to overthrow the government in El Salvador.
All weve said to Nicaragua, and from the beginning, is become a legitimate American state. Quit trying to subvert your neighbors. And well talk all kinds of relationship with you,he said.
Reagan, who has said there were serious grounds for questioning Soviet compliance with arms control agreements as a result of possible new weapons tests, repeated his assertion that we have reason to believe that very possibly they (the Soviets) were in violation of the strategic arms limitation treaty.
But, he said, its a case of whether you have the evidence to actually pin down an infraction.
In an opening statement, Reagan said he was gratified that a bipartisan consensus on arms control is emerging. Earlier in the day, the House Appropriations Committee heeded
Reagans lobbying and voted 30-26 to permit development and testing of the MX missile.
1 look forward to prompt approval by both the House and Senate, Reagan said
In response to a question about his standing with black voters, he said there is a perception that budget cuts have affected blacks more than others.
But he explained, All we have done is remove from the rolls (of social programs) people that we believe are at an income level that is above what is required for them to be getting some benefits....at the expense of their fellow taxpayers. We have increased our ability to help those truly at the lower earning end.
In other areas, the president:
-Defended the hiring of relatives of top administration officials and asked isnt almost anyone that you appoint to a positioif'in government someone that you either know or you know
through someone" -Declared that if a new long-term agreement is reached to sell U.S. grain to the Soviet Union, "the benefit will accrue to us, certainly, as much as to them.
-Answered a question about deficiences in U.S. education by saying that
ed:ation is not the prime resinsibility of the federal goirnment.
-Refused to say whether f would renominate Paul olcker for a second term as hairman of the Federal Reserve Board when his first term ends this summer.
-Said he pardoned Eugenio Martinez, one of the
burglars whose entry into the Democratic National Committee headquarters 11 years ago touched off .the Watergate scandal, because Martinez served his sentence and has since lived up to the letter of the law and been a very fine, productive citizen and those are the terms for pardoning someone.
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Burrouc is Wellcome Robots Making Appearance
By PATRICIA GREBE Editor, Wellcome News Photos By Gail Shrader Meet Sam, the one-armed wonder. Burroughs Wellcome Companys first robot cant walk, talk or drive a forklift. but Sam can swivel, grip and lift tire-' lessly. Dubbed Sam by Greenville employees, the $100.000 machine, housed in the plants five-month-old experimental robot development lab. is one of a new generation of robots.
Sams mechanical ancestors were classical robots that could monitor temperature, air pressure or light, but were basically limited to nuts and bolts functions. The new robotics, known to engineers as flexible automation, link the mechanical muscle of traditional robots with todays smart computers. The brawn and brains combination means robots of the 80s can.
indeed walk, talk, see, think, remember and correct their ownrr. takes.
Bur. ghs Wellcome Co. is among the first in the pharmaceutical industry to put Sams to work in manufacturing. But what can Sam (IBMs Robot System I) do and what impact will he have on the Greenville plant The Sams of the world are useful, said production and engineering vice president Dr. Gabriel Cip.u, "for doing tedious, repetitive jobs that people find unrewarding.
A brood of Sams could offer more time flexibility, and could increase productivity in areas where large quantities of materials need to be moved. Dr. Cipau said. Robots can also work in settings where environmental conditions would be harmful to humans.
Looks Like A Giant Dentist Drill Time Magazine could have
been talking about Sam when it said industrial robots look like giant dentist drills. Sams one big mechanical arm suspended from the ceiling is linked to a computer. Two conveyor belts in the experimental lab feed supplies to Sam. Bottles of Sudafed S.A. come in on one side, Sudafed cartons on the other: Sams two-finger steel gripper picks up one to four bottles at a time, puls them in cartons and sends the filled boxes on their way. His sophisticated computer can sense trouble - if a bottle or carton is missing, he knows it, sends out a printed alarm message and automatically stops the line.
In the coming months if modified with a voice synthesizer, Sam may have his say and be able to declare in his programmed best, Im out of widgets (or cartons or bottles). Please feed me. To integrate robots with peo
ple, the ability of robots to communicate will be important, Dr. Cipau said. Robot developers are working to integrate technology with the human work force. The Japanese, who have the largest population of industrial robots, have experienced difficulty integrating robot operations with the people who interact with them. People say its stressful to relate to a machine. So the trend is to humanize the robot.
But with robots on the scene, what will happen to peoples jobs? Will Sam cut or create jobs?
New technology always means new jobs, he said. Robotics will create sophisticated high tech jobs for programming and developing applications and maintaining the robot. Although it may reduce the need for manual labor, robotics increases the need for other types of work.
STUDYING SAM ... Employees at the Greenville plant of Burroughs Wellcome in Greenville are studying the capabilities of the plants new robot, nicknamed Sam, in packaging
activities. Here, the .robot is seen (center of photograph) as it packages bottles and cartons of Sudafed.
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The slogan, Be all that you can be, could apply to the self-teaching, self-optimizing robots of today. New seeing robots learn from experience by built-in pattern recognition devices in a robot-see, robot-do operation. Once a robot is led step-by-step through a sequence of tasks. Dr. Cipau said, he can translate what hes been shown without manual programming. As the robot repeats the movement, he automatically writes the program into his memj^ry and can repeat the action when necessary.
New robots can also learn to improve. The robot may see a vertical or horizontal motion. Dr. Cipau said, and after observing the pattern, analyze that a diagonal motion would be more efficient. He translates, records and stores the imformation and does it his way from then on. But visions of electronic helpmates crooning I did it my way as they bleep down the halls is a bit mind-boggling, so the word in purchasing robots is- proceed with caution. Anyone whos gone robot shopping lately knows theres an ever changing array of the fancy critters on the market and theyre not cheap. Son of Sam (Robot System II) is already available.
' Studying Sam
To scrutinize what Sam can do and how he fits into the needs of Greenville^ operations, a project team was formed to study Sam from tiniest screw to computer screen. Getting to know Sam are: Bernice Lee and Larry Lamb of general packaging, Walt Wo^ward and Linda Smith of sterile products, Barry Keiter of automation, Gary Wyrick of engineering and Jim Madures of design. The lab has also ordered HERO (Health Education Robot), a programmable walking, talking robot. HERO was purchased as a training tool for lab members to learn the robots basic functions, repair and maintenance.
Using robots, said robotics project team member Bernice Lee, can increase productivity by avoiding the need to do tasks that are boring, tedious, highly stressful of potentially dangerous. In this way, people can do more interesting, challenging work while the machine does routine work.
But before investing in more Sams, HEROs or other robots, a full analysis needs to be done on what they do best, where, how and what the payback is. Dr. Cipau said. The see-all, do-all development robots are sophisticated and expensive.
The common robot used on
Opposition To Landfill
BOONE, N.C. (AP) -More than 100 people, most from the Deep Gap and Brownwood communities, told the Watauga County Board of Commissioners Tuesday that theyre exposed to a proposed landfill site near their homes.
More than 35 people of residents set up a picket line outside the meeting and carried signs proclaiming I Love New River and Save the New. Parts of the 103-acre site off Brownwood Road, now under consideration for a landfill, are less than a half mile from a stream that feeds the New River
In addition to expressing concerns about how the landfill would affect the river and the environment, the group $aid it is worried about how much the landfill will cost the county and whether the landfill will decrease nearby property values
Some group members said that transporting gar bage out to Deep Gap in the far eastern end of Watauga County would be needlessly expensive.
We have talked to a lawyer about bringing suit for compensation to area landowners, said Janet Moretz, a protest organizer. We may also seek a restraining order, if necessary, to prevent develop ment of the landfill until compensation is worked out.
The commissioners indicated Tuesday that they have made it clear that the county has not yet chjsen any landfill site.
).
MEETS HERO ... Mary Margaret meets HERO, a training robot that
Means of the Greenville Burroughs will be used to study robot functions.
Wellcome Training Department
a production line probably would be downscaled and compartmentalized to do singular tasks much like the assembly line cdhcept. The right robot has to be selected for the right job.
We will study the applications, feasibility, re
turn on investment and options that robotics offer, Dr. cipau said. There are 11,000 robots in use worldwide now, but there will be 30.000 by 1985. Theyre not taking over, but theyre here, and they can help. Theyll continue to be important in industry.
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Blue Mold
Reappears In 4 Counties
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Blue mold, a fungus that swept over North Carolina tobacco fields in 1979 and 1980 causing $80 million in crop losses, has reappeared in four North Carolina counties, but agriculture officials say the effect so far has been minimal.
The discoveries were made this week. Florida and Georgia have also had reports of blue mold outbreaks.
Three tobacco beds on a Robeson County farm, two plant beds in Sampson and one each in Columbus and Guilford County have been affected, officials said.
In each case, according to reports, the fungicide treatment Ridomil had not been applied.
Its not that serious yet, C. Ray Campbell, a tobacco marketing specialist with the N.C. Department of Agriculture, said. But in view of the recent discoveries. we recommend the use of Ridomil to prevent the spread of the mold."
Worth Gurkin, a Sampson County extension agent, said, Its (Ridomil) been effective on the current strain of blue mold ... If they follow the recommendations and treat their fields, there shouldnt be an outbreak of the disease.
In Robeson County, the mold was discovered Tuesday in a 3,800-square-yard bed area, said Clarence Stockton, tobacco agent with the Robeson extension office.
I advised him (the farmer to destroy the beds, Stockton said. "What were concerned with most is the possibility of the disease spreading, and if we have a period of cool, wet weather, it could easily spread to untreated fields.
Stockton said the farmer will sustain little monetary loss since his crop has already been set in his fields.
In both Sampson County areas where the mold was found, Gurkin said the extension agency advised the farmers to replant and incorporate Riilomil before replanting.
One plant bed, approximately 2,000 square yards in size, was affected in Sampson. The other bed -about 250 square yards -showed signs of systemic infestation of the disease.
The systemic mold, which has been around for about three years, is more devastating than other strains which were previously identified because it enters the plants stem, Gurkin said.
Willie Raynor, owner of the 2,000-square-yard bed in Sampson County, said Tuesday that he did not apply Ridomil earlier this year. Agriculture officials estimated his loss at $68,000 if he does not re-plant, Raynor said.
But 1 wont have a complete loss. I'll just have to plant somewhere else. They told me to cut the beds in, and then re-do it, using Ridomil, Raynor said. While the systemic strain has appeared in Sampson County, plant beds in Columbus and Guilford.have not been identified as having the more serious strain.
Garland McCullen, a Columbus extension agent, said the mold was discovered Monday afternoon on six or seven beds on the L.P. Mangum farm in the Evergreen community. Mangum sustained no monetary loss because he had already used the beds to transplant his crop to, the field, McCullen said.
Though the mold was found in Mangums beds, none was found in his fields, McCullen said.
- What the situation in Guilford County had ^done was to alert farmers to continue using Ridomil, said Guilford Extension Chairman John Crawford. The mold is not in the fields yet. Weve identified it on nnly one farm, in a bed not treated with Ridomil.
Concerning the spread of the mold, Gurkin said high winds and frequent showers in the past have led to further infestation. Windblown spores are responsible for spreading the disease. But with the new strain of systemic mold, we dont know exactly what conditions are favorable for it, he said. With the old, normal blue mold, high temperatures and sunny skies usually led to a low incidence of the disease.
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Items and Prices Effective wed. May 18 Thru Sat. May 21, 1983
Copyright Kroger Sav on Quantity Rights Reserved None Sold To Dealers
Open Mon Thru Sat 8am to Midnight Sun 9am to 9pm
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville
CENTENNIAL
U.S.D.A. COVT INSPECTED 4-7 LB. AVC. WCT. YOUNG
Turkey
Breast
u s D A. CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN BONELESS BEEF
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London Broil.
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REGULAR OR LIGHT
Budweiser
JFC BATHROOM
Mayonnaise^^jSwansoft Tissue
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Roast
U S D A GOV'T INSPECTED GENUINE
Chopped Steak Lb
UNTRIMMED FRESH DOMESTIC
Whole Lamb $ A48 Leg.......Lb A
FRESH DOMESTIC
Lamb Loin S498 Chops Lb O
U S GOV T INSPECTED , GENUINE '
Ground Chuck
168
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SIZE
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Ground $4 58 Beef p.'i I
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The DaUy Reflector, Greenville. N C Wednesday, May 18,1983-25
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26- The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, May 18,1983
Crossword By Eugau Sheffer
A Review
FORECAST FOR THURSDAY, MAY 19. 1983
ACROSS
1 Choose 4 - Uke It Hot"
8 Concoct
12 Marble
13 Dolt
14 River in England
15 Biblical name
16 Early beginning
18 Poem division
20 Sweet potato
21 Yale men 24 Table bird 28 Brash social-
climbers
32 Hawaiian goose
33 Head of the fairway
34 laughing
36 Hole in one
37 Nautical word
39 Frightened suddenly 41 Persephone's mate 43 Fencer's sword
44 Trun trees
46 Flavor
50 Tardy beginning
55 Mature
56 At an end
57 An angle, in botany
58 Wrath
59 Roman clan
60 Goddess of youth
61 Guided
DOWN
1 Of the ear
2 Neighbor of Bol.
3 Double
4 Earnest * student
5 - Buttermilk Sky
6 Extinct bird
7 Whirlpool
8 Role for Adam West
9 Narrow inlet
10 Blunder
11 Moist 17 Pouch 19 Asian
festival
Average solution time; 26 min,
mm lass sira Bisiii mm ^ BESBBBIllBSl @HSI
DOS) sms siii
TO
IE Ely I LMi
hEeisi
A IP
5-18
Answer to yesterdays puzzle.
22 Rainbow
23 Condition
25 Resound
26 Fairy tale start
27 Require
28 Western state
29 Chinese wax
30 Germ
31 Break suddenly
35 Braced framework
38 Moray fishermen
40 Afternoon party
42 Distress call
45 Chief god of Memphis
47 Ski resort
48 Monster
49 Marsh grass
50 Pilots record
51 Salutation
52 Denary
53 Woodsmans tool
54 Umbrella support
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1963 Tribune Compeny Syndicile, inc
YOU BE THE JUDGE
East-West vulnerable. South deals.
NORTH 4643 <7 AJ8742 0 1073 42
WEST EAST 4A 4K8752
TKIO TQ63 OAK9862 OVoid 4Q543 4AJ1098
SOUTH 4QJ109 y 95 0 QJ54 4K76 The bidding:
South West North East Pass 10 1 ^ 14
Pass 2 0 Pass 3 4
Pass 3 T Pass 3 4
Pass 4 4 Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: Nine of T.
Last month, this hand was posed as a problem. Readers were asked to decide which, in their opinion, was the worst bid of the auction. Also, who was most responsible for missing the excellent five club contract. East or West. The player
Went Awry In Classic Remake
CRYPTOQUIP ' 5-18
DKXNBV SKC BKWJ CKKS XGMKCVCW:
GXX GMKNJ VGDV?
Yesterdays Cryptoquip - UNCONTAINED FIRES IN MAIN POST OFFICE ARE STAMPED OUT.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: K equals 0,
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
1983 King Features Syndicate, Inc
Breathless (1959) is one of the finest examples of French New Wave Cinema. Jean-Luc Godards film about a petty crook who kills a policeman by chance has the feel of an old-fashioned gangster movie and the power to make viewers care about the characters. Jim McBrides 1983 remake (now playing at Plaza Cinema) shares only the title with the original.
In Godards film, based on a screenplay by Francois Truffaut, Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg established themselves as major stars by creating believeable characters who refused to conform to the meaningless world around them. They helped to make the anti-hero popular to both European and American audiences. In McBrides version, Richard Gere and Valerie Kaprisky are mere caricatures; we never learn enough about them to care about what happens.
The story is simple. Jessie (Gere), a car thief with a fondness for Jerry Lee Lewis music, steals a Porsche in Las Vegas and shoots a policeman while driving the car to Los Angeles. Identified by the police, he remains in the city for several days with his French girlfriend Monica (Kaprisky). Together they wander through the seedier sections of Los Angeles, quoting William Faulkner and the Silver Surfer. .Minutes before they are to escape to .Mexico Monica calls the police and Jesse is killed.
The original film used black-and-white photography and realistic backdrops to make the thief and his lover believable. Their indifference to their fate was understandable. The remake is all hot colors and flash, and the film has all the depth of a comic book.
At times "Breathless approaches parody, but the parody is unintentional. Director McBride, who wrote the screenplay with Kit Carson, moves his actors throu^ the plot with all of the skillTW a child attempting
to learn how to ride a bicycle.
The ponderous direction is a shame, because Gere is a skilled actor and a number of scenes are genuinely funny. Early in the movie Gere searches for Kaprisky at a university in Los Angeles. He finds her taking her final examination in architecture before a panel of three professors. Impersonating a janitor, he disrupts the exam in a scene which would have made the Marx Brothers proud.
Unfortunately, there are too few moments like this. Gere is burdened with a script that calls for him to bare his chest, mime rock and roll lyrics, and read comic books to the camera. Kaprisky is beautiful, but even her passionately explicit love scenes with Gere seem nothing more than feeble attempts to keep the audience from falling asleep.
Breathless is a perfect example of what can go wrong when someone attempts to remake a classic film. It should be required viewing for the people making Casablanca into a television series.
Jim Holte
Lawyer Facing Slander Suit
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The ex-husband and former manager of singer Helen Reddy, Jeff Wald, has filed a $5 million slander suit against Miss Reddyls lawyer.
,(iThe suit, filed Friday in Superior Court, stems from a May 16 People magazine article in which lawyer Gary Olsen is.quoted as saying that Wald. 39. has lost his meal ticket. The article, concerning the couples bitter. custody fight over their 10-year-old son, said Wald is seeking a percentage of Miss Reddys future income.
Attorney Marvin Gross said Tuesday that Wald is upset by Olsens statement to the magazine.
suit.
If yoii entered the competition and got both answers right, you will soon be receiv-ing your copy of the
magazine that contains the article on the competition. If you entered but did not get both right, youll be sent a copy of the jurys vote.
who made the worst bid was not necessarily the party who had to bear the greatest share of guilt.
Bridge World Magazine submitted the hand to a panel of experts to decide the case. Their vote appears in the current issue of the magazine.
The jury decided that'|he worst bid in the auction was Wests two diamond rebid. When your pattern is 6-4, you usually rebid your six-card suit only on minimum hands. With a good hand, you should bid your four-card suit before rebidding your six-card suit, even if it is a major. The opinion of the experts was that West had a clear two-club rebid on the second round.
Despite the fact that West made the worst bid in the auction, most of the blame for missing the game was laid on East. After West had made a cue-bid and then supported Easts second suit, the jury felt that East was not allowed to stop short of game, even though East had a void in his partners long.
Jii
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Located In RIvergate Shopping Center
E. 10th St. Greenville
752-1275
Oui Specialty la Quality'
Belvoir Factory Outlet
I ocaled In Old Blvoir Schoolhouse, Hwy ''i>! T)iursday& Friday9 to 5PM
INC
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Located Between Bethel & Tarboro on Hwy. 64 Hours 9-5 Mon -Sat We Accept Visa & Mastercard
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GENERAL TENDENCIES: Get out from under difficult problems through the use of tact and diplomacy. Analyze and systematize your activities Do not get upset when details don't work out.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) There is an opportunity for you to make progress via an older person or some legal affair. Your schedule changes.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Getting your work done in the morning leaves time for some entertainment you like. Dont be sassy with loved one.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Your loved one can give you good advice in the morning, but tonight the situation at home requires tact and patience.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) You may receive a letter from a friend which brings you benefits. Come to the right decisions.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Older individuals are very cooperative, but money matters bore you, so forget them for a while. Finish tasks at hand.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Handle those financial affairs about which you have procrastinated for some time. Get out and see someone .you like.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Gain that desire that means so much to you. You have difficulty getting your ideas across to others.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Forget that friend who is erratic and could spoil your day. Don't be pushy in personal matters as it's detrimental.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Avoid someone in authority who is irate today. Some new contact has information you need, so get it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Show loved one you are steadfast and loyal. Avoid a stranger whose ideas are radically different from your own.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) You gain an unexpected benefit in,the morning, so get your bills paid this evening. Carry through on good ideas,
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20rDon't tax the patience of a loved one. You can accomplish a great deal during the day, but relax this evening.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will get much data from those who are experienced. Teach early in life to the importance of being successful, .A more understanding attitude of others will be acquired. Give good religious training to stay on right track.
The Star^ impel, they do not compel. " VVhat you make of your life is largely up to you!
OIL IMPORTS DOWN
BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (AP) - Oil imports have fallen more than 40 percent, from 8.4 million barrels a day to fewer than 5 million barrels a day. since decontrol of the U.S. oil industry was begun in 1979, reports Phillips Petroleum.
Though conservation and the economy have played a
role in the decline, decontrol has helped boost domestic oU production and reduced the nations dependence oh foreign sources.
Carolina Grill
Hot Cakes & Sausage
With Coffee 5 *198 _
I tax Inc. Cocmr o( (III t OlcklMon
752-1188
TARHEEL ii NIGHTCLUB
Located On The Old Tar Road 4 Miles Soulh of Sunshine Garden Center
Enjoy Dancing Wednesday Through Sunday Evenings. Live Music Friday And Saturday Nights By Tequiia Sunrise.
Draft Beer (Wednesday Only).........................25'.
Bottled or Canned Beer (Wednesday Only) .......75*
Make Plans Now To Spend An Evening At Tarheel II. YouD Be Glad You Did. Call: 746-2696 Daytime, Evenings, 744-2269.
Open 5 Days A Week Wednesday Through Sunday At 6:00 P.M.
Hes hurt, hes angry, hes gotten a lot of response from friends of his, all negative, said Gross.
The magazine was not named as a defendant in the suit. Olsen said he had not seen the suit and could not comment.
Miss Reddy, 41. filed for divorce from Wald last June 28 after a 17-year marriage.
Wed.(6:30-9:30) Tom Jones Thurs.(6:30-9:30) Michael OKeys Jazz Loft Beef Barn
Great Peppis Specials
Monday thru Friday 11 -.00 a.m. To 2:00 p.m. Monday Nights 5:00 p.m. To 8:30 p.m.
AH The Spaghetti $075 You Can Eat ^ piu.i
Served with tossed salad, garlic bread and coffee or tea.
Every Tuesday Night 5:00 p.m. To 8:30 p.m.
All The Lasagna $ Q 7 5 You Can Eat......
Served with garlic bread, tossed salad and coffee or tea.
Every Wednesday Night 5:00 p.m. To 8:30 p.m
All The Beef Ribs $r95 You Can Eat Upiu.t.x
Served with garlic bread, tossed salad or potato salad and coffee or tea.
421 GrecmlU* Bl<d . GrmrilU. N C Sow 7S6-0S2S
A GOOD-TIME REUNION! A RAFTER-RAISING NIGHT!
The third annual all-star celebration of the great traditions and styles of country music! Host: MAC DAVIS rickyskaggs
Guest Stars: ALABAMA THE SONS OF
LYNN ANDERSON THE PIONEERS
EDDY ARNOLD SYLVIA
BOBBY BARE SHEUYWEST
THE BELLAMY BROTHERS GLEN CAMPBELL LAaj. DALTON DAVID FRIZZEU THE OAK RIDGE BOYS CHARLEY PRIDE DION PRIDE ROY ROGERS
A CBS SPECIAL PRESENTATION
GREAT MOMENTS ON CBS
WNCT-TV 9 GREENVILLE
^^COUHTOjnWICHjOIEWMO^^
1
NBC Reports Ratings Trav/s McGee On ABC Tonight
And Profits Increasing
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
NBC is financially healthy and moving up in the program ratings, the networks executives told an en } thusiastic audience of affili- ate station owners and man-agers.
* NBC Chairman Grant ,: Tinker said at the concluding ' meeting of the network's
* affiliates at the Century Plaza Hotel on Tuesday that
* the tide is beginning to
* turn for the third-place ' network.
: ABC Wins ! In Ratings
NEW YORK (AP) - More people saw the Miss USA * beauty pageant on CBS than any other program broadcast in the week ending May 15, but ABC won the network ratings race with five of the . II most-watched programs.
* figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co. showed.
^ ABC was first in the t prime-time competition for ^ the ninth time in the 33 weeks since the 1982-83 TV year began in September. CBS, No. 1 in prime time in the ' first-run season that ended in April, now has been domi-
- nant in the ratings only twice
* in the last five weeks.
i ABCs average rating for ;; the latest week surveyed was
- 15, compared to 14.7 for CBS 'and 14.5 for NBC. The ^ networks say that means in
* an average minute of prime I time, 15 percent of the TV-
* equipped homes in the nation ^ were tuned to ABC.
CBS had three shows among the first 11, and the i rating for Miss USA was 124.4, Nielsen says that means ;of all the countrys homes
* with television, 24.4 percent ' saw at least part of the show.
The seasons top-rated
* series, 60 Minutes on CBS, finished in 12th place.
* ABC and NBC each had
* two shows among the weeks I five lowest-rated. ABCs " "New Odd Couple was No.
* 62. followed by At Ease on ABC, Wizards and Warriors on CBS and Teachers Only on Monitor on NBC.
264 PLAYHOUSE
INDOOR THEATRE
tMHMWMtOfGrMnvtll*
OnU.S.2M(FanitvillHwy)
ENDS TONIGHT
NBC is improving in both financial and ratings strength, he said.
NBC President Robert E. Mulholland, recounting profits that more than doubled in
1982 and are up 22 percent so far this year, said, I can stand here and tell you your network is healthy .
NBC profits of $48 million in 1981 climbed to $110 million in 1982 and network officials said they expected
1983 profits to be even higher.
Noting that NBC won the first week of the May sweeps, and won Monday night with its Motown music special, Mulholland said, We may be No. 1 for the Maysweeps.
NBC placed second behind CBS for the second week of
TV Log
Fof comptal* TV proBrtmmInQ In-fonnatlofl, consult your wookly TV SHOWTIME froffl Sundays Dally Rsflsctor.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
WEDNESDAY 7:00 Jokar'sWlld 7 :30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Special 9:00 Speical 11:00 Ncws9 11:30 Movie 3:00 Niohtwatch THURSDAY 3:00 Nlghtwatch 5:00 JimBakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 News 10:00 Pyramid 10 :M Childs Play 11:00 Price is 13:00 News
13 :30 Young and 1:30 AstheWorld 3:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding L. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5.30 A.Griftith 6:00 News9 6:X CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:M Tic Tac 8:00 Magnum P.I. 9:00 Simons 10:00 Tucker'sW. 11:00 News 11 :M LateAAovie 3:00 Nightwatch
WITN-TV-Ch.7
WEDNESDAY 7:00 Jetterson 7 .x Family Feud 8:00 Real People 9:00 Facts Of Lite 9:M Taxi,
10:00 Ouificy ]l:00 News 11 :M Tonight 13:X Letterman
THURSDAY 5:X Dark Shadows 6:M Almanac 7:M Today 7:35 News 7:X Today 8:35 News 8:X Today 9:M R Simmons 9:X All in the 10:M FactsOtLite 10:X Saleofthe
II :M Wheel ot II X Dream House 13:M News 13:X Search For 1:M DaysOfOur 3:M Another 3:W Fantasy 4:X Whitney the 4:X Little House 5:X Lie Detector 6:M News 6:X NBC News 7:00 Jeffersons 7:X Family Feud 8:M Fame 9:M GImmeA 9:X Cheers 10:M Hill Street 11 :W News 11:X Tonight Show 13 :X Letterman 1:X Overnight 3:X News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
um
IntTodudng SANJA SORRELLO
mis ON (X) caos
Qti<e>fuics
75M84B Doors Open Showtime 6:00 5:45
WEDNESDAY
7:00 Three'S Co. 7:X Alice 8 :W Fall Guy 9:X Atovie
11 :M Action Nevrs 11:X ABC News
12 :X StarskyA 1:X Mission 3:X Earlv Edition THURSDAY
5:00 Bewitched 5:X J.Swaggart 6:M AG Day 6:X News 7:00 GoodAAorning 6:13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News 9:M Phil Donahue
10:X Laverne
11 :M Love Boat 12:M Family Feud
12 :X Ryan's Hope 1:X My Children 2:M One.Life
3: bo Gen. Hospital 4:M Carnival 4:X BJ/LOBO 5:X People's 6:M Action News 6:X ABC Nevus 7:M Three's Co. 7:X Alice 8:W The I Love 9:X TooClose 9:X Amanda'S 10:X /
11:N Actions News 11 :X NIghtllne 12:X StarskySi 1:X Mission
10:M Good Times _ 2:X Early Edition
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
WEDNF.SDAY 7:M Report 7:X Stateline 8:00 Creatures 9:M History of 10:M Blitz over 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11 :X Morecambe 12:M SignOtf
THURSDAY 7:45 AM Weather 8 X Victory G.
8:35 Cover To 8:X Readalong I 9:M Sesame Street 10:M TipTopTen 10:10 Zebra Wings 10;X Tradeoffs 10:50 Parlei Mio 11 :M Literary 11:35 Thinkabout 11:45 Write On 11:50 Readalong 11
12:M Advocates 12:X Read It 12:45 Electric Co. 1:15 Come Alive 1:45 Good body 2:M Case Studies 2:X Give and 2:45 Inside/Out 3:X Creativity 3:X Planning for 4 :00 Sesame St. 5:00 Mr. Rogers 5:X Powerhouse 6:00 Or. Who 6:X Sherlock 7:b0 Report 7:X stateline 8:X Previews 8:X Inside Story 9:00 Geographic 10:M Cosmos 11 :M A. Hitchcock 11 :X AAorecambe 12:W SlgnOff
Thursday Night Delight
Steak And Brew
Get A One Pound U.S.D.A New York Strip ^Steak, Choice Of Stuffed Or Baked Potato, Salad Bar And Vegetable. Plus All Of The Draft Beer That You Can Drink During Your Meal For Only $9.95 Per Person.
Also By Popular Demand Wed. & Fri. Night Special Feature
"Shrimp And Chablis
Thats All The Fried, Broiled or Boiled Shrimp You Can Eat And Chablis To Drink For $8.95
756-2792
Dinner Hours 5 P.M. -10 P.M.
IWBBW
the A.C. Nielsen Co. ratings sweeps, which were announced Tuesday.
The sweeps are four-week periods during which more detailed ratings surveys are taken to establish advertising rates for local stations.
Brandon Tartikoff, president of NBC Entertainment, gave the 700 broadcast executives an advance look -at NBCs fall programming schedule and predicted NBC would build on the ratings success of The A-Team, and other series.
Weve got shows that we put on this year that are going to be much bigger next year. I think we are on the right track ... Its working now and I think its going to work even better next year.
It was welcome news to the station owners and managers after ratings setbacks in the past. At times, led by Steve Sohmer, the official who heads the networks promotion department, the audience responded like teen-agers at a pep rally.
The networks rating were particularly good among young viewers. Tinker said, calling that a positive sign of growth.
Tinker, who took over as chairman nearly two years ago, warned, however, that NBC still faces many pressing problems.
He said NBC Nightly News was in a tie for second place and that was not good enough. The Today Show has not only failed to gain on ABCs Good Morning America but finds CBS morning news show coming up fast, he noted.
Tinker said daytime programming, where NBCs schedule of soap (^ras and game shows is 'a dismal third, is the most urgent priority.
We are not a laid back group of losers, he said. Our company impatience with the state of things is a probable, positive, motivating force.
ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - You can tell a lot about a man by his asides to the audience -those narrative ramblings that explain what a character is thinking, or if he is doing much thinking at all.
A brooding, reluctant-hero type is showcased tonight on ABCs Travis McGee movie, an entertaining treatment of John D. MacDonalds The Empty Copper Sea.
McGee, MacDonalds famous world-weary adventurer, is not cast from Mickey Spillanes mold. As played convincingly by Sam Elliott, McGee is too concerned with the general human condition to dwell on booze, dolls and guns.
If I ruled the world, he says to no one in particular in one of his philosophical asides, I would lop off the heads of weasels who inflate their own self-esteem by stomping on yours. The King Travis regime would reign over so many rolling heads, it would look like a berserk bowling alley. McGee then runs across a cross bartender. Another bowling ball, he mutters under his breath.
Even when McGee does
Previn Staying 2 More Years
PITTSBURGH (AP) -Andre Previn has signed a two-year extension to his contract as music director of the Pittsburgh Symphony.
I am extremely happy to have renewed my contract with the Pittsburgh Symphony, the 48-year-old Previn said Tuesday.
/uTMh '
n.,r..,. St , ADM UK
Now Open Every Night Call For Showtimes
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Ok
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CINDY SUTTON PAT ROWLETT
WITH
JOHN POOLE DAVID THURSTON
JUNE 3,4,10,11,24. & 25 DINNER AND SHOW $ 12.50 TICKETS NOW ON SALE
(Suggested For Mature Audiences)
Production Conception, English Lyrics, Additional Material By Eric Blau & Mort Shuman. Based On Brels Lyrics & Commentary.
>' Music By Jacques Brel
Jacques Brel Is Presented Through Special Arrangement With Music Theatre International. 119 West 57th Street, New York, N Y. 10019. ' '
DRUMS:
Bill Dunn GUITAR;
. Dave Hardy
BM& Becky Hollowell
EUilEi Elissa Hardy
PIANO:
Cindy Sutton LIGHTING DESIGN.
Willie Sumner ARTISTIC DIRECTOR: Dennis Delamar CHOREOGRAPHER: Kitty Bailey
Harvej Mansion Destaurant
221TRYON PALACE DR.. NEW BERN 638-3205
surrender to his fleshier instincts, such as spending the night with a torchy barroom singer, hes self-effacing about it. By diligent efforts I seem to be prolonging my adolescence to total absurdity.
McGee is always the gentleman. After some punk sucker-punches him, McGee manages to rough him up, but still helps him into his pick-up truck.
McGee is not a detective. That requires licenses, offices and phones. Instead, hes In the human salvage business, rescuing friends in need.
When we first meet McGee, hes lolling around on his sailboat and no longer in a helping-hand mood. He tells his pal Meyer (Gene Evans, a Burl Ives lookalike and soundaiike, if there ever was one) that hes grown tired of taking in other peoples dirty laundry ."
But his Intended career change lasts only until his next friend in need. Van Harder (Richard Farnsworth) is a sailor by trade who lost his license when the boat he was guiding ran aground, causing the boats owner to fall in the drink and disappear. Harder was discovered unconscious and apparently drunk.
Losing his license is like taking Harders life, says McGee. It happens his self-respect was stapled to it.
McGee takes the case and
soon discovers that the missing man. Hub Lawless, was a California businessman who was over his head in debt. The question becomes. Was he really over his head in water? The possibility exists that Lawless fled to Mexico with his mistress and millions of dollars in other peoples money.
The trail to clear Harders name takes McGee through the seaweed and muck of Californias beach resorts. He meets the barroom singer (Amy Madigan), her former boyfriend who is a two-bit thug (Marshall Teague). John Tuckerman (Geoffrey Lewis) who is a slow-witted friend of Lawless and Gretel ( Katharine Ross), Tuckermans sister.
Tuckerman and Gretel live together on the beach. McGee is instantly attracted to Gretel - Elliott and Ms. Ross are also an off-screen couple - because she washes her own clothes, eschewing the 20th-century convenience of a laundromat. "1 love doing things the hard way, she says.
McGees conflict is how to put the squeeze on Tuckerman to solve the mystery without jeopardizing his relationship with Gretel.
Elliott, who looks like Tom Selleck before Tom Selleck did, has a deep, drawling voice and a mischievous smile. He will be seen next season in NBCs sprawling soap, Yellow Rose, about
a modern working ranch in Texas.
As McGee, Elliott exhibits a robust, macho charm that causes men and women to instantly spill whatever beans theyre hiding. This is a winning asset from a sleuth, without a license.
working in "the human salvage business.
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Public
Notices
DEPARTMENTOF THE TREASURY/INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION SALE
Under the authority in Internal Revenued Code section 6331. the property described below has been seized tor nonpayment ot internal revenue taxes due from William Beachum. Route t. Box 473, Grimesland, N.C. 2J837. The property will be sold at public auction as provided by Internal Revenue Code section 633S and related reaulations.
Date of SaTe: June 1,1983 time of Sale: ll:00a.m.
Place of Sale: Pitt County
Transportation Department, Hwy 264 By-Pass, Greenville, N.C.
Title Offered: Only the right, title, and interest ot William Beachum in and to the property will be ottered for sale. If requested, the Internal Revenue Service will furnish information about possible encumbrances, which may t>e useful in determining the value of the interest being sold.
Nature of Title: The right, title, and interest of the taxpayer (named on the front of this form) in and to the property is offered for sale subject to any prior valid outstanding
tgages. encumbrances, or other 5 in favor of third parties against the taxpayer that are superior To the
lien ot the United States. All
property is offered for sale "where Is" and as is" and without recourse against the United States. No
guaranty or warranty, express, or implied, is made as to the validity ot the title, quality, quantity, weight, size, or condition of any of fhe
property, or its fitness for any purpose. No claim will be considered tor allowance or adjustment or for rescission of fhe sale based on failure of fhe property to conform wifh any expressed or implied
representation.
Redemption Rights: The rights of redempfion, as specified in Internal Revenue Code section 6337, are-quoted as follows.
Sec. 6337 Redemption of Property.
(a) Before Sale.Any person whose property has been levied upon shall Rave the right to pay the amount due, together with the expenses of the proceeding, if any, to the Secretary at any time prior to the sale thereof, and upon such payment the Secretary shall restore such property to him. and all further proceedings in connection with the levy on such property shall cease from the time of such pay^menf
(b) Redemption of Real Estate After Sale
(1) PeriodThe owners ot any real properly sold as provided in section 6335, their heirs, executory, or administrators, or any person having any interest therein, or a lien thereon, or any person in their behalf, shall be permitted to redeem
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF~"' OLD NORTH STATE ,i MANAGEMENTCORP
Notice is hereby given thaft Articles ot Dissolution ot Old North State Management Corp a North Carolina corporation with its principal place of business in the City of Greenville. Pitt County, North Carolina, were filed in the office of the Secretary ot State of North Carolina on the I9th day of April, 1983. and that all creditors of and claimants against the Corporation are required to present their respective claims and demands immediately in writing to the Corporation so that it can proceed to collect its assets,-convey and dispose of its properties, pay, satisfy and discharge its liabilities and obligations and do all other acts requiretfto liquidate its business and affiars.
This 22nd day ot April, 1983.
Old North State Management Corp.
4(X) West First Street Greenville. North Carolina 27834 Michael A. Colombo James, Hite, Cavendish & Blount Post Office Drawer 15 Greenville. North Carolina 27835 0015
April 27, May 4, 11, 18, 1983
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council will hold public hearings to receive public comment on The Bluefish Fishery Management Plan from 7 30 10 00
pm, on May 18 at the Marine Science Building, 601 College Rd . University of N.C.. Wilmington, N C. May 19 at the Marine Resources Center, Bogue Banks. Morehead City/Atlantic Beach and from 1:00 3:30 p.m. on May 21 at the Marine Resources Center, Manteo, N.C For additional information contact: David H.G Gould,
Executive Director, South Atlantic Fishery Management Council, 1 South park Circle, Suite 306, Charleston, SC 29407 (803 571 4366). May 18, 19. 20, 22, 1983 _
Having qualified as Executors of the estate of Lula Mae Moore Tyndall late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against fhe estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executors on or before November 18, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.
This 16th day of May. 1983 Norman Earl Tyndall Route 2, Box 465 Greenville, N.C. 27834 8.
Preston Ray Tyndall Route 2, Box 463 Greenville. N C 27834 xecutors of fhe estate of Lula Mae Moore Tyndall, deceased
May 18, 25, June 1.8, 1983
016
Chrysler
1973 CHRYSLER, 89,900 miles, 4 door, automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, inte rior in excellent condition Excellent ynechanical condition Exterior needs paint First S500 Call 756 9874 __
022
Plymouth
017
Dodge
RELIANT WAGON 1981. Good condition, low mileage. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Avden, 746 3141.
TC 3. 1979 Good condition Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Avden. 746 3141 1978 PLYMOUTH FURY 440, new paint, radial tires, etc Runs good Sl275 756 3958.__
1976 DODGE MAXI VAN Good
condition 752 5334_________
1978 DODGE COLT Excellent con dition. good gas mileage $2600 neqotiabTe 756 9273after6p m____
023
Pontiac
018
Ford
1977 GRAND PRIX, air, AM FM, automatic. One owner, good conoi
tion. Call 756-8650_
1980 TRANSAM, T top, excellent shape Small eauity and take up
payments. 746 376
PINTO, 1980 4 speed 10,000 miles
Like new. S3200 firm 752 3616 ___
TAKE UP PAYMENTS no down payment. 1982 Escort Excellent condition. 756 7755 days, 756 3792
and 752 2334 nights____________
1967 PLYMOUTH Valiant Good dependable transportation $300
756^^2265_,__
1973 FORD GRAN TORINO Stationwaqon 752 5334___________.__
1976 MUSTANG Air. automatic. good condition $1400 Call 753 2245
1977 PINTO Loaded, 49,000 miles
$1750 756 0988 after 6 p m_____
1 978 FAIRMONT, 4 door, automatic, air, AM FM. power steering and brakes, very clean, new radials. $2895. negotiable Call
355 2161 after 6pm______
1979 FORD FAIRMONT FUTURA Air, automatic. AM.FM stereo Good condition $3100 752 5377 after
5^__
1982 MUSTANG Must sell Assume payments Payments up to date 4,000 miles Loaded A I condition 758 7815_
024
Foreign
019
Lincoln
1977 TOWN CAR Loaded, 58,000 miles Mint condition Call 756 5388 days or 756 37 1 4 nights and weekends_
1959 PORSCHE 356A convertible New top, radials, clutch Runs good Front tender, bumper damage
$3500 758 8156_____
1967 VOLKSWAGEN Runs well Good fires $800 Call 946 9494 after 6 p rri_______
1972 VOLKSWAGEN BUG Very good shape Asking $1800 Cafl 52^5710 atior 7 p m_
1973 MGB Excellent condition Asking $2500 757 3867_
1974 AUDI 100 LS 1 owner, 44,000 original miles, power steering, power brakes, air Will consider mad^ Excellenlcondition 756 9032
. 1977 MGB 30,000 miles Good con
dilinn 752 1275 or 752 9199_
1977 MGB, new paint, good tires Clean Must sell $2495 Call 752 8266 or 758 5728____
1980 BMW 528 dark blue with camel interior, automatic, sunroof. AM FM cassette, power doors and windows 355 2245 or 355 6422_
1981 DATSUN 280Z 2-2, 5 speed Loaded Call 757 1321 or 523 1524 after 7 p m. _
1982 VOLVO DIESEL 4 door Loaded Call 757 1321 or 523 1524 after 7 p.m__
020
Mercury
ZEPHYR 1979. Fully equipped Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141 _
021
Oldsmobile
per
the property sold, or any particular tract of within thereof.
iper .
tract of such property at any time within 120 cfays after the sale
(2) Price.Such property or tract of property shall be permitted to be redeemed upon payment to the jurchaser, or in case he cannot be ound in the county in which the property to be redeemed is situated, then to the Secretary, for fhe use of the purchaser, his heirs, or assigns, the amount paid by such purchaser and interest thereon at the rate of 20
rircent per annum
ffect of Junior Encumbrances: Sec 6339(c). Effect of Junior Encumbrances
A certificate of saie ot personal property given or a deed to real property executed pursuant to section 6338 shall discharge such property from all liens, encumbrances, and titles over which the lien of fhe United States with respect to which fhe levy was made had priority
Description of Property: One 1979 Chevrolet One half ton pick up truck, Silverado 10, red, and cream in color, 350 V 8 engine with automatic transmission, power door locks, power windows; cruise control, tilt steering wheel; tool box. Odometer: 91,598.9 Serial Number CCL 149B12I542 Small dent in right-frqnt fender
Property may be Inspected at: By Appointment
Payment Terms: Full payment
required on acceptance of highest bid
Form of Payment: All payments must be by cash, certified check, cashier's or treasurer's check or by a United States postal, bank, express, or telegraph money order. Make check or money order payable tott^ Internal Revenue Service. VeriTette A Dean, Revenue Officer 5/13/83
Internal Revenue Service, 101 W. First St,, Greenville NC 27834 7526218 May 18, 1983
TLEnO 82 CVD 1532 FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT
1969 CUTLASS CONVERTIBLE Good running condition Best offer.
757 1631 after 5 30 p.m _
1971 OLDS CUTLASS FOR PARTS No fires, no rims Motor and transmission in real good shape
Call 756 6983 after 8 30 p m_
1977 CUTLASS SUPREME Brougham Volure inferior, power steering, power brakes, air, tilt, cruise, lape, power windows, power door locks Excellent condition.
756 8987 after 5___
1980 OLDS Cutlass Supreme MosI options New radials Sacrifice. $5300 756 7417________ _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
032
Boats For Sale
CAROLINA SALES LIQUIDATION
Sale See our adverfisment this
section__
SAILBOAT 18'with trailer $5000 or best offer Must sell Call 758 9132
after 6 pm___ ___
SAILBOATS AND ACCESSORIES Now On Sale at the Rag Bag Sailor, Highway 264 East Call 757 1333
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
RIGSAH SHOE REPAIR
113 W. 4th Street-Phone 75W)204 Downtown Greenville Parking in Front & Rear Open 6 Days A Week
8F JUSTICE T COURT DIVSION
to pay child support in the am llliO.O per month beginning 1983. plus all future medic
DISTRI ____
I NORTH CAROLINA I PITT COUNTY I HERLEY LOUISE ATKINSON (JONES)
I RONALD EXCELL JONES
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO:RONALD EXCELL JONES:
I TAKE NOTICE that a Motion I seeking relief against you has been I filed in fhe above captioned action, i The nature of fhe relief being sought is as toliows: The transfer of all your right, title and interest in and to a 1973 General Mobile Home, Serial No GCFXMNOGE6364, North Carolina Title No. 11650595. as child support, and an Order directing you to pay child support in the amount of , June 1, cal and
dental expenses of your minor child, Michelle Denise Jones.
The undersigned will bring this Motion for hearing before the District Court Judge Presiding over the July 11, 1983 Session of Civil District Court (Domestic) tor Pitt County on July 11, 1983, at 9 :30 A.M., or as soon theretter as the matter may be heard, in the Third Floor Hearing Room of the Pitt County Courthouse. You will please attend Court at said time and place, if you so desire, but the plaintiff will ask the Court to hear said AAotion regardless ot your presence or absence This the 16th day ot Mav, 1983. UNDERWOODS. LEECH By
David A, Leech, Ot Counsel for the Plaintiff
P O Box 527, 201 Evans Street Greenville, N.C, 27835 Telephone (919) 752 3303 Mayl8, 5, June), 1983
NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA PITT GREENE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF TKE REMOVAL OF GRAVES FROM VICKSCEMETARY US 264 trom Wilson Greene County Line to East of NC 121 Project 8,1230101, R 525
Claim of Edna Lewis Baker Parcel 28
Notice is hereby given to the known and unknown relatives of all those persons burled in the Vicks Cemetery located south ot Survey Station 3i2 00 and being turther described as beirig located one-half mile north ot Us 264 west of the Farmville city limits; that the following named persons are among the known deceased buried in said cemetery; James Hall; Pennie Evans; Ann Elizabeth Smith; Leon Smith; Willie Battle; Leander Bynum, Lexie Faison, and "Baby" Johnson; that there are seven unknown graves located in this cemetery; that the known and unknown deceased are to be reinterred in the new Vicks Cemetery on land owned by Edna Lewis Baker which is located ih Greene County, North Carolina, that the exact location of fhe reinferment sites of fhe known and unknown deceased can be found on a map tiled with fhe Regisfer of Deeds of Greene Counfy, North Carolina.
You are further notified that said graves are being moved under the provisions of North Carolina General Statute 65-13, and that said removal will begin after this notice has been published once a week tor tour weeks over a period ot thirty (30) days in The Daily Reflector, published dally In Greenville. North Carolina.
This the 28th day ot April, 1983. DEPARTMENTOF TRANSFORATION By C. Jack Baldwin Acting Manager of Right of Way James E Magner, Jr.,
Deparfmenf ot Justice May 11, 18, 25, June 1, 1983
NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned, having qualified as Executrix under the Will ot Louis L Forbes, Sr , deceased, lateot Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before November II, 1983, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned.
This the 5th day ot May, 1*83. s/Lucy T, Forbes Executrix Under the Will of Louis L. Forbes. Sr . Deceased RFD 1, Box 46 Wintervllle, NC 28590 May 11,18, 25, June i, 1983
SERVICE WRITER
Send Resume To:
Service Writer P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N. C. 27835
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
FREE! Stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers Downtown Evans Mall for free gift to be given away weekly. No purchase necessary
ONE WAY DELTA AIRLINE ticket from Raleigh Durham to Seattle Good fhru May 26 $160 Call
756 2559,____
010
AUTOMOTIVE
on
Autos For Sale
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County Hastings Ford Call 758 0114 '
015
Chevrolet
YOU DO LOVE THAT CHURCH!!! But...
Are you doing anything about its poor old sagging roof? That tall, pretty steeple that never quite got built?
. .That added space that it really needs so badly
.1 et us surprise
qual;f:ed as :tal p ideas & costs Lee'
:itne easy cosi soi',it;('ns' We aie proud to hg ul- .1 Clime- i'-,,jr.u-ual problems' Get our
Wilson & Worthington
General Contractors
Call Collect Offlce-795-4687 Robersonville Evenlngs-756-1502 Greenville
1981 CHEVETTE Good condition $300 and take up payments ot i $142 71. 752 4109 or 752-i701after6 |
1983 CHEVETTE, 2 door automatic transmission, AM FM radio, air conditioning, 4800 miles Candy apple red. $400 and assume loan. Call 756 9874 _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.L. Lupton Co.
7 .2 hllh
FLEMING FURNITURE & APPLIANCE
Not*SrvlCM Crotby AppUancM Kalvlnator AppUance*
SpMd OuMfl Laundry Faddara Air Condltlonara 1i12DlcHnaonAta. 7S2-36(
ARMY SURPLUS
CAMPING SPORTING MILITARY GOODS Oxer 1000 Diilereni Items New and Used
ARMY-NAVV STORE
1974 CHEVROLET BLAZER CHEYENNE - It blue and white two-tone 4x4, 350 auto., p.s., p.b air, stereo, chrome spoke wheels, white letter all terrain tires. $3950
WASHINGTON MOTOR INC.
1103 Carolina Avi. Waih., A.C.
r
032
Boats For Sale
17' GLASSPAR, twin 40 horsepower Evtnrude. long tandem trailer 752 5907
1972 GLASTRON 16' with 65 horse power Evinrude and trailer $1595 355 2970
2t' GLASTRON, 455 Oldsmobile engine, Berkley |et drive, $5500 Call 752 1197._
26' TROJAN 1977. Fly bridge, head, oalley, and OF radio Call 946-6127 28' CARVER Twin screw. Bridge head, galley. sleeps6. Call 756 13H6
034 Campers For Sale
LEER CAMPER shell. Fits shortbed small trucks. $100 752 5984 after 6
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774.
TRUCK COVERS Sea Hawk, Cobra All colors and sizes Camptown R V's, Ayden 746 3530
036
Cycles For Sale
SPRING AND SUMMER SPECIAL 1974 Honda 450, with hi rise bars and sissy seat. Runs like new and much more. You must see to appreciate at this price, $550. Will trade for car or truck of equal value. Call 756 0492
1972 750 HONDA Excellent condi tion. 758 3484
1977 550 Honda. Excellent condition
Call 752 0334 or 746 2017_
1980 CB750 HONDA 6100 miles. Excellent shape $1750. Call 752
4161__
1980 CM400 HONDA Excellent condition Call 756 9938 anytime.
1980 YAMAHA 650 Speciai. Immac ulate $1150. Call 752 f888 after 6.
1980 YAMAHA XS400 Special. Vef ter, quick silver faring, cover, helment, 4500 miles, garage kept Excellent condition. $1200. 756 0981.
1981 HONDA400C Call 757 1533
1982 YAMAHA 750 Seca. Excellent condition. I owner, only 2300 miles $2450 Call 758 5876 after 5
1983 HONDA 750 SHADOW, plus 2 new helmenfs and new rain gear. Must sell! $2500.946 8183.
039
Trucks For Sale
JIMMY BLAZER, 1977 4 wheel
drive 4 speed 350 engine $3500. Call Chris Joyner days 753 3232.
1957 CHEVY '3 ton truck. Needs rear end. $200 or best offer. 752 1523. 1969 CHEVY PICKUP Ugly $700 756 8833 or 756 1188.
1979 FORD VAN Gold and white chateau. 752 1159 days. 752 6822
nights__
1982 JEEP WAGONEER, Limited, low mileage All options. $14,000. 975 2012 756 0439 after 6 pm._
040
Child Care
MOTHER OF 2 would like to keep your child in her home. 10 years experience in home child care. References Oakwood Acres. Call
752 4754_
WANTED: mature responsible
woman to keep my children in her home in the Winterville area. Monday through Friday. Call 756 8935 after 6.
WILL KEEP infants and children in my home. Up to 8 years of age. Only $ 85 an hour. 752 4903.
041
DAY NURSERY
MOTHERLAND DAY CARE ages I month thru 13 years. Plenty of summer fun. Rates $25 for one child, $40 for 2. Phone 752 2743.
046
PETS
AKC MINIATURE Longhaired Dachshund II week old male, red and black. 355 6476, Greenville.
BLACK AND RUST Dobermans. 2 females. I male. 7 weeks old. Call 355 2227 days, 756 7628 nights
DACHSHUND PUPPIES 4 males, 1 female Must sell next 2 weeks, $50 males, $40 females 756 3826 after 6.
GOLDEN RETRIEVER puppies. AKC registered. Have both parents. 753 3074 days; 753 2270 nights
4.ABRADOR RETRIEVERS AKC
'Puppies. Field trail and gun dog stock. Wormed, shots, and de-wclaws removed. 1-242 6529 or 1 242 4830. _ _
ONE AKC POMERANIAN, female. 18 months, blonde, house trained. SIOO. 752 8149 _
SIBERIAN HUSKIES, registered, 4 red with blue eyes. 6 weeks old, wormed $150. 752 5333
3 DACHSHUND FEAAALE PUPS, wormed. 6 weeks old. 746 3681._
051
Help Wanted
AUTO MECHANIC, 5 years experi ence, must have fools. Good benefits. Contact Kenneth Evans, Regional Auto Parts, lnc.756 1100
AUTOMOTIVE SALES career Excellent starting salary and benefits. Good working conditions. Sales experience preferred. East Carolina Lincoln Mercury-GMC. 756 4267.
AUTOMOTIVE MECHANIC needed with experience in air conditioning, engine tune up and repair, and front end. Salary and commission de pending on experience. Excellent vacation and benefit program. Call Phil Trull at Goodyear Tire Center, 752 44l7or 756 9184 after 7.
BLOODMOBILE ASSISTANT Head Nurse. American Red Cross Blood Services has a full time supervisory position available for a registered nurse at the Tar River Sub Center, Greenville, NC Major re sponsibilities is the management and supervision of mobile blood collection activities in the absence of the head nurse. NC licensure and driver's license reguired. Proven management experience required. IV or venepuncture experience preferred. Ability to travel daily and work irregular hours and some weekends. Join our professional friendly team. Apply Tar River Sub Center, Post Office Box 6003, Greenville, NC 27834. Part time staff nurse position also available.
EOE___
BODY SHOP TECHNICIAN needed. Must be experienced. >^ply to Buck Sutton, Hastings Forcl, 758 0114. _
COMMERCIAL CARPENTERS or lead persons needed at once at Cherry Point. Call Jim Jones. 1 447-4921 We are an EOE
: DIRECTOR POSITION
.Beaufort County Developmental Xeriter. Inc. has an immediate opening. Position entails Directing ,a center for ADAP, Child Day Care . - MR and Group Homes.
* Minimum Qualification
Requirements
A Master's Degree in Special Edu 'cation. Vocational Rehabilitation or '^related Human Services or a 'Bachelor's Degree in the '^^aforementioned disciplines with 'three years experiences in an ad-minlstration capacity In an agency ^'serving exceptional adults and 'Children.
Salary Range $15.000 $18,000
rSend resume to: Tom Umphlett,
Chairman of Search Committee,
1534 West 5th Street, Washington, NG 27889.
Application must be submitted by .June 15, 1983.
Affirmative Action/Equal Ppportu-,
nitv E mplover and Service.
EXPERIENCED SHEET METAL uworkers only. Apply in person at aLarmar Mechanical Contractors between 8 and 9a.m. only
EXPERIENCED KENNEL help wanted. Morning work. Call be
tween 4.00 and 5:00 pm. Helen's
Grooming World. 758 6333.
FJRE/RESCUE TRAINEE Entry level position involving both ' tiretighting and EMT duties. Night and shift work. Must have high sctMWl diploma or GED Excellent physical/mental health. Valid NC ' drivers license, Pre employment testing required. Starting. salary ">$11,419 Apply at Employment Se--curity Commission by June 1, 1983. EOE/AAM/F _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CONCERNED ABOUT RADIATION LEAKAGE
from your
MICROWAVE OVEN
Call 355-2712 M-F HAVE IT TESTED
'S-1 SENTRY SAFE
119
HMUuarFnEuniinco.
jCofiiffOl pm QrMn St.
1
051
Help Wanted
CONSTRUCTION SUPERIN TNDENT wanted. Only qualified superintendents need apply Send resume to Carl Mills: Wimco, PO Box 121, Washington, NC 27889.
HEAD nurse Pheresis Unit American Red Cross has a full time management position in Pheresis Unit in which specialized blood donor and patient treatment pro cedures are performed Position requires graduate of accredited school of nursing with current NC licensure Minimum 5 years recent
nursing experience with demon stratedf supervisory capabilities Responsibilities include supervision
and coordination of all donor, tient, and staff acfivifies. Ad ministrafive dufies include scheduling, reports, quality control, etc. Hours basically 8 30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. with some flexibility Salary and benefits competitive Apply American Red Cross, Post Otfice Box 6003, Greenville. NC 27834. EOE
IMMEDIATE JOB OPENING for office personnel. Duties will include typing, filing, light bookkeeping, making deposits Salary $10.000 Hospitalization and retirement plan Please send resume to Job, iox 2245, Greenville, NC
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER IE
degree or equivalent, 2 to 4 years onTiand experience in needle trade or textiles. Self motivated Dynam ic company. Excellent benefits. Reply to Industrial Engineer, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.
INFANT ATTENDANT Experience only Call 752-2886 for appointment
INTERNATIONAL COMPANY seeking 6 ladiesTo demonstrate non surgical face lift. Career manage ment, we train. 946 1494_
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,
Greenville. NC 27834.__
LOCAL MANUFACTURE of pre cisin molding rubber products has
an immediate opening for a quality joer The successful candidate should possess the follow
control manag
ing minimum requirements: a 4 year college degree with emphasis in math to include statistics, a minimum of 2 years quality control and managerial experience Re sumes should be forwarded to GSH Corporation. PO Box 37, Snow Hill, NC 28580. Equal Opportunity Employer
051
Help Wanted
OVERSEAS, Cruise Jobs. $20,000 $60.000 year possible. Call 805 687 6000 Ext. J 8752._
PART TIME ATTENDANT for self service car wash. Prefer retired or semi retired person. Must be good with customers and be mechanically inclined. Call 758 3258 between 9 11.3 5._
PLUMBER NEEDED At least 5 years experience. Call 756-7961. RECEPTIONIST with typing and some clerical experience. Apply in person Thursday, May 19 at COECO, 510 South Greene Street.
RN
STAFF DEVELOPER
Position available for a staff devel oper in modern long term care facility. Must possess leadership ability and technical skills to carry out policies and programs established by the facility. Regis tered nurse with work experience sufficient to demonstrate ability to organize, plan and assist employees in Teaming situations.
Please send resume to:
Rt.1,Box21 Greenville, NC 27834
RN'S, LPN'S and OR Technicians Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald, Director of Nursing, (919) 943 2111.
SALES CLERK A quiet settled mature individual is needed for this position with a local company. Salary 9 to 10 K No outside work. Call John at Heritage Personnel, 355 2020_
SCREEN PRINTER, experienced only, in all aspects of printing. Apply in person. 758-0517 for directions^_
WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them for cash with a Classified Ad
SERVICE STATION HELP Expe rience. Local references. Apply in person. Holiday Shell, 724 South Memorial Drive. No phone calls.
STARTING A 9 month secretarial course May 23 Greenville School of Commerce, 752 3177
LPN POSITION available lor indi vidual to work in renal dialysis setting. Excellent salary and benefiTs with every Sunday off. Contact Sandra Green, RN Greenville Dialysis Center, Greenville, NC 752 1520. _
LPN's NEEDED part time to work 3 II or 11 7. Competitive salaries. Shift differentials 311 and 117. Interested persons contact L Morgan, RN, 758 7100_
MAID TO CLEAN house one da per wee 756 7647
er week. References required
day
Call
MANAGER
$65,000 CALIBER
National Organization Manage 4 6 Salespeople Contact Established Accounts Bob Thomason_213 327 7980
MANAGER FOR CONVENIENT
store and gas combination $20,000 with commission. Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South Memorial Drive, Greenville._
MATHEMATICS INSTRUCTOR, masters in mathematics, teach de velopmental. occupational and col lege mathematics thru calculus English instructor, masters or bet tr in English, teach devel opmental, occupational and college transfer courses. Psychology in structor, masters or better in psychology with specializations in developmental, experimental or related area. At least 2 years college, psychology experience preferred. Positions are available September 1, 1983. For application and additional information contact Dr Frank B Gaines, Dean of College Transfer Education, 444 Western Boulevard. Jacksonville, NC 28540. 919 455 1221. An equal opportunity employer
MEDICAL INSURANCE clerk needed. Call for appointment. Anne's Temporaries, 120 Reade Street, 758 6610._
MULTILINE CLAIMSMAN needed for Greenville NC area. Large company opening new office. Should have minimum of 5 years experience. Good benefits, com pany car. Excellent opportunity. Call (404 ) 325 2480. _
NEEDMONEYFORA SUMMER VACATION
Sell Avon and start saving! Work in your own neighborhood, earn up to S0%! Call 752 7006._
NEEDED MATURE lady who loves children to care for twin girls In my home 4 days a week beginning June 1. If interested call 752 6164_
OFFICE MANAGER Immediate opening for the right person to take charge of the offTce of a top local company plus plush surroundings and pleasant working conditions with good benefits. 12 to 14 K Call John,THerltaoe Personnel. 355 2020.
PART TIME anatomy and physiol ogy, mathematics, English, 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 munity College. 444 Western Boulevard, Jacksonville. NC 28540, 919 455 1221. An equal opportunity employer._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WANT A NEW CAREER? Energetic person who is determined to make money. Prefer someone settled with college degree. Company will train. Call Mr. Lee for 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._
WANTED PARTY CHIEF or in sfrument person for surveying firm. Experience required. Call Speight 8, Associates, 758 8440 from 6 a.m. 5 p.m
WANTED SOUND MAN for rock band. Call between 11 12 midnight. Call 638 6934. _
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. ^
059
Work Wanted
ABLE BODIED responsible indi vidual would like to do odd |Obs, yard work, gardening, etc. In Pitt County. 756 6913._
ALL -TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming, cutting and removal Free estimates J P Stancil, 752 6331._
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, mawnry and roofing. 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 Also service and repair your air conditioners. We do all types of Mobile Home Repairs.
CARPETCLEANING
2 Rooms & Hallway Special Truck mounted steam cleaning for deeper, longer lasting clean H & H Clean Care 756 9076
_"The Carpet Doctor"_
CARPET CLEANING or repair Reasonable rates. 758-7253._
CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use Eliminate creosote and musW odors Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En-
terpri! ..... '
night.
DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do your housecleaninq. 752-3758.
FOR TREE REMOVAL, Call Tony Brown's Lawn and Tree Service. 756 6735.
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood
and metal.
Dip and Strip
Equip: -ip Al
ment formally of items returned
"P -
within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call tor tree estimate. Days 756 9123, Night 756 1007.
GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call 752 7341.__
HOMES PAINTED Interior and ex terior. Graduate student with expe rience in painting. We give excellent work with substantial savings over professional prices. 756 8948 anytime. _
IF IT'S IN A YARD, we'll do it! Call Tony Brown's Lawn and Tree Service, 756 6735.
LAWN MAINTENANCE Any type. Call 756 9938 anytime.
LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m., weekends anytime.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
1981 Buick Skylark
4 door, dark blue, V-6 engine, automatic transmission, power steering and brakes, air condition.
^5785
WASHINGTON MOTORy^O., INC.
9M-77N 1103 Carolma Ava.
mU24 Waali., N.C.
059
Work Wanted
LAWNMOWING Other yard work Low prices Call 757 0317 or 752 4680,
ask for Sam Junior._
MIDDLE AGE experienced nursing companion would like live-in or full time work for elderly person Have driving license Call 758 6697 ask for Anne. _
PAINT PROS
We specialize in use of Benjamin Moore paints. Residential or commercial. Interior or exterior Plaster and wallpapering Free estimate. 758 4155.
_WE DO IT RIGHT
PAINTING
No job too small. Interior and exterior. Low rates. McEarl Paint Co.
_757 3604_
PAINTING/GUTTER WORK, etc 6 years experience. Call 758 7034. PAINTING Tired of paying con tractors high prices? Experienced painter Work guaranteed. 757 1233.
SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 2868 anyfime, if no answer callback.
074
Miscellaneous
FACTORY 2nds NOW available direct from manufacturer. Hand
$53 Hatferas Hammocks, 1104 Clark Street, Greenville
FOR EXPERT TV repair, bring set to Four Way tV in Hookerton (We sell new RCA sets). 747 2412
FOR SALE: yellow collards and cabbage plants. Marlon Mae Mills, 756 3279 or 355 2792
FOR SALE: Avocado drop in
electric range and matching hood. $100 746 2224
FOR SALE: Timex Sinclair 1000 computer with 16K Ram memory and 2 instruction books. Excellent condition. Selling for $111 or make an offer. Call 752 2330 after 5 p.m
FOR SA1.E: 21,000 BTU Hotpoint air conditioner Excellent condition, $250 Call 756 5019 after 5:30.
SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59.95. Call Steve Atkins for all your sign needs. 756 9117.
STUDENT INTERESTED in lawn cutting. Reasonable rates Call before 10 a.m. 758 3216._
060
FOR SALE
061
Antiques
J & J's ANTIQUES operating at Woodside. Come out and brouse. Don't forget Antique Show & Sale, June 5. James Allen and Jenny Move_
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J P Stancil, 752 6331.
065 Farm Equipment
LAWN MOWER SUPPLIES Briggs and Straiten motors 3 5 horse power vertical shaft $122.49, 5
horsepower horizontal shaft $163.95, 8 horsepower horizontal shaft $219.95. Lawnmower batteries $31 49. Blades, throttle cables, pulleys and other parts in stock. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752
067 Garage Yard Sale
MAMMOTH YARD SALE All of Stancill Drive 8 until 4 p.m., Saturday.__
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752 5237__
073 Fruits and Vegetables
MAY PEAS Field opens Thursday, May 19. $5 50 a bushel. B & B You
Pick. 795 4646._
PORTORICAN POTATO plants $20 per 1,000. 758 1812._
074
Miscellaneous
ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air conditoners, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale. Call B J Mills, Authorized Appliance Service,
746 2446at Black Jack._
ANTIQUE DOUBLE BRASS bed with mattress and box springs $400 or best offer. 756 9878. _
accessories
APPLE //e Starter Systems. Brand new: $1695. Also AppI 15% discount. Call 757 3820.
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $39 95 on a 6 piece Western living room suit Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables Furniture World, 757 0451. We take
trade ins._
ATARI GAMES "Venture ", "Vanguard", "Space Jockey" and "Berserk". Call 758-1739 evenings between 5 and 9._
BEDDING&WATERBEDS
Why pay retail when you can save up to '/z and more on bedding and waterbeds. Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza), 355 2626.
BERKLINE RECLINER, new $145. 19" color TV, $245. 2 fold but sleeper chairs, $50 each. Call 756
5380.__
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation- 919 763 9734.
FOR THE COLLECTOR in you, we have 2 Treadle sewing machines. 1 Singer and 3 stands. Machines operable. At attractive collectors prices Stop by soon for best selection. Greenville Sewing Center, Pitt Plaza, 756 0747.
FOR THE PERSON who wants to sew. new Singer machines have not increased in price, plus instructions without charge of the use and care. Prices start at $14995. Greenville Sewing Center, Pitt Plaza, 756 0747
GEORGIA RED sweet potato sprouts $25 for 1,000. Call 752 3015
days, 756 7159 nights. _
GIBSON, 16 CUBIC foot upright freezr, only 7 months old. Still under warranty. $400. Call 756 3291
after 5:30 pm._
GOOD USED washing machines. $100 each or $85 with trade in. Call
756 2479.__
GRADUATION IDEA? Moftitfs Magnavox has 12" black and white TVs for only $74.95! 2803 Evans
Streef Extension, 756 8444._
HOTPOINT washer and dryer 5 years old. $325 pair Call 758 5486
after 6.__
ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers. Sale 40% off Barkers Refrigeration. 2227 Memorial
Drive. 756 6417.__
IRISES FOR SALE Over 300 varieties. Free Iris to every buying
customer. Call 746 3084_
LADIES CLOTHES for sale Like new. Size 7 8 and 9 10 Blouses, tops, slacks, skirts, dresses, size 6 nar row shoes. Call 355 2136 for in
formation. _
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m , Jim
Hudson.__
RTAR SAND, fill, rock, lopsoil. all 746 3819or 746 3296.
MOVING! Zenith 19" portable color TV with chromomatic color, has sharp picture, only $165. Admiral 12" portable color TV with in stamatic color, has sharp picture, only $125. 8,000 BTU air conditioner by Sears, only used 2 seasons. works like new, $125 Call 756 0492. MOVING MUST SELL 3 piece den suite; sofa, chair, loveseat. (brown and rust plaid). Excellent condition. $375. Rocker recliner, rust, like new, $75 752 3949 after 5 p.m.
CLASSIFIED ADS are as close as your telephone Just dial 752 6166 and ask for a friendly Ad Visor.
MOVING SALE Family room full of Mission oak furniture. Henrydon walnut corner table, 36" and lov eseats in brown Sofa and chair. Mission oak style 2 casual leather chairs, side chair Cabinet bar. Golf cart, bag and clubs Desk lamp and draftsman lamp. Heavy metal York safe. Mahogany chest Tools, large and small. Chainsaw. Lion 40 LB radio TV antenna. Heavy duty cooler window fan. Antique wine press and tables. And more Brook valley, 756 0799 Sunday anytime,
weekdays 5 to 8 p.m_
ONE 23,000 BTU GE air conditioner in very good condition, $150, in eludes window stand Call 758 4756 after 4 p.m.
SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.
SPRING AND SUMMER SPECIAL 1974 Honda 450, with hi rise bars and sissy seat. Runs like new and much more. You must see to appreciate at this price. $550. Will trade for car or truck of equal value Call 756 0492.
STANCILTREE SERVICE
_J P stancil, 752-6331_
SUPER XL HOMELITE CHAIN saw with bow and bar, 2 chains, good condition, $175. 1 GE washing machine, $75. 752 8149.
TOBACCO PLANTS for sale. Call 756 POOS', Arthur King._
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone Also driveway work_
CAR SEAT, stroller, walker, high chair, old milk can. Call 757 0307. CARPET, CARPET, CARPET! Assorted sizes and colors. 9xl2's, 9x15's, 12x12's, 12x15's. Priced to move. Financing available. Furniture World 2808 East 10th Street. 757 0451.
CENTIPEDE SOD 758 2704, 752 4994.
COFFEE MACHINE, $50 Call 756 2121.
DELUXE ELECTRIC hospital bed. Like new Used only 3 months. $1000. Table, $50. 758 9000 or 523-9460.
CLASSIF^IED DISPLAY
TOPSOIL, rriorfar sand, fill sand and gravel. Davenport Hauling, 756 5247.
TREE & STUMP REMOVAL
Reasonable prices. Insured. Work guaranteed. Call 752-4060 for free estimate._
TWO 50 watt Lyric speakers Good condition. $75 or best offer. Days 756 9371 or nights 756 7887.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING
C.L. Lupton. Co.
7.S2 61 If.
A&MUSEDCARS
Have moved to their new location 3014 S. Memorial Drive
Across From Wachovia Computer Center 756-6953 Greenville, N.C.
NEED RADIAL TIRES?
Only
25dow
Per Set We Finance Hundreds To * Choose From Come In Today
FAIRMONT VILLAGE APARTMENTS
TIRED OF PAYING HIGH UTILITY BILLS
Come to Ayden-where lower utility rates, energy efficient heat pumps plus free water wilt 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
COGGINS WHOLESALE TIRE DIVISION
320W.Qreenvllle Blvd. 756-1370
1979 Lincoln Continental Mark V
2 door. White, white landau roof, every option except sunroof. One local owner, 41,000 actual miles.
*8450
WASHINGTON MOTOR^^^0., INC.
MI-nN MM424
1103 CaroliM Ava. Wask.. N.C.
980 rRD ECONOLINE CONVERSION VAN
maroon w/gold stripes, raised roof. 4 captains chairs, sofa-bed combination, snack and game fables, air, cassette and more. Sells new for over $20.000. Only 1 at this price! $10,644.15
WASHINGTON
M0T0R^/^0.,INC.
NFIIN ^^.tlH tanliH In
MM424 u.The Daily ReHector, Greenville, ,N C.-Wednesday, .May 18,1983-29
074
Miscellaneous
WHITE WEDDING DRESS, veil, and crinoline, size 9 10. Excelleni condition. 752 1231 $110 or best
offer
WOULD LIKE fo buy used refrig erafors, air conditioners, freezers, and ranges that need repair 746 2446
WURLITZER PIANO Excellent condition, $800 Call Donna, 758 3191.
19" COLOR TV Rent to own $23.11 per month. Furniture World, 757 0451.
32" RIDING MOWER, good tion. $275. Call 752 6032 after 5
condi
p.m
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
ABOVE AVERAGE by Fleetwood, with 2 bedrooms, with extra closet spaces and cabinet spaces, extra nice household furniture, 23,500 BTU air conditioner, practically new stove and heavy duty washing machine, all plywood walls, with hardwood floors and much
more Parked in a quiet, nice trailer park on an extra large lot in city limjts Also have a large storage
barn. Economical to keep cool or warm. You must see to appreciate at this price. $3,850. Call 756 0492, BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide. 3 bedrooms. 2 .full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof, frosi 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 includecT Hours, 8 AM to 8 pm CROSSLAND HOMES (formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756 0191
EXCELLENT INVESTMENT
70x14 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, total electric repo. Great condition Less than $600 down and less than $200 per month for only 9 years Call 756 0131.
077 Musical Instruments
7 PIECE SET of Blue Tama Drums 1 snare drum, 4 mounted tom loms. I floor tom, 1 22" base drum, 3 zildien cymbols, high hat with 2 zildien cymbols Pnce negotiable Call 758 0206 after 6___
Help fight inflation by buying and selling through the Classiliecf ads Call 752 6166
077 Musical Instruments
FOR SALE Yamaha Studio con sole piano Like new $1.350 Call 756 0906 anytime__
WINTER SPINET PIANO with bench, beautiful cabinet $550 Piano 8. Organ Distributors Greenville, 355 6002
Searching lor the right lownhouse-Watch Classified eviery day
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
IT'S A STEAL! A beautiful 1977 Oakwood 12 X 56, front kitchen with big bay window, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath; new carpet and drapes. House type windows with storm windows Frost free refrigerator, deluxe range Must sell $8,500 $850 down, $142 per month for 8 years Will move free up 1o 25 miles Days, 756 2929. Nights, 756 8771.
LIMITED TIME ONLY!!! 1983 70x14 2 bedrooms. 2 baths To see is to believe! Need fo sell immediate
ly. 10% above wholesale plus set up Only 1 - - ^ -Y
756 0131.
1 home, so hurry and call!
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE 12x60 Call 758 4234.
NEW QUALITY built Marshfield 3
bedrooms, I'z baths Payments under $200 per month Only i ' left! Call 756 0131
14 WIDES for as low as $190 per month Call or come by Art Oetlano
Homes, 756 9841._
rtx/O COMMADORE Only 3 months old. $500 down and assume loan, 2 bedrooms, I' j baths Call 758 5010 anytime_
14x70 3 BEDRCX3MS, 2 baths $500 equity and assume payments of $191.10. 757 3964.
1978 12x60 CONNOR mobile home for sale. 2 bedrooms, I bath. Underpinning Included. Low down payment, assume low monthly payments Call 752 8846 alter 2.
1979, 14x65 Oakwood, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump, unfurnished $800 equity and take up payments Call
1980 14 X 70 three bedrooms, 1 bath Some equity and assume loan of $181 per month Call Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841
AUCTION
STERLING SILVER
Friday Evening, May 20th 7:30 P.M.
LOCATION: 2000 Cedar Lane, Greenville. N.C. (Jaycee Park).
171 PIECES
This is antique sterling silver that was willed to the First Presbyterian Church by one of it's deceased members. It consists of flatware of different patterns, several different serving pieces, teapot, creamer, sugar, cake plate.
The patterns consist of Chantilly, Hamilton and Community.
Auctioneer: Doug Gurkins N.C. License No. 765 Phone 758-1875
1981 CONNER, house type furniture, underskirting, steps and all. $2,000 down and take up pay mentsof $209 month. Call 756 7856
1982 24 X 64 Parkway $500 down Assume loan at 12% interest. Call Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841
076 Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754. _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton, Co.
SWIMMING POOL
Cash Or Monthly Payments Above And Inground
Seaboard Home Center
602 Grimes Rd Washington, N.C 946-2156
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 5250,000 of Merchandise
SK| EQUIPMENT
. slides ' ; .
MARINE ELECTRONICS
Depth fmdiir', VHf r,^,j. . f: mdrinri stereos
SAILING ACCESSORIES
BiOCff une ' r.,1 y,,--. ; -
tracks ,
BRAND NAMES r.n-'.-"'!- C,
LOAranr.c SMR
International
SAFETY EQUIPMENT MARINE PAINT MARINE SPORTSWEAR BOAT, MOTOR .TRAILER
Pur.to Sk, Master Scnaet.jr .*;oo:s, and
OLIN SAFETY FLARES
Regularly
S29.95
Special
S1495
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
NEWOIDS
HRENZA6T
JUST
$944600*
Low 9.9% financing available to qualified buyers
Here's what a sporty car can be when its an OtdsmoHe.
The OMs Firenza 6T-its sporty inside ond out.
REOINING BUan SMS SPKinC INTERIOR DOOR TREATMENTS SPORT STEERING WHE WITH LEATHER GRIPS BOLD REir ACCENTS ON INSTRUMENT WNEL
SPEQRA RED E)(TERIOR WITH SILVER TRIM AND MUCH MORE
* Does Not Include Tax And Tags
HOLTOLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
Greenville
756-3115
Drive A New
1983 Datsun Pickup
For As Little As
*138
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 Li'l Hustler
HGLT GLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd
Greenville
756-3115
JO The Daiiy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Weoiicouay, May 18,1883
080
INSTRUCTION
NEED TUTOR IN management accounting gractuate student Call Abdulla 752 6586
WILL TUTOR ENGLISH, all levels. MA English, 2 years experience C a 11 75 2 924 alter S_
082 LOST AND FOUND
inq lost around Krogers Kewardi ottered^II 355 2339 nights._
085 Loans And Mortgages
2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans mortgages bought Call tree 1 800 845 392
095
PROFESSIONAL
BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and
drywall. Call 757 0678 or 756 268V Atler 6 355 6952,_ _
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimr^y
/eep 25 years experience workinj on chimneys and fireplaces C day or night, 753 3503. Farmville
100
REAL ESTATE
104 Condominiums For Sale
093
OPPORTUNITY
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 8. Co , Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville. NC 757 0001. nights 753,4015 _
NEED EXTRA MONEY? Choose own hours Full or part time opportunitv to earn S50 plus in a tew hours sharing the Aloe charm skin care and glamour line For in formation call 355 2887_
OWN YOUR OWN JEAN Sportswear infant preteen, ladies .ipparel store Ottering all na
tionally known brands, Brittania. Jordache, Chic Lee, Levi, Van derbilt God Calvin Klein, Esprit, Zena Gunne Sax, Ocean Pacific. 300 other brands 57,900 to $16,900, beginning inventory, airfare for one to fashion center, training, fixtures, grand opening Call Mr Kostecky 1501 ) 327 803f _
TO BUY' OR SELL a business. Appraisals Financing Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATE'S, Licensed Brokers 401 W First Street 752 3575 _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Is Open House Week at Brookhlll Townhomes. See our affordable 2 and 3 bedroom townhomes I Call Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029 or Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 for more details
MOORE &SAUTER
110 South Evans 758-6050
106
Farms For Sale
58 ACRE FARM Good road fron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110 51 acres cleared. 6.209 pounds tobacco
allotment, pond and 2 bedroom St. Johns Community. Call
house
for more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details _
TO PLACE YOUR Classified Ad, just call 752-6166 and let a friendly Ad Visor help you word your Ad
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
1980 Lincoln Continental Town Car
4 door. Fawn, fawn vinyl top, velour interior, full power, beautiful car.
MO,650
WASHINGTON MOTOR CO., INC.
946-7798
946-6424
1103 CaroliM kn. Wash., 4.0.
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 Datsun 4X4 Truck
Long bed. White with blue interior, 19,000 miles, one owner.
1982 Olds Delta 88 Royate
Brougham. 2 door. Loaded, diesel engine, 36,000 miles, gray with gray velour interior.
1982 Datsun Sentra MPG
2 door, white with tan vinyl interior, 5 speed transmission, AM-FM radio.
1982 Ford EXP
2 door, dark blue, light blue vinyl interior, one owner, 14,000 miles, 4 speed, air, AM-FM stereo with cassette.
1981 Datsun 280-ZX
Copper with tan leather interior, T-top, 5 speed,loaded, one owner.
1981 Datsun 4X4 Truck
Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, r#with black interior.
1981 Plymouth TC-3
Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.
1981 Mercury Marquis
4 door, tan and brown, beige cloth interior, loaded, 22,000
miles, one owner.
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 Datsun 210 Wagon
White with blue vinyl interior, 48,000 miles, automatic transmission, air condition, AM-FM stereo, one owner,
1979 Olds Delta 88
2 door. Blue with white landau top, white interior, 44,000 actual miles, looks new.
DISCOUNTS UP TO $2500.00 On These Company Demonstrators All Vehicles Carry Full Factory Warranty
1983 Olds 98 Regency
4 door, loaded, moon roof, silver with beige top.
1983 Olds 98 Regency Brougham
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 door. 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, tjucket seats.
HOLT OLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
.1
109
Houses For Sale
A RARE FIND Very seldom for sale Mobile home located on over an acre lot In city with additional mobile home spaces to be rented out tor additional income. We have it! Call Davis Realty. 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1W7___
AN ADDRESS you'll give with
pridel Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2''j bath home
Living room with fireplace, double garage, extra's in kitchen CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 756 3438
BACK ON THE MARKET! Don't let this one slip by you again! This 3 bedroom has an 8% VA loan
assumption with payments ot Fenced in backyard
with a detached garage and workshop Ottered at 532,500 *454 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 6666
BEST VALUE IN TOWN! Owners are ready to move and want quick sale on this three bedroom, two full bath home. Otters excellent floor
plan plus large den with fireplace $52,900. *445 CENTURY 21 Bass
Realty. 756 6666
BRICK RANCH situated on a wooded lot Excellent neighborhood. WInferville school district. No city taxes, 3 bedrooms, I' j baths, recently painted inside Only $56,900. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997
109 Houses For Sale
EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Excellent location. 3 bedrooms, large family room with fireplace, garage, deck.
patio, extra large room tor office, study or etc. Some equity (
owner financing). Only $42, - - 752 300,
Davis Realty. 756 1997.
slble Call 756 2904.
FARMERS HOME ASSUMPTION
Great opj^tunlty for those that qualify. Based on Income payments as low as $106. 3 bedroom home offers many extras such as chalrrall. beams end decorated well Cell (or details. $40's. #471 CENTURY 21 Bast Realty. 756-6666.
GRAYLEIGH It you like Williamsburg you will love this house located In a rapidly growing neighborhood. Must see to apprecT
ate' Available Immediately.^fhrea ^droom, 2'.'> baths, large den, built
bookcases with fireplace $110.500 W G Blount and Associates. 756 3000
HOUSE, BUILDING, and lot lor sale S R #1551, 2.2 milts on right
past caution light at Stokes - $13,000. Contact Charles M Vincent, 75*-
4000
BRICK VENEER DUPLEX reduced to $48,000. Assume 9Vx% loan Cash flow. Owner financing
possibly equity Almost 3 years ole Heat pump 2 ^edroorns, 1 bath.
IV I I
tv, 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997
sou. _
ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, close to schools, shopping, den with fireplace and woodstove, living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, extra room. 12 X 14, perfect (or shop or game room Large lot Assume Tl'j% VA loan $7500 equity. Call after 5pm. 752-6448.
BY OWNER 3 bedroom. 2 bath ranch Large greatroom with fireplace, garage and sundeck. Assumable I1'j% loan. 153,900 756 8715. _ _
BY OWNER IN Club Pines. 534 Crestline Blvd 2 story brick Williamsburg. 2400 square teet, 3-4 bedrooms. f i baths. Great room with fireplace, large spacious kitchen. Double carport with storage. Fence All electric. Only $100,000 Assumable 9'2% VA loan. Call 756 8953 for appointment. No realtors please.
CLUB PINES Spacious great room design with 3 bedrooms. 2'^i baths, built in bookcases with fireplace. Deck and garage. $84.500. W G Blount and Associates, 756-3000. CONVENIENT TO THE CITY This cedar home Is located on an acre and just five years old Built-in microwave, stereo intercom, energy saving heat pump and a 2
HOUSE FOR SALE by owner in Tuckahoe Subdivision on a quiet Culdesac. 1,742 heated square feet and garage. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living, dining, den, eat-in kitchen. Extra large back and side yards, heat pump. Possible loan assumption, Shown by appointment only. $63,900. 756 365f _
IDEAL HOME tor young family. Located on large lot In country. 3 bedrooms, deck. Assume loan plus equity (owner will finance equity) only S34.500. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000. 756-2904, 756 1997
KEEP SLIM AND TRIM by having your own swimming pool that comes with this three bedroom brick ranch In Eastwood. Den with fireplace, all formal areas in this
176
square foot home. Offered at * #435 CENTURY 21 Bass
$69.900 Realty. 756-5*68
LARGE FAMILY? You'll have plenty of space In this lovely traditional styled home. Formal living room, dining room, eat-in kitchen and a targe famly room with wainscoting and an antique brick fireplace. **1,900. #477. CENTURY it Bass Realty, 756-6666
LARGE OLDER home In quiet
community. Approximately 3100 square feet, 5 badrooms, 2 baths.
large garage. PossibillW of extra lot (^NTURY 21 B Forbes
Agency, 756 2121 or 756 7426.
LOCATED NEAR HOSPITAL Neat Br;jck Veneer starter home. Re
cently decorated,^ new carpet. For fh
energy saving heat pump and a 2 car garage. Make your appointment for that pleasureable drive in the
country! Upper $60's, #403 CEN TURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.
COUNTRY LIVING can be yours Over 1400 square feet modular
home on brick tondation, '/> acre lot, heat pump 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, all appliances remain. Only $43.900 Call Davis Realty. 752 3000,
2904, 756 1997.
752
756
EDWARDS ACRES Beautiful new homes with FHA or VA financing and closing costs paid. Three bedrooms. ni baths, living room, dining area, paneled gara central air, wood deck. $54,i Duttus Realty Inc., 756 5395.
EXCELLENT TASTE is to be found in this beautiful four bedroom home in Lynndale. Hardwood floors In foyer and dining room, den with
fireplace and french door leading to deck, playroom, custom draperies throughout^ Like new! *lj5,9(.
#341. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.
It'S Still the garage Sale season and
people are really buying this year!
Get 1 '
yours together soon and adver tise it with a Classified Ad. Call 752 6166
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
less than $3500. You may purchase and close this home. Only *38,500. Call Davis Realty, 752-3000, 756-2904, 756 1997._
Look What's Home!
New house under construction In Country c In this com-
beautlful Baytree. Country charm with city convenience In this comfortable, affordable house with a touch of luxury.
CALL 758-6410
Diversified Financial Services, Inc. _Or your REALTOR_
Look What's Home!
New house under construction In beautiful Baytree. Country charm with city convenience In this comfortable. affordable house with a
touch of luxury.
CALL 758-6410
Diversified Flrnncial Services, Inc. or your REALTOR
109
Houses For Sale
BY OWNER 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, 2500 square Teet, nice yard. In Farmville. *59,500. Call after5p.m , 753 3030
LYNNDALE - Very unique 2Vi story home offers superb living areas
plus study, playroom, 2 fireplaces and screened ^ch. Reduced to $114,900, but take a look and make an offer! Call Ball & Lane. 752 0025 or Richard Lane. 752-8*19
MAVIS BUTTS REALTY
758-0655
NEW LISTING .........
Convenience is an asset in tl
University area his cute
2 bedroom bungalow. Other features Include lull bath, living room with fireplace and woocT
burning stove, kitchen, dinin room, enclosed solarlum/sunjoorc and detached garage. Put this one on the top of your list. *41,000.
PINERIDGE is the setting for this cute brick rancher. Convenient door plan otters 3 bedrooms, IVj
baths, living room with woodburn
!, I
to p,
storage building and carport
glass doors to
stove,
large country kitchen latio, outsiite
must see for only'sa.SO.
THE WARMTH AND CHARM of
Williamsburg surrounds you as you step In the door of this lovely 2 bedroom contemporary. Unique floor plan features large kitchen, dining room, great room with loodburning sfc
-----. .love, split bath,
french doors to deck, neat pump
lurning I doors and more!! *53,900.
TIRED OF THE SAME 'Ole Routine? Pick out the decor you've always wanted In this enticing new home. Convenience is not the only asset In this home that offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living and dining rooms, work kitchen, glass doors to deck and heat pump. *54,200.
NEW HOUSING IS AFFORDABLE and available in this choice neighborhood convenient _ to the
hospital and med school. Buy now
id .......
choose all interior design and exterior colors. Interesting floor
filan offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
i'
iving room with fireplace, dining room with doors to deck, eat-in kitchen, heat pomp and carport. *55,500.
Jane Butts.......
Shirley Morrison . Mavis Butts......
.756-2*51 .75* 5463 .752 7073
NEW HOME In established neighborhood. Cedar siding, 3 bedrooms, V/2 baths. Low 50's. Pay ^ to 4 points plus closing. The Evans Co., 752-2*14. Faye Bov 756 525*. Winnie Evans. 752 4224.
Owen,
NEW LISTING - Well kept ranch home offers great room with fireplace, dining room, 3 bedrooms, * baths, fenced backyard. Take
2 baths, fenced backyard. Take advantage now at *49,900. Call Ball & Lane, 752-0025, or Richard Lane, 752 8*19.
NEW LISTING - Belvedere Roomy three bedroom ranch with recreation room, wooded lot. *55,500. Call Ball & Lane. 752-0025. or Lee Ball 752 1646.__
NEW LISTING Quality can be easily detected In this well decorated. 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Large corner wooded lot provides attractive setting for bay window in kitchen. Tremendous great room with fireplace and wood stove.
Price only S6*,500. Call Davis Real ty 752 3OO0. 756-2904 or 756 1997
LOVELY FAMILY neighborhood. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, family
, room
with fireplace, and carport. Beautiful corner lot. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756-2121 or 756 3438.
OWNERS DESPERATE TO SELL! Will rent with option, owner finance
part of equity Located just
nything to sell! ninutes from
Greenville on a wooded lot. *3,900. #331. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 586*.__
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
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 fireplace and dining area. Beautiful kitchen, heat pump, well landscaped lawn. Only S65.900. Call Davis Realty 752 3000. 756 2904 or 756 1997
NO QUALIFYING, assume fixed rate FHA loan, *14,500 to assume loan balance in low S50's. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump, fireplace, dining room, large lot. 756-5621 evenings. Owner/broker.
OWNER SAYS SELL! Only a stones throw from the pool and tennis courts on a Vj acre at Cherry Oaks
Great neighborhood to raise your family. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths with
2075 square feet with cape cod style with a great sun deck. *89,900. #360. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5*68
OWNER WILL FINANCEI 2300 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, screened porch, 9x12 laundry room,
20x21 greatroom with fireplace. All
NT
this for *79,500. #212. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
1982 BUICK aECTRA PARK AVENUE 4 dr., dark claret vinyl roof, claret crushed velour, full power, 12,000 actual miles, 1 owner. Sold new tor almost $17,000 your price
$12,350 WASHINGTON MOTORy'^0., INC.
M8-7TII 1103 CariiM In.
MM424 Wash.. IX.
FOR SALE
JD450C JOHN DEERE
CRAWLER
LOADER
Used 1200 Hours
CALL 746-3461
Greenville's Finest Used Cars!
(Located At Honda Store)
1982 Honda Accord Hatch back
Silver with dove gray interior, 5 speed, air, stereo, hatch release, digital clock, radial fires, 19,000 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 Stota)-
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 fan Interior, 5 speed, air, stereo, radial tires, trunkUlease.
very
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
Medium brown, 4 speed, air condition. AM-FM stereo cassette, 57,000 miles.
Limited
Slate blue, like new.
1982 AMC Jeep Scrambler
Lowtnlleage, loaded.
1980 Volkswagen Rabbit
Diesel. Air condition, good mileage Inexpensive.
1980 AMC Concord Wagon
Nice car. Wed taken care of.
1980 Jeep Renegade
Low mileage, blue, 4 speed transmission, sharp.
1980 Renault LeCar
Air condition, stereo radio.
1980 Volvo GLE
Sunroof, air condition, stereo with cassette, leather seats.
1979 Pontiac UMans Wagon
In good condition, automatic, air condition, nice car.
1978 Audi Fox
Sunroof, air condition, extremely sharp car.
1976 Ford Thunderblrd
Power windows, power seats, air condition.
Bob Barbour
EiHPimtn
vllOO S Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500
BobBaibour
VKMiDA.MfJccpRciumli
U U'liiti Si GrftTmlii' 758-7200
J
jJtk.
T
109
Houses For Sale
LDVELY DLDER HDME, Universi
ty area. *55,000. Call Joe Bowen, East Carolina Builders, Inc
7194.
752
PRIVACY DF 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, or 756 5314.
S60's. 756 3627or:
READY FOR OCCUPANCY I This four bedroom has been completed
and is now waiting for you to move
. ^
in! Offers formal areas, chairrail, crown molding, eat-in kitchen, and double car garMe located on a beautiful lot in Gra #530 756 5868.
.. .. _ Byleigh. *116,900.
CENTURY 2l Bass Realty,
READY TO SELL Owner wants to sell now! Pretty contemporary, wooded lot Three bedrooms, two baths, living room, fireplace, dining room, storage. Possible assump tion. *57.500. Duffus Realty Inc. 756 5395 _
RED OAK, Cul-De-Sac. 4 bedroom, 2Vj baths, living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, sunken den with
fireplace insert, garage, *67.500. 8% 7S?5:
assumable loan. 75'-537l after p.m. except weekends.
STARTING NEW HOME in Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room. High 60's. Paying opto 4 points plus closing costs. Buy now ick out your owji colors.
wallpaper, carpet, etc. The Evans Co . 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258 Winnie Evans, 752 4224
Co.,
THIS ONE WON'T LAST much longer! Reduced to S99,5<X) 5
bedrooms, 3 baths, 2500 square feet, double car garage, all forma! areas, fireplace in famTly room. Call today or it may be too late! *67. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666
UNIVERSITY AREA Lovely 3 bedroom home within walking distance of university, downtown and shopping. New furnace, hardwood floors and new furnace, hardwood floors and a sunny sunporch. *44,900. #444. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 5868
1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living
room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop'^ able
large great room with 8' pool fabL and fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 Years old Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced in the S50's. 758-0144 or 752-7663. _
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, 2 full baths, den and kitchen. Callafter6. 757 1489.
308 STANWOOD DRIVE, Lynndale. *145,500. Lovely new brick veneer 5 bedroom Georgian home. Loaded with features: formal dining room, huge den with raised fireplace, enclosed garage, carpet, built-in
enclosed garage, carpet, built-in range, dishwasher, disposal. 3 tiled baths, 3,000 square feet of heated
120
RENTALS
LIST YOUR RENTAL with Grier Rental
- _ property
_____ Agency, 1100
Charles Boulevard, phone 752-5700.
We specialize in property manage ment.
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Securlh deposits required, no pets. 75144131 -
between 8 and 5.
"
121 Aprtment For Rent
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
All utilities 1
Cable TV 30 day leases Furnished
With or without maid service
NEED STORAGE? We have an size to meet your storage need. Ca Arlington Self Storage, Open ' day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933
121 Apartments For Rent
AVAILABLE MAY 1. New 1, 2 and 3
bedroom apartments. Drapes, wall It am
to wall carpet, central heat and air, outside storage. Grifton 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
AZALEAGARDENS
Greenvilles newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost free refrigerators.
Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.
Contact J T or Tommy Williams 756 7815
BRAND NEW duplex townhouse, 2 bedrooms. IVj baths, I mile (rom
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1'/j baths Also I bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers.
compactors, patio, free cable TV, h n
hods*
DUP dr<
washer dryer room, sauna, tennis court, house and POOL. 752 1557
LEX, 1 block from campus. 1 bediroom, S185. References re quired 355 2446_______
EASTBROOK
AND
VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom
space, laundry room. One of Lynndale's finest. Can be seen
anytime. Call Ed Tipton Agency. '56-0911; nights or weekend 756-
7;
1769
111 Investment Property
BY OWNER Investment Property.
Two story, very large home r-fmi
modeled Into two aparfments. half a block from ECU Excellent condl fion. Over 700 per month income 757 67
Mid 70 s. Call 757-6715 or 756 0788.
113
Land For Sale
116 ACRES located southeast of Pitt County. Some timber, priced at *550 per acre. Call W G Blounf and Associates. 756 3000, Bob Barker, 975,3179.___
3 ACRES of land with small 3 room house. 441 foot of road frontage. *15,500. 758 4611 or 752 4017.
115
Lots For Sale
'/j ACRE TO 5 ACRES, over 100 lots to choose from. Locations on Highway 43 south, Chlcod Creek, Grifton 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 J
1-3421.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
BROOK VALLEY, on goll course High and dry, trees, beautiful view. Best lot available in Greenville. S2S.OOO. Call owner/agent Louise Hodge (804) 794 1532 (evenings) or Mike Aldridge. Aldridge & ltof ......
Southerland Realtors. 756-3500.
EVANSWOOD Wooded building lot on quiet street. *14.000. Call Ball & Lane, 752 0025_
HUNTINGRIOGE Large lots con venient to Hospital and Med School
Restricted. FHA and VA approved subdivision with community water. 752 4139 Millie Lilley. Owner Broker.
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. 1000 square feet house
mini
ilnimum. 752-6715 after 5 p.m.
READY TO BUILD a home for you on lots in a variety of established areas. Call The Evans Co.. 752 2814. Faye Bowen. 756-5258. Winnie Evans, 752 4224.
117 Resort Property For Sale
BEACH LOT on Kilby Island. Large natural sandy beach. One of the few
lots left near B^view. *25,000. Call
756 0046 after 5:
UNLIMITED Pamlico
Lounty, 8 acres prime waterfowl waterfrc " - . -
Vont 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. Captains Walk, Blounts Bay, *24,000
Bath Creek, Saw Mill Landing, *28,500
Bath Creek in Bath, NC, *28,000.
bedroom, IVi bath.
?iarderf and townhouse apartments, e
featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air conditioning. clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
EFFICIENCY I bedroom, maid service. *70 week. Call 756 5555, Heritage Jnn Motel.
FOR RENT Furnished apartment, also private room, kitchen privi leges, near colleoe. 758 2201_
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom
Starting *250 month and up
75-5555 The Heritage Inn
ONE BEDROOM, furnished aparfments or mobile homes for rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815,_
ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus. No pets. *215 a month. 756 3923._
ONE BEDROOM close to universi tv. Call after 4,756 0528._
ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment, l block from university Heat, air and wafer furnished Short or long term lease No pets. 758 3781 or 756 0889._
ONE BEDROOM apartment in up stairs of house Private entrance. 1110 Arlington Boulevard *175 month includes utilities. 756-8423.
din
RENT FURNITURE: Living, i ing, bedroom complete *79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO. 756 3862. _
RIVER BLUFF I09A Brookwood Drive Available June I. 2 bedrooms, large kitchen, living room, fully carpet, air condition. Call 752 2887_
SINGLE APARTMENT *140 rent, *140 deposit. Call 758 9758 eveninos.
SMALL EFFICIENCY apartment professional person.
Student 756 8785
SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE for rent 1422 square feet includes 3 bedrooms and 2"3 baths, large living room/dinihg room combina tion with fireplace, and kitchen, appliances and some furniture. U desired; located in beautiful Quail Ridge with swimming pool and tennis court privileges, available immediately at *500 per month. For
confidential showing, call Real ! 4348.
Estate Brokers. 752
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABl
JLETV
Office hours 10 a m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
zrsadayat
7M-4800
TAR RIVER ESTATES
I. 2. and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer
hook ups. cable TV,
house, playground. Near I
ryer
club
Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex,"
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
jarden apart ments. carpeted, dish
washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical
abundant parking, economical utilities and PCXJL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 7S6-6869
JOHNSTON STREET APART MENTS I bedroom unfurnished apartments available Immediafe
Water and appliances furnished. No pets. Call Judy at 756-6336 before 5
p.m., Monday Friday
KINGS RQW
apartments
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located lust off lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex
Shenandoah 756 5389.
Subdivision.
uplex
$295.
LQVETREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door
CQURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash
washer/dryer hook-upSr- cable I carpel windows, extra Insulation.
TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane
Office Open 9 5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1-5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
NEW TASTEFULLY decorated townhouse. 2 bedrooms, IW baths.
washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump. ......... $2 204(1
Efficient. *310 per month, or 756 8904.
NEW 2 BEDROOM townhouse. 1</] baths, washer/dryer included, *325 month. No pets, 1 year lease. deposit required. 752 1010.
NEW 3 bedroom duplex near ECU Heat pump, double pave windows, well insulated, ample storage, dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups, no pets, *330 756 5346_
QAKMQNT SQUARE - APARTMENTS
2 story, 2 bedroom, Gaylord's Bay, *57,500.
3 story, 3 bedroom, 2 baths. Bay ,*130,000.
Hills__________
Call Buckrnan Realty, 946-2112
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, r^nge, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
TIRED OF ROOMMATES? Call us for immediate occupancy in a 1 bedroom apartment. Energy effi dent and reasonable renf Days 758 6061, nights and weekends 758 5960.
TWO BEDROOM apartments available No pets Call Smith Insurance a. Realty, 752 2754_
TWO B coUefle
apartments near !:all 752 6391 _
TWO BEDROOM duplex apart ment, IVj baths, central air and heat. Range and refrigerator. Near 752 4550.
colleoe.
TWO NICE spacious apartments in quiet neighborhood near college. 5 room duplex includes washer and dryer hook-ups. *260. 2 bedroom apartment includes wafer and sew-aoe *250. 756-5991___
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, I'/j bath townhouses. Available now. *295/monfh.
9 to 5 Monday-F riday
756-7711
WEDGEWCQDARMS
NOW AVAILABLE
2 bedroom. 1'/} bath townhouses Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis ' court.
.. 756-0987
1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available immediately. 7$2 3311
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn, *215. 756 0545 or 758-0635
BEDROOM, unfurnished. 758 3767 or 752 6924
2 BEDROOM apartment Central air, carpeted, appliances. 804
air, carpeted, appliances. 804 Willow Street. Apartment 4. *250 758 3311 _
2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air. cameted, appliances. *250 a month. BrvtonHifls. 758 3311.
2 BEDROOM near ECU, utilities
Appliances *300 a month. Deposit ' I pets Available June 1. 754-0491 756 7809betore9D.m.
No
3 BEDROOM duplex. Energy efficient. Washer/dryer connections. Excellent location. *275. Call 757 0001, 753 4015.
month. Call 756
ytarti
n47.
2 BEDROOM, carpet, refrigerator, dishwasher, air. 5 blocks from campus. *265 a month. Also duplex 752 0180. 756-3210._
2 BEDRCX3M DUPLEX, stove, re frigerator, central heat and air, deposit, lease, no pets 756 6834 atfer 3 p.m.__
2 BEDRfXlM APARTMENT near campus - marri^ couples only, no
pets. Available May 15. Lease and
deposit required ' *220 monthly, "ealfy^ ............
Estate Realty Company, 752-5058.
2 BEDROOM, furnished. Near ECU Nooetsorchildren. 756-0173.
2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE Energy efficient heat pump, IVi baths, carpet, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, hook ups. *310. 756-7480.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
IHESE CARS ARE PREOWNED...BUT
WiPimwLE!
SHOP THE REST. ..BUY THE BEST!
1982 Buick Electra Limited
Sparkling white with padded vinyl top and blue velour interior, fully ecjuipped, 17,900 miles, local trade.
1981 Chevrolet LUV Pickup
Sliver metallic, blue vinyl interior, 4 speed transmission, AM-FM radio, only 20,000 miles.
1982 Pontiac T-1000
1981 Pontiac T-1000
5 door hatchback. White with blue interior, 4 speed transmission, air condition, AM-FM radio, like new. 3300 miles.
5 door hatchback. Silver metallic with blue vinyl trim, 4 speed, air, AM-FM radio, new tires, local trade.
1982 Chevrolet Citation
4 door, silver metallic with burgundy vinyl trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air, radio, cruise, clean car.
1980 Fiat Spider Convertible
White with dark, red interior. AM-FM stereo with cassette, 5 speed, 31,400 miles, sharp sports car.
1980 Pdiitiac Phoenix
2 door, dark blue metallic with blue trim, power steering and brakes. 4 speed transmission, air condition, AM-FM radio.
1982 Pontiac J-2000 Wagon
Light jade with cloth trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition. AM-FM radio, local trade.
1980 Fiat Spider 124
White with blue vinyl trim, 5 speed transmission, AM-FM radio with cassette tape, only 27,000 miles, local car
1981 Buick Century
4 door, dark blue metallic with blue vinyl interior, AM-FM radio, cruise control, wire wheels, 34,000 miles.
1978 Cadillac Sedan De Ville
Dark greei) metallic with leather trim. Equipped with most factory options Including wire wheel covers.
Before You Trade Your Used Car See Us WE BUY GCOD CLEAN UTE MODEL USED CARS
Chevrolet Impala
Landau. Light blue with blue vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, wire wheel covers, sharp car, local trade.
SPECIAL
1977 Ford Pinto Squire Wagon
Light blue with blue vinyl trim, automatic, AM-FM
radio.
Dickinson Ave.
Brown-Wood, Inc.
752-7111
121 Apartment For Rent
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Meade Street near ECU Central air, ran^^retrigerator, hook ups, $270.
122 Business Rentals
FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 In Chocowlnity. Call Donnie Smith at 946 5887.
FOR RENT Prime retail space. Arlington Boulevard. 4500 square feet 4 50 per square foot Call 754 9315 or 7Sa 5097. _
WAREHOUSE AND office space for
lease 20.000 s
WMI subdivide
lease 20.000 square feet available.
le. 754 5097 or 754 9315
125 Condominiums For Rent
LEXINGTON SQUARE TOWN HOMES 2 bedrooms, IVj bqths. fully carpeted, deluxe appliances furnished. No pets J R Yorke Construction Co., Inc., 355-2284
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2
bedroom. 1'j bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished. No pets. 82?7321 after5o.m
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM, 2 bedrooms, I'/j baths, major appli-ances Call 754 0320__
127
Houses For Rent
AVAILABLE JUNE 1. 4 bedrooms. I block from Pitt Plaza, Oakmont. 754 9142 or 754 3500.
DISCRIMINATING FAMILY 4
bedrooms. Farmville area. Large den, carport, near schools and Pftt Plaza July I. $450 Lease and deposit. Grier Rental Agency, 1)00 Charles Boulevard, 752 5700.
ECU PROFESSOR and family want to.lease 3-4 bedroom home in quiet neighborhood. Late June or July. Responsible, references Call 754-7837 or 757 4032
127
Houses For Rent
FURNISHED 2 bedrooms, study. 2 baths, large sun porch, fenced in backyard. Freezer, washer, dryer. Good location. Lease and deposit. Grier Rental Agency, 1100 Charles Boulevard. 752-S700._
FURNISHED HOUSE Available Immediately through the end of August. $200 a month with a $50 deposit. 752 5190.
IN AYDEN 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carpet, fireplace, central heat, stove and refrigerator. $325 a month. 744 4394 or 752 5147_
LARGE 2 STORY house Excellent condition. 3 bedrooms. $300 mon thiy Call Deborah 758 3191.
2 BEDROOMS, fireplace, all electric. No pets. Hillcrest Drive. Available June 1. Call 724 7415.
3 BEDROOM HOUSE, 2 baths, living room, family room, double carport. Near Carolina East Mall. Call 758 4200or 754 5217.
SOMEONE IS looking tor your unus ed power mower Why "Ot advertise it with a low cost Classified Ad?
3 BEDROOM^ 1 bath $250 per month. Steve Evans 8, Associates. 355 2727__
129
Lots For Rent
PRIVATE MOBILE home lot. Spacious, shady, fenced yard, storage building, concrete pad and walk, IV} miles west of AAoose Lodge on 244 Business. Only quite non alcoholic need apply. Phone 754 5441 after 8 p m _
133 Mobl le Homes For Rent
CLEAN 12' wide, 2 bedrooms, air, Vz mile from city, Belvoir Highway. $150 plus deposit. Students or couples. 754 0222 or 754 1455 after 5.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes. $135 and up. No pets, no children. 758-4541 or 7i4 9491._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
TWO BEDROOM, furnished children. No pets. 758-4479.
12X45. Washer, dryer, air. 3 miles north of city C^all 758 2347 or
2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent Call 754 4487._ _
2 BEDROOMS, all electric, 4 miles out on New Bern Highway. No pets. 754 0975
2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pets, no children. Call 758 4857
2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Furnished, no pets. Deposit re quired Available May 15 752 4008 or 752 5242
2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent in Meadowbrook Call 754 8948.
135 Office Space For Rent
FOR RENT 2500 square feet. Suitable for office space or com merclal. 404 Arlington Boulevard. 754 8111._
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT orTommv Williams, 754 7815. 3101 SOUTH EVANS Street next to Fastfare on 244 By Pass 4 offices, carpet, reception room, heat, air condition. Excellent location. Available June 1. Call Van Fleming, 754 4235 or 752 2887 _
137 Resort Property For Rent
EMERALD ISLE Beach house 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air. Cable TV $300/week. 354 3301.
Fully Outfitted CONDOMINIUAA
on the ocean at Atlantic Beach for 2. 4, or 4. 752 2579.
KILL DEVIL HILLS, efficiency apartment. Sleeps 4. $30 per night or $200 weekly. Near Avalon Pier. Call 441 4480aHer9p.m._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR LEASE - 2500 SQUARE FEET PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON BOULEVARD CALL 756-8111
137 Resort Property For Rent
ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom condominium, ocean front. 754 4207
138
Rooms For Rent
SINGLE FURNISHED room for discreet male student or young businessman. $125 month. Nice home near Pitt Plaza. 754 5447.
142 Roommate Wanted
CHRISTIAN FEA8ALE roommate wanted to share mobile home $125 a month plus V] utilities. Call Ann anytime 758 5010._
FEMALE ROOAAMATE to share house. $140 month includes utilities. Call Janet 757 7342, 758 4447 after 5.
RESPONSIBLE AAALE roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom home with 2 others. 754-5431 days and ask tor Mike, 752 1579 after 4 p.m.
RESPONSIBLE non smoking female needed to share 2 bedroom apartment near campus. 758 0194 alter 5p.m. _
144 I Wanted To Buy
WANT TO BUY used telescope or microscope. Call 754 8481._
148
Wanted To Rent
PROFESSOR WITH FAMILY
looking tor home to rent. 2 year lease. Living room, dining room, family room, eat in kitchen, 3/4 bedrooms. July. 757 4947 days or 752 0892 after 5.
WANTED TO RENT 3 or 4 bedroom house by 3 mature medical stu dents. Call 758 4221.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Help Wanted
Full & Part Time
Mutt be neat, honest and dependable. Prefer nondrinker. Apply In person. No phone calls.
Sam & Daves Snack Bar
1200 N. Greene Street
THE REAL ESTATE
CORNER
East Carolina University
CONDOMINIUMS
w. g. blount & associates is pleased to announce a new offering AFFORDABLE, NEW 2 BEDROOM. IV2 BATH. CONDOMINIUM LOCATED WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE TO THE UNIVERSITY.
We have only 6 units that are availahle. 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 $43,600 with 90% financing at 12% available to qualified purchasers.
w.g. blount & associates
Bill Blount 756-7911
756-3000
Bob Barker 975-3179
Betty Beacham 756-3880
Shenandoah Village Townhomes Begin at $39,900
Down Payment Less Than $2,000.00 Payments Comparable To Rent!
Brick
Energy Efficient
Frost Free
Refrigerator with ice maker G.E. Appliances
Private Patio
Convenient To Carolina East Mall
Professionally Landscaped
Professionally Decorated
Call Us For More Exciting Details!
Aldridge & Southerland
756-3500
R C WATERS
East Carolina University Condominiums
The W.G. Blount & Associates announces a new offering. Affordable new brick 2 bedroom, V/ bath condominium located within 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, parnts of students and real estate investors. These units are offered at $43,000.
Call
W.g. blount & associates
756-3000
9
11V2% FHA/VA financing available! New home in Camelot subdivision nearing completion. In just a couple of weeks you can move into this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, cedar siding home. Fireplace in activity room, separate dining room. Will pay up to 4 points plus closing costs.
Call us now at 752-2814
Winnie Evans 752-4224
The Evan$
Company
Of Greenville Inc
BuJdtri D*^tiop*ri Btdtcys T01 W. Foufteenth St Greenville. N.C.
Faye Bowen 756-7426
a
EDWARDS ACRES
-e*-
YES jOnly 10V2% Financing, FHA or VA, Fixed Rate, 30 Years, On These New Homes Under Construction. YES, Closing costs And Points Paid By The Builder. YES, Three Bedrooms, IV2 Baths. YES, Living Room With Fireplace. YES, A Paneled Garage. YES, Central Air And Heat Pump. YES, Sliding Glass Doors To A Wood Deck. YES, You Should Definitely Buy Now Because The Price For This Package Is Only $54,600.
DUFFUS REALTY INC.
756-5395The Daily Reflector, Greenville, .N C Wednesday. .May 18,1983-31
I
COME IN AND HELP US CELEBRATE!!
NEW COUGAR
Millions Of Dollars Worth Of Cars Must Be Sold By Saturday. Were Dealing On Everything From Lynx To Lincoln. There May Never Be A Better Time To Buy Than Right Now!
Only At
EAST
CAROLINA
UNCOLN-MERCURY-GMC West End Circle Greenville, N.C.
TRUCKS
756-4267
nni
300
COMPLETE LINE OF BEDROOM SUITES
SAVE $50 TO $140 OUR COMPLETE SELECTION OFRECLINERSONSALE-LA-Z-BOY, ACTION AND BERKLINE
SAVE ^30 TOM 80 ON OUR COMPLETE INVENTORY OF 5 AND 7 PIECE DINEHES
SAVE *50 TO *360
Big selection of sofas, loveseatsand chairs, swivel and ottomans.
COMPLETE SELECTION OF LIVING ROOM FURNITURE REDUCED!
SAVE *100 TO *600
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER
$1 Q88 Res.
' I W S29.98
ALL DINING ROOM FURNITURE REDUCED FOR THIS SALE , SAVE ON TABLES, CHAIRS, AND CHINAS!
Reg.
' V $29.98 48 wide, holds stereo, turntable and 2 speakers
SMALL 4 DRAWER CHEST
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The DaiJy Reflector. Greenvi if \ C Wettriiiay May IR 1983-.33Bringing The World Into A New York Classroom
By MARIANNE McGOWAN Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) - To learn more about the world, 10-year-old school children in New York City are studying their candy bars.
"What would happen," their teacher asks, "if there were a dock strike in Africa or big forest fires in Canada?"
The answer: The manufacturer might not be able to get enough chocolate to make the bar or enough paper for the wrapper, things most children dont think about when they bite into a piece of candy.
"The kids are seeing that there is a world in their candy bars, said Elliot Salow, director of social studies for the city school system.
The lesson is one example of a nationwide campaign to fight provincialism in American schools and give school work an international scope.
The concept, known as global education, was fostered by recent reports that 40 percent of high school seniors couldnt find Egypt on a map and only one in 20 public high school students studies a second language beyond two years.
Some studies have noted that specialists in the State Department and the military often cannot speak the languages of their countries of "expertise - a problem officials say contributed to the confusion when Iranian students overran the U.S. embassy in Tehran in 1979.
Pamela Wilson of Global Perspectives in Education, a New York-based group that assists teachers and develops curricula for global education programs, estimated that about 200 of the nations 17,000 school districts have such programs. About a dozen high schools offer even more, special programs that focus on international issues and foreign languages and lead to an International Baccalaureate degree.
Although the global education programs are more likely to be found in cities like New York or Atlanta or Washington, they are also appearing in places like Reading, Pa., Urbana and Glenview, 111., and Salinas, Calif.
The overall concept grew from the findings of a presidential commissio in 1979 that Americans were sorely lacking in language skills and the ability to understand cultures other than their own. But the impetus for individual programs is usually practical.
In Atlanta, for example, educators became alarmed when they realized the city was becoming a major trade center and few Atlantans were equipped for careers with the international firms settling there.
So. the city set up a special program in international studies in its North Fulton High School, a program its director, Ann Goellner, said was regarded as a "protot>pe international high school. It offers courses in cultural values, negotiation and diplomacy, and injects a world perspective into its more standard courses of history and literature.
"The program prepares people to be good citizens of an international city. Ms. Goellner said. "In four years, you learn everything you need to learn in a high school education, with a strong international component.
The Atlanta school is one of those offering the International Baccalaureate degree, which is administered by an educational council in Geneva. Switzerland, is iecognized by European universities and requires a far more rigorous academic preparation than the standard American high school diploma.
The school also insists on four years of a foreign language, a requirement that has^ome unusual in United States high schools since the 1960, when students demanded more control over their education. In response, many colleges dropped language requirements. Without the need for languages in college, high schools dropped them, too But colleges are slowly swinging back the other way, according to Richard Brode of the Modern Language Association.
"Americans need to know more about the rest of the world or we are going to be increasingly at its mercy, said Rose Hayden, executive director of the National Council on Foreign Language and International Studies, which for the past two years, has promoted global education. The council was established to carry out the recommendations of the presidential commission.
Rep. Paul Simon, D-Ill., author of the book "The Tongue-Tied American. sees the problem as a threat to national security and international trade. "I think we have to be looking at security in more than simply weapon systems terms, Simon said. "You achieve security not only by having bombers and nuclear warheads, but by having an understanding of people so that they (weapons) are not used.
Simon said that in 1915,85 percent of American colleges had foreign language requirements. In 1975, just 10 percent retained them. Last Tuesday, a bill, introduced by Simon, that would offer $50 million in incentives to schools that teach foreign languages was approved by the House Education and Labor Committee.
One of the major tasks in spreading global education is
SI^P GLASSES - What appears a super-giant razor blade is a set of funny sungjasses, worth some $410,000 The luxurious model by West German goldsmith Helga Deppen-meier, designed in platinum and decorated with 32 brilliants displayed during a fashion show in West Berlin (AP Laserphoto)
Most Calcium Intake In Milk
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) To get the same amount of calcium contained in one 8-ounce glass of milk youd have to eat 1,132 cups of popcorn or 541 french fries or 586 saltine crackers or 440 potato chips - or drink 7 quarts of beer or 88 cups of black coffee or 2\k quarts of
rose wine.
In light of these figures, from the Dairy Council of California, its not surprising that three-fourths of the calcium consumed in the American diet comes from milk group foods, which dont have to be eaten in tremendous quantities.
training teachers.
"There is very little of anything in teacher preparation or colleges of education that prepare teachers for this, Ms. Hayden said.
In New York, for example, rather than begin expensive training so teachers can give language instruction in elementary schools, the state proposes to strengthen high school language study and wait until future graduates become teachers before starting elementary school instruction.
Ms. Hayden pointed out, however, that global education can
start with just a few dedicated teachers who can change viewpoints in the classroom.
Billie Day, for instance, uses global concepts in her social studies classes at Benjamin Bannecker High School in Washington, D.C., and says students are enthusiastic even though they have to work harder.
At the beginning of the school year, each student is assigned a country. When topics are discussed in class, the students argue the viewpoints of their assigned countries.
Its a lot different from just taking home a history textbook or a geography textbook and doing homework, she
said. People have to work and track things down."
The reason America, a land of immigrants from all over the world, became so provincial is its dominant position in recent history, explained .Ms Wilson
"We continued to see ourselves as the major plaver on the world stage, she said. "We were the most powerful and the wealthiest nation, and we dictated international policy for many years
"But weve seen other countries, like Japan, become more powerful and farmers now know what it means to cut off grain to the Soviets. she said.
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How Tar Heel Senators And Representatives Voted
Roll Call Report Service W.^SHINGTON - Here's how area members of Congress were recorded on major, roll call votes Mav 5-11.
HOUSE PINCHED The House passed, 216 for and 196 against,' and sent to the Senate a bail-out bill for recession victims facing foreclosure ontheir home mortgages The bill (HR 19831 provides $760 million in taxpayers' dollars to be loaned at low interest to some 100,000 homeowner unable to make house payments.
Recipients would contribute about 38 percent of income toward their payment and the loan would cover the remainder for up to three years.
To qualify, homeowners must be delinquent through no fault of their own," be sufficiently poor, allow a government lien on their property, and be judged likely to start repaying the Treasury within three vears
Supporters called the bill an act of compassion to help innocent recession victims keep their most essential possession. Opponents labeled the program a budget-buster that is unneeded with economic recovery underway.
Supporter Henry Gonzalez. D-Tex., said "we are not talking about a giveaway program or an entitlement program."
Opponent Buddy Roemer, D-La., said "this move fbday is the birth of yet another entitlement, the cost of which we can never calculate."
Members voting yes supported special aid for hard-pressed homeowners.
NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes: Walter Jones, D-1. Charles Whitley. D-3, Stephen Neal, D-5. Charles Britt. D-6, Charles Rose. D-7.
Voting no: Tim Valentine. D-2. Ike Andrews. D4, James Martin, R-9, James Broyhill, R-lO. James Clarke, D-lf,
Not voting: W.G. Hefner, D-8.
GOP PLAN Bv a vote of 197
for and 220 against, the House rejected a GOP alternative for aiding homeowners threatened by foreclosure. The vote occurred during debateonHR 1983 (above).
The GOP plan granted regulatory relief to discourage banks from foreclosing. It killed the $760 million loan program as well as a mandate in HR 1983 that the secretary of agriculture stop foreclosures on farmers home loans. It kept intact a $100 million outlay to care for the homeless.
Sponsor Chalmers Wylie, R-Ohio. said the $760 million loan fund would only induce banks to foreclose. "1 am not ready to add a new federal subsidy program of this magnitude to the federal devicit, he added.
Opponent Jim Wright. D-Tex.. said encouraging forbearance by banks is no answer because "we have record of 230,000 instances in the past year in which they have not forborne."
Members voting yes favored encouraging banks
not to foreclosure rather than government loans as the better way to aid homeowners behind in mortgage payments.
NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes: Valentine, Ike Andrews. James Martm, Broyhill.
Voting no: Walter Jones. WTiitley, Neal, Britt, Rose, Clarke.
Not voting: Hefner. DEFICIT The House rejected. 157 for and 254 against, an amendment prohibiting the $760 million loan fund for delinquent homeowners if it would increase the federal deficit. The amendment was an attempt to kill HR 1983 (above).
Sponsor Robert Walker, R-Pa., said "we have heard a lot about the American familys right to a home....Nothing more destroys that right than the high interest rates that too much government spending brings on,
Opponent Fernand St Germain. D-R.I., said that while "we are all for the
deficit being reduced and eliminated," the fact is that "there are millions of people out there who are out of work through no fault of their own."
Members voting yes wanted to kill the loan program for delinquent homeowners.
NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes: James Martin, Broyhill.
Voting no: Walter Jones, Valentine, Whitley. Ike . Andrews, Neal, Britt. Rose, Clarke.
Not voting; Hefner.
SENATE BUDGET By a tie vote of 48-48, the Senate reject a proposal to increase defense spending in the next fiscal year by an inflation-adjusted 6.5 percent.
The vote displeased the Adminstration as well as conservative senators. While favoring a larger defense buildup, they were willing to accept 6.5 percent as the best compromose available to them.
It came during debate on the 1984 budget resolution (S
Con Res 127), the fiscal blueprint that will guide Congress in later individual spending and taxation decisions. S Con Res 127 awaited final action.
President Reagan asked for a 10 percent increa^ in 1984 defense outlays, to a total of $245.4 billion. The budget resolution sent to the floor by the Senate Budget Committee recommends a five percent hike, raising outlays to $241.5 billion.
Most senators voting yes wanted 1984 defense outlays to be increased by at least 6.5 percent in "real or inflation-adusted dollars.
Voting from North Carolina were John East, R, voted yes. Jesse Helms, R, voted yes.
WE.'APONS By a vote of 74 for and 21 against, the Senate tabled (killed) an amendment to the fiscal 1984 budget resolution (above) to cut spending for the development of nuclear weapons.
Addressing weapons development within the Department of Energj'. the
amendment sought to limit funding to the fiscal 1982 level. This would have saved about $2 billion.
Sen. Pete Domenici. R-N.M., who voted to kill the amendment, said the amendment was out of plate. Frankly, this budget resolution is not the place to debate a nuclear freeze," he said.
Sen. David Pryor. D-Ark., who sponsored the
amendment, deplored "a mentality which drives itself to think of every conceivably way to use a nuclear weapon. This kind of thinking is, to put it simply, insane.
Senators voting no wanted to use the budget resolution as a vehicle to express their concern over the nuclear arms race.
Voting from North Carolina were East voted yes. Helms voting yes.
Gasoline-Use Is Frequent Target
NEW YORK (AP) - Although Americans worry more about home energy costs than about gasoline costs, gasoline use is the most frequently reported target for cutbacks when Americans are trying to conserve energ>-, a national study reveals.
Of those responding to a survey on public attitudes about energy use conducted
for Honeywells Energy Management Information Center. 43 percent said they would cut back on use of their car, followed by reductions in use of lights (37 percent), heating (35 percent), stove and oven (29 percent), air conditioning (25 percent), small appliances (21 percent), dryer (18 percent), dishwasher (15 percent) and washing machine (14 percent).*^C00TOHS^% save
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District Court Report
Judge James Ragan and Judge E Burt Aycock disposed of the following cases during the April 11-15 term of District Court in Pitt County,
James Riley Bames Jr., Fifth Street, driving under influence, driving while license expired. 6 months jail suspended on payment of 1100 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop William Owens Bames. Bath, driving under influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of *200 and cost, surrender operators license. I night jail, unsupervised probation 2 years .Mark Bradley Boulware. Statesville, 10% blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license Charles Janley Cam, Route 7. (jreenville. exceeding saf speed, prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost < Anthony Frank Caputo. Jr. Forbes Mobile Estates, slop sign violation, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and cost
James Christopher Dickerson. Jamesville. driving under influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, surrender operators license, probation 2 years, attend alcohol workshop .Michael James Evans. Winston Salem, reckless driving, so days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, attend alcohol workshop Alfred Earl Garris, Jr Route 9, Greenville, worthless check. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check
Richard Green. Grimesland slop light violation 5 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and cost .Michael Stephen Haul, Dunn Street, slop sign violation, 10 days jaii suspended on payment of $10 and cost William Haynes Jr. Atkinson Drive, speeding driving under influence. 6 months jail. suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license attend alcohol workshop *
James Roy Holton, Kennedy Circle, assault. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost Theodore Milton Hopkins Bath speeding. 5 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and cost Philip Howard Jones. Cherry Court, stop light violation not guilty Michael D Jones, Circle. Drive, worthless check 30 davs jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost and check Donnie Lee Kennedy Shady Knoll, 10% blood alcohol cotilent 6months jail suspended oi. payment of $100 and cost surrender operators license, attend alcohol wo ^shop Mark Alan Landers. Belk IXirm intoxicated and disruptive, 3u days jail suspended on pay menl of $2.5 and cost Henry Walter Leggett W illiamston. exceeding sale speed.cost Terry Wayne Little, Tarboro. false report dismissed reckless driving, fail burn headlights. 6 months jail suspeigjed on payment of $250 and costs, surrender operators license David Paul Micka, Asheboro. 10% blood alcohol content 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license, probation I year
Levon Moonng. Route 5. Greenville driving while license revoked. 6 months jail suspended on pavment of $200 and cost, probation 1 year. 24 hours jail Jim .McClu Route 3, Greenvdle. 30 days lail susj ed on pavment of cost and check Francis arl .McK issick.
Washington, exceeding safe speed, cost
John E ' ilns. Fourth Street, trespass, disn Patnci 1 Am. r rl s. shoplrfting. 6 months jau suspenr on payment of $200 and cost, proba 3 years Joyce Ann Pratt lel. shoplifting,
6 months jail suspended on payment o *200 and cost, probation 2 years Vivian Purvis. Route 6, Grevaville, assault. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost Keith Alan Reddeck. Greenville, 10% blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol w()gkshop Marvin Lee Robbins, Rocky Mount, speeding, 5 days jail suspended on
payment of $10 and cost Eldred Glen Smith. Simpson. 10% blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop, possession of schedule 11 dismissed Buddy Stocks, intoxicated and disruptive .30 days jail suspended on pavment of cost John Wayne Suggs. Bubba Blvd driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop Raymond Norman Thornton. Avden. driving under mfluence. 2nd offense, not guQty Stephen Franklin West. Lumberton. operate left of center. 10 days jaiJ suspended on pavment of $ 10 and cost Larry Darnell White. Route 2, Greenville, pass stopped school bus, 30 days jail suspended on payment of *50 and cost, surrender operators license, pass Slopped school, bus, dismissed Clyde Chester Wiggins Jr . Washmgton, speedmg. restriction code violation. 30 days jail suspended on
payment of $25 and cost, surrender operators license Genen W ilson, Fourth Street, assault on female, malicious prosecution, prosecuting witness pay cost John Hawkins. Cove City, trespass, malicious prosecution, prosecuting w itness pay cost Mitch Brown, Tobacco Road, fail return hired property, worthless check, dismissed Billy Charles Barrett. Wataugua Avenue, bastardv/nonsupport. 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost. *20 week support Brian Corbett Blaine. E'astbrook Apt, trespass, dismissed Tonya Ann Bolton, Fleming Hall, safe movement violation, prayers for judgment continued upon payment of cost
Claude Parks Boyd Jr, Scotland Neck. 10% blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cosl surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop Joyce Everett Bunting. Robersonville. shoplifting, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost Jeanette Corey Myrtle Avenue, larceny 12 counts i, 29 days jail .Michael Lindon Cox, Route 2,' Greenville, exceeding safe speed, cost Linwood Ray Daniels. Route II. Greenville. 10% blood alcohol content.
6 month.s jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license attend alcohol workshop Grover C Fowler, Greenville Blvd . driving under influence, drunk and disruptive, 6 months lial suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop Charlie Jenkins. Darden Street, assault, nut guilty Elisabeth Giovanna Jerome. Kent Drive, defraud innkeeper, dismissed Jimmie Uohnson, Connecticut, driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on pavment of $200 and cost Samuel Jones Beth Street, safe movement violation, dismissed W ilham Earl Leggett, Ayden, driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $500 and cost, surrender operators license. 3 weekends jail, probation 2 years Reggie Morns. Eight Street, worthless check 13 counts i, 30 days jail suspended on pavment of cost and check
Richard Pjtlway, Bucks Trailer Park, trespass. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost. $86 95 restitution Rusty Lynn Stallmgs, Farmvllle, speeding, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $75 and cosl, surrender operators license Richard Thomas Sugg. Grifton, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgment continued upon pavment of cosl
George Sterling Washington,
.M 0 r e h e a d City, abandonment nonsupport. 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, *200 month support Joseph Lane Foster Fifth Street, sale movement violation, dismissed Eieth Bright. Stanwood. unauthorized opening and reading of sealed letters, dismissed Charles Brown, Page Drive, larceny, dismissed Walter Hill. Queen Drive, bastardy support, dismissed John M Abbott, Southview Drive, worthless check. 30 days jaii Tammy D Allen Snow Hill, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on pay ment of $25 and cost and check Thomas Wesley Belch. Ahoskie. fail use headlights, dismissed Teresa Byrd, Kinston, worthless check, dismissed Robert Micfeel Coons, Fayetteville; reckless dnvillg, not guilty Paul Darren Foraker, Kenly, breaking entenng and larceny of coin operated machine, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost,
$25 restitution, probation 1 year Leonard Ward Gurganus, Wright Road, speeding, cost Jesse James Hansley, Grimesland. no operators license, 30 days Jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost Pamela Ann Harris. Charlotte, fail yield right of way. dismissed.
Terry Lee Horton, Roanoke Rapids, reckless driving, dismissed.
Linda Jones, Cooper Lane, shoplifting, not guilty James Michael Mills, Academy Road, exceeding sale speed, dismissed.
Johnny A Perkins, Fifth Street, assault. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost.
Maggie Pollard, Route 1, Greenvdle injury personal property, not guilty Marsha Porter. Grifton. worthless check, dismissed David Thompson ScotL Tarboro, operate left of center, dismissed.
.Nick Simonowich, First Street, shoplifting, 6 months jad suspended on payment of $100 and cost, $5.99 restitution Elie Francis Ward, Route 5,
Greenville, assault, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and cost,
$21 resitution John Robert Ward, Route 5,
Greenville, assault. 30 days jaii suspended on payment of $10 and cost $21 restitution Shirley Spain Ward. Route 5
Greenville, safe movement violation, dismissed Randy Webb. Bethel, communicating threats, dismissed, harassing phone calls, 60 days jad suspended on payment of *25 and cost Kenneth Wayne Willis, Bethel,
trespass, jo days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost Alexander Wilson. Bonner Lane, assault with deadly weapon, 8 days jail Shakee Wilson. Bonners Lane, assault inflicting serious injury. 90 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost, probation 1 year Thomas Lee Perkins Jr, Riverbluff Apt, driving under influence, split sentence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, probation 2 years. 10 days jad Herman Streeter, Route 3. Greenville, no operators license. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost
Morris .Monk, Bell Arthur, domestic criminal trespass, dismissed Joseph C Grimes. Chestnut Street, shoplifting, 5 days jail Eligah Clay, Impena Street, driving while license revoked, 90 days jad su^nded on pay ment of $200 and cost Ellis Lynn Daw, Pantego, exceeding safe speed. Cost Ernest Dudley Jr, Ayden. trespass, dismissed
William Pete Edmundson. Cypress Gardens, affray, dismissed Tommy Griffin, Route 5, Greenville trespass, dismissed Henry L Harris. Greenville, trespass, dismissed John E LaForce. Simpson, worthless
check. 30 days lad "suspended on payment of cost and check Cioris E Mullins, Fleming Street,
worUdess check, 30 days jail suspended on pavment of cost and check William Randy McKinney. Holiday
Court, 10% blood alcohol content. '6 months jad suspended on payment of $200 and cost, attend alcohol workshop Major E Price. Box 8393, Greenville, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check Kimberly Lynn Rouse. Farmvdle, speeding, driving under influence, 6 months jad suspended on payment of $200 and cost, probation 2 years, attend alcohol workslHM)
Mark K Smith, Winterville, harrassment on telephone, lo days jail suspended on payment of cost Lonnie Lee Whitehead. Battle Street,
fail return hired property. 90 days jail sus|}ended on pavment of cosl and check
.Marvin Earl Carroll. Belhel, driving under influence. 6 months jail. driving while license, revoked. 12 months jail Charles Braxton. Snow Hill worthless check. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check Ella .Moore Washington, worthless check, 116 countsi 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost and check, probation 1 year James Barrow Jr, Ayden, assault on female. 90 davs jail suspended on payment of $I0 and cost Carol Harper Brock. Winterville, speeding, cost James Carter, Winterville, communicating threats, trespass cost remit
William Earl Collins. Ayden, assault with deadly weapon, not guilty Jane Stancil Forrest Avden. exceeding sale speed. $10 and cost'
Linley Henry Gibbs, Washington driving under influence 6 months jail
suspended on payment of $200 and cost surrender operators license Millard Hardy. Cherry Point, driving while license revoked, dismissed Delores Jackson. Kinston, driving while license revoked 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost Eddie .Mack Moore. Ayden. trespass, dismissed Donnie Gene Phipps Jr. Camp Gieger. driving under influence speeding, 6 months jail suspiended on payment of $150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop Dan Shack, obtain property bv means of worthless check 60 'da'ys jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost, $223 7H reslituion Harvey Smith. Ayden obtaining labor advances. 60 days jail suspended on payment of cost $120 restitution Richard Marlin Vanscoy, Stanwood Driv e, exceeding safe speed, cost Sue Mae Vest Ayden shoplifting. 90 days jail Suspended on pavment of $100 and cost
Esther Cotozetla Webb Hookerlon
The DaiJy Reflector, Greenville, NC.Wednesday, May 18,198335
allow no operators license cosi Jodi Lynn Freeze New Bern exceeding safe speed cosl Bennie Kay Pearson Lucarna reckless driving 60 davs jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost attend alcohol workshop James Edward Chance. Route 5 Greenville larceny of gas 90 davs jaii suspended on payment of $100 and cost $1701 restitution Sdaysjail Elijah Ebron Jr Fourth Street obtain property by means of worthless check. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost $4H restitution idaysjail Archie Lee Hayes. Illinois unauthorized use of conveyanc 6 months jail suspended on pavment of $200 and cost, probation 2 vears $9oo restitution Marvin Earl Hines Village Drive larceny, dismissed Wendy H Keith. Route ,i t.reenville possession of schedule I Ml and possession with intent to sell and deliver schedule M dismissed Dennis Wade Newton Roanoke
Rapids, assault wiih deadlv weapon dismissed Victor Payne Newton Roanoke Hwipids dssdull knih deadj\ weapon inflicting serious injury with intent to kill no probable cause found
f<reg Charles Pratt Ford .Strc-et, unalhorized use of covev ant e 6 months jail suspended on payment of $loo and cost 2davsjail probation2vears Reginald M Tinsley Rwkv Mount false pretense no probable cause found
Deborah bpeigbi Webb Raleigh pos.session of stolen properlv dimissed Andreu Taylor, i.ine .Avenue assault inflicting serious injur> h months jail suspended on paymeni 'of I20(i and cost probation 4 vears Jeffrey 'Scott 'Stakes Michigan driving under influence 6 months jail suspended on pay ment of $100 and cost attend alcohol workshop Sandra Powell (inflinRoad assault 2 years jail suspended on pavment of $200 and cost protialion 2 vesrs $.179 restitution
Weve Lowered TIk Prices Oi Over 6,800 iteis and Were Deterniied To Have H LOWEST Food Prices In' Eastern Nortii Carolina.
LOCATED ON HIGHWAY 33 IN CHOCOWINITY
PRODUCE
LARGE
CANTALOUPES
EACH
YELLOW OR WHITE
CORN
5'.r* I
YELLOW m
SQUASH.49
FRESH g A
(HCUMBns...6.o.M
GRANNY SMITH
appus.79
LB.
COnONEUI
4 ROLL
BATHROOM TISSUE .. PKG.
99
PRICES GOOD MAY 19, 20,
& 21,1983
BONEUSS SHOULDER ROAST.
BORELESS CHUCK STEAK.....
BORELESS SHOULDER STEAK.
BORELESS STEW BEEF...
Quantity Rights Reserved None Sold To Dealers
LB.
LB.
LB.
LB,
'HOLE
PICNICS
V
L/M/T?
eOLDKIST FRYER WINGS
^LEASE
lb.
5 LB. t BOX
LUNDY'S FRESH COUNTRY
UNK SAUSAGE
JUV\ K-bUr
uivniV'
hoi,
....
eWALTNEY BACON
ISO
LB.
1 LB. PKG.
SMITHFIELD FRANKS
12 02.1 PKG.
WHITE, PINK, BLUE, YELLOW, GREEN.
DAWN
DISHWASHINGilQUID.. 20 OFF BOHLE
303
CAN
FINE FARE 0%^,
MAYONNAISE.... o9 HEINZ 57 c -
SAUCE........... 1
CATES SALAD
CUBES........... # 9
SHASTA 2
LITER DRINKS... 9
WHITE HOUSE
apple sauce
8.
2/79
TEXAS PETE HOT DOO CHILI... PURINA
CAT CHOW.......
CHATHAM CHUNK DOG FOOD.......
10 oz
CAN
4 LB BAG
69
$237
$339
76
COePfR COUNTRY S W 19
CHEiSEsmeus... 1
EXCUSE ME, SIR! Hungarian sc
Szervatlusi stands In front of his creation ___
Throne, as it hovers behind him during an hlbt of his works in Budapest. His sculptures were displayed at the Hungarian National Gallery as part of Budapests annual spring festival. (AP Laserphoto)
LIPTON TEA BAGS cr $ 1 29
FAMILY SIZE
COCA-COLA CAN DRINKS $159
6 PACK
NABISCO OREO DOUBLE STUFF $ 179
20 02. PK(3 I
PILLSBURYJACK INSTANT POTATOES
89*
1 LB. box'
PINEAPPLE JUICE.......
46 02. CAN
DEL
MONTE
SALE
99
SWEET PEAS ...
303
CAN
GREEN
BIAMS"'"SJc;r^"
IlDil CREAM STYLE OR W9PB1IW WHOLE KERNEL 303 CAN
HAWAIIAN PUNCH
red. tropical FRUIT. WILD FRUIT DACIf island FRUIT COCKTAIL
2/89*
2/79' 2/89'
FROZEN FOODS
FRIiDPeTATOiS....ij,o
nOZINFRINCH FRIiDPOT
SUN VALE
STRAWBERRIES..,, FINE FARE
WHIRTOPPme.........
SEALTEST SHERBET.
CAROLINA DAMT ROUND PREMIUM CE CREAM.
V,
QAL
2/$ 00 2|$|00
59*
$|59 $J19
8 0Z. PKG.
.1/2 GAL
1
International Treaty Helping Endangered Species
By JAMES F. SMITH Associated Press Writer
GABORONE, Botswana (AP) - Ten years after its creation, a treaty to control international trade in endangered species has brought some important victories in the fight to save the Earths most vulnerable animals and plants.
Conservationists and traders agree that serious loopholes still weaken the campaign to prevent extinction of threatened species.
But they say the existence of a binding treaty has helped foster a new awareness of the danger, with some tangible results.
You can't walk down Fifth Avenue today and buy a leopard skin coat. said Israeli conservationist Bill Clark. "You dont find many alligator handbags or python belts.
"This is an organized war against vanity, Clark said.
The Convention on International Trade in En-
Pilot Assembles His Dream Plane
ByPATKOSSAN Sun City News-Sun SUN CITY, Ariz. (AP) - It was the early 1900s when Art Smith dazzled the hometown folks of For1 Wayne. Ind., with his daring aerobatics performed in a newfangled flying machine.
Among the town people was a wide-eyed little boy named Walter W'efel.
Head arched to the heavens. Walter spent his daydreams in the clouds When Wefel wasnt craning in search of the daredevil, hed fantasize of faraway places and the romantic life of a pilot.
Almost 70 years later, Wefel is piecing together his dream in his garage.
Its a Bede F one-seater flying machine that Wefel has been shaping since he, bought the kit in 1973.
"1 think its a couple of years yet until it will fly, said Wefel, who has worked on the still-wingless plane for three-to"-eight hours a day since his retirement. Wefel did take off a year to work on another project, but admitted the unfinished plane "bothered me all the time. Wefels life was full, but only touched on the romance of his youthful daydreams.
He married his hometown sweetheart and raised four children.
Working his way through college during the heart of the Depression, Wefel grad
uated with a degree in mechanical engineering.
During World War II he put his skills to work for Douglas Aircraft but moved to Consolidated Paper for a 35-year career.
He found time to earn a pilots license and finally lifted his childhood desires off the ground.
Wefel wanted to own his own plane. So he bought a kit dubbed as the solution to lowering the cost of flying.
But there were problems.
The company that originally contracted to supply the iow-cost engine, an adapted snowmobile model, never filled the order, said Wefel.
Frustrated manufacturers, dunned by the 6,000 folks who bought the kits, contracted with a Japanese company for a similar engine. Theyve not delivered yet. reported Wefel, and the cost of the thing has gone from $700 to $5,000.
Finally a dealer camg^ through with a water-cooled Honda Civic engine, which sits in Wefels garage in its shipping box.
The new engine meant modifications on the aircrafts shell, including lengthening the fuselage.
What started out as a $2,700 all-incluSive kit for a flying dream machine has cost Wefel $12,000.
dangered Species, formed in Washington in 1973, recently held its fourth review session in Gaborone. About 300 delegates met in a tent to debate whether governments should upgrade or downgrade scores of species covered by the treaty.
The treaty is binding on 81 member states and covers some 50,000 species - four-fifths of them plants - in two categories:
-Appendix One bars all international trade in 600 animal species and several thousand plant species.
-Appendix Two requires export permits and other monitoring but does not forbid trade.
The conference tou^ened the rules on whale trade, adding two species of great whales and four bottlenose whale species to Appendix One. Canada and the United States lost an attempt to remove bobcat, lynx and other species from Appendix Two. They argued that the listing caused a great deal of paperwork and was unnecessary because the species are not on the endangered list.
But Canada won a campaign to keep 14 species of earless seals from being added to the second group, saying such monitoring was not useful and that the species were not endangered.
Zimbabwe won approval for crocodile ranching, the first time the convention has permitted a ranching program for a most-endangered species. And seven African countries were given permission to export a total of 460 leopard pelts a year under strict conditions -that they be sold singly to individuals and not to the fur industry.
Eugene Lapointe, the Canadian secretary-general of the convention, said the seemingly contrasting decisions reflected a new sophistication and flexibility among member governments. He said the delegates were balancing the need to use wildlife with the need to conserve it, based on scientific rather than emotional arguments.
Ian MacPhail, a British founder of the W'orld Wildlife Fund in 1961, said "for all its weaknesses, if ithe conven
tion) didnt exist the situation would be a bloody sight worse than it is today. He said a spinoff benefit has been that Third World countries are beginning to take wildlife seriously, realizing that they cant exploit their wildlife if it disappears.
MacFhail said one thing he is happy to see disappearing is "the trophy - the head on the wall, a change he attributes to the new kind of thinking that is making alligator shoes a thing of the past as well.
The decision to allow some leopard pelt exports was a sort of vindication of the treaty, delegates said in the debate. Leopard populations have increased dramatically in some areas after nearly disappearing in the early 1970s - allowing minimal exports today. The same was said of the much-lauded Zimbabwe crocodile ranching project.
But most conservationists remain pessimistic about the long-term outlook.
Craig van Note, who runs a Washington consortium of 35 environmental groups, said the rapid disappearance of wildlife habitats under pressure from expanding human populations is as serious a threat as trade.
He also said the right of countries to file reservations to trade bans is a serious loophole. Japan has 11 such reservations allowing it to ignore convention decisions.
Van Note added that not all nations are signatories -which opens escape routes for traders bent on circumventing the treaty. In addition, the convention does not cover domestic trade, so turtle soup can be found on menus and market shelves in some nations even though turtle products cant be exported.
Stanley Johnson, British member of the European Parliament and ] an avid conservationist, said"I would like to see (the convention) aimed as much at promoting abundance as protecting against extinction, he said. In a way, getting things on Appendix One is an admission of failure.
FLORIDAGOLD
is 100% Valencia. The other brand isnt.
wm
oS
lUlCtS
OVR ^2 SAYS YOULL TASTE THE MFFERENCL
The Valencia is a special kind of orange, a slow-ripening fruit that soaks up sweet sunshine two to four months longer than ordinary oranges. The result is a juice with a naturally sweet taste.
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Good tcmuud oiw 12 Of 16 01. uui, OM 64 01. tuton or two 6 01. uns.
IIIOD S033b3
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on 16 oz. FLORIDAGOLD' orange juice
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lust Sind this form with three (3) white opening strips from FL0RIQM;X)LD I6 oi c*ns and receive a coupon good tot one,(I) fRtt 16 01 can of FLORIDAOOLD orange juice
Mall td Lykes Pasco Packing Co free Coupon Offer. PO Box 8720. I CRnton, Iowa 52736 Umit one coupon pet famRy Void where prohibited I
Ww 6-8 weeks for deffvery Ofc,
Clark, the Israeli who is rehabilitating nearly extinct zoo animals to return them to the wild, said, environmental people look on extinction as biological genocide. What would have happened if the mold for
penicillin had disappeared before its use was discovered?
Marshall Meyers, representing the U.S. pet trade, said the treaty has helped make trade more responsible. ... We will do battle on
many issues, but we will also be on (the conservationists) side. In the long run, if we dont have proper mechanisms for trading within a controlled export system, the industry is not going to have very many animals to sell.
The United States delegation, led by G. Ray Arnett, assistant secretary of the Interior Department, expressed concern about a trend by consumer nations to dictate trade rules for producers.
V^E FAIR
1212 N. Greene St., Greenville, N.C. Mon.-Thur. 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m., Fri.-Sal. 8:30 a.m.-8 p.m. C'ldsed Sunday. No Limit On Quantities, None Sold To Other Merchants. We Accept Food Stamps, WIC Vouchers & Manufacturers Coupon.
WAREHOUSE
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VALUE FAIR SELLS GROCERIES, MEATS & PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE COST. VALUE FAIR WANTS TO HELP YOU CUT YOUR, FOOD BILL.
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CS
SLICED
75
WHOLE
LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM LEAN BONELESS
STEWING $^58
BEEF
BEALES COURTLAND BRAND
ROLL SAUSAGE
LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM FRESH
GROUND BEEF.........
FAMILY'
PACK
BEALES COURTLAND BRAND ^
FRANKS.......LiSS"
GOLDEN RIPE CRISP
BANANAS. 33^. LETTUCE. 58
YELLOW TEXAS
ONIONS
3 LB. BAG
ROYAL GEM CUT
GREEN BEANS..
NATURAL LIGHT
BEER.......
12 PACK OF
12 oz. CANS
SWIFTNING
SHORTENING
5SM imist -..88'
'4^* Sir, ,'is68'
^ T
33
MAOLA HOMOGENIZED
MILK.....
SHASTA
DRINKS
1/2 GALLON PAPER CARTON
2 LITRE ALL BOHLE FLAVORS
^ ^ COUNTY FAIR HAMBURGER OR HOT DOG
ggC BUNS
7QC ARMOUR
'O TREET
OR BREAD 3for^1
28
12 oz.
CAN
98
UPTON
TEA
BAGS
100 CT. BOX
88
3LB. I CAN
CRISCO
SHORTENING.........
CHATHAM RATION CRUNCHY
DOG FOOD .....50 LB. BAG
DAWN
DISH LIQUID ... . . BOmE 98^
$|98
S588
ROLLER CHAMPION
FLOUR...........
KELLOGGS SUGAR
FROSTED FLAKES
WHITE CLOUD CJilO
BATHROOM TISSUE
PUREX
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
42 OZ. BOX
08
YOUR FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS AT
FRESH PORK
NECK c BONES
FROSTY MORN
KNOW WHAT IT IS TO FEED A FAMILY
YOU SAVE 40' LB.
VINE RIPE TOMATOES
YOU SAVE 20'LB.
79
LB.
FRESH WHOLE
FRYERS
^43*
CUTUP 55* LB.
YOU SAVE
FRESH PORK
STEAK.^I BUTTS 99*
FRESH PORK BOSTON
LB.
YOU SAVE 30'LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM
RIB-EYE STEAK
$349
YOU SAVE 50' LB.
YOU SAVE $1.30 LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM
WHOLE RIB EYE
CUT INTO STEAKS OR ROASTS FREE
19
LB.
YOU SAVE 80' LB.
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WHOLE SIRLOIN TIPS $169
LB.
CUT INTO STEAKS OR ROASTS FREE.
YOU SAVE 20'LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM BONE IN
RIB STEAK
$189
1
LB.
YOU SAVE $1.00 LB.
OSCAR MAYER
BOLOGNA
BEEF .meat
16 OZ. PKG.
$ |79 $ |69
SWIFT PREMIUM STANDING RIB
ROAST
$179
LB.
YOU SAVE 90'LB.
' FRESH PORK
SPARE
RIBS
$|49
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1
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2 LB. BAG
49*
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6OZ. BAG
19
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OSCAR MAYER
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OSCAR MAYER
WEINERS CHEESE DOGS COOKED HAM BACON 0
KRAFT
AMERICAN SINGLES
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12 OZ. PKG.
YOU SAVE 50'
^--^1 CHAR
149 iLii
32 0Z. B
uuvcu
I ^1
GULF
CHARCOAL
UTE. HEINZ 57 SAUCE
10 OZ. BOTTLE YOU SAVE 20'
YOU SAVE
COnONELLE
BATHROOM TISSUE
6 ROLL' PKG.
$|59
YOU SAVE 36'
FOODLAND
BREAD
$|29
111/2 LB. ' LOAVES
3
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
SNOWDROP
5 ALIVE JUICE
12 OZ CAN
YOU SAVE
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98
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PET RITZ APPLE OR PEACH
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26 OZ. BOX YOU SAVE SARA LEE LARGE PECAN
MORTON CHICKEN, TURKEY OR MEAT LOAF
DINNER
11 OZ. BOX Jtr
SARA LEE LARGE PECAN ^ _ YOU SAVE
COFFEE CUKE * I Ti'
111/2OZ. BOX.... 111 Ll\
TM iiHicalB IiaHemaii ot DC tao incflSK
' 59
a/*!
69'
t
'"V SEE Display iN S''HE
16 OZ. BOTTLES
$100
MAOLA HOMOGENIZED
YOU SAVE
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COUPON
YOU SAVE 80'
ARMOUR
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I -> I
DOG CHOW
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Limit 1 With $10.00 Additional Food Order Or More & This Coupon. Expires May 21,1983.
Limit 1 With $10.00 Additional Food Order Or More & This Coupon. Expires May 21,1983.
SHOP EZE
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managerBURGESS STEVENS MONDAY-SATURDAY 8 A.M. 9 P.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M. 6 P.M. VISIT OUR DELI FOR DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS
l/ERY DAY LOW PRICE MISSBRECK
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MAXIM COFFEE
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$2*9
8 0Z. JAR
$^95
KEEBLER CHOCOLATE FUDGE. FRENCH VANILLA, FITTER PAHER, OR OPERA CREME .
$ 1 19
ALKA
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]
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OWNED & OPERATED BY ALTON SPAIN MONDAY-THURSDAY 8 A.M. 8 P.M. FRIDAY-SATURDAY 8 A.M. - 8:30 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY
War Of The
Roses For
Iowa Farms
By CYNTHIA BENJAMIN Associated Press Writer ARGYLE, Iowa (AP) -Battle lines are being drawn across the pastures of southeastern Iowa for a modern day war of the roses.
On one side is the multiflora rose, a thorny fighter with the ability to dig in. On the other side is the farmer, armed with herbicide pellets to kill the scrawny, spreading bush. The farmers are considered the underdogs.
"I was spending all my spare time grubbing them out. but they kept gaining on me." says farmer Albert Storms, a veteran of the rose campaign,
"They have ornery thorns, just like a fishhook. If they get into your skin, you've got to work them out just the way they came in," he says. "Thev can reallv tear clothes
up.
And to prick the farmers' pride is the fact that they once deliberately planted the scrawny bush at the urging of the federal government.
A native of Japan, the multiflora rose was introduced to the United States more than 40 years ago. It was touted as a "living fence" that would also control erosin. Seeds were grown in state-owned nurseries and plantecf by government employees.
The rose is found in nearly every state east of Nebraska, as well as parts of Oregon, Washington and California, but is not considered a major prob'lem in most of them, says Robert S. MacLauchlan, a national plant materials specialist with the Soil Conservation Service in Washington.
Besides Iowa, states currently having problems with the plant include Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia, Ohio and Missouri, he said.
In Iowa, the Soil Conservation Service grew the plant experimentally and found that it was ideal for cultivation as fences, ornamental shrubs, and wildlife breeding grounds.
The conservation service also reported that the rose would not spread in Iowa because the climate was too cold. That was the "big mistake, according to Thatcher Johnson. Iowas deputy secretary' of agriculture.
Instead, seeds which passed through the digestive track of birds could, and did. germinate. Within 20 years, pasture lands in almost every state in the nation were being choked by the hardy rose.
The multiflora rose is capable of growing up to 10 feet high, with 15 foot stems that bend down to the ground. Prickly, hooked thorns on the stems make it more like a blackberry brier patch than a rose bush, although the plant produces white or pinkish flowers characteristic of its breed.
"It makes a good fence, thats for sure." Storms scoffs. "It gets into your pastures and gets so big and tali' and spread out that the cattle won't go near it. And it chokes out all the grass."
Last year, in response to a request from >Des Moines County offictars, the state Department of Agriculture and the Iowa Conservation Commission declared the rose a noxious weed.
"It is like many other well-meant introductions such as kudzu in the South and like the carp and the European starling," a position paper issued by the two groups said. "Like these mistakes, it is too late now to ever hope to totally eradicate the plant."
In Iowa, the rose's deepest inroads have been in the southeastern part of the state," where winters are just A'arm enough for the rose to hrive.
While no figures on infestation are available, the rose is believed to have affected almost all pasture land in at least seven counties - Des Moines. Lee, Keokuk, Jefferson, Van Buren, Louisa and Henrv.
The solution is "high-quality pasture management. says Herb Davison, the Lee County district conservationist.
The rose will not spread, he says, if the fields that surround it are mowed, cultivated or chemically treated.
SUPER MARKETS, INC.
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G.E. 4 PACK 60, 75 OR 100 WAH SOFT WHITE
UK luu HAii )uri nniit ^ ^
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\.........
.........$|49
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3 WAY BULBS
FRYING CHICKEN LEG QUARTERS
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CHUCK STEAK
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SMITHFIELD
SMOKED PICNICS c
69
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WHOLE
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SMITHFIELD
HOT
DOGS...r
99
GOLD LEAF
CHICKEN
FRANKS
79
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PKG.
ECONOMY CUT
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99*
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c
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99
ARM A HAMMER FAMILY SIZE
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69
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99c
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69
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84
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COCA COLA, MELLO YELLO DIET COKE
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With 25* Coupon On Page 34 Of Today's Daily Reflector. $2.19 Without Coupon.
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Smithsonian Overflow To
New 'Attic'
ByMIKEFEINSILBER Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON lAP) -The Smithsonian Institution, known as the nations attic," has outgrown its nine museums and is opening an attic of its ow;n today to hold the overflow,'
Some attic. Some overflow. Built in suburban Suitland, Md.. for $29 million, the iacility will be a storage place for the one of the most eclectic collections of stuff known to man.
Into the new Museum Support Center will go:
A million fossils. Stuffed animals. Seventy thousand rocks from the West. A third of a million pressed flowers and ferns. Suits of armor. The worlds biggest bug collection, including upwards of seven million mosquitoes, fleas, ticks and lice and other insects.
Totem poles Posters. Spears. Whale skulls. The institution's wet collection" of more than 350,000 biological specimens preserved in alcohol-filled jars. Toys. .Meteorites, Pianos. Diamonds Algae. More than a million specimens of marine animals, incleding mollusks. octopods, crustaceans, sponges, coelenterates and worms.
The new facility was to be dedicated today at a brief ceremony presided over by S. Dillon Ripley, secretary of the Smithsonian.
But the real celebrating will be done by the museums' experts, who work in cramped laboratories tucked away in corners and basements of the musuems on the National Mall.
They are pleased that Indian "baskets, for example, can be stored side by side on shelves, not piled one inside the other at the risk of losing their shape.
All told, six million of the 100 million objects owned by the Smithsonian will be moved into the support center. Some had been kept in hallways and staircases of the museums for want of better storage space.
So tight had working conditions become, says Carolyn Rose, an anthropology conservator in the Museum of Natural History, that working in her third floor lab is like living in a compact apartment where you cant put the bed down until you put the ironing board away. The Museum Support Center is a four-and-a-half acre, two-story building with four climate-controlled storage areas, each almost the size of a football field. It was built with 165,000 concrete blocks.
It will contain $21 million worth of storage and laboratory equipment, including a computer system to keep track of everything, bringing the facilitys total cost to $50 million.
The most novel piece of equipment is a 7.000-gallon tank for boiling the grease and fat out of whale carcasses. -
About 300 people will work at the center, mainly managing the collections. But Smithsonian and visiting sci-entists will have 55 laboratories where they can conduct research.
The Oceanographic Sorting Center will be one of the first laboratories to move in. The center sorts and preserves marine specimens dredged up from ail the worlds seas. The sorted specimens are distributed to scientists around the world for study.
New Category In Almanac
NEW YORK (UPI) - The American teenager is a new and permanent category in The World Almanac, which last year held its first annual high school records contest.
The announcement of the new category says it was established to recognize and reward teenagers achievements.
The 1983 edition of the reference book lists winners of the first contest, in which junior and senior high students in the United States and Canada were asked to submit their outstanding achievements or skills.
The records are judged in three categories academic, sports and miscellaneous with subclassifications of individual or group.
4 -The Daily Renector. Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, May 18,1983Japan's Supercomputers Moving Into The Markets
By DAVID LAMMERS Associated Press Writer
TOKYO (.AP - When Japan's NEC Corp. announced recently that it planned to market the 'worlds fastest computer" it was the latest spurt in the high-technology version of a Mississippi riverboat race.
Supercomputers perform the billions of calculations required to simulate such phenomena as the changing air flows of an airplane as it takes off, weather, nuclear fusion, satellites, petroleum flows, weapons performance, secret c o d e s^, and manufacturing processes.
,\ nine-year government research program is designed to put made-in-Japan supercomputers, now used largely in scientific research, at the head of the race. By the end of the 1980s, Japanese supercomputers will calculate more than 10 times
faster than supercomputers now being made by two U.S. firms, Cray Research Corp. and Control Data Corp., and 100 times faster than the fastest general purpose mainframe computers, industry officials predict.
Last July, Fujitsu Ltd., Japans largest computer maker, made the first of what has become a running series of announcements from competing firms, heralding the latest version of the "worlds fastest computer."
Hitachi Ltd. followed Fujitsu, and now NEC, formely called Nippon Electric Corp., claims its supercomputers "effective performance speed is twice as fast as the Fujitsu and Hitachi supercomputers. Cray and Control Data have responded with new, faster models of their own, and prices have been lowered to meet the
Hong Kong To Impose A Fee On Roads Use
By J.L, BATTENFELD
HONG KONG (LTD - Hong Kong, faced with crippling highway congestion, is resorting to computerized gadgetry to tap Its most effective traffic control measure: the drivers pocketbook. '
In the next few years, providing all the tests check out, drivers in this crowded British Crown Colony will receive monthly bills charging them for their use of main roads. The charges will be determined by sensors implanted in the roadway and linked to computers.
The system will be the first "road pricing system of its kind in the world, according to Alan Scott, the colonys secretary for transport.
Scott said the system, which will cost about $50 million, is aimed at dissuading drivers from unnecessary use of the colonys congested main roads.
Those roads run about 735 miles through the colonys 425 square miles of land area, much of it steep hills or crammed high-rise urban areas.
The colony has 338,990 regi^Jered motor vehicles, of which 213,940 are private cars, meaning 462 vehicles must share each mile of road. ,
"You provide roads and people buy cars to fill them up, Scott said in an interview.
He noted the Hong Kong government has tried to limit ownership, and thus reduce the number of vehicles, through stiff registration fees, including a one-time "first registration tax that can amount to 90 percent of the vehicles cost. But the Mercedes Benz, or any car, is a status symbol in Hong Kong.
I reckon that if we can take off at peak hours between 5 and 15 percent of the traffic, we will have reasonable traffic flow, Scott said. But noting, Hong Kongs terrain, congestion, and the prohibitive cost of new roads, he said "none of the standard ideas will work here.
So the Hong Kong government picked electronic road tolls. The system consists of a plate, a bit smaller than a paperback mystery novel, encoded with ownership information and affixed with tamperproof screws to the underbody of each vehicle. *
A series of sensors, called interrogators, is embedded in the roadway and "reads the information from the plate as the car passes over.
The information - car ownership, distance traveled, etc. -is fed to a central computer and each month the driver will receive, along with his telephone, gas and electric bills, a statement from the Transport Department billing him or her for the use of so many miles of road.
"None of the technology is new, Scott said. "Every single piece of this technology exists and has been in use in all sorts of applications.
What is new is the way we will put the system together.
Scott said he had received inquiries from traffic officials in Europe and the United States who said they would be interested in how the Hong Kong system works.
He said manufacturers will be selected to provide equipment for a 21-month pilot program using 5,000 government vehicles and 20 to 30 sensing points.
If no hitches develop, he said, the system could be in place by 1987, affecting all of the colonys motor vehicles and most niain roads with a rate structure based on time of day.
The system also can monitor traffic flow and can control computerized traffic lights. It even can be used to spot stolen cars, since the computer can be instructed to alert a police monitor each time a certain vehicle passes over a sensor.
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Japanese challenge.
This race, measured in M-flops (million floating operations per second), nanoseconds (billionths of a second), and gigabits (billion bits of computer memory capacity), is just in the beginning stages, and its commercial importance may be greater than many realize, Akihiro Iwaya, a marketing official at NEC, said.
NECs market research indicates that about 400 supercomputers will be in operation by 1990, 100 of them in Japan. Private companies increasingly will 'be using the machines for computer-aided design (CAD) and computer-aided manufacture (CAM).
At present, most product simulation and structure analysis is being done on mainframe or minicom-
Hell's Canyon Is Deepest Gorge
LEWISTON, Idaho (AP) -The deepest canyon in the United States is not the Grand Canyon, but a gorge along the Idaho-Oregon border called Hells Canyon.
Cut by the winding Snake River, Hells Canyon is 7,900 feet deep at its deepest point, or 2,200 feet deeper than the deepest part of the Grand Canyon.
puters that take up lots of computational time, Iwaya said. If such simulation could be done on a very fast, special purpose supercomputer, it could greatly expnd the uses of computer-aided design and manufacture.
Others are not so sure.
Don Chamberlain, a computer engineer who represents the Amdahl Corp. in Japan, said supercomputers have been a very small market for a long, long time, but it is a market which is expanding.
He said Cray, which pioneered the supercomputer, has been adding staff, but in the last year big Japanese firms have entered the field in a big way.
"It would have made sense to have a national project to produce one supercomputer, but four or five? I dont envy anybody trying to peddle those things, Chamberlain said in a telephone interview.
Some minicomputer makers have put array processing machines on the market which do what supercomputers do at a much smaller cost, Chamberlain said. Current supercomputers cost between $15 million and $25 million.
The Japanese governments supercomputer research program began in 1981, with a $100 million budget over the nine-year life
of the project. Less than $4 million has been spent thus far, said Satoshi Ito, a section chief at the supercomputer project of the Ministry of International Trade and Industry.
While the amount of money seems relatively small, such projects are bolstered by the manpower provided by Japans large electronics and
Teaming Up For Disaster Role
WASHINGTON (AP) -The American National Red Cross and an air cargo company are working to expedite assistance to victims of flood, fire and other cataclysms of nature this year.
Emery Worldwide says it will transport emergency Red Cross supplies to major disaster areas in the United States throughout 1983.
The Red Cross dedication to immediate response in times of emergency exemplifies the American spirit of neighbor-helping-neighbor at its best. We are pleased they now will be able to utilize our domestic air fleet to ensure that vital equipment and supplies will reach those in need whenever and wherever disaster strikes, said John C. Emery, chairman of the firm.
computer companies. Six companies are participating in the government project: Fujitsu, Hitachi, NEC, Mitsubishi Electric Corp., Oki Electric, and Toshiba Corp.
The project focuses on b^ic scientific research. The pri^^te firms are expected to study the commercial applications separately at a later stage.
Besides making advances in computer-aided design and manufacturing - fields which have wide commercial applications - Japans supercomputer project is expected to reap rewards in other cutting-edge technologies.
Parallel processing, where two computers work in
tandem to solve one problem, is part of the research effort. Also, the role supercomputers might play in artificial-intelligence machines is being studied.
Considering the frenetic rate of calculating, one technical problem is keeping the supercomputer, and the semiconductors at its core, from burning up.
Another challenge is to keep the machines internal wiring short enough so that time is not wasted as electricity moves from point to point, which results in supercomputers which resemble food freezers: relatively small and frigid.
The supercomputer of the future may incorporate even colder elements. Ito said
Japans project is concentrating on the Josephson junction, which takes advantage of the physical principle that resistance drops when certain materials are cooled to nearly absolute zero, which is 460 degrees below zero Fahrenheit..
While Josephson junctions
- named for British physicist Brian D. Josephson, one of three co-winners of the 1973 Nobel Prize for Physics
- might provide Ihe speed necessary to produce the worlds fastest computer, such a machine would be unwieldy, Ito said. To get temperatures down to a few degrees above absolute zero, he said, the machine would have to be bathed in liquid helium.
41-
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The Daily ReHector, GreenvUie, N.C.-Wednesday, May 18,1983-41
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Foreclosure 'Cure'
I
For Future
By LOUISE COOK Associated Press Writer
Congress is working on legislation to help unemployed homeowners who are behind on their mortgages, but any dollars-and-cents aid is still months away and youll have to act to protect yourself if youre in trouble today.
The problem affects thousands of Americans, and the Pepartment of Housing and Urban Development has some advice for them in "Avoiding Mortgage Default, a guide listing steps to take if you cant come up with the money for your monthly payment.
The Democratic-controlled House passed a bill last week to provide $760 million in emergency loans to unemployed people facing foreclosure. The aid would be limited, however, to families whose average annual income over the last three years was $20,000 or less.
The bill lso faces strong opposition in the Republican-controlled Senate and from the Reagan administration. And even if there is a compromise, it probably would not come before late summer.
The Mortgage Bankers Association says that about 180,000 homeowners - a record number faced foreclosure procedings as of the beginning of 1983. That represented about two-thirds of I percent of all outstanding mortgage loans. Payments were at least 20 days late on an additional 5.7 percent of all mortgages, the association said.
The word foreclosure evokes visions of the Great Depression and families being thrown out of their homes in the middle of the night. In practice, however, foreclosure procedings vary from state to state and may take more than a year. And the Mortgage Bankers Association says less than half of the cases where foreclosure procedings are begun actually wind up with the owner losing his or her house.
The HUD guide says immediate action is the key to success. Dont delay. Do something now! Today, advises HUD Secretary Samuel Pierce Jr., who has said he thinks the Democratic loan program will be impossible to administer. The lender may be willing to work out a revised payment schedule; you may, for example, be able to skip interest payments temporarily and pay only the principal each month. He or she also is likely to be more understanding once you make it plain you are sincere and are not trying to shirk your responsibilities.
If your mortgage payment is overdue - or if you expect to be: late next month call the company that holds the loan You may be able to call collect or use a toll-free number so it wont cost you anything extra.
Ask to speak to someone in the mortgage servicing department and explain your problem. Dont be hesitant. The details about your present and future economic situation are necessary.
After you have contacted your lender - write a letter if you cant telephone -consider a housing counseling agency. These groups work with homeowners who cant keep up their payments. Some agencies serve only those people whose mortgages are insured by HUD; many, however, will counsel anyone in trouble. To find out if there is a counseling agency in or near your community, ask your mortgage company or call the nearest HUD office or state or city housing authority.
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CHUNK LIGHT IN OIL IN WATER
A4P QUALITY FROZEN
Glazed Donuts x- 99^
14 OZ. pkg
GOURMET TOASTED ONION JALAPENO CHEDDAR PROCESSED -------- . M
Breakstone Dips x 79^ Mt. oiive Dili pickies x
VIWMIWWWIIW Ctn. ww SEE STORE DISPLAY FOR DETAILS
Star-Kist Tuna
A&P
Pink Salmon
6Vj oz. cans
16 oz. can
79v
139
KLEENEX BOUTIQUE (125 CT.) OR WHITE ASST.
Facial Tissue
KLEENEX
pkg
Family Napkins 79*
PROCESSED
140 ct. pkg.
(NEWBORN 30 CT, 2.79) (EX. ABSORBENT 24 CT. 3.12 OR TODDLER
8 oz. ctn.
12 ct. pkg.
93
SEE STORE DISPLAY FOR DETAILS
Ice Cream
Morton Dinners
SEALTEST
If your mortgage is insured by HUD and you cannot get help from your lender, call your local HUD office and ask for assistance. If you bought your home with a loan guaranteed by the Veterans Administration, call the closest VA office.
Vz gal. ctn.
CHICKEN TURKEY MEAT LOAF SALIS. STEAK
11 OZ.
pkg.
89
TASTEMAKER
25 "X 50'
each
only
3
The HUD guide includes telephone numbers of local HUD offices across the country and is available at no charge from the Consumer Information Center, Dept. 596L, Pueblo, Colo., 81009.
KRAFT BRANDED MEDIUM MILD
Cheddar Cheese
KRAFT REGULAR OR MILD
Shredded Mozzarella
8 oz. pkg
A new survey, meanwhile, indicates that lenders expect mortgage rates to stay in the double-digit range through the end of next year.
8 oz. pkg.
<|39
139
OULANY (CUT 10 OZ. 69) OR
Whole Okra
OULANY CROWDER OR
Blackeye Peas
16 oz. pkg.
99*
16 oz. pkg.
OFF LABEL SAVE 90 You Piy Only
Pepsodent Toothpaste
/ O'
A&P Alcohol ;
6.5 oz. size
16 oz. btls.
89'
100
1
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703 Greenville Boulevard Greenville Square Shopping CenterGreenville, N.C.
>
f.
COUNTRY STYLE SAVINGS WITH
double COUPONS
Betw^n now and May 21. we wiM redeem national manufacturer s cents-otf coupons up to 50 for double their value. Offer good on national manufacturers cents-oft coupons only (Food retailer coupons not accepted ) Customer must purchase coupon product in specified size Expired coupons will not be honored One coupon per customer per item No coupons accepted for free merchandise Offer does not apply to A4P or other store coupons whether manufacturer IS mentioned or not. When the value of the coupon exceeds 50' or the retail of the item, this oHer IS limited to the retail price
I TOTAL COUPON | AT AAP
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEND, WE WILL DOUBLE 3 MFCS COUPONS EXAMPLE:
$10 PURCHASE = 3 COUPONS S20 PURCHASE = 6 COUPONS S100 PURCHASE = 30 COUPONS AND SO ON!
ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE'
GomsniBE
PART OF THE CAROLINA HERITAGE SINCE 1879
ANN PAGE
Sliced Bacon
HILLSHIRE FARM (ALL VARIETIES)
Smoked Sausage
ARMOUR
Cooked Ham
1 lb. pkg
|59
CAROLINA PRIDE
Meat Bologna
pkg. WW
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF WHOLE (18-24 LB. AVG)
Bottom & Eye Round
229
SWI^^ ^
Suzlean Bacon
.0. 149
pkg. 1
FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM COUNTRY STYLE
Pork Spare Ribs
. 1
|99
COTTAGE BRAND
Smoked Sausage
. 1
QUICK FROZEN
Ocean Perch Fillets
EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM
Va Poi1( Loin
SLICED
Box-0-Chicken
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH
OVERNIGHT (14 CT) TODDLER (12 CT) NEWBORN (24 CT) DAVTIME (18 CT)
38
Huggies Diapers cS. 2^
NEW FREEDOM (REGULAR 12 ct. 1.59)
Super Maxi Pads?.r 3^
DOG FOOD
NEW FREEDOM
Mini Pads
Field Trial Chunks .'i 3^
DISH DETERGENT
Dermassage Liquid ir 99^
cgnwinoB
Boiled Ham .. 2^.
LORRAINE SWISS
AVAILABLE
AT:
703 GREENVILLE BOULEVARD
Cheese.. 3,
Cucumbers
GREEN ONIONS OR GREEN PEPPERS
3100
for I
onlv H
Fresh Cabbage
/'moo o/M If'
CRISP SOLID
5100
I
only H
III
ZESTY
Yellow Onions
3 lb. bag
SALAD SIZE
Stockbroker A Stuntman On The Side
By KILEY ARMSTRONG Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -Flameproof longjohns and pin-striped suits are both part of the working wardrobe of Frank Ferrara, a stockbroker who does stunts for kicks and money and for the great stories he can tell his Wall Street colleagues.
"Both businesses require quick thinking and good reflexes. said Ferrara. "If I make a mistake as a stockbroker, I lose money. If I make a mistake as a stuntman, I could be dead."
Ferrara now divides his time equally between stunts and stocks, taking unpaid leaves of absence from the brokerage firm when he needs to spend a week or a month on a movie location, where he may jump out of sixth-story windows, crash cars or set himself ablaze.
"At the beginning. I thought it would be just for kicks. But its gotten to be a full-time profession, he said. "People find it intriguing. The other brokers bring their wives to meet me and ask to hear stories about the actors Ive met.
Ferrara, 36, of Staten Island, has worked in finance for 17 years, starting as a page at the New York Stock Exchange and now working as a broker for Troster Singer Stevens Rothchild, based in Jersey City, N. J Six years ago, a friend in the movie business took the brawny, 6-foot-2, 215-pound broker to a party, where he was hired as a bodyguard for actress Farrah Fawcett. He soon began hanging around with stuntmen, learning the skills of their profession, and eventually began doing stunts himself.
Ferraras first stunt, for the movie King of the Gypsies, involved jumping onto the hood of a moving car and throwing two people off of it.
He since has learned to leap from a sixth-story window - only four stories if Im on fire and to crash a car doing 50 mph.
I think stunt driving is hereditary. My father was a New York City cab driver, Ferrara said with a smile.
A stunt for the movie Fort .Apache, the Bronx was the scariest of his career.
I had to hold a 160-pound man over my head and then throw him six stories off the roof, he said. "If I overthrew, hed hit the concrete. If I underthrew, hed hit the building.
He threw just right. The man landed safely on an airbag.
. He has played the bodyguard of guest actress Morgan Fairchild on Simon & Simon, and appeared as "a regular bad guy in about four other episodes of the television show.
Ive even signed auto-^aphs. Its embarrassing at times, but its great for business. he said.
His stockbroker friends especially like to hear about the famous people he meets: like the time he was a stunt double for actor Burt Lancaster in the movie Atlantic City
Ferrara successfully leaped between levels of an eight-story structure for that film, but injured himself on his lunch break, tearing cartilage in his knee when he jumped four feet to the ground.
Safety precautions, such as calculating crash speeds and having the fire department standing by during fire stunts, are factors that help a novice live long enough to become a professional, he said.
People think were stupid.
But we take everything down to a science, he said. We research everything and take proper measurements before a stunt.
Ferrara classifies 80 percent of his work as basic stunts, like precision driving and high work. Its the other 20 percent where youre more likely to get hurt, things like fires and spectacular accidents.
Red Ripe Tomatoes
TANGY
Fresh
Lemons
up
for
only Hi
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.
1
EXILES STRIKE BACK
PARIS (AP) Scores of exiles from communist-ruled countries Tuesday displayed a banner which said Better Dead Than Red and announced formation of an organization they said would oppose "Soviet imperialism.
44 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C -Wednesday, May 18,1983
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CLOROX BLEACH =
1/2 GALLON JUG
2/$100 I
With this coupon and ItO.OO food ofder eluding adartiod items. Without coupon **** Kh 71, Limit 2 por customof. Expires 5-2143 u **
Bi
.PAPER
TOWELS
GENERIC
PAPER TOWELS ~3
GIANT ROLL
3/$1oo
With this coupon end $10.00 food order excluding advartitad items. Without coupon 2/$1 00 Limit 3 roils par customer Expires 5-21-03 'eu*
$*j19
vvn r 1'. Limii A pr ciiSionWf. cxpiiQS ^
Giant . coupon 2/5100 Limit 3 roils per /**
..........a............ Roll -sT customer Expires5-21-03
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HEAVY WESTERN
WHOLE RIB EYES
$
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PEPSI, MOUNTAIN is DEW, DIET PEPSI ^
fUl IVlBff *'*'< **<** coupon and $10.00 food order Mi
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chotea. Expiras **^ J I
BEALES OR SOUTHHAMPTON SMOKED
COUNTRY HAMS
$
WHITE STAR
SUGAR
5 LB.!
BAG
with this coupon and $10.00 food order excluding advortisad items Without coupon *** $1.60. Limit one pat customer Expires 5-21- T***