Daily Reflector, May 24, 1983


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INSIDE TODAY

PRISON BILL

The state House has killed legislation that would have provided alternatives for prison to some of North Carolinas convicts. The story is on Page 5.

AVENGING SON

A South Carolina man who set up the murder of his parents killer is sent to prison for eight years. The judge says man cannot take the law in his own hands. Story is on page 6.

GOLF PROBLEMS

Rose High School's golfers had more than just scoring problems yesterday m the first round of the state tournament. (Page 9)

t

%THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 105TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOOI^ MAY 24, 1983

20 PAGES 3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS

Court Denies Tax Bre^s For Goldsboro School

WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court, in an embarrassing setback for the Reagan administration, ruled today that the federal government may deny tax breaks to schools that practice racial discrimination.

By an 8-1 vote, the court decided that the Internal Revenue Service may withhold tax-exempt status for such schools even if the racial policies are dictated by sincerely held religious beliefs.

The administration, touching off a political uproar, had sought to revoke the 13-year-old IRS policy on grounds that Congress did not specifically authorize the agency to ban tax breaks for schools that discriminate.

The decision is also a defeat for Bob Jones University in Greenville, S.C., and Goldsboro Christian Schools in Goldsboro, N.C.

Bob Jones bars interracial dating and interracial marriage of its studnts. Fewer than a dozen of its 6,300 students were

black in 1981.

It began admitting black married students in 1971 and single blacks in 1975.

Goldsboro refuses to enroll blacks.

History buttresses logic to make clear that to warrant exemption under (federal tax law) an institution must fall within a category specified ... and must demonstrably serve and be in harmony with the public interest, Chief Justice Warren E. Burger wrote for the court.

The institutions purpose must not be so at odds with the common community conscience as to undermine any public benefit that might otherwise be conferred, he said.

The Reagan administration had originally supported the IRS policy denying tax exemptions to schools that practice racial discrimination, as had the Nixon, Ford and Carter administrations before.

But the Reagan administration reversed the policy in

January 1982. It urged the Supreme Court to drop a pending appeal in the case because, the Justice Department said the adm^inis ration itself intended to lift the ban on tax exemption for Bob Jones and Goldsboro.

Justice Department lawyers said the IRS policy was not justified without explicit authorization from Congress.

The Supreme Court had agreed in October 1981 to review a Circuit Court of Appeals which upheld

the IRS.

The administrations change in policy touched off a storm of protest from civil rights groups. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said the government was explicitly condoning racial discrimination.

Reacting to that uproar, the administration asked Congress to give the IRS specific authority to bar tax breaks for schools that discriminate.

President Reagan said his aim was to try and rein in a

federal bureaucracy, not condone racial bias.

Congress has not taken any'action on the proposal, but some members claim Congress has alreadv approved the IR.S policy implicitly.

Speaking for the court todav, Burger agreed that the actions of Congress since 1970 leave no doubt that the IRS.

reached the correct conclusion in e.xercising its authontv. "

The correctness of the iIRS) commissioner's conclusion that a racial discriminatory private school is not charitable' within the common law concepts reflected in the code is wholly consistent with what Congress, the executive i branch) and the courts had repeatedly declared before 1970 Burger said.

The chief justice conceded that denial of tax benefits will inevitably have a substantial impact on the operation of private religious schools.

Biggesf Jump In Nine Months

AMONG THE SPEAKERS ... for the Pitt County Action Coalition for Teens organiza

tion meeting held Monday were Dr. Jack Allison, Jesse Harris and Dr. Joseph Russo.

Youth Groups Form New Q>alition For Teen-Agers

ByCAROLTVER Reflector Staff Writer

Lets Talk, coordinator Patricia Byrd told representatives of Pitt County youth-serving agencies and other groups during an organizational and planning meeting Monday of Pitt County Action Coalition For Teens (A'.C.T.).

The luncheon meeting was held at the First Presbyterian Church, where several local professionals commented on the gravity of the choices and responsibilities that teen-agers face and need guidance on from their parents, teachers, ministers and other friends.

Dr. Joseph Russo, an adolescent gynecology and obstetrics specialist with the East Carolina University

School of Medicine, talked about the tremendous cost of teen-age pregnancy psychologically, biologically and socially. He said older teen-agers are apparently becoming more responsible about protecting themselves from pregnancy, bringing about a decrease of pregnancy nationwide in the 17-20 year-old range.

However, he said, pregnancies in the 14-17 age ^oup have shown a sli^t increase and pregnancies under 14 are way up. The younger teen-ager is the one at greatest risk, he said. She hasnt stopped growing physically. Then, suddenly, her body is called upon to support not only its own growth, but that of a baby, too.

Its the girls who dont feel

good about themselves as persons who become pregnant as young teen-agers, he said, and many girls stop maturing emotionally, he said, when they experience an unplanned, unwaated pregnancy, whether the pregnancy results in delivery or abortion. Thus, you see women who are emotionally unable to cope at 35 with grown children whove had to suffer the consequences of being raised in an environment that has not supjwrted them emotionally, physically or financially as every child should be entitled, he pointed out.

Brenda Teel, representing the Pitt County Juvenile Corrections Program, said

(Please turn to Page 8)

Consumer Prices Rise Again

BySALLY JACOBSEN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Rising gasoline and housing costs sent consumer prices up 0.6 percent last month, the biggest jump in nine months, the government said today.

For the first four months of 1983, however, consumer prices rose at an annual rate of just 2.1 percent. Many economists say inflation for all of 1983 could match - or better - last years 3.9 percent and one analyst called the April increase a temporary blip.

' Largely responsible for the April rise, the Labor Department said in todays re port, was a 4 percent rise in gasoline prices, the result of the federal governments nickel-a-gallon tax hike April 1 and a general firming-up of retail prices.

Gasoline prices, down generally for the last two years, " had tumbled a full 1 percent in March.

At the White House, presidential spokesman Larry Speakes noted the impact of gasoline prices on the April data and said, We dont see any cause for major concern.

The jump, he said, does not represent a long-term

upward shift in inflation.

Also responsible for last months increase in the Consumer Price Index was a 0.5 percent gain in housing prices.

Food prices were up, too, but the 0.5 percent rise was off from Marchs 0.6 percent hike. Fresh fruit and vegetable costs, reflecting the scarcitis brought on by unusually cold and wet conditions in much of the country, rose 1 percent, down from the whopping 4.4 percent increase of the previous month. In the last two

months,, fresh vegetable prices have risen 17.7 percent.

Medical care costs matched their 0.5 percent increase of March, well below the pace such prices had set in the preceding months. Even so. those costs have soared 9.9 percent in the last 12 months.

Consumer prices overall have risen a modest 3.9 percent in the last year.

If Aprils 0.6 percent seasonally adjusted increase held steady for 12 straight months, the yearly advance

would be 7.2 percent. The annual rate reported by the department is based on a more precise calculation of monthly prices than the figure made public.

Consumer prices rose a tiny 0.1 percent in March after falling 0.2 percent in February and rising 0.2 percent in January. Inflation last rose at a 0.6 percent clip in July.

In advance of todays report, Ted Gibson, an economist at San Franciscos Crocker National Bank, said the anticipated April jump in

prices would be a temporary blip in the index.

"We dont think it's a fundamental upward shift in the rate of inflation, he said.

The bright inflation news has been widely attributed to the serious recession, from which the economy is rebounding, and the worldwide oil glut, which has produced a 14.1 percent drop in the record gasoline prices of two years ago.

Energy prices generally

(Please turn to Page 81

Electric Rate Hike Starts June 1

By STUART SAVAGE ReBector Staff Writer Members of the Greenville Utilities Commission, at a noon meeting Monday, decided to move ahead with plans to begin tracking a 10.8 percent wholesale electric rate increase to retail customers on June 1.

Commissioners approved the rate hike - which will increase the cost of power to the average residential customer and to large industrial users by about 6 percent a month, and charges for small general service or commercial customers by about 7 percent - at a meeting April 12. GUC Director Charles Horne said the increase from North Carolina Eastern Municipal Power Agency was necessary to pay the power agencys share of repairs needed at the

Brunswick nuclear power station which is owned jointly by the power agency and Carolina Power & Light Co.

Horne also told commissioners at the time that another rate increase, of approximately 8 percent, is expected about Oct,

Monday. Hprne told commission members that because GUC would end the fiscal year with about $2 million more in retained earnings than had earlier been estimated, the rate hike could be postponed until October.

However, the director noted that if the rate increase planned for June 1 was put into effect as planned, a rate increase in.October might not be needed. !

The commission is scheduled to meet with the City Council tonight to discuss 1983-1984 budget matters '

$700 Million Drug Ring Halted

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - An investigation by a presidential task force dubbed Operation Jackpot has led to indictments against 40 people accused of being part of two rings that smuggled more than $700 million in marijuana and hashish into the South.

The indictments and 12 arrests were based on an 11-month investigation into the financial records and business transactions of people working in two

drug smuggling Henry Dargan

major South Carolina-based operations, U.S. Attorney McMastersaid Monday.

The indictments were handed down last week by a special federal grand jury and unsealed Monday.

Most of the shipments of the marijuana and hashish - made between 1974 and 1981 - were successful, McMaster said, "Most of it got

through: a lot of it's been smoked.'

McMaster explained the task force investigated drug shipments that already had been made.

We were following a paper trail and the money trail, he said.

Robert Leslie Riley of Columbia, S.O., and Wallace E. Butler ofHilton Head, S.C., are in custody in Sydney. Australia, pending extradition hearings.

KEKI.KCTOKrtOTLIfi'52-1336

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.

HOST FAMILIES NEEDED Two host families are needed - one for a girl from Finland, one for a girl from Norway - for each to spend a high school year in the United States. The girls, both selected by the Educational Foundation for Foreign Study, are 16 and 17 years old respectively and both are fluent in English. Anyone interested in hosting either of the girls for 10 months may contact area representative Gerda Nischan, 752-0041.

Backyard Service Still Favored

By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer Mayor Percy Cox told the gathering at the outset of Monday nights public hearing on refuse collection fees that we are here to listen tonight and listen they did as a host of local citizens expressed their views.

One point appeared to be made as the issue of garbage collection was discussed; avoid changing the method of pick-up from the present backyard to a frontyard service.

The City Council, according to Cox, will give further consideration at a workshop to the feasibility of securing additional revenues through the establishment of a coL lection fee for garbage services.

Cox said that as far back as he could remember, the question of whether to charge a collection fee has been a source of debate that

comes up annually around budget time.

City Manager Gail Meeks, in explaining the need for revenues, said the new city budget will call for no new positions and no raises for current employees and if revenue sharing is not implemented, there will be no capital outlay money.

She said the council has reviewed a proposal to establish collection fee of $3 per month per household, and a container refuse collection fee of $12 per month per container for business, commercial, institutional, churches, charitable, governmental or any other non-residential establishments serviced by containers.

According to Mrs. Meeks, the fees would generate approximately $496,800 annually in additional revenue and would be equivalent to about 6.7 cents on the city tax^

rate. Capital improvements would benefit from the additional funds, she said.

Mrs. Meeks said the citys sanitation division, which administers garbage collections, had a budget of over $909,000 in 1982-83 and represents the lions share of the total public works financial package.

She said the fee could be placed on monthly utility bills, a system she said is in use in some other cities, and a penalty clause could be written into the ordinance to cover fees that are not paid.

Mrs. Meeks said the collection charge would be considered a user fee rather than a tax and each household unit would be assessed under the proposal.

Dr. Frank Fuller, a former member of the council, said he was aware of the necessity for additional city funds, but he had reservations about 'falling some

thing that is essentially a tax a fee. He said he would receive no benefit from a user fee in figuring his income taxes and he added, It is a tax, no matter what you call it.

Cox pointed out that the city could reach more people with a user fee who are not paying city taxes.

Councilwoman Janice Buck, who supports the collection fee, said that not everyone owns property and a user fee assessed monthly would reflect a charge for services rendered. Students were among those mentioned as receiving city services but generally paying little in property taxes.

Richard Littlefield of Sanata Drive said a collection assessment is another way of getting around a tax increase. He said in essence it would amount to a raise in taxes and not benefit him as a deduction on his feder?^

returns.

Randy Martin, a resident of Lake Ellswcrth, opposed " the collection fee and asked why the council was not conducting a hearing on cutting back garbage service to once a week. Martin said there are too many luxury items in the budget and excesses that could be trimmed before you start assessing necessities like garbage collection.

Ed Stallings told the board that he was not in favor of a user fee but if it was necessary. it would be the better of two evils. He urged the council not to put anything else on real property or change the method of collection.

Another former council member, John Howard, said that the question boils down to whether the board wants a user fee or a tax. He said the

JfPlease turn to Page 8)VV tLookino Aheoc

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Beniari'i'i Diieeel 1





Miss Walls, Mr. Allen

Speak Vows Sunday

Lee

the

and

Brenda Lois Walls anc Charles Hugh .Allen of .Ayder were united in marriagt Sunday afternoon at six oclock in the Ormondsville Free Will Baptist Church, Route 1, .Ayden. The double ring ceremony was conducted by Rev. Jack .Mayo.

Daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Jim L. Walls Sr. of Ayden, the bride was escorted and given in marriage by her brother, Wayne Dawson Walls. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Rountree Allen of Ayden.

The father of the bridegroom was best man and the maid of honor was Irene Walls of Greenville, niece of the bride.

Bridesmaids were Nancy Smith of Albertson and Jean Craft of Kinston. Misty Williams of Ayden, great niece of the bride, was flower girl.

Ushers were Jimmy Walls Jr., brother of bride, Denny Johnson Lathan Dennis of Ayden.

Mrs. Bill Norris of Ayden presented a program of organ music and Tim Parker of Newport sang Through the Eyes of Love and "The Love that Lasts a Lifetime. Mrs. Carson Edwards directed the wedding.

The bride wore a formal gown of white organza over peau de soie designed with a high neckline encircled with silk Venise lace beaded with pearls. The gown was enhanced with a sheer yoke of point desprit edged in silk Venise lace. Matching lace encircled the empire bodice. The sheer bishop sleeves were fashioned with cuffs of point desprit and beaded silk Venise lace. The modified A-line skirt and attached chapel length train were edged in lace. She wore a fingertip veil of illusion with pencil edging and lace held in place by a caplet overlaid in matching lace. She carried the prayer book that was carried by the mother of the bridegroom on her wedding day. It was was covered with lace and topped with a cascade of white miniature roses, daisies, baby's breath and miniature^nglish ivy.

The bridal attendants wore formal gowns of romance chiffon over taffeta designed with an open neckline. The fitted bpdice was enhanced by a double layer of ruffled chiffon outlining the scooped back bodice. A satin ribbon encircled the waistline from which fell the flared skirt. Each carried a bouquet of mixed spring flowers and wore matching flowers in their hair.

The flower girl wore a floor length dress of whiteorganza with three-quarter length sleeves and a pinafore of romance. She carried a white princess wicker basket filled with mixed spring flowers.

MRS. CHARLES HUGH ALLEN

The mother of the bridegroom wore a formal gown of rose lustreglo designed with an open neckline and miniature rolled shoulder straps. She wore a corsage of pink sweetheart roses.

A reception was held after the ceremony at the ancestral home of the bridegroom on Route 1, Ayden. Mr. and Mrs. Carson Edwards greeted'the guests.

The wedding cake was served by Mrs. Gray Williams of Kinston. Lillie Everett and Mrs. Jimmy Walls poured punch. Others assisting in serving were Martha Abernathy, Irma Worthington, Beth Norris, Allyson Norris, Mrs. Daryl Clements and Mildred Mitchell.

The bride is a graduate of Winterville High School and

Pitt Community College. She is employed as a computer operator at Dupont Co. in the Kinston plant. The bridegroom is a graduate of Ayden-Grifton Higli School and is self-employed in commercial egg production and farming.

Following the wedding, the couple left for a wedding trip to Bermuda

A rehearsal dinner was given Saturday at the Colonial Inn in Farmville by the parents of the bridegroom and his aunt, Mrs. Carroll Humbles.

A bridesmaids luncheon was given by the mother of the bridegroom and Louise Dawson in Ayden.

Numerous showers were given for the couple and a bachelor party was given the bridegroom at the home of Danny Johnson, Ayden.

Wife Likes To Be Remembered

Name Tags

Made By

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By Abigail Van Buren

Pitt Plaza, Greenville

1983 by Univetsal Press Syndicate

DEAR ABBY: How can 1 get my husband to be as .romantic and thoughtful as he was before we were married?

Our first anniversary came and went. No flowers. No card. Nothing. That day really meant a lot to me, Abby.

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Wedding Vows Spoken On Saturday Afternoon

BETHEL - Mabel Elizabeth James and Ken Stuart Perry were united in marriage Saturday afternoon at four oclock in the Bethel United Methodist Church. Officiating at the double ring ceremony was the Rev. Ellis J. Bedsworth.

The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Benjamin William James of Robersonville and the late Mr. James. The parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Delton Erget Perry of Bethel.

A program of wedding music was presented by organist Michael Edmondson and soloist Susan Carson, both of Bethel. Selections included The Wedding Song, The Lords Prayer and "The Wedding Prayer.

The bride was given in marriage by her mother and was escorted by Ken Manning Jr. She wore a formal gown of candlelight silkened organza over peau de soie and rose point lace. The gown was fashioned with an empire waistline highlighted with candlelight satin ribbon. An overlay jabeau effect of lace edged with a ruffle was used on the front and back of the bodice and at the colonial neckline. The sheer bishop sjeeves were cuffed with ruffles. The gathered skirt flowed into an attached chapel length train which was bordered with a ruffle. The gown was accented with appliques of lace. Her two tiered fingertip veil of candlelight silkened organza fell from a hat that was pearl embroidered with a turned up brim. The hemline of the veil was trimmed with peau de soie and rose point lace. She carried a semi-cascade bouquet of off- white miniature carnations, miniature orchids and pal pink rosebuds backed with ivy and tied with off-white lace ribbon.

Mrs. Ken Manning Jr. of Bethel, sister of the bride, served as honor attendant. Bridesmaids were Joy and Linda James, sisters of the bride from Robersonville, Beth Perry, sister-in-law of the bridfferoom, and Kim Rook, bom of Bethel, Kim Mills of Raleigh, cousin of the bridegroom, and Lee

MRS. KEN STUART PERRY Pittman of Nashville. Each wore a formal dress of dusty

attendant wore a formal gown of royal blue taffeta designed with an open neckline featuring a double ruffle of taffeta outlining the off-shoulder bodice and scooped back. A gathered sash of taffeta accented with a self-fabric bow encircled the modified waistline from which fell the gathered skirt. Each carried a mixed basket of spring flowers accented with white daisies and tied with white ribbon.

Delton Perry served as his sons best man. Ushers included David Perry, brother of the bridegroom, Lee Manning, cousin of the bridegroom, Eddie Hemingway, Jay Bedsworth and Taylor Carson, all of Bethel and Tommy Corbett of Greenville. Ring bearer was Ben Manning of Bethel, nephew of the bride.

The mother of the bride

A holiday to him is just another day.

Im a very sentimental person, and it hurts to be forgotten. I enjoy doing special things for him, but he never reciprocates. I know he loves me, but it would be nice to have some tangible evidence once in a while.

FEELING DEPRIVED

DEAR DEPRIVED: Wait for the appropriate time, then without being critical, judgmental or sulky, tell him you feel sad when he forgets those special occasions. And just to make sure he remembers, clip this column and tape it to his bathroom mirror the day before you want to be remembered.

DEAR READERS: The unknown author of Its the Driver, a poem I published in this space, has surfaced. She is Frances Ellsworth Asher of Eustis, Fla.

Having been married for 61 years to a retired Colorado state patrolman, this prolifc poetess has written a book of safety verses. My favorite:

TRAFFIC GEM When Im driving I gain this impression The pedestrians use no discretion;

But when walking, 1 alter the facts,

And call drivers the real maniacs!

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rose jersey with a chiffon caplet. The mother of the bridegroom selected a formal dress of light blue taffeta with a chiffon overlay. Both mothers wore white silk rubrum lilies. The grandmother of the bridegroom, Mrs. Manee Edmondson, wore a white silk rubrum lily.

A reception, given by the brides mother, relatives and friends, followed the ceremony in the church fellowship hall. Guests were greeted by Reuben Russell James, Mr. and Mrs. James Alton Manning and Mr. and Mrs. William Edward Hemingway.

A tea was given at the home of Mrs. Frank Powell of Farmville. Assisting were Mrs. Rod Carlson and Mrs. Remus Everett. A pig-picking was given by friends and relatives of the couple. A bridesmaids. luncheon was given at the home of Mrs. Charles Wynne, assisted by Mrs. Darrell Smith and Mrs. William Tetterton.

An after-rehearsal dinner was given by the parents of the bridegroom, relatives and friends and a dance was given by friends of the couple at the Robersonville Country Club.

The bride is a graduate of North Pitt High School and East Carolina University. She is lead teacher for Pitt Community College Preschool Laboratory, The bridegroom graduated from North Pitt High School and North Carolina State University. He is vice president of Tri-County Feed Mills Inc. of Bethel.

After a cruise to the Bahamas, the couple will reside in Bethel.

Club Names New Officers

Mrs. C.R. Shepherd has been named president of the Grass Roots Garden Club.

Other officers are: Mrs. Carl Crawford, first vice president; Mrs. Boots Barlow, second vice president; Mrs John Shan-

nonhouse, secretary; Mrs. Earl Simmons, treasurer and historian; Mrs. Jimmy Rayford, year book; Mrs. Paul Jewett, telephone,

A fellowship hour and covered-dish luncheon followed the meeting. Each member was given a corsage of silk daisies made by the hostess

Happy Birthday Perry Leary Johnson

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WARNING!

HELL IS WAITING FOR YOU!

lESUS CHRIST (the Son of God) DESCRIBES HELL TO BE:

A UKE Of FIRE! (Re*. 20:18)5)

A PLACE OF T0RMEHT!(Lul(e16:2224)

A PLACE WHERE LOST SOULS NEVER DIE - AND THE FIRE IS NOT QUENCHED' (Mark 9:43-48)

A PUCE OF WEEPING - WAILING - ANO GNASHING OF TEETH' (Matt.25-30)(Matt. 812)(Matt. 2451)

A PUCE WHERE SINNERS AND UNBELIEVERS DRINK OF THE WINE OF GOO S WRATH (Re*. 14:10)

A PUCE WHERE THE SMOKE OF THEIR TORMENT ASCENDETH UP FOREVER AND EVER (Re*.14:11)

ALL LIARS, ADULTERERS, FORNICATORS. SORCERERS, (Enchanter with drugs) MURDERERS. AND UNBELIEVERS. ARE GOING TO SPEND ETERNITY IN THE LAKE Of FIRE! (Re*. 21-8) (Re*. 22:15)

MOST PEOPLE ARE GOING TO HELl!

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ARE GOING TO HELL! - unless you sincerely,

WHOLEHEARTEOLY REPENT OF YOUR SINS! THEN "BELIEVE ON THE LORD JESUS CHRIST" AS YOUR SAVIOR AND LORD' THEN FOREVER FOLLOW HIM' lOVE HIM' OBEY HIM ALL THE DAYS OF YOUR LIFE!

NO SIN OR SINNER WILL EVER ENTER HUYEN! AND HEU IS THE ONLY OTHER PUCE YOU CAN GO'

REMEMBER' CHURCH MEMBERSHIP OR GOOD WORKS OR GOOD MORALS, OR ANYTHING ELSE, WILL NEVER SAVE YOU! JESUS SAID. "YOU MUST BE BORN AGAIN" (John 3:3-6)

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At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

Couple Marries On Saturday

The DaiJy Reflector, Greenville, NC.-Tuesday, May 24,1983-3

Engagement Announced

ELIZABETH CROWELL STEWART...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Harrison Stewart of Greenville, who announce her engagement to Nicholas Thompson Long, son of Mrs. Paul Ellis of Roxboro and the late Richard Gwynn Long. The wedding will taKe place June 25.

It used to be the incentive for buying a product or a service was to save you money.

Now the whole world is dedicated to an even rarer commodity - time. I have never had so many people interested in saving me time and making my every minute count. Theres the mattress that will improve my sleep in 30 days. Theres a non-stop flight to New York that will save me two hours. And a conditioner that will repair split ends and make my hair fat in 10 days.

If 1 run a mile every day for the rest of my life, I will not. only feel wonderful, but will add 10 years to my life. If I devote just 15 minutes a day to the care of my skin, men will flock to light my cigarette even though I dont smoke. A pouch of stroganoff dropped |n boiling water will give me a meal in five minutes, saving me three hours of preparation.

My oven will clean itself as I sleep. If I get a phone with the right stuff built in, 1 can save minutes each day by not having to dial the number myself.

Anne Harrington Is Members To State Secretary    speaker

Anne P. Harrington of Greenville, CPS, has been named secretary of the year for the N.C. Division of Professional Secretaries International.

The announcement was made at the annual meeting held in Charlotte during the weekend. Candidates for the honor received points for education, chapter service and participation and work experience.

Competing against candidates from PSI Chapters across the state. Ms. Harrington, one of three finalists, appeared before a panel of judges to answer a question regarding office automation and the secretarial role in the office of the future.

She is executive secetary to John McGara, plant manager at TRW Inc. She is married to Jackie Harrington and they have two sons. She gained her Certified Professional Secretary rating in 1982. A PSI member since 1979, she has served the chapter in various offices including presidentelect during this past year. Last night, she was installed as president of the local chapter.

Nila Bland, current chapter president, served as delegate to the meeting. Others attending from here were Margie Davis, who is an outgoing NCD director, Jo Gillin, Mary Kittrell, Kathy Parker and Helen Rollins.

Trudy Blessing, physicians assistant, spoke to the members last night on Health Issues Affecting Women, She is associated with Quadrangle Internal Medicine.

During the business session. President Bland presented a report on the NCD meeting and announced that the local chapter received the divisions second place award for membership.

Other ojficers installed were; Ms. Gillin, presidentelect; Betty Andrews, recording secretary; Ms.

Shower Given Bridal Couple

Mr. and Mrs. Leon Raymond Hardee entertained at a miscellaneous shower at their home honoring Bunny Tripp and Jay Cox, bridal couple-elect, last week.

The refreshment table was overlaid with white lace and centered with an arrangement of yellow and white spring flowers.

The honoree was given a corsage of white daisies.

The spiraling winds of hur-ricanes move counterclockwise. South of the equator, where theyre known as cyclones, the winds spin clockwise.

Rollins, corresponding secretary; and Roberta Herring, treasurer. Directors are Doris Hunt, CPS, Mary Kraczon, Myrtle McRoy and Janie Radford.

After the meeting, the chapters 10th anniversary was celebrated. Amy Mills presented a review of the activities over the past decade. She also recognized charter members and past presidents.

Anne Harrington

Discussion ot Communication in the Remarried Family will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Agricultural Extension Service office.

Dr. Mel Markowski, family counselor and professor of child development at East Carolina Universitys School of Home Economics, will be the speaker.

"The remaried family, the step-family, the blended family, all terms for those families which consist of previously divorced or widowed spouses and children who may be his, hers or ours. An estimated one of every eight children living with two parents, lives with a step-parent, said Evelyn Spangler, Pitt County home economics extension agent.

Theodore Roosevelt was the first president to have a book published while in office. It was titled The Deer Family, and it was one of many he wrote on the life history of animals, including waterfowl, buffalo, bear, mountain sheep and cougars. Roosevelt was a prolific writer, authoring some 35 books and 150,000 letters.

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F<n#    Ana O'A'nona imporie^s

Carotma East Mail Gretnviiia

Im always hearing people say there arent enough hours in the day. If there were any more. Id pass out I can remember when people used to do one thing at a time. Now we jog and listen to music at the same time, cook and talk on the phone simultaneously, and eat dinner and watch TV.

1 did some fancy mathematics the other day and figured out the following: Using a one-coat paint on my house would save me three days.

Buying a detergent with the finishing rinse already in it would save a minute and a half each week.

A cold tablet that raced to my bloodstream would save me two days sick leave a year.

A food processor with 30 attachments would save me several hours a week of chopping and slicing.

A one-step floor polish would save me two hours a week.

I added all those together and subtracted all the products I didnt need, like making me a non-smoker in four days, growing a headful of hair in 60 days to combat my baldness, and a flea collar that outlasted all the others by two months.

I computerized how much time I needed to work, play, sleep and maintain myself. Then I averaged out how many things I could do at one time and finally figured out with all the time-saving devices and products, I had 15 extra seconds in my life.

Then I subtracted the time it took me to computerize the whole mess and you know something? Im into a 25-hour day again.

The wedding of Tammy Jo House, daughter of Norman House and the late Mrs. Gaynen House, and George Joseph Abeyounis Jr., son of Mrs. Myrtle Abeyounis and the late George Abeyounis, both of Bethel, took place Saturday evening at five oclock. The Rev. Charles Branch officiated at the double ring ceremony in the Hickory Grove Free Will Baptist Church.

The bride was escorted by her father. She wore a gown of organza fully lined in acetate taffeta. The gown featured an empire waistline, stand-up collar, front and back ruffle and trimmed yolks of lace. The illusion sleeves had lace

Bridal

Policy

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

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

cuffs. She wore an attached chapel length train. Her headpiece was a white floral wreath with a veil of nylon netting. She carried a silk bouquet of assorted lavender and pink flowers.

Lori Ann House of Bethel, sister of the bride, served as maid of honor. She wore a lilac kint gown with a chiffon caplet. The gown featured spaghetti straps, a draped asymmetrical empire bodice and one-shoulder styling. She wore a floral wreath of assorted flowers accented with babys breath and carried a bouquet of assorted silk flowers.

Bridesmaids were Joette Abeyounis of New Bern, sister of the bidegroom, and Wanda Eller of Greenville. They wore gowns styled like that of the honor attendant and carried identical flowers.

Flower girl was Babs House of Bethel, niece of the bride. She wore an off-white gown and carried a basket of silk rose petals. Michael Eller of Greenville was the ring bearer.

Ted M. Abeyounis of Hilton Head, S.C., brother of the bridegroom, served as best man. Ushers included Ronnie and Larry House, both brothers of the bride from Bethel.

Organist Linda Weathersby of Ayden and soloists Linda Everett and Brent Bennett provided wedding music.

A reception was held after the wedding at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Larry House. Josephine Butler cut the cake and Sharon Everette poured punch.

A rehearsal dinner was given by Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie L. House.

A pig-picking was given in honor of the couple by the brothers of the bride and their families.

Storyteller Hans Christian Andersen was born in 1805.

MRS. GEORGE JOSEPH ABEYOUNIS JR.

A bridal luncheon was given at Three Steers Restaurant by the family of the bridegroom.

The bride graduated from New Hope Christian Academy and attended Pitt Community College. She is employed as a unit secretary at Pitt Memorial Hospital. The bridegroom is a gradu-jrte of North Pitt High School and Pitt Community College.

He is a technician/supervisor for Greenville Cable TV.

After a wedding trip to Hilton Head, S.C., the couple will reside in Bethel.

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Editorials

Ideal For Many

All eastern North Carolina, as well as Greenville, is fortunate in the site-selection of Cypress Glen Retirement Community.

There is more to it than the magnet effect, drawing people into the Greenville area, or the obvious financial benefits the city will enjoy.

The 100-acre tract on which the community will be built offers potential homes for a large number of retirees. Those homes will be designed to suit the specific needs of the people for whom they are intended.

The proposed facility represents the fulfillment of a very real need in providing a gathering-point for retirees who have so much in common: a perspective on the art of living and prospects of enjoying their final years in the company of their peers. To many, the latter is important.

While it is fair to say association with varied age-groupings is stimulating, the preference for many lies in a day-to-day relationship with people of their own age-grouping ... whether its teens-with-teens, young singles, young couples, the middle-years grouping and finally the elders.

So we see in the retirement community the promise of a setting that poses an ideal for a great many individuals.

Even at this early date it is easy to visualize scores of people looking forward to the day when the Cypress Glen Retirement Community is a going concern.

A Key To Ourselves

Modern telescopes and the ability to observe the universe from outside the Earths atmosphere are giving astonomers their greatest opportunity to determine how our sun and solar system were formed.

Recently stars, much like our sun in its early stages, have been observed forming by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite which is a joint project of the United States, The Netherlands and the United Kingdom.'

The star-forming process has been photographed by the telescope at Palomar Observatory.

Scientists can observe times past in the universe and they can identify objects in all phases of development. Startling new discoveries are being made every day now that we can move beyond the Earths atmosphere. In the years aheail, we will learn much more about the universe, and as a result, much about ourselves.

James Kilpatrick

Reagan And O'Neill Spar Again

WASHINGTON - Two workaday truck drivers, Frank Greco of New Jersey and Jerry Bliss of Michigan, testified in March before the Senate Labor Committee. Partly because of their sobering testimony, the committee last week voted unanimously to try again on a Labor-Management Racketeering Act. The idea is to do a little something to protect the working stiff.

The pending bill is sorely needed. Over the past 30 years, and especially since 1974, industrial pension funds have mounted into billions of dollars. Most such funds are honestly administered, usually by joint labor-management trustees, but examples abound of collusion and abuse. During the 97th Congress, the Senate twice passed a bill intended to address the problem, but the bill died in an indifferent House. Now the principal sponsors, Orrin Hatch of Utah and Sam Nunn of Georgia, are pressing for action on a schedule that will leave the House no excuse for inaction.

The bill would make it a felony, punishable by up to five years in prison,

for officials of either labor or management to abuse the trust reposed in them. Other provisions would increase penalties for buying and selling labor peace. Under this bill, an official convicted of corrupt conduct would be suspended from office the moment a guilty verdict were returned; he could not continue to influence pension decisions while his conviction languished on appeal.

Corruption on the waterfront, centered in the International Longshoremens Association, sparked the interest of Senate investigators 30 years ago, but nothing much happened un^ the Justice Department cracked down in 1975. As a result of the departments work, more than a hundred high-level union officials and shipping compnay executives were convicted on charges of extortion, kickbacks, obstruction of justice and income tax evasion. Meanwhile, abuses within the Teamsters Central States Pension Fund were inviting congressional attention. The Employees Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) in 1974 had created new oceans of pension money, and the sharks were swarming in.

Frank Greco, a njnber of Teamsters Local 478 in Union, N.J., educated the Senate committee in certain facts of life. His local is a part of the Teamsters Joint Council 73, which also includes locals 945 and 863. Four officers of Local 945 were convicted for almost two years while their convictions were being appealed. Two officers of Local 863 were indicted last July for ripping off the health and welfare fund.

Another New Jersey union. Local 560, was dominated by Anthony Provenzano, who stayed in office for three years while his conviction for extortion was under appeal. After serving a seven-year sentence, he returned to his union office only to be convicted of murder. He was replaced by his daughter as secretary-treasurer. .

In Detroit, Jerry Bliss managed to win a hard-fought election as secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Local 337. In retaliation, unin bosses at the international level, stripped him of responsibilities and reduced the salary for the office frim $5,700 a month to $500 a month. Locals 299 in Detroit and 406 in

Grand Rapids fell under the influence of a couple of characters convicted of extortion.

A$ Bliss remarked in his testimony, the crooks would have had far different and shorter union careers if the pending bill have been in effect at the time of their convictions. The bill would get the bad apples out of the barrel before extended damage could be done.

It is hard to understand the unwillingness of the House to act on this legislation. Lane Kirkland, president of the AFL-CIO, has endorsed it. Such Senate liberals as Kennedy of Massachusetts have urged its adoption. The only persons who would benefit by defeat of the bill are the criminal manipulators who have their hands on ERISA trusts. Millions of wage-eamers, both union and non-union, would be given small measure of protection against abuse of their money. This may not be a perfect bill, but it isa good bill. Lets get it on the books.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

WASHINGTON - For g^ reason or bad. "Kiddiegate has entered its second month - longer than Washingtons latest controversy over political nepotism need have lasted.

But the ongoing saga about hiring practices at the United States Information Agency (USIA) may yet prove worth its weight in news print, if only as instruction for those who take such favoritism seriously and those who dont: Nepotism isnt easily avoided.

USIA Director Charlie Wick has been an easy target. The brain behind Snow White and.the Three Stooges has done some silly things in his term, from producing Let Poland Be Poland to humming the Marseillaise loudly for Frances ambassador at a Washington reception. Wicks appointment of nearly a dozen Reaganaut

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

CIA Pinpoints Ills Of Nepotism

scions to USIA posts only confirms a leadership style that has undermined the agencys status before congressional appropriations panels as much as any concern for the national debt.

On average, the appointments which prompted an inquiry by Sen. Edward Zorinsky (D-Neb.) are no worse than the placement of less fashionable folk in similar positions. Of course, Caspar Weinberger Jr.. 36, who, before his resignation last Monday was allegedly boasting CIA connections at the Cannes Film Festival, is said by a former USIA supervisor to have skills that have not been properly applied. (Ironically, one agency offical had seen fit to hand young Weinberger a $4,000 merit pay raise on his $50,000-plus salary.) Similar euphemisms have been applied to Daniel Wattenberg, 23. son of neo-conservative

columnist and Reagan appointee Ben Wattenberg; according to USIA, the younger wattenberg, a candidate for a cultural affairs post in Paris, has studied French in college and has experience as a writer and an editorial research assistant.

.^Yet Barbara Haig, who works for USIA general counsel Jonathan Sloat, is trained as a paralegal and described by intimates' to be as determined a worker as her father, Al. And 23-year-old Monica (daughter of national security adviser William) Clark, appointed as assistant to the public affairs tfficer in Bonn, is at least bilingual in German.

The mix^ bag of talent underscores Zorinskys zealousness in asking the General Accounting Office to investigate. To be sure, the USIA admits that Ronald Reagans appointments to the 7,700-

employee agency (62) are more than twice those of Jimmy Carter (26). Yet when the Senate can confirm much larger percentages of political hacks to ambassadorial posts (despite the vehement complaints of career Foreign Service t^s), Zorinskys concern about USIA defies logic.

This isnt to suggest that Wicks knack for good breeding defies criticism. While the Californian routinely asserts an interest in bringing professionalism to USIA, his old preferences only make his agency appear to be a dumping ground for incompetents, has-beens and the homeless. That, in turn, helps reinforce a common perception that the USIA is mismanaged, propagandistic and unnecessary.

Yet if theres any buzzword understood by public- and private-sector workers

Public

Forum

alike, its connections. Journalists, businessmen and especially first-time jobseekers cant deny it.

Nor can members of Congress: Only two years ago, Roll Call, Capitol Hills weekly newspaper, found that at least 27 House employees were relatives of congressmen, including three Powerful committee chairmen; the revelation came despite the fact that Congress must endure the nepotism restriction that other federal agencies do.

Put bluntly, what field is immune to the influence of friends and family on hiring? To inveigh against the USIA chief too harshly is to ignore the cheesy practice elsewhere. None are acceptable, but as Watergate apologist Victor Lasky might have said, It didnt start with Kiddiegate.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

To the editor:

Through this newspaper, I would like to publicly acknowledge the staff at Sheppard Library. Writers are in constant search of odd bits of information. No matter how inane, how trivial, how dated the question, they will make every attempt to find the answer. And with a smile.

They not only do waht is expected of a librarian, but they remember your problem and continue looking long after you have given up. It is a w'onderful feeling to deal with people who care.

Maxine Haiter

Grifton

Letters to Public Forum ^uld be limited to 300 words. The editor reserves the ri0it to cut longer letters.

John Cunniff

Interest Rates Raise New Questions

NEW YORK lAP) .As the economy recovers the issues become less immediate. fess pressing, more distant and decidedly 'easier to live with. For now.The Daily Reflector

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But what happens down the line if mortgage rates rise, bringing with them the monthly payments of all those variable-rate home loans that are now being urged on buyers?

Since Americas priority was to get out of the terrible economic fix in which the economy was mired, this is but one of several issues that probably havent been dealt with'as thoroughly as they might have been.

They solved the immediate problem,-but did they create difficulties for the future?

There are restraints on the heights to which variable, interest loans can rise, but any rise at all can upset budgets. Just ask the savings banks, some of whom went under because of a rise in the cost of money.

In fact, a rise of just 2 percentage

points can make a serious impact on a household budget, an impact of more than $70 a month on a $50,000 mortgage payable over 20 years.

In theory, this should cause relatively little trouble, because by then the borrowers pay raises will cover the added expense. But maybe not. Rising interest rates generally are accompanied by higher prices. And rising prices and interest rates often if not always lead to recession and layoffs.

At the moment, interest rates show little sign of any major increase, but there are reasons for this. The economy is operating far below its capacity, and producers have been able to finance their businesses internally.

But as the economy expands, producers may be forced to borrow in order to expand facilities. Will the credit pool

be sufficient to accommodate this expansion? Of, diluted by the need to finance government debts, will it be ^ insufficient? And if it is insufficient, will rates take off again?

The employment question is far from being hypothetical. Over the past few years many thousands of workers have lost their jobs to efficiency programs and cannot expect them back. Their numbers include both blue-collar and white.

The overwhelming thrust of management during the past few years has been to raise productivity through efficiencies, and that thrust has a long wayto go. In general, it means producing more with less, including manpower.

Scholars who have studied the situation maintain there is a good side to it. That is, more efficient production means greater profits to be spread throughout

Cliff Haas

the economy, even among those who arent working.

But that, of course, doesnt solve the social problem of unemployment.

The potential problem with IRAs is strictly hypothetical, buj if the past is a criterion you may be siire that many of those who put money away for retirement will be tempted by economic stress to tap it sooner than that.

Great enthusiasm greeted the introduction of IRAs. People felt they needed a haven from income taxes, and so they were willing to tie up their money far into the future, until their retirement years, in fact.

But, the question arises, what will their mood be in a severe downturn, when the immediate need for money becomes more pressing than a comfortable retirement off in the future?

WASHINGTON (AP) - After a brief lull, President Reagan and House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr. have resumed their roles as symbols of the opposite ends of political argument in the nations capital.

This time, though, ONeill, D-Mass., is increasingly seeing himself as a sort of a one-man truth squad when it comes to Reagan.

ONeill comM by the role easily.

He talks of itlmself as the leader of the

Bill Would Protect Working Stiff

Democratic Party, until such time as my party has a presidential nominee. He feels a particular responsibility as the constitutional officer of the only branch of the national government still under Democratic control.

But more to the point, ONeill feels he is the guardian of the liberal tradition of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the New Deal, a tradition that Reagan and his conservative allies have tried to dismantle as being the root of skyrocketing

budget deficits.

And, ONeill thinks reporters are letting Reagan get away with too much.

Following Reagans nationally broadcast news conference last week, ONeill grumped that the White House press corps was playing softball and throwing slow pitches. He added that Reagan was fouling them off.

ONeill, though, has resumed his game of hardball.

For the first two vears of Reagans

presidency, ONeill could do little more than watch as Reagans troops on Capitol Hill rolled to a series of victories.

Last falls congressional elections changed the picture a bit by increasing the Democratic majority in the House and allowing ONeill to tighten his grip on the chamber.

There were even rare signs of bipartisanship early this year in passing a rescue plan for the ailing Social .Sernritv svstpm

Elisha DouglasStrength For Today

Some people throw happiness away with both hands. They have love, opportunity, good health the makings of a happy life. But because they lack self-control, or have a jealous spirit, or nurse a grudge, or love moiiey too much, they cast all chances of happiness away in exchange for some bauble, some tinseled toy not worth the having.

It very often happens that married couples, because they greatly dislike some, little failing in each other, destroy the possibility of deep and abiding happiness. People who have been friends for years sometimes disagree over some petty matter and henceforth are strangers to each other. Jealousy has shoved many persons off the road to happy, purposeful living, and has kept on pushing them until they were over the precipice.

Why do we cast away our treasure so recklessly? Its easy to throw happiness away, but happiness thrown away is ajs hard to pjck up as spilled water.





CtoSBWOfd By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS 1 Actor McCowen 5 Indicate approval 8 Raby carriage

12...-candlein the sun."

13 Formerly Clay

14 Bad

15 Candy treats

17 Arthurian lady

18 Yellow bugle

19 Congressional body

21A pulled candy

24 Opening

25 War god

26 Energy snack

30 Meadow

31 Closes

32 Hole in one

33 Chewy candies

35 Theater org.

36Gothe

37 Ingredient of 26 Across

38 Scatters 2 Irish sea

41 Egyptian god god

42 See the sights 3 Greek

43 Ingredient letter

of 21 Across    4 Moslem rul-

48 Dismounted

49 Tokyo, formerly

50 Jot

51 Roman clan

ers:var,

5 Zola novel

6 Corrida cheer

52 Lepidopter- 7 Disagrees iststrap    8 Abundance

53 Fencing sword DOWN

9 It hundred years... (Holmes)

1 Venomous    10 Mine en-

snake

trance

Avg. solution time; 23 minutes.

BQti a

5-24

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

11 Early Persian

16 College climber

20 Goals

21 Soft mineral

22 Zone

23 Terror

24 Bank safe

26 Bishops and knights

27 Slam

28 Recorded proceedings

29 Window (1954 film)

31 Small duck

34 Wards off

35 Native of Perth

37 Vast supply

38 Kind of party

39 Enameled metalware

40 Destroy

41 Blemish

44 Pindaric work

45 Saturate

46 Nice season

47 Engineers org.

House Rejects Prison Alternative Bill

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) A bill aimed at keeping some criminals out of prison died Monday in the state House while the Senate endorsed a bill to help judges identify repeat offenders before they sentence them.

Rep. Joe Hackney, D-Orange, introduced the House bill that would have prevented those convicted of nonviolent felonies from serving prison sentences.

The bill was the result of a study of prison alternatives that recommended ways to get the least violent offenders out of overcrowded prisons.

The bill would have allowed the presumptive punishment for nonviolent felonies to be a suspended prison sentence, probation and community service in some cases.

Under the bill, criminals could not get an active sentence unless the judge believed they mi^t fail to successfully complete probation, had failed probation in the past or were a threat to the public.

Rep. Hugh Lee, D-Richmond, and Rep. George Miller, D-Durham, noted that the definition of a nonviolent felony was vague and could include breaking into or burning down a hom.

In light of those questions, the House rejected the bill, 69-33.

Meanwhile, the state Senate approved a bill that would break with tradition and allow judges who are sentencing an adult to see that person's juvenile record in some cases.

The bill would affect adults who are convicted and brought before a judge for sentencing. It would allow the judge to see the defendants juvenile record if it contained one of three kinds of felonies, which include first-degree murder and rape.

Juvenile records are confidential now. The change is aimed at making sure that judges know whether they are dealing with hardened criminals.

The bill was approved, 42-3, and sent to the House.

In other legislative action: Wildlife

The Senate unanimously approved a bill that would allow the state Wildlife Resources Commission to charge a fee for applying to participate in state-managed big-game hunts. There is no charge now to apply for the limited number of hunting licenses.

The bill returns to the House for concurrence in an amendment.    

Housing

A bill to outlaw housing discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap or marital

CRYPTOQUIP    5-24

YKT OFIMHLFA KMJT FV LFYTHTEY LF YKTLH EMJLFAE MIIVOFYE.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - SEAMSTRESS IS NOW WRESTLER; SHE PINS ALL OPPONENTS TO THE MAT. Todays Cryptoquip clue: F equals N.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cijdier 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.

1*3 Kinfl Features Syndicate. Inc

Former Bar Leader Indicted

Teachers

Getting

Grants

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -the North Carolina Humanities Committee is donating $62,000 to help 45 eighth-grade teachers take a refresher course in history before they begin teaching a required course next year, an official said Monday.

The State Board of Education last year decided to make North Carolina history -a required course after it had been discontinued for 12 years. But the state later cut funding for in-service training in half, leaving no way to retrain its 1,000 history teachers in the field,

Alice Barkley, spokesman for the committee, said her organization has contracted with the National Humanities Faculty to conduct a two-week institute for teachers at Wake Forest University.

John Ellington, in charge of social studies for the Department of Public Instruction, said all North Carolina history teachers need a refresher course and that the department welcomed the financial assistance.

He said most of the teachers had been teaching North Carolina history as a part of U.S. history but were not teaching it as a separate course,_____

GOLDSBORO, N.C. (AP) - The former president-elect of the N.C. State Bar was indicted Monday on 35 charges ranging from corporate malfeasance to embezzlement.

George Komegay Jr., a Mount Olive attorney, was indicted by the Wayne County Grand Jury following a probe begun last September after complaints were filed by three of his former law partners including Superior Court Judge R. Michael Bruce.

Kornegay, who had been

elected president of the state bar, resigned when the probe began.

A secretary-bookkeeper with the law firm was a key witness before the grand jury.

Charges against Komegay included 15 counts of embezzlement, 15 counts of corporate malfeasance by misapplying funds, one count of false presense and four copts of corporate malfeasance by making false entries.

Bond was to be set later Monday.

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More DUI Arrests Noted

status was approved unanimously bv the Senate and sent to the House.

Sen. Joe Johnson. D-Wake. said the bill would make a 1978 federal law part of North Carolina state law and give the state jurisdiction over violations under the law Hospitals

The House tentatively approved a bill to help Washington County Hospital and Chowan Hospital collect overdue medical bills. It would allow them to seek garnish wages to collect the money if the patient fails to pav the amount within 180 days of demand.

The bill was introduced on March 29 and since then has undergone a number of transformations As manv as 17 counties tried to put themselves in the bill but were removed after they met stiff opposition during an earlier trip to the floor.

The version of the bill approved Mondav adds onlv Washington County Hospital.

Submarines

A resolution urging the federal government not to dump decommissioned nuclear submarines in the water off the ."Vorth Carolina coast cleared the House and returned to the Senate for concurrence in an amendment.

Federal officials are considering whether to dump the submarines off the coast of North Carolina or California

By The Associated Press

North Carolinas state troopers made 807 more arrests for drunken driving in the first three months of 1983 than for the same period in 1982.

Patrol officials say the 7 percent increase is due primarily to a patrol crackdown on drunken drivers.

The states. 1,037 troopers

made 11,973 arrests for drunken driving in the first quarter of 1983. In the same period last year there were 11,166 arrests for driving under the influence.

In Mecklenburg County -the states largest - drunk-en-drivirig arrests were up 37 percent. The countys 20 troopers arrested 426 motorists for driving under the influence, ri4 more than

during the same period last year.

The increases are mostly a matter of training and emphasis on DUI arrests by supervisors, said Lt. Co. Jack Cardwell of Raleigh, executive officer of the Highway Patrol.

Cardwell said as drunken-driving detection methods have advanced, the number of DUI arrests has risen.

'1'

Every day in

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

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Avenging Son Goes To Prison

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - A frustrated man who waited four years for the state to execute the killer of his parents, then set up the murder of the Death Row inmate, was sentencd to prison by a judge who said he understood the crime but could not condone it.

"People cannot take the law into their own hands, said Circuit Judge James Morris, sentencing Richard "Tony Cimo to eight years in prison.

Cimo had first denied any knowledge of the prison bombing in September that killed 24-year-old Rudolph Tyner, but pleaded guilty Monday to conspiracy to murder, threatening to kill by means of an explosive and failure to report his knowledge of a felony.

Donald Pee Wee Gaskins, a convicted mass murderer, has been sentenced to death after being found guilty in March of getting a booby-trapped intercom placed in Tyners cell at the Central Correctional Institution and detonating the explosives. Two other men face trial in the case and a third has pleaded guilty.

Friends and co-workers testified that Cimo, a 36-year-old bricklayer and father of two, became distraught after his mother and stepfather, Myrtie and Bill Moon, were shot to death at their Murrells Inlef grocery store in 1978,

' Tyner was arrested and found guilty, but the conviction was reversed because of prosecution error and a new trial was ordered, disturbing and frustrating Cimo, witnesses said. Tyner, who was again convicted and sentenced to death, also boasted about the murder in prison, according to other testimony.

Solicitor Jim Dunn of Horry County said that while Cimo tried to work within the legal system. Tyner was grinning at him during the murder trial.    *

"I loved my father and mother very much, Cimo told the judge at his sentencing He said he was able to handle the

pressure until he heard that Tyners first conviction had been reversed.

"That hurt me bad after all that hard work, he said, "We just wanted to get it over with. People in the prison told me how my mother was begging on her knees before he shot her.

"Tony Cimo is a tragic figure, said Deputy Solicitor Richard Harpootlian. Hes even more tragic now.

Before pronouncing sentence, Morris said, I do not sympathize or condone what you did, but I understand it. The wheels of justice do turn slowly. There are others such as yourself who would like to see them move more swiftly.

The slow pace ensures that no mistakes are made and that justice is served, the judge said.

We cannot have people taking the law into their own hands and exacting punishment, Morris added. "I dont think you are a hardened criminal and need to be put away for a long time. But in order to deter others, I am going to incarcerate you.

Cimo, who is free on $10,000 bond, was ordered to report to prison June 23. Charges against him of murder and accessory before the fact of murder were dropped earlier, said Harpootlian, so the judge would have some leeway in sentencing

Cimo had testified at Gaskins trial that he talked about killing Tyner but never sent Gaskin explosives and was surprised when he heard that Tyner was dead. However, much of the evidence against Gaskins came from tapes that he kept of the arrangements with Cimo.

Of the other men charged in the case, prison inmate Jack Martin, 42, pleaded guilty in April to conspiracy to commit a felony and was sentenced to three years in prison. James Donald Cooper, of Murrells Inlet, and prison inmate Gerald McCormick. 47, face charges of conspiracy to commit murder and will probably be tried later this week, said Harpootlian,

UFOs

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) - The Australian air force began a UFO investigation today following hundreds of reports of four, multicolored cylindrical shapes hovering over the town of Bendigo over the weekend.

One explanation was that the unidentified flying objects were caused by a rock band practicing with a laser lifting system, the air force said.

The air forces command intelligence officer. Flight Lt. Brett Biddington, left for Bendigo, 100 miles northwest of Melbourne, to find out whether there is a rational explanation for the UFOs.

Biddington already has interviewed several people who had reported seeing the UFOs and was eager to have a close look t some photographs taken by an amateur photographer and Bendigos radio announcer, Mike Evans.

Evanss negatives will be submitted for scientific analysis. possibly in the United States. Biddington said.

Copyright 1983 Kroger Sav-on Quantity Rights Reserved None Sold To Dealers.

House Panel Hears How Stolen Cards Are Used

WASHINGTON    (AP) -

Credit card fraud is a very lucrative business, complete with training seminars designed to increase the profits from stolen or counterfeit cards, a criminal contends.

Hidden behind    a black

hood and cape, with his voice disguised, Mr. Witness told a House Banking subcommittee how    he had

earned a living through credit card scams.

I wouldnt say I was super, but I existed, the man said Monday. "I went from hot dogs to caviar.

On a good day, he said, he was able to charge $5,000 in cash and merchandise to stolen or counterfeit credit cards.

The witness said schools were set up to educate street workers about the finer art of credit card fraud. Instruction focused on how to speak, how to dress and how to deal with sales clerks.

You wouldnt expect

someone to use a gold American Express card wearing blue jeans and sneakers, said the man, who was arrested 20-25 times and has since become a police informant.

When the course is completed, he said, the diploma is the green.

Contending that credit card fraud is a quick way to earn "easy money, he added, If you get caught, what will they do to you? Slap you on the wrist?

The witness was allowed to testify in disguise before the House Banking consumer affairs and coinage subcommittee because he feared for his life, according to the panels chairman. Rep. Frank Annunzio, D-Ill.

Security was tight in the hearing room. Observers had to pass through metal detectors before they were allowed to enter, and plainclothes and uniformed law enforcement officials

stood guard while the man testified.

The penalty for betraying a fraudulent credit card operation is death, the witness said. He said one person who was in the management level of his organization was killed after he spun away and made his own deal.... He cut somebody out of a large sum of money. He like stole from the industry.

The witness said An-nunzios estimate that $1 billion was lost last year to credit card fraud was "very conservative.

The congressman is proposing legislation that would restrict the distribution of credit card numbers

Wholesale Auto Parts Complete Lini

Auto Specialty Co.

917 W. 5th St.

758-1131

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

Each of these advertised items is required to be readtiy available lor sale in each Kroger Sav on. except as specilicaiiy noted m this ad II we do run out ot an item we will olfer you your choice ol a comparable item when available, reliectmg the same savings or a ramchecK which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised pnce withm 30 days

\.

THIS OFFER EFFECTIVE WEWDNESDAY. MAY 25 AT OUR

GREENVILLE STORE ONLY

Wi GlADll WttCOMt

Your Food Stamps Go Further At Kroger Sav on.Double Yjwr S'""*

TOMORROW Wed.May 25 at Kroger Sav-On

H. hi    ''^sy    25. we will redeem all national manufacturers cents-off coupons up to 50* for

Oj 900d On national manufacturers cents-off coupSX (FSd retailer coupons not accepted.) Customer must purchase coupon product in specified size Exoired counons

i: merchandise excluded from thiJofler Offe^doe'S nS whether manufacturer is mentioned or not. When the value of the ti> uom ih- ' r.? j limited toSt.OO. If double the value of a coupon exceeds the retail of Hm! nnk rn n!n    '!<3I price. Limit One cigarette and coffee coupon per customer

Wh^n anrt ?finw *    any particular item If you, for example have two coupons for 15* off on Miracle

Whip and intend to purchase two jars of Miracle Whip-only one of these coupons will be douhlpd You may use the second coupon but its value remains at face value.

OOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS

At Kroger Sav-on

MANUFACTURERS' COUPON'

MFG.

CENTS

OFF

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600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville

Phone 756-7031





In The Area

Inmate Sentenced For Threat

A North Carolina prison inmate received a one-year prison sentence Monday after pleading guilty to charges of threatening to kill Gov. Jim Hunt and evangelist Jim Whittington.

Michael Dean Reese, 28, pleaded guilty in Pitt County Superior. Court to two charges of threatening to kill the men and one charge of communicating a threat through a letter he had written.

Judge James D. Llewellyn consolidated the charges and sentenced Reese to one year, which will be served concurrently with a prison term he is now serving.

Pitt Students Participate In Chorus

Eight students from schools in Pitt County took part in the All-State Chorus held at UNC-Greensboro recently; Dr. Rhonda Fleming, a member of the East Carolina University School of Music faculty, directed the chorus of 500.

Those from Pitt County schools selected for the chorus were Mary Dixon and Roy Adams, both of Ayden-Grifton High Schook, and Renee Staton, Pam Little, Ronnie Perkins and Walter Johnson, all of North Pitt High School. Jeff Adkins and Kirk Smiley of Ayden-Grifton audition for the program.

Chicad Creek Funds Approved

The Chicod Creek Watershed project will receive $10,000 of federal money that will go toward completion of the project. Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C., has announced. The additional funds were made available by the recently, approved Jobs Bill.

The Chicod Creek Watershed is administered by the USDA Soil Conservation Service and is one of six SCS projects in North Craolina to receive additional Jobs Bill funding.

Greenville Student Graduates

Teresa Gave Hopper of Greenville received her B.S. degree fron the University of Alabama during recent graduation exercises.

Students Earn Academic Recognition

Three Greenville students received academic honors for the spring semester at St. Marys College. Anne Robins Hardy and LuAnne OBannon made the deans list and Kathryn Lynn Ross was on the honor roll.

Girl Scouts Go Camping

Girl Scouts and adults from the Pitt County area participated in camping at Camp Hardee last weekend. In addition to cooking their own meals, many participated in crafts, hiking, campfire safety and tent procedures.

A Scouts own service and flag ceremony were held Sunday for the over 2,50 Girl Scouts and adults who participated in the weekend.

Marshals Chosen For Lifegate

Marshals for graduation exercises at Lifegate Christian School were named recently. They are:

Tammy Duncan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Aden Duncan of Black Jack; Donna Edwards, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Edwards of Grimesland; John Glenn, son of Mrs. Anita Glenn of Vanceboro; and Billy Morris, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Van Morris Sr. of Vanceboro.

Graduation will be Friday at 8 p.m. at Lifegate Christian School in Chicod. ,

NEW HAUNT - NBC-TV will kick off its 1983-84 prime time schedule with nine new series, includmg Jennifer Slept Here, starring Ann Jillian who plays a ghost who refuses to leave her Hollyood home. Jillian was a showgirl in Broadways Sugar Babies and has had several roles in television productions. (AP Laserphoto)

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Play Day Scheduled Friday

Play Day will take place at Third Street School Friday. During the morning session, all children will participate in games. Afternoon activities will include obstacle relays, all school relays and teacher relays.

Each class will present a class activity outside. Various activities will include square dancing, folk dancing, rhythm band and May pole dance.

Parents and interested patrons are welcome to attend.

Toastmasters Meet Wednesday

Greenville Toastmaster Club No. 2595 will meet Wednesday at the Western Sizzlin Steak House on 10th Street, with dinner at 6 p.m. and the business meeting starting at 7 p.m. The educational program will be the third lesson on parliamentary procedure: privileged motions.

Regular program participants are Robert Howell as toastmaster of the evening and Steye Johnston, Pat Flanagan and Bennett Okundaye as prepared speakers. For more information about the Toastmasters development program, call Tom Houston, 756-8171.

Two Accidents Investigated

An estimated $3,850 damage rsulted from two traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Monday.

Officers said heaviest damage resulted when vehicles driven by William Allen Weathington of Winterville and Lillian Jollie Grimmer of Route 4, Tarboro, collided about 9:50 a.m. at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Dexter Street.

Investigators, who charged Ms. Grimmer with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety, estimated damage at $1,500 to the Weathington car and $1,300 to the Grimmer truck.

Cars driven by Juanita Moore Williams of Quail Hollow Trailer Park and Thelma Edwards Hardee of Route 3, Greenville, collided about 4:30 p.m. bn Evans Street, 100 feet north of the Reade Circle intersection, causing $900 damage to the Williams car and $150 damage to the Hardee car.

Building Fund Service Set

Eldress Louise Phillips will conduct a building fund service Wednesday at at Bell Chapel Holiness Church. The service will begin at 8 p.m.

Coin Machines Forced Open

Greenville police today were investigating a break-in at Hendrix-Bamhiil Co. on Memorial Drive, which bccurred early today.

Chief Glenn Cannon said three coin-operated machines inside the building were forced open and an undetewnined amount of change was removed.

Wellcome Schedules Spring Concert

Wellcome fiddle School will present its annual spring concert at 8 p.m. Thursday in the schools cafeteria James Powell is director of the sixth, seventh and eight grade bands The chorus is under the direction of Barbara Plummer.

No admission will be charged.

Kidney Unit Names Committee

An executive committee has been appointed to present a slate of officers for the newly organized Pitt County chapter of the North Carolina Kidney Foundation. Serving on the committee are the Rev. Bill Hadden, Jim Egerton, Carlos Thompson. Bob Anderson and Barbara Lee.

A movie, Bridging the Gap, concerning kidney disease, dialysis and donors, was shown by Larry Comer, executive director of the North Carolina Kidney Foundation of Chapel Hill.

The purposes of the kidney foundation are to provide research, public education, patient services, encouragement for the organ donor program and legislative awareness.

The next meeting will be held June 16 at 7:30 p.m. in the upstairs conference room in the cafeteria of PCMH.

Money Taken From Parked Car

Chief Glenn Cannon said $710 in cash was reported taken from a vehicle parked at the U.S. Post Office on Second Street about 5:30 p.m. Sunday.

Cannon said Dudley Carroll Vann of 102 Prince Road, told investigators the cash - five $100 bills, -one $50 biH and eight $20 bills - was taken from his wallet which was left in the unlocked vehicle when he went into the post office.

Electronic Service Available

After 12 months of testing, the National Society of Micro-Computer users and Groups in association with the East Carolina Micro-Computer User Group has officially inaugurated its electronic Bulletin Board service.

Initially the system will enable participants to use personal computers to send messages over telephone lines to each other and NSMUG headquarters. These messages will be stored by the computer on the receiving end for the intended party to read at his own convenience. There will be no charge for using Bulletin Board.

NSMUG will also use the system to distribute NSMUG and ECMUG news and personal computer ideas and information to its members.

NSMUG is a non-profit organization including hobbyists, businessmen, professionals. Associate memberships are also available for all firms dealing in personal computer hardware and software.

NSMUG Bulletin Board can be reached at 758-5261 24 hours a day.

Outboard Motor Stolen

An outboard m/or, valued at $3,500, was reported taken from a boat at East Carolina Marine at 3125 Bismark St. over the weekend.

Chief Glenn Cannon said the 70 horsepower motor was reported missing at 8:40 a.m. Monday

Winterville Field Ready

The new Winterville softball field will be readv for the first scheduled game June 6. members of Winterville Recreation Inc. reported at the organization's monthly meeting Monday.

Vice Chairman Karl .McLawhorn reported that the poles are up on the field and the light fixtures are now on the poles. In addition, he said the grass has been sown and is growing.

A committee was appointed to plan a grand opening ceremony for June 6.

Other business included discussion of fence prices for a backstop and the need for a purchase order system. A motion to support a youth girls softball team was also considered. WRI also extended the deadline for softball team fees to Mav 25,

For further information about Winterville Recreation Inc. contact Bruce Grav, chairman.

NAMED PRESIDENT

DURHAM - Elizabeth 'Betsy" Ray of Greenville has been named presidentelect of the North Carolina Dental Hygienists Association. Officers for the coming year were elected at the associations annual meeting held recently in Pinehurst

Street lighi outages should be reported to the Utilities Commission at 752-7166.

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8-The Daily Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C^^TuKda^^jjavMj^

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH. NC iAP (NCDAI - The trend on the .North Carolina hog market today was 50 cents to 75 cents lower Kinston 46.50. Clinton. Elizabethtown. Fayetteville, Dunn. Pink Hill. Chadbourn,, Ayden. Pine Level. Laurin-* burg and Benson 46.25, Wilson 46 25, Salisbury 44.50, Rowland unreported, Spivey's Corner 44.75. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 42 00. Favetteville ;]y.OO, Whiteville 41.00, Wallace 40.00, Spivey's Corner 39.00, Rowland unreported: Durham 40.00.

Poultrv

RALEIGH, VC. (AP) (NCDAi - The North Carolina f o b. dock quoted price on broilers for this week's trading was 45.00 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2L' to 3 pound birds. Final weighted average price was 45.11 cents f o b dock or equivalent The market tone for next week's trading in very firm and the live supply is moderate, instances light, for a very good demand Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina tuesday was 1,845,000, compared to 1.779.000 last Tuesday.

Hens

RALEIGH. N.C lAP) I NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was steady. Supplies adequate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for .Monday and Tuesday slaughter was 13 cents.

NEW YORK i.AP) - Stock prices climbed across a wide front in heavy morning trading today as the market extended its. late rally of the previous session.

Five stocks rose for each two falling on the. New York Stock Exchange, with auto, retail, energy, drug and financial issues pacing the advance

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which rose 10..54 points Monday after the late rally erased an early retreat, gained another 7.7*4 to 1,208.30 after two hours of trading today.

Big Board* volume swelled to 45 21 million shares at noon EDT compared with 34 11 million at that hour Monday.

NYSE-listed gainers today-included General Motors \ to 67-C, Woolworth ^ to 32*4. Atlantic Richfield 1 to 48 and First Charter Financial 1 to 29.

Deere was off ^4 to 36^4, however, after posting an S11.3 million loss for its fiscal second quarter compared w ith profit a year earlier.

Natomas, subject of a takeover bid by Diamond Shamrock, led the NYSE's active list and was off 4 to

The NYSE composite index rose 0.48 to 94.87.

At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 3.18 to 455.28.

SKW YORK    .Mi<ida>    stocks

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)s    6(K

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PACTOLUS RECEIVES STATE AWARD ... Pactolus Elementary School received a first-place state award for its work in the School Beautification Project this spring. Above, at the presentation of the award in Raleigh, were (left to ri^t) Dr. Melvin Goode, director of

the division of cultural arts, N.C. Department of Public Instruction; Mrs. Dank Moore, executive director of Keep N.C. Beautiful; Beth Ward, principal of Pactolus School, and Jerome Melton, deputy state superintendent of the N.C. Department of Public Instruction.

Hearing...

29'4    29S,

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Following are selected market quotations Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power & Light

Collins & Aikman

Connor

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

Fieldcrest

Halteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

Lowe's

McDonald's

.McGraw

Piedmont

Pi22a Inn

PiG

TRW Inc LnitedTel Virginia Electnc Wachovia

OVER THE COI NTER

Aviation

Branch

Little .Mint

Planters Bank

11 a m stock

4<P4

51,

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31'4

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23'

41',

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34S.

35S,

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35',

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28'4

64,

45',

35

13\

55S,

72',

21s

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41'-4

27',-28 22'4-22x4 1-S. 17-17',

I Continued from Page l) city could raise half a million dollars by increasing the tax rate by six cents or collecting the refuse fee.

Howard warned the board not to let capital improvements go down the drain, saying equipment has to be kept up. He added, Do what you have to do to meet the revenue needs.

Richard Duncan of East Rock Springs Road said that possibly a combination of user fees and taxes would provide the needed funds and he cited the possibility of charging a fee for rescue services. Duncan also said he would prefer to see a charge for actual users of recreational facilities, noting that some residents use them more than others and he would rather see fees raised on things people are using.

Duncan was one of the few who indicated he would go along with frontyard collection services. He acknowledged that the method would not be as pretty but maybe we cant afford the beauty of having backyard serv-ice.

Martin said a fifth of the citys budget or about 10 cents out of the 49 cents.tx rate is tied up in parks and recreation. He recalled that Mrs. Meeks said only $32,000 is generated by the local recreation programs. Martin

asked if anyone had given any thought to scaling down the programs to consume less of the local funding.

Rufus Keel said he was against all taxes but he was more opposed to a back door tax referred to as an assessment. He said the city provides a good service, "but be brave about it and call it a tax. Keel said he also opposed the $100,000 subsidy for the local transit system (GREAT), saying the only thing great about it is the cost

Jerry Cox of Crestline Boulevard said the establishment of a user fee would set a dangerous precedent and would lead to fees on other intangibles. He said if the collection assessment is considered a user fee, he would want to choose not to use. If it is a tax. he said he would want to take it off his tax returns.

R.S. Pollard Jr. said that each time city officials visit other towns to see their situations, you (iome back and tax us to death. Pollard said the situation is getting out of hand and he cited 12 break-ins at Pollards Store last year. He said the county sheriffs department is excellent but the police department is gone.

Mrs. Louise Duncan said she had front yard collection service in Greensboro.and she said that while it does not

Mansion To Be Krishna Shrine

Prices...

DETROIT (AP) - A great-grandson of Henry Ford and the daughter of the late United Auto Workers President Walter Reuther have pooled their fortunes to convert an auto tycoons mansion into a Hare Krishna Society museum.

'1 gave my whole inheritance to the society, Elisabeth Luise Reuther said -Monday, 1 want to give Krishna consciousness to people,

Ms. Reuther and Alfred' Brush Ford of San Francisco. a great-grandson of the Ford Motor Co. founder, spent $2.5 million to convert the 40-room mansion, which is to open Wednesday as a museum.

The 56-year-old mansion formerly was owned by the late Lawrence Fisher, founder of Fisher Body Co. and Cadillac Motors, said Ford.

Ms. Reuther, 36, who is married to another member of the Krishna group, said she and the 32-year-old Ford, whose Krishna name is Ambarish Das, pooled their money to buy the estate in 1975 and donated it to the Hare Krishna movement.

(Continued from Pagel) have been firming up in recent months, however, and that showed in last months increases for gasoline and natural gas, up 1.8 percent. Fuel oil price fell 2.7 percent, almost half the record 5.2 percent drop of March.

The department reported these other, seasonally adjusted, details of last months price activity:

-Besides the gains posted for fresh fruits and vegetables. prices also rose for beef, up 2.1 percent after declines in the preceding four months. Pork and poultry prices fell, but egg prices were up. Alcholic beverage prices rose 0.4 percent, as did the costs of meals at restaurants.

-Transportation costs, which include gasoline prices, surged upward 1.1 percent, the first increase in that overall category since October. Automobile finance charges fell 2.8 percent, their

ninth monthJy drop in a row. New car prices declined O.l percent while used car prices rose 0.2 percent.

-Clothing prices rose 0.2 percent. ^

-Entertainment costs fell 0.1 percent, the first decline since April 1977.

Largely responsible for the 0.5 percent gain In housing costs overall was a sharp 0.8 percent increase in the departments calculation of homeownership costs.

In January, the department changed the way it measures homeownership costs by calculating how much homeowners would charge if they rented their homes.

The old calculation, which took into account home prices and mortgage rates rather than a rental equivalence calculation, had been criticized as over-emphasizing swings in those two areas.

Had the old calculation been used, the overall index would have risen 0.5 percent last month.

Jurors

Chosen

Jury selection began late' this morning in the trial of former Deputy Sheriff Billy Braswell,' who is charged with murdering his wife.

Braswells wife was found shot on Sept. 27 near Farmville. Braswell was found later shot in the chest at his home.

Judge James D. Llewellyn is presiding over the trial. Attorneys for Braswell are Milton Williamson, Cherry Stokes and Tom Greer.

Don Stevens of the attorney generals office and District Attorney Tom Haigwood are prosecuting the case.

Teens

(Continued from Pagel)

look as nice, it Is not that much trouble.

Cox said that if the council recommended that the city go to frontyard pick-up, 1 think we would have to leave town.

Charles King, a former mayor here, said he was satisfied with the way the service is provided here now, He said the garbage pick-up is the finest thing in town,

Edith W'ebber also commended the city for its garbage and trash collection services.

Jim Scott, representing Peoples Baptist Temple, expressed opposition to any; increase in charges but hie asked that if t is implemented, non-profit organizations be exempt.

A C. Jackson of Tryon Drive said he had seen the garbage collection method shift from front to back yards over the years. He said he is opposed to any collection charge, contending it would start at $3 but probably go up next year.

Albert Smith, who manages Oakmont Square Apartments, said he had been at Oakmont for 13 years and all of a sudden we have to bear this burden. Mrs. Meeks assured Smith that the owners of the complex would not be charged for the dumpsters it now has since it is a residential development. She said the residents of each apartment who pay individual utility bills would be assessed the collection fee, not the Oakmont Square owners.

Rhea Markello, president of the League of Women Voters of Gteenville-Pitt County, urged the council to give serious study and consideration to the recommendations contained in the report submitted to the city by the mayors advisory committee in 1981 before making a final decision on ways to obtain additional revenue.

Durward Harris Jr. of Harris Supermarkets cited the annual costs the grocery firm pays for its dumpsters and said that if residents are allowed to take care of their own garbage disposal, the Harris containers will be filled even more rapidly than they are now. Harris said his firm has a lot of unsolicited help in filling up the dumpsters.

Cox noted that the council has not discussed allowing citizens to handle their own garbage in lieu of paying a fee. He said it was only one possibility that could be discussed.

that 12- to 15-year-olds are in the high-risk group for getting into trouble with the law. She pointed out that it takes $12,000 to $18,000 to keep a child in a group home; $22,000 to keep him or her in a regular juvenile detention center, and $31,000 to keep a child in the most restrictive juvenile detention center, such as the one at Butner. She said her office stands ready to work with the community to prevent this kind of waste of persons and funds.

Booze is still our biggest drug problem, Dr. Jack tyilson, director of emergency services at Pitt County Memorial Hospital, told the group. He also addressed teen-age pregnancy and said that use of ^cohol, smoking and eating junk food greaUy endanger teen-age mothers and their babies.

Jesse Harris, Greenville Community Relations officer, talked about the financial difficulties encountered by teen-agers who start families. He pointed out that a monthly AFDC payment for a woman with one child is $165 and the cost of renting the average dump in which to live in Glwnville is $150.

Bill Byrd, professor of community health in the ECU School of Allied Hatlh and Social Work, said he believes the schools, the church, families, and the government have 'done an excellent job of evading reality, and thus have been irresponsible in dealing with the problems of teen-agers. He called on the ^up to take a detached realistic look at what needs to be done to assist teeangers in becoming responsible citizens.

Lets Talk, Patricia Byrd said, is to be a campaign for responsible parent-hoods to be conducted during October. It will be planned throughout the summer, with input from tlie community welcome. She said that the planning is made possible by a seed grant from the Governors Advocacy Council for Children and Youth. A goal of Lets Talk, she said is to raise community awareness of some of the causes and consequences of adolescent problems and needs, to enhance parent-child communication, and to secure a mandate and direction from the community about where energy and resources to address families needs should go.

Those wishing more information about the project may write to Lets Talk, Pitt County Health Department, 1825 W. Sixth St., Greenville, or call Mrs. Byrd, Jo Rogerson or Donna Weeks at the Health Department, 752-4141.

For information on the services provided by the City Public Works Department, call 752-4137

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Obituaries

Edwards

GRIFTON - Mrs. Blanche Elizabeth Edwards, 77, of Route 3, Ayden, died Monday at Lenoir County Hospital in Kinston. The funeral service will be conducted at 3 p.m Wednesday in the Grifton Free Will Baptist Church by the Rev. James Pittman and the Rev. Earl Hannah. Burial will be in Juniper Chapel FWB Church Cemetery near Vanceboro.

Mrs. Edwards was a native and life-long resident of Grifton. She was a mamber of the Grifton FWB Church.

Surviving are a son, Marvin Wayne Edwards of Kinston; four daughters, Mrs. Leroy Mitchell of the home, Mrs. James Stroud of La Grange, Mrs. Herman Allcox of Kinston and Mrs. Michael Smart of Taylor. Mich.; a sister, Mrs. Annie Bowen of Grifton; 17 grandchildren and 14 greatgrandchildren.

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

Gurganus 4 Survivors for Mr.James E. Gurganus, whose funeral will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel, include his step-grandmother, Mrs Penny Crawford of Greenville.

Ipock

VANCEBORO - Mr. Jodie J. Ipock, 50, of Route 2. Vanceboro, died Monday night in Craven County Hospital in New Bern. The funeral service will be conducted at 3 p.m Wednesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel in Vanceboro by the Rev. Walter Sutton. Burial will be in the Willis Family Cemetery near Vanceboro.

xMr. Ipock, a native of Craven County, spent most of his life in the Emul community. He was a member of Macedonia Free Will Baptist Church and served in the United States Air Force during the Korean war.

He is survived by his wife. Mrs. Barbara Miller Ipock; a son, Jeffrey Ipock of Emul; a daughter, Mrs. Lisa I. Gaskins of Vanceboro; his mother, Mrs. Florence Mayo Brown of Vanceboro; a lister, Mrs. Sandra I. Caton of Vanceboro, and one grandchild.    ^

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

McLawhom Mrs. Sarah Melissa McLawhom, 102, died Monday night. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 3 p.m. at Farmer Funeral Chapel in Ayden by the Rev. David Ric! and the Rev. C,H. Overman. Burial will follow in the Ayden Cemetery.

Film Scheduled

A film entitled Family Affairs will be shown at the Wendesday dinner meeting of the Pitt County Council on the Status of Women.

Starting at 5 p.m., the meeting will be held at the Three Steers Restaurant. Helen Simpson, regional coordinator, N.C. Council on

the Status of Women, will ihfc

give mformation concerning the film.

The meeting is open to interested persons.

Mrs. McLawhom was the oldest member of Ayden FWB Church.

Surviving are one so.i, Roy H. McLawhom of Yorktown, Va.; one daughter, Mrs. Ethel Mae Cuthrell of Greenville; 12 grandchildren; 28 greatgrandchildren and seven great-great-grandchildren.

The family will be at Farmer Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. today.

Snyder

Mrs. Helen Achenbach Snyder. 81. of 311 S. Meade St. died Monday at her home. The funeral service will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in the W'ilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev Martin Armstrong. Burial will be held later ui Plainfield Township Cemetery near Wingap, Pa.

Mrs. Snyder, a native of Plainfield Township in Pennsylvania, received her A.B. degree from Ursinus College in Collegeville, Pa. In 1947 she moved to Greenville where she was associated with East Carolina University as a dormitory counselor at Cotten Hall until her retirement in 1965.

In 1952 she received her -M.A degree in admihistra-tion from ECU. She was a member of Janis Memorial United Methodist Church, the Business and Professional Women Club, the Pilot Club, the Wesley Service Guild and the Woman's Club in Greenville

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

Whitehurst

The name of a surviving stepdaughter in the Dewey Whitehurst Sr. obituary Sunday should have been Ms. Betty Jean Smith rather ttian Ms. Betty Jean Whitehurst.

WUliams

Mr. Jerry Webster Williams of 226 E. 87th St., Brooklyn. N Y,, formerly of the Piney Grove and Epworth communities of Craven County, died Thursday at King County Hospital in Brooklyn,

His funeral service will be conducted Thursday at 3 p.m. in Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church on Route 1. Grifton, by Elder E.L Gamer. Interment will be in the church cemetery.

Mr. Williams is survived by his parents, William Arthur Williams and Mrs. Pearlie Mae Williams, both of Brooklyn; two brothers. Thurmond Williams of Broklyn and William A. Williams Jr. of Westbury, N.Y., and his maternal grandparents; S.T. Maye and Mrs. Mary L. Chapman Maye of Epworth.

The family will receive friends at the Norcott and Company Funeral Home Chapel in Ayden Wednesday fVom 8 to 9 p.m. The family will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S T. Maye In Epworth. .

Woods

Roosevelt Woods of Route 2, Farmville, died Sunday in the Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Arrangements are being handled by Hamilton Funeral Chapel in Wilson.

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Sports 'PHE DAILY REFLECTOR ClassifiedTUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 24, 1983

He's Beaten Them All

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Fernando Valenzuela follows through with a pitch during his four-hit, 2-0 shutout over the Phillies at Veterans

Stadium in Philadelphia Monday' Valenzuela had beaten every National League team except the Phils unt last night. His record for the season is now 5-2.

Jabbar Upset With Early Start To Playoff Finals

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Kareem Abdul Jabbar said he wasnt making any excuses, but he wants the National Basketball Association to give the teams in the championship finals at least one day to prepare for the series opener.

I dont think thats unreasonable. said the 7-foot-2 center of the defending champion Los Angeles Lakers who trail the Philadelphia 76ers 1-0 in their best-of-seven title series.

Philadelphia won the opener Sunday, 113-107, against a Laker team that had played three games in four days and had no time to physically or mentally prepare for the Sixers.

I think we earned a chance to prepare to be our best. said the 36-year-old center, the second oldest player in the league.

The Lakers, who meet the 76ers Thursday in Game Two, obviously were a tired team in the fourth quarter when they usually are at their best.

This is the world championship (of basketball). Its supposed to be basketball at it best. The teams should have a chance to prepare. This way is disappointing, Abdul-Jabbar - said Monday.

He was asked if the NBA Players Association should take steps to see that the system is changed.

Obviously its out of our control, he replied.

"Television controls. Im very happy were on the network. Im glad they feel we deserve that type of exposure. But it should allow us to be our best, thats all Im saying.

Abdul-Jabbar made it clear that he wasnt trying to detract from the 76er victory. He said the opener was a great game, but resents it being manipulated for television purposes.

The game was played prematurely in terms of the day. It wasnt the best we could provide in terms of effort. It doesnt happen in the World Series, Super Bowl or in hockey," he said. We shouldnt be put in that posi-tioneither.

I dont think anybody objectively can look at this and argue that the game wasnt played too early.

Los Angeles Coach Pat Riley agreed with his center.

I think we should try and develop a system, some policy, that would reduce" any undue pressure on teams that get to the finals. 1 think theyll do that. Its better, for the game.    I

Riley predicted fans would see an obviously fresher team Thursday.

Both psychologically and physically, well be a different team. Well do things a little better. We didnt execute our half-court pressure, didnt contain the ball very well.

Neither team practiced Monday. Theyll be back on the court today. Abdul-Jabbars opponent at center, Moses Malone, predicted a very tough series.

Three more (victories) seem a long way off, said the 6-10 Malone. But if we can win Thursday, it might be easy.

Guard Mo Cheeks said of the 76ers, WTiat we have now is confidence to go with our desire to win the title. But all it means is that were one up. There wont be an easy game in this series.

Rockets Slow Negotiations

HOUSTON (AP) - The Houston Rockets are not in a hipry to conclude negotiations with prospective head coach Tom Heinsohn, the teams president and general manager says.

The door is still open but there is no rush, Ray Patterson said Monday after talks with Heinsohns attorney appeared mired. Id like to have it done before the draft (June 28) but its not critical

Sports Colwdor

Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice

Todays Sports Golf

State Tournament at Chapel Hill Baseball Rose at Gamer (8 p.m.)

Princeton at Jamesville (8 p.m.) Ayden-Grifton at Havelock PrepLea^

Hendrix & Dail vs. Garris-Evans Shop-Eze Foodland vs. First State Bank

LitUe League Moose vs. Pepsi-Cola Optimists vs. Union Carbide Softball

Gates County at Jamesville (5

p.m.)

Williamston at North Eddecombe (4:30p.m.)

Church League Mt Pleasant vs. First Christian First Presbyterian vs. Black Jack

First Pentecostal vs. MaranaUia Church of God vs. Oakmont Grace vs. Arlington Street Trinity vs. St . James Unity vs. Immanuel Faith vs. Jarvis

Co-Ed League BiUs Goodies vs. Ervin's Bonds vs. Western Siizlin Wednesdays SpMta ,

SoftbaU Womens League PTA vs. Fred Webb Burroughs-Wellcome vs. Wachovia Players Retreat vs. Copper Ket-Ue

Prep Shirt vs. Pitt Memorial Industrial League Cox Armature vs. East Carolina

#2

Public Works vs. GUCO TRW vs. Vermont-Aiherican Empire Brushes 2 vs. Burroughs-Wellcome 11 WNCT

#2

Empire Brushes #1 vs. Pitt Memorial Coca-Cola vs. CIS Grady-White vs. Belvoir City Lea^

'Airborne vs. J.A.s Whittington vs. PTA Liberty vs. Subway Pantana Bobs vs Eggs

BaaebaU

Little Lean

4CT vs. Burroughs-Wellcome

at this point.

Heinsohn said he believes something can be worked out.

If two parties are willing to be flexible, there are a lot of areas that can be discussed, he said. So far, I havent gotten involved but now it looks as though maybe I should.

Heinsohn, who coached the Boston Celtics to two world championships, turned down a contract that would have paid him $250,000 a year. Patterson and Heinsohns attorney, Phil McLaughlin, have met without reaching an agreement.

Heinsohn is working with the Mutual Radio Network during its broadcast of the National Basketball Association playoffs. He lives in Boston, where he is involved in real estate, insurance and public relations ventures.

I want the job, I really do, Heinsohn said. But they have got to understand the position that I am in. They made me an offer that is attractive and. Im sure, would probably get any coach in the NBA ri^t now to jump.

Price Is Right For Reds

The Associated Press

For the Cincinnati Reds, the Price is right - again.

Cincinnati left-hander Joe Price, thrust into the starting rotation by early-season injuries, then sidelined May 1 with an elbow injury, returned to action for the first time in three weeks Monday night and went right at the St. Louis batters, throwing hard for six innings to help the Reds edge the sagging Cardinals 2-1.

Elsewhere in the National League it was New York 4, San Francisco 3; Montreal 3, San Diego l; Atlanta 6, Pittsburgh 3; Los Angeles 2. Philadelphia 0, and Houston 3, Chicago 2.

Three weeks off is a long time, Price said. I went out there with no thought of being tentative. I had to find out if 1 could throw hard from the first pitch.

The Cards, dropping their fourth in a row, got only one run on three hits off Price when George Hendrick walked and came around on second-inning smgles by Lonnie Smith andOzzie$mith.

I was' lucky, Price insisted.

And Joaquin Andujar was unlucky. He worked seven innings a.nd gave up only three hits but one was a two-run double in the sixth inning by Wayne Krenchicki.

When you are going bad, everything falls apart, said Andujar, who has been on the losing end in six of his last seven decisions.

Mets4, Giants 3 New York Manager George

Bamberger, who used to count on Neil Allen as his stopper before Allen fell apart and wound up in the starting rotation, has a new saver in Jesse Orosco.

The Mets reliever put two men aboard with nobody out in the ninth inning, then got the next three batters to preserve the Mets' victory, built on George Foster's fourth-inning homer and decisive eighth-inning sacrifice fly.

In his last 12 appearances, 26 innings worth, Orosco has allowed only one run. Overall, his eamed-run average is 0.67 over 27 innings covering 14 appearances.

"Either he does the job or he doesnt, Bamberger said, explaining why he stayed with Orosco when things looked grim. Jesse has an excellent arm and throws hard. 1 was going with him all the way ... Hes not just good. Hes outstanding!

Expos 3, Padres 1

With the score tied in the eighth inning. Gary Carter beat out a one-out infield single off Dave Dravecky. It was Montreals eighth hit and it prompted San Diego Manager Dick Williams to summon Luis DeLeon from the bullpen.

Tim Wallach looked at DeLeons first pitch, then sent the second one into the left-field seats for his fifth home run of the season. Carter singled heme the Expos other run.

Im happy for Timmy more than anything. said^ Carter. He needed something'

like that because he's been struggling lately.

Braves 6, Pirates 3

Bob Homer and Claudell Washington each drove in two runs and Pete Falcone, with six innings of six-hit pitching, was Atlantas winner in his first start of the season. He allowed solo home runs by Steve Nicosia and Bill Madlock.

The Braves got a seconds inning run off Rick Rhoden on a single by Bruce Benedict and two in the third, Brett Butler, Bob Murphy and Horner each hitting a double in the burst. Washington hit a

two-run triple in the sixth and scored on Homers single.

Dodgers 2, Phillies 0 Fernando Valenzuela checked the Phillies on four, hits and Steve Sax provided the Dodgers with some punch, scoring one run and driving in the other one.

Valenzuela, who struck out seven batters, now has beaten every NL team in his brief ' career in the majors.

Sax tripled and scored on Ken Landreauxs grounder in the first inning and hit an RBI singleTrnhe ninth after Steve Yeager singled and Bill Russell bunted him to second.

Astros 3, Cubs 2

Ray Knight's two-run. six-th-inning double propelled Houston past the Cubs, who managed only four hits off Joe Niekro and two relievers Leon Durham homered off Niekro in the seventh and Jody Davis homered off Frank LaC'orte in the eighth before Frank DiPino nailed down the victory In the decisive sixth, the .Astros loaded the bases with two away on a triple by Dickie Thon and two walks before Knight ripped a' liner off shortstop Larr\ Bowa's glove for two runs

Little Time Allowed To Enjoy 23-20 Victory

Controversy In Rose Scoring

CHAPEL HILL - A controversy developed around the score of a Rose High School golfer in the first round of the North Carolina State High School Golf Tournament yesterday, being played at the Finley Golf Course in Chapel Hill.

The controversy developed when Jordy Smith of Rose ruled a ball as unplayable and took a drop with a penalty stroke on the fifth hole at Finley. Another golfer in the foursome misunderstood Smith as saying the ball was lost, and since he did not return to the tee to rehit, said Smith should have been disqualified from the tournament. An Elkin golfer, playing in the same foursome, was hit with disqualification when he declared a lost ball and hit from the line of flight rather than the tee, explaining that rule had been usd in his conference play all year.

At the time when the problem was brought up in the clubhouse. Smith had

already left the course and it was late last night before it was resolved and the misunderstanding worked out.

Rose finished the day with a 344 score, standing 19th in the team standings.

Craig Davies led Rose's scoring with a 77, while John Jordan had an 83, Chris Evans had an 86, and Smith had a 98.

The tournament winds . up today.

' AP I .Monday 's opening-round scores in t)ie N C HigiiScheoi Athletic Associa tion boys golf ctiampionship being played at Uie par-72. 6.5fc-yard Finley dolf Course at the Lniversitv of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Francis Ciucevich, Char Cath    39-33- 72

Brian McDaniel, Hend Vance    36 36 - 72

Mike Taylor, Ashbrook    37 36 - 73

Joe Gay, Lee Co    36-37 - 73

Russell Muir. E Henderson    35-38 - 73

Mark Jones, HP Andrews    36-37- 73

Ricky Nichols. Reldsville    40-34-74

Danny Hockaday, Lee Co    37 37 -74

John Hall. Elkin    37 37 -74

David Hull. Jacksonville    39-35- 74

Marvin .Mangum. Jacksonville    37-37 - 74

John BenrucT Jacksonville    37-37 - 74

Greg Parker, McDowell County    38-37- 75

Lee Porter, G'boro Page    40-35- 75

Team Scores

Jacksonville 301, Lee County 309. Fay Terry Sanford 312, Gastonia Ashbrook 316, Reidsville 316. South Mecklenburg 316, Northern Durham 319, Charlotte Catholic 319, Mooresville 320. Hit Point Andrews 320, Davie County 323, Raleigh Millbrook 323. W S Reynolds 323. W Alamance 323, Burlington Williams 324, Hendersonvdle 331. .Apex 332, .Alexander Central 341, Greenville Rose 344, Swan nanoa Owen 346, Havelock 359

Has No Funds To Purchase Raiders

PNT1.AC, Mich. (.AP) -You cant blame the Birmingham Stallions for feeling slightly cheated despite a five-game winning streak.

Scott ' Norwood's 46-yard field goal at 4:32 of overtime Monday night boosted the Stallions to a 23-20 victory over Michigan and left both teams tied with 7-5 records in the United States Football Leagues Central Division, one game behind the Chicago Blitz)

The problem is, the Stallions had to be right back out on the practice field today, getting ready for a game Friday night with the Denver Gold.

Weve got to wake up tomorrow and think about Denver right away, said quarterback Bobby Lane, who tossed a pair of second-quarter'touchdown passes to stake the Stallions to a 17-7 halftime lead. "But 1 think weve laid down a solid base for Denver with this game. This is the chance you wait for and we made the most of it. Birmingham Coach RoUie Dotsch said the dramatic victory seemed to bring his team together.

"Our players believe now, Dotsch said. We may or may not get to the playoffs this year, but were laying down an awfully good foundation. The Panthers John Williamss second 1-yard fourth-quarter touchdown, with 2:52 remaining, could have given Michigan the game, but Birminghams Herb Spencer got a hand on Novo Bojovics extra-point kick and knocked it wide.

The defeat snapped the Panther victory string at six.

A crowd of 20,042 was on hand for the game in the 80,000-seat Silverdome far fewer than the 32,862 who witnessed last weeks victory over the New Jersey Generals. but slightly ahead of the Panthers average of 19,582 attendance.

The Stallions almost won on a freak play moments before the end of regulation. Michigans Fred Logan intercepted a pass intended for Ron Frederick on the Birmingham 1-yard line, rolled into the end zone and lost the ball attempting to spike it. Darryl Mason fell on the ball and one official

Lions vs. Sportsworld First Federal vs. Carroll & Associates

Babe RuUi League Wachovia Bank vs. Coca-Cola Tennis

State Tournament at Chapel Hill

But in terms of my current Sunnyside financial situation, the contract they offered me would meim that I would be coming to m^uston just for the pure joy of coaching Ralph Sampson and to develop ulcers. Its not offering me a dollar more than Im making right now.

SALINAS, Calif. (AP) -Oakland has no funds to acquire the Raiders through eminent domain and filed suit merely to force the National Football League team back to the bargaining table, ati attorney says.

We are dealing here with the question of bad faith, Raiders attorney Moses Lasky said Monday. We are submitting to the court a contention that this suit was never bought with the real purpose of acquiring the team.

It was brought to bring the Raiders back to the bargaining table without any bargaining power.

Oaklands suit, being tried before Monterey Superior Court Judge Nat Agliano, seeks to acquire the team through eminent domain condemnation, the same process a city typically would use to acquire land for parks and highways.

'The Raiders moved to Los Angeles last season after a federal ji^ decided an NFL rule barring franchise shifts violated anti trust laws.

Oakland vice-mayor Rich

ard L. Spees, who testified last week that the city was trying to improve its image, told the court that the city could find the funds to acquire the team.

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Awkward Moment

Birmingham Stallions quarterback Bob Lane works loose from Michigan Panthers John Corkers tackle in the second quarter of Monday ^ nights USFL game at the Pontiac Silverdome. Up Laserphoto)

signaled a Birmingham touchdown, but after a long discussion, the ball was given to Michigan on the 1 and the Panthers ran out the clock

Leading 20-14, the Stallions attempted a 49-yar.d field goal with 7:24 remaming in the fourth quarter but Norwoods boot fell short.

The Panthers then drove 68 yards in nine plays, capped by Williamssecond TD.

In the second quarter. Lane tossed a l-yarcl touchdown strike to Steve Stephens and also had a 15-yard TD flip to Greg .Anderson with 27 seconds remaining in the first half.

Norwood booted a 23-yard field goal in the second

quarter and was good on a 25-yard shot in the third period.

The Panthers lone first-half score came on an 81-yard bomb from Bobby Hebert to -Anthony Carter which the fleet wide receiver gathered in at the 25 after it had been tipped by two Birmingham defenders.

Williams first TD for the Panthers on a 1-yard plunge on the first play of the fourth quarter.

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Twins Get A Complete Game

Held Back

Lloyd Moseby of the Toronto Blue Jays is held back by home plate umpire Tim McClelland and Detroit Tigers Lance Parrish after he

started to head towards the pitchers mound Monday, Mosebys movement caused both benches to erupt onto the field, but no fights occurred. (AP Laserphote)

Bedard Avoids Illusion Of Thinking He's Safe

1NDIAN,\P0L1S (.AP) -Patrick Bedard, at 41 the oldest of six rookies in Sundays Indianapolis 500, learned a long time ago to avoid what he calls a race drivers greatest illusion -that bad things happen only to the other guy.

All of us, sometime, get

our first glimpse of mortality," says Bedard, who will start his first Indy race from the middle of the sixth row. "I know Im not made of iron and steel.

"I. first had that realization walking across the street in Newort Beach, Calif., in 1972. 1 was hit by a car. That

Youth Baseball

Little Leogue

Kiwanis...........5

Sportsworld 4

The Kiwanis won their third straight North State Little League game yesterday, nipping Sportsworld. 5-4, despite a one-hitter by two Sportsworld pitchers.

Sportsworld grabbed the initial lead with two in the top of the first and added a third run in the third. The Kiwanis came up with two in the fourth and then scored two more in the fifth to take a 4-3 lead. Sportsworld came back with one in the sixth to tie it up.

Then, in the seventh, the Kiwanis got the winning run. Jamie Hale walked and moved to third on two wild pitches. Pat Joyner also walked and stole second. John Chambliss grounded to the infield and the relay home to get Hale was too late as he scored the game-ending run.

Tye Pickling led the Sportsworld hitting with two, while Hale had the only hit for the Kiwanis.

Exchange.........8

Wellcome.........7

The Exchange held off Wellcome, 8-7, to win its second game in a row yesterday in the Tar Heel Little League

The win halted a three-game winning streak by the Wellcome club.

Wellcome took the lead with two runs in the top of the first, while Exchange came back with one in the bottom of the inning. Wellcome added four in the third, only to see Exchange also come up with four to remain one run behind. Maurice Brittle cracked a three-run homer to account for all but one of those Exchange runs.

Wellcome added its seventh run in the top of the fourth, moving into a 7-5 edge.

But the Exchange came back with three in the bottom of the inning to take the lead for good. With one down, Jeiinie Stoneham singled and moved up on an error and a wild pitch. She scored on Chris Blands single. Bland moved to third on two wild pitches and came in on Daryl Moores two-out double. Moore then stole third and scored on a passed ball with what proved the difference.

Moore led the Exchange hitting with three, while Bland had two. Judd Grumpier and Chris Brown each had two for Wellcome.

Bobe Ruth Leogue

Everette's 10

Planters Bank......8

Pitcher Curtis Perkins struck out 10 and gave up just

three hits, while teammates Tim West and Axel Smith tripled in the seventh to propel Everettes Pest Control to a 10-8 victory over Planters Bank in Babe Ruth League baseball action Monday at Guy Smith Stadium.

Robert Joyner led Everettes with a pair of singles in three,at bats and scored three runs, while Robbie Ehrmann and George Saad went 2-5. Chris Stokes had two of the Planters hits.

Planters scored a pair of runs to take the lead in the sixth when Perkins attempted to pick off Stokes at third. Stokes and Tom Taylor , crossed the plate for an 8-7 advantage.

But in the top of the seventh, Robert Joyner led off with a walk and West followed with a triple to knot the score. Smith drove in Joyner with his triple and scored on a throwing error.

Planters mounted a 2-0 lead with runs in the first and third innings. Everettes batted around in the fourth to take a 4-2 advantage, but Planters retaliated with four in the bottom half of the frame.

Everettes set the score at 7-6 with three more in the fifth.

S.P. Bambino _

Hornets...........6

Red & White 2

GRIFTON - The Chicod Hornets gained a 6-2 victory over Grifton Red & White in a Southern Pitt Bambino League game last night.

Gray Mills was the winning pitcher, while Eric Bradley had a double and Eric Swinson had a triple for the Hornets.

Paul Walker had two hits to lead Red & White.

Pitt Co.Bobe Ruth

Chicod...........12

Winterville 11

HOLLYWOOD - Randy Mills executed the suicide squeeze with the bases loaded in the eighth to give Chicod a 12-11 win over Winterville Monday in Pitt County Babe Ruth League baseball.

Randy Mills led Chicod with three singles in as many at bats, while Ken Hadnott slapped a pair of singles. Fred Bryant and Jody Vines slapped a pair of singles each for Winterville.

Mike Mills led off the extra inning for Chicod with a base on balls, and Hadnott reached first on an error. After Bryan Evans walked to load the bases, Steve Mills grounded into a fielders choic to nail Mike Mills coming home.

Randy Mills followed by driving in the winning run.

Steve Mills came on to pitch in the eighth and picked up the win for Chicod.

reordered my priorities. It got rid of the childish thought that nothing bad will ever happen.

"Secondly, when something like that happens, you realize whats important in life. Auto racing is a whole lot more important than I thought it was, said Bedard, who started out as a writer and is still a columnist and editor-at-large for Car & Driver magazine.

He began racing sports cars in 1972, moved into the Formula Ford series in 1978 and first came to Indianapolis in 1981. He did not make a qualification attempt that year or in 1982, but he put his March-Cosworth racer into Sundays 33-car starting field with a four-lap qualification average of 195.941 mph last Saturday.

Bedard, who lives in New York, is 20 years older than the youngest rookie, A1 Unser Jr.

"1 know the end will come somewhere along the line, Bedard said of the constant danger in racing. But, as they say, you can get hit by a truck while youre crossing the street; 1 did get hit by a car. But to avoid the things in life you really want to do is foolish. Im not going to worry about it.

For the record, Bedard has never been injured in a race car.

Besides Bedard and Unser, 21, the son of three-time winner A1 Unser, the other rookies in Sundays race are Teo Fabi, 27, the record-setting pole-position starter; Steve Chassey, 38; Chris Kneifel, 22; and Derek Daly, 30.

The oldest rookie winner -and the most recent of six rookies who have won at Indianapolis - was Graham Hill, who was 37 when he won the race in 1966. The youngest rookie winner was Frank Lockhart, who was 24 when he won in 1926.

Connors Con Still Win 'Em

PARIS (AP) - Jimmy Connors, who turns 31 in September, says he is still young enough to win the French Open tennis title on the slow clay courts of Roland Garros stadium.

Im in good shape, Connors'said after his first-round victory Monday, the opening day of the two-week tournament. 1 dont think Im too old for clay. I just have to be in the right frame of mind.

He needed only 97 minutes to shatter Australian Craig Miller 6-2,6-2,6-1.

Connors, the top seed at the $1.3 million grand slam event, has never won a major clay court tournament and has not played on clay since his last appearance in Paris a year ago when he was eliminated in the quarterfinals.

"I'd rather be a dangerous floater than seeded No. 1, he said. Unseed me and put in the draw somewhere.

Connors is attempting to become the oldest player to win the French title since Spains Andres Gimeno took it in 1972 at age 34 years and 10 months.

By The Associated Press The Minnesota Twins expect home runs and have been getting them. They want complete games and finally got one.

Tom Brunansky and Gary Ward each homered twice and Dave Engle added a solo shot while Frank Viola became the first Minnesota pitcher to go the distance this season as the Twins routed the Baltimore Orioles 124 Monday night.

"The relievers have been doing a fantastic job and our hitting has been there, Viola said. The starters just havent been able to keep us in the game.

Its nice to give the bullpen a day off, he said.

In other American League action, Toronto blanked Detroit 4-0, Boston beat Chicago 64, Kansas City topped Texas 5-2, California defeated New York 3-0, Seattle nipped Cleveland 3-2; and Oakland edged Milwaukee 54 in 17 innings.

Viola, 2-2, allowed eight hits and struck out seven. He had snapped a personal eight-game losing streak last week in beating Oakland 16-5, though he wasnt able to finish the game. Nonetheless, that effort made his job against Baltimore a little easier.

Winning that first game last week took all the pressure off me, he said. It was a heavy load off my shoulders. Now, if I can do something about those home runs.

Viola, who allowed a two-run homer by Cal Ripken and a solo shot by Gary Roenicke, has now given up 12 homers in 53 2-3 innings this season.

Minnesota displayed plenty of long-ball power, too, starting in the fifth inning. Brunansky - who knocked in five runs - hit a two-run homer, Engle followed with another homer and Ward socked a three-run job in the fifth inning.

Ward, who also doubled and singled, smacked a solo homer and Brunansky added a three-run shot in a, ninth as Baltimore lost its fourth straight game.

The seven home runs tied the Memorial Stadium record, accomplished three times previously.

The simple reason is that we have guys on this team that can hit the ball out of the park. Ward said.

Said Orioles pitching coach Ray Miller: We'threw up enough yardage to play golf tonight.

Blue Jays 4, Tigers 0 Luis Leal and Randy Moffitt combined on a three-hitter for Torontos third straight shutout, setting a team record of 27 consecutive scoreless innings.

Leal, 4-3, pitched eight strong innings - allowing Detroits hits - before running into trouble in the ninth. Moffitt recorded his fifth save.

Willie Upshaw, Ernie Whitt and Lloyd Moseby homered off Milt Wilcox in the fourth inning.

After Whitt homered in the sixth - tying a team record for home runs in a game -Wilcox threw two inside pitches to Moseby, who started to rush the mound but was restrained.

Royals 5, Rangers 2 Dennis Leonard; withsteed a shaky first inning and turned in a fine effort before leaving because of a sore knee in the eighth. Leonard gave up two runs on three hits in the first but allowed only two more hits. Quisenberry went the final 12-3 innings for his ninth save.

Kansas City managed just

Heels Set For Indians

CHAPEL HILL (AP) -Atlantic Coast Conference' champion North Carolina will meet automatic qualifier William & Mary in Thursdays first round of the NCAA Division I East Regional baseball tournament in Chapel Hill.

The Tar Heels are 41-8 while the Indians are 24-14 and will meet at 7:30 p.m. In other first-round games. South Carolina, 35-11, will meet James Madison, 33-11, at 11 a.m., and Delaware, 34-14, plays The Citadel, 32-8, at 3 p.m.

The double elimination tournament runs through Sunday.

The winner of the regional advances along with seven other regional champions to the College World Series June 3-12 in Omaha, Neb.

South Carolina captured last years East Regional on its home field to advance to Omaha. In that regional. North Carolina lost to The Citadel, 94, and to East Carolina, 1-0,

four hits off Charlie Hough and Dave Schmidt. But those hits included homers by Hal McRae and John Wathan and a two-run single by Amos Otis.

Red Sox 6, White Sox 4 Tony Armas homeredtwice and rookie Mike Brown, 4-3, pitched a seven-hitter.

Armas, who now has seven homers, put Boston ahead 1-0 in the second inning with a home run and added a two-run shot in the third.

Greg Luzinski homered for the fourth straight game -giving him six home runs for the season - and Tony Bernazard belted a solo blast for Chicago.

Bostons Carl Yastnemski

broke an O-for-19 streak with two singles.

Mariners 3, Indians 2

Bob Stoddard and Bill Caudill combined on a seven-hitter for Seattle.

Stoddard left in the eighth inning, leading 3-1, after yielding Julio Francos one-out triple. Caudill allowed Rick Mannings RBI single before recording his ninth save.

Dave Henderson scored Seattles first run when he escaped on a rundown on second baseman Manny Trillos throwing error. Henderson singled in the second Mariners run.

Angels 3, Yankees 0

Geoff Zahn tossed a six-hitter and Rod Carew raised his major league-leading average to .450.

Zahn, 4-3, escaped a first-inning jam when Dave Winfield singled and Don Baylor doubled him to third. But Zahn retired Steve Kemp to stay out of trouble. Zahn did not allow a New York hit after Baylor doubled in the fourth inning.

Carew went 2-for4, including a run-scoring double.

As5, Brewers 4 Rickey Hendersons two-out sin^e in the bottom of the 17th inning drove in Dan Meyer from second base to end the longest game in the majors this season.

Meyer singled off Jim Slaton. 5-1, to open the 17th and went to second on a sacrifice by Davey Lopes, who had homered twice in the game. Daryl Cias grounded out, Tony Phillips walked and Henderson singled in the winning run, ending the five-hour, 17-minute marathon.

Oakland had been just one out away from victory in the ninth, but pinch hitter Roy Howell hit reliev^ Steve McCattys first pitch for a three-run homer to put Milwaukee ahead 4-3.

Lopes then hit Don Suttons first pitch in the bottom of the ninth for a game-tying homer, forcing the extra innings.

Kunkel Battles Cancer, Prepares To WatcK Son After Retirement

MIDDLETOWN, N.J. (AP) Two cancer operations couldnt make American League umpire Bill Kunkel retire. But the presence of another Kunkel in the league could.

If Kunkels his oldest son Jeff plays in the AL, Kunkel has said that he will retire rather than umpire in Jeffs games.And Jeff Kunkel is rated a likely first-round choice in the major-league draft on June 6. The Rider College shortstop said he will forego his senior year at the schwl if he is selected high in the draft.

Baseball scouts say Jeff could be anywhere from the second to the sixth player selected in the draft. The Texas Rangers, an American League team with the third pick, and the Chicago Cubs, a National League team with the sixth, are reportedly the most interested in a shortstop who can hit.

Jeff Kunkels credentials go beyond his .400 average, school record 57 hits and 40 runs scored, and six homers this season. He has the determination to succeed that was planted in him as a toddler and which blossomed during his fathers two-year battle with cancer.

A lot of scouts have asked me if I really want to play baseball, and I tell them that the one thing in my life that 1 want is to play and follow in my fathers footsteps, Jeff said. My dedication to do so is even more since my fathers fight with cancer. Its an obsession with me to do well and follow him.

You hear about cancer all the time, but it never really hits home until it happens in your family. We are a close family anyway. In my younger years. Dad constantly helped me to develop the proper fundamentals. He kept telling me over and over that you must have the Big W.

Thats the Big Want. You must have this along with heart and desire to succeed. The Big W got bigger after Dad got sick.

Scouts have noticed the change in Jeff since his father was first stricken with rectal cancer during a series in Minnesota in August, 1981.

John Hagemann, a Baltimore scout who has been watching Jeff since his junior year in high school, said, He wasnt ready for professional baseball as a high school senior, as some kids are. But each year since then, h has improved tremendously. The biggest change has been in the past year.

However, not many people outside the family know that Jeff had to fight his own battle, several years before his fathers began, to get his chance in baseball. During his junior year at Middletown South High School, he incurred a severe leg fracture trying to break up a double play. He was in a cast for four months and doctors told him he might never play any sport again.

Only a long period of rehabilitation, including exercises that sometimes brought him to tears, got him back on the field. Watching him go throu^ that difficult period was what made Bill Kunkel think that his son had a chance to make it.

Jeff returned his senior year to win area and state honors as a shortstop with wide range and a strong arm, but his first game as a freshman at Rider almost made him wish he had stuck to his alternate position, pitcher, like his father. In that first game, he had five balls hit to him at short and he made five errors.

He hasnt done that poorly in a full season since then. He made the All-Jersey College team every year at Rider and has been an All-East Coast Conference first team selection two years in a row.

Last summer, he was with'the Kenai Peninsula Oilers of the tough Alaska Collegiate League, which has produced many major leaguers. He led that league in homers although it has big parks with top college pitching.

Oddly, Bill Kunkels second cancer operation in Februar>' has given him the oppurtunity to watch Jeff play at Rider, which he never had when he was umpiring. Bill returns to work at Yankee Stadium this weekend, but he will be home on draft day to offer Jeff advice just as he has been advising him since Jeff was barely old enough to hold a bat.

The elder Kunkel, who was a relief pitcher with Kansas City in 1961 and 1962 and with the New York Yankees in 1963, didnt teach Jeff how to hit.

I dont think he could, Jeff laughed. I was home. I lifted weights to gain strength, and the coaching at Rider was good.

If Jeff doesnt force his father into doing something that cancer couldnt, then there is still Kevin, who won his first six games for Stanford before he lost. Kevin should be ready for the draft in three years.





Mays, Mantle Suspensions Linger On

By WILLGRIMSLEY by liftine the susoensions of wonlrl annear

By WILL GRIMSLEY AP Special Correspondent

Bowie Kuhn, who relinquishes his office as baseball commissioner in August, could endear himself to the game he served for 14 years

by lifting the suspensions of two of the games greatest and most admired stars, Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle.

It would take guts. It would be contrary to his every principle and sense of ethics. It

would appear an open admission that his controversial action in the two cases was wrong in the first place. The commissioner would never admit that.

But it would reveal a sense

Cedeno Faces Fine, Suspension For Incident

CINCINNATI (AP) - Outfielder Cesar Cedeno has been suspended without pay for three days and fined $100 for missing the team plane after he refused to fly home from Chicago with the Cincinnati Reds because he didnt have a first-class ticket.

Cedeno, who was not available for comment after the suspension, said beforehand that he thought Reds Manager Russ Nixon was punishing him.

Everyone else can hurt around here and it goes by fine. Obviously, he doesnt believe that Im hurting... He wants to punish me for some reason, Cedeno said.

Cedeno hasnt played since May 12 when he complained of stiffness in his shoulder. He was O-for-21 the previous week as his batting average dropped to .272. Various injuries have kept him out of 16 of the Reds 40 games.

"The reason I havent been played is not because of the slump. Its bwause I was hurt, Cedeno said. Just now, my left shoulder is starting to come around. I can swing a bat.

The suspension may cost Cedeno as much as $11,000, based on his estimated $600,000 annual salary, The Cincinnati Enquirer reported.

The Reds said Cedeno could rejoin the club for its game Thursday with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

The club statement referred to incidents of "misconduct at Wrigley Field and OHare Airport in Chicago between Cedeno and Nixon, trainer Larry Starr and Steve Cobb, traveling secretary.

Nixon met for 14 hours Monday with club

President Dick Wagner and privately with Cedeno afterward.

When Cobb gave Cedeno a boarding pass for the airplanes coach section, the outfielder demanded a first-class ticket, then stormed out of the airport after Nixon refused to intercede for him, witnesses said.

"I tried to talk to him, but he walked away, Cedeno said of his Sunday night plea to Nixon.

"I did walk away, Nixon said. "1 didnt feel that he should be shouting at me across the airport. It belongs inside the club.

The nine available first-class seats on the Chicago-to-Cincinnati flight - which takes less than an hour were given to regulars Gary Redus, Eddie Milner, Dave Concepcion, Dan Driessen and Johnny Bench, pitchers Toih Hume, Frank Pastore and Joe Price and Nixon.

"There were only nine seats (available) in first class, and if he feels he has to have priority over people who beat their brains out for nine innings today; thats his problem, Nixon said.

Im tired of people treating me like I was still with Houston, Cedeno said Monday. Its time to defend myself. 1 really didnt want to make a big deal of it. But if Russ does, thats okay.

Pitcher Mario Soto, who earned his sixth victory Sunday afternoon, said he also felt slighted.

They said the nine guys in first-class should be the guys who played their butts off. I ' jsitched the whole nine innings, Soto said. "How come I was in the back, too?

of humanity in the tall, ramrod-straight onetime attorney whose real character and personal passion for the game and the people who inhabit it have been obscured by the austerity of his office.

As lawyer and as one whose basball roots go back to his teen-age job as scoreboard boy in Washingtons old Griffith Stadium, Kuhn has been inclined to adhere strictly to the letter of the law and to the unrelenting protection of the image of the game.

Sometimes human factors transcend the cold, impersonal codes. People

become more important than the archaic standards that bind them. Certainly that seems true in the cases of Mays and Mantle.

Here are two of the games top personalities of all time -dominant in the decades of the 1950s and 1960s and later almost unanimously voted into the Hall of Fame. After finishing their brilliant careers, baseball found no niche for either of them.

Mays remained on the New York Mets payroll at $50,000 a year largely for public relations purposes by dictate of the late Mets owner, Joan Payson, but he found himself a loose wheel who showed up

at spring training and sat around the locker room recalling fond memories. Mantle had a menial job with the Yankees in the spring. His duties consisted largely of being a golfing partner of Billy Martin.

Neither was afforded the attention or the remuneration he deserved. Restlessness set in.

In October, 1979. a hotel casino in Atlantic City, Bally, Inc., offered .Mays a 10-year contract, starting at $100,000 a year and escalating to $150,000 a year, to do promotional work for the hotel. His job consisted mainly of sponsor-

Morton Shows Interest In Position With USFL's 'Gold'

DENVER (AP) Former Denver Bronco quarterback Craig Morton says hes interested in becoming coach of the Denver Gold of the United States football League.

And, with Rod Humenuik of the Kansas City Chiefs withdrawing from consideration for the job, the choice apparently has narrowed to Morton and former Kansas City Chiefs Coach Marv Levy.

Yes, Im interested, Morton said during an ABC broadcast of the Birmingham-Michigan USFL game on Monday night. Morton, who retired from the National Football League team last year, is a commentator for ABC radio.

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Rec Softball

Women's League

Wachovia    120    10-4

PTA .................. 611113 2X-22

Leading hitters PT - Barnhill 2-4, D Ellts2-3.WB-Chandler 2 3

G'villeTravel.......... 531    102    4-16

Players Retreat    000    100    0 - 1

Leading hitters: PR - Sealy 2 3, GT -Register 2-3. Counterman 2-4

Kred Webb    201 000 0-3

B-Wellcome......... 003 000 1-4

Leading hitters: BW - Harris 2-4, Moore 2-4; FW - Pittman 2-3

Copper Kettle........... 230    060    0-12

Pilt Memorial    233    004    1-13

Leading hitlers: PM - Keene 2-3, Smith3-4; CK- Parker3-4, Daniels3-3

Industrial League

Union Carbide...........004    003    0-7

CIS.................... 003    000    0-3

Leading hitters: UC - Stan Kossol 2-4, Kenneth Gattis 2-4, Wesley Deal 2-4: Cl -Steve Williams 3-3, David Brantingham

Vermont-American, 3illi3    031    5-26

WNCT-TV.............302    020    0-7

eading hitters: VA - Joel Brown 4-5 ti. Haywood Latham 3-4, .Marvin SHith HR, Glenn Page 3-3; WN - Ron Newton 2-4, Luther Williams 2-4, David Boyd 2-4, Charles Gorham 2-4.

B-Wellcome 2.............101    022    3-9

Enforcers ............oOl    000    0-1

Leading hitters BW - Jeff Skinner 3-4, Jim Bailey 2-4, Lynn Cherry 2-3. Gene TutUe 2-4; E Donnie Taylor

California Oakland Texas Kansas City Minnesota Chicago ' Seattle '

WEST DIVISION

.550

.525

525

.406

.452

.405

.372

-Donnie Taylor 2-3

Fire Fighters Coca-Cola

150 020 0-8

100 001 0-2

Leading hitters: FF Lynnie Owens 2-4, Lynwood Owens 2-4, CC - Lance WeaUierington 3-3, Ronnie Harris 2-3.

Public Works............330    233    2-16

Wachovia ..............ooo    000    0-0

Leading^hitters: WB - Carl Karplnski

2-3, John Rogers 3-3; PW - Jeff Daneils

3-4, Willie Slieeter 3-4

Empire Brush 41.........435    000    0-12

Empire Brush 2..... 001    lOI    2- 5

Leading hitlers: 2 - Kenneth McKeel

2-2, Anthony Burroughs 3-4; 1 - Joe Gantz 3-4, Ed Cobum 3-3.

Carolina Leaf.............080    040    0-12

B Wellcome #1........... 000    101    2- 2

l.eading hitters: CL - Jimmy Bond 2-3, Craig Browning 2-3; BW - Mike Hosey

3-3

ECU1 ................... 162    403    0-16

GUCO -    001    020    2-5

Leading hitters; Gl) - Joel Jones 3-4, Willie Eakes 2-3; EC - Paul Fletcher 3-4, Carl Hartzfield 3-4

aty League

Ormonds................233    001    2-11

Liberty...................310    102    0- 7

Leading hitters: L - Darrell Roebuck 2-2, Lee Latham 3-4; 0 - Stuart Brooker 2-31 HR). Levi Brock 2-3, Dennis Newman 2-2

Subway....................253    181-20

PantanaBobs...............200    302-5

Leading hitters: S - Keith King 3-3, Elmo Alexander 2-3; PB - Dennis Beauchamp 34.

MeaUl Craft.............270 000 0-9

   000 110 2-4

GB

Sunnyside Eggs    ........

Leading hiUers: SE - Gene Rackley 2 3, Worfli Albea 2 2, Mike Weaver 2-3; MC - Tim Rose 2-3, Greg Waters 2-3, Jim

Shallow 2-3,

Cal Concept...............000    540    09

Jimmys66...............411    000    2-8

Leading hitters: J - Stan Joyner 34, Charlie Meeks 34; CC - Cloyce Wilson 44, Jeff Cobb 24, Chris Parrisher 24,

Boseball Stondingt

By The Aisoclated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet. GB Boston    22    16    579    -

Toronto    22    16    .579    -

Baltimore    23    17    .575    -

Milwaukee    20    17    . 541    14

New York    20    19    .513    2'i

Cleveland    18    21    462    4'^

Detroit    17    21    447    5

Monday's Games

Toronto 4, Detroit 0 Minnesota 12, Baltimore 4 Boston6,ChicaM4 Kansas City 5, Texas 2 California 3, New York 0 Oakland 5, Milwaukee 4,17 innings Seattle 3. Cleveland 2

Tuesday's Games Detroit lUjdur 0-4) at Toronto (Morgan

0-3i,(n)

Minnesota iBCastillo 1-3) at Baltimore (McGregor 4-2i. (n)

Btteton (Bird 1-1) at Chicago (Koosman

1-Oi) (n)

Texas (Smithson 3-2) at Kansas City (Splittorffl-ii.(n)

New York (Shirley 2-3i at California (Forsch3-3), in)

Cleveland (Sorensen 2-5) at SeatUe (Young5-3), (nl Milwaukee (Haas 1-1) at Oakland (Underwood3-1), (n)

Wednesday 's Games Milwaukee at Oakland Cleveland at SeatUe Detroit at Toronto, in)

Minnesota at Baltimore, in)

Boston at Chicago, in)

Texas at Kansas City, 1 n 1 New York at California, (n)

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet.

St. Louis    19    16    .543

Philadelphia    18    15    545    -

Montreal    19    17    528    4

Pittsburgh    14    20    .412    4i

New York    15    22    405    5

Chicago    14    23    378    6

WEST DIVISION Los Angeles    27    11    711    -

Atlanta    26    13    667    p,s

San Francisco    19    20    . 487    8*^

Cincinnati    19    22    463    9'.i

San Diego    17    22    .436    10/j

Houston    18    24    .429    11

Mondays Games , Cincinnati 2, St Louis 1 Los Angeles 2, Philadelphia 0 New York 4, San Francisco 3 Montreal 3, San Diego I Atlanta 6, Pittsburg 3 Houston3.Chica^2

Tuesday's Games San Diego (Lolfar 1-3) at Montreal (WelshO-I), (n)

San Francisco (Krukow 22) at New York (Lynch2-1), (n)

Los Angeles (Pena 4-1) at Philadelphia (Christenson 1-3), (n)

St, Louis (LaPoint 2-1) at Cincinnati (Berenyi 34), (n)

PittsDurgh (McWilliams 4-3) at AtlanU (Camp 3-3), (n)

Chicago iRuthven 1-2) at Houston (ScottO-1), (n)

Wednesday, May IS St Louis at Cincinnati San Francisco at New York Pittsburg at AUanta Los Angeles at Philadelphia. (n)

San Diego at Montreal, (n)

Chicago at Houston, (nl

Baseball leoders

ByTheAssocUtedPreas AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (80 at batsl-Carew, Calilomia, .450; Brett, Kansas City, 383; Boggs. Boston. ,381; McRae, Kansas City, 346TFord, Baltimore, .344.

RUNS-Castino. Minnesota, 34; Brett, Kansas CIU, 31, Ford, Baltimore, 29; DeClnces, California, 27; McRae, Kansas City, 27; Ripken Baltimore, 27.

RBl-Ward, Minnesota. 36; Brett. Ka^s City, 32; Rice, Boston, 30; 5 are ttedwiUi28.

HITS-Carew, Calilomia. 63; Castino, MinnesoU, 55; Boggs, Boston, 53; Ford, Baltimore, 52; YounTMllwaukee, 51 DOUBLES-Ford, Baltimore; 14. Hrbek, Minnesota, 14: Bemaiard, Chicago, 13; Brett, Kansas City, 13; 6 are tied with 11 TRIPLES-GWlfson, Detroit, 5; CMoore, Milwaukee. 4; Griffin, Toronto. 4; Winfield New York, 4; 8 are tied with 3.

HOME RUNS-DeClnces, California, 11; Brett, Kansas City, 10, Winfield, Slew York, 9' Castino, MinnesoU, 8; LAP-arrish. Texas, 8; Rice. Boston, 8; Ward. MinnesoU, 8 STOLEN BASES-JCrui, SeatUe, 23, WWilson, Kansas City. 17; RLaw Chicago. 16; MDavts, Oakland. 14;

RHenderson, Oakland. 12:

PITCHING (4 decisions)-Flanagan, Baltimore, 6-0, 1.000, 2.72; Kison, California, 64, .857, 3.11; Slaton, Milwaukee, 5-1, .833, 2.10; Sanchez, California, 4-1, .800, 1.65; Stieb, Toronto, 8-2, .800, 1.04; Sutton. MUwaukee. 4-1, 800, 3.13; Whitehouse, MinnesoU, 4-1, .800,3.04.

STRIKEOUTS-Stieb, Toronto, 64; Blyleven, Cleveland, 51; Kison. California, 46; Norris, Oakland, 46; Morris, Detroit, 45; Wilcox, Detroit, 45 SAVES-Caudill, Seattle, 9; Quisen-berry. Kansas City, 9; SUnley, Boston. 9; Gossage, New York, 6; Rbavis, MinnesoU. 6.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING (80 at baU)-Madlock.' Pittsburgh, .333; Evans, San Francisco, 328; LoSmith, StLouis. .328; Bench, Cincinnati. .327; Richards. San Diego, 327.

RUNS-Murphy, Atlanta, 34; Garvey, San Diego, 31; Evans, San Francisco, 29; LeMaster, San Francisco. 29; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 28 RBl-Murphy, AUanta, 36; TKennedy, San Diego, 29; Brock, Los Angeles, 28; Dawson, Montreal, 28; Bench, Cincinnati, 27; Gamer, Houston, 27; Hendrick, StLouis. 27.

HITS-Thon, Houston, 52; RRamirez, AtlanU, 50; Bonilla. San Diego. 49; Bench, Cincinnati, 48; Oester. Cincinnati. 48.

DOUBLES-JRay, Pittsburgh. 15; Ashlw, Houston, II; Bench, CincinnaU, II. Dawson, Montreal. 11; Evans. San Francisco, 11.

TRIPLES-Moreno, Houston, 5; Dawson. Montreal, 4, Raines, Montreal, 4; 6 are tied with 3.

HOME RUNS-Murphy, AUanU, 11; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 10; Brock, Los Angeles. 9; Evans, San Francisco, 9; 7 are tied with 7 STOLEN BASEIS-Lacy, Pittsburgh, 15; Wilson, New York, 15; Moreno, Houston. 14; EMilner, Cincinnati, 13; SSax, Los Angeles, 13.

PITCHING (4 decisionsi-Stewart, Los Angeles, 4-0, 1.000, 1.20; McMurtry, AtlanU, 6-1. .857, 2.72; Rogers. Montreal, 6-1, 857, 2 41; PPerez, Atlanta, 5-1, .833, 2.13, APena, Los Angeles, 4-1, 800,2.51 STRIKEOUTS-CarlUn, PhUadelphia, 77; McWilliams. Pittsburgh, 56, Soto, Cincinnati. 56; Valenzuela, Los Angeles. 50; Berenyi, Cincinnati. 48; Rogers, Montreal. 48 SAVElS-SHowe, Los Angeles, 7; DeLeon, San Diego, 5; Forster, Atlanta, 5; Hume, Cincinnati, 5; Lavelle. San Fran

cisco. 3; Minton, San Francisco, 5.

NBA Playoffs

By The Associated Press FINALS (Best of Seven) (Pbiladelpbia leads series 1-0) Sunday, May 22 Philadelphia 113, Los Angeles 107 Thursday, May 26 Los Angeles at Philadelphia, (n)

Sunday, May 29 Philadelphia at Los Angeles Tuesday, May 31 Philadelphia at Los Angeles. (n) Thursday, June 2 Los.Angeles at Philadelphia, (n), if necessary

Sunday,June 5 Philadelphia at Los Angeles, if necessary

Wednesday, June 8

Los Angeles at Philadelphia, (n), if necessary

Transactions

By The Associated Press BASEBALL National League

CINCINNATI REDS-Suspended Cesar Cedeno, outfielder, without pay for three

days and fined him 5100 for missing the team plane after he refused to fly home with the tealn because he didn't have a

ing the (home

first-class ticket NEW YORK METS-Sent John Steams, catcher, to the team's minor-league training complex in St. Petersburg, Fla , to continue rehabiliu-tion on his injured right elbow.

HOfStEY National Hockey League HARTFORD WHALERS-Appointed Larry Pleau assisUnt general manager and named Bob Crocker director of hockey administration

N.C. Scoreboard

By The Associated Press Baseball South Atlantic League

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out there, Morton said. I think I could do the job there. I would be interested in doing it. Theres a great Challenge out there.

The job came open last Thursday when Red Miller, Mortons former mentor with the Broncos, was fired by club owner Ron Blanding.

Since the firing, Blanding has talked with Humenuik, offensive line coach for the Chiefs, Morton and Levy, who was fired by the Chiefs at the end of the past NFL season.

Morton said that he has not been offered the job. But when asked by one of his broadcasting colleagues, Fred Manfra, whether he would be in Denver Friday for the Stallions-Gold game, Morton said:

Ill be there one way or another - in the booth or on the sidelines.

Earlier, Levy and Blanding declined to comment on whether Levy is a candidate for the job, but Levys continued presence in Denver raised speculation that ^me-thing was brewing.

Levy arrived in Denver Sunday morning to speak with Blanding about the job.

Contacted at his Denver hotel Monday, Levy said, Id rather not comment on what my plans are. He refused to say if the job had been offered to him, or even if he has

actually spoken with Blanding.

Blanding also has been close-mouthed about his efforts to find a new head coach.

When asked about Morton, Blanding said, Craig who'i So we talked, big deal. I dont want to say anything at all about either Craig Morton or Marv Levy.

Levy, fired by the Chiefs in January after compiling a 3142 record in five seasons, has made it clear that he wants to get back into football as soon as possible. He is among the leading candidates to coach the newly announced Houston expansion team in the USFL.

Morton, who played under Levy when the latter was head coach at the University of California, has no coaching experience. He has private business interests, is doing color commentary for USFL games on ABC radio, and has offered to coach the Broncos quarterbacks on a part-time basis.

Blanding said on Sunday tha,t Humenuik is stUl our No. 1 man.

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ing golf tournaments, engaging in community enterprises and working with kids

Kuhn^ immediately ordered that he^divest himself of this association or promptly disassociate himself from baseball.

Three and a half years later, on Feb 8 of this year, .Mantle, who hit 536 home runs and drove in 1,509 runs for the Yankees, was similarly suspended for accepting an jequivalenl position with the Claridge Hotel in Atlantic City.

liis job, like that of .Mays, was in customer relations. He spends about six days a month with the hbtel, never entering the casino.

His salary also is said to be SIOO.OOO a year, a figure baseball hasn't been able to match.

Kuhns ruling is that Mays and Mantle are not actually barred, simply are not allowed to put on uniforms in an official capacity.

The commissioner contends that the mer association with casino guests gives the "appearance of evil" even if no evil is involved as thus violates the best interests of baseball.

Mays has been distraught over the suspension and has made numerous overtures to the commissioner to restore him to good standing.

Mays cites what he calls inconsistency in the game in allowing owners such as John Galbreath the Pittsburgh and George Steinbrenner of the Yankees to own racing stables and even race tracks where gambling is the life's blood.

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With gambling legal, big cities such as New York relying on off-track betting pallors to meet sagging ^gets andjjld women with /papers cups Of coins playing slot machines, the offense's of Mays and .Mantle seem farfetched,

Kuhn admits he doesn't relish the situation, which actually puts an unfair stain on two of our greatest What I'd like to do." the commissioner said, "is find places in baseball which would be commensorate with ^ their jobs." He also contends he cannot compromise his ethics.

Churches Tie At Putt-Putt

Salem Methodist and Farmville Presbyterian tied for first place in last night's action in the Church League at Putt-Putt Golf and Games.

Both teams recorded scores of 279.

Farmville continues to hold the overall lead,

Arthur Christian was third with 297, followed by Jarvis Memorial at 316 and Hooker Memorial at 341,

Jeff Taft had a 63 and Ray Taft had a 70 to lead Salem, whi(e pi W'illiams had a 66 and MittMaewis, a 68, to pace Farmville.

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Blues' Producer Turning To Baseball

ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer

NEW YORK (,\Pi - The baseball season wont end with the World Series. Bay City Blues. coming to NBC next fall from the producer of "Hill Street Blues, is about the major league dreams of a minor league baseball town.

Steven Bochco, the Emmy-winner who revitalized the tired cop-on-the-beat TV theme, will look for more of lifes absurdities - real and ilifagined - this time with baseball as the backdrop.

Can you see the bickering Hill and Renko as a double-play combination'? Wild-eyed Belker as team mascot? Pompous Howard Hunter as team owner'?

The Class AA Bay City Bluebirds - and the working-class California town supporting and feeding off the ball club - will find their own identities as the Tuesday-night series develops.

But you can be sure that Bochco and the writers he recruited from "Hill Street and "M-A-S-H will create characters with more dimension than their baseball cards.

"Ive always been a big baseball fan, says Bochco. "Last July, 1 went to an old-timers game at Dodger Stadium. There were old guys with big guts hanging over their belts, but they could still hit the ball. It struck me that this game defines our culture. We worship ballplayers and the game itself. But underneath the game is a w'onderfully complex and fearful arena.

Guys going up, guys desperately trying to hang on - and theyre dll affected by the random nature of the game. Theres some real interesting dynamics inside and outside, too, with the working-class town struggling with a difficult economy.

But its not actually a show about baseball, adds Bochco. Its primarily a show about people.

Bochco is aware that sports series have not fared well. Programs like the quickly canceled Ball Four appeal to male viewers, and its the women who control the dial in primetime.

"Our characters will have mass appeal because people can laugh at them and will, most importantly, be able to identify with their situations and feelings, he says. People get involved in Hill Street, even though their only contact with the law might be a jaywalking ticket. The most pertinent stuff we do is the human stuff.

The cast for Bay City Blues has not been set, but Bochco is assembling a large ensemble of relative unknowns to play the parts of athletes, wives, management, baseball hangers-on, townspeople and, dont forget, the team mascot, The Bluebird of Happiness.

I promise you the cast wont be star-studded, says Bochco. Theyll all be rookies, journeymen and old faces seen in new ways. Like in Hill Street, well be telling

multiple stories with some degree of continuation to those stories.

Bay City Blues will not be Hill Street Blues in spikes, but Bochco did invite comparisons because of the new shows parodie title.

The obvious difference is the subject matter, he says. You dont do a baseball show with the same amount of heat as a cop show. Were not going to have chases, shootouts and people being killed. The two shows will be populated by different groups of characters with very different priorities in life.

Production on Bay City Blues was stalled when Bochco. and his production studio, MTM, couldnt establish a license fee with NBC. After compromise, the parties agreed to a per-episode payment over $850,000 - more than Hill Street got in its third season.

We needed it to build the stadium, fill it with bodies (reportedly 500 extras) and carry a very large cast, says Bochco.

Bochco and Michael Kozoll were able to make Hill Street Blues their way because, in order to entice them to the network, then-NBC president Fred Silverman had to offer a creative blank check.

The freedom issue hasnt even come up this time, says Bochco.

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TV Log

For complete TV programming In-lormallon. consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Reflector.

ULTIMATE NIGHTMARE "CURTAINS" 2:05-3:50-5:35-7:20-9:05

WHAT A FEELING "FLASHOANCE" 1:55-3:45-5:35-7:25-9:15

HES OUT THERE...

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WCT-TV Ch.9 Concentration

TUESDAY ,    12

/ IK) Jokers Wild 12 7 30 Tic Tac Dough 1

8 00 Movie

9 00 Special 11:00 News9

H 30 Late Movie

1 00 Nightwatch WEDNESD4V

2 00 Nightwatch

5 00 Jim Bakker

6 00 Carolina 8 00 Morning

10 00 Pyramid

to 30 Child'sPlay n 00 Price Is

00 News 9 30 Young and 30 As The World 30 Capital 00 Guiding Light 00 Waltons 00 Hillbillies 30 Andy Grittith 00 News 9 30 News 00 Joker's Wild 30 Tic Tac Dough 00 Special 00 News 9 30 Movie 00 Nightwatch

WITN-TV-Ch.7

TUESnn'T    '0    

? 00 Jetterson

7 30 Family Feud " 0

8 00 ATeam " 30

9 00 R Steele '2 M

10 00 St Elsewhere '2 30

11 00 News    I    00

II 30 Tonight Show 2 00

' 12 30 Letterman 3 00

1 30 Overnight

2 30 News

4 00 4 30 5:30

WEDNESDAY 4 qO 5 30 Dark Shadows 30

6 00 Almanac

7 00 Today 7:25 News

7 30 Today

8 25 News

8 30 Today

9 00 R, Simmons 9 30 All in the

7.00 7.30 8:00 9 00 9 30 10:00 II 00 n 30

Facts 01 Lite Saleot the Wheel ol Dream House News

Search For Days 01 Our Another WId. Fantasy Whitney the Little House Lie Detector News NBC News Jetterson Family Feud Real People Facts of Lite Taxi Quincy News Tonight

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

TUESDAY

7 00 Three's Co

7 30 Alice

8 00 Happy Days 8.30 Joanie Loves

9 00 3'sCo 9:30 9to5

10 00 Hart to Hart

11 00 Action News 11:30 Nightline t>:30 Starskyi

1 30 Mission

2 30 Early Edition WEDNESDAY

5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J Swaggart 0:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7:00 Good Morning

6 13 Action News 6:55 Action News

7 25 Action News

8:25 Action News 9:00 Phil Donahue 10:00 Good Times 10:30 Laverne 11:00 Love Boat 12:00 Family Feud 12 30 Ryan's Hope 1 00 My Children 2:00 One Life 3:00 Gen Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4.30 BJ/LOBO .

5 30 People's

6 00 Action News

6 30 ABC News

7 :00 Three's Co. 7:30 Alice

8 00 Fall Guy 9:00 Movie

It 00 Action News 11:30 ABC News 12 30 StarskyS.

1:30 Mission

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

TUESDAY

7 00 Report 7:30 Almanac

8 00 Nova

9 00 Playhouse 10:30 Comedy 11,00 A. Hitchcock

11 30 Morecambe

12 00 Sign Off WEDNESDAY

3 30 Cooking

4 00 Sesame 5t. 5:00 Mr Rogers

5 30 Powerhouse

6 00 Dr Who

6 30 Sherlock

7 00 Report

7 30 Stateline

8 00 Creatures

9 00 Mystery

11 00 A Hitchcock 11 30 Morecambe 12:00 Sign Oft

6,000 QUESTIONS NEW YORK (AP) - A board game containing 6,000 questions in six categories was introduced recently at the American Toy Fair.

Invented by two Canadian journalists and a former hockey goal tender, the game. Trivial Pursuit, is believed to have more memory-challenging trivia questions than any other.

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Heidi Lehwalderhas to see as well as hear her music she plucks the strands of her harp. She is part of the Chamber Music Concert Series at Spoleto Festival USA in Charleston, S.C. Concerts are being given almost daily during the 17-day festival. (AP Laserphoto)

FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, MAY 25,1983

Mr. T Phones Mom Each Day

GENERAL TENDENCIES: A day when you can expect delays so tackle duties of a career nature early in the day. Study a civic matter carefully before making any judgment on its faults. Be logical.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Be sure you dont vent your ire on a higher-up or you could soon regret it. Dont quibble over a pressing bill.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Some new enterprises may seem to be profitable, but they will need further study.J}efore making definite plans.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) You have promised to keep your end of a bargain, and now want to get out of it, but it's to your best interest to carry through.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) An old friend could be annoying now. but you could have brought this on yourself. Strive for increased harmony.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) It is wise to handle regular duties instead of seeking pleasure. Work diligently to gain your goals. Use care in motion.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) A good day to engage in creative work. Show others that you have much talent. Sidestep a well-known troublemaker.    ,

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Study your environment and make plans to make it more comfortable for you. Ai-rive on time for appointments.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Much care in motion is advised to avoid possible accident. Express happiness with close ties in the evening.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You want to improve your financial position, so take time to study the situation before investing. Be wise.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) You may think you're not getting ahead as fast as you should, but doing anything rash at this time would be foolhardy.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Contact those involv^ in mutual plans you have and put them in operation in a most intelligent fashion. Use common sense.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Don't rely so much on friends now and get busy on own duties. Make sure you don't lose your temper with anyone,^,,^

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will want to solve difficult problems and will do remarkably well provided the right education is accorded your intelligent progeny. Teach to be more businesslike. Working with hands is important early in life.

The Surs impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

NEW YORK (AP) - Big, baaaaad Mr. T, the bruiser extraordinaire of NBC-TVs A-Team, calls his mother every day and says hed never make a movie he wouldnt be proud to show her.

Any man who doesnt love his mama cant be no friend of mine, the actor.said in this weeks issue of People magazine.

Mr. f's ambition is to play Charlton Heston-type roles.

like Moses, Ben Hur or El Cid or one of Jesus disciples, he said. Or something meaningful, like a black doctor in a Southern town who finds a cure for cancer.

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More Attacks Set In South Africa

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, May 24,1983-13

GOREN BRIDGE

MAPUTO, Mozambique (AP) - The government will allow African National Confess members to stay in Mozambique despite the South African jet strike against suspected ANC bases that killed six and wounded 40, Information Minister Jose Luis Cabaco said today.

The ANC warned of more guerrilla action against South Africa in statement telexed from Lusaka, Zambia, to The Associated Press in Johannesburg. The only way we can truly honor these victims of aggression is by intensifying our offensive within South Africa, the statement said.

Cabaco traveled with foreign journalists to the sites of Mondays air strike by South African air force jets. The raid on the outskirts of Maputo was in retaliation for an ANC car

bombing that killed 18 people and wounded 216 in Pretoria, South Africa, last week.

The minister stood in front of one of the houses strafed and rocketed by the South African jets and shouted, Does this look like the ANC? The six sites included a jam factory, where three workers died, and a day-care center, where a 6-year-old child was killed.

At the day-care center, a 23-year-old woman described the attack.

We were inside, changing the clothes of children for them to come out and play. Then we heard such a noise. We thought it was thunder. We felt something hitting the wall and saw smoke. Then we took the children and ran.

Saudis Sending Envoy To Syria

By The Associated Press

King Fahd of Saudi Arabia today sent an envoy to Damascus to ask Syrian President Hafez Assad to reconsider his opposition to the U.S.-sponsored troop withdrawal pact between Lebanon and Israel, informed sources in Damascus said.

The emissary. Sheikh Ab-dul-Aziz al-Toweijary, is deputy commander of Saudi Arabias national guards corps.

An official Syrian state-rnent reported al-Toweijarys arrival and his meetings at the presidential palace without elaboration. But informed sources said Saudi

Arabia was attempting to soften Syrias opposition to the Lebanese-lsraeli withdrawal accord and persuade the Damascus government to agree to a simultaneous military withdrawal with Israel from Lebanon.

Syria has rejected the plan, and Israel has said the pact will be voided if Syria does not go along with it.

Al-Toweijary is considered Saudi Arabias leading trouble-shooter in Arab affairs. His shuttle diplomacy between Jordan and Syria stopped the two neighboring Arab nations from going to war in 1981 over political, ideological and subversion disputes.

In other Mideast developments:

-The official Soviet news agency Tass said today the United States is engaged in wishful thinking if it believes the Israeli-Lebanese withdrawal plan will succeed.

Tass said that U.S. propaganda has described the agreement as a major contribution to peace in the

Middle East which would isolate Syria. But the news agency said the Arab public has rejected the agreement.

Lebanese leaders on Monday secured the release of a Maronite Christian archbishop kidnapped by Druse militiamen.Lebanese security sources said 104 other Christians and Druse kidnapped during the weekend also were freed.

Notice of Sale of 1982 Tax Liens on Real Property Townof Winterville

Under and by virtue of the power vested in me by the State of North Carolina and the Winterville Town Board, I will on Monday, June 13, 1983 at 12:00 noon in front of the Municipal Building expose for sale to the highest bidder for cash, the following real estate for unpaid taxes for the year 1982. Interest in the amount of 5 percent has already accumulated on these taxes.

Elwood Nobles Tax Collector

Anderson, Clinton Ray &

Settle Carmon................31.64

Andrews, Geneva Baker.......75.85

Baggett, Grace Bruton........95.50

Barnes, Virgie Gardner......104.97

Barrett, Simon...............102.66

Barrett, Windsor & Nellie 75.58

Beddard, Woodrow Wilson.....59.87

Blount, Cora Cobbs...........119.34

Bond, Jane Scott.............150.22

Boykin, Mathew Thomas.....169.62

Bradley, Franklin L. 8.

Ivynetta ..... 102.86

Brock, Mary Frances (If. est.) 103.51

Brown. Delois Floyd.........144.96

Brown, John Arthur &

GennieMae...................65.32

Bryant, Fannie Mae...........43.11

Bryant, Mary Magdalene......67.17

Bryant, Oscar Clayton ........62.02

Bryant, Raymond & Sandra T. 141.52 Bullock, Jasper Ray &

Deborah.....................117.30

Cannon, Fannie Mae......... 247.94

Cannon, Ruby Streeter.......118.74

Cano, Paul L. .."..............139.08

Carmon, Bobby Gene &

Fannie.......................137.93

Carmon, Maltn Earl .........89.47

Carmon, Morris H. & Mary 0. . 59.94

Carmon, Hubert Lee ...........8,96

Carmon, Willie Mae...........50.91

Clark, Rufus Lee..............93.93

Clark, Sandra Mobley.........13^07

Clark, Shirley Lou Glenn 168.87

Cooper, Ernest 8,

Amanda Tyson................98.70

Coward. WlllleClennel&

Llllle........................138.47

Cox. Barbara Jean...........130.30

Cox, Ernest Lee 8i Shirley 106.52

Cox, Lester, Jr...............131.36

Cox, Mamie Lee

Grimes (heirs)................65.12

Cox, Nellie Sermon (heirs)    .... 68.24

Crandell, James Lewis.......144.30

Credle. Arnell 8, Mildred Mae.. 73.74

Dali, LInwood Clayton........110.14

Daniels. Iris Jean Patrick.....30.05

Daniels, Jesse ................82.32

Daniels. Joe 8, Rosa Lee .....211.60

Daniels, John W................6.16

Daniels, Lendel & Bobbie Ward 89 62

Daniels, Odell 8i Mary........135.39

Daniels, Roy Lee 8. Annie......46.72

Donaldson, James Bradley S.

Debra T.    157.73

Donaldson, Willldm Vann S.

Brenda Lee..................133.87

Edwards, Ella Grimes 71 19

Edwards, Laura Williams .... 263.70 Edwards, Louis Levi &

Lillie Wilkes.................153.66

Ennis, William Thomas 79.22

Evans, Caroline (heirs) .......12.19

Evans, H B (heirs)...........18.48

Evans, William Arthur, Jr. 8,

Olivia...'.....................140.13

Fields, Mary (heirs) .....  3.83

Fox, Ann L. Atkinson.........150.15

Garris, Eddie Mac 8, Beulah B. 93.28 Gerry, Douglas Steven S.

Shirley A.....................178.95

Godley, Richard James 8,

Minnie Cox ..................132.01

Graham, Willie Elbert, Jr. 8,

Diane........................119.09

Green, Linwood 8, Lina 149.11

Grimes, Katie (It. est.) 41.16

Grimes, Lee Ernest 8,

Ruby Stocks.................144,37

Grimes, William 0,8.

Mandle Brown...............128.33

Gurganus, Robert A. 8.

Linda M......................146.43

Hall, Alonza.................137,90

Hammond, Es)er Ree.........39.24

Hammond, Harvey Lee.......52.22

Hammond, Laforrest Evans.... 9.68 Hardy, Sam, Jr. 8. Edna R, ... 117.24

Harper, Louis Linde..........192.76

Harris, Alton Thomas &

Christina....................152.27

Harris, Janie Garris.........138.25

Harris, Jarvis Edgar.........418.01

Hazelton, Jeffrey H............41.52

Hight. Joseph Randal 8.

Sharon C.....................140.00

Hines, Jeffrey Allen...........43.30

Hoggard, Robert A.......... 160,38

Hooks, Ada Barrett ..........144.37

Ingram, Guy Joseph 8.    Maggie

Thigpen .....................136.77

Johnson, Wanda Carol

Phillips......................174.82

Jones, Willie Lester 8. Mavis... 60.88 Kilpatrick, Elbert L. 8.

Minnie H.....................130.05

King, Ida Bell.................78.85

King, Nellie Victoria 8.

James W......................46.60

Knx, Troy (heirs)............44.20

Little, Rose Lee................3.84

Littleton, ThomasT..........136.55

Mackey, Donna W............161.83

McLawhorn, Edward E. DBA .53.43 McMahon. James Ashbrooke 8,

Karen........................159.79

Miller, Donna S...............134.22

Miller. Shirley Wynne........147.28

Mitchell, William Henry 8.

Barbara R..................,709.24

Mobley, Classle..............123.65

Mobley, James W , Jr.........56.89

Monk, Morris* LinC \ 143.32

Moore, Susie Bell .............52.64

Morrison, Marie Porter.......79.28

Murphy, John Henry (heirs)... 28.38

Neil Realty Co., Inc............18.00

Nelson, Joe Nathan...........26.04

Nichols. Robert Earl 8,

Brenda Joyner...............176.29

Patrick, Charlie D  .......64.24

Patrick, Enlsher B. 8, John L.. 152.95 Patrick, Georgiana Lawson    ... 34.17

Patrick, Johnnie (heirs).......77.97

Patrick, Thomas James &

Mary Ward .. ................98.74

Patrick, William Rogers......16.40

Payton, Palsy Gray..........128.20

Payton.'lohn Henry (heirs)    ... 49.58

Phillips, Earl Clinton 8.

Elizabeth C..................125.25

Phillips, Zack 8,

Petronia Windley............130.98

Richardson, Anna,Tyson 87.24

Sherrod, Gene Carrell, 8,

Dorothy D....................121.23

Smith, Burnice Richard 8.

Rose Mary...................130,05

Smith, Emanuel &

Janice King..................102.92

Smith, Johnnie & Mattie Jones. 86,91

Smith, Katherine Wilks.........4.68

Smith, Mark K. & Catherine D. 12.94

Smith, Milton  ...........45.84

Smith, Perlene (heirs) &

Mable R.......................70.90

Spell, Mary Sidberry Smith... 130.66

Stocks, Chester ...............73.08

Stocks, Romeo & Geneva......49.52

Strong, Bennie Edward &

Martha......................127.70

Sugg, Virginia R..............163.38

Suggs, Sidney & Temple Smith. 96.68

Sutton, Michele Edwards......46.59

Thompson, Stephen Mark____180.71

Toler, Kenneth Wayne, Jr.....155.43

Tripp, Mickey Ray &

Teresa Dail..................136.81

Tucker, Sam, Sr..............112.96

Tyson, Isabella Harris........13.10

Tyson, Roland (heirs).........60.88

Tyson, Tom (heirs) ...........75.29

United States of America.....135.30

Vines. William James &

Mary Louise............  135.09

Waller, Garland (heirs).......44.58

Waller, Patricia..............115.77

WaDer, Tony, Jr. (heirs) ......63.52

Waller, Tony Sr. (heirs)........2.36

Waters, John..................ei.oo

Wells, Katherine.............135.17

White, Charles Vernon   .....311.64

Whitehurst, Joseph Lee&

Beatrice......................66,96

Whitehurst, Lomer H........i 1500

Whitfield, Lucille Dali........153.47

Wier, Jackie B.  ............158.13

Wilder, Robert Douglas &

Annie........................ui.64

Williams, Clifton Ray &

DelorIsC.....................125.98

Williams, Curtis Earl &

Shirley ......................134,93

Williams, Wright 8. Ester Mae. 79.62 Wills, Michael J.&

Joanne Quick........... 161 56

Wilson, Larry Clifton 8,

Margaret....................128.20

Winterville Rest Home.......607.29

Worthington, Dalton

Woodrow, Jr..................48.08

Smith, Denise A. 8. Leon.......93.26

May 17, 24, 31 and June 7

The Eighth Wonder of the World

In 1852, engineer John Roebling got the idea for a suspenetiun bridge frum Manhattan to Brooklyn in New York City. His dream took shape in 1870 when construction on the bridge began. But that same year, Roebling died from injuries he received in a construction accident, and his son Washington took over. In 1872, the younger Roebling was paralyzed by a stroke, but he spent the next 11 years directing operations from a house in Brooklyn Heights that overlooked the construction site. The bridge took 13 years to complete and cost more than $15 million and the lives of 25 workmen. Today New York City celebrates the 100th anniversary of the Brooklyn Bridge, The Eighth Wonder of the World.

DO YOU KNOWWhat river does the Brooklyn Bridge span?

MONDAYS ANSWERA.J. Foyt has won four Indy 500smore than any other driver.

5-24-83    c VEC, Inc. 1983

The day care center and the other five targets had windows blown out and gates smashed.

Cabaco said Mozambique would continue to allow ANC members and any other genuine refugees to enter the country,

It is a principle of our constitution, Cabaco said. But he added ANC members would never be allowed to carry' arms against South Africa. Asked what would happen to those who did so, he replied, They would certainly be arrested.

Our sovereignty has been attacked bv a neighboring country, Cabaco said late Monday night.

Cabaco made it clear that despite Mondays raid he did not consider his Marxist government to be headed for an active war against the more powerful military of the white-minority g()vernment of South Africa.

"Asked whether Mozambican officials would be willing to confer with South African officials to seek peaceful solutions he replied, Certainly.

Mozambiques news agency, AIM, and South African officials said seven jets swooped over the city Monday morning, warned the Maputo airport tower an attack was about to begin, then unleashed a barrage of rockets and machine-gun fire.

Accounts of casualties differed. Mozambique said six died and 40 suffered wounds, seven critically. It said the fighters had struck at a residential neighborhood and that the casualties were nearly all Mozambican.

South Africa said scores could have been killed, considering intelligence reports that 350 or more ANC members might have been inside six targeted buildings and compounds.

Cabaco said the jets swooped onto their targets from over the Indian Ocean, which would place the sun behind them and hide their dives until the last moment. He said the jets caught people on their way to work.

In South Africa, spokesmen for the ruling National Party, along with its right-wing critics, strongly supportedthe attack.

Opposition groups that usually challenge the Nationalists on apartheid, or race-separation, issues, backed the raitj but said it could increase tensions in the region.

Charge Is Filed In Bailey Death

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1963 Trlt)ur) Company Syndlcati, Inc

RUFF THOSE WI.WERS!

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C (AP) - A recently discharged U.S. Army soldier was been charged with murdering a Belk-Tyler department store executive earlier this year, police said Monday.

Police Chief Danny Dixon said Richard Dale Johnson, 36, formerly of Fort Bragg, was being sought on a murder warrant.

Johnson is accused of killing Luther Anderson Bailey, 56, of Nashville, N.C. He was executive vice president of Belk-Tyler, a 15-store chain based in Rocky Mount.

Baileys body was found in a motel room in Fayetteville

at about 10:18 a.m. Feb. 11, He was nude and had been beaten on the head and strangled, authorities said.

His wallet was missing and jewelry had been stripped from his body.

Baileys car was found three days later in a parking lot on Fort Bragg grounds.

Detectives said Bailey had been in Fayetteville for a court appearance involving an automobile accident in late 1982.

Bailey was not married and lived with his mother in Nashville.

Police declined to reveal details of the investigation.

North-South vulnerable. North deals.

NORTH

Q964 <7K93 0AQJ5 4K10

WEST EAST AJ87 Void ^ 754    :7AJ1062

0 872    OK964

4Q53    4AJ92

SOUTH

K 10532 . ^Q8

0 103

8764 The bidding:

North E*8t South West

1 NT Pass 2 4 Pass Pass Dble Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: Three of 4.

Trump Coup Tommy had never felt the need to make his mark on the national scene. However, when the American Contract Bridge League held its Spring Championships in Hawaii, he could not resist the lure of sunny climes and joined thousands of bridge players on the pilgrimage to the first of the year's shrines of the master point.

On the first board that Tommy played in tournament competition, he found an exotic line to convert his eight fast tricks into six. That had not failed to make an impression on West. This was the second board of the set, and West had no qualms in converting his partner's double of two spades to penalties. He did not know what effect a bad trump break made on Tommy, changing him instantly from Daffy Duck to Mighty Mouse.

West led a low club, and dummys king lost to the ace.

The Tax Division of the City Finance Department is responsible for the collection of City taxes. The tax rate is established by the Cify Council on an annual basis. City taxes are due on September 1. For information, call 752-4137.

A club was returned to the queen, and West shifted to a heart. Tommy played low from the table, and East's ten was taken by the queen in the closed hand. The ten of diamonds was run to the king, and East cashed the ace of hearts before exiting with a heart. The defenders had four tricks in the bank, and it looked as if they surely would get at least two trump tricks. But that did not make allowance for Tommys extraordinary talent.

Tommy ruffed the heart, ruffed a club in dummy, cashed the ace of diamonds and then ruffed his second win ,ner - the queen of diamonds. He and dummy were now down to three trumps each, and West still had four.

When Tommy led his last club. West was forced to ruff low. Dummy overruffed with the nine. The jack of diamonds was returned and Tommy ruffed in hand with the kingl

West could do no better than overruff with the ace and return a trump. But there was no deflecting Tommy from.his appointed task.' He played low from dummy, won the ten in hand and the doubled contract was home for a top score.

How do you choose the best opening lead? Charles Goren has the answer. For a copy of Winning Opening Leads, send $1.85 to Goren-Leads," care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 259, .Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make checks payable to News-paperbooks.

Paul Tardif Quartet Fri. & Sat. May 27 & 28 9:00 PM until Jazz Loft

Movie Blockbusters: The 15 Greatest Hits Of All Time

THE STARS SALUTE THE MOVIES AMERICA LOVES MOST!

An entertainment-packed look at 50 years of box-office champions! HOST: Christopher Plummer Harrison Ford R2-D2

Henry Thomos

Maurice Gibb Mark Hamill John Trovolta Robert Mocnoughton Mario von Trapp Butterfly McQueen Dee Wallace John Willioms

OUTLET

MENS

FUN IN THE SUN

[TENNIS SHORTS BY OXFORD . .

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UNISEX SHORTS BY DEE CEE . . ...10

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LADIES SHORTS ALL LENGTHS . . . 11.UP KNIT TOPS BY MANOR HOUSE. $^ PRICE^ 14^^

SUH VISORS.............

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Ask About Our Layaway Plan

THIS DOCTORS A KILLER. Is the woman tracking him his next patient or his next victim?

THE CRADLE WILLFAU

James Farentino,

Lauren Hutton, Ben Murphy

Based on the novel by Mary Higgins Clark

Also sfarrina members ofthe Emmy Award-winning daytime drama

GUIDING

LIGHT."

Elvera Roussel

Pete* Simon

Jerry ver Dom

World Television Premiere!

A CBS SPEOAL MOVIE PRESENTAHOM

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14-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, May24,1983

PUBLIC NOTICES

NOTICE TOCREDITORS NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned, having qualified as Executor ot the Estate of TORA MARIE LARSEN, late* ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to

notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned by the 10th day of November. 1983, or this Notice wil

be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment This the 4th day of May, 1983 DAVID A JARRATT .

Execulor ot the Estate ol Tora Marie Larsen Post Oftice Drawer 99 Greenville, North Carolina 27835 0099 W H Watson

Speight, Watson and Brewer Attorneys tor Estate Post Office Drawer 99 Greenville, NC 27835 0099 Telephone 919/758 1161 May 10, 17, 24, 31. 1983

FILE NO : 83CVP97 IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY STUART SHINN, INC VS

DEWEY DAR L WHITEHURST,

ET AL

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCES BY PUBLICATON TO Dewey Dari Whitehurst TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been tiled in the above entitled action The nature ot the relief being sought is as follows:    '

Action tor damage to and for conversion ot a truck owned by Plaintiff

You are required to make defense to such pleading within forty (40)

PEANUTS

V

PUBLIC NOTICES

aays atter May 10, 19j, exclusive of Such dale, and upon you failure to do so. the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sought This the 5th day ot May, 1983 MATTOX 8, DAVIS, P A Gary B Davis Attorney for Plaintiff Post Office Box 686 Greenville. North Carolina 27834 Phone 919/758 3430 May 10, 17, 24, 1983

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

ADM^N^iSISflON

INTHE GENERAL COURTOF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Having qualified as Executor of the Estate ot Evelyn Davis Whitehurst ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the Estate to present them to The undersigned, on or before the 20th day ot November

mmediate payment This the 9th day of May, 1983 Judith Whitehurst Peel Executor 1115 Park Drive Elizabeth City. NC 27909 May 17, 24, 31. June 7. 1983

NOTICE TOCREDITORS AND DEBTORS OF

HERMAN R STACKHOUS

Alt persons, firms and corporations having claims against Herman R Stacknous, deceased, are notified to exhibit them to Pattie M Stackhous. as Executrix ot the decedent's estate on or before November 18. 1983. at Route 3, Box 924, Washington, North Carolina 27889, or be barred from their recoverjz JJebtors of the decedent

ULTRALIGHT AIR SHOW

Ayden Flight Park, May 28 and 29 Hot air balloons, ultralight com petition, remote control demo and sky diving Saturday night barn fire and live music Admission $1 00 Kids under 12 tree. Call 355 2970

WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick We will pay too dollar._

SELL YOUR CAR the Nationa Autofinders Way! Authorizec Dealer in Pitt County. Hasting' Ford Call 758 0114    

014

Cadillac

CADILLAC, 1970 4 door hard top, Sedan Deville One owner, $595 negotiable 756 8999

1976 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

Needs little body work. Also air conditioner, 5,000 BTU Call be tween 10 and 7 757 3119.

015

Chevrolet

CAPRICE 1982.    4    door,    fully

equipped, extra clean. Call Re> Srnifh Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141.

CELEBRITY 1982. 4 door, low mileage, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141.

018

Ford

1973 FORD GALAXY 500. $600 Call Joe at 756 8950 before 2 30. No calls on Sunday.

1974 PINTO STATIONWAGON

Extra clean, low mileage $1095 756 4204 or 756 8715.

1977 LTD LANDAU Fully equipped. Extra clean 48,000 miles $350 Call Joe Clark. 756 0919

020

AAercury

1969 MERCURY MONTEREY Runs good, $375. Call 752 2321.

021

Oldsmobile

CUTLASS SUPREME 1982. Fully equipped, extra clean, low mileage Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141.__

1971 OLDS CUTLASS FOR PARTS No tires, no rims. Motor and transmission In real good shape Call 756 6983 after 8:30 p.m

1980 OLDS Cutlass Supreme Most options. New radials Sacrifice. $5300 756 7417._

022

Plymouth

1956 PLYMOUTH 4 door in good shape. 61,000 actual miles Phone 758 7130__

051

Help Wanted

ADVERTISING SALESPERSON

wanted. Previous advertising sales experience helpful, must have good Wping skills Send resume to Classified Advertising Manager The Daily Reflector, P O Box 1967 Greenville, N C ,    27835    1967.    N(

phone calls please._

AUTO MECHANIC, 5 years expei ence, must have fools Good benefits. Contact Kenneth Evans, Regional Auto Parts, Inc. 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 fune 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 4417 or 756 9184 after 7.

1972 PLYMOUTH FURY Clean. Good condition $695 or best offer. 752 1705._

are

to make immediate

xecutri

PATTIE M STACKHOUS Executrix ot the Estate of Herman R Stackhous OF COUNSEL.

Charles L McLawhorn, Jr McLawhorn 8, Warren, P A Attorneys at Law P C Box 8188

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 May 17 24, 31, June 7, 1983

018

F^

PINTO RUNABOUT, 1974, good condition, 4 speed, air, reliable. Best offer Call Richard, 355 2362.

1960 T BIRD lor sale by owner Good shape Low mileage $3500 firm Call 756 0558.

1966 MUSTANG, straighf, 6 engine excellent condition. Rebuilt carburetor and transmission, AM/FM cassette, $2500 or best offer Wade after 6 p.m., 756 6893

1971 MAVERICK 4 door Right side damaged Runs, good tires, new mutfler Best offer 758 4567

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

A FEW VEAR5 BACX.ONEOF THE GKADUADN6 CIA5SE5 6R0UGWT me HERE AMD DUrtlPED /V\E ATTME FFDNT OF THE SCHOOL ' .

MOW IT'S BECOME A TRADITION EACH VAR FOR THE GRADUA71M& CkASS TO RAIMT ME WHEM THEC LEAVE !

IN FACT, IT'5 BECOME 60 MUCH FUN ,THEO'VE TAKEN TD 6PRAc,>-RAIMTIM& THE ENTIRE FRONT OF THE SCHOOL'

SHOE

fmmmm.

iwiipwiiNras".

'Si

___-    y.___

mofor, 72,000 miles. Excellent con dition. $1500. 746 2326.

023

Pontiac

1974 FIREBIRD

3763

$1500. Call 752

1981 GRAND PRIX 1 owner, excellent condition Must sell im mediately. Call 752 8865_

024

Foreign

1977 MGB. new paint, good tires. Clean. Must sell. $2495 Call 752 8266 or 758 5728.

1977 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 756 2774 after 7

1978 MGB 38,000 miles, c Excellent condition 756 of

fires.

1979 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE con

vertible 4 speed with electric overdrive. 30,000 miles Excellent condition 758 1809 weekdays. 752 6712 weekends and nights.

1980 DATSUN 210 SL Hatchback Automatic, air, excellent condition. 756 6588.    _

1981 DATSUN 280Z 2 + 2, 5 speed Loaded. Call 757 1321 or 521524 after 7 p.m._

1982 TOYOTA TERCEL, 4 door, automatic, air, AM/FM, 12,000 ac tual miles.. Excellent condition. 758 1809 weekdays; 752 671 2

weekends and nights_

1982 VOLVO DIESEL 4 door Loaded. Call 757 1321 or 523 1524

atter 7 p.m.______

450 SL MERCEDES, 1978. 18.000 miles. Silver with blue top. Call before 9 a.m., 757 1073 or after n p m., 946 6020 except Sundays_

BLOODMOBILE ASSISTANT Head Nurse American Red Cross Blood Services has a full time supervisory position available tor 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 required Proven management experience required IV or venapuncture 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 Ford, 758 0114

BROprS HAS OPENING for full time sales position in the Junior Sportswear Department. Strong retail experience preferred Apply Brody's, Pitt Plaza, Libby Kinley, Monday through Friday.

BRODY'S PITT PLAZA has an opening for a full time office worker Must be able to prefornri office duties, filing, typing, telephone work Previous office work experience preferred Apply Brody's, Pift Plaza Monday through Friday, 2fo5

CARPENTER with framing and trim experience. Greenville. 355 2956

COMMERCIAL CARPENTERS or lead persons needed at once at Cherry Point. Call Jim, Jones. I 447 4921. WeareanEOE_

DENTAL HYGIENIST WANTED

Flexible hours. Call 752 5126 for information.

EXPERIENCED SHEET METAL workers only. Apply in person at Larmar Mechanical Contractors between 8 and 9 a.m. only._

Searching tor the right lownhouse' Watch Classified every day

BoatiFor Sate

COM PAC 16 SAILBOAT, cabin, 3 sails, trailer, 4 horsepower Evinrude Fun and stable Phone 825 9811, Bethel or see at Rag Bag

Sailor, Greenville.__

ELECTRIC TROLLING MOTOR Motor glide, magnum series with battery 28 pounds thrust 355 28?9

after 6__

12' SANDPIPER saiiboaf, $695 Call

756 6840alter 6p m._

14' HOBIE CAT TURBO Call 756 9730 alter 5__

1972 GLASTRON 16' with 65 horse power Evinrude and frailer $1595 355 2970    ___

1973 THUNDERBIRO 17' tri hull, 135 horsepower Johnson, power tilt, Cox trailer Excellent condition

$3,000. 756 4125.__

1977    18'    WINCHESTER.    115

Johnson, Galvanized trailer power winch and many extras. $3195. Call

756 7041 after 6.__

1981 KAWASAKI Jef Skis, $1200. New and used Hobi Cats, $1000 and

up. 441 4270.    __

26' TROJAN 1977. Fly bridge, head, galley, and DF radio. Call 945 6127.

034 Campers For Sale

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 Campfown R V's, Ayden. 746 3530.

GRADY WHITE Boats is now accepting applications for future clerical positions. Must be able to type 60 words a minute. Accuracy a must. Experience with computers desirable. Minimum of 3 years office experience p^referred. Good pay and benefits. By appointment onfy. Call 752 2111, Ext. 251, be tween 9 am and 4 pm Monday

through Friday,. _

HEAD NURSE Pheresis Unit American Red Cross has a full time management position in Pheresis Unit in which spec! donor

cedures are pei requires graduate of accredited school of nursing with current NC licensure. Minimum 5 years recent nursing experience with demon strafed supervisory capabilities. Responsibilities include supervision and coordination of all donor, pa tienf, and staff activities. Ad minisfrative duties 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 Office Box 6003, Greenville, NC 27834. EOE

051

Help Wanted

DENTAL ASSISTANT WANTED Must have experience. Call 752 5126.

RN'S, LPN'S and OR Technicians. Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald, Director ol Nursing, (919) 943-2111.

SALES REPRESENTATIVE Ma

lor national company has an open ing for a Sales Associate in the Greenville area. Prior sales experi ence not as important as ability and willingness to learn. Salary negotiable. Excellent benefit package For a confidential in terview send resume to MANAG ER, PO Box 1985, Greenville, NC 27835 Equal Opportunity Employer

SALESPERSON WANTED for

retail bedding store. Mattress World. Apply 1203 West I4th Street.

SECRETARY Sale Coordinator. Requirements: typing, shorthand, good organizational skills, ability to work well with pOblic. Apply in person only between 2 4 p.m. Holi

day Inn. Greenville.

Memorial Drive.

SECRETARY/BOOKKEEPER

One Girl Oftice. Must be accurate and efficient in handling receiv ables, payables, payroll, general ledger and telephone. Good typing and math skills required. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to Boyd Associates, Inc., PO Box 1705, Greenville, NC,

SERVICE STATION HELP Expe rierKe Local references Apply in person. Holiday Shell, 724 South Memorial Drive. No phone calls

SR

TYPISTS!

55 Words Per Minute WE NEEDYOUl MANPOWER TEMPORARY

060

FOR SALE

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood tor sale. J P Stancil, 752 6331._

074

Miscellaneous

SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company._

STANCIL TREE SERVICE

_J    P    Stancil,    752    6331_

065 Farm Equipment

TRACTOR RADIOS top quality clarion radios. AM/FM pushbutton radio $93 49. AM/FM cassette stereo radio $102 49: Fender mount housing with built-in speaker and antenna $61.49. Coaxial wedge speakrs $31.95 per pair. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING

Stables, 752 5237

WANTED YOUNG boy or girl to give a Pinto pony a home $175 756 7209

073 Fruits and Vegetables

CERTIFIED PORTORICAN sweet potato plants. 752 6215.

AAAY PEAS $5.50 a bushel B 8. B You Pick. 795 4646._

PICK y6W OWN

BROCCOLI COLLARDS,LETTUCE,CABBAGE NOWOPEN    4pm.8pm.

8 miles west ot Greenville on 264,turn left on Hwy.l3, 300 yards on left. Watch tor sign._

074

Miscellaneous

Services offers you:

' Uniere Fringe Benefits

lexible Schedule

To^T

'ay

Call us for an appointment We Are Not a Fee ^ency

MANPOWER

TEMPORARY

SERVICES-

118 Reade Street 757-3300

WANTED ASSISTANT managers Apply atter 2 p.m. at Huckleber ry's. 1011 Charles Boulevard. Greenville. Management experi ence preferred._

WANTED SOUND MAN for rock band. Call between II 12 midnight Call 638 6934.

WANTED: middle aged woman to with woman nights 746 3654

Slav \

WEIGHT LOSS ADVISORS Must be willing to work 10 hours a week and lose 10 pounds. 752 0919.

WELL ESTABLISHED import GM dealer in Eastern NC seeks 2 experienced technicians. Only ex perienced need to aj^ly. Send resume to Technician, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

059

Work Wanted

jcinerii posiTion in rneresis in which specialized blood and patient treatment pros are performed. Position

HEADS UP HAIR SALON now

taking applications for full time hair stylist. Call 758 8553 for ap pointment._

HOUSEMOTHER POSITION Experience in operating a home. Light bookkeeping in managing employees. Apartment providetT Must have own transportation. Salary negotiable. F tion, call 758 5632.

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, masonry and rooting 35 years ex^rience in building Call James Harrington after 4 pm.

CARPET CLEANING or repair. Reasonable rates. 758 7253

ANTIQUE DOUBLE BRASS bed

with mattress and box springs $400 or best otter. 756 9878.

APPLE //e Starter Systems Brand new, $1695, Also /

15% discount. Call

new, $1695, Also Apple accessories I 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 fake trade ins.

BABY CARRIAGE/STROLLER

combination by Sears. Like new. 756 7038.

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

hy pay retail when you can save lo ' 3 and more on bedding and

Whi

up    .

waterbeds. Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza), 355 2626._

TOASTER OVEN, $35 Corelle Dinnerware by Corning, cost $100. selltor$50. 752 1231.    ._

TOPSOIL, mortar sand, fill sand and gravel. Davenport Hauling, 756 5247_

TREE 4 STUMP REMOVAL

Reasonable prices. Insured. Work guaranteed. Call 752 4060 for free estimate.    '    _

TWO 50 watt Lyric speakers. Good condition. $75 or best otter Days 756 9371 or nights 756 7887.

USED REFRIGERATOR 15 cubic toot, coppertone. $150. 746 4505.

WEDDING CAKES professionally decorated and delicious. Made to order Call 757 3133_ _

19" COLOR TV Rent to own $23 11 per month. Furniture World 757 0451,_

7 PIECE DINETTE, sofa, chair and recliner. $200. Call 355-2128.    _

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, many extras Including maionite siding, shingle root, frost tree refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much more Regular price, $21,995 Limited Time Only

$16,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up includea Hours, 8 AM to 8 pm CROSSLANO HOMES (formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756    0191_

EXCELLENT INVESTMENT

70x14 3 bedrooms, I's baths, total electric repo. Great condition Less than $600 down and less than $200 per month tor only 9 years Call 756 013L_

LIMITED TIME ONLYI 1983 70x14 2 bedrooms, 2 bafhs. To see is to believe! Need to sell immediate

ly. 10% above wholesale plus set up. Only I home, so hurry and cad! 756 0131,__

MOBILE HOME for sale. 3 bedroom Call 752 9978 after 6 p.m.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL

Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 763 9734.

BY OWNER - Office equipment and furniture 756 9209 or 756 1436.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013. for small loads ot sand, topsoll and stone. Also driveway work._

CAR SEAT, stroller, walker, high chair, old milk can Call 757 0307._

CARPET, CARPET, CARPETI Assorted sizes and colors. 9x12's, 9xl5's, 12x12's, 12xl5-'s Priced to move Financing available. Furniture World 2808 East 10th Street, 757 0451.

CENTIPEDE SOD 758 2704, 752 4994. _

COFFEE

756 2121.

MACHINE, $50 Call

DISNEY WORLD 8i EPCOT

tickets. 2 adult, 2 children. 2 day pass $78. Pop up camper with stove, ice box, sink, sleeps 4, $500. One 5,000 BTU air conditioner. $125. 355 2588 atter 5 o m

NEW QUALITY bullf Marshfield. 3 bedrooms, l'-3 baths Payments under $200 per month Only 1 home left! Call 756 0131

REAL NICE AND CLEAN 70x12 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Low down payment, low monthly payments Should see this one! Thomas Mobile Homes, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Greenville, NC 752 6068.

12X50 RITZCRAFT Call 758 4234 12x60, 1^70 HILLCREST Located in good park $4800. 756 0801

12 X 70 2 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, good condition. $2,000 equity and assume loan. Call 756 9001 atter 6

14 WIDES tor as low as $190 per month. Call or come by Art Oellano Homes, 756 9841

14x70 COMMADORE Only 3 months old $500 down and assume loan 2 bedrooms, I'z bafhs. Call 758 5010 anytime_

ELECTRIC WHEEL CHAIR New. still in box $1800 value, will sell for $900. 758 5319

CARPETCLEANING

Quality Cleaning-Reasonable Rates. H & H Clean Care    756-9076

"The Carpet Doctor "

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning atter a hard winters use Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road Enterprises. 756-9123 day, 756 1007 night

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time Let someone else do your housecleaning. 752 3758.

IMMEDIATE OPENING tor a

career minded individual as sales person, with some bookkeeping knowledge. C^portunity tor advancement. Pleasant working conditions. Apply in person only. Absolutely no phone calls please! Zales Jewelers, Carolina East Mall.

KIND, RELIABLE person needed to keep six month old baby at home. Monday through Friday. Child care experience preferred. Call 758 0852

Cycles For Sale

1977 AT 175 Yamaha $200 or best otter. Must sell. Call tor more

information, 756-0977.__

1977 550 Honda. Excellent condition. Call 752 0334 or 746-2017.

LEGAL SECRETARY No experi ence required. Send resume to Legal Secretary, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834

1978 KAWASAKI KZ650 custom Very low mileage. Mint condition. Extras. $1400. 753 2515 atter 8 p m. 1978 KZ650 KAWASAKI Custom paint, new tires, 4 into 1 header, new seat, lots more. $1300 or best

otter. Call 746 4066.__

1980 CB750 HONDA 6100 miles Excellent shape. $1750. Call 752 4161.__

1980 CM400 HONDA Excellent condition. Call 756 9938 anytime.

1980 HONDA CR80R, super condi tion, $500. Call atter 6, 746 6753.

1981 HONDA CB125. Excellent con dition. Best otter. Call 756 7066 atter 5:30p.m__

1981 HONDA CAA400E, 2,300 miles Excellent. 2 helmets, winter suit $1100 negotiable. Must sell. 524 5293.

1982 YAMAHA 750 Seca Excellent condition. 1 owner, only 2300 miles $2450. Call 758 5876 atter 5.

Trucks For Sale

JIMMY BLAZER, 1977 4 wheel drive 4 speed. 350 engine. $3500 Call Chris Joyner days 753 3232 1971 STEP VAN 12' body Runs good with new battery. $1500 negotiable. 756 9123 days. 756 1007 nights.__

1976 JEEP CHEROKEE 2 door, 6 cylinder, 4 wheel drive, new tires and42Uj>holstery. 756 4230 night,

1979 FORD VAN Gold and white chateau. 752 1159 days, 752 6822 nights.____

1983 TOYOTA, 4x4 truck, blue with silver stripes, tilt wheel, FM stereo, 5 speed. 7,000 miles. Call alter 6 p.m , 792 9059.

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.

LEGAL SECRETARY Experienced, salary negotiable. Send resume to Secretary, P(j Box 5091, Greenville, NC r ^ LOCAL MANUFACTURE of pre cision molding rubber products has an immediate opening tor a quality control manager The successful candidate should possess the follow 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

LPN NEEDED surgical office.

Hours Tuesday, Wednesday,

Thursday, 9 5. Reply to LPN, PO

- painting, remodeling,    storage

MANAGER FOR CONVENIENT    buildings. 758 6213.    ^

store and gas combination.,$20,000    PAINTING interior and    B.win,

756 6873 atter 6p.m.

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. All items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call tor tree estimate Days 756 9123, Night 756 1007.

GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call 752 7341

GRASS CUTTING prices 355 6132.

Reasonable

LAWN CUTTING College student cutting lawns at reasonable rates. Call Alat 758 6178.

LAWN AAAINTENANCE Any type Call 756 9938 anytime.

LAWNMOWE9 REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver All work guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m., weekends anytime

MATURE LADY will sit with el derly person at night. Call 746 2434 or 355 6695    .    .

FACTORY 2nds NOW available direct from manufacturer Hand woven rope hammocks, $19.95 to $53. Hatteras Hammocks, 1104 Clark Street, Greenville    _

FOR SALE G E 25" color TV as is $150 Call after 6 p.m , Monday Friday, anytime Sunday, 756 4328.

FOR SALE: yellow collards and cabbage plants. Marion Mae Mills, 756 3279 or 355 2792,

FOR SALE: 21,000 BTU Hotpoint air conditioner. Excellent condition. $250. Call 756 5019 atter 5:30.

GEORGIA RED

'or 1,( favs, 756 7159 niohts

----   St    potato

sprouts $25 for 1,000. Call 752-3015 da

GOOD USED WASHERS SlOOeach. $85 with trade in. Call 756 2479.

GRADUATION IDEA? Mottitf's Magnavox has 12" black and white TVs tor only $74.95! 2803 Evans Street Extension, 756 8444.

ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers. Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration, 2229 Memorial

Drive, 756-6417.    ' A_

KENMORE refrigerator Frost tree, energy efficient. 5 years old, $150. 753 267

LADIES CLOTHES tor sale. Like new Size 7 8 and 9 10. Blouses, tops, slacks, skirts, dresses, size 6 nar row shoes. Call 355 2136 lor in formation

LARGE LOADS ot sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available 756 4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson._

1970,    12x65 Town & Country

Excellent condition. All electric central air and heat. 2 bedroom. 2 bath, washer, dryer. Unfurnished. $5,000. 752 7941 atter 6p.m.

1972 12x52. 752 7233

Hatteras. Furnished.

1974 RITZ CRAFT 12x65    2

bedrooms. 1 bath $300 down. 757 0633_

1975 CAPELLA Like new 12x65, 2 bedrooms on a large lot 757 3796 or 752 2877.

1978 12x60 CONNOR mobile home tor sale. 2 bedrooms, l bath. Underpinning included. Low down payment, assume low monthly payments. Call 752 8846 atter 2.

1980 14 X 70 three bedrooms, 1 bath. Some equity and assume loan ot $181 per month. Call Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841.

1981 CONNER, house type furniture, underskirting, steps and all $2,000 down and take up pay-ments ot $209 month. Call 756 78.

1982 24 X 64 Parkway $500 down Assume loan at 12% interest. Call Art Oellano Homes, 756-9841.

1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as Iqw as $148.91, At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068.

1983 3 BEDROOMS, IV, baths, living room, kitchen. Take up payments. Unfurnished. 746 6035

1983 70x14, 2 months old. Masonite siding. 2 bedrooms. 2 baths. $1500 and assume payments. 752-7112 days, ask for Robert, 753 5427 after 6.

076 AAobilelHonne Insurance

NEED A SAAALL wallpapering or paint job done? Experienced, quail ty work. Reasonable. Judy 757-1580.

PAINT PROS

We specialize in use.ot Benjamin Moore paints. Residential or commercial Interior or exterior. Plaster and wallpapering Free estimate. 758 4155    ^

_WE    DO    IT    RIGHT_

PAINTING

No |ob too small. Interior and exterior. Low rates. McEarl Paint Co.

_W3604

MARKETING

MANAGEMENT

Large, multi line financial services company seeks bright person tor rriarketing management. Opportunity otters 36 months extensive training in financial marketing leading to career in first time management. Outstanding benefits and bright career tor right person. College background desired, sales experience helplul. Submit resume to PO Box 539, Jacksonville, NC 28540.

MATURE DETERMINED and energetic person who would like to make money as personnel consultant. Good telephone personality a must. College degree preferred. For details can Herb Lee, 355 2020, Heritage Personnel.

PAINTING Tired ot paying contractors high prices? Experienced painters, work guaranteed. 757-1233.

SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, counter tops Jack Baker Floor.Service. 756 2868 anytime. It no answer call back.

SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59.95. Call Steve Atkins tor all vour sign needs. 756-9117.

WILL reasonable rates 6p.m._

AAOW any size lawn at Call 752 6419 atter

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WILL BABYSIT in my home on Stanfonsburg Highway, Pineridoe Subdivision, 757 1419

WILL KEEP infants and children in my home Up to 8 years of age Only $.85 an hour 752 4903

WILL KEEP YOUR children in my home during the summer Near Bells Fork. 756 3028.

YOUND WOMAN would like to care tor children in her home. Will provide meals. Near Ayden SportShop. Call between 7 and i pm.

PETS

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER

jjes. All shots, wormed Call

AKC MINIATURE Longhaired Dachshund. II week old male, red and black. 355 6476, Greenville,

BIRD DOG, 18 months old. lemon and while, female Pointer, un trained, all shots. 756 5575.

DALMATIAN PUPPIES while with black dots, $100 Call Pollocksville. 224-7941 or 224 5431 atter 5 p.m._

FULL BLOODED Labrador Re triever puppies. 6 weeks old. $50. 752 3914

SOMEONE IS looking lor your unus ed power mower. Why not advertise it With a low cost Classified Ad?

MATURE RESPONSIBLE woman to keep baby and do housework for school teacher in my home near Carolina East Mall beginning August IS. References and trans portation required. Only those ex perienced in child care need apply 756 7392.

NEED A JOB? Avon has sales positions available in the Greenville and Pitt County areas tor men and women. Work in your own neighborhood, choose your working hours, earn up to 50%! Call 752 7006.

NEED GOOD SALESMAN OR SALESLADY Must need $30,(XX) and up per year income. Willing to train sharp person. For contldenJIal interview apply In person to Man ager. Crossland Homes, 630 West Greenville Boulevard

NEEDED MATURE lady who loves children to care tor twin girls In my home 4 days a week beginning June I. It Interested call 752 6164.

PART TIME ATTENDANT tor self service car wash Prefer retired or semi retired person Most be good with customers and be mechanically inclined. Call 758 3258 between? II, 3-5.

PART TIME HELP to train as designer and do general duties In to Florist, PO Box

Reply 1 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

PART TIME help wanted. Sales position. Maternity Warehouse Outlet, Carolina East Center Apply In person

LABRADOR RETRIEVERS AKC

pupoies Field trail and gun dog stock Wormed, shots, and de wcliws removed. 1 242 6529 or I 247 4830.

POMERANIAN, male, blonde. house trained. $100. 752 1541 alter s.

SIAMESE KITTENS, 6 weeks old. alSo breeding pair, call 756 4500 atter 7

SIBERIAN HUSKIES, registered. 4 rad with blue eyes, 6 weeks old, wormed $150 752 5333. _

SIBERIAN HUSKIE Black and white, blue eyes. Female, 5 months old Good pet with children. AKC registered, $150. Call 355 6119.

3 DACHSHUND FEMALE PUPS, wormed 6 weeks old. 746 3681.

051

Help Wanted

PART TIME HELP wanted, fast food experience helpful. Serious inquiries only. Apply between 2 3 p.m. at Bill's Fast Food, cornar ot 4th and Graene. No phone calls

QUALIFIED SAILING and wind surfer Instructors needed. Bayslde Watersports. Nags Head, NC 441

4270.

A MATURE CHRISTIAN LADY to live In as housakeeper. Private phone, bedroom, bath, with all utilities, room, and board free of charge, plus sn^all salary. 756 3703.

(

RN

STAFF DEVELOPER

Position available for a staff davel-oper In modarn long-tarm cara l*y Must possasS laadarship ability and technical skills to carry out policies and programs established by the facility. Registered nurse with work experience sufficient to demonstrate ability to organize, plan and assist employees in learning situations.

Please iettd resume to;

Rt.1, Box 21 Greenville, NC 27834

MORTAR SAND, fill, rock, topsoil. Call 746 3819or 746 3296.

NOTICE TO RENTAL property owners. Furniture World has a wholesale division. Call us for the best prices. 757-0451

ROSE BUSHES

ARE

20% Off HAPPIPOTGERBERAS BEGONIAS IMPATIENS TOMATOES & PEPPERS

Many Other Bedding Plants ANDGARDEN SUPPLIES

Open Sunday 1:30 to 5 PM

Kittrell's Greenhouses

2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT _CALL    756 7373

SEARS BEST rowing exerciser, $100. Stationery exerciser bike, $20. 3 pound dumb bell set, $5. Brinley 10 ' turning plow, cultivator _,and hitch, tits 10-14 horsepower lawn tractor, $150. 758 6373.

SEIKO WATCH, G757, all features 756 5575

SET OF PINE bunk beds and mattress and box springs. Dorm size retrigerafor. All in gooc tion. 756 7X)66atter5 :30.

good condi

SET OF SEARS weights and weight bench. Call 752 1973 alter 5.    

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752

077 Musical Instruments

BABY GRAND PIANO, completely rebuilt and retinished Must sell. Best offer. Call 757 0020. ySED^ PIANOS AND ORGANS Yamahas, Wurlitzers, etc. The Music Shop, Greenville Square Shopping Center. 756-0007.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality fumliura Raflntshlm and rtpalrt. Superior caning for all type chairs, larger seteclion of CMtoin picture framing, survey 8take-iny length, HI types ol pelleti, hand<rafted rope hammocks, telected framed reproductiont.

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Induslrtat Park, Hwy. 13 754-4188    8A.M.'4;30P.M.

Qreenvme, N.C.

The New Truck In Town is At

Brown-Wood, Inc.

1983 Isuzu Pickup

M33.94

Per Month

Based on Selling Price of $6000.00, $1000 down (cash or trade), Amount financed $5000.00. 48 monthly payments, 12.9% Annual Percentage Rate Finance charges $1429.12. Total note $6429.12. Stock no. 710050.

Brown-Wood, Inc.

Dickinson Ave.

752-7111

T





077 Musical Instruments

WINTER SPINET PIANO with bench, beautiful cabinet. SS50. Piano & Organ Distributors, Greenville, 355 6002

080

INSTRUCTION

EXPERIENCED ELEMENTARY

teacher would like to tutor students grades I 6 MA in learning dis abilities. Call 752 1973 after 5.

NEED TUTOR IN management accounting, graduate student Call Abdulla, 752 6586

START YOUR PIANO or voice lessons this summer B A in sacred music 756 3028

WILL TUTOR ENGLISH, all levels, MA English, 2 years experience Call 752 924 after 5.

109 Houses For Sale

CHERRY OAKS Two year old corner ranch home Three bedrooms, two baths. Foyer, great room with fireplace, dining room, garage Short walk to recreational area 572,800 Duffus Realty Inc, 756 5395.

HAVE CLIENT interested in buying in the Belvedere area It interested in selling your home, please contact Betty Beacham at 756 3880 or W G Blount a. Associates at 756 3000.

085 Loans And Mortgages

2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans mortgages bought Call tree I 800 845 3929.

091

Business Services

IF LIGHTNING STRIKES Are

you protected? Total Home Light ning Protection is the proven mernod tor insuring the safety of your home and family Don't lake chances with one of natures most destructive forces For free estimates call Carolina Chimney Cleaners Your Home Safety Professionals Since 1978 All in slallations meet U L standards and your satisfaction is guaranteed For more in/ormation call Carolina Chjmney Cleaners. 758 0174

HORSESHOE ACRES Country liv ing with city flair. 3 bedroom home feafuring well equipped kifchen,

greaf room wifh fireplace and uilt in bookshelves 2 large bafhrooms, dining room, central heat and air. Located on Vx acre lot. $64,000 Call Betty Beacham at 756 3880 or W G Blount & Associates at 756 3000

HOUSE, BUILDING, and lot for sale S R I55I, 2.2 miles on right past caution light at Stokes 513.000. Contact Charfes M Vincent, 758 4000.

NEW HOME in established neighborhood Cedar siding, 3 bedrooms, 1'2 baths. Low 50's Pay ^ to 4 points plus closing The Evans Co., 752 2814. Faye Bowen, 756 5258. Winnie Evans, 752 4224.

NEW LISTING Under construction in Horseshoe Acres. Buy now and pick out all colors. Traditional 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace. 60s Call Aldridge 8, Soulherland, 756 3500. Nighfs, Rod Tuqwell, 753 4302_

093

OPPORTUNITY

LIST OR BUY your business wifh C J Harris & Co . Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, NC 757 0001, nights 753 4015

TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals Financino Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed Brokers. 401 W First Street 752 3575

095

PROFESSIONAL

BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and

drywall Call 757 0678 or 756 2689

Alter 6 355 6952___

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimney

sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces Can day or night, 753 3503. Farmville

104 Condominiums For Sale

NEW LISTING 606 Eleanor Street. Unique contemporary in Cherry Oaks 3 bedrooms. 2' j baths, large great room, and garage $79,500. Call Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, nights Rod Tuqwell 753 4302

OWNER WILLING to make sacrifice. This is a deal fhaf is too good to be true! Owner has been transferred and needs to sell imme diately. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home won't last long features a kitchen complete with stove, dish washer and refrigerator, laundry area with washer 8. dryer, great room with free sfanding woodsfove and a dining area. Make us an offer! Only $57,900 Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655. _

RED OAK, Cul De Sac, 4 bedroom, 2' 2 baths, living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, sunken den with fireplace insert, garage, $67,500 8% assumable loan 756 5371 after 4 p m except weekends

STARTING NEW HOME in Cherry Oaks 3 bedrooms, 2 full bafhs, great room High 60 s Paying up to I points plus closing costs. Buy now ick out your own colors.

wallpaper, carpet, etc The Evans Co , 752 2814 Faye Bowen, 756 5258 Winnie Evans, 752 4224.

UNIVERSITY AREA, by owner 2 bedroom bungalow Living , room, dining room, den/sfudy, oil heat, woodstove, screened porch, siding, lovely yard Low $40's Call 758 4043 after 4 p m No realtors

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool tab'

and fireplace Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV,

7 Years old. 1 Greenville.

Located 3 miles from Priced in the $50's    758    0144    or

752 7663

FIREPLACE in living room makes it coy, yet it's spacious with 3 bedrooms, 2'2 baths, patio with storage, adjacent to pool and play area at Windy Ridge $58,000 Call J L Harris 8, Sons, Inc , Realtors,

75j_^n____ _

thetaTk^

OF THE TOWN

Is Open House Week at Brookhill Townhomes See our affordable 2

and 3 bedroom townhomes! Call  ______   ._____,        __

Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029 j Call 757 0277, after 5 p m 756 2682

or Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446    - -

tor more details

115

Lots For Sale

VJ ACRE TO 5 ACRES, over 100 lots to choose from Locations on Highway 43 south, Chicod Creek, Gritton area. Highway 33 south

MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

106

Farms For Sale

58 ACRE FARM Good road tron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house St Johns Community Call tor more details Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details

109

Houses For Sale

A STONE'S THROW from campus 12 block from campus siffing on a shady lot, a new ottering featuring

BUILDING SITE 3'2 acres Heavi ly wooded $18,500 Aldridge 8.

Southerland, 756 3500 041_

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._

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

ATLANTIC BEACH oceanfront, 3 bedroom, 2'2 bath condominium, new, furnished $99,000 756 4207.

REAL NICE 3 bedroom. 1' double wide mobile home

bath

Com

stained hardwood floors Fireplace in the hving room Dining room and den Over 1700 square feet of living area a stone's throw from campus In the $50's Darden Realty. 758 1983 or niqhts, weekends. 758 2230

BY OWNER Corner of Allendale and 264 By pass. Red Oak Sub division 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den, kitchen, double garage Low $50's. Days 756 2557, nights 752 7425 Ask for Clark_

BY OWNER 11'2% assumable loan 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living and dining rcom, den wifh fireplace, carpeted throughout. Central air, gas heat, fenced backyard, patio, 1 block from Aycock Junior High 756 8281 or 758 9090

BY OWNER 1718 square foot, brick 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 for shop or game room Large lot. Assume 11'2% VA loan $7500 equity Call atter 5 p m. 752 6448.

BY OWNER Hardee Acres .3 bedrooms, I'j baths, den with fireplace, french doors leading to wood deck Newly built 16x24

pletely set up and underpinned with brick On a beautifully landscaped fenced wafer fronf tof. with '2 interest in a 200' pier Located at Portside, Washington, NC 746 4271.

12X55 ALL ELECTRIC mobile home at Oceanana Trailer Park, Atlantic Beach Leased lot includes utilities Completely furnished Porch and storage barn. Call after 6, 746 4078

35' A frame chalet Like new, air. Gas heat Furnished 758 8171 or 752 2878 anytime Twin Lakes on canal, Washington_

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets Call 758 4413 between 8 and 5._

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need Call Arlington Self Storage, Open day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933.

workshop

please.

752 5250 No realtors

FHA 235 LOAN assumption availa ble in established neighborhood With minimum total payment less than $300 If you qualify. 3 bedrooms, I 2 baths, sliding glass doors in dining room Beautifully decorated in beige and blues Call The Evans Company, 752 2814 Listing Broker, Faye Bowen. 756 5258, Winnie Evans, 752 4224 ___

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS i AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton, Co.

752 6116

TOMATO STAKES

Hardwood, inc 3V2to4'long I U ea.

Bethel Manufacturing Co.

Bethel, N.C. 825-3451 -

121 Apartments For Rent

AVAILABLE MAY 1. New 1. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Drapes, wall to wall carpet, central heat and air, outside storage Griffon area Office hours 10 a m. to 2 pm, 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

DUPLEX Near ECU 2 bedrooms, 1 bath $235 per month. No pets 752 2040.

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, twO and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases Furnished

Wifh or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 month and up

756 5555 The Heritage Inn

EFFICIENCY 1 bedroom, maid service. $70 week Call 756 5555. Heritage Inn Motel

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart menfs, carpeted, dish washer, cable Tv, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adiacenf to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869

JOHNSTON STREET APART ME NTS 1 bedroom unfurnished apartments available immediate Water and appliances furnished No pels. Call Judy at 756 6336 before 5 p.m., Monday Friday

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re trigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located lusf oft lOfh Street.

Call 752-3519

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex Shenandoah Subdivision >$295 756 5389    ^

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment Hving with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARWENTS

Qualify construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    15    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NO DOWN PAYMENT!

Discover the joys of Engage-A-Car, the common-sense alternative to BUYING a new car.

It's the modern way to drive any new car, van or truck your heart desires. ..foreign or domestic. With Engage-A-Car, you can laugh at inflation because NO DOWN PAYMENT is necessary and your MONTHLY PAYMENTS are lower! You owe it to yourself to get all the exciting details now.

Mid-Eastern Brokers

Pitt Plaza    757-3540

Shopping Center

121 Apartment For Rent

NEW DUPLEXES near hospital med school $300 per month. John or Bfvant. 752 3152 or 752 6715._

NEW TASTEFULLY decorated townhouse. 2 bedrooms, I' z baths, washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump Efficient. $310 per month 752 2040

OAKMONTSQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart menfs. 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartn^nts or mobile homes tor rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.

ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near campus.

756 3923

ONE BEDROOM furnished Martment, 1 block from university. Heat, air and water furnished. Short or long term lease No pets 758 3781 or 756 0889

ONE BEDROOM apartment in

private home, quiet neighborhood Central heat and air and private entrance. $185 per month plus

utilities Security deposit, lease and reference from former landlord required. No pets 758 5398_

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din mg, bedroom complete. $79 00 per ^0^2Option to buy. U REN CO,

RIVER BLUFF 109A Brookwood Drive Available June 1    2

bedrooms, large kitchen, living room, fully carpet, air condition.

SMALL EFFICIENCY apartment. Student or professional person

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Otficehours I0a m to5p m Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex '

1401 Willow Street Office Corner EIm 8. Willow

752-4225

121 Apartments For Rent

TIRED OF ROOMMATES? Call us tor immediate occupancy in a 1 bedroom apartment. Energy efti cient and reasonable rent Days 758 6061, nights and weekends 758 5960.

TWO BEDROOM apartments available No pets. Call Smith

iVy,

M ape , 4ls. Ca Insurance a. Realty, 752 2754.

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 age. $250 756 5991

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, I'a bath townhouses. Available now $295/month 9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

WEDGE WOOD ARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, 1' j bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately 752 3311.

1 BEDROOM, unfurnished. Call 758 3767 or 752 6924

1 BEDR<X)M APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn, $215 756 0545 oY 758 0635

2 BEDROOM apartment Central air. carpeted, appliances 804 Willow Street, Apartment 4. $250 758 3311

2 BEDROOM apartment Central air, ca^eted, appliances $250 a month Brvton Hills 758 331 1

2 BEDROOM near ECU, utilities Appliances $300 a month. Deposit No pets Available June 1 75 0491 or 756 7809 before 9 p.m

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE Energy efficient heat pump. I'j baths, carpet, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, hook ups $310    756

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, stove, re trigerator, central heat and air, deposit, lease, no pets 756 6834 after 3 p m

2 BEDROOM duplex Energy efti cient Washer/dryer connections Excellent location $275 Call 757 0001, 753 4015

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'j baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL. 752 1557__

Help fight inflation by buying and selling through the Classified ads Call 752 6166

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

2 BEDROOM apartment at Whitehollow Drive $250 00 per month 2 bedroom townhouse at Village East $300 00 per month Both require lease and security deposit Duffus Realty, Inc , 756 08ll, 9 am 5 pm, Monday

Friday

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Meade Street near ECU Central air, range, refrigerator, hook ups. $270 756 7480

122

Business Rentals

FOR RENT 10,000 square tool building Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity Call Donnie Smith at 946 5887

FOR RENT Prime retail space, Arlington Boulevard 4500 square feet $4 50 per square foot Call 756 9315 or 76 5097

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Chmpulor Center Memorial Dr.    7SS-S221

SERVICE WRIIER

Send Resume To:

Service Writer P.O. Box 1967 V Greenville, N. C. 27835

SALES OPPORTUNITY

Prefer someone with automobile sales experience, but not necessary. Will train right person. Apply in person to A1 Britt.

756-3228        .

109 Trade Street Greenville, N.C.

FOR LEASE - 2500 SQUARE FEET PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON BOULEVARD CALL 756-8111

122 Business Rentals

WAREHOUSE AND office space for lease 20,000 square feet available Will subdivide 756 5097 or 756 9315

2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space tor lease in small strip shopping center. Contact Aldridge 4 Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 756 5260.

125 Condominiums For Rent

LEXINGTON SQUARE TOWNHOMES 2 bedrooms, I'j baths, fully carpeted, deluxe appli anees furnished No pets J R Yorke Construction Co., Inc., 355 2286

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2

bedroom, I'j bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished No pets 85 7321 atter 5 p.m_

3 BEDROOM, 2'J bath townhouse at Windy Ridge $470.00 per month. Lease and security deposit re quired Dutfus Realty, Inc , 756 0811, 9 a m 5 p m , Monday Friday_

127

Houses For Rent

AVAILABLE JUNE 1. 4 bedrooms, 1 block from Pitt Plaza. Oakmont 756 9142 or 756 3500

LARGE 2 STORY house Excellent condition 3 bedrooms $300 mon thiy Call Deborah 758 3191

PRIVACY IN COUNTRY Small log cabin 20 miles from Greenville 524 3180

RENTAL HOUSE 3 bedrooms in Twin Oaks area Good location Excellent condition. $425 a month 756 8338 or 758 98.SQ.

3 BEDROOM houses tor rent 410 Paris Avenue $300 00, Lindell Road $350 00, 4 bedroom house in Bethel $500.(X). All require lease and security deposit Duftus Realty, Inc . 756 0811

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

CLEAN 12' wide, 2 bedrooms, air, ' J mile from city, Belvoir Highway $150 plus deposit Students or couples 756 0222 or 756 1455 after 5

SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes $135 and up No pets, no children. 758 4541 or 756 9491

TWO BEDROOM, furnished children No pets 758 6679

No

12X65. Washer, dryer, air, 3 miles north of city Call 758 2347 or 752 6068

2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent Call 756 4687

2 BEDROOMS, all electric, 6 miles 7W 097^^'^ highway No pets

2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location No pets, no children Call 758 4857

2 BEDROOM mobile home tor rent Furnished, no pets Deposit re quired Available May 15. 752 4008 or 752 5262.

2 BEDROOMS, 2 baths Private lot, furnished. No children, no pets 758 7555    ^

2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, mint condi tion Private lot $175 Call after 5, 758 7741

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL . ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

C.L. Lupton, Co.

752 6116

The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.C,-Tuesday, May 24,1983-15 133 Mobile Homes For Rent

144 Wanted To Buy

2 BEDROOMS, air condition On a shady private lot near town si75 per month Call 355 6924

135 Office Space For Rent

FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or com mercial 604 Arlington Boulevard 756 8111 __

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams. 756 7815 3101 SOUTH EVANS Street next to

Fastfare on 264 By Pass 4 offices, I__

carpet, reception room, heat, air

condition Excellent location i CLASSIFIED DISPLAY Available June 1. Call Van Fleming,

756 6235 or 752 2887

WANTED TO BUY Ford Jubilees. Ford 600's or 801 tractors Any early model Ford tractor Call 758 4669 after 7pm__

WISH TO BUY good used carpet 752 2994afteri8 30 p m_

148 Wanted To Rent

UNFURNISHED ROOM wanted tor Summer, Greenville area Call 746 3687, leave message

137 Resort Property For Rent

EMERALD ISLE Beach house 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, central air

Cable TV $300/week 354 3301__

TOWNHOUSE 2 bedrooms, on ocean. 2 pools, cable TV, washer, dryer Pine Knoll Shores 752 2579 3 BEDROOM BEACH HOUSE for rent Near Sportsman's Pier at Atlantic Beach Call 756 2787 after 5

138

Rooms For Rent

ROOM IN PRIVATE home for rent in country $150 month 756 1264 or

752 7553__^__

SINGLE FURNISHED room (or discreej, male student or young businesiman $125 month Nice home near Pitt Plaza 756 5667

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED '

to share 2'bedroom house Working !

rsrson preferred Call 752 0875 after ,

pm_^__

A6ALE roommate needed $71 25 [ rent. ', utilities Furnished apartment, near campus 757 1587    !

RESPONSIBLE roommate wanted ! Professional or grad student pre : ferred. $55 per month plus utilities 1

752 2994 after 8 30 p m _  j

ROOMMATE WANTED, $85 month, ' $80 deposit, 'j utilities Available! June 1. 752 7856    I

Sell your us'ed television the Classified way Call 752 6166

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

7,2 6116

SPECIAL Safe

Model S-1 Special Price

SI 2250

I Reg. Price $177.00 '

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S. Evans St.    752-2175

JARMAN

AUTO SALES

1982 Pontiac Bonneville, 4

door, loaded. $8350

1982 Buick Regal, 2 door hardtop $8350

1981 Toyota Corolla Liftback,

2 door, automatic, air condition. $5650    -

1981 Pontiac LeMans, 4 door, 6 cylinder, automatic, power steering and brakes, AM-FM $5750

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix, 2

door hardtop $6850

1981 Pontiac Phoenix, 4 door

$5150

1980 Chevrolet Caprice Classic, 4 door $5650

1979 Malibu Station Wagon,

air, automatic. $3650.

1979 Datsun B-210, 2 door, 4 speed $3350

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme, 2

door hardtop. S4350

1977 Datsun 810 Wagon, air

condition. 4 speed. $3150

1977 Buick Regal, 2 door landau, loaded. $3350

1975 Chevrolet Monza, 2 door sports coupe, $1450

1974 Toyota    Clica ST,

Automatic $1550 1967 Chevrolet    Pickup,

automatic $1050

12 Months, 12,000 Miles Warranty Available FlrandngAiraiibKWIIIiApproiiwlCrMin 4 Hwy 43 North 752-5237 Business

Grant Jarman.......756-9542

Edgar Denton.......756-2921

Donald Garris.......758-0929

SHOP

OPPORTUNITIES

Black & Decker, the world leader m the power tool industry, is seeking highly qualified individuals to fill the following positions

MAINTENANCE SPECIALIST

Must be able to perform electrical and mechanical functions with a high degree of expertise Must also have journeyman * skills in welding, plumbing and pipefittmg

MOLD MAKER

Must be able to build and repair tools and fixtures from prints or verbal instruction We prefer 3* years of experience in toolroom work

ELECTRICAL MECHANIC

5* years experience in troubleshooting automatic, high volume assembly and production equipment with heavy emphasis on electronic knowledge

For qualified individuals. Black & Decker offers competitive wages, company-paid benefits promotional opportunities and a clean working environment It you feel you meet the qualifications we are looking for, please send resume to

TorSyndahl. BLACK & DECKER

3301 Mam Street Tarboro, NC 27886

An Equal Opportunity Employer M F H VBOYD ASSOCIATES INCORPORATED

P.O. BOX 1705, GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROUNA 27834 GENERAL CONTRACTORS    758-4284

CONCRETE FOUNDATIONSSTEEL BUILDINGS

BYRiverside Iron WorksToll Free 1-800-682-3705

An Authorized Dealer for Mitchell Steel Buildings for over 15 years. PART TIME

Food Lion, Inc., the nations fastest growing supermarket chain is seeking permanent part time employees for the Greenville store. Experience preferred but will train.

Flexible work hours up to 30 per week with opportunity for advancement, good starting wages, and a benefit package that includes profit sharing, annual bonds, vacation, holidays and credit association.Come Grow With Us!

Apply in person at the Food Lion store Red Banks Road Greenville, N.C.

Production Supervision/ Engineering Opportunities

The Black & Decker Company, the world leader in the / power tool industry, is seeking qualified plant engineering and production supervision for it? Tarboro, North Carolina manufacturing facility. The preferred applicants will have a mechanical, production management or related technical

degree.Injection Molding Supervisor

This position requires 3-4 years experience in injection molding supervision Responsibilities will include quality, production, safety and human relations efficiency An excellent command of electro-mechanical systems in a Van Dbrn injection molding equipped shop is essential. We prefer candidates with familiarity with major plastic molding resins (ADS, polycarbonate, nylon, styrene, etc.). A degreed production management professional would be preferable.Production Supervisor

At least 5 years of high volume assembly line manufacturing experience is desired. We are seeking a degreed production professional with a proven track record of accomplishments and responsibilities in areas of employee relations, safely, quality, and volume efficiencies. The preferred candidate should have a basic knowledge of such equipment as hydraulic presses, tools, dies, and Pace assembly line apparatusProject Engineer

The successful candidate will have a Mechanical Engineering degree and at least 3 years of power tool or small appliance assembly experience with emphasis on new product introduction. Additional requirements include a working knowledge of high volume assembly as well as tooling and design requirements for plastic molded parts, powdered metal parts, stampings, die castings and machine parts CAD/CAM usage and capital justification experience

would be desirable.

If you are seeking a greater opportunity to use your engineering and production management talents, we can reward you with an outstanding salary and benefits package. For further action, send a resume and salary

requirements to:

Persiinnel Manager BUCK a DECKER

3301 Main Street Tarboro, NC 27886

An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/V/H

HUlU

AUCTION

Prime Location. Office Building and Land. 4200 square feet of heated area, 800 square feet of office space. Room for additional strip otfice center. Excellent Investment potential. All offers must be presented by sealed bid on or before June 3rd. For maps & information, contact; Mike AldridgeAldridge & Southerland Realtors

756-3500 N.C. Auctin No. 2810 Seller reserves right to reject any bid.AUCTION

4 Residential Building Sites. Westhaven I. Offers presented by sealed bid before 12:00 noon Friday, May 27th. For maps and information, contact: Mike AldridgeAldridge & Southerland Realtors

756-3500 N.C. Auction No. 2810 Seller reserves right to reject any bid.ASTONESTHROW^^'

/i block from CAMPUS, sitting on a shady lot, a new offering featuring three /bedrooms, IVz baths with stained hardwood floors. Fireplace in the living room. Dining room and den. Over 1700 square feet or living area a stones throw from ................................................   intheSSOs.DARDEN REALTY

758-1983

Nights - Weekends 758-2230





16 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C-Tuesday, May 24,1983You've got what it tahes.Share the spirit Share the refreshment





'edcTyer

SUPPLEMENT TO: THE NEWS HERALD ON MONDAY, MAY 23rd; THE DAILY ADVANCE. THE GOLDSBORO NEWS ARGUS, THE DAILY REFLECTOR, THE KINSTON DAILY FREE PRESS, THE MOUNT OLIVE TRIBUNE, THE NORTHAMPTON NEWS, THE EVENING TELEGRAM. THE TARBORO DAILY SOUTHERNER, THE WILSON DAILY TIMES, THE WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS, THE ENTERPRISE ON TUESDAY, MAY 24th; THE BERTIE LEDGER, THE ROANOKE BEACON ON WEDNESDAY, MAY 2Sth;

THE CHOWAN HERALD, THE FARMVILLE ENTERPRISE ON THURSDAY, MAY 26th.

SHOP NOW THROUGH SATURDAY FOR THESE RIPE AND DELICIOUS SAVINGS IN GREENVILLE!

Big Savings of Up to 22% on Casual

Canvas Deck Muggers

Ladlet'

Regular $19...........

Natural canvas deck shoes with soft double cushion arch. Shop and savel

15.80

Men's Regular $20

12.80

Youth's Regular $17

Boys' Regular $18

9.80

Child's Regular $13

Large group of natural canvas deck shoes in men's, boys' and youth's sizes. Navy in child's sizes. Savel

summSTOCK UP AND SAVE ON CASUALWEAR, SHOES AND MORE IN GREENVILLE!





Terrific Prkm

Swim TrimkSf^ Shlrtsi

mSm'WF Beff*MmXnmkM

Terrific Buy on Cool and Comfortable Basic

Big Boys' Swimwear!

Rfgular

6.00....

Large group of famous name swimwear with rounder leg and piping. Royal, navy, red, light blue, khaki, green and yellow colors. Shop and save!

Large variety of ewftmvaair In eeyaisl ytee. colofed checkerboard, eollds^aOlpoe. Stock

Boya^SMrti Regalar 6t

Polyester/cotton and cotton T-ahtfta kt nrttny GQiam and printa. Decoradva ^ aoeen print, Eaaycare.

Hobie*T-ShHs, Stickers and Hats

Purchsm a Hobie man's or boya' T-shirt or whwt and recwe a FT^ btanpar sticker, a' FMEE pamter's hat or bay a T-^Mit for only 3.M.

HURRY! SALE ENDS SATURDAY, MAY 28thl

Warm Days are Here! Great Price on

Girls' Shorts Cr Swimwear

4.80    8.80

Shorts, Reg. $6

Swimsuit, Reg. $11

BugOffl polyester/cotton/Lycra swimsuits in five styles. BugOff I solid pull-on shorts. Easy-care. Sizes 7 to 14.

summl

Girls' Sizes 4 to 6X, Regular $10 .    ,    8.00

BugOffl polyester/cotton/Lycra swimsuits in 4 styles.

Big Savings on Dei^

Designer

Jeansi

13.88

SQie

Oacardalaftonta

Ragulw17.VSave Up to $9 on New

29.88

GloraiVandarbft Ra{^$3S

CMKMit*

Ragtii$38

Junior Swimwear by Ocean Pacific^!

17.88 23.88

/

/

Ladas'Mm jaw

inalzatttolt.

Jr. Swimwear, Reg. $24 to $33

Maillots including multi-stripe style with shelf bra and V-neck, multi-stripe style with square neck and shelf bra plus more. Bikinis including hibiscus stripe and multi-stripe styles. Hurryl

Terrific Savings of Up to $7 on Men's, Boys' and Girls'

Lee^ Basic Denim Jeansi

YOUR CHOICE

Regular $22 to $25

17.88

Men's Lee and Vienna cotton denim jeans with straight leg styling. Boys'Lee jeans in 8 to 14, 25 to 30 sizes. Girls'

Lee jeans in sizes 7 to 14.

Attention Ladietl

Savbigs of Ug to 110

Catalina ^ortsw

11.881. It.

RaB.$1ib$2l

iHwrak WKm ropo, - '-w aiilrta in slrbat, print* or aolds. Steciiliia viathabla. tfurryt

Savings of Up to $6 on Ladies'

Lee^ Jeansi

24.88 26.88

to

19 J8

Ri0.$16tof3O

Western Regular $29

London Rider Regular $33

Cotton denim 5-pocket Western and London Rider style jeans available in sizes 5 to 13 and 6 to 18. Easy-care. Tough enough to take it I Save today!

LCr

Your choice of cimrit boKorpont Md abort,

fvRCfl roiroii non or jomaica * fbort.

Buys on Misses'

Swimwear!

21.88 to

28.88

Rag. $32 to $42

Lycra molded and shelf bra styles. Solids and prints. Misses' sizes.





4, I % k

:^mc Savhiga on Uttla ib

Mt Loops: 'Aparates!

Ibpf/Stwrts

Springtime is Here! Beat the Meat with

Little People Sportswear!

>7.00...............

nkMar

.

Fhiit Loops* itr^ crap tops

woven cuftad shom, rampoit and tank tops. Btfght spplqtiac.

' Shes 4 to SX. Machina waMiif. ''

Shorts and Shirts

Reg. $3 and 3.50.

2.28

Qreat Sftvings on BugOff!*

Sj^l^swear for Girls!

/ Utg>MMMlMM0ipi|MdMllk tope, plpod ahorta^ aiffpt tank toptr anap aide shofta to mix and y    match. Ena^oara. Slxee7to14.

YOUR CHOICE

Twill shorts with 3 white stripes. Red, royal, green, pink and light blue. Short sleeve shirts. Infant and toddler sizes. Save!

Shift and Panty Sets

Reg. $7 to 7.50.........

Girls' polyester/cotton 2-pc. pleated front shft with matching panties. Infant and toddler sizes. Easy-care. Stock up today!

Big Savings of Up to $6 on Decorative

Handbags for Ladies!

4.88    7.88    9.88

Regular 8.00    Regular 12.00    Regular 16.00

Large selection of straw and macrames in natural, multi and white colors. A nice gifti

Super Savings on Versatile

Boys' Swimsuits, Shorts and Shirts!

2>78and3i88

T-Shlrta. Reg. 3.50 and 48

Boya' short ileeve T-aNrta with acracn print dMlgn. Polyeater/cotton. Machine waahanddry. HurrywhieauppSaalaati

Savings of Up to $5 on Men's

Andhurst"" SiacksI

16.88 ..18.88

Regular 22.00 and 23.00

Polyester/cotton poplin, seersucker and pinfeather cord slacks In a variety of spring colors. Some styles with matching belt. Sizes 29 to 44. Supply is limltedi

AKMWon Mml Stock Up

Sava on Versatile

* SlacksI

lleia imI ommM dtaddt

'PliapifpOplRf dUMi 'MMAmIi ftiNlgt.. '8ilt j laiandbaliidtiiB,'' 8lMilitp42. Nsni^

Terrific Buys on Comfortable

Ladies' Sleepwear!

9.88 11.44

Rag. 413 to 415

Saiactad group of shift gowna. long gowns, iMdry dol with hkwmar pants al made of polyeatar and cotton. Eaay-cara. Htirryl

Can^Short,Rag.7.00  .......

Rolyaetar/cotton camp shorts and popin awimaiekisixas4to7. SfMlngcol^.

Bargain Buy on Stylish

Ladies'

Panties!

Reg. 3 for

Brief, hip hugger and bikini styles. Solids and prints. Sizes 5 to 7. Stock up and savel

Save 6.00 on Sweetbriar

Ladles' Skirts!

YOUR CHOICE

-t T '

Regular 24.00 ..

17.88

Large assortment of polyester and rayon duck skirts in two styles. Back elastic waist style with self sash and pockets. Elasticized waist style with a calico trim border and self string tie. Savel

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Save Up to $6 on All Adult

Timex Watches!

20* OFF

Regular 24.95 to 32.95

Select from many styles for men and ladies. For yourself or as a giftI Dress and casual.

Terrific 25% Savings on

Junior Cheeno's^ Sportswear!

YOUR CHOICE

11.88

Large group of short sleeve shirts, twill shorts with pleats, seersucker shorts with pleats, V-neck blouses, cord shorts, striped camp shirts and more. Available in many spring colors.

Special on Ladies' Ultra Suede Belts!

Two-inch width suede belts in a variety of 111 QQ solid colors. Stock up todayl Regular 412 I w aOO

Great Buy on Ladies' Tailored Jewelry!

Select from pins, chains, bracelets,    Q C |||1

necklaces and more. Reg. 44 to 410.....O fOr 9 aUU

Ladies' Heiress Sport Socks Reduced!

Rayon/nylon stretch socks in two styles.    QQ    ^

Sizes 9 to 11. Easy-care. Values Up to 1.50.......

Boys' Tube Socks at a Special Price!

Economy package of six pair of over-    A _ A OQ

the-calf socks. Hurryl Great Buy  UfOfHaOO

Terrific Price on Men's Tube Socks!

Package of six pair of striped top    R QQ

tube socks. Stock upl Special Buy O fOF waOO

Ladies' Loungewear Reduced!

Polyester/cotton dusters, sundresses and    4 4 QQ

sleeveless shifts. S, M, L. Values Up to 416 .. I I aOO

Junior Cheeno's Work Pants Reduced

Basic twill pants in six solid colors for    4 C ^OO

springl Sizes 3 to 13. Great Value........... lOaOO

Ladies' LEVI'S Bend Over Pants

Polyester gabardine stretch pants in sizes    04 QQ

6 to 20. Spring colors. Regular 427 .........m I aOOIMPRESS AND CASUAL CLOTHING, ACCESSORIES AND MORE THROUGHOUT THE STORE!





SALE ENDS

SATURDAY,

MAY 28th!

Fantastic Savings of Up to $13 on

Nike" Court Shoes!

'A Court' Regular 25.00

16.80

Nike 'All Court' premier canvas basketball and tennis shoes. Rugged canvas uppers feature a rubber toe cap for durability. Shell sole and padded heel collars. Sizes for men and ladies.

15.80    26.80

Child's 'Curt Canvas' '"Regular 20.00

Men's Leather 'Bruin' Regular 40.00

Child's Leather _ _    ^    ^

'Burt Bruin'    fjfl Ofl

Regular $30 ifcfc lO V

Men's leather 'Bruin' shoe with traction outersole. Child's 'Burt Bruin'with suede/leather upper. Child's 'Curt Canvas' in two styles. Shop and savel

Terrific 24% Savings on Sweetbriar

Ladies' Casual Shoe

Regular

13.00..

Washable canvas casual shoes complete with cushioned insole, decorative rope trim, 2-eye tie styling and non-skid rubber sole. Choose from beige, white, navy and green colors. Ladies' sizes.

Children's Sandal Sale!

Regular 12.00 ..    8.88

Large group of leather two-buckle sandals available in white and tan.

Save on 'Royal Classic'

Cannon^ Towels

Washcltoh i QQ Reg.2.50 ... I eOO

3.88

Hand

Reg. $5...

Bath C QQ Reg. 2.50 WaOO

Notin Parkwood Wilton, Shop Downtown

bCRRies

Great Price on Dependable

Murray Mower!

129.88

Briggs & Stratton* 3.5-H.P. engine, 22" cut, automatic choke and manual height adjusters. Hurryl

Big Savings on Breneman

Window Shades! 4.88    6.88

'Cadence' Reg. 6.50

Nev-R-LHe* Reg. 8.50

Heavy guage vinyl plastic shades with a lovely embossed pattern. Two styles.

Hoover Upright Vacuum

Model IU4127. Convertible upright with steel agitator. Reg. 94.95 ......

Hoover Canister Vacuum

Model #S3203. Combination rug and floor nozzle. Savel Regular 79.88 ____

Deluxe Photo Album Sale

Forty 'Magic Cling'

pages. SpecM Value...............

$25 OffI

69.88

Special

64.88

Priced I

7.88

Sale! Cannon'Santa Cruz'Towels

Washcloth Hand Towel Bath Towel

1.22 1.88    2.88

If Perfect 1.47 W Perfect 2.47    If Perfect 3.47

Plysh terry towels of 86% cotton/14% polyester. Irregular. Not In Parkwood Wilson, Shop Downtown

Decorator Sheets at a Great Buy!

Twin, full and queen    i| QQ    4 O QQ

sizes. Special Value____HaOO tO l^aOOWE'VE HAVE CUT OUR PRICES ON ITEMS THROUGHOUT THE STORE! SAVE TODAV!


Title
Daily Reflector, May 24, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30460
Date
May 24, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95381
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