Daily Reflector, May 26, 1983


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INSIDE TODAY

SUMMIT

The U.S. government is seeking simplicity for the world economic summit at Williamsburg, Va., this weekend. Story on Page 9.

FRIENDLY

A couple from Holland has found residents of this area to be friendly. The story is on Page 6.

ROSE, A-G OUSTED

Rose High s softball and Ayden-Grifton s baseball teams were out-sed from the state playoffs yesterday. (Page 15)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 107

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 26, 1983

28 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

t Quake Kills 30 In Japan

AL'TTA    iAn.    A    4.1        .L.    I____________r________...    ..    B

AKITA, Japan (,AP) - A severe earthquake and tidal waves pummeled a 180-mile stretch of coast in northwest Japan today, killing 30 people and leaving 69 missing, police reported. Fifty-six others were injured.

Waves up to 20 feet high were reported, and a group of students picnicking on a beach screamed and most of them were swept away, said Tsuyoshi Tsuruga, a farm worker.

Riki Sato, a government spokesman, said he felt a sharp vertical jolt in his six-story concrete building that was followed by about two minutes of side-to-side swaying.

"We couldn't stand still,"

he said. 1 told everyone to hide under their desks and then windows broke and glass fell into the offices.

1 heard the building creak at one point and thought it was ^ing to collapse, he said.

In Tokyo, 280 miles south of the stricken area, upper stories of office buildings also swayed.

The Central Meteorological Agency said the quake, with an epicenter in the Japan Sea west of the main island of Honshu, registered 7.7 on the Richter scale of ground motion.

The South Korean Central .Meteorological Office issued a tidal wave warning along the nations eastern coast.

across the Japan t^ea from Akita, where waves were as high as 10 feet.

Prime Minister Yasuhiro .Nakasone declared a state of emergency to coordinate relief efforts in the rural fishing and farming area as reports came in on what appeared to be the worst quake to hit the region in 44 years.

. The .National Police Agency said about 50 people, including more than 40 children on a school excursion, were caught in a wave that struck the coast of the ga Peninsula, near the city of Akita, the state capital.

Police in Akita said two students were killed, 11 were

missing and the others were rescued Officials also reported 14 dead throughout the prefecture, most of them fishermen or construction workers along the beaches.

The national daily Asahi .Shimbun quoted Tsuruga as saying a wave "rising to a height I have never before seen." crashed down on the group. ".Ml the children screamed and most of them were swept away.

Toshiharu Hosoi. an official at a coastal Oga aquarium, said a Swiss woman, unofficially identified as .Magdalena Brandenberger, 38, from Zurich, was found dead after failing to reach the safety of a rock as the waves "of five

or six meters approached at a speed much faster than we expected '

Reports conflicted on the size of the tsunami The Japan Broadcasting Corp. iNHK) said it measured six feet at Oga, and as high as nine feet in southern Hokkaido.

Meteorological agency spokesman Toshiaki Yasuda said those estimates were "reasonable but that its own measurements at several fixed coastal stations showed waves up to three feet high. The agency measures the deviation of a wave from the norm, he said NHK reported fires burn-

I Please turn to Page 131

Navy Adviser Dies In Salvador

AFTERMATH - Residents of Akita, Japan, stand on a damaged pier early today following a severe earthquake which registered 7.7 on

the Richter scale. Police in northern Japan say at least 30 people died and scores more were injured. (AP Laserphoto)

Syrians Reject Outright Troop Withdrawal Plan

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Syria said -today it would never support the Lebanese-Israell troop-withdrawal pact despite pressure from moderate Arabs and warned Israel that a new war would "cost the aggressors very dearly."

The Beirut independent newspaper An-Nahar said the Lebanese government has been warned of possible attempts to assassinate President Amin Gemayel to rekindle civil conflicts that could lead to partitioning Lebanon.

Syrias position on the withdrawal accord was outlined by government-

KKH.K( TOK

controlled newspapers a day after Syrian warplanes fired missiles at Israeli jets over Lebanon for the first time since last summers war.

Syrian President Hafez Assads Soviet-backed government issued no comment on the Israeli communique reporting the .aerial encounter Wednesday or a Lebanese police claim that a ground-to-air Syrian missile downed a pilotless Israeli reconnaissance drone in east Lebanons Bekaa Valley.

Israel has denied the Lebanese report. But the Israeli military command said the Syrian attack on the

jets was the most serious in a chain of worsening Syrian violations.

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - A gunman pumped four bullets into the head of the deputy commander of U.S. military advisers in El Salvador as he sat in his car waiting for a woman friend on a university campus. He was the first U.S. adviser slain in this nations civil war.

Navy Cmdr. Albert A. Schaufelbefger was killed Wednesday night. U.S. Embassy spokesman Don Hamilton said. He was in charge of security for the American advisers assigned to assist the Salvadoran military' in its fight against leftist rebels.

In Washington, deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said the U.S. Embassy in San Salvador reported Schaufelberger was on the campus "to pick up a Salvadoran national, a woman friend he had met from time to time ...

"As she came out, a car

pulled up and someone in the car fired the shots, Speakes said, adding that the woman witnessed the incident from some distance. But he said, We are unable to draw explicit conclusions as to the cause, the.

reason and who was re-sponsbile. He said President Reagan expressed "regret, sorrpw" and would probably call Schaufelberger's family.

Schaufelberger had replaced the double-plate

bulletproof glass windows m his green Chevrolet Malibu with ordinary glass recently because the cars air conditioner did not work and "he did not like baking inside, said a friend who asked not to be identified.

The car. like most U.S. government-owned vehicles here, came equipped with the special windows, which could not be rolled down.

Schaufelberger is the first

Please turn to Page 13)

7,>2-1.3.36

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.

HOWARD DISCUSSERS HERE?

I have recently become acquainted with the tapes and books of author-philosopher Vernon Howard and would like to know if there are others in this area who enjoy him and would like to discuss his writing. T.C.

Call Sherry Strother, 758-6598. She lives at 110 N. Warren St. here and holds a discussion group in her home every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. She has been studying Howards teaching for many years now and says shed be delighted to talk with you and have you be a part of the discussion group any time you wish.

Eleven Jurors Seated In Trial

Eleven jurors had been seated late this morning for the murder trial of former Deputy Sheriff Billy Braswell.

They were ordered to appear at the Pitt County Courthouse at 2 p.m., raising the possibility that testimony would begin immediately if the final juror and alternates were selected today.

Braswell is charged in the September 1982 shooting death of his wife, Lillie .Mae Stancill Braswell. Mrs. Braswells body was found near the intersection of U.S. 264 Alternate and the Chinquapin Road near Farmville. Officers later' found Braswell at his Farmville home with two bullet wounds in his chest.

Meanwhile, Judge James D. Lewellyn has issued an order banning news media cameras from the second floor of the Pitt County Courthouse while the murder trial is in progress.

Lewellyn said he issued the order Wednesday after at least one television cameraman violated ground rules established as the selection of a jury to hear the case began Tuesday.

The judge also ordered attorneys, law enforcement officers, court officials and jurors not to discuss the case.

Choice

Expected

Friday At PCC

The Pitt Community College Board of Trustees will meet Friday at 8:30 a.m. to hear a recommendation from the boards personnel committee on an interim president for the college, according to board Chairman Clifton Everett Sr,

Current PCC President William Fulford Jr. was recently granted a one-year leave of abscence from his post begining June 1 and the board said last week it would make a choice for a temporary head by then.

The personnel committee met early today, Everett said, to discuss candidates for interim president, and "made a decision which will be presented to the entire, board tomorrow (Friday).

Everett noted that the committees choice is only a recommendaton and may or may not be approved by the board but that he expected a decision to be made sometime tomorrow morning.

Eaton May Transfer Work To Local Plant

Eaton Corp.. which announced in January a restructuring of its industrial truck operation, is considering closing its Salem, Va., facility, a move that would mean more work and more jobs for the Greenville plant, a spokesman said,

Frank G. .Muller, general plant manager here, said the decision to close the Virginia plant has not been made. He said a study of the situation will continue with a decision expected within 30 days.

Eaton, in announcing the division restructuring earlier, said the industrial truck operation would become an independent company during 1983. The Greenville plant is part of the division, which manufactures and markets fork lift trucks under the Yale product line:

It is essential that the new company be properly structured from a manufacturing capacity perspective," the spokesman explained. "Our Philadelphia manufacturing facility was closed during 1982 due to problems' of overcapacity, but that action did not completely bring our capacity in line with more current market forecasts.

.Muller said Greenville employees were informed Wednesday that an analysis of manufacturing requirements for the new company recommends that the Salem plant should be closed,

"Should the decision to close be made, indications are that it would mean the transfer of additional work to the Greenville plant, said Muller. "The transition woul(l take place over the ne.xt 24 to 30 months.

.Mulller did not disclose the number of new jobs that could result from the additonal work load.

The manager said "such a move would leave the new company with two North American manfacturing facilities, both in .North Carolina The company also has a plant in Lenoir.

The Salem plant employs about 350 people to manufacture industrial fork lifts an(i similar devices. The plant also manufactures electric motors.

The Greenville operations, employing approximately 315, involve the manufacture of electric-powered lift trucks and the assembly of internal combustion engine units.

Judge Acquits Students In ECU Fraternity Case

District Judge Horton Rountree Wednesday acquitted eight East Carolina University students of assault charges which

Senate Approves Debt Increase

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate has given final congressional approval to legislation increasing the national debt limit to nearly $1.4 trillion, allowing the government to borrow another $99 billion through the end of September to pay its bills.

By a 51-41 vote Wednesday evening, the Senate agreed to a version of the bill the House passed last week on a voice vote and sent the measure to President Reagan. His signature is expected soon.

Passage of the legislation cleared the way for Congress to leave town today for a Memorial Day recess. The House will return June 1 and the Senate will return June 6.

While there was virtually no debate on the issue of raising the debt limit, final Senate action came only after Republican leaders who control the

chamber assured Democrats that there would be an opportunity next month to vote on limiting the personal income tax rate cut scheduled for this summer.

Without such assurances. Democrats threatened to try to change the measure or attach complicating amendments.

But they agreed to give up their efforts after House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr., D-Mass., assured them the Demo-cratic-controlled House will approve legislation next month limiting the income tax cut.

Democrats have virtualy abandoned their bid to repeal the tax cut, and now are concentrating their efforts on capping its benefits to upper-income taxpayers, both as a means of reducing federal deficits and of stressing their claim that Reagans tax cut program is unfair to middle and lower-income taxpayers.

Senate Democratic Leader Robert C Byrd of West Virginia said ONeill told him the House bill would probably limit an individuals tax break to $700, a level that would affect a one wage-earner family of four with an income above $45,000.

The Reagan administration requested the debt limit increase saying the current ceiling of $1.29 trillion will be reached at the end of the month. Wednesdays daily Treasury statement showed the debt at $1,288,945,000,000 - just 0.08' percent under the limit.

The Treasury already has canceled two bond auctions this week to avoid going over the limit.

Treasury officials said the requested increase in the debt limit to $1.389 trillion will be enough to meet government borrowing needs.

stemmed from a fraternity initiation in February,

Fifteen students were charged with various violations stemming from the Omega Psi Phi fraternity initiation after Tony Michael Jones suffered head, neck and back injuries.

The judge said Jones' testimony did not support the assault charges and said Jones had consented to the treatment.

Jones, 21, said he was beaten, kicked and pushed on Feb. 10, and knocked unconscious on Feb, 12.

The eight who were freed of assault charges include Danny R .Alston, Gregory T Benson, Clinton A Crawley, Kenneth M Coleman, Roland 'L. Eley, Donald Gatlin, .Alvin B. Jolly and R VinniePeele

Judge E Burt Aycock, on May 10, dismissed hazing charges against three of the 15 defendants after ruling that the states 70-year-old hazing law is unconstitutional, That ruling has been appealed to Superior Court where a hearing has been

scheduled for June 2.

Rountree continued hazing charges against several of the defendants until after the appeal has been heard.





> y' TL

AN OUTDOOR THEME, highlighted the stage for the fashion show held Wednesday for annual Senior Citizens Dav at J.H. Rose High School.

Diploma May Open Doors For Troubled Teen

By Abigail Van Buren

' ^983 by Universal Press Syndicate

DKAK ABBY A friend whose family is divided on this asked me to write. It seems that her nephew was scheduled to graduate from high school, but he got into trouble with the law (an old habit of his) and was sentenced to six months in the county jail However, he is being allowed to do his homework in jail in order to complete the needed credits and get his diploma.

His mother went ahead and maile4. his graduation invitations and announcements to family and friends knowing he wouldnt be able to attend his own graduation. My friend thought this was a tacky thing for the mother to do. Of course, those who received graduatioreinvitations and announcements felt obligated to send a gift.

What do you think about this?

NO TOWN OR NAMK, PLKASK

DEAR NO TOWN: I think its to the boy's credit that he chose to graduate instead of dropping out. Having that diploma will make it easier for him to shape up and stay out of trouble. Dont assume that relatives and friends sent gifts because they felt obligated. It could be their way of saying, "Congratulations for graduating anyway. Now we expect better things from you. Dont let us down.

DEAR ABBY My wife is physically handicapped and needs help in the bathroom When we go out, which is often, I assist her in the ladies room.

Should I take her to the mens or ladies restroom?

We wont cut back on our outings regardless of what people say or think.

^    MINNESOTAN

DEAR MINNESOTAN: I posed that question to "June, at the Westside Community for Independent Living in Los Angeles. Her reply: "No problem. The man should ask a woman,to please go into the ladies room first and tell whoever is occupying it (if indeed someone is) that a woman who needs assistance from her hushand will be coming in. Most people are very understanding and cooperative.

DEAR .ABBY A mother in law was upset because her daughter in law never made a home-cooked meal for her' instead she always entertained in a restaurant. You said: "Some people just cant handle entertaining at home. The very thought of it is so upsetting, they dont even want to make the effort, so accept the restaurant dinners with good grace, and dont let it bother you.

Thanks. Abby. No one else understood. But you did. 1, too, am petrified at the thought of entertaining at home. Even when my married children are coming for dinner, 1 can t sleep for three days ahead of time; I wake up at 4 a m, in a panic, simply ternfiedl Books, courses, friends or family cant help me, I cant help being this way I've fought it for 40 years, and Im only fit).

Thank you for understanding

MR.S B., ALABASTER, ALA.

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Pictured are Deborah Bullock, Murriel Best, Wilma Cobb, the Rev. Lucy Jones and Jennifer Best.

DEAR MRS. B.: If misery loves company, take comfort in the knowledge that you have "a lot of company.

DEAR ABBY: Is there anything "improper about having the mother of the bride escort her daughter down the aisle?

My father will be a guest at my wedding, but he and my mother have been divorced since I was a small child and mv mother raised me alone.

SENTIMENTAL

DEAR SENTIMENTAL: Improper? No way. Discuss this with the clergyperson who will perform the ceremony, and good luck.

DEAR ABBY: A reader who was also a nudist tried to justify nakedness by quoting Scripture (Genesis 2:25): "And they were both naked.', the man and his wife, and they were not ashamed.

Had he gone on to read Genesis, Chapter 3, he would have learned that Satan appeared in the Garden of Eden and tempted Adam and Eve to eat of the forbidden fruit that would give them the knowledge to discern good from evil. So they ate the forbidden fruit. 'Then they knew they were naked and became ashamed, so they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves aprons to cover their nakedness.

The I.ord then rebuked them with, Who told thee thou wast naked'? And from that time on, the beauty and innocence of nudity were to be forever a thing of the past.

What sayest thee, fair Abigail?    ,

STUDENT OF THE SCRIPTURES

DEAR STUDENT: I sayest that was the first major coverup known to man.

DEAR ABBY: I hope you can give me a confidential reply through your column because I do not want to disclose my name. I sent a check to a mail-order firm for a sex manual one of those how to books that one sees advertised in catalogs. My check was cashed, but 1 never received the book or a refund.

Is it illegal to order or receive such a book through the mail? Would the post office have confiscated it? Or do you think I was ripped off I have the name and address of the firm.

I guess it wasnt really pornography, but rather a medical manual. (No pictures were advertised.)

Maybe I should explain why I ordered it so you wont think Im some kind of pervert. Im an adult married man who is too embarrassed to discuss such things with a doctor and too self-conscious to go into a bookstore and buy such a book off the she^

. (URIOUS YELLOW

DEAR CURIOUS: Send a registered letter to the firm from which you ordered the book, advising the firm that the book was not received. If your letter is ignored, notify your postmaster. It is not illegal for an adult to order (or receive) sei^ually oriented material through the mail.

Getting married? Whether you want a formal church wedding or a simple, "do-your-own-thing ceremony, get Abbys booklet. Send $1 plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (.37 cents) envelope to: Abbys Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

Although oranges appear on many Renaissance paintings of the Last Supper, the fruit did not appear in the Holy Land until 1,000 years after the Crucifixion.

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Students Honor Senior Citizens

Students sharing their talent highlighted this years Senior Citizens Day held Wednesday morning at J.H. Rose High School,

Senior citizens from Greenville, Winterville, Ayden and Grifton were honored by the home economics students at Rose. Activities included a social and refreshment hour, talent program, fashion show- and a special luncheon served in the school cafertia.

This is the end of the year project Future Homemakers of America work toward and

Births'

Home

Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Ronald Dow Horne, Route 8, Greenville, a daughter, Kelly Lynn, on May 18,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Gayior Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Danny Ray Gayior. 200 Caddie Court, a son, Matthew Ray, on May 18,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Ward

Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs,

Ralph    Edward    Ward. 63

Quail Ridge Road, a son, Jonathan Edward, on May 18. 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Johnson Born    to    Mr,    and    Mrs.

Francis Ray Johnson, 2505 East Fourth St., a daughter, Amanda Grace, on .May 18, 1983, in Pitt .Memorial Hospital,

Cotton

" Born to Mr. and Mrs, Guy Warren Cotton, Farmville, a daughter. Katisha Ann, on May 18, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Chamberlain

Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Johnny Ray Chamberlain, Grifton, a son, Jermaine Lamar, on May 19, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Taylor

' Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Robert Taylor, Macclesfield, a daughter, Demetria Michelle, on M'ay 19,1983, in Pitt .Memorial Hospital.

Jackson Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Charles Douglas Jackson, Farmville, a son, Damien Jeron, on May 19, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Jowdy

Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Dwight Jowdy. 215 Beth St., a daughter, Laura Susan, on May 19, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

its always held in May, said home economics teacher at Rose. Marion Wilkes.

Fifth-two students from the host school modeled garments which they had made in class. Each participating class planned their part on the program. Students from D.H, Conley, Farmville Central and Ayden-Grifton High Schools also modeled clothes which they had made.

The theme for the day,Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow, was given by Wendy Moore and Latecia Tyson. Assistant Rose Principal Jean Darden extended the welcome and the F.H.A. Creed was presented by Deidra Brewington.

Fashions for Today were shown by the first period class at Rose with the second period class showing Aprons Are For Us."

Brenda Edwards in-

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 withr 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.

Miss Myers Enteretained

Renee Myers, bride-elect of Jeffrey Haddock, was entertained at a floating miscellaneous shower Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Haddock.

The refreshment table was covered with a lavender cloth with a lace overlay. White candles, lavender silk flowers and yellow ribbons adorned the center of the table. Summer flowers and white candles were used throughout the house in decorating.

The shower was given by friends.

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troduced the guests from D.H. Conley and the Ayden-Grifton guests were presented by Marilyn Barfield.

Music was presented by Scotty Brown and Alona Chance.

Murriell Best, third period class, showed A Stitch in Time Saves Money followed by music by Veda Wilkes. Jennifer Taylor was narrator for the fourth period class Spring Fashions,

Quilters Guild Has Meet

The Greenville Quilters Guild held it May meeting at the Community Center here. Pat Reep, president, told of the quilt symposium which be held June 2-4 in Winston-Salem.

Ten members of the local quilters will attend and will host a reception for the 200 quilters expected for the event.

Plans were made and discussed for the mini quilting seminar to be held Nov. 14-15 at St. James Church. Demonstrators and speakers will be Carla Hassell. Yvonne Amico. Dot Brinkman, Jane Hall, Nancy Garves, Junaita Metcalf, Dr. Eleanor Young and Kathy Kunct.

A check was presented to Lucille Sumrell and Patsy Denson, recreation and parks department, to be used for their arts and crafts programs. A check was also presented to Kay Clemons for the Ni^t Quilters Guild, Suggestions were made to purchase more books and magazines to be placed in the library at the recreation department.

A show and tell sessions followed the program

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Doris Dixon introduced Farmville Central ^ests and Melanie Manning introduced country and western. Fashions, Fashions, Fashions " was shown by the fifth and sixth period classes.

MissTltlpp Given S

Bride-elect Bunny Tripp was honored at a coffee hour Saturday morning at the home of Mrs. Herbert Whe-less. .Mrs. Charles Lewis, Mrs. William Miller, Mrs. Walter Williams and Mrs. A.F, Johnson were cohostesses.

The refreshment table was covered with a white cloth and centered with an arrangement of pink and white carnations.

The honoree was given a corsage of white daisies.

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Engagement Announced

SUSAN KAY WARREN,,.is t*he daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.S. Warren of Walstonburg, who announce her engagement to Sheldon Dwayne Letchworth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Letchworth of Walstonburg. A June 24 wedding is planned.

As usual, the conversation between the women turned to motherhood. We must have chewed it around 15 or 20 minutes before we hit a dead air pocket.

Rising to the challenge of filling up the silence. I announced with authority, Well, its not the quantity of time one spends with ones children - its the quality.

1 could have been swept into the White House on those words. Everyone nodded in agreement. (One woman even picked up my luncheon check.)

In truth, 1 hadnt the foggiest notion what 1 had just said.

What is the quality of time'? Have 1 ever had it Would I know it if I did?

Is it the time when you set your child down and say something meaningful like. You can level with your mother. How do you really feel about George Bush

Is it the confrontation speech where you begin. You know your father and I have always loved you and end with Clean out this cage or take a walk!

Is it a character-building moment when you make a child take back a candy bar and confess to the manager that he stole if?

The quality of time has become an interesting phrase.

It was conceived about the time a lot of women began to work outside the home. Somehow it took the edge off the guilt. Despite the fact mothers have become of age and realize that all go^ mothers dont necessarily stay home and all bad mothers dont necessarily go out to wohk, the cliche has remained with us.

1 think if you spread an Infinite amount of love to your children you can get by with a lot of honesty. You can tell them youre tired and dont want to listen to them take * three hours to tell you the plot of a two-hour movie. You can tell them youre busy but if they have a problem you can make time for it. And Im a big believer in talking at a time when they dont want to talk. Thats when they need it the most.

A couple of years ago, 1 thought^ had experienoed the quality of time myth. My son came into my office one day (Ive.always worked at home) and said, Hey, how about having lunch with me? 1 was on deadline and said, "Sorry. Not today. I really cant, As he headed out the door, 1 softened and ' rationalized this moment would happen only once.

We went to lunch that day - just the two of us - for three hours. We discussed ideas and attitudes I never dreamt he had, and to think I almost missed it.

When I reminded him of this awhile back he said, What lunch? 1 dont even remember,

Conclusion: 1 still dont know what quality of time means.

Anyone Can Grow Orchids.

By CAROLYN CLICK WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (UPI) - Like fictional detective Nero Wolfe, Maryland orchid grower Merritt Huntington believes orchids can solve almost anything - from hypertension to the most convoluted of mysteries.

Unlike the rotund master sleuth - who secluded himself on the top floor of his New York brownstone to fuss over his hothouse plants -Huntington believes orchids are for anyone who has a hint of a green thumb.

People are growing orchids everywhere, said Huntington, who owns nearly an acre of orchids and sever-al greenhouses in Kensington, Md. Anyone who can grow African violets can grow orchids. Anyone who can grow house plants can.

To prove his point, he took his orchids - including such varieties as Richard Nixon and Jackie Kennedy - on the road before several hundred sceptics at the 37th Williamsburg Garden Symposium.

It is a gathering that traditionally leans on the side of perennials and outdoor gardens.

The bespectacled Huntington - himself a convert from the rose garden -sought to dispel lingering hothouse myths about the prissiness of orchid cultivation.

The only state that has no native orchids is Hawaii, he said. They were all brought there byCapt.Cook.

Although hobbyists have been known to pay several thousand dollars for a particular hybrid, Huntington said it is cloning, or micro-propagatioD, that has brought orchids out of the estate.

The cloning process was developed in university laboratories in the United States and elsewhere and officially commercialized by a French firm in 1964.

The process has made it possible for professional orchid growers like Huntington to market a beginners kit for $37.50.

He relishes the democratization of orchids - although he told of one scion of the Virginia horse country who paid $5'000 for a particular plant, only to find cloning had reduced the price to under $40 a year later.

Huntingtons love affair with orchid culture spans 37

Wnmpn Atf-pnH years. Even as a teenager he VV UlilCll /AlldlU leaned toward a hnrtiriiUiiral

State Meet

The 41st annual convention of the N.C. Association of Insurance Women was held at the Bordeaux Convention Center in Fayetteville during the weekend.

The Pitt County Association of Insurance Women was represented by Audrey Stillwell, CPIW, Sophia Sumner, CPIW, Frances Blanchard, CPIW, Sarah Jenkins, Judith Wingate and Joyce Mills, CPIW.

Mrs. Mills represented the PCAIW as delegate and Mrs. Stillwell as alternate. Mrs. Jenkins served as state resolutions chairman.

Mrs. Stillwell attended the pre-convention board meeting Friday and also gave the local association presidents 'report. She was also honored as PCAIW president at the Friday luncheon. Mrs. Mills read the collect at the first business session Friday. A Saturday luncheon honored all Certified Professional Insurance Women.

Mrs. Stillwell and Mrs. Mills attended the post convention board meeting Sunay morning. Mrs. Mills has been appointed safety chairman for the state group and introduced the state safety project for the new year Vehicle Safety - DUI Awareness, Buckleup for Safety, Defensive Driving.

leaned toward a horticultural career.

He was encouraged by his high school horticulture teacher, who urged him to attend Rutgers and work at the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station. There he took up orchid cultivation.

It is the joy and diversity of orchids - ranging from the cattleya or corsage orchid to the multi-petaled Mexican cigar orchid - that he tries to convey to novice orchidologists.

His clients include ministers; students, housewives and doctors. One physician, from the National Institutes of Health in Washington, began growing orchids several years ago as a means of conquering tension.

He said he could go home at lunchtime after a really busy morning, work with his orchids for 20 minutes, and go right back to work, Huntington said.

Now, he said, the American Orchid Society has 25,000 members across the United States. Almost all are hobbyists, growing any of the 25,000 species that make up the orchid family, the largest among flowering plants.

They grow ojrchids in basements under lights, in shaded window boxes, or -like Nero Wolfe - with the help of a professional horticulturist.

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EditorialsKeep Our Air Clean

Carbon monoxide levels are a source of major concern in many metropolitan areas where streets and freeways are crowded with automobiles and trucks.

Now the problem is beginning to affect North Carolina where it is reported that carbon monoxide has reached excessive levels in Raleigh and Durham, That could lead to an Environmental Protection Agency order to require inspections programs of exhaust emissions in the two cities.

Fortunately all municipalities of the 17-county northeastern district have levels of carbon monxide within accepted levels.

Milan Muzinich, manager of the N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development regional office in Washington, says monitoring is part of the departments function.

He said there have been no indications of high carbon monoxide levels in the cities of Greenville, Elizabeth City, Kinston or Goldsboro.

He said there was concern that large gatherings such as ECU football games might cause high levels, but that so far has not been the case.

We can all be thankful that the problems of carbon monoxide from motor vehicles does not affect our area. It has been a major problem in many areas of high population density and it could very well be a problem here if the program of auto emissions control were not well under way. Hopefully as we grow we can keep our air clean.

James Gerstenzang

Defjcit May Trouble ReaganAt Long Last

It may be at long last a desegregation case involving the University of North Carolina Sysem is at an end.

A 10-judge federal appeals court last week upheld an agreement made in 1981 between UNC and the U.S. Department of Education.

UNC officials were pleased with the decision and they are hoping that it will bring an end to the litigation. If that is the case the states unversities can proceed with fulfilling the desegregation plan and the money being spent on the case in the courts can be diverted to more urgent higher education needs.

The 10-judge panel was unanimous in its decision upholding the desegregation agreement. The agreement was carefully developed and should be in the best interest of all the states universities and all its citizens.

Hopefully North Carolina will now be free to continue building a stronger system of state universities without further federal court involvement.

Rowland Evans and Robert NovakSecret Response

VV.\.S11I.\'GT0.\ - In a response described by Pentagon and intelligence community hardliners as "false and contemptuous," the Soviet Inion on .May 12 sent a formal reply to President Reagans understated complaint early this month about Soviet S.4LT ij violations. The White Hou.se is keeping the response - and even its existence -secret for the present.

The response, sent to Secretary of State George Shultz, brushed off the principal question raised by the I .S.: whether the Feb .Soviet test of an intercontinental ballistics missile violated a formula in the treaty on what is called the missile's throw-weight.

Inder terms of the treaty, which the l..S. has not ratified but, along with the Soviet Union, has agreed to abide by, the warhead weight may not be less than .50

The Daily Reflector

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percent of the throw-weight. The reason for this is highly technical. It is designed to prevent one side from deceiving the other on the number of warheads that might be placed on the new missile.

Nor did the Soviet response to the long, five-page U.S. complaint come to grips with U.S. protests on Soviet encryption of telemetry transmissions from the missile during the test. SALT II drastically limits either sides right to conceal these performance reports during the flight test. The encrypted data included "throw-weightdetails.

The Soviet reply claimed that the disputed new missile was well within treaty limits for modernizing existing missiles and was not the one "new-type missile each side may test and deploy under terms of the treaty. But the U.S. privately claims that, to the contrary, the test had strong earmarks of being that of a new missile. Since then the Soviets have confirmed they flight-tested a new-type missile last fall, the Feb. 8 test appeared to violate the limitation on more than one such new weapon.

Adding to suspicions within the administration that the Soviets are giving false answers to the U.S. was the fact that only a few days after the U.S. letter was handed to Soviet Ambassador Anatoliy Dobrynin, another test of the disputed missile was conducted on May 5 from the Flesetsk range. Although the shot came after the U.S. demarche to Moscow, analysts here say that it breached yet another part of the treaty. It was conducted at night, raising strong suspicion that the Soviets were deliberately contriving to conceal from the U.S. the relationship between the missile itself and its launcher. That relationship is another requirement under terms of the treaty.

President Reagan made clear in his press conference Tuesday night that although he is deeply suspicious about Soviet violations, he is wary about making a major public issue of it because he is not certain. Some specialists doubt that under the often ambiguous terms of the treaty it will ever be possible to be absolutely certain - until it is too late.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

WASHINGTON (AP) - As he heads for the 18th-century village of Williamsburg, Va., to talk about the worlds 20th century economic problems. President Reagan is leaving behind a series of dilemmas and seeming policy contradictions. But, each could follow him to the economic summit conference there.

While he is planning to focus on exchange rates, inflation, interest rates, and unemployment, the president will be forced by the six other heads of state to also discuss the United States deficit problem, .which he said at the last summit a year ago would be licked in coming years.

But the deficit has grown to $200 billion, by some estimates, and could go higher during the period he said it would be in balance.

Which brings us to dilemma No. 1: The president said last week that deficit-spending represents one of the most alarming dangers to our republic and to the prosperity of our people.

However, the president has shown no interest in giving ground on two areas in

which he could tackle this threat to the nation: by raising taxes or limiting the scope of pending tax cuts - or by cutting the defense budget increase below the approximately 7.5 percent raise he has accepted after originally seeking a 10 percent increase.

Reagans advisers have little doubt that the allies will want to talk to him about the deficit, because they feel it is responsible for continuing high interest rates and the strength of the dollar at the expense of their currencies.

Dilemma No. 2: Reagan is ready to release for shipment to Israel 75 F16 jet fighters. He held up the shipment last year in the wake of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon. The announcement of their release was seen as a signal of U.S. support after Israel signed an agreement with Lebanon, although the Israeli troops will remain there until Syrian and Palestine Liberation Organization forces are withdrawn.

The dilemma is this: On March 31 in a speech to the World Affairs Council in Beverly Hills, Calif., the president said that while the Israeli forces "are in the position of occupying another country

that now has asked them to leave, we are forbidden by law to release those planes. Its as simple as the other forces returning to their own countries and letting Lebanon be Lebanon.

While the Middle East is not on the agenda for the three formal summit meetings on Sunday and Monday, it is a likely topic for discussion at the informal lunches and dinners Reagan will have with the leaders of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan.

In fact, at the previous summits he attended, in Montebellow, Quebec, and Versailles, France, Middle East issues intruded to become major attention-grabbers, forcing the president to deal with arms shipments to Israel and the Israeli invasion of Lebanon while juggl ing intemationl economic issues.

Dilemma No. 3: One of the steps Reagan took after the imposition of martial law in Poland was to limit U.S. trade with the Soviet Union. In December 1981, he suspended talks for a long-term grain sale agreement. But on April 22, he offered to resume the negotiations. The U.S. Agriculture Department announced

last week that the Soviets said they would return to the bargaining table.

The president said at a news con ference last week that he had disagreed with the use of grain as a single economic weapon and had lifted an embargo imposed before he took office. He said an agreement would restore* the credibility of the United States as a dependable provider of grain.

"The benefit will accrue to us, cer tainly, as much as to them, he said. '

But, although he was asked, Reagan did not deal with the subject of the overall situation in Poland, and it wag that situation that prompted him to cut off the grain negotiations 17 months ago as a gesture of protest against the martial law regime.

While U.S. officials hope they have Ironed out the considerable differences over East West trade that separated the allies at Versailles, the topic could be raised at Williamsburg during the economic meetings or during the informal diplomatic talks. And if it is raised, the U.S. willingness to sell grain to the Soviet Union could very well be an element of the discussion.

James Kilpatrick

Patronage Keeps Party Going

WASHINGTON - A major political party, if it would survive successfully, needs money; it needs volunteers; it may even need a couple of working principles. But the mothers milk of party politics can be defined in a single word: patronage.

That axiom will be tested anew in a case about to come to trial in a U.S. District Court here in Washington. Depending upon the outcome, the litigation may give the U.S. Supreme Court an opportunity to reconsider its lamentably wrongheaded decision three years ago in Branti vs. Finkel. In any event, the pending trial may serve to focus attention on a part of politics that some of our pussy-willow thinkers to disdain.

It has been truly said, though I forget by whom, that the goal of party politics is not only to throw your rascals out; it is also to throw our rascals in. A party has to be able to reward its faithful workers. These rewards historically have been in the form of jobs. The prospect of a job - a job as a motorman, a street sweeper, a clerk-typist, an ambassador - is the light that beckons and the flame that warms. Call it th spoils system if you please. This is one of the things that politics is all about.

Jimmy Carter played by the rules six years ago, when the Federal Emergency Management Agency was created. The agency was to have 10 regional directors. Mr. Carter understandably gave the jobs to nine deserving Democrats and one front-office Republican. The positions were in what is known to the civil service as the non-career Senior Executive Service. When Mr. Reagan came to the scene, he too played by the rules. He set

out to fire the nine Democrats (the one Republican was retiring anyhow), the better to replace them with nine deserving Republicans. Now four of the displaced Democrats are suing to hold their jobs. They contend that their dismissal violates their First Amendment right of free speech and free association.

The case will be largely controlled by the Supreme Courts 6-3 decision of March 31, 1980, in a case involving public defenders in Rocknd County, N.Y. In 1972, Republicans won control of the countys

legislature; they gave the public defenders post to a good Republican, who in turn appointed good Republicans as assistant public defenders. In 1978, the Democrats regained control. They named a good Democrat, Peter Branti, as public defender, whereupon he undertook to oust the Republican assistants.

Two of the Republicans wouldnt play ball. Aaron Finkel and Alan Tabakman sued to retain their positions. The case went all the way to the Supreme Court, where Justice John Paul Stevens wrote a

Elisha Douglas

Strength For Today

Can skepticism play any helpful part in the development of the spiritual life? Yes, it can, depending on the attitude one takes as skepticism com^s upon him.

If our religious convictions have any vitality to them, they are capable of being carefully examine^ and indeed questioned. But they should be questioned in a spirit of reverence.

Also, and this is important, the questioner should realize that basic religious truths have to be accepted on faith. He must

decide, therefore, whether he is justified in taking a chance in assuming that religious truths are sound.

In other words, skepticism will never hurt us if we realize that Christian conviction demands faith and that we must exercise this faith if we are going to arrive at a satisfactory conclusion.

So we should examine and re-examine religious truths, but with the realization that without the venture of faith, religious knowledge is impossible.

patty-cake opinion saying, yes. these dear boys couldnt be fired just because they were Republicans; they could be fired only if they held policy-making or confidential positions.

In a dissenting opinion. Justice Lewis Powell sharply criticized the majority for its "evisceration. of patronage. Two hundreds years of political tradition, said Powell, stand for the proposition that patronage serves a substantial political parties by offering rewards to persons who assume the tasks necessary to the continued functioning of political organizations. The public in turn benefits by reason of the political accountability that patronage brings.

To weaken the patronage system, in Powells view, is to weaken the structure of government itself. A victorious party must be able to fix new policies, but that is only the beginning: Such policies must be implemented. Ideas must be transformed into political action, and that process demands political appointments. The majoritys decision casts a shadow over this time-honored element of our system.

In the case at hand, I cannot say whether the four regional directors of the Federal Emergency Management Agency were engaged in making policy. This seems likely, but I find it irrelevant. These jobs are nice high-paying jobs; such jobs are part of the spoils of victory, and they ought to be awarded accordingly. This is sound doctrine: Those who live by the ward may die by the ward. I wouldnt have it any other way.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

Black Presence Prods Democrats

WASHINGTON - Many Democrats certainly worry about the prospect or a black Presidential candite in 1984, but theyre quick to dismiss the substance of such a candidacy.

Even with the recent victories of black mayoral candidates in Chicago and Philadelphia (not to mention the success of black voter registration drives throughout the U.S.), Democrats are generally hoping that their key minority bloc will wisely remain in the fold.

Yet black leaders should continue to explore the possibilities. Whether or not Jesse Jackson becomes the consensus black candidate, Demoorats could use the prodding - not only in the interest of blacks, but also for the sake of the partys entire constituency.

To be sure, blacks would benefit from the enhanced political leverage that a presidential candidate would provide. While Ronald Reagan has apparently

written off blacks in two years of ambushes on welfare and civil rights. Democrats have seemed only slightly less hostile.

Pafty Chairman Charles Manatt has made it clear that he discounts the idea of a black vice president. Meanwhile, campaign staffers for Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio) indicated last week that they would welcome a black candidacy - only because it would siphon votes from their nemesis, Fritz Mndale.

Yet a black presidential canu.dacy could do more than force concessions at next summers Democratic National Convention. Thou^ the cyclical recovery now underway will certainly put some laid-off Americans back to work, it will leave unaided the vast majority of the countrys 13 million jobless. Made up largely of semi-skilled, middle-class whites, this group has never known chronic unemployment and the problems

that accompany it.

Both conditions have long been facts of life for blacks. They know the problems and their leaders have for years spoken to them. Potential party platforms aside, they have demonstrated more genuine concern for the chronically unemployed than the current array of Democratic presidential contenders, who may believe that the jobless, as a bloc, vote erratically.

Handled carefully, a black candidacy could prove Democratic assumptions wrong or, more likely, at lease force the party to re-examine where the political center lies.

Sorry, Jimmy, but they dont vote! At a meeting in Atlanta with Saudi Arabian businessmen recently, former president Jimmy Carter is said to have announced that had he been re-elected, Israel would not have invaded Lebanon.

Thats Entertainment III: On a recent late-night television show in Brazil, two members of that nations parliamentary opposition started kicking and punching one another before a student audience and thousands of viewers. One of the congressmen had accused the others party of collaborating with Brazils military government and betraying voters. The episode undoubtedly did wonders for the stations ratings.

Abortion opponents have opened a new and unexpected front in Congress, hoping to amend unisex insurance legislation to discourage insurers from umlerwriting the procedure.

Nothing in this act shall be construed to require an insurer to offer insurance covering abortion, reads an amendment offered by Rep. Tom Corcoran (R-Ill.) and several colleagues.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.





of UiXICO'tllAY, H

Oilmen Bid Record $3.47 Billion

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RECORD FIGURES - Interior Secretary James Watt writes    billion to least tracts m the central Gulf of Mexico. The highest

in figures highlighting the record offshore oil lease sale    bid for a single tract was for $92 million. (APLaserphoto)

conducted in New Orleans Wednesday. Oilmen offered $3.47

Martin County Agency Will Employ 450 Youth

WILLIAMSTUN - Martin County Community Action Inc. will employ about 450 youths between the ages of 14-21 between June 20 and Aug. 13.

Young people from Martin, Pitt and Beaufort counties who are economically disadvantaged according to specifications in CETA guidelines will be eligible for work in the Summer Youth Employment Program.

A total of 136 hours a week will be made by all participants.

A spokesman for the programs said, Our major aim is to inspire and motivate young people to return to

school. Therefore, an education component will be implemented in the area community colleges and Washington High School for high school students and drop-outs. A limited number of four year college students will be allowed to take part. This change is somewhat different from prior -programs.

The Summer Youth Employment Program will provide counseling, work experience, labor market orientation, vocational education and possible permanent job placement for those not returning to school .

The program and activities will be closely coordinated

with several human service agencies, especially the Employment Security Commissions in the three county area.

Applications have been distributed in local schools and community colleges. They may also be picked up from any of the following locations:

Greenville - Mount Herman Lodge, 5th Street, telephone 758-3575.

Williamston - Martin County Community Action, Ray Street, telephone 792-7162.

Washington - Mother of Mercy School, 114 West 9th Street, telephone 946-0016.

Weather Helps Fuel Bill

WASHINGTON (AP)' -The warmest winter in a quarter century - with temperatures averaging 5 degrees Fahrenheit above normal - helped cut the nations heating bill by 4 percent, according to gov

ernment figures.

Preliminary, temperature figures issued Wednesday by the National Weather Service indicate the nation enjoyed a warmer-than-average winter along with much of the northern hemisphere.

Last winter was the warmest since 1957-58 when temperatures were 3.1 degrees above normal, said James K. Angel, a research meteorologist. In 1980-81, winter temperatures were 2.2 degrees above normal.

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) A high-spirited Interior Secretary James Watt called the nations largest offshore oil lease sale "a phenomenal success after he dispensed 656 underwater tracts in an auction that drew record bids of $3.47 billion.

The sale Wednesday drew bids on 656 of more than 7,000 tracts that were offered, encompassing 40 million acres or virtually the entire north central Gulf of Mexico not already under lease.

The previous record was $2.67 billion bid on 147 Gulf tracts in 1980.

Much of the bidding Wednesday was speculative. Millions of dollars were offered for the right to drill In water so deep that the bottomlands cannot yet be explored.

Watt, attending his first such auction, wore a bright red sports coat - symbolic of a great sale - and afterward called it a phenomenal success story.

The greater story is that we have industry, using market forces, willing to provide energy for America, and thats our them,he said.

The auction was a further application of Watts policy to let oilmen bid on whatever tracts they desire. Previously, oilmen submitted a list of desirable tracts, the government pared about 75 percent from the list and offered them for lease a few times a year.

A similar mass sale already has been held for the Atlantic Coast, and another is planned in August for the Gulf of Mexico off Texas.

We have demonstrated that the marketplace is the right place for decisions to be made regarding allocation of natural resources, Watt said.

Sales of offshore drilling leases have been dismal recently, the most recent netting less than $40 million in high bids.

But Wednesdays performance indicated industry is responding to the wide open sales by exploring and bidding in

a wide variety of geological settings offered, Lloyd G. Otteman, president of Shell Offshore Inc., said.

The bidding occurred at a time when more than a third of the countrys rigs are idle and more than 150,000 workers are jobless.

John Rankin, director of the Interior Department's Mineral Management Service, and his staff have three weeks to evaluate the bids, but officials of the service said decisions will be made on about half the tracts within the next three days.

In addition to the lease payments, the federal government will get royalties on oil and natural gas when the tracts start producing in four or five years.

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Friendship Visitors Find Area People Friendly

The Friendship Force is n non-profit organization initiated by Fresident Carter in I97H. This program matches a city in the I nited States w ith a foreign town for cultural enchange. .4 pilot program was begun here last year when the first exchange between Greenville and Arnhem. Holland, took place .4 group of residents from Greenville traveled to .Arnhem last summer to live with a host family and experience Dutch life Dr. and Mrs. Carol Hampton of Greenville were'members of the Friendship Force to visit Holland Their host family in Arnhem was Corry and Henk ten Over. The two couples enjoyed each other's company so much, the Hamptons invited the ten Overs to visit them in Greenville.

By JANE WELBORN Reflector Staff Writer

The force of friendship pulled Henk and Corry ten Over to Greenville from Holland, a trip of 2U hours. They left their home and their children in Arnhem to take the longest trip of their lives to visit Dr. and Mrs. Carol Hampton.

The ten Over family lives in Arnhem, Holland, an industrial town of 130,000 on the Rhine River about 10 miles from the German border. The climate of the city is cooler and less humid than the weather in Greenville The ten Overs compared the city to Raleigh and said that the land is like that in the Piedmont Henk ten Over owns a laundry that provides linen service to institutions and hospitals. Corry ten Over is a housewife The couple has two children: Clara, 24, is a nurse and Marjan. 20, is a student at a university in Holland Corry enjoys working in _ her garden, reading and

painting on wood, Henk is a member of a volleyball team and raises tropical birds as a hobby.

Tourism is a big business in Arnhem. The city is 750 years old this year and is full of historic places. There are palaces and castles nearby. The oldest continuous restaurant in the world has been in business in Arnhem for 500 years. There are m.useums, fountains and parks in the town.

During World War II, the city of Arnhem was bombed. The large church in the center of town was destroyed and was reopened recently after a :tO-year reconstruction job.

The setting of the novel A Bridge Too Far," by Cornelius Ryan is Arnhem. The bridge refered to in the title is a bridge in Arnhem that was bombed in an airborne attack during the war,

The ten Overs said that a favorite tourist spot in the city is the Open .Air Museum. In this park, old homes from different periods of history

and different parts of Holland have been dis- mantled and reconstructed, 'The windmills and wooden shoes are for the tourists, Corry said. "Yes, I do have wooden shoes, but they are hanging on the wall with flowers in them."

After arriving in North Carolina, the ten Overs traveled across the state with their hosts. They bought Indian crafts on a visit to the mountains. They swam in the Atlantic Ocean on a trip to the coast, The water here is warm," Henk said, "The North Sea is much colder, The ten Overs said there are many similarities between Holland and North Carolina, For instance, the clothes worn in Holland are like the styles popular here, although that was not always the case. Traditional Dutch clothing carried symbolism, and Corry said that the style of clothes indicated religion and marital status.

Henk said the most popular sport in Holland is English football, or what Americans call soccer The Dutch also enjoy hockey, tennis and sailing, he said.

But there are some differences between Holland and eastern North Carolina, More women have jobs here than in Holland, Corry said. "There just arent enough jobs there.

The pace of the two countries is different. Henk said Americans move faster than the Dutch. ,,

"The people in North Caro-

LIKE KIDS AT CHRISTMAS ... Henk and Corry ten Over are as excited as kids at Christmas with their new store-bought American items. Henk, right, can't wait to fool his

friends with the Gee-Haw Whimmy-Diddle he bought in the North Carolina mountains. Corry is looking forward to poaching eggs. (Reflector photo by Jane Welbom)

Bomb Damages Autos In South African City

BLOEMFONTEIN. South Africa (APi - A bomb exploded under a parked car at lunch hour today in this central South African city, causing damage but no casualties, police said There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast, which* came six days after a powerful car bomb killed 18 people and wounded 217 in Pretoria.

Brigadier Francois Steenkamp, the city's acting security police chief, said todays bomb had been placed under a car parked beneath a corrugated metal lean-to. He said the 12:50 p.m. explosion caused extensive damage to a nearby fabric factory and to other vehicles.

At least two other cars were damaged by the blast, but there were no reports of deaths or injuries, he said.

The South African Press Association said windows-

were shattered in a nearby block of apartmenjs. It said the explosion occurred near a labor bureau office where blacks apply for work in white areas of South Africa.

The outlawed African National Congress, which is trying to overthrow the white-minority government, claimed responsibility for Fridays explosion in Pretoria. the capital.

On Monday, South African jets attacked suspected ANC

bases outside Maputo, Mozambique. South Africa said the jet strike killed 64 people, including 41 ANC guerrillas, but Mozambique said six civilians were killed and denied it harbored guerrilla forces.

Bloemfontein is about 200 miles southwest of Johannesburg in Orange Free State Province. The city has previously been the target of sabotage attacks by black nationalist guerrillas.

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lina are so friendly, Corry said. They are more open than the people in Holland.

The ten Overs could not believe that it took two hours to drive from Raleigh to Greenville. "We are not used to the great distances, Henk said. You can travel across all of Holland in two hours. He said that Holland could fit into eastern North Carolina with room to spare.

The 14 million people in Holland live in row houses to conserve space, and because the towns are small and close together, the people of Holland ride bicycles. If they are going on a trip, the Dutch take the bus or train, because in Holland gas costs three times what it costs here.

A major change for the ten Overs was the meals here. They said that the Dutch eat a hearty breakfast, then a mid-morning snack of tea or coffee and a pastry or sweet. A light lunch of fruit and cheese is served, followed by ' a mid-afternoon snack similar to the one in the morning. Around 5 p.m., they eat a light soup, and dinner is eaten around 7 p.m. After dinner, the Dutch relax with a small cup of strong dark coffee topped with whipped cream. "Even though it seems that we eat more meals, we actually eat less than people do here, said Corry.

She said that in Holland every morning, milk and fresh butter, fruit and bread

are delivered to her door. Corry was delighted with the large supermarkets in Greenville. She said that most of her shopping is done in small specialty shops in Arnhem, although there are a few smaller supermarkets there.

The ten Overs found that they liked many of the foods they encountered in the eastern North Carolina. Henk said that The Net House restaurant in Beaufort is deserving of a five-star rating; he and Corry especially enjoyed the Key Lime Pie served there.

A new dining experience for the couple was the breakfast foods in the South. They decided they like grits, hash browns and scrambled eggs, but their favorite breakfast food was biscuits.

Thiey discovered two new vegetables: baked potatoes and corn-on-the-cob. "In Holland, we eat boiled potatoes, Henk said, and ' we feed corn to the animals. Corry plans to prepare those vegetables for her friends when she returns to Holland. '

I really like Coca-Cola, Henk said, but it is too cold for me here. He said that beverages are served at room temperature in Holland and he could not get used to iced drinks.

One night the ten Overs were treated to an eastern North Carolina pig-picking with all the trimmings. They also went on their first picnic.

Corry, whose hobby is cooking, was impressed with American kitchens. The kitchens here are so big, and there are more more appliances and little gadgets, Corry said. While in Greenville, Corry bought corn-on-the-cob holders, an egg poacher and other conveniences that cannot be found in her native land.

One of the modem conveniences in the United States that the ten Overs had never seen were drive-through windows at banks and restaurants.

New York City, Washin^on, D.C., Florida and California is all you hear about America in Holland, Corry said. The Dutch watch such American television programs as Dynasty,

Dallas and "Fame. Most people in Holland think that all Americans live like the people in those shows. Corry said.

The ten Overs said that they found the people in

eastern North Carolina Very hospitable. "If 1 had my dogs and my daughters, I wouldnt mind living here, Corry said. But I would miss the cheese and chocolate made in Holland.NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS^

The offices and Operation Center of Greenville Utilities will be closed on Monday, May 30, in observance of Memorial Day. Customers wishing to pay their bills on that day may use the Dropository beside GUCs drive-in window. GUC will reopen Tuesday, May 31 from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM.

To report emergencies at night, on weekends or holidays, call 752-5627.Greenville Utilities Commission

EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY

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For Physical Fitness & Masters Swimming Our Program Is Designed For Developing Swimming Fitness, Losing Weight, Building Muscle Tone Developing Stroke Technique.

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757-6490

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8-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, May 26,1983Presumed Death Count On Nile Climbs To 302

ABU SIMBEL. Egypt (AP) - The government said today that 119 bodies had been found and 183 people were missing and presumed dead after a passenger ferry caught fire and sank in the crocodile-infested waters of the Nile River Helicopters, police boats and scuba divers continued searching the Nile for bodies and survivors.

The Interior Ministry in Cairo said 325 people were rescued. A spokesman, who asked not to be identified in accordance with government ,policy, said officials held out

"little or no hope" that the missing would be found alive.

Some of the victims burned to death and others drowned, the ministry said.

The ferry caught fire and burned Wednesday at 3 a.m. near this southern Egyptian town, forcing the 627 people aboard to dive overboard, scramble for life jackets or go down with the boat. Most were Sudanese and Egyptians.

Those who dodged the crocodiles and made it ashore risked getting stung by poisonous scorpions that

infested the shore of Lake Nasser, an artificially enlarged stretch of the Nile about 150 miles south of the winter resort Aswan. The ferry sank about 700 yards from the western shore.

State television and the governments Middle East News Agency said the blaze was caused by the explosion of a butane gas cylinder on aboard.

The Cairo newspaper Al-Messa said the fire quickly engulfed the vessel because some passengers bought butane gas bottles and gasoline cans at Aswan,

where the prices are lower than in Sudan.

Police officials said the boat was towing a barge and a small boat but they could not confirm newspaper reports there were people aboard the two smaller craft.

"We were asleep when we felt the flames coming out of a storage room, said Mohammed Abdel-Fattah, a Sudanese survivor. When I saw the fire I jumped into the water without knowing how to swim, but some people helped me out.

Abdel-Fattah complained there was no fire-fighting

equipment aboard the steamer.

Five military aircraft, including three helicopters, and 50 army frogmen were sent from Cairo. 525 miles to the north, to join 20 to 30 police motorboats in the search for survivors and bodies.

The steamer, named 10 Ramadan, left Aswan, 400 miles south of Cairo. Monday ,for a 200-mile run to Wadi Haifa, just south of Sudan border.

Lake Nasser was formed by the backwaters of the Soviet-built Aswan high dam.

completed in 1970. It is one of the worlds largest man-made lakes, stretching about 50 miles into Sudanese territory.

Police said it had 599 passengers and a crew of 28.> They said the passengers included 547 Sudanese, 48 Egyptians, a Frenchman, a New Zealander, a Tanzanian and a Chadian.

In the Sudanese capital Khartoum, the official Sudan news agency quoted President Jaafar Nimeiri as saying he was "shocked by the accident.

Striking Police Reach Settlement In Peru

LI.MA, Peru lAPi ^ Striking police officers ended a 36-hour walkout today and began reporting to work after reaching a settlement with the government, the 42nd civil guard station said.

President. Fernando Belaunde had declared a three-day state of emergency on Wednesday in Lima and ordered troops into the streets to prevent looting when the more than 7,000 of paramilitary civil guard police went on strike.

Terms of the settlement were not immediately announced. and there was no immediate word on whether the state of emergency had been lifted.

A strike leader at the 42nd civil guard station said the striking officiers were reporting for duty after agreement was reached at 5:30 a.m. following negotiations between Interior Minister Luis Percovich and a committee of the strikers.

The civil guards were demanding higher pay. shorter working hours and restoration of the death penalty for anyone killing a policeman.

The national radio broad

cast the presidents emergency order Wednesday, saying civil rights were suspended, including freedom from search and seizure without a warrant. The order was effective in Lima and the adjoining port of Callao.

The government said it took the action because normal police service had been affected by some "undisciplined" civii guards.

Shortly after the announcement, pedestrians disappeared from Limas downtown streets and some shops closed early.

"Theres no guarantee of protection now, said the owner of a restaurant near the presidential palace.

There were no reports of the strike spreading beyond the capital, where traffic police joined the walkout just before the evening rush hour

Interior Minister Luis Percovich told reporters the strike was confined to one 'guard station adjoining the national police headquarters w hich was taken over by the strikers, but a spokesman for the contingent of guards at that post said two other branches - National Police

and the Republican Guard -were supporting the strike.

Reports from various guard posts put the number of guardsmen on strike at more than 7,000. The guard has 42.000 members nationwide.

Troops in armored personnel carriers took up positions near Lima shopping centers to prevent looting, and other units were reported moving into the capital from the armored division headquarters.

The interior minister appealed to the strikers to return to work to show their love for their fatherland, institutions and responsibility to society, and warned that "this lack of discipline will be treated by each police force command.

He said he was willing to talk with a delegation of strikers about their grievances in his office.

A spokesman for the strikers said they were earning about $35 a month, and leaflets passed out by some strikers demanded that pay be increased up to $411 per month. Percovich told reporters the government was studying the idea of

changing the basic salary of the guards to $150 monthly, the total amount now received with all fringe benefits.

Some guards said they want their work day of 10 to 12 hours reduced, more humane treatment from their officers and restoration of the death penalty - abolished by Belaunde - for anyone killing a policeman.

The strikers also contended the government is sending young guardsmen with only six months of training to fight leftist guerrillas in Ayacucho state of southern Peru! More than 1,000 people have been killed since Belaunde ordered troops there last Dec. 29.

The state of emergency suspending civil rights began shortly after midday Wednesday. 12 hours after the civil guards refused to go on duty.

It is the first time Belaunde has ordered the armed forces into the streets of the capital since he took office in 1980, ending 12 years of military rule. In 1975, Gen, Juan Velascos military government sent tanks into

Limas streets to break up a police strike, and more than 100 civilians were killed.

Belaunde declared a 60-day state of emergency in Lima last August after leftist guerrillas dynamited power stations and blacked out the city of 5 million people. But he did not call out the army.

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Work Halted On U.S. Embassy

MOSCOW lAP) - About 30^ Soviet workers have walked off the job at the new U.S. Embassy construction site, halting the $120 million project that already has been plagued with persistent delays.

American supervisors said the workers abandoned the sprawling project Monday to protest alleged health dangers from X-rays used to check for structural flaws in the eight-story office building, the central structure in the heavily guarded complex.

Marine guards at the site confirmed the Soviets had

stopped work Monday and said four Soviet women supervisors wearing red arm bands were stationed at the main gate to prevent workers from entering the project. Later, the guards said, some workers were allowed in to remove tools, trucks and bulldozers.

The site is 300 yards long and 150 yards wide, directly behind the current embassy building, a converted 10-story yellow stucco apartment block on Moscows busy Ring Boulevard.

Embassy spokesman Rick Ruth confirmed the walkout began Monday and said it

was a dispute over terms of a contract. Ruth said he could not elaborate because of the delicate nature of the dispute.

"As far as we are concerned, there are no health hazards at the site, the spokesman said.

The Soviet agency responsible for providing workers for the project could not be reached immediately for comment.

American supervisors, however, said they did not expect the Soviet workers to return until June 20 when the X-ray inspection of the support columns is completed.

Its nothing but politics, said one of the Americans, asking to remain anonymous. Theres more radiation coming from the sun than there is from that equipment, said another.

Soviet diplomats have already moved into a new complex in Washington.

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PCC Holds Graduation

Graduation exercises for hospital ward secretary students at Pitt Community College were held Wednesday with Teresa Foskey, unit secretary at Pitt County Memorial Hospital, as the guest speaker.

Twelve students received certificates and several special awards were pesented, including the Iristeen Award for Clinical Excellence which went to Judy Johnson and Patricia Johnson. This award was established by previous graduates of the ward secretary program in honor of a former student, Iristeen Atkinson, who was killed in a car accident. * Awards were also presented to Gladys Ellis, Alice Williams, Brenda Smith and Patricia Davis for outstanding clinical performance.

The Most Congenial award went to Mildred Heath and the Most Improved to Rhonda Peed. Brenda Smith was named Most Likely to Succeed.

Benita Anderson, Brenda Smith. Patricia Davis, Audrey Darden and Gladys Ellis were cited for perfect attendance. Certificates were presented by Charissa Colchough, head of the PCC ward secretary program.

Graduates were: Audrey Darden and Gladys Ellis of Farmville; Judy Williams of Winterville; Rhonda Peed of Washington; Milly Heath of Black Jack; Benita Anderson, Brenda Smith, Alice Williams. Patricia Johnson, Patricia Davis and Darlene Wooten, all of Greenville and Pam Miller of Ayden.

SUBARU OF GREENVILLE GRAND OPENING

Ribbon Cutting Ceremony For The Grand Opening Of Subaru Of Greenville Was Held Friday, May 20th. Mayor Percy Cox cut the ribbon while Joe Cullipher, President Of Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth- Dodge-Peugeot And Subaru Of Greenville, looked on. Also present were (left to right) Louise Whichard, In Cli^rge Of Office Staff, Elmer Britt, (Second from right)' General Manager, and Diane Barnhill, Office Manager for Subaru of Greenville. Subaru Of Greenville is located at 605 W. Greenville Blvd. (adjacent to Joe Cullipher) and will carry a full line of front wheel drive and four wheel drive Subaru products.

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House Moves Purity Ahead

By DAVID GOELLER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON lAP) - The House, putting historical purity ahead of more office space and a new private dining room, has moved to break a 21-year congressional impasse over the crumbling West Front of the Capitol.

The action came Wednesday on a 325-86 vote approving $49 million to restore the sandstone facade that dates back to 1800 and is the only portion of the original building still visible from the outside.

The House and Senate have been squabbling since 1%2 over how to save the West Front. Three times the two chambers have deadlocked, with the Senate pushing restoration, the House a more ambitious extension plan,

Date last month, as President Reagan addressed a joint s^Son, sixteen sandstone slabs fell from the West Front, jewing the old argument.

|rhe response by the House Appropriations Committee was So. renew the push for the plan - advocated by George White, flie present architect of the Capitol - to save the West Front gy extending it.

The committee approved $71 million for the extension, hich calls for encasing the front w|th a new 31-foot extension gwt would add some 147.000 square feet of space to the gapitol

But the historic purists, led by Rep. Edward Roybal, I>:Calif., revolted Wednesday against the committee and won Spproval for the restoration plan that the Senate has favored.

In two hours of debate, the preservationists argued that jeiaimng the last original part of the Capitol was more *mprtanl than the office and restaurant space the extension wolj^d provide.

;#his is not a plan to extend the Capitol. It is a plan to jt^iterate it," said Rep. E. Clay Shaw Jr., R-Fla.

"There has to be some reverence around here for that Jfriginal I Capitol) building, said Rep. Joel Pritchard, J-Wash. "Someone told me Thomas Jefferson laid the

rnerstohe." A colleague whispered to him, "George iington" Pritchard smiled. "Thats even better. porters of extending the West Front argued that the gpftol has been rebuilt, reshaped and enlarged almost as ine as it has existed To prove their point, they wheeled in a few containing a take-apart model of the building.

Sk For a few minutes, however. Rep. Jerry Lewis, R-Calif Jrei laughter as he tried to get the various pieces - the east Jiffl extension, the Lincoln dome - to fit into place.

*Trom the very beginning, the Capitol has been a living Jnd growing building," Lewis said.

Summit Will Have Simple Format

ByDONMcLEOD Associated Press Writer WILLIAMSBURG, Va, (,AP) - When the White House set about creating an international economic summit conference it wanted to show world leaders "what makes us different - so it eliminated pomp and ceremony and set a tone that is distinctly American, if not downright frugal.

Thats why V^hite House officials searching for a meeting site chose Williamsburg, a 284-year-old time capsule of what this land was like when it made the historic shift from colonies of Britain to United States of America.

After the opulence of Versailles, where the French staged the 1982 summit to the grumbles of their taxpayers.

the Reagan administration^ wanted to hold down costs for this one.

And President Reagan said he wanted to get these annual meetings of the worlds leading industrial nations back to basics, with more time for heads of government to talk.

All three of these goals blend in Williamsburg, a clapboard and brick village where George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, James Madison, John Marshall and other famous men learned their politics and played midwife to a new nation.

Like the founding fathers, the heads of seven nations and the European Common Market will ride in horse-drawn carriages, stroll dusty streets from business to

luncheon/ relax m . fine breathe fresh mown hay on the morning breeze, live in ancient houses and sit on antique chairs.

"It gives them a little touch of our history. said Michael McManus, the chief summit planner. "Williamsburg gives us an idea of where we came from. Its a statement of this country and its basic principles and what makes us different from some other countries in the world.

Basically, the leaders of Great Britain, France, Canada, Japan, Italy, West Germany and the Common Market will be immersed in democracy, simplicity and Americana from the moment they join Reagan here on Saturday for the three-day meeting.

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Opening lead: King of .

There are many card combinations we recognize and tend to play automatically. That can be an expensive pastime.

The bidding was normal. West's one-level overcall is beyond reproach and North certainly had the values to in troduce his suit at the two-level. The final contract was eminently sound..

West attacked with three rounds of spades, declarer ruffing the last. Since West was long in spades, it seemed likely that he would be the one to be short in hearts. So declarer continued with the ace of hearts and a heart to the king. That would have allowed him to pick up the trump suit via a finesse had East started with four to the jack. Unfortunately, it was West who held the four trumps, and the contract could no kw^er be made. He had to rely on the club finesse, add when that lost declarer still had to concede a trump trick for down one.

Had Souths ten of trumps been a low card instead, he would probably have spotted the winning line. South can afford to lose a trump trick in addition to two spades as long as he can bring in the diamond suit.

With that in mind, there is a simple way to handle the trump situation. Declarer should cadi the ace-queen of hearts. If. both defenders follow, diclarer draws the last trump and then runs five diamond tricks and the ace of clubs to siSbre an overtrick.

When East shows out on the second trump, declarer abandons that suit and starts to run the diamonds immediately, sluffing clubs from his hand should West refuse to ruff. West can ruff whenever he pleases, but he cannot harm declarer. South can win any return (he ruffs spade in handl, draw the last trump bjWbssing to the king and at the same time provide himself with the entry to dummy to cash the remaining diamonds to dispose of his club losers.

Rubber bridge clubs throughout the country use the four-deal bridge format. Do they know something you don't? Charles Gorens Four-Deal Bridge will teach you the strategies and tactics of this fast-paced action game that provides the cure for unending rubbers. For a copy and a scorepad, send SI.75 to Goren-Four Deal," care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 259, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make checks payable to News-paperbooks.

The austerity of the event wont match those who once denounced taxation without representation on these same grounds, but McManus hopes to hold costs to the taxpayer to under $7 million, $1 million less than the French are thought to have spent a year ago.

Frills and corners have been cut everywhere. The government is renting the entire historic area for 3'2 days, but the contract is at least $500,000 less than what it will cost the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation to give up the income from the 7,000 tourists it would get daily on a Memorial Day weekend.

In return, the foundation hopei the worldwide news coverage will attract more foreign visitors. Currently, it draws about 50,000 foreigners a year,

The Reagan administration also is holding down costs in much the same way it redecorated the White House - by inducing private contributions with the lure of future tax deductions. ,

Gifts from the private sector, estimated to be worth at least $1 million, include more than 2,000 pounds of chicken for the press center commissary, unlimited beer from three breweries, free soda pop, almonds, hazel nuts and pistachios from California, peanuts from Virginia, hot dogs, ham

burgers and icecream.

Reagan is taking the modesty and frugality theme to new lengths For example, the big state dinner will be informal with guests in business suits. No elaborate entertainment IS planned for the weekend, only dinner music.

Even the diplomatic gifts which President and Mrs Reagan will give their official guests may set new standards for restraint Instead of the hand wrought silver pieces the Reagans took to Europe on their trip to the summit last year, the visiting heads of government will receive commercially produced porcelain bowls engraved with Williamsburg scenes, better in quality perhaps but the same in spirit as those tourists buy hereby the hundreds.

"They dont want anything that appears the least bit elaborate. said one Williamsburg official, who

didn't want his name used but who expressed disdain at White House aversion to using some of the facility's finer offerings "They wouldn't even use our carriage for the arrival ceremony. ' this official grumbled ' They are using our landau," an open vehicle as opposed to the stately closed carriage Most of the official residences are relatively modest clapboard structures, occupied in their prime by ministers, merchants and other ordinary tow nsmen As for Reagan's goal of informality and frankness. Williamsburg could not be better .Most meeting places are within easy amble of each guest's quarters

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PRACTICE - A woman dressed in colonial attire walks past a Marine helicopter Wednesday during practice landing in Williamsburg, Va. A world economic summit will be held in Williamsburg this weekend. (AP Laserphoto)

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lu The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C -Thursday,-May 26,1983

Labor Neojrs Endorsement

B.ALTIMORE i.APi - .After a year and a half,of scrutinizing 1984 Democratic Party presidential hopefuls, the ,AFL CIO leadership is putting the final touches on its plan to endorse a candidate before the primary season opens.

.At the conclusion of the executive council's screening >ession of former Florida Gov Reubin Askew on Wednesday, AFL-CIO spokesman Murray Seeger said "I don't anticipate any more candidates being interviewed by the labor leaders.

Seeger and others have not ruled out such sessions if new candidates emerge besides the quintet already in the race -former Vice President Walter F. Mndale, Sens. Alan Cranston of California, John Glenn of Ohio, Gar> Hart of Colorado, Ernest Hollings of South Carolina, and Askew.

The screening process by the union leadership began in .November 1981. when Mndale appeared before the federation's convention in New York. Hart and Glenn were interviewed last August and Cranston and Hollings appeared before the council's February meeting in Bal Harbour. Fla.

Seeger. briefing reporters as the council wound up a two-day meeting in suburbalf Linthicum Heights, said a policymaking meeting scheduled for Boston in August will finalize the procedure aimed at achieving a labor consensus behind a single candidate in mid-December, well ahead of he first primaries and caucuses.

"One of the things that's been overlooked is the real problem of specifically getting delegates elected and qualified ifor the July 1984, Democratic National Convention!," said Seeger, chief spokesman for AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland.

The 33 federation vice presidents who serve on the executive council have urged officials of the AFL-CIOs 99 affiliated unions to refrain from irrevocable candidate commitments until the labor organizations general board can conduct an endorsement vote in Washin^on Dec. 14.

Seeger said, however, that many unionists who want to attend the San Francisco convention might be tempted to run on the slates of favorite-son candidates in some states.

"Florida is a good example. he said.

"There are people in Florida that definitely want to be delegates, and if we tell them, 'you have to run on a slate pledged to candidate X because thats the person we endorse, and they'say. hey man. Im going to get to the convention if I go on a slate for Reubin Askew. what are we going to tell them'."

Reagan's Civil Rights Selections Draw Fire

CADET LIFT - Cadets of the 1983 class at West Point rejoice after receiving their diplomas Wednesday. The United States Military Academy graduated 861 men and

women in its 184th commencement. Defense Secretary Caspar Wineberger spoke to the graduates. (APLaserphoto)

Free Spender's Lifestyle Is Changing

ByERICNEWHOUSE Associated Press Writer

ST LOl'lS i.AP) - Thomas R Brimberry, a former saloonkeeper, lived a life that most people only dream about - and now hes about topay forit.

At his peak. Brimber' was a free spender who splashed $100 tips around, built a mansion with three Jacuzzis and a sauna, and lost $250,000 in Las Vegas within half an hour.

But prosecutors also accuse him of masterminding a scheme to plunder a brokerage house of up to $23 million, one of the largest losses of its kind in the nation

On Wednesday, Brimberry. 39, was convicted in .Alton, 111,, of two counts of obstructing justice by urging his co-workers to burn records He was acquitted of a third count. Sentencing was set for June'24.

Brimberry still faces charges in .vilssouri of lying to a federal grand jury, lying . to the federal Securities and Exchange Commission and liquidating equipment after he had agreed in bankruptcy court not to sell his assets.

His problems stem from 1974 when a fire destroyed Brimberry's failing tavern in

Pontoon Beach. 111., and he took an $8,000-a-year job as a margin clerk for Stix & Co., a respected St. Louis brokerage firm.

It wasnt long before he was stealing from the firm, Brimberry later told authorities.

By 1975, Brimberry and James J. Massa, who owned a majority interest In Stix, had worked out a scheme to borrow from 10 accounts controlled by Brimberry, using phony stock as collateral, according to a federal indictment.

But William Gaynor, chief investigator for the SEC, testified later that interest was never paid on the alleged loans, leaving the 10 accounts $23 million short. A federal bankruptcy judge agreed that Brimberry owed the estate that amount.

By 1979, Massa had used $954,000 of the firms stolen funds to buy a 62 percent majority ownership in Stix. And Brimberry was named a senior vice president, drawing a $300,000 annual salary.

Brimberr), Massa and Stix accountant Duane Skinner were the principals in looting the firm of $16.5 million between them, according to the indictments in federal court.

W'ith all this money, Brimberry suddenly prospered.

A business associate testified that he kept $50,000 in cash in the trunk of his car in case Brimberrv wanted to buy something, and Janice Brimberry told reporters recently that she frequently went shopping with $10,000 in her purse.

After a while, you dont think about it, said Mrs. Brimberry. You ride the good times, you ride the bad times. But its not worth it.

In the heart of blue-collar Granite City, 111., Brimberry bought seven lots and built a $1.75 million mansion. It boasted seven bathrooms with gold fixtures and hammered-brass sinks, a $65,000 stocked liquor cabinet and a $60,000 pool complex.

He once donated a car to a church raffle, and sometimes swooped down to pick up his children from their Catholic school in a helicopter.

It happened a couple of times, supposedly to give lunch money to his kids or pick one of them up, said Gary Schneider, editor of the Granite City Press-Record.

But he stopped that after a complaint was filed with the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration), said

Schneider, who lived near the school and witnessed one of the incidents.

And Brimberry took friends, acquaintances and, on one occasion, workmen from his new home on trips to Hawaii, the Bahamas and Las Vegas. His wife estimated that he lost in the neighborhood of millions of dollars to his passion for gambling.

His behavior eventually attracted the attention of the Internal Revenue Service.

When he learned that he was the target of an IRS investigation, Brimberry decided to make a deal. On Nov. 2,1981, he agreed to lay out the scam in exchange for an agreement allowing him to plead ^ilty to a single tax felony charge.

Two days later, federal officials raided the brokerage firm and seized its bwks. They also went to the vaults and found old copies of the Wall Street Journal stuffed into folders which should have held $36 million in securities.

Stix & Co. was quickly closed, declared insolvent and placed in receivership.

Tom exposed the fraud himself, said Mrs. Brimberry. The fraud was not under investigation. If it

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hadnt been for Toms exposure, it could have taken them a year to unravel the scheme.

But federal officials later decided that Brimberry was simultaneously covering his tracks and filed their charges. Defense attorney Rodney DeVilliers told the jury that prosecutors pressed the obstruction of justice charges because they were embarrassed by the deal with Brimberry.

Brimberry didnt testify earlier this month at the trial of Massa, 50. of Collinsville, III.

WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan is being criticized by major civil ri^ts groups after replacing three members of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission with conservatives who share his opposition to racial quotas and school busing.

The nominees, meeting with reporters at the White House on Wednesday, emphasized their independence repeatedly.

But Rabbi Murray Saltzman, who was dismissed from the commission, said, Im saddened and grieved and even on the verge of outrage in terms of what the administration is doing to the commission.

Thomas I. Atkins, acting executive director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said the move was a vindictive attempt to purge from the government.. people who have a commitment to effective civil rights enforcement and protection,

No one at the White House would say for the record why Reagan made the move. One White House aide, who spoke only on condition that he not be named, said: He just wanted fresh blood there. Clearly, the president chose them because they are distinguished and because he feels comfortable with them.

If the nominees, all Democrats, win Senate confirmation. Reagan will have replaced all but one of the commissions six members since he took office.

The lone holdover would be Jill Ruckelshaus, wife of William Ruckelshaus, the presidents new Environmental Protection Agency administrator

Reagan attempted to replace several commissioners last year, including Mrs. Ruckelshaus, who was appointed by President Carter. But the Senate refused to confirm the nominations.

The new nominees, all white, are:

-Morris B. Abram. 64, of New York, a lawyer and former president of Brandis University. He would succeed Mary Frances Berry, a black who was assistant secretary of education in the Carter administration.

-John H Bunzel, 59, senior research fellow at Stanford Universitys Hoover Institution and former presi

dent of San Jose State University in California, He would succeed Blandina Cardenas Ramirez, a Hispanic educator from San Antonio. Texas, appointed by Carter

-Robert A. Destro, 32, assistant professor at Catholic Universitys Columbus Law School. He would succeed Rabbi Saltzman of Baltimore, who was appointed by President Ford. Destro was nominated by Reagan last year but was never confirmed by the Senate.

In a telephone interview, Saltzman said Reagans action was a really unprecedented invasion of the integrity of the commission because of the assumption that the commission should reflect the political ideology of the president.

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How They Voted

Widow Gets Life In Husband's Killing

Roll Call Report Service

WASHINGTON - Heres bow area members of Congress were recorded on major roll call votes May 12-18.

HOUSE DEBT By a vote of 263 for and 156 against, the House cleared the way for a final vote on a bill enabling the ^vernment to borrow to pay its bills when the current debt limit is reached within a few weeks.

The bill I HR 2990) raised the debt ceiling by $98,8 billion to a $139 trillion limit that is expected to suffice until next Sept. 30. On a later voice vote, the bill was passed and sent to the Senate Both^ Democrats and Republicans averted a yea-and-nay vote of final passage of HR 2990 The low-profile strategy left this vote as the most direct expression of sentiment on expanding the .governments borrowing ^Ihority to pay ofr the ^ograms Congress has put ifto effect.

However, most of the 156 lawmakers voting in the negative later muted their oppositin when the nonrecord final vote was taken -Supporter Barber Conable. R-N.Y., said "failure to pass this before the end of the month can be serious embarrassment to a President who is the leader of

I the free economic world" and shon will host an economic s;ummit meeting at Williamsburg. Va.

Opponent Delbert Latta, R-Oliio. said "these debt ceiling increases ought to be passed by the individuals who put us ;whind the eight ball in the first place, the big spenders iin this Congress. j Members voting yes -supported the debt ceiling increase

: NORTH CAROLINA Voting Jyes: Walter Jones, D-1, Tim ^Valentine, D-2. Charles Whitley, D-3, Stephen Neal,

"D-5. Charles Britt, D-6.

'Charles Rose, D-7, W G Hefner, D-8, James Martin, R-9, James Clark, D-11.

- Voting no; James Brovhill, R-10.

Not voting: Ike Andrews, D4.

REPEAL The House passd. 382 for and 41 against, and sent to the Senate a bill (HR 2973) to repeal the law requiring banks and other financial institutions to withhold for Uncle Sam ten percent of interest and divident payments.

Slated to take effect July 1, withholding is the largest revenue item in the major tax alw enacted last year, collecting some $13.4 billion through 1988 from tax cheaters.

However, the House vote and a previous Senate vote for postonement make it clear withholding will be shelved - a major victory for bankers and millions of complaining constituents Supporter Norman D-Amours, D-N.H., said since the Merchant of Venice, people have not been in love with bankers. And it is easy to make them the fall guy. But grassroots America understands this issue Opponent Robert Matsui, D-Calif., called the bankers lobbying campaign "one of the most deceptive and outrageous... 1 have seen in my five years in ths Congress

Members voting yes w,anted to repeal the withholding law.

NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes: Walter Jones, Valentine, Whitley, Ike Andrews, Neal, Britt, Hefner, James Martin, Broyhill, Clarke.

Voting no: None.

Not voting: Rose.

SENATE NOMINEE The Senate confirmed, 69 for and 28 against, the nomination of Alfred S. Regnery to head the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.

The Justice Department office awards grants and sets federal policies aimed at curbing juvenile crime.

^ Critics pointed to Regnerys own admission of inexperience in this area, and they said his public statements and background of conservative activism show he leans too strongly toward punishment rather than prevention.

Supporter Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., said we are overloaded with experts in Washington and that Regnerys trong professional record as a private lawyer and government official "more than compensate for whatever technical deficiencies might arise.

Opponent William Proxmire, D-Wisc., said "nothing in his background qualified him for the post to which he has been nominated.

Senators voting yes favored Regnerys nomination.

Voting from North Carolina were John East, R, voted yes. Jesse Helms. R, voted yes, REFORM By a vote of 76 for and 18 against, the Senate passed on immigration reform bill to enable the U.S. to better control its borders.

The bill (S529), which was sent to the House, clamps down on illegal immigratin primarily by penalizing 'western growers and others who knowingly give jobs to undocumented workers At the same time, it makde concessions to civil libertarians and to economic interests that depend on the illegal labor pool.

It grants varying degrees of amnesty to millions of illegals who entered the U.S. before Jan. l, 1980. Those arriving since then could be

deported, although the bill defines circumstances under which a large percentage could remain in the U.S.

Supporter Walter Huddleston, D-Ky., said the prsence of at least 10 million illegal aliens shows "there is, for all practical purposes, no border between Mexico and the U.S., and that Congress must act to protect American jobs.

Opponent Pete Wilson. R- ^ Calif., said the attempt to keep foreigners at home by denying them U.S. jobs will fail because they still will be "seeking a better quality of life even without the prospect of employment.

Senators voting yes favored the immigration reform bill.

Voting from North Carolina were^East voted no. Helms voted no.

WARRANTS By a vote of 62 for and 33 against, the Senate adopted an amendment to S 529 (above) requiring immigration agents to obtain warrants before searching a field for illegal aliens.

While the Immigratin and Naturalization Service (INS) needs a warrant to enter buildings, it can, under . limitations set by U.S. Supreme Court decisions, arbitrarily enter a farm field if it "sees illegal activity underway.

Senators voting yes wanted to require search warrants for INS raids on open fields.

East and Helms voted yes,

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GREENSBORO, N.C. I.AP) - Three people, including the victims widow, have received life sentences after their convictions in a murder-for-hire scheme in. Greensboro A Guilford County Superior Court jury Wednesday convicted Dora Mangum Mills. .53. William Sidney .Albert, 51, and Michael Stephen Dearen. 30, of second-degree murder and attempted robbery in last Novembers slaying of Coy Kemple Mills.

the key prosecution witness in the case was Brenda .Albert King. Alberts daughters. who described an affair

between her father and Mrs Mills. She testified she carried notes about the murder from her father to Dearen. who was her boyfriend.

She testified as part of a plea bargain with prosecutors.

"This is a calculated, cold, planned killing, Judge Julius Rousseau told defense attorneys before he sentenced the three to life in prison for the murder and 14 years for attempted/obbery

"Whether it was for loveor money. I'm not sure. Or whether it was just to get somebody out of the way, Rousseau said. "It was

premeditated and deliberated. in my opinion, based on the evidence.

.Mills was shot to death in the driveway of his home last Nov 6.

Mrs King testified she had provided her father with sedatives and such intended murder weapons as Raid bug spray - which she believed contained arsenic - and

doral hydrate crystals to be sprinkled on Mills' barbecue sandwich

As payment for the killing. Dearen was to help himself to the large sum of money Mills' usually carried. Mrs King said But he left without his reward when the 27U-pound Mills rolled over onto the $12.6(JO in his pockets after he had been shot

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12 The ail> Keflector, Greenville. N C -Thursdav, May 26. l83

Crossword By Eugene Sheffer KothonflO RobinSOfl Ev6r6t

ACROSS

1 Watch part 5 Western Indian 8 Read over

12 Possess

13 Thumbs down

14 Vagrant

15 Refinery needs

16 Pool need

17 Hvmn close

18 Artist .Andy 20 Spatter

22 Before

23 Malde

24 Boston orchestra

27 Subdue

32 Play by improvise

33 rule

34 Collection

35 Newspaper worker

38 Key

39 Red or black

40 Pet for an ailurophile

42 Mad

45 Los - tbomb site I

49 Dolt

50 Chinese pan

52 Vesuvian flow

53 Monster

54 Supplement

55 Monogram pt.

56 - the mark

I conformed i

57 Draft org.

58 Give in

DOWN

1 Third place

2 Scarlett's home

3 Eternally

4 Interlocks

5 Poster pointer

6 Greek T

Avg. solution time: 24 min.

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5-26

Answer to yesterday's puzzle.

7 Ogled

8 Clay molder

9 Squeeze

10 Seth's brother

11 Zilch

19 Choice word 21 Elec unit

24 Energize

25 Paddle

26 Stress

28 Neighbor ofMex.

'29 Flapjacks 30 French salt 31Sault Mane

36 Did usher's work

37 - .Antonio

38 Type type

41 .Actor Pacino

42 Atoll part

43 Ni.x

44 She sheep

46 U'o's pride

47 Classic piiet

48 Glut

51 Gives the green light

State's First Woman Lawyer Still Practicing

By JAMES GOGEK By The Associated Press

DURH.AM. N.C (AP) -Attorney Katherine Robinson Everett's first trial involved a stolen year ring in southeastern North Carolina. That was in 1920. when she became the stale's first woman lawyer.

Today, at age 90. she still practices law, with the firm of Everett and Hancock in Durham.

When she became the first woman to pass the stale bar in North Carolina. Mrs. Everett said people thought she iJias a freak." For her first trial in Sampson County, ' they came from miles around to see a woman in court . " ,

Today, they wouldnt come across the street. .Mrs, Everett said. ".Now, there are so many women in law, you see them all the time.'' She added, "we've come a long way."

Mrs. Everett said in her first trial she represented an insurance company trying to retrieve a stolen car that had been smuggled to New York from eastern North Carolina. The insurance company got the car back and the culprits were convicted.

Mrs. Everett was the first woman to graduate from the University of North Carolina School of Law. She was the onlv woman in the class of 1920.

Although she originally wanted to attend the University of Virginia law school where her father, former Fayetteville mayor H. McD. Robinson, had* attended, "they were not gracious enough to take a woman, she said.

Fresh out of UNC law school with the class of 1920, Mrs. Everett joined her fathers law firm. Her first court appearance was in the state Supreme Court in a

case involving the rights of a woman in financial dealings with her husband, she said.

"The question came up as to whether I should wear a hat or not in court, what would be proper she said. "In those days, women wore hats everywhere and werent seen without one."

She said she spoke to a state Supreme Court justice who was also a professor at UNC and the decision came down that she shouldnt wear a hat

In 60 years since her first case before the state Supreme Court. .Mrs. Everett is still well known to several of todays justices.

Associate Justice J. William Copeland, who was 6-years-old when Mrs. Everett was first in the state Supreme Court, said he saw her often when' he was a Superior Court judge in Durham Countv. He said she

was a good lawyer and one of the earliest woman lawyers we had,

Copeland also said that Mrs. Everett always attends the American Bar Association meetings, no matter where theyre held.

it was in San Francisco last year and I saw her walking down the street with her son, he said.

Mrs. Everett comes from a family emersed in'the law. Her son, Robinson 0. Everett, is the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Military Appeals in Washington. He was part of the Durham law-firm of Everett. Everett and Everett, father, mother and son, who practiced together from 1956 to 1968.

In 1954, we were all sworn in together as members of the U.S. Supreme Court, Everett said. I believe that was a precedent to have mother, father and son all

Katherine Robinson Everett

sworn in at the same time to practice there.

He calls his mother "a really remarkable person. Shes right on top of things and she keeps going.

Everett said he took a trip to China with his mother in 1981, and "she just about ran me ragged touring the country. "I can attest to her keeping active.

Ecologists Challenge Syn~Fuel Project

CRYPTOQUIP

5-26

RVWEKTRVTJ ZGCRVTVC EXGTJW OVVEATZ OAXXKO.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - TIME FOR SPIRITED IjVDY FROGS TO PROPOSE MARRIAGE: LE.AP YEAR.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: V equals E.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher m 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 usmg an apostrophe can give you. clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

C I93 King Featurfs Syndicate Inc

POSTWAR ART

W.ASHINGTON LAP) -Four conservation groups Wednesday called on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to reverse its opinion that a synthetic fuels project in North Carolina will not affect saltwater marshlands Meanwhile, the North Carolina Attorney Generals Office Wednesday issued an opinion saying the state would not have to issue an environmental impact statement on the Fiist Colony project.

The state Department of Natural Resources and Communitjp Development has been reviewing Peat Methanol Associatess plan to build a plant to convert peat mined from Washington. Hyde and Tyrrell counties into methanol, an alcohol fuel.

The department had requested an opinion as to whether the companys receipt of federal aid from Synthetic Fuels would qualify as public money under the

NEW YORK i.AP) - New Yorks Guggenheim Museum has scheduled an exhibition of important European paintings called "Acquisition Priorities: Aspects of

Postwar Paintinf in Europe" for May 21) to Sept , 11.

The exhibit includes some 70 paintings by 27 artists, spanning the period from the 1940s through the present

Blue Mold Spreads

R.ALEIGH. N.C lAP) - Spurred by recent rainy weather, blue mold disease has spread over the past week to several more North Carolina farms, a tobacco expert said Wednesday

the farms affected had not used protective fungicides that most farmers routinely use, said Dr. N.T. Powell, extension specialist at N C. State University.

Blue mold was reported last week on several farms in Sampson, Columbus, Robeson and Guilford counties. Powell said the disease has spread to Stokes County and additional fields in Guilford and Columbus counties.

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North Carolina Environmental Policy Act and therefore require an environmental statement.

However, the attorney generals office said that since the funds do not (fome through the state, a statement would not be needed.

Joseph W. Grimsley, secretary of natural resources and community development, said his department still would closely examine the environmental issues surrounding the plant.

Critics have said the peat mining could hasten freshwater runoff into the states saltwater sounds and harm commercial and sports fishing.

The consen-ationists contend the 15,000 acres are shrub bogs and thus subject to wetland regulations governing dredge and fill operations.

The corps, which makes such determinations, ruled otherwise last September.

For information on the services provided by the City Public Works'Department, call 7524137

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Earthquake... Adviser...

(Continued from Pagel) ing at an oil refinery and a thermal power plant in Akita, a city of 200,000, and other fires in Hirosaki city, north of Akita.

Kyodo News Senice said three oil storage tanks had been ruptured at Niigata, another major city 160 miles south of Akita. Some structu-jjd    ral damage and broken roads

   and sidewalks were reported

in many parts of the area. Numerous highways were closed and train service was interrupted.

The police said three workmen were swept away while working on sea barriers at Aomori, at the northern tip of Honshu, and

one person was killed by a collapsing wall in Akita city. 80 miles tarther south. Several people were reported missing at the southern end of Hokkaido, across the strait from Aomori.

Nakasone appointed State Minister Mitsuki Kato to head a committee to coordinate relief efforts. Later in the day, Nakasone left for the United States to represent Japan at the Williamsburg. Va.. summit of seven industrial nations. A spokesman said Nakasone would be given updated reports on damage from the quake when his plane lands in Alaska for a refueling stop.

(Continued from Page 1 American adviser slain in El Salvador. Another adviser. Special Forces Sgt. J Stanley Thomas, was wounded by rebel fire while flying in a helicopter above Usulutan province in early February.

Thomas was shot in the leg. but his wound was not serious.

The first group of advisers, numbering 55, was dispatched by the Reagan administration in March 1981. '' Since then the administration has observed a self-imposed limit of 55 on the number of advisers.

Hamilton said Schaufeiberger, dressed in plain clothes, was killed

when he went to the Central American University in a western suburb of the capital about 6:30 p.m. to pick up a friend.

As he was waiting in the university parking lot. a car pulled up behind his Malibu and four shots were fired from the vehicle, striking Schaufeiberger in the head. Hamilton said.

He said a passerby placed the officer in his car and rushed him to the Military Hospital, but he was pronounced dead on arrival.

Hamilton said his account was based on reports from witnesses and information gathered by other embassy officials.

A night watchman at the university gave a different version.    i

The watchman, who iden-

ThUaiJy Reflector, Greenville, N C -Thursday .May 26,1983-13 tified himself as Roberto Alfaro, said the officer apparently parked along the one-way street that runs through the university.

After he was shot, he drove about 20 feet before the vehicle jumped the curb and smashed into a parked car. Alfaro said, showing an Associated Press reporter broken glass and the tire marks he said were made by the victim's car

The shooting occurred after dark when hundreds of students were leaving classes. The street was congested with vehicles and pedestrians, .Alfaro said.

Hamilton said Schaufeiberger usually did not wear his uniform'after working hours

Utilities Want Nuke Plant Kept Open

REMEMBER WHEN - There was a time within the memory of many of todays motorists when less than five dollars would buy a full tank of gas. Here, a gas pump no longer in use in the town of Turkey shows that gasoline was at one time 27 cents a gallon, presumably the price in the year that the store was closed. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)

W'ASHINGTON lAP) -Utility officials today urged the Nuclear Regulatory Commission not to shut down New Yorks Indian Point power plant next month despite a long history of problems with emergency plans at the site.

Top executives of the New York Power Authority and Consolidated Edison, owners of the plant, said the facilities are safe and that the problems identified last month by the Federal Emergency Management Agency are being resolved. A shutdown, they said, would cause major economic disruption in the New York metropolitan area

The NRC has said it will issue a shutdown order by June 9 unless the utilities cn

show that the planning problems have been resolved or that other compelling reasons" exist to keep the plants open.

Indian Point, 35 miles north of New York City, is the first American nuclear site to be threatened with a shutdown for failing to meet the planning requirements imposed after the 1979 accident at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania.

The power authority firmly believes that the emergency response capability now exists to protect the public health and safety around Indian Point in the extremely unlikely event of a major accident," authority President Leroy W. Sinclair told the commission.

Consolidated Edison

Chairman Arthur Hauspurg added, i believe our record and the current situation point in one direction -allowing continued operation of the Indian Point plants."

Today's hearing was the last chance for the utilities, their critics and government disaster planning specialists to give the NRC their views before the June 9 deadline. FEMA and the New York state preparedness commission, however, decided at the last minute not to send representatives.

Later today, utility critics were expected to press the NRC to proceed with the shutdown order. The critics claim that the plants are a threat to the 288,000 people who live within 10 miles of the site.

FEMA reported last month that, despite more than two years of work, two serious problems remain in the plants: Westchester Countv. where the plant is located, has not obtained commitments that bus drivers will work during an emergency, and neighboring Rockland County's officials refuse to participate in the plan.

Without the bus drivers, the utilities have not been able to show compliance with the key requirement that everyone who lives within 10 miles can be evacuated quickly in an emergency.

Sinclair said local officials have received verbal promises that bus companies will make 1.000 buses available for any emergency, and he added that some

Sermon

Lawsuit

Settled

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) - A S3 million lawsuit filed by a woman who claimed her minister defamed her in a sermon by saying she was disloyal to her husband has been settled out of court, the womans attorney says.

Neither side would discuss terms of the agreement, but the womans attorney. James Heiting, said his client was very pleased

Frances Rodriguez Paez, 31, of Riverside, sued Pastor Fred Diaz, the La Sierra Spanish Seventh-day Adventist Church and the Southeastern California Association of Seventh-day Adventists over a sermon Diaz delivered Oct. 10.

In the lawsuit, she contended she suffered medical and psychological injuries, loss of earnings and loss of respect from her husband, family, friends and fellow church members after I^iaz allegedly exposed her personal problems to illustrate a sermon entitled. The Home Under Attack

.Ms. Paez alleged Diaz said in the sermon that she "was not a proper wife, was disloyal to-her husband, put certain work before her family, was not following Gods teaching and was not a good member of the Seventh-day Adventist Church."

.Mrs. Paez, who had been married 10 years at the time of the sermon but has since divorced, claimed she had discussed her marital problems with Diaz a month before the sermon.

But the pastor, who has since been assigned to a Santa Ana congregation, said in a deposition that he barely knew her and that the woman he described in the sermon was someone else.

In the sermon, Diaz discussed societal trends he believed were tearing away at the institution of the family, Toward the end, he spoke about a troubled marriage in which the wife wanted to become a peace officer despite the objections of her husband, who was born and raised in Mexico and wanted his wife to fulfill the traditional role of wife and mother.

Mrs. Paez works for the Riverside Police Department as an unsworn crime prevention officer. She said in a depbsition that she had discussed her desire to be a peace officer with her husband.

Mrs. Paez was not present when Diaz delivered the sermon, which she later heard on tape. However she said in the deposition that her father was at church that day, and that he called her immediately afterward and told her. You were just the main entree of todays sermon.

Unemployment Claims Show Decline

drivers are already receiving training to deal with radiation, But under questioning from NRC Chairman Nunzio J. Palladino, he acknowledged that no written commitments have yet been obtained from either the companies or the drivers.

New York Gov. .Mario Cuomo said Wednesday that he hopes to avoid' a June 9 shutdown bv volunteering state workers' to replace Rockland County officials. That offer has been made before, and in fact FE.MA said the state was not able to satisfactorily compensate for Rocklands absence.

Cuomo said that under his new plan "all the command decisions would be made by the state But he denied that he was asking for an extension, saying, "If the NRC or FE.M. concludes the place is not safe, then they must not let the plant go forward

Summit Backed

VV.A.SH1NGT0N '.APi -President Reagan said today that a summit meeting with Soviet leader Yuri Andropov merely to get acquainted makes no sense" but that he would be willing to meet the Kremlin's leader if they could work on legitimate" issues

Reagan, in an interview with six European journalists. said there has been no evidence from Andropov that he IS ready for a summit.,, The president said the Soviet leader still was settling in to. his job

And 1 think just to have a summmit meeting which might raise the hopes of people all over the world simply to get acquainted and then nothing positive comes from it, makes no sense

It's been tried before and with sad results for our own country and for the world, ' Reagan said. The president did not spell out what he was talking about. '

However, there has been speculation that after the first summit between former President John F Kennedy and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in 1%1, that Khrushchev came away thinking Kennedy was a weak leader and this may have led him to put Soviet missiles in Cuba.

Reagan told the intennew-ers. 1 am perfectly willing to meet with him when there is an agenda and when there are legitimate issues that could be resolved to the benefit of all of us. worldwide."

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WASHINGTON (APi -About 453,000 Americans filed first-time claims for unemployment benefits in mid-.May, the lowest level of jobless benefit applications since September 1981, the Labor Department said today.

the total of new applications in the week that ended May 14 was 30,000 below the previous weeks seasonally adjusted level, the Employment and Training .Administration said in its report.

But some private economists interpret the weekly first-time jobless claims figures with caution, noting that these figures tend to bounce up and down and send conflicting signals about employment trends.

Nevertheless, there were other positive signals in the latest department survey of unemployment claims trends.

For instance, some

3.713.000 Americans were drawing regular 26-week benefits under the various state programs in the week ending May 7, a decline of

51.000 from the week before. That was the lowest total of claims coverage at the state level since March 1982.

The nations insured unemployment rate - the proportion of the working labor force insured against the loss of jobs which actually gets unemployment

benefits - stood still at 4.3 percent in the week ending May 7.

The 11 states with the highest insured unemployment rates were:    West

Virginia, 8.4 percent; Alaska and Pennsylvania, 6.4; Louisiana and Oregon, 5.7; Illinois, Washington    state

and Wyoming, 5,6; Idaho, 5.5 and Kentucky    and

Mississippi. 5,2.

The agency reported that ,533,000 unemployed    people

were getting 13 weeks ot additional benefits under the extended benefits program paid in 20 states. Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands in the week ended .May 7, based on seasonally unadjusted figures. That was a decline of 45,000 from the previous week.

There also was a healthy decline in the number of people getting extra'jobless benefit payments under the Federal Supplemental Compensation Program in

the week ending May 7, The total stood at 1.333,200. down 114,000 from the week ended .April 30.

The national, seasonally adjusted civilian unemployment rate dipped from 10.3 percent in March to 10.2 percent in April, and total employment rose by 360,000. The Labor Department will release the national jobless rate for May on June 3.

Every day in

THE DAILA' REFLECTOR

Three Slain In Family

MINERAL POINT, Wis. (AP) - Officials investigating the slayings of a couple and their lO-year-old son want to question an older son who checked into a Missouri motel using his fathers credit card, authorities say.

The I5-vear-old was taken

into custody Wednesday after the motel clerk, told to watch two youths using a stolen credit card, called police.    ,

Just hours earlier, Iowa County authorities asked by an unidentified high school counselor to check on the

familys welfare found the bodies of Hans Zimmer, 48, his wife. Sally, 44. and their son Perry, 10.

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14- The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, May 26.1983

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH. N C. (AP iNCDAi - There was no trend reported on the North Carolina hog market today because of the upcoming holiday Kinston unreported Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hili. Chadbourn, Ayden. Pine Level. Laurinburg and Benson closed Thursday and Friday, open .Monday, Wilson closed Friday and Monday. Salisbury 4T50, Rowland 4.7,00, Spivey's Corner 44.75. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up: Wilson closed, Fayetteville :{9.00, Whiteville 40,00, Wallace :58.00. Spivey's Corner 40.00. Rowland 39.00, Durham 40 00.

Poultry

RALEIGH. N'.C. tAP) i.NCDAi - The North Carolina fob dock quoted price on broilers tor this week's trading was 40.25 cents, based on full truck load lots ot ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2C' to 3 pound birds. Too few of the loads offered have been confirmed. The market is firm and the live supply IS moderate instances light for a very good demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryprs in North Carolina Thursday was 1,889,U. compared to 1,834,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK i.APi - The stock market gained more ground today, making a new run at record highs.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up almost 40 points in this weeks first three sessions, added 1.16 to 1.230.17 by noontime today.

The averages record closing high of 1,232.59 was reached on May 6.

Gainers heid a 5-3 lead over losers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Analysts said some late buying Wednesday was encouraged by word of continued booming sales of mutual funds investing in stocks and bonds.

Gainers on the active list included Boeing, up 2 at 41; Merrill Lynch, up s at 96, and Bankamerica, up '4 at 24

The NYSE's composite index slipped .03 to 95.98, and the American Stock Exchange market value index was up 1.26 at 463.97, after both those indicators reached new peaks for the second straight day Wednesday.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 45.68 million shares at noontime, against 63.16 million at the same point Wednesday.

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38

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33 76'

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12'

74

73'4    73'

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7 (8) pm - Greenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers

7 ;iU p m Overeaters .Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church

8 (81 p m - Chapter 1308 of the Women of the Moose

8 18) p m - VFW Auxiliary meets at Post Home

FRIDAY

7 :io p m - Red Men meet

Missionary Mamie Gorham will speak at Full Gospel Holiness Church on Thomas Street, Rocky Mount, Friday at 8 p.m.

Mrs, Gorham is a member of Friendship Holiness Church, Falkland.

MASONIC NOTICE The Queen of the South Lodge No. 77 in Ayden will hold a communication today at 8 p.m. All members are asked to be present.

Willie Stallworth, master Jesse Wilson, secy

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Obituary Column

Brandt

RALEIGH - Dr Bartholomew B; Brandt, a retired professor of zoology at N.C. State University, died at his home Monday. A memorial service will be held Saturday at 3 p.m at Brqwn-Wynne Funeral Home, St. Mary Street, Raleigh.

Brandt was a member of the biology department at East Carolina University from 193946 and a member of the N.C. State University faculty from 1946-1960. He was a pioneer in the study of the effects of industrial pollutants on the states waterways in the 1940s.

The author of several books and many technical articals related to his field, he also was a member of numerous professional and academic organizations including the N.C. Academy of Science, for which he served as chairman of the zoological section.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Lucille P. Brandt; a son. James L. Brandt of Raleigh; a daughter, Mrs. Lois B. Hudson of Pride, La., and seven grandchildren.

The family requests that in lieu of flowers, contributions be made to the B B. Brandt Fund of Zoology, NCSU, Raleigh. N.C. 27605.

Burlingham Kristina Kay Burlingham, 19. died in Las Vegas. Nev. Memorial- services will be held in Dwight. Kan.. Friday at 4 p.m. I She was a Pitt County resident from 1977-79 and attended Wellcome Middle School. She was a 1982 honor graduate of Council Grove Kansas High School and at the time of her death was a sophomore honor student at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas majoring in fashion design.

Surviving are her parents. Dr. Byron T. Burlingham of Greenville and Mrs. Susan G. Burlingham of Dwight, Kan.; a brother. Thomas A. Burfingham of Dwight. Kan., and her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Tom J. Burlingham of Rudd, Iowa.

The family requests that in lieu of flowers memorial contributions be sent to Council Grove High School. Council Grove, Kansas, where a scholarship has been established in her memory.

Hackney Mrs. Mae Ayres Hackney, 93, died Wednesday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Jeanette H. Thomas, 315 Oxford Road. Greenville.

Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 11 a.m. at the First United Methodist Church in Washington by the Rev. Ralph I.' Epps. Burial will follow in the Oakdale Cemetery in Washington.

Mrs. Hackney was bom in Washington. She was a member of the First United MethodisttChurch and was organist for 45 years. She was a charter member of the Crescite Book Club and was Beaufort County Mother of the Year in 1976.

Surviving are one son, James A Hackney Jr. of Washington; two daughters, Mrs. Jeanette H. Thomas of Greenville and Mrs. John Ames of Selma, Ala., and 16 grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the home, 326 N, Market St., Washington. Arrangements are being handled by C)den-Bonner Funeral Home in Washington.

Hayes

The funeral service for iMr. Lonnie Hayes will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m, in the Phillips Brothers Mortuary Chapel by Bishop W.L. Phillips. Burial will be in Brown Hill Cemetery,

Mr. Hayes was bom in Pitt County and was employed by the Person-Garrett Tobacco Co.

Surviving are six sons. Pria Lee Hayes of Stokes. William Henry Hayes of Washington, DC., Lonnie Hayes Jr. and Fred Hayes, both of Newark, N.J., Lynn Hayes of East Orange, N.J., and Jimmy Lee Hayes of Virginia Beach, Va.; three daughters, Mrs. Lenora Ross and Mrs. Dorothy Chapman, both of East Orange, N.J., and Mrs. Sarah Bivens of Newark, N.J.; a brother. Enoch Hayes of Pantego; a sister, Mrs. Delzora Norfleet of Greenville; 26 grandchildren and 13 greatgrandchildren The family will receive friends Friday from 7 to 8 p.m. in the Phillips Brothers Mortuary Chapel.

Williams Mrs. Nettie Dixon Williams, 77, died Wednesday in the Greenville Villa

CONGRATULATIONS TO PITT COUNTY INDUSTRIES

Pin COMMUNITY COLLEGE APRECIATES THE MANY OPPORTUNITIES YOU AFFORD OUR CITIZENS FOR AN ENRICHED AND PROFITABLE WAY OF LIFE.

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Nursing Home. Her funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Leon Harris and the Rev. N.D. Beaman. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mrs. Williams was bom and reared in the Black Jack community and made her home in the Venters Crossroads community for a number of years. She was a member of Rose Hill Free Will Baptist Church.

Surviving her are two sons, Arthur Tab Williams Jr. of Winston-Salem and Walter L. Williams of Greenville; two daughters, Mrs. Peggy Nobles of Route 1, Win-terville, and iMrs. Jo Ann Corey of La Plata, Md and 10 grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. At other times they will be at the home of Mrs. Peggy Nobles.

Williams

Mrs. Queenie Lillie Williams died Friday in Laurel Hill Hospital in Maryland. Her funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in the Washington Branch Free Will Baptist Church near Snow Hill by the Rev. R.A. Morris. Burial will be in the Washington Branch Cemetery.

Mrs. Williams was a Greene County native and a member of Washington Branch Church.

Surviving are her daughter, Mrs. Aldotha Sasser of Washington, DC.; three sisters. Mrs. Tinnie Bell Edwards and Nina Ruth W'hitley, both of Snow Hill, and Mrs. Jessie Lee Pratt of Greenville; a brother, Luby J. Reid of Snow Hill, and two grandchildren.

The family will receive friends Friday from 8-9 p.m. in the Washington Branch Church. Funeral arrangements are by Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.

CT&T Opposes ID Rafe Hike

Carolina Telephone, which serves some 586,000 customers in half of North Carolinas 100 counties, urged the N.C. Utilities Commission Wednesday not to approve increases in statewide long distance rates now being considered.

It said Southern Bell requested $20 million in such increases last February and. if approved, would affect all telephone subscribers in the state. The commission suspended Bells request in March and scheduled the matter for a hearing next week.

Carolina Telephones position, filed with the commission in the form of expert testimony, said that industry restructuring and competition in the intercity markets makes long distance rate increases unwise at this time.

T.P. Williamson, vice president-administration with Carolina Telephone, said, It appears to us that the only entity who would benefit from Southern Bell's toll rate proposals is ATTIX (a new AT&T intercity subsidiary).

He said the proposals would also increase the charge for directory assistance or "information services.

Helms Supports Duties On Leaf

a tariff of 16.1 cents a pound, while regular quality flue-cured tobacco has a duty of 35 cents a pound.

Helms has urged that the U.S. increase tariffs on scrap tobacco to discourage the increasing importation of foreign-grown tobacco. Tobacco exporters and North Carolina Democratic Part officials say a higher tariff would cause a tobacco trade war in which the U.S. would be the loser.

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Sen. Jesse A. Helms, R.-N.C., wrote several letters to the treasury secretary last year, saying that if the government didnt act to raise tobacco import duties, it would be "harmful to me and other Republicans in North Carolina.

Helms pleaded with Secretary Donald T. Regan for the government to reclassify imported scrap tobacco. The senator wrote that his political opponents could use the issue "to take me out of the Senate in 1984.

But last week, Regan instructed the U.S. Customs Service not to consider political implications when deciding on the tobacco issue.

Helms and others charge that importers, in an effort to get lower tariffs, thresh quality leaf tobacco and label it as scrap. Scrap tobacco has

MASONIC NOTICE

Crown Point Lodge No. 708, AF&AM, will hold a stated communication Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Greenville Masonic Chapel. All reblar Master Masons are cordially invited to attend.

Edward J, Harper II, Master Wiley S. Christy, secy

CARD OF THANKS ^

The family of the late Heber Leo Sutton sincerely thanks their many relatives and friends who added strength to th^m during the death of our loved one. The prayers, flowers, gifts, food, cards, visits, telegrams, telephone calls and other expressions of concern have meant so much to all of us. It was so lovely of you to share your time with us. May God richly bless each of you.

The Heber Leo Sutton Family

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Sports DAILY REFLECTOR ClassifiedTHURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 26, 1983

Havelock Rally Ends Ayden-Grifton Bid, 5-3

Baker Takes 600 Pole

HAVELOCK - Havelock, down 3-0 after three and a half innings, stormed back on a two-run homer by Tom Mullins to take a 5-3 win over Ayden-Grifton yesterday in the first round of the 3-A State Baseball Playoffs.

Ayden-Grifton, winners in the Eastern Carolina Conference, built up a 3-0 jead over its first four times at bat, but coudnt generate any more runs after the Rams, winners in the Coastal Conference, got started

After two scoreless innings, the Chargers pushed ahead with a pair of runs in the third. Wesley Hardee walked as did Charles Mitchell. Gene Johnson then singled and that loaded them up. Both Hardee and Mitchell scored when Doug Coley singled.

The Chargers added a third run to their lead in the fourth. Hardee reached on a two-base error and scored on Jackie Conways double.

But it was not to be for the Ayden-Grifton nine as Havelock began its rally in the

Heels

NCAA

CHAPEL HILL (AP) -Four conference champions, including sixth-ranked Atlantic Coast Conference

Sports Colendor

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

Today s Sports Softball

Currituck at Jamesvllle i6p m i City League PTA vs. Pair Electronics Metal Craft Vs California Con cepts Jimmy's66vs J As Church League Blackjack vs Unity Memorial vs Grace First Free Will vs Faith First Christian vs Peoples Arlington Street vs First Pentecostal Maranatha vs Mt Pleasant Oakmont vs Trinity St James vs First Presbyterian Jarvis vs. Church of God Co-Ed League Ervin's vs Western Sizzlin

Bills Goodies vs Bonds Baseball Eastern Wayne at Rose (8 p m. i Little League Moose vs True Value Hardware Optimists vs. Coca-Cola Tennis

State Tournament at Chapel Hill Fridays Sports TTack State Boys Meet

Baseball Bath at Jamesvllle 18 p m )

Little League Sportsworld vs. Jaycees Carroll & Associates v.s Wellcome

Babe Ruth League Pepsi-Cola vs Brown & Wood SoftbaU

Northern Nash at-Williamston (5 pm.)

bottom of the fourth. Richard Carter led off with a single and Mullins followed with his home run, quickly cutting the lead to 3-2.

The Rams tied it up in the bottom of the fifth, scoring one more. Chris^Gerende reached on an error and was sacrificed up. D.J. Fleming then singed him to, third and a wild pitch brought him home, knotting it at 3-3.

The sixth frame saw Havelock push over the winning runs. Carter reached when his third strike got past catcher Roger Moye and Landon Pryor followed with a single., Dwight Downey got another hit. scoring Carter to put Havelock in to a 4-3 lead. A passed ball let Pryor take third and he was sacrificed in by Gerende

Fleming and Pryor each went two-for-three to pace Havelock, while Coley had a like day at bat for the Chargers,

The loss drops Ayden-Grifton to 18-5 on the year.

Begin

Quest

winner North Carolina, and two at-large entries opened play today in the NCAA East Regional baseball tournament.

The tournament began at 11 a.m. at Boshamer Stadium on the North Carolina campus. The at-large entrants. South Carolina, 35-11, and James Madison, 33-11, were scheduled to meet in the opener. At 3 p.m.. Southern Conference champion The Citadel, 32-8, was scheduled to face East Coast champion Delaware, 34-14.

In the nightcap, the Tar Heels, 41-8, plays ECAC-South winner William & Mary, 24-14.

Three games are scheduled for Friday and Saturday with the championship game set for Sunday at 2 p.m. with-a second game to follow if necessary.

The winner of the doubleelimination tournament joins the champions of seven other regionals in the 34th College World Series in Omaha, Neb., June 3-12.

North Carolina is No. 6 in the poll conducted by Baseball America and No. 11 by Collegiate Baseball.

concluding its season. The Rams are now 13-8-1, and will travel to Northwest Halifax to face the Roanoke River champions in the second round of the playoffs later this^ week.    *

Ayden-Grifton . 002 100 0-3 6 1 Havelock 000 212 x-5 7 2

Gay and Moye: Carter and Vnung

HARRISBURG, N.C. (AP) - Buddy Baker had to hide Wednesday during the late stages of qualifying for Sundays World 600 NASCAR race, but he emerged long enough to take the pole and its $31,200 prize.

Baker's four-lap average speed of 162.841 mph on the 1.5-mile Charlotte Motor Speedway track made him the fastest of 15 qualifiers for the $478,010 event. The pole victo

ry also qualified him , for Februarys Busch Clash, worth an additional $10,000.

His first pole victory this year was the 30th of his career and 17th at the track for his crew, the famed Wood Brothers. Bakers only other World 600 pole came in 1973. 'ivhen he claimed the third of his three victories in this race.

When Baker completed his run, he talked to reporters briefly before saying, Im

Money Bags

Race driver Buddy Baker holds money bags at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Wednesday after winning the pole for Sundays World 600 with a speed of 162.841 MPH. Baker collected a record $31,200 for his four lap run. (AP Laserphoto)

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going to hide just for a minute. Im nervous about a car coming up.

As Baker took off, David Pearson, last years pole winner, took the track in quest of his seventh number one start in this race. However, after Pearson could only get 162.521 mph, Bill Elliott gave Baker more reason to worry.

Elliott turned his first lap at more than 163 mph, dropped a little on his second lap and then pushed his Ford back to 162.798 on lap three.

That concerned Baker because nearly every driver had lost speed on the final two laps as the tires heated up and traction diminished.

But Baker got a reprieve when Elliott could not escape the sanie fate and finished with a 162.762 average, the days second best.

' "You sure know how to make an old man feel older, dont you*? Baker, 42. told the 27-year-old Elliott when his trial was complete.

Their finishes, combined with third-place qualifier Dale Earnhardt at 162.727 put three Fords at the front of the pack with Bakers crew chief, Leonard Wood, saying he couldnt remember the last race where the first three spots were filled by Fords.

I think the tip on the Fords right now is that they may be a little bit lazier accelerating out of the turns, which probably is putting less pressure on the tires. Elliott said. "I dont know if thats the key or not, but I guess we've got something,

The best non-Ford finisher was Pearsons Chevrolet, and fifth place went to Neil Bon-netts Chevrolet at 162.194 mph. Bonnett, winner of last years race, will start in row three beside Joe Ruttmans Buick, which was timed at 161.855.

Benny Parsons and Harry

Gant earned fourth-row starts, while Ricky Rudd and Dick Brooks make up row five. Tim Richmond and Cale Yarborough, whose 1980 qualifying speed of 163.194 mph remains a race qualifying record, hold row six spots ahead of Bobby Allison and Darrell Wallrip.

Terry Labonie's 160.483 closed out the field.

Allison is the current Winston Cup point leader, while Waltrip, the points champion the past two years, is the current earnings leader.

Elliotts run bumped Rich

ard Petty from the lineup after he had posted a 160.333 speed. He'll lead 39 qualifiers into Thursday's 2 p.m EDT trials, with each hoping the fastest of their two laps will earn them one of the next 15 starting spots,

I Bud(l\ Hdker Kord. 162 Ml J BillUltioIt Kord 162 762 :! Dale Karnhardt Kord 162 727

I ilavid Pearaon ('hevVolel 162 721 7 .Neil Bonnett Chevrolet 162 IH

6 Joe Kutlman, Buick 161855

7 Bennv ['araon;. Boick 161 761 a Marrv (iant Buick. 161 462

. 8 Rickv Kudd Chevrolet 161 257 III Dici Brooks Kurd 161 228

II Tim Kichmond Pontiac. 161 214

12 Cale 7 arhorough Chevrolet 16tiifc.i l.i Bolihv .Alllaon Buick I6(J 81u 14 Darrell Waltrip Chevrolet 160 616 17 Terrv l.atxinte. Chevrolet 160 487

I)    "

Lady Tigers Oust Rose, 9-4

Williamston High School made Rose High Schools first venture into the State 4-A.3-A Softball Playoffs a brief one yesterday, downing the kampettes. 9-4.

Williamston, runner-up in the Northeastern 3-A, won the second round game over the Big East 4-A champs, after Rose had gained, a bye in the first round. Williamston will now face Northern Nash, a victor over Tarboro in the second round. The game will be played at Williamston at 5 p.m. Friday. Northern Nash was the Big East runner-up,

Williamston took the lead in the second inning, scoring twice, while Rose came up with one in the bottom of the frame.

The Lady Tigers then scored three times in the fourth to sew it up. Hope Hopkins and Regina Rodgers both singled and Hope Coefield reached on an error, scoring Hopkins. Jan Mills then tripled to score both Rodgers and Coefield.

Williamston ^dded two in the sixth and two more in the seventh. Rose scored once in .the fifth and twice in the seventh, but fell well short.

.Mills and Hopkins each had three hits. Mills getting a double and a triple. Timberly Rodgers. Valerie Smith and Regina Rodgers each added two

Rose's offense was led by Laura Vincent. Sharon Carmon, Wendy Jones and Doris Dudley each had two hits, all but Jones collecting triples.

Williamston is now 12-6 on the year, while Rose completes its year with a 13-7 mark.

WUliamston . 020 302 2-9 16 6 Rose 010 010 2-4 10 3

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16 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N X'.-Thursday, May 26,1983

Hrbek Paces Twins' Victory

By The Associated Press When the Minnesota Twins come to Baltimore, they usually turn into birdseed for the Orioles This time, however, they, only added to the Birds' recent attack of indigestion.

Kent Hrbek drove in four of .Minnesota's six runs in the first two innings as the Twins defeated Baltimore T-4 Wednesday night to complete a three-game sweep and pin the Orioles with their sixth straight defeat. Except for a

Legion Tryouis Sef On Friday

Tryouts for the Pitt County American Legion baseball team will be held Friday at D.H Conley High School.

The tryouts will get underway at 4:1.1 p.m , according to Bill Davis, who will coach the team

one-game stop in 1968, it was the Twins' first sweep in 51 series in Memorial Stadium since the Minnesota franchise started in 1961.

"The sweep has usually been theother way around, said John Castino, who has been with the Twins longer than any other player.Any time you win three straight you get excited, especially against the Orioles. They're a great team."

Elsewhere in the American League, the California Angels completed a three-game sweep of the New York Yankees 7-1, the Detroit Tigers ended the Toronto Blue Jays' five-game winning streak 6-2. the Boston Red Sox blanked the Chicago White Sox 2-0, the Milwaukee Brewers edged the Oakland As 7-6, the Kansas City Royals downed the Texas Rangers 5-2 and the Seattle Mariners nipped the Cleveland Indians 2-1.

Youth Baseball

Babe jiuth Le^u^

Coca-Cola........11

Wachovia Bank ....9

Coca-Cola outlasted Wachovia Bank, 11-9,, last night in the Greenville Babe Ruth League Wachovia pushed over a run in the first to take the initial lead and added five more in the second frame. Coke finally broke the ice in the third, scoring once, and added two more in the fourth. Wachovia came up with two of its own in the bottom of the fourth to hold an 8-3edge.

Coke came up with two in t:he fifth, then scored five times in the sixth to charge ahead for good Chris Hilliard led off the sixth, reaching on an error. Van Alston singled and Mike Maxon singled, loading the bases. Anthony Cobb singled to score Hilliard and both Alston and Maxon scored on a single by Ervin Best. An error on the play also allowed Cobb to score. Clay Young then singled in Best with what proved to be the winning run.

Wachovia came back in the bottom of the frame to score once, while Coke got one more in the seventh.

Alston. Cobb and Fletcher Phillips each had two hits for Coke, while Kenny Baines and Lee Eakes each had two for Wachovia.

Little Leogue

Carroll & Assoc 5

First Federal...____2

Carroll & Associates gained a 5-2 victory over First Federal in the Tar Heel^ Little League yesterday. *

Carroll got all it needed in the second inning, scoring three times. Julius Smith led off with a double and Joel Daughtry walked. Hank Thompson singled to score Smith, and with two away, Michael Sutton banged a double. driving in both Daughtry and Thompson.

Carroll added two more in the fourth. First Federal got one in the second and another in the third.

Sutton led the C&A hitting with two, while no one had more than one for First Federal.

Sportsworld 25

Lions .............8

Timmv Moofe cracked two

home runs, one a grand-slam as Sportsworld rolled up a 25-8 victory over the Lions in the North State Little League yesterday

It was all over before the Lions even got a chance to pick up a bat as Sportsworld stormed over 12 runs in the top of the first inning. With, one away. Troy Clemons walked and Moore singled. Both of them scored on Jamie Brewingtons double. Kelvin Yarrell reached on an error, and a wild pitch scored Brewington. Yarrell then scored on an error. Tye Fickling singled and moved around on two passed balls before scoring on a wild pitch. Jay Kuykendall walked and scored on Walter Dunns single.

Jason Wing started the second go-around with a single and Clemons singled in Dunn. Moore then cracked a three-run homer. Brewington kept it going, reaching on an error and Yarrell singled him in, moving up on an error. Fickling then doubled to drive in Yarrell with the 12th run.

Sportsworld added five in the second, six in the third, including a grand-slam by Moore. One more scored in the fourth and one in the fifth.

The Lions came up with two in the first, one in the third, two in the fourth and three in the fifth.

Moore, Brewington and Yarrell each had three hits for Sportsworld, while Wing and Fickling each had two. Pierre Nelson had two to lead the Lions.

S.P. Bambino

Hornets..........20

MacKenzie........7

CHICOD - The Chicod Hornets rolled to a 20-7 victory over Simpsons MacKenzie Security yesterday in the Southern Pitt Bambino League.

Dale Sutton hurled the win for the Hornets and contributed a double to the hitting. Eric Bradley homered for Chicod, while John Green and Earnest Harrington both had doubles, along with Sutton. Eric Swinson and Derek Ennis both had two hits, both one of Swinsons and both of Ennis doubles.

Reggie Wallace had two hits, one. a homer for MacKenzie, while Brian Ayers also added two hits.

Hrbek laced a two-run single in the first inning following a single by Bobby Mitchell and a double by Castino and his two-run double finished Dennis Martinez. 3-8, in the Twins four-run second, which also included an RBI single by Bobby Mitchell and a run-scoring double by Gary Gaetti, who had three*hits and extended his hitting streak to 17 games. Ken Schrom, 3-0, allowed seven hits before being relieved in the eighth by Ron Davis, who recorded his sevefith save.

When the Twins recorded the final out, pitcher Bobby Castillo rushed from the clubhouse with a broom "Im glad to be a part of it, said Castillo, "so 1 just went out and cleaned a path in the runway When you win, you have fun.

Before this series, the Orioles had won 13 of their last 14 home games against the Twins and were 20^ overall since July 21,1980.

Angels?, Yankees 1 At Anaheim, Tommy John scattered nine hits against his former team and Ellis Valentine and Bobby Grich homered. It was Johns first appearance as an Angel against the team that traded him to California last Aug. 31. The veteran left-hander, who turned 40 on Sunday, struck out two and,^walked one in recording the 241st triumph of

his career. Loser Shane Rawley allowed all the California runs.

Tigers 6, Blue Jays 2

At Toronto, Kirk Gibson hit his first home run of the season, a two-run in-side-the-park shot in the first inning, and Detroit went on to snap the Blue Jays five-game winning streak. The loss dropped Toronto into a first-place tie with Boston in the AL East.

Loser Jim Gott opened the game by walking Lou Whitaker on four pitches before Gibson, batting only .185, rapped his first home run of the season that ticked off the glove of right fielder Jesse Barfield and rolled to the wall. Detroit added a run in the second inning when Alan Trammell tripled and scored on a single by Whitaker. Gibson also singled and scored in the Tigers' two-run ninth. Jorge Orta and Willie Upshaw homered off winner Dan Petry for Torontos runs.

Red Sox 2, White Sox 0

At Chicago, Reid Nichols rapped a two-run single with two out in the ninth inning and Bruce Hurst pitched a three-hitter for his first major league shutout. Hurst walked two, struck out six and retired the final 13 White Sox batters. Dennis Lamp was the loser after taking over for starter Britt Burns in the ninth.

Dwight Evans opened the

FC Athletes Are Honored

FARMVILLE - Farmville Centrals annual All-Sports Banquet was held last ni^t at the school, with Andrew Edwards receiving the schools top award, jhe Dickie Newton Memorial award.

Edwards was also named as the most valuable player in boys basketball.

Jerry Smith, the new head basketball coach at Campbell University, served as speaker for the occasions, which saw plaques presented to 50 lettering senior athletes, the most ever in Farmville Central history.

Awards were as follows:

Football - Best All-Around Lineman, Eric Faison; Most Valuable Back, James Moore; Most Valuable Defense, Dennis Tyson; John Moore Memorial Award, Jerry Foreman.

JV Football - Most Valuable Player, Jerome Daniels.

Volleyball - Team Before Self, Michelle Medlin; Most Valuable Player, Lydia Worthington.

Girls Basketball - Most Improved, Joy Peaden; Coachs Award, Cynthia Hart; Most Valuable Player, Stephanie Newton.

Boys Basketball Team Before Self, Tony Hargrove; Best Defensive, Terrance Pettway; Most Valuable Player, Andrew Edwards.

JV Basketball - Coachs Award, Bobby Evans.

Wrestling - Most Outstanding Wrestler, Joel Shackleford (who finished fourth in the state tournament); Most Valuable Wrestler, Jerry Foreman.

Girls Track - Coach's Award, Marian Tutton; Most Valuable Athlete, Samantha Payton.

Boys Track - Most Improved, Ben Williams; Most Valuable Athlete, Wesley Carmon.

Softball - Most Improved. Christine Bynum; Coachs Award, Suzette Wilson; Most Valuable Player, Martha Satterthwaite.

Baseball - Coachs Award, Alvin Baker; Most Improved, Brian Windham; Most Valuable Player, Wade Corbett.

Tennis - Best All-Around, Kathi .Messer.

Golf - Most Improved, Howard Hurt.

Other awards: FCA Honor and Duty award, Bobby Car-raway (letter winner in three sports); First Union National Award (lettering in two sports, and scholarship), Gary Hobgood (second year); Special service awards to Duffy Lincoln, William Vick and Joby Griffin; Special service awards for students to Alan Wooten and Lydia Worthington.

Boston ninth with a single. Two outs later, Dave Stapleton beat out an infield hit and Wade Boggs walked to fill the bases before Nichols . lined a single to ri^t.

Everything worked good, said Hurst. "I kept my fastball in and my breaking ball and change were over. When Nichols got that hit, I jumped up and down and said Yippee! After five or six innings 1 knew it would be a close game so I told myself to stay aggressive and challenge the hitters.

Brewers?, As 6 At Oakland, Cecil Cooper smacked a two-run homer and Robin Yount slammed a two-run triple. Cooper capped a three-run third inning with his seventh homer after Jim Gantner tripled and Ned Yost singled. The As eventually tied the score 4-4, but scored three times in the seventh. Cooper drove in the go-ahead run with a bases-loaded grounder before Younts triple, which offset a two-run homer by Oaklands Wayne Gross in the bottom of the ninth.

Royals 5, Rangers 2 At Kansas City, Bud Black, just up from the minors, blanked Texas on four hits for seven innings and Joe Simpson belted a two-run triple. Black allowed two more hits in the eighth before giving way to Dan Quisenberry, who posted his lOth save. George Bretts 11th homer gave the Royals a 1-0 lead in the first inning against Danny Darwin.

Manners 2, Indians 1 Pat Putnams two-run homer broke up a pitching duel between Seattles Jim Beattie and Clevelands Juan Eichelberger. Putnam delivered his two-run shot into the second deck in right with two out in the fourth inning for his sixth homer of the season after Jamie Allen led off with a walk. Beattie gave up five hits in ? 2-3 innings, including Rick Mannings eighth-inning homer.

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Atlanta 'Walks' All Over Pittsburgh

By The Associated Press The Atlanta Braves walked all over Pittsburgh. They couldnt help it. The Pirates pitchers wouldnt let them hit the ball.

Jim Bibby and Jimmy Winn helped put the Pirates in the record book Wednesday, issuing a record-tying seven consecutive walks in the third inning of the Braves 6-0 victory.

"That never happened to me before," said Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner. "They were just trying to throw strikes. They weren't trying to walk them. That just shows you that everything happens in baseball.

But not necessarily very often. Joe Torre, the Braves manager, poking fun at Rube Walker, his pitching coach, offered; "I909s the last I remember - and Rube caught it.

It was, in fact, 1909, when Washingtons pitchers walked seven consecutive Chicago White Sox. The National League record for successive passes was six. It happened five times,Holloman-Searl Knocked Out

CHAPEL HILL. N.C. (AP) - The top four seeds, including No. l-seed Ashley Rhoney of South Caldwell, advanced to the semifinals of the N.C. High School Athletic Assocation state tennis tournament Wednesday.

Rose High Schools doubles team of Steve Holloman and Lance Searl lost out in the first round of play, bowing to Darr Keiger and David Dowdy of Shelby, 6-0,6-2.

Defending team champion High Point Central is atop the team title chase with six points, followed by Burlington Williams with four points.

Asheville, Chapel Hill and T.C. Roberson are tied for third with three points each, followed by Shelby with two points and Milbrook and Southeast Guilford with one each.

The tournament is being played at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill;

Rhoney beat Greg Loyd of Milbrook 6-4, 6-0 in the first round and Eric Little 6-0, 6-3 in the quarterfinals to advance to Thursdays semifinals.

Rhoney will meet No.4 seed Jimmy Weilbaecher of T.C. Roberson in the semifinals. Weilbaecher defeated Brad Winslow of Chapel Hill 6-2* 6-0 and Rusty Woy of Shelby 6-3, 6-3.

In the other semifinal matchup. second-seeded Mike Pittard of Burlington Williams thkes on third-s^ed Hayes Dallas, who is the defending state singles champion.

Pittard defeated Bryan Graham of Asheville 6-4, 6-3 and Tawn Hardin of Hendersonville 7-5, 7-6 (7-2) and Dallas downed Wayne Parrish of Gastonia Ashbrook 6-3, 6-1 and Brian Burchfield of Concord 6-1,6-1 to advance fo the semifinals.

In one doubles semfinal, the

Wesleyan After National Title

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer

With all the post-season experience to draw from. North Carolina Wesleyans upcoming visit to the NCAA Division III World Series may be the one to produce the schools first title.

This is N.C. Wesleyans third successive trip to the series, held in Marietta, Ohio, June 2-5. Most of this years team played in the previous two tournaments and finished fourth both times.

First-year coach Mike Fox went to the Division I College World Series as a player at North Carolina in 1978. His first season at the Rocky Mount school resulted in a 36-5 record and the South Regional title, a feat made tougher by the fact that the Battling Bishops had to emerge from the losers bracket to survive.

"It felt wonderful, Fox said. It was a very exciting day. I think the excitements still around here.

Before Fox, Tony Guzzo led N.C. Wesleyan to the other two series visits. In 1980, he led to the team to its first winning record in 20 years, setting the stage for what is now the tradition instead of the exception.

1 really didnt know what to expect. I knew about the program and the tradition that was here, Fox said. I just didnt know that much about Division III, but its all seemed to work out. Theres a lot of talent here.

That talent overcame losses in two of their first three games and went on to post winning streaks of 14 and 12 games en route to a 36-5 record.

"At one time, we won 28 out of 29. We really didnt have a

bad slump, Fox said. "In other sports, some teams have a lull. We were fortunate when we didnt hit the ball because we got great efforts from our pitching staff.

Rarely does Foxs team not hit the ball. The team walloped 43 home runs and has a .332 batting average entering the series. Second baseman Richard Mattocks leads the attack with a .399 mark. Selected to the Dixie Intercollegiate Athletic Conference all-star team. Mattocks has stolen 55 bases' in 57 attempts. He also has 10 homers.

He never slumped, Fox said. He may have gone hitless in two straight games, ,but he was on base either by walk, error or hit.

Center fielder Willie Arrington batted .311 and stole 21 bases in 25 attempts.

He really was one of the main players responsible for us coming back in the tournament, getting all the players fired up, Fox noted.

Catcher Toby Holliday, only 5-foot-6 and 165 pounds, is batting a cool .239, but Fox says hes one reason baseball players cant be measured in size. Hes about as tough as they come.

Foxs pitching staff has an earned run average of 3.12. The nucleus of the staff, Carl Payne, Larry Parr and Bruce Rhodes, have a combined record of 24-4. In addition, freshman Sam Jones has an unblemished record in five decisions.

N.C. Wesleyan will meet the winner of the Northeast Regional at Ithaca College. Whatever the challenge. Fox said his team will have to shake off its poor showing in its own region.

most recently in 1944 when the New York Giants were the recipients of the Brooklyn Dodgers wildness.

"Im sure happy I was on this side as opposed to the other side.Torre observed.

Elsewhere in the NL it was Los Angeles 6, Philadelphia 1: San Francisco 7, New York 6; Houston 1, Chicago 0; Montreal 2, San Diego 0, and St. Louis 7, Cincinnati 2.

Bibby started the Braves string of two-out, third-inning passes by walking Dale Murphy, Bob Horner,. Bob Watson and Glenn Hubbard. Winn then took over and walked Bruce Benedict, pitcher Craig McMurtry and Brett Butler before a second reliever. Larry Niemann, got Rafael Ramirez for the final out of the inning.

"1 havent seen anything like that except in Little League, said Watson, adding quickly; "Im not saying they were Little League pitchers.

Bibby wasnt in a talkative mood, but Winn said; "I was just trying to pitch. I might have been trying to aim it a little bit. 1 couldnt throw a strike.

Almost overshadowed by the Pirates ineptitude was McMurtrys performance. He pitched a three-hitter for his first major-league shutout.

"Hes as good a pitcher as has pitched against us all year, said Tanner. "He has a lot of poise. He has good stuff. I dont think he can throw a straight ball. Its always moving.

Dodgers 6, Phillies 1 The Phillies got a run for a change, but that didn't change the outcome. They lost their fifth in a row as Burt Hooton and Dave Stewart of the Dodgers combined on a six-hitter.

The only hit that hurt was Gary Matthews' two-out homer in the eighth inning. It halted the Los Angeles pitchers' shutout string at 35 innings and the Philadelphia batters scoreless streak at 42 2-3 innings.

("Lll take that, .Matthews shrugged, "but it really doesn't ^ean a thing when you lose.'

Pedro Guerrero drove in three runs with a single and a homer and pinch-hitter Rick Monday had a two-run single.

Giants7, Mets6 Johnnie LeMasters three-run homer in the fourth inning and Jack Clark's decisive solo shot in the seventh carried the Giants past the .Mets, saddling Neil Allen with his first loss as a starting pitcher. Dave Kingman and George Foster homered for New York.

In the seventh inning, San Francisco Manager Frankl Robinson and his pitcher, Jim Barr, got into a shouting match on the field. Robinson started toward the mound to replace Barr. Instead of waiting for Robinson, Barr walked toward the dugout and flipped the ball toward his manager, who promptly grabbed the pitcher by the arm and spun him back to the mound, precipitating the argument.

"I've asked them to stay until 1 get there. Then they're free to leave. Robinson said, adding; "I wont let this interfere. Hell be back out there tomorrow if 1 feel its necessary for himtogetsofnebodyout."

Astros 1, Cubs 0 .Mike .Madden allowed one hit over six innings in his first big-league start and three relievers Frank LaCorte. Frank DiPino and Bill Dawley - preserved the shutout of the Cubs.

The Astros' only run came in the second inning on a passed ball by Chicago catcher Jody Davis after Ray Knight had doubled and taken third on a grounder.

Expos 2, Padres 0 Montreals Steve Rogers pitched a seven-hitter for his sixth consecutive victory, his sixth complete game and his third shutout this season.

Chris Speier and Bryan Little hit RBI singles in the bottom of the sixth. In the top of the inning, right fielder Warren Cromartie fired a strike to the plate to nail Alan Wiggins of the Padres, trying to score from second on Juan Bonillas single.

Cards?, Reds 2 John Stuper survived early wildness and went on to pitch a five-hitter against Cincinnati for his second cmplete game. Ken Oberkfell had three hits and Darrell Porter a two-run homer for the Cardinals.

top-seeded brother duo of Lee and Stephan Picklesimer of High Point Central wil take on unseeded Peter Schweitzer and Mike White of Chapel Hill.

The other doubles semifinal features No.2-seeded Brad Hubbard and Charles Williams of Asheville against third-seeded Walker Toole and John Stubblefield of Greensboro Page.

Wednesday's first and second round results of the ,N C High School Athletic Assocation boys state Tennis tournament being played at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill tennis complex Team Scores: High Point Central 6. Burlington Williams 4. Asheville 3. Chapel Hill 3. T C Roberson 3, Shelby 2, Milbrook 1. Southeast Guilford I Singles First Round Ashley Rhoney iS.Caldwelli d Greg l.ovd I Milbrook) 6-4. frO F.ric Little I Myers Park) d Mike Corthum ISEGuilford) 1-6.6-2,6-2    

J)mmy Weilbaecher IT C Roberson) d Brad Winslow (Chapel Hill) 6-2,6-6 Rusty Woy (Shelby) d John Gaskins iR Rapidsi6-2,6-l Brian Burchfield (Concord) d Coley Keel (Terry Sanford) 7-6,6-3 Haves Dallas (High Point Central) d Wayiie Parrish (Gastonia Ashbrook) 6-3, 6 1

Tawn Hardin (Hendersonville) d John Morris (Chapel Hill) 6-4,6-2 Mike Pittard (Burlington Williams) d Bryan Graham (Asheville) 6-4,6-3 Quarterfinals Rhoney iS Caldwell) d Little (Myers Park 16-0,6 3 Weilbaecher iT C Roberson) d Woy (Shelbvi6-3.63 Dallas (High Point Central) d Burchfield iConcord) 61,6-1 Pittard (Burlington Williams) d Hardin I Hendersonville) 7-5,7-6 (7-2). Doubles First Round Brad Hubbard-Charles Williams I Asheville I d Brad McRaeBrian Ivey iLumbertoni6-4.6-4 Todd Pope-Rob Atkinson (Milbrook) d Mike Bambauer-Brian Meighan I Charlotte Catholic) 6-3,63 Walker Poole-John Stubblefield 'Greensboro Page) d Mark Rawls-Jack Frv iT C Roberson16-0,6-2 Jell Rock Keith McAfee iSE Guilford) d Derek Stirewalt Kenneth Pittman I Lexington) 2-6.63.6-3 Peter Schweitzer-Mike White (Chapel Hill I d David Washam-Slate Thompson South Point 16-4, 7-5

Darr Keiger-David Dowdy iShelbyi d Steve Holloman-Lance Searl (Greenville Rose I 6-0.6 2 David BaylifI Allen Mitchell (Burlington Williams) d    Todd

CampbeirScott Saffer lE Forsyth) 6-0, 6-3

Lee Pieklesimer-Stephen Picklesimer (High Point Central) d Scott Edwards-Ken Heltme (S Mecklenburg)

6-3, 7-6(12 10)

Quarterfinals

Hubbard-Williams (Asheville) d Pope-Atkinson (M ilbrook 11 -6,62,6-2.

Toole-Stubblefield (Greensboro. Page) d Rock McAfee (SEGuilford) 6-2,7-5 Schweitzer White (Chapel Hill) d Keiger-Dowdy (Shelby) 61.6-2.

Picklesimer-Picklesimer (High Point Central) d Bayliff-Mitchell (Burlington Williams) 7-6 (7-5), 6-4,

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TheDay Renector, Greenville. N.C.-Thursday, May 26,1983

New G)ntroversy For Martin

.ANAHEIM. Calif, lAP) -Billy Martin, the fiery manager of the New York Yankees, is embroiled in yet another controversy. He maintains hes done nothing to deserve it.

A man who said he just wanted to buy Martin a beer claims that he was struck by the Yankee skipper and roughed up by Dorn Scala. New York's bullpen catcher.

But the version of Martin and Scala as to what happened early Wednesday morning, a couple of hours after the A ankees had suffered a 7-6. lO-innihg lo.ss to the California Angels, was totally different.

Police said Wednesday that no charges have been filed, but that they are continuing their investigation of the incident that occurred at the Anaheim Hyatt Hotel bar.

Robin Olson. 27. of El Toro. Calif., filed a report with police alleging that he was hit in the face by Martin,

Olson also claimed that Scala banged his head to the floor several times in rapid

succession while holding him by the hair.

' t told the police 1 didnt even touch the guy." Martin said after the Yankees 7-1 loss to California Wednesday night. The guy came up four or five times and wouldnt leave us alone and one of the coaches i Scala i collared him.

"Nothing happened as far as Im concerned. The guy was just looking for publicity. He came behind me^pd it seemed like he threw something at me. We called the security guards and they threw the guy out of the place."

Scala said, "In a nutshell, 1 was trying to prevent an altercation. I would have done it for anybody on the team. The guy was hassling him Martini for about 20 miniites and he (Olson) was shouting obscenities. I didnt hit him or anything."

Olson gave The Associated Press his version of what happened nearly 24 hours later.

"1 went over and I bought

him a beer," he said. Im a real happy-go-lucky type person. 1 asked the bartender if he had Lite beer, I was excited, here was my opportunity to meet him. I thought it was going to be really nice.

Olson said he went over to Martin, who has appeared in several Lite beer commercials, and handed him the beer. Then, Olson said, Martin called him an abusive name, said something obscene about the beer and told him to get away from him in a profane manner.

"My bubble was just burst, said Olson. "I went back and asked him why he called me that name, what had I done. And he called me that again as I walked away.

"When I went to leave, I told him that 1 wasnt what he had called me. He motioned his friend (Scala), who grabbed me by the arm and walked me outside. He told me if I didnt leave him (Martin) alone he would take care of me.

"I walked back over to tell him (Martin) I was sorry. I

tapped him on the shoulder, just to get his attention, I was behind him. He got on his knees to turn around in the booth, grabbed me and ripped my shirt at the collar and then took a swing at me.

When he hit me it grazed me on the right cheek. At the same time Dorn grabbed my hair and pulled me down to the floor and banged my head to the floor about 15 times.

Olson, who said he is involved with real estate and finance," maintained he was not intoxicated, that he had three drinks at Anaheim Stadium during the game and one more at the hotel several hours later, at the time of the incident.

I was sober, that wasnt what the problem was, the problem was the guy (Martin) was insulting.

Jack Jewell, 62, the security chief of the hotel, said he did not know if Martin had hit Olson.

All I know is that I got the call on it about 1:35 a.m. and that there was a fight, so I

went into the bar to take care of it, Jewell said. One guy was getting dragged off another guy when I got in there.

1 think it was Scala. I made sure he was neutral in a corner. The guy he was tangling with took a seat behind Billy Martin and started jawing at Martin.

It was just a normal eviction, things like that happen in bars. He didnt seem to be intoxicated.

A hotel bartender, who asked not to be identified, said he saw part of the incident.

Dorn and this other guy, they were already on the floor, he said. Dorn was hollering at him (Olson) to stay down. Some of his teammates pulled him off. I dont know what caused it or why.

The bartender said he did not see whether Martin had hit Olson.

Olsons attorney, Connolly Oyler, said he believed his client.

SCOREBOARD

Thursday Night Mixed W

TANK 9FNAMARA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

Team 9 Western Siz/lin lli^h Timers Sweet Revenge DewCrew iiome Cleaners Give I s .A Break Team 2 Strugglers Shoneyls Team 12 Hanging Ten Team 10 llangTen

High series .Marvin Sutton 612. Su.san Iuryear high game: Dovie .Matthews 235. Klaipe Cobb 212.

Rec Softball

.1 s .Airborne

City League

9H)

000

RcciiM&e> P05PPIM&.

V Kjorwc

022 3 10 010 0- 1 Leading hitters J.A Lonnie House 4 4. Kddie Vincent 3 4

Leading hitters: PM -Keene 3-4. Rose Skinner 3-4.

Alice

PTA    204    010    0-8

Whittington .    olo    i:iO    0-5

Leading hitters    PT    Greg

.Melton 2 3. .Mike Hogan    HR,    W

Terry Lovich 3-3, Tony.Baker 2 3

Subwav    430    400 0-11

Liberty ..... 220 (K13 5 12

Leading hitters S - K King 3-3 HR I, KImo Alexander 2-3. L - Kd Hottby 4 4, Carl hTeld3 4

Sunny side Eggs......114    )02 55 - 20

Pantana Bob's    021,    00- 3

Leading hitters: SE - Craig Smith 4 5, Joe Gaddis 3-4; PB Chris Daly 2-3

Industrial League Cox Armature    203    307-15

KCC 2    000    000- 0

Leading hitters CA David Bell

2-3,

\ ermont American, lOO 120 26

TRW .......310    030 x-7

Leading hitters: TR - Terry Monday 3-3: VA - Glenn Page 2-3, Eddie 'Chance 2 3, Thomas Clark

B-Wellcome 2.    .    210    402    3-18

WNCTTV.....000    010 0- 1

Leading hitters W.N - Keith Whitnev 2-2. Rav Higdon 2-3. BW -John Hill .3-4, Gene Tuttle 2-3 (TS    302    Oil    2-9

Coca-Cola    000    020    0-2

Leading hitters: CC - Lance Weatherington 2-3; Cl - Wayne Elks3 4.

GCCO -    .,    000    200    0- 2

Public Works 212 024 x-11 Leading hitters: PW - Leonard Williams 3-4, David Tyson 3-3; GL Robert Garrette 2-3; Mike ,Mc(iov^an2-3

B Wellcome!    oil    711    l 12

Empire Brush 2    .020    310    0    6

Leading hitters: EB - Charlie Doughtie .2 3. Stuart Langley 2-3; BW Sam Allen 3-4, Garv Brock 4 4

300 3 -8 :i(W 1 9 James

Wachovia ................00-    0

B Wellcome..........il4i(17i-31

Leading hitters; BW - Charyl Harris 3 3, Mary Kaye Smith 4-4.,

Copper Kettle.    140 002    2-9

Players Retreat    510 053    x-14

Leading hitters: PR - Mary Ann Burfiend 3-4, Cindy Grendle 3-4; CK Zelma Parker 3-4.

EredWebb    000    002 0-2

PTA ..............013 040 x-8

Leading hitters; PT - Irish Barnhill 2-3, Ronda Phillips 2-3; FW - Debra Jackson 2-3.

Boseboll Stondings

By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet.

GB

Boston

23

17

,575

Toronto

23

17

.575

_

Baltimore

23

19

548

1

.Milwaukee

21

18

,538

lv

New York

20

21

488

3'v

Cleveland

19

22

463

4*2

Detroit

18

22

.450

5

WEST DIVISION

California

24

18

.571

Oakland

22

20

524

2

Texas

21

20

.512

24

Kansas City

18

18

,500

3

Minnesota

21

23

477

4

Chicago

16

23

410

6'2

Seattle

17

28

378

84

Pitt Memorial    020

Empire Brush 1 .    2:iO

Leading hitters KB Parker! 4, Ed Coburn 4-4

.. Wednesday's Games Milauk^7.0akland6 Seattle 2. Cleveland 1 Detroit 6. Toronto 2 .Minnesota Baltimore 4 Boston 2, CnieaaoO Kansas City 5.'Texas 2 California 7, New York I

Thursday's Games Boston (Ojeda 1-11 at Toronto (Slieb 8-2i, ini

Texas (Honeycutt 5-31 at Chicago (Bannister2-51,1ni Baltimore (Boddicker 1-11 at Kansas Citv (Renko3-3i, ini rtnlv games scheduled

Friday's Games Minnesota at Detroit Boston at Toronto, (ni Cabtornia at Cleveland,' n i Oakland at New York, tm Seattle at Milwaukee, im Texas at Chicago, (ni Baltimore at Kansas City. i n i

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Belvuir ........23OOO-5

Grady-White ........UlO 014 -6

Leading hitters: GW - Kevin Adams 3-3, Keith Bryant 2-3: B -M Wooten 2-3.

Womens League

Pitt Memorial 013 11311-18

Prep Shirt..............000 20-2

EAST DIVISION

W L Pet

GB

.SI Uuis

21 16

.568

.Montreal

21 17

.553

'v

Philadelphia

Piltshurgn

18 17

514

2

15 21

417

5'j

Chicago New N'ork

15 24

385

7

15 24

385

7

WEST DIVISION

lx)s Angeles

29 II

725

Atlanta

27 14

659

2'-i

San Francisco

21 20

512

84

Cincinnati

19 24

442

114

liouslon

19 25

432

12

San Diego

17 24

415

12(2

Wednesday's Games

St laiuis 7 Cincinnati 2

San Francisco 7, New York 6 Atlanta 6. PittsburghO lais Angeles 6. Philadelphia I Montreal 2. San Diego 0 Houston 1. Chicago 0

Thursday's Games .Montreal (Sanderson 3.-41 at Philadelphia iCarlton6-3), ini Pittsburgh iTunnell 0-D at Cincinnati (PuleoO-l I, in)

Chicago (Moskau 2-2) at Atlanta iNiekro I-3i. (n)

St Louis iForsch 3-3) at Houston iLaCoss 3-3l.ini San Francisco (Laskey 5-41 at Los Angeles (Reuss 5-2 ),(n)

Only games scheduled

Friday's Games Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, i n i Chicago at Atlanta, in)

Montreal at Philadelphia, i n)

St Louts at Houston, (n)

New York at San Diego, I n I San Fancisco at Los Angeles, in)

Leogue Leaders

By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING (80 at bats): Carew, California. .441: Brett, Kansas City, .388: Boggs, Boston. .359; McRae, Kansas City, 353; Thormon.Cleveland. ,340.

RUNS: Castino. Minnesota, 37; Brett, Kansas City, 33; Ford, Baltimore. 31; DeCinces, California. 27; McRae, Kansas City, 27; Ripken. Baltimore. 27; Yount, Milwaukee. 27 RBI: Ward, Minnesota. 36; Brett. Kansas City. 33: Hrbek. Minnesota, 32 Kittle. Chicago. 31; Rice, Boston. 31 HITS: Carew. California. 64; Castino, Minnesota. 57; Boggs. Boston, 55; Yount, Milwaukee. 54; Fora, Baltimore, S3.

DOUBLES; Hrbek, Minnesota, 15; Ford, Baltimore, 14; Bemazard, Chicago, 13; Brett. Kansas City, 13; B BeU, Texas. 12; McRae,KansasCity,12.

TRIPLES G Wilson, Detroit, 5; C Moore, Milwaukee, 4; Griffin, Toronto, 4; Herndon. Detroit, 4; Winfieid, New York, 4

HOME RUNS: Brett, Kansas City, 11; DeCinces, California, II; Castino; Minnesota, 9; L A.Parrish, Texas, 9. Winfield, New York, 9 STOLEN BASES: J Cruz, Seattle, 27; W Wilson, Kansas City, 18; R Law. Chicago. 16; M.Davis. Oakland, 15; R Henderson, Oakland. 12; Sample. Texas, 12

PITCHING 14 decisions): Flanagan. Baltimore,    6-0,    1 OOO,    2 72; Kison,

Calliornia,    6-1,    857,    .3 1 1; Slaton,

Milwaukee,    5-1,    833,    2.10: Sanchez,

California, 4-1. 800, 2 45; Stieb, Toronto, 8 2. 800, 1.04, Sutton. Milwaukee. 4-1, 800 , 3 13; Whilehouse, Minnesota, 4-1, 800, 3,04

STRIKEOUTS Stieb. Toronto, 64; Blvleven, Cleveland-, 51; Kison, California. 46. Norris. Oakland, 46; .Morns, Detroit, 45, Wilcox, Detroit. 45.

SAVES Quisenber^, Kansas City, 10, Caudill, Seattle, 9; Stanly, Boston, 9, R Davis, Minnesota. 7; Gossage, New York, 6

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING (80 at batsi: Madlock, Pittsburgh, 349; Lo.Smlth, St.Louis, ,327; Oester, Cincinnati, 327; Bench. Cincinnati. ,325; Richards, San Diego, 325 RUNS: Murphy, Atlanta, 36; Garvey, San Diego, 32; LeMasler, San Francisco, 32. Evans, San Francisco, 31: Guerrero. Los Angeles. 29.

RBI: Murphy. Atlanta. 36. Dawson.

Montreal. 29: Hendrick. 5t.u>uis. 29: T.Kennedy, San Diego. 29; Brock, Los Angeles, 28.

HITS: Thon, Houston. 54: Bonilla. San Diego. 52; R.Ramirez. Atlanta, 52: Oester. Cincinnati, 51: Four are tied with 50,

DOUBLES: J Ray, Pittsburgh, 15: Ashby, Houston. 11: Bench, Cincinnati, 11, Dawson, Montreal. 11; Evans, San Francisco, II.

TRIPLES: Moreno. Houston. 5, Dawson. Montreal. 4; Raines. Montreal. 4; Six are tied with 3.

HOME RUNS: Guerrero. Los Angeles. II: Murphy, Atlanta, II; Brock, Los Angeles. 9; Evans, San Francisco, 9; Kingman. New York. 9 STOLEN BASES; Wilson. New York, 16; Lacy. Pittsburgh. 15: Moreno. Houston. 14; S.Sax, Los Angeles. 14. EMzlner, Cincinnati, 13; LeMaster, San Francisco. 13: Thon. Houston. 13 PITCHING 14 decisions): Stewart, Los Angeles, 4-0, 1,000, 1,36; McMurtry, Atlanta, 7-1, ,875, 2.32; Rogers. Montreal, 7-1, .875, 2 15: A Pena, Los Angeles, 5-1, 833,1.91; P Perez, Atlanta, 5-1, 833,2.13 STRIKEOUTS: Carlton. Philadelphia, 77: McWilliams, Pittsbu^, 62, Solo, Cincinnati, 56, Berenyi, Cincinnati. 55. Rogers, Montreal. 52.

SAVES: SHowe, Los Angeles, 7; Lavelle, San Francisco, 6, DeLeon, San Diego, 5; Forster, Atlanta, 5; Hume, Cincinnati, 5: Minton, San Francisco. 5; Stewart, Los Angeles. 5.

Michigan

Birmingham

Los Angeles Oakland Arizona Denver

7    5    0

7    5    0

Pacific 6    6    0

5    7    0

4    8    0

4    8    0

583 252 .583 223

Tampa Bay 29

Saturday's Game ly 29, Oakland 9 Sunday's Games

500    197    233

417    219    217

333    199    285

.333    160    204

NBAPloyotfs

By The Associated Pren FINALS (Best of Seven)

(Philadelphia leads series 1-0) Sunday, May 22 Philadelphia 113, Los Angeles 107.

Thursday, May 26 Los Angeles at Philadelpnia. I n i Sunday, May 29 Philadelphia at Los Angeles Tuesday, May 31 Philadelphia at Los Angeles, (n) Thursday, June 2 Los Angeles at Philadelphia, (n)

Sunday, June 5 Philadelphia at Los Angeles, if necessary

Wednesday, Junes

Los Angeles at Pniladelphia, in), if necessary

USFl Stondings

Philadelphia Boston New Jersey Washington

Tampa Bay Chicago

By The Associated Press Atlantic W    L    T

II    I    0

7    5    0

3    9    0

I    11    0

Central 9    3    0

8    4    0

Pet. PF PA

,917 253 117 .583 264 227 .250 201 290 .083 164 313

750 243 211 ,667 295 176

Boston 21. Washington 14 Chicago 19, New Jersey 13, OT Los Angeles 14. Denver 10 Philadelphia 24, Arizona 7 Monday's Game Birmingham 23, Michigan 20. OT Friday, May 27 Birmingham at Denver, ini Sunday, May 29 Philadelphia at Boston New Jersey at Washington Los Angeles at Oakland

Monday, May 30 Tampa Bay at Michigan, tni Arizona at Chicago. i)

Tronsoctions

ByThe Associated Press

BASEBAU American League

OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Plaeed Carney Linsford, third baseman, on the 15-day disabled list Activated Mike Heath, catcher Recalled Luis Quinones, infielder, from Albany of the Eastern League

FOOTBALL Natkmal FooUmU League

ATLANTA FALCONS-Siened Brett Millet offensive tackle. John Rade. linebdcker, John Salley, defensive back, and Allama Matthews,.light end.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Announced that Tony Eason, quarterback, has agreed to a four-year, 2.3 million contract

United States Football League WASHINGTON FEDERALS-Announced the resignation of James Gould, president, so that he can become executive vice president ol John F Bassett Enterprises.

HOCKEY NaUoaal Hockey League NEW YORK RANGERS-Named Carol Vadnais as assistant coach Signed Jan Erixon, left wing, Peter Sundstrom. right wing, and Ron Scott, goallender.

COliiGE EAST TEXAS STATE-Announced the retirement of Jim Gudger, head basket ball coach THIEL-Named Michael Grilfin head basketball coach

N.C. Scoreboord

By The Associated Press South Atlantic League

G reensboro 4, Anderson 2

Carolina League -Kinston 11. Winston-Salem 3

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Ive known Robbie about 10 years, said Oyler. He and his father are both very low-key, mild-mannered people, soft-spoken tj^es. I would tend to believe in my client.

Hes told me he would take a polygraph, etc. Were not looking to nail Billy. Hes just angry. All Robbie was trying to do was buy him a Lite beer because Billy has been his idol all these years and Billy has been in all these commercials.

During the 1979 off-season, Martin was involved in a scrape in a Bloomington, Minn., hotel bar with a marshmallow salesman.

Martin was fired as manager of the Yankees four days later. It was the second time he had been dismissed by George Steinbrenner. Martin was hired to manage the club for a third time by Steinbrenner last winter.

In November of 1978, Martin got in a fight with sportswriter Ray Hagar in a hotel bar in Reno, Nev.

kVomen /n Fifth Win

, Greenvilles womens Eastern Carolina Tennis Association team rolled up another victory yesterday, crushing Washington 9-0.

The Greenville women had an easy time of it for the most part, and were carried to three sets only once, in the number three doubles.

The victory boosted the record of the team to 5-0. Greenville will close out the spring season in Washington next Wednesday.

Summary:

Carlie Wille (G) d. Janice Rich, 6-2, 6-1.

Frances Cain (G) d. Jean Coleman, 6-2, 6-3.

Nancy Powell (G) d. Carol Tayloe, 6-4,6-3.

Sharon Ricks (G) d. Kathleen Taylor, 6-2,6-3.

Lia Moore (G) d. Mary Howard Blount, 6-1,6-1.

Mary Angela Lee (G) d. Ruth Mitchell, 6-4,6-2.

Wille-Powell (G) d. Rich-Coleman, 6-2,6-2.

Cain-Myra Hill (G) d. Tayloe-Taylor, 6-0,6-3.

Lee-Sydney Womack iG) d. Blount-Milchell, 5-7.6-4.7-5,

Gudger Retires From Coaching

COMMERCE, Texas (AP) - Jim Gudger, one of the nations top basketball coaches in total number of victories, announced Wednesday his retirement as East Texas State University basketball coach.

Gudger, 62, will end his 33-year career with a 547-385 record, including a 201-178 mark during his 14 years at ETSU. The record is fourth best among the nations active college basketball coaches, ETSU officials said.

Gudgers son, Jim Jr., is a former assistant coach at East Carolina University.

Gudger said he has been named divisional manager of A.L. Williams Co., an insurance firm, and that he will continue to live in this Northeast Texas city.

Coaching is kind of like smoking - its not good for us but its addictive. So by working in clinics, scouting and writing. Ill keep my hand in the profession, he added.

He spent nine seasons at Western Carolina, where he won three Carolinas Conference championships and his 1962-63 team advanced to the finals of the NAIA national tournament.

Gudger coached the 1971 U.S. Pan American team and was a member of the U.S. Olympic Basketball Committee and International Basketball Board. He also served as president of the

NAIA Basketball Coaches Association and the NAIA Coaches Association and three times was chairman of .the NAIA National Basketball Tournament Committee.

He has been inducted into the NAIA Hall of Fame and was named a distinguished alumnus of Western Carolina University In North Carolina.

He was named Lone Star Conference coach of the year three times and his 1973-74 team shared the LSC title.

Pollard Takes Putt Tourney

Danny Pollard used an eight-under-par 28 in the second round to win the Wednesday Night Pro Tournament at Greenville Putt-Putt and Games last night.

Pollard finished with a total of 94 for the three-rounds of play.

Secohd place went to Lavem Mayo with a 96, while Henry Beacham was third with a 97. Johnny Carrow finished fourth with a 98.

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In The Area

PEANUTS

Cable TV To Have Diabetes Show

Greenville Cable TV Inc. will present Diabetes: Update 83, a cable health network Informathon on diabetes, on June 2 from 7-11 p.m. on channel 26,

During the live program, viewers will be able to call 800-232-4242, toll free, to have their specific questions about diabetes answered by a panel of doctors who specialize in treating diabetes. They will be on call for eight hours.

Fuller Is Campaign Chairman

Dr. Frank Fuller is serving as chairman of the Mental Health Association in Pitt County membership campaign being conducted this month in conjunction with National Mental Health g Month.    

Fuller is the retired chairman of the department of counselor education of East Carolina University. He has served as president of the Mental Health Association twice - in 1961-63 and 1980-81. A past governor of the Greenville Moose Lodge, he is a past president of the N.C, Personnel and Guidance Association, the N.C. Education Association, and a former member of the Greenville

City Council.        j    dR. FRANK FULLER

Memorial Day Schedule

City hall and all municipal offices will be closed Monday in observance of Memorial Day.

The city sanitation division will be closed, delaying refuse and trash pick-up one day from the normal schedule. The regular collection schedule will resume Thursday. Emergency calls for public works services may be made to ,752-3473.

Local transit system buses will not operate on Monday.

River Birch Tennis Center will remain open throughout the holiday weekend. The Kim Street Recreation Center will be closed Saturday and Monday. The South Greenville and West Crenville centers will only be closed on Monday.

! Sheppard Memorial Library and its branches will be closed Saturday, Sunday and Monday for the Memorial Day observance.

Student Wins Scholarship

^Jeffrey Harris Parnell of Greenville, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jalhes Parnell, has been awarded a $1,000 Hardees Employee Scholarship. The annual scholarship program was established by Hardees for high school seniors or college students who have high scholastic standards and have exhibited leadership qualities.

Scholarship requirements specify that the award be used to further the education of the recipient. This year Hardees [scholarship awards totaled approximately $45,000.

ECU Cadets Commissioned

r Fifteen cadets in East Carolina Universitys Air Force HOTC Detachment 600 received commissions as second lieutenants in the U.S. Air Force recently. The new officers completed Air Force ROTC training at ECU along with undergranduate or graduate degree programs.

. The new lieutenants are Donald Carter of Greenville, son of

Choir To Mark Anniversary

The sixth anniversary of the Pitt-Greene Interdenominational Choir will be celebrated Sunday at 5:30 p.m. The observance will be held at the Little Creek Disciple Church in Greene County.

Board Of Trade Meets

The annual meeting of the Greenville Tobacco Board of Trade was held Wednesday at the boards Ficklen Street offices. During the session, representatives of the buying companies and local warehouses discussed plans for the 1983 selling season in Greenville.

Board of Trade officers elected during the meeting included W.C. Clark Jr., president; Fenner Allen, vice president, and J.N. Bryan, secretary-treasurer and sales supervisor.

Appreciation Service Planned

A mothers appreciation service will be held today at 8 p.m. for a portion of the mothers of Noahs Ark Holiness Church of Greenville. Pastor Betty Rhinehart and the choir of Guiding Light Temple of Farmville will be guests.

Greenville Student Graduates

Judy Lynn Little received her degree from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington during recent graduation exercises. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman F. Little of Greenville.

Four Chosen For School

Four local students have been selected to attend the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics next fall as members of the junior class.

Attending from Rose High School will be Maya K. Ajmera, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Ramesh C. Ajmera; Maria P. Kelly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kelly and Brant M. Taylor, son of Dr. and Mrs. Harold Taylor.

Sharon Jolly of Ayden-Grifton High School will also be attending. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Jolly.

Conley Classes Present Awards

The 11th annual D.H. Conley Employee-Employer Breakfast, held Wednesday by the schools cooperative occupational classes, included presentations of special awards to Wanda Venters, Tommy Best and Vicky High.

Mike Gurkin presided at the breakfast and Cathy Cox gave the invocation. The welcome was given by Arlene Gardner. Janet Swindell introduced the speaker, Carol Ann Tucker, who is in continuing education at East Carolina University.

Certificates were presented to the employers. Thirty businesses were represented.

Advisers present were Annie Chappell, Sarah Perkins and Ritchie Wynns.

Land Loss Seminar Planned

The Benefit Commission of the General Baptist State Convention of North Carolina will sponsor a Land Loss Seminar and Conference June 4 at noon at Sycamore Hill Baptist Church, 226 W. Eighth St.

The seminor is intended for minority persons who own farms or who have recently lost a farm. Dolores J. Faison, an attorney associated with the North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers Land Loss Prevention Project, will lead the seminar.

Vehicles Collide On Boulevard

A car driven by Evelyn Freeman Bryant of Grimesland and

'^Building permits totaling $1,880,667 were issued in 'Greenville in January as ..construction activity re-,flected an increase over Decembers $1,565,550, according to state Labor Commissioner John Brooks.

The commissioner reported that building activity in Greenville included: $1,095,800 for 30 single-family units, $240,350 for 14 jnultifamily units; $309,347 ,ior four non-residential structures; and $235,170 for

27 additions and alterations. He said 75 total units were authorized here in January.

The permit total for Pitt County, which included the Greenville figure, amounted to $1,905,417, Brooks said. Five more county permits for additions and alterations pushed the Pitt total to 80 units for the month.

He said that building activity authorized in 44 of North Carolinas largest cities in January increased 88.1 per

cent from the tirst month of 1982. Compared to December, total activity jumped 6.7 percent from 2,406 units, and value gained 43.5 percent from $68,930,173.

Brooks said all four categories of city building activity topped January 1982 totals statewide. He noted that 727 permits for singlefamily homes were issued, compared to 266 last January.

Compared to January 1982, the average construction cost

for a single-family home decreased 1.8 percent, to $43,726 from $44,544, but the average gained 5.1 percent from Decembers $41,601.

Building values for January in several eastern towns included; Elizabeth City, $176,058; Goldsboro, $54,269; Jacksonville, $1,861,225; Kinston, $159,787; New Bern, $993,100; Roanoke Rapids, $413,796; Rocky Mount, $751,320; Tarboro, $329,600; and Wilson, $1,923,534.

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BEETLE BAILEY

.Mrs. James Worth Carter and husband of Beth Hignite a car ariven oy hveiyn h reeman Bryant of Grimesland and jCarter, who has been assigned to pilot training at Laughlin\*--&Aruck operated by Gene Austin Alley of Route 1, Princeton, "Air Force Base, Del Rio, Texas, and Andre Lovett of Ayden, collided about 3;50 p.m. Wednesday on Greenville Boulevard, son of Pearlene Randolph, who has been assigned to missile    feet east of the Forrest Hill Drive intersection,

officer training at Vandenburg Air Force Base, Calif., before    Off'cers set damage to the Bryant car at $400 and estimated

assignment to Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri.    damage    to    the    truck driven by Alley at $25. ^

Area Building Activity Increases

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close. This stand is located on the corner of a traffic intersection just outside Faison. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)





20-The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.Thursday, May 26,1983

MRS HOWARD HUGHES - Holl>-wood film star Terry Moore speaks at a news conference at which she announced that she had been legally married to the late Howard Hughes since November 1949. A large mural of the billionaire hangs behind her at a Beverly Hills Hotel. She said the marriage had never been legally dissolved. (AP Laserphoto)

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NEW YORK (AP) - Impressionist Rich Little says his favorite candidate for president will always be one with a good voice, because "1 live in fear of the country having a president 1 can't do."

The Ottawa-born comedian joked was honored Wednesday by the Canadian Club of New York. As Little stepped behind the podium, he couldnt resist doing a familiar voice.

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British Producer Has Hands-Off Policy For Shows

ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer

NEW YORK (API - John Mortimer, famous British playwright and novelist, doesnt watch much American television, but he does like "Hill Street Blues, He also appreciates the fact that the NBC series is done without network interference.

As any writer for American TV will say, once the multilayered network bureaucracy finishes modifying a work, it might be unrecognizable. That doesnt happen to the classy Hill Street Blues because the producers extracted a hands-off guarantee in return for working for NBC.

And television butchery cant happen to Mortimer, whose "Rumpole of the Bailey mystery series and Brideshead Revisited adaptation were seen on public television. Both programs were produced in England, and a new set of "Rumpole stories will be shown here next year.

"Nobody can change one word, says Mortimer, whose TV work recently was

TV Log

For complete TV proflrammlnp Irt-formetlon, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Reflector. '

THURSDAY 7 00 Jokers Wild

7 30 Tic Tac

8 00 Magnom P I

9 00 NBA Game r 00 News

II 30 Late Movie 2 00 Nightwatch

FRIDAY

2:00 Nightwatch

5 00 Jim Bakker

6 00 Carolina 8:00 Morning

10:00 Pyramid

10 30 Childs Play

11 00 Price Is

WITN-TV-Ch.7

THURSDAY 7 00 Jettersons

7 30 Family Feud

8 00 Fame 9:00 GimmeA

9 30 Cheers

10 00 Hill Street

11 00 News

11 30 Tonight Show

12 30 Letlerman

1 30 Overnight

2 30 News FRIDAY

5 00 Jimmy S

6 00 Almanac

7 00 Today 7 25 News

7 30 Today

8 25 News

8 30 Today

9 00 R Smimons 9 30 All in the

10 00 FactsOfLite

10 30 Sale ot the

11 00 Wheel ol

11 30 Dream House

12 00 News

12 30 Search For

1 00 Days of Our

2 00 Another Wor

3 00 Fantasy

4 00 Whitney the

4 30 Little House

5 30 Lie Detector

6 00 News

6 30 News

7 00 Jettersons

7 30 Family Feud ,

8 00 Special II 00 News

11 30 Tonight

12 30 Comedy

2 00 Overnight

3 00 News

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

THURSDAY

7 00 Three'sCo

7 30 Alice

8 00 Benson f a 30 Condo

9 00 Too Close

9 30 Amanda s

10 00 20,'20

11 00 Actions News

11 30 Nightline

12 30 Starskyi 1.30 Mission

2 30 Early Edition

FRIDAY

5 00 Bewitched

5 30' J Swaggart

6 00 AG Day 6 30 News

7.00 Good Morning 6 13 Action News

6 55 Action News

7 25 Action News

8 25 Action News

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

THURSDAY

7 00 Report

7 30 Sfateline

8 00 Previews

8 30 Inside Story

9 00 Geographic

10 00 Cosmos

11 00 A Hitchcock

11 30 Morecambe

12 00 SignOtt

FRIDAY

3 00 Over Easy 3 30 Great Chels

4 00 Sesame St

5 00 Mr Rogers 5 30 Powerhouse 4 00 Dr Who

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screened at New Yorks Museum of Broadcasting. "Im sure directors find it a bit frustrating.

Mortimer doesnt say this out of arrogance but with a proprietary interest in his words. My works are literary and depend on dialogue, he says. "Theyre immutable for TV. The sounds have a certain rhythm in your head and youre either born with that ability or not.

"The great secret, he adds, is working with people who will treat you well.

In England, writers have more say in the television adaptation of their work, including casting. Mortimer has even more Influence because hes successful enough to demand total control. This contrasts with his brief and unhappy experience in Hollywood on his screenplay for John and Mary, a theatrical film starring Dustin Hoffman. -1 dont like that people can change things without knowing the characters, and I object to the idea that people can write in pop meetings, says Mortimer. Its ludicrous to think that

five people. can sit down together and produce a work, of art.

Mortimer, whose autobiographical "A Voyage Round My Father will be seen on the syndicated Mobil Showcase Network in early 1984, says his writing skill was nurtured by reading poetry and prose to his father, a barrister who became blind late in life. When I ran out of things to read to him, I wrote them.

Mortimer followed his father into the law. and the profession became a primary source for much of his writing, particularly the amusing character Horace Rumpole. Im the best British playwright who ever defended a murderer, but when I tell murderers that, they dont look particularly cheered up.

Mortimer remembers waiting with one client for a verdict. The conversation had dried up.. I guess I could have said, See you in 12 years, or, Win a few, lose a few, but I said nothing. He then turned to me, and said; Your Mr. Rumpole could get me out of this.

You see, there is a certain penalty for writing Rumpole.

But his legal background has helped more than it has hurt. The courts helped me discover how people talk in moments of crisis, he says. The basis of all comic writing is reality. The aim, however, is not to be a documentary writer but to write realistically. I try to have the same relationship to reality as Dickens. I try to write two feet off the ground.

Mortimer says he sits down to his paper and pencils - he does not type - with the idea of making some kind of statement, and I also have a vague idea of the end. If its a good idea and the characters say the right things, youll have a good story.

Unless, of course, the networks put their too-many-fingers and commercials into it. Which is another advantage writers have in England, They have a law there mandating that commercials be clustered and inserted together only during a plays natural breaks.

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Sargent Painting Goes On View In Washington

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WASHINGTON (AP) - A century-old painting of writer Robert Louis Stevenson by portraitist John Singer Sargent, which experts say had never been shown publicly in the United States, is now on view at the National Gallery of Art.

Stevenson, the Scot who wrote Treasure Island, and his American wife Fanny, were painted in England by Sargent, an American. But the official catalogue says:

...In this exhibition (it) takes its rightful place among the great French paintings of the 19th century.

Stevenson himself thought it ought not to be shown.

It is, I think, excellent, but is too eccentric to be exhibited. he wrote to a friend. 1 am at one extreme comer: my wife in this wild dress, and looking like a ghost at the extreme other end... All this is touched in lovely, with that witty touch of Sargents: but of course it looks damn queer as a whole.

Now it belongs to one of the greatest collections of modern French and American paintings still in private hands, being shown at the National Gallery of Art until Oct 2. The collection is the property of Betsey Cushing Whitney, viidow of John Hay Jock" Whitney, former publisher of the New York Herald-Tnbune and the International Herald-Tribune, who was also President Eisenhowers ambassador to Britain.

The collection is strong on French painters - Manet, Monet, Matisse, Gau^in, Cezanne, Derain, Vlaminck, Vuillard - many of whom were friends of Sargent.

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Whitney died last year. The paintings are eventually to be distributed among the National Gallery of Art, the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Yale

University Art Gallery.

The collection includes nine of the works of Pablo Picasso. One of them - Ace of Clubs done in 1914 - has never been shown either.

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Health Bill Sent To Subcommittee

By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Disabled employees would receive full compensation regardless of outside health hazards, but cigarette smoking would not be recognized as one of them, under suggested changes to a workers compensation bill.

The bill, sent to a sub-committee of the Manufacturing, Labor and Commerce Committee on Wednesday, currently would reduce compensation if disabilities were partly caused 'by factors not related to the job

But Sen. Cecil Jenkins, D-Cabarrus, said he hoped to make it clear that smoking was not a health hazard while allowing full benefits for anyone now working who suffers a work-related disability.

rm not sure how I'll do

it, he said, adding that a sentence saying the bill should not be interpreted as a blow to the tobacco industry "probably wouldnt work.

Even if that attempt fails, Jenkins said he might try to extend full compensation to those already working who "were not forewarned that their lifestyles might reduce their compensation.

"If were going to apply it to cigarette smoking, we should have a grandfather clause in there so that anyone in the textile industry now would get full benefits, he said. "After that, anyone going into the industry would have fair warning they are contributing to their disease.

The bill has been criticized as an attempt to reverse an April state Supreme Court ruling which granted full benefits to a textile employee

and smoker who was unable to work due to byssinosis, or brown lung disease. Breathing cotton dust has been linked with byssinosis, but in a similar 1981 case, the court granted only 55 percent compensation, saying the rest of the damage was due to smoking.

Sen. William Staton, D-Lee, who introduced the bill, offered a substitute Wed-nesday that would ensure workers with lifetime disabilities would receive lifelong compensation.

He said a provision limiting compensation to 300 weeks when off-job factqrs contributed to disabilities was the main objection, opponents had to the legislation during last weeks public hearing.

Jenkins said the timing of the bill was unfortunate.

"1 dont feel like we should trv to undo what the

Supreme Court has done. he said. "In 1981, we didnt try to reverse that decision.

Current laws aUow workers to receive two-thirds of their wages for life if a work-related injury or disease prevents them from working. Based on the April ruling, that payment would apply to any case that was at least partly due to on-the-job conditions.

Staton said apportionment is "the very heart of workmens compensation, but added that very few apportionment cases were likely under his bill.

The state House enacted a bill to establish a model plan for offering teacher incentives by exempling the Charlotte-Mecklenburg public school system from North Carolinas tenure law.

Tenure there may now be delayed up to six years instead of the current

three-year limit, but the new rules will affect only teachers hired to begin work in the 1984-85 school year.

The program, supported by Gov. Jim Hunt as a way to improve the quality of education, will set higher standards for teachers and give them longer to meet those standards.

Pregnant women convicted of nonviolent crimes may delay serving prison terms until after their children are born under a bill enacted by the House.

Supporters say the measure will save the state several hundred thousand dollars that would have been spent for the womans health care in prison.

In other action, the House approved and sent to the Senate a bill to raise S8.3 million by increasing court costs.

A bill that has sparked

heated debate among optometrists, ophthalmalogists and physicians was referred to a subcommittee of the Senate Human Resources Committee;

The bill introduced by Sen. Gerry Hancock. D-Durham, would prohibit optometrists from using drugs to treat vision problems. They could continue using certain drugs 'to diagnose eye problems.

It would allow ophthalmalogists. who are physicians specializing in eye problems, to continue using drugs to diagnose and treat vision problems.

Hancock said that North Carolina and West Virginia are the only states that continue to allow optometrists to use both kinds of drugs. He has argued that only physicians should handle therapeutic drugs.

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County Schools List Academic Honors

OUTLET

The following Pitt County stu dents made the honor roll and principal's lists (or the recently completed fifth marking period D.H. CONLEY: honor roll: Patty Anderson. Judy Boyd, Dallas Braxton, Darlene Gardner. Michele Halby. Roy Lewis, principals list: Karen Andrews, .Momka Avery, Beth Barton. Sandi Beaty. Shern Beaty. Kim Briley. Darlene Cannon, Karry Carusa. Karen Credle, Ona Credle. Michelle Deal, Carl Dunn. Mike Elks, Linda Evans. Lisa Flanagan, Andy Garris, Loretta Grantham, Sophie Gurganus. Debbie Hall. Patricia Hanson, Carla Hardison. Angela Hardy, Wendy Hardy. Todd Hoogerland. Valerie Jones, Patti Keeter. .Michelle Kittrell. Janet Little. Lmzette .Mills, Robin Mills, Chris Murphy. Calvin Phillips. Ann Ross, Betty Staton, Snadra Staton. .Monnie U'ssery. Wanda Venters, .Michelle Waters. Missy Whitford, Pattie Williams AYDEN-GRIFTON: honor roll: Tammy Cox, Tina Venters, Renee Brown' Kim Stocks, Ginger Had dock, James Howell. Catherine Reaves. Lori Wells: principals list: Karen Cannon, Carla Gray, David Liles, Karla Cannon, Dana Tyndall, .Marjolein Wilson. Wendy Wooten,

Bill Rodebaugh, Laune Vandiiord. Jamie Easterbrook. Tyrone Hart. Lori Mooney, Mitchell Riggs, Leo Venters, Tammy Cannon, Betty Ellison, Angela Ingram, Melanie Hardee. Rita Jackson. Sandra Rouse. Evetta Lawrence. Gail .Nobles, Regina Thornton, Adrien Williams. Youvonkia Stocks FARMVILLE CENTRAL: honor roll: Donna Costner, Wendy Crisp, Gary Hobgood. Michelle Medlin, .Michael Owens. I.ynn Ramsey, Jennifer Walston, Lydia Worthington, principals list: Martha Britt. Tina Byrd, .Michael Cherry. Michelle Daniels. Lynn Elks, Julie Farrior, Cherry Flake, Kelly Hobgood, John Jomes, Katie Jones, Tracy Killebrew, .Melme Kue, Brenda Little, Scott Little. Samantha Nanney, Mark Natale, Steve Norville. Melissa Owens, Tammy Robertson, Vibian Roebuck. Joel Shackleford. Vanessa Shackleford, Robert White, Lisa W ilson, Brenda Marris NORTH PITT: honor roll:' Renee Briley. Keith Coltrain. Rhonda Kast'wood, Kimberly Farmer, Glenda Johnson, Judson Joyner. .Mary Moore, Clyn Morris, Tammy Nelson, Lisa Sawyer, principals list: Roy Edgar Ballard Jr, Rose Bell, Sheila Bland, Robert Brilev.

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Albert Campbell, Cindy Carraway, Kim Carraway, Pete Clark. Jen nifer Farmer. Wendy Flynn, Brian Godbey, Wanda Gorham, Ann Hamm, Wanda Hardy. Jay Hines, Rhonda Jackson, IMark James. Peggy Jenkins. Dame! Keel, Susan Kirkman. Rodney Lawrence, Larry. McKeel. Lee Manning. .Martha .Moore, Renee Oakley, Trudy Oakley. Scott Rawls, Gay Single ton, Rhonda Singleton, Greg Spain. Lisa Stancill. .Michelle Staton, April Weatherington, Ken Whitehurst FALKLAND: honor roll: Carrie Hale, Tracy Lawrence, principals list: Chris Gillikm. Shirley Joyner. Rosa Ragin. Ricky Smith. Buddy Vandiford, Wendy Whitehurst, Tricia Wooten. Dawn GBreene. Laverne Bullock. .Melissa Brown CHICOD: honor roll: Anna F'oster, Stephanie Garner. Stephanie .Mills. Tracey Stancil, Christy Boyd, Angela Capillary, Hunter Gardner, .Melanie Hardee; principals list: Hope Buck, Patrick Leary. Wendy Dixon, Britt Haddock' Stephanie Haddock. Gina Halstead. Tammy Lane. David Forrest. Nikki Adams, Leasa Evans. Bobbie Jo Strickland, Lisa Rouse, Crystal Newby. Steve Haddock, Paula Holland, Joey Johnson, Elmer Leary, Lorayne Mills, Rhonda .Mills. Toby Corey, Karla Dixon, Christy Shivers, Rhonda Jackson GRIFTON: honor roll: John McLawhorn, Robert Evans, Shawner Kinsey, .my Shepard, Jason Williams, Daphne McLawhorn, Kathy Day, Duania Campbell. Missy Rose, principals list: Wayne Lyerly, Joseph M^pre, Dwayne Lyerly. Lon McClaine, Paula Phillips, Pamela Garris, .Mike Boswell. Amy Dellinger. Billy Hume, Kesha Jones. Susan Koon, Patricia Nobles,. Shirley Stancill, Clarissa Edwards. Leticia McCot-ter. .Michelle Burns, Russell Jones, Kim Stokes, Roberta Harris, Mike Shafer, Kelly Langston, Alex McLawhorn PACTOLS: honor roll: Kim Lee. Sandy Lee, heather Noble, John Paul'Corey: principals list: Cindy Briley, Melanie Cottingham, Tammy .Mayo. Beth .Mizell. Ben Ormond. Chris .McCullen. Jeanne Gouras, Jodie Stackhous, Tammy Bryant, Jamie Braxton. Sabrina Coburn. Sherry Dyson, April Farmef, Susan Hardy. Cherie .Moore, Michael Pilgreen, Glenn Scott, Junior Sutton, Tammy Woolard

A.G. COX: honor roll: Noelle Blasi, Hank Crapps. Shannon Fields, Hollis Gunn, Amy Owens. Maria Smith, Charlie Tripp, Rae Troiano, Patrick Winstead. Celeste Charlton. Chad Dickerson. John Dunn. Dawn Haddock, Julie Milner. Kathryn Mohror, Angie Sexton, Glenn Weathington, Lanette Coward, Christy Hardee. Chris Weathington, Ketan Amin, Jessica Bays, .Miriam Fulford, Misty Jones. Pamela Keel. Laurie Little, Albert Newman. Heather Smith, Mystie Becton, Paul Bredderman, Jennifer Hardee, Brian Jovner, Julie Taylor; principals list: Jimmy Beckman, Melanie Bennett, Bonnie Biggs, Jennifer Campbell, Felecia Clemons, Ashley Cobb, Erica Cox, Melinda Ebron, Chris Gray, Gina Grubbs, Penny Harris. Nicole Hegger, Tvler Hill. Amanda Hines. Christopher Holland, Alyssa Kishore. Patrick Lee, Gail Lilley, Lenoe McLean, Kern Meyers, Jesse Nelson, Jacqule Posey, De berah Thompson, Julie Smith, Jason Watson. Tonya Williams, Jason Wing, Amy Woolard, Laune Burns, Terri Dawson, Anna Gasklll, Sara Jolly, William Jones, Mary .Mc.Murray, Grier Moore, Connie Palmer, Jonathan Prescott, Missy Ratcliff, Lynn Sung, Lynn Van

Dyke. Lon Waters, Michelle Williams. Sonya Atkinson. Paulette Barrett, John Carawan, Kimberly Colson, Scott Claybrook, Leigh Cowan, Cam Cox. .Michael Cox, Erica Credle. Sherri Daughtridge. Sharm Duncan. Amanda Haddock, .Michelle Hales. Anna Harrington. Jana Holland, Leslie Jones. Brian Ledford. Winton McLawhorn, Shannon OGeary, .Mark Simmons, Josh Trough!. Wadie Tucker, Carol Ty.son. Van Vanhome, Steve West. Queenie WTlliams, Laura Albritton. Beatrice Blount. Nanc-y Bogenn. Nicole Coburn, Derrick Credle. Amy Dale. .Marsha Drake. .Michelle Drake, James Faulkner, Emily Finison, Michele Hall. .Michael Hardee. Michael Harris, Hannah Hill, Jennifer King, Phil .Medlin. Kimsu .Meyers. Johh Pinner. Edwina Sneed, Wanda Stocks, De nise Sumerlin, Andy tetterton, Jerry Tucker. Stefani Inverferth, Sheree Wall.er, Stephanie Watson. Eric Weathington, Fldwin West, Mark Whitehead, Jennifer Wing, Donna Woods. Wanda Braxton. Cynthia Brown. Stephanie Cash. Lon Conger. Ed Daughtridge. Amzie Hoffner, John Howard. Burdette Joyner, Becky Joyner. Jay Joyner. Monica l.ong, Linset'te .Morris, Leslie Ray, Sharia Richards, April Scudder, Christy Smith. Gavin Sundwall. Kenneth Williams H.B. SUGG: honor roll: Rhonda Davis, Nicole Graham, Crystal Gay, Reginald Howard. Amanda Corbett, Dionne Griffis: principals list: Carrie Emory. Tammi Gorham, Wayne May, Melanie Parker, Renee Tyson, Carol Mozingo. Wayne Braxton. Andrea Frisby. Jennifer Joyner, Kevin Tugwell. .Michael Moore, Bernard Newsome. Tina Avery, Suzanne Bradham. Claire Chesson, Michael Holloman. Tonya Daniels. Jennifer Gill, Denise Suggs, David Tugwell, Vikki Mercer. Felicia Barrett, Vickie Chestnut, Angela McLamb, Renee Crawford, Sam Kirkland BETHEL: honor roll: Charles Lewis, Rod Whitley. Kelly Andrews Jeffery Bell, Sandy Andrews, Angela Bell; principals list: Renee Ayscue. Keisha Clemmons. Katherine    Hunniecutt,    Tracy

Palmer, Bernica Thigpen, Angela Wynne. Virginia Harrell, Lori Howard. Shaun Howard, Reneese Pitt. Troy Whitehurst. David Whitley, Al Roberson. Leigh Whitehurst,    Wendy McLawhorn,

Kathy Cyrus. Tangela Spell. Amy Carson, Billy Hardison. Karen Pilgreen, Johnny Sherrod, Tami Tetterton.    Kirri Hines.    Steve

Strickland,    Joell Hobbs,    Kevin

Swindell FARMVILLE MIDDLE: honor roll: Monique Bembry, Kathryn Gay, principal's list: Raynita Carter, Gary Joyner. Freda McLawhorn, Rhonda Owens. Channel Dixon, Mimi Jefferson, Tammy Bullock, Andrea Craft, Misty Crisp, Keith Everette, Kathy Joyner. Dean Lawrence, Amy Mewborn, Shona Reason. Scott Snckland, Coleman Bailey, Michelle Crawford. Lisa Deans. Desha Lane STOKES: honor roll: Freda Jackson, Myra Locklear, Kimberly Roberson. Angela Taylor, Katrina W il^on principals list: Christopher Jones, Raymond Jackson, Tina King. Cynthia Hines, JoAnn Langley, Salma Barnhill, Sherry Battle, Caressa Brooks. James Grimes, Trent Bullock, Terence Burney, Tracey Hopkins. Laytona Little, Kennc McNair, Susan Wiens G R WHITFIELD: honor roll' Anthony McCann, Michelle Abel: principals list: Kathyrn Dail, Quency Hawkins, Shari .Moore, Paul Pajak, Sonya Suggs, John Williams. Stephanie Phillips, Tres

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22--The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.- Thursday, May 26,1983

District Court Report

Judge Robert D, Wheeler and Judge E. Burt Aycock Jr., disposed of the following cases during the April 5 - 7 term of District Court in Pitt County

Peg)iy Bizzell. Avden deposing ol mortgaged property, dismissed Robert Bizzell. Ayden disposing o( mortgaged property, dismissed Melvin Ray Brown Ayden. speeding .10 days Jail suspended on payment of S2.S and cost Herman Lee Bryant. Kinston, unlawful use ol tnspeclion certificate. :fl counts' :I0 days jail suspended on payment ol cost, probation 2 years Charles Ray Coburn, Route 4.

' Oreenville, exceeding safe speed. It) days jail suspended on pay ment ol cost Kmma Draughn. Karmville. worthless check. ;iO days jail suspended on payment ol cost Shirley Jones. Hollybrook Estates, worthless check, .itl days jail suspended on payment of cost and check Christopher Martin Kelly Jones Dorm, no operators license, no safety helmet. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $2.s and cost Bessie Lane. Lakeview Terrace, damage personal property prayer for judgment continued upon payment ol cost

lenn Alan .Morrison Lakewood Drive. 10% blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost. 6 hours jail. attend alcohol workshop Brenda Nelson, Roundtree Drive, worthless check, 60 days jail suspended on pay ment of cost Jerry David Redlern. New Bern, exceeding safe speed, 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost Ishmael Earl Ricks, Rocky Mount, exceeding sale speed, 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost Edward Lee Ross. Dudley .Street, assault, dismissed Hubert Elliott Slone, Harding Street. 10 days jail suspended on payment ol cost

Joseph Burden Slox, Wmterville, littering. 30 days jail suspended on pay ment of $200 and cost Jospch Rodgriguez Teel. Ward Street, trespass, dismissed William D Ward. Wmterville. worthless check 3 counts 60 days jail suspended on pay ment of 'cost and check

John Thomas Worthington Jr Crestline Blvd . speeding, dismissed Charles Dietrich \dllertsen, Stokes, exceeding sale speed, 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost Wayne Smith. ECC hazing, not guilty

Richard Whitehead Hi. .Macclesfield assault. 30 days jail Roy Cleveland Dail. Homestead Trailer Park, exceeding safe speed, tO days jail suspended on payment of cost Woodrow Sutton. Jefferson Drive, trespass, dismissed Albert Earl Atkinson. Route 4. Geenville. abondonment nonsupport. 6 months jail suspended on payment of cosOremil. $100 month support Cparles Lindberg Biggs Jr Plymouth, driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost. 6 hours jaii attend alcohol workshop surrender operators license

William Roy Bniokshire. W mterville. exceeding sale speed prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost

Jayne Elizabeth Brown, Roxboro. exceeding safe speed, to days jail suspended on payment of cost cfean Russell Carrico. Edgewood Trailer Park, exceedmg sale speed, 10 days jail suspended on payment ol cost.

Fentress Hughes Chappell. Ayden. trespass, assault on female. 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, probation 2 years. $495 restitution, breaking and entering, dismissed Levi Clemons, Route 5, Greenville, exceeding sale speed, to days jail suspended on payment of cost Darrell Cobb. Farmville. bastardy nonsupport, 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, $25 week support

Farley Ebron, Phillips Circle, trespass, dismissed Robert Glenn Edwards. Azalea Gardens, speeding. 10 days jail t ol cost

and cost

James Ray Barrett. Bunch Drive, driving while license revoked. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and

cost

Timothy Carstarphen Burgess. Wendell exceeding sale speed. 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost Anthony Daniels, Wmterville, fail apply certificate of title. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost L C Edward, Fountain, worthless check, dismissed Pete Forbes. Farmville, assault with deadly, dismissed Don Holloman. Farmville, ABC violation. 2 years jail suspended on payment of cost. $500 restitution, contributing to delinquence to minor, dismissed Hardy Ray Jones. Roundtree Drive, speeding. 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost, surrender operators license Clinton Ray .May. FarmVille. larceny no probable' cause found, unauthorized use of conveyance, not guilty

Irvin Oakley Farmville, contributing to delinquency of minor, dismissed. ABC violation, 2 years jail suspended on payment of cost. $250 restitution, probation 5 years Elmer Phillips. Fountain, assault on female, dismissed Donnie Breston Reason. Wilson, exceeding safe speed, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and cost Willie J Suggs. Thirteenth Street, worthless check. 60 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check.

Walter Tyson. Farmville, worthless check. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check Robert Tucker Wiliams, Grifton. exceeding safe speed, 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost .Michael Edward Beaver. Goldsboro, safe movement violation. 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost Eric Jerome Braxton, Route 1, Greenville, assault on female, dismissed Robert Thomas Johnson Jr . Wilson, speeding. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost

Allen Boyd Grant Jr. Rout* 3. Greenville, exceeding safe speed. 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost Jesse Grant, Route 4, Greenville, using threatening language over telephone, 24 months jail suspended on payment of cost remit Virginia Roberts Harben. Mumford Road, shoplifting, dismissed Jean Lucey Hardee, Ayden. reckless driving. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost., attend alcohol workshop William Charles Johnson Route 6, Greenville, exceeding safe speed. 10 days jail suspended on pay ment of cost Peter Mallakis Elm Street, communicating threats, dismissed Brenda E Payton Route 6, Greenville, worthless check, dismissed Cleceland Shermon Jr. Bonners Lane, abondonment nonsupport, 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, $120 support per month Harvey Elmo Strickland. Route 1. Greenville, speeding, dismissed William Henry Woolen, driving under influence 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost. 6 hours jail, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators I cense Harold K Vines, indecent exposure, communicating threats, prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost remit Richard A Zook Kinston, abandonment nonsupport 6 months jail suspended on paymenl of cost. $200 month simport Alvin Earl Barrow LaGrange. 10% blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payhnebt ol $200 and cost. attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license 6 hours jail Catherine lor Wilbur A Johnson, River Bluff, worthless check, 60 days jaij suspended on payment of cost and check

Cynthia .Mobly. Azalea Gardens, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check Kelvin Paige. Bethel, injury personal property, dismissed Pete Payton. Douglas Avenue, breaking and . entering, dismissed, injury real property. 30 days jail suspended on payme'nt ol cost. $17 50 restitution '

Jimmy Ray Carmon, Ayden. intoxicated and disruptive. 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost Eula Mae Williams, Bethel, shoplifting. 3 days jail William Wesley Brantley Jr, Wilson, driving under influence. 40 days jail Earnest Manley Kinsley Third Street, shoplifting. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost probation 12 months

.Michael A Phillips, damage personal property . 90 days jail Jackie Robinson. Elizabeth City, damage personal properly. 6 months jail suspended on paymenl of $25 and cost, probation I year. $150 restitution Gerald Douglas Spellman. Bancroft Avenue, fugiluve, dismissed Steogeb Verbardo. Rocky .Mount worthless check, to days jail suspended on paymenl of cost and check Kimberly .Morns Nichols, Washington sale movement violation. 10 days jail suspended on paymenl of $15 and cost Willie Louis Wilson, McClellan Street inspection violation. lOdaysjail suspended on payment ol cost Larry Tyndall, Carriage House Apartments, fishing violation, cost Charlie Staton Jr, Douglas Avenue, assault on female, dismissed Dexter Owens Fairfax Street, assault on female dismissed Dalton Moore, Washington Street, assault on female. 6 months jail suspended on $15 and cost Timothy Allen Hannah. Sherwood Green, trespass, 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost, fishing violation, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $15 and cost

Watson Nathan Hale, Brownlea Drive, fail to display city tag. cost Christy Josejih Gouras Jr, Jarvis Street, trespass. 30 days jail suspended on payment of cost, filing violation, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and cost

Sylvia Joyce Clemmons. Mumford Road, speeding, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and cost Samuel Thomas Atkinson. Washington Street, registration and financial responsibility violation. 60 days jail su.spended on payment ol $150

NOTICE OF TAX LIEN SALE FOR TOWN OF SIMPSON

Under and by virtue of the power vested in me by the laws of the State of North Carolina, particularly Chapter 310 of the Public Laws of 1939, as amended and pursuant to an order of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners, I will offer for sale and will sell at public auction for cash to the highest bidder at the Courthouse door in Greenville at 12 o'clock noon on Monday, the 6th day of June, 1983, liens upon the real estate described below for the nonpayment of taxes owing the year 1982. The names of the owner or of the person who listed the real estate for taxes, the real estate which is subject to the lien, and amount of the lien being set out below. Reference is made to the records in the Office of the Tax Supervisor for more particular description of said real estate, and notice is hereby given that the amount of the liens set out below are subject to the addition of penalties as provided by law, and the cost of sale.

W.R. Smith

Pitt County Tax Collector

Andrews, Jesse Lee 1 res ,    t    lot    I

Boyd Hyman Earl 1 res .    I    lot    If

Brendia VernorM.

1 lot    .................1

Brewington, Maggie life est

1 lot      >

Brown. David Earl 1 res    .    1    lot    5

Clark, Walter Lee Sr

Hot.     f

Clemons. Helen

1 res    ,    I    lot     1

Daniels, Mary Joyce

I lot     1C

Dixon Mark V

I lot,       3

Dixon William &

I lot..... .......

Floyd. Henry Leon

I lot     4

Floyd, Pauline & Henry Tucker I lot    4

Grimes. James Earl

1 lot     1

Hardee Oueenie

1 res    .    1 lot    3

Hardee, Ruth Mae life est

I lot.    1    acre    8

Hardy. FonnieA Eddie

1 res    ,    1 lot    8

Hardy, Helen

1 lot    ........  3

Hardy. Jasper Lee

I lot......................

Hardy. William Earl

1 res    ,    t lot...............3

Howard, Oleon Marie

I res    ,    1 lot  .................8

J. J. Mobile Homes

Hot.     1

Johnson, Stephen H. &

I lot..........................3

Little, Jeremiah Sr.

1 res..    Hot...................10

Moore. Clarence Milton &

1 lot..........................1

Moore, Hertford Lee &

I res    ,    Hot ...............12

Moore. James

1 lot...........................20.88

Moore. James Elijahetal

I res., 1    lot...................148.28

Moore. James Jr & Cassie Lee

1 res . 1    lot............  115.94

Moore. Jarvis (heirs)

2 lots.......................27.50

Moore. Willie James &

I lot...........................89.92

Moye, Edward Earl &

I lot..........................15 22

Moye. Willie Earl &

1 res . 1 lot.............. 277    50    Bat

Nelson, Hoover Lee

1 res.. Hot.................. 55.92

Nelson, Lou S

1 lot..................48.51

Parker, James David

1 lot.........................150.10

Powell. Alexander Daniel 8,

I lot......... ..............25 51

Reese, William Earl, Henry, &

! -2 lots....................25.44

Rodgers, Peters & Dora

I lot.......................32.02

Smith, Della House

1 res    ,    1    lot..................37.21

Smith. Estella

1 res..    Hot...................45.94

Smith. Reathia

1 res    ,    1    lot....................98.59

Smith, Samuel Jr &

1 res    ,    1    lot....................59 08

Sutton, Grace Reidnell

2 lots  ......................14.40

Taft, Willie (heirs)

1 lot...........................80.87

Telfair, Clarence

1 res., Hof....................73.05

Telfair. Willie Clarence 8i

I lof...........................11,41

Thompson, Galloway Conv Marf.

1 lof..........................179.43

Thompson, MyrfleGaflin

1 res., 3 lof....................88.83

Unknown

4 lOfS................  43.45

Whiffield, Beulah Jeffrles--

1 lof............................8.92

May 5, 12, 19,28, 1983

NOTICE OF TAX LIEN SALE

Under and by virtue of the power vested in me by the laws of the State of North Carolina, particularly Chapter 310 of the Public Laws of 1939, as amended and pursuant to an order of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners, I will offer for sale and will sell at public auction for cash to the highest bidder at the Courthouse door in Greenville at 12 oclock noon on Monday, the 6th day of June, 1983, liens upon the real estate described below for the nonpayment of taxes owing the year 1982. The names of the owner or of the person who listed the real estate for taxes, the real estate which is subject to the lien, and amount of the lien being set out below. Reference is made to the records in the Office of the Tax Supervisor for more particular description of said real estate, and notice is hereby given that the amount of the liens set out below are subject to the addition of penalties as provided by law, and the cost of sale.

This 5th day of May, 1983

W.R. Smith

Pitt County Tax Collector

79.92 Bal.

4 38 Bal

102 47 12 47 28 88

Adams. S Parker

1 acre....................

Adams, Annie Jenkins Knight

1 res , Hot........

Adams, Floyd Michael a.

Sacres

Adams, Jackie Wayne &

1 res , 1 lot

Adams, Kelly & Rena

1 res , 1 lot .............

Adams, Velma Lee

2 lots.......................

Adams, William Manning &

Hot.......................

Albertine. George E Jr &

I res., Hot..................

Alfordi Frederick R &

1 res.. Hot...................

Allen, Arthur

1 res , Hof.........

Allen, Donald Ray

2 lots....................

Allen, Mary &

1 res . Hof..............

Allen Robert A Jr &

1 res , 1 lot

Allen. Thelonia Olandus

1 res.. 'Hot...........

Alleyne, Samuel William &

1 lot..............

Allied Chemical Co......

American Legion Post.....

Anderson, Ada

1 acre.......................14.85

Anderson, Joe Jr

1 lot....................... 22 68

Anderson, Simon S.

acres    264.22

Anderson, Willie Issac

I res , 1 lot............... 100 00

Andrews, Edward &

I lot    20 52

Andrews, Jesse Lee

I res , Hof.................. 75 58

Andrews, Lester &

1 res , 1 lot............. 132.59    Bal.

Andrews, Mack Arthur 1 res.. Hot    ...    140.17

Andrews, Mitchell Lane

1 lot........ ..............57.70

Andrews, W C. (heirs)

1 lot........................ 20 49

Arlington Self Storage

7 acres     2.094.82

Armistead, Milton Aristltus &

1 res., Hof    . -..............122.09

Arthur, LeslieOrmie

1 res . 22 acres.............9,05

Artis, Arle Vines ,

1 res., 1 lof..................171.53

Artis. Isaac Amos (heirs)

3 lots..................... 275.02

Artis. James Percy & Pattie

2 lots........................ 139    59

Atkins, Mary Bess

2lots    3718)

Atkinson, Albert Ray

3 lots    80    97

Atkinson, Albert Ray &

1 res , 2 lots    193    43

Atkinson, Claude

I res ,    3 lots    102 68

Atkinson, Claude Mrs

1 res.,    3 acres................101 30

Atkinson, Malissa T.

2 lots....................... 250    31

Atkinson, Mary Harris

1 res.,    3 acres.................37.54

Austin, Harry &

1 res , 1 lot...................156 18

Austin, Isaac John&

I res , 1 lof...................141.38

Autry, Cathy Manning

1 res , 1 lot...................221 04

Avent, Henry L

1 lot.......................41 91

Averefte, Ernest Cleveland 111327.30 Avery, FloydHolton

1 res., 1 lot....................185.79

Avery, Gladys McPherson

1 res,, Hot...................128.67

Baggett, Oneal &

1 res , 3 lots..................680.79

Baker, Augustus 8i

I res . 1 lot..................149.67

Baker, Cora Elizabeth Smith

1 lot..........................1)4 64

Baker. David 0 &

1 res.. Hot....................95,45

Baker, Dorsey Edward

1 res., 2 lots, 46 acres.........417.30

Baker, Eddie Elijoh

1 res.. Hot...................166.50

Baker. Joseph L. &

1 res.. Hot...................182.88

Baker, Junior Wayne

1 res , Hot................... . 123.04

Baker. Oscar Lee

2 lots.........................47.73

Baker, Robert Linwood

I acre........................ 183 75

Baker. Robert Linwood 8i Nina

I lot...........................82,51

Baker, Robert Lynwood

1 lot......................... 124 20

Baker, Robert Lynwood &

1 lot..........................201.58

Baleme, Larry Dean 8i

3 acres......................142.64

Baldwin, Linda Fay

1 res., 1 lot.,..............28.26 Bal.

Ballard. Helen

1 lot...........................17 35

Barfield. Alphasine Cheryl

2 lots..........................26,74

Barnes, Johnny Robert

1 res., Hot...................172.50

Barnes, Juanita Braswell

1 res., 1 lot...................208.49

Barnes, Marlon Lee 8, Edith

1 lot...........................35 84

Barnes, Sallie Life Estate

'acre.........................22.88

Barnes. Willie Edward

1 res., 2 lots..................305.55

Barnhill, Alfred (heirs)

I lot  ...................H.99

Barnhill, Andrew 8,

1 res., 1 lot....................83.04

Barnhill, James Noward &

2 lots..........................45.68

Barnhill, Lonnie (heirs)

' res., 1 lot...................122.55

Barnhill. Robert Earl

1 res., 1 lot...................188.45

Barr, Jake

1 res., 1 lot....................45.48

Barrett, Annie Lee

2 lots..........................20 79

Barrett, Bernard &

'lot........................... 22 52

Barrett, Elsie P.

1 res., 1 lot...................131.80

Barrett, Floyd &

1 res , 2 lots..................191.89

Barrett. Jessie Lee

I res., 1 lot...................177.48

Barrett, John F (heirs)

I lot...........................10.53

Barrettr Joseph

1 res , Hot....................41,58

Barrett. Matthew &

I res.. Hot  ..................170.47

Barrett. Simon

1 res., 4 lots..................138.59

Barren, SInnleT

1 res., 1 acre.................178.38

Barrett, William Etta

1 lot..........................100.79

Barrett. Windsor 8i Nellie

1 res., 1 lot  .............102.03

Bartlett, Mary Forbas (heirs)

3 lots.........................174.04

Basnight, Thomas Gray Jr. (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot..............

Bass, Carolyn Meadows

Hot.....................

Batchelor, Dock DBA ... Battle, Charlie L.&

1 re 1 lot..............

248.99

. 37.07 .50,23

. 185.03

Batts. Johnnie Brown 234.88

Batts, Johnny Brown &

1 res., 2 acres................341.78

Beacham. David &

1 res , 1 lot...................189.54

Beacham. Richard Archable

1 res., 1 lot...................184.04

Beachum. William E.

2 lots.........................350 78

Beacon Piano Company Inc.

lacre........................995 17

Beddard, Myrtle Jones

ires . Hot....................92.05

Beddard, Woodrow Wilson

1 res, 1 lot....................80.82

Bell, Charles Linburgh Sr.

1 res., 2 lots..................160.48

Bell. Mary L. House

1 acre.........................24.95

Bell. Millard F.

1 res., 1 lot...................181.81

Bell. Ulysses Grant Jr. 8,

I lot........................... 72    90

Bell, Ulysses Grant Jr. &

Ires., 9 lots..................988.52

Bell, William Lindsey &

1 res , 1 lot......... 185.59

Belue. Ralph Daniel

1 lot..........................101    03

Benilett, Charles M. & Wf. Ann

1 res., 1 lot...................230.42

Bennett, Mary Lee Vines

1 res., 1 lot....................82.12

Benton. Elsie Harrington

1 res., 1 lot............"......181.29

Benton. Walter Green Jr

1 lot..........................19.77

Berry, Nancy Worsley

.91 acres.......................19.98

Bess, Carrie Umphrey

3 lots..........................40.32

Best, Leroy & Carrie

1 res .    3    lots..................183.38

Best. Mathew Jr.

Ires.. 1 lot.........*.........104.37

Best, Ruby Jean

1 lot............................1.13

Bethea. Eugene

1 res.,    1    lot...................172.91

Blackwell. Ella

1 lot..........................50    22

Blackwell. George Hughes &

1 res., 1 lot...............  190,48

Blackwell, Josephine Wilson 8<

1 lot...........................21    55

Blount, Cora Cobbs

1 res., 1 lot...................161.10

Blount. Daniel Lee

1 res , I lot................... 120    21

Blount, Lester Benjamin 8i

1 res., 1 lot....................60.88

Blount. Willie Jr.

I lot...........................48    48

Blow. Alton Ray &

1 res., 1 lot...................170.47

Blow, Larry & Agnes H.

1 res.. Hot....................81.58

Board Of Trans On Unlcorp

1 lot...........................59    40

Bob Barbour, Inc.

1 lot........................6,278.31

Bonner, Glenn Miller &

1 lot........ * ...............20    79

Boseman. Elsie Williams

1 lot......................33.72    Bal.

Bostic. Alfredo. Jr. &

1 res., 1 lot...................142.78

Bowen, Jack Hunter &

78 acres......................550.72

Bowen. Sidney Si

I lot...........................33    4C

Boyd. Charlie Ray

1 res., 1 lot...................187.48

Boyd. Donald Wlnford

1 res.. Hot...................112.97

Boyd. Elias &

1 res., 1 lot...................180.05

Boyd, Hyman Earl

1 res.. Hot...................211.32

Boyd. James Jr. &

1 res.. Hot...................183.67

Boykin. Mathew Thomas

1 lot :....................228    99

Boys Club Of Pitt Co. Inc

29 acres    92    68

Bradley. Franklin L. &

1 res.. 1 lot..................94.92

Bradshaw. Harvey Deaklns

18 acres......................883    69

Branch, Carlton Ray&

Hof.................... 14)    80

Branch, Earl & Wife

2 lots........ .................2 58

Branch, John A. (heirs)

1 res, 29 acres ...........492.93    Bal.

Braxton. Betty Smith

1 acre......................... 24    41

Braxton. Elbert Lee Jr,

I lot...........................20.52

Braxton, Jesse

1 lot...........................74.52

Braxton, Jesse Lee

1 acre........................187,80

Braxton. Truemiller Hines

I lot.............,..........,...11.48

Bray. Earl Neal &

1 res., 1 lot...................138.85

Brendia, Vernor M

Hot.......................   19.48

Brewington, Carrie

1 res., 1 lot................78.81    Bal.

Brewington, Maggie life est.

1 lot...........................79.00

Brewington. Raymond S,

Ires-.llof  ................139.17

Bright. Ralph &

1 res . 38 acres ...............645.58

Briley. Elbert 8.

1 lof .....................3.40

Briley. Johnnie Mae

I lot............................5.83

Briley. Joseph Oelandar

acres.................... 1.14

Briley, Kathryn Elaine

1 res.. Hot...................188.63

Briley. Marianna 8. "

1 res., 5 lots..................123.42

Briley. AAellssa (heirs)

I acre..........................7.81

Briley. Willie Elbert

1 res., Hot...................420.84

Brock, Mary Frances life est.

1 res., 1 lot...................139.74

Brock, Osiana

1 res., 1 lot....................77.33

Brooks, Cecelia P

1 lot..........................274.26

Brooks. Dale Dennis

1 lot.......................... 124 98

Brown & Drewery Co.

2 lots..........................25.95

Brown. David Earl

1 res.. Hot...................108.31

Brown, David F. 8.

3 acres..........  69.93

Brown, Delois Floyd

1 res., 1 lot...................195.70

Brown, Donald Wayne &

1 res.,1 lot........... 166.30

Brown, Donnie Ray

1 lot ............. ............2 43

Brown, Ellis

1 res., 1 lot...................125.84

Brown, Fornie (heirs)

1 lot...........................28.27

Brown, Geraldine

1 res.. I lot...................134.57

Brown, Harry M. Etal

1 lot...........................84 14

Brown, James Louis &

1 res . 1 lot...................2)3.59

Brown, John Arthur &

1 lot...........................88.18

Brown, Lee 8,

3 lots..........................33 64

Brown, Meanon Lee & Brenda

I res., 1 lot................10.80    Bal.

Brown, Mercedes

1 res., 1    lot...................167.37

Brown. Owen Wilson &

1 lot....... ..................278.75

Brown. Pearl le &

1 lot.......................... 122 24

Brown, Peggy Horton

1 res . 1 lot....................26 48

Brown. Rosa Mae

1 res . 1    lot................... 185 75

Brown, Willie Jamfs & Lena

1 res., 2 lots ............53.82

Bryan. Olin Lawrence8,

1 res., Hot...................288.78

Bryan, Robert Lee

Hot...........................63.80

Bryant, Fannie Mae

1 res., 1 lot....................58.20

Bryant, Mary

1 res., 1 lot....................90.88

Bryant, Oscar Clayton

1 res., 1 lot....................83 73

Buchanan. Stuart L. &

I lot..........................522.22

Buck, Allen McKennly

1 res., 2 lots..................374.85

Buck, Ervin & G.P. Haddock

33 acres......................208.88

Buck, Jo Ann Sutton 8i

1 res.. I lot...................243.25

Buck, Kenneth Ray

13 acres......................534.55

Buck, Vera Aden

1 res., 1 lot...................180,98

Buck, William M.Si

1 res.. Hot...................172.39

Buckman, Thomas F.

89 acres......................724.33

Bullock, George Richard &

1 res.. 1 lot...................213.19

Bullock. Jasper Ray 8i

1 lot..........................158 38

Bullock, Larry Ronald

1 lot...........................60.70

Bulluck. Robert Wendell

8 acres........................28 14

Bunch, JoelT.&Wf.

2 lots..........................92.19

Bunn, Jeanette

' 1 res., 1 lof................11.81    Bal.

Bunn, Robert Jr. 8,

I res ,    I    lot...................179.22

Bush, Bertha Stephenson

1 res.,    1    lot....................52.98

Butler. Nannie Gray

' lot....................  28    03

Butler. William A.

' lot...........................73.49

Bynum. Rutus Sr. 8,

2 lots..........................19    93

C/0 Tax Suparvlsor

I lot............................6    18

Cahoon, Frances Jones

1 lot..........................291 17

Caldwell, Iris B.

1 res., 1 lot...................358.01

Campbell. Rosa Maxine H.

' lot..........  5.82

Candlewick Inn Inc;

1 lot...........................47.52

Cannon, Fannie Mae

1 ret., 1 lot...................334.72

Cannon, Helen Bryant

1 lot..........................138.70

Cannon, Jamas Willis Jr &

1 ras., 1 lot...................205.11

Cannon, Ruby Streeter

1 res., 1 lot...................159.09

Cannon, William Ourwood Sr.

1 res., 2 lots..................299.43

Cape Fear Mobile Hm. Inc. &

' lot..........................303.88

Carawan, Ethel Andrews

1 res.. Ho)...................104.84

Carmon, Alfred & Essie

1 res., 1 acre.................108.68

Carmon. Bobby Earl &

1 res.. 1 lot...................172.90

Carmon, Bobby Gene &

1 res., 1 lot....................85.01

Carmon, Clarence Wilbert (heirs)

1 res., 1 lot.............,.....240    09

Carmon, Hilda Gray

1 res.. Hot   ................79.88

Carmon, Leamon

1 res.. 1 lot....................48.74

Carmon, Maltn Earl

1 res . 1 lot................... 120 79

Carmon, Morris H. S. Mary Q.

2 lots..........................80.91

Carmon, Robert Lee

1 res , 1 acre.................204.92

Carmon, Robert Lee

1 lot...........................12.10

Carmon. WillieMaa

I lot...........................68.73

Carmon, Yvonne

1 res . 1 lot................... 175 79

Carmon, Zeno (heirs)

1 res , 2 lots................ 125 38

Carney, Betty Pearl

1 lot...........................98 77

Carney, Clifton E . 8,

1 lot...........................44.98

Carney. Florence

I lot...........................14.15

Carney, James Lee

1 lot...........................22 09

Carney, Julius R.

1 res.. Mot...................238.40

Carney. Raymond Leon

1 lot...........................96.05

Carney. Willie Mae

I lot...........................13.84

Carney. Zebedee 8, Willie

1 res . 1 lot...................230.91

Carolina Model Hm. Corp

1 lot...........................88    78

Carr, Blount (heirs)

1 lot...........................18.20

Carr, Martha Mrs. (heirs)

5 acres........................40.50

Carr, Pauline Fleming (heirs)

1 lot...........................11.83

Carr. William George & Betty

1 lot............................2    32

Carroll, James Ernest

1 lot...........................19.60

Carroll. James Jr. 8,

1 lot...........................83.40

Carter, Hubert L. 8i

1 lot..........................250    07

Carter, Tommy

1 acre...........  81.33

Casper. Robert Alston &

I lot...........................14.18

Castelloe. Thomas E. &

121 acres........ 431.24

Cates. Carlton Thomas

6 lots..........................36.77

Caton, Harley Trovis

1 res . 2 lots..................124.84

Causey, John

1 lot..........................109.57

Causey. Johh L. Sr.

1 lof.......................... 197    28

Causey. John L. &

1 lot...........................81    54

Causey, John L. DBA

3 lots.........................584.48

Causey. John L. Sr.

4 lots. 1 acre................2,852.98

Causey. John Lewis Sr. &

33 lots. 14 acres 3.298.35 Bal.

Chamberlain, Melvin &

1 res.. 1    lot....................51    30

Chance. John Henry &

1 res.. Hot...................170.35

Chance. Junious Boston

1 res . I    lot................... 147    27

Chancey, Dora (heirs)

I lot...........................51.84

Chancey, Lucille C.8i I res.. 1 lot

.94.13

4.50

Chapin, Hiram Thompson Jr. &

1 res . 5 acres...........

Chapman, Claude (heirs)

1 lot.............................7.01

Chapman. Johnny Lee&

1 res., 1    lot............. 184.02

Chauncey. Harold Bryant 8<

1 lot, 10 acres.................j    79.28

Cherry, Billy Curtis &

I res . I    lot...................153.23

Cherry, Charles Rogers

4 lots..........................14 97

Cherry, Eleanor B.,

I lot...........................89 10

Cherry, Guilford (heirs)

8 acres........................93 80

Cherry, Jack Alton

1 res. 8 acres ..............5.84    Bal.

Cherry, Margaret Whitehurst

27 acres.......................64.39

Cherry. Oscar

1 res , 1 lot.....................9 33

Cherry, Thomas C.

1 res., 1 lot....................33.39

Cherry, William Stanley Jr.

1 lot. 1 acre...................800    57

Clark Snowden Properties

1 lot..........................414.34

Clark, Francis Skinner &

1 res , 6acres............170.41    Bal.

Clark. Gladys H.

1 res , 1 lot................... 137    45

Clark. James D.

3 lots  ........................20    08

Clark, Johnnie A 8t Wf. Sherry

71 acres......................408.57

Clark, Julius Jasper

1 res., 1 lot...................154.31

Clark, Katie Buck

1 acre.........................88    85

Clark, Louvenia Harrison

Hot    .......................8    37

Clark. Melvin Hardy 8.

1 res , 1 lot.................4.02    Bal.

Clark, Michael Gordon

1 lot..........................103.11

Clark, Robert Lloyd 8,

1 res.. 1 lof...................277 74

Clark, Rutus Lee

1 res., 3 lots..................128.80

Clark, Sandra Mobley

1 lot...........................17.84

Clark, Shadie Lee

Ires, 2 acres ...,.............157.90

Clark, Shirley Lou Glenn

1 res., 1 lot................... 227 97

Clark, Walter Lee Sr.

1 lot...........................84.83

Clark. William H.

1 lot..........................221.45

Clemmons. Blanche Freeman

1 lot...........................11 88

Clemons, Alvin &

I res.. Hot...................130.22

Clemons, Annie Barr

I lot...........................94.07

Clemons. Floyd Lee

I res., 2 lots..................138.98

Clemons. Helen

1 res., 1 lot....................18.04

Clemons. Roy Jr.

1 res., Hot...................200.89

Clemons. William Augusta

1 res 4 lots...................70.11

Clemons, William Augustus

1 lot...........................11 88

Clemons, William Augustus &

1 res., 1 lot....................21.71

Clifton, Harold D. &

1 lot........................   233.01

Clifton, RuthH.

1 res., 2 lots..................819.51

Cobb, Charles David Sr.

2 lots.........................384.17

Cobb, Nathan Redmond Jr.

Hot...........................20.47

Cobb. William Jeffrey

1 lot..........................173.10

Coggins, Lesley E. Jr. &

.1 res.. 1    lot...................151.78

Coggins, Lester & R.H.

8 acres........................14.28

Cole. Sidney

1 res.. 1 lot...................228.99

College View Cleaners-Laundry

1 lot..........................382.24

Commercial Printing Co.

2 lots.........................338.04

Commonwealth Mortgage Co.

1 lot, 3 acres...................97.52

Conway, John Allen Jr. &

3 lots.........................478 28

Conway, Mark A. &

1 res., 1 lot....................37.58

Cooper, Dennis Ray

Hot.............. 178.98

Cooper, Emma

Ires. 2 lots  .................112.81

Cooper. Ernest & Wf. Amanda

1 res., 1 lot...................188.21

Cooper, James Earl

1 lot.........................: 157.25

Cooper, Jasper Jr. &

1 res.. I lot...................172.87

Corbett, Caesar Jr. &

1 res., 1 lot...................180.92

Corbett, John L.

3 acres........................20.55

Corbett, John L.

'lot...........................59.40

Corbett. Simon

2 acres ................32.87

Corey, Henry D. 8>

1 res., Hot...................178.78

Corey, Herbert S. & Joann

2 lots.........................8M.55

Corey, Herbert S.

1 res.. Hot...................210.17

Corey, Jesse Ray &

1 res., Hot.......... ........179.20

Corey, Liddie E. (heirs)

1 res.. Hot................... 179 31

Corey, William Henry 1 lot.

.55.12 ! 59.24

Cottlngham, Wilmer Edward &

Hot...................

Cotton, William Earl &

I lot...........................72.79

Council, Roberta Barns

1 res., 1 lot....................39.29

Coward, Fred Lae &

Ires., 2 lots...................84.11

Coward, James Earl &

1 res., Hot...................250.35

Coward, Leon

1 res., 1 lot....................81.88

Coward, Linwood

1 res., 1 lot...................349.45

.Coward. Robert Earl

1 res, 3 lots...................207.47

Coward, Vickie Ann

1 res., 1 lot...................213.88

Coward. WillieClennel &

1 res., 1 lot...................188.93

Cox, Barbara

1 lot...........................27 00

Cox, Barbara Jean

1 ras., 1 lot...................128.01

Cox, Barbara Jean

1 res., 1 lot....................49.90

Cox, Edward Allen &

1 res., 1 lot...................333 54

Cox, Ernest Lee    ./

1 res., 1 jot...........  //143.80

Cox, Fred & Peggy Jean    '

1 res., 1 lot....................89.58'

Cox. J.M.

1 acre..........................8.91

Cox, Jamas E.

1 lot..........................20 79

Cox, Jeanette Gilley

1 res., 2    lots...................18.93

Cox, Jeannette G. Agency Inc.

1 lot...........................37 38

Cox, Joe life est.

ires., 1    lot, 3 acres............97.80

Cox. John Henry

1 res ,    1    lot...................183.71

Cox, John Lewis &

1 res .    1    lot...................118.50

Cox, Lester Jr.

1 res..    1    lot  ...............177.34

Cox, Luther Jr. 8, Minnie R

1 res..    1    lot................... 175 98

Cox, Luterh Junior

1 lot...........................31    62

Cox, Mae Belle T.

1 res..    1 lot................... 172    81

Cox. Mamie Lee Grimes (heirs)

1 res..    I lot....................87    91

Cox. Martha

2 acres..........................73.47

Cox. Marvin Lee 8,

Ires., 2 lots  ...............141.80

Cox, Nellie Sermon (heirs)

1 res..    1 lot....................92    12

Cox, William McKlnnley

I res., 1 lot....................183.73

Craddock, David Mellon 8i

1 lot..........................105.73

Craft, Dalton

2 lots..........................59    63

Craft, Major Hazzard Etals

51 acres......................537.04

Craft. Minnie Mills

1 res , 1 acre..................39.43

Crandall, James Lewis

1 res , Hot...................194.80

Crandall, Jimmy Lee &

1 res., 1 lot...................183.89

Crandall, Julius

1 lot...........................13    23

Crandell, Albert Jr. &

1 res , 1 lot................... 177 87

Crandol, James Bernard

1 res , 1 lot..................  114.37

Crandol, Reble Wilson

1 acre..........................9    18

Crandol, William Joshua &

1 res . 1 lot...................205 85

Crawford, Mary Sutton

1 res.. 1 lot................... 182 70

Crawford, William H.8i

1 res., 1 lot      ................248.58

Credle. Arnell &

I res., 2 lots...................99.55

Creech, C. Harold &

1 lof...........................47 52

Creech, Curtis Harold &

1 res., 1 lot...................385.21

Cyrus, William Thomas

1 res., 1 lot...................188.78

Daggs, Jamesetta

1 lot....................... 87 28

Dail. Dennis Ray &

1 lot...........................34 59

Dail. Harold Lee

1 res.. 1 lot...................500 91

Dail, Ralph E

1 lot..........................112.70

Daniel Orywall & Paint, Inc.

1 lot..........................390 88

Daniel. Frederick E. 8, Gayle

1 res., 1 lot  ..................580.34

Daniels. Ashley (heirs)

1 lot...........................10 10

Daniels, Carolina

1 lot...........................37 82

Daniels, Clifton Albert &

1 res , 1 lot................42    05 Bal

Daniels. Edgar Lee 8i Mary Lee

1 res., 1 lot....................98.53

Daniels, Emma Mae

1 res . 1    lot.................... 32    89

Daniels. Iris Jean Patrick

1 lot...........................40.57

Daniels, James Curtis 8i

1 res., 1    lot.................. 152    80

Daniels, James Edward

1 lot...........................54    05

Daniels. James Jr. &

1 lot...........................17    82

Daniels. Jesse Calvin (heirs)

2 lots  .......... 18    83

Daniels. Joe

1 res., 4    lots..................217    33

Daniels. John Henry

1 lot..........................112    52

Daniels. John W.

1 lot.............................8    32

Daniels, Johnnie L. 8,

1 res..    1    lot...................170.81

Daniels, Johnnie Ray 8i

1 res.,    1    lot................... 178 75

Daniels, Lendel &

1 res .    1    lot...................119.79

Daniels, Linwood Ray

1 res.,    1    lot...................198.47

Daniels, Mary Joyce

1 lot..........................119.87

Daniels, Odell

I res., 1 lot...................182.78

Daniels, Roy Lee& Ruebener

I res .    1    lot................... 132 73

Daniels, Roy Lee & Wf Annie

1 res , 1 lot....................83.08

Daniels. Spencer

1 lot.....................  190.97

Daniels, Warren Gatlin &

1 res . 1 lot...................182.45

Daniels, Will (heirs)

2 acres.........................4.75

Daniels, Willie Howard &

1 res., 1 lot...................111.24

Oansey, W.E. Jr.

10 acres......................475.20

Darden, Henry Lee

1 res., 8 acres.............81.84    BaL

Darden, Kelly Lee

1 lot.......................... 108    00

Darden, Pattie L

2 lots..........................14    25

Darden. Sadie

1 res., 1 lot...................138.88

Darr, Sheila J.

1 res . 1 lot................... 202    05

Daughtry, Alton G.

1 lot...........................39.15

Davenport, G.A. Si

1 lot...........................19.80

Davenport. Walter Ray &

I lot..........................118.18

Davenport, Walter Ray

I lot........................   327    29

Davis, Elijah & Esthar D.-

12 acres.......................14.28

Davis, James Ambler &

1 lot...........................17    82

Davis, Richard J. &

1 res., 1    lot...................180.19

Davis, Rudolph Si Mandy

1 res., 1    lot...................153.48

Dawson. Johnnie Mae

1 res., 1 lot.................... 73    28

Dickens. Charles M. &

2 lots..........................18    74

Dickens, Jermore

1 lot............................7.72

Dickens. Jerome 8

1 lot..........................248 86

Dickerson, James Perry

1 res., 1    lot...................198.84

Dickerson, Sellers Crisp

1 res , 1    lot...................199.27

Dickerson, Timothy Allen &

1 res., 1    lot...................288.88

Dixon, Annul & Novella

1 res., 1    lot...................124.88

Dixon, David & Mildred

SO acres......................354.71

Dixon, Dirk S. 8

2 lots.........................274 32

Dixon. Hannah (heirs)

98 acres......................503.99

Dixon. Henry L. 8

1 res.. 1 lot...................179.11

Dixon, Jimmy Ray 8

1 res., 1 lot...................159.52

Dixon, Joyce Gray

1 res., 1 lot...................103.84

Dixon, Kirby Stanley

1 res.. Hot...................294.54

Dixon. Larry Jr.

1 res., 1 lot...................327.47

Dixon. Leslie Thomas

15 acres.......................57.92

Dixon. Leslie Thomas

3 acres....................  2.43

Dixon, Leslie Thomas

8 acres.......................283.74

Olxon, Leslie Thomas

1 res., 2    lots,    IS acres.........744.87

Dixon, Leslie Thomas

1 lot...........................93    80

Dixon, Leslie Thomas 8

1 lot.......................... 159    41

Dixon, Lloyd Scott 8

1 lot....................  24    95

Dixon. Lloyd Scott Jr.

1 res., 1    lot,    3acres..........975.85

Dixon. Mark V.

' lot...........................25.43

Dixon, Roy W. And Joyce F.

31 Lots.......................177.82

Dixon, Tony Earl 8

'lot...........................58.35

Dixon. William 8

1 lot............................3,78

Dixon, Wlllle (heirst

1 lot..............................33

Donaldson, Jamas B 8

1 lot...........................17.82

Donaldson, James Bradley

1 res., 1 lot...................212.93

Donaldson, John (heirs)

' lot...........................51.84

Donaldson, William Vann 8

1 res., 1 lot...................180.73

Dozier, Casper Edwards 8

I ras., 1 lot...................453.74

Drake, Burtis Gana 8

I res., 2 lots..................219.98

Drewery, Oollle Shine 8

1 res., 1 lot....................88.83

Dudley. Alma A (hairs)

4 acres.........................2.70

Dudley. Charlie

1 lot...........................27.00

Dukes, Annie Mae

20 acres......................538.84

Dunn, Ernest Beasley 8

1 lot..........................152.50

Dupree, Connie AAack 8

1 res., 1 lot....................98 13

Dupree, Eva

Hot..........................115.71

Eakes, Edward Lae Jr. 8

1 res., 1 lot...................158.41

Eakes, Jamas H. 8

1 res., 1 lot...................194.82

Eakes, William Robert

1 lot.......................... 120 76

E astwood, James E Ibert    

Ires., 2 acres.............28.83    Bal.

Eastwood, Joseph F.

1 ras., 1 lot...................180.94

Eaton, Anna (hairs)

1 res , 2 lots..................124.35

Ebron. BllllaT.8

1 lot...........................88.87

Ebron, Howard Earl 8

2acras.......................175.11

Ebron, Jamas Henry 8

1 res., 2 lots..................228.31

Ebron, Johnny

Hot...........................14.38

Ebron, Lillie Bea

1 lot...........................14.73

Ebron, Lucy (hairs)

2 lots.......................... 37 42

Ebron, Margie P.

1 res.. 1 lot...................177.18

Ebron, Martha (heirs)

1 lot...........................10.57

Ebron. Mary Emma

1 res., 1 lot................79.18    Bal

Ebron, Mary Moore Etal

I lot........................... 50 37

Edmondson. J J.

1 lot...........................35 84

Edwards, Danny Russel

) acre.......................'. 110 94

Edwards, Ella Grimes

1 res    ,    1 lot....................98 10

Edwards. Ella Mae P. 8 Virginia

1 lot............................8 42

Edwards. Ernest Cardwell 8

1 lot...........................88 16

Edwards, Eula Mae 8 Peggy

1 res    .    1 lot....................73.40

Edwards. George 8

1 res.. 1 lot...................135.77

Edwards. Henry 8 Wt. Alma

1 res., 1 lot................... 124 98

Edwards. Israel H. 8

1 res., 3 acres ...............259.80

Edwards, James Frank 8

1 res., 1 lot...................139.22

Edwards. Jimmy Arnold 8

1 res., 1 lot...................228.09

Edwards. Kyle...............540 59

Edwards. Laura Williams

1 res , 1 lot...................355.99

Edwards, Linwood

1 res, 88 acres............... 705.42

Edwards. Louis Albert

1 res 2 lots..................161 29

Edwards. Louis Levi 8

1 res., 1 lot...................207 44

Edwards. Pauline

1 lot..................... 155 74

Edwards. Robert Floyd 8

1 res , 1 lot...................135.99

Edwards. Rudell Mills

2 acres....................,...28.09

Edwards. S. M. Jr.

7 acres........................28.02

Edwards, Shirley Jean 8

1 res., 1 lot................... 159 07

Edwards, Thomas Lee

1 res . 1 lot................... 178 48

Edwards. Velorls Jean

1 lot.......................... 197 59

Edwrds. Vernon Scott

2 acres.......................112.43

Edwards. Wilbert 8 Mattie

1 res , 2 lots..................153.03

Edwards. William 8

1 res . 3 lots..................133.87

Edwards, William T.

1 lot..........................145.28

Edwards. William Thomas

1 rts., 1 lot................... 182 80

Edwards. William Thomas8

1 lot.................

Elbert, William Earl

1 res.. 1 lot..........

E Iks. Alvin Leroy 8 wf

89 acres...........

Elks. Casper H 8 27 acres

Elks. Casper Ham

1 res.,    1 lot................... 143    24

Elks. Donna Olxon

1 res    1 lot................... 194    93

Elks. Fredrick Allen8

1 lot...........................80 32

Ellison, Mack (heirs)

10 acres.......................23.78

Ennette. Herman (heirs)

I lot...........................54    00

Ennis. William Thomas

1 res .    1 lot............... 106    95

Ervin, Sybil P

2 lots...........................I    93

Evans, Caroline (heirs)

1 res . 1 lot..................18.48

Evans. H B (heirs)

1 lot.........................24    95

Evans. Herman

1 res . 1 acre................. 182    87

Evans. James Willie

1 lot...........................50    31

Evans. The Co. Of Gviile Inc.

1 res., 1 lot................... 27    00

Evans, William Arthur Jr 8

1 res . I lot............ 189.18

Everett, James Jr.

1 res , 1 lot...................158    13

Everett. Julia N.

1 lot...........................19    78

Everett, Julia Nell Whitehurst

185 acres.................... 789    91

Everett, Julia Nell Whitehurst

2 lots................... 94    23

Everette, Joseph Robert 8

1 res . 1 lot.........   178    91

Farmer, Ernest Jr. 8

1 res ,    1    lot................... 178 48

Farmer. James Harvey 8

1 res..    I    lot...................11) 48

Farmer, Joe Nathan 8

1 res..    1    lot...................113.71

Fields. Claude 8

1 lot........................  .24.33

Fields. Mary (heirs)    *

.5.17

1 lot.

Filmore, William Augusta

1 res , 1    lot...................152.89

Flanagan, Charlotte

1 lot.......................  10.15

Flanagan. Charlotte Elizabath

I lot..........................10.34

Flanagan. Jerry

1 lot...........................27.45

Fleming. Curtis Edward 8

1 lot................  137.08

Fleming. Elisha

1 res., 14 acres.............. 148 53

Fleming, J, Russell8

1 res.. 1    lot...................441.23

Fleming. Willie Garland

1 res., I    acre................152.43

Floyd, Pauline 8 Henry Tucker

47 28

1 lot.

Forbes, C. Herber (heirs)

Sacres....................

Forbes. Lennie 8

1 res., 1 lot................

Forbes, Sam Jr 8 Helen

1 res., 1 lot................

Forehand, Ernest Roy 8

1 res., 1 lot................

Foreman. Ben Jr. 8

1 res.. 1 lot................

Forrest. James Harold 8

1 res., 1 lot................

Forrest, James Harold 8

1 res.. Hot................

Foskey. Henry Thomas 8

1 res.. 4 acres.............

Fox, Ann L. Atkinson

1 res., 1 lot................

Franks, Eva

1 res., Hot................

Freeman, Marion Augusta

1 res., 4 lots   .............

Freeman, Mary

1 lot.......................

Friend. William E 8

1 res.. Hot  ........

Furman, John Harlie Jr 8

1 lot.......................

Gallman. James E Jr 8

1 res., 1 lot...................194.39

Garcia. Smokey

1 lot.........................

Gardner. Elizabeth Harris 8

I lot  ................

Gardner, Henry Lee 8 Hazel

1 res., 3 acres...............

Gardner. Jesse Clarence

I res., 1 lot..................

Garner, Geneva Ann S.

1 res., 13 acres..............

Garrett, Cornelius 8 Mary

1 res., Hot..................

Garrett, Denison 0.8

1 res.. 3 lots.................

Garrett, Denison Oaver Jr 8

Hot.........................

Gaskins, Charles H 8

I lot. 37 acres............

Gaskins. Charles Harper

1 res , 1 lot..................

Gatlin, James etal 84 acres.

85.34 .182.40

81.24

224.50

.172.98 27 97

222.03 . 140.99

.201.51

.42.81

. 105.38 . 11.77

388.20 . 17.82

.19,80 5 23

78.73

188.28

.271.87

.119.89

217.50

.95.09

973 08 .328 21

Green, Roosevelt 8

1 res., 1 lof....................62    01

Greene, Allie B.

1 res., 1    lot...................34.98

Greene. Donald Lindsey

Hot...........................52.29

Greene, Peggy Brown

1 lot..........................34    81

Greene, William Frank etal

1 res.. 1    lot...................174.10

Greenville Church Of God

1 lot, 4 acres..................819.54

Greenville Health 8

8 lots....................... 1,059.50

Grier, John Davidson 8

1 res., 5 lots.................702.94

Griffin, J.C 8

1 lot...........................11.04

Griggs, Douglas 8 wf Camille J

1 res . 1    lot....................42    69

Griggs. Lillie Belle life est

1 res.. 1 lot....................18.21

Grimes, Annie Ruth

1 res.. Hot...................18 39

Grimes, Ellsworth, Jr.

1 res., 1 lot...................154.33

Grimes, Gladys

I res . 1 lot....................68.82

Grimes. James Earl

1 lot............J    .      13.99

Grimes, Jessie Lee

I res .    1 lot....................79    89

Grimes, Katie life estate

1 res .    1 lot....................55    58

Grimes, Lee Ernest 8

I res . 2 lots..................194.90

Grimes. Lee Ernest 8

1 lot........................... 32 40

Grimes, Mary

3 acres........................10    89

Grimes. Oscar Jr. 8

1 res .    1 lot................... 188    57

Grimes, Robert (heirs)

2 lots..........................2).44

Grimes. William O

1 res., 1    lot...................)73 24

Gross. Allegra Grimes

1 lot.......................... 142    98

Guinn, Ernest B Jr

1 lot.........................88    69

Gurganus, Deborah P

1 res.. 1    lot..................)82 37

Gurganus. Robert A. 8

1 res . 1    lot...................197.88

Gutierrez, Mario Oscar

2 lots........................ 332.04

Gutierrez. Mario Oscar

1 res., )    lot................. 380 05

1)2.38

200.18 68 31

105 99 9 )8

270 73 49 13

17 82 588 08

20 20 487 83

245 97

268 88 .124.88

70.50 . 13.07

.123.80

94.21

11.17

180.45 . 70.84

330.78 . 157.05

-lit

............. 119 42

Gatlin, James H. 8 wf Geneva T

1 res., 1 lot...................127.15

Gatlin, Josephine 8    ,

5 acres........................44    55

Gatlin. Nora Hawkins

1 res., 1 lot    . . ................. 224.74

Gatlin, Wilton Lee 8

1 res , 4 lots..................231 29

Gay. David Clinton

1 res., 1 lot................... 132 88

Gay, Robert (hairs)

1 res., 1 lot...................182.38

Gentile, Carol Lee

2 lots......................... 174 28

German, Lynnon Novella

1 lot  ......................4.75

Gerry, Douglas Steven 8

1 lot..........................240    38

Ghorashi, Hamid Moayed 8

1 res., 2 lots..................527    90

, Gilbert, Robert Jackson 8 Joan

1 lot..........................128.85

Gillikin, JuneW.

1 lot...........................28.57

Glast. James L

I res.. Hot................94    80 Bal

Glisson. Richard F

1 lot..............  109    48

Glisson. Richard Fernando

1 res.. 1 lot................... 322.13

Glisson. Richard Fernando8

25 acres......................171    18

Goddard. William Jr.

1 res., 1 lot...............118.29 Bal.

Godette, Joseph Ltroy 8

I res., 1 lot ...........118.28

Godley, AAae Etta P

1 lot..........................180.33

Godwin, Jamas Patrick 8

1 lot...........................84.59

Golette. Noah

Hot...........................14.85

Gordon, Horace 8 Cherry, Barne'

2 acres........................51.01

Gorham. George Washington

1 res., 1    lot....................71.98

Grady, Esthar Carr 8 atals

2 lots..........................58.49

Grady, Raymond 8 Esther

1 lot...........................21    44

Graham, Tanya L.

1 res., 1    lot...................197.40

Graham. Wlllle Elbert Jr 8

I res., 1    lot...................180.77

Grant, Reuben Craig 8

1 ras., Hot...................185.19

Gray, Lillian (hairs)

1 lot...........................13.50

Gray, Zeno Jr. (heirs)

1 ras., 1 lot....................81.22

Groan. Curtis Earl 8

1 ras , I lot..............       178    84

Graan, Hattie (heirs)

1 res., 2 lots...................50    33

Green, Linwood 8 Lina

1 res , 4 lots..................201.30

Green, AAorrls Junior 8 wf

Hot...........................88.31

Graan, Richard 8

1 ras., 2 lots..................233.95

Graan, Robart L.

I ras., 1 lot...................191.09    i

Haddock. BurniceEverette

I lot........................

Haddock, David Talmadge

I res., 1 lot..................

Haddock. Donnie Dean Haddock, Frank James

1 lot.........................

Haddock, Jesse David

) lof........................

Haddock, Jimmie Dalton

1 res , ) lot.................

Haddock, Jimmy Charles 8

1 res.. 1 lot.................

Haddock. AAaybelle Haddock

1 res , 155 acres..........2)5 95 Bal

Haddock, Ricky 8

) lot.......................

Haddock. Woodrow 8

9 acres.....................

Hagan, Charles Hubert

1 lot........................

Hagan, Charles Hubert Jr

1 res'.; 1 lot.................

Hagan. Michael

1 lot........................

Hamlll, William N. 8

1 res . )lot................

Hammond. David S. 8

1 res . 2 lots................

Hammond, Harvey Lee

I res . 1 lot.................

Hammond, Laforrest Evnas

) lot........................

Hannah. Henry 8

4 acres....................

Hannah. Jasper Ray 8

Ires. 2 lots................

Hannah. Ray...............

Hansley. Jasse James 8

1 res . 1 lot.................

Hardee. Charlie (heirs)

98 acres....................

Hardee. Claude Robert

1 res . 1 lot...............

Hardee. Claude Robert.....

Hardee. Dennis Wayne 8 Barbara

1 res . 1 acre................404.01

Hardee. Earl Webster

1 res.. 1 lot..................335 49

Hardee, Harry A 8

)4 acres ..............218 22

Hardee, Henry Earl

1 res . 1 lot ...........210 17

Hardee, Josephine

1 acre........................ 32    83

Hardee, Queente

I res.. 1 lot.................... 35    88

Hardee, Ruth Mae life estate

1 lot, 1 acre............... 53    35 Bal.

Hardee, Tony Alan...........100.21

Harding. Clara

1 res., 1 lot................... 123 28

Hardison. Lena Bell

1 lot, 2 acres...................91.53

Hardison, William 8 Lena Bell

1 res., 1    lot.................. 149    88

Hardy. Fonnie8 Eddie

1 res., 1 lot....................98.30

Hardy. Helen

1 lot...........................24    03

Hardy. Jasper Lee

1 lot............................5.52

Hardy, John David

1 acre.........................26.02

Hardy, Mary Jane

1 res , 1 lot....................71 55

Hardy. Norman Lee

1 res . 1    lot................... 154    47

Hardy. Sudle Mae

I res . 1    lot................... 182    98

Hardy. William Earl

1 res . 1 lot....................43.25

Hardy, Wlllle J

1 res.. 1 lot....................42.59

Hardy, Willie J. Jr.

1 res., 1 lot  .....,............ 159 38

Hardy. Willie Jr. 8

2 lots..........................20.80

Harper, Annie S.

1 lot...........................91 74

Harper, Emma Southerland

1 res .    1    lof...................139.99

Harper, Louis Linde

1 res., 1 lot....................65.72

Harper, Louis Linde 8

2 lots.........................194.51

Harrell, Wanda Leonard

1 res.,    1    lot...................208 81

Harrington, Frank Charles

2 lots, 1 acre................. 92.94

Harrington, Frank Charles Jr

1 lot..........................143 35

Harris, Addle Smith (heirs)

9 acres........................70 69

Harris, Alton Thomas

1 res.,    1    lot..................205.58

Harris, Carl Edward

1 res.,    1 lot..................214 97

Harris. Carl Edward

1 lot...........................14    85

Harris, Charles Earl

1 lot...........................41.25

Harris. Clinton A 8

1 res..    58 acres...............930    72

Harris, Delores Faye

1 res., 1 lot................... 84.05

Harris, Eveline Murphy

1 res..    1 lot................. 218    02

Harris, J. W.

1 lot..........................108.41

Harris. Janie Garris ,

1 res . 1 lot....................188.84

Harris, Jarvis Edgar 8

1 res . 8 lots..................584.32

Harris, John E.

1 res..    1 lot...................190    53

Harris, John Louis 8

2 lots............  19.08

Harris. John Louis 8

1 res., 1 lot...................328.90

Harris. Julius C. 8

1 res . 1 lot...................208.11

I Harris, Lymon Earl

' 1 res:.    1 lot...................141    10

Harris. Milton Ray

1 res., 1 lot.........1..........41.41

Harris, Ray

1 lot...........................21    38

Harris. Ronald Leon life est.

1 res., 1 lot...................152.85

Harris, Thelma Smith '

1 lot............................5    17

Harris, Thomas Earl

1 res , 1 lot...................117 44

Harris, Wilber Floyd.........142.02

Harris, Wilber Floyd

51 acres......................258.23

Hartmann, Robert M. 8

1 res., 1 lot...................351.52

Hathaway, Joseph Edward

1 res , 1 lot...................445    98

Hawkins. James Leo

6 lots.........................828.45

Hawkins, James Leo

1 lot...........................97    20

Hawkins, Jamas Leo 8

1 lot..........................126.52

Hawkins. Norman

1 res.. I lot....................48.98

Hawkins. Sidney R 8 Clara B

1 res., 1 lot................... 287.00

Hayes. Annie Mae

3 acres........................21    14

Hayes, Annie Mae

1 lot...........................14.85

Hazelton, Jeffrey H.

1 lot..........................58 05

Hazelton, Jeffrey Howard

19 acres......................194.45

Hazelton, Jeffrey Howard 8

1 res., 1 lot...................372.80

Heath, EmmaG.

1 res., 1 lof...................184.48

Heath. Peggy E.

1 res., 1 lot...................200.88

Helmich, Gertrude A.

1 lot...........................41.59

Hemby, Carrie (heirs)

1 res.,    1    lot....................94.77

Hemby, Luke Columbus

1 res.,    1    lot...................133.55

Hemby, Robert

) lot...........................58.81

Hemby, Wlllls (heirs)

1 res.,    1    lot....................23.92

Herring, Charles Force 8 Mamie

1 lot...........................89 00

Higdon, James Bryon

1 res., 1 lot...................280.05

Higgins, James Leslie

1 lot...........................35.84

Higgins, Kathryn Ballanger

1 res., 1 lot...................193.9)

HIghsmlth, Roosevelt

2 lots..........................30 5)

HIghsmlth, Roosevelt &

2 lots..........................52.55

HIghsmlth, Roosevelt8 wf

2 lots......................... 138.57.

Hight, Joseph Randal 8

1 res., 1 lot...................189.01

Hignite Builders





I lot

Hill, Dorothy Williams I res .Hot

Hill. Gertrude L lifeest I lot

Hill, Sarah Faye T &

I res , I lot Hines, Bobby &

I res , I lot

Hines, l2el & Doris Forbes

1 res Hot

Hines. Jeffrey Allen

I res . I lot

Hines, Olivia Iheirs)

9 acres

Hines. Robert &

I res , 2 lots Hines. Ronald Frizzell 1 res Hot Hoggard, Robert A

I res .Hot .........

Holland, Glenda W I res Hot Holley, Anderson &

1 res Hot Holliday, Thelma A

2 lots

Hollis, John Henry & Willie M 1 res .Hot Holt Beverly D I lot

Hooker, Edward Earl 8. Dorothy

57 19

185 14

180 67 248 62

Knox.-Darrell Knooc, Mary Elizabeth I res . 1 lot Knox. Naaman

I res . 93 acres..........

Knox, Pauline Yeafes

1 res . Hoi

Knox, Troy (heirs)

1 res . I lot...........

Lancaster. Garland M Jr. I res , I lot

Lancaster. Garland Mayhugh &

218 39

400 63

I res , 1 lot

Hooker, JesseC & Ella E I res 2 lots Hooks. Ada Barrett I res . 7 lots .

Hopkins, Albert Ray 8.

I res I lot, 2 acres    149    63    Bal

Hopkins, Elizabeth Atkinson I res , I lot    145.04

Hopkins James Milton I res . ) lot    64    94

Hopkins Nelson Thomas Hot    116    05

Hopkins. Walter N 8 acres    26    79

Horne David E 8. Mary Alma I res .    Hot    334    16

Horne John 8

I res .    I lot    157    19

Horne Wilbert &

I res .Hot    8    62 Bal

Horton Stalvey Milton 8.

1 res .    1 lot    180    27    I

House Cassie Mae Adams    '

2 lots    86    92

House George Lee Jr

I res ,    I lot    205    05    |

House Norman

I res , Hot    *    '. 118 32    I

House    Norman    53    9)    |

Housing Services Corporation 12    42    |

Howard. Billie Olin 8    '

1 res .    1 lot    163    78    I

Howard Bobby Gene I res ,    2 lots    280    87

Howard, Charies Jr    |

I lot    161    31    i

Howard, James

I res .    I lot    156    39

I res., I lot Lang. David Earl

1 res , I lot...............

Lang, Willie Ray 8 Sarah

I res , 2 lots

Langley. Addie Moore 1 res . I lot Langley. Alonza

1 res , Hot ..........

Langley, Carl Walker etal

3 lots..............

Langley, Ernestine Carr 8 I res , Hot Langley, James D &

I lot.................

Langley. John H (heirs)

) lot...................

Langley. John (heirs)

I lot    ..........

Langley, Rosena (heirs)

1 res , I lot

Langley. S E (heirs)

I lot

Langley, Teanor Icybell 60 acres

Langley, Tener Belle

I lot...............

Lassiter, Gloria Nobles

I res.. Hot...............

Lassiter, Ronald A Jr 8 I res , 28 acres Lassiter, Ronald Allen I res . 54 acres

Lassiter. Ronald Allen Jr 1 acre

Laughinghouse. Edward Earl Hot

Laughinghouse. Emanuel I res Hot

Lea, Joyce    

1 lot

Ledbetter, Gorman Walter Jr

2 lots

Ledbetter, Russell Hilton I acre

Lee. Dolores Reese (heirs)

Hoi

Lee, James, W 8

3 lots

Lee. Johnnie (heirs)

I lo)

Leggett, John Charles 8 I res I lot

Leverton, W B 8 wf SallieC TO acres    2.740    50

Lewis Elizatieth Elfreeta (heir)

160 69 , 160 II

18 14

188 08

178.26

162.87

34.34

48 76

29.70 3) 97

10.45 ' 193 57

.72.82

119.77

151 03

689 50

705 12 142 12

103 84 80 66

68 63 85 48

18 71 28 13

46 82 199 04

I lot

Lewis, J B Jr 1 acre

149 33

222 05

83 65 82 10

119 32

24 95 10,75

I res 3 lots

Jenkins Joyce Marvalene I res , 1 lot

Jennette Waller G 8 I res 5 acres Johnson Annie Mae G 8 I res . 1 lot

Johnson Annie R 8 Jessie (heir)

I res . I lot Johnson H S Jr'

I lot

Johnson, Jesse A (heir)

Hot ,

Johnson. Lei (a E I lot    15    39

Johnson, Sterling

Ires, Hot    15    15

Johnson. Wanda Carol Phillips

1 res , Hot...... 236    01

Jones, Audrey J 8 Hus Beverly

2 lots    23    98

Jones, Cedric Foster

Ires, Hot .    103    57

Jones, David W 8

1 res . Hot ,    206.02

Jones. Harold E 8

1 lot.................. 39    53

Jones. Hugh S (heirs)

6 acres    39.74

Jones. Louise 8

2 lots    4.32 Jones Mary F

3lots    29    II

Jones, Noah Jr

Ires., )6 acres    522    09

Jones, Nora (heirs)

66 acres    470    45

Jones Paul Gibson 8 I res , 2 lots    37,9    07

Jones Randy 8

1 res , 1 lot    3[1    52

Jones, Samuel

I res , Hot    239    72

Jones W R Sr 8

1 res (lot    107    30

Jones Willie Lester 8 Mavis 1 rest, Hot ,    ,    82,18

Jordan, Amos Henry 1118

1 lot    40 99 Jordan, Caroll Jr 8

2 acres    81.65 Jordan. Caroll Watson

1 res , Hot, 3 acres    522.44

Jordan, Caroll Watson Jr (lot    113 13

Jordan, Eugene (heirs)

17 acres    158.76

Jordan, Sam Gregory 8

1 res , Hot    ........ 263 64

Joyner, Isaac Jr

Ires , Hot ............ 196 84

Joyner, Jacqueline

Hot    ...........35,37

Joyner, James B 8

Hot    28.51

Joyner, Linda Delaine

I res , Hot     173.75

Joyner, Lindburgh

I res. Hot...... ...... 169 68

Joyner, Lindburgh 8 Martha I lot    19 87

Joyner, Lindburgh 8 Martha

I lot.....................423 28

Joyner, Mary E lla

1 res , 1 lot .............181 84

Keaton, David Thomas 8

IS acres ............... 54.18

Keeter. Milton Bruce 8

2 lots    58.16 Kelly, ElizabethM

I res., I lot    273.70

Kennedy, Phyl W 8 1 res . I lot    195 04

Kennedy, Samuel 8 Mary 1 res I lot    147 79

Kerwin, Jeije 8

I res .    1 lot ........ .......121    41

Keyes, Donnie R 8

I res.,    1 lot    187    76

King, Calvin McKinley 8

Ires . 2acres    78.99

King, Ida Bell

1 res .    1 lot    106    44

King, Jimmy Bryant 8 1 res .    Hot    202    41

King, Nellie Victoria 8

1 res., 1 lot................61.70

King. Warren (heirs)

Ires, Hot ...............5106

King, Windsor (heirs)

1 acre  ............... ., . 2 67

Kirkland. William Smith

I lot........  53.77

Kite, Flora Azalee

1 lot....................13 85

Kite, Floyd G 8 wt. Sue N 1 res., I lot     327 91

Kite, Robert Lee

2acres........................Ill 08

Knight, Edward S 8

1 res,, 2 lots................183.08

Knight, Henry Jr

Hot .......................99.08

Knight, O. D 8

1 res.. I lot................ 140 70

Knott, Carl Thomas 8

2 lots .. ..................., 635.26

Howard. Jimmy Lee 8

Lite Homes Inc

1 res , Hot

191 94

2 lots

30 30

Howard. Lenora Moore

1

Lincoln, Catherleen Coward

1 res . 1 lot ,

60 03 1

1 res , 1 lol

80 33

Howard Lester Jr

Little Mint, Inc

1 res , 1 lot

187 20 !

Hot

1,337 23

Howard. Oleon Mane

1

Little. Andrew

1 res . 1 lot

93 35 :

1 lot

11.53

Howard Walter 8

Little. Billie

1 res , 1 acre

222 48

1 res . 3 acres

21 71

Howell, Seaton Ward

1

Little. Billie 8 wf Lottie

1 res .Hot

139 83

1 lot

6) 13

Hudson, Linwood Fred Sr

Little, Carrold S 8

1 res 34 acres

908 94

1 lot

1485

Hughes Ronald Alton 8

Little. Dave Jr

152 20

1 res .Hot

9 95

Little, Dave Jr 8

Huneycutt, Florence Meggs

1 res., 1 lot

17)17 1

Hot. , ,

126 31

Little Debra N

1

Hunt William carl 8 Lena W

1 res , Hot

172.74

1 res Hot

100 81

Little, Elizabeth'

Hurst Concrete Products Co

1 lot .

20 79

Inc .

346,55

Little, Ernest

Hurst, Billy A

2 lots......

168 10

59 acres '

286 25 ,

Little. Ernest8

Hurst Billy Allen

5 lots

51 19

1 lot

267 14

Little, Hattie

1

HursI Billy Allen 8

1 lot

1069

1 res Hot

741 31

Little Jeremiah Sr

Hyman Joe Freeman

1 res Hot

1I75 1

1 res 2 lots

186 21 !

Little, Linwood Earl

Ipock William H Jr

1 lot ......

20-79 1

1 lot

268 22

Little, Lydia

1

Irvin, Bobby Ladon

1 res Hot

96 41 Bal

1 lot

136 68

Little, Mayo Andrew 8

Ivey Marvin F 8

1 res , 1 lot

3 22

1 acre

408 73

Little Orlanda 8 Geraldine H

Ivey. Marvin Franklin 8

1 res . 1 lot

19) 80

12 acres

69 88

Little, Tommie L Builders, Inc

J J Mobile Homes

13 lots

2,289 81

1 lot

12 60

Little. Tommie L

Jackson, Bobby R 8

2 lots

185 98

1 res . 1 lot

185 24

Little, Tommie L 8

Jackson. Elmer Wayne

1 lot

882 4) 1

1 res Hot

139 90

Little, Tommie L Builders Inc

Jackson, John R

2 res . 4 lots

786 29

Hot

152 28

Little, Tommie L Builders Inc

Jackson, John R

1 lot

292 25

5 acres

89 10

Little, Tommie L Builders Inc

Jackson, John R

Hot

424 49

I lot

21 60

Littleton, Thomas T

Jackson. Mildred Haddock

1 res , 1 lot

181 94

1 lot

235 22

Lloyd. Ada Evans

James, Alston Sway

1 lot

9 18

1 res .Hot .

166 95

Lloyd, Bobby Kay

James. Delha Ross

1 lot ........

260.26

1 res 1 lot

3 60

Lloyd. R Harvey

James. George Beniamin

1 res , 13 acres

430 61

1 res .Hot

223 43

Lloyd, Reuel H 8 Virginia

James, Novella Powell

Hot

254 82 ;

1 res , 1 lot 2 56 Bal

Lockamy, Linwood James 8 ;

James. Thomas Curtis 8

1 res . 6 lots

.47.57 1

1 res . Hot . 81 66 Bal

, Locke, Dorothy M

James, Van Calvin

1 res . 1 lot........

199 75

1 res Hot

114.96

Long, Essex (heirs)

James. Van Calvin Bulldozier

6 24

1 lot ......

.....11 94

Jefferson, Johnny Boy 8

Loyd, Ada Ruth

1 res . Hot

53 66

! 1 res . 1 lot............

82 13

Jenkins Frizzell 8

) Lupton, Leon Parker

Hot

21 60

1 1 lot.............

1 77

Jenkins. Hugh Morris

Lynch, Ara

2 lots

124 09

1 res 1 lot...........

20142

Jenkins Johnnie

Lynch, Arthur

123 34

Ires, 3 acres Lynch, EltiertMrs (heirs)

1 res . 2 acres.........

Lynch, Lee Arthur

I res . 1 lot..........

Lynch, Paul David

I lot.....-.........

Lyons, Charles A , Jr 8

47 03 I I lot...................

j M 8 W Builders Pitt Co Inc

2 acres..................

I Mackey. Donna W

i 1 res . I lot...................217    27

Magee. Archibald Carter M.D

84 79

154 82

.52 16 98.95

.20.79

1 lot ................ 76 38

Malvaso. Marjorie Kluck

I res . I lot...................191    70

Manning. Edward J 8

1 res 1 lot............... 4    50    Bal.

Manning. Gail

1 acre.............   35.96

Manning, Julian A 8

I res . 1 lot.............. 169    50

Manning. Lois Hales

I res . 1 lot.................. 153    80

Manning, Robert Earl

1 res . 19 acres...............151    12

Manning, Warlene

I res , 3 lots........... 170    68

A8anning, Willie L 8 Oneta I res 1 lot    134    82

Marlowe. Vester Henry I res I lot    105    72

Martin, George CHI I acre    424    24

Martin. William Edward Sr I res . I lot    183    74

Mason. S 8 Margaret Paramore 14 acres    34    21

Massenburg. David T I res . I lot Mathews. Dallas Matthews. Albert L 8 wt

I lot..............

Maxwell, Marion Wilbur 8

Mercer, Robert tee

Ires, Hot    59.18

Miles. Henderson 8

I lot.............. 778    29

Miller 8 Louis Construction Co

3 lots............,............19    84

Miller, C J Agent

I lot........  17    82

Miller, C J. Agt

I lot.............. 20    85

Miller, Carl Langley 8 1 lot    53    50

Miller, Shirley Wynne

I res I lot.......... 198    83

Mills. Blanche W

1 lot.................... 22    57

Mills, Claude William

2 lots....................... 103    57

Mills. Danny Wayne

1 lot.......................... 22    87

Mills. Franklin Dan

I res    .    1 lot.................. 202 25

Mills, Lou Miller (heirs)

12 acres....................63    09

Mills. Lula Haddock

I acre................... 46    31

Mills, Phillip Ray

I res    3 acres.............231 78

Mills, Ray Cleveland 8

I res    .    1 lot...........136 78

Mills, William Ray I lot    22    57

Mitchell, Barrie 8 1 res    .    I lot    171 20

Mitchell. William Henry 8

13 lots...................... 586.28

Mitchell, William Jr 8

I res    ,    I lot.............. 162 42

Mobley, Classie

I res    .    I lot    166 94

Mobley. Richard Allen 8

I res    1 lot................112 29

Monk, Charlie Jefferson I res .    1 lot    169    22

Monk, Hattie *

1 lot......................90    72

Monk, Morris 8

I res .    1 lot.......... 193    49

Moore, Alice Gibbs etal I res    .    I lot    149.28

Moore, Amelia

I lot     7    94

Moore, Andrew (heirs)

I lot    6    18

Moore, Annie Lee

I res    I lot    172    32

Moore, Annie Pearl Tyson I lot    22    09

Moore. Annie Ree 1 res ,    3 lots. 1 acre    III    63

Moore, Barry A 8 wf Diane L

3 acres

Moore, Clarence Milton 8 1 lot

Moore, Collice Clyde 8 I acre

Moore. Edwin G 11 5 lots

Moore, Elijah 1 res .Hot

Moore, Hertford Lee 8 1 res , I lot Moore. James I lot

Moore. James Jr I res . I lot

Moore, James Jr 8 Cassie Lee

1 res .Hot

Moore, Jarvis (heirs)

2 lots

Moore, Jerry F 8 I res . I lot

Moore. John Archer 8 I res . I lot

Moore, John Gregory

5 lots

Moore. Josephus

I res . 1 lot......

Moore, Kenneth W 8 I res 2 lots Moore. Louellen8 I lot

Moore, P M, (heirs)

1 acre

Moore. Sarah (heirs)

I lot

Moore. Susie Bell Ires. 2 lots Moore. Ulysses I res , 45 acres Mcxjre, William I res . I lot

Moore, Willie James 8 Mooring, Linwood S'r I res , 1 lot Mooring. Swanola I res , 2 lots

Morgan, Fred Edward Jr 1 res . I lot

Morgan, James Perry 1 lot

Morgan, James Ray 8 1 res., 1 lot

Morris, Jerry Toby 8 I res . I lot Morris, Rosa (heirs)

3 acres

Morrison, Marie Porter

1 res . 1 lot Mouning, Luther J

2 lots

Moye. Clarence Hardy II 57 acres

Moye, Elma Lee I lot

Moye, Mary H 1 res , 1 lot Moye, Minnie Lee 1 res 1 lot Moye, Rosa Teel I lot

Mullen, William E Jr etal 39 acres

Mullins, Thomas E 8

I res . I lot................

Murchison, Joe R 8 I res 1 lot

Murphy, Frank Jr 8

1 res I lot..............

Murphy, James Earl

I res I lot-..............

Murphy, John Henry (heirs)

I lot...........

Myers, George

1 res I lot...........

National Realty Co

2 lots..............

NCNB Trustee For

I lot............

NCNB Trustee For

I lot....... 161    31

Neil Realty Co

6 res 9 lots...........,    184    32    Bal

Nelson. Audrey

1 res . I lot................... 173    21

Nelson, Bertha Mae Mills

1 res . I lot..........   337    62

Nelson, Hoover Lee

I I res . I lot...................62    90

I Nelson, Joe Nathan

I 1 res . 4 lots .. ................35    16

Nelson, Linwood 8 Virginia

1 res . I lot.................. 157    46

Nelson. Lou S.

1 lot.......................... 52    33

Nelson, William Clifton 8

1 res . 1 lot...................334    90

New Birth Holy Church

I lot............... 15    80

Newton, Vance

I res . 1 lot............... 28    34

Newton. William

1 res , I lot............... 83    27

Nichols. Frank Timothy 8

139 21 Bal

892 43

12 15

116 91

7 83

73 85

137 24

23 49

199 50 130 44

30 94 233 61

169 27 24 30

161 22

162.55

18 31 255.42

22 84

71 06

215 60

7 94 73 60

180 47 93 08

169 98 189 59

249 07

128 45

26 73

107 03 138 28

500 14 71 82

192 89 116 64

117 96

239 21 171 83

209 90 192.64

173 72 38.31

107 12 15 56

Patrick, Thomas James 8

1 res . I lot..............132    10

Payne, Thomas J 8

2 lots    142    08

Payton Farms 8 Co.

114 acres................ 476    63

Payton Farms 8 Company, Inc 1 lot. 12 acres    140    26

Payton, Azell

1 res . 1 lot.............. 185    44

Payton, Azelle

2 lots............... 39    31

Payton. Brenda 8 Linda 8

I acre    i3l    08

Payton, Daisy Gray I res . I lot    173    08

Payton, David (heirs)

lacre...................22    95

Payton, James 8

I lot....................13    50

Payton, John David

I res , 113acres............ 1,182    72

Payton, John David

I lot....................... 20    57

Payton. John David life est 93 acres    342    68

Payton, John Henry (heirs)

1 res . I lot    66    93

Payton, Marvin Earl

I lot    22    68

Peaden, Emmett 8

I acre    ,    13    50

Pelas, Helen Louise

I res , 1 lot    196    98

Pender, Charles Araunah 8

I res . 1 lot    271    50

Perkins, Janies Harvey

I res I lot    151    65

Perkins. Julius R 8

1 res . I lot    116    44

Perkins, Thelma Baker

I lot................ 60    64

Person, Redmon J (heirs)

18 acres    93    22

Person, William Henry I lot    72    88

Peters, Donald 8

I res    1 lot    251    94

Peterson, Icelene Harper

I res    .    I    lot.......... 139    28

Peterson, Mac 8 Ethel Marie 1 res    ,    I    lot    91    20

Phillips. Clarence

1 lot................ 32    51

Phillips. Earl Clinton 8 1 res    I lot    167    88

Phillips, James Henry 8 I lot    13    50

Phillips, Robert Earl I res    .    I lot    189    82

Phillips, Will

I res , 2 lots    ,    169    37

Phillips. Zack 8

I res , I lot    173    86    Bal

Pickett, Joseph M 8 1 res    ,    1 lot    210    07

Pippins. Arthur 8

1 res    .    2 lots    203    96

Pitt Property Management, Inc

Hot    216    76

Pitt, Johnny Lee 8 I res , 1 lot    4)6    09

Pitt, Rosa Belle

I res . Hot    113    14

Pittman, Bobby Willat Jr 8

I lot    157    45

Pittman. Johnny A 8

I lot    49    60

Pittman, Mary Blow

3 lots    29    84

Pollard, Amos Lee 8

I res.. Hot    148    46

Porter, Edwin

Hot    174    96

Porter Ida Lou

1 res , 1 lot    176    02    ,

Powell. Alexander Daniel 8

1 lot    28    70

Powell, George H 8

Ires, 2 lots    410    98

Powell. George H 8

2 lots    123    20

Powell. Lela C

3 lots    84    67

Powers. Charles Tyrone 8

Ires. 2 acres.......... 2.90    Bal.

Powers, Hughie Carlton 8

Ires. 5acres    426    15

Prayer, John 8

I lot    26    19

Prayer, John Isaac I res . I    lot    263    68

Prayer, William Thomas

I res . 1    lot     199    89

Preterred Prop Of G'ville Inc 3 lots, 33 acres    1,381    15

Preterred Properties Of 6 lots    351    82    Bal

Pnce, Jesse R 8 wt Cora L

1 lot..... 23    76

Price. Sam K 8

2 lots    520    91

Price, Sylvia

Ires, 2 acres    50.79

Price, Wilton Earl

1 lot    17    82

Pridgen, William Eldred

II acres    24    52

Pritchard. Thomas Grey

Ires. Hot.......170    07

Property Group, Ltd

2 lots    915    84

Provite. Nathaniel etals

2 lots     11    88

Pruett. Abraham Lincoln

I res , Hot    190    20

Pruette, David Rowland 8 1 res.. Hot    211    15

Pruitt, Appieleen Allen Mrs 49 acres    275    29

Pruvis, Eneth

Hot    5    82

Purser, Caroline Gayle 8

1 lot.....................268    72

Purvis, Bernice Blount

3 lots .................... 53    51

Purvis, Velma 8

2 lots    14.42 Purvis, Walter Clayton

2 lots    157    74

Purvis, Willie (heirs)

1 res . I lot..........    104    41

Quail Ridge Community Assoc

1 acre Ragin. Thomas 8 1 res , I lot Ramsey. Grace D

92.07

!/) acre 16 2)XRand, J Lee

5 acres

! Randolph, Jesse Maryland.

I 1 res .Hot ......

j Randolph, Kenneth

I lot..........

I Randolph, Kenneth 8 I res 2 lots

Randolph, Willie Gordon 8

I res I lot..........

Redmond. Willie

2 res , 3 lots    321.08

Sharpe, Barbara Best

I res . 2 lots.............210    74

Shaw. Jon Ward

I res., I lot ............ 575.01

Sheffield, Wilbur Lee

I res . I lot............ 228    63

Shepard, Thelma Long

I res . I lot.........I........65    57

Shepard. William Earl 8

1 res . I lot............. 172 73

Sherman. Cleveland 8

1 res I lot    138 II Sherman, Mary B Jernigan

2 lots.................... 23    00

Sherrod, Annie Wilkins

1 res I lot................. 35 21

Sherrod, Clifton 8

2 lots    ............... 27    67

Sherrod, Clifton R 8

I res I lot.......... 202 42

Sherrod, Gene Carrel I 8 1 res    .    I    lot    163    66

Sherrod, JohnM

Ires. 2 lots    2)0',74

Sherrod. Johnny C. 8 I res    ,    1    lot    169    62

Sherrod, Roxie life estate I res    .Hot    4    82

Shields. Bob Steele 1 lot    27 54

Short, Fred (heirs)

Hot    24    95

Simmons, Lee Leroy 1 res    I    lot    117    19

Simpkins, Jimmy Ray 8 Lillian 1 res    .Hot    303    53

Simpson. Calvin Lee I lot    17    82

Skinner, Garland 8 1 res , 1 lot    188 02

Sloan, Jerry L 8

I lot    32    67

Smallwood, Thurman Lee 8 I res    , I    lot    159    92

Smith, Banks Hamilton 8 I res    . I    lot    480    22

Smith, Burnice Richard 8 I res    . I    lot    175    57

Smith, Charlie Van

1 lot ............. 18 36

Smith, Deborah Moore I lot    10    10

Smith, Denise A 8 I res I lot    107    18    Bal

Smith, Ed Warren 8 Clydie Mae

1 res 2 lots ,    .......71 75

Smith, Eddie L

1 lot    ........64 63

Smith. Emanuel

Ires, 2 lots    138    94

Smith, EmmaO

1 res I lot    259 74

Smith. Estella

1 res .Hot    51    68

Smith. Guy V Jr

1 res . I lot    117    6)

Smith. Jack 8

1 res , 1    lot    82    03

Smith, Jessie (heirs)

I lot    I    36

Smith. Johnnie 8

1 res , Hot ,    ......117 33

Smith, Katherine Wilks

1 res , I    lot    6    31

Smith. Kealsy Mae

1 lot    '    15    39

Smith, Lillian T 8 Roxanna

I lot    5    82

Smith, LilheM

I res , Hot    40    79    Bal

Smith, Louise Crandol 1 res , 1 acre    123 07

Smith, Margaret H 5 acres    127    0

Smith, Margie 8

Hot    9    18

Smith, Margie Louise

I acre    17    82

Smith, Mark K 8 Catherine D

I lot    17 47

Smith, Nathan G-. Jr 8

31 acres    154    66

Smith, Nathan Green Jr

I lot    9    64

Smith. Nina Belle

Ires. Hot    126    73

Smith, Olivia Earl Williams 8 lacre    66    39

Smith. Perlene (heirs) 8 I res I lot    94 52

Smith, Reathia

1 res , 1 lot    108    66

Smith, Robert Lee

68 acres    985    07

Smith, Robert Lee

1 lot    136    03

Smith, Robert Lee

3lots. Uacres    1,172    01

Smith, Robert Lee 8

3 lots.....\..... 344    63

Smith, Ronald W 8

1 res 1 lot    202    56

Smith, Samuel Jr 8 1 res . 1 lot    66    45

Smith. Seymore

5 acres    103    95

Smith. William Alton 8

1 res , Hot    115    98

Smith, William Thomas

2 acres    34    45

Smith. Willie B liteestate

2 acres    25    60

Sneed. Joseph Robert 1 res , Hot    10    02    Bal

Sneed, Patricia Ann 1 lot    38    56

Snook, Harry R 8 wt Margaret 8 1 1 res . 1 lot    29    5    8)

I Southerland. Charles Donald 8

6 acres    68    15

Southside Realty 8 Ins

I res I lot............. 264    87

Spain. Donnie Earl

1 lot......................... 47    74

Spain, Earl 8 Margaret

195 acres.................

Spain. Jesse

I res......... ........

Spain. Minnie O'Neal 8 1 res.. Hot

Sparkman, Joe Frank

I res I lot..............

Speight. Joseph 0 8

I lot...................

Speight, Powell Tucker 38 acres Spell. Julia Ann 1 res I lot

Spell. Mary Sidberry Smith

1 res . I lot    171.20    Bal

Spell, P W (heirs)

2 lots

Speller. Charlie H 8 1 res . I lot

Spencer. Billy Gipson I res . 2 lots, I acre Spencer, Billy Gipson 8 126 acres

1,329 21 13 18 156 40 96 97 39.47 1.03 202 25

29 52 108 55

364 83

753 OO

190 99 II 88

1 lot................

212.82

May, Dennis R 8

1 lot..................

41 11

May, Ernest Jr

1 res . 1 lot

181 88

May, S Reynolds

1 res . 1 lot

80 95

Maye, Oscar

1 res , 46 acres

207.28

Maye, Oscar Jr

1 res . 1 lot.................

176 97

Maye. Willie Roy

1 lot .............

26 35

Mayo, Jesse

1 res,. Hot............

. . .3 60

Mayo, R Guy

1 lot

. 38,07

Mayo. Rubin Guy Jr 8 Jeanette

1 lot............... ,.......

27 27

McArthur, Charlie

1 res . 26 acres.............

201.74

McCarter, James Lee 8 Cornelia

1 res . 1 lol

204.7)

McCray, Charles R 8

1 res , 1 lot.................

175.63

McDaniel, Henry Jr 8 Frances

1 res . 1 lot.................

435 48

McDermott, Patrick 8

1 res , 1 lot.................

163 30

McDonald. Virginia Smith

1 lot........................

22.57

McIntyre, Emma 8 James

2 lots......................

20 41

McKinney, Richard Albert 8

1 res . I lot.................

McLaughlin, John Raymond Jr. 8

1 res . I lot...............351 67

McLawhorn, Bobby Ray 8

1 res , Hot................246,39

McLawhorn. Edward E DBA

1 lot........................72    13

McLawhorn, Edward Earl 226.80 McLawhorn, Edward Earl 8

1 res . I lot................... 233.34

McLawhorn.G. V 8E. J.

5 lots..........................68    15

McLawhorn, Jerry Linwood

1 res    1    lot...................264    92

McLawhorn, R F 8 Ludie E (heirs)

1 lot.....................31    00

McLawhorn, R F 8 Sons

3 lots........................ 437    18

McLawhorn, Robert Frances//

38 acres.................... 1,734    10

McMahan, Paul

lOacres................II    74    Bal

McMahon, James A 8 wt

2 acres.................. 98    01

McMahon, James Ashbrooke

1 lot..........................215.71

McMahon, Paul David

1 lot.......................6    94    Bal

McMillion, Russell Luther 8

1 lot.........................176.6)

McPherson, Douglas Elwood 8

1 res., 1 lot................... 345    84

McRoy. Grade Hardy

4 acres........................89    42

Meeks, Joshua

1 lot...........................17.82

Mercer, Bishop Henry

2 lots.........................323    49

1 res , 1 lot

Nichols, Guy Joab    

Ires, 2 lots    249    95/

Nichols, Guy Joab 8    '

I lot.................  4    86

Nichols, Luther G

I res . 1 lot    197    11

Nichols, Robert Earl 8 I res . 1 lot    237    99

Nicholson, Wesley R 8

1 res . I lot.............. 175    06

Nicholson, Willie 8 1 res 4 acres    152    19

Nicholson. Willie David 8 1 res , 1 lot    164    82

Nobles, Leah B 8

1 lot...............113    61

Nobles, Leah Bryant Ires .4 lots    657    99

Nobles, Rita Francine I lot    136    46

Nobles, Willie Hower 8 Irene I res . 1 lot    193    05

Noggle. Wesley G Jr 8

I lot................6    44

Norfleet. Frances

1 lot .............. .    12    58

Norfleet, Roscoe 8

1 lot......... 4    00

Norfleet, Roscoe C 8

1 res , 3 lots............... 309    67

Norris, Evelyn Phillips (heirs)

I lot........................ 90    72

Northside Lumber Co

I lot.......................10    19

O'Neal, Olivia

1 lot.............  6    18

O'Neal. Robert Lee

I lot.................. 475.85

O'Neal, Robert Lee 8

1 res.,    5 lots............... 785    92

O'Neal, Robert Lee 8

1 res ,    I acre...............369    44

Oakes, Thomas Clifton 8 Inez

1 res ,    1 lot....................258    32

Oakley, Arthur C. Jr. 8

1 res , 1 lot...................177.23

Oakley. Michael    49    30

298.38 I Oneal, Bobby Ray 8

I res . I lot...................116    67

Oneal. Bobby Ray 8 Barbara

1 lot..........................22.92

Ormond, James Arthur

1 res . 1 lot................ 123    78

Osborne, Larry H

2 lots, 3 acres ......106    33    Bal

Outterbridge. Mary Chase

1 res,, 1 lot................... 94    72

Owens, James R 8

1 res . 1 lot..................154    36

Pace, Peter

I lot........................15    62

Paige, William Ernest

I lot........................ 105    08

Paramore. Sterl Dixon 8

I lot.......................... 242    23

Parker, James David

I lot..........................168    86

Parker, James Jr 8 Ernestine

1 res.. 2 lots .      146    05

Parker, Lewis C. 8

1 res . 1 lot...................213    33

Parker, Marie

1 res., 1 lot....................45.24

Parker, Richard Cornell Sr

1 res , 1 lot....................85.96

Patrick, Charlie D.

1 lot..........................86.72

Patrick, Enlsher B. 8

1 res..    1    lot..................206.49

Patrick. Georgiana Lawson

1 res.,    4    lots...................46,12

Patrick, Jesse Ray 8

2 acres........................ 29 70

Patrick, Johnnie (heirs)

1 lot.......................  105.26

1 lot.................

17.82

Spencer, Daisy Mae

Reese. Sam 8 Annie

1 res , 1 lot

180 2)

1 res 1 lot

169 1)

Spencer, Feltor 8 Wf Shirley B

Reese, William Earl, Henry.

8

1 res 1 lot

20 14

2 lots...................

28.62 1

Spencer, Janie Autry

Reid. Charles W, 8 Lillie M

1

1 res , 1 lot, 86 acres........

868 0)

1 res 1 lot.............

173.53 ;

Stafford, Dora Dawson

Reid, Lillie 8

1 res . 1 lot................

98 09

3 acres

.37.42

Stafford, Helen Taylor lit est

R ice Const 8 Dev Co

1 lot................

. 10,42

1 lot....................

268 06

Stallings. Lloyd A 8

R ice Construction Co

1 res 1 lot............

193 03

1 lot.......................

643.52

Stallworth. Willie 8

Rice Construction Co Inc.

1 res , 1 lol

105 40

Hot.......................

, . 108 .70

Stancill. Clara (heirs)

Rice. James G

5 acres

44.55

1 lot.....................

. 216.97

Stancill, Jo Ann Green

Rice, James G

1 res . 1 lot.................

65 06

2 lots..............

559 41

Stancill. Walter J

Rice, James G 8

1 lot.......................

22.57

1 lot...................

22) 83

Stancill. William 8 Barbara

Richardson, Anna Tyson

1 lot.......................

209 5)

1 res 2 lots...............14 61 Bal

Stancilli William Jennings

Richardson, Madalene Teel

1 lot ...................

121 52

1 lot................

45 54

Stancill, Wilton J

Rickard, S D 8

1 res 47 acres

294 58

1 lot..................

. 10.40

Stanley, Thomas Daniel 8

Riverhills Inc

1 res 1 lot............

298 61

11 lots, 32 acres.........

1.688 08

Staton, Annie Hollis

Riverhills. Inc

1 res 1 lot

178 41

1 lot................

. 234 68

Staton, Clarence 8

Riverhills Inc

1 lot

110 76

20 acres..............

269 19

Staton, Isaac

Riverhills. Inc

1 lot

5 82

12 acres

368.60

Staton, Issac Lee

Roach. Jarvis 8 wt Sadie

1 lot

44.01

1 res . 1 lot............

186 33

Staton Issac Lee8

Roach. Maytiell

1 res . 1 acre

155 10

1 res . 1 lot ...............

154 48

Staton, Oscar 8 Wt Ida

Roach, William Henry

1 lot...................,

100.0)

1 lot........................

18.24

Staton, Robert Earl Jr

Roberson, Johnny C 8

1 lot...................

170.86

1 lot ......................

218 06

Staton, Samson D 8

Rodgers, John Thomas Sr 8 Ruth

1 res.. 1 lot

. 181.21

1 res , 2 lots............

. 159 92

Stephenson, Jacqueline Elaine

Rodgers, Peters 8 Dora

1 lol...................

,25.06

1 lot.......................

36.02

Stephenson. Ruth D

Roebuck, Mary Annis Perkins

1 res . 1 lot

46 76

1 lot..................

17 06

Stevenson David 8 Mary

Roebuck, Richard Arlien

1 lot...................

27 00

1 res . 1 lot..............

53 31

Stevenson, David E Jr 8

Rogers. Daniel William 8

1 lot

179 59

2 acres..............

40.81

Stevenson, Wesley R 8

Rogers. James Thomas 8 wt

1 lot....................

136 50

1 res . 1 lot

198 14

Stocks. Chester

Rogers, William A 8

1 lot........................

98 66

1 res . 1 lot................

201.37

Stpcks. Elizatieth Ann

Rogerson, Luther Ray

1 res.. 3 acres............

. 128 40

1 res . 1 lot..............

127 06

Stocks. Romeo 8 Geneva

Rosen, A A etals........

10,551.38

1 res.. 1 lot...............

66 86

Ross, Marina

Stocks, William Van Jr. 8

1 rps , 1lol.............

. . 47,77

1 res . 1 lot...............

278.65

Rountree. Marvin

Stokes. J B Jr 8 Louise

1 lot...................

154 56

) res . 88 acres

1.256 54

Rouse. John Blount Jr 8 wt

Stokes. John Henry life est

1 lot..............

104 38

1 res., 1 lot

125 66

Rouse, Kenneth

Stox, Edward Coleman 8 Monna S

1 lot.................

184 94

1 res , 1 lol

158 6 7

Russco Inc

Streeter, Ervin Warren 8

1 lot..............

253 37

1 res.. 1 lot

172.17

Salley. Gloria L. Brown 8

Streeter, Kelly Ray

1 res., Hot

66 26

1 lot

. 27 00

Sanderson, David Lee

Streeter, Rhebia Coward

1 lot...................

5116

1 res . 2 lots

169 30

Sanford, Mattie Mae B He est

Streeter, Robert E Lacy C 8

151 acres..................

822.26

2 lots...............

172 26

Sarvey. Jeffrgy P 8

Streeter. Ruby Lee

1 res . 1 lol .............

.259 42

2 lots..............

15)2

Satterfield, G Howard, Ford

Streeter, William Thomas 8

6 acres

27,27

1 res 1 lot...............

201.77

Savage. Eugene Jeffrey 8

Strickland. Charles Ray 8

1 res . 1 lot...............

330 98

1 res . 1 lot..............

146 99

Sawyer, Kenneth Glen

Strickland. Eugene G. 8Odell

1 lot........................

115.93

7 acres....................

.231.75

Sawyer, William Jarvis

Strickland, James Willis

4 lots....................

.31.50

1 res ,1 lot..............

.183 05

Scdtt, Carlton Ray 8

Strickland. Joseph Edward

1 res 1 lot...............

226 06

1 lot...................

. . 10 80

Scott, Peggy Boyd

Strong, Bennie Edward 8

1 res., 1 lot...............

98 55

1 res . 1 lot................

172.40

Seagle. Angela P

Stroud. Janice Crandell 8

1 lot.....................

178 44

1 lot....................

108 23

Sec y Of Housing 8 Urban Dev,

Sugg. Melvin R

1 res , 1 lot.................

161 03

2 lots..............

374 64

Setters, Stanley Owen Jr. 8

Sugg. Melvin Ray 8

1 res . 1 lot...............

1 183.17

1 lol

212 30

Shackelford. William EdwaM <

Sugg. Melvin Ray 8

1 res . 1 lot.............

188 07

20 acres

44 55

Shackleford. James0ttis8

Sugg, Melvin Ray 8

1 res . 1 lot................

260.39

1 lot............. .........

12.89

Shamrock RIty Co Pitt Cty Inc

Sugg. Melvin Ray 8

73 acres

Sugg, Thomas 8 Celistine R I res , Hot Sugg. Virginia R 1 res .Hot

Suggs. Edward Lawrence I res . 1 lot Suggs. Sidney 8 1 res , I lot Suggs. Tessie Lee I res . I lot

Sumerlin, Jasper Lee 8 3 acres

Summers. Jerry L I res . Hot

Sumrell, C R 8 Mable 3 lots

Sumrell, C R

I lot ............

Sumrell, C R 8

I lot .............

Sumrell, Clarence Reginal 8

1 res , 3 lots

Sutton, Charles F Mrs

1 res , 47 acres

Sutton, Charles Fountain Jr

5 acres

Sutton, Emmie B liteest I res . 1 lot Sutton, FayeMizell

1 lot

Sutton, Grace Reidnell

2 lots

Sutton, Joseph K Hot

Sutton. Lillian Martin 8 Hot. 262 acres    I

Sutton, Lillian Martin life est 49 acres

Sutton, Margaret H I res Hot

Sutton, Mary Braswell 1 res , ) lot

Sutton, Noah 8 Wt Susie 1 lot

Sutton, Retjecca Williams I lot

Sutton, Walter Jr

3 acres

Swain, Ralph Lee 8 Sacres

Swinson, Jimmie Lee 8

Hot . ..

Swinson, Sammie 8 Wf Reve I res , Hot

Inc

171 49

807 00

T F J

Hot    115 48

Tadlock, J W

I res    . I lot    100    43

Taft. Herman McKinley 8

1 res    . 2 acres    229    63

Taft, Isaac 5 acres Taft. Julia

2 lots    61    22    Bal

Tatt, Milton E 8 Oueenie

1 res    , 2 lots    229    30

Taft, Willie (heirs)

I |ot    90    76

Tate, John David

I res    , Hot    220    47

Taunton, Harold D 8 Dolores C

357 06

1 res .Hot Taylor Alvin Ray 1 lot

Taylor, Billy

1 lot

Taylor. Connie G 8

2 acres

Taylor, James 8 2 lots

Taylor, James D Jr 8 2 lots

Taylor, James David Jr Hot

Tylor, John Henry Taylor Jr I res .Hot Taylor, Leonard 8 I res Hot Taylor. Otis Bruce 8 I res . 1 lot Taylor, Sam Jr 1 res , I lot

Taylor William Earl 8 I res .Hot Taylor, Zebedee Ires, 2 lots

Tedder Billy S 8 Joyce I res . 2 lots Teel. Calvin Douglas 8 1 res , I lot Teel, Elias (heirs)

Sacres Teel. Hollio I res . 2 lots

Teel. Jessie 8 Jesse Bell 1 res . 1 lot Teel Moses I lot

Teel. Moses 8 Wife I res , I lot Teel. Robert 8 I res .Hot

Teel William Harvey 8 I lot

Teeter, Vernon C 8 1 lot

Teltair. Clarence

1 res    .    I    lot    82    18

Telfair, Joann S

) res    ,    1    lot    83    25

Teltair, Leroy 8

1 lot    82    43

Telfair, Willie Clarence 8 I lot    12    83

Tetterton, David

1 res    .    Hot    81    96

Tetterton, Hilton L 1 res , Hot    22    26    Bal

Tew, Woodrow Turlington 8 Ires. Slots    100    98

Thigpen, Hannah

I res . Sacres......

Thomas, Jesse Jr 8

I res , I lot.........

Thomas. Willie Mack

1 res 2 lots......

Thompson, Galloway Conv Mart

I lot..................201    86

Thompson. Jesse James

I lot..................

Thompson, Joseph

1 res .Hot.............

Thompson, Mrytle Gatlin

I res , 3 lots.........

Thompson, Samuel Jr I res I lot

Thompson, Stephen Mark

1 res..........

Thornton, Mary Larkins

2 res , 4 acres Tillery, Lonnie Irvin Sr 1 res I lot

Timmons 8 Associates

' 1 lot.....

I Tingen, James L

70 31

6 41

35 64 26 14

24 89 247 42

262 60 96 15

237 30 96 10

18/ 27

499 80 160 32

185 87

12 63

14 85

241 68

68 94

120 78 20 61

The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, May 26,1983-23

Williams James Jr &

1 res .    1 lot    95    45

Williams. Jesse Wallace Jr lots    51    35

Williams Jimmy Cole 8 Ires Hot    1 78 80

Williams. John 8

I lot    I    78

Williams, Johnnie 4 acres    u    26

Williams Larry Darnell t res , 1 lot    188    83

Williams Leroy

I res I lot    24    06

Williams Lossie Council'lhiersi 1 res    1 lot    58    20

Williams. Louise Woolen 1 lot    85    48

Williams LuCy Blount 6 acres    10    69

Williams Nancy Daniels Ires 3 lots    119    57

Williams Paul James 1 res    27 acres    266    42

Williams Raymond W 8 Ruby 2, lots    22    79

Williams Richard Iheirsi 1 lot    12    72

Williams Ruth D

1 lot    I    507    63

Williams. Stephenson George 8 1 res    3 lots    408    92

Williams. Thomas Eugene 8 1 res    1 lot    214    01

Williams Warren-,C 8 1 res    I lot    152    66

Williams Wright C 8'

Ires    2 lots    107    49

Williamson Charles Archer 8 26 acres ,    88    61

Willis Johnnie Jr 8 Wt Viney Ires    Hot    106    56

Wills. Michael H 8 I res    I lot    216    91

Wilson Bobby Clayton 8 1 lot    43    12

Wilson Ervin

I acre    24    95

Wilson HuqhieL 8 I lot    34    28

Wilson Larry Chiton 8 Ires    Hot    173    08

Wilson Laura Foreman I res , 3 lots    103    72

Wilson Shirley Loyd 8 1 lot 1    acre    36    29

Wi.ison, Victor T 8 1 res    Hot    155    89

Wilson W H DR

4 lots    193    87

Windham David Ray 8 1 res    .    4 acres    i42 07

Winstead Elizabeth Bniey I res    ,    I lot    213 51 .

Winterville Rest Home Inc I lot    719 84

Woodard David D 8 ' I res    1 lot    170 92

Woolard Joyce Jean Stickland 1 res .    1    lot    90    34

Woolard Marshall Hot    17    82

Woolard William Steve 8 1 lot    136 05

Wooten Clifton 8 Margaret 1 res    ,    1 lot    126,83

Wooten Delores Hardy 1 lot    50    59

Wooten, James Daniel 8 1 res ,    1    lot    158    51

Wooten Jennie L

I res    I    lot    221    40

Wooten Joe(heirs)

I lot    -7    37

Wooten Maggie (heirs)

1 lot    6    53

Wooten Rotiert Earl 8 1 lot    13    50

Wooten Rotierl Lee Ires.    2    lots    103    57

Worsley Ben Jr 8 Rachel 1 res . 1 lot    .    118    01    Bal

Worthington Dalton W Jr I lot    II    56

1 res , 1 lot

174 53 I

Vines E Inora

3 lots

23 34 ;

Vines Freddie E

1

1 lol

47 99 ,

Vines. Jimmie Ray

1 res , 1 lot

192 09

Vines. Louis 8

1 res Hot

163 49

Vines, Margaret B 8

1 lot

37 42 i

Vines Mary Ruth 8 Charlene

1 res . 2 lots

138 65

Vines. Thomas F 8

1 res , 1 lot

61 66

Vines, William James 8

1

1 res . 1 lot

182 37 !

Virginia Carolina Corp

i

7 acres

58 81 ;

Wachovia Bank 8 1 rust Lo N

A ,

1 lot, 2 acres

185 65

Wadtord, Robert Earl 8

1 res . 4 lots

256 65 ,

Waggoner William A &

j

1 res 1 lot

348 90

Wall. Sarah

14 acres

129 38 1

Wallace Joseph

1 res . 1 lot

158 05 1

Wallace Louis McDowell

9 acres

94 60

Wallace. Willie Jr 8

1 res . 8 lots, 83 acres

958 31 1

Wallace Willie Jr

91 69

Waller, Garland (heirs)

1

1 res . 1 lot 52 17 Bal

Waller, Patricia

1 res , 1 lol

185 44

Waller, Tony Jr (heirs)

I

1 res Hot

85 76

Waller Tony Sr (heirs)

1

1 lot

3 19 ,

Walston, Annie Dickens (heirs) 1

1 res , 1 lot

154 44

Ward, Charlie Ray

1 acre

13 50 '

Ward, Clarence Jasper

1 res . 1 lot

99 25

Ward Daniel Ray 8

1 res . 1 lot

198 59 1

Ward, James8

1 lot 1 acre

41 58 '

Ward, Mathew L 8

1

1 res . 1 lot

200 85

Ward, Willie Arthur

1 lot

13 50'

Warren Daisy C Mrs liteest

58 acres

299 33 ,

Warren Daisy Cox life est I res 54 acres Warren Daisy, C Mrs lifeest

3.62 51 526 75

44 acres

Warren, David Lee Sr 8 4 acres

Warren, Donald Richard Warren Donald Richard 8 71 acres    I

Warren. Harry Skinner /

31 acres

Warren Harry Skinner I res 1 lot Warren Jack S 8 4 lots, 21 acres Warren Jack Shelton 1 res , 4 lots, 1010 acres 3,193 8<i.Bal Warren Kenneth Paul Etal 3 acres

Warren. Leroy 1 res , 2 acres Warren Rosemary Taylor I res . I lot Washington Elias 8 I res 2 lots Waters, Charles L 8 1 res 1 lot

Waters. Darwin DBA 6 lots

Weaver Alexander 8 8 acres

Weaver, Alexander 8 Verna 1 res . I lot Weaver Alfonza I res I lot

Weaver Robert Lee 8 I lot.

: Webb Mattie L (heas)

216 66 ! 1 res 2 lots

Webb Ray Allen 8 I acre    

Weil David    *

' 1 lot Weil David 8 I 1 lot

Weil, David 8 ; I lot Wells. Katherine Ann 1 res , 1 lot j Wells Mamie Ruth , 1 res Hot

' West Haven Property Inc 1 2 lots, 2 acres West C B 1118 I 1 lot

' West, C B III , 2 lots West. Sara Moore Hot.

I West William Michael

111 II 218 81

594 74 121 90

}83 06 I

259 74

34 29

75 81

305 13

94 21

160 20

298 07

41 36

162 64

156 47

17 82

103 45

96 76

757 30

28 09

1 226 19

182 48

213 94

121 23 Bal

62 06

315 31

Worthington. Dalton Woodrow Jr 2 lots

53 35

1 res . 1 lot Westbrook, Charles L 8 1 res , Hot    22

Whichard Group, The 31 acres

Whichard. Haywood E 1 lot

Whitaker, Arthur Lee

1 res 1 acre Whitaker Charles D

2 lots

Whitaker Jospeh Garland 8 1 res , 2 lots

Worthington Louis Allen Sr 1 res 2 acres    1

Worthington Nina Hough 1 res Hot    2

Worthington Pattie Ebron ' I res I lot Worthington William Phillip I res    1 lot    3

I Wright Aubrey Gildon Jr 8 .

, 1 res    1 lot    I

I Wright Herbert Wood 8 Hot

Wright Ledonia Smith (heirsi I 2 lots

; Wyche James Thomas 1 res    1 lot    1

j Wyne Bertha Byrd I res    1 lot 2 acres    1

1 Wynne HC 8 Clayton 0 ' I acre

Wynne Lila James Iheirsi

1 lot

Yarrell Eddie Gene8 3 lots

. Yarrell. Walter Franklin 3 lots

Yarrell, William Ray

2 lots

Yarrell William Ray 8 ; 3 lots

Younger Eula Mae Edwards 1 res , 1 lot

Zavatsky, Elizatjeth Smith 1 res . 1 lot

65

Whitaker Joseph Garland 8 Wf

134 77

May 5, 12. 19, 26 1983

57 29

180 09 7 47 Bal

96 01 93 50

97 68 34 38

241 56 309 88

220 50 648 57

165 19

236 56 ,088 86

172 81 156 76

122 27 167 II

i 1 res . 1 lot i Tingen, James L 19 acres

Tingen, William L 8 Mildred 1 res I acre Toler, Donald Loyd j 1 res , 1 lot, 54 acres I Toler. Kenneth Wayne Jr 1 res , I lot

Tolson, William Hambleton. Ill

15 lots, 48 acres

Tripp, Bennie Joseph 8 I res 1 lot

I Tripp Douglas Earl I Tripp F, Roosevelt8

I 1 res 1 lot..........

I Tripp. Jarvis Edward 8 I 1 res . 2 lots............

Tripp, Jasper Leroy Inc

I 1 lot....................

I Tripp, John Stanley &

1 res., 3'acres.......

j Tripp, Mickey Ray 8

I res . 1 lot...........

Tripp, Raymond J.

1 res I lot Tucker. John Allen K 27 acres Tucker, Sam Sr

1 res , 2 lots Turnage, GarnieMae 35 acres

Turner. Eva Blackburn

2 lots

Tyson, Arthur L 8 1 res , I lot Tyson, Betsy G 1 res .Hot Tyson, Charles M 8

I res . I lot .....

Tyson, George Wesley Jr

I res . I acre ......

Tyson, Isabella Harris I lot.......

Tyson, J W 8 Doris8

1 res . I lot.......

Tyson. James Walter

2 lots.............

Tyson, Jessie James

I res . 1 lot

Tyson, Joanna McClinton I res . 1 lot Tyson, Joel Van 8 1 res . 1 lot

Tyson, John H 8 Wf Jo I res . 1 lot

Tyson, Louis Harper 8

I res . I lot .........

Tyson, Roland (heirs)

1 res . 1 lot Tyson, Tom (heirs)

I res . 2 lots........

Tyson, Willie Lee

) lot..............

Underwood, Eliza

1 lot...............

United States Of Ameri I lot

2 lots

Whitaker, Lornell 8 I res . 1 acre Whitaker, Mary

37 acres.........

White, Betsy T^

1 res , 7 acres White Bradie Jr I res , Hot

White, Charles Vernon White, Frank Lee 8 I res I lot

White. James William 8 1 res . I lot

White. Jesse L liteestate 1 res , 1 lot White. Letha

1 res.......

White, Louis Earl 8 1 res Hot

White. Magalene Ayers 1 res . I lot White Velton 1 res .

White. Vivian McLawhorn I res 1 lot

Whitehurst, Athelene B . 41 acres Whitehurst, Athelene B 475 acres

Whitehurst, Athelene B lifeest ' 56 lots    532    44

; Whitehurst, Athlene Bullock 2 lots    247    37

Whitehurst, Ed Alton Sr 1252 acres    1.688    63

Whitehurst. Ed Alton Jr 8 1 res.. Hot    270    67

I Whitehurst. Gladys Chapman I 1 res , 1 lot Whitehurst, Grady Lee I 1 res 1 acre Whitehurst, Harvey Gray I res , 3 acres Whitehurst, Judson Tyson 1 res , 1 lot, 1 acre -; Whitehurst, Linda B j I res , Hot Whitehurst, Lomer Hayes ' 1 res , 4 lots Whitehurst, Lomer Hayes 8 i 2 lots    69    77    Bal

Whitehurst, Marshall Paul 8

152 76 I lot ........

Whitehurst, Mary Hemby I res I lot

Whitehurst, Paul W 8 1 res , Hot

Whitehurst. William Cadet Jr

141.80 67 18

351 97 406 74

9 65 Bal 30 24

165 13

85 85

42 57

152 89 212 54

1,612 77

209 84

999 24

246 35 246 70

233 77 140 32

207 55

461 92 184.70

164 57

296 03

62 37

52 22

130 17

212.54 152 77

263 75

216 12

2,474 38

191 49

51 17 253 5)

179 31

1 res. 7 lots.......

Whitehurst, William Curtis 8

. 187 98

1 lot .......

Whitehurst. Zeno Jr

187.42 i

1 res 1 lot

8

Whiles Insulation Inc

49 58

1 lot

Whitfield Beulah Jeftries

17.69

1 lot

Whiltield, Lucilie Dail

91.43

1 res Hot

Wicker Wallace W Jr 8

. 19 12

1 res , 1 lot, 3 acres

Wier, Jackie B

. 194 81

1 res . 1 lot ........

1

j Wiggins, Edna Faye

46 89

4 acres

1 Wiggins, Gwendolyn R

. 191.67

1 lot

nn H

Wiggins. Nathan Lee

......20 55

1 lot. , ,

Wiggins, Silas Primrose Mrs

223.14

1 res 282 acres

Wilder, Rotiert Douglas 8

82 18

1 res . Hot

Wilkes. Bernard 8

101.64

1 lot

Wilkes. Marvin Eugene 8

57 06

1 lot

( Wilkins, Elijah Ray

.....10.04

1 res Hot

3

j Wilkins, Velma Ree

..... 182 66

1 res 1 lot

a. The

Wilks, Johnny R 8

790 13

imic

mm

NOTICE north CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

The undersigned having qualified as Executrix of the estate ot Addie E Smith, deceased, this is to notify all persons firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned or its attorneys Williamson Herrin Stokes 8 Heftellinoer on Or before November 12 1983 or this Notice will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

This the 10 day ot May 1983 Nettie Marie Yohn Executrix ot the Estate of Addie E Smith. Deceased 14)0 Phillips Ave New Bern, NC 28560 Mickey A Herrin Williamson, Herrin. Stokes8 Hetfeltinger Attorneys at Law P O Box 552 Greenville, NC 27834 May 12, 19, 26 June 2, 1983

NOTICE toCREDITCIRS

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

Having qualified as Executrix ot the Estate of Hattie J Rogerson late of Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Executor within six (6) months from the date ot the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned

This the 10th day of May, 1983 Norman E Rogerson 106 N Summit Street Greenville. North Carolina 27834 OWENS, ROUSE 8 NELSON Attorneys at Law P O Box 302

Greenville North Carolina 27834

(919) 758 4276

May 12 19 26, June 2. 1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix ot the estate of Dorothy Retiecca Carawan late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons , having claims against the estate ot said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before I November 14, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate

ment

ly <

Frances C Edwards

his 10th day ot May 1983

173,80

13 07 .34 99

13 90 25 66

168 81 3 62

131 34

1 lot...............

Unknown

2 lots..........

Unknown

3 lots { Unknown

1 lot

Unknown I lot

Urjknown Owner 3 lots, 101 acres Unknown Owner I lot    .

Valentine. Geraldine Moore I res 2 lots Valentine, Zachary Bernard

1 lot................ 7    54    Bal

Vaiiditord, Major Lee 8 E lla M

' 1 lot.........................31 36

Vandiford. Willis Henry Jr

1 lot ................ 38    88

Vannortwick. Nathaniel 0 111 8

I lot.....................3    68

Veltri, Nicholas 8

1 lot    78    46

Venters, Carl Spencer

1 res , 1 lot, 222 acres  1.547.71

Venters, L M    2    13

Vernon, John Edward Jr 1 res . 1 lot    82,73    Bal

Vick, Kay J

I res 1    lot      189    65

Vincent. James Dalton 8

I res , I    lot............ 246    88

Vincent, Marian Dunn lite est

!    1 res,. 1 lot    25

Wilks, Redmond Jr 8 I    1 res Hot    147

i Williams. Albert i    1 res , 1 lot    199

1 Williams, Ashley Jr '    1 acre    44

Williams Barbara Barghen I 1 lot    ,    9

Williams Barbara Stokes 'Hot    22

I Williams, Bessie (heirs)

Hot    18

, Williams, C E 8 Bettie R , 1    lot    178

'    Williams, Charles Edward 8    Bel

I    1 res , 2 lots        385

I WilTiams, Charlie

, 1    lot..... 94

Williams. Charlie Jr 8

1 res . 1 lot .....9    55    B

I Williams, Clarence

1    lot............ 20

Williams. Curtis Earl 8 1    res . 1 lot    179

Williams. Curtis Jr 8 ! 1    lot    9

Williams, Donnie Lee 1 res , 1 lot    188

Williams, Etfie

1 res , 2 lots    31

Williams, Herbert C 8 1 res., 1 lot    I5(

Williams. Howard R 1 6 lots, 17 acres    16!

P O Box

Simpson, North Carolina 27879 E xecutrix ot the estate ot Dorothy Rebecca Carawan deceased

May 12, 19, 26 June 2 1983

FILENO FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY

IN THE MATTER OF THE

ESTATE OF

BOBBY GENE McROY

NOTICE OF CREDITORS ANOOEBTORSOF BOBBY GENE McROY A11 persons, firms and corporations having claims against Bobby Gene McRoy Deceased are notified to exhibit them to Joyce H McRoy as Administratrix ot the Decedent s Estate on or Ijetore the date not later than six months after the first date ot publication ol this Notice, at Route 3. Box 96, Greenville, North Carolina 27834, or be barred, from their recovery Debtors ot me Decedent are asked fo make imrhediate payment to the above named Joyce H McRoy, Administratrix

Joyce H McRoy,

Aclministratrix ot the ,,    E state ot Bobby G McRoy

Route 3, Box 96

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 ' James Leon Bullock Attorney tor the

Administratrix ot the Estate ot Bobby Gene McRoy Post Office Box 7151 Greenville. North Carolina 27835 7151 May 26 June 2, 9, )6, 1983





The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C -Thursday. May 26,1983

PUBLIC NOTICES

024

Foreign

346

PETS

051

Help Wanted

legal NOTICE REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

Nolit f hereby qiven th.ri ihe A/I'U East Commission Area Aqein y on Aqinq is requeslinq Proposals lor I onsfrijc tinq renovatinq alterinq 01 aiquirinq Multipurpose Senior oenters Procurement will be by competitve neqolialion Applicants nuisi be an incorporated orq.mication yyithin Reqion Q .Heaiilort Bertie Hertforci Martin and Pilt Counties enhibiting evidence ot ability to provide ser cues to older persons Local funds amounting to at least ten percent ilO'"i ot the Federal funds requested are required to match the Federal Funds The completed I ations will be evaluated lor The documented capacity ot

1982 TOYOTA TERCEL 4 door ' automatic air AM FM 12 000 ac ' tual miles Excellent condition ;s8 1809 weekdays 257 6 7 1 ? weekends and nights 450 SL MERCEDES 1978    18,000

miles Silver with blue top Call bctore 9am 757 1073 or after II p m 946 6020 except Sund^s__

POMERANIAN, male blonde housetrained SI00.752 1541 after 5 SIAMESE KITTENS,.6 weeks old

032

Boats For Sale

FAY SWAFFORD ORIGINALS

Hostesses wanted Design your own handbags, luggage accessories in aiso'breeding pair ''can"75 4^ eluding maroon navy and tan 3fter 7        leather    Turn your    spare    time    into

riDc^Aw uiiciricc    I    O'" P^ht time Call 756    2 550

SIBERIAN HUSKIES, registered. 4     yi-jn wnur.mo

red wivith blue eyes, 6 weeks old, |    756 /jjO anytjrne    -

wormed S150 752 5333    I    GRADY    WHITE    Boats    is    now

Wdh 7hi?dren KC

appi

the applicant agency to develop and implement activities for a Mul*

ith

purpose Senior Center

7 . Repsonsiveness to those. \ the greatest economic or social i need    ,

3 I he docirmented effectiveness I 01 the relationship the applicant I agency has with other public and 1 private organizations tori cooidin.ition with linkage mei hanisms

4 Plan tor Ihe Proieci Satisfied Proposal Requirements. Submission ot completed proposal foi ms    I

s Documented evidence ot Community Support    ,

6 Advocacy ettorts exhibited on behall ot older persons

' E vidence ol sufficient tunds tor completion and implementation of the protect

8 Assurance ot Compliance with i all applicable Federal State and local laws regulations and policies

9 Compliance to the length of use . ol an acquired or constructed facility as slated ir, the Federal Register Vol 45 No 63132! 129    . i

10 Evidence ot Ihe Agency s i ability to provide services to oidei persons

Priority shall be given to those counties where a multi purpose ' Senior Center does not ex ist    ,

The Mid East Commission may | reiect any and all proposals i. Completed applications are doe m j the Mid E ast Commission s oltice by j 5 OU p m on Wednesday. June 8, i 1983 For more information contact i Louisa Cox Mid East Commission. i PO Box 1787 Washington North Carolina 2 7889 Telephone 919 946 8043 May II 17 26 1983

12' SANDPIPER sailboat 5695 Call

756 6840 alter 6pm ______

14' HOBIE CAT TURBO Call 756 9730 atty^

1972 GLASTRON 16 with 65 horse power Evinrude and trailer 51595

35j^2970    _______ ____

1977    18'    WINCHESTER,    115

Johnson Galvanized trailer power winch and many extras 53195 Call 756 7041 alter _ ___________

1981 KAWASAKI Jet Skis, 51200 New and used Hobi Cats 51000 and yg_441^4270^____ ________

1982 BASS BOAT, 16    115    Wse

Mercury Center console Galva nized trailer 53200 Cali 752 8888

registered. 5150 Call 355 6)19 __

3 DACHSHUND FEMALE PUPS, wormed weeksoid 746 3681

i 05i

Help Wanted

rti'usl Experience with computers desirablf'^ Minimum of 3 years office experience preferred Good pay and benefits By appointment only Call 752 2111 Ext 251, be tween 9 am and 4 pm Monday through Friday

HEADS UP HAIR SALON now

taking applications for lull time hair stylist Call 758 8553 for ap

ADVERTISING SALESPERSON

wanted for full time position Pre ,    ,    -    .

vious print media sales experience | pointmgnt   _

required with good typing ability Transportation needed Good salary and commission Lite and hospi talization insurance paid vacation

23' O'DAY SLOOP, 7 5 OB VHF shore power racing spars 58200

Call 756406_____________

26'TROJAN 1977 Fly bridge head gallex. and DF radio Call 946 6127

034 Campers For Sale

COX FOLD OUT camper older model Very good condition Sleeps 5 comfortably 5600 Barton 758

1547    __________ ____ _______

TRUCK COVERS All sizes colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops 250 units'in stock O Briants

Raleigh N C 834 2774_______ ______

TRUCK COVERS Sea Hawk Cobra All colors and sizes Camptown R V s Ayden 746 3530 1972 JAYCO hardtop pop up camper Sleeps 8    5400    Call    825

5781    _ _

and holidays Write to Advertising Sales P O Box 1967, Greenville. N C 27835 All inqyiries kept con

tidential    __

AUTO MECHANIC Experience preferred Excellent pay- and benefits including paid vacation paid hospitalization plan Call for

appointment. 355 2 500_______ _

AUTOMOTIVE SALES career Excellent starting salary and benefits Good working conditions Sales experience preferred East Carolina Lincoln Mercury GMC, 756 4267    ________

HOUSEMOTHER POSITION Experience in operating a home Light bookkeeping in managing employees Aparfment provided Must have own transportation Sal

BODY SHOP MECHANIC needed Must be experienced Apply in person to Bill Brown Brown Wood

Inc , Dickinson Ave_____

BRODY'S PITT PLAZA has an

ary negotiable For more informa

tion, call 758 5632__

IMMEDIATE OPENING tor a career minded individual as sales person, with some bookkeeping knowledge (^portunity for advancement Pleasant working conditions Apply in person only Absolutely no phone calls please! Zales Jewelers. Carolina East Mall INFANT TODDLER TEACHER needed Must have experience Apply in person 1026 Red Banks Road_

If you're not using your exercise equipment, sell it this winter in these columns Call 752 6166

LEGAL SECRETARY

051

Help Wanted

051

Help Wanted

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 for growing mobile home industry Must need 530,000 and up per year income Willing to train sharp person For confideritial interview apply in person to Man ager. Crossland Homes. 630 West Greenville Boulevard

NEED PERSON with service sta tion experience, mechanically in dined and can drive. 5 days a week Tripp's By Pass Service Center, 719 Soutn Memorial Drive. No phone calls please_

PART TIME HELP to train as designer and do general duties in florist Reply to Florist, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834

PART TIME odd and end work for local builder No heavy physical labor required Must have own tools and transportation Expereince necessary 756 8085___

PART TIME HELP wanted, fast food experience helpful Serious inquiries only Apply between 2 3 p m at Bill's Fast Food, corner of 4th and Greene No phone calls

opening lor a full time office j Experienced, salary negotiable

036

Cycles For Sale

worker Must be able to preform oltice duties filing typing tele phone work Previous office work experience preferred Apply Brody s Pill Plaza Monday through Friday. 2 to5    _

COMMERCIAL CARPENTERS or lead persons needed at once at Cherry Point Cali Jim Jones. 1 447 4921 We are an EOE

MOPED Like new Great deal! 600 miles Call 355 2160after 5

1977 550 Honda E xcellent condition Call 752 0334 or 746 2017    ___

1978 KZ650 KAWASAKI Custom painl new tires 4 into I header new seat lots more 51306 or best Otter Call 746 4066    ____________

1980 HONDA CR80R, super condi lion sm Call after 6 746 6753____

1981 HONDA CM400E. 2.300 miles Excellent 2 helmets, winter suit SI 100 negotiable Must sell 524 5293

1982 GS 6S0L Suzuki 5 speed shaft drive disc brakes front air lorks, cruise lock windshield luggage rack, trunk, adjustable sissy oar excellent condition, 52200 Matching bag man luggage 5100 Barton

7_5|_I547^    ________________

1982 XR80 DIRT BIKE Excellent condition S350 tirm Call 758 2658

afler^    _____________________

19M YAMAHA'750 Seca Excellent condition I owner only 2300 miles $2450 Call 758 5676 alter 5

COMPUTER SUPPLIES Sales Representative tor Ihe Greenville area No overnight travel Com puler backgroundBelptol Excellent training provided Salanz plus

Data SuoDlies. I BOO 662 8748

CRUISE SHIP JOBS! Great income potential All occupations For in lormation call (312)    741    9780

extension 4332_________

DENTAL ASSISTANT WANTED Must have experience Call 752 5126

DENTAL HYGIENIST WANTED

Flexible hours Call 752 5126 tor information_______

DRYWALL FINISHERS needed 3 years experience Government Proiecli Beals & Western J V, Havelock I 447 0677________

Send resume to Secretary PO Box

5091. Greenville. NC____

LOCAL MANUFACTURE ot pre cision molding rubber products has an immediate opening for 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 _

LOCAL WHOLESALE 1

has

co^pan^

Bookkeeper ' Send resume to Sec retary, P O Box 1967, Greenville N C 27835

LPN NEEDED surgical office Hours Tuesday Wednesday. Thursday 9 5 Reply to LPN, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834 . MAINTENANCE PERSON needed lor apartment complex Must be knowledgeable in all areas of gen eral maintenance work Send de scription of qualifications and work experience to Maintenance PO Box 7, Greenville. NC 27834

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY! __

Large corporation has outstanding !    CONVENIENT

sales opening for a salp repre ,    520,(X)O

sentative Individual must be lal ,    commission Apply at Dodges

resident with rnanagerial ability ^ store 3209 South Memorial Drive, ! ambition and show progress for Greenville

age Business or sales background j    -

helpful In reauestino personal in 1 MATURE DETERMINED and

helplul In request terview please sul

Trucks For Sale

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

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 tire | and live music Admission $1 00 1

Kj^ds under [2 tree Call 355 2970 _

WE PAY CASH for diamonds. I Floyd G Robinson Jewelers 407 Evans Mall. Downtown Greenville

011 Autos For Sale

CHEVROLET LUV 1980 4X4

Blue 29 000 miles, custom made roll bar and rear bumper Amen

stating personal history education business experience Write Box 406 Greenville, NC 27834_____

energetic person who would like to make money as personnel consul tant Good telephone personality a must College degree preferred For details caM Herb Lee, 35 Heritage Personnel__

PARTTIAAE

OPPORTUNITY

Greenville and Surrounding Area

Leading National Confectionery ** consumer products company has an excellent opportunity for you to

EARN EXTRA INCOME WORKING NEAR YOUR HOME

Earn S0.17ffn hour working 20 hours a week Mondayihursday, 9 am-2pm

We otter paid vacations, pai^holi days and an automobile allowvice lor business use

As part time Merchandisers, you will call on grocery stores to build displays, sell merchandise and products or will call on convenience food stores, drug stores and other small outlets to sell, and merchan dise our popular food products within a specific geographic area The successful candidate must own an automobile tor transportation to and between customer calls.

Send a letter or resume (handwrit ten perfectly acceptable) sum marizing your qualifications and interest Please include your tele phone number

Merchandisers P 0 Box 1967 Greenville, N C 27835

An Equal Opportunity Employer

051

Help Wanted

QUALIFIED FABRICATORS

needed 5 years experience! minimum. Send resume to Quali i lied. Route 1, Box 692, Greenville

NC_ >__

RESTAURANT management: personnel for the Greenville and | New Bern area Starting salary , $13,000 and yi Send complete I resume to'PO Box 2672, New Bern, , NC 28360    I

RN

STAFF DEVELOPER

Position available for a staff devel oper in modern long term care facility Must possess leadership ability and technical skills to carry out policies and programs established by the facility. Regis tered nurse with work experience sufficient to demonstrate ability to organize, plan and assist employees in Teaming situations

Please send resume to:

Rt. 1, Box 21 Greenville, NC 27834

RN'S, LPN'S and OR Technicians

Contact Barbara McDonald. Director of Nursing, (919) 943 2111

SALESPERSON WANTED tor

retail bedding store. Mattress World Apply IW3 West 14th Street

SECRETARY/BOOKKEEPER

One Girl Office. 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 . P Bo* 1705. Greenville, NC, 27835 1705.__-

SERVICE STATION HELP Expe rience Local references Apply m person. Holiday Shell, 724 South Memorial Drive. No phone calls.

I m f

can Racing Aluminum mags H70 x 15 tires, sliding rear window 54900 or best offer 825 432 i days. 825 1140

nights Bethel

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car call 756 1877, Grant

Byick We will pay top dollar_

SELL YOUR CAR the National Auiotinders Way' Authorized Dealer in Pitt County Hastings Ford Call 758 01 14__

014

Cadillac

CADILLAC, 1970 4 door hard top, Sedan Deville One owner 5595 negotiable 756 8999

1976 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

Needs little body work Also air conditioner 5,000 BTU Call be I ween 10 and 7 757 3119_

015

Chevrolet

CAPRICE 1982    4    door,    fully

equipped extra clean Call Rex S^im Chevrolet Ayden. 746 3141

DODGE VAN    1976    Fully

customized    complete with    bed,

stereo CB    electric west    coast

mirrors, air, air home sink and refrigerator Immaculate condition Price $4500    Will finance    Call

756 9874 Country    ' Squire    Mobile

Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville FORD, 1978, F150. 4X4. 4 speed Stepside 54700 Call 752 8888 1964 CHEVROLET pickup    Call

752 6633______

197) STEP VAN    12' body    Runs

good with new    battery    $1500

negotiable 756 9123 days 756 1007 nights _____________

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1975 CHEVROLET pickup Carolina blue with tool box $2,000 Call 756 7067

1976 JEEP CHEROKEE 2 door. 6 cylinder, 4 wheel drive, new tires and upholstery 756 4230 night 752 4220 day_

040

Child Care

MOTHER OF 2 and 3 year old would like to keep children in her home 520 week 756 3276 anytime

WANTED: Children to enjoy during the summer for working moms Responsible jenergetic teenager (assisted by her mom) has great summer planned tor your chiTd If interested call 756 9428 anytime

CASH FOR your car Barwick Auto

Scales. 7^_7_M^___________

CELEBRITY 1982    4 door low i

mileage extra clean Call Rex | Smith Chevrolet. Ayden. 746 3141 1979 Chevrolet Monza, 4 cylinder, i automatic air sunroof, aM FM ' stereo cassette Real clean, low j rnileage 53200 752 8870__

WILL KEEP YOUR children in my home during the summer Near Bells Fork 756 3028     '

04

PETS

017

Dodge

1978 DODGE TRANS VAN Loaded, CB ACDC refrigerator stove AM FM stereo, cruise porta potty, sink air Excellent condition 746 3542

1978 DODGE COLT Excellent con dilion good gas mileage $2600 negotiabIe_756 9273 atter 6pm__

018

Ford

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER I ^u^gies All shots, wormed Call

, AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER

I Male, 6 months old '550 752 6T36

I atter 6 p m__

AKC MINIATURE Longhaired Dachshund 11 week old male red

and black 355 6476, Greenville_

AKC REGISTERED Cocker Spaniel puppies been wormed, 5100 each

244 1139. Midlred Tripp_

DALMATIAN PUPPIES white with black dots $100 Call Pollocksville, 224 7941 or 224 5431 alter 5p~m________________

COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON 1982 Ford Executive Car Light blue, loaded Call Leo Venters Motors,

Ayden, 746 6171______

PINTO RUNABOU'T. 1974 good condition 4 speed, air reliable Best otter Call Richard 355 2362 1960 T BIRD for sale by owner Good shape Low mileage $3500 firm Call h 0558___

1965 MUSTANG 6 cylinder 3 speed Good condition $1700 negotiable. 756 7698    ___

1966 MUSTANG, siraighf. 6 engine, excellent condition Rebuilt carburetor and transmission, AM FM cassette $2500 or best offer 22ade atter 6 p m 756 6893 1971 MAVERICK 4 door Right side damaged Runs, good tires new

mufller Best oiler 758 4567__

1974 ltd Brougham Loaded 5600 Call 756 0962_aMer_4.m___.

1974 PINT STATIONWAGON E>tra clean, low mileage $1095 S6 4204 or 756 8715 19 77 LTD LANDAU Fully equipped Extra Clean 48.000 miles s)506 Call Joe Clark 756 0919

FULL BLOODED

never puppies 6 752 3914

Labrador weeks old

Re

550

HALF ENGLISH, halt boxer bulldog puppies Tails cut oft and dewormed 5100 each 1 male, l

lemale 758 3858 or 758 4997_

HELP ME SAVE MY DOG Wanted someone to keep dog at their house Willfurnish food, etc plus monthly

fee 756 7503 or 756 8802__

LABRADOR RETRIEVERS AKC puppies Field trail and gun dog stock Wormed, shots, and de wclaws removed I 242 6529 or I 242 4830

The New Truck In Town IsAt

Brown-Wood, Inc.

1983 Isuzu Pickup

M33.94

Per Month

Dickinson Ave.

020

Mercury

1969 MERCURY MONTEREY

>'*0053000, $375 Call 752 2321

021

Oldsmobile

CUTLASS SUPREME 1982 Fully equipped extra ciedn. low mileage. Call Hex Smith. Chevrolet, Ayden,

746 JUi    _________

1970 98 OLDSMOBILE Affordable and reliable All power 5500 Days 756 5434, atter 6, 756 6994

1971 OLDS CUTLASS FOR PARTS No tires no rims Motor and transmission in real good shape Call 756 6983 alter 8 30p m _

022

Plymouth

1972 PLYMOUTH FURY Clean Good condition S695 or best otter

7S2 1705

Based on Selling Price of S60Q0.00, S1000 down (cash or trade), Amount financed $5000.00. 48 monthly payments, 12.9% Annual Percentage Rate, Finance charges $1429.12. Total note S6429.12. Stock no. 710050.

Brown-Wood, Inc.

752-7111

1983 ECONOQJY FROM SUBARU

THE ENGINEERING EXPERTS

1975 PLYMOUTH Salon Futv 318 cel lent con

motor 72.000 miles E dition 51500 746 2326

024

Foreign

MUST SELL! 1972 Porsche 914 Good condition, 53150 758 6721 1976 DATSUN 280Z, automatic, air" AM FM stereo cassette iet black Ith mag wheels excellent condi 756 45

tion

4568

1976 MAZDA 808 MISER 2 door runs good good miles per gallon Needs body work 5750 Call 756 8098

1977 BMW 3201 Excellent condition Call 756 5034 atter 6

1978 MGB 38 000 miles good tires I x'cellent condition 756 0138_

1979 JAGUAR XJ6, 4 door sedan excellent condition All options Priced to sell Call 757 1321 or call collecI 52_3 1524 ask tor Bill Lewis 1979 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE con vertible 4 speed with electric ove.rdnve 30.0O miles Excellent condition 758 1809 weekdays, 752 6712 weekends and nights

1980 BMW 52*1 Dark blue, sunroof, automatic Excellent condition. 514.500 355 2245 or 355 6422

1980 DATSUN 2)0 SL Hatchback Automatic, air, excellent condition 756 6588

1980 DATSUN 200 SX Hard top. SL package, sunroof, low mileage, ori ginal owner 56.000 355 2525 after 6

1981 TOYOTA 2 door Liftback Corolla 5500C 756 5511

1982 SR5 TERCEL Like new, air, 5 speed, AM'FM stereo, sunroof, extra clean Call 756 3979 before 8 a m or ar 7 o m____

The 1983 Subaru line engmered for economy and durability. There's a new Subaru that s sure to fit your driving needs. Reliable hatchbacks. sporty-looKing two-doors, roomy station wagons, practical luxury sedans or the rugged Bral all Subaru vehicles feature tront-wheel drive and well-built reliability. And brand new for '83 "On Demand 4-Wheel Drive " in an automatic transmission Available on certain models. Come in today and discover the Subaru Difference tor yourself.

GLWagon

(JL Hardtop

GL Hatchback

SUBARU

INEXPENSIVE. AND BUILT : TOSTAYTNATWAY. i

Subaru Of Oreenville

60S W. Greenville Blvd.

Authorized Parts & Service Phone 756-8885

Greenville

Jfm

SR

TYPISTS!

55 Words Per Minute WE NEED YOU! MANPOWER TEMPORARY Services otters you:

' Unique Fringe Benefits ' Top Pay

Flexible Schedule Call us tor an ^pointment We Are Not a Fee ^ency

MANPOWE^R

TEMPORARY

SERVICES

ll8ReadeStreet

757-3300

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

EXPERIENCED SHEET METAL workers only Apply m person at Larmar Mechanical Contractors

between 8 and 9am only_

EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN to work with established firm. Excellent opportunity, good benefits Please call 756 2340 for.,

interview_

POSITION AVAILABLE for Re ceptionist Secretary Send resume to P O Box 1128, Farmville. NC 278

051

Help Wanted

QUALIFIED SAILING and wind surfer instructors needed Bayside Watersporfs, Nags Head. NC 441 4270    _

WANTED- SERGE hemmer, I'j years experience Blue Cross, vacation, holidays, profit sharing A good place to work Apply Too Tuff Togs. Grimesland, 758 9727__

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 stay with woman nights 746 3654 WELL ESTABLISHED import GM dealer in Eastern NC seeks 2 experienced techniciaps Only ex perienced need to apply Send resume to Technician. PO Bo* 1967, Greenville, NC 27834 CARPENTER with framing and trim experience Greenville 355 2956

059

Work Wanted

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 rootina 35 years experience in building Call James Harrington atter 752 7765

pm

WANTED PARTY CHIEF or in

sfrument person for surveying firm Experience required Call Speight & Associates, 756 8440 from 8 a m 5

p m^____

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CALL SEARS ROEBUCK 8. Co for free estimates on siding, guttering, mobile horhe roofover, insulation, interior and exterior painting and roof vents Call 7S6 9700, exf 232 Monday Saturday IQ am 9pm

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

m VALUE PRICED USED CARS

1981 Audi 4000 5 Plus 5...........

REDUCED

1981 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel____

^5995.00

1981 Volkswagen Truck.............

DIESEL

1980 Dodge D-50 Truck..............

'4295.00

1980 Volkswagen Rabbit...........

'4195.00

1979 Pontiac Sunbird...............

AUTOMATIC

1979 Chevrolet Impala Wagon.......

'5195.00

1978 Plymouth Horizon.... .........

'3595.00

1978 Buick Electra Limited 4 Door..

'3995.00

1978 Chevrolet Chevette............

'2495.00

1977 Buick Skylark..................

SPECIAL

1977 AMC Gremlin..................

'1995.00

1976 Volkswagen Rabbit............

'1995.00

1974 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham

'1695.00

12 Months/12,000 Mile Mechanical Warranty . Available On Some Of The Above No Reasonable Offer Refused

Joe Pediles Volkswagen, Inc.

GiesnvilleBlvd,    ;5b-ll35

Serving Greenville To The Coast For 18 Year^

Bethels Finest Used Cars

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier 4 door, green, 4 speed, air condition, like new.

1981 Chevrolet Caprice 4 door,

white.

1980 Chevrolet Chevette 4 speed air condition, white. Priced to go.

1980 Chevrolet Monza Blue, automatic, air condition, sharp.

1980 "Honda 2 door, 4 speed transmission, clean.

1979 Chevrolet Chevette 2 door. 4 speed transmission, air condition.

1979 Buick Regal Blue, clean, sharp car.

1979 Chevrolet Maiibu 4 door, automatic transmission, air condition, red and white.

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Blue white vinyl top, sharp car.

1978 Chevrolet Monza Black, 4 speed, air condition.

1975 Olds Delta 88 Convertible

1975 Chevrolet Caprice Classic -

59,0(X) miles, clean, loaded.

TRUCKS

1980 Chevrolet LUV Pickup - Red, 4 speed transmission, clean.

1980 Oatsun King Cab Orange, 4 speed

1980 Chevrolet LUV Pickup 4 X 4

blue, like new.

1978 Chevrolet C-10 Diesel Like new, automatic, power steering

1974 Oatsun Truck Orange

We Are In Great Need Of Used Cars Now

We Are Offering Highest Trade-In Allowances Ever!

WYNNES CHEVROLET

Ramon uthain 'On The Comer, Ofi The Square j.T.surrua

JooRawla Bethel, N.C._ Phone    825-4321    OouflHouaa

GMCUALTTY SBMCE PARTS

CaraRAL IIOTOSS nUZTS DIVISION





059

Work Wanted

074

Miscellaneous

074

Miscellaneous

CARPETCLEANING

ality Cleaning Reasonable Rates & H C lean Care    754    9074

' The Carpet Doctor'

CARPET SPECIAL

2 rooms and hall Home Care Cleaners

39 95 754 5453

CHIMNEY SWEE'PING Fireplaces! and wood stoves need cleaning atter , a hard winters use Eliminate' creosote and musty odors Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En terprises 754 9123 day, 754 100?:

niqnt____

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time Let someone else do your housecleaninq 752 3758 FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed trom wood and metal Equipment tormally ot Dip and Strip All items returned within 7 days Tar Road Antiques Call tor tree estimate Days 754

9123. Night 754 1007______

GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and, driveways Call

752 7341_____

GRASS CUTTING Reasonable'

prices 355 6132__ ;

LAWN CUTTING College student! cutting lawns at reasonable rates

Call Al at 75 4178__'

i^WNMOWER REPAIRS We will ftlpk up and deliver All work sguaranfeed Call 757 3353 atter 4

' ),|fn weekends anytime  _

] 1EED A SMALL wallpapering or , idint |ob done? Experienced, quali , lework Reasonable Judy 757 1500

PAINT PROS

Vte specialize in use ot Beniamin fAoore paints Residential or commercial Interior or exterior piaster and wallpapering Free estimate 758 4155 __ WE DO IT RIGHT

PAINTING

CALL CHARLES TICE. 758 3013 for small loads ot sand topsoil and

stone Also driveway work____

CARPET, CARPET, CARPET!

Assorted sizes and colors 9xl2's, 9xl5's I2xl2's, 12x15'^ Priced to move Financing available Furniture World 2808 East lOth

Street. 757 045i_____

C8 BASE. 40 channel power mike

antenna and coax 575 754 2584 ______

CENTIPEDE SOD 758 2704    752

4994___

CITY DIRECTORY FOR SALE The official City Directory is almost worth its weight in gold at times to businesses that need to locate people, street addresses, phone numbers businesses and other in formation one copy available Reduced to JlOO Calf 752 4348 be

tween 9am and 6pm____

CLEARANCE SALE on Sony Tele visions Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center West End Shopping Center And Dickinson

Avenue    ______

COFFEE MACHINE. 550 Call

754 2121    .    __

DAY CARE EQUIPMENT for sale Almost new but drastically re duced tor quick sale 20 cots at 520 each 2 cribs at 575 each 2 mattresses ahS20 each Call 752 4348

between 9 a m and 4 p m_________

DEN SUIT Sofa, recliner rocker 3 tables 5150 or best otter 752 6448 atter 5 weekdays, anytime on

weekends .    ________________

FACTORY 2nds NOW available direct trom manufacturer Hand woven rope hammocks, 519 95 to 553 Hatteras Hammocks

No |0b too small Interior and exterior Low rates McEarl Paint Co

.    ____ 757 3^^    _____

PAINTING, remodeling storage

beildinqs 758 4212    _______

PAINTING, interior and exterior 42 years experience work guaran 4bd References Free estimates

4873 after 4pm ______

Painting Tired ot paying con trjctors high prices Experienced A^nters work guaranteed 757 1233 SANDING and finishing floors small carpenter |obs counter tops dock Baker Floor Service 754 2848 aavtime, it no answer call back

S^N PAINTING Truck lettering s low as 559 95 Call Steve Atkins of all your sign needs 754 9117 typing PROFESSIONAL 15 Vars experience Letters, term papers. Charts, etc 754 7162 atter 8 p.m or early morning before 8am WILL /MOW any size lawn at rBSonable rates Call 752 4419 atter . . ______________

1104

Clark Street, Greenville FOR SALE G E 25" color TV as is 5150 Call atter 4pm Monday Friday. anytime Sunday 754 4328 FOR SALE yellow collards and cabbage plants Manon Mae Mills m 32^r 355 27W FOR SALE 35 mm Topcon camera Great condition Two lenses, case 5100 Call 752 7854 tatter June I 754 9 5951    _

GEORGIA RED sweet potato sprouts 525 tor 1000 Call 752 3015

days 754 7159 nights    ______

GIRLS BIKE, Schwinn 26    5    speed

2 Florescent 2 bulb work lights Pushbutton wall phone Call 754

54 24 atter 5________

GOOD USED WASHERS 5100 each 585 with trade in Call 754 2479

PORTABLE REFRIGERATOR

sells for 5210. asking 5105 4 months old 754 1444 after 3    _    __

ROSE BUSHES

ARE '

20% Off HAPPIPOTGERBERAS BEGONIAS IMPATIENS TOMATOES&PEPPERS

Many Other Bedding Plants ANDGARDEN SUPPLIES

Open Sunday 1 30 to 5 PM

KitfreH's Greenhouses

2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT

________CALL    75A7373

SEARS BEST rowing exerciser, 5100 Stationery exerciser bike. 520 3 pound dumb bell set, 55 Brinley 10 turning plow, cultivator and hitch, tits 10 14 horsepower lawn

frac t^i.5150 758 4373_

SET OF PINE bunk beds and mattress and box springs Dorm size refrigerator All in good condi

tion 754 7044 atter 5 30 _

SET OF SEARS weights and weight

^nch Call 752 1973after 5_

SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental

Tool Company___

SMITH CORONA TP 1 letter quali ty printer 5 months old Used 1 month In mint condition 752 3980 SOLID W<X)D pan finish 9 piece dining room suit, Mediterranean style, like new. 51500 Call 754 8702

STANCILTREE SERVICE

J P Stancil, 752 4331_

TOASTER OVEN, 535 Corelle Dinnerware by Corning, cost 5100. sell tor 550 752 1231__

074

Miscellaneous

075 Mobile Homes For Sale '075 AAobile Homes For Sale

I r4LUUt air powered gun nailer 2 Radial arm saws Call 758 7438 or 754 3194 nights

21"    10    speed Jeunet bicycle

Excellent condition 5100 744 2637 between 12 noon and 5pm Mon day Friday or anytime weekends

40' ALUMINUM extension ladder Like new 5149 00 Call 754 9129 5 PIECE LIVING room or den furniture Contemporary wood with natural color woven cushions in eludes sofa, love seat, arm chair sofa table, and end table Excellent condition. 5450 355 4119

p>

FOR SALE

Oil

Antiques

I ; f    ANNOUNCING

I,'    North Carolina's Finest

: It    THE WINSTON SALEM

! ANTIQUE EXTRAVAGANZA I ^ 1    Show and Sale

I May 27. 10 a m 9pm May 28. 10 1 ,a m 7pm May 29, Noon 4pm, 1 JMemorial Coliseum Over 150 quail , ,ty dealers displaying

, ;    ANTIQUESANDOLD

I    COLLECTIBLESONLY!

' 52 00 admission 51 50 with this ad .DEALERS AND COLLECTORS I DON'T MISS IT' 919 924 8337,

I 919 924 4359. 919 924 8954    __

I ANTIQUE PIANO 5550 antique I swivel stool with glass ball and claw I feet 590 Call 754 9103 before 4pm 1 or 754 5594 alter 4    _

GRADUATION IDEA? Moftift s Magnavox has 12 black and white TVs tor only 574 95! 2803 Evans

Street Extension 754 8444________

ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers Sale 40% olt Barkers Refrigeration 2227 Memorial

Drive, 754 4H7____________________

LARGE LOADS ot sand and top soil, lot cleaning backhoe also available 754 4742 after 4pm, Jim

Hudson_________________

MAGNAVOX 25 Color TV Good condition 5250 753 4492 atter 4 p m MATTRESS SET, queen size Simmons Beauty Rest Good condi

tion, 5100 754 8442    _    ____

MORTAR SAND, tilt, rock, topsoil

Call 744 38l9or 744 3294_________

MOVING MUST SELL 3 piece den suite sota, chair, loveseat (brown and rust plaid) Excellent condition.

5375 752 T949 atter 5 p m______

NEED TO GET RID of old clothing ind) or household iterns

758 47?!

TOFSSOIL, mortar sand, fill sand and gravel Davenport Hauling,

754 5247 ___________

TWO 50 watt Lyric speakers Good condition 575 or best otter Days

754 9371 or nights 754 7887__

USED DESKS FOR SALE only 3 available at 5100 each Call 752 4348

between 9am and 4pm__

USED LIVING ROOM turmture Good condition Reasonable* Call

752 9419    _____

WANTED TO BUY -used 1978 or newer Mustang or Pontiac Sunbird Call 758 3047 after 5pm_

WEDDING CAKES professionally decorated and delicious Made to

order Call 757 3133___

WlXtDEN STORM DOOR, 34x80 Good condition 545 Call 355 2508

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

7 PIECE DINETTE, sota, chan recliner 5200 Call 355 2128

and

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

12X50 RITZCRAFT Call 758 4234__

12x40, 1970 HILLCREST Located m

good park 54800 754 0801________________

12x70 2 BEDRCX3MS, 2 baths good condition 52,000 equity and assume

loan Call 754 9001 atter 4_______ ________

14 WIDES for as low as 5190 per month Call or come by Art Dellano Homes. 754 9841 _

4974 RITZ CRAFT 12x65    2    I    results

bedrooms I bath 5300 down 757

0433    I    _

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Thursday. May 26, l983-2,i

aZHEN SOMEONE IS r*-,id|i *0 bu r t to Pi ACF YOUR ( izn.x,tifri ah

. Ad Visor help you vvord vdor Ad

BRAND NEW 1983 top ot the line double wide 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle root frost free refrigerator, garden tub cathedral ceiling and much, much more Regular price. 521,995 Limited Time Only

$16,995

VA. FHA and conventional on lot financing Delivery and set up included Hours, 8 AM to 8 pm CROSSLAND HOMES (formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 430 West Greenville Boulevard

14x70 R NALL 3 bedrooms. 2 baths

Assume loan Call 757 3944__________

1970.    12x45    Town    & Country

Excellent condition All electric central air and heat 2 bedroom, 2 bath washer dryer Unfurnished 55.000 752 7941 atter 4 p m ______

1980 14 X 70 three bedrooms, I bath Some equity and assume loan ot 5181 per month Call Art Dellano Homes. 754 9841___

1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as low as 5148 91 At Greenville s volume dealer Thomas Mobile Home Sales North Memorial Drive acro trom airport Phone4048

1978 12x60 CONNOR mobile home tor sale 2 bedrooms, I bath Underpinning included Low down , payment assume low monthly j payments Call 752 8844 atter 2    ;

1979 MOBILE HOME, 2 bedrooms i new furniture completely deco rated Excellent condition and ap | pearance priced under 5150 month Call 756 9874 Countr_y Squire Mobile . Homes 244 Bypass Greenville

1979 12x50, 2 BEDRCX3MS Assume I loan and take up payments No equity 754 8394_____

1983 WAYCO 2 bedrooms. I bath ' plywood floors sheetrock walls front and rear bedrooms priced under 5125 per month Call 754 9874 j Country Squire Mobile Homes 244 Bypass Greenydle    |

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Sell your used television the Classified way. Call 752 4164

EXCELLENT INVESTMENT

70x14 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, total electric repo Great condition Less than 5400 down and less than 5200 per month for only 9 years Call 754 0131 ______

LIMITED TIME ONLY!!! 1983 70x14 2 bedrooms. 2 baths To see is to believe! Need to sell immediate

ly 10% above wholesale plus set up Only 1 home, so hurry and call' 754 0131

BOYD

ASSOCIATES

INCORPORATED

P.O. BOX 170S. GREENVILLE. NORTTICABOUNA 27134 GENERAL CONTJtACTOHS    7S84284

METAL BUILDINGS

HASTINGS FORD MAY SPECIAL

1982 Ford Mustang GT

302 High Output performance engine, speeid transmission Raven black, sport wheels. AM-FM stereo, bucket seats, raised white letter tires. A cream puff

Priced To Sell

H

ASTING

FORD

s

U^d Caf ( omp^ny

Vnir SI W s . ^4 b, ,-ds,    758*0    114

MOBILE HOME tor sate 3 bedroom Call 752 9978 after 6!d m NEW QUALITY built Marshfield 3 bedrooms, I'a baths Payments under 5200 per month Only 1 home

left' Call 754 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 trom airport, Greenville

NC 752 4068_____

I TO BE MOVED! 1971 Ritzcratt ' mobile home, 12x60 T', baths Nice and cien. in excellent condition Washer, dryer New heater, under pin. central air condition Call 2 4209

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ny kir II pic

k them up Call 752 0308 or

EM'S ANTIQUES, crafts and gitts, 5 rooms Monday Saturday. 114 2 miles west of Moose Lodge on 264 Business 754 2921

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood for sale J P Stancil, 752 4331

, 065 Farm Equipment

I TRACTOR RADIOS top quality Iblarion radios AM FM pushbutton I radio' 593 49 AM FM cassette I stereo radio 5102 49 Fender mount > housing with built in speaker and X antenna 541 49 Coaxial wedge speakrs 531 95 per pair Agn , SuWJly, Greenville, NC 752 3999

067 Garage-Yard Sale

SDON'T Ml this years largest m yard sale!! Saturday morning, 8 to 0 I At The Red Barn Trailer Park d Everything trom furniture to clothing

' NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market open Saturday 8 til 5 Sunday I til 5 Outside dealer I spaces 52 00 Inside spaces 54 00 I (Tall Bill 744 3541. Mike 746 3550. Fair Grounds 758 4914

PORCH SALE 413 West Fourth Ladles clothing, camera, household items May 27. May 28__

RAYNOR FORBESANDCLARK

Flea Market open Saturdays 7 til 1, across from Moose Lodge 754 4090.

YARD SALE, Friday and Saturday. 8 until 12    812 West 5th Street,

Ayden Moving Baby clothes, toys, bed, hardware and much other

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Movers Goodyear Tire Center. West End Shopping Center And

Dickinson Avenue_____

NOTICE TO RENTAL property owners. Furniture World has a wholesale division Call os for the

best prices, 757 Q451____________ _______

OUR NIECES have gone back to Germany from ECU We have 2 couches, 2 living room chairs, large chest, and end table Ideal for

college student 355 2154    __    __

PORTABLE GENERATOR Honda 1.000 waft Gasoline powered 110 volt AC, 12 or 24 volt DC Si85 754 4784    _ _

STEEL BUILDINGS

BY

Riverside Iron Works

Toll Free 1-800-682-3705

An Authorized Dealer for Mitchell Steel Buildings for over 15 years

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

7.,2 61 Ih

FOR SALE

40 Wide Screen GE Color Television

Reduced To ^2399.00

Goodyear Tire Center

West End Shopping Center

756-9371

TARO SALE, Saturday, Falkland | "brch of God. Faiklarid, NC. was ;

told school house 9 until._ i

FAMILY yard sale. Saturday, I By 28. 8 to 2. *4 mile off Memorial ' Bveonto Stokes Highway 752 2755 758 2197

Livestock

Jrseback riding

bles, 752 5237

Jarman

 ISESHOW, Sunday May 29,

T983 9 am Haytield Farm, Ayden. NC Coastal Plain Circuit ASAC ttonctioned No added classes

wanted young boy or girl to

give a Pinto pony a home 5175 i

754 7209___I

073 Fruits and Vegetables

CERTIFIED PUERTOi, RICAN I

sweet potato plants 752 4215_

MAY PEAS 55 50 a bushel B 8. B

You Pick 795 4444__I

Z    POWELL'S    i

: PICK YOUR OWN I

   BROCCOLI    j

COLLARDS.LETTUCE.CABBAGE I

NOWOPEN    4pm    8pm    ;

8 miles . west ot Greenville on !

244. turn left on Hwy 13 300 yards on B left Watch tor sign_

- I I I    I I

4

074

Miscellaneous

AIR CONDITIONER FOR SALE

4,000 BTU Kenmore, almost new, reduced to only 5125. Call 752 4348 between 9 a m and 4 p m . will deliver, it desired_

ASSUME PAYMENTS of 539 95 on a 4 piece Western living room suit Sgfa. chair, rocker, and 3 tables Furniture World, 757 0451 We take trade ins

BASSET SOFA AND CHAIR, plaid. $450. Excellent condition Call 758 2443_____

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

Why pay retail when you can save up to ' z and more on bedding ano waterbeds Factory Mattress & Waferbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza). 355 2624

BROWN VINYL ROCKER recliner $45 Call 754 4472 alter 4 P.m

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL

Table'- Cash discounts. Delivery and insinuation 919 743 9734

BY OWNER - Office equipment and

furniture 754 9209or 754 1436

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE install ALUMINUM AND I VINYLSIDING

I C .1. Lu|)'>n. Co

SPECIAL Executive Desks

Rg. Fries $251.00

50 30 beautiful walnut finish Ideal lor home or office

Special Price $17900

TAFF OFFICE 1 EQUIPMENT

569 S Evans St 757-2175

SALE

1983 Chevrolet Canuro Z-28 ' IOC -uiipcrte^ like new

1982 Toyota Clica 5 5ceec. aifconoitior

1982 Olds Cutlass Cruiser Wagon

1982 Toyota Pickup 4 Air'ee''drive SOOOtnues

1982 Chevrolet Blazer uliDCviei

1982 Ford Mustang 'IOC dii corjiiioftsceea povnersiegMig    

1981 Chevrolet Citation laoor a.-.onait'C'- Sunroot '

1981 Olds Cutlass Supreim 2ooc'f fyit power aif 1981 Chevrolet Chevette 2300' ispeefl 1981 Toyota Pickup 4sceec 1981 Honda Accord 4 door 5 Speed d<f ronpirion 1981 Chevrolet Caprice    Fuiloo*er l300niiies

1980 Lincoln Town Car    4'JoOf *uii cower

1980 Chevrolet LUV Pickup 1 mneel 3'ive isceeo 1979 Ford Fainnont Futura " 2doof an ;ondifion 1979 Cadillac Sedan De Ville 1979 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup Air condition 1979 Chevrolet El Camino 4 r :ondi!ion 1979 Chevrolet Malibu Wagon Air condition 1979 Chevrolet Customized Van Air condition 1979 Honda Civic 2 3001 1979 Oodge St. Regis 4 300' 'uiiDovie' at'

1979 Chevrolet Malibu 4 300' a,' 9 000 miles '

1978 Ford LTD Wagon

1978 Toyota Wagon 4 5oeea

1977 Ford 2 Ton Truck 23pee3aie 15 sieei beo

1976 Triumph TR-7

1976 Pontiac Grand Prix

1970 Chevrolet 1 Ton Truck 'lai steel Deo

Many Others To Choose From

43,495.00

*7995.00

*8995.00

*7995.00

*11,495.00

*6695.00

*5895.00

*7495.00

*3995.00

*4295.00

*7695.00

*7895.00

*10,495.00

*4995.00

*3895.00

*8495.00

*5995.00

*4995.00

*4995.00

*6995.00

*3295.00

*3995.00

*4995.00

*2995.00

*3995.00

*3995.00

*2395.00

*2495.00

*2895.00

Voyager Mechanical Protection Available On Many Of These Units

GREENVILLE

GM QUALITY SERVICE PARTS

GEHERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION

I

liJJieiMi'iij

SAVINGS UP TO $1725.00 PLUS 11.0% FINANCING AVAILABLE

ON

1083 CHEVROLET CAPRICE CLASSIC

Terrific Selection Offer Good Thru May 31st

^rannra

CHEVRO^^ JHLL I

West End Circle

Phone 756-2150

. , ...........

PI

GM QUALITY SERVICE PARTS

GM

1^1

GREENViLLE

GENERAL MOTORS PARTS DrVBICMV

AUTO CARE YOU CAN TRUST

GOODYEAR fiRE CENTER

Memorial Day Weekend Specials

We Will Be Open All Day Monday

Strut

Replacement Cartridges

Most Imported

Per Pair Installed Coupon Expires June 15th

4th Shock Free

Buy 3 Heavy Duty Shocks at our regular low price and oetthe4th shock

$6888

Coupon Expires June I5th

Lube, Oil & Filter

Includes up to 5 quarts of our own multigrade oil and high ^ quality filter. Other canned and multigrade oils extra Most U S and foreign cars.

88

Coupon Expires June 15th

5-Point

Brake Check

Pull all 4 wheelslnspect linings for wear and master cylinder for proper operation Call for appointment.

99

Coupon Expires June iSth

Front End Alignment

5*1 fi?on

I    Expires

June 15th

Remanufactured Retread Tires

Radial or Bias Ply Whitewalls

ANY SIZE 13-INCH IN STOCK

$

for

ANY SIZE 14-INCH P195/75R14 or Smaller

41.,

P205/75R15

Replaces many FR&GR78X15

83

*93 103

or $21.95 each    or    $25.95    each    or    $26.95    each

Plus F.E.T. from 34c to 68* per tire with recappable trade-in

WQOODl^iARi

^HHiTIRE ^CENTERMHI^B

Open Saturdays Til 5 P.M.

West Ettd Shopping Center Phone 756-9371 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 8:00 to 5:00

729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 752-4417 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 8:00 to 5:00





26 -The Daily Reflector, Greenville. Nx.- *. .a> 26. hu

075 Artobile Homes For Sale ^ 075 AAobile Homes For Sale 075 Mobile Homes For Sale ! 077 Musical Instruments

1982 24 X 64 Parkway SSOO down 1972 12x52. Halteras Furnished

Assume <oan at 12% interest Call' 7S2 ?233......      _

Aft Oellano Honnes. 7b6 9B4>____

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SALES OPPORTUNITY

Prefer someone with automobile sales experience, but not necessarv- Will train right person. Apply in person to A1 Britt.

756-3228

109 Trade Street Greenville, N.C.

TOYOTA

EAST

1983 3 BEDROOMS,    baths,    

living room, kitchen Take up payments Unfurnished 746 6035 j

076 Mobile Home Insurance I

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance i the best coverage for less money ^ Smith Insurance and Realty, 752

2754    _

077 Musical Instruments

USED    PIANOS AND ORGANS

f Yamahas, Wurlitiers, etc The I    Music    Shop, Greenville Square

Shopping Center. 756 0007_

WINTER SPINET PIANO with j    bench,    beautiful cabinet 5550

Piano    & Organ Distributors,

I Greenville 355 6002__

i WURLITZER ORGAN with 2 I keyboards, automatic rhythm, built I in recorder bench 2' years eld Like new 758 8296

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

BABY GRAND PIANO, completely rebuilt and refinished Must sell.

Best offer Call 757 0020._

OUTSTANDING BUY! Over $2,000 of PA equipment I Shure mike. Model 565 I , Peavy XR 700 8 chanrtel dual powered amplifier (main and monitor) 1 Peavy stage wedge monitor, I pair of Peavy snap together wedge monifors. 2 Peavy PA cabinets, each consists of I 15 Black Widow, and 2 Piteo Tweeters Mounted on 2 heavy duty stands Will sacrifice. 51300 Call 756 9939, ask tor Randv, Room 432.

080

INSTRUCTION

EXPERIENCED ELEMENTARY teacher would like to tutor students grades 16 MA in learning dis abilities. Call 752 1973 after 5

START YOUR PIANO or voice lessons this summer B A in sacred music 756 3028_

FOR LEASE - 2500 SQUARE FEET PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON BOULEVARD CALL 756-8111

Month End Used Car

SPECIALS

1982 Peugeot 504 Wagon Aulomaiic Diue 1382 Datsun 200-SX 2aooi auicn-dtic an due,

1982 Peugeot S05S 4 Joo' dulornd'ic, dir D^tge 1982 Dodge Colt V door 4 speed fpj 1982 Dodge Mirada 2 door automdtic an Diue 1981 Chrysler Cordoba LOdded DfOA'' 'dPoc 1981 Buick Regal Limited 2aoor loaoeo oeige 1981 Plymouth Champ Ajtomaiic siive'

1981 Plymouth Reliant 2000' automatic an tan 1980 Mazda RX-7 Coupe Automatic an Diue 1980 Plymouth Champ 2 300' automalic D'ow'

1980 Dodge Colt Automatic Dei.oe

1980 Volkswagen Rahhit 4 door diesei 4 speed ai' green 1979 Oldsfflobile Delta Royale 4 300' 3'ese' blue

1979 Buick Regal 2 doof Afilie

1978 Plymouth Volare 4300' automatic, 6cviinaer ngh'Diue 1978 Chrysler Cordoba 2 door auiomdtic i^ 3i8eng*ne

1978 DatsuoB-210 DX    4 speed Diue

1977 Plymouth Volare    2 door auTomattC    6 cylinder, air Durgundv

1977 Olds Starlire 2 300f automatic an gold 1977 Dodge Monaco 4 door loaded stiver 1977 Olds Delta Royale 4 aoor automatic an b'on.-e 1977 Olds 98 4 doof loaded greer.

1976 Olds Cutlass -4 door automatic an loaded Atiite

1976 Cadillac Coupe DeVille-blue 1975 Pontiac Lemans 2 doo' coupe Dron;e

1973 Chevrolet Impala Wagon Brown

1971 Chrysler New Yirker 4 door loaded iiKene*

1981 Studehaker 2 dop' green

TRUCKS

1982 Dodge Stepside Pickup 4 speed 6cylinde' si'ver 1982 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup 5 speed ai.' blue

1982 Datsun Pickup 5 speed aircoriditicn-

1981 Dodge Custom D-150 Pickup 131 Aneeibase automatic aHiK

1981 Dodge D-50 Ram Pickup 5 speed Af-ite

1980 Dodge D-150 Pickup Automatic ecmae' butgund,

1980 Dodge D-150 Miser Pickup 4speed 6:.'inder Amte 1980 Dodge D-150 Pickup Automatic feSvimoe' Su'gudo,

1977 Chevrolet El Camino Automatic ai' DtbAi

1979 Dodge Van ~ Automatic ai' Diac

1977 Dodge Tradesman Van D-tOO automatic 318enqine i.qntbiue

1974 Chevrolet LUV Pickup 4 speed red .

10.995 *8495

13.995 *5495 *8995 *8995 *8995 *4995 *6995 *8495 *4495 *4995 *4995. *4995. *5995. *2995. *3995. *2995. *2495 *2995 *3995. *4995. *4995. *3995. *4995 *2995 *1495 *3995. *1995.

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

QO

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

00

*6995.00

7995.00

*8995.00

*6995.00

*5995.00

*5495.00

*4995.00

*4995.00

*4995.00

*5995.00

*4495.00

*2495.00

JUST RECEIVED

32 -1983

Chrysler Corporation Executive Can

WAGONS, 4 DOORS AND 2 DOORS Fully Factory Equipped

SAVE

5 Year 50,000 Miles Protection Available On These Cars

THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER-SAVE HUNDREDS

Joe CulHpher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge

Peugeot

3401 S. Memorial Dr.

Greenville, N.C

WILL TUTOR ENGLISH all levels. MA English 2 years experience Call 252 6924 alter 5_

085 Loans And AAortgages

2ND MORTGAGES by phone comm.ercial 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 metnod for insuring the salety 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 1928 All in stallations meet U L standards and your satisfaction is guaranteed For more information call Carolina Chimney Cleaners, 258 012a_

093

OPPORTUNITY

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co. Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville NC 252 0001 nights 253 4015    __

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

093

OPPORTUNITY

109

Houses For Sale

NIGHT CLUB for sale Located downtown Greenville Call 257 3121. leave name and number_

TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals Financing. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed Brokers. 401 W First Street 752

3525    _

095

PROFESSIONAL

BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and drywall Call 757 0678 or 756 2689 After 6 355 6952._

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimney

/eep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces C day or night, 753 3503. Farmville

104 Condominiums For Sale

FIREPLACE in living room makes it cozy, yet it's spacious with 3 bedrooms. 2' i baths, patio with storage adjacent to pool and play area at Windy Ridge 558,000. Call J L Harris 8. Sons. Inc , Realtors. 758 4711    _

PICNICON THE PATIO

Of your own townhome or con dominium Little down and low monthly payments Call Jane Warren at ^58 6050 or 758 7029 or Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446

MOORE & SAUTE R no South Evans 758*6050

BELVEDERE Owner moving in a few weeks and must sell this 3 bedroom brick ranch Offers formal living room with hardwood floors, dining room and large family room with energy efficient woodstove plus a Casablanca fan. 561.900 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty^^ 756 6666. Gay Waldrop. 756 6242, Broker on call____

bethel Farmers Home Loan Assumption 3 bedrooms, I bath, brick, large lot, mint condition S|iei^ht Realty, 756 3220. nights

BY OWNER Corner of Allendale and 264 By pass. Red Oak Sub division 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room. den. kitchen.

double gara'qe Low 550's Days

756 2557, nights    .....

Clark_

752 7425 Ask tor

BY OWNER ft'3% assumable loan 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal living and dining room, den with fireplace, carpeted throughout Central air, gas heaf, fenced backyard, patio, 1 block from Aycock Junior High 756 8281 or 758 9090_

BY OWNER 1718 square toof, 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 As^me Tl',% VA loan $7500 equity Call after 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 workshop 752 5250 No realtors please

109

Houses For Sale

BY OWNER IN Club Pines 534 Crestline Blvd 2 story brick Williamsburg. 2400 square feet. 3 4 bedrooms, 2'2 baths Great room with fireplace, large spacious kitchen Double carport with storage Fence All electric Only 5100.cm Assumable 9<3% VA loan Call 756 8953 for appointment No realtors please__

109

Houses For Sale

Bring your

COUNTRY LIVING Tnly 5 *1500    .    ,

menfs under 5250 Call Steve Evans & Associates. 355 2727

hamrher Only 528,900 with small fixing up $1500 dowq with_ pay

EXCELLENT ASSUMPTION in Englewood. FHA 8':% APR loan, balance of approximately 553.362. payments of $534 month PIT I Approximately 25 years remaining Nicely landscaped and pretty ranch, three bedrooms, two baths, living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, carport Very nice 569,900 Duftus Realty Inc., 756 5395 __

OWNER WILLING to make a sacrifice This is a deal that 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 wifh stove, dish washer and refrigerator, laundry area with washer S, dryer, great room with tree standing woodstove and a dining area Make us an otter! Only 557,900 Call Mavis Butts Realty. 758 0655

FHA 235 LOAN assumption avalla ble in established neighborhood with minimum total payment less than 5300 if you qualify 3 bedrooms. 1'2 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 E vans. 752 4224_

PRIVACY IN A neighborhood with proven appreciation in value Single car garage with outside wood deck below outside cookouts Home has 3 bedrooms, brick fireplace in family room, GE heat pump tor the efficient minded person 553.900 Call Steve Evans & Associates. 355 2727.

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 2)66 tor full details    ___

BY OWNER on Lake Glenwood Brick Ranch, recently painted Three bedrooms. 2 baths, all formal areas, eat in kitchen, den with fireplace (woodstove inserted). Central air Large screened in porch overlooking lake double car garage with large storage area, storm doors and windows, large landscaped lot with garden and fruit tress Upper 60 s Possible 814 Loan Assumption Call 758 4898 9 a m to9 p m _  ^

HAVE CLIENT interested in buying in the Belvedere area If interested in selling your home, please contact Betty Beacham at 756 3880 or W G Blount a. Associates at 756 3000 HORSESHOE ACRES Country liv ing with city flair 3 bedroom home featuring well equipped kitchen,

great room with fireplace an'd ullt in bookshelves 2 large

RED OAK, Cul De Sac 4 bedroom, 2' 2 baths, living room dining room eat in kitchen, sunken den with fireplace insert, garage, 567,500 8% assumable loan 756 5371 after 4

p m except weekends ___

STARTING NEW HOME in Cherry Oaks 3 bedroo(TS. 2 full baths, great room High 60 s Paying up to 4 points plus closing costs Buy now

flick out your own colors. Ipaper, car^t etc The Evans Co , 752 2814 Faye Bowen, 756 5258 Winnie Evans. 752 4224 _

i SOMEONE IS looking tor your unus led power mower Why not advertise it with a low cost Classified Ad

111 Investment Property

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool tab!

e Newly carpeted wit cable TV. 7 years old

and fireplace Newly carpeted with _>ner, cable TV. 7 yi Located 3 miles from Greenville

dishwash

Priced in the 550's    758    0144    or

752 7663_;_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1984 Chevrolet Corvette

Now On Display In Our Showroom

GREENVILLE

ge central

___acre    lot

564.000 Call Betty Beacham at 756 3880 or W G Blount 8. Associates at 756 3000__

bathrooms, dining room, heat and air Located on : Betty

HORSESHOE ACRES Country liv ing with city flair. 3 bedroom home, two baths, featuring well equipped kitchen, great room with fireplace, built in bookshelves, dining room, central heat and air. garage, located on large lot $64,000 W G Blount & Associates 756 3000

Evenings. 756 3880_

HOUSE. BUILDING, and lot for sale S R *1551, 2 2 miles on right past caution light at Stokes 5I3.()00 Contact Charles M Vincent. 758

4000_

NEW HOME in established neighborhood Cedar siding 3 bedrooms. 12 baths Low 50's Pay up to 4 points plus closing The Erians Co . 752 2814 Faye Bowen 756 5258 Winnie Evans. 752 4224

DUPLEX FOR SALE 10% assumable loan Beautiful brick 3 and I bedroom duplex near ECU 3 fireplaces, brick walkways, Florida room, large unattached garage 411 East 4th Street beside Episcopal Church High 560 s 756 8085__

113

Land For Sale

HAVE CLIENT interested in buying

5 acres of land between Hmes Crossroads and Ballards I Crossroads It interested, please

call Betty Beacham at 756 3880 after

6 00 PM or W G Blount at 756 300C

115

Lots For Sale

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 & Southerland, 756 3500 Nights. Rod Tuowell, 753 4302_

' 2 ACRE TO 5 ACRES, over 10O lots to choose from Locations on Highway 43 south. Chicod Creek Grifton area Highway 33 south Call 757 0277 after 5pm 756 2682

BUILDING SITE 3'2 acres Heavi wooded 518 500 Aldridge 8 utherland. 756 3500 041

ly I Sout

NEW LISTING 606 Eleanor Street ' Unique contemporary in Cherry I Oaks 3 bedrooms, 2' 2 baths, large j great room, and garage $79,5(50 ' Call Aldridge 8 Southerland 756 35t)0, nights Rod Tuqwell 753 4302 It's still the garage sale season and people are really buying this year! Get yours together soon and adver tise it with a Classified Ad Call 752 6166 .

^ EVANSWCX)D RESIDENTIAL

lots from 59 000 512 500 Call W G

Blount 8 Associates. 756 3000_

1 NEWLY DEVELOPED wooded lots

now available tor building in i Tucker Estates Call The Evans j Co . 752 28)4 Faye Bowen 756 5258

I Winnie Evans, 752 4224_

; READY TO BUILD a home tor you on lots in a variety of established ' areas Call The Evans Co 752 2814 I Faye Bowen 756 5258 Winnie

1 Evans. 752 4224_

I REDUCED DRASTICALLY! 2

acres, well, and septic tank I mile ' East of Hams Cross Roads $11,500

Call 757 3964_____

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY '

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

HASTINGS FORD MAY SPECIAL

1982 Ford Bronco XLT Lariat

Red and white. Captain's chairs, rear seat, styled steel wheels, white letter tires, tilt wheel, cruise control, power windows, power door locKs. AM-FM stereo radio. A cream puff.

Priced To Sell

Ajnencd s = I Used Car Company

H

ASTINC3

S

Tenir. Sl'eel i 64 B* ^dss 758-0114

I'ie'-. 'e N C ^'634

Portab

from Bob Barbour!

Why just drive a car when you can drive a Jeep! When you go in a Jeep, the fun goes with you!

And were making the fun even better!

Buy any Jeep and get a FREE 48-Quart Igloo Cooler!

No matter where your Jeep adventures take you, you can take along all the refreshment youll need, with a FREE Igloo Cooler.

Register to win a portable Video Recorder & Camera!

With this versatile VMS video system the fun never ends. You can record the action wherever you go, and keep it for years to come! Theres no purchase necessary, so stop by & register!

(Licensed drivers only.)

BobBarbour

VOLVqAMC/Jeep/Renault

117 West Tenth Street Greenville, NC 758-7200





me uauy neiiecior. ureenvuie, > t.-itiursday, May 26,1983-27

115

Lots For Sale

2 LARGE LOTS Cherry Oaks Call 7SA aa;6alter Sp m___

117 Resort Property For Sale

ATLANTIC BEACH oceanfront. 3 bedroom, 2' j bath condominium, new, furnished tW.OOO 756 4207

REAL NICE 3 bedroom, I'j bath double wide mobile home Com pletely set up and underpinned with brick On a beautitully landscaped fenced water front lot. 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_

1974. 12*65, on Pamlico River Set upon water front lot Call 752 7931 35' A frame chalet Like new, air Gas heat Furnished 758 8171 or 752 2878 anytime Twin Lakes on canal. Washington__

121 Apartments For Rent

LARGE APARTMENT, 13I0A Myrtle Avenue, 4 bedrooms (2 upstairs. 2 downstairs). 2 full baths, living room with fireplace, stove, refrigerator, gas heat Available June I Lease andd deposit 5340 No pets Call 355 2544 or 756 0489.

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex Shenandoah Subdivision 5295

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 56% less than comparable units), dishwash

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes Security deposits required, no pets Call 758 4413 between Sands    __

er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulati

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage ned Call Arlington Self Storage. Open day Friday? 5 Cali 756 9933

121 Apartments For Rent

AVAILABLE MAY I. New ). 2 and 3 bedroom apartments Drapes, wall to wall carpet, central heal and air, outside storage Gritton area Office hours 10 a m to 2 p m , Monday through Friday, 10 am to 2 p m Saturday Sunday by appointment only Phone 524 4239 or 524 4821

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments

All energy efficient designed

Queen size beds and studio couches

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance

All apartments on ground floor with porches

Frost tree refrigerators

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets

Contact J T or Tommy Williams

__756    78)5_

BRAND NEW duplex townhouse. 2 bedrooms, )' 2 baths. I mile Irom medical school Available May 25fh Deposit and lease 5300 825 493)

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    I    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd

_756-5067_

NEW DUPLEXES near hospital med school 5300 per month John or

Bryant, 752 3152 or 752 67)5_

NEW TASTEFULLY decorated townhouse 2 bedrooms. I'z baths, washer.'dryer hook ups, heat pump Efficient 5310 per month 752 2040

or 756 8904__

NICE 3 RCX3M apartment Stove and refrigerator furnished Located at 1301 Dickinson Avenue 5)35 monthly Dial 756 3662___

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

T wo bedroom townhouse apart ments 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 apartments or mobile homes lor rent Contact J T or Tommy

Williams, 756 78)5_

ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus No pets 52)5 a month

756 3923__

ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment. 1 block from university Heat, air and water furnished Short or long term lease No pets

758 378) or 756 0889__

ONE BEDRCX3M APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances 5195. Call 758 33)1__

121 Apartments For Rent

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours )Oa.m to5p m Monday fhrough Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

75-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

I, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hookups, cable TV, pool, ctu house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex"

)40) Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TIRED OF ROOMMATES? Call us for immediate occupancy in a 1

bedrcxtm apartment. Ertergy effi dent and reasonable renf Days 758 606), nights and weekends 758

TWO BEDROOM apartments available No pets Call Smith Insurances. Realty, 752 2754

TWO BEDROOM apartment, low utilities, 5225 per month. 752 3270. TWO NICE spacious apartments in quiet neighborhood near college. 5 room duplex includes washer and dryer hook ups. 5260 . 2 bedroom apartment includes water and sew age 5250 756 599)

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, )Va bath townhouses Available now. 5295/month 9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

WEDGE WOOD ARMS

NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom, )'i bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pdmps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court

756 0987

rhorruCnurf    i    ENT furniture Living, din

\<ncrry V<uuri    |    mg, bedroom complete 579 00 per

I 2 bedroom townhouses ' month Option to buy U REN CO,

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'a baths Also I bedroom apartments Carpet dishwashers

compactors, patio, tree cable TV.

sner dryer hook ups. laundry room sauna tennis court, club

house and POOL 752 1557_

DUPLEX Near ECU 2 bedrooms ) bath 5235 per month No pets 752 2040__

EASTBROOK

AND

VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 -one two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, feafuring Cable TV, modern appli ancfs central heat and air condi tiOTMng clean laundry facilities, throe swimming pools

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

______7525100_

EFFICIENCY/APARTMENTS

All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases Furnished

With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates Starting 5250 month and up

756-5555 The Heritage Inn

RIVER BLUFF I09A Brookwood Drive Available June )    2

bedrooms, large kitchen, living room fully carpet, air condition Call 752 2887_

RIVER BLUFF

otters, 1 bedroom garden apart ments and 2 bedroom townhouse apartments. 6 months leases For more intormation call 758 4015.

Monday Friday, 106p m_

SMALL EFFICIENCY apartment Student or prolessional person 756 8785

) AND 2 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately. 752 33)1 1 BEDROOM, unfurnished Call 758 3767 or 752 6924

2 BEDROOM apartment Central air. carpeted, appliances 804 Willow Street, Apartment 4 5250 758 331)_

2 BEDROOM near ECU. utilities Appliances 5300 a month Deposit No pets Available June ) 758 0491

or 756 789 betore 9 p m_

2 BE0RCX3M DUPLEX, stove re trigerator. central heat and air. de^it. lease no pets 756 6834 after 3pm -_^_

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE Energy elficient heat pump, )'j baths, carpet, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, hook ups 53)0 756 7480__

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Meade Street near ECU Central air, range refrigerator, hook ups, 5270 756 7480

EFFICIENCY I bedroom, maid service 570 week Call 756 5555, Heritage Inn Motel

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with apordant parking economical uftlifies and POOL. Adiacent to Greenville Country Club 756 6869

JOHNSTON STREET APART A6ENTS 1 bedroom unfurnished apartments available immediate

Water and appliances furnished No Judy at p m . Monday Friday

pets Call

756 6336 before 5

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 just oft iOth Street

Call 752-3519

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS 6 AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

CASH REBATES or 9.8%    

APR FINANCING On All Convertibles In Stock

Oodqe 400 2-Door Convertible ,

If Youve Ever Dreamed Of Owning A Convertible, Now Is The Time!

JoeCullipher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodgc Peugeot

1983 Chevrolet Chevettes

$12990

Per Month

9.9%

APR Financing

Equipped with tinted glass, floor mats, air condition, left hand remote control mirror, 4 speed manual transmission, WSW tires, AM-FM stereo.

Based on $1500 down (cash or trade), 48 monthly payments, 9.9% Annual Percentage Rate, Finance charges $1303.20. Stock no. 468.

Offer Good Thru May 31st Only

GREENVILLE

^1 GMQUAUrY ^11 SERVICE PARTS

GEMEBAL MOTORS MITTS DIVISION

121 Apartment For Rent

2 BEDROOM apartment at Whifehollow Drive 5250 00 per month 2 bedroom townhouse at Village East 5300 00 per month Both require lease and security t Duftus Realty, Inc , 756

depo

08)1, 9 a m Friday.

5 p.m , Monday

DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it for cash with a fast action Classified Ad!

122

Business Rentals

FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building Ideally located on Highway 33 in Cnocowinity Call

Donnie Smith at 946 5887__

FOR RENT Prime retail space, Arlington Boulevard 4500 square feet 54.50 per square foot Call

756 9315 or 76 5097_

TERRIFIC RETAIL location for lease 3.000 square feet of prime retail or office space on Arlington Boulevard For additional informa tion, call Real Estate Brokers.

752 4348__

WAREHOUSE AND office space for lease 20,000 square feet available Will subdivide. 756 5097 or 756 9315 2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space for lease in small strip shopping center Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty. 756 3500. nights Don Southerland 756 5260    _

125 Condominiums For Rent

LEXINGTON SQUARE TOWN HOME S' 2 bedrooms, I'z baths, fully carpeted, deluxe appli anees furnished No pets J R Yorke Construction Co . Inc , 355

2286._

LOVELY 3 BEDRCXDM, 2 bath townhouse in Quail Ridge available July 1st Tasteful decor, fireplace, deck with.storage Close to univer sity and minutes from Med school 5525 per month. Call Clark Branch, Realtors. 756 6336 or Marie Davis

756 5402_

UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2 bedroom. I'j bath, major appli

anees, air Call 756 0320._

3 BEDROOM, 2'z bath townhouse at Windy Ridge 5470 00 per month Lease and security deposit re quired Duftus Realty. Inc , 756 0811, 9 a m 5 p m . Monday Friday__ ^_

127

Houses For Rent

RENTAL HOUSE 3 bedrooms in Twin Oaks area Good location Excellent condition. 5425 a month 756 8338 or 758 9850._

UNIVERSITY AREA Large 7 bedroom house, just painted. 2 baths, appliances furnished, ideal for group of students 5400 114 East 12th Street, 756 0765    _

UNIVERSITY AREA 3 bedroom house. I bath, appliances furnished, ideal for students or family. 112 East )2th Street 5275. 756 0765

133 Mobile Homes For Rent 142 Roommate Wanted

2 BEDROOMS, completely furnished, washer, air, 2 miles South ot Greenville No pets 756 7381 anytime. _

148

Wanted To Rent

135 Office Space For Rent ! ^

FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED ij rent 5130 and 'z utilities Call

756 763) atter 5___^___

FEMALE TO SHARE 2 bedroom duplex near Rivergate. furnished except bedroom 5t37 50 per month r^i..*)^ utilities 758 7884 after 6 n m

ECU PROFESSOR and family want to lease 3 4 bedroom home in quiet neighborhood Late June or July Responsible references Call 756 7837 or 757 6032_ _

3 BEDROOM houses for rent 410 Paris Avenue 5300.00. 4 bedroom house in Bethel 5500.00. All require lease and security deposit Duftus Realty, Inc.. 756 0811_

DOWNTOWN, just oft mall Singles and multiples Convenient to courthouse Call 756 0041 or 756 3466 FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or com mercial 604 Arlington Boulevard 756 8111 __

MALE roommate needed 571 25 rent, ' utilities Furnished apartment, near campus 757 1587 RESPONSIBLE roommate wanted Professional or grad student pre ferred 555 per month plus utilities 752 2994 atter 8 30 p m________

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes 5135 and up No pets, no children 758 4541 or 76 9491

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756 7815 TERRIFIC OFFICE LOCATION tor rent large and small offices I located in the 2700 block of East 10th Street, one of the most heavily travelled streets in Greenville, extremely reasonable rales For additional information, call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348.

144

Wanted To Buy

TWO BEDRCXDM, furnished children No pets 758 6679._

No

If you're nof using your exercise equipment, sell it fnis fall in these

12X65. Washer, dryer, air. 3 miles north of city Call 758 2347 or 752 6068

3101 SOUTH EVANS Street next to Fastfare on 264 By Pass 4 ottices, carpet, reception room, heat, air condition Excellent location Available June I. Call Van Fleming. 756 6235 or 752 2887_

WANT TO BUY good used swing and slide set Calf 756 4472 after 6

pm___

WANTED TO BUY Ford Jubilees, Ford 600's or 801 tractors Any early model Ford tractor Call 758 4669

after 7 p m____

WISH TO BUY good used carpet

752 2994 atter 8 30 p m___

WOULD LIKE TO BUY a crib, high

I UNFURNISHED ROOM wanted for I summer. Greenville area Call 746 3687 or 758 7207

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CARPET SPECIAL

2 Rooms & A Hall

'39.95 Home Care Cleaners

12X65.    2 bedrooms. 2 baths,

excellent condition Located in good park 756 0801 after 5 p.m_

2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent Call 756 4687

137 Resort Property For Rent

chair and atter 7 p m

stroller Call

lb, high 756 3578

17 to 19' BOAT motor and trailer For skiing and tishmq 756 4027

EMERALD ISLE Beach house 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, central air Cable TV 5300/week 354 3301

EMERALD ISLE Pebble Beach Ocean Front Condos Sales Rentals 1 BOO 682 7810_

II.. .-I    I    i    I

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY I

2 BEDRCXDMS, all electric, 6 miles out on New Bern Highway No pets 756 0975

2 BEDROOM, furnished washer air. good location No pets children Call 758 4857

no

2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Furnished, no pets Deposit re quired Available May 15 752 4008 or 752 5262

2 BEDRCXDMS, air condition On a shady private tot near town 5175 per month Call 355 6924_

2 BEDROOMS, washer, dryer, air Private lot Call 756 3523

2 BEDROOM TRAILER Washer, dryer, air, private lot Near hospi tal No pets, no children Call 758 5757

2 BEDROOMS, furnished, air. un derpinned. 1 child only Call atter p m . 756 3377___

127

Houses For Rent

2 BEDROOM apartment Central air. carpeted, appliances 5250 a month. BrvtonHifis 758 33H_

AVAILABLE JUNE 1. 4 bedrooms, I block from Pitt Plaza, Oakmont

756 9142 or 756 3500_

IN AYDEN 3 bedroom, Vj bath brick ranch on large corner lot Gas or electric heat Air condition, fully carpeted, stove, refrigerator, dish washer, gas hot water heater 5275 per month No pets Lease and deposit required I 524 5411 _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TOMATO STAKES

10'..

Hardwood, 3V] to 4'long

Bethel Manutacturing Co.

Bethel. N.C. 825-3451 -

HASTINGS FORD MAY SPECIAL

1982 Ford Escort GL Wagon

Automatic transmission, power steering and brakes, air condition, AM-FM stereo radio. Previously owned by Ford Motor Company.

M47.57

Per Month

Based on Selling Price of $6400.00, S1000 down (cash or trade), amount financed $5400.00, 48 monthly payments, 14% Annual Percentage rate, finance charges $1683.36. Total note $7083.36. Does not include taxes and processing fees.

H

ASTING

FORD

s

Ustd Cif Comp4nY renin Slreei 4 By ^ f

758-0114

KILL DEVIL HILLS, efficiency apartment Sleeps 6 530 per night or 5200 weekly Near Avalon Pier i Call 441 6680 after 9p m_

ON OCEAN FRONT large duplex. Emerald Isle Each side accom modales 14 New Game room Near fishing pier Very reasonable Ask tor Oakley Duplex, 354 2958__

on

TOWNHOUSE 2 bedrooms ocean 2 pools, cable TV, washer dryer Pine Knoll Shores 752 2579

3 BEDROOM BEACH HOUSE for I rent. Near Sportsman's Pier at 1 Atlantic Beach Call 756 2787 atter 5

138

Rooms For Rent

ROOM IN PRIVATE home tor rent in country 5150 month 756 1264 or 752 7553

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality lurnlture Reflnlshing and repairs. Superior caning lor all type chairs, larger selection of custom picture framing, survey stakesany length, all types ot pallets, hand-cralled rope hammocks selected ftamed reproductions

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Industrial Park Hwy 13 758-4188    8    A    M    -4    30    P    M

Greenville. N C

The Real ' Estate Corner

AUCTION

Prime Location. Office Building and Land. 4200 square feet of heated area, 800 square feet of office space. Room for additional strip office center. Excellent Investment potential. All offer must be presented by sealed bid on or before June 3rd. For maps & information, contact: Mike Aldridge

Aldridge & 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 Aldridge

Aldridge & Southerland Realtors

756-3500 N.C. Auction No. 2810 Seller reserves right to reject any bid.

GRANT MAZDA

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

1983 MAZDA TRUCKS

All Models NOW THRU MAY 31ST

DEALER COST

Plus N.C. Tax!!

' I

NO HIDDEN COST!!

NO SALES GIMMICKS!!

JUST COST plus N.C. SALES TAX

Dont Wait Move While The Selection Is Good!

Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00

Phone: 756-1877

BILL

ASKEW

MOTORS

3010 s. Memorial Drive

756-9102

1982 Lincoln Continental

4 door, emerald green. 19181 Yamaha Exciter 250

3.000 miles

1981 AMC Jeep Renegade

6 cylinder. 20,000 miles, 1981 Olds Cutlass LS - 4 door, maroon

1981 Ford Ranger Pickup

Blue and white

1981 Cadillac Coupe De Ville Light green 1980 Subaru Wagon 1979 Cadillac Coupe De Ville-Red

1979 Chevrolet Chevette

4 door, beige

1979 Chevrolet Chevette

4 door, silver

1979 Ford Pinto Wagon Bronze

1979- Buick Regal 2 door. marOon

1979 Plymouth Fire Arrow

Automatic

1979 Pontiac Grand Prix

Blue, loaded

1979 Olds Delta 88 Royale

2 door, blue

1979 Chevrolet Camaro

Maroon

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme 2 door, silver 1978 AMC Concord DL -

48.000 miles, gray

1978 Pontiac Grand Prix Blue.

1978 Jeep CJ-5

1978 Datsun 280-Z - 2 plus

2, gold.

1978 Ford Thunderbird

Town Landau,peach.

1978 Honda Civic Wagon

White

1978 Ford Mustang 4

speed.peach 1978 Plymouth Volare Wagon 6 cylinder, silver.

1978 Mercury Zephyr Villager Wagon While 1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Blue. 54,000 rhiles 1978 Pontiac Sunbird Wagon Low mileage, loaded.

1977 Dodge Colt 2 door, yellow

1977 Olds 98 - 4 door, white, loaded.

1977 Olds 98 - 2 door, maroon, loaded.

1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Brown 1977 Chrysler Cordoba Silver

1977 Mercury Comet 4

door, blue

1977 Chevrolet Nova 4

door, silver

1977 Ford Pinto White, blue trim

1977 Ford Maverick 4

door. 6 cylinder

1977 Ford Pinto Wagon

White

1977 Chevrolet Nova 2

door, burgundy 1977 Toyota Corolla 2 door, automatic, brown. 1977 Plymouth    Volare

Premier Wagon Maroon 1976    Olds    Cutlass

Supreme 2 door, beige 1976 Ford Ranger XLT Pickup 4 wheel drive,

59.000 miles, immaculate. 1976 Chevrolet Monte Carlo - White, 56.000 miles.

1976 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Blue.

1976 Dodge Dart 1976 Ford Elite-Blue 1976 Ford Courier Pickup

White

1976 Chevrolet Malibu 4

door, blue

1976 Ford Maverick

Yellow

1975 Buick Century Luxus

-White

1975 AMC Pacer-White

1975 Buick Skylark - 2

door, 54,000 miles.

1974 Chevrolet Vega

Maroon

1974 Pontiac Grand AM 1973 Dodge Van White

1973 Ford Pinto Wagon 1969 Ford Mustang Mach I 1967 Mercury Cougar

TRANSPORTATION

SPECIALS

1976 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

1975 0ldsmobile

1974 Chevrolet Vega 1973 Mercury Comet

Plus Many Others





Area Resident

Is Heart Donor

A heart donated by an eastern North Carolina resi-dent was recently transplanted into a 50-year-old mother of nine children in Pittsburgh, Pa.

The transplant was performed near the end of April. Officials at the East Carolina University School of Medicine said this week the heart recipient was "doing well."

Nmes of the donor and family and the cause of death were not released.

According to ECU transplant coordinator Steve Joyner, the heart transplant team from the University of Pittsburgh flew to Greenville within three hours of receiving the call that a heart was available in Greenville that "matched" with a patient at their hospital.

The donor's' family had given permission to the ECU transplant team to remove any organs needed for transplantation. A recipient for the heart was located through the Southeastern

Organ Procurement System, the computer network that matches avialable organs with the most compatible recipients.

Joyner said this was the second heart that had been removed at the ECU-Pitt County Memorial Hospital medical complex for transplantation. A heart removed earlier in April was transported to the University of Alabama, but only the valves were transplanted.

Joyner said the kidneys and eyes of both heart donors were also transplanted.

The ECU transplant team, composed of medical school and community physicians, currently transplants only kidneys at the Greenville medical center.

Surgical teams at Craven County Hospital in New Bern. Lenoir Memorial Hospital in Kisnton and Womack Army Hospital in Fayetteville will soon be procuring kidenys in cooperation with the ECU program, Joyner said.

Workshops Set

DURHAM - The North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics has announced the names of teachers who will be faking part - as instructors and students in the summer microcomputer workshops being held at the school in Durham from July 11-22.

Violet Burch, a faculty member at J.H. Rose High School, is one of 11 computer teachers statewide who will be an instructor in the workshops.

Six teachers from Pitt County and one from Greene County are scheduled to attend as siudents. They are Ronald E. Braxton. Conley High School; Vada P. Cayton, Agnes Fullilove Community School; Mary Virginia Jones and VirginiajA. Read, J.H. Rose High School; Margaret S. Powers. E B. Aycock Junior High School; Cheryl Treadwell. Greenville .Middle School, and Agnes .M. Cobb. .North Greene Elementary

The workshop programs are designed for beginners as well as those who have computer experience.

Participants will receive instruction in Basic and Logo computer languates, learn how the microcomputer can be applied in the classroom, and sample microcomputer software. They will also learn about the capability of designing software for application in small classrooms

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY. MAY 27.1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES: You are in a state of mind that could lead to a confrontation with an associate, but you would be wise to maintain a peaceful attitude. Make plans to have more abundance.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Use tact instead of forcefulness with others and accomplish a lot more. Discuss the future with financial experts.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Dont waste time with the wrong persons today. Go to the right source for valuable information you need.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) A financial arrangement may be annoying in the morning but solve it wisely and make better plans for the future.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Take steps to improve your health and appearance, and then go after your most cherished desires.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) A secret worry should be forgotten now and later you can easily resolve the matter. Adopt a logical outlook on life.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Contact friends you have not seen in a long time and deepen the relationships. Enjoy the social side of life tonight.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Strive to have increased* harmony with family members. Bring your talents to the attention of influential persons.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You may find it hard to step out of that convenient rut you are in early in the day, but later you can do so easily.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Don't neglect duties you have assumed and discharge them with true efficiency. Be careful of outsiders.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Study what close ties expect of you during the day and then try to please them in the evening. Avoid trouble.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Try to enlist the help of loyal friends for a new project you have in mind. Avoid one who is a gossip.

PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar. 20) Contact congeniis for recreational purposes since you are in need of fun. The evening can be especially happy for you.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY . .. he or she will have great capability for solving problems of others, so be sure to give the right education to make the most of this ability. Direct it toward salesmanship for best results. A good family person in this chart.

Is Your

Delivery Okay?

We toke particular pride m the efficiency of our carriers who deliver the Daily Reflector to your home.

If the daily delivery of your Daily Reflector is less than satisfactory, please tell us about it. Call our Circulation Department and we will do our best to work out the problem.    \

752-3952

Between 8:30 A.M. and 6:30 P.M. Weekdays and 8 'til 9 A.M. on Sundays

IT'S NAT O NAL

FRIGIDAIRE WEEK

at Garris Evans

The 1983 Frigidaire Five Star Collection is here! Theres never been one better. And were showcasing this beautiful new refrigerator line with special Premiere Showcase savings on every Frigidaire appliance m stock.

Come in today. Because theres never been a better time to buy the best!

FRNHMML HIRE TOMY, HOE TOMORROWL ANDON SALE NOW!

All Items Are Priced For The Color White

Reg. $599.99 $

Reg. $599.99

$54699

i\

Side-By-Side 100% Frost Proof

-U-

2S.eCu.Ft.

ic* A Water Thru Door -Elctric-Sav Switch RaniovMe Ice Saver, Textured Steel Doors Oiaaa Shotvos

FPE-26VWM Reg. $1375.99

Sale

S126899

30 Free Standing Electric Range

Cook Master Control Glass Door 2*8 & 2*6 Burners

RQ-35H

Reg.9404.99

Sale

$37299

24 Wide Automatic Dryer 4 Position Tenqserature Water Selector

LC-248J Reg. $686.99

.Sale

$64699

30* Free Standing Continuous Cleaning Electric Rang

60 Minute Clock Glass Doors 1-8 & Burners

RG-32HB Reg. $434.99

Sale

39299

2 Speed Washer

18 U>. Capacity

-PorceWiiTub    _

-Water Uvei Control

Sale

S37499

Automatic Electric Dryer

18 Ub. Capacity -Flowing Heat

DEiJ Reg. $323.99

Sale

$27999

^sJMicrowave

46 Minute nmer 1.6 Cu. Ft. Capacity -720 Watts Of Power Fun Circle Cooidng

MC-700M Reg. $290.99

S266

6 Piece Microwave Cookware by Nordic When You Buy Any Microwave Oven

Electric-Saver

Dishwasher

PorcmUnTub 2 Wash Levels OM Cycle Seteetm-Heavy a Normal Son

Cycdet

DWU-11J Reg. $297.99

MicrowdYi

-Touoh-N-Cook Controls -2Sfa(pProitpam Meal Minder Probe 16 Cu. Ft. Capacity -Auto Defrost FirilClrcie Cooking System

MCr900M Rg,36(IM Sgie

Chest Food * Freezer

8 Co. Ft.

Textured Steel Top Basket

Manuai Defrost

CF8HL

R*g.V1.99l

701 W. FOURTEENTH ST. . GREENVILLE. N.C.

OPEN WEEKDAYS 8-5 "

''-A    -

8rN0dN

752-2106

1


Title
Daily Reflector, May 26, 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.) - 30462
Date
May 26, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
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