Daily Reflector, June 9, 1983


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INSIDE TODAY

THE LEGISLATUREToo many Tar Heel drivers are evading liability insurance, and Sen Craig Lawing hopes to close a loophole that permits such a lapse. (Page 22)

INSIDE TODAYSUMMER PROGRAMThe Pitt County Community Schools offer program of varied summer activities that are beginning this month. (Page 20)SPORTS TODAY

BREATHING ROOM

The Los Angeles Dodgers gamed a little breathing room /.ith an n-5 victory over the Atlanta Braves jast night iPage I6i.THE DAILY REFLECTOR

I02ND YEAR NO. 119

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PRETRRENCE TO FICTION

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 9, 1983

28 PAGES TODAY PRICE 5 CENTS

Plan Raising $242 Million

Panel Okays Additional Taxes

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer HAI.KHill. \r AP rtie >lale lluu.se Financf ConiniitUr 'o(la> approved a plan to rabf ,SJ4: million In It'wint; additional taxe.v on tractor trailer trucks, video itiimcs, alcotiolic tieverases and ncu and used cars The cotmiilttee appl'ovcd the. pian ahoni -f minutes alter rei eiMii^ it Tom House leadel^ House Finanee ( ommiltee ( hainnan Dwmht (^umn. DCatiarrus said the full uould >jo to the llooi' i(,r a vole Friday and could receive tinal iioU.se consideration .Monday nmht The eommillee voted 4 II lo afiprove the paek.me 'ith

mosi oi the ohjeetions com mil irom Hepuhlieans who are heavilv outnumtxTed in Ihe House Rep (ieor^e Miller. I) Durham, who led a suh eommiltee that compiled the paekaite. said it would rai.se SI.I K million in recurring tax revenues and S7T1 million in one lime windlalls The package also would gen erate S:!7 I million a \ear m Highwa) Fund revenues The tolal value ot the package. S242 million, slightly ehceeds budget needs ol S2:!2 4 million estatilished h\ ihe Appropri at ions ('ammittee leaders That include,s money tor gu mg slate employees and

teachers a 7 percent across the hoard salary increase, spending money to match ledcral highway lunds and making capilal improve mcnts in Hu- university system

Here arc the items m eluded in the tax package Raising the 2 percenl sales lax ceiling on new cars, lioals and airplanes trom S120 to sdiHi and charging ihc sales lax on used cars and trade ms lo generate Sii2 million 111 IWH H4

Klimmatmu Ihc S2on intcrcsl exclusion on stale income taxes to raise million

\pply Ihc sales fax to homes collages and con

dominium rentals lo raise s>4 million

Raise the auto license lee irom lo S2o and increase the title transler lee Irom S4 to !s|(i to generate 7 million Raise the lax on heer and wine tiy in percent and on li(|uor liy K percent in crease the i.ix on Iniuor lor mixed lie\(rages irom Slo lo sFi raise the inilial mixed drink [lerniil lee trom S.Ton to s7iii and Ihe renewal lee Irom S2,')ii lo i.,')(iil lo generale ''!2n million lor the stall'

Inerease Ihe minimnm Iranchise lax on corporations Irom Slo to >2.7 to rai.sc s4l III .1100

l{ c s t r 111'I u r e tin

merchant's count lo

sales lax generate

Apply Ihc sales lax to computer programs to raise

Levy a >40 per niacliinc license tax on video itamcs and install coniilers to record

the niimhcr ol g.mics pla\cd on Ihc machine tor I'on sidcr.ilion in levying luture laxes The change would raisesl 2 million

Lew a weiitht dislaine tax ot 2 cents per mi.li' "ii

Dleaseturntolage li

Arms Negotiators Launch

(iKNK\A Swilerland AP .Soviet and I S negotiators met today loi the lirst lull session m the new round ol Strategic Arms Reduction Talks as the A m c r leans a w a 11 c d Moscow's reaction to Presi dent Reagan's signals ol greater I S llcxihility "I haven t read it yel," the aetmg .Soviet chiet delegate Alexei A Oliukhov. unsmil ingly [old a reporter when asked whether he felt Reagan's 'announcement in Washington was a con structive move in the year old talks

^Tlic modilications ol the r S plan, which omit a rigid ceiling on Ihv, numlicr ot long range missiles and stress a count ol warheads rather than missiles m any lialanccd reduction, was presented hy Reagan as a new opportunity not to he lost' by Soviet leaders Rrushmg aside lurther (juestions. Dl)ukhov briskly led his team into the I S arms eontrol ollict' tuildmg

where he was awaited up stairs t)y the American chicl negotiator Kdward 1, Rowny

On Wednesday while Reagan read out his state ment m the Rose garden ol the White House. Ihe two chiel delegates had a two hour and 4o minute meeting, descritied hy Rowny as t)Usinesslikeand .serious ' 'Die chiet Soviet negotia lor \ ictor 1. Karpov, was ati.sent < itiukhov said Karpov was ill and Soviet sources .^ald he was expected haek Lite this week Rowny said he hoped Karpov's illness was temporary' hul added he had known Obukhov lor some tune and that he was conlident they would he able to move ahead rather hriskiy '    '

Reagan s new proposal emphasi/es Soviet and I' S nuck'ar warhead arsenals, instead ol mi.ssiles. and gives I S negotiators more tlexi hdity 111 reaching an accord The change is designed to move th( I'niled States and

the Soviet I pion away Irom liuilding multi warhead missiles and toward small, single warhead missiles that would [le less threatening

The plan calls tor raoing the propti.scd ceiling on Ihc numlicr ol land tiascd and >iihmarmc based missiles cacli side could have The cxisling 1 S proposal would M't a celling ol K.70 long range missiles oil each side It also calls tor a one third culliack in warheads, leaving cacti side w ith 7 (100

I nder the new plan Ihe missile ceiling would tie i,n creased hi an undisclosed lunidier somewhere Imm Ihe ii.711 the 1 lilted .Slates has

proposed lo tlie I 4-7ii tnissile cenling the Soviet I mon has indicated it would accept At llu' same lime Iher warhead limit would remain at i.iHin The Soviets have argued that the \m(rican.propnsals do not take into accouni Hie dillereni structure'' ot Ihe two power' arsenals, as 7n [lercent ol Momou s sIraU'Uic polenlial 'is land based wtiile Ihe I nilt'd States relies primarily on suhma rmt' launched missih's and hi'avy bomber'

Tht'v a'sert lhal an accord liasi'd on the American eon ei'pl would lorce Hie Soviet I nion lo 'erap more than no [lerci'ili ol il' intercon I menial tialli'lie missile'

Resting Place

TKHT FIT A Royal Navy Harrier jump jet fighter sits atop a makeshift landing pad of containers on txiard the Spanish freighter Alaigro" as the 2,:!()0 ton ship tieads for Ihe Spanish port of Tenerife The aircraft's pilot landed on the freighter with only one minute's fuel left, after losing contact with the carrier H.MS Illustrious during NATO exercises Monday ' AP Laserpholo'

Educators Gather For School Crisis Talks With President

HI I 1 ( HMa

Hotline gels things done lor you (all 7.72 l:{:f(> and tell your problem or your sound-ott or mail it to Hotline. The Daily u/xv Hi*;? lmAnvilI \ (' >7kU

Reflector, Box l%7, Greenville. N (' 27K:t4 Because ot the large numbers received. Hotline can answer

readers Names must In* given hul only initials w ill lie used

CANDYSTRIPER FEEDBACK (reenville Villa Nursing Home had .some ' response, but not as much as \vs hoped, from its recent appeal for (andystripers Any girl or boy interested in taking part is asked to contact activities director Terry Fuller and plan to be at an orientation session .Saturday at O ilO a m at the nursing home.

HidKIN.s. Mmn AP FdiuahH' gatht'H'd lu talk w ith Pn'i(leiil Iteagan abmit solving lh('. crisis in th( nation s >chools vvcrt' lold tiy' Minnesota s governor today that Ihc ledcral govi'rnmen! will have to h('!p loot Iht' relormliill    '

When we are talking about ('ducalion w(' stiould put our money wtK'rc our mouth IS." Gov Rudy Pcrpich, a Democrat, said at Ih(' start ot a day long torum at lh(' Hopkins Ki.'cnhower Communily ('enter Th(' participants are to (liscuss Ihe recommenda tions ot Iht' National Com mission on Fxct'llence in Kducalion Tht' president himsell was Hying later today to Mm neaptilis to join in the dis cussion m this sutiurt) outside Iht' Twin Cities His appear ance is the latest in a flurry ot While Htiuse education activities mt'luding a lunch

Hu' prt'sidcnl hi'ld Wcdnt's dav lor leaders ol lour na'

Ilonal'chool groups Tht' piihhc ('ducal ion lead (I's have b(en al loggerh(ad' wiih Ihe R('agan administr.i lion over Hie |)r('sidenr.' push lot lax brt'aks tor privat( ('ducation .nd his ellorts m [ia.'t veal' lo dll aid lo putilic stiiools Bui Hu'y are op,. Iimistic Dial Reagan's p(isonal mb'iesl will lead to more t(d('ral 'dollars lor schools Ib'i'pich greeting Kduca lion Secretary T II Ih'll and oHk'!' ('ducator', outlined steps h( has taken in his six months in ollice to boost slat(' support and prod s( hools to oiler mor' courses III m.ith science loreign l.diguages and computers Teachers must he paid and paid well they are key lo Hie (lualily ot edueation the governor said H(' added I don I lielievt' Hull stales should hav tolal

r('spoMsit)ililv to 'Upport ('d lualioii hy Hu'msi'Kcs |h(' h'di'ial Ltovi'rniiK'ii! nuM prov idc imancial .support .md .1 clear nalioiud [iolicv

Th(' pn'sidi'iif also will ,ill('iid an ('Vi'tiiiiL', tuiid raisi'i' in Miimi'aiiolis lor S('ii Rudy Boschwit/. R Mmn bt'lori'HymnhoiiK'

\('Xl i'lK'siI.lV tl(' phill' to visit a high scluMil 111 T('ii ii('ss('(' and will addiY'ss a Paii'til reactK'i' \ssuciation convt'iition m \('w Mexico on \\('dii(''day

On W(dn('sday R('.igaii disciissi'd Hi(' school pro hb'ins o\er lumh a! Hu' White Houst' with Icadi'i's ol tom major t'duciition groups llic \FI.('l(is \m('rican F('d(rallon (it Teachers the Nalional .School Boards \ssociati('m lh(' \merican \s'ociatlon ol Scliool Ad mmistrators and Hit' ( oiiiicil ol Chiel CMali' ScfliMil (II IlCl'I's

\FT Prt'sidt'iil \H)erl

sli,inker a in'ijiicni criliv ot Ive.iLt.m ' clloii' lo uiU' lax liliak' lo [larciil' ol |)lival(' scliool chiidl'cil (!.' well a'III' past atlcmpi' to 'harjilv cut h.ick on ledcral aid lo public 'ctiool' 'aid alti'rwai'd'

I'hi'ie won' .i"Umplioii' iii loda.y ' discU"!oii' ihai Hit' It'doral LtoLoinmcnl mmhi do a lew oHiei Hiiiui' iiol hug('

Faliit'l' Hil' veal Ri'aUaii a'kod ( oiipic" loi' ' lO million to help 'taic' mi'cl ,i 'horlauo ol math .iiid't ii'iice leacht'i' The lloii'c .ilroadv has pa'si'd a 't2i million M'l'slOll ol that lull

Ttl(' lU'C'l'lclll '0|I ol III dical('d Hial Hit", will be doimt 'ome iiiitro but I m sui'(' not much a' wt' would vvalll 'alil shalikci

Sluinki'i '.iitl that '(i; p('rC('Ilt III Hie ih'i U"loll w a' around jioint' ol .otri'o IlK'Ilt ' such .1' 'ho liood to

iRIeaseturntolageti'

Charged In Arson Cases

W \slll\(>T(i\ \( Kt'iiiu'th Kay Ro's a Hitthwav ialrol sorue.int sl.tlioiii'il in Ritt ('oimtv w.n arrested W('diU''day on .iisoii and conspiracy charut'' iii connectluii with Hit' tuirmiu; ol iwo niohilt' home'm Bi'auiorl Counlv on (Id (' IU2

l\o>' W.I' I.(k('n into tU'lodv al llighwav Ialrol I'roop \ lie.id(|UarU'r' in (.i'('('iivillt' .ihout H am bv Bi'autort ( ounty 'ht'fiH ' oiiut'i'' and .lut'iil' at ih(' ^lab' Bureau ol iiiv(''imanon

( hai'iti'd wliHi two count' oi .irson and oik' count ot .1 oii'jur.icv lo commil .ir'on Ross vv.is rt'h'ased on Mooun bond pciidmu a lu'.iring in Bi'autort ('ounty superior Court .lur.c 20 Tlu' Roule (In'i'iivillt' man could Ih'st'iitenccd to ',0 y't'.ii ' 111 [irisoiion ('.ich cluirgt' il loiind ituilly \ iiK'iiibt'r o! Iht' lluthway Iatrol tor IK vi'ars Ross wc' indicli'd by .1 Bi'.iuiorl Coiiiity urand jury .May !1 However ncnt' wt'H' '('all'll by courldrdi'r unlil Wt'dnc'day

Hii' mornini; 'aul Rirs' h.is Ix'i'ii sU'peiided irom ilulv withoul p.iv pi'P.itiiut .in mv(''tii;alion by th(' (Ml ml' iiilt'rnal .tll.iii'' '('cHon Kti" a I'li: Counlv iialivt' wa'iraiisli'rn'd In Gret'iiv ilh'ill I'lT' a' a li'oopi'i' a'ld proiiioh'd to '('I'Ut'aiil in Novt'inber inni I'hc t hai'oe.' .m.iiii't Ko" re'Ulti'd Irom an investigalioii ol lirc' Aliich it(''lroycd two niobili' hom'i'''oi) Hie Route i, Ua'huM; " '.irni ol H.irvt'\ Ih'id'v Dixon bv the Beautort I tiuiii'. 'h.i : "2 ' DcparliiK'tit .iiul Iht' sBl Flu' Iraili'is weri'

iiK alt'll in ,1   It'd ,irca )U'i ('.I'l ot Hu' Illl Bi'.iulor! County

line 'til I s . 'H

Ihifc oihi'i Im I'oiiiily rt'siili'iil' .iKo laci' chariti's in coiiiici iHui with Ihc c.isi' .iccordiiu; to shi'ritt Ni'lstiii shi'|i|ianl IIc'.iiil ..lc"(R..IV D.iv I' 2I ol ,o2 Dnuglas \vt 1,1'i'cnv ilIc Ni'llic li'ic:r'on 2i' ol Rouii'I Wmti'rvillt' and ,],i'(ti'r F.iri (iriiiit'' 17 oi Winb'rvilh' wt'it' taken into I ii'ioiK alli'i a cr.ind pirv indicb'd thi'in on two coiinl' ol al 'Oil t'och on March 21 The i iin'(tir.u v diarui' au.iiii'l Ko" .lili'iti's that on Si'pt ;o pi;i2 he com'|)ired with iirmii''to commit ar'on.ait.un'l 1 nxon Till' aiMin ch.irci'' alleui' Ro" m'I lilf lo and .inli'tlllu' burninitIII Hit' Iwo housi' tra'U'i''

Consul Changes Mind; Requests

Asylum In U. S.

M'.W ii|;| K\\s \p Nil .Il aUUa 1 oii'Ul Ui'iici o! Ill New ( n It',III' 01 dci'i'd out 111 the I mil'll Slab'' aliinu ,\i!h .'0 Iilhi'l' Nual'aitu.in d,i|iloiiiat' a'kc'i iii'lcad lor (Hihtic.ii a'Vluin .ii'id will he alliiwril 111 'l,l\ wlrili' his

irijllC'l Is li'\ ic.ti'd

\iimi'Iin \ll.iio t'oin

ini'iili'il only luicllt Wed ni'sdav on 111' dt'cision to rv III irinain m Hic I nilcd

Males

I'.dw111 I haiiv in .Ir di'tricl director ol Ihc ImiMinr.iiioii ,ind Nalurah/alioii-Sei vici' in Nt'W I iiieaiis said Allal'o will be (icrmilti'd lo remain in Hie coiinlry while his application Is icvifwed rtlcri' was iK'i [III'dicliiiM how loiiLt Hic pm ci'ss would lake'

Il has I   a vcrv dll

licull dav liir iiic he s.nd as he I'lni'rci'il Hum Ihc oiticc 111 I lie I S lilimigralion and Naturali/.dion Service ,iiid w,liked lo ,1 ear 111 whieh lu' wasdi ivi'ii aw.iy

\ski'd when h(' had di'cided III a(i(ilv |iii [Mililiciil as\luni. \llam s.iid list nighi alter laikiim In my lainilv It was an ahrufil K'vi'r.sal Imm his comment' ol Ihi' (iiev loll' nmhi will'll 111' h.id said W(' are uoinu hack to mil (iniiiii'v Wc ari' hajipv to 20

Ihe Slab' Di'parHlK'til lespondmu lo Hi(' ('xpul'ioii III Hiri'i' \m('ric.in diplomat' iroin Nicaragua had ordi'ii'd 21 *\i( araguaiis and thi'ir 'amilii'' oul ot ih(' I mil'll slalc' \ltaro ' dcadlini' lor l('avmgwa'4p 111 I'he Slate Deparlmt'iil ' older clo'cd Ihc New (irlcaii' I oiisul.ili' and livc olhei' ol lict'' i! 'Old had hecii .hed

lor'pv 1112

Poscosio Soys Sheriff 'Suggested' Resignation

OLD BRICK APPEAL Aycock Junior High School Principal Kay Whitehurst has asked Hotline to appeal for the donation of old bricks to complete work on a courtyard garden at the school. The project was started several years ago by the late Sally Klingenschmitt, long a teacher and lover of nature here. Her friends wish to finish it in honor of her and for the students. Anyone having any bricks to donate is asked to call Mrs. Whitehurst' at 756-4181.    '

By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer

Former I'llt County Deputy Lee Rascasio hinting ol a >uil against the .state attorney general s office to clear my name, .said Wednesday afternoon that Sherill Ralph Tyson suggested lo me that 1 resign "

The resignation and possible suit stemmed trom incidents that occurred during the murder trial last week ot Billy Braswell, who admitted that he shot his wite lo death in September lt>K2 and then tried to commil suicide -

Ty.son declined earlier Wednesdtiy to say il he had asked lor Pa.scdsio's resignation, but he did say I let1 like it vxas one ol those* things lhal was necessary ' The sheriff said today he had nothing further to sav atxiul Paseasio's resignation

Itui'mg the trial Pascasio ri'ad .i transcript ol ,i lapt' K'cordmg IK' mad(' ol a convcrsution wiHi Bra'Wi'll which b'lided lo corrotMiraI(' Braswell s tcstimonv lhal his wili' 'hoi tiimtirsi

\ssislanl .Mlorney General Don Srcpheiis wfio pro.scculed the case lor Ihe stale Nith during cross t'xaiiimation and again during his linal argument to the jury accusi'd Pascasio ol liemg Ihe author ol the Braswell delense Also during cross examination. Pascasio said tie had, at one lime, considered taking a warrant out ' tor Tyson tiecause )i('believed the sherill had done a wrong thing Iascasio nni given an opportumlv to explain m court said lollowing Ihe trial last week lhal he lelt at one time the sherill was applying pressure on me not to testily at a tiond

iK ariiig im Biw'Well lasl November and lelt that bordered on inlinildalion ol a stale wilness Pa.'casio >aid Ihe nuiHer involved ,i mi'iinderstaiidmg 1 ti.id good inlenHoiis and the sherill tiad good inleniions Iiki II wassimplv a time ot disagreement lie said Pascasio said Wednesday Hiai he discussed the allegations made tiy Mi'pheiis with an attorney early Monday then talked with Tyson The .'herilt jusf 'Uggested to me told me tie w.mieii lor me to clear my name ' and suggested to me that 1 resign in order to devote ton percent ot my

elK'l'gK'stodoso

1 was not ('xpi'ctiiig him to say that Pascasio said, .iddmg lhal lit' Iheii asked the .sheritl Suppose 1 chiKi.se not I Please turn to Page 141





2-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, June 9,1983

Church Singles Programs ProvideGood F riendships

Miss Judy Carter, daughter of Mrs. Ellen Carter of Grifton and the late Emmett Carter, and Donald D. Sheridan were married in a

By ANDREANEAL INDIANAPOLIS (LPli -Bachelor Ben Cagle used to head for the singles bars after finishing work. Now he says hes found a place where friendships are more meaningful - a nearby churchs fellowship hall.

Cagle. 39. one of 56.8 million single Americans, can be found every Wed- nesday night at the St. Luke's United Methodist Church singles program in Indianapolis.

"1 came because 1 was getting tired of a lot of the shallow relationships I was having, Cagle said, in the bar scene, there were too many superficial people. id get off work on Friday nights and Id want some place to go. I'd go to some of the singles bars, but 1 wasnt happy with the girls I dated.

The number of church-organized .singles programs is mushrooming, from New York City to California They are sponsored by Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish congregations While some of the groups focus on the special problems of divorce and widowhood, most are designed to address the problem of loneliness in an increasingly singles' world.

In 1981, there were 33,2 million people over age 18 living in the United States who had never been married. Another 12.8 million were single because of the death of a spouse and 10 8 million were divorced The Rev Jim Smoke was involved with the formation of one of the first officiai church singles programs at the Garden Grove Community Church at California Smoke joined the church staff in 1974 as a fulltime minister to single adults. He now is a consultant to churches developing singles programs,

"Its a growing phenomenon, Smoke said. "Society is recognizing singles are a viable force for the first time. Society no longer says, Tf youre 34 and unmarried you're strange.'

Rabbi Allen Kaplan, associate director for the New York Federation of Reformed Synagogues, helps congregations develop singles programs that suit their individual needs.

He said half of the 104 temples in the New York area have singles groups.

BPW Meets Tonight

The Greenville Business and Professional Womens Club will meet tonight at the Ramada Inn Pageantry hall for dinner at 6:45 p.m and a busine,ss meeting to follow.

The legislative committee will present a program on

How to Protect Oneself Against Crime. The civic affairs committee will host Plans will be finalized for the N.C. State Convention to be held in Greensboro June 9012 For more information about the club or its activi ties, call Elizabeth Deal. 7,52-2917, or Rep.sv Baker. 7,56.5690.

A little baking soda on a damp sponge Will clean the interior of a microwave oven without scratching the surface.

We are famous for our solitaires. 18K mounting, yellow or white goid set with a Va ct. round, brilliant cut diamond.

$800 up

LAUTARES

JEWELERS

DIAMOND SPECIALISTS

Registered Jewelers Certified (iemologists 414 Evans Street We do not sell discount or promotional jewelry.

"The bar scene is a horrible scene, particularly in large metropolitan areas, Kaplan said.

This whole depersonalization that comes about through the bar scene is something to which people are reacting. The religious institutions are safe havens. Safety is a big rason for the popularity of church singles groups among women, said Jerie Smith, administrator of a single adult pilot program for the Lutheran Church at Minneapolis-St. Paul.

"We live in a culture where a woman iraped every eight minutes, Ms. Smith said. Churches have a group setting so there is a physically safe place to come.

The St, Lukes group at Indianapolis began as a Sunday school class for singles, but expanded when the minister's wife died in a traffic accident. Suddenly thrust back into singlehood, the minister felt at a loss.

Now, in addition to Sunday school, there is Wednesday night fellowship, social events on weekends, boating and camping trips and retreats.

The Rev David Owen, minister to single adults, said more than 1,200 people participate in the program during a year, with most events drawing crowds of between 1,50 and 2,50.

Owen, 47, has been a Meth-odi.st minister for 20 years Divorced five years ago, he says, "Ive been through it myself.

Owen said about 20 mar riages have resulted from the program, but "we don't .see it primarily as a place to meet and marry

'We emphasize friendship." Owen said Owen, who also counsels singles, said he is visited most often by people who have recently experienced divorce.

They have special needs. Their lives have been totally uprooted, he said. The most common problem is how to rebuild their life when the old life is gone, recreat ing a life when the old is takmaway.

At a recent social hour at the church, members discussed why they joined the group and what their expectations were.    The

common response    was

companionship, friendship and social life.

Most people who    come

here Initially are looking for a support group,    said

Maureen Hamm, 36 !! we took a silent poll, wed all say we wanted to meet some-

of marriage. "1 didnt even know how to ask somebody out.

The churchs new role ministering to singles is paying off in increased church membership. Less than half the members of most church singles groups initially belong to the congregation. but many join when they discover what they experience in singles, they also experience in the church, Owen said.

garden ceremony in McLean, Va May 28. The bridegroom is of Alexandria, Va. and Scranton, Pa.

one.

Jerry McGlothlin, :f4, said being in the group "has taught me its OK for men and women to be friends as well as date each other When 1 came here, 1 wasnt ready for dating, said Jerry Harlan, ,50, who was divorced after 29 vears

Not all church-sponsored singles groups are directed at heterosexual adults tired of the bar scene.

Many Roman Catholic and Episcopalian churches have begun chapters of a national support group for homosexuals. The Episcopalian organization is called "Integrity. The Roman Catholic group is "Dignity

Dwight Geisendorff, sexton at All Saints Episcopal Church at Indianapolis and Charter member of the local Integrity chapter, said the groups purpose is largely social.

The group holds monthly meetings, which feature educational programs, films or book reviews, and once-a-month parties or dinners.

Geisendorff said members join the group for the same reason heterosexuals join other singles programs.

"There are gay bars and also baths which are primarily for the purpose of .sexual liaison, Geisendorff .said, "You get tired of it after a while We were looking for people with values and Christian morals and thats' something you dont usually find in bars.

But for every single person frustrated with the bar scene, there are others who have found their niche in smoke-filled lounges and taverns. Some churches are beginning to minister to those people too.

For seven years, the Rev Tom Behrens, called Father Behrens by those who know him, has spent his nights and wee-morning hours hanging out at about 20 bars in the East Lakeview neighborhood of Chicago Behrens was hired by a group Of city churches, who pay his salary, to "have a church presence in the bars, which-means I basically bar hop.

The main presence is just to be there to listen to folks who are lonely or have poor self images or problems and just want to tell another person, Behrens said, Behrens said street ministries like his are helping improve the image of the church "1 hear lot of people say: Its about time the church came out here Not that we expect the church to condone this lifestyle -- drinking, debauchery and lust - but we out here are human regardless of our shortcomings

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor

DINNER FOR TWO Piggy back Lobster Cole Slaw & French Bread Strawberry Chiffon Pie PIGGY BACK LOBSTER For a special occasion 2 eight-ounce Rock lobster tails, thawed ' 1-pound stick 'L- cupi butter L' cup stemmed parsley sprigs, minced 2 scallions (white part only I, minced .

2 large cloves garlic lor more), minced White pepper to taste Using a sharp knife or kitchen scissors, cut hard shell of lobster tails down through the middle lengthwise, leaving tail fan intact. Do not remove underside membrane. Gently open shell, .separating it from meat with fingers. Lift raw tail meat through split shell to rest on top of shell, leaving meat attached to fan end of shell. Cup each tail in foil: place in a shallow broiler pan In an 8-inch skillet, melt butter: off heat stir in parsley, scallion, garlic and pepper. In a preheated broiler, 4 inches from high heat, broil lobsters, basting often with the butter mixture, until opaque when tested with a small knife slit - 14 to 16 minutes. (If tails begin to burn, adjust heat or rack.) Makes 2 servings.    .,

Auxiliary Met

Girls State representation

and the organizations poppy drive were discussed during a meeting of the American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 39, which met recently    ^

Shelia Craft, Cindy Wallace, Michelle Darden, and Michelle Connally are .the Girl Staters. They will present a report to the auxiliary at its September meeting. The poppy drive was outstanding, it was reported The N.C. Department Convention will be held June 16-19 in Charlotte. There will be no meetings during July and August.

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At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

MRS. DONALD D SHERIDAN

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 hie printed.

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

For the last decade, all parents have heard is how school enrollment is dn^ping off. Kids dont want to ^ to school anymore. It isnt fun. It isnt stimulating. It isnt challenging.

In typical adult fashion, weve really flexed our muscles. Weve shortened the school day to four hours or ' less. Weve made electronic games out of English and math. Weve added every frill from the History of Perrier to Holistic Car Repairs.

None of it has worked. Weve got to start thinking like teenagers and use a little reverse psychology. You want to discourage dropouts? How about this plan of action?

Tell them their parents would die if they knew they were in school. Within weeks, teenagers would sneak out of the house by the thousands and force their way into schools if they had to.

Tell them theyre not old enough to go to high school and watch them break out fake I D S in droves.

Cant get your kids to go to

summer school? Just tell them that out of season it costs more. The hotter it gets, the more it costs. There wont be an empty seat in the house.

Tell them they have to drive to get there. If the school is only two blocks away, tell them that anyway. They wont miss a day.

If you really want a mob scene at the front door of every school in the country, sell tickets on a first-come, first-seated basis. No reserved seats! Then stand back. Especially if the school has had a hit within the last six months.

If school is touted as being fattening and gives you bad skin, theyll go for it. If you forbid them to associate with

anyone who even goes there, theyll sleep over and accompany their friends to school every day it is open.

It probably sounds like a lot of trouble, but young people dont want to hear how unique public education is in this country. They no longer believe in the American dream that if you learn how to' diagram a sentence, you can become president. Theyve been raised as a society of spectators where everything is done for them, and if you dont like what you see, you just change channels.

It isnt an easy job to keep them in school as it was a few years ago when my son said. Everyone is skipping school. Its no big deal. I dont see why I cant do it.

Then why dont you? 1 asked.

"Because youd kill me! Fear. We should have hung onto it.

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A dinner party honoring Rhonda Hooks and Glenn , Joyner, who plan to be married June 25, was held Sunday at the Beef Barn.

The bride-elect was presented a rose corsage and a piece of her chosen crystal. Mr. and Mrs. Dalton Vainwright of Greenville and Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Whit-ford of Raleigh gave the party.

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Indian Newspapers Run Matrimonial Ads

By STEWART SUVIN NEW DELHI, India (LPIi - It appears to me that Box No. 77353 and Box No. 77400 in the matrimonial pages of the Sunday Hindustan Times

should be a perfect match.

No. 77353, billed himself as a 23-year-old multimillionaire looking for a wife. No. 77400 claimed to be a 22-year-old heiress

Her Self Esteem Suffered As Slapping Became Beating

By Abigail Van Buren

I90J Dy Universal Press Syndicate

DKAH AHHY I lan't ct the letter from Worried Father out of my mind. His 19 year-old daughter, "Judy, stopped seeing her boyfriend because he had slapped her on a few occasions, but she went back with him. Her father then barred him from their home, and asked you if he had done the right thing. (You said he had not.)

How I wish I had read that m your column when I was 19. I was in similar circumstances at that age (I am now 25), and I can tell you that when my parents barred my boyfriend from our home, it drove us (him and me) Closer together.    '

You were also correct when you said slapping eventually turns into beating It happened to me The more he abused me, the less my family thought of me, and the less I thought of myself, until I was convinced that 1 wasnt good enough for any man. (I felt lucky he would have me. no matter how he abused me.) Thank God I finally got the strength to break up the relationship I am now happily married to a wonderful, non violent man, but it will take years to overcome the humiliation and degradation of having been battered and abused.

OVKR IT IN OREGON

DEAR OVER IT: There is not sufficient space to print all the letters I received in response to the one from Worried Father.

This one says it all:

DEAR AHHY: 1 stupidly married not one, hut tuv men who slapped me before we were married. Your advice was excellent, but 1 would like to add this:

Judy should visit the local spouse abuse center One visit will convince her that a slap soon becomes a punch, and then an outright brutal beating. Unfortunately, it rarely stops there The abpser soon learns that he can hurt a woman even more by extending the abuse to her children. Any individual who lays a hand to another in violence has no respect for either that person or him.self.

Please advise Judy to run as fast as she can from this lunatic. It will not get better only worse.

HEEN THERE IN UOUOA. FLA

DEAR AHHY: There are three children in our faTmly (all boys). We want to ask you if you think it is rougher being the youngest, oldest or middle child','

DOUG IN DURHAM, N t

DEAR DOUG: As Ive said before, if you ask the eldest, hell say, "The eldest, because youre expected to set a good example for the younger ones. And if a fight breaks out, I get blamed because Im the oldest and should know better."

Ask the middle child, and hell say, "Being the middle child is the hardest because you get none of the advantages of being the youngest or the oldest."

Ask the youngest child, and hell tell you that being the youngest is hardest because your parents try to keep you a baby as long as possible, and youre the one who has to wear all the hand-me-downs.

In other words, it all depends where youre coming from.

DEAR AHHY: I'his^ is fur Johnny .on the .Spot,' whose ladyfriend is never on time for a date I have a .solution to this problem, and it's been working like a charm for years My husband has never beeivon time for anything, so when we have to be someplace at 7 p.m , 1 tell him we have to he there at b p,m This way we are only 15 minutes late, but it sure beats an hour!

SNEAKY IN NEW YORK

If you put off writing letters because you don't know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, l^etter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

Greenville Gymnastics Club

With

East Carolina University

Announces Summer Sessions

Of The Children s Gymnastics Program Under The Direction Of Darlene Rose

Sewton A: Mondays and Wednesdays tl:45AM 12:45PM June 13. 15.20. 22. 27.29

Session B: Tuesdays and Thursdays 4:30 P M. 5:30 P M.

June 14. 16.21.23.28.30 Session C: Mondays and Wednesdays 11 45 A M 12 45P M July 11. 13. 18. 20. 25.27 Session D: Tuesdays and Thursdays 4:30 P M -5:30 P M July 12. 14. 19.21.26. 28 Cost Per Session: $24.00 Boys and Girls Ages 3-17 Class size will be limited to insure proper ratios oi teachers to students. Classes are held in Memorial Gym on ECU Campus Registration:

Open registration will take place on Monday. June 13 from 10 A.M.-l P.M. in Memorial Gym on 10th St., Room 112. This will be for all sessions. Registration may also be called in to Darlene Rose 757-6583 or the secretary at 757-6490.

seeking a mate.

For several weeks running 77353 placed special boxed ads in the Hindustan Times;

Wanted; Exceptionally beautiful, attractive and homely vegetarian girl from exclusive industrialist-business family for handsome, smart, pleasing personality, age 23 ... multimillionaire."

After some weeks. Box No, 77400 came on the scene:

Not only was she "very homely. but the 22-year-old attested that she was also slim, smart and beautiful" and had a Punjabi Hindu father who owned multimillion-dollar industries around New Delhi.

"Families of equal status may write." her ad said.

India's "mating game" is played out each Sunday in the classified pages of New Delhi newspapers, where nearly 1,000 would-be brides and grooms are weekly put on the marriage block.

In this nation still ruled by ancient rites of matchmaking, the matrimonial ads are jinly the first step in a rigorous, drawn-out process.

In many cases, astrology charts must be checked. Caste, religion and family income are major considerations.

Often, the entire family including aunts and uncles come under scrutiny - or do the scrutinizing.

.Although the practice of dowry was banned in India 100 years ago, the payment of money and gifts to the groom by the brides family is still the unwritten law. Only a small percentage of matrimonial ads - mostly by the would-be bride -specify "Nodowry."

To be a knowledgeable watcher of the marriage ads. you must first know some ground rules,

"Homely does not mean that a potential bride is plain, but that she is a skilled homemaker.

"No bar does not mean that liquor wont be served after the wedding, but that differing caste, religion, or family background won't stand in the way of a match There are some descriptions. however, that baffle even longtime matrimonial

ad watchers, such as that of a 52-year-old government employee who invited matrimonial correspondence from virgin widow without encumbrances above 35 for unencumbered widower, The plight of one man was particularly heart-rending.

Sometimes stars dont match or luck strikes one hard - so is the case of this Punjabi boy, the ad began.

. He continued that he is "32 plus (looks younger)" and underwent the trauma of divorce by mutual consent He said he was now inviting "proposals from really beautiful non-divorced. charming spinsters." 5-foot-3 to 5-foot-5, must be a college graduate, healthy, fair, clear complexioned, modem, homely, ambitious, intelligent, sweet smile, sweet natured."

Things are decided much easier in India's villages, where 80 percent of the nations 684 million people live Children are often married off by their parents before puberty - sometimes as young as 5

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Recognize Operation Sunshiners

The Operation Sunshine Girls Activities Program closed out its 9-month program yesterday with a cookout and recognition ceremony at the center, 1103 Broad Street Previously the girls had taken an end-of-the-program camping trip to William B. I'mstead Park near Raleigh.

The Girl of the Year, Pamela Jones, was named Runners ups were Stacey Green. Nikki Blount and Lora Tyson. These girls were chosen because of their willingness to participate fully and share with other girls. Operation Sunshine Director Gloria Pearsall said .Mrs. Pearsall said the summer program will begin Mondav, June 20, at 10 a.m

The program will be open to girls aged 7 to 13 and will be held each weekday from 10 a m to 4 p.m. (The age limit is being lowered one year.)

Fre-registration is bc'ing held today and tomorrow from 9 a m* to noon For more information call the center. 7,58-5315

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4-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Thursday, June 9,1963

EdiforialsPlaying For Keeps

Its called the toughest and most comprehensive law against drunken driving in the United States.

Kffective Oct. 1 the new North Carolina law will eliminate plea bargaining and hopefully help keep drunken drivers off the highways. It should, if they can read and comprehend all thats involved, discourage drinking and driving by teenagers.

It abolishes lesser offenses fsuch as careless and reckless driving after drinking), and jail sentences are mandatory in grossly aggravated cases.

Breathalyzer rt'sults are going to play an ever-increasing role in passing judgment on drivers; and the law extends from six months to 12 months the period of license revocation for refusal to take the Breathalyzer

Theres more, much more: but the message is very clear.

Starting Oct. 1 there is something else for a motorist with only a couple of beers under his belt to think about than running off the road or running into a pedestrian, or another car. or truck

He (or .she) can t>e in deep trout)le just tooling along and then being slopped t)y a suspicious law enforcer. A 1)1-1 offense no longer is a gam(. The new law is making it pretty clear that North (arolina has begun playing for keepsMetrics Bring Yawns

Cood old made-in-.America apathy apparently is winning one more round in the continuing effort to make the people go metric.

It seems only yc'sterday when a gung-ho campaign was launched to accustom the pul)lic to metrics as a common denominator with most other countries in the world.

There were highway signs giving a destination in terms of miles and kilometers 'I'here were containers designated in pints, quarts, etc . as w(ll as in liters (and multiples thereof). Advocates did (*verything t)ut give away money to win their point

All the logic in thi* world was poured out upon the citizenry, to no avail The public just yawned.

Rowland ivans and Robert NovakSummit Helps Adviser Nail Dovyn Policy

WASHINGTON - Fresh from the personal triumph he helped shape for President Reagan at the Williamsburg summit, Natioual Security Adviser William P. Clark moved with unaccustomed dispatch recently to nail down White House preeminence over the State and Defense Departments.

If Reagan had taken a pratfall at Williamsburg, as one senior White House aide worried he might, the future of Clark himself would have been in jeopardy. Instead, the unprecedented pre-Williamsburg briefings ordained for the president by Clark that started months ago (and ended up with six or more hours a day of Reagan's time) achieved what they had to. Instead of ambling on stage as an amiable stumblebum, Reagan orchestrated one of the sharpest summit shows witnessed by the Western leaders.

That was the catalyst for Clarks run on the State Department following months of morose contemplation of what White House aides feel has been steady deterioration of the American position abroad The grandson of a straight-

shooting Ventura County (Calif.) sheriff, Clark has staked out new turf with Reagans cognizance and approval. That stakeout moves policy toward the right and makes compromise, with the Democrats more difficult. As such, it becomes a major move on the 1984 presidential campaign chessboard.

Not all Reagans success! Williamsburg derives from Bill Clark. Indeed, it was Secretary of State George Shultz and Assistant Secretary Rick Burt, his top Eun^an aide, who persuaded Clark and the president to gamble on summit approval of the East-West security statement. As it turned out, that produced the core achievement at Williamsburg.

But after Clark accepted the challenge of the East-West security statement, first broached to skeptical West Europeans May 10, it was he who squelched revolt inside the Pentagon. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and suspicious civilian aides smelled U.S. retreat in States insistence on the summit statement, Clark overruled them and. in the event, the president carried his allies with him at Williamsburg.

But mild-mannered Bill Gark rankled in the days leading to the summit. Three weeks ago, he had sent Shultz a routine presidential request for State Department ^roval of 11 names proposed as new amn^dors, all of whom were apparently political appointees, not from the Foreign /Service. Shultz or his bureaucrats Dejected all but one of them, substiting Foreign Service regulars.

Those vetoes help explain the anonym^S-4ttack from deep inside the White House last week against diplomacy by tea and crumpets on the diplomatic circuit That populist crack was ostensibly aimed at ousted assistant secretary of state Tom Enders, who almost single-handedly, without serious help from Shultz, has been running Central American policy. But Shultzs veto of White House suggestions for political appointees to man embassies abroad helped fuel the populist mood in the White House.

Thou^ nursing no blood feud with Shultz - or anything close to it - Clark has shared such populist emotions. Perhaps more to the point, so has Ronald Reagan. Clark has also shared a convic

tion held by Reaganites that the striped pants boys were too attentive to Democratic critics in Congress. "One White House aide told us privately that Enders treats Doc Long as though he were deputy assistant secretary of state (referring to Rep. Clarence Long, the Democrat who chairs the House Foreign Operations Subcommittee)

For Clark, the Penta^n has become a hairshirt of a different color. Weinbergers obtuseness on the tricky politics of the MX missile, one issue that has recently prickled Gark, tossed that hot coal into Clarks office for managing. Clark thinks it should have been handled by Weinberger.

Tight control by Clark over national security policy guarantees a larger penetration of 1984 presidential politics than yet witnessed in this administration. That, not one-upmanship or personal hostility for either Shultz or Weinberger, explains Clarks swift reach for centralized control of policy in his small West Wing basement office. There are few doubters that his grasp will equal his reach Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

James Kilpatrick

VVA.SHINCTON It is a truism on Capitol Hill that when it comes to the hig issues, nobody's mind ever Is changed py committee hearings or by floor debate, But if last months.Senate hearing on the born-again E(jual Bights Amendment do not chill some of the enthusiasm for the ERA, it will Im* surprising The proposed amendment got a very cold bath. .

Almost everyone is generally lamihar with the ERA, and some of us know it by heart. The amendment was propo.sed by Congress in 1972 It finally died 10 years later for want of:{ states ratifications Now it has bwn resurrected m both houses, without so much as a comma changed, and the battle l)egms anew

The amendment says "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied orCourts Aren't The Place To Change Constitution

abridged by the United .States or by any state on account of sex A second section vests power in Congress to enforce the amendment by appropriate legislation A third section would make the amendment operative two years after its ratification

As chief Senate sponsor, .Massachusetts Paul Tsongas served as opening witness m support of the resolution He had a rough time of it. Judiciary Chairman Orrin Hatch of Utah questioned him closely on what the amendment means What would its effect be m this situation or that situation Time after time. Tsongas made the same reply The courts would have to decide what it means

A kev witness against the re.solution

was Walter Berns, a highly respected professor of political science snd constitutional law He posed the large question that follows from Tsongas feeble answers: Do we truly want to leave it to the courts'' Is this what 5.35 members of Congress and the legislatures of 38 states would like to do to let nine members of the .Supreme Court tell them what they really meant by their amendment''

After 1 years of study, Berns said, he doesnt know what is meant by the ERA He doubted that the co-sponsors know . The amendment speaks of "equality of rights" without identifying those rights. The language appears to be absolute in its terms: it appears to forbid all laws, federal as well as state, that classify by

sex; the language permits no exceptions or qualifications

But is this what the sponsors intend'' Some proponents insist that the ERA, if it becomes part of the supreme law of the land. "Of course would take account of physical characteristics: Laws relating to wet nurses would not apply to men. And "of course" the ERA would not disturb a right to privacy: It would not require cc^ucational dorms at state universities or common latrines at Army camps. But the amendment itself is silent on these points.

Berns persisted. Is "on account of sex" in the ERA to be equated constitutionally with "on account of race" in the 15th Amendment'' Do we leave it to the courts to decide'' If classifications by gender are

to be legally as "suspect as classifications by race, what then'' Will the sponsors accept "any meaning the courts may give the language'.

"If so." said Berns. "1 would charge them with treating the Constitution with contempt; if not, I would ask them to point to the standard on the basis of which they could charge the court with misinterpreting the language

Would the ERA invalidate a male-only draft Let the courts decide. Are sex entitlements similar to racial entitlements'' Will the rights of women to vote be equivalent to the rights of minorities to vote, and not to have their voting power diluted'' It would be up to the judges. Does "on account of sex" embrace homosexual

choice'' Do we leave that issue to a majority of five on a court of nine? Would the amendment equalize the laws on prostitution, imposing equal punishment on the prostitute and her customer alike?

These are not frivolous questions. Tsongas got a friendly ho-ho-ho from the pro-ERA audience when he scoffed at "unisex toilets, but constitutional law is no laughing matter. If a black Marine cannot be denied access to the Quantico showers "on account of race, and of course he cannot be so denied, who is to be forbidden showers "on account of sex"? Says Tsongas: The courts would decide. Its a terrible way to amend the Constitution.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

Paul 7. O'Connor

Elisha DouglasIndustry Offers Helping Hand

RALEUill Nationwido, scbools arc lindmg it increasingly dilficult to tmd math and science teachers (iiven the salaries paid teachers and the salaries paid to math and science majors in private business, its no surprise that less than 1(H) new math and science education majors joined the ranks ot North (aro lina s public schimls last year

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 Colincha Slraat, Qreanvllle. N C 27B34

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Mambar Audit Buraau ol Circulation

One ol the highly regarded solutions to this problem is to pul private business scientists and mathematicians m the classrcMim An industry might lend the teacher lo the local schiKil system or. al the least, reschedule his work hours to allow him lo teach a class iir two When the National Task Force for Economic (irowth met al Research Triangle 1ark, several participants said such programs were getting und.er way in their areas of the country But, some professional educators said they questioned the wisdom of taking this course A teacher must know nol only the discipline hes teaching, they said, but the teacher must also know how to teach Bruce Brombacher of Upper Arlington, Ohio, national teacher of the year, made the point most succinctly "Theres a difference tietween knowing math and physics and being able lo impart that knowledgetochildren inK-12

Other educators argued that lo bring these non-teachers into teaching jobs, youd have to change the legal standards for teachers. In the process, we might end up opening the classroom to a lot of unqualified people, they said But the arguments of the educators were overwhelmed by several governors and businessmen. New Jersey Gov. Tom Kean said state laws are fraught with roadblocks that keep extremely competent people out of teaching Tiiese laws have lo be changed, he said.

"These laws make it impossible for some people to get back into teaching or for retired executives to get into it. These are people with different experiences They could develop into career teachers. They are well-qualified , Yod dont have to go so far as to quote the Einstein Rule - that Einstein could nol teach physics in a high school because he didnt have a teaching certificate, Kean said

others argued that state laws could be written very strictly If you didnt have a teaching certificate, youd need to show a suitable educational background and have a specific expertise, .As one businesswoman from the audience argues, "You wouldnt be getting totally unqualified people, just some people without some of the specifics of an education degree

Gov Jim Hunt, taking the most practical point of view, said that in some communities the debate may not be over whether to allow a non-teacher to teach math and science It may be whether the school was going to offer any of those subjwts "In some areas, you might not be able to get a math teacher but here, living in the community, you have this

retired engineer.

This question hits right at the heart of the reason the Education Commission of the States formed its task force Good math and science education will be essential to todays children as they enter the workforce. Having a science and math literate work force is also essential to American business, especially as we encounter more competition from foreign industry

By putting private sector scientists and mathematicians in the classroom, we may be able to buy ourselves some time in which to correct the structural problems of American education that have led lo the shortage of these teachers American business appears to be saying let's give it a try.

StrengthFor Today

The author Oliver Goldsmith once wrote, People seldom improve when they have no model but themselves to copy.

Probably we have all noticed this truth, at least in a negative way. Everyone has at some time seen a strange old man who lives alone, queerly dressed, talking to himself, behaving pecqliarly.

How do people become like this? Partly because they have no outside standard the companionship of someone else by

John Cunniff

WESTPORT. Conn. lAP) - James McManus goes nowhere in the marketplace without his numbers, without the data his researchers compile and his computers analyze, and from which he distills wisdom about human behavior,

We are the most expert people in the world at quantifying human behavior, he says. He claims his business record demonstrates it. "We have the best track record in terms of compound growth, he says.

Marketing Corporation of America, which produced revenue of $25,000 when McManus founded it in 1971, brought in $83 million in 1982, a figure he expects to reach $125 million this year and $200 million in 1985.

Early revenue came largely from market research and sales promotion, and from advising clients on how to build consumer lines, advice that led lo the success of Pillsburys Pipin Hot lz)af and Frito-l>ays GrandMas Foods More recently theyve been coming also from MCA subsidiaries that emerged from its knowledge of markets, including Westport Resturants. Inc. operator of two expanding chains called The Bakers Garden and Tanglewoods In all, McManus and his 88 principles or associates, all chiefs, no trkinees. have begun 22 business ventures and succeeded at 10, a track record that defies the incredible odds against new-businesssiiccess While 10 inhere considered failures.

McManus says, two were sold al what he says were a profit The jury, he says, is stl out on the other two. a microcoputer software company and a venture capital concern

Sitting in his office overlooking the Saugatuck River, McManus informality contrasts with his adherence to the numbers Almost nobody in the glass and red-brick complex dresses formally. Few of them, you learn, think rigidly either

In fact! McManus is sort of a maverick, deriving his business philosophy more from market research and observation than from academic notions taught in some of the most noted graduate schoOls of business.

Central to his philosophy about new businefws is that thev begin with a real

which to correct themselves.

We often say that a man is. known by the company he keeps. We might go further and say that a man is formed by the company he keeps. Our friends have a great effect upon us. which may lead us to the barroom or to the lecture hall, to the night club or to church.

For models in life to copy, we cannot afford less than the best. And we ourselves, as models for others, cannot afford to be less than our own best.

Data Help Develop Growth

consumer need, demonstrated through research, rather than the desire of an entrepreneur to give the world what he thinks it needs.

Simple as it sounds, the world of new business is smeared with the carcasses of technolgical geniuses who jumped in with a product before finding out everything possible about ^ts need and potential.

McManus-philosophy is to "collect intelligent, honest, individuals, peopld who want to work together and join in the adventure of building ideas into businesses" The goal, he says, "is to leverage people strength

In other words, management by objective - MBO - is out. and you soon realize how hard the door is slammed on that notion    '





Anti-Slovery Law Given A Good Chance

By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)-A bill to make slave holding a felony stands a good chance of becoming law after the state House adopted an amendment that helped the measure win 105-7 approval, supporters say.

I think the vote by which it passed will make it a^ deal more difficult for them (the Senate) to ignore it, said R^. Malcolm Fulcher,. D-Carteret, who introduced the bill and nursed it through the House.

After withstanding two close votes on amendments to weaken the bill Tuesday, Fulcher bowed to political realities and Wednesday supported removing a provision giving the State Bureau of Investigation the right to initiate slavery probes.

1 understand the realities of the political process here and I realize that the amendment may enhance the chance of this bill becoming law, he told the House.

Rep. Richard Wright, D-Columbus, who led opposition to the bill Tuesday, said there was no need for the SBl to have original jurisdiction in slavery cases. He said complaints about involuntary servitude could be lodged with the local sheriff, police chief, district attorney, and superior court or district court judges who, in turn, could notify the SBI.

i would be able to vote for this bill if we would take this out, said Wright, whose attempt to push through a similar amendment Tuesday failed by four votes.

Rep. Bob Slaughter, D-Stanly, said the amendment would also quiet his objections.

1 am very much opposed to any move whatsoever that would allow the SBI ... to involve themselves, he said. If we open the door on this, we will open a floodgate that will never end.

While that amendment breezed to 104-8 adoption, others were less well received.

Bill supporters sidestepped an amendment offered by Rep. Hugh Lee, D-Richmond, aimed at eliminating what he perceived as a focus on farmers and migrant t workers.    *

I strongly object to pointing out certain people for purposes of punishment, he said, adding that his amendment would include everyone, including those who hold ladies of prostitution.

While the bill holds employers liable if they with knowledge hire someone who uses slaves, Lees amendment would have required proof of conspiracy or knowingly giving ' personal assistance! to slave holders before someone could be prosecuted.

After several members complained the amendment was too braod, Fulcher undercut Lees supporters, saying, You might be signing the death warrant on this bill if it passes the House and goes to the Senate. The amendment failed, 51-56.

An amendment making in clear that employers were responsible for slave holding by crew leaders even after a contract is signed was approved 85-25 after a short dcbdtc Rep. Frank Ballance, D-Warren, said his amendment would require that a farmer innocently employing a slave holder and later finding workers held in captivity must terminate the contract or correct the situation to avoid being prosecuted under the bill.

Rep. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, argued that the amendment mi^t encourage fanners to avoid making such discoveries. But Ballance countered that at some point, theres a presumption of knowledge simply because a landowner is expected to know whats happening on his property.

The House voted 66-35 to taUe an amendment offered by Rep. John Brown, R-WUkes, that would have required migrant crew leaders to sign a document saying they held no slaves. Brown had ar^ied that it gets the monkey off the farmers back and puts it where it belongs.

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6-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Thuiwlay, June#, 1983Thatcher Asks British Voters For Landslide Win

By JEFF BRADLEY Associated Press Writer

LONDON (AP) - Con-

Added Taxes...

(Continued from Pagel) trucks weighing 70.000 pounds or more to raise $17.4 million.

- Require more corporations to remit employee income tax withholdings monthly instead of quarterly to raise a $30.2 million windfall. Also require more corporations to remit income taxes quarterly to raise a $27.2 million windfall.

In addition, finance leaders said theyre counting on community colleges and un iversities to raise tuition.

They also plan to make a one time transfer of sales and use taxes on motor vehicle parts and accessories from the General Fund to the Highway Fund to help attract more federal highway funds.

The Senate already has submitted to the House four plans to raise approximately $204 million a year Senate Finance Committee Chairman Marshall Rauch, D-Gaston, said he will wait to hear from the House before deciding which approach to pursue.

Rauch said today he and the Senate are working closely with the House to come up with a package for financing the lOSTHf) budget

Both sides agreed there will be no general increase in individual or corporate in come taxes. Quinn .said the counties still are seeking the option to raise local sales taxes by one-half cent and that could come later in a sc'paratebill.

Meanwhile, Hou.se spend ing leaders .said they hope legislators as well as state employees and teachers will get a .') percent pay raise this session.

House Expansion Budget Chairman William Watkins, D-Granville, said the General Assembly agreed    in 1979

that each time    state

employees get a    raise,

legislators' salaries should be increased too.

He said that    when

legislators considered their salaries separately, "they felt the heat too much" to take action.

FRANKFCRT, West Germany lAl'i Band leader Thomas Watts says he is "extremely sorry" that the U.S. Air Force caused a sour note at a West German Yugoslav soccer match The band mistakenly played a wrong Yugoslavian national anthem, Air Force Lt. Col. Neil Norum said Wednesday.

The mistake held up play in Tuesday's match for ;io minutes while a search was made for the proper music Norum said the band played the anthem used by Belgrade's pre-war, anti Communist government, which was ousted by the Communists under Yugoslav leader Jozef BrozTito

Plon Two-Site World's Fair

CHICAGO (AP) - A de cisin to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus discovery of the new world with a two-site worlds fair In Chicago and Seville, Spain, is a step closer to reality, officials say.

The executive committee of the Bureau for International Expositions recommended Wednesday in Paris that its general assembly give shared status the g-ahead when it meets next week. That would all but guarantee participation in the 1992 fair by most of the 46 member nations.

Senate Expansion Budget Chairman Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, noted that legislators cannot raise their salaries beginning this session. Any raise would have to take effect beginning in the 1985 session.

Hardison refused to take a stand on the legislative pay raise.

Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, another budget leader, said there is a lot of support for a 5 percent raise for legislators, who failed to get a raise last Januarj when state employees received one.

"I think its just ir-re.sponsible not to do it, he said of the raise.

The House Speaker now earns $13,860 a year, the House and Senate pro terns earn $8,664 a year, the House and Senate minority leaders get $8,664 a year and the others are paid $6,9.36 a year.

"The citizen legislator is not supposed to be paid as a job," Watkins said. "All you can do is help defray the cost a little more. 1 don't know one individual who doesnt lose money by serving."

servative Prime /Minister Margaret Thatcher, strongly favored to win a second term, asked voters for a landslide victory in British national elections today to banish forever extreme left-wing socialism.

We are hopeful. I think we are going to win, Mrs. Thatcher said as she and her husband, Denis, went to vote 20 minutes after the polls opened this morning.

Four last-minute opinion polls released today gave the Conservatives a lead averaging 20 points over Labor.

But 69-year-old Michael Foot, leader of the socialist Labor Party, shrugged off the opinion surveys, saying, "Well see what the real polls say today. He maintained throughout the month-long election campaign that the published polls did not reflect the degree of nationwide support for his opposition party.

Voting got off to a brisk start in hazy sunshine in Ixindon and most other parts of Britain, but a morning drizzle cut the turnout in northern England. A turnout of 75 to 80 percent of the 42.7 million eligible voters was predicted.

Turnout was reported heavy in Mrs. Iliatchers north London cmstituency of Finchley, and in the Hillhead district of Glasgow, Scotland, where Social Democratic leader Roy Jenkins was in a tou^ battle to hold onto his parliamentary seat.

Liberal leader David Steel voted 20 yards from his home in the tiny Scottish border village of Ettrickbridge. I indulged myself, he told reporters. 1 voted for myself lean tell vou."

Opinion (X)lls showed the new centrist alliance of Jenkins and Steels parties jostling with Labor for second place. Some forecasts said the Conservatives could capture more than ^ seats in the House of Commons, the biggest landslide since Stanley Baldwin's Conservative victory in 1935.

A total of 2,579 candidates were contesting 650 seats, expanded from 635 in the last Parliament, due to boundary changes.

"1 want as big a vote as possible, said the prime minister, who urged voters to banish forever the dark, divisive clouds of extreme left-wing socialism.

Mrs. Thatcher voted in Londons Chelsea and Westminster district, where Conservative Peter Brooke was seeking re-election. The district covers her 10 Down

ing St. official residence. Candidates do not have to live in their own constituen

cies.

In Northern Ireland, where 20,000 troops and police were on duty, guerrillas blew iqi a gasoline tank truck outside a police-anny base in predominantly Roman Catholic West Belfast. No injuries were reported.

The Irish National Liberation Army. Marxist offshoot of the outlawed Irish Republican Army, claimed responsibility for the explosion, which occurred with 300 yards of a polling station but caused no injuries. Police had warned they expected the anti-British perrillas as well as Protestant extremists to try to disrupt voting in the divided province, which is electing 17 candidates to the British Parliament.

Mrs. Thatcher ran on right-wing policies of strong defense and tight fiscal control, while the main opposition Labor Party fumbled attempts to forge a unified policy on nuclear disarmament. For the first time in 60 years, there was a strong challenge from a third political force - the alliance of the Social Democratic Party and the Liberal Party.

Labors strongest issue was the post-1930s unemployment peak of 3.2 million or 13.8 percent reached this year - nearly

Charged With Role Of Spy In 1950s

Educators...

(Continued from Pagel)

Band Plays The Wrong Anthem

OTTAWA (API A former Royal Canadian Mounted Police corporal has been arrested and charged with giving slate secrets to the .Soviets nearly three de- cades ago James Morrison, <i7, who became a private detective after he was dismi.ssed from the police force in 958 for passing bad checks, was ar rested Tuesday in Prince Rupert, British Columbia Police escorted him to Ot tawa where he was charged with giving secrets to Soviet agents between 1955 and 1958 while he was part of the .Mounties security service.

Solicitor General Robert Kaplan announced the arrest Wednesday.

In the 1950s Morrison allegedly told the Soviets about a KGB officer in Canada who had turned double agent. Morrison was not charged after giving a lengthy statement to the police at the time But he later told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp and the Winnipeg Free Press that he squealed on a KGB officer to a Soviet Embassy contact for about $4,(HK), because he needed monev.

.Morrison said then that he could not convince himself that "1 sold my country out. All I did was to sell a . Ru.s.sian down the drain

He has said that if spying charges ever were brought against him they "would open up a can of worms."

Kaplan reopened the case after author John Sawatsky published a book about the RC.MP security service last November titled "For Services Rendered," and the CBCs "Fifth Estate" program aired another interview with Morrison. Both accounts implied that he had more extensive Soviet contacts.

Police searched Sawalskys home in April and seized documents. CBC reportedly received a similar visit from Mountie agents and reluctantly turned over a tape of their interview.

Conservative Member of Parliament Allan Lawrence, who was solicitor general in the short-lived Tory government of 1979, said he was outraged that it took nearly 3 years for Morrisons alleged actions to become public knowledge

raise standards, maintain discipline and attract better teachers to the profession. He said they agreed to explore the concept of higher salaries for "master teachers. They did not dwell on such disputed issues as tuition tax credits and restoring prayer to public schools, he said.

"The president asked for our support and we gave it and we asked that the president remain very visible and vocal on the issues, Shanker said.

Reagan in recent weeks has spoken repeatedly on education, which is emerging as a major issue for the 1984 campaign. Democratic presidential hopeful Walter F. Mndale has accused Reagan of being an enemy of excellence and proposed boosting federal school aid by $11 billion a year.

Asked if he thought Reagan was genuinely concerned or merely using the issue for political purposes, Shanker said, 1 think he does care about education....Its a good thing for education that it is a major issue and that all of the

candidates will be competing to come up with good programs.

Asked why the National Education Association, the larger teachers union, was not invited to the luncheon, Bell replied, The table was full. But he added that the NEA and other groups would be invited to a later session with the president.

Reagan has charged that the NEA is impeding efforts to improve U.S. schools with its staunch opposition to a master teacher plan in Tennessee and other proposals to pay teachers by merit instead of seniority.

Bell said Reagan has shelved, but not abandoned, his plan to abolish the Education Department.

1 shouldnt say that that endeavor has been abandoned forever, Bell said. 1 think its been temporarily put aside."

Reagan vowed during the 1980 election campaign that as president he would abolish the department established in October 1979 under his predecessor, Jimmy Carter. Reagan never submitted a formal proposal to Congress, which would have to approve such a move.

Parakeet Sings For Full House

BALTIMORE (AP) Give Fred the parakeet a full house, and hell sing up a storm for opera goers.

The parakeet nesting in the Lyric Opera House lobby "loves company, says Lyric spokeswoman Nancy Dugan. "When we have a show going on and the lobby is filled with patrons, he sings at the lop of his little lungs. He just loves it," she said.

On the other hand, when the lobby is quiet, so is Fred.

You dont know there is a bird in there," Ms. Dugan says.

No one knows how Fred got into the Lyric, but hes bwn there since May 13 - residing in a large potted tree in the lobby. Sometimes the yellow and green bird sits on a rafter in the sun.

Staff members si^id Fred was named for former Lyric manager Fred Huber. They have considered trying to catch Fred and put him in a cage, but so far he has thwarted their efforts.

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treble the 12 mlioa or 5.2 perceitt when Mrs. Thatcher took (rffce after defeating Labor in 1979.

But polls showed voters wore sl^kal about Labors plans to borrow heavily for a $17 billion program to create 2 million jjobs in five years.

The alliance had hoped its moderate policies would a^ieal to Britains growing middle class and transcend Tory-Labor class voting. But Liberal leader Steel, 45, conceded to Mrs. Thatcher a day eariy.

The question now is how substantial the victop' will be and what controlling influence the alliance is going to have, he said.

Mrs. Thatcher defended her record of cutting inflation to a 15-year low of 4 percent.

The party winnii^ a majority of seats in the Com-HKHis forms the government, and its leader becomes prime minister.

When the last Parliament was dissolved, the Conservatives had 334 seats and a 35-seat majority. Labor had 239 seats, the alliance 42

and the rest were held by small or regional parties.

The 17 seats in Northern Ireland were contested by rival Protestant and Roman Catholic-supported parties, including 14 candidates for Sinn Fein, the political arm of the Irish Republican Army.

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11

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GREENVILLE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY GRADUATES ... Fifteen seniors graduated from Greenville Christian Academy recently. They are: left to right, first row, Stephanie Brown, Georgia Boseman, Debbie Pollard, Kathy Parker, Sharon

Dixon, Terri Baker; second row, Beveriy Hurst, Brenda Mills, Jery Butts, Jennifer Collie, Elizabeth Harrison; third row, Randall Wells, Ivy Harris, Mike Allen. Not pictured is Tanya Oliphant.

With The

Armed Services

William Slade Tripp of Greenville was promoted to the rank of corporal during a recent awards ceremony at Camden Military Academy in Camden, S.C. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Tripp.

TSgt. Ephraim Streeter, 19th Bomb Wing, was retired from the Air Force in ceremonies at parade grounds at Robins AFB, Ga., where he also received a meritorious service medal. A native of Greenville, Streeter was a noncommissioned officer in charge of the Security Police Standardization/Evaluation Section and a security flight chief with the 19th Security Police Squadron. Streeter and his wife, the former Ruth Ann Shepherd, have three children. He plans to attend Georgia College, Milledgeville.

Larry K. Gilliam, nephew of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Williams of Williamston, was promoted to the rank of staff sergeant. He is a social actions specialist at Seymour Johnson AFB with the 4th Tactical Fighter Wing. Gilliam is a 1978 graduate of Williamston High School. His wife is the former Ann Ruffin of Williamston.

Route 4, Greenville, was promoted to the rank of senior airman. He is a security specialist at Seymour Johnson AFB with the 4th Security Police Squadron. He is a 1977 graduate of North Pitt High School. His wife is the former Loretta Strong of Ay den.

Spec. 4 Eddie L. Streeter Jr., grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Blount of Route 3, Greenville, reeinlisted in the Army at Fort Lewis, Wash., for an additional four years. Streeter, a communications system operator with the 9th Signal Battilion, is a graduate of^ D.H. Conley High School.

Sgt Patricia A. Krask, daughter of Rose M. Whitehurst of Oakwood Acres and James C Smith of 1613 East Wright Rd., was awarded an achievement medal at Offutt AFB, Neb., for meritorious service and acts of courage. She is a staff support administrative specialist with the Strategic Communications Division and a 1978 graduate of D.H. Conley High School.

Tyler P. Duffy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Duffy of Route 3, Williamston, was commissioned a second lieutenant through the Air Forc ROTC program and earned a bachelors degree at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He is scheduled to serve at LaughlinAFB,Tex.

Sgt. Donnie W. Jackson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Jackson of Route 1, Grifton, reenlisted in the Army at Fort Lewis, Wash., for an additional four years. Jackson, a cannon crewman with the 2nd Battilion, 4th Field Artillery, is a 1979 graduate of Ayden-Grifton High School.

Michael Wright, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie L. Wright of

DREW PRISON

MOSCOW (AP)^ - A woodworker who circulated a petition calling on the United States and the Soviet Union to scrap nuclear weapons has been sentenced to three years in prison for anti-Soviet slander, his wife says.

Tornado Hit Community

CHADBOURN, N.C (AP) - A tornado swept through parts of central Columbus County Tuesday night, destroying a mobile home and heavily damaging five others in the Five Points community west of Chadbourn.

The tornado, which touched down at about 10:30 p.m., also tossed a pickup truck into the air. Continuing east, it touched down again several times in the Smyrna community where another mobile home was destroyed

There were no reports of injuries, said Howard Stanley, Columbus Countys emergency management coordinator.

Stanley said it will take several days to determine the damages.

The Ithica Manufacturing plant received heavy structural damage, Stanley said.

Falling trees from the high winds snapped several electric transmission lines, bringing a three-hour power outage to more than 3,000 customers of the Brunswick Electric Membership Corp., according to Willis Horton, the utilitys district manager

Several hundred area Carolina Power & Light Co. customers lost their electric power for several hours, util ity officials said.

Truck Hit A School Bus; Minor Hurts

MOYOCK, N.C. (AP) -Nine Chesapeake, Va., high school students and a 1^ driver have been treated for I minor injuries after a truck hit the bus on a 2-lane road just south of the Virginia-North Carolina border.

The Great Bridge High School students, a^ 15 to 19, were taken to Chesapeake General Hospital where they were treated Wednesday for minor cuts, scrapes and bruises, then released, authorities said.

Just two days before the end of the school year, the students were returning home early after completing final exams, school officials said.

The bus driver, Emma Nixon, who suffered cuts on her left arm and face, said she was driving 12 students, including two of her own children, to their homes when the collision occurred about 1:30 p.m.

Mrs. Nixon was preparing to make a U-turn through a restaurant parking lot 400 yards south of the state line She routinely turns the bus around in the parking lot in North Carolina because there is no suitable U-turn area on the Virginia side, said Don Travitz, director of pupil transportation for the school system.

The northbound truck, driven by Ronald V Barholm, 22, of Virginia Beach, struck the southbound bus on the right side. North Carolina State Trooper W.C. Eleysaid.

The collision shattered half of the bus windows, caved in about 15 feet of the right side and shoved the left rear against a utility pole and into a drainage ditch.

Barholm was not injured, and declined to discuss the collision.

Eley said the accident was still under investigation and no charges had been filed.

LACK ESSENTIALS BANGKOK, Thailand AP - Two out of five people in .Asia and the Pacific arta lack the bare essentials in food, shelter and clothing, according to a United Nations report released Wed nesday.

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8-TbeDailyReflector,Greenville.N.C.Thmday, June9,190    _Exclusionary Search Rule Is Still Being Questioned

By JAMES H. RUBIN Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON, (AP) -Legal scholars predict the Supreme Court will soon get

another opportunity to review a 69-year-oid rule that bars evidence seized illegally by police from being used in criminal trials.

The court avoided the issue Wednesday in an Illinois case many thought would lead to an important change in the rule.

We bought some time, said Prof. Yate Kamisar of the University of Michigan law school, one of the staunch defenders of the

Two Engines Out But Alaskan Airliner Makes Safe Landing

By WARD SIMS Associated Press Writer

ANCHORAGE. Alaska (AP) - A crippled airliner with 15 people aboard limped to a pretty good" landing on

two 01 tour engines as dozens of spectators cheered, after an engine exploded and blew loose a propeller which gashed the fuselage, authorities said.

EXTENDED PHONES - Joel Schwan shows the line of his Expansion Phones at the Summer Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago. The phone has a plastic base and standard receiver; the dial or tone pad is mounted in a five-foot expandable tube that can go in any direction. Thousands of items were on display at the international show. (AP Laserphoto)

Tick Fever Blamed In 2 N. C. Deaths

GREENSBORO', N.C.(AP)

- State medical officials are investigating two deaths attributed to Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, a disease spread by ticks common to North Carolina.

Dr. Tim Lane, an infectious disease specialist at Moses Cone Memorial Hospital, said Tuesday that a 63-year-old woman died from the disease about two weeks ago at the hospital, apparently because her condition was diagnosed too late.

Rutherford County Sheriff Damon Huskey reported that a 76-year-old man from Forest City died in Charlotte Memorial Hospital Saturday night, two weeks after contracting the disease.

But Dr. J.N. MacCormack, head of the communicable disease control branch of the state Department of Human Resources, said Wednesday that neither fatality has been reported to his office as required by law.

1 dont know that either one of those have been confirmed as Rocky Mountain spotted fever," MacCormack said. Many physicians like to wait on the confirmation which may require an autopsy.

Through May 31, there were 13 confirmed cases of the disease in North Carolina

- all nonfatal - compared with 32 for the same period last year, MacCormack said.

Last year. North Carolina recorded a total of 225 cases and 12 fatalities. These figures are about 25 percent of the 1,000 cases reported annually to the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta,

FOR THE DEFENSE SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - Oh Jea-dah, a lawyer known for his anticommunist views, will help defend six Chinese accused *of hijacking a Chinese airliner to Soukth Korea, Oh's office announced today.

according to Stuart Gordon, a Cone pharmacist and spokesman for the Triad Poison Center at the hospital.

Reeve Aleutian Airways Flight 8, a Lockheed Electra turboprop on a run from the Alaska Peninsula to Seattle, landed Wednesday night on its second approach to Anchorage International Airport after circling for about two hours to burn fuel, officials said.

No injuries were reported among the five crew members or 10 passengers, who slid down emergency chutes after the plane rolled to a stop a few feet off the runway.

The pilot, Capt. Jim Gibson, made a pretty good landing," said Andrew Laux, control tower supervisor. Theres a little fire around one of the wheels, but its just a tire, he said after the plane touched down. Firefighters (|uickly hosed down the smoking rubber.

During the tense period as the plane circled west of Anchorage before making its final approach, scores of observers gathered, including airport personnel, emergency crews and townspeople who had heard of the trouble.    ,

As the plane touched down, they burst into cheers.

Most passengers stayed calm during the incident, said Richard Krueger, 37, of Seattle, one of those on aboard. I always think positive, he said.

The airline kept the crew from talking to reporters.

The pilot initially reported problems at about 2 p.m. Alaska Standard Time (7 p.m. EDT), shortly after taking off for Seattle from Cold Bay, about 600 miles southwest of Anchorage, said Dave Jenson, airline vice president.

The planes right, outboard engine exploded" and its propeller blew loose, ripping a vertical gash in the fuselage about 8 feet hi^ and 4 feet deep, said Jim Michelangelo, chief of the National Transportation Safety Board in Alaska.

In Washington, NTSB spokesman Ira Furman said investigators were being sent

to the airport today to look at the aircrafts engines, cabin damage and controls.

Gibson had chosen to fly to Anchorage, instead of returning to Cold Bay, because of the Anchorage airports fire and rescue facilities, Michelangelo said. The plane was escorted by military C-130 planes and helicopters, officials said.

The pilot shut down an engine on the opposite wing from the disabled one to help him hold course and lose speed as he came in for the landing, officials said. The 24-year veteran had previously made a practice approach, Michelangelo said.

Gibson had very little control over the aircraft as he landed, said Airport PoliceChief John T. Hynes.

As the plane touched down, Gibson shut down the remaining two engines to help prevent an electrical fire, causing a partial loss of the planes hydraulic and brake systems, Michelangelo said.

There was fire in the right gear and nose gear as the plane was slowed, Michelangelo said "Three-quarters of the way down runway six he lost directional control and exited the runway. He ended up in the dirt five or six feet off the runway."

The pilot had to stand on the brakes to stop, said Eugene Morris, accident prevention coordinator for the Federal Aviation Administration.

Hynes said the passengers gathered in the rear of the plane as it came down. They slid down emergency chutes onto the soft, grassy area where the aircraft came to rest.

An airline spokeswoman who asked that her name not be used said the aircraft was capable of carrying 87 passengers and crew.

so-calted exdustenary rute.

The excluskmary rote is proving to be tou^ stuff than many expected, he added. But, he said, cteariy we havent beard the last of court challenges to the rule.

In Wednesdays decision, the court made some cban^ to help police obtain search warrants based primarily on anonymous tips.

But the justices backed away from using the case to decide whether it is permissible for illegally seized evidence to be used when police make an honest mistake.

Kamisar said he is relieved the court did not weaken the ban on use of illegally seized evidence.

He said the court showed it is being cautious in avoiding demands by some, incliidig the Reagan administration, to lower the bar against'such evidence.

Assistant State Attorney General Paul P. Biebel, who argued the case for Illinois, said the ruling is a major victory for law enforcement, particularly in major drug cases that use informants.

Justice William H. Rehn-quist, in his opinion for the courts majority, said, With apologies to all... we reserve for another day the question of whether the exclusionary rule should be modified.

By a 6-3 vote, the justices ruled that Bloomingdale, III, police acted lawfully when they arrested Lance and Susan Gates and seized 350 pounds of marijuana from the couples car.

The Illinois Supreme Court

ruled the marijuana could not be used as evidence against the cou|4e because a magistrate never should have given the police a search warrant.

P(dice received an anonymous letter in 1978 alleging that the Gates couple was shipping illegal dn^ from Florida and sUning than in their home.

After conducting some surveillance, the police were issued a search warrant and they found the marijuana.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday cleared the way for the marijuana to be used as evidence when the Gates couple stands trial.

liie decision scrapped a two-part test adopted in the 1960s that required a judge before issuing a search

Convict Realtor Of Racial Bias

GREENSBORO, N.C. (API - A federal jury has decided that a Winston-Salem real estate agent refused to sell a house to the chancellor of Winston-Salem State University because he is black.

The jury did not award damages to the chancellor, H. Douglas Covin^n, and his wife. But it did award them court costs and attorneys fees.

Then the Covingtons and the real estate agent, Earl R. DeLong, agreed that DeLong would pay them $18,000.

warrant to consider the rrii-at^ity of an informant and whether the tipeto ^ a basis for knowing the information passed on to poltee was accurate.

Illinois bad asked the court to substitute a common-sense approach that would give jud^ more leeway in deciding whether the tipsters information justified a search warrant.

The court adopted the states proposal, saying, in Rdmquists words, there should be room for police to act on information from an anonymous citizen.

The task of the issuing magistrate is simply to make a practical, common-sense decision whether, given all the circumstances set forth in the (police-supplied) affidavit before him... there is a fair probability that con

traband w evidoice of a crime wiU be found in a particular place, Rehnquist said.

Rehnquists opinion was joined by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Harry A. Blackmun, Lewis F. Powell and Sandra Day OConnor.

JuMice Byron R. White agreed that the marijuana should be allowed as evi-(tence, but voiced concern over abandoning the previous procedural rules.

Justices William J. Brennan, Thurgood Marshall and John Paul Stevens dissented.

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Rental Rehabilitation Demonstration Program

(Request For Proposals)

The City of Greenville through its Community Development Program is requesting proposals for a Rental Rehabilitation Program Demonstration. The area designated for this Demonstration Program encompasses those neighborhoods generally known as Higgs, Cherry View and Biltmore. Under the Demonstration, the City will provide 40% matching grants to help rehabilitate substandard rental properties. The rental units should be occupied by low income tenants. Qualifying tenants will be offered Section 8 Rental Assistance to avoid relocations. This Program is funded with $90,000 of Community Development Block Grant funds.

Proposals for assistance will be received by the Community Development Office until 5 P.M., June 17, 1983. For more Information and a proposal package please contact Ms. Dorothy Daniels at the Community Development Office, City Hall, 201 West 5th Street, Greenville, N.C. or call 752-4137 ext. 268.

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Unstable Slide Area

SLIDES FOLLOW MOUNTAIN AGING The relative youthfulness of the Sierre Nevada mountains contributes to the areas instability. And a once-in-a-century accumula

tion of snow on Donner Summit provided the saturation that allowed 40 acres of Slide Moundain to pour down into the Washoe Valley. (AP LaserphotoMap)

Aging Of A Mountain Range Poses Dangers

By MITCHELL LANDSBERG Associated Press Writer RENO. Nev. lAP) - As mountain ranges go, the Sierra Nevada is a relative youngster - probably under 1 million years old. and tens of millions of years younger ttian its eastern relation, the Appalachians.

That youthfulness is what

E'^lves the Sierra its dis-nctive charm - the craggy granite peaks, the jpectacular canyons and the towering waterfalls. It also ean make the mountains Seadly.

As the Sierra grows older, |gs rugged features are gradually wearing away. What iappened in the Washoe Jalley on Memorial Day,

^hen 40 acres of Slide lountain slid into the valley loor, is part of that aging process.

5 And this year, a on-e-in-a-century accumulation 2bf snow is likely to contribute Significantly to that process.

Millions of years from now, Ijhe Sierra Nevada may be unore like the Appalachians. Softly rounded and gently Jiered. Until then, geologists Jay. people living in the Xierra can expect periodic jerainders that the moun-Jfhins are constantly chang-*^ng, sometimes in violent ways.

? What we saw (on Memorial Day) was just one little J)lip in the history of this wnountain range." said John iteell, a geologist with the IJJevada Division of Mines ^d Geology. Thats whats

taken place here for millions of years and will probably fake place for a few more million until the mountains are eroded and the valleys are more or less filled in.

Slide Mountain, as the name suggests, is a particularly unstable peak, and geologists can count at least nine times in the past 100,000 years that it let loose with rock or debris slides. The Memorial Day slide, which killed one person and destroyed four homes, was the tenth.

It was a relatively small event on a geologic scale, but fairly significant in terms of what has taken place in historic times around here, Bell said.

What happened at Slide Mountain is in dispute. Some experts say infrared heating of the earth on the mountain caused snow to melt from underneath and give way, triggering the landslide. Others say the land itself gave way first.

But all agree on the two necessary ingredients for the slide - water, which acts as a lubricant, and gravity, which sets things in motion.

If you take steep slopes and saturate them like they were saturated this year, theyre going to start moving. Bell said.

Or, as Terry Katzer, a hydrologist with the U.S. Geologic Survey, put it. Gravity overcame the friction coefficient and it just let go."

Katzer, like other experts.

said the potential for similar mudslides in the Sierra this year remains rather high."

Im really amazed that there havent been more slides, because everything is just super saturated, he said.

This was the snowiest year in Sierra history, with 796 inches - close to 70 feet - of snow falling at Donner Summit during the winter. The latest survey by the U.S. Soil Conservation Service said there was still 60 percent as much snow on the ground at the end of May as there was at the peak of the winter, according to Jon Lea of the agencys snow survey crew.

Robert Clark, director of the National Weather Services office of hydrology, said thats about triple the average for this time of year. Clark called the snow situation in the West unbelievable, and singled out Nevada as a state that could be headed for trouble in coming weeks.

Theres no consensus on how long the danger will remain this year, but estimates seem to range from two weeks to a month - depending on the weather.

Bob Crittenden of the National Forest Service said that while slides cant be predicted, certain areas can be identified as slide-prone. Slide Mountain is an extreme case, experts agree, but other places also exhibit signs of danger

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10-The Daily Reflector, GreenvlUe, N.C.-Tbursday, June 9,1983Calcutta, City Of Chaos; Overflows With People

BY TINA CHOU Associated Press Writer

CALCUTTA, India (AP) -Teeming Calcutta, Indias capital in British colonial times, is deteriorating even as city planners try to make it better. But some Calcut-tans say its the only place to live.

The citys critics often say that Calcutta has been dying ever since it was built by the

British 294 years ago on a malarial swamp.

Winston.Churchill, the late British prime minister, once said of the port city in eastern India: I shall always be glad to have seen it, for the reason that it will be unnecessary for me to ever see it again.

Its 10 million people are plagued daily with at least eight hours of power cuts,

OVER THE TOWER - The U.S. space shuttle Enterprise atop its 747 jet transport flies over the Peace Tower of the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa Wednesday. The shuttle will be on display in Ottawa, and leaves Friday. (AP Laserphoto)

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food shortages, lack of space and ever-increasing filth.

About a third of the pq;>ula-tion lives in slums, officials concede. More than 200,000 people live on the streets, contributing to a peculation density of 85,800 [r square mile. The population density of New lork City is about 20,000 per square mile.

Calcuttas transportation

system can accommodate 2.8 million people an hour, and thats only about half the peak demand.

People jam together on bus tops and hang from tram-cars. Bullocks saunter down the middle of roads, and rickshaws thread their way throu^ crowds at a bone-jarring pace.

Calcutta is building a

'Slew \yhistle On Officialdom

BySCOnKRAFT Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - A People magazine photographer is waiting for her. Newsweek has her picture in this weeks pages. And she just squeezed in a quick appearance on the Today show.

Who is this woman?

Barbara Walters asked me that only a few days ago, she begins in a soft accent of the South. I am a strong mother, a good daughter, a patriot and I struggle to be a good Catholic.

She is Marie Ragghianti, a woman of principle.

While chairman of the Tennessee Board of Pardons and Paroles in 1976, she saw evidence that paroles and clemency were for sale: She could have ignored it. She was urged to ignore it.

But she didnt.

Her efforts helped topple the Democratic administration of Gov. Ray Blanton. Politicians fell because they never thought this mother of three, a former beauty queen with raven hair and an enchanting smile, would risk her high government post, her handsome salary and her reputation to fight them, They were wrong.

Blanton escaped that scandal, but two of his aides were caught. They are serving five-year terms in prison. Two years after he left office, Blanton was convicted on unrelated charges stemming from the issuance of liquor licenses. He is appealing.

Despite Mrs. Ragghiantis widely publicized travails in Tennessee, the rest of the country had scarcely heard her . name. Now, with the publication of Marie, A True Story, she has become a national celebrity.

Marie is the work of Peter Maas, who wrote about another whistleblower, Frank Serpico, an honest cop who refused to look the other way when he found graft in the New York City Police Department.

Film rights for "Marie, have already been sold to Dino de Laurentiis for $650,000, and Mrs. Ragghianti is off on a 20-city tour to promote the book.

At a Stop in Serpico territory Tuesday. Mrs. Ragghianti (ri-JAN-ti) talked proudly about her experience in Tennessee and the message she believes her story has for the country.

"The message is that one person really can make a difference and our system really does work - Im living proof of that, she said.

Mrs, Ragghianti, 40, lives in Sarasota, Fla., where she moved to be close to a drug rehabilitation center. All three of her teen-age children have had trouble with drugs, but she said they have told her the drug use resulted from peer pressure, not from their mothers very public difficulties in Tennessee.    ^

Marie Ragghiantis life has been rough. She was married at 19 to a man who she says beat her Divorced, she worked as a cocktail waitress and ran a church library to support her children and put herself through Vanderbilt University,

Blanton hired her as an extradition officer, then appointed her chairman of the parole board in 1976 - a dream job, she thought at the time. But soon she balked at pressure from the governors legal counsel to parole prisoners she felt were unqualified.

The administration circulated rumors that she had slept her way to the top. She was followed. Her records were altered by her bosses, and she was twice arrested for driving violations after leaving political functions.

After 18 months on the job, Blanton fired her, calling her a liar and a cheat. She sued over her dismissal, won the case and collected $38,000 from the state.

Blanton, elected governor in 1974 and choosing not to run for a second term, was ousted from office three days early, on Jan. 17, 1979, after he pardoned three people and granted executive clemency to 49 inmates in the waning days of his administration. Leaders of Blantons own party agre^ to the swearing-in of his successor early.

Critical Over Extravagance

PEKING (AP)

U.S.

engineers helping to construct a building for the housing of seed samples have been criticized by the Chinese for extravagance.

For one, it was thought artificial lighting levels were too high for a country where scarce energy is carefully conserved.

We designed the lighting levels quite modestly by U.S.

standards, said one project engineer. And yet, they were four times higher than Chinese standards,

In addition, the Chinese had originally vetoed a hot water system for the building, thinking that workers in the laboratory could go to a hot water plant in the central compound once a day and bring back a few gallons of water for washing laboratory glassware.

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subway to ease its traffic problems. But the construction, under way now for 10 years and scheduled for completion in 1987, only adds to the general chaos.

Yet many Calcuttans say this is the only place in the world they want to live.

They are proud of their rich Bengali culture and artistic traditions. The city has a unique stimulation that has bred such internationally known figures as Nobel laureate poet Rabindranath Tagore, musician Shanki Shankar and film maker Satyajit Ray.

Mother Teresa, the Yugoslavia-born Roman Catholic nun known as the Saint of the Gutters, has opened homes for the dying destitute and homes for the living, providing a humane touch to the metropolis.

The French writer Dominique Lapierre, coauthor of Freedom at Midnight and several other best sellers, has said he plans to write a book entitled Calcutta, My Lord because he loves the city so much.

For many a foreigner, the ifoul odors of the city, its poverty and its wall-to-wall humanity could discourage a second visit.

It is common to see a woman, wrapped in a tom sari and carrying an undernourished baby, rush to a taxi stopped in traffic to beg for a rupee, about 10 U.S. cents.

Some slum dwellers sleep in'waist-high dried mud boxes called juggis and in overcrowded huts and shacks, using water running in nearby gutters as their kitchen sinks.

Instead of resettling slum residents, the Calcutta Metropolitan Development Authority, a city planning organization, has installed power lines, light poles and water taps in the slums.

It is far better, economically and from a social point of view, to keep the slums where they are and to improve them environmentally, an authority official told a reporter.

One slum dweller said he and his family would rather not move to apartment buildings in Calcuttas outskirts, as has been proposed, because they operate businesses or provide services in

or near the slum. Living in the suburbs would mean a lot of traveling costs they cant afford, he added.

For Calcuttas masses the city is an aceptable place to live because it is cheap. A man working as a security guard for a foreign diplomatic mission said he would not dream of living elsewhere because only in Calcutta can he get a meal for two rupees (20 cents).

Members of the citys small, elite i^r-class society have a different way of living. They swim and play golf in a few exclusive clubs, even celebrate what they call POETS day - Push Off Early, Tomorrows Saturday.

Until about two decades ago, Calcutta was Indias richest city. Strikes, political violence, shortages and waves of refugees who poured into the city from neighboring Bangladesh have made it what it is today.

Officials say about 2 million refugees- came to Calcutta from East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) when India became independent from the British in 1947, and another 2 million came after the 1971 India-Pakistan war which resulted in the

establishment of Bangladesh as an independent nation.

Most of these refugees have not been resettled.

Calcutta is the capital of Indias eastern state of West Bengal, run by the Marxist Communist Party which gained control of the state government in the 1977 general elections and was reelected in 1982.

Some Calcuttans claim the Marxist government spit most of its funds on rehabilitating villages in the citys outer areas, where the Communist Party got its votes, while neglecting the city itself.

But the Marxist Communists accuse the central government of Prime Minister Indira Gandhis Congress Party of withhold

ing financial support.

We are doing our best to solve problems, but what more can we do when the central government does not give us the money we need? said P.K. Bbattacbarya, the state governments spokesman.

While the rival p(ditical groups debate this, Calcuttas inhabitants worry about the coming monsoon season. Monsoon rains could flood the city with knee-high water and cut off power for the whole summer.

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The Dally Reflector, GreenvUle.N.C.-Thursday, June 9.1983-nNorth Carolina A 'Wet' State, Declares Official

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) -Although a majority of its counties claim to be "dry, North Carolina essentially is a wet state, says the administrator of the state Alcoholic Board of Control.

Forty-six of the states 100 counties have ABC stores and permit sales of beer and wine, Bill Hester said in an interview.

The other 54 counties prohibit ABC stores outside city limits. But in 48 of those counties, theres at least one municipality that allows the establishments along with beer and wine sales.

Only six counties are completely dry, allowing no alcoholic beverage vending. All are in western North Carolina: Clay, Davie, Graham, Mitchell, Yadkin and Yancey.

For all practical purposes. North Carolina is wet, said Hester. "Youll get arguments because 54 counties are still officially dry. But you can buy some type of alcoholic beverage in all but six of them.

In some cases, trying to label a county wet or dry is an exercise in futility.

Dare County, for example, is officially dry but the towns of Kilt Devil Hills, Nags Head and Kitty Hawk are . wet. The Kinnekett township - including the towns of Avon, Salvo, Waves and Rodanthe-isdry.

Or consider High Point, which straddles three counties and was completely dry before 1977. Now the Guilford County part of the city is wet, while the Randolph and Davidson sections are dry.

Dry Brunswick County has 10 municipal ABC stores. There are seven of the stores in Columbus County and six in Robeson County, both of which are dry.

Its such a hodgepodge, we have trouble keeping track of it all, said Hester. Areas that allow beer and ' wine sales are even harder to identify because the state doesnt keep records of which counties and municipalities allow them ^ and which dont.

I According to Jay Hare of , the North Carolina Depart-' ment Revenue, 4.2 million North Carolinians live in areas where beer and wine sales are allowed. The remaining 1.6 million live in places where theyre banned.

The first ABC store opened in Wilson County following the repeal of Prohibition in 1935. Currently, there are 99 city ABC boards and 46 county boards overseeing 379 stores.

! There was a big jump in the number of ABC boards in the mid-1970s as local governments became pressed for funds, Hester said.

Cities realized they were losing money, he said. "The people in charge saw their residents going to other towns and buying liquor and supporting (the other towns) tax base. The dry towns wanted their piece of the pie.

The latest statewide statistics, covering the period from July 1, 1981, through June 30, 1982, show that sales of liquor and mixed drinks in North Carolina totaled $296 million. Of that, $51 million went to the state.

The rest went to local government, which used much of it to pay expenses. But the stores turned an average profit of 12 percent and had combined proceeds of $36.6 million, which went for everything from law enforcement to alcohol education and research to bolstering city and county general funds.

The net profit can mean big money for some communities. Districts that have profited most from having liquor sales include Mecklenburg County, which had a net gain for 1981-82 of $4.2 million; New Hanover County, $1.1 million; Wake County, $2.5 million; and the city of Greensboro, $1.7 million.

Hester said its difficult to pinpoint how much money specific cities and counties

DRUG SMUGGLERS TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Police said Wednesday they broke up a narcotics ring that used Israeli soldiers to smuggle 15 tons of khashish in Israeli army water tankers from Lebanon to . Israel over the past eight ' months.

have lost by refusing to permit liquor sales.

He said that during the len^hy period when High Point was dry, nearby Jamestown in Guilford County sold so much

alcohol that they hardly needed a local property tax. But since High Point voted to allow liquor sales in 1977, Jamestowns sales have plummeted by two-thirds while High Points sales and

profits are among the states t<^tO. ^

Boone, home of Appalachian State University, is dry while nine miles away in Blowing Rock stores do a tremendous business with all

those students, said Hester.

If Boone ever votes to go wet. Blowing Rocks bubble will burst, he added.

Boone residents soundly rejected ABC sales in a referendum last year. Mayor

Hadley Wilson acknowledged that Blowing Rock provides many of his town^ieople with liquor, beer and wine.

Theres no question about that, he said in a telephone interview. It would be nice

to get the extra revenue, but the fact that we dont have it hasnt hurt our budget too much.

Wilson said he expected no change in Boones policy any time soon.

"I think its because Blowing Rock has had some bad experiences with noise, littering, these sorts of things, as a result the many night spots that sell beer and wine, he said.

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I2-The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, June 9,1983

RED ARMY IN QUESTION - This is a 1981 file .photo of the Soviet Army on maneuvers. A study released today by Georgetown Universitys Center

for Strategic and International Studies reports that the Red Army is not as well prepared or equipped as many believe. (AP Laserphoto)

Think Tank's Report Says Soviet Army Reliability Is Questionable

By CHARLES J HANLEY Associated Press Writer The Red Army is short on training and experience, long on piKir (|uality equipment and saddled with soldiers of questionable reliability, says a study of the Soviet Union being publi.shed Thursday The report, sponsored by Ceorgetown Universitys (enter for Strategic and In lernational Studies, is the latest of several recent studies pointing out what are said to be serious .shortcomings in the Soviet military structure One, a biMik by defense writer Andrew Cockburn, draws on interviews with .Soviet emigres atxiut their military experience, and tells of an army that "oc casionally borders on anarchy because of brutali ty in the ranks, ethnic hatreds, drunkenness, thievery and poor leadership, 'I'he new Oeorgetown vol ume, titledAfter Brezhnev" and published by Indiana University Press, includes a chapter on the Soviet military written by Professor (oit I) Blacker of Stanford University Like other parts of the (ieorgelown study, it is ba.sed on 1 months of re search by a group of specialists and uses a variety of Western and Soviet

sources.

'' S 0 V1 e t capabilities, pressive. are degree by a persistent

military while im offset to a number of problems,

Blacker writes Much of the advanced Soviet weaponry, including warplanes, submarines and sea launched ballistic

missiles, tends to be inferior in quality and perfor manee to the high technology systems produced by the United States, Blacker .says.

.Secondly, he writes, 'not all Soviet forces receive the high level of combat training characteristic of .. American troops, he writes. He notes that Soviet pilots fly fewer hours per month and engage in fewer exercises than U S pilots, and the .Soviet air force and navy do not have the war experience of Western forces

Finally, he says, Soviet armed forces "may be less reliable than commonly as.sumedintheWest."

Because the Red Army draws conscripts from more than 90 racial and nationality groups in the .Soviet Union., powerful ethnic and religious tensions have developed, Blacker writes

In addition, soldiers from the large Moslem minorities of Central Asia are less educated, and many do not speak Russian, posing potentially serious difficulties of communication and command."

As a result, the army assigns Central Asian soldiers to non combat support units as much as possi ble Western specialists report 80 percent of the troops in support units come from minorities    Uzheks,

Kazakhs, Batts - and 80 percent of the combat troops are Slavs    Russians,

Byelorussians or Ukrainians,

Blacker notes that the proportion of ('entral Asians and other non-Slavs among the draftees will rise in the

coming years because the Russian birth rate is declining, aggravating this ethnic dilemma for military planners,

A study last year by the Rand (Jorp. concurred.

"We can envisage com bat related scenarios in which ethnic or racial riots, minority conflicts with local populations, or even mutiny ba.sed on ethnic grievances could become real possibilities, that study said.

Cockburns book, published by Random House, fills in details of the ethnic antagonisms.

He quotes one former Soviet .soldier: "When it is necessary to do some unpleasant work, say, clean a toilet, a Kazakh would be sent and (he Russians would make him do it " Russians eat first in mess halls, Moslems are forced to break their religious code and eat pork, and racial tensions regularly erupt into violence, the emigres say.

(ockburns sources also describe an army in which units can be immobilized by habitual drunkenness, a major problem throughout Soviet society. Thievery and .sale of military gear - to supplement pay as low as $6 a month - can strip a unit of .spare equipment.

The food is so bad that one Western researcher has found that apparently e.'i percent 'of Soviet soldiers suffer from vitamin-deficiency ailments during their service, Cockburn writes.

This is why you can sometimes see soldiers on

the march stopping their tanks apd scattering into the fields for vegetables or fruit in the gardens, he quotes one emigre as saying.

Bullying by senior draftees in the second year of their two-year hitch is the unofficial organizing principle of the army, he writes. Noncommissioned officers are ignored, and commissioned officers cover up indiscipline rather than blot their own records, Cockburn writes.

These conditions so sap morale that only 1 percent of Soviet conscripts re-enlist, the author says.

In a recent interview, the exiled dissident Pyotr Grigorenko, a former Red Army major general, also cast doubt on the effectiveness of the Soviet soldier.

"If he is not in the hands of a good commander, the Soviet soldier is no longer a soldier, he said.

Similar testimony comes from "Viktor Suvorov," pseudonym for an emigrant and former Soviet tank officer whose recently published "Inside the Soviet Army describes the everyday brutality and harshness of Red Army life.

If war broke out with the West, he writes, Soviet soldiers would surrender by the million.

HOLY MONTH

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -Officials in Cairos leading tourist and nightclub district have banned the sale and consumption of alcohol in most public places during the Moslem holy month of Ramadan,

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1 Century Velvet Club Chair

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Pitt High Schoois To Graduate 679 Seniors Friday

DAVID DAVENPORT

KEITH COLTRAIN

A total of 679 seniors from four Pitt County high schools will don caps and gowns Friday and march down aisles to receive handshakes and diplomas.

Graduation exercises are scheduled at each of the schools, with school officials scheduled to pass out diplomas,

At North Pitt, commencement is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the schools gym, with doors closing to guests at 7:55 p.m. Seniors David Davenport and Keith Col-train will speak to the graduates and guests. Davenports topic is Tomorrow, the World and Coltrain will reflect on four years at North Pitt.

At Ayden-G rifton ceremonies will begin at 8 p.m. on the schools athletic field or in the ^m in case of rain. Seniors Kim Stocks and Marla Avery will address those attending, with Miss

Stocks speaking on "Roads of Tomorrow and Miss Avery on the classs growth from freshmen to seniors.

D.H. Conleys graduation exercises will be on the schools athletic field (or in the gym in case of rain) at 8 p.m. Senior speaker Glenn Bucks topic will be The Best Is Yet To Come and senior Amy Gibbs topic "Whats Our Hurry?

At Farmville Central graduation will be at 8 p.m. on the athletic field or in the gym in case of rain. Seniors Jennifer Walston and Donna Costner will speak to graduates and guests. Miss Walstons topic is Attaining Success and Miss Costners is The Magic of Believing. County school principals note that parents and guests should arrive early and should check with individual schools on door-closing times and graduation rules and regulations.

Pope Will Ordain N.C Seminarian

CHARLOHE, N.C. (AP)-A Charlotte seminary student will be ordained as a priest Sunday by Pope John Paul 11 at the Vatican in Rome.

Peter Jugis will be the first seminarian from the 11-year-old Charlotte Catholic Diocese to be ordained in Saint Peters Basilica.

Hes a first for us, all right, said Bishop Michael J. Begley, head of the Charlotte diocese. Since this diocese is so young, hes our first seminarian selected for study there (at the Vatican). Its one of those things

thats a sign that were growing and moving forward.

Begley said he, Jugis parents. Joseph and Peggy Jugis of Charlotte, and the Rev, John J. McSweeney, the dioceses vocations director, will attend the ceremony at the Vatican.

After his ordination, Jugis, 26, will return to Charlotte. He will celbrate his first Mass as a priest June 26 at Saint Vincents Catholic Church.

In October, Jugis will return to Rome for an additional year of graduate studies in church law, Begley said. '

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Diamond Solitaires

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Gold Nugget Pendant With .06 Ct. Diamond

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Diamond Earrings

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U-The DaUv Renector. GreenviUe, N.C.-TlnuKlay. June , 1963

Stock And Market Reports

Pascasio...

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly steady. Kinston 46.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden. Pine Level, Laurin-burg and Benson 46.00, Wilson 46.75, Salisbury 45.50, Rowland 45.00, Spiveys Corner 45.00. Sows; all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 38.00, Fayetteville closed, Whiteville 37.00, Wallace 37.00, Spiveys Corner 37.00, Rowland 37.00, Durham 37.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f o b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 46.50 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2' 2 to 3 pound birds. 25 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a preliminary weighted average of 45.99 cents f o b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a good demand. Weights desirable Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was 1,862,000, compared to 1,876,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) The stock market turned downward again today, resuming the decline of the past two sessions after a brief attempt tonally The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up about 4 points in early trading, was down 2,11 at 1,183,39 by n(K)nlime. The average fell 28 74 Tuesday and Wednesday.

Losers held a slight lead over gainers among New York Slock Exchange listed issues.

Maryland Cup tumbled 7 to 36 m after a delayed opening. The company said merger discussions with an unidentified second party had been ended

The NYSEs composite index dropped .17 to 93.40. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was off .96 at 4.59,64.

Volume on the Big Board came to .37 ,59 million shares at noontime, against 42.68 million at the same point Wednesday.

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6::i0 pm Rotary RIdg 6 ;top m 6::to pm meets 7:(K) p m

THURSDAY

Jycecs meet at

BPW meets - Kxchange Club

Greenville Citivan Club meets at Three Steers 7 ;iO p m    DAV and Auxiliary

mwtsal VKW Home 7 ;t() p m - Overeaters Anony mous meets at First Presbyterian Church

8:00 p m    Chapter 1308 of the

Women of the Moose

7:30pm

FRIDAY

Red Men meet

Followmit arc selected II rnarkel quolalions Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power 4 l,i(>hl

Collins 4 Aikman

Connor

Duke

Kalon

Kckerds

Kxxiin

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McDonalds

Mctiraw

PiedmonI

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TRW Inc CiiilcdTel Dominion Rcsouns's Wachovia

OVKRTIIKCdliNTKR

Aviation

llranch

l.iltic Mini

Planters Bank

Arts, Crafts Program Set

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department will sponsor several arts and crafts programs this sum mer at the Community Building, corner of Fourth and Greene streets.

The courses offered and the dates and times are .

June 13 - weaving, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Fashion illustration, 9 a.m.-noon.

June 14 - Fabric painting, 9 a m noon, Portrait painting, 1p.m.-4 p.m.

June I,')    -    Weaving

(contd), 10a.m.-2p.m.

June 22 - Assorted crafts, 9 a m noon; .Senior citizens assorted crafts, 9:30 a.m.-11:30a.m.

.lune 23 - Unstructured painting,9a.m.-3p.m

Embroidery Guild workshops will be held June 14, July 19 and Aug. 25 from 9 a.m.-noon.

For further information, call 752-4137, ext. 250.

Heat Wove

NEW DELHI, India (AP) - A two-week heat wave sweeping parts of India has claimed 101 lives and is causing dust storms and water shortages, authorities say.

Temperatures were reported as high as 117 degrees Fahrenheit in parts of central India where seven people died of heatstroke Wednesday.

Authorities said ten children died of heat in the Nagpur region alone during the past two weeks.

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lust see To Believe The All New 14x76 Home With Paddle Fan, A Frame Celling Beams And Brass Bed. With Every Day

(Continued from Paget)

to resign?

He said Tyson responded, if you dont resign. Ill need to let you go.

Do I think he was fair? No. Pascasio said. The sheriff knew I never lied on the witness stand. I was one of his supervisors.

I think he (Tyson) had the opportunity... to support me. I supported him, Pascasio said, referring to his explanation of the incident at the Braswell bond hearing.

Theres a lot of good in him, Pascasio said of Tyson. Hes a very good man. But its deputies that make him good ... make him a great sheriff. Hes really dedicated, but he has some of the best men working for him thats ever been in law enforcement. Its the deputies that get out here and work... to protect life.

Pascasio said, I want to be fair, but I want to tell it like it

is.

I didnt want to resign. But Tyson did say that were I to choose not to resign, he would have to let me go ... to terminate my employment because of the controVersary over the Braswell trial.

The sheriff has to make the best decisions he can ... in the best interests of the department, Pascasio said, but, I feel he does so for the best interest of himself, too.

I cleared him. I was determined to get him off the hook. He was concerned and wanted the record to be set straight.

He could have done the same thing for me. But he didnt. This loyalty thing should work both ways. Not just from the bottom up, but from the top down, too. When the pressure gets on, thats when you should get tough and hold your ground and do the right thing.

"I feel I was fired and thrown to the dogs... in a nice way.

The former deputy said the statements made by Stephens during the trial were assumptions on the part of the prosecutor and had no factual basis to them. He (Stephens) certainly has the right to assume what he wants to.

If his (Braswells) story is a lie, its one he made up, Pascasio said.

Pascsio said he "was assigned to go to the hospital on the day that it (the shooting) happened to stay on top of everything that went on. 1 kept a lot of notes. I was assigned to, and did. I was not assigned to investigate the case, and I didnt.

Pascasio said his suggestion, in a report to the district attorney and to the State Bureau of Investigation, that Mrs. Braswell might have shot her husband first, was speculation on his part from observations of an experienced investigator The shootings could have happened in a way other than the obvious way. How easy it is to say murder-suicide. You have to be open minded ... think of ways something could have happened.

An experienced investigator^ Pascasio said, has to say, Look, did it happen the way it appears, or did it happen otherwise. You have to deal with the best probability. But it could have happened in a way other than the obvious way.

1 looked beyond the obvious way. 1 could clearly see how it could have happened that way (Mrs. Braswell shooting her husband first). But I never denied the obvious.

You need to be thorough when you are dealing with murder .. when you are dealing with any type of criminal investigation.

Tyson, who confirmed Pascasios resignation yesterday and said 1 feel like it was one of those things that was necessary, said this morning he had no ad;itional comments to make.

'Position Paper' Is Narrowly Defeated

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C.

(AP) - Delegates to the eastern North Carolina Conference of the United Meth-

Evacuated Due Ammonia Leak

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Caustic liquid ammonia leaking from a tanker truck in north Charlotte Wednes day forced the evacuation of homes and businesses in a three block area

Firefighters wearing protective clothing and breathing tanks worked for 25 minutes to control the leak. at Atando Industrial Park. The leak was reported about 11 am

Firefighers allowed people to return to their homes and offices about 11:45 a.m.

Fire officials said witnesses told them that the ammonia was being transferred through a pressurized hose from the USS Agri-Chemicals Division of U.S. Steel Corp. to a tanker truck when a plug blew from the truck. The leak sent the liquid spewing into the air.

odist Church Wednesday narrowly defeated a position paper condemning U.S. military involvement in Central America.

The delegates overwhelmingly adopted a nuclear freeze resolution calling on the United States to negotiate with the Soviet Union for a bilateral reduction of warheads to the lowest possible level.

The Central American proposal called for the U.S. to reconsider all military aid to Central American governments and to cease efforts to overthrow the government of Nicaragua.

Opponents said the paper was unfair in its criticism of U.S. military aid They said the Board of Church and Society, which introduced the resolution, should have presented a report which criticized leftist regimes as well as U.S. intervention.

In another matter, the delegates postponed a proposal encouraging the appointment of ethnic minorities to the church conference cabinet.

Of the Conferences 212,000 members, onlv 4,090 are

Obituary Column

Briley

Mr. Richard W. Briley, 56, of 118 King George Road died today at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The funeral service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday in the WilkersoD Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Ralph Messick. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mr. Briley, a native of Greenville, spent most of his life in Greenville and graduated from R(^ High School. He was president and owner of East Coast Coffee Distributers and Creative Wall Coverings. He was a charter member and a past deacon of the Hooker Memorial Christian Church. He was also a charter member of the Greenville Breakfast Lions Club and a member of the Eastern Pines Mens Club.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs, Peggy Minton Briley; two sons, Richard W. Briley Jr. of Greenville and Randy Briley of Kinston; two dau^ters, Mrs. Kathy B. Pittman and Mrs. Susan B. Congleton of Greenville; two brothers, Walter E. Briley of Greenville and Billy Briley of Charlotte, and six gran-children.

Treasure Is Uncovered

HERCULANEUM, Italy. (AP) - Archaeologists digging at this ancient city destroyed by an eruption of Mount Vesuvius have discovered 10 more skeletons and a small chest filled with precious jewelry, Italian newspapers reported Wednesday.

It is a very important discovery, Giuseppe Maggi, the chief archaeologist at the site, told Romes La Repub-blica newspaper.

He said the skeletons were found near what was once Herculaneums port on the Mediterranean and that the people were obviously trying to escape the eruption. The city, which had 4,000 inhabitants when it was covered by volcanic ash and lava in 79 A.D., is now 500 yards from the sea.

Near a womans skeleton, diggers found a small w(^en chest, filled with gold bracelets, rin^, jewels and many bronze and silver coins, Maggi said.

He said they also discovered the skeletons of a pregnant woman, about 21 years old, and her unborn child.

Last year, 80 skeletons and some murals and jewelry ' were uncovered at the site, and Massi says he hopes to find more than 300 skeletons in the town near Pompeii.

Scientists originally believed most of those living in Herculaneum escaped the eruption, which enveloped Pompeii and its residents, but Maggi says the skeletons are strong proof that they didnt.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7:30-9 p.m. Friday.

Fields

SNOW HILL - Mrs. Betty Adams Fields, 62, died Wednesday. Graveside services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Friday at Fairview Cemetery, La Grange, by the Rev. Ed Taylor.

Surviving are her husband, Leon Fields; a daughter, Mrs. Annette Cayton of Winterville; two sons, Cullen R. Vinson of Washington, D C , and Richard T. Vinson of Clarksville, W.Va.; a stepsister, Mrs. Ruth Frizzelle of Kinston; eight grandchildren and a greatgrandchild.

The family will be at Rouse Funeral Home in La Grange today from 7-8 p.m.

Home

FOUNTAIN - Funeral services for Miss Grace Home will be conducted Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in Reids Chapel Baptist Church by the Rev. Walter Adkins. Burial will be in the Bullock Cemetery.

Miss Home was a Pitt County native and a graduate of H.B. Sugg High School and St. Augustine College. She attended Harvard University and East Carolina University and had fellowships at Arizona State, Purdue and N.C. State universities. She was a public school teacher in Greene County, at Sugg School, and at Farmville Central High School and a member of Reids Chapel Baptist Church.

Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Bertha Harris Horne of the home; a sister, Mrs. Regina Reid of Norwalk, Conn.; and four brothers, Alton Horne of Wilmington, William Home of Bronx, N.Y., Bobby Horne of Newport News, Va., and Larry Horne of Greenville, and a grandmother, Mrs. Sattie Harris of Fountain.

The family will receive friends at Reids Chapel Church Friday from 8 to 9 p.m. Hemby Funeral Home of Fountain is handling arrangements.

Langley

FARMVILLE - Mr. James E. Langley, formerly of Farmville, died Wednesday in Springfield, Mass. Joyners Mortuary of Farmville announced that the funeral service and burial will be Saturday in Springfield.

Mr. Langley was raised in Farmville and attended the local schools.

black, and about 2,000 are Indian, Bishop William R Cannon said. And only one^ Indian and four black ministers would be in the-|i Conference next year, he-li said.    

A vote an a proposal to ^ prohibit homosexuals from ^ entering the United Method- J ist ministry, introduced ? Monday, was postponed until ? today.    ^

*

We are pleased to announce that

R. Bradley Troutman

is now associated with us in our

Greenville Office

Wheat

FkstSeamties

MEMBERS PRINCIPAL STOCK AND COMMODITY EXCHANGES

for Sound fimncM A(Mc9 mtoiNhootFirot

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He is survived by a brother, Charlie Langley, and a si^r, Mrs. Fannie Mae Lan^ey Hester, both of Massachusetts.

Words of symphathy may be sent to 82 Cherokee Drive, Springfield, Mass.

Olds

Mr. Merritt (Mack Jr.) Olds of Route 1, Snow Hill, in the Maury community of Greene County, died Thursday at Pitt County Memorial H(ptial. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at Mount Zion AME Zion Church, Route 1, Hookerton, by Dr. R.L. Newby. Burial will follow in the Ayden Cemetery.

Mr. Olds was bom and lived most of his life in the Maury community. He was a member of Mount Zion AME Zion Church, a class leader, member of the Trustee Board, president of the Senior Choir, member of Little Creek Free Will Baptist Church Male Chorus and member of the Maury Community Club and Sandy Hill Masonic Lodge No. 119 of Snow Hill.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Lucille Albritton Olds of the home; three sons, Laurence Olds of Danville, Va., Donnie Olds of Dunn and Marriott Olds of Fort Bragg; three daughters, Virginia Olds of Woodlawn, Md., Mrs. Linda 0. Hinton of Suitland, Md., and Mrs. Brenda 0. Carter of Greensboro; two sisters, Mrs. Essie 0. Streeter and Mrs. Mahalia 0. Speight, both of Kinston, and 11 grandchildren.

The body will be at the church from 7-9 p.m. Friday and at other times at Norcott Memorial Chapel in Ayden. Family visitation at the church will be from 8-9 p.m. Friday.

WUson

Mr. James Theodore Wilson Sr., 56, died Saturday at his home on Route 5, Greenville. Funeral services with military honors will be conducted Saturday at 1 p.m. at Whichard Holy Church of Power at Stokes by Bishop Mott Ebron. Burial will

follow in the Clark Cemetery, Greenville.

Mr. Wilson attended the Edgecombe County schools and the Franklin Institute of Boston. He was a member of the Whichard Holy Church of Power and was a World War II veteran of the U.S. Army.

Surviving are his wife. Mrs. Mary Pearlie Adams WUson of the home; two sons, Sylvester Adams WUson of the home and James Theodore WUson Jr. of Greensboro; two daughters, Ms. Carolyn Ann WUson of GreenvUle and Ms. Shelia Francine Kornegay of Rocky Mount; his mother, Mrs. Rosa Wilson of Bethel; one brother, Benjamin WUson Jr. of Boston; one sister, Mrs. Mary Staton of Mattapan, Mass., and three grandchildren.

The famUy will receive friends Friday from 7-8 p.m. at Hardees Funeral Chapel and at other times at the home on Route 5, GreenvUle.

MASONIC NOTICE

Meet the Newly Elected Worshipful Master

Monday, June 13. 1983 at 7:30 P.M.. Ml. Hermon Masonic Lodge No. 35 will hold regular Communication. Have refreshments with the newly elected Worshipful Master (Samuel E. Hemby) and his cabinet. All brothers are expected to attend.

Bro. Samuel E. Hemby 32*

Paid Announcement

Card of Thanks

The family of Malissa B Mcl .awhorn sincetely thank their many relatives and friends who added strength to them during the death of their loved one.

The prayers, flowers, food, cards and telephone calls and other expressions of concern have meant so much to all of us May God bless each of you

Nallssa B. McLawhorn Family

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THE DAttY REFLECTOR

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 9, 1983

i

IWhitaker Powers Tigers To 6-3 Win

By The Associated Press Lou Whitaker, the Detroit Tigers leadoff man, has turned to a new page In his baseball career book. Hes now a power hitter.

Whitaker hit his fifth homer of the season, tripled and doubled twice to lead the Tigers to a 6-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox Wednesday night.

Had he shortened one of his doubles by one base, he would have hit for the cycle.

ive come close to the cycle in the past, Whitaker said, but 1 wasnt a home-run hitter at that time.

Despite the sudden show of strength, Whitaker^ says he has not totally abandoned the role of leadoff man. After all, he did score four runs in the victory besides driving in two.

Im a leadoff hitter. Im just trying to do my thing so other guys can do theirs, he said. I know I can hit, but sometimes you get robbed. I hit the ball tonight where they werent.

In other American League games, Dave Stieb became the first nine-game winner in the AL as the Toronto Blue Jays beat Oakland 5-2, Baltimore rallied to defeat Milwaukee 7-3, New York edged Cleveland 6-5, Kansas City clobbered Minnesota 9-2, California downed Chicago 7-4 and Texas defeated Seattle 1-0.

Jack Morris, 5-5, went the distance for the Tigers, scat

tering eight hits and striking out eight.

Whitaker doubled and scored in the first inning, homered in a two-run third inning, doubled and scored in the fifth and hit an RBI triple and scored in the seventh inning. He now has 24 RBI on the season.

The victory was the fourth in a row for Detroit, and Boston lost its fourth straight.

Blue Jays 5, As2 Stieb, 9-4, yielded just four hits before he left after Bob Kearney homered to lead off the eighth inning. Joey McLaughlin finished up for Stieb, earning his sixth save after striking out the side in the eighth, and Cliff Johnson suppliwi most of the punch with two RBI doubles.

Chris Codiroli, 4-5, was the loser, falling behind 2-0 after two innings.

Stieb had a two-hitter through six innings before giving up a run in the seventh on a walk, a grounder, a balk and Bill Almons single.

Orioles?, Brewers 3 The Orioles launched their second comeback of the game with a pair of homers - by Cal Ripken and John Lowenstein - to score five runs in the eighth inning and beat Milwaukee. Both homers were two-run shots off Tom , Tollman, who relieved Don Sutton to start the inning.

The Orioles erased a 2-0 Milwaukee lead in the seventh inning when Ken Singleton

Sports Calendar

Editor's Sote Schedules are        .

supplied by schools or sponsoring Western Sizzlinvs Bills Goodies agencies and are subject to change    Fridays    SMrts

without notice    Baseball

Today's Sports    Little    League

Baseball    Carroll 4 Associates vs

Babe Ruth League    Exchange

Wachovia Bank vs: Planters    Sportsworld vs. Kiwanis

Bank    Babe    Ruth    League

Brown 4 Wood vs Pepsi Cola    Everettes vs Planters Bank

American l.,egion    Coca-Cola vs Wachovia Bank

Edentonat Pitt County (8pm )    Softball

Little league    Church    League

Jaycees vs Union Carbide    Unity vs First Pentecostal

Wellcome vs. Pepsi Cola    Maranatha vs Arlington Street

Softball    Industrial    League

City League    Pitt Memorial vs Empire

California Concepts vs PTA    Brushes 2

Church League    Union Carbide vs Coca-Cola

Immanuel vs St. James    Carolina Leaf vs Vermont

Maranatha vs First Christian    American

Black Jack vs Oakmont    Enforcers vs Burroughs

Grace vs. Unity    Wellcome    #1

Memorial vs Jarvis    Fire Fighters vs. Wachovia Bank

Mt Pleasant vs First Pre-    Grady White vs TRW

sbyterian    City    League

Arlington Street vs First Free    Airborne vs Sunnyside Eggs

Will    Pair Electronics vs Pantana

Peoples vs Trinity    Bobs

Faith vs Church of God    Whittington vs. Liberty

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snapped a l-for-15 slump with a two-run homer off Sutton, who had yielded just two singles throu^i the first six innings.

Paul Molitor singled, doubled, tripled and had two walks for the Brewers.

Yankees 6, Indians 5

Pinch-hitter Lou Piniellas one-out sin^e in the bottom of the ninth inning rallied the Yankees over Cleveland, giving New York only its second victory in seven games. Dave Winfield, Graig NetUes and Steve all homered for the Yankees in the first two innings.

Right-hander Jay Howell was protecting a 5-3 lead going into the ninth, when Cleveland scored twice to tie the score on singles by Manny Trillo and Ron Hassey and a two-run, pinch double by Alan Bannister. Rich Gossage, 3-2, was the winner despite facing only one batter in the ninth.

Royals 9, Twins 2

The Royals scored three runs in the fourth inning and four more in the eighth to whip the Twins. Willie Aikens and Willie Wilson had three hits apiece for Kansas City,

Robinette

Drafted

Kelly Robinette, shortstop for the East Carolina University baseball team for the past four years, was drafted yesterday by the Cleveland Indians.

Robinette was a 13th round choice of the Indians.

A 5-8,160-pound senior from Prince George, Va.. Robinette is the highest draft choice of any player coached by Hal Baird since he took over as head coach four years ago at ECU. He was also the first player Baird signed after becoming head coach.

Robinette batted .214 as a freshman, .247 as a sophomore, .273 as a junior, and closed out with a .288 season this past spring. He was 42 for 146 as a senior and had 18 runs batted in, scoring 26 runs himself. He fielded at an .885 rate.

which was playing with only four regulars in the lineup because of injuries to catcher John Wathan, third baseman George Brett and right fielder Jerry Martin.

Aikens drove in two runs, one in each of the big innings.

Steve Renko worked into the eighth inning for Kansas City, and Dan Quisenberry finished up, earning a league-leading 14th save.

Angels?, White Sox 4 Rick Adams drove in three runs and Ron Jackson had two RBI to lead California over Chicago. Adams, a rookie, hit his first major league homer leading off the second inning, and his two-run single capp^ a three-run fifth inning that put the Angels up 7-3. Adams was hitting only .160 with one RBI coming into the game. Jackson drove in his runs

Going Into A Rage

Toronto shortstop Alfredo Griffin rips off his hat in a rage after umpire Drew Coble called Oaklands Bill Almon safe at second base in the seventh inning of their American League game in Oakland Wednesday afternoon. Coble said that Griffin missed the tag. (AP Laserphoto)

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with a pair of singles, in the first and fifth innings, backing Ken For jch, 5-3. wIm pitched a five-hitter.

Rangers 1, Mariners 0 Mike Smithson of Texas outdueied Matt Young of Seattle, and Larry Parrish scored the games only run on

a wild pitch in the seventh inning.

Smithson,4-4, scattered nine hits over 8 2-3 innings before needing help from Odell Jones, who struck out Steve Henderson to end the game and earn his eighth save.

Young, 7-4, gave up just

eight hits, inree of uiem in me seventh when Parrish, Bill Stein and Pete OBrein singled to load the bases. Young then fanned George Wright and Jim Sundberg, nearly escaping harm before throwing the wild pitch that allowed Parrish to score.

With Four Weeks Left, Tampa Likes Leading

TAMPA. Fla, (AP) - Four weeks remain in the United States Football Leagues inaugural season, and the Tampa Bay Bandits still find themselves leading the chase for the Central Division title Coach Steve Spurriers club has become accustomed to the frontrunner's role and is look ing forward to Sundays rematch with the Chicago Blitz, a game thatll go a long ways Coward determining the eventual outcome of the race.

This game, said wide receiver Eric Truvillion, could be the season,

A victory would give the 10-1 Bandits a two-game lead over the 9-5 Blitz with three games to play - all against teams Tampa Bay beat earlier jn the season Michigan and Birmingham already trail the division leaders by two and three games, respectively Spurrier, however, is not looking beyond Sunday The Blitz beat the Bandits 42-3 two months ago, so his team can hardly enter this weekend's showdown overconfident All weve done is get ourselves In a position to go up to Chicago and play our biggest game of the year, Spur rier said. 1 think our fellows

realize weve got four more big games and this is the first of them.

I dont think we have anything to prove, though. Spurrier added, discounting the revenge factor This is a key division game Whoever wins is going to be in the driver's seat, so you dont need much more incentive to play well.

The embarrassing loss to the Blitz on April 2 was the first of two humiliating beatings the Bandits have taken. Michigan beat Spur riers club 43 7 on Memorial Day

The first-year mentor, however, has taken the lopsided lo.s.ses in stride and accepts them as one of the built-in

hazards of Banditball, Tampa Bays wide-open offensive attack.

The Blitz Luther Bradley intercepted a pro football-record six passes in the first game against Chicago, and the Bandits had four turnovers and allowed eight quarterback sacks in the loss to Michigan When you throw the ball as much as we do, bad things are going to happen to you sometimes .. sacks and turnovers, explained Spurrier.

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Pafience Pays Off For Perez, Phillies

By The Associated Press

11 had been awhile since Tony Perez last faced Bruce Sutter. In fact, it was back in 1980 when Perez was with Montreal and Sutter was pitching for the Chicago Cubs.

On Wednesday night. Perez, now with the Philadelphia Phillies, and Sutter, with the St. Louis Cardinals, met again. This time it was in the bottom of the ninth innmg of a tie game with two outs and runners on first and second.

"1 know he's a tough reliever. and you have to be patient with him." Perez said, an American !.eaguer the past three seasons.

Patience paid off this time for Perez, who belted a three run homer to lift Philadelphia over St Louis 7-4

That's what we needed." Perez-said We came back and beat them Thats the way we were supposed to play ."

In other National League games, Us Angeles pounded Atlanta 11-5. Houston edged San Francisco l o m 11 in nings, Montreal beat Pittsburgh 5-4, San Diego de feated Cincinnati 5-:i and v. Chicago nipped .New York 21 \ Philadelphia had lost 13 of Its last 16 games and hadn't scored more than five runs in a game .since .May 4

But the Perez and the Phillies changed that with their mnth-inning uprising

Pete Hose started the win ning rally with a pinch single.

his first hit in 21 at-bats. Pinch-runner Bob Dernier stole second and Joe .Morgan walked. Gary Matthews forced Dernier at third and .Mike Schmidt flied out before Perez blasted a Sutter pitch over the center-field fence.

1 would say .Mr. Perez really smoked it," said St Louis Manager Whitey Herzog.

Philadelphia's Garry Maddox had tied the game at 44 in the eighth inning with a two-out solo homer, his third of the season, off reliever Doug Bair St. Louis scored ail its runs in the fourth off John Denny Lonnie Smith walked with one out and Keith Hernandez and George Hendrick singled to load the bases Willie .McGee singled in one run and Darrell Porter followed with a three-run triple The Phillies scored in the first on Bo Diazs groundout. in the third on Schmidts run-scoring single and in the fifth on an KBl double by Perez

Dodgers 11, Braves 5 Fernando Valenzuela starred on the mound and at the plate for Los Angeles, The right hander raised his record 7-2 and helped his own cause by smacking a solo home run his first of the year and second of his career as well delivering a run-scoring single and a deep ba.ses loaded sacrifice fly

The Dodgers-banged out 16

Youth Baseball

Little League

First Federal 5

Exchange.........0

.John Bolen los.sed a two hitter at the Fxchange as First Federal got back on the winning track yesterday in the Tar Heel Little League, 5-0.

Bolen struck out 12, walked three and hit one along the way to the shutout victory He did not allow a hit until the fourth inning when .Maurice Battle broke up his no-hit bid Duane Williams added the other hit in the fifth

First Federal got all it needed in the third inning, scoring twice Trey Dansey reached on an error to open the frame, and moved up on an out. He scored when Maurice Dyer doubled Dyer moved to third on an error on the play and scored on Bolen's groundout.

First Federal added two more in the fourth and one in the fifth to compete its five run score.

Dyer It'd the First Federal hitting with three, while Dansey got the only other hit allowed by loser Darryl Moore

Babe Ruth League

Coca-Cola.........8

Pepsi-Cola.........5

('oca ('ola snapped a two game losing .streak with an 8-5 victory, over Pepsi (ola last night III the Babe Ruth League, rallying for five runs inthefifth'topullitout (oke look the initial lead with one run in the first, then added three in the .second Pepsi came back with one each in the second and third ('oke then put it away with five runs in the fifth Owen Cox led off with a walk and moved all the way to third on an error on a pickoff try Jimmy Bryant walked and stole second, with Iwth scoring on a single by Mike .Maxon .Maxon was thrown out going to second for the second out, as .Michael Garris reached Van Alston singled and a passed ball .scored Garris. Clay Young doubled in Alston and scored the final run on a single by Krvin Best Pepsi rallied for two in the fifth and one in the sixth, but fell short Alston and Jimmy Carter. each had three hits to lead (oke, while Maxon and Young each had two Pepsi was led by Mitch Phillips and Sterling Kdwards, each with two

Kiwanis...........6    Everette's.........7

Lions.............5

The Kiwanis scored two runs in the bottom of the sixth inning and pulled out a 6-5 win over the Lions yesterday in the North .State l.iille League

The Kiwanis scored first, getting three runs in the first inning. They added a fourth run in the second. The Lions came back with three runs in the fourth, then inched ahead at .5-4 with a pair in the top of the sixth.

But the Kiwanis then came up with a pair of runs to gain the win in the bottom of the frame. Rocky Thurston led off the sixth with a double and moved to third on a wild pitch. He scored lo tie it up when Jon Chambliss doubled. Jamie Hale then followed with a double, .scoring Chambliss with the game-winning run.

Hale, Monte Smith, Bill Wainwright and Thurston each had two hits to lead the Kiwanis. No one had more than one for the Lions.

Brown ft Wood 6

Kverette's Pest Control pushed over a run on a bases loaded walk in the ninth inning to squeeze past Brown & Wood, 7-6, last night in the BalK* Ruth League,

Kverettes took the lead in the first with a pair of runs, but Brown & Wood came up with four in the third to move ahead. Kverette's got one in the fourth, and then scored three times m the sixth to take a 6-4 lead. B&W then scratched back for two in the top of the seventh to tie it up.

Finally, in the bottom of the ninth. Lee Lewis led off with a walk and Robert Joyner also walked. After an out. Axle Smith walked, loading the bases. Then, with two away, Curtis Perkins also drew a walk, forcing over Lewis with the game-ending run.

Tom Rosche had two hits to lead Everettes. while Chris Meeks had three and Patrick Kanetzke had two for B&W

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hits, including two-run homers by Dusty Baker (No. 6) and Pedro Guerrero (No. 13) and a solo homer by Rick Monday, his third,

Atlanta also played longball as Bob Homer hit his 10th homer, Rafael Ramirez belted his first and Braves reliever Rick Behenna hit his first ever in the majors.

Astros 1, Giants 0 Phil Gamers two-out single in the bottom of the Jlth inning scored Omar Moreno from second base with the games only mn.

Both starters, Houstons Joe

Niekro and San Franciscos Andy McGaffigan, pitched well but neither was involved in the decision.

Niekro scattered 10 hits over 10 innings while McGaffigan yielded just four hits in nine innings.

In the 11th, Moreno singled with one out off Gary Lavelle, 3-1 Terry Puhl sacrificed and Dickie Thon was intentionally walked before Gamer stroked his single, making a winner out of rookie Bill Dawley, 4-1.

Padres 5, Reds 3 Dave Dravecky became the NLs first nine-game winner

with some outstanding relief help from Sid Monge.

Dravecky, 9-3, went 7 2-3 innings and allowed just five hits. Monge replaced reliever Luis DeLeon in the ninth ami pitched out of a bases-loaded, none-out situation for his second save.

Rookie Kevin McReynolds slammed a two-run homer and Terry Kennedy and Sixto LezcatK) added solo shots for the Padres. Gary Redus and Cesar Cedeno homered for the Reds.

Expos 5, Pirates 4

Bill Gullickson pitched eight

Winning Kick

Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Ferando Valenzuela goes through his motion Wednesday against the Atlanta Braves at Atlanta Fulton County Stadium. He added an 11-5 yictory to bring his season record to 7-2. (APLaserphoto)

Court Blocks Takeover By LeRoux Of Red Sox

BOSTON (AP) - Hayward Sullivan was back today as general manager of the Boston Red Sox after a .Massachusetts judge decided his fellow partner, former team trainer Bijddy Leroux, had little likelihop of winning his bid to taHe oyer the American League^D. t After he^^i^uments in Suffolk Superior Court for a second day on Wednesday , Judge Andrew Linscott issued a l-rpage order blocking LeRoux and his supporters from taking over the Ameri can League club.

Linscott set trial for July 11 and told the feuding parties lo have all documents and mo lions filed by July 6,

LeRoux, one of three gener al partners in the club, claims he is the boss as a result of amending the partnership agreement with the support of a majority of limited partners. The other general partners, Sullivan and Jean Yawkey, claim the amending was improper. They went to court seeking an injunction.

"The court is of the opinion that the plaintiffs are entitled to a preliminary injunction pending adjudication on the merits," Linscott ruled.

This injunction is to issue

since there is a strong likelihood of success on the merits and also a strong likelihood of irreparable injury without such relief

The judge said the ruling leaves the partnership agreement as it was before June 6, when LeRoux attempted his coup, firing Sullivan as general manager and appointing his own candidate. Dick OConnell OConnell was fired as executive vice president and general manager to make way for Sullivan after the 1977 season

"The defendants are preliminarily enjoined from taking any action under the amendments set forth in the pleadings, Linscott ordered.

The judge said the LeRoux faction had not complied with requirements of the Red Sox partnership agreement concerning choice of legal counsel.

The agreement provides that a majority of the general partners is required to employ a partnership attorney," he ruled. This was not accomplished here."

Sullivan and Mrs, Yawkey, widow of Thomas A Yawkey. who owned the club alone for 43 years until he died in 1976,

.sought the injunction Tuesday.

Linscott recessed the hearing then to give LeRouxs lawyers lime to answer a hefty brief filed in evidence by Daniel Goldberg, lawyer for Sullivan and Mrs. Yawkey,

Linscott accepted written evidence from both sides and listened to oral arguments Wednesday before taking the matter under advisement.

LeRoux, a former Red Sox trainer, announced Monday that the general partnership agreement had been amended by a majority vote of 30 limited partner shares.

The majority consisted of 16 such shares, owned by LeRoux, Rodgers Badgett, a wealth coal magnate from Kentucky who now lives in Florida, and Albert Curran, a lawyer and former general counsel of the Red Sox.

Lawyers on Wednesday also disputed whether LeRoux wanted to sell his interest in the club.

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strong inning before running into trouble in the ninth, when reliever Jeff Reardwi came in to put down Pittsburg.

Gullickson, had a six-hitter and a S-I lead after eight innings, but Dave Parker led off the Pittsburgh ninth with a single. Mike Easier then singled to right and scored when Terry Francona misplayed the ball for a three-base error. Dale Berra then cracked his sixth homer, chasing Gullickson

and fetching Reardon.

Al Oliver had a pair of run-scoring singles for Montreal, one of them during a three-run third inning. That outburst was started by Gullickson, who doubled for his first hit this season in 22 at-bats.

Cubs2,Metsl Ryne Sandberg homered to tie the score and Keith Moreland singed home Leon Durham as Chicago rallied for

two runs in the bottom of the ninth inning for its seventh straight victory. The win streak is the longest for the Cubs in more than five years.

New York's Mike Torrez, 2-7. took a four-hitter into the ninth before Sandbergs on-e-out homer. One out later, Durham walked, moved to second on a wild pitch and after Ron Cey was intentionally walked - came home on Morelands single.

Plan Nears Completion For ACC Grid Telecasts

GREENSBORO (AP) -Rick Ray of Raycom Productions says a contingency plan to put Atlantic Coast Conference football on television this fall could be completed by today.

Ray, president of the Charlotte-based company which televises ACC basketball in conjunction with Jefferson Standard, met with the

76ers Meet President

WASHINGTON (AP) -Hundreds of congressional aides sent up cheers as the towering Philadelphia 76ers basetball team strode into a Senate office building. But the day was special in a different way for 76ers guard Andrew Toney,

"Its'a memory that Ill treasure for life, being inside the White House and seeing the president. If we win it again, 1 think well be invited back, Toney said Wednesday after the championship team had met with President Reagan in the Rose Garden.

Forward Julius Erving said with a grin that Reagan did not ask for team autographs. But he added, He was on the receiving end. The ball we gave him was autographed by everyone and the jersey that we gave him was number one. It had his name on it

For information on voter registration, call the Pitt County Board of Elections at 7584683.

athletic directors of the eight ACC schools Wednesday at Hilton Head Island. S.C

The ACC, seeking to put together a football package of its own, similar to that of basketball, is waiting to see if the U.S. Supreme Court upholds a ruling to allow individual schools to negotiate their own TV contracts

Two courts have already upheld that ruling after a lawsuit was filed by the universities of Georgia and Oklahoma against the NCAA more than a year ago. Prior to the suit, the NCAA controlled all television rights to college football.

If the Supreme Court upholds the ruling of the lower court, however, the NCAA probably would be granted a stay in order to let all 1983 television contracts remain intact. Otherwise, the ACC will have a plan to put football on television throughout the fall.

In a related development, Ray confirmed a report that his company is negotiating with Clemson University to show all the Tigers 1983 games on a delayed-broadcast basis in the ACC area.

Clemson is currently on

NCAA-ACC probation for recruiting violations and. therefore, cannot play football on live national television. However, NCAA rules allow any school to delay-broadcast its games.

We define a telecast that is not live as one that occurs at least a half hour after the beginning of the game and one that is not telecast in the area earlier than 10:30 p.m. on the day of the game," said David Berst, director of enforcement for the .NCAA.

Clemson athletic director Bill McClellan also confirmed the report, saying the school would make no money from the broadcasts but was simply doing it for the exposure.

McClellan said the school is also negotiating with a cable television network for broadcast of Clemson games.

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Aussie Teenager Drums Vitas Texas Eyeing Alabama

Out Of Queen's Net Tourney

LONDON (AP) It was the Craig Wittus turn today to try to stop Pat Cash, the 18-vear-old Australian star in the making, in the $203,000 Stella Artois Tennis Tournament.

Wittus, 26. the United States 67th ranked player, was aiming to succeed where Vitas Gerulaitis failed.

Cash, hailed as Australias best young player since John Newcombe, drummed Gerulaitis out of the tournament 5-7, 6-3, 6-3 in the second round Wednesday at Londons Queens Club.

"Hes certainly a great prospect," said Gerulaitis, who was seeded fourth in the tournament.

Hes tough and strong and works really hard, and he moves about the court fast and has the right attitude.

The man most disappointed in Cashs progress is Cash himself.

Last year he won the junior titles at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open and was hailed as the best junior in the world.

"My aim this year was to get into the top 40. perhaps the top 30," Cash said, instead 1 am No. 61 in the rankings.

"Still. 1 have learned a lot. I have played a lot of matches

Beaten Out

Vitas Gerulaitis of the Unites States goes down on his haunches with an expression of disbelief after a rally against Australian teenage star Pat Cash in the second round of the Queens Club-Stella Artois London Championships Wednesday. Cash won the match, 5-7, 6-3, 6-3. (AP Laserphoto)

Vilas Suspended By Net Council

PARIS (AP) - For the second time in 24 hours, a renowned tennis player has been suspended by the Mens International Professional Tennis Council.

On the heels of Yannick Noahs 42-day suspension Tuesday. Guillermo Vilas was hit with a harder slap Wednesday when the IPTC knocked the Argentine star out of competition for a year, along with fining him $20,000.

Vilas, the worlds fifth-ranked player, was suspended and fined for accepting guaranteed appearance money to play in a tournament in Rotterdam. The action against Vilas was announced by Philippe Chatrier, president of the International Tennis Federation, who said the Argentine would have 30 days to appeal the decision.

The organizers of the Rotterdam tournament last March also were fined $10,000.The ban will keep Vilas out of all Grand Prix and Davis Cup events, althou^ the tennis organization said that the Argentine player would b allowed to participate in special events such as exhibition matches and certain WCT events.

Vilas, who has denied the

charges, became the first player ever suspended for allegedly accepting guarantee money, a practice reported to be common among the pros. Such guarantees, paid regardless of how a player performs, assures smaller tournaments of lop-name participants who can generate big gate receipts

"After an investigation of several months, we have formal proof (against Vilas) provided by the organizers themselves, Chatrier told a news conference.

No date was set for Vilas suspension to start, pending his decision to appeal.

Noah, winner of the French Open last weekend, was suspended 42 days and fined $20,(X)0 by the council for refusing to participate in last Mays Nations Cup tournament,

Noah said he would not appeal his fine and suspension and would sit out competition and exhibition matches, from June 13-July 25, including Frances Davis Cup quarterfinals against Paraguay July 8-10.

Noah was given a choice between an 84-day suspension, during which he could continue to play exhibitions, or a 42-day ban on all events. He took the latter.

Senior Players

Open Tourney

of the best over-50 golfers in the world are competing today in the $250,000 Senior Tournament Players Championship, which is more money than was ever available in their prime.

"For an old man. Im playing    said 60-year-old

Roberto DeVicenzo. im happy. You never know when youre going to lose it. First goes the interest. Then the power. But when you put up the money, you see that power comeback.

The top prize at this weeks tournament at Canterbury

on a lot of different surfaces.

Currently Cash is making as good a job as anybody of adapting to English grass courts in preparation for Wimble^n, which be^ns a week from Monday.

Getting ready for Wimbledon is a treacherous exercise.

Ask the top Uu^ seeds at Queens Gub - Jimmy Connors, John McEnroeand Ivan Lendl. They have been slipping and sliding about the center court all this week.

McEnroe took one heavy tumble Wednesday in the process of beating Freddie Sauer of South Africa 6-1, 7-6. He rushed back to his baseline to try to retrieve a lob and went crashing into the canvas at the back of the court.

McEnroe lay on the grass for almost half a minute before gingerly picking himself up and walking slowly to the chair to towel himself down.

But he was not hurt and went on to win the tiebreaker.

Lendl gave Wimbledpn a miss last year because he dislikes grass. This is his first tournament on grass since Wimbledon in 1981.

"The most difficult thing for me is chasing a ball to the side of the court, because it is slippery and 1 cant turn and get back. Lendl said.

But he used good grass courts serve-and-volley technique to defeat Tim Wilkison 4-6,7-5.6-3.

Connors, defending champion and No. 1 seed, had a long strug^e for supremacy before defeating Nduka Odizor of Nigeria 7-5,6-1.

Connors opponent today was big serving Hank Pfister McEnroe had to play Cassio Motta, the Brazilian Davis Cup player. Lendl faced Australias Paul McNamee.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Some Golf Club is $40,000. A total of

50 golfers, who hold about 500 PGA Tour titles among them, will be competing.

DeVicenzo, of Argentina, has been honored in the Professional Golfers Association Hall of Fame. Because of his goof in the 1968 Masters Tournament. DeVicenzo is one of sports most famous runners-up.

In that Masters, DeVicenzo signed a scorecard that showed him scoring a five on one hole instead of the four he actually shot. His final total left him one shot off the winning score-

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OMAHA, Neb. tAP) - The eyes of Texas will be on Alabama and college baseballs leading hitter Thursday night when the two square off for the first time in 61 years for a finals bid in the 37th^ annual College World Series.

Top-ranked Texas, 63-14, will be eyeing the Tides David Magadan, who has already set two CWS hitting records and boasts a .538 batting average. Magadan, a junior from Tampa. Fla., entered the series at ,523 and is now batting .535 after going five-for-five and setting a single game consecutive hits record against Arizona State

In Alabama's 6-5 victory over Michigan Tuesday night, Magadan, a second round choice of the New York Mets in the major league free agent draft, went three-for-four and had his CWS record hitting streak stopped at eight with a seventh-inning flyout.

Texas has beaten James Madison, 12-0, and Oklahoma State in 11 innings. 6-5. to

remain unbeaten in this double-elimination event. No. 6 -ranked Alabama beat Arizona State in 11 innings. 6-5, and Michigan. 6-5, to go 2-0 in tournament play.

Alabama, 45-9, entered the CWS with a .340 batting average, the highest of any team here, with seven hitters above .300. But Tide batters will face a Longhorn bullpen that is filled with winners.

Roger Clemens, who boosted iiis record to 13-5 with a victory over Oklahoma State, was a first-round draft choice by the Boston Red Sox Junior righthander Calvin Schiraldi also went in the first round to the New York Mets, Shortstop Mike Brumley was taken in the second round by the Red Sox.

Texas Coach Cliff Gustafson hasnt decided on a starter for the contest, but he has an arsenal of pitchers to use Besfdes Clemens and Schiraldi, Kirk Killingsworth, 11-3, earned his team-leading eighth save over Oklahoma State Mike Capel, who has a

3.07 ERA, is 12-1 and has a save. Steve Labay, who was drafted in the eighth round, is 7-2 with a 2.42 ERA.

The Longhorns are expected to start either Schiraldi or Labay. Dean Hayes, 11-2. will pitch for the Crimson Tide.

Alabama and Texas met for a total of seven times in 1899 and 1922. The Longhorns have won six of those baseball games.

batted in. total bases and highest batting average.

"Texas will be tough but everybody has been lately . Magadan said. 1 dont usually go up to the plate thinking about making an out and 1 just hit the ball hard and was lucky enough to have it fall in for hits

Texas is an awesome team, said Alabama Coach, Barry Shollenberger. T picked Texas to win this series before we found out we were coming here. Thats all changed now and well be in there swinging

Lucky or not, Shollenterger calls Magadan "special. He's got a gift. Some people can sing, some can dance, some can educate themselves This guy can hit

Magadan, who has 21 hits in 33 trips for a .636 average in three postseason tournaments, baited 389 as a freshman and set a Southeastern Conference record for hitting in 27 consecutive games He hit 395 as a sophomore and holds school records in most at-bats, hits, doubles (and leads the nation in doubles with 30). runs

The winner of the 7 10 p m (CDTt .Alabama-Texas game advances to a Friday night game and draws a bye in the hnals, win or lose The loser faces either Arizona Stale or Michigan

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NBA Coaches Play Musical Benches

...    X*    I    M    DACciKilitfOC    tA    fll    I

Stan .\lbeck and Jim Lynam are the latest to play "musical benches ' in the National Basketball Association Coaches continued to fastbreak to other teams as

Albeck, the San Antonio expatriate. was appointed Wednesday to coach the New Jersey Nets and Lynam. most recently an assistant in Portland, latched on with the

San Diego Clippers.

The latest job changes bring to seven the number of coaches who have already moved around this year, and there will be more changes to

come, particularly at San Antonio and Atlanta and possibly at Indianapolis and Philadelphia.

"We felt Stans style would best bring out the potential of

TANKSFNAMARA

fUWY0F6KT 1KJTUtN

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CRm ACtiVrnc^

foarmL-

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

7T

SCOREBOARD

Rec Softball

(I

City l.eague .1 A s    iKi:)

l.ilHTty    -'1)2

CcadinM hillcrs .lA 2 4 i2 IIKi Clfii \l()orc (4 ( nnncr Merrill 2 4 Mil) 1, Kd lliiblis 2 i Norman Davis 2 i

040 001 0 r> Ted Kinn

BWelliome    )HX)    10 I

UmdinK hitters PK Dollie .lohnson t 4. Dot .Move ! 4 BW BernidineKreeman2 2

I hiidUo ' Burns i' at Caldornia 'John

im

24

I'TA    'ladKI    21

t opper Kellie    lOO    20    J

l.eadirin hitlers CK .Sylvia Howard 2 2, Betty Blount 2 :i PT .lanice Moore 4 4, Irish Barnhill :i 4

Toronto fCtamy 5 at Oakland il'n dcrvKKKi t J' 'm Texas llounh ,isi al Seattle Beattie 4 1' >n'

(Inly names .scheduled

7, Wilcox. Detroit, 57. 1 udor, Boston, .56 SAVES Quisenberry, Kansas City, 14 Caudill, Seattle. 13, Stanley. Boston, II lAipez. Detroit, 8, 0 Jones, Texas, 8

USFL Stondingi

Friday's (iames

Baltimore at Boston 'O)

Metal Cralt    271 Old, 0 II

Ormond-s    (KHi ooi o    I

l.eadintl hitlers .MC .) Shallow 2 :i. I) Harris 2 :i 0 Waters 2 .1, W CaliacearJ .1 < Brilev 2 :t

14

Whitlinnlon    014    027 0

Pantana Hot) s ooo 022 I 4 l.eadmn hitters W Terry I.OVK k 4 4 I) Chrislianx f 4 ' HKi. Boyd Holmes :i 4 PH Oren Hill 2 :i'Buz/Chadwick 2 I

Prep Shirt    4|    -lO    20

Wachovia Bank    J<i2    II    7

l.eadmii hitlers WB Barhara .tones 2 2 Kvon W ilson i J PS Niauaia Whilchard 4 4, Wanda t-'oreman2 J

Cleveland at Detroit, in) New Vorkat .Milwaukee n' lexasal Minnesota, 'm Toronto at California, mi ChicakoatOakland.ini Kansas City al Seattle, ' n

By The Associated Prets Atlantic W L T

Philadelphia 12 2 0

Boston New Jersey Washington

League Leaders

14

t. villeTravel    'ill    02

l- red W'etil)    W0    (Hi    2

Leading hitlers OT Angic Ilumphrie4 Susan Holacre4 ,7

By The Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGUE

BAT'tlNG 105 al balsi Dawson, Montreal 146 McGee St laniis. :140, MadOak Illtshurgh, J38 Benedict, Allanta 127 Knight, Houston, 326 Itl NS Murphy, Atlanta. 47 Garvey s.m Diego 4! Kvan,s San Francisco, :I8, llorner Atlania, :i Dawym Montreal,

Tampa Bay Chicago Michigan Birmingham

Oakland lx)S Angeles Denver Arizona

20

.Illlimy'sOO    202    IIIH

Siitiway    2IHI    201

Leading hitlers .1    .terry Clark

:14, Kemp Bradshaw    2 4    l.inwiidd

Briiwii 2 4 Charlie Meeks 4 4 Mike Conger 4 4 '2 Hit'    S    Tom

Overstreet 2 2' HKI

Baseball Standings

By Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGUE

liHI Murphy Atlanta 44 Hendrick. SI Louis 41 Dawson .Montreal

T Kennedy San

Industrial l.ague I'util ic W orks    112    (Hi2    0    I)

I monCartiide    4(Hi    IKHI    0    4

Leading hitlers CC Wesley Deal 4 4 PW David I'tiillips 2 2; Killer Aiiderson 2 2

KAST DIVISION W \L

S( 1.)UIN 2H 22^ .MnnlHMl 2: 2.\

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l.ts \iinHfs 17

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MTIS liawsoii Montreal 71 Thon.

Il))usl)ni 71 Garvev San Diego, 66 Oliver

Atlahli

It It.iniirez,

M))iilre.il 6;i Dot HI ES    Dawson    Montreal    16,

G.irvev San    Diego I7    .1 Kay    Pit

tsOiirgh I:')    Oliver    Montreal,    L5,

K llernande/ SI laiuis. 14

IKIPI.ES    Moren))    Houston    6

iMiwsoii Montreal 5 6are lied with 4 HOME Kl NS , Evans San Eranci.sco,

   5    0

4    10    0

1    13    0

CenU-al 10    4    0

9    .5    0

8    6    0

7    7    0

Pacillc 7    7    0

7    7    0

6    8    0

4    10    0

Friday's Game Denver 24, Washington 12 Saturday's Game (lakland 34. New Jersey 21

SundaysGames . Tampa Bay 45. Birmingham 17 Philadelphia 29. Michigan 20 lx)s Angeles 17, Arizona 13 Monday's Game Boston 21. Chicago 15

Saturday, June II Bo.slonal Birmingham, ini Washington at Arizona, ini Sunday, June 12 Tampa Bay al Chicago Philadelphia al New Jersey .Michigan al Ims Angeles

Monday. June 13 Denver at Oakland, I ni

Pet PF PA

857 299 158 643 306 259 286 254 35} 071 205 369

714 295 271 643 346 208 571 315 269 500 259 230

.500    273    248

500    224    266

429    205    235

286    223    338

I! i.iierrer)) U)s Angeles 13, Murphy, All.int.i It HriK'k, l-os Angeles, 11

KasI CiiKiliiia!    IJII Olii 2

Coca Cola    OlHi 232 U 7

Leading hitlers <<' Boh 'Woolen 2 3. l.inwiMid Kverelle 2 4 KC Greg Wilson 3 4, Gene Owens 2 2. Boh l-'ox 3 4

23

Eanpire BrushesI    HLI IKii

W'NCTTV    IMHI lliVi (I 5

Leading hitlers KB .tell Barw ick 3 4. .Iimmy Medlin 4 5, Kd Cohurii4 3

Grady While    321    133 I 13

Cox Armature ^ 'Jilti :I2 11 III Leading hitlers CA Bonnie SjHiitti 3 4, Greg Mcl.aughlin 3 4 GW Bohhy Mtwire 3 3, Busiy Dennis ,i 3, Doug Gomes 3 4

Wedne.sday's Games I III) ,tg)) 2 Ni'W V))rk I l,))s Ang)-I)'s II AllanI.i '

,M))nli)Ml ) IlllslMiigh 4 Phil,))l)'l|)lii.i 7 SI l.))Uisl San (iK'gi) ' i'liii iiin.ili I ll))U.sl))ii I S.)ii El.ID) ISO) 11 IllllllllIgS Thursday's Games New 'l))rk 'l.vmli 4 2' al Chnag)) ltulhv)'ii 14)

SI l,))iiis ' Aii)luj.)r I8> .il l'liil.i)l)'l|)lii.i Bvsli))iiHi 3i.' n I

f'lllsMui gli ) Ml W illi.ims 6 I - .il Monlii-.il' Itiigi'rs7 2) II'

San Dii'gii Hawkins I l> al < iniimi.ili HiTI'MSI 16' III

l.ns ,\ngi'li's 'lliHiliin 4 2' at Allanta ' McMiirlv 7 2', 111'

San Eiaiii isii) 'Krukow 1 C .it HdusIiiii ' Kne|i(ii-r 1 81,' III

Friday's (iames SI l.iiuis.il Chii agii S.in I'raiiciscD.il AllanI.i l.ns Aiigi'li's ,il Cincinnati

Si hiniill Ihilaileluhia. 11 S'Dll.EN BASES S Sax. Iw)s Angeles. 21 Wilson Ni'W ADrk. 20 Lacy, Pit Isliuigti 18 Moreno Houston 18 Kedus I iiK innali. 18 Il'K'IIING 4 decisions' P Perez All.nil.) 7 1    87.5    2    69 A Pena, lais

Angi'lis il 833 2:18 Dawley. Houston. I I 8IHI I 95 Monletusco. .San Diego 4 I. 8)81 6 Ml Sli'warl, U)s Angeles 4 I, 800. I 6,1

s ritlKEOI rs t arlton, Philadelphia, 92 Solo ( iiH innate 80, McWilliams,

Transactians

A .ili n/uida lais Angtnes. 63 SAVES Beilroslan Atlanta, 8. Eorster. All.inia 8 l.avelle, San Eranci.sco, 8 l.i Sinilh Chicago 8 S Howe Los Angi'les. 7

By The Asioclated Press BASEBALL NatkNUl League

CHICAGO CUBS Signed Jackie Davidson and Gary t-ee Parmenter, pitchers

CINCINNATI REDS Signed Joe Oliver, catcher, and Hugh Kemp, pitcher, and a.s.signed them to Billings of the Pioneer league

NEW YORK METS Signed Stanley Jellerson, outfielder, and assigned him to Little Falls of the New York Penn

league

PITT

Pill Mcliioriiil wiiii hy ttirlcil iivcr Bclviiir

I'lllsliurgli,il Philadelphia 'ii Monln-.il al New York, 'ii

San Dli'go

K.islCiiriiliiiai)2 iHHi ihhi ii ii Kiiipire Brushes ))2 21)2 (ilM) x 10 Leading hitlers KB Atihrey Harrison-:! 4, Charles Doughlie :i 4. Bohhy Leggett 2 3

AMERICAN LEAGUE EA.ST DIVISION

W I. Pet

II

B Wellcome 2    102    121

Gl'CO    ;13    204 X 12

Leading hitlers    BW    .linimy

Caylon 2 4. Gene Tuttle 2 4. Jim Bailey 2 3. Boiinie Williams 2 3. GD BolM'rl Garrett 3 4. Joel Jones 2 3, Willie Kakes 2 4., Mike MeGowan 2:1, Larry Lewis 2:1, George Mayo 2 :i

B.illnii))!)'

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B)isl))ii

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Ni'W Aiirk

Milwank)')'

Cli'vel.inil

582

547

.528

29

19

Kire Kiglilers 440 o:i3 CIS    III (HI2 0    5

Leading hillers Kl' Lynwood Owens 43, ,lelf Walker 3 4, Jon West:! 4 Doug Braneh 3 4 ' IIK 1. Cl SleAe Williams 3 4, Keilli Bliodes

:!4

Women's la^ague

PkiAers Kelreal    Ml

WE;sT DIVISION

Caliliirni.i    31    24

K.iiisas I lly    25    24

OakI.mil '    27    27

lex.is    26    26

( hlc.igii    25    28

Miniii'si)t.i    23    ,13

Si'.iltli'    2:1    15

Wednesday's Games I iininlii > Oakland 2 Delriill 6, Boslon 3 B.illininre?. Milwaukee I Ni'iw York 6, Clevelanil ,5 Kans.isCilvO, Minnesola 2 r.ililiirnia ).ChK'ugo4 li'A.isl Sealllell

Thursday 's Games lli'Iroil 'Petry ' l':i ki'Isll'V 4 2i I||i Milwailkce 'Auguslinc Balliinmi' BiHlilii kt'r :i 2i. 'ic Mmni'MiI.i AAilliains 2 7' Cilv 'I'li'i'Di I' 'II'

510

453

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATUNG 1105 at hatsi Carew, 1 .ilitornia 421, Boggs. Boslon. :18L IlD'll Kansas Cily iffi McRae. Kansas Cilv, 144 Thornlon, Cleveland. 331 III N.S Caslino Minnesola, 42, BrelL Kansas Cilv. 41, Ripken. Ballimore, :i8, Ih'Cinces. Calilornia, :16, E Murray, Ballimore. Hi KHI Ward, Minnesota, 41, Hrbek, Minnesola 40 Killle, Chieago, 40, Brell Kansas Cilv, :I9, Wmlield, New York, 18 HITS ('arew, Caldornia. 80 Boggs. Bnsl))ii. 74 Caslino, .Minnesota, 7:t tint li'A New York. 64 Whilaker Delroil, 64 A )iunl. Milwaukee 64 UOCHI.ES Hrhek Minnesota. 20, M) Kat'. Kansas Cily, 18. I, N Parrish, iK'lroil. 17 B Bell, Texas. 16, Boggs, Ihislon. 16, Brell, KansasCity 16 TKIPLES C Moore, Milwaukee. 5. G Wilson. llelroiL 5, Herndon Detroit. 5. Winfield, New York. 5, Ganlner. Milwaukee, 4, Grilfin, Toronto 4, White,

TSBURGH PIRATES Extended Ihe contracts ol Harding Peterson, execu live vice president, and Chuck Tanner, manager, through the 1987

American League TOKONTO BLUE JAYS Signed Otis Green, first basemanxAultielaer. and assigned him to Medicine Hal o( Ihe Pioneer la'ague

BASKETBALL Natkmal Basketball Asaoclatlon CLEVELAND CAVALIERS Named

Harvey Greene public relations director and Elaine McCrlmmon director ot

advertising and promotion NEW JERSEY NETS Named Stan Albeck head coach SAN DIEGO CLIPPERS Named Jim l.vnam head coach

FOOTBALL United States Football League WASHINGTON FEDERALS Signed

Brian Butcher, ollensive guard

HOCKEY Natkmal Hockey League

PHILADELPHIA FLYERS-Traded

K.)iisasCity,4 IIOIAIE RUNS DeCinces, Calilornia.

I I KilllcChicago. 13 lynn, Calilornia, I ! Krcll, Kansas Cily. 12, Rice, Boslon.

12 Wmlicid, New York, 12 S TOLEN BASES J Cruz, Seattle, :U. W Wilson, Kansas City, 25 R Law, Chicago 22. R Henderson. Oakland, 21 Sample, Texas, 17 PITCillNli '4 dci'isionsi Flanagan Ballimore, 6 u,    I U(K).    2 72, Kison,

C.ililornia 6 I    857.    3 23. Haas.

Milwaukc)' 4 I. 8IMI, 4 16. Koosman. lit B)is|))ii Chicago 4 1 8(Hi 4.56. R I, Jack.son, r))r)iiiTo, 4 1. 8IKI 4 46 Schrom, Min iM'Mila 4 1, 8(H), 4 63, Whileh))us)' Min neM)la.4 I, 8(H).2 9(1 STItlKKOl TS    Slieh    Torimlo. 78,

Blvl)'V)'ii Cleveland 72 Morris Detroil

Hehn Wilson, delenseman, lo the Chieag Black Hawks lor Doug Crossman. de (en.seman. and a 1984 second-round draft pick

OUEBEt NORDigUES Traded Real Cloutier, forward, and a first round draft pick lo the Buffalo Sabres lor Andre savard. J K .Sauve and Tony McKegney, forwards, and Bllalo s third round pick in this draft WlNNIPEf! JETS Traded Dave Chrislian. center, to Ihe Washington ( apilals tor a first round draft pick SOCCER M^or Indoor Soccer League WICIHIW WINGS Signed Jeff Bourm', lorward, and Terry Nicholl, midfielder, to one year contracts

COLLEGE WESTERN ATHLETK CON EERENCE Named Guy H (iibhs supervisor ol basketball oHicials

Alhletie WorM't

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our players, said Lou Schaf-fel, the Nets executive vice president and    and chief

operating officer. We felt Stanls personality and way of coaching was best for us.

Albeck did    not come

cheaply. To get him, the Nets had to give up their second pick in the June 28 draft - the 46th selection overall; an undisclosed amount of cash believed to be    as high as

$300,000; and the rights to ex-Brigham Young star Fred Roberts, a 6-foot-lO forward who was drafted in the second round by the Nets last year, but played in Europe.

Albeck then agreed to a contract worth    a reported *

$750,000 for three years with the Nets.

There were some legal problems as well. The Nets pursuit of Albeck had been blocked in the courts last week when a judge ruled that the

coach, who had two years to run on a $175,000 contract in San Antonio, had to remain with the Spurs.

But on Tuesday, NBA Comnmissioner Larry OBrien met with Angelo Drossos. president of the Spurs, and Alan Cohen, chairman of the Nets, to work out the matter ..

The Clippers, meanwhile, ended their two-month search for a coach by selecting Lynam, an assistant with the Trail Blazers the past two years. The 41-year-oldLynam replaces Paul Silas, who was dismissed April 19 after three non-winning seasons.

terrific potential.

Lynams overall college coaching record was 158-118 during two years at Fairfield University, five years at American University and three years at St. Josephs. He said the Clippers youth appealed to him because, I view myself as a teacher.He said that as a result of his schooling under Jack Ramsay at Portland, his teams will be built around team-oriented play, rather than individualism. s

Lynam, coach of the St. Josephs of Philadelphia team that upset powerful DePaul in the NCAA tournament two years ago, said he views the San Diego job as a big challenge and sees the Clip-^ pers as a voung team "of

Besides Albeck and Lynam, other new coaches already in place are Kevin Loughery, who has left the Atlanta Hawks to coach the Chicago Bulls: Bill Fitch, who switched from Boston to Houston; Chuck Daley at Detroit, Johnny Bach at Golden State and K.C. Jones, who succeeded Fitch at Boston.

Triple Missing From Racing's Triple Crown

Possibilities to fill Albecks vacated San Antonio job are Bobby Weiss, an assistant at San Diego, and George Karl, a former NBA assistant. '

Another assistant, Mike Fratello of the New York Knicks, appears to top th list of candidates in Atlanta. Fratello was an assistant with the Hawks, first under Hubie Brown and then under Loughery, before moving to the Knicks to assist Brown there last season.

Mike would be great, said Hawks guard Matthews., He knows the system. He knows everything about us. He knows us better than Kevin did because he was with us longer.

In Indianapolis, the Pacers management has yet to offer a new contract to Coach Jack McKinney, whose old pact has expired. And in Philadelphia, Coach Billy Cunningham of the World Champion 76ers says he is considering stepping down.

I'll let the enthusiasm of winning the title subside * before I decide, said Cunningham, who points out that it will be at least a week before he decides whether he will return for another year.

By DICK JOYCE AP Sports Writer

Last year the Kentucky Derby winner skipped the Preakness. This year its the Belmont Stakes.

For the past two years, the Preakness winner hadnt run in the Derby.

For the past four years, the Belmont winner hadnt run in either the Derby or the Preakness.

The Triple is missing from thoroughbred racings Triple Crown, a six-week test that many horsemen have long contended is too taxing for 3-year-old horses.

It has all served to diminish interest in Saturdays 115th Belmont Stakes, the 1'-2-mile "Test of Champions. This year its more a test of also-rans - a lot of them - leftovers from a mediocre crop that already was minus such stars as Roving Boy and Landaluce, victims of injury and illness.

The bigger-than-usual field of 12 includes only five of the 20 who ran in the Derby, only two of the 12 who started in the Preakness.

The largest field ever for the Belmont was 14 in 1875. The biggest in modern times was 13 in 1971. i

The Kentucky Derby is limited to 20 horses, the Preakness 14, The Belmont has no such restriction because of its wide track and because its grueling distance discourages many trainers.

Last year Gato Del Sol won the Kentucky Derby and skipped the Preakness. Alomas Ruler, who had passed the Derby, won the Preakness. Conquistador Cielo, who didnt run in either, whipped both of them in the

Belmont.

Sunnys Halo, this years Kentucky Derby winner who ran sixth in the Preakness. is passing up the Belmont to run in Sundays Arlington Classic, the first time since Dust Commander in 1970 that a Derby winner hasnt gone in the final leg of the Triple Crown.

Actually, skipping the Belmont was what Sunnys Halos trainer, David Cross, wanted all along. Too much to ask of a 3-year-old, he said, and besides he wasnt fond of New York racing officials.

Its virtually certain, though, that owner David J. Foster of Toronto would have ordered the colt to run in the Belmont if the Triple Crown - and the accompanying purse and stud money - had been at stake. But the Preakness, when Sunnys Halo stumbled coming out of the gate and bumped another horse, took care of any Triple Crown aspirations.

Deputed Testamonys Preakness victory in the slop hasnt scared away many rivals for the Belmont. He didnt run in the Derby,

None of this years Belmont contenders have run in both the Derby over 1>4 miles and Preakness over 1 3-16 miles. Desert Wine, runnerup in both races, wont go because he is a bleeder and needs the diuretic Lasix, which New York wont allow.

One Belmont hopeful. High Honors, was excluded from the Derby because of insufficient earnings. He crossed the wire first at Churchill Downs on Derby Day in the Twin Spires Purse, but was disqualified and placed second.

Knox Captures Puffing Event

J R. Knox captured first place in the Wednesday Night Pro Tournament at Putt-Putt Golf and Games last night.

Knox finished with a 92 after taking the first round lead with a 27. He maintained his lead throughout the three rounds of competition.

Jake Loftin finished second with a 96. He rallied from a first round 32 to tie Knox after two rounds, but then slipped as much as seven strokes back during the final round.

David Beacham was third with a 103.

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In The Area

Ball Heads ECU Counseling Center

Dr. Wilbert Ball, a member of the East Carolina University Counseling Center staff since 1967, has been appointed director of the center. Ball, who will assume his duties Aug. 1, will succeed Dr. George Weigand, who is retiring.

A Moatsville, W. Va. native. Ball has degrees in industrial arts from Fairmont State College, W. Va., and Miami University, Ohio. He received the doctorate in counseling and guidance from Indiana University and completed additional advanced studies at N.C. State University.

The center, staffed by six full-time counselors, offers individual counseling and special ^p programs for ECU Students seeking academic, vocational and personal guidance.

Ladies Exercise Program Planned

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department will offer a new session of ladies exercise beginning Tuesday. Classes will be held at the Recreation and Parks Administration Building at Jaycee Park on Cedar Lane.

Classes are from 6 to 7 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday and last for 12 weeks, Propam fee is $4. Restration will be held the first night of class. For more details, call 752-4137, extension 265.

Wafer Program Starts June 28

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department is offering a program of basic canoeing and water safety to young people between the ages of 10 to 18 years, The class begins June 28 and will be held successively on Tuesdays, July 12, 19 and 26. Students will meet at 9 a.m., have an instruction period, then take a three- to four-hour trip on the Tar River with a lunch stop, returning to Elm Street Gym at 4 p.m.

Instructions will be given in carrying and launching canoes, boarding and debarking, paddling strokes, and canoe safety. Equipment provided includes all canoes, paddles, personnel flotation devices, and drinks. Participants are to bring their own lunch bag and shoes are required. Old clothes are recommended as they will get wet. Hats, sunglasses, sunscreen, and lip and nose protection are recommended.

Cost of the program is $5. Each session is a one-day inclusive program.

Registration will be at the Recreation and Parks Administrative Building from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 15.

Senior Games Are Proposed

A meeting will be held for persons interested in the organization of a Greenville Senior Games program in May 1984 at the Greenville Recreation and Parks Departments main office at Jaycee Park on Cedar Lane Friday at 10:30 a.m.

The program will stress competitive physical activities for individuals 55 and older. For more information call Lesley Ball at 752-4137, ext. 259.

Students Earn Academic Honors

Several area students received academic honors for their

ierformance during the spring semester at Duke University, hey included:

Mark Earl Grossnickle, Frederick Melvin Parham Jr., Christopher Paul Tardis, Michael Arden Tucker, Susan Leigh Tucker and Dorothy Joan Wang, all of Greenville; Christopher Gene Paramore of Grimesland and Patricia lynn Tenpenny of Ayden.

Student Makes Dean's List

Kimberly Ann OBrien of Greenville has been named to the deans list at Salem Cdlege for the spring semester. A student must compile a 3.5 grade point average to make the deans list.

Society Selects Local Student

Amelia Yongue has been named to The Society of Distinguished American High School Students. She is a student at St. Marys College and the-dau^ter of Dr. and Dr. Alfred and Judith Yongue of Greenville.

Talk Planned On Boating Safety

Hal Byrum will speak on boating safety at Holy Trinity United Methodist Church, 1400 Red Banks Road, Tuesday at 7:30p.m.

Byrum is past commander of the Kinston Power Squadron and is chairperson of the rules committee for the newly formed Power Squadron of Greenville. He teaches courses on safe boating. The public may attend the talk, which is free of charge.    ^

ECU Day Camp Begins June 13

Weekly sessions of East Carolina Universitys annual physical education day camp will begin June 13 and end July 8. The camp program is designed for children who have completed kindergarten but are no older than 12 years of age.

Campers may participate in day-long or half-day sessions, and may sign up for one or more weeks during the camps duration.

The weekly fee is $40 (full day), with discounts offered for two or more children in the same family and for children enrolling for more than one week. A parent who helps enroll at least 10 campers for one of the weeks may enroll his or her child for a fee of $1.

Further information about the program is available from Imogene Turner, camp director, at the ECU Department of Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Safety.

Bible School Starts Monday

Vacation Bible School at Red Oak Christian Church will be held June 13-17 from 7-9 each evening. Classes will be offered for all ages from nursery (ages 2-3) through college age and adult.

Activities will include songs, Bible study and crafts. For information regarding enrollment or assisting, call 756-4553 or 756-1483.

Child Wins Church Contest

Richonda LeCrystalline Hill was the winner of the Medley Chapel Methodist Church Baby and Kiddie Contest held recently.

She is the granddaughter of Mrs. Crady Hill of Greenville and Mr. and Mrs. K.B. Chance of Bethel. Edrick Chance placed second; Jeanette Purvis, third.

Guest Speaker Set For Sunday

The Rev. Robert Gay of New Haven, Conn., will preach at Arthurs Chapel Church Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Music will be rendered by the Arthurs Chapel Gospel Chorus.

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Ahoskie Woman Charged In Wreck

Pamela Maylor Wynn of RoiRe 1, Ahoskie, was charged with failing to reduce her speed enough to avoid an accident following investigation of a 9:29 a.m. collision Wednesday on Charles Street, 78 feet south of the 14th Street intersection.

investigators said the Wynn .car collided with a vehicle driven by Theresa Anne Holley of 86 Barnes St., causing $1,000 damage to the Wynn car and $300 damage to the Holley car.

PCC Offers New Therapy Program

Pitt Community College will offer the first two-year respiratory therapy curriculum in eastern North Carolina this fall.

The seven-quarter program comes in the wake of a 1981 manpower survey that projected an increased need of 151 percent for advanced critical care i-espiratory therapy practitioners in eastern North Carolina. Upon completion of the program students will be awarded the associate in applied science depee.

Applications for the initial class for fall quarter are now being accepted, say PCC officials. For further information write Director of Admissions, Pitt Community College, P.O Box 7007, Greenville, N C., 27834. or telephone an admissions counselor at 756-3130.

Greenville Student Graduates.

Larry Zicherman of Greenville graduated from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville today. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Zicherman of Greenville:

Pitt Schools Air Viewpoint'

Summer recreational programs in the county will be the topic of this week's Pitt County Schools Viewpoint," a radio show aired on several local stations.

Host Barry Gaskins will talk with Alice Keene, Community Schools coordinator for Pitt County.

The show is scheduled at the following times and stations: Saturday, 7:30 a.m. WITN-FM, 8:30 a.m. WGHB-AM, 8:25 a.m. WOUW-AM; Sunday, 8:30 a.m. WRQR-FM; 1:06 p.m.

WNCT-AM, and Monday. 3:05p.m. WBZQ-FM.

For further information contact Pitt County Community Schools at 752-6106, extension 249.

Choir To Be In Concert

The Mighty Travellettes from Hamilton will be in concert at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at Haddock Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.

The church will hold Sunday school at 9:45 a.m., followed by 11 a.m. morning worship with Bishop Stephen Jones and the senior choir and ushers in charge.

\

Pitt NAACP To Meet

The Pitt County Branch of the NAACP will hold its regular monthly mass meeting Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Church of Christ, Desciples of Christ, on N.C. 222, two miles west of Fountain.

The guest speaker will be Walter L Tucker, senior division officer of veteran affairs for the slate.

Jenkins Seeks Ministerial Support

Speaking before the North Carolina Annual Conference in Fayetteville this week. Dr. Leo Jenkins called on United Methodist ministers to support the effort to build the Cypress Glen Retirement Home in Greenville

A $6.3 million fund-raising campaign must be completed before construction can begin Jenkins, chairman emeritus of East Crolina University, is chairman of the fund raising effort.

Students Graduate At Mount Olive

Several area students were among 104 graduates who received associate degrees during the 28th graduation exercises at Mount Olive College.

Students receiving degrees included Chauncenette Dixon, daughter of Mrs. Mary E Dixon of Greenville; John Leo McDougald, son of Mrs. Linda McDougald of Greenville; and David T Williams, son of Walter T. Williams of Greenville.

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Pitt Community Schools Set Summer Activities

Pitt County Community Schools has announced following times, dates and locations for the 1983 summer program activities;

Summer basketball camp; The pro^am will include two camp sessions (40 participants per session) with emphasis on building individual skills and good sportsmanship. Dates: June 13-17, boys and girts grades 9-12 from 5-9 p.m. at D.H. Conley High School; Aug. 1-5, boys and girls grades 4-8,2-5 ^p.m. at A.G. Cox School and Farmville Central, wilt include activities such as a watermelon feast, swimming and trips. Registration is $25 per session and to pre-register call Community Schools at 752-6106.

Library/Media summer program: The library/media centers in six schools will be open on a part-time basis from June 27-Aug. 5. Activities include leisure reading, storytelling, arts and crafts, puppetry, music games and a variety of other activities Dates: A,G. Cox School, Mon

day/Wednesday/Friday from 1-4:30 p.m. with registration June 27; Bethel Elementary, Monday/Wednesday/Friday from 9 a.m.-l2;30 p.m. with registration June 27; H.B. Sugg School Monday/Wednesday/Friday from 12:30 p.m.-4 p.m. with registration June 27;Pactolus, Monday-Friday 1-9 p.m. and Thursday 5-7 p.m. with registration June 27; W.H. Robinson, Monday/Wednesday/Friday 9 a.m.-12;30 p.m. with registration June 27; Wellcome Middle, Monday/Wednesday/Friday 9 a.m.-l2:30 p.m. with Registration June 27.

Pitt SU^: The Pitt Stop is a mobile recreation prorgam that will provide a variety of activities throughout Pitt County. The unit will staff and equipment to provide softball, badminton, volleyball, arts and crafts, music, nature crafts, small games and pre-school activities. The Pitt Stop schedule begins June 27 and ends Aug. 5. Dates: Stokes Activity Center, Monday from 9-11:30 a.m.; Chicod, Monday from

1-3:30 p.m.; Cherry Oaks Recreation Area, Tuesday from 9-11:30 a.m.; Simpson Recreation Area, Tue^ay from 1-3:30 p.m.; Grifton Rest Home, Wednesday from 9-11:30 a.m.; A.G. Cox, Wednesday from 1-3:30 p.m.; Candlewick, Thursday from 9-11:30 a.m.; Fountain, Thursday from 1-3:30 p.m.; Friday, Bethel Elementary from 9-11:30 a.m., Friday, PactolusSchool from 1-3:30p.m.

Summer Day Camps: The Community Schools Programs sponsors a day camp at the Stokes Activity Center and Chicod School and co-sponsors camps at Ayden Elementary, A.G. Cox and Bethel Elementary, Each camp includes six one-week sessions and children ages 6-12 will be eligible to participate. The programs will run from 9 a.m.-3:30.p.m. and registration is $8. Children should bring bag lunches but kool-aid and cookies will be provided in the afternoon. Dates; session I June 27-July 1; session II July 5-8; session III, July

11-15; session IV July 18-22; session V, July 25-29; session VI Aug. 1-5. For a list of camp activities and to pre-register, call 752-6106, extension 205 or 255.

Gymnastics clinics: A series of eight gymna^ics clincis will be held during the summer with Jon Rose of East Carolina Univeristy as the director. Instructions will be given on the balance beam, the mini-trampoline and in the area of floor exercises. Dates: June 13-16, 6:30-8 p.m., G.R. Whitfield; June 20-23,6:30-8 p.m., Ayden Middle; June 27-30, 6:30-8 p.m., A.G. Cox; July 5-8,6:30-8 p.m., Wellcome Middle; July 11-14, 6:30-8 p.m., Farmville Middle; July 18-21, 6:30-8 p.m.. Bethel; July 25-28, 6:30-8 p.m., Chicod; Aug. 1-5,1-2:30 p.m., Grifton.

For further information contact Alice Keene or Barry Gaskins at the Community Schools Office, 752-6106, extension 205 or 255.

Response In Peat Project Plans

By TOM FOREMAN Jr. Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Officials of a synthetic fuels company developing a peat mining and processing operation in Washington County say they have given reasonable answers to objections by environmentalists.

We feel that we have controlled the environmental

impact of this thing extremely well, said Bob Fri, president of Energy Transition Corp. 1 feel quite comfortable about that aspect of it.

Our project represents a very useful laboratory to learn how the environmental impact of future developments can be controlled, Fri said. I would hope we could be a significant factor

in helping understand how future developments would take place - and how they wouldnt take place/

Fri said the site for Peat Methanol Associates $540 million plant would contain a 1,500-acre lake that would hold freshwater runoff that otherwise might drain into Lake Phelps and the Pungo River, saltwater bodies in

Appointees Announced To Ministerial Posts

$3,000 ART SCHOLARSHIP TO ECU... Gary Parisher of Ayden-Grifton High School puts the finishing touches on one of his works which helped him win a $3,000 art scholarship to East Carolina University. Parisher must maintain

a 3.0 average to keep his scholarship and says the honor has helped him decide what my focus of study at ECU will be. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. LG. Parisher of Grifton. (Barry Gaskins Photo)

N.C Sales Of Hard Liquor Dip

ByJOHNFLESHER

Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -For the first time, the North Carolina Alcoholic Board of Control has delivered less hard liquor to local ABC stores than during a comparable period the previous year.

Bill Hester, administrator of the state ABC, said the decline indicates that North Carolinians are drinking less liquor and fewer mixed drinks and are turning instead to beer and wine

"Its a nationwide trend. he said in an interview this week. "People are drinking beverages with a lower alcohol content. Its partly due to the economy, and all the public attention being devoted to drunken driving is having an effect."

In the first quarter of this year, 49,182 cases of liquor were shipped from the state ABC warehouse to stores throughout North Carolina. Thats 4.2 percent fewer cases than were shipped from January through April 1982, a decline equivalent to 41 truckloads, said Hester

"Its the first time in history that weve had a decrease, since 1937 when the first ABC store was opened," he said Hester said the fact that "you can buy two big jugs of wine for what it costs to get one bottle of bourbon is starting to sink in,

"Theyre drinking beer and wine," he added.

No statewide figures on the sale of beer and wine are available. But Jay Hare of the state Department of Revenue said excise tax collections dont seem to indicate a significant increase in consumption.

"Offhand, Id say the beer tax figures are running at about last years pace," he

said in a telephone interview. "Theres an increase in unfortified wine,' and fortified wine has been decreasing. But as to whether people are actually drinking more beer and wine, 1 just dont know. Hare said there are unofficial statistics comparing beer and wine excise tax collections during the first quarter of 1983 with the same period the previous year. He was reluctant to release the amounts because theyre unconfirmed, but said beer levies rose by about 1.03 percent, while unfortified wine collections rose by 1.14 percent while fortified wine collections fell by 1.6 percent.

FAYEHEVILLE - The North Carolina Conference of the United Methodist Church has been meeting here this week. Ministerial appointment changes for 1983-84 were announced.

The Greenville District changes are: Bath - Bath Church, Bath, Bethany Church, Winsteadville, and Pantego Church, Pantego, the Rev. Haywood L. Martin from Vanceboro Circuit.

Bell Arthur - Bethlehem Church, the Rev. Fred F. Dillon from Institute Church in La Grange.

Hobgood - Hobgood Church, Hobgood and Williams Chapel, northwestern Martin County, the Rev. John Olive from Burlington Circuit.

St. Mark, Kinston - the

Rev. Wilbur (f. Ormond from Mattamuskeet.

Mattamuskeet Amity Church, Bethany Church, Englehard, and Watsons Church, eastern Hyde County, the Rev. Bruce Allen from Leahs Chapel, Wake Forest.

Lebanon-Tab - Lebanon Church and Tabernacle Church, southeast of Stan-tonsburg, the Rev. Terry L. Shackleford.

Stantonsburg - Stan-tonsburg Church, the Rev.

Jesse C. Staton Sr. from Pamlico parish in Stonewell.

Stokes - Parmele Church, Stokes Church and Vernon Church, the Rev. Steve Phillippi.

Vanceboro Circuit -Chapmans Cliurch, Epworth Church and Lanes Chapel, the Rev. Richard C. Hill from director of Good Shepard Home, Lake Wac-camaw.

Asbury - Asbury Church in Washington, the Rev. Billy B. Cuthrell from Stokes.

which fishing might be threatened.

The plant will draw groundwater from three sources and discharge the resulting wastewater into the man-made lake. A statement released at Fris news conference Wednesday predicted that existing ground levels would not show a significant decline for 30 years.

The project, the first to receive money from the Synthetic Fuels Corp., will mine 15,000 acres of peat from Sites in Washington, Hyde and Tyrrell counties. It has been the target of environmentalists who have claimed government agencies have failed to consider the projects impact on coastal marshes.

Among other concerns of opponents is that the project is being constructed on wetlands, which would require project officials to file an extensive environmental review.

Fri said the Army Corps of Engineers has stated that the land cannot be considered wetlands and no such statement need be filed.

Its not as if we havent analyzed the environmental impact, he said.

(Conservationists have maintained that the 15,000

acres designated for peat harvesting are shrub bogs and thus subject to wetland regulations governing dredge and fill operations.

This project will cause irreversible damage to valuable wetlands in an estuary that supports a billion-dollar commercial and sport fishing industry, argued Jay D. Hair, executive vice president of the National Wildlife Federation.

Concentrations of mercury have also been found in the area of the project, but Fri said he doesnt believe the findings pose a hazard to wildlife or humans.

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Solar Fraction

The excise tax on beer is ,53.376 cents per gallon or $15 per 31-gallon barrel and is collected from wholesalers. The unfortified wine tax rate is 21 cents per liter and the rate for fortified wine is 24 cents per liter.

The solar fraction for this area Wednesday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 52. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 52 percent of your hot water needs.

Recycling Plays Packaging Role

NEW YORK lAPl -Though most consumers probably dont realize it, nearly half of the grocery and household items that come in paper cartons are packaged in recycled paperboard.

The American Paper Institute says this includes products ranging from cereals and instant soups to pet foods and facial tissues. All paper egg cartons, for instance, are made from recycled paperboard.

The key raw material in recycled paperboard is clean waste paper. Along with saving consumers money, recycling this material keeps it from being dumped into overcrowded landfills. Every ton of recycled paper saves three cubic yards of landfill space.

The City Council recently enacted an ordinance prohibiting trucks from traveling on certain streets or parts of streets in the city. For more information, call the City Engineering Department at 752-4137.

PUBLIC NOTICE COUNTY OF PITT BUDGET HEARING

The Public will take notice that the proposed budget tor the fiscal year, 1983-84, has been tiled with the Pitt County Board ot Commissioners and is available tor public inspection in the office of the Clerk to the Pitt County Board ot Commissioners, Finance Office, in the Pitt County Office Building at 1717 West Fifth Street, and a copy is on file at Sheppard Memorial Library, 530 Evans Street, Greenville, North Carolina, and the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce.

A Public Hearing on the proposed budget will be held on Monday, the 20th day of June 1983, in the County Commissioners Auditorium, second floor of the Pitt County Office Building at 7:00 p.m. at 1717 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27834.

A summary of the budget is as follows:

CAPITAL RESERVE FUNDS

QMMALFUND

Less transfers to other funds (school & etc. Net Total General Fund

HEALTH DEPARTMENT

$17,757,963.65 :12.?61.318.76 $ 4,996.644.88

$ 808,000.00

SOCIAL SERVICES DEPARTMENT

MgitJAL HEALTH CENTER

BEBT RETIREMENT

soLfpwlSS

NDS

eBiNi

IMDUSTRIAt DEVELOPMFNT

REVENUE SHARING FUNDS apltal Fund-

Capital Equipment Cost School - Capital Outlay -    '

City Schools County Schools

$ 148,483.10

$ 1,405,519.00 S 4.454,396.32 S 2.168,971.00 S 1,282.259.65 S 168,658.00 $    567,327.00

$    28,143.93

$    98,184.00

S 1.294.430.00

S 126.086.00

329,391.90

6M-469.00

REVALUATION RESERVE

S 1.294,430.00

FACIUTIE8 Less tr

FEES FUND

ransfer to Capital Fund

CflUNTYflARAQE

50.000.00 125.000.00

90.000.00

!60d.00

EDUCATION

Pitt Community College

$    234.862.00

County Schools-Current Expense County Schools-Capital Outlay Greenville City Schools-Current Expense Greenville City Schools-Capltal Outlay Schools-Severe i Profound ^

591,878.00

6.723,859.00

690.469.56

3,157,375.56

359,391.90

Autistic Classes

56,810.24

Total County recommended budget all sources Less interfund transfers Net County recommended budget

$41,898,498.81

At the Hearing, oral and written comments will be received from any interested citizens.

Charles P. Qasidns, Chairman  _ Pitt    County    Board    of    Commisaloners

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The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C -Thursday, June9,19B3-21

REJECT MIRACLE CLAIM - A statue of a weeping madonna that drew thousands to a rural church in Thornton, Calif, has been described by diocesan spokesmen as not seeming to be the miracle its claimed to be. (AP Laserphoto)

Priests Reject Miracle Claim

STOCKTON, Calif. lAP) - Angry believers denounced a panel of priests as "a bunch of devils" after the clergymen ruled that a weeping Madonna in a rural Roman Catholic church is probably a hoax, not a miracle.

One woman, LaVerne Pitta, burst into tears when the findings were announced Wednesday by the Diocese of Stockton.

Manuel Pitta protested that these investigators are not investigators. They are a bunch of devils. How can they do this'

And Antonio Usuna, whose wife says she was cured of asthma after praying to the statue of the Virgin Mary, dismissed the diocesan report, saying, ! believe in it (the statue).

Reports that the 60-pound statue sheds real tears and can move as far as 30 feet from its niche in Mater Ecclesias Mission Church in Thornton began circulating two years ago.

Church attendance has tripled since then, with as many as 600 people visiting each week.

Last year, the diocese named a commission to study the reports. In announcing the panels findings. Bishop Roger M. Mahony said the events connected with the statue "do not meet the criteria for an authenticated appearance of Mary, the mother of Jesus Christ

The statue may have been moved by someone, and the tears may have been applied, he said.

"No one has ever reported actually seeing the tears flow from the eVes of the statue, he said. "Rather, it was reported that at a given time, liquid was on the face f the statue.

.Mahony? said one witness reported touching the liquid, which was oily and sticky, and "certainly not the texture or consistency of human tears.

Miracles validated by the Roman Catholic Church, he said, always have been accompanied by a clear, important message. But in this case, "there is no report of any clear and important message in the context of Christs work of salvation, he said.

One could rightfully question, therefore, the reason for the divine or supernatural phenomena alleged to have taken place, the bishop said.

Mater Ecclesias is an outpost of St. Annes Catholic Church in Lodi. It should be kept as a parish mission rather than a shrine. said the Rev. Harmon Skillin, pastor of St. Annes.

"We will discourage pilgrimages to the church by, among other things, reserving the major area of the church for local people at Sunday morning Mass, he said.

Skillin also said some of the embellishments around the statue will be removed to restore the prominence of the altar.

Some people who learned of the ruling while in the church Wednesday said their bel ief remained unshaken.

' Many believers think the tears are connected with the reported appearance of the Virgin Mary to three children at Fatima, Portugal, on May 13,1917,

"When this Virgin appeared to the kids in Portugal, they didnt believe them, Usuna said. They were practically tortured.

"These things usually appear to the humble and low-income, the poor, he added. These things are not for everybody.

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MOUNTAIN VIEW. Calif. (AP) - The Pioneer 10 spacecraft will cross the orbit of Neptune on Monday and become the first man-made object to leave the solar system, scientists say.

The unmanned probe was functioning normally when checked Wednesday, according to Pete Waller, a spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Ad-minstration at the Ames Research Center.

The package of 11 instruments launched in March 1972 will be more than 2.8 million miles from Earth when it crosses the orbit, about 3.75 million miles from Neptune.

Pioneer "will cross Neptunes orbit and will be outside all the known planets and therefore outside the solar system at 8 a.m. EDT Monday, Waller said.

"And it will become the first time in human history that any man-made artifact has left the solar system, he said.

Although Pluto is the ninth and last planet in the solar system, it is currently in the

eighth position from the sun because of its tilted, elliptical orbit.

Scientists centered the Pioneer lOs radio antenna Wednesday with commands taking 44 hours to reach their mark because of the distance the sisals had to travel. Waller said.

As it leaves the solar system, the spacecraft will take a picture of a star, possibly Altair, which is a fast spinner nine times brighter than our sun, he said.

"The picture will have no significance except that it was'shot 2.8 billion miles away, the greatest distance away from the Earth a picture has ever been taken, Waller added. He said the picture might be released Monday

Streaking at more than 33,000 mph or 750,000 miles per day. Pioneer 10 has been exploring the outer solar atmosphere, trying to confirm whether there is a jOth planet or a dark star that might account for deviations in the orbits of Uranus and Neptune.

By MIKE SHANAHAN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - A 6-month-old policy of allowing senators to earn unlimited outside income from speeches and similar sources is under attack by critics who say the practice is unfair and open to abuse This honorarium thing is out of control, said Sen Henry Jackson, D-Wash The Senate arranged to begin debate late today on a spending bill for the last few months of fiscal 1983. and Jackson planned to attach an amendment sharply curtail ing income from speeches and other similar sources.

The supplemental appropriations bill includes additional funds to keep a number of government agencies - including the Pentagon - operating through Sept 30 Congressional sources said senior advisers to President Reagan have advised him to veto the legislation because it includes more in social programs and less in mili tary spending than the administration wants.

Sen. Mark Hatfield, R Ore., the chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, was reportedly angered over the veto threat because he believes that unlike other spending measures likely to clear Congress later this year, the supplemental bill varies in only minor

ways from what Reagan wants

"There are a few senators taken by surprise, a few who are distressed (by the threat), said Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee.

It was also possible that the measure might become the platform for floor fights over efforts to kill a new law requiring withholding of dividends and interest from stocks and other investments and Democratic efforts to cap a 10 percent income tax cut that takes effect July 1 Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said Democrats seeking to cap the tax cut were "gasping to save the lives of their favorite spend ing programs."

Regan said "the liberals are back m their favorite disguise as Mr. Moneybags' with a budget calling for more domestic spending and higher taxes.

On the honorarium issue, Jackson said in an interview that he has broad support among the Senates 46 Dem ocrats for making their pay and limitations oh outside income the same as the House

The .54 Republican senators are divided on the issue, according to GOP sources who spoke on condition that they not be quoted Last December, the Demo crat-controlled House voted itself an $8,238 pay increase

to $68,900, and retained a 30 percent limit on outside income.

The Senate, meanwhile, denied itself the pay increase, but lifted the ceiling on allowable income from speeches, magazine articles and other similar sources That left the 100 senators with annual incomes of $60.662. and for the first time since the early days of the Republic, House members ami senators are receiving different rates of pay With his two amendments, Jackson planned to give the Senate the same pay in crease received by the House, along with the 30 percent limit on fees for speeches Senators willing to give up the pay raise would be allowed to retain unlimited income from giving spetThes Although there is a limit of $2.000 per spwch, current rules allow senators, who are generally much better known than House members, to earn far more than their government salaries, just by accepting a large number of speaking invitations A number of senators, in required public disclosure forms, have recently re ported earning more than $10(1,000 annually from speeches to various organi /ations, many of them with inter('sts pending in (on gress

Those who support limiting outside income say there is potential for abuse by senators who could speak to one or more small groups of lobbyists, and receive $2,000 per appearance, without really giving a formal speech.

Because of a general pay increase for federal workers, senior military officers, many congressional staff workers and thousands of civilian federal employees are now earning more in salaries than senators

"We are confronted with an absurdity, said Jackson, who gives all of his outside earnings to charity.

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The LegislatureSeeks To Close N. C. Liability Insurance Loophole

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Thousands of North Carolina drivers have no automobile liability insurance, and current law does little to change the situation, says an influential state senator.

Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecldenburg, is pushing legislation that would close what he says is a gigantic loophole enabling people to evade state-mandated insurance coverage. The bill was approved Wednesday by the Senate Finance Committee.

Lawing told the panel he had thought that under existing law a driver without insurance coverage even for one hour automatically lost his re^stration for 30 days and that even the governor couldnt get it back before then.

Actually, however, a person who lets his policy lapse but renews it within 15 days can avoid losing his license plate simply by paying a $25 fee. People who go without insurance for longer periods must pay a $60 fee but face no threat of registration suspension.

Lawing said he learned of the loophole about six weeks ago. He said he had spoken with 80 percent of the senators and that they were equally ignorant of it.

Although its the insurance companys responsibility to notify the state Department of Motor Vehicles when a policy lapses, it can take weeks or months for the department to contact the driver, said R.V. Wilkins, department commissioner.

That means a person could conceivably drive for months with no insurance, said Lawing. "I was appalled when I learned of this.... It gets down to the basic judgment call of whether we want to have compulsory insurance or not.

Wilkins told the finance committee that about 22,000 cars currently are being operated without insurance.

Under Lawings bill, a driver who allows his insurance policy to lapse would forfeit his cars registration for 30 days. To get it restored, he would have to pay a $50 fee.

People who dont renew their coverage within 15 days would have their license plates revoked by a DMV officer. Restoration would cost $100.

Lawing said his bill could be expected to reduce the problem of lapsed policies by about 50 percent over a couple of years. But he said total elimination probably could never be achieved.

You put a man to walking for 30 days and make him pay $100, and youll get his attention. he said.

The bill must pass the Senate Appropriations Committee before reaching the floor.

In other legislative action:

Education Board

The chairman of a state House committee broke a tie to kill

a proposed constitutional amendment calling for election of the state Board of Education, now an appointed group.

But members of the House Constitutkmal Amendments Committee said they would write a minority report. If the House approves the minority report, the constitutional amendment could be considered on the floor despite the committees rejection.

The amendment stems from a Legislative Research Commission study on education. Its sponsor, R^. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, was one of the c(Khairman of the study group.

We have institutionalized conflict in R-12 (kindergartoi through 12th grade) through the structure of governance, Mavretic said. We are sending mixed signals to the citizenry. It think it costs us money to be organized the way we are.

Under the proposed amendment;

- The board would be enlarged from. 13 to 17 members and would add the chairman of the University of North Carolina Board of Governors, chairman of the state Board of Community Colleges. The presidents of the UNC system and community college system would be non-voting members.

- Board members would serve for four instead of eight years with the terms overlapping.

- Legislators, state employees and spouses of the two would be ineligible to serve on the board.

- The board would select a state superintendent instead of allowing the public to elect one.

- Board members wo^d be nominated by their local school system and one nominee per county would be selected by county commissioners. The Legislature would choose one person from each congressional district.

Rep. Bertha Holt, D-Alamance, was forced to break a 6-6 tie to reject the proposed amendmment.

Gene Causby of the North Carolina School Boards Association said his group supports the change because the current system is not working.

We now have about a three-headed monster, Causby said. If and when'the system works it is because of personalities and not because of the system. This is too important to be left to personalities.

Larry Poore, Gov. Jim Hunts education advisor, said Hunt believes he is held accountable for public education in the state and so he should be able to appoint board members.

Education Systems

A House-Senate Appropriations Committee sent to subcommittee a bill requiring Directory systems consolidate into one per county. Already 70 of the states 100 counties have one school system.

Sen. Jim Edwards, D-Caldwell, the bills sponsor, suggested the subcommittee consider calling for a study on consolidation because legislators dont have enough statistics to deal with the problem now.

The bill was sent to subcommittee after it encountered serious objections from both House and Senate members.

Headlights

The Senate Finance Committee gave a favorable report to a bill that would require motorists to turn on their headlights when their windshield wipers are on due to bad weather.

Rep. Margaret Hayden, D-Alleghany, said many times its difficult to see oncoming vehicles when its rainy and foggy. Twenty-three percent of all accidents occur in rain or snow, she said.

Violators of the law would be fined $10.

Industrial Recruitment

A controversial bill that would allow local government to spend property tax revenues on industrial recruitment was approved by the Senate Finance Committee.

The bill sparked a dispute between top House and Senate members last month. The House, which passed it after lengthy debate, asked that it be returned from the Senate for consideration of a propos^ amendment. The Senate, at the urging of Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, refused.

In retaliation, the House rescinded approval of several Senate bills and postponed consideration of others for a week.

Opponents of the bill in the House said it would spark a bidding war for industry between little and big counties. But sponsor Rep. Dan Lilley, D-Lenoir, said his county needed to use tax funds to attract industry and create jobs.

The bill sailed through the Senate Finance Committee without debate.

ROBOT WONT SPEAK - North Miami (Fla.) Senior High salutatorian Ming-Hang Ho hoped his custom-modified educational robot could deliver his commencement speech, but Principal Nicholas Borota said no. Ho, who spoke no English four years ago, will enter Brown Universitys seven-year medical program in September. He plans to take the robot to guard the fraternity. (AP Laserphoto)

Election Laws

The Senate Election Laws Committee killed two bills sponsored by Sen. Cass Ballenger, R-Catawba. The first would have required that any officeholder seeking another position resign at the time he files for the new office.

Ballenger, an unannounced candidate for ^vemor in 1984, said under the bill he would have to resign his Senate seat in order to run. Other probable gubenatorial candidates such as Attorney General Rufus Edmisten and Insurance Commissioner John Ingram also would have to resign their current jobs, said Ballenger.

The other bill was to allow people who vote a straight party ticket to support individual candidates from the other party.

During the 1982 election. Republican Bill Hendon, who lost his congressional seat narrowly to Rep. James M. Clarke, D-N.C., comiJlained that many Democrats had voted a straight ticket but also had cast a vote for him. But under North Carolina policy, all such votes were counted for Clarke because a strai^t ticket vote takes precedence.

Motions to kill the two bills were cast by Sen. Russell

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FORT BRAGG, N.C. (AP) - One soldier was killed and three others wounded in an explosion on an anti-tank firing range while they were setting up a target, a Fort Bragg spokesman says.

The apparent dud, left over from an earlier practice, exploded Wednesday, said spokesman Capt. Bill OConnell. Two soldiers were hospitalized and a third was treated and released from Womack Army Community Hospital, he said.

On Monday, at Fort Bliss near El Paso, Texas, 24 recruits and an instructor were injured by shrapnel when an anti-tank rocket exploded on a firing range during training.

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STRASBOURG, France (AP) - The European Parliament has endorsed Greenlands withdrawal from the European Community, and recommends the Danish island province be given special trade status.

Walker, D-Rando^, chairman of the state Democratic Party.

Surprise, surprise, said Ballenger.

Gaaobol

A bill that would grant gasobol a partial exemption to the state gasoline tax was iqiproved by the Soiate Finance Committee.

The bill was endorsed by former U.S. Soi. Robert Morgan, who appeared on behalf of Diversified Fuels Inc., of Wilson.

Gasohol is a mixture of 90 percmit gas^ and 10 percoit ethanol, which is made from corn. The bill would apply only to gasohol made from North Carolina corn and manufactured within the state.

Bechtel Corp. plans to construct a plant for the purpose in Johnston County, said Smi. Marshall Rauch, D-Gaston.

Board Selection

A bill that would force Washington Countys education board to accept the recommendation of the local Democratic Party regarding appointments to the board was approved by the ^nate State Government Committee.

Over 30 counties already are governed by a similar requirement.

High-Tech Jobs

The Senate State Government Conunittee approved a bill that would create a N.C.. Technological Development Authority, which in turn would support devel(^ment of high-technology projects.

The propc^ authority would oversee a program with one or more incubator facilities where projects could be developed. Grants for the projects not to exceed $50,000 per year also would be available, as would a continuing appropriation for the existing N.C. Biotechnology Center.

Sen. Robert Jordan, D-Montgomery, said North Carolina needed to keep up with other states which are pumping millions of ctollars into high-technology research and development

It has been proven that... you can be very successful in creating new jobs by helping p^Ie develop new ideas, said Jordan.

$113,556 a year over ttie next biennium to counties to pay for trai^rting juveiles to the facilities. She said the sites had not been cbbsen, but added that Burke, Wayne, Lenoir and Pitt counties were being considered.

Tbere are certain areas of the state that have no facilities for the plan (to move juviiles), Mrs. Tennille said. The two units would be located in rural areas in the northeast and western part of the state. *

The balance of the funds would be used to renovate existing state-owned facilities and operate the prison units, she said.

The committee also approved a bill to let the N.C Paroles Commission omsider i^ietber a prisoner sentenced before the 1981 Fair Sentencing Act deserves parole consideration based on subsequent reductions in the penalties for his crime.

Commission officials said the bill would be hard to administer and mi^t lead to lawsuits by prisoners who do not get eariy paroles, but Rep. Joe Hackney, DOrange, said it should only be used in cases manifestly clear. >

Hackney also pushed through a bill that was nearly killed on the House floor. The bill, which originally mandated that some non-violent felons be given community service instead of prison terms, has been amended to suggest that judges consider such an (^tion.

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Headlights

The Senate Finance Committee gave a favorable report to a bill that would require motorists to turn on their headli^ts wwhen their windshield wipers are on due to bad weather.

Rep. Margaret Hayden, D-Alleghany, said many times its difficult to see oncoming vehicles when its rainy and foggy. Twenty-three percent of all accidents occur in rain or snow, she said.

Industrial Recruitment A bill that would allow local government to ^nd property tax revenues on industrial recruitment was approved by the Senate Finance Committee.    

The bill sparked a dispute between top House and Senate members last month. The House, which passed it after lengthy debate, asked that it be returned from the Senate for consideration of a proposed amendment. The Senate, at the urging of Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, refused.

In retaliation, the House rescinded approval of several Senate bills and postponed consideration of others for a week.

Opponents of the bill in the House said it would spark a bidding war for industry between little and big counties. But sponsor Rep. Dan Lilley, D-Lenoir, said his county needed to use tax funds to attract industry and create jobs.

Corrections

The House Corrections Committee approved a bill to postpone the date when North Carolina juvenile offenders must be removed from adult prisons, paving the way for a $1.2 million project to open two juvenile prison facilities.

Rep. Margaret Tennille, D-Forsyth, said the money approved Tuesday by appropriations leaders would provide

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Actor Found Stardom In A TV Commercial

ByEUSSAMcCRARY Associated Press Writer When officials of Pine State Creamery Co. of Raleigh began advertising their products through a country-bumpkin character named Ernest Worrell, they didnt know if Ernest would sell Pine State milk. They just knew Ernest was funny.

A year and a half later. Pine State officials are smiling at the overwhelming response to their television campaign. And the Nashville, Term., advertising firm that created the Ernest series is selling the idea to dairies all over the country.

The public just loves the Ernest ads, said Pine State President Ben Kilgore. Were just overwhelmed

with the public awareness of our name that the ads have brought about.

We get letters, phone calls and comments from people every day, saying how much they like the commercials, he said. Its like Ernest has a fan club. Kilgore said he doesnt know if the ads have boosted sales but said. When something this popular comes along, you feel like it really helps.

Kilgore declined to say how much the company spent on the promotion.

Pine State daity products are marketed in Eastern North Carolina.

The television ads feature Ernest, a slow-talking character wearing a t-shirt, denim vest and a khaki hat.

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wlM) drops in on his next-door neighbor, Vera. The commercials were filmed throu^ a fish-eye camera lens and Vems face is distorted. He never talks in the ads.

Ernest is kind of a country guy, obnoxious but loveable, who bothers his neighbor who really doesnt much like him, said Carla Hall of Carden and Cheiry Inc., a Nashville advertising company that owns the rights to the Ernest character. 1 think his big appeal is that everybody has some Ernest in them or they have known somebody like Ernest. They identify with him.

Ernest is played by professional actor Jim Varney of Nashville.

Pine State was the first company to use the Ernest ads in December 1981. Since then, Carden and Cheiry filmed commercials using Ernest for nine other dairies from Michigan to Oklahoma.

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6 30 ABCNevrs

7 :00 Sanford &

7 30 Who Loves 8:00 Benson 8:30 At Ease

9 00 Movie II 00 Action News II 30 NIghtline 12:30 StarskyA 1:30 An Evening 2 :30 Early Edition

By VERNON SCOTT

UPl Hollywood Reporter

HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Does marriage diminish the sexuality quotient of a movie glamour girl or male hunk?

Its a rhetorical question, to be sure, and probably of no great sociological consequence. But the answer does illuminate changes in Hollywood lifstyles over the years.

In the very old days of the film colony, during the teens and 20s and even into the 30s, many a glamour girl lost her aura of virginal d^irability when she took a husband, losing in the process her box-office allure as well as, one supposes, her innocence.

Some actors and actresses were secretly married, afraid of losing their following among fans if the news ever came out. Francis X. Bushman was one such.

In many cases, stars refused to acknowledge their children, fearful that parenthood would detract from their standing as sex symbols.

Today, in a society which Hollywood helped liberate, it appears the marital status of sex symbols, male or female, matters not a whit to those given to mooning over screen idols.

Availability, then, of a sex symbol is not a serious consideration to the smitten fan to begin with. People probably are more comfortable with their dreams than reality when it comes to sex symbols.

Perhaps because movie gods and goddesses are so remote from the reality of most peoples lives their marital status is immaterial

CBS Spillane SeriesOrdered

HOLLYWOOD (UPl) -CBS-TV has ordered eight one-hour episodes of Mickey Spillane shows for the 1983-84 season from Jay Bernstein Productions and Columbia Pictures Television.

The network opted for the tough-guy Mike Hammer series following the success of two Spillane TV movies, Margin for Murder and Murder Me, Murder You, which were telecast last season.

The series, still untitled, will be geared for an adult audience and telecast during late evening hours Stacy Keach will star as streetwise detective Hammer.

and inconsequential.

Certainly, matrimony has not coded male ardor for Bo Derek. Nor has Raquel Welch suffered the disaffection of the multitudes since taking a husband.

Men, in would seem, lose none of their illusions, nor fantasies, simply because a dream girl takes a mate. It is natural to assume that marriage is not what the average male has in mind when he looks at a sex symbol anyhow.

Neither are women all that discriminating when it comes to mooning over male dreamboats.

Tom Selleck, Warren Beatty, Clint Eastwood and Burt Reynolds are, its true,

single, unattached and high on the list of feminine fantasies.

But also rated as heart-throbs among the female population are such battle-scarred maiTKd veterans as Paul Newman, Robert Red-ford and Sylvester Stallone.

The highly subjective question.of marriage and sex symbolism was put squarely to Barbara Carrera, the exotic Nicarapan beauty who was married a few weeks a^ to Nicholas Navroleon, scion of a Greek shipping family.

Barbara, who recently co-starred in Never Say Never Again, which restores Sean Connery to the role of James Bond, is a

legitmate^'sex^dess.

Before turning to acting, the dark-haired, dark-eyed Miss Carrera was a top model whose sensuality brought her to the attention of Hollywood producers. They gilded the lily by casting her in sexy, glamorous roles.

Last year Barbara appeared in a Playboy photographic layout, something of a confirmation rite of passage into the pantheon of authentic sex symbols.

Observed objectively, Barbara clearly does not appear to be any less beautiful, sensuous or desirable since her April marriage. She does, in fact, look more radiant than ever

She is, naturally, less available and, at least for the nonce, disinterested in flirtations and other ploys more commonplace in single women than in newlyweds

Barbara, whose smile rarely left her lovely face during the course of a leisurely lunch in the Polo Ixjunge, confirms the opinion that marriage these days has no affect whatever on the popularity of sex symbols

Elizabeth Taylor cer tainly didnt suffer any loss of popularity or sexuality through her marriages," Barbara said. "And Marilyn Monroe was a sex symbol all

her life whether she was married or single.

In fact, their marriages made them more Interesting. Images change as people grow and develop. It would be boring if actors and actresses stayed the same year after year.

We dont create our own images anyway. The public does and usually it sticks, no matter if you are married or single. Personally, I think whatever image I have will improve now that 1 am married

Mavbe.

264PUYHOUSE

INDOOR THEATRE

8 MUm WMt 01 OrMnvWc OnU.S.Z64(FirmvlHwy)

STARTS TODAY Bin

IN MINISERIES - Charlton Heston and Wayne Rodgers perform for the cameras during filming for the miniseries Chiefs, which is being shot in Chester, South Carolina. The television drama is being made for CBS. (AP Laserphoto)

Jrui 11

theatres H

SUMMER FUN SHOWS TICKETS NOW ON SALE

BLUE THUNDER"

1:00-3;05-5:10-7:15-9;20-R

ALONE IN THE DARK" 1;45-3:35-5:25-7;i5-9:05-R

FLASH DANCE

1;55-3;4V5:35-7:25-9:15-R

SPACEHUNTER "3D 2:30-4:10-5:50-7;30-9:10-PG

JOHN C. HOLMES A m. SlarnnQ LISA DE LEEUW CODY NICOLE ADULTS    (    1    I

ONLY

7M-0S48 Doors Opon khowtlme 6:00    5:45

COOL COMFORT NEW YORK (AP) -Americans hate to give up their comfort, a natiownide survey shows. ^

More than 60 percent of individuals polled by Honeywells Energy Management Information Center reported using their air conditioners more in the past year and feel it would be difficult to cut back on the use on this appliance to save energy.

AydwiHlgliwty 7810813 Utl Osyl-Call For Shotvtlmot High Road To China po

Starts Frldavl

The Entity -r-

AIL SkATS    CNnS

ItH All TIKIS CnUO PARK ONLY TODAY!

BREATHLESS^ 7:00-9:00 (R)

IT S 22 YEARS LATER. AND NORMAN BATES IS COMING HOME.

isna

ANTHONYI PERKINS

A UNIVERSAL [wl OAK PICTURE U3|

SHOWS DAILY 3-5-7-9

plaza kJ-FKHJ cinema P2"3

PITT-PIAZA SHOPPING CENTER

SORRY NO BARGAIN MATINEE S&E ADMIT ONE OR GUEST TICKETS

THEATRE WILL BE CLEARED AFTER EACH SHOW

ajn'AR.WARra.

RETURN OF TOE

JEDI

PG

SHOWS

DAILY

2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30

STEVE MARTIN IS

3:30-5:20-7:10-9:00 (R)

SOLI DATED EATRES

:ADULTS $2.00 TIL 5:30

CHILDREN

ANYTIME

 "'helo^A

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BUCCANEER MOVIES

751-3307 Graanvllla Squara Shopping Cantar

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MUM UA (RS

1:00

3:05

5:10

7:15

0:25

EXPOSED LAST DAY!

1 10.3 10. 5 10, 7 10, 8 10

STARTS TOMORROW ' OCTOPUSSY

DR. DETROIT LAST DAY!    no

STARTS TOMORROW! TICKLED PINK IN 3-D

HELD OVER! 2ND BIG WEEK

1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:15, 9:25

AdifFerentkind of game.

MbRGAMS

ml

STARTS

TOMORROW

2:00,4:30, 7:00,9:30

James BoikTs afl tme acton high.

WITH MAUD ADAMS

ALBERT R BROCCOLI piesenis

ROGER IVfOORE

s IAN FLEMING S JAMES BOND 007*

IIM ttW lOK m UC1W Bnm (Ml RDi (WT IMIi

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STARTS TOMORROW!

EXCLUSIVE! FIRST RUN!

THE FIRST ADULT MOVIE IN 3-D!

TICKLED PINK

IN

3-D

1:20

3:20

5:20

7:20

9:20

(R)

SEASON TICKETS ARE NOW ON SALE FOR OUR CHILDRENS SUMMER SERIES ALL 8 MOVIES $3.00. CALL 756-5235

STARTS

JUNE24TH

PORKYSII





Croaswoni By Eugnu Sheffer

ACROSS

1 Seaweed 5 Sprite 8 Naturalist John 12 On-(equal)

Sticky stuff 14 inLove with Amy 51 Actor Ely Shore 52 Not taped movement 53 Unites 16 Slippery 54 Directors

37 Infallibly

46 Peruse 41 Singer

Holmes

45 Bat abode

47 Epoch

46 Finished 50 Adams

son

one

17 Not new

WWUdcat

20 want for...

22 like some dictionaries

26 Dodge

29 Poke fun at

30 Thumbs down vote

31 Pine product

32 Vanangians

33 Plateau

34 Campaigned

35 Carpentry need

36 Dim

domain 55 Different

DOWN

1 Green Hornets aide

2 Beowulf, for one

3 Stow cargo

4 Overture

5 -Kick Out of You

6 One Stooge

7 Famed submarine

8 Casting shape

9 Anonymous, perhaps

Avg. solution time: 26 min.

n

10 Diamond, to a thief

11 Scarlet Singleton 21 Womens-

23 Earthy color

24 Simplicity 25Twosne 26 Neutral

color 27Banktrans-. acti<H)

28 Dispirited

32 -of the Lost Ark

33 Streamer-covered staff

35 Madrid Mrs.

36 Winter ailment

38 Film units

39 Johnsons

successor 42 Cruet 43Gunsthe

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

engine

44 Sequoia, e.g.

45 Corvine cry

46 Honest-48 Future fish

CRYPTOQUn    6-9

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Yesterdays Cryptoquip - A VENTUROUS AUTO RACER IS DRIVEN TO SUCCEED.

TodaysCYyptoquipclue: FequalsK.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substituon cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

IVU King Features Syndic<lc. Int

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY, JUNE 10,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES: The early part of the day is favorable for artistic endeavors. Avoid arguments or comments pertaining to associations of a Usual or routine nature. Keep on an even keel.

ARIES iMar 21 to Apr. 19) Contact newcomers whose sense of humor is similar to yours and have a good time together. Do not drive recklessly.

TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) Get your home in order and bring more harmony into it for the future. Steer clear of a family argument. Appreciate kin.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Talking recreation over with regular partners can bring better understanding. Go after your personal aims with energy.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) You have an opportunity to make improvements with the assistance of a co-worker Don't be extravagant.

LEO (July 22 to Aug 21) Join with outside partners and friends and make new plans for the future. Avoid a group meeting which will upset you.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Plan how you can be more consistent where your loved one is concerned. In this way, you will increase your happiness together.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Avoid people who think they can get away with taking advantage of you. Enjoy personal happiness this evening.

SCORilO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) Consult a financial expert and learn how to handle your responsibilities better. Take no risks with business associates.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Sit down and try to resolve differences with a co-worker. Look at it objectively and handle it intelligently.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) The work ahead of you is complicated so study it well before tackling it. Do whatever will relax you tonight.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Make sure you do nothing that could test the patience of your loved one. Show that you are devoted and faithful.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Make sure that you join with kin in civic work. Be cooperative for best results. Take a fellow worker along.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be enthusiastic and ready to do things, have a lovely smile and be very popular Be encouraging. Life flows smoothly at school, but upon reaching middle age, may become too businesslike and demanding. Teach patience.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate. Inc.

Plastic Shipping Pallets Valued

PUINFIELD. Ohio (API - The faster and more frequently parts pour into automaking plants, the more valuable plastic shipping pallets become.

Detroit is moving toward the Japanese system of fast and frequent shipment of subassemblies into auto plants, instead of stockpiling

parts in the plants. This saves money for the auto makers, but causes a tremendous increase in handling and movement of parts, Jeco Plastic Products says. This means that long-life plastic shipping pallets become ecnonomical even though they may cost three times as much as wooden pallets.

PEANUTS

A Distant Traveler

On March 2,1972, the tiny space probe called Pioneer 10 was launched on an exploratory trip to Jupiter. Pioneer 10 cost just $20 million to build, and scientists hoped it woiild survive the 21 month trip to the largest planet in our solar system. The probe has done far better than anyone could have expected. Today it is scheduled to become the first man-made object to leave our solar system and go into deep space. Pioneer 10 is still sending radio signals back to Earth, and scientists expect to keep receiving those signals for another 10 to I.'i years. NASA officials believe the probe could survive for another 100 billion years, outliving not only its creators but the .solar .system itself.

1)0 YOU KNOWAt what speed do radio signals travel?

WEDNESDAYS ANSWER-Margaret Thatcher leads Britain's Conservative Party.

VKC, Im( i<m;i

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

)1983 Tribune Company Syndicate. Inc

DUMMYS HIDDEN POWER

Both vulnerable. West deals. NORTH

1032 ^ 10783 0 865

1096

EAST

Void ^K542

0 J10943

J853

WEST

K87 J98

0 AK72

K72

SOUTH

AQJ9654 ^ AQ

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The bidding:

West North East South

1 0 Pass 2 0 Dble Pass 2 Pass 4 Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: King of 0.

the nine of clubs to take the heart finesse. So East must duck, but declarer is in dum my to take the heart finesse - making four odd.

Let's back up a bit. Suppose West allows declarer to win the queen of clubs. What then?

Now declarer needs only one finesse for his contract. He can enter dummy with the ten of trumps to take the heart finesse, and he will lose a trick in each suit except hearts, no more.

So congratulations if you elected to declare. Wed like to have you on our side in our next team match. ,

Heres an opportunity to test your technique. Would you rather play or defend four spades?

We do not approve of the bidding. East should show his fourcard heart suit rather than raise diamonds. How ever, that would not have changed the final contract.

It seems that declarer can get to dummy only once because of the poor trump break. He ruffs the second diamond and can enter dum my with the trump ten sooner or later. Best is to lead the ten of clubs, but East doesn't cover and declarer will end up losing a trick in each suit.

But look what happens if, at trick three, declarer leads the club queen from'hand. If West takes the king, his safest exit is a trump. Dum my wins and declarer leads the ten of clubs. If East covers, declarer wins and gets back to the table with

HOT SPRINGS. Ark. (AP) - It takes an average of 3,500 years for rain to filter through earth and rock formations before it becomes bottled water near Hot Springs National Park, according to geologists at the University of Arkansas.

The finding was disclosed by Dr. Leslie E. Mack, director of the Water Resources Center, and Dr. Kenneth F. Steel, a geology professor, following a decade of research in Arkansas Ouachita Mountains.

The scientists said when rain water falls in the area it sinks through the earths rock formations, through shale, sandstone and limestone, which filter and provide unique chemical properties to the water before it emerges from the Mountain Valley spring near the park.

I 60TAC"INMATH. A *C" IN MISTORV, A "C" IN SPELLING..,

SARCASM DOES NOT BECOME VOU, MA'AM!

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WHAT^GEXiiAL

Bottled Water 3,500 Years Old

PHANTOM

FRANK & ERNEST

I TftOUSHrYoU f/KiP guyiN6 0 o o o 0 xHi5 cap Woui-P Put AN En^> lb

HEY, I PIPNT i*AY / WHICH CNP, PIP X ?

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HEKE'5 IW LATEST PI22A cRE/mow... PEANUT BurmR-GOACAIVIOLE!

SHOE

5BaTl~^ N*iI'MBN6oi;t15W

M1II6W! IMKWlINefimilONIW

smenctnmw^.

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BASSET WITH A BEAT - Basaet hound puppy Nastassja appears to be a pretty hip canine wearing her owners headphones and listening to a stereo tape player near her home in Hong Kong. Nastassja doesnt get to listen to the latest hits, but to the voice of her owner, so that she will be accustomed to thesoundofhis voice. (APLaaeipboto)





The Daily Relector, Greenville, N .C.-Thursday, June 9,1983-2S

MONEY

InYottr

Pocket!

,011 '    nic)fn-y

r'l    tt'nb    t'ial

ar(> loyinu a'ound thi nuosf iiffii', that yOLi no lonqer ise

Our Family Rates

3 Lines

4 Days

M.OO

Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellaneous For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Per Ad With Sale Value Of S200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Ads Cash With Order. No Refund For Early Cancellation.

Use Your VISA or MASTERCARD

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

Classified Ads 752-6166

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Personals............

InAAemoriam........

Card Of Than^......

Special Notiles.......

Travel & Tours.......

Automotive..........

Child Care............

Day Nursery

Health Care..........

Employment.........

For Sale..............

Instruction...........

Lost And Found ......

Loans And AAortgages Business Services

Opportunity..........

Professional..........

Real Estate..........

Appraisals...........

Rentals..............

002 .003 005 .007 .009 010 .040 041 043 050 060 080 082 085 091 093 095 .100 101 . 120

FILENO FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION

THE

WANTED

SALE

Autos for Sale...........Oil    029

Bicycles for Sale............030

Boats for Sale..............032

Campers for Sale...........034

Cycles for Sale.............036

Trucks for Sale ..... 039

Pets.......................046

Antiques...................061

Auctions...................062

Building Supplies...........063

Fuel. Wood, Coal ...........064

Farm Equipment...........065

Garage Yard Sales    067

Heavy Equipment..........068

Household Goods.......... 069

Insurance............. .071

Livestock ..................072

AAiscellaneous..............074

AAobile Homes tor Sale......075

AAobile Home Insurance    076

AAusical Instruments .......077

Sporting Goods.............078

Commercial Property . .... 102 Condominiums for Sale    104

Farms tor Sale.............106

Houses for Sale ...... 109

Investment Property.......Ill

Land For Sale ....'.........M13

Lots For Sale...............115

Resort Property tor Sale    ... 117

YOUR AD COUIDBE

WORKING FOR YOU IN THIS

SPACE

ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED

THE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified Advertising Rates ^ 752-6166

,1 Line Minimum 1 3 Days 45' per line per .lay 4-6 Days 42'per ime per .lay 7 Or More

Da^s 40'peMine per .lay

Classified Display

'2 75 Per Col lru ri Contract Hates AvailaPif

DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines

Monrlav    Friday    4pm

Tuesday Monday 3pm Wednesday Tuesday 3pm Thursday Wednesday 3 p rn, Friday    Thursday    3pm

Sunday    ' Friday noon

Classified Display Deadlines

Monday    Friday    noon

Tuesday    Fnday4iim

Wednesday    Monday 4 p ir.

Tnitsday    Tuesday 4 pm

'^'iday Wednesday 2 p ni Sunday Wednesday F p ni

ERRORS

Errors rnuRt Pe reported iirimediatei V The Daily Rtdip. tor . annot maF e al'owan. e tor errrrrs attm 1st lav >t tiut'ii at'ion

^ ,

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reiect any advertisement submitted

Help Wanted...............051

Work Wanted..............059

Wanted ........... 140

i Roommate Wanted.........142

Wanted To Buy.............'144

Wanted To Lease...........146

Wanted To Rent............148

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent.......121

Business Rentals .........122

Campers For Rent..........124

Condominiums for Rent.....125

Farms For Lease............107

Houses For Rent........... 127

i Lots For Rent..............129

AAerchandise Rentals.......131

AAobile Homes For Rent.....133

Office Space For Rent ......135

Resort Property For Rent    137

Rooms For Rent............138

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF BOBBY GENE McROY

NOTICE OF CREDITORS ANDDEBTORSOF BOBBY GENE McROY

All persons, firms, and corporations having claims against Bobby Gene Me Roy, Deceased, are notified to exhibit them to Joyce H Me Roy as Administratrix ot the Decedent s Estate on or before the date not later than six months after the first date ot publication ot this Notice at Route 3. Box 96. Greenville. North Carolina 27834, or be barred from their recovery Debtors of the Decedent are asked to make immediate payment to the above named Joyce H McRoy, Administratrix

Joyce H McRoy Administratrix ot the Estate ot Bobby G McRoy Route 3, Box 96

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 James Leon Bullock.

I Attorney tor the

Administratrix ot the Estate ot Bobby Gene Me Roy Post Office Box 7151 Greenville. North Carolina 27835 7151    %

May 26. June 2, 9, 16, 1983

ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE

Having qualified , as Ad ministratrix of the Estate ot Earl Thompson, deceased, late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons firms and cor porations having claims against the Estate ot said deceased To exhibit , them to the undersigned at Apart meni 2 F, Lewis Drive P O Box 652,

I Grifton, North Carolina 28530. on or , before the 5lh day ot December i 1983 or this notice will be placed in bar of their recovery All persons in I debted to said Estate will please imake payment to the Ad i ministratrix at the address stated herein

This the 27th day ot May 1983 Mary Lena Sikes Thompson Apt 2 F

Lewis Drive. P O Box 652 Grifton, NC 28530 Daniel L Taylor, Attorney at Law 127 South Queen Street Kinston, NC 28501 Telephone (919) 522 4814 June 2 9. 16 23 1983

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS

Sealed bids will be received by Pilt County Merrlorial Hospital Board of Trustees in the Otiice ot Vice President Facilities Manage ment until 2 00 P M Tuesday June 14 1983 and immediately thereafter public opened and read, tor the con siruclion of the North Parking Lot Phase I Expansion at Pitt Coun ty Memorial Hospital Separate con tracts will be let lor General Con struclion, which includes curb and gutter storm drainage grading and paving, and etc Electrical contract shall include parking lot lighting and other appurtenance Plans and spec itications are available in the ot ticeot Ralph R Hall, Jr Vice Presi dent Facilities Management Pilt County Memorial Hospital, Green ville    N C Telephone Number

919 757 4587

E ach bid submitted must cover all portions ot the work All Contractors are required to haVe proper licenses Bid Bonds ot 5% will be required Bid deposits may be in the lorm ot cash, cashiers check or bid bond Performance bond ot l(X)o ot the cost ot the work will be reouired The Hospital reserves the righi to re lect any or all bids and to waive in lormalities

Jack W Richardson President

Pitt County Memorial Hospital June 7, 8. 9, 1983

NOTICE OF SECOND RESALE OF

LANDS BY COMMISSIONERS

Pursuant to and by virtue ot the Order of the Honorable Sandra Gaskins, Clerk ot Superior Court ol Pill County, entered June I 1983 in that proceeding entitled Robert Lee Smith, el als vs Phillip L Good son, Jr et als' being Pill County Clerk of Superior Court File No 83 SP 62, the undersigned will, on Fri day, June 17, 1983. at 12 00 Noon at the Pitt County Courthouse Door in Greenville North Carolina, otter lor sale to the highest bidder tor cash, upon an opening bid ol S73,550 00, but subiect to f onlirmalion by the Court, the following described tract of land

TRACT NO 3 Beginning at an iron stake located in a ditch, a cor ner, common with Lot No 9 and Lot No 10 of the Warren Tucker Division and the lands ol the Heirs of J R

PUBLIC NOTICES NOTICE

Having qualifil as Administrator of the estate ot Annie R^^ Manning late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons havirra claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administrator on or before Oecembw 9. I9a3_ or this

notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons in debted to said estate please make

ueuicvi lU saiw

immediate payment This 7th day of June. 1983 B F Manning P O Box 309 Bethel, North Carolina 27812 Administrator of the estate ot Annie R Manning, deceased June 9, 16. 23, 30. 1983

015

Chevrolet

1978 CHEVETTE 4 door. 4 speed. air, 1 owner 12100 Call 753 2381

018

Ford

1963 FORD FALCON. 2 door, need minor repairs Runs good Will accept best otter Call 752 7479.

1966 FORD FAIRLANE. 4 door. 289 motor, motor needs repair S225 Call 756 6136 after 5

1968 TORINO Fastback, 391 Cleveland. 8250 as is Call 756 8Q11

1977 MUSTANG, 4 speed Real condition S1750 Calf 752 1705

1977 MUSTANG II 4 cylinder I owner, air. power steering. AM FM Excellent condition, very clean SI750 756 3974    _

1978 FORD FUTURA 1 owner, good condition $2995 Fully equipped 756 1 523_

1981 FORD ESCORT Wagon

Automatic, air excellent condiTion. loyy mileage 756 7063 atler 6p m

019

Lincoln

002

PERSONALS

SHY 24 YEAR OLD male seeks female companion Interests in elude downtown bars intimate dinners or quiet evenings at home Send narrte phone number age and interests to 210 North Library Street, GreenyUle

CONTINENTAL 1982    4    door

Givenchy series Like new Ford Motor Company executive car Leo Venters Motors Aydert. 746 6171 _

020

Mercury

1973 MONTEREY 4 door loaded AM FM stereo power steering brakes and seats air $650 753 5850 1977 COUGAR XR7 new radials 1980 Grand Marquis. 45 000 miles

loaded Call 524_53i4 after 4

021

Oldsmobile

1974 98 OLDSMOBILE, 4 door One owner Real clean 756 2018 98 REGENCY LS 1981 For sale by owner All extras Excellent condi lion $8500 00    756 3000 days

evenings I ?75 3179    ________

022

Plymouth

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

1973 DUSTER 2 door Coupe Craqar rims full length headers told down rear seat 3 speed, automatic with shitt kit new paint power steering brakes and distributer All original 340 motor Must see to appreciate Call 756 6730

WE PAY CASH tor diamonds Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 E vans Mall, Downtown Greenville

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car call 756 18.^7 Grant

Buick We wHIJSiY.'PP dpHar SELL YOUR CAR the National Autolinders Way' Authorized Dealer in Pitt County Hastings Ford Call 758 OlU

I

I 012

AMC

1977 MATADOR 45 000 miles i owner excellent condition air $1950 C^ll 746:6575^

1978 GREMLIN , Gcxid condition $875 Cjdl 756 6J90a[ler 12 nppn

023

Pontiac

1978 FIREBIRD AM FM stereo cassette ajr radials CaM 756 50M

1979 TRANSAM Excellent condi tion Low mileage Assume loan Call 355 2079

1981 GRAND PRIX LJ loaded one owner diesel 30 mpq, excellent condition $7 800 355 2899 alter 6__

024

Foreign

013

Buick

1983 SKYLARK, 4 door sandstone brown vinyl top cream interior fully loaded 4 cylinder 4500 miles factory warranty Call 758 5940 after 6pm __

014

Cadillac

CADILLAC, 1970 4 door hard to Sedan Deville One owner $3) 756 8999    i

015

Chevrolet

CASH FOR your car Barwick Auto Sales 756 7M5

1955 CHEVY STATIONWAGON

Very good condition 758 5731 after

5    ......

1957 CHEVROLET Excellent con dilion CaH 758 p_732 1966 4 DOOR SEDAN Automatic needs minor body work Engine and transmission, good condition Col lectors edition Reliable trans porlalion. with minor work $JSO Call 756 6730

1968 CHEVELLE SS New 196 engine 4 speed 'Excellent shape Must sell 756 1693 1971 CHEVY IMPALA, 62.000 mites runs excellent needs paint $550 Call 746 4474 : 1976 NOVA, 2 door power steering auloinalii Exrellent condition I 753 4183

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR SALE 1980 Corolla Deluxe liHback automatic air AM FM cassette sport wheels low mileage Great conclition Call 758 0097 TOYOTA 1979 2 dooi Corolia 5 speed AM FM radio air good tires Good condition $3 350    753

5008 after 7pm

1973 TOYOTA CORONA Deluxe 4 door automatic air AM FM stereo good running condition $1350    Call 753 2381    _____

1974    VOLKSWAGEN    Beetle    son

root    new engine brakes, shocks

clutch and paint In excellent condition    756    0171 after 6

1975 DATSUN B2I0 2 door 4 speed an    good condition    $1500    Call

757 JlOOor 758 6321

1975    HONDA CIVIC    $1850    Call

758 0513

1976 DATSUN 280Z, automatic air AM FM stereo cassette let black wilh mag wheels, excellent condi tion 756 4568

1976 DATSUN 710 Wagon almost nc*w rebuilt engine but needs re wiring $1200 or best otter Call 746 4646 after 6pm

1977 TOYOTA CELICA 5 speed air very clean $2800 Call 757 3100 or 758 6321    

1978 DATSUN 510 Wagon Air, AM ^ M Must sell $2295 752 8266 or 758 5728

1978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed AM t M radio air condition extra clean $2800 746 2741

1978 MAZDA GLC Sport 4 speed with air 23 000 miles on motoi New paint new seats Days 758 6,340 or nights 75? 2788

1979 BMW 320 I Wine with black interior 4 speed 43 000 miles Call (919) 355 224>or (919) 355 6422

)979 HONDA CIVIC Best oiler Call 752 6874

1979 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT

AM F M stereo cassette clean Musi sell' $2795    752 8266 or 758

5728

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Moye, and running from said Begin ning Point thence South 84 55 East a distance of 582 52 feet to a concrete

monument, an agreed corner runn ing thence South 3 40 West a distance of 104 86 teel to a concrete monu ment, another agreed corner, runn mg thence South 89 17 East along and with an agreed line a distance oT 176 06 feet to an iron stake a corner running thence South 30 30 East a distance of 472 10 teet to an iron stake another Corner running thence South 83 19 East a distance oT 100 teet to an iron stake a corner running thence South IB 18 West a distance ol 113 06 teet along and with a chain link fence to an iron slake, continuing South 17 II West a distance ol 72 25 teet and South 3 49 West a distance ot 20 54 feel to an iron slake, a corner, running thence South 3 49 West a distance ol 218 46 teet and thence South 14 I East a distance ot 115 15 feet to an iron stake, a corner, running thence South 16 47 West a distance of 147 02 feet to an iron stake in the line ot Lot No 9 of the Warren Tucker Division a corrier running thence along and with the line ol Lot No 9 and Lot No 10 ol the WBrren Tucker Division. North 38 50 West a distance ot 1597 feet to the Point ot Beginning, and containing H 7 acres, more or less according to survey made by A S Johnson. Jr in December, 1976 The highest bidder will be re quired to deposit ten per cent (10%) of the first $1,000 00 thereof, plus five per cent (5%) ol any excess above

AUTOMOBILE SALESPERSON

Experience helpful but not necessary. Excellent earnings opportunity. Apply in person only 9-10 A.M. and 3-4 P.M.. Monday-Friday. See Van Stocks or Charlie Goodman.

Joe Cullipher

Ctiryslei-Plymoutti-Dodge-Peugeol

Hwy 11 & 264 By-pass    Greenville. N.C.

$1.000 00, as evidence ol good faith of fni ! properly subiect to 1983 City ol Greenville and

pending confirmation . the '

he Court Thej

he sale by will be sold

Pilt County ad valorem taxes, with possession to be delivered December I 1983    

This the 1st day ot June, 1983 David A Leech. Commissioner FredT Mattox Commissioner June 9. 16, 1983

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS

Sealed proposals will be received until3 OOP M on June 17, 1983 at the Pitt Cnunty ABC Board's Office, 2305 Memorial Drive, Greenville, North Carolina tor the Construction ol an I Addition to Warehouse and ABC Store No 8. at which time and place bids will be opened and pubhcally read

Complete plans and specifications lor thisproject can be obtained from DUDLEY, SHOE 8. HITE, P A , 200 East First Street. Greenville, North Carolina, during normal office hours alter June 8, 1983

The owner reserves the un qualilied right to reiect any and all proposals

Paul Davenport Chairman

Pitt County ABC Board June 9, 1983

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

3-DAY COUPON SPECIALS

FRIDAY SATURDAY & MONDAY

OIL, LUBE & FILTER

Official North Carolina Inspection Station

AIR

CONDITIOJ^NG TUNE UP

Includes Freon & Labor

aoooPi'CAta

ITIRE ^ CENTER!

West End Shopping Center Phone 7S6-9371 Open8to6Mon.-Fri.,Sat.8toS

729 Oickinson Avenue I hone 752-4417 Open 8 to 6 Mon.-Fri., Sat. 8 to 5

HASTINGS FORD JUNE SPECIAL

1980 Ford Fairmont

4 door. Pastel sand, creme vinyl top, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition. 6 cylinder, radio, wire wheels, local car.

M19

Per Month

Based on selling price ot $3700.00, down payment S700 (cash or trade), amount financed $3000.00 . 30 monthly payments, 14.5% Annual Percentage Rate, finance charges $594.42, total note $3594.42. Does hot include taxes and documentary tees. With approved credit.

AST

FORD

Used Car Company Tenth Street 8 264 By Pass

758-0114 Greenville N C 27834

024

Foreign

1960 BMW SM I. Dark blue with camel interior. Fully equipped Excellent condition. Calf (919) 355 2245or (919) 355 6422

1980 DATSUN 210 SL Hatchback, automatic and air. Original owner Excellent condition 756 6588

039

Trucks For Sale

048

PETS

1972 CHEVROLET Short body, 6 cylinder, straight drive 795 *889 after 4 p.m__

t9il HONDA CIVIC 1500 GL 5 speed, 40 -F miles per gallon, AM/FM cassette stereo, velour interior, low mileage Like new, $4500. 753 3444

1973 FORD pickup truck Good condition with removable racks

$1200 355 2352    __

1975 CHEVROLET pickup Carolina ...    jjooo

blue with 756 7067

tool box

Call

1901 MAZDA 626 LUXURY 4 door sedan. 5 speed, power brakes, windows, ana steering, air. AM/ FM stereo Charcoal grav. $7.000 Day$ 758 1333 nights 756 8743

1982 VOLVO DL. 2 door, air sunroof. AM/FM cassette, cruise. automatic. $11,650 355 6700 after6

1975 CHEVROLET pickup Automatic, air 758 7T3i.    _

Cheyenne $2150 Call

AKC DOBERMAN. 6 months old good around children $50. Call

756 aoit__

AKC IRISH SETTER 8 months old All shots, $100 Between 7 and 9 p m 756 0700

AKC REGISTERED miniature male Dachshund puppy Red $125 758 3807

AKC SIBERIAN HUSKIES Black and while, beautiful masking $125 $150 3 females I male 753 2WI 1*7    ' BRITTANY SPANIEL PUPS, AKC

-      '     registered, champion blot^line.

I excellent field stock, maybe picked 'up June 12 19    $100    946    2281

, (Washington) _

032

Boats For Sale

QUALITY DUTCH BUILT 30 sailboat. 4 sails, spinaker, wheel. inbound plenty ot extras 758 4881

SAN JUAN 21' sailboat 5 horse power Volvo outboard Fleet Cap tain trail.r $5,000 756 4061

13' BOSTON WHALER 33 horse power Johnson Bimini top. 2 tanks Good shape Call 753 5043 alter 6 15' CAROLINA BOAT with trailer 50 horsepower Mercury motor Engine hardly ever been used CaJI

756 4924______  _

16' CAROLINA 20 horse Mercury electric starter with shift controls $750 746 4425    _

1968. 15' Glassmaster Tri hull, walk through windshield. 18 gallon gas tank, trailer just painted Call

1977 25 Lancer Sailboat Galley Head 3 sails VHF gauges and lO

964

sepo'

4172

or 752 0966

$11 000

1978 20' MEG CUTTY CABIN 350 Chevrolet engine Cox tandem trail er Fully equipped Just like new

756 3348 .... ....... .......

21 COBIA, 150 Evinrude trim and till, galvanized trailer all extras $5900 or best otter 752 6715 after 5 245 HORSEPOWER Grady White Rogue iet drive 4 wheel galva nized trailer excellent, condition Can be seen at Boat House

bed with camper shell rally wheels new tires, lilt, AM FM. power steering, power brakes, air $3800

Call after i, 752 0584    __

4X4 CHEVROLET truck 1967. jacked up with white spoke rims. 3 speed, steel bumper, lock out hubs needs chain in transfer less alumi num intake, motor in good shape with cam, without motor iSOO with motor $800 757 3438____

040

Child Care

MOTHER OF 5 YEAR OLD would like to babysit child age 4 thru 7 Please call 756 9906

WILL KEEP INFANTS and

children in my home for working mothers day or night! 752 4903 WILL KEEP your children in my home this summer on Highway 33 Call 752 1783 ________

WOULD LIKE to keep children in mv home Call 757 0354____________

046

PETS

AKC BLACK Labrador Retriever puppies All shots and wormed Field champions in line 756 1268

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

I WHY STORE THINGS you never I use' Sell them tor cash with a I Classified Ad

I FREE KITTENS 2 long haired part Persian males 2 Tabby part Lynx I I solid black; part .Lynx, also l ' female Tabby full grown part Lynx : All very playful Call 756 2513 after 1 6 pm    _____

FREE to"GOOD HOME AKC

I registered Golden Retriever ) year I old Well trained healthy Call i 243 6485    __________

I PUT EX I HA LASH m your pocket I today Sell your don't needs with j an inexpensive .Classified Ad

.HIMALAYIAN KITTENS. 9 weeks I first shots, registered I blue I point female I tiame point I cream

m^c $,l75each I 743 2721 ____

L A B R A DO RR E T RI EVER S AKC puppies Field trail and gun dog stock Wormed shots and de wclaws removed I 242 6529 or I 242 4830

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

034 Campers For Sale

FIBERGLASS CAMPER SHELL

Fits longbed mini pickup Sliding

?lass windows, built in boot Asking

M.Cdi! 746 3313 .    ________

TRUCK COVERS All sizes colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman lops 250 units in slock O Briants Raleigh, N C W4 2774 17'j' SELF CONTAINED travel trailer Sleeps 6 Air new refrigera tor and tires $1000 After 7 pm 756 4957

1973 DODGE mini motor home Excellent condition Sleeps 4. com

pl^ely sf IL^ontajned 746 2407____

27' HOLIDAY Alum Lite 5th wheel 1982 Laredo Jeep J to rigged tor camper $l^(X)0 756582

SALESPERSON

To sell new homes in Pitt and surrounding counties. Draw and company benefits for right person. No real estate license needed.

Call Harold, 758-6018

036

Cycles For Sale

GOLD WING 1100 Enlerslate 1981 stereo and other options included like new Call 752 36t9 HONDA XL 175, 1976 Showroom condition Price negotiable Call 758 6262______

MOPED Like new Great deal' $500 CaJI 355 2160after 5 WANT A GREAT BUY? 1980 CM 400E Honda Must sell $900 Mot litt sMagnavpx .756 8444 XS ELEVEN SPECIAL, 1979 needs battery and regulator $I7S0    355

6448

1981 YAMAHA XJ550 MAXIM

Excellent condition I owner Low! mileage includes 2 helmets plus ' (over $1900 Can be seen at , Yamaha Pilt County or call 746 i 4459 758 4580 alter 3    j

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton, Co.

Morris Blueberry Farm

r    LOCATED: 1 mile North ol New Bern

On US 17 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Bring Your Own Container

@ GUARANTEED USED CARS

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED

1982 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel...............$6995.00

1981 Volkswagen Diesel Truck............... $6695.00

1980 Mazda GLC..................   $3995.00

1980 Volkswagen Rabbit  ................$4195.00

1980 Dodge D-50 Truck...............  $4395.00

1979 Chevrolet Impala Wagon................$4195.00

1979 Pontiac Sunbird.......... AUTOMATIC

1979 Audi Fox GTI   .......  $3995.00

1978 Buick Electra Limited ..... $3995.00

1978 Chevrolet Chevette.....................$2495.00

1978 Plymouth Horizon....................REDUCED

1978 Datsun 200-SX     ......................$1795.00

1977 Buick Skylark...........................$1995.00

1977 AMC Gremlin...........................$1995.00

1974 Cadillac Fleetwood.....................$1695.00

1973 Chevrolet El Camino..................LIKE    NEW

12 Months/12,000 Mile Mechanical Warranty Available On Some Of The Above

Joe Pediles Volkswagen, Inc.

eeeville Blvd.    /5b    1135

Serving Greenville To The Coast For 18 Year-s

REX SMITH CHEVROLET, INC.

Hwy 11 South Ayden, N.C.

-3141

Phone 746

Rex Smith Owner

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier 4 door............'6495.00

1982 Chevrolet Caprice 4 door............ 8495.00

1982 Chevrolet Malibu - 4 door............. 6995.00

1982 Olds Cutlass Supreme 2 door '8495.00

1982 Buick Regal 2 door..................'8295.00

1981 Chevrolet Impala 4 door............  6295.00

1980 Chevrolet Chevette 4 door...........'3995.00

1979 Mercury Zephyr 2 door ...............'3895.00

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo.........  4495.00

1978 Buick Park Avenue 2 door............'4495.00

Oick Evans Sales Manager

1978 Plymouth Fury 2 door................ 2495.00

1976 Buick Regal Landau 2 door........... 3495.00

1975 Dodge Monaco 4 door    1595 00

TRUCKS

1981 Chevrolet Pickup...................... 5995.00

1980 GMC Sierra Classic.................... 5495.00

1980 Datsun Pickup wilh air............... 4295.00

1977 Chevrolet LUV Pickup .................'2495.00

1977 Chevrolet 4X4 Pickup................. 3895.00

1975 Ford F-100 Pickup .....    ...    2595.00

NEW CARS AND NEW TRUCKS

8.8%

APR Financing Available On Selected Models

^Silesmjg^





2) rneUaijyKeiietiui.vjictiivuit;, inuiauaj, juiivj, iB3

0A6

PETS

LHASA APSO. AKC male, 6 months black on brown All shots SlOO 75? 4967

051

Help Wanted

051

Help Wanted

TWO BLUE TICK WALKERS, mix

ed I / years old Call 355 2533 alter

2 SIBERIAN huskies Red with blue eyes AKC registered Wormed and shots 75? 5333 S125 4 BEAUTIFUL full blooded German Shepherd puppies 1/5 each 756

9/4

051

Help Wanted

AVON REPRESENTATIVES

needed in Winlerville and Ayden areas Earn up to 50% Call 756 6610

BABY SITTING/CHILD CARE

Part time tull time, days evenings weekends Refer enees required Ask for Sharon or

Mike 756 4254    _________

COUPLE TO MANAGE rental

AUMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

position available for responsible, dependable person. Requirements: previous secretarial experience, typinq skills, basic bookkeeping knowledoe. Send resume to Ad ministrative Assistant, PO Box

1967, Grtenville, NC 27834

property Living quarters provided Bookkeeping experience necessary Reply to Couple PO Box 1967,

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY

Large corporation has outstanding

sales opening tor sales repre ive IndTi......

Greenville NC

DIETITIAN

sentative Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambitious and show progress tor age Business'or sales background

ACCOUNTANT by CPA firm Ex perience preferred Send resume ti Accountant PO Box 1967 Greenville NC

Registered Dietitian to direct | dietary operation in 120 bed i S'N F ICF nursing facility

helpful In requesting personal in ase subr

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SALES

CLERK

Exciting and challenging sales clerk position open tor aggressive person No sales experience necessary. Call Diane Murphrey.

CREECH & JONES

Business Machines

t03 Trade St Greenville. NC

756-3175

BILL

ASKEW

MOTORS

3010 s. Memorial Drive

756-9102

De

De

1982 Lincoln Continental

-1 door, omerald green 1981 Yamaha Exciter 250

1,000 iTiilos

1981 AMC Jeep Renegade

b cylinder, 20 000 miles 1981 Ford Ranger Pickup

Blue and white 1981 Cadillac Coupe Ville Light green 1980 Subaru Wagon 1979 Cadillac Coupe Ville-Red

1979 Chevrolet Chevette

4 door, beige

1979 Chevrolet Chevette

1 door, silver

1979 Ford Pinto Wagon

Brnn/t.'

1979 Plymouth Fire Arrow

Automatic

1979 Pontiac Grand Prix

Bine, loaded

1979 Olds Delta 88 Royale

2door.t)lue

1979 Chevrolet Camaro

Maroon

1978 Pontiac Grand Prix

Blue    -    '

1978 Jeep CJ-5

1978 Ford Mustang 4

speed.peach 1978    Plymouth    Volare

Wagon    6    cylinder,

silvttr

1978    Mercury    Zephyr

Villager Wagon White 1978    Chevrolet    Monte

Carlo Blue. 54.000 miles 1978    Pontiac    Sunbird

Wagon Low mileage, loadeil

1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo 2 door, hlue 1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Gold 1978 Pontiac Trans AM Brown

1978 Chevrolet Impala Wagon 9 passtmger, low mileage

1977 Chevrolet LUV Pickup Black 1977 Toyota Clica GT Liftback - Silver and black

1977 Ford Thunderbird

Whitr; with red l0|)

1977 Chevrolet Monte

Carlo Brown

1977 Chrysler Cordoba

Silvrrr

1977 Mercury Comet 4

door, tilue

1977 Chevrolet Nova 4

door, silver

1977 Ford Pinto White, triue 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 Dodge Sportsman Maxi Wagon 1976 Dodge Dart 1976 Ford Elite Blue 1976 Ford Courier Pickup

White

1976 Chevrolet Malibu 4

door, blue

1975 Buick Century Luxus

-White

1975 AMC Pacer White 1974 Pontiac Grand AM

1973 Ford Pinto Wagon 1967 Mercury Cougar

TRANSPORTATION

SPECIALS

1974 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

Plus Many Others

iil

Minimum 2 years experience in food service management required Experience in Geriatric nutrition a plus Contact Administrator Uni versity Nursing Center Rt I Box 21 Greenville. NC or call 919 /58 ;iOO E EO Handicapped

terview please submit resume stating personal history, education and business experience Write Box 406, Greenville, NC 27835_

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY

Exceptional skills, pleasant work ing environment Excellent

051

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED R N * ncMled for

 , handic^ped at Camp

Easter In The Pines. Summer

employment, full or part time. Hours or shitts may be flexible to suit your schedules. Immediate openings 692 MSS days. 692 7789 nights Your help is urgently

HVAC SERVICE Personnel wanted. Some experience necessary. Call 756 4624    ,__

benefits Send resume to PO Box 407, Greenville

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN

to work with established firm Excellent opportunity, good benefits Please call 756 3240 for interview    _

GRADY WHITE BOATS is accept

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

ing applications for clerical posi tions Must be an accurate typist

C.L. Lupton Co.

752-6116

Good pay and benefits By ap pointment only, call 752 21 1 1, extension 251 between 9am 4pm,

Monday Frjday___________________

HEADS UP HAIR SALON now taking applications tor full time hair stylist Call 758 8553 for ap pointment __

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

HASTINGS FORD JUNE SPECIAL

1979 Dodge Van

Long wheel base, local one owner. Automatic, power steering, small V-8. Polar white.

123

1

Per Month

Based on selling price of $3600.00. down payment $500.00 (cash or trade), amount financed $3100.00, 30 monthly payments, 14.5o Annual Percentage Rate, finance charges $614.24. total note $3714.24. Does not include taxes and documentary tees. With approved credit.

H

ASTING

FORD

s

(Jvd ( xti ( oifipriny ertin MftM'f . t,.! hy

758-0114

INDUSTRIAL TRUCK SALES

Eaton Corporation has an im mediate opening for account man ager Capital equipment, selling experience preferred. Excellent earning potential and bertefits. Send resume in confidence to Yale Indus trial Truck Division. 150 Industrial Avenue, Greensboro. NC 27406, Attention Personnel Manager.

LOCAL COMPANY needs sales oriented person due to expansion Full fringe benefits Starting salary 1300 per week Average salary in agency S650 per week 753 4482 between 7 p m. and9 p.m

NANNY, HOUSEKEEPER and

cook needed Experience required

Must possess pleasant personality

and ability to dea| understanding!y  lor

with children Set hours 5 days a week Liberal pay (depending on individual) Car provided as trans portation References needed Call 756 6303 to set up appointment for interview    _

NEED A FULL time person experi enced in personal and commercial lines of insurance Excellent oppqr tunify Send resume to P O Box

tunify bend ri 156, Greenville

NEED ORUMME R FOR

established lop 40 variety band 757 3619 _ _

NEEDEDRN'S

Full or part tim Competitive salaries Wilting to work around school

schedules

Contact Lydia Morgan RN, Director of Nursing, University Nursing Center 758 7100    __

PART TIME SALES opportunity rk 10 hours

Persons needed to wor _    _

per week from their home Can earn 175 or more For interviews, ask for Mr. Stallings, Friday, June 10,    11    am    only    Employment

Security Commissions Office No phone calls please______

PROFESSIONAL SILK screening firm has immediate position available for self motivated indi vidual with managerial ability Great opportunity tor advance meni Unlimited income based on sales Send resume to Sales, PO Box 362, Ayden, NC 28513

PROFESSIONAL SILK screening lirm has position open lor neat experienced secretary Excellent

lary

typing and tiling skills required Shorthand helptuT but not required

WE LEASE ICE MAKERS

Scotsman York

Morris

Manitowoc Arctic Temp Kold Draft

100 No. Cube Ice

200 No. Cube Ice

400 No. Cube Ice

$56.16

$75.82

$73.67

$101.42

$90.09

$124.02

36 months 24 months 36 months 24 months 36 months 24 months

Sales - Service - Installation

304 Hooker Rd. Greenville, N.C.

Greenville 756-2100 Wanchese 473-2218

For rnore intormation, call 746 6134 RESTAURANT MANAGEMENT personnel lor the Greenville and New Bern area Starting salary 113,000 and up Send complete resume to Management Personnel, P(3 Box 687, Gr-<enyille. NC __

RN/LPN NEEDED full or part time (Earn extra money) Small hospital with medical service and

emergency room care Call 795 3126 Mr J L Williams

SALES OPPORTUNITY: Are you a self starter with a desire to get ahead? We offer excellent income potential with opportunity lor advancement For application, call between 10 a m and noon GSC

Products 756 6386 _____  _

SALESPERSON tor hardware de partment, other duties include stock installation, cleanlno. possible de livery and unloading merchandise Must be able to handle medium heavy packages at limes Math accuracy an absolute must Five day work week including Saturday Mature person or lull time perma nent employment only Salary ac cording to experience and ability Write resume with picture to PO Box 794, Greenville, NC 27834 for intervlew_

SECRETARY Bookkeeper for gen eral small oflice work, retail store Must be accurate at math, 5 day work week tor full time permanent employment, only (or mature person Salary according to experi ence and ability Write resume with picture to PO Box 794. Greenville,

NC 27834 (or interview.    ___

SECRETARY n'eEDEED for Greenville NC Large company opening new ottice in Immediate (uture Good company benefits Insurance claims experience de sired 60 words per minute typing ability required with ability to use transcriber Duties of job are multip|e_CalJ 404 325 2480 ______

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

C.L. Lupton, Co.

752 6116

SPECIAL Executive Desks

Reg. Price $259.00

60 30 beautiful i8(alnul linish Ideal for home or ottic"

Special Price

S17900

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S Evans Si

75?-2175

Bethels Finest Used Cars

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier ^ 4 door, green, 4 speed, air condition, like new.

1981 Chevrolet Caprice 4 door, white.

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Blue, white vinyl top, sharp car.

1979 Buick Regal Blue, clean, sharp car.

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix 26,000 actual miles, like new. White.

1978 Chevrolet Monza Black, 4 speed, air condition

1975 Olds Delta 88 Convertible

1980 Chevrolet Monza Blue, automatic, air condition, sharp.

1970 Chevrolet Camaro Average car.

1980 Chevrolet Chevette 4 speed, air condition, white. Priced to go.

TRUCKS

1980 Honda 2 door, 4 speed transmission, clean.

1980 Chevrolet LUV Pickup - Red. 4 speed transmission, clean.

1979 Chevrolet Chevette 2 door. 4 speed transmission, air condition.

1980 Datsun King Cab Orange, 4 speed

1979 Chevrolet Malibu 4 door, automatic transmission, air condition, red and white.

1978 Chevrolet C-10 Diesel Like new, automatic, power steering

1974 Datsun Truck Orange

We Are In Great Need Of Used Cars Now    \

We Are Offering Highest Trade-In Allowances Ever!

WYNNES CHEVROLET

Ramon Latham Bonner Latham

On The Corner, On The Square Bethel, N.C.    Phone    825-4321

GMCMJAUTY SERVICE RMHS

Joe Rawit J.T. Burrus Oous Houm

GSNDUa MOTORS HITS DIVISION

/

1

051

Help Wanted

SECRETARY - For small chain of

preschools. HoursAppjy J_n

person af 313 Easf lOfh Sfreef. No phone calls Please

SHIFT OYER Experienced in dyeing woven coffon and coffen bfends. Candidate musf have 3 fo 4

years experience _and_ abilif^^fo

supervise Planf is locafed in

ware Valley area. Excellent salary ' benefits. Qualified appr may send resume to Shift Dyi Box 1967, Greenville. NC EOt

and

SR

TYPISTS!

55 Words Par Minute WE NEED YOU!

MANPOWER TEMPORARY Services offers you:

Unique Fringe Benefits Top Pay ' Flexible Schedule

Call us for an appointment We Are Not a Fee Agency

MANPOWER

TEMPORARY

SERVICES

118 Reade Street 757 3300

STAFF CERTIFIED Respiratory Therapy Technician needed imme

diately lor modern hospital located in Eastern North Carolina, some weekend and evening work in volved Competitive wages, fringe benefits and good working condi lions. Equal Opportunity Employer Send resume to Respiratory Technician, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834.

YALE INDUSTRIAL TRUCKS has

immediate opening (or experienced litt truck mechanic Experience on electric trucks preferred Top pay scale and benefits Send resume in confidence to Yale Industrial Truck Division. 150 Industrial Avenue. Greensboro, NC 27406, Attention Personnel Manager

ZALES JEWELERS is looking (or person to train in store manage ment and jewelry sales Experience is not required it you have the

e^nthusiasm and are willing to learn ti

Excellent company benefits So it you are looking for a career and not |ust a |0b. apply in person to Zales Jewelers, Carolina East Mall

059

Work Wanted

A CAPABLE BABYSITTER is as

close as your phone Any age. day or night Call Dini at 752 8M8.

062

Auctions

PUBLIC AUCTION ABSOLUTE Saturday, June 11,11 AM 507 Pine St., Greenville, NC

RAIN DATE JUNE 13 THE ESTATE of Mrs. Raymond Barber to be sold at auction, a

rooms of furniture and household goods. Round solid maple table and 4 chairs, refrigerator (I year old) washer and dryer (like new), color TV, console radiophormgraph, 3 complete bedroom sets (1 single, 2 full siie), 2 velvet chairs, couch, chairs, curved davenport, Boston rocker, several stands, quilts, blankets, linens, mirrors, small appliances, dishes, cookware , set of left hand golf clubs, and much more

Off 264 Bypass to Hooker Road at Nichols sign, turn on Milbrooke to Pine St Watch tor auction signs.

Sale conducted by Statewide Auc tion. 1400 Highway 70 East. New Bern. N C NCAL 1501, Telephone 638 8573 and 638-2147. Auctioneers George Kino Dan Morton

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale J P Stancil, 752 6331. _

065 Farm Equipment

ALLIS CHALMER WD tractor with mower 758 0732._ _

BALER TWINE All prices 10 or more bales Sisal twine 10,000' bale 123 40 per bale Plastic twine 9,000' bale S20 60 per bale 20.000' (for round baler) *22.49. AgrI Supply. Greenville. NC. 752 3999 _

BIO ALLIS CHALMER tractor, cultivating plows, breaking plows Excellent condition Call anytime, 752 1589

FOR RENT Two 10,000 bushel grain bins. 154 per bushel Located approximately 4 miles west of Winterville Call 756 5097 or 756 9315_ _

GRASS OR HAY ball^ for hire or on shares. Raking^ncluded if needed Call 524 4349

JOHN DEERE M tractor and equipment, *1250 and MF 135 gas. equipment Call 756 3755_

MASSEY FERGUSON 35 Deluxe Gas. power steering. Excellent condition, extra equipment Call 746 3339 after 5 30._

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

Licensed and fully insured Trim ming, cutting and removal Free estimates J p Stancil, 752 6331

AN IMPRESSIVE SIGN is the

secret (or impressive profits tor your business We are masters of impressive signs Call Steve Atkins. The Siqnmaster. 757 3626

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building Call James Harrington after 6 pm 752 7765

CALL SEARS ROEBUCK & Co for

free estimates on siding, guttering, mobile home rootover, insulation.

nterior and exterior painting and rool vents Call 756 9/00, exf 232

Monday Saturday lOa m 9pm

CARPET SPECIAL

2 rooms and hall Home Care Cleaners

*39 95 756 5453

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use Eliminate

creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En

terprises 756 9123 day, 756 1007 jht

niqh

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else 4 your housecleaninq 752 3758

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood

and metal Equipment formally of Dip and Strip All items returned itt -

within 7 days Tar Road Antiques Call (or tree estimate Days 756 9123, Night 756 1007

GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways Call 752 7341_

GRASS cutting at reasonable prices All si/e yards Call 752 5583 I NEED WORK TO stay in school! I

have experience and excellent ils

credentials in interior and exterior painting, minor household repairs Very reasonable Call 757 361 1 alter 12 noon, ask lor Keith.    _

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver All work guaranteed Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m., weekends anytime_

NEED A SMALL wallpapering or

paint jqbjdone? Experienced^ RVA'

ly work Reasonable Judy 757 1580 P 8t M Cleaning Services Services available lor business, oflice, resi

dence "Quality services with re sonable rates " 756 5384 or 756 0087

PAINTING, interior and exterior

12 years experience, work guaran leed References Free estimates

756 6873 alter6p m

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

EM'S ANTIQUES, cralls and gifts, 5 rooms, Monday Saturday. 116 2 miles west of Moose Lodge on 264 Business 756 2921.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

067 Garage-YardSale

BETWEEN WINTERVILLE and

Ayden on Old Number I). Couches, chairs, and lots of other items Watch lor signs. Saturday, 8 until

BIG YARD SALE, 5 families East 14th Street Extension at 212 Tuckahoe Drive. Lawn mowers. small and big items

FRIDAY, June 10, 69 p m Satur day, June 11, 8 a m until. Stalon Heights of) Stantonsburg Highway Rain or shine_ _

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

backyard. 2 families Lots of girl's clothes, size 2 18, excellent condi tion Draperies, bedspreads, and other household items 102 Dupont

Circle^___

GET READY! Ninth Annual Downtown Mall Flea Market Satur

day, June 25, 1983 Sign up at C Heber Forbes, 419 on the Mall or

phone 75? 3468

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market open Saturday 8 til 5 Sunday 1 til 5 Outside dealer

spaces *2 00 Inside spaces *6 00 C^ll Bill 746 3541, Mike 746 3550,

Fair Grounds 758 6916

RAYNOR FORBES ANDCLARK

073 Fruits and Vegetables

074 Miscellaneous

FOR SALE TravN swact potato plants. *3.00 per 100 Call 7464277 after So.m.

2 MATCHING grewi velvet barrel shaped living room chairs Call 756 1280. ,

074 Miscellaneous

3 HORSEf^fR Go Cart Good rondition *175. Call 746 6860

AIR CONDITIONER for tale 8.000 BTU l^lvinator, 4 spieed fan and 9 setting thermostat, very quiet but it really cools adequate for 2 or 3 rooms. Reduced ro *155. Call 752 4348 between 9 a.m. and 6 o.m

5 HORSEPOWER Dayton gar^n tiller. 5.000 &TU Whirlpool window air conditiorter, 5 piece drum set Call 756 9350afterD.m.

5 PIECE dark pine American Drew bedroom suit, queen size bed Excellent corulition, *800 Call 758 0999 after 6

ASSUME PAYMENTS of *39.95 on a 6 piece Western living room suit Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables Furniture World, 757 0451 We take tradC'ins

5,000 BTU WHIRLPOOL air ccdi tioner Used one summer Side oanels *100 firm 758 3729

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

Why pay retail when you can save up to '.'2 and more on bedding and waterbeds. Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza), 355 2626.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW 19*3 top of the line double wide 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle root, trost free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much more

LImitedTimeOnly

$15,995

VA, 100% financing No money down Also FHA Conventional )i nancin^ROssLA,(D HOMES (formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables Cash discounts. Delivery and installation 919 763 9734.

BUNK BEDS New mattress and box springs. Excellent condition 756 71)66 after 5 30

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work. CENTIPEDE SOD 758 2704, 752 4994.

CLEARANCE SALE on Sony Tele visions Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center. West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.

FOR SALE 1979 Taylor, 14x70, 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths, un derskirted, new carpet, new furniture, new 25" color TV Sharpe, utility building, sun deck, located Lot 132, Shady Knoll *19.500 757 0274 or 752 2366 Mr. Carraway

CLUB ALUMINUM 10 piece harvest gold, Silverstone inferior New *I00flrm. 756 1778

COFFEE AAACHINE, *50 Call 756 2121

FOR SALE: Mobile home 12x60 2 bedrooms, good condition Located in nice park *4200 Call 756 0801 after 5 o m.

COMPUTER FURNITURE

Work station for micro computers Johnson & Thiele Co.

1306 N Greenest. 757 1843

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!

COUCH FOR SALE 1 tan and black, *30 1 blue, *50 752 6259 evenings

or 1,000, 35 each Belvoir, 752 3252. DARE IV fireplace insert. In excellent condition. Looks new *300 or best offer. Call 756 6071 after 5 pm

NEW QUALITY built Marshfield 3 bedrooms. I'a baths Payments under *200 per month Only i home left! Call 75i 0131

under *200 i

DAY CARE EQUIPMENT for sale almost new. but drastically reduced for quick sale. 2 cribs, 1 for *70 and 1 for *60. mattresses tor *20 each. 20 cots at *20 each Call 752 4348 between9a.m. andp.m_

DEN FURNITURE Early Ameri can sofa, chair. 2 tables. 2 lamps, *395 355 6002_ _

EARLY AMERICAN bedroom set. by Broyhill 3 pieces, like new *600 72 164^

FACTORY 2nd* NOW available direct from manufacturer Hand

woven rope hammocks, *19 95 to lifer

*53. Hatferas Hammocks. 1104 Clark Street, Greenville

NEW 1983 14*70 3 bedrooms Fully furnished, can be yours for a low down payment and payments under *168 per month Free delivery, set up, and tie downs. Phone 756 9874 Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass Greenville

NEW 1983 3 BEDROOMS Fully furnished. Including delivery, set

up. tie downs Can be yours for a low down payment and payments under *114 a month Phone 756 9874

Country Squire Mobile Homes. 264 Bypass Greenville.

RANELL Over 1300 square feet, central air, dishwasher, woodstove, perfect condition, already set up in

FOR SALE: 3 piece Corner group. Like new Cost *500. will take *200 756 6311 _

FULL SIZE box spring and mat tress with frame new Best otter 7581450    

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture

Shop Stripping. Repairing & Re finishing (Formerly pl _Eastern

Carolina Vocational Center) Located approximately 200 yards Pactolus Highway Call 752 3509.

GRADUATION IDEA? Moftitt's Magnavox has 12" black and white TVs for only *74 95! 2803 Evans Street Extension, 756 8444

HOSPITAL BED tor sale Call 946 6787._

HOSPITAL BED Matching Lazy jta Call

Boy chair and 4 cushioned sot, 758 1091

ICEMAKERS Sple 40% oft Barkers Refrigeration, 2827 Memo rial Drive, 756 6417    _

Flea Market open Saturdays 7 til 1 across from Moose Lodge 756 4090 ..

SATURDAY. JUNE II. 8 to 12 Rain or shine, Stantonsburg Road to

- _    '9    _____

Village Mart Grocery Store Turn right. Road 1210 qo9/i0o( a mile

SATURDAY, June 11, 9 a m , Roy Craft home, corner of Jenkins and Railroad Street. Bethel. nC House hold items _

YARD SALE, Saturday, June II Pactolus Highway Furniture, clothes, household items, etc 8 1

YARD SALE, Saturday 9 to 2 513 Crestline Boulevard. 756 4380

YARD SALE, Saturday, June II 504 Pine Street, just off Hooker Road 6 until 12_ _

YARD SALE 1045 Cooper Street. Winterville Rugs, carpet, miscel laneous Friday, June 10. 10 to 5

YARD SALE, Saturday, June II, 403 Abel Street. Men's and ladle's clothes, and furniture 7 a.m. until.

YARD SALE, Saturday, June 11, 7 a m 12 Voice of America Road, oft Stantonsburg Road Clothes. furniture and appliances_

YARD SALE 2 families Priced to go TVs, exerciser, vacucms, power fools and stoves (call 756 8244), kitchen supplies, clothes, wing chair, and lots more Saturday, June n 8 30 to 12 1702 East 4th Street    _

072

Livestock

DAIRY GOATS Adga. kids, does, bucks, milking does Between 7 and 9p m 756 071

FOR SALE: Fancy chickens Show quality Call 752 1783 _

HORSEBACK RIDING

Stables, 752 5237

TWO GOATS, female Nubian, male Wood goat Reasonably priced Call 752 0304 after 6 pm or weekends

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

HASTINGS FORD JUNE SPECIAL

1981 Chevrolet Malibu Classic Wagon

4 door. Medium blue metallic, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, stereo radio, wire wheels, extra nice.    >

Priced To Sell

Anirn< x > I Usd ( di Lumpxny

I(.nlh SlrtviA.M Hy I'

HasTj^C

K 0 R D    ^

758-0114

ift'enviile N . '814

KEROSUN HEATER *210 Call 756 7279_

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available 756 4742 after 6 p m., Jim Hudson

MORTAR SAND, fill, rock, topsoil Cail 746 3819 or 746 3296_

MOVING Selling 17 cubic foot gold retrioerator *195 Call 758 5038

Top quality, fuel economical cars can be found at low prices in Classilied

CLEARANCE SALE _on Snapjier

Movers Goodyear Tire West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

NOTICE TO RENTAL property owners. Furniture World has a wholesale division Call us (or the best prices, 757 0451 _

ONE LARGE hot water holding at

lank, 1 Victor cash register. 1 meal tenderizer Call 746 6146

ONE TAN naughahyde sofa and chair, with coffee and end tables

and lamp *200 _ J_ Jam^,^^*15. I

oriental type rug, *25 758 :

PAIR OF WATER skiis, *50 Call 758 5346 atter5p m

SEARS 10" electric table saw. like new, *140 Portable wood planer, *75 75? 5671    _

SEIKO GOLD QUARTZ digital alarm watch, new In box, retail *275, wholesale *135 752 3008

SET OF TWIN BEDS Solid oak with mattress and box springs Linens and bed spreads included Excellent condition. 758 3699 after 5

SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Comp

Tool Company

SMITH COROHA TP 1 letter quali ty printer 5 months old Used I month. In mint condition 752 3980 Irom 9 a.m. to 5 30p m

STANCILTREE SERVICE

J P stancil, 752 6331

THEATRE SEATS, *2 00 each Some with cushions Can be used in boats, churches or recreational facilities 756 5400 or 758 4031

TWO 50 watt Lyric speakers Good condition *75 or best otter Days 756 9371 or nights 756 7887_

appliance lor sale Kerosene heater and juicer extracter Call 825 1165.__

USED KENMORE electric range. double Oven. Call 756 3264._

19" GE COLOR TV Programmable remote Brand new *50C valu, tor *450 Sears Exeter 3 in I bumper pool table Like new *600 value, (or *375 756 7766 after 7 p m

2 ALL WEATHER tires for sale (G 78x14) almost new, tubeless. smooth running, reduced to halt

&rice (J25 each) Call 752 4348 etween9a m ando m_

Azalea Gardens Sales price *23,500

'    -    "    7r.....

Contact Tommy, 756 7815 or 758 8733

12X45, 1973, I bedroom, air, washer, *2900 Ideal lor students Must be moved Days 758 )593 or nights 752 7246

12x54 OFFICE Central heat and air 4 offices Under pinning *3200 756 7196

12X60 RITZCRAFT, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, furnished with air in Azalea Gardens *5600 Call 758 4476

14 WIDES tor as low as *170 per month Call or come by Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841.    _

1971 CELEBRITY, 12x65, excellent condition. 3 bedrooms, new carpet

refrigerator, stove, air conditioner, fy

gun Type oil burner, underskirting, storage building on corner lot in nice trailer park *5895. 756 6054.

1972    12x65 PARK MANOR 2

bedrooms, 1 full bath, living room, dining room, partly furnished 1 air window unit. Must sell Asking *5300, negotiable 746 6449

1975 RITZCRAFT DELUXE 12x65 2 bedrooms, I bath, air condition

ing. large living area, bar. dining fui    

area, partially furnished Set up in Azalea Gardens on corner lot *6'-" 757 3180 or 752 0088

1979 12x50, 2 BEDROOMS Assume loan and take up payments No equity 756 8396

1983 )4' Wide homes Payments as low as *148 91. At Greenville's volume dealer Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 752 6068.

per

condition on acre of land Will sell separate or together 756 8993

076 Mobi le Home I nsurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money Smith Insurance and Realty. 752

077 Musical Instruments

FENDER SUPER Reverb ampliti er, new speakers, *275    756    4797

after6p.m_

TAMA ROYAL STAR drum set, silver, Zildjian cymbals, new con dition. *975 752

USED PIANOS AND ORGANS

Yamahas. Wurlitzers. etc The Music Shop, Greenville Square Shopping Center, 756 0007_

YAMAHA PIANOS and discount prices makes Piano & Organ Dis tributors a great place fb shop 355 6002

078

Sporting Goods

model 26 Call 753

Highway 5089 alter i

INSTRUCTION

KARATE Private Karate lessons taught in your home, men, women and children 20 years experience in self defense. Charles June, Black Belt Instructor Call 756 9621

SWIMMING LESSONS available for all levels mother and infant to adult Ray Schart Swim School 752 3400

082 LOST AND FOUND

BIG REWARD tor intormation and recovery of a red bisele built tor 2 Hutty brand Taken from Wedgewood Arm Apartments Call 756 8072 or 758 6361

FOUND: small Dachshund near Belvoir Elementary School Call 752 0622 or 758 2707______

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

BOYD

ASSOCIATES

INCORPORATED

P.O. BOX 1705. GREENVILLE. NOWTW OUIOIJWA73r GENERAL CONTRACTORS    75MS84

METAL BUILDINGS

Ferguson Enterprises, Inc

3108 South Memorial Drive Greenville, N.C.

Across From Parkers Barbeque

Plumbing Fixtures, Appliances, Cabinets

One Day Only Saturday, June 11,1983 8:00 A.M.-2:00 P.M.

Due To Recent Renovation And Remodeling Of Our Facility, We Have 1st Quality, New Fixtures At Unbelievably Low Prices. Also Available Are Discontinued Color Appliances And Some Rebuilt Appliances.

50 - 75% OFF

Trash Compactors Refrigerators Corner Tubs Kitchen Sinks Dishwashers

Sunken Tubs One Piece Toilets Pedestal Lavatories Ranges

Garbage Disposals Solar Panels Hot Water Dispensers Sharp Copier Otftce Furniture

I

,n

J





082    LOST ANO FOUND

109 Houses For Sale

LOST! Black and whife female i bv Malamote Off of roufe 33. near

Belvoir Elemenfary Scfwol Call LlfS p^'    H'*

757 3744 days, 758 3511 niohfs    I    753^-^        500    Call    aHer

lost : Red and whife female Collie, r 1' j years old If found call 756 8229    '

093

OPPORTUNITY

111 Investment Property

DUPLEX FOR SALE 10%

assumable loan Beautiful brick 3

design yourself a new waw of ^ssumaoie loan Beautiful brick 3 f.fl'* Full fime plrt ffm7 R

your ambitions through the Shaklee r/C?.    florida

opportunity Bonus program bonus' p^cT Jth    

car and fravel For information call Church

May or Carolyn Gray. 752 0919 i    High    S60    s    756    0005.__

Lots For Sale

list or buy your business with iie C J Harris & Co . Inc Financial S |

Marketing Consultants. Serving the I Southeastern United States ' APPROXIMATELY 2 ACRES Greenville. NC 757 0001. nights' Ready to build on or ideal lor

753 4015._____ : mobile home Septic tank and well

OWN YOUR OWN Jeani Located between Ham's and Boyd's Sportswear. Infant Preteen Ladies    Priced    at J13J00

Apparel store Ottering all na ,

tionally known brartds. Brittania ^ Billy Wilson, 758 4476__

Jordache, Chic Lee, Levi, Van j EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL derbilt, Izod, Calvin Klein, Esprit,, lots from $9,000 $12,500 Call W G

Zena, Gunne Saz. Ocean Pacific 300' Blount 8, Associates. 75a 3000 ___

other brands $7,900 to $24.500,1 i aRGF uvrvynpn i ot in m bMinning inventory airfare tor one sfr i c t e d^?bd i v^?lo n o t t nrt    Stanstonsburo Road Approimate

Loughlin, ly 5 m,|e^ ^yonj, hospital Call [612)888 6555      _    I 704 876 1432 atfer 7    _

LYNNDALE, Queen Annes Road Call 355 2220 after 6__

131 Apartments For Rent

CLOSE TO ECU Two bedroom, iv, bath townhouse $315 per month. Lease and deposit required. Ball A Lane. 752 OwT_  _

BEAUTIFUL CONDOMINIUM tor rent or sale. 3 bedrooms, almost 1500'. tree shaded Call 757 6331 before 5 756 3618 after 6

EFFICIENCY 1 bedroom maid service $70 week Call 756 5555 Heritaoe Inn Motel_

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases Furnished

With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 month and op

756-5555  The Heritage Inn

FURNISHED APARTMENT tor

rent Convenient to university and downtown Recently redecorated Phone 1804 ) 276 1576

GreeneWay

TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals Financing Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIAirs, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street 752 3575

095

PROFESSIONAL

THE PINES in Ayden 130 * 180 j corner lot Excellent location I Paved streets curb and gutter, i prestigious neighborhood $10.500 lAL I Call Moseley Aflarcus Realty at 746 2166 tor lull details

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman ' WATERFRONT lots, located in

North Carolina's original chimney! Chocowinity on Crawford Creek

sweep 25 years experience working ' Call Fred Poore at 946 8916_

chimneys and fireplaces Call j LARGE LOTS Cherry Oaks, corner ot Lee Street and S R 1725 Two lots together over 1 acre Call 756 6676 alter 5p m____

limneys and fireplaces Car day or night. 753 3503 Farmville

104 Condominiums For Sale

WINDY RIDGE Two story con I M7 Resoft Property Fof Sale

dominium in a very private section Three bedrooms. /'z baths, living room with fireplace, dining room breakfast bar, extra insulation, completely floored attic, patio iOO Duff ----    -

$57,:

Duffus Realty Inc . 756 5395

109 Houses For Sale

BEAUTIFUL CONDOMINIUM for

rent or sale 3 bedrooms, almost 1500' tree shaded Call 757 6331

before 5, 756 3618 after 6______

BELVEDERE Three bedrooms and two baths, beautifully land scaped home on Crestline Boulevard Several quality features $60's Call 756 3837 after 5 P m , except weekends___

BELVEDERE "

By owner, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths foyer, living room, large den with colonial brick fireplace, fenced backyard, workshop or playhouse wood deck By appointment only

Call 756 4590________

BROOK ROAD Convenient to ev eryfhing, this pretty three bedroom two bath ranch is located on a corner lot Foyer, living room dining room, family room with fireplace, screened porch, double garage, almost new fiberglass roof Possible some owner financing S73.900 Duttus Realty Inc , 756 5395 BY OWNER II'z% assumable loan 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal

PAMLICO COUNTY near Oriental Creek front lots available tor cam pers or mobile homes Prices start at $6500 offshore lots $2,000 Owner financing available Call Oriental Realty 919 249 0717 or owner

919 823 6653________

PAMLICO RIVER 10 acres, 450 waterfront. 1870 cabin, pier,

absolute seclusion 522 5171__

PAMLICO RIVER Lots Near Washington, N C Large wooded lots Beautiful building sites with sandy beach front Call tor location and details W G Blount, 756 3000 2 NEW HOMES ON Pamlico River water front lots with bulkheads 3 bedrooms, 1'z baths, large kitchen and family room, large closets Built for year round comfort, with heat pump, air condition and fireplace Owner will finance 80% at good interest rate lor 10 years Excellent location 2 miles below Bath, NC at Bayview Vance Overton, 756 8697 or 923 2701_

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments carpeted dish washer, cable Tv, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 756 6869 GRIFTON AREA New centrally heated and air conditioned. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments 12 miles from Kinston, 17 miles from Greenville Handicapped units available Rent starts at $190 Adjusted leases available tor stu dents Office hours 10 a m to 2 p m Monday through Saturday Office 524 4239. home 4 4821

JOHNSTON STREET APART MENTS I bedroom unfurnished apartments available immediate Water and appliances lurnished No pets Call Judy at 756 6336 before 5 p.m , Monday Friday

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just oft lOth Street

Call 752-3519

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex    $295

Shenandoah 756 5389

Subdivision

120

RENTALS

living and dining room, den with fireplace, carpeted through Central air, gas heal, frnced

backyard, patio, I block from Aycock Junior High 756 8281 or

758 9090_____

BY OWNER Assumable 9',% loan 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, fireplace in den 752 5250 No realtors please

BY OWNER IN Club Pines 534 Crestline Blvd 2 story brick Williamsburg, 2400 sguare feet, 3 4 bedrooms, 2^ z baths Great room with fireplace, large spacious kitchen Double carport with storage Fence All electric Only $100,000 Assumable 9'z% VA loan Open House every Saturday and Sunday, I to 5, or call 756 8953 lor

appointment No realtors please___

ELEGANT WILLIAMSBURG AH formal areas family room with fireplace. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, apartment (or relative Quality throughout Approximately 3,000 square feel Large wooded lot $l20's Call 756 9103 before 6 p m or 756 5596 alter 6 No Realtors,

please______

NEW CEDAR SIDING E300 home with country porch, just waiting for you Well planned living area leaturuing lovely decor Convenient location to shopping centers and medical center We will pay up to 4

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes Security deposits required, no pets Call

^8 4413 between 8 and 5_______________

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need Call Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon

day Friday 9 5 Call 756 9933    __

warehouse ANDoltlce space for lease 20,000 square leet available Will subdivide 756 5097or 756 9315

121 Apartments For Rent

points plus closing costs Low $50's The Evans Company 752 2814, Winnie Evans 752 4224 or Faye Bowen 756 5258     ^__

ON SHADY LANE

There are some good buys on Greenville's market and this nice 3 bedroom hidden in the trees is a good example Recently a new neatpump and new root were added Two fireplaces with stained hardwood floors Over 1700 square teet lor $58,800 Call Carl,at Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and

weekends. 758 2230    _________

PICTURE PERFECT is this new home with white, cream and soft blue siding exterior Well planned living area includes walk in closet in master bedroom, foyer, custom built cabinets in kitchen, seperate dining room, and great room, with fireplace We will pay up to 4 points plus closing costs Camelat Sub division $58,000 The Evans Com pany, 752 2814, Winnie Evans 752

4224 or F aye Bowen 756 5258______ ___

WESTHAVEN Comfortable ranch with family size family room plus ad|Oining screened porch Formal areas, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and it's immaculate! $74,900 Call Ball 8, Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane.

752 8819___   ^___

WINTERVILLE 2 bedrooms, Ireshly painted, new root, hardwood floors, corner lot. excellent rental history $18,000 Call owner 756 7314,

after 5 756 4980__

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room. 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, great room with 8' pool table

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville s newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments

All ener^ etiicieni 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 Nopets

Contact JT or Tommy Williams _756 7815    ______

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'z baths Also 1 bedroom apartments Carpel, dishwashers, compactors, patio, tree, cable TV, .her dryer hook ups. laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club

was her dryer hook ups. room, sauna, tennis co house and POOL . 752 1557    ____

EASTBROOK ' AND

VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees central heat and air condi lioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

~ Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

LARGE ONE BEDROOM within walking distance ot ECU and downtown No pets Partial utilities included $210 month Days 756 9318

or niqhl 756 2542_____

LARGE 2 BEDROOM duplex 705 Hooker Road Stove, refrigerator, central air Available June 3 Lease and deposit No pets $275 355 2544

LOVE TREES?

E xpenence the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, tireplaces. heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation

OfficeOpen9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    I    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd

_____756    5067____

NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedrooms, I mile from hospital med school Really nice $300 Deposit.

lease 825 4931_________.

NEW DUPLEX near hospital Ready for immediate occupancy $300 per month No pets Call 752 3152 Irom 9 to 5, 752 6715 after 5,

ask^fpr John or Bryant___

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex Available July l Washer and dryer hook ups, heat pump Efficient $300 756 0471 alter 6 p m ________

OAKMONTSQUARE APARTMENTS

Two 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

7^4151

ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus No pets $215 a month

756 3923    _

ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment, I block trom university Heat, air and water furnished Short or long term lease No pets 758 3781 or 756 0889 _______

ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances $195 Call 758 3311

ONE BEDROOM, lurnished apartments or mobile homes tor rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

_ lireplace Newly carpeted with dishwasher cable TV, 7'years'old Located 3 miles trom Greenville Priced in the $50's    758 0144 or

752 7663

CAMPUS GAMEROOM

Outstanding campus location, best video games, attractive decor, stable revenue, good lease.

CALL FRANK COLLECT AT 404-355-6621

O APR

FINIUICIIIIIAVAIIIIBIE

At

GREENVILLE

Or

^300 Cash Back On Selected Models

See Us For Details

121 Apartments For Rent

RENT FURNITURE; Ltv^ din log. bedroom completo    per

month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 756 3862.    _

RIVER BLUFF townhouse sublease. Availabte June August Call 758 401$or 476-627$.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live

la^p^na

TV

Office hours tOa m.toSp m Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4M0

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups. cable TV, pool club house playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All A Community Complex

1401 Willow Street Office Corner E Im & Willow

752-4225

TIRED OF ROOAAMATES? Call os lor immediate occupancy in a 1 bedroom apartment Energy effi cieni and reasonable rent Days 758 6061 nights and weekends 758

5960    _______

TWIN OAXS lownhomes. *2 bedroom. I'z bath carpet range refrigerator, dishwasher hookups

No pets $310 756 7480__________

TWO BEDROOM apartments available No pets Call Smith Insurance & Realty, 752 2754___

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS

Near ECU Most utilities included $275 up Available immediately 758 0491 Of 756 7809betore9p m

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom I'z bath townhouses Available now $295 month 9 to 5 Monday Friday

754:7711    __

walk TO "uNIVERsifY I bedroom utilities lurnished $220 per month 756 7417    _

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom I'z bath townhouses Excellent location -Carrier heal pumps, Whirlpool kitchen washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court

____ 756 0987    ____

VI/HY PAY RENT?

When you can own your lownnome or condominium! Four locations available tor a low monthly pay ment, low down payment and no closing costs! Call Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 756 1498, Wil Reid a) 758 6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029

MOORE & SAUTER no South Evans    i

758-6050    1

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments | Available^irnnie^ately 752 33|l

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Air condi lioned Available June 16 $240 per month Cal I 756 336?^ter 5 g m

2 BEDROOM apartment at Whitehollow Drive $250 00 per month 2 bedroom townhouse at Village East $300 00 per month Both recluire lease and security deposit Duttus Really, Inc .756 0811    9 am 5 pm, Monday

Friday    ______________

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartments For Rent 133 Mobile Homes For Rent

TWO NICE spacious apartmonts in quiet neighborhood near college. 5 room duplex includes washer and dryer hook ups $260    2    bedroom

apartment includes water and sew age. $250 756 5991

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air canted, appliances $250 a month. Bryton Hifls 758 3311

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air. carpeted, appliances 804 Willow Street. Apartment 4 $250. 758 3311

2 BEDROOM apartment. Kitchen apptianes lurnished. totally efectric. $325 month. Call 756 7647 ^

2 BEDROOM townhouse. I'z bath, central air. washer/dryer hookups, four miles from hospital Available July I Call days 756 5780. nights

2 BEDROOM townhouse. carpeted, central air and heat, modern appli anees, washer-dryer hookup, t95 108 Cedar Court, 758 3311

503 EAST 4TH STREET Large 2 bedroom apartment Excellent tor students I block from ECU $250 per month 756 1888 9 to 5 weekdays

122 Business Rentals

FOR RENT Prime retail space. Arlington Boulevard 4500 square leet $4 25 per square foot " 756 5097

756 93l5or i

Call

FOR RENT 10.000 square tool building Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity Call Donnie Smith at 946 5887_

2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space lor lease in small strip shopping center Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty 756 3500. nights Don Southerland 756 5260

127 Houses For Rent

EAST TENTH STREET, 3

bedrooms. I' z baths, very nice $300

per month Call 758 7741  _

HOUSES FOR RENT m Ayden 3 bedrooms, kitchen living room bath central hall and 2 porches Also 2 bedrooms, living room,

kitchen, bath Call 746 3674___

IN AYDEN 3 bedrcxim house, two story 2 baths, carpet fireplace central heat stove and refrigera tor No pets $325 a month 746 6394

or 752 5167 ____________

UNIVERSITY REA 3 bedroom house, I bath, appliances furnished ideal tor students or family H2 East 12th Street $275 7M 0765 2408 east' 3RD STREET 3 bedrooms air condition gas heat nice family neighborhood Marrieds only $285 per month 756 1888 9 to 5

yyeekdays  __  _    _    ,

3 BEDROOM houses tor rent 410 Pans Avenue $300 00 Biltmore Street $330 per month All require lease and security deposit Duttus Realty, Inc^ 756 0811 3 4 BEDROOM brick home 2'z baths living room dining room, den, 2 fireplaces double garage Available July i 600 Soufh Elm Street 355 6476

129

Lots For Rent

TRAILER SPACE available imme dialely Eastern Pines Community 756 J4t3

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

AVAILABLE JUNE IS, furnished. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer, central air and heat, no pets Call after 6 p.m., 756 3040.

MOBILE HOMES for rent 2 bedrooms, washer, and air Call 756 1444 after 3

SPECIAL RATES for students Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes $125 and up. No pets, no children. 758 0745 or 756 491_

and

ads

Help fight Inflation by buying selling through the Classified Call 752 6166    _

I BEDROOM Mobile Home lor rent .all 756 4687    ___

2 BEDROOM TRAILER

Furnished, washer optional Im mediate occupancy 752 3839

2 BEDROOM, furnlshad. washer, air. good location No pets, no children. Call 758 4857

2 BEDROOMS Inside city limits $160 per month Call 756 1800_

2 BEDROOM, furnished on private lot $175 Call 758 7741_

frailer for rent Call between 8 5. Monday ridav, 355 2381.

8X50. Remodeled. I'l bedrooms, new bed air. washer Fenced In private lot $100 a month. 752 5671

135 Office Space For Rent

DOWNTOWN, just ott mall Singles and multiples Convenient to courthouse Call 756 0041 or 756 3466

FOR RENT 2500 square feet

Suitable tor office space or com merclal 604 Arlington Boulevard 756 8111

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756 7815. 3101 SOUTH EVANS Street next to Fasttare on 264 By Pass 4 offices, carpet, reception room, heat, air condition Excellent location Available June I Call Van Fleming 756 6235 or 752 2887

137 Resort Property For Rent

EMERALD ISLE Pebble Beach Ocean Front Condos Sales

Rentals I 800 682 7810_____

ON OCEAN FRONT large duplex Emerald Isle Each sioe accom modales 14 New Game room Near fishing pier Very reasonable Ask

tor Oakley Duplex, 354 2958    _

PRIVATE CONDO on ocean with everythiry furnished Pine Knoll Townes Sleeps 6 Available June 8 12 July 17 31 and August 7 Labor

Pay 752 2579 ____________

4 BEDROOM furnished cottage on Albamarle Sound Weekly or mon Ihly Call 825 7321

138

Rooms For Rent

ROOM FOR RENT with private bath With or without board White male, in 50 s or 60 s Must be honest and sober Call 752 6182 day or night tor inlornnaliqn

ROOM TO RENT In quiet family neighborhood Cooking and laundry privileges pool near by Prefer male $125 month Call 756 8073

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quility furnllur Rellnlthing ind rtpiirt Superior cinlng lor ill type chiirs. Iirger telectlon ot custom picture Irtmlng. survey stikeeiny length, all types of pallets, hand-craltad ropa hammocks, saleclsd tramad raproductlons

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Industrial Park. Hwy 13 758-4188    8    AM-4 30 PM

Greenvllls. N C

Salesman Of The Month

Waverly Phelps, President of Phelps Chevrolet is pleased to announce that Clyn Barber is the winner of Ihe Salesman of The Month Award. Clyn won this for his outstanding sales performance during the month ot May

PHELPS CHEVROLET

West End Circle

756-2150

FOR LEASE - 2500 SQUARE FEET PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON BOULEVARD CALL 756-8111

*1000

CASH REBATES or 9.8%

APR FINANCING On All Convertibles In Stock

Chrysler LeBaron 2-Door Convertible

If Youve Ever Dreamed Of Owning A Convertible^

Now Is The Time!

Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge PeugeotI'he UaUy Reflector, Ureenvuie, N t1hursday, June 9,1983-27

143    Roommate Wanted    I

FEMALE NEEDED immediately to share nica 2 bedroom apartment tor summar. $130 Ittcludes every thir "        

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted tor 3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge Pool, tennis courts and

WtL rS6.949i_______

FEMALE ROOMAAATE WANTED Brytoo Hills 752 2382 after 6pm Needed Immadiately

144    Wanted To Buy

USED GARDEN TILLER Call Z5? 7423 after 6pm   _ _    _

148    Wanted To Rent

i RESPONSIBLE PERSON wants to rent 3 bedroom house with formal dining room Need to move imme diateiy' 756 6052

RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE wanted.^^Your^halt. $5^5 per month

ROOMMATE WANTED to Thare furnished 2 bedroom apartment

ROOMMATE WANTED Country living. Lots ot room $100. plus ' z utilities 756 8100 from 9 5. ask for Barbara, 746 3705 after 5

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE wanted Your half. 555 per month alter 8

plus utilities $752 2994 ,

I pm

144

Wanted To Buy

WANTED 2 to 5 acres of land suitable for house and garden wifhin 10 miles trom Greenville between Highway ii South and NC 33 East Call Real Estate Brokers

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping In fhe Classified Ads

for bargains I

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ACCOUNTANT TO $14,000

Dynamic company needs individual for in charge processing of data on an IBM System 34 computer for weekly and monthly financial reports. A.A.S. Degree preferred. Experience in general ledger accounting a plus. Send resume to: Comptroller, PO Box 2101. Washington, North Carolina 27889,    '

STEEL BUILDINGS

BY

Riverside Iron Works

Toll Free 1-800-682-3705

An Authorized Dealer for Mitchell Steel Buildings for over 15 years

HASTINGS FORD JUNE SPECIAL

1981 Datsun 280-ZX

Medium gold metallic Turbo Automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, till wheel, cruise control, power windows. T-tO() June NADA Retail $14,000.

Our Price

Amem I (J%rd C l'omf>ny

Tenth Sftwl A .f>4 Ry t

*11,400

758-0114

makin' tracks

Rapidly expanding, aggressive company is seekingpersons interested in a career opportunity with excellent upward mobility and advancement potential to manage a new retail facility in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina. Experience in C-store or fast food industry required for manager position.

Managers $11,000 to $18,000 per year Assistants (Manager Trainees) ^

$7,500 to $13,000 per year

Reply in confidence to: Personnel Manager.

P.O. Box 2101, Washington. North Carolina 27889

Sfe IM

NEW

TOWNHOMES

Priced Frpm

$53,900

FEATURES Park-like atmosphere Prime location Innovative design 2 & 3 bedroom plan Ranch and 2 story Privacy

Culde-sac streets Brick and wood exterior Private patio

LOCATION/DIRECTIONS

Go South on Evans Street one mile past TV Station, turn left at first cross roads, go one block and turn right intoTreetops

CHAPIN & ASSOCIATES. INC.

3106S. Memorial Dr. Greenville, N.C. 27834 Weekend y Weekdays 756-8733    756-1234

Lexington Square

Townhomes Phase II

Near The Greenville Athletic Club

Model Open Daily    ^

12-4 P.M.

2 And 3 Bedroom Units Offered

J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.

355-2286





CAMP MEETING - Parents rest on the    held each August    at Balls Creek Campground,

porches of their wooden tents and children walk    (AP Laserphoto)

the dirt streets during the annual camp meeting

N. C Religious Tradition Has Won Attention Of Historians

By RICK FOSTER The Newton Observer-News-Enterprise

BALLS CREEK, N.C. (AP) - Cars, school buses and other traffic whiz constantly by the .Balls Creek Camp Meeting Grounds in eastern Catawba County. But the rambling collection of wooden tents seem to be taken for granted by local residents.

The campground has caught the attention, however, of state historians who want to see it in the National Register, according to Davyd F. flood, a Catawba County native and representative of the Division of Archives,

The Balls Creek Camp Meeting has its roots in the middle of the 19th century

when the Methodist Church began the tradition in 1853, There are other camp meeting grounds in the area, such as Rock Springs in Lincoln County, dating from the 1790s.

I think Balls Creek is the largest of the three, and, because it is an ongoing social event, it has special significance in the history of not only Catawba County but the state and the nation, ll(K)d said,,

flood is writing architectural descriptions of the buildings, which include about 300 of the small wooden tents and the arbor, where the revivalist worship services are held ^each August for two weeks.

If the camp meeting grounds are deemed a na

tional historic place, any action taken by the state or federal governments that would have any effect on the property would have to be reviewed.

The camp has been closed only four years during its history, one year because of a polio epidemic.

The camp ground is not the oldest in the county. The Wesley Chapel Campground near Plateau was formed in

the 1700s.

The land belongs to a board of mainly Methodist trustees, but the tents are owned by individuals. A few rent tents.

But Balls Creek has its share of history, dating back to the 18,50s.

The tents are rebuilt con-.stantly. John Sipe, 72, of Maiden and Paul Drum, 67, of Newton, are rebuilding two tents to replace structures built in the 1930s.

In the 1930s, a tent could be purchased for $15. Now they go for $4,000 to $5,000.

Over the years, improve-mentss have come to the camp, though they are still largely primitive. The camp has been electrically wired, and many of the tents have outlets. A few even have air conditioners.

Both men are following a family tradition that goes back almost to the beginning of the meetings.

Running water is available though most still use the common rest rooms located near the tents.

Genetic Engineering Opposed

By Religious Leaders In U. S.

ByRICKHAMPSON Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Re Hgious leaders who urged Congress to ban attempts at human genetic engineering are overreacting to a problem that does not even exist, according to the executive director of a presidential commission that studied the ^ subject.

"Many, many problems stand in the way of scien-. tists successfully t * manipulating human geries.

' Alexander Capron, who was executive director of the Presidents Commission for the Study of Ethical Pro - blems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research, said Wednesday.

"They are suggesting a solution to an urgent problem we simply dont have, he said. "They have not thought . through their position as clearly as they should have. About 40 religious leaders, ranging from liberal Catholic bishops to conservative Protestant preachers, signed

a resolution urging that engineering specific traits into the human sperm or egg "not be attempted because it raises the possibility of altering the human species.

Such engineering requires people to decide "which genetic traits should be programmed into the human gene pool and which should be eliminated, according to the resolution released Wednesday at a Manhattan news conference.

But "no individual, group or institutions can legitimately claim the right or authority to make such decisions on behalf of the rest of the species, it concluded.

Signers of the resolution included Dr. Jerry Falwell, founder of the Moral Majority, Pat Robertson, president of the Christian Broadcasting Network, and the leaders of the United Methodist, Lutheran, Mennonite, American Baptist and Southern Baptist churches.

Bishop James W. Malone, vice president of the U.S.

Conference of Catholic Bish-ops, Bishop James Armstrong, president of the National Council of Churches and Rabbi Wolfe Kelman, executive vice president of the Rabbinical Assembly, also signed.

Jeremy Rifkin, author of a new book criticizing genetic engineering, drew up the resolution and collected the signatures. Although the resolution contains no reference to legislative proposals, its signers were told it would be sent to Congress, he said.

The resolution differed from that of the presidential commission, which found no reason for immediate alarm about genetic engineering research.

Instead of a prohibition, the commission suggested cautious scrutiny of procedures that could create inheritable changes.

Capron criticized the resolution in a telephone interview from Washington, DC.

If it turns out that the

only way you can eliminate a disease that kills children is to expose the germline (sperm or egg) cells to genetic alteration, and if you were confident of the outcome, wouldnt you want to do it? he asked.

Several of the religious leaders at the news conference emphasized they were not opposed to theraputic genetic changes that would not be passed on to future generations, such as those involving procedures to correct the bodys production of blood when hindered by sickle cell anemia or hemophilia.

River Has High

Pesticide Level

SAN DIEGO ,(AP) -Pesticide levels considered dangerous to humans have been ifound in a river that flows from Mexico into a major Southern California vegetable growing area, officials say.

The New River, which flows from Mexicali on the Mexican border through the tomato and avocado fanning region of the Imperial Valley, contains pollution from many pesticides banned in the United States, said Stuart Gummer, chairman of the Colorado River Basin region of the state Water Quality Control Board.

The immensity of the pollution and contamination problem presented by the hazardous substances in the New River demands that every possible remedy be pursued, Gummer said in a recent letter to the state Department of Health Services.

SOLO SAILOR - Tom McOeans boat the Giltspur may be small, but he says it is heavy and deep; two things that are vital for his ,'ittempt to sail (solo) 2.300 nautical miles

across the Atlantic Ocean. McClean says he plans to sail from St. Johns, Newfoundland, on June 9 or 10 and hopes to set a record for the fastest eastward trip. (CP Lasei])hoto)

UGHTNING DEATHS ISTAMBL, Turkey (AP) - Lightning killed 12 people in two days of heavy rains that flooded cities along Turkeys western and Black Sea coasts, officials said Wednesday.

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Title
Daily Reflector, June 9, 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.) - 30476
Date
June 09, 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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