Daily Reflector, June 16, 1983


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INSIDE TODAY

DIABETES CONTROL

Diabetes contr^ol in rats has been achieved by researchers, leading hope that humans will be next. Final solution no longer decades away. Page 21

INSIDE TODAY

THE LEGISLATURE

A bill disallowing compensatory, time for state employees is given approval by the House Personnel Committee. Not very many affected. Page 20

SPORTS TODAY

ERROR PLAGUED

Four error by Pitt County gave Rocky Mount a 6-3 win Wednesday in American Legion baseball. Page 15THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 125

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE-TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 16, 1983

28 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

County Tentatively Shaves School Funds

D cTTTADTCAVArp    ..nif    .1    Allooations    One    cent    on    the    tax    rate    wolUd    raise    about    $215.712.    recommendations    were    based    is    dependant    on    Congressional

By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer

Looking for a way to cut the recommended 1983-1984 budget to avoid a proposed 2 cents per $100 valuation tax hike, the Board of County Commissioners Wednesday tentatively approved a reduction of $307,821 in school capital outlay funds for the coming year.

Commissioners made the tentative cut as they reviewed proposed education budgets in their final budget session before a public hearing Monday night.

County Manager Reginald Gray, when he presented his recommended budget to the board last week, proposed a 2 cents increase in the tax rate, saying there has been no property tax increase since 1980.

Part of the increase, he said, would help establish a capital reserve fund to set aside money for replacement of landfill equipment, the purchase of land, a new tax and land records mapping system and other projects.

Earlier this week, commissioners suggested that cuts could be made in the $808,000 recommended for the reserve fund, but set no dollar amount for the proposed cuts.

Wednesday, in reviewing proposed school budgets, the board tentatively agreed that part of the cut needed to maintain the present 54 cents tax rate come from the school s

Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mall it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1%7, Greenville, N.C. 27834.

Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.

capital outlay allocations.

Gray had recommended $690,469 in capital outlay money for the county school system (507,920 was appropriated for the current fiscal year), and $329,391 for the Greenville city system ($268,308 this year). The tentative cuts would take $215,712 away from the county and $92.109 from the city, leaving $474.756 in capital money for the county schools and $237,282 for the city system.

One cent on the tax rate would raise about $215,712.

Commissioners also suggested that at least part of the capital outlay funds appropriated for the schools in the coming year be placed in a reserve for allocation after a merger study has been completed.

Gray pointed out that school capital outlay money will come from revenue sharing funds in the coming year, and said at least part of the projected revenue on which his

recommendations were based is dependant on Congressional approval of the continuation of the revenue sharing program.

Commissioners reviewed, but took no tentative action, on Gray's recommendations for school current expense money for 1983-1984, indicating that further study would be given to the current expense budgets, possibly next week Gray has recommended $4 93 million in current expense

(Please turn to Page 10)

Additional $207J Miliion Eyed

Tax Pian Shaping Up In Senate

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A state Senate subcommittee today adopted a plan to raise an additional $207.7 million in 1984-85 that removes almost all of the objections of business and industry to a House tax plan.

The Senate Finance Subcommittee plan would raise revenue estimates for 1984-85 to provide an additional $10,2 million and would put all teachers on a 12-month pay plan to create a one-time windfall of $74 million.

Like the $240-million House plan, it would raise the sales tax on new cars and levy a sales tax on used cars, eliminate the $200 interest exclusion on income taxes, levy a sales tax on vacation home rentals, tax computer

programs and increase the tuition at community colleges.

The Senate plan removes from the House plan higher taxes on alcoholic'beverages, corporations, merchants, vifleo games, heavy tractor-trailer trucks and insurance companies.

Representatives of those industries appeared Wednesday before the full Senate Finance Committee to sharply criticize the House plan. But the same lobbyists had nothing to say today in opposition to the Senate plan.

Finance Committee co-chairman Sen. Marshall Rauch, D-Gaston, acknowledged there are big differences in the House and Senate approaches and that it probably will take a conference committee to resolve

the differences.

The Senate had a chance to hear from the people," Rouch said. There was a clamor from outsiders, from business that caused us to realize it (the House plan) was going to hurt business."

Senate Democrats also had a caucus Wednesday night and sources said they were told the House plan was too "anti-business."

Rauch said his Finance Committee will vote on the bill Friday and the matter could go before the Senate on Monday night.

The subcommittee plan did not incorporate some of the recommendations which Rauch gave to the full com mittee Wednesday.

He sugjgested the state begin paying its workers on the first of the month to

BONE MARROW TRANSPLANT Twenty-eight-year-old Greenville resident Frank Barnette must have a bone marrow transplant soon as his only hope for long-term survival.

Dr. Mary Raab, his physician, has arranged for him to be the next new patient at a bone marrow transplant center in Seattle, Wash,, and it is hoped that he will be accepted around July 1.

Barnette has panocytopenia, a preleukemic condition that affects his energy level, his blood clotting ability, everything about his physical well-being.

Right now his energy is so low that he is sleeping | most of the time, his wife, Elaine, said. A blood transfusion would restore his energy somewhat, but it is deemed inadvisable because adding antibodies would not be good for him in view of I

the upcoming FRANK BARNETTE transplant.

Formerly Barnette, a U.S. Air Force veteran, was attending East Carolina University, majoring in geology, and Pitt Community College at the same time. He is now unable to go to school or work because of his health condition and is battling with the Veterans Administration because it is seeking to deny benefits, saying that the condition which appeared during his years in the Air Force is a childhood illness. His doctors have sought to refute this claim and Congressman Walter B. Jones office has now gone to bat for him.

Barnettes family, who are originally from Swansboro, have been tested to see who is the best bone marrow match. Its a tossup between his brother, Charlie, who lives here and his sister, Barbara Ann of Raleigh. Both are willing to provide the marrow and both may accompany him to Seattle, along with his wife, and stepdaughter, Kara. The family will stay in an efficiency apartment provided by the hospital while theyre there, possibly as long as four months.

Mrs. Barnette, who was in school at the time her husbands condition worsened, formerly worked for the ECU School of Medicine.

Anyone willing to assist Barnette and his family financially is asked to send donations to the Frank Barnette Fund, c/o Dr. Mary Raab, Department of Medicine, ECU School of Medicine, 3-E 106 Brody Medical Science Building, Greenville, N.C. 27834. Attention Valeria George.

John-Paul Leaves For His Homeland

By BRYAN BRUMLEY

Associated Press Writer

WARSAW. Poland (AP) -Pope John Paul II today embarked on an eight-day pilgrimage to his homeland, declaring he would pray for Poles at the shrine where they have always gathered "in the happy and sad hours of their history ."

The pope left Rome aboard a special Alitalia jetliner at 2:55 p.m. (8.55 a.m. EDT) on the two-hour flight to Poland. Thousands of Poles streamed into Warsaw for his arrival, police convoys combed the city and secret police "bodyguards" dogged Solidarity leader Lech Walesa in Gdansk.

In a telegram to Italian President Sandro Pertini, who telephoned the pope earlier in the day to wish him a good trip, John Paul said;

1 undertake this pilgrimage to my homeland... to pray at the feet of Our Lady of Jasna Gora for the Polish people who have always gadhebed around that venerated icon in the happy and sad hours of their history ."

Walesa, freed from 11 months' martial law internment last November, said the guards were shadowing him, and trying to prevent him from leaving Gdansk to meet with the pontiff, who supports Solidar-the free trade union under military

ity,

outlawed rule.

There has been speculation that sometime this weekend, Walesas regular time off, he would make the 300-plus mile journey to Czestochowa, site of Polands holiest icon, the Black Madonna, and meet the pope there.

Government spokesman Jerzy Urban claimed the police escort was for Walesas protection. There have been signals Indicative of a possible provocation likely to endanger his security," Urban told a Warsaw news confernice. He said the

policemen wouldnt try to hinder Walesas movements.

^ In the streets of Warsaw, vendors did a brisk business hawking religious souvenirs as well as ice cream, soda water and pizza to pilgrims descending on the capital in buses.

The streets were decked with the red-and-white Polish flag, the Vaticans yellow colors and banners reading, "Holy Father, Lift Up Our Hearts" and "Holy Father, With Ourl^ve.

At St. Annas Church, where young Solidarity supporters regularly gather by a floral cross in the courtyard, youths handed out sarcastic leaflets saying, "Long Live the Soviet Union - At Our Cost

In Castle Square, along the popes route into town, a woman shook her head as a police convoy drove past, sirens wailing. "Why are they doing this just at this moment? she asked Authorities have warned they will deal sternly with any political demonstrators during the papal visit.

The tight security, designed both to protect the pontiff and to forestall any outbursts of support for Solidarity, underscored the stark difference between the Poland which John Paul visited in 1979 and the country still under the shadow of martial law today.

The visit comes at "an immensely difficult moment in the life of my country, John Paul said at his audience Wednesday in St. Peters Square on the eve of his eight-day, six-city tour.

It is a pilgrimage anxiously awaited by his devoutly Roman Catholic countrymen, who for centuries have sought refuge in the church in times of crisis.

Moscow and Washington will be closely watching the pope on his pilgrimage. John Pauls itinerary includes meetings with Polish gov

ernment officials, visits to workers' strongholds and a series of religious events.

"If John Paul takes a stand in his statements that will further stabilization, then he will be making a positive contribution to the lifting of martial law, Deputy Pre mier Mieczyslaw Rakowski told reporters Wednesday.

Martial law was suspended in December 1982, a year after it was imposed in the midst of workers' demands for human and civil rights, but many of its restrictions on freedom remain in force

Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, who heads the Communist government, and his aides have made no secret of their hope that the trip will improve his regimes image at home and abroad - and perhaps even hasten the lif ting of Western economic sanctions imposed after martial law was declared.

generate additional interest income on payroll money and to get a one-time windfall of $400 million. The windfall would come because the state could postpone paying salaries from the current fiscal year to the next fiscal year

Rauch also asked for consideration of repealing the state income tax exemption on bonds for industry and joint-power agencies, levying a sales tax on services like those of barbers and law vers, considering delaying capital spending until Jan. 1, 1984, and reducing the 1983 85 budget by 2 percent to more accurately reflect spending

He said his ideas would generate a minimum of $500 million

At the hearing Wednesday, Lindsay Warren of the N.C Motor Carriers Association said the truck tax would l)e the same as a lo cents per gallon increase in the gasoline tax or an increase in the annual registration ftv from $91()to$2,5(KI

He said the cost of the tax would tx multiplied because there are 22 other states that will retaliate with additional taxes on North Carolina trucks if the bill iK^'omes law

'It IS an unfair and very discriminatory tax." Warren said Knough is enough There is a limit lo what industry can do and can .sustain

Representatives of the beer, wine and lujuor in dustries criticized the pro posed 10 percent increase m the taxes on alcoholic beverages. They agreed that they are paying a dispropor lionate amount of taxes al ready and the burden should not Ije increased

Ruffin Bailey of the N C Beer Wholesalers Association said the slate has the second highest tax on beerjri the nation and the sixth lowest con.sumption

The alcoholic beverage industry, from the top to the bottom, is paying ,a disproportionate amount of lax in this state comp.ared to

(Please turn to Page 10)

Foggy Assignment

EARLY START - City Public Works department employee Perry Smith mows grass on First Street at the Town Commons early this morning in a light fog. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Tripoli Throng Machinegunned

Plane Damaged At Local Airport

A single engine airplane was damaged Wednesday when the landing gear on the craft collapsed after the plane landed at Pitt-Greenville Airport

Ed Turcotte of 134 East Longmeadow Road, who was piloting the plane at the time, said this morning that the landing gear collapsed after landing about 12; 30 p m

Turcotte was not injured, but he said damage to the Beechcraft Bonanza, owned by Judson Blount of Greenville, might run as high as $10,000.

According to the Pitt County Tax Supervisor s office, the

1973 model aircraft is valued at $52,500.

Turcotte said the mishap was "just one of those things that happens." A retired military pilot. Turcotte said he has experienced similar incidents "two or three times while in the service.

He compared the accident to "running your car into a

ditch.    ,,,    .

He said the Federal Aviation Administration will investigate to determine why the landing gear collapsed.

Aircraft mechanics jacked the plane up Wednesday afternoon and moved it to a hanger to await the arrival of FAA inspectors.

BEIRUT, LEBANON (AP) - Gunmen in a white Mercedes car sprayed pedestrians with machine-gun fire at the southern entrance of Ubanons northern port city of Tripoli today, killing 14 and wounding 17, state radio said.

There was no immediate word on the identity of the gunmen, but the car had diplomatic license plates, the stale radiobroadcast said.

Another radio station, the right-wing Christian. 'Voice of Lebanon," put the death toll at 17 and said masked gunmen fired from three cars at a string of shops, a restaurant and a crowded beach al Tripolis southern entrance of Bahsas, 50 miles north of Beirut.

The Voice of Lebanon" said one Syrian was wounded when a truck carrying Syrian troops came under fire in the same area a half-hour before the shootings by the masked men

It could not be immediately determined whether the shootings were connected with the two dayc of street battles that were halted Wednesday by a cease-fire between pro-Syrian and anti-Syrian militias in the city.

Three people were killed and 15 wounded in the clashes Tuesday and Wednesday between the

Syrian-backed "Arab Knights and the "Islamic Union idovement, a fundamentalist faction opposed to Syrias military presence in northern l^ebanon..vf

AliiMta





2-Tbe Dtly Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Hiuiwtay, June W, WtS

Party Hostess Put-On Leaves

Her Put-Out

By Abigail Van Buren

t983 by Univerul Prnt Syndicate

DEAR ABBY; A woman friend (?) phoned and invited me to a wedding anniversary party for mutual friends. She said, "Im having a money tree for the honorees, so make your check out to me. I will cash it and hang the money on the tree, and put your name on the card listing

all the donors.    ...

I agreed to send my check, although I thought the idea was in poor taste since the honorees were wealthy and had much more than I.

Then she said, Im sure you wont want to attend as the party is set up for couples only and you are a single woman, so just mail the check to me. Goodbye." Since I had already agreed to send a check, I meekly mailed it.

I later learned that several single men attended the party and had a good time. 'The honorees never acknowl edged my gift, and since theyre not the type to disregard a gift, I can only assume that my name was not put on the card.

I welcome your comments.

STUNG IN COLUMBIA, MO.

DEAR STUNG: Your friend could author a book on how to lose friends and alienate people. As any Monday-morning quarterback can tell you, when your friend said she was sure you wouldnt want to attend because the party was set up for couples and you were single, you should have told her you would either bring an escort or come alone and take your chances.

Its not too late to tell her that your gift has not beep acknowledged, and knowing it Is unlike the honorees to ignore a gift, you are writing them to ask if your name was on the card or inadvertently omitted.

DEAR ABBY: When flying on a commercial plane, I find that it is a rare flight when an infant doesnt scream or cry for a good part of the trip. I am extremely sensitive to noises, and the constant cries of a baby upset me no end.

I pay a large sum of money to fly, while the infant who flies for free ruins my trip. I feel that this is an infringe ment on my rights.

What are your thoughts about having a section on planes for passengers with infants? .lust as there is a No Smoking" section, there can also be a No Infant section.

ALLERGIC TO CRYING BABIES

DEAR ALLERGIC: No Smoking sections on planea are not entirely smoke-free because smoke has a way of drifting.

A No Infant section would offer little relief from a screaming baby because sound (like smoke) also travels. Given a choice. Id opt for the crying baby and use earplugs or a headset.

DEAR ABBY: Uoking Ahead at 72 writes that she hopes that when the time comes (to die), some loving person will remove the hair from her upper lip because she wouldnt want to be caught dead with her moustache showing.

Abby, you seem to think its the morticians responsi bility to make the deceased appear as "natural as pos sible. I have been in the funeral business for over :10 years, and its our policy to allow the family to view the deceased before the public visitation in order to be certain , that the deceased looks natural."

Here are some of the requests we have had:

1. "Cant you put a smile on Dads face? He looks so sad."

2. "Stick a pipe in hie mouth, or nobody will believe its Joe.

:i. Put Duds glasses on. Nobody ever saw him without them."

4. "Take the rouge and lipstick off Grandma. She never wore any.

"Put a Wall Street Journal in Dads hand, so hell look more natural."

N J. FUNERAL DIRECTOR

Shower Given Miss Weston

A miscellaneous bridal shower was given Monday ni^it honoring Toni Weston, bride-elect of Charies W. Enloe. They will be married June 18.

Marriage

Announced

The shower was given by Mrs. Milton Faulkner and Mrs. Gentry Mills at the home of Mrs. Faulkner.

Howard

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. David Eugene Howard, Bethel, a son, Kenya vOTSh, on June 6,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

The refreshment table was decorated with a yellow hurricane candle surrounded by

ivy.

Special guests were the brides mother, Mrs. William F. Weston, and her grandmother, Mrs. Neta G. Weston.

CUnUm Bora to Mr. and Mrs. James Frederick Clinton, Wilson, a son, Michael Bradley, on June 6,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Pede

Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Curtis Peele, Robersonville, a son, Clayton Curtis Jr., on June 7,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Sena

Born to Robert John Sena and Dr. Carol Little Sena, B-9 Doctors Park, a son, Joseph Max, on June 9,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Taykff

Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Rudolph Taylor, B-12 Highland Park, a son, Michael Ryan, on June 10, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Dave, Chris and Mary Catherine Sawyer and Christy and Dana Davenport announce the marriage of their parents, Cathy Briley Sawyer and Charles Stewart' Davenport, on June 11 at the Pactolus Baptist Church in Pactolus.

Miss Boyd Is Honored

Engagement Announced

Kimberly Joyce Boyd, bride-elect of Mark Lane Baker, was honored at a miscellaneous bridal shower last week.

It was given by friends of the bride and was held at the Shelmerdine Pentecostal Holiness Church fellowship hall.

Campbell

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ray Campbell, Pinetown, a daughter, Bridget Nicole, on June 7, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Williams Bora to Mr. and Mrs. James Paul Williams, Poweilsville, a son, Jesse Wayne, on June 9, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Miss Godwin Given Shower

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

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RUTH OSBORNE SETZER...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cornelius Setzer Jr. of New Bern, who announce her engagement to James Logan Hunt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Billy Lee Hunt of Farmville. The wedding is planned for July 30.

The honoree was remembered with a corsage of white miniature roses.

Barnes

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Wayne Barnes, Winterville, a son, William Douglas, on June 9, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Beverly Ann Godwin, bride-elect of Gregory T. Sharpe, was honored at a floating miscellaneous shower given by friends at the home of Mrs. M B. Dickens last week.

Special guests included Miss Godwins mother, Mrs. Hiram R. Godwin Sr. and Deborah Godwin of Camden.

The wedding will take place July 9.

PROUDLY

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Miss Boyd was also honored at a shower given by employees of the Pitt County Health Department where she is employed. She was given a pink carnation corsage with babys breath.

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Birthday

Bridal Couple Entertained

Bunny Tripp and Jay Cox, bridal couple-elect, were honored at a barbecue and wedding shower Saturday at the Pactolus Ruritan Clubhouse.

Hosts and hostesses were Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Tripp. Dr. and Mrs. William Tripp Jr., Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Tripp Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Switzer.

The honoree was presented a corsage of red silk carnations and mothers of the couple were given yellow silk carnations.

The Rev. Tommy Payne gave the invocation.

Prohibition ended in the United States in 1933.

ff Carol!

Love,

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Her Winning Secret Is Four Ps

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Seattle hairdresser Patti Hammond is a systematic winner.

The 52-year-old grandmother makes a business of entering contests, sweepstakes and drawings. In the past three years, she has won some $10,000 in cash, gift certificates, home furnishings and trips.

I dont just enter every contest unless its got something to offer that I really want - cash, car or trip, said Mrs. Hammond, owner and operator of the Hair-i-Styling Salon in Seattle. Im usually entering between 12 and 20 every day.

It seems like hardly a month goes by that 1 dont win something, she said. Youve got to think like a winner to be a winner.

She said her secret to winning lies in "the four Ps - positive thinking, persistence, prayer and postage.

Mrs. Hammond, whose three grandchildren provide the colored pencils and crayons she uses to draw attention to her entry envelopes, mails one entry a day at the beginning of a contest. Toward the middle, she sends two entries a day and for the last couple of weeks before deadline, she sends up to five entries a day from different mailboxes around town:

She folds her entries in accordion pleats to make them stick out from the rest.

She spends 20 hours a week and about $150 a month writing cards, decorating envelopes, stamping and mailing. She subscribes to

three contest newsletters that alert her to contests die may have missed and provide tips on how to win.

Im never without my 3 x 5 pad of paper, so if I have to spend 10 minutes waiting at the doctors office. Im always writing my name, Mrs. Hammond said.

She keeps diligent records of her mail and supply expenses. She claims tax deductions for the expenses, and she must pay income tax on her winnings.

Her biggest, and most recent prize was a week at Club Med in Playa Blanca, which brought her through San Francisco.

It came on our 34th anniversary, said the white-haired woman wearing purple feathers in her hair and heart-shaped purple sunglasses. Not registered mail; just a plain envelope telling me Id won.

While she was away, one of her employees mailed her 25-50 daily entries so she wouldnt fall behind schedule. She sent 88 postcards home during her week-long vacation, using the same system she does to enter contests.

1 would have withdrawal symptoms if I didnt go to the mailbox every day, she said.

Its a lot of work, but it doesnt seem like work to me, she said. Everybody has a hobby. This is my real love and I made a lot of believers out of people who thought I was loony. It pays off-it really pays off.

But my tongue gets very tired of licking.

Engagement Announced

JOANN PERKINS...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Harvey Perkins of Greenville, who announce her engagement to Van Joel Sharpe, son of Mrs. Barbara Jean Sharpe of Route 4. Greenville, and the late Jerry Sharpe Jr. The wedding will take place July 16.

Bridal Policy

Cookbook Puts Diet Fare In Glamour Class

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

Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven

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

The World Health Organization was founded in 1948.

ByTOMHOGE AP Wine and Food Writer

Calorie watchers should get a lift from a new cookbook, a diet ai" dedicated to the "greening of the American cuisine.

The Golden Door Cookbook (Forman Publishing. Los Angeles. $24.75) was put out by Deborah Szekely, who served on fitness councils under presidents Nixon and Ford and who operates the Golden Door Health Spa in Escondido, Calif.

There are delectable hors doeuvres, tempting breads, hearty roasts and fancy desserts. They may seem a far cry from the usual Spartan diet fare, but all are low in calories.

The main taboos in the book are salt, sugar and beef. The reader is also advised to decrease intake of fats, whether they be saturated or unsaturated.

Ms. Szekely, who has been working in the food field for 42 years, is keenly aware of the fact that diet dishes must look attractive and taste good to be successful.

Above all. she notes, where possible the ingredients should be fresh. When you browse through a supermarket, for instance, shun the brightly colored bottles and boxes and head for the fresh fruits and vegetables and eggs and cheeses.

"Fortunately. she says, tantalizing flavors satisfy the appetite, even though their quantity be small. When you eat dull food, more and more of it is required for satisfaction. 1 dont agree with this entirely, but she has a point.

Sugar and salt are the chief villains in the book. Ms. Szekely points out the ironic situation today where many people conscientiously cut down on their purchase of sugar, then proceed to stoke up on sugar-packed soft drinks. Better to quench the thirst, she says, with fresh fruit.

She strongly advises the reader to avoid salt, noting that most of us get all the sodium our systems require, since many cheeses, canned foods and baked goo^ contain salt. If you must use it, try sea salt.

There is a ^wing bdief that too much beef is not good for one, but to eliminate it altogether as this book does, while featuring veal and lamb, puzzles me.

In ^ral, the recipes sound tempting and the on I tried were tasty, such as this one for Cauliflower Whip.

1 cauliflower head, pared

margarine Grated nutmeg and vegetable seasoning to taste 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese Parsley, chopped Place cauliflower in saucepan, cover with water and simmer covered 20-25 minutes, until tender. Remove cauliflower from water and place in food processor or blender with reserved cauliflower broth. Puree until smooth. Add cheese, margarine, nutmeg and vegetable seasoning and puree. Garnish with Parmesan and parsley and serve. Serves 4. Calories per serving, 64.

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At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

The DaUy Reflector, Greenville. N.C-Tbunday, June It, 198a-3

No matter in what position the moon is, I am always ad-vised to overcoiitf obstacles... persevere^ . and know that mondy "doesnt buy success ... only happiness.

I hate my sign. But then I suspect most of the people bom under it hate it too: Eva Braun, Tom Dewey and Roy Rogershorse. Trigiger.

What sign was I boro under? A bakery! What else!

I'm never going to read my horoscope again!

I know, I said that two weeks ago when it said I was going to have an adventure on water and my contact lens fell down the commode, but I mean it this time.

Im sick and tired of every other sign getting the good stuff. Im looking at a fashion horoscope right now with a big headline reading, WITTY AQUARIUS HAS KNACK FOR MIXING CLOTHES Theres more. The story goes on to say. Who is that bubbly woman wending her way through the crowd on the dance floor If shes wearing navy and chartreuse and theres a glittery gold star on her cheek, theres no doubt about it. Its the witty and brilliant pacesetter. Aquarius.

You know what my sigh says Spend more time on your personal needs. Dress refully. Dont rush the pro cese. Plan a new bedroom furniture arrangement to add allure to your nights. "

All zodiac signs do make me hostile. Dont tell mo about Aquarians. I've been around them all my life You know them too They dont have one single skirt in Iheir closet with an elastic waistband. They know how to tie scarfs so they don't look like theyre stopping the bleeding

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somewhere. Their dresses never hang below their coats and they wear eye makeup without someone saying. "Oh, you remind me. Ive got to clean the burner trays in my stove next week.

Its not only fashion horoscopes. Im a loser in the ones on gardening, travel, foods, fitness, decorating and career.

1 haye the kind of sign where you go to a party and someone will say, "What's your sign and when you tell them they search your eyes and say, Youre kidding. (Some will even stop chewing a cheese puff.) Then they turn and yell. "Walter, come here. Youre not going to believe this

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4-The DtUy Reflector, Greenvle. N.C.-Ttairsdty. June l*. I98S

Editorials

Holding Tax Line

As the Pitt County Commissioners come down to the finals of providing a 1983-84 budget they seem determined to maintain the present tax rate of 54 cents per $100 valuation.

County Manager Reginald Gray proposed increasing the tax rate by two cents to help fund the proposed budget and to establish a capital reserve fund.

It was proposed that $808,000 be set aside in a reserve fund for capital improvements. The commissioners say this should be reduced to meet the operating needs of the county.

Ciray recommended the capital reserve fund to finance replacement of landfill equipment, a new tax and land records mapping system, new bookmobile, land purchase and other projects with the thought of preventing a large burden in any one year.

It was not clear just how much the reserve fund might be cut and certainly we are totally in favor of any efforts to hold the tax rate, assuming services are being financed adequately.

The commissioners, however, should do all possible to build the capital reserve so that large investments can be met in the future without bond issues. If the fund is to be reduced, so it must be. The concept, however, of building a capital reserve fund is just sound business practice and it should not be abandoned.

Cannot Satisfy Everyone

The N. C. Department of Transportation last Friday chose the Option 1 location for a new $12.4 million bridge from Morehead City to Atlantic Beach.

The plan, which will place the bridge near the present low level bridge that is to be demolished, should settle a spirited debate over four proposed locations.

The 3,830 foot bridge will join 23rd Street in Morehead City . It will include four lanes and a 65-foot span over the Intracoastal Waterway. The old bridge has been a traffic bottle neck because it must be opened for boats.

The bridge location does not satisfy everyone, but the question should be settled now and hopefully planning and construction on the much needed facility can proceed.

Paul 7, O'Connor

Records Privacy Involves Risks

. .    .      II____ Tka Munm

RALEIGH - The young man held in the county jail had more problems than his prfice record indicated. Prior to his arrest, he twice tried to kill himsdf. No one at the jail, no one in the local probation office, knew that. A third suicide attempt was imminent but only the young man, himself, and his psychiatrist at the community mental health center were aware of his history of problems.

This case has a happy ending in that the young man didnt die at the end of a rope fashioned from cell sheets. He told his probation officers of the suicide attempts and appropriate steps were taken, with the psychiatrists cooperation. When he tried to kill himself a third time, jailers were able to stop him.

The Governors Crime Commission uses this story as an example of a problem facing the Department of Correction and county jailers. Had the young man not told his probation officer of his

suicide attempts, and had he not allowed his t^chiatrist to release his records to court officials, hed probably be dead now. His jailers would have had no idea that he was a special case to watch and his suicide attempt probaWy would have caught them off guard.

State and federal laws guarantee the privacy of mental health records. Information from the records cannot be released without the explicit consent of the patient. In addition, correctional officials in many areas have no working relationships with mental health officials. Nor are the privacy statutes well understood. In the end, the inmates suffer

The crime commission is concerned that the Department of Correction cannot receive this information unless it Is volunteered by the inmate. Some of these people withhold this information because of the stigma attached to mental illness

Others keep it private because they believe it wiU prolong the time they must spend behind bars.

That lack of information poses all kin* of problems. As could have occurred in the case of our suicidal young man, prison officials may lack the needed information to prevent an inmate from hurting himself.

An inmates psychiatric reoml could be of great help in determining where he should be housed, or how he should be treated by prison mental health services. All inmates receive screening but someones record can complete the sketch which that testing reveals.

The commissions draft report expresses the concern that prison naental health officials could begin to treat the inmate in a way totally inappropriate to the treatment he was receiving prior to his incarceration. In other words, the prison doctors could end up messing him up worse.

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Art Buchwald

We'N Never Have Too Many Lawyers

It may be my imagination but every young person 1 meet this June is graduating from law school. The question is how many lawyers can the country sup port. The answer is that nobody really knows

Harlan McCugh, a senior partner with McCugh, McCugh & Moore McCughs, is one of those who believes the United States will never have enough lawyers to serve the needs of the people.

The reason why Im so bullish on the law as a profession is that the more lawyers you have the more business you generate for each other. Were the ones who make the problems for other lawyers to solve

Tm not loo sure 1 understand

"Well, there is a famous story about a lawyer in North Dakota who hung up his shingle in town and was starving to death. Then another lawyer moved in and hung up a shingle across the street. Suddenly they were both prospering. The rule of thumb in America is that it takes a minimum of two lawyers on opposite sides of the street before one can make any money.

McCugh continued, The beauty of the American justice system is that one doesnt have to do anything wrong to have need of a lawyer. All somebody has to do is accuse you of doing something wrong, and then you have to seek legal help to de fend yourself. Even if you arent accused of doing something wrong, its best to hire a lawyer in advance, just in case somebody might take a gamble that you did.

Another reason why Im bullish on the law business is that lawyers are taught to write contracts and legal papers that can only be decoded by other lawyers. So

when one lawyer draws up a contract, he or she is automatically assuring a fee for another lawyer who has to read it and see that the person signing it is not getting a raw deal.

I had an instance not long ago where a lawyer for a motion picture studio sent a one-page contract to a screenwriter I was representing 1 took one look at it and Iwcame furious I called up the studio lawyer and said, Are you crazy or something'* My client could sign this contract today. Where the hell did you study law'.

The studio lawyer apologized and said

he had a paralegal draw up the agreement, and hadnt realized the young man had written it In plain English. He promised to send over the studios usual 170-page contract right away^s soon as 1 got it, we started haggling over it for three months, and I was able to charge my client my normal outrageous fee.

You were smart not to let your client sign the one page contract, I said.

Another reason Im bullish on lawyers, McCugh said, is that almost every family in America has a relative who is a lawyer, and you dont even have to leave your house anymore to find one.

Now when a mother calls up her lawyer son from the hospital and says, 1 fell on the sidewald and broke my hip, the first question he usually asks her is, Were there any witnesses?

There arent enough lawyers in America to handle all the accidents that are happening all around us, much less the insurance companies who are refusing to pay.

You paint a very rosy picture for young people just coming out of law school, 1 said.

Im not making it up, McCugh told me. Youve got government lawyers

working day and night confusing everyone as to what the legislators had on their minds when they passed a law, or repealed one. You have people being poisoned by chemicals, crime is soaring, and the simplest business transaction cannot be consummated without two legal minds in the middle screwing it up. I would say the outlook for the law class of 1983 has never been brighter.

What a wonderful message. Can I print it?

Of course. Why do you ask .

I didnt want you to sue me.

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

Strengthening The Clark-Nitze Link

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

m Coltnch* SirMi, QrMnvHIa, N.C. t7l34

EalabtMwdlUt PubHahad Monday Througb Friday Aflornoon and Sunday Morning

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I of Circulation

WASHINGTON - Strengthening the family link between President Reagans national security adviser William P. Clark and Ambassador Paul Nitze, Reagans chief negotiator on nuclear weapons in Europe, has all but ruled out misunderstandings of the kind that angered the White House last year.

Just before Nitze returned on May 17 to the Geneva talks with the Soviets, Clark took him on a horseback ride for nearly two hours in the Washington environs. Clarks wife, Joan, and Nitze are cousins, a little-known fact that, despite their differences on the Euro-nuke issue, has brought the two together.

Last year Nitze and his Soviet counterpart reached an informal agreement that was immediately rejected by Reagan -and the Soviets. With Clarks power now rising to a peak, and the president counting heavily on Clarks personal control of the arms talks, no suctrembarrassment is likely in the future. Nitze knows he has an open door or telephone line to is cousin-in-law anytime he wants to use it.

Before his surprising endorsement of Sen. John Glenn for the Democratic presidential nomination, Massachusetts senator Paul Tsongas tried to enlist another New England liberal in Glenns candidacy: Connecticuts Sen. Chris Dodd. Dodd told Tsongas it was far too early for such a final decision. But friends say that what really mattered to Dodd was the fact that in endorsing Glenn he would be alienating several other senators who are presidential candidates, particularly Alan Cranston, a power as Senate Democratic whip, and Sen. Gary Hart. As liberal leader of the anti-Reagan policy in Central America, Dodd might need Cranstons support in future Senate votes.

A footnote; A seminal reason for Tsongas endorsement of Glenn is his need to shore up his standing among moderate and conservative Democrats back home, particularly those in the camp of former governor Edward King. Tsongas could be vulnerable to a conservative Democratic challenge in his reelection bid next yei^.

Former secretary of state Alexander Haig quietly warned hs successor, George Shultz, in the aftermath of the Enders-Hinton sackings that he had better stand up for his Foreign Service bureaucracy fast - or iose his influence within the State Department. That was the background of Shultzs rather emotional remarks praising both Assistant Secretary of State Tom Enders and Ambassador to El Salvador Deane Hinton at a carefully-orchestrated State Depart ment tribute 10 days ago. The Enders-Hinton sackings were engineered from the White House, not Shultzs seventh-floor emporium at State. Two days later, in a separate gesture of reconciliation, national security adviser William P. Clark, who had arranged the ouster of the two Foreign Service diplomats, made a conspicuous appearance at a small housewarming in Enders ne\v Georgetown house. That did not come close to erasing the impact on the aggrieved Foreign Service of Shultz looking weak when he was upstaged by the White House.

Partly as a result of a pri 'ate letter > from Rep. Tom Corcoran on Jan. 26, President Reagan has promosed neutrality in Corcorans soon-to-be-announced primary campaign against Sen. Charles H. (Chuck) Percy, d^ite Percys three terms and his chairmanship of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The letter from the Republican conservative was to assure you that... no hard feelings resulted from Reagans speech at a Percy fund-raiser in Chicago in mid-January and his refusal to drop in at Corcorans reception in the same hotel the same evening. Corcoran was not an announced candidate, although the president had every reason to believe he would run. The race for the Republican nomination between Percy and the three-term congressman may turn on national security issues. Percy is vulnerable to charges of being insufficiently pro-Israel and of opposing Reagans tough arms control

Ce. One poll taken by Illinois licans shows that defense and foreign issues, not the economy, are permost ifl the votersminds, with Per^ in an exposed ooiitical oositkm on both

The unsung hero at the Williamsburg summit two weeks ago was Evan Galbraith, U.S. ambassador to France, who was secretly positioned at Williamsburg as a safety precaution in case he would be needed by the president.

Needed he was. when French president Francois Mitterrand balked at agreeing to any East-West security statement. Mitterrand had notified the White House privately weeks before the economic sum mit that he would never agree to any

Quotes

Truth, when witty, is the wittiest of all The mold of a mans fwtune is in his things. - JuliusCharles Hare    own hands. - Francis Bacon

He who has begun his test has hall done Horace    gj*"'

Give every man thy ear, hut lew thy    ^

^ Without being told.-Victor Hu

The commission doesnt bdieve the state and federal privacy laws act as a cmnplete barrier to the sharing of information about these inmates. The problem may stem more from a lack of communication betwen correctional personnel and local community mental health facUities.

The six recommendations included in the draft report on the problem all stress the need for more cooperation between these two branches of government. The commission says correctional and mental health officials need to sit downn with each other, at the community and state levels, to establish procedures that will guarantee Uiat one hand of state government know what the other hand knows about inmates.

The alternative to this type of cooperation, says the commissions report, are some undetected cases of troubled inmates - and more successful suicide attempts.

Public

Forum

document outside the economic area. But Reagan wanted the summit to emphasize western unity against Soviet efforts to defeat NATOs nuclear rearmament plan.

When summoned by the president at the last minute to help convert Mitterrand, Galbraith was there and, after hours of discussion, the French president came around. One result: Galbraiths stock inside the white House stands higher today than any other ambassador.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterpirses, Inc.

To the editor:

Sunday, June 19, is Fathers Day. Whats a father to do? A father loves; a father is present; a father shares himself. Bill DeBord of Peoria, Illinois, says, "I believe the most important things you can give your children is your time,

A father listens. Id go out drinking till 2 or 3 in the morning, recalls Stagnano, now a Los Angeles policeman. When Id get home, my dad would have a pot of coffee going, and we would sit in the dark in the living room and talk.

A father teaches. Ask your children, What would you like to do today?

A father cares. Fathering can mean either becoming a father or acting as a father does.

A father sets rules. To be human is to touch and caress the child so that a reprimand is felt as one more expression of caring, said Mrs. Marva Collins, Chicago educator. Discipline coupled with the presence of a father tends to decrease the incident of behavior problems in teenagers. Only 14 percent of the teens from homes with strong discipline (defined as homes with established rule for dating, television, companions, homework and the like) had ever been involved with drugs.

A father forgives. A father makes mistakes. As parents, we have a right to be the imperfect human being that we are. A father inspires. Father W. J. Hecht of Geveland wrote a ^iritual will and testament for his four children. It was read at his funeral mass. In part, it said; 1 leave you faith in God. Please keep it, use it, cherish it and pass it on...This inheritance of faith far surpasses my other possessions I could leave you.

So whats a father to do. St. Augustine said, Do what you can and pray for what you cannot yet do. Mark records an incident that can keep the goal in si^t: He took a child and put him in the midst of them; and taking him in his arms. He said to them, Whoever receives one such child in My name receives Me; and whoever receives Me, receives not ME but Him who sent Me. Mark9:37.

Mrs. Beatrice C. Maye Greenville

Letters to Public Forum should be limited to 300 words. The editor res&rves the right to cut longer letters.

-^Elisha Douglass

Strength

For

Today

The cleansing of the temple was a very important episode in the life of Jesus; and it continues to be important in gospel teaching for the simple reason that the Church stands in constant need of being cleansed.

To say this does not mean that anyone regards the Church today as corrupt or dishonest. Every branch of the modem Church is committed to the task of bringing men and women to God and making the world a better place in which to live. Yet the Church, even though a divine institution, is always in danger of taking on the coloration of the world. It easUy adapts itself to standards of worldliness. It forgets its Lord sometimes in seeking to please certain of its members. It sometimes seems to value more highly the esteem of men than the esteem of God.

The cleansing of the temple by our Lord emphasizes the nec-cessity for a strong, healthy church as the greatest single factor in producing a strong, healthy world.





Andropov Cemenfsl Power In Kremlin

The DaUy Reflector. GreenvUle, N.C-Thursday, June 16.1963 -<i

MOSCO^V (Ai^) - Communist Party leader Yuri V. Andropov was elected president of the Soviet Union today, consolidating his power by taking over the post tht had remained vacant since the death of Leonid I. Brezhnev seven months ago.

His unanimous election at the opening session of the Supreme Soviet, the national parliament, means that Andropov has taken firm control of this nation of 280 million people Andropov, who turned 69 Wednesday, was nominated for the position by Konstantin U. Chernenko, who said it was "expedient for the head of the Communist Party to also be president. Chernenko, a veteran Politburo member who was a close associate of Brezhnev, in the past several months had been thought to be Andropovs chief rival for power.

By succeeding Brezhnev as head of the all-powerful Communist Party, taking over the presidency and assuming the leadership of the Soviet Unions military council in May, Andropov now has all three of the posts held by Brezhnev.

Allow me to express my wholehearted appreciation and gratitude for the hi^ trust and honor given me in electing me chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, said Andropov, a former head of the Soviet KGB Intelligence agency, in a brief acceptance speech.

Your trust and consideration are a trust placed in the Communist Party and a member of this party for over 40 years, he added. I would like to assure you that I will use my experience. . . to respond to your trust and confidence.

Then Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko blasted U.S. policy toward the Soviet Union but said the Soviets want better relations between the two nations.

"We want to make our relations with the United States steady because we are aware that they are instrumental in preventing war ... (and) in the common interest of holding back the danger of a nuclear holocaust, Gromyko said in a speech to the Supreme Soviet.

He charged that the Reagan administration had manifestly expressed imperialistic ambitions which encourage the cult of militarism.

The instigators of this policy shout torrents of lies to prove that the threat comes from the Soviet Union, he added.

Andropov became party general secretary on Nov. 12, 1982, two days after former leader Brezhnev died after 18 years at the helm of the Kremlin.

Brezhnev had held both positions, and Andropov, whose health is believed to be failing, was expected to become president last November.

He did not take the post then, sparking speculation that he had been unable to get an absolute hold on the nations secretive political apparatus.

But in taking the presidency today, he displayed his strength - taking the nations two top positions ' only seven months after Brezhnev died.

Brezhnev, who became the top party man in October 1964 when he ousted Nikita S. Khrushchev, was not able to take over the presidency until 1977. He took the head of states job from Nikolai V.

Podgorny.

Andropov becomes the ninth president of the Soviet Union. Yakov M. Sverdlov was elected the first head of state in 1917.

An Andropov ally. Defense Minister Dmitri F. Ustinov, 74, had been widely touted as the man likely to take the head of states job at this parliamentary session.

Andropovs election was thought to have been worked out Tuesday and Wednesday during a plenary meeting of the 300-plus member Communist Party Central Committee, which Andropov heads as party leader. The committee approves decisions taken by the ruling Politburo, its membership down to 11 men from 14 two years ago.

Filling the presidents job ties up the loose ends left by Brezhnevs death. The head-of-state position makes it more appropriate in terms of protocol for Andropov to meet visiting national leaders.

When the Central Com-mitee session closed Wednesday, widely expected additions to the ruling Politburo had not been made, leading

to speculation that the stalemate in the tq) leadership was continuing.

The legislative body also announc^ the removal of two men from the presidum, its leadership body, and the appointments of two replacements.

YURI ANDROPOV

Also on the agenda was approval of a draft law on worker collectives, a measure making innovative changes in the way the Soviet Union organizes its work force.

The Supreme Soviet meets twice a year to adopt major Soviet legislation. Votes on matters brought to the floor always get the unanimous approval of the 1,500 deputies.

The most notable change announced at (ientral Committee session was appointment of Politburo member Grigori V. Romanov, the Leningrad party boss, to the powerful 10-man Central Committee secretariat.

Romanov is seen as an Andropov ally and his assumption of a Sjeat on the secretariat, headed by Andropov as general secretary, could significantly strengthen the Soviet leaders hand.

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6-The D*Uy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thuraday, June 16,190    

Polish Regime Urges Peopie Avoid Disorders

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ByTHOBIASW.NETrER Associated Press Writer WARSAW, Poland (AP) -Pope John Paul II could help Polish authorities bring an end to martial law, Deputy Premier Mieczyslaw Rakowski told'a news conference today on the eve of the papal pUgrimage.

Rakowski, a key aide to Communist Party chief and Premier Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, said the authorities still viewed any meeting of the pontiff with Lech Walesa, chief of the outlawed independent union Solidarity, as a political rather than religious event,

If John Paul takes a stand his statements that will

further stabilization, then he will be making a positive contribution to the lifting of martial law," Rakowski said. Military rule was imposed Dec, 13,1981 and eased a year later, but stiff controls still remain At the Vatican, the pope said at his weekly general audience today that he hopes his trip to Poland will serve the cause of truth and love, freedom and justice. So that it may serve the cause of reconciliation and peace. Rakowskis statement was

the clearest indication so far by a top government official of expectations for the ei^t-day papal visit, which begins Thursday. It is the second Polish pilgrimage since John Paul, the former Archbishop of Krakow, was elected pope in October 1978.

Rakowski, once regarded as a leading liberal but seen increasingly as a pragmatic conservative, repeated police and Interior Ministry warnings against disturbances during the pq)es stay, saying the authorities would maintain tight security

Rakowski appeared to be cautioning the pontiff against making political statements to crowds expected to number in the millions.

The government has repeatedly warned priests against criticizing the authorities, but said hi^er churkh leaders have avoided using the church as a forum to attack the state or its alliances

It is not possible to predict what the pope is going to say exactly, but there will be no serious surprises, Rakowski said.

In touching on a possible meeting of the Pope and Walesa, Rakowski reiterated

government yiews that Walesa had been given political status by the Western media, but hinted that a compromise on his seeing the pope was still possible.

When asked about a potential compromise, Rakowski replied, In politics we are frequently confronted by compromises.

Vatican officials who arrived here Tuesday said the church was still trying to arrange a meeting between Walesa and the pope, and a government source said it might occur, but not in private as the church hopes.

The head of the Vatican state should discuss this matter with the Warsaw authorities, Rakowski said.

Rakowski is the most senior government official to meet the foreign press arriving for the papal visit. His news conference seemed designed as an orientation session for many incoming reporters on the eve of the trip.

Polish authorities are concerned that religious and political passion will overcome crowds during the visit and that many Poles will unfurl banners or chant slogans embarrassing to the government.

The security of this visit is the most important thing, said Gen. Jozef Bejm, national police commander. Security must be maintained, and it will be maintained.

The general told a news conference Tuesday that police will use their forces to the fullest extent to maintain security for the visit, which takes John Paul to eight provinces.

The government has banned alcohol sales since Monday. This means no bottle sales either for Poles or

foreigners who could go to state-run hard currency shops - and no drinks, imt even beer or wine in restaurants.

The atmosphere of this visit is different from the previous one, said a police official interviewed in the state media. Social discipline is relaxed. Religious emotions may easily be topped by political ones. A stone thrown in the crowd can become a Pershing missile.

Stories abound of ^ial units of Zomo, the feared riot police, and of army units

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By RANDALLHACKLEY Associated Press Writer

EL PASO, Texas lAP) - A Big Mac is a Big Mac in any language, but folks who want a hamburger and fries at the Golden Arches can order a hamburguesa y papas fritas as part of a trend toward bilingual restaurants in this Mexican border city.

We consider the Hi.spanic market exceptionally important to us as a business, said McDonalds Corp. spokesman Bob Keyser at company headquarters in Oak Brook, 111,

With Hispanics making up ()2 percent of El Pasos nearly half-million residents, its little wonder that all 11 .McDonalds restaurants offer menus in English and Spani.sh.

In a market like El Paso that's fairly unique, its not a hiring requirement, but most people who work for us akso are bilingual, said Gail Burbank, .McDonalds spokeswoman in El Paso, Bilingual workers and English-Spanish menus are necessary are both found in t h e M i 11 s Avenue .McDonalds, just a half mile from the muddy Rio Grande, which separates El Paso from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

Hamburguesa con queso or cheeseburger'? Whats the difference"' This is El Paso, so theres not much difference, said Manuela de la E.speranza, a maid who travels four days a week from her home in Juarez to work for an El Paso family.

Ms. de la Esperanza and fellow maid Roberta Ayala (iutierrez only speak Spanish, and said that after work they love to stop in McDonalds downtown restaurant near the bus stop to order a cool barquillo vanilla ice cream cone.

Mexicos economic problems have spilled over into neighboring El Paso, where three 1982 peso devaluations sliced by one-sixth the Mex icans purchasing power, and caused the closure of an estimated 35 El Paso stores that depended on cross-over

business from Juarez shoppers.

Even McDonalds has been affected. Problems across the border obviously have had sporadic effects on our walk-in business. The better the situation is in Mexico, the better we do, Keyser said. McDonalds El Paso stores stopped accepting pesos for payment last August.

The peso was fluctuating too much (against the U.S. dollar). We lost $160 one day in the peso exchange, store manager Gordon Chamberlain said.

But many Mexicans" changing their dollars for pesos - the rate is now 148 to the dollar still think they get their moneys worth at McDonalds. "Desayuno -breakfast - is a bargain at 99 cents for an Egg McMuf-fin, 18-year-old Juan Luis Alvarez said.

There is no Spanish translation for Egg McMuf-fin, so the menu name is the same in both languages. The same is true for Big Macs, hot cakes and McRib sandwiches.

Not so for an all-American piece of apple pie. The Spanish equivalent is pastel manzana, or apple pastry.

But huevos revueltos is scrambled eggs and the quarter-pounder with cheese is a quarter-pounder con queso.

"1 still like a hamburguesa con queso y papas fritas best, Alvarez said. We cant get any good ones in Juarez,

SITE CHANGED

UNITED NATIONS (AP) - A U.N. conference on Palestinian rights will convene in Geneva, Switzerland, instead of in Paris as originally scheduled, the planning committee has decided.

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assigned to help priests man roadblocks and entry points to cities to maintain security.

Church authorities in Warsaw alone have mobilized 10,000 pecle, including laymen and priests, for the popes stopover in the capital. Officials in other cities on the papal itinerary said they will organize similar numbers.

At St. Annes, a monastery in southwest Poland where the pope will stop for two hours, routes have been changed to avoid heavily wooded areas, and each tree will have its own guard, a Warsaw newspaper reported.

Security will be extremely tight, said one government press official, surveying a ceremony site already blocked off by white-painted metal poles marking crowd sectors. It is under 24-hour guard.

When you arrive, you will have to load your camera with film under the eyes of security, and you wont move

around here without someone from the church or sUte at your side, he said.

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Astronauts Hold Launch*Site Training Exercises

By HOWARD BENEDICT APAero^ace Writer

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Five astronauts, including Americas first space-faring woman, conducted launch-site training today after countdown began for Saturdays early morning blastoff.

NASA officials said the weather forecast for 7:33 am EDI launch looked ideal. There was one early technical problem aboard Challenger, but the space

agency said it may have been a false alarm. In any event, it went away.

On the anniversary of the flight of Valentina Tereshkova, the Soviet woman who broke the man-in-space sex barrier in 1963, Sally Ride and four male astronauts were ready for the seventh space shuttle, mission.

The count started at 3 a.m. EDT, with the clock ticking down from 40 hours toward liftoff Saturday. Twelve

CARRYING A LOAD - Astronaut Sally Ride ' carries her personal bags from the flight line at Cape Kennedy on arrival for final preparations of Saturdays shuttle launch. (AP Laserphoto)

hours and 33 minutes of hold time are built into the count to to aUow for contingencies.

NASA test engineer Robert Sieck reported that eariy in the count there was an indication of a bad data exchange between the spacecraft computers and one of two master events controllers - a unit needed to control the explosion that separates the shuttle rockets from the orbiter shortly after launch. The problem cleared up after the system was reset, he said, and NASA was making more tests.

Commander Robert Crippen flew test landings before dawn today on the 15,000-foot runway where Challenger is to return to Earth on June 24. Later, he, Ms. Ride and Rick Hauck made honed their flying skills in T-38 jet flights over central Florida.

Test conductor Robert Websters call to stations summoned more than 50 engineers and technicians to consoles in the control center three miles from the launch pad. Scores more workers were on the pad, grooming the sleek spaceship Challenger for the six-day trip.

Must 'Teach' Microorganisms

EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - If bacteria will ever be used to clean up large areas tainted by dioxin, scientists must teach microorganisms to devour the toxic chemical, not just nibble at it, researchers say.

Two Michigan State University scientists said Wednesday they have had "limited success in changing the eating habits of two types of bacteria to encourage thereto eat more .than their u|i|al quota of dioxin.

Their first tasks were to check the external fuel tank, verify the shuttles computers and navigation systems and test the crews inking water.

Much of the pre-launch media attention has focused on Ms. Ride, the 32-year- old astrophysicist who is the first woman named to a U.S. space flight, although the trail was blazed by two Soviet female cosmonauts.

She and her four colleagues, Crippen, pilot Hauck and mission specialists John Fabian and Dr. Norman Thagard, flew to the launch area Wednesday afternoon in three T-38 jet planes after completing training at the astronaut base in Houston.

Were really looking forward to it and were ready to go, Crippen told reporters on their arrival.

The T-38S touched down on the same runway where the Challenger is to return to Earth on June 24 - the first shuttle set to land on the strip just five miles from the launch pacj.

Were looking forward to landing right back here again in about nine days," H U0330 -b- Rick said that pretty well, Ms. Ride said. I dont thi 09:41 there is anything I can add.

Landing on the swamp-surrounded runway at Cape Canaveral eliminates the need to bolt the shuttle to the back of a Boeing 747 transport for a return trip to the launch area. This will shave at least a week off the preparation time for a shuttles next mission.

In their final two days of training, the astronauts will hone their flying skills with proficiency runs in the T-38 jets, practice landing on the shuttle runway in a Gulfstream jet modified to handle like the spaceship, check their flight gear and review flight plans.

Ms. Rides historic role has overshadowed other aspects of the flight, but it is one of the most ambitious yet in the fast-maturing shuttle program.

With Ms. Ride playing a

key part, the astronauts are to deploy two commercial communications satellites -for Canada and Indonesia -practice rendezvous maneuvers with a third payload and conduct more than 20 scientific and technological experiments.

During the mission, Ms. Ride and Ffibian will use the ships 50-foot robot arm to place a scientific payload in orbit, Dirieving it later for return to Earth While the payload is flying free. Crippen and Hauck will fly formation with it, closing in for retrieval in a rehearsal for a satellite repair mission planned next year.

The five-member crew is the largest ever launched from Earth in a single spaceship. The old mark was four on the fourth and fifth shuttle flights

The upcoming flight' originally had only four crew members, but Thagard. a medical doctor, was added in December to study motion sickness, which has afflicted seven of 16 astronauts who have made shuttle trips

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At the same time, we will have a 20% discount on all leather accessories which include wallets, credit card holders, etc. With the purchase of any TexTan' Leather Goods, You will receive a key case at no extra charge plus all monogramming is FREE...so give your dad a special treat hell treasure for years and save money, too!

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8-The Dally Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Tbursday, June 16.1963Senators Making Final Bid To Increase Salaries

By MIKE SHANAHAN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Majority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. is seeking support for a pay plan that would equalize Senate and House salaries, while delaying tough new restrictions on moonlighting until next year or later.

After a week of intermittent consideration of the pay issue, the Senate appeared certain to resolve it today.

Last week, the Senate voted 51 to 41 to limit the compensation its members can receive from speeches and other outside income to , 30 percent of salary, or about $18,200.

A number of senators had reported giving speeches worth over $100,000 annually, some to groups with issues pending in Congress.

But sensitive to voter discontent with pay increases, the Senate declined last week to raise its $60,662 salary to the House level, which has

been at $69,800 since last December.

Sources who spoke on condition that they not be identified said Wednesday that Baker and other key figubes in the pay dispute were making one last attempt to find a majority of senators willing to vote themselves a pay raise, while putting off the new limits on outside income until Jan.l,1984orJan.I,1985.

If that fails, the Senate would be stuck with the embarrassing disparity in pay with the House and similar limits on outside in

come.

The Senate would then go on to approve a $16 billion supplemental appropriations measure to which the pay amendments are attached.

In a speech on the Senate floor. Baker also called for broad reforms in the way the Senate operates, including six months off, cutting salaries by more than half, and no limits on outside or investment income.

There would be strict reporting requirements on all income, allowing voters to decide whether a senator or House member was earning too much from improper sources.

Conceding his sweeping proposals have no chance of enactment now. Baker said, We are institutionally incapable of dealing with that patent conflict of interest ... setting our own salary.

He proposed a constitutional amendment setting up an independent commission to establish salaries.

Recommending that senators and House members be permitted to pursue second careers at home. Baker said, I would like to see us once more to be an aggregation of lawyers and doctors and farmers and architects.

1 do not think we will ever solve this problem as long as. we think of ourselves first and primarily as federal employees who are supposed to be here 12 months of the

year, said Baker, a Tennessee Republican.

Baker announced in January that he will not seek re-election to a fourth Senate term in 1984. He said giving up the Senate seat he has held since 1966 did not mean

he would retire from politics and refused to rule out a bid for the presideiKy in 1988.

As efforts to resolve the pay issue continued behind the scenes, the Senate added more than $300 million in extra funds for federal edu-

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Among the additions were;

-$225 millkMi to a pn^am of health care benefits for 11 million unemployed workers.

-An additional $40 million for education programs, mainly aimed at Southern and Western states.

-$30 million to provide summer Jobs for jobless teen-agers.

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WASHINGTON (AP) -The Navy wants to build more fast attack submarines and reactivate more battleships, one of its top admirals says.

Testifying Wednesday before the defense subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Vice Adm. Robert L. Walters defended plans to reactivate the battleships Iowa and Missouri.

Walters also defended the Navys request for money to contract for three SSN-688 class nuclear attack submarines in the next federal fiscal year instead of the two that have been requested each year since 1977.

Walters also said in his prepared testimony that submarines are going to have to become even more sophisticated if the United States is to stay ahead of the Soviet Union technologically.

As the Soviets continue to construct new and increasingly sophisticated submarines, it becomes more difficult to maintain this quali-

Special Services

St. Monica Missionary Baptist Church, Grimesland, will have two special services this weekend.

Friday at 7:30 p.m., the pre-Homecoming service will be held with guest speaker Rev. Sister Ethel Bryant from Washington.

At 2 p.m. Saturday, St. Monica will present a concert by the childrens choir from the Baptist Central Orphanage Home, Oxford.

The public is invited to attend these services.

Quarterly Meeting

Quarterly conference will be held Friday at 7 p.m. at St. Matthew Free Will Baptist Church.

Eldress Hattie Cobb will preach at 11 a.m. Sunday. Music will be rendered by the senior choir and the senior usher board will

serve.

Eight-year-old Patricia Phillips will preach Sunday at 7:30 nm

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tative edge, Walters said. The Soviets are building fast, quiet, deep-diving suIf marines. It will be a challenge to our technological competence to stay ahead of them in the future.

Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, the subcommittee chairman, told Walters and other Navy officials he did not expwt money would be appropriated for any significant increases in Navy manpower.

Stevens questioned whether additional battleships should be reactivated, since it takes 1,500 officers and enlisted men to man each of them.

So far, one battleship, the USS New Jersey, has been reactivated.

Despite their heavy manpower requirements, , battleships provide incredible firepower and survivability unequalled in post-war ships, said Walters, the deputy chief of naval operations for surface warfare.

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QUEBEC (AP) - The Quebec government has shelved plans for the aerial spraying of forests in the Lower St. Lawrence and Ga^ regions with two defoliants that form Agent Orange.

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Quarterly Meeting

Holly Hill Free Will Baptist Church, Belvoir, will observe quarterly meeting services thiswMkend.

Quarterly conference will take place Friday at 7:30 p.m.

Holy Communion will be celebrated Saturday at 6 p.m.

Vice Bishop R E. Worrell, the senior choir and senior ushers will be in charge of the service Sunday at 11 a.m. Dinner will be served in the lunchroom at 2 p.m. Vice Bishop W.L. Phillips and the English Chapel choir and ushers will conduct the service at 3 p.m.

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FIRST PITCH TOSSED ON NEW FIELD . Red Nobles, town clerfc for WinterviUe, throws the flrst ball in the first softbaU game played on Wintervilles new field. WinterviUe Recreation Inc. officiaUy opened its new recreation park Tuesday with a

ribbon-cutting cerenumy held before the game. The was a joint ^fort between the Town of Wi Winterville Recreation, Inc. (Barry Gaskins nioto)

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DA Says Grand Jury Decided Not To Hear Green Testimony

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The Wake County grand jury that Monday accused Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green of conspiring to take bribes knew Green was avaiiable to testify, but decided not to call him, Wake County District Attorney C. Colon Willoughby said Wednesday.

The grand jury returned presentments Monday accusing Green of taking a $2,000 bribe and conspiring to receive bribes of $10,000 a month. Willoughby and former U.S. Attorney James L. Blackburn, who was appointed to help prosecute Green, must now decide whether to seek indictments from the grand jury, which meets again next Monday.

Green has denied the allegations and complained that he was not asked to appear before the grand jury d^ite telling Willoughby he was willing to testify. The grand jury considered testimony from two other witnesses.

I want you to know that last week, when this presentment procedure was explained to me, 1 volunteered to appear before the grand jury ... and again, I have not been contacted," Green said.

1 knew he was available, Willoughby said. The decision of what witnesses to call is up to the grand jurv.

The foreman of the and jury was told Monday that Green was wilting to testify, court officials said.

Its very unusual for the subject in an inquiry to be called into a state grand jury, Willoughby said.

The grand jury also accused Howard F. Watts of Clarkton of conspiring with Green to obtain the $10,000-a-month bribe for Green.

Blackburn, 39, an attorney in private practice in Raleigh, is a former U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina and a former assistant state attorney general under Rob

ert Morgan and. briefly, under Rufus Edmisten.

As assistant U.S. attorney for the Eastern District, a post he was named to in 1977, Blackburn successfully prosecuted Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald in a celebrated triple murder trial. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the conviction last year after a lengthy appeal by MacDonald.

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lO-Tlie DaUy Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.-TlNiniUy, June 1C, 1M3

County Board... Chile's Copper Worker

Begin An illegal Sirlki

(Continued from Pagel) money for the county schools ($4.95 mUlion was requested), and $2.26 million in local money for the Greenville school system ($2.46 million was requested).

This year, the county appropriated $4.68 million for the county and $2.03 million for the city.

Grays recommended budget for the county school system reflects an increase of about 5 percent over the cuirent year, while his recommendation for the city system is an increase of about 11.3 percent over 1982-1983.

In addition to Grays recommendations for the individual school systems, he recommended a joint appropriation that would combine programs for autistic and severely and profoundly handicapped children in the two systems, as recommended by both school superintendents. The recommendation, totaling $56,810, would provide $29,125 for one severe and profound class and $27,684 for a class for autistic children.

Gray told commissioners that the special appropriation would be for one year only, until students in the two classes are included in the school systems average daily membership allocation from the state.

In his budget message to the board. Gray said his recommendations for school current expense funds would provide no new programs or teachers. However, he said his recommendatioris will "keep present programs in place and are reasonable for a good school program for our young people

Also reviewed Wednesday was the proposed budget for Pitt Community College. Gray has recommended a total of $591,878 in county money for PCC. Included in his recommendations are $479,878 in current expense funds and $112,000 in capital outlay money for 1983-1984. This year, PCC received $452,622 in current expense funds and $111,717 for capital outlay.

The school had requested a total of $701,236 for the coming year, including $210,174 for capital projects and $491,062 for current expense items.

Mayor Washington Is Warmly Greeted

CHICAGO (AP) - It was a hostile territory during his campaign to become Chicagos first black chief executive, but Mayor Harold Washington found the mood in the neighborhood has changed.

Washington chose the predominantly white Northwest Side for the first in a series of neighborhood meetings Wednesday, returning to an area where he was greeted by surly protesters during the campaign. The voters overwhelmingly backed Republican Bernard Epton in the April mayoral election.

On Wednesday, Washington addressed more than 700 mostly white residents at a local high school. And far from being jeered and hooted down, he received a standing ovation after reiterating his pledge to reform city government and devote more funds to neighborhood improvements.

Washington told the gath

ering, "I think Im looking into the eyes of future partners in the building of this city. If I didnt believe that, I wouldnt have come here.

Among the issues addressed at the gathering was that of additional scat-tered-site public housing, fiercely opposed by white neighborhoods but supported by Washington.

The mayor has tried to allay fears about the program by promising that high-rise projects would not be built in neighborhoods with single-family homes.

Jo Ann Sypel of the Hanson-Riis Park Neighborhood Organization told Washington, "We will be a part of the overall picture. The responsibility for our neighborhoods is in your hands, and we do not take that lightly.

Jean Mayer, a member of the Southwest Parish and Neighborhood Federation that sponsored the event with

By RICHARD BOUDREAUX Associated Press Writer

SANTIAGO, ChUe (AP) -Leaders of 22,000 copper workers called an illegal strike against Chiles largest Industry starting today to press for release of their union president, jailed for organizing nationwide protests against military rule.

A judge on Wednesday ordered Rodolfo Seguel,

Tax Plan ...

(Continued from Pagel)

other taxes, said Jim Morgan, representing the N.C. Association of Liquor Distillers.

Bill Rustin of the N.C. Merchants Association asked the committee not to reduce the 3 percent merchants sales tax discount because it costs more than that to collect the tax for the state.

William Elmore of the N.C. Citizens for Business and Industry objected to removing the federal depreciation schedule from state tax laws. He said the state needs the economic stimulus from the tax break.

Frank Gray of the N.C. Manufactured Housing Institute asked the committ^ to consider taxing double-wide mobile homes as one mobile home.

He explained that the bill would raise the cap on the 2 percent sales tax on motor vehicles from $120 to $300 and mobile homes are taxed as motor vehicles. Double-wides are taxed as two vehicles.

Sneed High of the N.C. Coin Operators Association said the $40 per machine tax on video games would be unfair because it is a 1,000 percent increase in the tax. He said money spent on the games is dropping and the tax would be "punitive.

the Northwest Neighborhood Federation, told the mayor that members of her group are "fighting to maintain our communities.

The groups are asking that there be no more public housing in their neighborhoods until other city neighborhoods have received their "fair share.

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29-year-old leader of the coppers workers, held until be decides if a trial is merited on the governments charge that Se^l jeopardized national security by organizing the demonstrations.

Detectives bashed down the door of the home where Seguel was sleeping early Wednesday and took him away. Seguel bad called for peaceful protests Tuesday and hundreds of thousands of Chileans answered the call, but others took the streets and clashed with police in demonstrations that lasted into the morning. The call for the Illegal strike today was a new challenge to Presidend Aegusto Pinochet and the growing, labor-led opposition. The state copper monopoly, Coldelco, accounts for half of Chiles $4.5 billion annual export income.

The constitution of Chile says strikes are illegal unless they are based on work contract disputes. Also, any strike in the copper industry is illegal because it is considered an industry of strategic importance.

The leaders urged copper workers to stay off the job at El Salvador, one of its four main mines, for 48 hours, starting this morning.

About 4,300 workers are employed at the mine in the Atacama Desert 600 miles north of Santiago.

The copper unkm announced a 24-bour strike for Friday against the other mines.

Orbe, the official news agency, said the government would apply "severe sanctions against strikers but did not elaborate.

Hugo Estivales, the copper union vice president, said the strike was called to back demands for the release of Seguel and that of two other union leaders and a union lawyer arrested Tuesday in a demonstration near the El Teniente mine in Rancagua.

The union also demands the reinstatement of 23 miners at the El Salvador mine who were fired for arriving 10 minutes late for work in political protest Tuesday.

Four labor federations claiming 200,000 members in various industries but less united than the copper union scheduled a meeting to consider broadening the mine walkout into a general strike.

Hundreds of thousands of Chileans heeded calls by the five labor groups, led by Seguel, to take part peacefully in "days of national social protest on May 11 and on Tuesday, the first in the nearly 10 years of Pinochets regime.

The.Jnterior Ministry held Seguef responsible for street disorders Tuesday in which three people were shot to

death in working class districts of the capital and 644 peofrie were arrested in 10 cities.    j

Fueling' the unrest is a dramatic decline o( Qiiles free-marketecowMny.

A five-year boom benefited many if not most of Chiles 11 millkm people, and in 1980, Pinochet, an army general, won a refermidum giving him nine years of authoritarian power.

But in 1962, the economy shrank 14 percent and Pinochet came under under attack for his handling of a deep recession.

Labor unions and political leaders from conservatives to socialists are demanding an end to his emergency powers and election of a

congress. Pinochet has re-

But with unmnployment well ovmr 20 perrnt, few workers have so far been willing to risk their jobs by striki^. The protest movement has bemi limited to school boycotts and the banging of empty pots.

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React To Rulings On Abortion

By The Associated Press Stqiporters of legalized abortion praised Supreme Court rulings on abortion as stronger than anything we could have hoped for, while foes said they would renew tbeir efforts in Congress for a con^ittdional amendment.

In three separate decisions Wednesday, a decade after the court first legalized abortion in 1973, it struck down state and local gov

ernment regulations that could have made abortions more difficult to obtain.

One required abortions for women more than three months pregnant to be performed in full-service hospitals. Another required doctors to tell women seeking abortions about possible birth-giving alternatives, and to tell patients that the fetus is a human life. A third required doctors to wait at

TICKETING HANDICAPPED - Jack Myers, a paralyzed stroke victim who is challenging W. Va. motor vehicle laws by driving his electric-powered wheelchair-cycle on city streets, is ticketed by Vienna (W. Va.) Police Chief Gary Deem. Myers says the cycle is his only means of running errands and fending for himself. (AP Laserphoto)

least 24 hours after a woman signs an abortion consent form before performing the procedure.

The court seems to have gone out of its way to say; the decision in 1973 was correct, reasoned, well-grounded in the Constitution and stop messing with it, said Nanette Falkenberg, executive director of the National Abortion Rights Action League. "Its clearly much stronger than anything we could have hoped for.

Archbishop Terence Cooke of New York called the Supreme Court action disappointing to ail who revere human life.

"When our most basic institutions condone such violent disregard for life ... the value and nobility of every human life and every human family are dealt a lethal blow, Cooke said.

Barbara Lewis, legislative director for Ohio Right to Life, said the decision dramatically reinforces the absolute necessity of passing a human life amendment to the Constitution to outlaw abortion.

After the ruling. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who supports reversal of the courts 1973 abortion decision, called for renewed debate on the subject in Congress.

Peter Gemma, of the National Pro-Life Political Action Committee, said he was honestly surprised because 1 fully expected that we would have a favorable ruling.

Jane Gruenebaum, spokeswoman for the National Abortion Federation, an association of abortion clinics, said the state laws struck down were really aimed at denying access to abortion to women. They in no way enhanced the health of the women concerned.

There are 530 abortion clinics across the country, which accounted for three-fourths of all legal abortions

in 1980. The decision on Wednesday ensures the future of abortion clinics."

In a small victory for groups opposed to legalized abortion, the court upheld a provision in Missouri that required a woman under 18 to have parental or judicial consent to receive an abortion, unless the woman lives independently of her parents and guardians.

If we had lost that I would have been terribly shocked, said Gemma. Its only common sense that parents will have some authority

over their kids, particulariy on a decision as important as abortion.

In the Missouri case, the court also upheld portions of a law requiring the presence of a second (giysician during abortions for women in their last three nnonths of pregnancy and requiring a pa-tholo^ report for every abortion performed.

The court, however, struck down a Missouri provision requiring hospitalization for all abortions performed for women more than three months pregnant.GET READY!NINTH ANNUAL SPRING FLEA MARKET

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'CLIPANDSAVEDisco Queen Is Welcomed

BOSTON (AP) - Disco queen Donna Summer was welcomed back to Massachusetts as Gov Michael S. Dukakis declared it Donna Summer Day. and got in return a black-and-white satin jacket like those worn by members of her entourage.

The governor, at a State-house ceremony Wednesday, said he didnt know what he would do with the flashy garment. But his wife. Kitty, quickly said he would wear it while^ogging.

"I think Boston should support the arts more, the 34-year-old Miss Summer said during the Welcome Home ceremony in her hometown. A lot of artists have had to leave Boston to seek recognition.

Miss Summer agreed to kick off a two-month national tour with a free performance at the Boston Opera House for 2,600 listeners of a city radio station. She was to visit her old high school today and tell students about her success in the music industry

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12-The Daily Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-^Thursday, June 16.1983

In The Area

J A Scholarship Awarded

Teresa McLawhom, daughter of Larry and Myra McLawhorn of Greenville, has been named to receive a National Junior Achievement scholarship in the amount of $150. Teresa will attend East Carolina Universtity to study business management and Spanish. She has held several officer positions in Junior Achievement since 1981.

t .

Vehicle Collides With Train

Mary Nell Hill of Industrial Trailer Park was charged with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety Wednesday after the car she was driving collided with a Southern Railway train at the crossing on Memorial Drive about 2:15 p.m.

Officers, who identified the engineer of the train as James Ormond Rogers of Raleigh, said the Hill vehicle stopped for the train at the crossing, then rolled toward ancf collided with one of the cars.

Damage from the collision was estimated at $1,500 to the Hill car and $500 to the train.

Pockefbooks Taken From Car

Greenville police said two pocketbooks were reported taken from a car parked in a lot at the intersection of Fourth and Evans Streets about 1:50 a.m. today.

Chief Glenn Cannon said the purses, owned by Carol Marie Wolstenbolm of 401 Jarvis St.. and Norma Allen Jones of 205 North Summit St., were recovered a short time later from a trash bin a short distance away.

Cannon said $5 in cash was reported missing from the Jones purse and $10 in cash missing from the Wolstenbolm pocketbook.

Handbag Taken Froth Parked Car

Chief Glenn Cannon said Kimberly Ruth Harrison of 207B East 13th St. reported her handbag was taken from a car parked at the Crows Nest at the intersection of Tenth and Cotanche Streets about 11:50 p.m. Wednesday.

Ms. Harrison told officers the handbag contained $2 in cash.

Open House Set At Day Care Center

l^\RMVILLE - The Edwin Kids Day Care Center, a non-profit organization located at 401 Vines St., Farmville, will have an open house Saturday from .3-5 p.m.

The open house will showcase the centers services and give parents an opportunity to register for summer and fall enrollment.

Half-day and full-day programs are available and both offer planned curriculums and scheduled educational field trips

Some activities the children recently particpated in included a visit to the Greenville Fire Department, a picnic at Peppermint Park, a visit to Dr Michael Dixons dentist office and a visitation from an officer of the Farmville Police Department.

Fundraising projects will begin in July.

A special music program will be offered by Sandra Dupree this summer. She will feature group singing, activities and instrument instruction. The children will also participate in a summer program offered by the Farmville Public Library.

The center is affiliated with the Department of Public Instructions Child Food Care Program and the N.C Department of Agriculture. It is certified by the state Department of Human Resources.

Technologist Wins Award

Rebecca R Leith, radiologic technologist in ultrasonography at Pitt County Memorial Hospital, won second place in the staff exhibits competition during the annual meeting of the North Carolina Society of Radiologic Technologists held June 1-5 in Winston Salem.

Ms. Leiths exhibit, entitled Ultrasonography of the Neonatal Head, showed how ultrasound is performed on the newborn infant and the abnormalities it can detect Ultrasound is used to evaluate abnormalities such as intracranial hemorrhaging which can result in retardation or death

Dr. Steven White To Be Speaker

KILL DEVIL HILLS - Dr. John H. Furr of Norfolk, Va., will preside over the upcoming 88th annual session of a two-.state regional medical group this weekend at the Holiday Inn here.

Scientific sessions will be held Friday and Saturday mornings with various doctors as guest speakers including Dr. Steven M. White of the East Carolina School of Medicine Division of Ophtholmology in Greenville

Dr. W. Beverly Tucker of Henderson will be installed as the new president for 1983-84 at a closing banquet session Saturday night, followed by Hope Mihalap, a comedian, as after-dinner speaker.

MAKESHIFT SWING - Eight-year-old Josh Jories of Leavenworth, Kan., finds out the hard way that determination and patience dont always pay off as he winds up in a less than desirable position on his makeshift swing. Josh, who made the swing, says he will probably substitute a tire for the stick, to tame its unpredictable nature. (AP Laserphoto)

Approve Tests Of Competency

GREENSBORO, N C. (AP) Four versions of part of a proposed writing competency test and two new reading and math competency tests for public schools were approved W'ednesday by the N.C Competency Test Commission.

The commission voted, unanimously to accept the new test questions after a day-and-a-half meeting at Greensboros Regional Center of the state Depart ment of Public Instruction

The new versions of the reading and math tests, which use 120 new questions on each to measure the same minimum skills covered by the current tests, will be used beginning in fall 1984.

Since 1978, the states public high school students have been required to pass reading and math com pelency tests to receive diploma. Starting with the class of 1987, they also will have to pass a writing com petency test.

Three versions of the reading and math tests are administered to high school juniors The commission will add the two new versions and drop an old one, making available four editions of the reading, math and writing tests, said William Brown, director of the state Division of Research, who works with the commission.

Scholastic Testing Service of Bensenville, 111., was paid $37,000 to help the commission come up with the new tests.

Each version of the multiple-choice section of the writing test contains 78 questions on punctuation, grammar, word usage, job applications, letter-writing and addressing envelopes, said James Hemby, interim president of Atlantic Christian College in Wilson.

The writing test also will include a section on writing a telephone message and taking a position on a topic and supporting it. While that section of the test also has been field-tested, the commission hasnt decided on the wording of the questions for that section, Hemby said.

Tenth-graders in 1984-85 will take the writing test for the first time on a trial basis. They will take it officially for the first time as juniors in the fall of 1985 and will have several chances to pass it before graduation in 1987.

ELDERTOSPEAK Elder Ricky Council will speak at Pleasant Plain Holiness Church Saturday at 7.30 p.m.

The Gospel Fellowship Chorus will render the music.

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NX. Officials Deny Nat'l Guard Allegations

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina National Guard leader Adjutant Gen. William Ingram and state officials say they can answer each allegation of wrongdoing lodged against him during a legislative meeting Wednesday.

I dont know what has triggered this (investigation) to this point but I feel its personal now against me, said Ingram, who was accused by Rep. Murray Pool, D-Sampson, of improperly influencing promotions, misusing aircraft and starting his pension without retiring, among other things.

Crime Control and Public Safety Secretary Heman Clark, whose department oversees the Guard, said he believes the committee has a lot of false innuendo. He

Synod Picks Moderator

FLAT ROCK, N.C. (AP) -The 179th General Synod of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, with about 280 delegates attending, elected a new moderator and vice moderator on Wednesday.

Joining the delegates for the meeting, which opened Monday night and ended Wednesday, were 151 ministers and 131 laymen. ^

Elected new moderator, the highest office in the church, was Dr. William Kuykendall, professor of history at Erskine College in Due West, S.C. The Rev. James Coad Jr. of Little Rock, Ark., was elected vice moderator.

Delegates reported on the churchs three new retirement centers, said Ben Johnston, editor of the denominations monthly magazine. A center north of Memphis. Tenn., opened last week, while centers in Gastonia and in Due West, S.C., are scheduled to open in September.

Outgoing Moderator Rev. Robert Marshburn of Doraville, Ga., said the church has experienced 11.5 percent growth in past year, due mostly to church members joining from the Presbyterian Church U.S. and the United Presbyterian Church USA, which merged last week.

PRE HISTORY FIND

MADRID, Spain (AP) -Scientists say a skull fragment that is at least 1.4 million years old has been found in southeastern Spain.

and senior deputy attorney general Andy Vanore said they were prepared to answer each of the char^.

Pool told the Legislative Committee on the National Guard that questions about the 1st Battalions 120th Infantry in Wilmington were raised after group commander Col. Arnold Jones died and was replaced by Maj. Nathaniel Robb. Pool said the law requires that promotions be based on seniority, yet acting commander Maj. Gene Ezzell and 26 other higher-ranked officers were passed over.

Pool also stated that:

- Up to 35 guardsmen in Raleigh play golf once a week during the spring and summer during their duty hours, costing the state $65,000 a year.

- Leftover concrete purchased for a Guard pistol range in Butner was used at the homes of city public safety officers, a charge investigated by the State Bureau of Investigation. The probe resulted in no criminal charges.

- Ingram has been collecting a $100-a-month pension since Nov. 18, 1981, although he continues to work as adjutant general.

- Ingram used a Guard helicopter at the cost of $130 an hour to fly 30 miles from Raleigh to Benson for Mule Day, to fly to Nags Head where he has a beach cottage and to fly to Washington, DC., for meetings of the National Guard Association of the United States of which he is president.

Pool said Ingram was one of three adjutant generals reprimanded by U.S. defense secretary for using Guard planes to fly to a bowling tournament in Tennessee.

He said a Guard plane also was flown from Charlotte to Raleigh and then to Elizabeth City to carry Guard officials and their vehicles to Ingrams father-in-laws funeral, costing $3,100 an hour.

Ingram later said it was Guard tradition to attend the funerals of senior members families.

Clark defended the selection of Robb as commanding general of the 120th Infantry, saying it was a subjective decision, but not necessarily favoritism.

He said the golf tournaments were being played long before Ingram became adjutant general and the number of people involved was closer to 13.

It is an established practice on every Army post everywhere else, Clark said, adding that the $65,000 price tag is utterly ridiculous.

As for the concrete deliv- bom by the concrete com- themselves about, be said, received about $3,000 from searched aircraft logs and ered to public safety officers    panies.    If the statute is ambiguous    the pension and is ready to have found no misuse, Clark

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surplus and any expense was legislators need to talk to Clark said Ingram has State officials have Day was for recruitment.

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$459.50.........$321.65

$695.00.........$486.50

$950.00.........$665.00

$1225.00 ........$857.50

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$315.00.........$250.00

Diamond

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.01 cl..............$95.00 $75.00

.15 Ct.............$1M.OO $125.00

$645.00.........$450.00

Marque

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.35 ct.. $1295.00 1035

.50 Ct.............$000.00 $550.00

14 Kt. Heavy Chain 20

R*g. Sale

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$317.00...................$150.00

$465.00...................$230.00

$017.00...................$300 00

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14-The Daily Reflector, GrecnvlUe. N.C.-ThMiday. Jiae U. 1W3

Stock And . El Salvador's President Market Reports Leaves For Washington

Obituary Column

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was steady to 25 cents higher. Kinston unreported, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 45.50, Wilson 46.00, Salisbury 44.00, Rowland

45.00, Spiveys Comer 44.50. Sows; all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 37.00, Fayetteville closed, Whiteville unreported, 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 24 to 3 pound birds. Too few of the loads offered have been confirmed. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a m^erate to good demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was

1.653.000, compared to 1,862,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market ran up another broad gain today, continuing the rally of the past week after breaking through to record highs on Wednesday.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up more than ,51 points in the last fiv^ trading sessions,, rose another 9.51 to 1,246.79 by noontime today.

The averages 10-point gain Wednesday carried it past the previous closing high of 1,232.59 reached on May 6.

Gainers outnumbered losers by more than 2 to 1 among New York Stock Exchange listed issues.

International Business Machines, the top holding of investing institutions, put some extra zip in the advance late Wednesday with a forecast of further strong earnings growth this year. IBM stock, up 3 points Wednesday, rose 14 more to 1224 after a delayed opening today.

Other gainers among the volume leaders included Sears Roebuck, up % at 43; American Telephone & Telegraph up 4 at 64, and Geneml Electric, up 4 at 574.

The NYSEs composite index rose .76 to 97.60. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 2.39 at 478.38.

Volume on the Big Board

totaled 58.99 million shares at noontime, against 38.88 million at the same point Wednesday.

NF.W YORK lAPi -Midday slocks

Hi^ Low , Last

AMR Corp AbblLabs Allis (halm Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmKamily Am Motors AmStand Amer T&T Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX CRP

ft

CaroPwLt

Celanese

C h 2 7

Chrysler

CocaCola

Colg Palm

Comw Kdis

ConAgra

Conti (iroup

OeltaAirl

DowChem

duPonI

Ouke Pow

KaslnAirL

Fast Kodak

KatonCp

K.smark s

F.xxon

k'irestone

FlaPowLt

k'laProgress

FordMot

For McKess

Fuqua Ind

CTF. Corp

CnOynam

t;en Food

(ien Mills

(;en Motors

(ien Tire

(ienuParts

GaPacif

Goodrich

Goodyear

(irace Co

(ilNor Nek

(ireyhound

(iulf Oil

Herculeslnc

iioneywell

HospU.'p s

Ing Rand

Inil Harv

Int Paper

Ini Kectil

Int T&T

K marl

KaisrAlum

Kane .Mill

KanehSvc

KrogerCo

Lockheed

laiews (drp

Masonite n

Mead Corii

.MinnMM

Mobil

Monsanto

NCNB Cp

NabiscoBrd

Nat Distill

NorllkSou

OlinCp

Owenslll

Penney .1C

Pepsit 0

Phelps Dod

PhilipMorr

PhillpsPet

Polaroid

PriKlGamb s

Uuaker Oat

RalslnPur

KeputiAir

Republic St I

Revlon

Reynldliid

UiK'kwelInt

KiH-kwel wi

SlRegisCp

Scott Paper

SealdPow

Shakhr s

.Skyline Cp

Sony Corp

Southern Co

Sperry Cp

sldOilCaf

SIdOilInd

SIdOilOh

Stevens JP

TRW Inc

Texaco Inc

TexF.astn

tin Camp

tin Carbide

Pnlroyal

IIS Steel

Unocal

Wachov Cp

WalMarl

WeslPtPep

Weyerhsr

WinnDix

Woolworth

Xerox Cp

34G

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21

9'

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..... 19

55-.    55',    55',

484    48'    484

654    64'-4

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36',    364

19    18

45

55.

65-4

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44    43'

54    53',

55'4,    5.5S,

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44.

29 v 29' I 401    40

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45" 26' 374 39' 118', 53', 52'.,

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37 45', 29". VI'k :0', 49'J 45', 25. 37 .39

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20', 20' 14'.    14

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120. 120 120': 164', 163','

53 32\

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:to    :io'

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28',

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:14,    :m',

4P5,    41-5,

81'

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:184,

55',    56'

355,

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8:00 p.m - Coochee Council No 60. Degree of Pocahontas meets at Kedmen's Hall

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McDonald's

McGraw

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444

37

13'

56'

78',

22',

21',

42

274, 28', 23 ', 24', 1 4 19 19',

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - President Alvaro Magana left today for Washington and said he hopes to convince President Reagan to give El Salvador unrestricted aid to fight leftist guerrillas.

Magana left Ilopango airport here at 7 a.m. - 9 a.m. EDT - aboard the presidential plane, accompanied by Foreign Minister Fidel Chavez Mena and Defense Minister Carlos Eugenio Vides Casanova. They were to change to a U.S. air force plane in Miami for the flight to Washington.

Magana made no mention of possible negotiations with leftists, who have been waging a 3>/i-year war to topple the U.S.-backed rightist government. However, U.S. officials in Washington said the subject likely would come up when the Reagan and Magana meet Friday.

Leftist leaders proposed such negotiations to presidential envoy Richard Stone in Mexico City earlier this week as he wrapped up a 10-nation Latin American fact-finding trip.

In the past, Salvadoran officials have rejected similar proposals, saying the rebels should lay down their arms and participate in general elections that Magana plans for December.

We would like to be sure we have substantial aid and

Again Boycott Joint Exercises

WASHINGTON (AP) -For the second straight year, U S.-sponsored naval maneuvers in South American waters will be boycotted by Argentina in a protest of U.S. support for Britain in the Falklands War.

But the Navy said Wednesday that five Latin American countries that had boycotted the 1982 maneuvers in an apparent gesture of support for Argentina, will participate this year. Six U.S. ships have set sail for five months of air and sea maneuvers, the Navy said.

Last years exercises followed the two-month South Atlantic war in which Britain regained control of the Falklands, which Argentina had seized.

Brazil, Ecuador, Peru, 'Uruguay and Venezuela joined in last years apparent boycott. All five countries will particpate this year, the Navy said.

Six U.S. ships have set set for five months of maneuvers with the Latin American navies.

All business operating in the City are required to obtain a business or privilege license annually. For details, call 752-4137.

(that) we get it on a continuing basis, without too many ties attached, Magana told NBC News Tuesday night.

The subversion gets unlimited aid and without any conditions, he said, referring to money and weapons allegedly smu^ed to rebels from neighboring Nicaragua and the restraints impo^ by Congress on aid to El Salvador.

Magana also is scheduled to meet with Secretary of State George P. Shultz and other U.S. officials, address the Organization of American States and conduct a news conference Saturday.

Reagan and Magana met once before in San Jose, Costa Rica, at the end of Reagans Latin American tour in December.

Scheduled to accompany Magana for the three-day visit were Defense Minister Gen. Eugenio Vides Casanova, Fidel Chavez Mena of Foreign Affairs, and presidential secretary Francisco Jose Guerrero.

By law, Reagan has to certify to the Congress every six months that El Salvador is making progress in eliminating human rights abuses and pushing through social and economic reforms for aid to continue.

The next certification date 'is in July, and U.S. aid could stop unless Congress renews it.

For the past two years, the United States has been providing military and economic aid to Maganas administration - including technical assistance from not more than 55 U.S. military advisers.    ^

Settlement Seen Cheaper

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) - A suit on behalf of 3,000 people whose phones were tapped in an organized crime crackdown was settled because it was cheaper than going to court, a phone company says.

Southern New England Telephone Co. agreed Wednesday to the $150,000 settlement in the 6-year-old class-action suit.

The company was accused of illegally tapping phones from 1963 to 1971, said James Curtin, general counsel and vice president, who said the company denies any wrongdoing. The suit charged the wiretap campaign snowballed into an effort to monitor calls of reporters, lawyers, and civil rights and anti-war activists.

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CALLUS PONAN EVI EXAMINATION WITH THE OOCTON OP VOUN CHOICE

Reagan has asked Congress to increase the military assistance fivefold this year to $136.3 million, and has asked for $86 millicH) for fiscal 1984. Congressional committees have slashed those requests, and the issue is still under debate.

Earlier this week, about 120 U.S. Special Forces troops set up camp in Hon-duras to train 2,400 Salvadoran soldiers over the next six months in anti-guerrilla tactics.

Shultz said the project is the next-cheapest to training the soldiers in El Salvador, after Congress refused to increase the number of U.S. advisers. He said training them in the United State would be very expensive.

Calling the 55 advisers a very low limit, Magana said we are training our troops in Honduras precisely as a consequence of that limit, and it would be more practical to train them in El Salvador.

On Wednesday, a top guerrilla leader said his forces are planning actions in El Salvador that could promote leftist insurgencies against U.S.-backed governments throughout Central America.

We are not fighting only against the dictatorship now, but also we are fighting all the time more openly against American imperialism, Joaquin Villalobos said in a broadcast over the clandestine rebel Radio Venceremos.

Villalobos leads the Peopless Revolutionary Army, one of the five rebel groups in the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front.

Imperialism is elevating its scales of intervention... with its millions of dollars, its weapons, its advisers and its plans to strengthen the army, he said.Within a few days we will start to execute new plans and a new military campaign, with which we are going to obtain a new strategic victory.

The broadcast said Villalobos statements were recorded Tuesday at what it called the swearing-in ceremony for a new rebel battalion in the northeast Morazan province, a longtime rebel stronghold.

Bullock

ROCKY MOUNT - Mrs. Mamie Bullock of 931 Stokes Avenue here, died Tuesday ni^t.

She was the wif^of Dempsey Bullock of m home ai^ the mother of Mrs. Mamie Ruth Cobb of Fountain.    V

Funeral arran^ments are incomplete at Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary in Tarboro.

DaU

SNOW HILL - Mr. Jimmie Ray Dail, 46, a farmer of Route 1, died Wednesday in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 3:30 p.m. from the Church Street Chapel of the Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Donald Fader. Burial will follow in Snow Hill Cemetery.

He is survived by his wife.

Early Payment

4

By Chrysler

DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler Corp., claiming a remarkable comeback, has paid off $409.9 million of its $1.2 billion federally guaranteed loans - even though the repayment was not due until 1990.

Fred W. Zuckerman, Chrysler vice president and treasurer, presented a check Wednesday to Daniel P. Davison, chairman of U.S. Trust Co. in New York City, which will distribute the money to the private lenders.

Mrs. Doris Pittman Dail of the home; his mother, Mable Fields Dail of Snow HiU; one dau^ter. Miss Ann Dail of Kinston; two sons, Jimmie Allen Dail and Jerry Lynn Dail, both of Snow Hill; thr^ sisters, Mrs. Sidney Earl Hill of Hookerton, Mrs. Robert Bright and Mrs. Harold Edwards, both of Kinston; three brothers, Eari Dail of Fountain, William Dail of Walstonburg and Alton Dail ofStantonsburg.

The family will receive friends at the Farmville Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. Friday. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the memorial fund at GrimesleyFWB Church.

Morris

VANCEBORO - Mrs. Beatrice Smith Morris, 77, died Wednesday in Craven County Hospital.

Her funeral service will be conducted Friday at 3 p.m. in the Wllkerson Funeral Chapel here by the Rev. Jerry Smith and the Rev. Kenneth Dixon. Burial will be in Celestial Memorial Gardens here.

Mrs. Morris, a native of Craven County, spent all her life in the Vanceboro community. She was employed by Jay Apparel for many years and was a member of the Bridgeton Pentecostal Holiness Church.

She is survived by her husband, Levi Morris; a daughter, Mrs. Archie Morris of Rt. 2, Vanceboro; a sister, Mrs. John Waters of Vanceboro; three grandchildren; and six greatgrandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. At

other times they will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Archie Morris, Rt. 2, Vanceboro.

Part

TARBORO - Mr. Willie Park died Wednesday in Edgecwnbe GwJeral Hospital.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary in Tarboro.

Pittman

BALTIMORE, Md. - Mr. Johnny Pittman Jr., formerly of Pitt County, died Saturday in Mt. Sinai Hospital in Baltimore.

Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at St. James FWB Church in Fountain with the Rev. Robert Phillips officiating. Burial will follow in the Bullock Cemetery.

Mr. Pittman was a native of Pitt County but had lived in Baltimore for the past 20 years. He was employed by a construction company as a cement finisher.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Jean May Pittman of the home; two daughters. Miss Judy Ann Pittman and Juanita Pittman, both of the home; his mother and his step-father, Mrs. Gladys Bridgers and Jessie Bridgers, both of Rocky Mount; and one sister, Mrs. Ida Ruth Long of Greenville.

The body will be at Hamby Memorial Funeral Chapel in Fountain after 6 p.m. Friday until one hour prior to the funeral. Family visitation will be Friday from 8-9 p.m at the chapel. The family will meet at the home of Mrs. Catherine Lindsey Taylor in Fountain.

Saint Paul Pentecostal Holiness Church

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REV. MAURICE PHELPS

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THE DAILY REFLECTORTHURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 16, 1983

Evans Blasts Houston

Over And Under

Atlanta Braves outfielder Dale Murphy cant break up the double play as he slides under Los Angeles second

baseman Steve Sax in the first inning at Dodger Stadium. Murphy was out at second, but the Braves went on to take a 4-3 victory. (AP Laserphoto)

By The Associated Press

Darrell Evans stayed up to watch his own version of the late show - then put on a show all by himself against Uie Houston Astros.

This is incredible. Ive never done anything like this before, said Evans after his three home runs and six RBI powered the San Francisco Giants to a 7-1 victory over the Astros Wednesday

Perhaps Evans wouldnt have been as successful had he not stayed up late to do his homework. Hitless in 17 previous trips against Uie Astros, Evans studied video tapes of himself for a couple of hours after Tuesday night^ 12-inning, 3-2 loss to the Astros. He said he paid^articular attention to his hands and feet and made soe adjustments.

I can hardly wait to get up to the plate when Im hitting like this, said the 13-year veteran after boosting his home run total to to a National League-tying 18 and RBI to 44. He also is hitting .315 and has a slugging average of .653.

In other NL action, it was Atlanta 3, Los Angeles 2; Montreal 7, Pittsburgh 4; St. Louis 7, Philadelphia 6; Chicago 7, New York 4 in 10 innings and San Diego 5, Cincinnati 1.

With his explosive afternoon, Evans tied Atlantas Dale Murphy for the NL lead in homers, ran his career total to 250 and became the first National Leaguer to hit three homers in a game since Claudell Washington did it for the New York Mets against the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1980.

Evans hit his first two homers - a solo shdt in the first inning and a three-run blast in the third - off Houston starter Mike LaCoss, 4-5.

The left-handed slugger hit a hard liner that was speared by Houston first baseman Ray Knight in the fifth. After Max Venables solo homer in the sixth gave San Francisco a 5-0 lead, Evans smacked a two-run shot deep into the right field seats at Candlestick Park,

"Even before I went in the ballgame, 1 felt real good, Evans said. I just felt like I was going to hit the homers, and as soon as 1 hit the balls 1 knew they were gone.

Evans power display backed the four-hit pitching of Fred Breining, 6-4, who had a perfect game until one out in the sixth

Braves 3, Dodgers 2 Jerry Royster tied the game with a run-producing infield single, then Dale Murphys sacrifice fly provided the deciding run as Atlanta rallied for two runs in the ninth to beat Los Angeles.

With the bases loaded. Royster bounced a hard grounder off the foot of reliever Dave Stewart, 5-2. to tie the score Murphy then followed with his game-winning sacrifice fly.

Atlanta reliever Gene Garber. 21. who came on in the bottom of the seventh, recorded the victory, Steve Bedrosian pitched the ninth for his ninth save.

"This is a very patient ballclub, said Atlanta Manager Joe Torre. "The players feel that if they keep plugging away, something good will finally happen.

Expos 7, Pirates 4 Andre Dawson drove in four runs, two during a four-run fifth inning, and belted a homer as Montreal rallied to defeat Pittsburgh Ray Burris, 2-2. survived a three-run first inning and went on to gain the victory with relief help from Jeff Reardon, who posted his ninth save. Burris, 0-11 as a starter in 1982. posted his first victory in a starting role since the NL playoffs in 1981 Losing 3-2, the Expos went ahead 6-3 in the fifth off Jim Bibby, 2-7, as Dawson slugged a two-run single, A1 Oliver slapped an RBI double and Warren Cromartie hit a run-scoring grounder. Dawson also had a sacrifice fly in the second inning and smashed a solo homer, his ilth, in the seventh.

Cardinals 7, Phillies 6 David Green lashed a two out RBI single in the

eighth inning, capping a four-run rally that led St. Louis over Philadelphia in a game that saw Steve Carlton regain the all-time career strikeout mark.

The Cardinals rally marred a seven-strikeout performance by Carlton, boosting his lifetime total to 3.542 - seven more than Nolan Ryan, with whom he had been tied. Both Carlton and Ryan earlier this year topped Walter Johnsons lifetime mark of 3,308.

Losing 6-3. the Cardinals won the game in the eighth on an RBI single by Dane lorg, Glenn Brummers run-scoring grounder, and RBI singles by Darrell Porter and Green.

Kevin Hagen gained his first major league victory with one inning of relief, and Bruce Sutter pitched the ninth for his fifth save

Cubs 7, Mets 4 Jay Johnstones bases-loaded, two-run single in the 10th led Chicago over New York. Mell Hall opened the inning with a single and moved to second on Ryne Sandbergs sacrifice which saw Mets first baseman Rusty Staub charged with an error for missing the tag, and advanced to second on Bill Buckners sacrifice.

Ron Cey was walked intentionally to load the bases and Johnstone delivered his two-run single off Scott Holman, the fifth of six pitchers used by the Mets.Holman, 1-5, was lifted in favor of Mike Torrez after walking Cubs winner Lee Smith. 2-4. Larry Bowa then greeted Torrez with an RBI single to make it 7-4

Padres 5, Redsl Ed Whitson pitched a three-hitter and helped himself with a two-run single as San Diego defeated Cincinnati. Whitson, 1-4. making his fourth start since coming off the disabled list May 20. struck out five and walked one Terry Kennedy also slugged a two-run homer for the Padres His blast in the first off Charlie Puleo. 2-3, actually provided the Padres with their winning run

Four Pitt County Errors Give Rocky Mount Win

Yankees' Slump Continues

ROCKY MOUNT - Barry Butler struck out seven on the mound and slammed a two-run homer in the fifth the lead Rocky Mount to a 6-3 victory over Pitt County in American Legion baseball Wednesday.

Hank Jones slapped two hits in four trips to the plate to lead Rocky Mount, while Randy Warren continued his hitting spree with three hits in five at bats for Pitt County.

Pitt County out-hit Rocky Mount 9-5, but four errors cost Post 39 the game.

Pitt took the lead with three runs in the top of the third. Bobby Buie reached first on an error to open the inning, and Warren followed with a single.

A fielders choice by Mont

Carter nailed Buie at third, but Warren and Carter scored when Doug Coley lofted the ball to left field and Todd Goins couldnt hang on to for a running catch. Coley crossed the plate on a double by losing pitcher Kenny Kirkland.

Rocky Mount retaliated with a pair of runs in the bottom of the third. Kirkland hit Goins with a pitch to open the rally, and Eddie Naylor and Neil Avent drew walks to fill the bases. On a delayed steal, Kirkland hit Avent in the back, sending the ball into center field and allowing Goins and Naylor to score.

Rocky Mount picked up two more runs in the fourth, as Hank Jones and Danny Isbell scored when a grounder by

Sports Calender

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

Todays Sports Baseball

American Legion Snow Hill at Pitt County (8 p.m.)

Little League Coca-Cola vs. Optimists True Value Hardware vs. Moose SoftbaU Church League Church of God vs. Unity Maranatha vs. Black Jack Trinity vs. Faith First Christian vs. St. James Peoples vs First Presbyterian Memorial vs. Oakmont Grace vs. First Pentecostal Arlington Street vs. Immanuel FirstFreeWill vs Jarvis City League PTA vs. Liberty Airborne vs Pantana Bobs Jimmys 66 vs. Metal Craft

Avent went between Carters legs at second base. Jones had singled and Isbell drew a base on balls to set up a 4-3 Rocky Mount lead.

Butlers homer in the fifth put the game out of reach, as Pitt County stranded runners at second in the fifth and sixth innings. Greg Briley tripled to open the eighth, but Butler struck out Kirkland and Troy Hudson to quiet the rally.

Pitt County, now 7-2 on the season, hosts Snow Hill tonight at 8 p.m. at D.H. Conley.

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CLEVELAND (AP) - With George Steinbrenner owning the Yankees and Billy Martin managing them, what is so rare as a day in June when talk of firing doesnt fill the air.

Steinbrenner was scheduled to meet today with Martin and his agent, Eddie Sapir, amid reports that Martin was about to be fired by Steinbrenner for the third time - in part because the team has been losing; in part because of Martins conduct, including smashing a clubhouse urinal during a 9-6 loss here Tuesday night.

The Yankees took a little of the pressure off Wednesday, downing the Indians 8-5 to end a four-game losing streak and get back to the .500 mark.

But the New York Daily News, quoting sources close to

Steinbrenner, reported that Martin was on the way out unless he could convince the man sometimes known as "The Boss that he would mend his ways and that the Yankees would start winning again.

The News said his likely replacement was Yogi Berra, a longtime Yankee hero and the manager of the 1964 American League champion Yankees and 1973 National League champion Mets. Berra is now a Yankee coach,

Berra would be the latest in Steinbrenners    game    of

musical managers that since 1975 has included Martin (three times). Bob Lemon and Gene Michael (twice each), Bill Virdon, Dick Howser and Clyde King.

For most of the Wednesday, attention here focused on

Tuesdays incident Martin admitted whacking the urinal with a bat According to one source, the outburst came during the fifth inning, when the Yankees were down 6-1.

"None of the players did it, Martin said 1 broke it. 1 called Gabe (Indians president Gabe Paul) and offered to pay for it.

.According to the New York

Post and New York Daily News. Steinbrenner is upset at Martin for a number of things.

The News said that Monday Might, after the Yankees lost 90 to Cleveland, Steinbrenner became even more upset when he learned that Martin had skipped a workout he had ordered last week and that only 11 players had attend^.

Martin said that if hes in trouble, Steinbrenner should

fire him "I aint running scared of nobody. Our relationship is supposed to be on a man to-man level Im not going to talk about my job with him through the^apers.^

jL

Co-Ed League Tournament

Fridays Sports Baseball Little League Pepsi Cola vs First Federal Union Carbide vs. Lions American Legion Kinston at Snow Hill (8 p.m.)

Babe Ruth League Brown & Wood vs Wachovia Bank

Coca-Cola vs, Everettes SoftbaU City League Whittington vs Ormonds J A.s vs. Subway California Concepts vs. Sunnyside Eggs

Industrial League Empire Brushes 4H vs. TRW Cox Armature vs. WNCT-TV Union Carbide vs. East Carolina

HI

Church League First Christian vs. First Free Will Mt Pleasant vs. Grace

PittCounty    003 000 000- 3

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K Isbell. Goins. Carter 2. Bnley. KirUand. DP Rocky Mount 2 LOB Pill County 8, Rocky Mount II, 2B-Kirkland 3B Bnley, HR Butler SB Warren, Stalls, Naylw, Godwin, Jones S Coats2, Godwin, Goins. Coley

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16-Tbe Datiy Reflector, GreenvUle,N.C.-nun(biy. June 11 UBS    m'Sick' Pitchers Lift Chicago Over Angels

By The Associated Press Shane Rawley and LaMarr Hoyt didnt feel all that well - but they were better than the batters they faced.

Rawley, fighting a fever, struggled to a nine-hitter as the New York Yankees snapped a four-game losing streak by beating the Cleveland Indians 8^, and Hoyt, likewise battling the flu, scattered four hits in seven innings as the Chicago White Sox defeated California 5-2 in a pair of American League games Wednesday night.

Elsewhere it was Oakland 10, Toronto I; Detroit 4, Boston 2; Minnesota 6, Kansas City 2; Seattle 6, Texas 4, and Baltimore II, Milwaukee 8 in 10 innings.

i had a pretty high fever last night, a sore throat, and I ached all over, Rawley said. I was just a little weak, and it affected my velocity just a little. He walked five batters and struck out

only two.

Despite those normally mediocre numbers, Yankees Manager Billy Martin called Rawleys performance heroic.

He was sick and I didnt think he could start, Martin said. He was up all last night. I didnt think he threw the ball as hard as he usually does. He did one heck of a job when you consider everything.

The Yankees built a 7-0 lead with five runs in the first inning, three on Graig Nettles homer, and two in the second before the Indians turned the rout into a close game. Chris Bando hit a three-run homer for the Indians.

Throw out the first inning, and we win the game, Cleveland Manager Mike Ferrarro philosophized.

Ther victory came less than 24 hours after Yankees owner George

Steinbrenner said he was unhappy with the teams performance and some of Martins activities, creating more headlines.

Its something all the players accept, Rawley said of Steinbrenners penchant for public utterances. Its kind of neat because there is always something to look forward to. But I dont think it affects us because on the field. Its a whole different ballgame.

White Sox 5, Angels 2 Hoyt seemingly didnt mind getting lifted by Chicago Manager Tony LaRussa after seven innings, during which he fanned four batters and walked one.    ^

I was gassed, he said. I had the flu the last couple of days and the fatigue from my illness just didnt make me feel strongenough to finish.

Scott Fletcher triggered the White

Soxs decisive two-run rally in the fifth-inning with a double and also had a sacrifice fly. With one out, he doubled and Jerry Dybzinski tied it 2-2 with a single. With two away, Carlton Fisk tripl^ to center to put Chicago ahead to stay.

Californias Doug DeCinces went O-for-4 and had his I2-game hitting streak stopped.

As 10, Blue Jays 1

Davey Lopes drove in seven runs for Oakland with a doubie, a triple and a grand-slam homer.

Lopes, an 11-year veteran, drove in two runs with a second-inning doubie off Luis Leal, then picked on Toronto reliever Dave Geisel for a run-scoring triple in the fourth and his seventh homer of the year and third career grand slam in the fifth.

Rookie Mike Krueger picked his first

major-ieague complete game for the As, scattering eight hits.

Tigm4,RedSox2 Kirk Gibson, Detroits batting star in a losing effort the previous evraing, k^t his bat hot against the Red Sox, drilling a two-run triple.

Like I said last ni^t, its a lot more fun to contribute to a winning cause, said Gibson. Thats what were here for.

Chet Lemon and Lance Parrish each hit a solo homer.

Twins 6, Royals 2 Scott Ullger and Frank Viola teamed their talents for the Twins to turn back Kansas City.

Ullger, replacing injured Kent Hrbek at first base, drilled three hits - two doubles and a single - to match his previous total big-league output. Viola scattered ei^t Royals hits.

Mariners 6, Rangers 4 A1 Cowens hit a two-out, two-run triple in a three-run ninth inning as the Mariners vaulted past Texas.

His game-winning hit to ri^t-center field off the Rangers ace reliever, OdeU Jones, followed singles by Domingo Ramos and Steve Henderson, put Seattle on top 5-4 and snapped a five-game victory streak by Texas.

Orioles 11, Brewers 8 Baltimore, riding five runs batted in by Cal Ripken Jr.,, rallied from a seven-run deficit after six innings and beat Milwaukee on John Shelbys single that produced the Orioles winning run inafourrrunlOth inning.

This might top them all, Brewers Manager Harvey Kuenn muttered. It probably does, getting a 7-0 lead and losing in extra innings.Mark Brouhard hit a two-run homer for Milwaukee.,

A

'Bear', Ballesteros Agree Driver Is Out At 1983 U.S. Open

OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) - Jack Nicklaus and Seve Ballesteros are in agreement on at least one point;

For the most part, the driver stays in the bag during the 83rd U.S. Open Golf Championship which began today. The rough is so deep, so severe, if a player challenges it with the driver "hes out of his tree, Nicklaus said.

John Hand, director of competitions for the sponsoring USGA, said the only word to describe it is penal. ,

Ballesteros, the young Spaniard who won the Masters and established himself as a solid favorite here when he won the Westchester Classic last Sunday, said he used a one-iron off the tee 11 times and the driver only on the three par-5 holes on treacherous Oakmont during his final practice round Wednesday.

You dont hit the driver very often, agreed Nicklaus, who will be seeking the record fifth American national championship that was denied him by Tom Watsons dramatic chip-in a year ago at Pebble Beach.

But, in taking the driver out of the hands of the players, "theyve taken an awful lot of the gamble out of the golf course, Nicklaus said.

Theyve forced you to play safe. As a result, the scores are going to be lower. If the gamble was left in, the scores would be higher.

Ballesteros predicted the scores will be high enough in any event.

"The fairways are very narrow, There is too much rough. The greens are fast, very fast. You cannot chip. The scores will be high. Maybe two over (par) will win, he said.

Ballesteros, 26, now the winner of two Masters and a British Open crown, said my confidence is very, very high, coming into todays first round.

He noted, however, this tournament has not been any good to me. He once was disqualified for missing his starting times and failed to qualify for the final two rounds on another occasion.

Seve is a very good player, agreed Nicklaus, at age 43 seeking still another addition to the record 19 major titles hes collected in an unmatched career.

But hehasnt yet proved he can win on an Open course.

Nicklaus hasnt won this year but, he said, that is not significant coming into this one, one of the four events around which he has built his golfing life.

I'm well prepared, he said. Actually, Im playing rather well 1 have a shot.

And, most leading players agreed, not many in the field of 146 pros and 10 amateurs do have a shot. The number, generally picked around 20, is limited by the severity of the course, which f/atson said is the toughest Ive ever seen.

Watson, in the worst slump of his career, said he is not playing particularly well. Off the way Im playing, I wouldnt give myself much chance.    v

Palmer Let Nicklaus 'Out Of The Cage'

ByWILLGRIMSLEY AP ^ial Correspondent

OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) - Oakmont revisted -21 years later.

Who can forget the June of 1962 when the pendulum of bigtime tournament golf swung from the fabled, charismatic Charger to the dour, workmanlike fat kid from Ohio?

I let the Bear out of the cage, Arnold Palmer was to remark later in reviewing his plavoff defeat at the hands of the bulbous, 22-year-old rookie. Jack Nicklaus, in the 62nd U.S. Open Golf Championship.

"If I had been able to beat that strong, young aude in that tournament, I might have held him off for another five years. But Jack gained such confidence and momentum there was no stopping him after that.

It is now two decades plus a year later and this storied old course still lies here tucked in the side of a mountain outside Pittsburgh -hardly a blade of grass changed.

Arnie and Jack are back, too, but the same cant be said of them.

Arnie is 53, his hair a silvery sheen, his oldtime ability to strangle a golf to death dulled by the years but still, nut-brown and lean, a magnetic, macho personality.

Nicklaus is no longer the kid whose Ohio State teammates called Blobbo, Whaleman and Baby Dumpling.

He shed some 20 pounds, let his gold-colored hair grow to a fashionable length and turned into a Hollywood matinee idol type while amassing the greatest collection of major championships - 19 - in the history of the game.

The Golden Bear became the Golden Boy, one of the most popular personalities in all sports. But at 42, without a tour victory in a year, he is looking over his shoulder at a brilliant, daring young Spaniard named Seve Ballesteros.

The dark-eyed Latin may be the new crown prince of golf, but he will have to go far to transcend the drama that signaled the changing of the guard on this same course 21 years ago.

As 20-year-old amateur, Nicklaus had finished second to Palmer in the U. S. Open at Denver in 1960 and won the NCAA and his second U. S. Amateur title in 1961 before turning pro. As a brash, raw rookie, he now was daring to challenge the great Palmer in his own backyard before all his neighbors and friends.

Palmer was at the height of his game, already winner of three Masters, the British and U. S. 'Opens. He was a national idol. People stayed close to their TV sets on weekends to watch him stage one of his patented miracle finishes.

This adulation was multiplied in this mine and steel area where Arnie grew up, married and raised his family in Latrobe, Pa., a stones throw from the course.

Arnie played his round and drove home for dinner.    ^

Oakmont galleries were understandably hostile to Nicklaus. To them, he was a brash young outsider who threatened their hometown hero.

Palmer and Nicklaus ultimately tied for the championship at 283, forcing a playoff. Big Jack won the playoff, 71 to 74, suffering some of the grossest indignities ever heaped on a competitor.

A chubby kid with a crew haircut and a baby face, looking like a young Boog Powell, Nicklaus lacked Arnies flair. Appearing grim at times because of intense concentration, he was a slow, methodical player, often standing over a putt seemingly an eternity before moving the club.

Golden Follow Through

Jack Nicklaus follows the path of his putt on the 16th green during

practice Wednesday for the start of the U.S. Open in Oakmont, Pa. (AP Laserphoto)

Lloyd's Pays $ 10 Million In Shergar Theft Case

Wednesday Youth Baseball

Sportsworld  .....14

Lions.............3

Galen Brinn and Tim Moore slapped a pair of hits each, while Sportsworlds pitchers allowed only two hits to pave the way to a 14-3 victory Wednesday in North State Little Lea^e baseball.

Sporstsworld had Doc Williams on the mound most of the way before Kelvin Yarrell came on in relief. The tandem struck out 10 batters.

Jason Wing scored four runs for Sportsworld with a single and two walks.

After Wing drew a base on balls to open the game, Brinn, Moore and Jamie Brewington singled to drive in four runs and put the game away. Sportsworld added five more in the second inning, one in the third and five more in the fifth.

Carroll&Asso.......7

First Fdral.......4

A two-run double by Taure Claibourne in the fifth inning gave Carroll and Associates a 7-4 win over First Federal in Tar Heel Little League baseball Wednesday.

Drew Johnson and Michael

Cox each homered for First Federal, but Carroll and Associates rallied for five runs in the fifth to ice the game

Michael Sutton walked and Travis Williamson reached first on an error before Claibournes double. Singles by Julius Smith and Marvin Gaye drove in two more runs,

Johnson ripped a solo shot in the third and Cox a two-run homer in the fourth for First Federal.

Bobs Ruth

PlanUrs...........6

Coca-Cola.........1

Eric Jarman fired a two-hitter to lead Planters Bank to a 6-1 win over Coca-Cola in Wednesday Babe Ruth League baseball.

Jason Galloway and Clark Stallings walked to open the second inning, and a balk moved the runners to second and third. A sacrifice by Jarman to the second baseman drove in the winning run.

Planters added a run in the third and three insurance runs in the fifth to seal the victory.

Wochovla 11

Papti-Colo.........3

Wachvia rapped just six hits but received 13 walks from Pepsi pitchers to record an 11-3 win in Wednesday Babe Ruth baseball action.

Larke Weatherington slapped two hits in four trips to the plate for Wachovia, while Mitch Phillips and Sterling Edwards went 2-4 for Pepsi.

Wachovia took a 2-0 lead in the second inning and put the game away with four runs in the third.

Lee Eakes, Larke Worthington, Terry Warren, Travis King and James Matthews walked to open the third for Wachovia. A sacrifice by Mike Sasser and another base on balls drove in the final two runs of the frame.

Wachovia added three more in the fourth and one each in the fifth and sixth.

PittSr.BobflRuth

WintarvilU 5

Jamasvilla.........4

HOLLYWOOD - Steve Kite scored the winning run on a double steal to give Win-terville Machine Works a 5-4 victory over Jamesville in Pitt

County Senior Babe Ruth League baseball Wednesday.

Winning pitcher Chris Via and Wesley Smith slapped two hits each for Winterville, while C. Hardison and J. Wynne had two for Jamesville.

Winterville improved its record to 1-4 on the season, while Jamesville slid to 0-2. Winterville travels to Washington tonight.

Adams was 2-4 for Chicod. Eddie Brown had three hits in four at bats, with Feign Worthington 3-5 and Jeff Adkins 2-4 for Ayden.

Randy Mills walked after Steve Mills homer in the fourth, stole second, moved to third on an error and scored the go-ahead run on a single by Adams in the fourth.

LONDON (AP) - Lloyds of London said its underwriters have agreed to pay theft insurance for the stolen champion racehorse Shergar and the London Times reported that the payout probably will total $10.6 million.

A spokesman for Lloyds who declined to be named said insurers involved believe Shargar is still alive despite a statement by Irish police that they think he is dead.

The spokesman said the

amount of the theft claim will certainly run into millions but did not name the sum.

Shergar was stolen at gunpoint from the Aga Khans stud farm at Ballymany in Ireland by a gang of masked men Feb. ,8. The stallion, owned by a 34-member syndicate in which the Aga Khan has six shares, won the 1981 English and Irish Derbies,

W'hen stolen. Shergar had ceased racing and become a highly-prized stud. His abduction has cost the syndicate greatly in lost stud fees.

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SCOREBOARDnetiecuir, ureenvuie. M.t - I'bunday, June U. 1963- -17

TAlVKimHARA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

_.tic42-3MMroW maeter vithhlB

iiiirs

San Francisco 31    30    508    94

Houston    31    32    492    104

San Diego    28    32    467    12

Cincinnati    27    35    435    14

Twtday's Gaines New York 4, Chicago 3.10 innings Montreal 7. PittslMirgh 3 Si Louis 5. Philadelphia 4 Cincinnali 4. San Diego 3 Los Angeles 4. Atlanta 3 Houston 3. San Francisco 2.12 innings Wednesday 's Games San Francisco 7. Houston I Montreal 7. Pittsburgh 4 St Louis7. PhiladelMiafi Chicago 7, New Yor 4,10 innings San Die 5, Cincinnati 1 Atlanta 3. Los Angeles 2

Thursday 's Games Cincinnati iPastore 2-5i at San Diego iLollarl-4i Houston I Scott l -3i at San Francisco iLaskev 1-51, ini Atlanta iCamp 5^ i at Los Angeles A Pena5-ti, ini Only games scheduled

Friday's Games New York at Montreal.' n i Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. i n i Chicago at St Louis. < n'

Houston at San Diego. i n i Cincinnati at lais Angeles ' n i AtlantaatSanFrancisco.ini

Rec Softball

Fire Fighters defeated Belvoir by forfeit.

3-4; Pr-Wanda Foreman 2-3, Gwen Silvera 2-4.

400 10

Industrial

CIS................210    105    5-13

Wachovia    160    000    0- 7

Leading hitters: C-Wawe Elks 4-5, Keith Rhodes 3-4; W-Thurman

Beard 2-3, Steve Krewzeski 2-3.

PCMH    103 000-4

ECl'H    000 012-3

Leading hitters: P-Al Giodamo 2-2, Joey Cahoon 2-3; E-David White 3-4

Greenville Travel 653 210 1-18

Wachovia ..........100    200    0-3

Leading hitters: G: Leslie Starr 2-2, Kim Waller 3-5; W-Barbera Jones 3-3, Bobbie Owen 2-31 HR).

Empire 1 ...........454    202    4 - 21

Enforcers  000 021 3-6

Leading hitters: EmJames Parker 5-6, Ed Coburn 5-5 (2 HR), John Huber 5-6, Randy Moye 4-5; En-Randy Nichols 2-3.

City

Airborne    061    000    0-7

Calf Concepts    602 351 x-17

Iveading hitters: A-Dave Regan ^3; C-Reid Kennedy 3-4, Ed Wells 3-4, Tony Oakley 4-4

Copper Kettle.......103    703 0-14

FredWebb.........003    000 3-6

Leading hitters: CMasha Daniel 3-4, Janice Atkinson 34 (HR); F-Faye Everette 2-3, S. Matthews 3-4 (HR).

Burr Wellcome 1    015 023 0-11

Coca-Cola.........OOl 031 0-5

Leading hitters B-Mike Hosey 4-4. Curtis Hill 4-4, Greg Gatlin 3-4; C-Terrv Duncan 2-3.

J A.'s.............000    245    11-13

PTA...............302 250 00-12

Leading hitters: J-Lonnie House 3-4, P-Burton Robinson 2-4 (HR).

Public Works.......033 900 3-18

GradyWhite........010 000 1-2

Leading hitters: P-David Phillips 3-4; G-Frank Brown 2-3

Ormonds .     420    050    112

Pantana's..........000    034    411

Leading hitters: 0-Ricky Ratley 4-4, John Von Cannon 4-5, Stewart Brooker 3-4 (HR); P-Greg Hill 2-3, Buzz Chadwick 3-4,

PCMH.................123 004-10

Players Retreat    565 OOx-16

Leading hitters: PCMH-Mary Smith 3-4 (2 HR), Lorie Stagner 2-3; PR-Mel Ham 3-3 (2 HR), L Cox 3-4

Boseboll Stondings

Cox .................002    000    1-3

TRW................200    202    x-6

Leading hitters: C-David Bell 2-3: T-W.H Hathaway 3-3, Mack Roebuck 3-3

Metal Craft.........301 023 1-10

Subway ............200 050 0-7

Leading hitters: M-Tom Odom

2-3, Danny Harris 2-4; S-Dave

inny

Wood 2-3, Tom Overstreet 2-3.

By The Amocltted Press AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet

Baltimore    37    24    607

Detroit    33    27    550

Toronto    32    27    542

Boston    ,    30    29    508

New York    30    30    .500

Milwaukee    28    :tO    483

Cleveland    27    33    4,50

GB

Seattle    26    39

Tuesday 's Games

Toronto 13, Oakland 7 develando. New York6 Boston 6. Detroit 2 Texas 7, Seattle 1 Minnesota 8. Kansas City 1 Baltimore at Milwaukee, ppd , ram California at Chicago, ppd . rain Wednesdays Games Baltimore 11, Milwaukee 8,10 innings Oakland 10, Toronto t Detroit 4. Boston 2 New York 8, Cleveland 5 Chicago 5, California 2 Minnesota 6, Kansas City 2 Seattle 6, Texas 4

Thursday 's Games Oakland i McCatty l-fli at Toronto i Gott 3-5i.ini

New York iGuido *4' 8t Cleveland iBlyleven4-5i. ini Boston I Hurst 4 5i at Detroit iBerenguer2-0i. ini Baltimore i.McGregor 8 3i at MilwaukeeiHaas4 2i,ini Minnesota lOelkers 03i at Texas (Darwin4 5i, ini Onlv'games scheduled

   Friday's Games

CaliformaatToronlo.ini Boston at Baltimore, mi Detroit at Cleveland, ml Milwaukee at New York, mi Oakland at Chicago, mi Seattle at Kansas City, mi Minnesota at Texas, (ni

Leogue Uoders

By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING 1130 at batsi Carew, California. 411. Boggs, Boston. 374. Brett. Kansas City, 369 McRae. Kansas Citv, 340, Griffev. New York. :133 Thornton. Cleveland. 333 RUNS Ripken, Baltimore. 45 Castino. Minnesota, 44. Brett. Kansas City. 41, K Murray, Baltimore 41 Boggs. Boston, 40, Sample, Texas, 40

nple, Texai RBI Kittle, Chicago, 45 Ward, Min nesota, 45, Hrbek Minnesota, 40 Rice

Boston. 40. Ripken. Baltimore. 40 HITS Carew. California 85 Castino. Minnesota. 81 Boggs. Boston. 80 Whitaker, Detroit 74. Griffey, New York, 73

IKllBLES Hrbek. Miiiiiesota, 20. McRae, Kansas Citv. 20 Boggs. Boston, 19. B Bell, Texas, 17. Ford, Baltimore, 17. Parrish, Detroit. 17 TRIPI.ES C Moore Milwaukee. 5. G Wilson Detroit. 5 Herndon. Detroit, 5, K Gibson, Detroit. 5 Winfield, New York,

Burr. Wellcome II . . 003 303 09

Car. Leaf ..... Oil    000    0-2

Leading hitters: B-Jimmy Cayton 3-3, Jeff Skinner 3-3; C Charles Thornton 2-2, Willie Harris 2-3.

Ladies

PTA.............(10)24    001    0-17

Prepshirt ..........000    320    3- 8

Leading hitters: PTA-Helena Barnhill 2-2 (HR), Barbera Wrerch

WEST DIVISION

California    34    27

Texas    31    28

Oakland    31    30

Kansas City    28    28

Chicago    28    32

Minnesota    26    37

557

.525

.508

.500

467

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet. GB

St laiuis    31    26    544

Montreal    30    27

Philadelphia    26    28

Chicago    28    31

Pitl.sburgh    22    34

New York    22    36    379    9'j

526    1

481    3'-,.

475    4

;t93    8'-:

WEST DIVISION

U)s Angeles    40    20    667

Atlanta    :I8    23    623

HOME RUNS DeCinces. California, 14 Kittle. Chicago 14 Rice. Boston, 14. l.vnn, California, 13, Armas. Bo.ston. 12, Brett. Kansas City, 12 Winfield. New York, 12

STOLEN BASES J Cruz. Chicago. 33 W ilson, Kan.sas City 31 R Henderson Oakland. 24 R Law Chicago 23 Sam pie. Texas, 22 PITCHING 5 dei'isionsi Flanagan Baltimore. 6 0, 1000, 2 72 Kison, California. 6 1,    857.    3    23,    Koosman,

Chicago. 5 1. 8U. 3 83, RL Jackson, Toronto 5i. 813 4 14, Schroin Min ne.sota. 4 1. 800 4 09 Whitehouse Min nesota. 4 1, 800,2 7o'

STRIKEOITS Slieh, Toronto. 85. Blvleyen, Cleveland, 78 Morris. Detroit. 71, Wilcox. Detroit, 60 Sdttoii, .Milwaukee 59 Tudor. Boston. 59 '

SAVES lyuiSentKTrv. Kansas City, 16. Caudill .Seallle. 13, Stanley Boston 12 Lopez Detroit 10, T Martinez. Baltimore. 9

Hernandez Shocked By Trade

By The Associated Press Going from the world champions to the team with the worst record in baseball came as a shock tc Keith Hernandez. But he says it wont change his approach to the game.

This games a challenge, no matter who you play for, Hernandez said said after being traded from the St. Louis Cardinals to the New York Mets an hour before the trading deadline Wednesday.

I talked to (Mets General Manager) Frank Cashen and hes very excited about their getting me. Theyre hoping that 1 can turn things around. Hopefully I can.

The trade of the 29-year-old Hernandez, a one-time National League Most Valuable Player, was the only pre-deadline deal that that could be classified as a blockbuster.

In return, the Cardinals got Neil Allen, the reliever beset this season by personal and professional troubles, and Rick Ownbey, a raw but promising right-hander who was promptly dispatched to Louisville of the American Association.

There were only two other major deals, both in the American League.

In one, the Chicago White Sox and Seattle Mariners exchanged second basemen. The Mariners got switch-hitting Tony Bemazard; the White Sox got Julio Cruz, the leading base-stealer in the majors this year with 33, who is playing out his option.

In the other, the New York Yankees got a right-handed starting pitcher, a commodity they sorely lacked, in Matt Keough. Keough came from

the Oakland As in return tor first baseman Marshall Brant and pitcher Ben Callahan, both minor leaguers.

In a minor deal, the Mets sent veteran outfielder-first baseman Mike Jorgensen to the Atlanta Braves for a player to be named later. In a deal made Tuesday, New York got catcher Junior Ortiz from Pittsburgh for outfielder Marvell Wynne and pitcher Steven Senteney,

Hernandez, hitting .284 with three home runs and 26 RBI, was unaware that he had been dealt until 20 minutes before the trade was announced at 7 p.m. EOT. an hour before the deadline. He was taking batting practice in preparation for Wednesday nights game with the Philadelphia Phillies.

I wasnt shocked that 1 was traded, he said, I was shocked that it was to the Mets.

A .299 lifetime hitter, Hernandez is expected to replace Dave Kingman at first base for the Mets. Kingman, who led the National League with 37 home runs last year while hitting only .204, has 12 homers this year, but is hitting only .204 and has been the subject of recurrent trade rumors.

"Dave Kingman is still with the club, but in all conscience 1 have to try to make a trade for him, Cashen said.

The trade of Hernandez finally opens up the outfield spot the Cardinals had wnted for David Green, who had been shut out of the alignment of Lonnie Smith. Willie McGee and George Hendrick Smith is currently going undergoing voluntary therapy in a drug-rehabilitation center.

Hendrick, who worked out a first base during spring training, played first Wednesday night, and

Cardinals General Manager Joe McDonald said the team plans to keep him there for the time being.

The Cardinals also called up Andy Van Slyke, a 22-year-old outfielder, from l^uisville, where lie was hitting .366 with seven homers 42 RBI in 49 games, Allen, who had 67 saves in his first four seasons, is suffering through his worst season, with a 2-7 record and a 4.30, At one point, he asked to be sent to an alcohol-rehabilitation center, and was undergoing treatment for stress at a New York Hospital when he was traded.

Ownbey, suffering from control difficulties, was 1-3 with a 4.67 ERA.

Cruz, hitting ,234 with two homers and 12 RBI, said he was nervous, scared, excited about going to Chicago.

But Mariner Manager Rene Lacheniann said it was a matter of getting a player for him now instead of losing him later.

You hate to see Julio go, Lacheniann said To me, he is the best fielding second baseman in the game. But he seemed determined to leave at the end of the yean and we would have lost him without compensation.

Bernazard, a switch hitter, had played in all of Chicagos 39 games and was hitting 262 with two homers and 26 RBI, He was leading the White Sox with 61 hits, 16 doubles and five sacrifice flies The Yankees, seeking a right hander to balance a starting rotation that has four lefties, picked up Keough, who was 2-3 with a 3,32 ERA this season He was 11-18 last year, with a 3.72 ERA His best season was 1980, when he was 16-13 with a 2 92 ERA

Cummings Readies For Return

NEW YORK (AP) - Terry Cummings acceptance speech for the National Basketball Associations rookie of the year award sounded like he was campaigning for next seasons comeback player of the year,

I want everyone to know Ill come back next season and will do my best to live up to this award, Cummings said after receiving his rookie of the year trophy Wednesday.

Cummings already had established his strong rook-ie-of-the-year credentials for

the Clippers - 23.7 points and 10.6 rebounds per game -when heartbeat irregularities were discovered early in April. The San Diego forward missed the last two weeks of the regular season and there were whispers that his career might be over.

Ill definitely be back, Cummings said, Some of the doctors say I might be at only 90 percent (effectiveness), but I believe I can play to my full potential.

Cummings said doctors arent sure what caused his

heart problems, and his treatment, for now, consists of a special diet.

Ill be a little smarter now and eat more fruits and vegetables and broiled foods, Cummings said.

He said the shock of finding out he had a heart problem was like buying a brand new car and finding out it doesnt work. It was frustrating because 1 never had problems with my body before. Philadelphias Moses Malone, in a near-unanimous vote, was named the NBAs

Garrison Breezes Into

1982-83 Most Valuable Player for the third time at the same awards luncheon.

Malone, who was first in the NBA in rebounding with 13.3 per game and was fifth in scoring with an average of 24.5, also was the MVP of the NBA championship series, during which the 76ers swept Los Angeles in four games.

The last player to win both the regular-season and championship series MVP was Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who was known as Lew Alcindor when he did it in 1971 for the Milwaukee Bucks.

Malone, who also won the NBAs MVP award in 1978-79 and 1981-82, received 69 first-place votes from a na

tionwide panel of 73 media members. Julius Erving of Philadelphia had three first-place vote.s, Earvin "Magic Johnson of l^s Angeles two and Larry Bird one.

Bird, however, was second in the voting based on a 10-7-3-3-1 system for first-through fifth-place ballots

Other honors announced were coach of the year Don Nelson of Milwaukee, comeback player of the year Paul Westphal of New York, defensive player of the year Sidney Moncrief of Milwaukee and the Sixth Man award-winner, Bobby Jones of Philadelphia

Semifinals With Upset

Loftin Wins Putt

EASTBOURNE, England (API - Zina Garrison, playing inspired, spectacular tennis, swept into the semifinals of the $150,000 BMW womens grass court championships today with a convincing 6-3, 6-2 victory over the worlds sixth-ranked player, Bettina Bunge of West Germany.

I guess that was the best I have ever played, said the 19-year-old from Houston after eliminating Bunge, the No.4 seed in this pre-Wimbledon tournament.

"Grass seems to be my best surface. I certainly seem to move well on it said Garrison, the 1981 Wimbledon and U.S. junior champion who turned professional only a year ago.

It was the second day running that Garrison, the No. 10 seed, had up^ the form book.

On Wednesday, she beat Hana Maodlikova of CzeclHwlovakia - the worlds No.9 ranked player who reached the Wimbledon final two years ago.

Only once before, in Sydney last year, has Garrison reached a semifinal as a pro.

Despite being ranked 15th in the world, she is not among the 16 seeds at Wimbledon next week but has now defeated two of them within the space of 24 hours.

Bunge is seeded sixth at Wimbledon and Mandlikova eighth.

Garrison, who made up for her lack of power with some deft lobbing and brilliant retrieving, broke Bunges serve three times in the opening set while losing her own once.

In the second set, she broke her opponent twice more - both times to love - and confouiKled Bunge with uncanny anticipation at the net and constant variation in her play.

The Swiss-born, Florida-based West German had her chances in the second set.

Twice, she found herself with two breakpoints on Garrisons serve but could not win the vital points and played too many unforced errors to worry her inspired opponent.

The point that won the match was typical of Garrisons performance - a backhand cross-court passing shot that left a bemused Bunge totally stranded in mid-court.

Jake Loftin shot a 23-under par 85 for three rounds to defeat Lavem Mayo by four strokes in the Wednesday Night Pro Tourney at Putt-Putt Golf and Games.

J R. Knox came in third with a 98, while Johnny Car-row was two strokes back at 101 for the night.

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NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING 1130 at balsi Hendnck. St.Louis. 342. Davison. Montreal. 335,

St I.OUI&. 331

tsbureh

Murpny.

Atlanta. 327

RUNS Murphy. Atlanta. 56: Garvey.

o. 45,

San Diego, 47, Evans, San Francisco. Homer, Atlanta. 42 Raines. Montreal. 42

RBI Murphy, Atlanta, 52, Hendnck. St Ia)Uis. 48. Dawson. .Montreal. 46.

Evans. San Francisco. 44, T Kennedy, San Diego. 41 HITS Dawson. Montreal. 79. Then,

Houston. 78. Murphy. Atlanta. 73.

7r, 01

Ramirez. .Atlanta, 71, Oliver, .Montreal. 70

IK)l BLES Dawson, Montreal, 17, J Ray, Pittsburgh, 17. Oliver, Montreal. 16. Cruz. Hoiislon. 15, Garvey. San Diego. 15

TRIPLES Moreno, Houston. 7. Dawson. Montreal 5, Washington, Atlanta. 5. 8 are lied with 4 HOME '.I NS Evans, San Francisco. 18 Murphy, Atlanta. 18. Guerrero. Izis Angeles, 13. Foster New York, 12: Horner, .Atlanta. 12. Kingman, New York, 12. .Schmidt. Philadelphia. 12 STOLEN BASES S Sax, Los Angeles. 22. Wilson, New York, 22. l.acy. Pit tsburgh 18, la-Master. San Francisco, 18. Moreno. Houston. 18, Raines, Montreal. 18 Redus. t'incinnati, 18 PlTt'HlNG 5 decisions' P Perez. Atlanta, 8 1.    889. 2 69 A Pena Los

Angeles. 5 1 833 2 32 Muntefusco, San Diego, 5 I. 8X1. 5 80 6 are lied with 800 STRIKEOI TS Carlton. Philadelphia. 108, SotOf. Cincinnati. 88. McWilliams, Pittsburgh, 82 Ro^rs. Montreal, ?2,

Chicago    10    5    0    667    377    216

Tampa Bay 10    5    0    667    303 302

Michigan    9    6    0    600    357    286

Birmingham    8    7    0    533    290    249

Pactnc

Oakland    8    7    0    533    289    258

lz)S Angeles    7    8    0    467    241    308

Denver    6    9    0    400    215    251

Arizona    4    It    0    287    234    356

Saturday 's Games Birmingham 31. Boston 19 W ashington 18, Arizona II Sundays Games Chicago 31, TamM Bay 8 Philadelphia 23. New Jersey 9 Michigan 42. Los Angeles 1/

Monday 's Game Oakland 16. Denver 10

Friday. June 17 Chicago at Birmingham, mi Arizona at Denver, ini lx)s Angeles at New Jersey,' n i Sunday. June I9

the Atlanta Braves for cash or aplayer to Reynolds,

be named later Sent Rorm Reynolds! catcher, to Tidewater of the International

League

PITTSBLRGH PIRATES-Signed An

Tampa Bay at Boston Monday '

ay. June 20

Washington at Michigan, mi Oakland at Philadelphia. n >

Transactions

By The AsaocUted Press AUTO RACING RIVERSIDE INTERNATIONAL RACE WAY Announced that Les Hichler resigned the post ol president but will continue as director,of racing BASEBALL

thony Blasucci. John Smiley. Aaron Carlie. Kevin Litwin and Jeff Satzinger. pitchers, Brvan Burrows infielder, and Chuck Carr first baseman ST LOUIS CAKDISALS-Traded Keith Hernandez, first baseman, to the New York Mels lor Neil Allen and Rick Ownbey pitchers Sent Ownbey to Louisville ol the American Association and called up Andy 5 an Slyke. outfielder, from Ixiuisville Placed Mike Ramsey, inlielder. on the 15-day disabled list BASKETBAU National BasketbaU AssocUtloa DALLAS MAVERICKS-Signed Brad Davis, guard, to a (our vear contract FOOTBALL National FootbaU League DENVER BRONCOS-Named IJ Gorman, a strength and conditioning coach, to the coaching staff Hot STON Oll.ERS Signed Alan Blackard, kicker Nate Bradlev. cor nerback Bryan Dausin and Stevefi Pytel, offensive guards. Mac McKnight and Andrew Molls, safeties. Reynaldo Peru, defensive end, and Willie Watson Jr, spill end

ST 1.01 IS CARDINALS Signed Olis Brow n, running back

nning ba

SEATTl.E SEAHAWKS Signed Pete Speros. guard, and Reginald Gipson.

NEW YORK

American Leaffiie

ORK YANKEES Acquired

Bcrenvi, Cincinnati, O S,A\T;S Bedrosian Atlanta 9. I.avelle.

Matt KtMugh, pitcher, from the Oakland A s for Ben Callahan, pitcher, and

San FrancLsco. 9 le Smith Chicago 9 Reardon. Montreal, 9, Forster Allanta.

H .Stewart, Ixjs Angeles, 8

USFl Standings

By The Associated Press Atlantic W L T Pet PF PA

Philadelphia 13    JO    867    322 167

Boston    9    6    0    600    ;t2.5    290

New Jersey    4    II    0    267    263    :176

Washington    2    l.t    0    l.Ct    223    380

Central

Marshall Brant, (irst baseman designated hitler

SEATTl.K MARINERS Traded Julio Cruz, second baseman lo the I'hicago While Sox for Tony Bernazard. second baseman

TORONTO BLl E JAYS Signeil Jett Hearron, catcher, and Alan McKay pitcher, and assigneil them to Florence of'

running back, to a series of one-year contracts

TAMPA BAY BUCANEER.S Named Gary Horton to an administrative posi tion

HOCKEY National Hockey Leag

National Hockey League

MINNESOTA NORTH STARS Named Glen Sonmor director of plaver devel opment

NEW YORK RANGERS-Slgned, Anders Hedberg, right wing, for the J983 84 season

the .South Atlantic l.eague

National League

ATLANTA BRAVES .Sold Ken Smith, first baseman outfielder, lo Richmond of

N.C.Scoroboard

the International Ix'ague NEW YORK MF'.TS Sent Mike

Jorgensen, first basi-man outfielder, to

By The Associated Press Carolina League

Alexandria 3. Kinston 2 Durham 5, .Salem 4HMti





Tape Indicates Green Wary Of Undercover Agent

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Thomas Doc Ryan told Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green he represented a group of Detroit investors involved in import-export deals along the North Carolina coast who wanted to see Green elected governor. The Fayetteville Times reported today.

Ryan was actually FBI agent Robert Drdak and the luncheon meeting on Feb. 15, 1982, was secretly tape-recorded. The Times reported today it had obtained a transcript of that tape, which has not been made public.

Green was wary of Ryan and asked Ryan four times if he was an FBI agent while the two men ate lunch in Raleigh, The Times said.

Green was accused by a Wake County ^and jury Monday of conspiring to accept $10,000 a month in bribes from Drdak and with accepting a $2,000 bribe as a campaign contribution.

At one point in the conversation, The Times said, Green told Drdak that Im not in a position to sacrifice my principles for one thousand a month or ten thousand a month or whatever the figure is. I

Green was first introduced to Drdak by former Ciarkton businessman Howard Franklin Watts, a long-time acquaintance of Greens now serving a 13 -year jail sen tence on counterfeiting andB. B. King And Band To Prison

YARDV1LLE,N.J.(AP)-Blues singer and guitarist B.B. King and his seven-piece band are headed to prison again, and prison officials are grateful.

A concert by King and his band today at the Yardville Youth Reception and Corrections Center will be the 44th such free concert for inmates the musicians have given throughout the country, said James Stabile, spokesman for the state Corrections Department.

Hes been doing this since 1970. He plays concerts and isnt paid anything tor them, Stabile said.

King, 57, offered to perform at Yardville during his engagement at Harrahs Marina hotel casino in Atlantic City. About 700 inmates were expected to at tend. Stabile said.

YOUTH DAY The House of Worship will observe youth day services Sunday at 11 a.m.

A joy night service will also be held Friday at 7:30 p.m. with minister Wilkes of Redemption Holiness Church rendering the services and the New Jerusalem Choir providing the music.

arson-related charges stemming from COLCOR.

Drdak met again with Green at the Western Sizzler steak house on Feb. 15. The meeting lasted about two hours.

Drdak began by telling Green that he was raised in Detroit and was working for some Detroit pecle who had invested some money in some, ah, deals along the coast there, import-export deals is a better word, and they-they lost a bunch right off. He says his people sent him and another fellow down to see if we could kinda straighten things out. . .

Here are excerpts of the meeting, as presented in The Times transcript:

GREEN: Well, let me tell you this, Tom, you know. Ive leveled with you. You know you-you could be...

DRDAK: Sure.

GREEN: ...the FBI...

DRDAK: Sure I could be anywhere. 1 could be anybody.

GREEN: ..Break Jimmy Greens neck, but Im not gonna let you do it. On the other hand, you could have several different things going right - right now that might be a little bit off color and a little bit out of line. Well, the minute I got in there and tried to help you, they might say he paid Jimmy off, he can buy Jimmy Green, then I got more trouble than I can face up to the rest of my life...! love to work with people and I love to help people if I was not in public office, it would be a different thing. Sure yeah, you could use'the money and I could use the money and everybody could use the money. Im not rich but am gettin along pretty good not as good as some people. I simply saying to you Im not in a position to sacrifice my principles for one thousand a month or ten thousand a month or whatever the figure is.

DRDAK: Yeah.

GREEN: And I. will honestly tell you I couldnt tell if you put ten thousand or one thousand or what. .DRDAK: Itsa, well it was, ah,

GREEN: Are you with the business or are you with the FBI?

DRDAK: Were an in vestment firm. Were with an investment firm in Detroit. Investments.

GREEN: A fellow said to me a while ago, said to me, ah, certain organizations in this state today, political organizations, have employed three people, and Ive just heard this since I saw you last, have employed three people to try to do to me and - and other office holders just what I tried to prevent.

GREEN: Let me ask you a question. You mentioned those names (District Court Judge J. Wilton Hunt and Columbus county com

missioner Ed Walton Williamson), those people down there that who are my friends and your friends that you help, how do they use what you give them without getting caught? How do they use a bunch of cash like that?

DRDAK: Well, now, you know, now it wouldnt - it wouldnt do for me to say that thats the help I gaveem.

GREEN: Well, I know and Im not, ah. Im not-DRDAK: I told you before, you know, I would -1 would never - I would never, ah, disclose a trust with you and thats the way itd hafta be with them.

GREEN I dont really know if you can do thin^ that way without somebody knowing about it beside a few people and that would be the end of me if it did.

DRDAK: Well, of course, nobody would know - nobody would know but me. GREEN: And me DRDAK: If you just want to do it that would be the thing.

DRDAK: Youre paranoid, youre paranoid.

GREEN: Could be another ABSCAM. (Green laughs) DRDAK: Youre paranoid. Itd take somebody with a lotta - itd take somebody with a lotta time on their hands to be fooling around in an area just with that in mind, you know what I mean?

GREEN: Let me - you ask if you were to try - if you were to do somethin to help me as you suggested before, ah, how would you go about doin it?

DRDAK: We could do it anyway you want it.

GREEN: Obviously, 1 wouldnt let you give me anything. I wouldnt take anything from you.

DRDAK: I didnt think-I wouldnt wanna give it to ya. No, I wouldnt wanna give it to ya.

GREEN: Well, how would it be done?

DRDAK: Because, see, in honesty, I wouldnt -GREEN: How would it be done?

DRDAK: Well, anyway you would feel comfortable, ah,

GREEN: 1 dont know DRDAK: The reason 1 wouldnt wanna give it to you is because see the shoe could be on the other foot.

GREEN: The only way... DRDAK: But let me say the shoe could be on the other foot. You-you can be wantin ta use somethin like this to be governor then say heres this -hole come ta bribe me and I got him, see?

GREEN: Im not that kind. DRDAK: Well, see. Well, Im careful too now.

GREEN: Well, but, ah, in what way do you think, ah, you could do it so if somebody ever said to me, ah, Tom Ryan, alias John Doe says he gave you ten thousand dollars - and 1 say

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hes a damn liar and they say heres a search warrant to search your house and see, and yep, here are the serial numbers.

DRDAK: WeU, you - you mentioned the first day that, ah, they would ah, that they would turn up somewhere and you would find it and, of course, you couldnt, you know, leave it under the john in the mens room.

GREEN: I dont know how, though. I dont know how that could be down here.

DRDAK: It could be in the (pause) hell, it couid come in a delivery, say like, ah,

GREEN: But you know I - M dont know how youd deliver it, without somebody knowing that you - that you went and sent it or that I went and came.

DRDAK: Ah, what if, ah, it was, ah, sent by somebody that didnt know what was goin on either way? Say like, ah,

GREEN: Well, if you get a third party in it, then you got to someone else in it.

DRDAK: No, say that, no say they-they thought they were delivering a potted flower. Make a flower delivery.

GREEN; From who?

DRDAK: The Jaycees.

GREEN: From where?

DRDAK: Say the Jaycees. See, he wont know whats in there. He, all his knows is its a flower.

GREEN: How much are you talking about?

DRDAK:Hm?

GREEN: How much are you talkin about?

DRDAK: What we talked about first.

GREEN: I couldnt read your writing.

DRDAK: WeU, you men-tioncd it

GREEN: You either didnt have enou^ zeroes or you had the decimal in the wrong place.

DRDAK: It wasnt - it wasnt, ah, it wasnt enough.

GREEN: I didnt know what it was. I dont know if it was one or 10.

DRDAK; It was a 10.

GREEN; That was a month.

DRDAK: Urn hm.

GREEN: Now Tom, let me ask you something, what could I possibly do for you and your company that would be that...

DRDAK: Get elected governor.

GREEN; Well, were going to work on that, but surely youve got some way of -some way of getting that money to me by check, dont you, would look above board.

DRDAK: We could.

At this point, Green says it will take two and a half to three million dollars to elect the next governor of this state... and he and Drdak begin talking about campaign contributions.

GREEN: If we can raise the money, we can win.

DRDAK-Well, how-

GREEN: You cant win It with a million dollars, the other man cant either.

DRDAK: How would you - how would you suggest a way - 1 didnt mention - 1 didnt mention a check because, ah, you know, you have you have paper there, but it could be ar

ranged, ah, to look like somethin else. You know how would you sugge^ that you feel comfortable with?

GREEN: Well, Id want to sit down and study the new law a little bit make sure, they raised the limit from three to four thousand dollars. For instance, you as an individual and your wife as an individual can write me a check for four thousand dollars apiece for my campaign (unintelligible).

DRDAK: Thats gonna come out in the - thats gonna be in some kind of a report.

GREEN: TbeyU be a report, yeah, Tom Ryan or XYZ Corporation.

Drdak then asks Grem about the camfi^gn spending reporting laws in North Carolina and asks if people from outside the state can contribute, but adds, it wouldnt look too good on your report though.

GREEN: No. WeU, you know they dont check those addresses too dosdy. You could always put John Doe, WhiteviUe, or Tom Ryan, Whiteville, or - Ed Williamson in Whiteville. They dont check.

DRDAK; So what youre sayin we could - if we could find a-a hundred names, we could probably raise four hundred thousand dollars.

GREEN; With DO problem. No problem at all.David L. Harrell

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District Court Report

Judge H. Horton Rountree and Judge Robert D. Wheeler disposed of the following cases during the May 16 term of District Court in Pitt County:

Wesley Garrett Alford, Eric Court, obscene phone calls, prayer for Judgment continued on payment of costs.

Sylvia Bradshaw. South Carolina, larceny. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, leave Greenville by 8 p.m.

Glenn Kelly Brock, Fayetteville, reckless driving. 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.

Neronta Bryant, New Bern, false report, voluntary dismissal; possession of marijuana. $100 and costs.

Alton Ray Clemmons. Route 4, Greenville, no operator's license. 10 days jail suspended on payment of $15 and costs.

Ernest Oliver Etheridge, Brownlea Drive, .10 percent blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended oa payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee Gilbert Walton Ginn Jr . Village Drive, driving while license revoked and inspection violation, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, not to operate a motor vehicle until properly licensed

Darnell Leon Jarman, Greenville, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operator's license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.

Kevin Francis OBrien, Wright Road, expired registration plate, voluntary dismissal.

Frederick L. Parker, Church Street, driving under the influence and driving with license revoked, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $300 and costs, surrender operators license David Scott Robertson. Shady Knoll, driving while license suspended, not guilty.

Ellen Jay Segal, Charlotte, driving under the influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend and complete alcohol school, pay $100 fee Bobby Ray Smith, Vanceboro, assault. 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and $7 restitution James Edward Smith Jr , Grifton, injury personal property, voluntary dismissal; assault with a deadly weapon, 6 months jail suspends on payment of $100 and costs, pay $576 restitution.

Claxton Godfrey Stancill Jr., Route 9, Greenville, driving under the influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license; driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license Chester Wayne Suggs, Grimesland, driving while license revoked, voluntary dismissal Jonathan Eric Tripp. Route 3, Greenville, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee Ruth Dawson Harris, Princeton, hit and run, not guilty Phyllis Ann Atkinson, Dudley Street, speeding, pay $10 and costs Ernest Leslie Barrett, Farmville, sell and possess numbers, not guilty

Thomas Earl Bumpers, Farmville, possession of malt beverage under 18 years of age. pay costs.

Eric Vaughn Byrum, Edenton, reckless driving. 90 days jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs.

Melanie Annette Conner, West 14th Street, consume malt beverage off-premlses, pay costs William Eugene Ellis, Fountain, give malt beverage to person under 18 years of age, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

Life Of Tread Increased

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Tread life has increased since the automobile tire was introduced 72 years ago, according to a maker of glass-fiber tire cord.

During the late 1960s and early 1970s, glass fiber was introduced as a tire belt material, says William P. Jenks of Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. Since then, more than 125 million glass radials have been built and sold.

Today, radial tires last on an average of 34,000 miles, compared to less than 1,000 on turn-of-the-century models, Jenks says.

Eric Conrad Garris, Route 5, Greenville, possession of malt beverage under 18 years of age, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.

Gene Luther Gray, Farmville, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

Lula Newsome Harper, Nash Street, driving under the influence. 6 months jaU suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.

Charles H Harris, Hopkins Drive, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.

Tony J Hines, Winterville, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $50 amd costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee

William Jenkins Jr., Colonial Trailer Park, assault, pay costs.

Anthony Kinlow. Eastbrook, indecent exposure, voluntary dismissal.

James Walter Lynch, Castalia, speeding, voluntary dismissal; driving under influence, 6 months jail suspended bn payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, atttend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.

Clyde Murchison, West 3rd Street, nonsupport, voluntary dismissal

Joe Van McDowell, Wilson, driving in excess of 10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.

Gloria Oakley Owens. Route 4, Greenville, careless and reckless, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

Roy Duane Parrott, Kinston, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $140 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.

Jeffrey R. Persinger, Ayden, worthless check, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs and check.

Shirley Weaver Pippins, Route 4, Ireenville, speeding, pay costs Earl Lindenburgh, North Warren

Street, sell wine to person under 18 years of age, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.

Dallas Morris Pounds, Wedgewood Arms, fail to stop at scene of accident, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs.

Darnell Speight, Charlies Lane, nonsupport, 6 months jail suspended on payment of costs and pay $60 every 2 weeks.

Arthur Earl Sutton, Forbes Street, consume malt beverage off-premises, pay $25 and costs Elzie James Wallace, Grifton, nohsupport, 6 months jail suspended, remit costs, pay $40 per week for support John Robert Warren, Durham, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend Multiple Offenders School Douglas Williams, Bethel, assault, pay costs Milton Ray Williams, Ayden, possession mixed beverage where not authorized, pay $25 and costs.

Paul Christopher Edwards, Route 1, Greenville, possession of alcoholic beverage under age 18, pay $50 amd costs.

James Robert Lewis, Oak City, possession of alcoholic beverage under age 18, pay costs.

Linville May, Red Barn Trailer Park, cruelty to animals, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and $28 50 restitution Joey Woodrow Owens, Lake View Apartments, assault on a female, % days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.

Timothy D. Tetterton, Bethel, sell malt beverage to person under 18, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs William James Adams, Route 1, Greenville, driving under the influence and driving while license revoked, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $500 and costs, probation 2 years, surrender operators license Mickey Braswell, Vance Street, no operators license and no registration, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs Linda Sue Bryan, South Summit Street, driving while license revoked. voluntary dismissal Zekbra T Bunn, Robersonville, driving under the influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $310 and costs, surrender opera tors license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.

Linda Ormond Cantu, Kinston, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee

Odell Chapman, Bethel, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $250 and costs, surrender operators license Julius Jasper Clark, Stokes, no registration, pay $25 and costs.

Ralph Henry Campano, Greensboro, stop light violation; prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.

William James Daniels, Winterville, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee, pay $100 attorneys fees; driving while license revoked, false Information

and unauthorized use of conveyance, voluntary dismissal.

Robert Freeman Deanes II. Farmville, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol contenL 6 months jail suspended on payment of $1 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol sdiool, pay $100 fee.

Hilda Harrison Gibson, Dickinson Avenue, pass stopped school bus, pay costs.

Shirley Gray, Lakeview Terrace, damage personal property, voluntary dismissal Nathan McKinley Griffin, Tarhoro, fall to report accident, not guilty.

Leonard Ward Gurganus, Wright Road, reckless driving, 6 modths jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee Lawrence Edward Henry, Cherry Point, no operators license, voluntary dismissal Alvin Jenkins, Spruce Street, nonsupport, 6 months jail suspended on pavment of costs and $30 per week, probation 5 years.

Michael D Jones, Circle Drive, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.

Booker T. Joyner, Route 2, Greenville, no operators license, voluntary dismissal Robert Allan Main, Templeton Drive, fail to reduce speed to avoid accident, voluntary dismissal.

Carolyn Bright Mcaendon, College Court, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend multiple offenders school.

Floyd Odell Oakley, Bahama, reckless driving. 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee

Bradley Jerome Overton, Vanceboro, safe movement violation, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs John Lacy Pearson Jr., Mills Street, driving while license revoked, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs.

Dennis Nelson Phillips, Moore Street, driving under the influence,

6 months jail suspended on pay ment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.

Gary Allan Ralph, Raleigh, reckless driving, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $125 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.

Larry Reid, Darden Drive, injury to personal property. 60 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs and $18 restitution.

Curtis Brandon Terrell, Cherry Point, careless and reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs Eddie Forbes, Broad Street, communicating threats, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.

James Garland Barber. Williamston, driving under the influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee, spend 6 hours in jail Thomas Barnhill, Pitt Street, assault with a deadly weapon and trespass, voluntary dismissal.

Robert Ward Causey. Greenville, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $175 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee. spend 6 hours in jail.

Edward Earl Chapman, Simpson, assault on a female, 60 days jail suspended on payment of costs remit, not assault prosecuting witness

Lester Cooper Jr., Route 10, Greenville, trespass, 10 days jail suspended on payment of costs-remit

Ester Marie Ormond, no address, assault officer and communicating threats, voluntary dismissal Melissa Page Venrick, Sanford, simple assault, voluntary dismissal.

A1 James Whichard, Kennedy Circle, careless and reckless, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, not to operate a motor vehicle for 6 months Virgil Pilgreen, East 10th Street, domestic criminal trespass, 60 days jail suspended on payment of costs Charles Anderson, Farmville, assault on a female. 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs

Laureen Barrett, Route 1, Greenville, larceny (3 counts), voluntary dismissal Charles Braxton. Route 1, Greenville, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check Tonya Gail Braxton, Route I, Greenville, no operators license, pay costs.

Reuben Elmer Davis Jr.. Route 8, Greenville, driving under the influence, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee James Dixon, Farmville, worth less check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check Danny Eastwood. Farmville, assault with a deadly weapon, not guilty.

Udell Edwards, Stantonsburg, exceeding safe speed, pay costs Ralph Glenn Evans, Farmville, driving in excess of 10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend, alcohol school, pay $100 fee. surrender operators license.

James Thomas Faison, Bell Arthur, no operators license and driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee, pay $125 attorneys fees,

George Earl Foy, Norcott Circle, driving under the influence (2nd offense), 6 months jail suspended on payment of $500 and costs, Oatton

probation 2 years, not to operate a

motor vehicle for 2 years; driving while license revoked, voluntary dismissal.

Eileen Barry Gauthier, Winterville, stop sign violation, not guilty.

Walter Earl Hines. Fountain, driving under the influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, surrender operators license.

Gary Hunt, Farmville, assault with a deadly weapon, not guilty, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend multiple offenders school.

Linda Curtis Ingram, Farmville. careless and reckless, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.

Bessie Sharlene Johnson. Farmville, shoplifting, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, probation 2 years.

Billy Joyner. Farmville, allow no operators license, voluntary dismissal.

John Thurston Kelly, Hardee Road, speeding, pay $15 and costs.

Todd Sheldon Levey, Shady Knoll, expired registration plate, pay costs.

David Wayne Lineberry, Ripley Drive, speeding, pay $15 and costs.

Vivian Dorsey Mayo, Grimesland, driving under the influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee, surrender operators license.

David Lee Moore, Hopkins Street, driving in excess of 10 percent blood alcohol content. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $250 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee. pay $100 attorneys fees, probation 2 years

Baby Ray Murphy, Farmville, driving in excess of 10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license

Johnnie Allen Pettewat, Fountain, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee

David Earl Sims, Farmville, larceny, voluntary dismissal

Gordon Neil Stroud, Fountain, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, surrender operators license

James Ray Tyson, Farmville, driving under the influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $220 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee, surrender operators license; stop light violation, resist officer, assault officer, voluntary dismissal.

Carl Dexter Williams, Farmville, financial violation, safe movement violation and registration violation. 18 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, probation 2 years

Hattie Mae Williams. South Pitt Street, assault with a deadly weapon, 2 years jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs

Joel Junious Williams. Farmville, driving in excess of 10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license.

Arthur Cyril Wooten, Route 1. Greenville, careless and reckless, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs

James Danny Yancey Jr , Goldsboro, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs

Energy-Use Is Sharply Down

MINNEAPOLIS lAPI -Industrial energy consumption in Delaware has been reduced by 25 percent since the 1973 oil embargo.

This is the largest percentage decrease in the nation, according to Honeywells Energy Management Information Center here.

New Mexico followed Delaware with a 21 percent decrease in industrial energy use, and West Virginia was third with a 15 percent reduction since 1973. The most energy used is by Alaska with an increase of 121 percent.

AGREE ON NEED ATHENS, Greece (AP) -Bulgarian President Todor Zhivkov has accepted a proposal by Greek Premier Andreas Papandreau to work together for a nuclear-free zone in the Balkans, a government spokesman says.

FREED FROM JAILS

KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) - More than 3,000 persons imprisoned following sectarian fighting in March have been released from Karachi and other district jails, the provincial government says.

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 Rentai 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.

James Wooten. WaUuga Avenue, larceny (2 counts), voluntary dismissal

Roy Lee Banies. Waistoabwrg, fictitious registration piale. days

jaU suspended on payment o $180 and costs.

Claybome Hixon, Farmville. nons(q)port. 6 monUis jail suspended. pay $40 per week for support.

Wesley Kenneth Braxton. Belvior, larceny, no probable cause found.

Danny Ray Cannon. WaUuga

Avenue, forgery of endorsement (2 counts), no probable cause found

SUnely Eaii Coville, Greenville, assault mfllcUng serious injury. 12 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs and restitution, probation 2 years.

William Samuel Daniels, West 6th Street, possession of stolen property, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, probation 2 years.

Nelson Dewey Edwards Jr . Jones Dorm, stop sign violation and careless and reckless driving. 6

me Daily iwuetioi. uieenvuie. w.t.-inursday, June 16, ltt$-19

months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, surrender operators license; speeding and speeding to elude arrest, speeding and fail to stop for blue light and siren, voluntary dismissal

Michael Green, Contentnea Street, assault. 90 days jail suspended on payment of cost and attorneys tees; possession of schedule I and 2nd degree sexual offense, voluntary dismissal.

Lonnie Earl Hopkins. Route 1. Greenville, assault with a dead! weapon and assault, 90 days jai

suspended on payment of costs and restitution, pay $150 attorneys fees, probation 2 years w Theodore Leniy .Jr., Fleming Street, uttering, voluntary dismissal

Sam Paige, West 3rd Street, shoplifting. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, probation 2 years Gerald D Spellman. Bancroft Avenue, tamper with motor vehicle, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, counsel fees, probation 2 years

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ao-The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Thunday, June W, 19

The LegislatureG>mpensatory Time Off Disallowed In Proposed

Bill

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C (AP) - Most state government departments wouldnt be affected by a bill barring executives from taking compensatory time off because they already prohibit it, says State Personnel Office Director Harold Webb.

The House State Personnel Committee approved Wednesday a bill disallowing comp time for employees holding managerial positions who earn more than $30,000 annually.

Prior to the vote, Webb told the panel his office conducted an informal telephone survey last month to determine how the 21 state departments handle comp time. The survey didnt include the University of North Carolina system.

Webb stressed,, however, that his survey dealt with executive personnel while the bill alludes to management. Executives include major program directors and higher positions up through deputy and assistant department head, but other state workers may hold positions considered managerial.

According to the survey, 14 departments dont have a comp time policy for executives. Five departments have a policy. They include the Employment Security Commission, the community college system, the Insurance Department, the Department of Natural Resources and Community Development, and the Department of Cultural Resources.

According to Webb, those five departments combined employ about 5,000 people - roughly 10 percent of the total number of state workers.

The remaining two departments, Wildlife Resources and Human Resources, have policies that allow for comp time during certain situations, such as work done during weekends or holidays.

Rep. John Jordan, D-Alamance and chairman of the House State Personnel Committee, introduced the bill after media reports surfaced that executives in the North Carolina Department of Insurance took as many as seven weeks of comp time white being paid as much as $36,000 a year.

Webb said he preferred a joint resolution authorizing a legislative study of the matter. Such a study would be ordered under a pending Senate bill sponsored by Sen. Cecil Jenkins, D-Cabarrus.

Jordan, however, said converting the bill to authorize a study committee would be tantamount to killing it.

In other legislative action;

Insurance

Convicted drunken drivers would have to carry maximum automobile liability insurance under a bill approved 8-7 Wednesday by the House Insurance Committee over industry lobbyists objections,

"This bill will enhance the Safe Roads Act, said Rep. Charles Beall, D-Haywood It will hit these drunken drivers in the pocketbook and maybe convince them it doesnt pay to drink and drive.

Under the bill, endorsed by Insurance Commissioner John Ingram, convicted drunken drivers would have to purchase the highest available coverage for three years.

The hipest possible coverage is $100,000 per accident for bodily injury or death involving one person; $300,000 per accident for death or bodily injury involving two or more people; and $50,000 per accident for property damage.

Currently, drunken drivers may carry $25,000 per accident for injury or death of one person; $.50,000 per accident for injury or death of two or more people; and $10,000 for property damages.

Ruffin Bailey, an insurance lobbyist and former state senator, warned the bill was so strict it would encourage efforts to circumvent it.

It would increase the drunken drivers surcharges and premiums 18 percent, Bailey added.

Wildlife Budget A request by the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission for an additional $1.8 million over two years drew a favorable vote from the Joint Appropriations Expansion Budget Committee on Natural and Economic Resources.

The proposal still must be approved by the full Appropriations Committee before going to the House and Senate floors.

In a report submitted to the committee, wildlife commission officials said the allocation proposed by legislative base budget panels was only slightly higher than the $12.9 million spent in fiscal 1981-82.

Waste-Energy

A bill to let county governments issue bonds to build waste-burning plants was approved by the House Public Utilities Committee despite objections that it allows officials to monopolize waste.

The bill, filed at the request of Burke County officials considering a waste-burning plant, gives counties control over garbage to ensure they will be productive, said Rep. Marvin Musselwhite, D-Wake.

But Paul Rankin of the National Solid Waste Management Association said the monopoly would allow facilities to pass on unlimited costs to taxpayers.

School Bus

A bill designed to let drivers pass stopped school buses on some five-lane highways is headed for a joint conference committee after the House Highway Safety Committee refused to concur with Senate amendments.

Rep. George Miller, D-Durham, supported the action, saying the Senate version deletes an important rule of evidence that allows police to charge the owners of vehicles that pass stopped buses.

He said arrests doubled since that provision was put in the law several years ago,

Mo-Peds

Drivers whose licenses were suspended would have to give

Services Planned

Evangelist Simon Boone of Stokes will hold services Friday and Saturday at 7.30 p.m. at Bells Chapel Holy Church.

Bells Chapel will also hold a building fund service Sunday at 7 p.m. with the

Rev. Louise H. Greene, associate pastor of Cedar Grove Missionary Baptist Church, as the guest, along with his congregation.

Both services are open to the public.

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Delivery Okay?

W tok particular pride in the efficiency of our corriers who deliver the Doily Reflector to your home.

If the doily delivery of your Daily Reflector is less thon satisfoctory, please tell us obout it. Call our Circulation Deportment ond we will do our best to work out the problem.

752-3952

Between 8:30 A.M. and 6:30 P.M. Weekdoys and 8 'til 9 A.M. on Sundays

up operating mo-peds, even though they require no license, under a bill sent to a House Highway Safety subcommittee.

Rep. LeRoy Spoon, R-Mecklenburg, said the bill was intended to make sure no one convicted of driving while impaired could operate a mo-ped, even if sober.

Why do you not care if someone who has never been licens^ drives a mo-ped, but you dont want a sober person who has a license suspended driving a mo-ped? asked Rep. Martin Lancaster, D-Wayne.

Rep. Howard Coble, R-Guilford, suggested the bill be amended to require mo-ped licenses.

A subcommittee report was expected by next week. Representatives of builders in Jackson County objected to a combined House-Senate bill to limit high-rise construction on mountain ridges being considered by the House Water and Air Resources Committee.

The developers said many attractive homes would be banned by the bill which would allow counties and cities to adopt regulations limiting ridge building or follow a proposed state law on the subject.

The bill affects buildings 40 feet and higher in 35 counties. It classifies as ridges anything 500 feet or more above the valley floor and the land within 100 feet below the ridge crest.

The committee amended the bill to prohibit the state from bringing civil suit against a city or county for its ordinance or fr violations of the local ordinance and to make it easier for state map experts to find the ridges affected by the bill.

Developer Hugh Morton of Western North Carolina Tomorrow urged the legislators to approve a bill soon to prevent building that may come soon.

Hospice

The Senate Human Resources Committee sent to subcommittee a bill that would set up a licensing procedure for hospices, volunteer groups that help the terminally ill and their families.

Rep Bertha Holt, D-Alamance, the bills sponsor, said it is, "vitally necessary the hospice movement get and achieve its own identity.

She said the bill would protect vulnerable people, enable the terminally ill to get insurance benefits for using hospice and make health care more cost effective But Howard Campbell of the N.C, Association of Local Health Directors said the bill would, merely be giving an identity to an entity that would not necessarily assure quality services are delivered in a cdst-effective manner.

Sheriffs Liability The House Law Enforcement Committee approved a bill clarifying a sheriffs personal liability for his deputies acts.

Currently, a sheriff is vulnerable to suits for anything done by one of his employees.

Under the bill, a suing plaintiff would have to prove that the deputys acts were:

- Within the "actual scope and course of duty; or

- Performed at the command of the sheriff; or

- Performed with the sheriffs "personal participation. Sheriffs would not be liable for acts done in defiance of their

direct orders.

Rape Victims

The rape victim assistance program begun during the last session would be expanded to compensate for ambulance rides and mental health assistance under a bill approved by the House Law Enforcement Committee.

The bill would not change the limit of $500 in aid per victim Emerald Isle

The Senate overwhelmingly enacted a bill to require public beach access at Emerald Isle while closing an off-road vehicle ramp.

Divorce

The House approved 64-35 a bill doing away with all grounds for absolute divorce except separation for one year The bill would eliminate grounds for immediate divorce including adultery, impotence, the wifes pregnancy at the time of marriage by a man other than her husband without his knowledge, criminal activity, and deviant sexual behavior.

Rep. Joe Hackney, D-Orange, said the overwhelming majority of divorces in 1982 were granted under the one-year-separation rule.

He said most people fifing for divorce on other grounds merely wanted to accuse their spouses of unsavory acts that may or may not be true.

Rep. Martin Lancaster, D-Wayne, fought the bill, saying that when the other grounds for divorce now exist, people should be able to do so as quickly as possible

Bus Administration The House passed 90-2 a bill expanding the State Board of Educations- jurisdiction over school bus maintenance and administration.

Rep. Gerald Anderson, I)-Craven, said the bill differed from a controversial bill defeated during the last session which would have given the state control over bus routing. Employee Limit Rep, John Jordan, D-Alamance, filed a proposed constitutional amendment identical to a law passed in the previous session.

It requires that the growth of the state employ not exceed the avera^ increase of North Carolinas population during the preceding 10 fiscal years.

For example, if the states population grew by an average of 1.6 percent between fiscal 1973 and 1982, the number of state employees for 1983 couldnt grow by more than 1.6 percent.

SpeedyTrial

The Senate approved a bill that would hold North Carolinas Spe^y Trial Act at 120 days instead of speeding it up to 90 days in October.

ABC Permits

Non-profit community theaters could serve alcoholic

beverages in counties allowing liquor consumption under a bill tentatively approved by the Senate after q>p(Mients failed to kill the measure.

Sen. Bill Redman, R-Iredell, said the bill was hypocrisy in light of the Safe Roads Act.

I cant see anything good coming of this bill, he said. It would allow beer and booze to be served in theaters where youve got minors participating in the show.

This will help the tourism industry and all kinds of things, responded Sen. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe.

Minors-Tavems Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne, fUed a bl to prohibit anyone under 10 years old in taverns.

Redefining Governmenf Powers in Three Branches Near Approval

By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The enactment of a lengthy bill redefining North Carolinas three branches of government is unlikely to bring any sweeping changes in the way the state does business, legislative leaders say.

The bill, tentatively approved by the Senate Wednesday and headed for possible enactment next week, is designed to unravel the independence of the legislative, executive and judicial branches in light of state Supreme Court nllings that the boundaries had become blurred.

Much of the legislation centers on the authority for setting salaries, making rules and running government - an authority that has long rested with the powerful Advisory Budget Commission. While the bill carefully relegates the ABC to an advisory role, few lawmakers believe that will change the power structure.

A rose is a rose, regardless of what you call it, said Sen. Harold Hardison. D-Lenoir, an ABC member and chairman of the Appropriations Committee. They (officials (Of the executive branch) will be seeking advice no matter what

You wont be able to see the difference (after the bill is enacted), he addd.

Hardison and ABC Chairman Sen. Kenneth Royall, D-Durham, were instrumental in the bills 45-0 Senate passage, a sharp departure from the controversy that marked the bills three-month march through the House and three-week perusal by the Senate Judiciary I Committee.

This bill has been studied long and hard, said Royall.

Its been agreed on by both houses, the governor, the lieutenant governor and I commend its passage.

This bill is long overdue and I urge your support, said Hardison.

The bill was scheduled for final Senate discussion Tuesday. If approved then, it must go back to the House for concurrence in Senate amendments.

The bill was sparked by a court ruling prohibiting legislators from membership

on executive boards. The court later issued an advisory opinion saying the Legislature may not delegate its powers to committees.

Sen. Julian Allsbrook, D-Halifax, chairman of the Judiciary I Committee, said it was important that no branch of government have any power over another.

Since we were shaking off the shackles of the King (of England), weve always had this separation of powers, he said.

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PUBLIC NOTICE COUNTY OF PITT BUDGET HEARING

The Public will take notice that the proposed budget for the fiscal year, 1983-84, has been filed with the Pitt County Board of Commissioners and is available for public inspection in the office of the Clerk to the Pitt County Board of 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:

APJTAkR6ERYE FUNDS    $    808,000.00

GgWEHAL Fttwn    317.757,963.65

Less transfers to other funds (school & etc.)    12.761.318.76

Net Total General Fund    $ 4,996,644.88

HEALTH DEPARTMENT    $    1,405,519.00

SOCIAL SERVICES DEPARTMENT    $    4,454.396.32

MENTAL HEALTH CENTER    $    2,168,971.00

DEBT RETIREMENT    $    1.282,259.65

REVENUE BONDS    $    168,658.00

SOLID WASTE    $    567,327.00

PRINT SHOP    $    28.143.93

INDUSTRIA! nEVELOPMFNT    S 98,184.00

REVENUE SHARING FUNDS    $    1,294,430.00

apitalFund-Capital Equipment Cost School Capital Outlay -City Schools County Schools

$ 148,483.10 3    126,086.00

3    329,391.90

gaflju.

3 1,294,430.00

REVALUATION RESERVE FACILITIES FEES FUND

Less Transfer to Capital Fund

COUNTY GARAGE EDUCATION

Wtt bommunity College County Schools-Current Expense County Schools-Capital Outlay Greenville City Schools-Current Expense Greenville City Schools-Capital Outlay Schools-Severe & Profound & Autistic Classes

50.000.00 125,000.00

90.000.00

35.000.00

234.862.00

591.878.00 6,723,859.00

690,469.56

3,157,375.56

359.391.90

56,810.24

Total County recommended budget all

sources    341,898,498.81

Less interfund transfers    314.019.662.76

Net County recommended budget    327,878,836.05

At the Hearing, oral and written comments will be received from any interested citizens.

Charles P. Gaskins, Chairman Pitt County Board of Commissioners

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Diabetes Is Con f rolled In Rafs; Maybe People Next

By DANIEL Q. HANEY AP Science Writer

WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) Drugs, surgery and radiation all keep rats from getting diabetes. For scientists, this is exciting news, because it may soon mean control of the disease in another species of animal; people.

How soon is still in doubt. But some experts believe the solution to human diabetes could be years, not decades, away.

If it happens, a good deal of the credit will probably go to an unfortunate little creature called the BB rat. Nine years ago, researchers discovered that this animal often inherits a form of diabetes that is remarkably similar to the human variety.

Since then, the BB rat has become the chief proving ground for all kinds of tlieories about how diabetes starts and how it can be stopped. The rat - named for the place that found it, Bio-Breeding Laboratory m Ottawa - is tested, dissected and otherwise scrutinized in dozens of medical centers around the world.

Among the first to recognize its importance were scientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, who now house 5,000 of the white rats in their animal labs in Worcester. There they oversee work that has led to perhaps the most

important theory in the recent history of diabetes research -the idea that this disease is a disorder of the bodys immune system.

Their research, along with experunents at other labs, has uncovered the workings and defects of the specialized cells of the pancreas that make insulin, one of the necessary hormoiKsoflife.

The ultimate target is the kind of diabetes that strikes young people, often children in puberty. About one million Americans have this disease, called type I, or insulin-dependent, diabetes.

Unlike people who get less-severe cases of diabetes in middle age and beyond, these youngsters must receive insulin injections to stay alive. And even though this can keep their diabetes in check, the disease is still a major cause of blindness and can lead to heart attacks, kidney failure and loss of limbs.

In BB rats, diabetes is passed through the genes from generation to generation. About half of those bom with this inherited weakness grow up to have the disease. Somehow their immune systems go awry. Instead of fighting germs, they attack the cells that make insulin and eventually kill them.

WORKING ON DIABETES - Univ. of Mass. Medical School facility supervisor Paul McGill prepares to inject BB rats with insulin as part of

experiments aimed at finding a means to control human diabetes. (AP Laserphoto)

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What touches off this self-destruction is still a mystery. But Drs. .Aldo A. Rossini. Arthur A. Like and others at Worcester have found that by tinkering with the rats immune systems, its possible to keep them from getting diabetes.

They discovered that commonly available drugs that weaken the immune system will waid off the diabetes. So will blood transfusions, radiation therapy and surgical removal of the thymus gland.

No one knows yet whether any of these treatments will help humans, or even whether the disease in people is actually a defect of the immune system. But the hints from the rat studies are so strong that several medical centers have begun trying them on humans.

Tests are being developed that will repeal the early stages of damage to the insulin-making cells in humans long before diabetes sets in. One strategy is to find these people and try to stop their disease before irreversible injury occurs. At the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston, Dr. George Eisenbarth has begun treating some of these people with prednisone, a steroid drug that works in rats.

This or some other drug may at last bring about a time when diabetes is a preventable disorder.

"My bias is we have reached the stage of clinical trials," or human testing, Eisenbarth says. "If a trial succeeds with a safe drug, then the time will be here.

Canadian scientists are giving young diabetes victims cyclosporin, an immunity-suppressing drug that is frequently given to organ transplant patients.

Last February, Rossini published the discovery that whole blood transfusions early in life will keep rats from getting diabetes. Eisenbarth says he suspects that other researchers have already begun trying this therapy on people.

However, Rossini is uneasy about the speed with which

doctors have used the results of rat studies to devise experimental human treatments.

Drugs that weaken the immune system are dangerous. They can increase the chances of cancer and other diseases. The treatments, he said, may actually be worse than the disease, for diabetes victims may follow reasonably normal lives for many years.

While learning that rat diabetes is an Immunity disorder, the Worcester researchers have ruled out other theories about what causes the disease. Among them;

-Some people suspected that eating too much sugary junk food can bring on childhood diabetes. But the scientists found that even a diet of candy bars does not increase rats susceptibility

-Stress seemed like another reasonable cause But subjecting rats to high-pitched noise does not make them more likely to gel diabetes -Some speculate that germs touch off the destruction of insulin-making cells. But susceptible rats still get diabetes even when they are removed from the womb before birth and raised in microbe-free surroundings How many of these discoveries will eventually apply to people' Rossini does not know "A rat is not a human," he said, "even though some humans are rats.' .

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22-The Daily Reflector, ureenviUe, N.C.-Thursdav. June 16. l*n

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Honors List Is Announced For East Carolina Univ. Students

ECU News Bureau Students earning academic honors at East Carolina University during the spring semester represent 87 o the states 100 counties, 26 states and the District of Columbia and 14 foreign countries.

A total of 2,901 ECU students earned places on the unversitys official honors lists for the semester, compared to 2,841 for the fall semester.

Most elite of the honors is all As. Those making the deans list have earned a B

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plus average with no grade below a C. The honor roll includes students with a B average and no grade below

aC.

The following students are listed by town of residence at the time they enrolled:

All As

Ayden Shirley K. W. Avery, Lamont W Cannon Regina R. Hardee, Sherri Cash Powell.

Fountain Lee Vincent Washalefsky.

Greenville - Karen E J Akers, Charles F. Board, Sandra K. Brown, Robin G Case, Robert Allen Cathey, Stephen Martin Chasse, Michael A Collura. Bonnie R. Correll, Edith D Cottingham, William Arthur Crocker. Elizabeth D Davis. Joanna Lee Askew Davis, Ann Maureen Donnelian, Donald G Easley, Lora Ellyn Ehlbeck, David Dale Elks, John Blount Farley, Carol Lea V Fornes, James A Grady Jr, Betty Morgan Hardee, Brenda K Hardy, Stephen C Harell Jr., Robert E Henry, Charles Herman Hypes, John Denny Jeter, Brenda Kaye H Joyner, Tammie S King, Jolinda D Rouse, Donald Levoy Sheppard, Amelia C Sutton, Amanda Cuel Thomas, Lisa D Thompson, Donald R Trippeer Jr, Karen E Wheeler, Thomas K Barefoot, Richard D Lytle.

Grimesland - Benjamin R Wilson

Hookerton - William H Stocks. Jamesville - Sonya Janine Gardner Stokes - Donna G Brown Willlamston - Lloyd Yancey Gardner. Fred L Chesson III Wlntervllle Willie Gordon Hendricks. Christopher McDaniel, David Wayne Miller, Kelly Grayson Moore

Schonbrunn, Germany - tJlrike W Steinbacher.

United Kingdom - Catherine C Walker

Deans List Ayden Wade Calvin Adams, Rhonda Ann Paul. Shari D Elks, James Michale Martello, Angela Roach, Norma Lisa Tripp Bethel - Terry Lynn Prichard, Falkland - Woodrow W Wooten

Jr

Farmville - Deanna L Chap-pelear, Jennifer Haseltine, Cecile M McKnlght

Greenville - Richard Hiram Cannon, Rachad H. El-Jawhari, Barbara B. Sigmon, Billie Jessica Ward, Ventura A. Cuella, Robert P Albanese, Susan L. Alcorn, Judy Ann Andrews, Teresa Renee Baker, Dwight D. Barham, James J. Bamaby, Lisa Bobette Barnhill, Douglas Stauffer Bell, Albert R. Braxton, Betina Len Bridges, Elizabeth L Brown, Cynthia R Buck, Nancy J Cargile, Russell W Carlson, Grayson A. Castellow, Ellise M Collura, Donna E Con-gleton, David A Cook. Katherine C^resswell, Ouida S. S. Daniels, James Henry Darden III, George Washington Davis, Mary Ann Bristow Davis, Samuel R. Dees, William L. Ditto, Christopher W. Duffus, Charles C. Ebbs, Shawn P Fitzgerald. Monica Jean Fones, Robin L Fornes, Dorothy L M. Gardner, Jason A. Garris, Laura Helen Wayne Gooding, Broughton L Goodson, Jeffrey K Gould, Dewey T Hales, Allen Kieth Harkep, Jane E. Harrison, Joel Kieth Harrison, Laura Elizabeth Hoke. Jaifre Wayne Idol, Carolyn J. Jenkins, Jeffrey S. Johnson, Donna Lynn Jones, Frank C. Jones, Robin G Jones, Janet Sue Kidd. Suzanne Marie Kinley, Jennisue Kolczynski, Karen Beth Lang, Sharon Melody Lewis. Samuel D Lovelace, Ellie F Lunsford.

Stuart Todd Lynch, Michelle M Lyons. Paul Kine MacMillan, Gary Dean McLain, Johnna E Mizell, David Mark Napier, Janet 1. Nethercutt, Tracy E. Hughs Owens. Jeffrey H Parnell. John Allan Parnell, Judith N Pilegge, Patsy Ann Potter. Ruth B, Poust, Stanley Ward Quinby, Shaela Kathleen Ray, Karen Jane Renz, Christi Amanda Robinson, Tamar Faiga Rosenfeld, Charles C. Ross, Tracy Leigh Savage, Gary Dennis Schaffer, Lisa Gay Selby, Richard William Sena, Susan Denise Setser, Mary Dell Sigler, Darlene Frances Sippel, Kenneth Lee Smith, Rodney Gary Snyder, Maxeen E. Speight, Gail Elizabeth M Stafford, Susan E Stalls. Sandra S Stokes, Robert E. Streeter, Martha C. Tadlock, Amos Carol Tyson, Carla A Wainwright, Joseph Blalock Ward. Mark A Ward, Joey E Weathington. Linda Anderson White, Michelle Lynn Wisse, Jennifer Lee Wooles, Kathryn Worthington, Ernest L. Connor Jr., Lindy Jean Wise, Patricia Kay Hiner, Caren L. Truske, Miriam R. Leighton Reid.

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'Interested' In An Experiment

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Representatives of 28 North Carolina school districts Wednesday said they might be interested in a proposed experiment extending the 1 length of school days and the school year.

The state Board of Education voted this month to select three school systems by the end of June to participate in the experie-ment, expected to be implemented this fall.

Board Chairman C.O. Dick" Spangler said an extended school time program may cost more money but that the results would be well worth jt. He said new ideas must be tried in an effort to improve the states educational system.

"It will cost about $170 to $180 per student involved to extend the day from six hours to seven hours and extend the year from 180 days to 200 days, Spangler said.

Most studies show that a longer instructional day will increase student achievement as measured by standardized tests.

al fund, although the board first needs the support of the General Assembly.

Other officials Wednesday expressed concern over the length of time students would be spending on school buses, potential conflicts with extra-curricular activities and the need for added compensation for school principals, counselors and teachers.

1 want to tell you this is not going to be easy, Spanker said. Nobody said this was going to be popular.

The school districts expressing interest were Bertie, Bladen, Camden, Chowan, Cleveland, Currituck, Greene, Edgecombe, Halifax, Harnett, Jones, Lenoir, New Hanover, Pasquotank, Polk, Stanly, Transylvania, Warren, Wilson and Yadkin counties and Fayetteville city, Greenville city, Goldsboro city. Hickory city, Monroe city, Mooresville city, Shelby city and Weldon city.

Jamesville Douglas R. Hamilton, Kathryn Randolph Lindsley.

RoberaoovUle - Rhonda Joy Britton. WUlis P. Harris III.

Simpaon Lindley W. Edwards.

Snow Hill - Vickie J. Biagini, Lori Ruth Brann, Margaret F. Hoover, Karla Jean Muqmi^, Eva Joan Rouse.

Stantonsburg - Donald K. Folston.

Stokes - Ricky L. Griffin.

Walstonburg - Sheryl L. Eastwood, Janet N. Strickland.

WUliamaton - Donna E. Holliday, Cheryl Lynn Williams, Jasper E Barber, Natalie Anne Beacham.

Wlntervllle George Roscoe Barbour Jr., Shawn A. Carson, Joanne L. Franke, Warren D. Franke, Kimberly Jean Joyner, Jesse Van Ri|u, Tammy Jean Stocks, Michael E. Troiani.

Belgium Dirk C. Vanraem-donck.

AUiens, Greece - John Dragonas.

Lebanon Theo Elias Razzouk.

BJorndalstra, Norway - Dordi Henriksen.

Bangkok, Thailand - Dusit Huntrakul.

United Arab Republic -Mohamed N^id Fakhry.

London, England - Francis Hu^ Cecil Newman

British Hong Kong - So Chun Wang.

Honor RoU

Ayden Elizabeth L. Costello, Angela D Fussell, Michael C. Garris, Stacie Lea Haddock, Michael A. Hardee, David Wayne Hodges, Mary Sue T Kendrick, Jaquelyn McLawhoro, David C. Pratt, Catherine Ann Lang SmiUi, James Michael Wilkinson, Tammy L Edwards, Kathryn Lassiter Stokes.

Bethel Denice S. Dennis, Beverly C B. Roberson

Falkland David Jordon Wooten, Willtam L. Wooten.

Farmville Charles N Eason, Jeffrey T Joyner, James W. McLawhornJr.

Greenville Raleigh Webster Bland, Angela Dawn Lingerfelt, Janet Louise Banks, Harvey Kieth Brinson, Kevin Woodrow Carrow, Gregory Keith McCall, Susan Elaine Spell, Angela Rose Tripp, Durward William Walker, Haywood E. Whichard, Thomas Andrew White, John Samuel Awew, Doris K Alston, Danny Garland Angle, Melda A. Arnold, Selina Leigh Arnold, Moneer Agel Baddad, Monica Lynne Baker, Maria A Baro, Ellen Suzanne Bates, Dorcia Ruth Benton, Susan M. Boudreaux, Cecilia G. Brewer, Jamie Carlton Briley Jr., Christopher E. Brown, Lisa C Brown, Richard Eugene Brown, Thomas B Brown, Wanda Sue Buck, Melanie Anne Bunch, Lori K. Burkette, Jean Ann Burnette, Teresa Jo Hedgepeth Cobb, William Henry Cobb VI, David Wayne Coburn, Sheila Lynn Collie, Sharon E. Connolly, Donna Jo Cullipher, Marykate Cunningham, Carroll S. Daughtrey, Mary Lou Dingman, Marjorie R. Disosway, Bruce G Doughertv, Susan Marie Duncan, Carol Ada Dykstra, Glenn Otto Dykstra, Deborah E Edwards, May C El-jawhari, Michael S Elliott, Sally A. English, Gary Charles Faircloth, Lee A Fortenberry, Howard J. Foy ill, Brian K. Garris, Edward G. Geisel, Nana Adwowa Ghartey-Tagoe, William L Gilmore, Karen A Goltermann, Joseph H Goodson, Jeri Lynn Graham, Kevin C Grossglass, Charles F Gunther, Royal T Gurganus, Caroline E Hardee, Jimmy M. Hardee, Sharon K Harris, David Merlin Heater, Richard Earl Higgins Jr , Larry D Hinsley, Michael David Hinsley, Lea I.ayne Hinson, Shamsul Bahrl Hj kalid, Sanja Tina Holland, Rachel E Hoots, Judith A Howell

Angela P Humphrey. Goldie Sue G Hunt, Md-yazod Bin Jamian. Edith F Jeffreys, George W Johnson, Julianne G Keeter, Susan E Kershaw, Brian T Kilcoyne, Steven C King, Anita Caroline Lang, Susan Laughinghouse. Hannah E. Lewis, Mary S, Lewis, Sherri Lynn Lewis, Mee Chin Lo, David Nash W. Love, David Jon Lowe, David R Maier, Gary W Mayo, Kenneth L McDaniel, Jerry L McKnight, Patricia A Midyette,

Tracy J. Miedema, Kelly L. Adams Miller. Brent P. Montgomery, Julia A Moore, Leonard Clyde Moretz, Patricia Gail Morris, Thomas R. Murray Jr, Cheryl A Muzzarelli, Kathy Haddock Paramore, Kimberly E Patrick, Betsy L Penland. Wanda K Phillips, Bobetta E Pignani, Franklin A Purgasen,

Sherry Ann t^inn. Sherry R. Rawls, Hugh K. Reece, Donald A. Ribeiro, Leslie S. RohioM, John CarraB Rood Jr., Carl Christian Schariile, Rede Earl Sdhy, Mark J. Shank, Lynn M. A. S&edrick. Sook Cheng Sim, Willie J. Skinner III, John T S^miolo, Betty Jo Sparrow, Ala C. Stanforth, Margaret E. Stephens, Billy W. Stocks, Melinda A. Sumerlin, Lavorn Ted. Cedlia H. Tokanel, Dwayne E. Tomlinson, Lisa Aim

Lee^^ II, George M. WUliams. Robert WiUie, Gary E. Worthington, LeiSb A. Wright, Susan Bartlett Wynne, Robert J. Zubaty, Susan Elizabeth Jackson, Gregg Festa, Michad John Russo, Mark Alan Oulmette, Gregory Lee Idol, Laura Elaine Nev^rn, Trina Susette Sumrdl, Virgina R. Neff, Laura Suzanne Tracy, Kathleen M. Samson, Alexia Beth Baker, Nancy M. Rexford.

Grifton - Mary Jean Dixon, Diane Burbage Stokes, Jennifer L. Tyndall.

Giiffleslaiid - Linda Kay Heath, JuaniU K. Matthews, Linda Joy H. Nichols.

Hamilton - Julie L. Everett. Hookerton - Keith J. Stalling. Jamesville Terry Lynn Daniels, Loria Ann Modlin.

Oak City Angela Denise Randolph.

Robenonville - Robert J. H. Ferguson.

Snow Hill Sharon Brinson, Glen D. DaU, Leychia P. Edwards, Daryl P. Howard, Vanessa D. Lewis, Timothy Allen Mooring, Robin Renee Myatt.

Stantonsburg - Dorothy J. Folston.

Stokes - SheUey Elaine BuUer, Eunice 0. Wynne.

WUllamston - WUliam F. Griffin, Mary Gwen Hardison, Justyn Fleming Jackson, Amy Jean Jones, Alan Grey Lilley, Jane Murphy Linsey, Williette J. Mizelle, Mary Waruszcak Moss, Karen Renea Peny, Robert Theodore Taylor, Vickie Lynne Taylor, Garland V. Thomas Jr., Robert Dayton Todd, Susan E. Gibbs, James G. Johnson, Mary Grace Baker, Delmas Benton Cumbee Jr., Kathy Lynn Edgerton.

Wlntervllle - Kimberly Sue Allen, Sue Ellen Allen, James M. Black, Charles Brackenhoff, Terry Lou Cobb, Jack Jolly Dail Jr., Robert G. Huffard Jr., James A. Kernen, Maria Lou Jones McDaniel.

El Salvador Janet Isabel Alvarez.

Havana, West Germany - Carla Maria Knapp.

Lebanon - Ghassan Adel Sabra Malaysia Noraini B. T. Roslan. Bergen, Norway - Therese Aarseth, Stig Otto Mjelde.

Sweden Stig Peter Magnusson. West Warwick. Bermuda - Allan Keith Clarke.

British Hong Kong - Moon Cheong Chong.

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Coppola A 'Born Gambler', But Empire Collapsed

By BOB THOMAS Associated PressWriter

HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Ten years ago, Francis Ford Coppola led the vanguard of a new generation of C(A-lege-trained filmmakers who aimed to revoliRionize the movie industry.

Today he is the reluctant star of a long-running clif-fhanger that will determine the fate of Zoetrope Studios, his dream of the movie factory of the future that has turned into a financial nightmare.

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Coppolas plight contrasts with the huge prosperity of his onetime protege, George Lucas, creator of the Star Wars merits, and with the unceasing success of another star of the New Hollywood, Steven Spielberg, director of E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.

Francis wanted to build an empire instead of just making movies, said a former associate who spoke on condition that he would not be named. He tried to create an industry, and he has no mind for business. Also, he became obsessed with the mechanics of filming and ignored what made him great: dealing with the human situation.

Coppola, who declined to

be interviewed, ascended the heights with The Godfather in 1972. It passed all previous box office records and won the Oscar for best picture - but not for Coppolas directkm. That came in 1974 with The Godfather II, which disproved the rule that sequels never exceed the original.

Coppola, who also sponsored Lucas American Grafitti and The Black Stallion, next embarked on the ambitious Apocalypse Now. Coppola watchers mark that as the beginning of his decline.

Apocalypse Now took a fearsome toll on Coppolas creative energies and finances. He, endured a monsoon, the near-fatal heart attack of star Martin Sheen, the recalcitrance of Marlon Brando.

A Review

'War Games'Is A Notable Film

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In the final sequence of John Badhams film, War Games, WOPR, the central computer for the entire American nuclear defense system, announces that Global Thermonuclear War is a strange game, the only winning move is not to piay. Director Badham has been criticized for making that statement in his movie, now playing at the Buccaneer Movies, but the film would make little sense without it. War Games is an outstanding movie, a combination thriller and political satire that moves quickly and cruelly to its logical conclusion.

Critics around the country have been finding numerous small faults in War Games, even though almost all of them admit to liking the film. Most have called the ending moralistic, drawing a distinction between the film and its message. But the two are linked, and like such earlier films about nuclear war as Dr. Strangelove and Fail Safe, War Games is both an adventure movie and a political statement.

The storyline is straightforward. A high school student with a love for computers (Mathew Broderick) accidently gains access to WOPR while searching for new computer games and triggers a simulation of a total nuclear attack upon the United States. Unaware that the game is a simulation, NORAD command responds as if the attack were real. Minutes before the American retaliatory launch, the game is discovered and Broderick arrested, but the computer plays on.

The seond half of the film involves a search for the computers programmer

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(John Ward), a growing teenage love between Broderick and his girlfriend (Ally Sheedy), the frustrations of NORADs computer expert (Dabney Coleman) and the increasingly-serious play of WOPR.

Althou^ War Games is crisply directed and all the actors perform well, the power of the film comes from its premise. War Games begins with two ideas: technology is increasingly faster than human ability to completely control it, and nuclear war is only a buttons push away. The combination is terrifying, and its to Badhams credit that he can make his point in such a thrilling manner.

Dont be misled, "War Hames will not hit you over the head with a sermon. The movie is full of small moments of satire, romance, adventure and suspense; bad puns and social commentary exist comfortably side by side. The deck is loaded, however. When Professor Falken, WOPRs inventor, argues with the NORAD commander, General, you are listening to a machine. Do the world a favor and dont act like one, Badham wants us to agree. I found it hard not to.

JimHolte

TV Log

WNa-TV-Ch.9

THURSDAY

7:00 JokeriWlltf

7 M Tic Tac

00 Magnum P . I

9 00 Simona.

10 00 Knots L

11 00 News

11 M LateAtovie 3 00 Nightwatch FRIDAY

2 00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker A 00 Carolina

8 00 Morning 10:00 Pyramid to W Childs Play 11 00 Price Is

13:00 News 13 30 Youngand 1:30 As the World 3 30 Capitol

3 00 GulldlngL

4 00 Waltons

5 00 Hlllblllles 5 A Grittllh t 00 News9

i 30 CBSNews 7 00 Joker'sWltd 7 30 Jerry Falwell 0 00 Dukes 9 00 Dallas to 00 Falcon Crest II 00 News9 II 30 Movie 3 00 Niqhtwitch

WITN-TV-Ch.7

THURSDAY

7 :00 Jellersons 7:30 Family Feud

8 00 Fame

9 00 GImmeA 9:30 Cheers

10 00 Hill Street 1) 00 News

11:30 Tonight Show 13 30 Letlerman

1 Overnight

2 30 News FRIDAY

5:00 Jimmy S.

00 Almanac 7 00 Today 7:25 News

7 M Today

35 News :30 Today 9:00 R. SImmont 9 30 Alimihe 10:00 FacHOfLilf

10 30 Saleolihe n 00 Wheel ot n 30 Dream House 13 00 News 13 30 Search For 1:00 DaysolOur 3 0 Another Wor.

3 00 Fantasy

4 00 Whitney the 4 :30 Little House 5:30 Lie Detector

00 News 4:M News 7:00 Jeftersons 7.30 Family Feud

00 Matt Starr

9 00 KnIghtR

10 00 Bare Essence 11:00 News

11:30 Tonlghf 13:30 Comedy 3:00 Overmghl 3:00 News

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

THURSDAY 7 00 SanlordA 7:30 B Millar

00 Condo

30 Old Couple 9 00 TooClose 9 30 ltTakes3 10:00 30/30

11:00 ActlomNaws 11:30 Colt 13:30 NIghlllne I 00 Starsky 2:00 Mission 3 00 Early Edition FRIDAY 5:00 Bewltclwd 5 30 J Swaggart 00 AC Day

30 News

7:00 GoodMornmg

13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7:35 ActlonNews

1 35 AcEiNews 9 00 PhilDonehuc

10:00 Happening anford

10 30 Sen

11 00 LoveBoel 13 00 Family F

13 30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 AIIMv 3:00 One Lite 3:00 G. Hospital 4:00 Carnival

4 30 W Women

5 30 People's

00 ActlonNews

30 ABC News , 7:00 Sentordi

7 30 B Miller

00 Benson

30 AtEese 9:00 Special 12:00 ActlonNews 12:30 SterskyB

1:30 AnEvanIng 3 30 Eerly Edltlon

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

THdWSOXV 7:00 Rapen 7:30 Statelina 1:00 Previews 30 Inside Story 9:00 JanaGcodall 10:00 Cosmos 11:00 Doctor In 11:30 MorKambe l2:OBSIanOH FRIDAY 3:00 TBA 4 00 Sesame St

5 00 Mr Rogers 5:30 Powerhouse 00 Dr Who 30 SiMrlock 7:tO Repon 7:30 Stelellna 1:00 WasMnglen 1:30 Well St.

9:00 Commandtrt 10:00 Chryshr: 11:00 Doctor In 11:30 MorKembe 13:00 SlgnOff

Eleanor Coppola wrote ol her bustMUKls ordeal in a book called Notes. As be was trying to assonble the film, she foind a note to himself in his typewriter:

The movie is a mess - a mess of contimiity, of style -and most importmt, the ending neither works on an audience or philosophical level. Brando is a disappointment to audiences ... My nerves are shot. My heart is broken. My imagination is dead. 1 have no ^If-reliance. But like a child just want someone to rescue me.

Despite disappointing views, Apocalypse Now did good business - $35.6 million in U.S.-Canada rentals alone. Coppola, who had poured his Godfather millions into the Vietnam film, escaped disaster.

Not content to relax and enjoy his fortune, Coppola next pursued his vision of a self-sustaining studio that would combine a creative haven with the latest technology. He paid $6.5 million for a 60-year-old studio in the heart of the Hollywood district, filled it with electronic gear and a staff that cost $500,000 a week.

Proudly displaying his new filming system to reporters in early 1981, he called it "a friendly slave at your feet, ready to do anything at your command.

But slave conquered master. Technical problems helped balloon the budget of his intimate musical.

One from the Heart, to $27 milUon. Hie film was panned by critics and earned $1 million at the nations theaters.

Two other Zoetrope films, The Escape Artist and Hammett, have had equally bad luck at the box office.

lile his empire was |ng, Coppola spent last'^mer in Oklahoma filming two S.I. Hinton novels, ilie Outsiders and Rumble Fish, both starring teen idol Matt Dillon with $8 million budgets. The

former had a modest success; the latter is due out in thefaU.

While seeking new financ-

ing for Zoetrope Studios. Coppola has won a series of reprieves from the mortgage holder,

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24-The DMy RdJector, GrewvUte, N.C.-Thunday, June W, IIO

Assassin Before A Parole Board

SOLEDAD, Calif. (AP) -Sirhan Sirhan, trying to persuade a parole board to set a date for his release, says he was "provoked to kill presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy in 1968 to protest the plight of Palestinians after the Six-Day War.

The 39-year-old convicted assassin made the comments Wednesday in the first day of a hearing before the state Board of Prison Terms, which must decide whether he should receive a new date for freedom.

A prosecutor opposing Sirhans release argued he has yet to realize the enormity of his crime."

The board was to resume deliberations today.

"I am a Palestinian by birth and citizenship, Sirhan told the board, adding that he killed Kennedy because of "the events and the aftermath of the 1967 war in the Middle East.

He said he felt the New York senator, slain a year after dhe Arab-Israeli war, was instrumental in supporting the Israeli state against my countrymen. I felt provoked ... He was projected in this country as being a man of peace ... and yet when it came to the Palestinians, he didnt give a damn about them.

Kennedy was shot to death in Los Angeles on June 5, 1968, after claiming victory in the California primary for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Sirhan, then 24, had cursed at Kennedy and opened fire with a .22-caliber pistol in the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles.

I did it for my country, he cried then, explaining later he was angry at Kennedy for backing the ship

ment of 50 Phantom jets to Israel.

"The de^ of hate and premeditation surrounding the slaying "are rarely equaled, Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney Larry Trapp told the board.

Sirhans attitude is grossly deficient and grossly callous, he said. Clearly Sirhan never appreciated the enormity of his crime.

The board said a group called the American-Arab Relations Committee in New York City had offered to take Sirhan to Jordan if he were deported. Libya previously had offered Sirhan a home if he were to win release.

As much as you people hate me, as evidenced by your treatment of me, lets part company, Sirhan told the panel in answering questions about his hope to live in an Arab nation.

His lawyer Luke McKissack said "kicking him out of the county with no right to return might be the most satisfactory solution. My feeling is ... he would disappear into the woodwork.

But Trapp said after the hearing that such an arrangement would be an "insult to all Americans that he would be released to a country where. . . he would be treated as a hero.

Last years panel rescinded Sirhans 1984 date with freedom after hearing evidence that Sirhan had threatened an author and prison officials while in prison.

He was sentenced on May 22, 1969, to die in the gas chamber. He spent nearly three years on San Quentins death row before Californias death penalty law was struck down and his sentence reduced to life imprisonment.

A WISH COMES TRUE - Todd Johnston, 14, is greeted by

f. Johnston,

His wish, to someday visit the San financed by the Oklahoma City departments. (AP Laserphoto)

Zoo, came true -San Diego pdice

QUIT BARBIES DEFENSE TEAM LYON, France (AP) - The principal defense lawyer for Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie says he and another attorney have resigned from the case.

Alain de la Servette said he and fellow lawyer Robert Boyer, a Jesuit priest, were leaving the defense team but gave no reason for the move.

fther Astronaut?

Twenty years ago today Valentina Tereshkova, lef^t, set a milestone that no American woman has been able to challenge until this month. On June 16,1963, Tereshkova became the first woman in space. Born on a collective farm and a former cotton mill worker, she manually controlled Vostok-6 during its 48-orbit, 70-hour flight. Later she became Chairman of the Committee of Soviet Women. This week Dr. Sally Ride, an astrophysicist, is scheduled to set a record of her own as the first American woman in space. Dr. Ride, who will operate the shuttles robot arm, is 1 of 8 U.S. female astronauts. But she has emphasized, "There is nothing I am going to be doing in space just because I am a woman.

DO YOU KNOW What American completed the first manned space flight?

WEDNESDAYS ANSWER - Neurology is the branch of medicine that studies the nervous system.

SIS-HII    '    VKTJ^nc    19^

Speaking of Your Health.

Lester LGokMU,M.Di

Brain Is a Hardy Organ

My daughter was injured in an automobile accident and was unconscious for about four houn. She now has completely recovered from this terrible accident that happened about three months ago.

We have been assured that she will not be left with any permanent effects. Even though we have been told this, it is hard for us to believe that there wont be any aftereffects. Do these ever show up at a later date? - Mrs. H.LT., Idaho.

Dear Mrs. T.:

It is really astonishing to learn that the brain is a much hardier organ than is c(un-monly believed. It can withstand far more manipulation during surgery than can the stomach or the intestines. I point this out because injuries to the head may be very severe, and yet the brain, protected by the skull and layers of fluid around it, may have no permanent damage.

Brain tissue may be bruised, which is known as a contusion and can be either lacerated or torn. The bleeding that is associated with such severe injuries and the swelling of the brain that follows are responsible for the symptoms such as the loss of consciousness, changes of speech and other neurological signs.

Concussion of the brain is caused by a blow to the head which may result in momentary or liMiger periods of unconsciousness. Whether this is temporary or prolonged depends entirely on the severity of the injury. Even skull fractures need not necessarily result in permanent injury to the brain.

The fact that you have been assured that your daughter has c(npletely recovered from the injury should relieve your anxiety. Because she is free from neurological signs and symptoms should be your added assurance that there are no residual aftereffects of her injuries.

It sometimes takes a long

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period to fully recover physically and psycholo^cal-ly from such an experience. But having once recovered, there is little or no chance of any later developments that will interfere with her health, scholastic progress and accomplishments.

Undoubtedly, the doctors will continue to follow her to be certain that there are no hidden residual aftermaths.

Unfortunately, parents retain for a much longer time the terror and anxiety that they had following a childs catastrophic accident. Children have such a remarkable rebound that they seem totally free from aftereffects much earlier than do their parents.

* W *

SPEAKING OF YOUR HEALTH... Punishment of a child must be meaningful if it is to be effective. Too often the child does not completely understand the reason, and the lesson is thus wasted and resented. Parents must both agr^ on the nature of the punishment if the child is to be free of conflict and confusion.

Calvin Klein Alive, Well

NEW YORK (AP) - Designer Calvin Klein calls it good gossip, but says its just not true that hes dead or dying.

Klein, 40, told Womens Wear Daily in a recent interview: "Im in great health. I dont even take vitamins.

Klein has been rumored to be receiving treatment in a Swedish sanitorium, blood transfusions in Switzerland and medical care in facilities across the United States. Last week, a West Coast radio station reported he was dead. Even bankers who deal with Klein have called to ask about his health.

For a long time I wouldnt even discuss it, because people tend to believe that denials are a way of hiding the truth. But now its gotten way out of proportion, and Barry (Schwartz, his partner) even had .o call my mother when I was away to tell her Im OK, Klein said.

Described by the paper as tanned and vibrant, Klein suggested the rumors may have got their start two years ago when he as treated for viral meningitis, or when a colleague underwent treatments for cancer.

I understand why I may be a target. Im young. Im successful. Im not so bad looking and I enjoy living life in the fast lane. Its good gossip, he said.

AT RECORD LOW PARIS (AP) - President Francois Mitterands popularity has slipped to a record low of 32 percent in a public opinion poll scheduled to be published today.

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Family Want Ads Must Be P'aced 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

Sometimes the simplest things work the best like a simple, little ad in classified For a Simple solution to your selling problem., try classified.

ri

Reflector ClassifiefI PtNie 752-6166

FILE NO FILM NO IN THE GENERAL COURT

OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION

THE

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF BOBBY GENE McROY

NOTICE OF CREDITORS AND DEBTORS OF BOBBY GENE AAcROY All persons, firms, and corporations having claims against Bobby Gene Me Roy. Deceased, are notified lo exhibit them to Joyce H McRoy. as Administratrix ot the

MCKoy. as Aoministratrix ot me Decedent's Estate on or before the date not later than six months after the first date of 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 fo make immediate payment to the above named Joyce H McRoy, Administratrix

Joyce H McRoy,

Administratrix ot the E state ot Bobby G Me Roy Route 3, Box 96

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 James Leon Bullock,

Attorney tor the

Administratrix ot the Estate ot Bobby Gene McRoy Post Ottice Box 7151 Greenville, North Carolina 27835 7151 May 26, June?, 9, 16, 1983

ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE

Having qualitied 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 porafions having claims against the Estate ot said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Apart ment 2 F, Lewis Drive, P O Box 652, Gritton, North Carolina 28530, on or before the 5th day ot December, 1983, or this notice will be placed In

bar ot their recovery All persons in

lid

^bted to said Estate will please make payment to the Ad minislrafrix 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 Gritton. 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

NOTICE OF SECOND RESALE OF LANDS BY COMMISSIONERS

Pursuant to and by virtue ot the Order ot the Honorable Sandra Gaskins. Clerk ot Superior Court ot Pitt County, entered June I. 1983. in that proceeding entitled "Robert Lee Smith) el als vs Phillip L Good

..... I. .1    d!    rA..rs..

son, jr . el als", teing Pitl County

Clerk ot Superior Court File No 8) 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 tor sale to the highest bidder tor cash, upon an opening bid of $73,550 00. but

subject toconlirmalion by the Court, the following described    

tract Qf land:

TRACT NO 3 Beginning at an iron slake located in a ditch, a cor ner, common with Lot No 9 and Lot No 10 ot the Warren Tucker Division and the lands ot the Heirs ot J R Moye, and running Irom 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 feet fo a concrete monu ment, another agreed corner, runn

ment, another agreed corner, runn ing thence South 89 17 East along and with an agreed line a distance of

176 06 teel lo an iron slake, a corner, running thence South 30 30 East a distance ot 472 10 feet to ah Iron stake, another corner, running thence South 83 19 East a distance ot 100 teel to an iron stake, a corner, running thence South 18 18 West a distance ot 113 06 feel along and with a chain link fence to an iron stake, continuing South 17 II West a distance ot 72 25 feel and South 3 49 West a distance ot 20 54 teet to an iron slake, a corner, running thence South 3 49 West a distance ot 218 46 teet and thence South 14 I East a distance ot 115.15 teet lo an iron stake, a corner, running thence South 16 47 West a distance ot 147.02 teet to an iron stake in the line ot Lot No 9 ot the Warren Tucker Division, a corner, running thence along and with the line ot Lot No 9 and Lot No 10 ot the Warren Tucker Division, North 38 50 West a distance ot 1597 teet to the Point ot Beginning, and containing 117 acres, more or less.

according to survey made^b^ A S

Johnson, Jr In December, 1976 The highest bidder will be re

quired lo deposit ten per cent (10%)

,t$r^    ....

of the lirst $1,000 00 thereof, plus tive

rer cent (5%) ot any excess above 1.000 00. as evidence of good faith pending contirmalion of the sale by the Court The ijroperty will be sold subject to 1983 City of Greenville and Pitt County ad valorem taxes, with possession to be delivered December 1, 1983

This the 1st day of June, 1983 - David A. Leech. Commissioner FredT Mattox. Commissioner June 9, 16, 1983

NOTICE

Having qualitied as Administrator ot the estate ot Annie R. Manning late of Pitl County, North Carolina, this is to nollly all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them lo the undersigned Administrator on or before December 9, 1983 or this

notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons lit debted to said estate please make

immediate payment This 7th day ot June, 1983 B F Manning P O Box 309

Bethel. North Carolina 27812 Administrator of the estate of Annie R Manning, deceased June 9, 16.23. 30. 1913

Having qualified the estate ot H C

NOTICE

as Executrix of

____________ Buck    late    of    Pitt

County, North Carolina, this Is lo notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them lo the undersigned E xeculrix on or before December 16, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons indebted lo said estate please make Immediate payment This I4thday of June. 198)

Iona D. Buck Route 2. Box 346 C Greenville. N C 27834 June 16, 23, 30, July 7, 1983

NOTICE

Having qualitied as Executor of the estate ot Lelia Rots Clark late of PItf County. North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceasod to present them lo the undersigned on or before December 16. 190 or

this notice or satne will be plealed In bar of their recovery All persons In debled lo said estate please make immediate payment.

This I4fh day ot June, 1983 James Warren Clark. Jr

June 16. 23. 30, July 7,1983The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C -Thursday, June 16.1983 - 23

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

WE PAY CASH for diamonds Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 E vans Mall. Downtown Greenville

011

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant

Buick We will pay too dollar______

SELL YOUR CAR the National Aulotinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County Hastings

Ford Call 758 0114    _________

1974 FIAT 124, 4 door, 4 cylinder, 4 speed 1975 Mercury Monarch, 4 door, 6 cylinder, 3 speed. 756 9034.

012

AAAC

1973 GREMLIN Very good condi tion, low mileage. $750 756 8766

1979 AMC Concord DL wagon Good condition $2295 752 5027    ___

013

Buick

1979 BUICK SKYHAWK. AM FM

tape. air. good mileage Excellent condition $3,300 758 4121 before 5

Other call 758 7559, 752 5001 ___________

door.

198r BUICK SKYLARK . -----

AM/FM stereo, air, low mileage 753 4302

014

Cadillac

CADILLAC, 1970 Sedan Deville 756 8999 1981

door hard top. One owner, $375

 CADILLAC Coupe Deville

Loaded with options Priced to sell Call BB8.T William Handley 752 6889    _

015

Chevrolet

CASH FOR your car Barwick Auto Sales 756 775    _____

1972 VEGA GT, 350 motor, high performance. 400 turbo

transmission, $1800 757 3438 _____

1976 MONTE CARLO, silver and maroon, air. stereo, like new Fire stone 721 radials Just tuned 62,000 miles $2.200 756 3709    

1976 NOVA, 2 door, power steering, automatic Excellent condition

7514181    ______________________

1979 CHEVROLET Camaro Excellent condition 43.000 miles Call 757 1291 alter 5p m________________

018

Ford '

FORD FUTURA 1978 Excellent Price $2995 Call 756 1523

condition 1972 LTD Brougham Air, AM/FM with 5 speakers, radial tires, excellent copditjgn $995^746 4^L 1972 LTD, AM/FM, 8 track. I owner, good condition, $595 Call ^ween IJ a_m_ lp_ m_, 7 W 7510____

1976 MUSTANG II, V 6, automatic, air. AM/FM stereo, new tires 7^9348___ __________

1977 MUSTANG 4 cylinder, 1 owner, air, AM/FM, excellent con dition Very clean $1595.756 3974

019

Lincoln

LINCOLN CONTINENTAL. 1966 Very oood condition. 758 7708_______

020

Mercury

COMPLETELY reconditioned, 1964 Comet, 6 cylinder, straight shift, like new, lully air conditioned, new tires, $1800 Call 752 2995 _

021

Oldsmobile

1968 CUTLASS 746 4401

Priced lo sell

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

022

Plymoutti

197* PLYMOUTH FIRE ARROW Automatic transmission, 27,000 ac

fir mlk^_V^tr^    coodifioo

SJWpCaIjZM:;

023

Pontiac

1966 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2

door hard hw.'Excellent condition. 2ndownef. 8795. 752 4903

1974 GRAND PRIX I owner $1500 Call 758 9087_

1977 FIREBIRD Power steering and brakes, tilt wheel, automatic transmission, AM/FM stereo cassette, mag rims $3200. Call terT

758 4349 after 4

1977 GRAND PRIX 307 V 8, air, AM/FM, Michelin tires. I owner, oood condition. Call 756 8650

1978 SUNBIRD, 61.000 miles, air, automatic, power steering, tilt wheel, excellent condition $2500 or best offer 757 3100 or 758 6321

1981 GRAND PRIX LJ. loaded, one owner, diesel, X mpg. excellent condition 355 2899 atter 6_

024

Foreign

DATSUN 240Z. 1972. red with black interior. 4 speed, good tires, runs ^^^^^needs paint W 5^7^ Call

VOLKSWAGEN. 1971 Square back Needs work $300 746 3530 or 746 4203

1971 RED DATSUN Straight shitt Looks rough, but in g condition, brand new

__N StraigI but in goocT running

__________   new    tires    S400

746 4171 or 756 7295

1975 FIAT SL 128. Blue, AM/FM.

condition

Must 756 0183

tow mileage. Very good Must sell    have 2 cars    $1150

1975 HONDA CIVIC Good condi tion $1095 746 4401___

1975 RED SPITFIRE convertible Excellent condition New transmission $3800 negotiable 792 6559 ____

1976 DATSUN 280Z, automatic, air. AM/FM stereo cassette, jet black with mag wheels, excellent condi tion 756 4568    _________

1979 BMW 320 I. Wine with black interior 4 speed, 43,000 miles Call 2245 or

(919) 355 ;

(919) 355 6422 ____

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

024

Foreign

1979 HONDA CIVIC Best offer Call 752 6874. from 6 to 9.

1980 BMW 5M I. Dark blue with

camel interior. Fully equipped. Excellent condition. Call (919)

353 ?24Sor (919) 355 64^

1980 COROLLA DELUXE MHtiack.

automallc. air, AM/FM

cassette.

sport wheels, low mileage. Great

' ion. Cl

condition. Call 758 0097.

1980 LeCAR DELUXE 50.000 miles,

jm:_

air $3200. Call 7581

1981, 300 S D , silver blue, loaded, $27,500. 1982 300 D Turbo, beige, leather seats, loaded, $25,900. 1982

240 D. sand beige. 4 speed, power $18.600 1981 300 D

windows, root, _______

blue, loaded. $20.900 1979 240 D, beige, automatic. $12,500. Call 355 6422 or 355 2347. DLR 2315

1981 HONDA CIVIC 1500 GL 5 speed. 40 -r miles per gallon. AM/FM cassette stereo, velour interior, low mileage Like new. $4500. 753 3444_

1982 TOYOTA COROLLA Wa speed All options, low mi Like new 6995/otter, consi trades. 756 7417__

igon. 5 ileage nsioer

1982 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA, 9700 miles, AM/FM cassette. 5 speed, air. 5 year 50.000 mile warranty le 76

Phone 76 9730

280Z DATSUN, 1978 white 43.000 miles, air conditioning 757 3753 ___

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 trailer $5.000 756 4061____

16' CAROLINA BOAT. 20 horse power Mercury motor, electric Asking price $750 746 4425 19' CHAPPERELL, 120 horsepower

Mercury I/O Depth tinder, galva nized trailer $3400 752 3170 days

752 2540 nights 1965 17' MFG. motor and trailer

$1200 Call 752 7636_______________

1968, 15' Glassmaster Tri hull, walk

through windshield. 18 gallon gas lank trailer |usl painted Call

752 2564

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

DONT THROW YOUR MONEY AWAY!

Buy Your Next Home From

AZALEA

MOBILE HOMES OF N. C., INC.

264 Bypass West    756-7815

LOWEST PRICES IN N.C.

A'

New Game Room!

% Whichards Beach

Open Wed , Thurs . & Fri, Til 10 P M Sal.Till A M,

Over 50 Games Latest Video Games Open Daily!

Washington, N C

Morris Blueberry Farm

LOCATED; 1 mile North of New Bern On US 17 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Bring Your Own Container

637-6896

637-6630

637-3709

032

Boats For Sale

1979 COBIA SPORSTER. IS dtep Vee, 150 Evlnrude with power trim, galvanized trailer, AM/FM cassette stereo. Call after 6, 744 2031

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1982 HOBIE CAT. 14'. turbo Carumba. extras, like new. Call 756 9847

1983 12' aluminum Jon boat. $225 Call 758 3555__

2 SHRIMP BOATS, 32 and 42 Good condition, fully eguipped. 249 1190_ _

21' COBIA, 150 Evinrude. trim and tilt, galvanized trailer, all extras $5900 or best otter 752 6715 atter 5

21' WINCHESTER BOAT Dep

tinder, compass. 30 gallon buill

gas tank, walk through windshield. CB radio. 115 horsepower Mercury motor. Cox galvanized trailer with

electric wench, till frame and tandem wheels First $2800 boys 758 2264 after 5 30 evenings

STEEL BUILDINGS

BY

Riverside Iron Works

Toll Free 1-800-682-3705

An Authorized Dealer for Mitchell Steel Buildings for over 15 years

23' SPORTCRAFT boat, I O, Cuddy cabin, under warranty, like new, galvanized trailer, loaded with ac cessories. very reasonably priced 752 7474 after 5pm or weekends

034 Campers For Sale

APACHE TRAVEL TRAILER, 25 , air. full bath $2700 Call 746 3530 or 744 4203

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops 250 units in slock O Briants Raleigh, N C 834 2774

IS'TRAVEL TRAILER Sleeps6 In good condition $800 Call 756 9U

1972 FORD pickup truck with slide in camper, sell contained, sleeps 4, both in excellent condition Asking $3300 752 6210

1973 DODGE mini motor home Excellent condition Sleeps 4. com

pletely self contained 746 2407    ___

20' ARGOSY CAMPER tor sale in excellent condition Call 756 1728

038

Cycles For Sale

HONDA XL 175    1976 Showroom

condition Price negotiable Call 758 6262

SUZUKI TS 115 needs work

Negotiable 756 521 1    ___

WANT A GREAT BUY? Vveo CM JOOE Honda Musi sell $900 Mol

fill's Maanavox 756 8444 ___

1973 HONDA CB 450 (DOHC) 9200 miles, good condition $350 758 3263 ariytim^

1974 HONDA 750 motorcycle

Excellent condition $999 Cal^ 752 5759

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

3-DAY COUPON SPECIALS

FRIDAY SATURDAY & MONDAY

OIL, LUBE & FILTER

Expires 6-30-83

Official North Carolina Inspection Station

AIR

CONDITIONING TUNE UP

Includes Freon & Labor Expires 6-30-83

KOOOfVEAm

TIRE ^CENTER

West End Shopping Center Phone 756-9371 Open 8 to 6 Mon.-Fti., Sat. 8 to 5

729 Dickinson Avenue 1 hone 752-4417 Open 8 lo 6 Mon,-Fri.. Sat 8 lo 5

@ GUARANTEED SED CARS

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED

1982 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel .........$6795.00

1981 Volkswagen Diesel Truck............... $6895.00

1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme...........  $7195.00

1981 Buick Skylark.  .....  $5995.00

1981 JeepCJ-5 ................ $6995.00

1981 Volkswagen Rabbit 4 Door  ........$5695.00

1980 Mazda GLC ....... ...$3995.00

1980 Volkswagen Rabbit................ $4295.00

1980 Dodge D-50 Truck............ $3995.00

1979 Volkswagen Van .......  $5995.00

1979 Audi Fox GTI.................... $3995.00

1979 Chevrolet Impala Wagon............  $4995.00

1979 Pontiac Sunbird   ..........  $3495.00

1978 Olds 98 Regency 4 Door ..........$4995.00

1978 Buick Electra Limited....................$3995.00

1978 Chevrolet Chevette ......  $2495.00

1978 Plymouth Horizon.............  $3495.00

1977 AMC Gremlin  ....................$1995.00

Joe Peclieles Volliswageii, Inc.

Gieenville Blvd.    /5b-U35

Servinq Greenville To The Coast For 18 Year-s

Bethels Finest Used Cars

1981 Chevrolet Caprice 4 ijoor, white. One owner.

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Blue, white vinyl top, sharp car.

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix 26,000 actual miles, like new. White. One owner.

1979 Buick Regal Blue, clean, sharp car.

1975 Olds Delta 88 Convertible

1980 Chevrolet Monza Blue, automatic, air condition, sharp. One owner.

1975 Chevrolet Monza Red Priced to go!

1980 Chevrolet Chevette 4 speed, air condition, white. Priced to go. One owner.

1970 Chevrolet Camaro Average car.

TRUCKS

1980 Honda 2 door, 4 speed transmission, clean.

1979 Chevrolet Chevette 2 door, 4 speed transmission, air condition. One owner.

1980 Chevrolet LUV Pickup - Red. 4 speed transmission, clean.

1980 Oatsun King Cab Orange, 4 speed

1979 Chevrolet Mallbu 4 door, automatic transmission, air condition, red and white.

1978 Chevrolet C-10 Diesel Like new, automatic, power steering

We Are In Great Need Of Used Cars Now

We Are Offering Highest Trade-In Allowances Ever!

WYNNES CHEVROLET

Ramon Latham    The    Comer,    On    The    Square

Bonnar Latham Bethel, N.C.    Phone    825-4321

OMOUMITY

SBMCI/MRIS

Jot Rawls JI.T. Burrua DougHouaa

QBIiBPMi Morotiwwinviim

The Best Is Getting Better!

8.7% APR

Or

Up To $750.00 Cash Rebate

(On Selected Vehicles)

Plymouth Reliant NOW You CAN Afford Americas Most Beautiful Driving Machines!

Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Peugeotmm





036 Cycles For Sate

1975 754 HONDA 29.000 miles. 5750 Good condition. 744 6144

192 ATC HONDA 200 Call 758 1192 attef 4._

19S2 GS850L SUZUKI 2300 miles Shaft driven Pi

______________ . 'effect condition.

Excellent buy Priced right Call 754 1643    _

039

Trucks For Sale

FORD RANGER XL Pickup 1983 Demonstrator Blue and white, fully

equipped Call Leo Venters Motors. Avden. 756 6171

1970 FRUEHAUL VAN 40' long. 13' X 6" high With vents, front arid

rear Swing out doors Good oak

1st

floor, needs tires $2500. 746 2785

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furnllure Reflnlthlng and repairs. Superior caning lor all type chaira, larger selection of custom picture framing, survey stakesany length, all types of pallets, hand-cratted rope hammocks. salected framed reproductions

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Industrial Park. Hwy 13 758-4181    8    AM-4:30PM

Graenvllle. N C

BILL

ASKEW

MOTORS

3010 s. Memorial Orive

756-9102

1981 Yamaha Exciter 250

3.000 miles.

1981 AMC Jeep Renegade

6 cylinder, 20,000 miles, 1981 Ford Ranger Pickup

Blue and white

1981 Cadillac Coupe Oe Ville Light green 1980 Subaru Wagon 1979 Cadillac Coupe De Ville-Red

1979 Chevrolet Chevette

4 door, beige

1979 Chevrolet Chevette

4 door, silver

1979 Ford Pinto Wagon

Bronze

1979 Pontiac Grand Prix

Blue, loaded

1979 Olds Delta 88 Royale

2 door, blue

1979 Chevrolet Camaro

Maroon

1978 Pontiac Grand Prix

Blue

1978 JeepCJ-5

1978 Ford Mustang \4

speed,peach    '

1978    Plymouth    Volare

Wagon 6 cylinder, silver.

1978 Mercury Zephyr Villager Wagon White 1978    Chevrolet    Monte

Carlo Blue, 54,000 mtles 1978 Pontiac Sunbird Wagon Low mileage, loaded,

1978    Chevrolet    Monte

Carlo 2 door, blue 1978    Chevrolet    Monte

Carlo Gold

1978 Pontiac Trans AM

Brown

1978 Chevrolet Impala Wagon 9 passenger, low mileage

1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Carolina blue, white top, white bucket seats, T-tops, loaded.

1977 Pontiac Grand Prix Brown

1977 Chevrolet LUV Pickup Black 1977 Ford Thunderbird White with red top.

1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Brown 1977 Chrysler Crdoba Silver

1977 Mercury Comet 4

door, blue

1977 Chevrolet Nova 4

door, silver

1977 Ford Pinto White, blue trim

1977 Ford Maverick

door, 6 cylinder

1977 Ford Pinto Wagon

White

1977 Chevrolet Nova

door, burgundy 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

1973 Chevrolet Malibu -

White

1972 Pontiac Lemans 1971 Pontiac 4 door, extra clean

1970 Datsun 240-Z Blue 1967 MG

1967 Mercury Cougar TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS

1974 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

Plus Many Others

039

Trucks For Sale

1973 PICKUP TRUCK Good condi tion. $800 758 4921 or 754 3357 bo tweon 7 and lOovenifKii,

1975 CHEVROLET Cheyenne

^icki^. Automatic, air. $2150.

Call

1974 CJ5 JEEP 6 cylinder, hardt^ good condition. $3.000. Call 752 9592 after 5.__

040

Child Care

BONDED BABYSITTING service now offering 24 hour. 7 days a week services tor infants, children, hand leaps, and elderly Your home or the sitters Rates are reasonable and we welcome spur of the moment contacts Mid Eastern 756 4254 days. 757 3529 nights

RESPONSIBLE LADY to keep 2

children in my home References required 8 30 to 5_:W. Monday

through Friday Call 756 7761 after 5 30_

WILL KEEP INFANTS and

children in my home for working mothers day or night! 752 4903

WILL KEEP your children in

home this summer on Highway 3 Call 752 1783

WOULD LIKE to keep children in my home Call 757 0354

WOULD LIKE TO babysit children

in my home in city limits. Call 752 761:

046

PETS

AKC BLACK Labrador Retriever puppies. All shots and wormed Field champions in line 756 1268

AKC DACHSHUND puppy 355 6476 AKC Golden Retriever puppies All shots Dewormed. Call 752 8019 AKC MALE white Poodle Best

offer Call Keith. 758 4631    _____ ____

$75

DACHSHUND, AKC, red I 236 3388

Looking for an apartment? Vou'll find a wide range of available units listed in the Classified columns of to day's paper

046

PETS

ENGLISH SPRINGER Spaniel puppies. AKC. shots and wormed. ta1f296 I 568 0f 296 1646.__

FEMALE AKC REGISTERED

Norwegian Elkhound. Call after 5 p.m., 752 0428._

ONE BEAUTIFUL full blooded German Shepherd puppy, male, $75. 754 3974.__

SUPER WALKER/black and tan Deer Hound puppies. Sire and dam

irobably best deer hounds in NC -- 2487

rsS

WANTED AKC fawn colored Great Oai

sne for stud service. Call

2 SIBERIAN HUSKIES Red with blue eyes AKC registered. Wormed and shots 752 5333. $125_

051

Help Wanted

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT position available for responsible, dependable person. Requirements: previous secretarial experience.

h            "        '

typing skills, basic bookkeeping knowledge. Send resume fo A<f ministralive Assistant, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

AVON REPRESENTATIVES

needed in Wintervllle and Ayden areas Earn up to 50% Call 756 6610

Capable person to toiiowup

and/or find leads for new home

improvement product, enioyable    nential.

work with good income poi either full time or part time For additional inlormation, contact Harold Creech & Associates, 752 4348__

EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN

to work with established firm Excellent opportunity, good benefits Please call 756 3240 tor interview__

EXPERIENCED SPECIALITY

Chemical Salesman for established territory Excellent opportunity for person with skills in Industrial. Transportation and water treatment sales and service. Send resume fo Chem Lube Corporation, 8010 East

88th St , Indianapolis, IN 46256 _

EXPERIENCED CASHIER Must have* experience Call 752 6124, ask lor Bob

HEATING AND AIR Conditioning repair service person wanted Some experience necessary Call 756 4624

HOUSEMOTHER POSITION

Mature adult needed who enioys working with young adults. Must have own transportation Social skills desired Knowledge of light bookkeeping helpful Apartment provided Salary negotiable For

051

HelpWanlad

051

Help Wanted

and full tim. Sand rMum*. PO Box 1545, Graa^ivllta, n C 27834.

SALES PERSON for growing mobile borne dealersnip in

MANAGER Needed for convenience store/oe* station combine tIon. Earn $15,000 to 820,000 annually - Salary and commissions. Howitalizatlon insurance available. Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South Tmorial Drive. Greenville.

Greenville, NC If you're making *    I    of

$20,000 a year with no chance . advancement, but have a desire to better yourself and are not afraid to work, you may be the person we are

' looking for. Sales experience neces /. Finance backgri Send resume to Mobi

sary.

PHYSICAL THERAPIST

inance background helpful.

 tsume to AAobile Seles, PO

Box 1967. Greenville. NC 27834.

Part time physical therapist posi ibTe In expending ICS/MR

2 years experience

facility serving mentally'retarded children. Duties will include

TRUCK DRIVER 25 y^m or older

Monday Friday C weekends. Call 94^1865.

rKord. R^lres overnight

driving

traveL

Occasional

assessing and treating chlldran and providing inservict to PT aides and other staff. North Carotina license required. Salary highly competitive. Contact Jan Harper, Cor porate Personnel Director, P O Box 607, LaGrange, NC 28551. 919 778 3067.

WANTED SALESPERSON due to expansion for Farmville and sur rounding areas, to service established accounts. Average sala-rv $512 per week. 753 4482

RECREATION; One year, fixed term appointment beginning August 1983. Teach in Therapeutic Recreation concentration, supervise student fieldwork experiences and advise students. Rank and salary commensuratre with degree and experience. Doctorate preferred (AAaster's required) with at least one dergree in Therapeutic Recre ation. Closing July 7, 1983. Send letter of application, resume, transcripts and three letters of recommendation to:    Dr.    Ray

Martinez, Chairman HPERS, East Carolina University, Greenville. NC 27834 AA/EEO

WANTED: Lead vocalist that plays rhythym or piano for a Country/Country Rock Band. Serious and reliable callers only. Call 758 7357 anytime

WEEKEND variety band is seeking

a male or female to sing, play m bano,

trumpet or keyboards, tronl _ etc., and also a roadie to haul and set up/take down equipment. Call 756 5797 or 757 0325.

059

Work Wanted

A CAPABLE BABYSITTER is as

close as your phone. Any age. day or night, call Dini at 752 838.

RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION

Supervisor. Experienced required. Send past experience summary.

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed and fully insured Trim ming, cutting and removal Free estimates. J P Stancil, 752 6331.

Salary plus fringe benefits plus Mail to P O Box

bonus available _____ .

859, Greenville. N C 27834

SECRETARY For small chain of preschools Hours 8 to 3 Apply in person at 313 East 10th Street No phone calls please.

AN IMPRESSIVE SIGN is the

secret for impressive profits for your business. We are masters of impressive signs. Call Steve Atkins, The SIqnmaster, 757 3626

SECRETARY/BOOKKEEPER

General office work. Must have typing skills Hours 9 to 4:30, .lonclay through Friday. Send re sume to PO Box 2674, Greenville.

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 752 7765.

SECRETARY to the Registrar at

Pitt Community College, available immediately. AAS Secretarial Science degree plus 3 years secre tarial experience required. Salary based on Institutional formula. Contact personnel office, Pitt Community College, 756 3130. by

CALL SEARS ROEBUCK 8. Co for free estimates on siding, guttering, mobile home roofover. insulation, interior and exterior painting and roof vents. Call 756 9W, exT 232. Monday Saturday 10 a m 9 p m.

CARPET SPECIAL

2 rooms and hall Home Care Cleaners

$39 95 756 5453

June 20,

) employer

SR

TYPISTS!

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use Eliminate

creosote and musty odors. Wood , Ta

stove specialist. Tar Road En

065 Farm Equipment

GRASS OR HAY baling for hire or on shares. Raking included if needed. Call 524 4349

iSEY FERGUSON 35 Deluxe. >as. power steering Excellent condition, extra equipment. Call 746 3339after 5:?0

POLLENATION SERVICE

$20.00 each. At least 4. Call 524-4349. TOBACCO HARVESTER conveyor chain 50' rolls. 18" width $201.94, 20" width $213.90. Foam rollers (30 or more) $3.59 each. We carry bearings, curtains, belts, tires and

other parts for tobacco harvesters A^i Supply, Greenville, NC, 752

WANT TO BALE HAY

Call 752 9225atfer 8p m

WANT TO RENT bulk barns Call 752 9225 after 8 p.m

WHEAT STRAW for sale 752 9225after 8p.m._

067 Garage-Yard Sale

BIG YARD SALE I This Saturday 409 Biltmore Street Books, albums. guns, and much much more 8a.m

GAKAGE SALE on Stantonsburg Highway, 4'/j miles from the hospi tal Past Candlewick Estates, look

for sign to Horseshoe Acres on right Driveway and house at next

rigl

45 mph sign. Like new clothes (women sizes 5 to 14), men's (small to large), men's suit, jacket 44 long, slacks 36x32. games, shower cur

tains, formal gowns, jeans. Avon of dishes, and mluella

bottles, set    _

neous Friday and Saturday From 9a m until 4p.m

GET READYI Ninth Annual Downtown Mall Flea Market Satur day, June 25, 1983 Sign up at C Heber Forbes, 419 on The Mall or phone 752 3468 _

MOVING SALE, June 18, 9 12 30 Fostoria crystal diningware.

furniture, baby things, appliances, canning supplies, etc Ml Doctor's

Park Apartments, Beasley Drive, Greenville, (behindhospital)_

RAYNOR FORBES AND CLARK

Flea Market open Saturdays 7 til I, across from Moose Lodge 756 4090.

YARD SALE Saturday. June 18 Clothes, jewelry, houseware and fixtures 805 West 9th Street, Ayden, 7 30 until

Livestock

terprises. 756 9123 day, 756 1007 int.

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables. 752 5237.

55 Words Per Minute WE NEEDYOUl MANPOWER TEMPORARY Services offers you:

CONSTRUCTION new. additions and remodeling Call Dillon Watson atter6p m , 756 8232

LANDRACE BOARS and gilts. Val idated herd No. 89 919 758 M19 after 6p.m.

Unique Fringe Benefits ~opPay

flexible ^Schedule

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do your housecleaning. 752 3758

NEWLY FRESH CUT Timothy and

Alfalfa hay. Buy by the bail or by        "     "    1370

the ton Call Mr Gentile at 752 or 752 9914

Call us for an appointment We Are Not a Fee Agency

MANPOWER

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood

Oi^ and Strip

Equipment formally of 'ip All items returned

Miscellaneous

TEMPORARY

SERVICES

wilhin 7 days Tar Road Antiques. Call for tree estimate Days 756 9123. Night 756 1007

GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways Call 752 7341

AIR CONDITIONER FOR SALE

4,000 BTU Hotpoinf, reduced to only $125. C^ll 752 4348 between 9 a m and6p m , will deliver, it desired

GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices All size yards. Call 752 5583. -I NEED WORK TO stay in school! I have experience and excellent credentials in interior and exterior _    ,, minor household repairs

ery reasonable. Call 757 3611 after 12 noon, ask tor Keith.

AIR CONDITIONER FOR SALE 6,000 BTU Westinghouse. 5 speeds and it really cools, adequate tor 2 or 3 rooms. Reduced to $165. Call 752 4348between9a m. and6p m

ANTIQUE DINING R(X>M table, golden oak Excellent condition. 756 7203.    _ _

KENNETH SUTTON Home Im provements. Call 758 4020 See my ad In the yellow pages, page 107.

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $22 46 on a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables Furniture World, 757 0451

K3 TEACHER will tutor math and reading Call 758 3658

BASSETT PLAID, sofa and chairs, excellent condition $450 758 2663

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver All work guaranteed Call 757 3353 after 4 pm, weekends anyiime

BEAR WHITE TAIL Hunter cgm pound I 758 3555

ound bow, like new, $50

NEED HELP AROUND the house? Experienced house cleaner with reasonable rates Call Laura Newborn, 758 0365

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

Why pay retail when you can save up lo ' j and more on bedding and

waterbeds Factory Mattress 8, Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza). 355 2626

BEDROOM SUITE, double bed. dresser and desk 752 7472 after 5 BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts Delivery and installation 919 763 9734

074

Miscellaneous

FOR SALE: 2 Madame Alexander dolls from 1953, hard plastic; few others. Sears 17 cubic foot chest freezer, SISO. CMilnet wHti glass doors, $15. Wooden table. StO Doll buggy, $35. Sat of old china. $35. Miscellanaous flea market stuff, cheap Also a law old collactables 758 2673.    _

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Shop StrlPPltig, Repairing & Re finishing. (Formerly of Eastern Carolina Vocational Center) Located approximately 200 yards on Pactolus Highway. Calf 752 3509

GOLF CLUBS Usad 4 wood, 10 irons. Great for beginner

balls. COVtrs, 751 2382

Sag.

GRA

Magi

RADUATION IDEA? Moltltt's inavox has I2" black and while

TVs tor only $74 951 2W3 Evans

HITACHI AM/FM stereo with turntable, I track player with r

t^llrWor^t^oltef^Ttl MS ICEMAKIRI talt 40% oTl Barkers Rtfrie^allon 2227 Memo

075 AAobile Hofnes For Sale

BRAND NEW 19*3 top of the line double wide. 3 bedrooms, 2 full

baths, "ir!Y_

uflinsf iiswssf    .wj.        a

masonite siding, shingle roof, tros free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much more.    _    ^ .

Limited Time Only

$15,995

VA, 100% financing No money down Also FHA Conventional fi

nancm^ROssL^^ND HOMES (formerly MoWle Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard 75641191

FOR SALE 1979 Taylor, 14x70, 2 badrooms. 2 full baths, un

derskirted, new car^eL new

lurnlfure, new 25" color TV Share

utility building, sun deck, located Lot 32, Shady Knoll $19,500 757

WWI

0274 or 752 2366 Mr Carraway

FOR SALE: Mobile home 12x60 2 bedrooms, good condition Located In nice park $4200. Call 756 080) atter )p m

GOOD SELECTION of used homes

JC FINNIYI best trih mattriss plus Dumper pee. like new, Call

LARGE CQAOl ' snd and lop fleamnp 6ihoe also

Low down payments and monthly DOymenls All homes guaranteed Tommy Willloms. Azalea Mobile

soil, lot

Hudion

ovoiloble    f*fattfr S p m jim

-IMITID TIME ONLY! 11    1983

70x 14 2 bedrooms 2 baths To see is lo believe! Need to sell immediate

MADAME ALEXANCUIR now dolls Ifif Mil Cjllll)i^kDro

MRTAR SANp IIM. rack lopsoH SL'4iii9f

CLEARANCE SALI on Snopper Movers Goodyeer Tirt tenter West End Shopping Conltr And

Dlcktnton Ayinut

ONE^|ET DRUMS Surfboard Call

ONE TON AIR condilionor. gas water heater Will deliver and

PRACTICALLY NEW Zenith stereo with cabinet, has AM/FM radio

tape player and phonograph. $250 i best otter 752 9767 atter 5_

REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE Large, coppertone Hotpoinf, runs like new. looks very good, (size is 63V,"x28"x25"). priced to move fast at just $195 Call 752 4348 between 9 a m and6p m._

REPOSSESSED SIGNI Nothing down Take over payments $58.00 monthly. 4' x 8' flashing arrow sign New bulbs, letters Hale Signs. Call FREE I 800 626 7446, anytime

SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent

shampooers and vacuums at Rental Comp

Tool (fompanv.

SMALL REFRIGERATOR for sale (18 "x19'3"x20"). Perfect for office

or dormitory room Reduced fo $75 Call 752 4348 between 9 a m and 6

SMITH CORONA TP-1 letter quali ty printer. 5 months old Used 1 month In mint condition $550 752 3980trom9a.m to5:3Qp.m.

THEATRE SEATS, $2 00 each Some with cushions Can be used in boats, churches or recreational facilities. 756 5400 or 758 4031._

THREE PIECE bedroom sujte $150 Phone 758 2699_

TWIN BEDS Mattress and box springs Like new $275 or best offer 756 4087.__

TWO 50 watt Lyric speakers Good condition. $75 or best otter Days 756 9371 or nights 756 7887

TYPEWRITER FOR SALE tan.

manual. Remington, newly cleaned ...... Ill

and reconditioned, types like new. Priced at just $145 Call 752 4348 between 9 a.m. and6p m

USED DESKS FOR SALE Priced from $75 to $150 Call 752 4348 between9a m andp.m._

USED HOTPOINT, heavy duty drver, $60 Call 752 3512

WASHER/DRYER, good condition, $350 Call 355 2339 after 5__

WILL MAKE 8x10 or 5x7 black and white glossy prints from old family photos or snap shots Copies are

5x7, $3 each 8x10, $7 each Mail to LDM Enterprises, PO Box 425, Dunn, NC 28334. Original photo returned unharmed

BUILDINGSI! Special Purchase All steel clear span 30'x40'xl0', $3,987 00    50'xl00'xl6',    $13,263 00

I00'xl50'xt6',    $39,151    00 FOB

Factory I 800 848 2988 til 7p m

1 HONDA generator, El500, $200 I Gould waterpump, $75. 1 refrigera tor, $35 756 2109    _

1/5 OF CARAT white gold regular $247.

ngagement ring, regular lifling to sell tor $175 756 6523

16.1 CUBIC FOOT freezer, Kelvinator, 9 months old, $375. Call 752 5759    _

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoll 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

COMPLETE C B set up, will sell together or separate Call 752 5398 alter 5 30

18.000 DTU air conditioner $200 280 gallon oil tank. 757 3753

2 ALL WEATHER TIRES tor sale (G78xU). excellent condition,

tubeless, smooth running Reduced to $25 each Call 752 4348 between 9

a m and6p m

21.000 BTU GE window air condi tioner Call 746 3938_

3 PIECE living room set, sota, loveseat and chair in Herculon

plaid Regular $599 95. sale $399 00.

assume payments of $22 46 month Furniture World, 757 0451

COPY MACHINE $100 Call 752 9231

30" GREEN gas range 3 years old Excellent condition Changing to electric $150 Call 758 0683

DAY CARE EQUIPMENT for sale almost new, but drastically reduced for quick sale, 2 Cribs, I for $70 and I for $6C, mattresses lor $20 each, 20 cots at $20 each Call 752 4348 i b^ween 9^ m and 6pm

075 'Mobile Homes For Sale

EXCELLENT CONDITION Couch ,$45 End tables, $10 each, dresser, headboard, mirror, $75 756 8208 FACTORY 2nds NOW available direct from manufacturer Hand woven rope hammocks, $19 95 fo $53 Halteras Hammocks, 1104 Clark Street, Greenville

1979    24x65    modular    home.

bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, den, kitchen and dining room Musi be moved $18,000 Call 758 0356 anytime

1983 14' 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

ly 10% above wholesale plus set up Only I home, so hurry and caO!

6JIL

LONGEST MOBILE HOME in North Carolina Is at Azalea Mobile Hfl[m, 264 Bypass Wa$t,?S8 ?8i5 MOBILE HOME tor sale. 10x40 Living room, bedroom, kitchen, and bath Moving out of slate, reduced lor quick sale 746 4352 anytime NEW QUALITY built Marshfield. 3

bedrooms, 1' a baths Payments under $200 per month Only 1 I left! Call 756 0131

REPO'S $39S DOWN and take up payments Call John Moore, 756 7815 Azalea Mobile Homes

12X50, 1967, underpinned Appli anees furnished 752 8019

12x50 HAVELOCK 2 bedrooms, i full bath. 355 2434 or 756 6994 after 5

12X60 RITZCRAFT, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, furnished with air in Azalea Gardens $5600 Call 758 4476_

14 WIDES for as low as $170 per Ca    .    .    ~

month Call or come by Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841    _

1971 HOMETTE 12x60 2 bedrooms, mostly furnished Also washer, dryer, under pinning, covered deck, excellent condition 758 3696_

1973 BEACON MOBILE Home 12x60 3 bedrooms. 1'a baths Call 752 2751 or 752 2075 after 6._

1973 CHAMPION 12x60. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, new carpet, central air, skirting, several extras. $7500 Call Mary days 752 3000, nights 756 1997.

1975 CHAMPION. 12x60. 2 bedroom. 1 bath, underpinned, air condi tioner, set up m Branch's Trailer Park Call 7^4252 or 758 7392.

1976    12x65    CIMMARON 2

bedrooms, 2 baths, appliances

bedrooms, 2 baths, alliances furnished, central air Excellent condition $0900 Call Mary days 752 3000, nights 756 1997__

Help fight Inflation by buying selling through the ClassifiedT Call 752 6166

and

ads

1979 14x70 REDMAN SHERATON 2

bedrooms, 2 full baths, total electric Located at Branches Trailer Park $500 and take up, payments of $195 756 8358 after 5

076 Mobi le Home I nsurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance

the best coverage for Jess mone^

Smith Insurance and Realty 2754

077 Musical Instruments

pi

walnut, excellent condition, $5200 or best offer 756 9878__

BRAND NEW CLARINET Call 355 23l9or 756 4181. _

GIVE US A call soon We'd like to help you place a classified ad in this newspaper today Call 752 6166

LOWREY GENI ORGAN Like new. only $850 Lowrey Organ

new. only $850 Lowrey Organ Center, Carolina East Mall, 756 8833

LOWREY TG98. 2 keyboard organ

Good condition janly $895 Lowrey

Organ Center, Carolina East Mai 756 8833

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 Tribufors a great place fo shop 355 6002

082 LOST AND FOUND

FOUND: Male Champagne colored Pekingnese Between Brook Valley

Pekingnese Between Bro and Cherry Oaks. 756 0381

LOST GRAY MALE cat with white yjot on neck and lower stomach

Country Club area 355 2941 _

LOST:    Long    haired    gold male

kitten, near (jverlook. Cafl 756 7788

REWARD ottered tor safe return of ladies billfold and personal s Lost in phone booth at kinson Ave 212 between 6 a m and 5pm___

lauicd uniiuiu oiivj

belongings Lost m phoi Piggly Wiggly on Dick Calf he 7411 Ext 212

091

Business Services

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

B

ACCOUNTING/BOOKKEEPING

Full line services priced for the small to medium sized business Mid Eastern, 14 Pitt Plaza Shop ping Center 756 4254    _____

FOR LEASE - 2500 SQUARE FEET PRIM^ RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON BOULEVARD CALL 756-8111

093 OPPORTUNITY

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business for sale Complete farm supply Established 21 years Owner deceased, family has other interests Call 758 0702

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris i. Co , Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, NC 757 000!, nights 753 4015_

Or

^300 Cash Back On Selected Models

See Us For Details

GM QUALITY SERVICf MRTS

OENIRAL MOTORS nuns DIVISION

OWN YOUR OWN JEAN Sportswear, infant preleen, ladies apparel store Offering all na tionally known brands, Brittania Jordache, Chic. Lee. Levi, Van derbilt, Izod, Calvin Klein, Esprit, Zena. Gunne Sax, Ocean Pacific. 300 other brands $7.900 to $24,500, beginning inventory, airfare for one to fashion center, training, fixtures,

?rand opening Call Mr Loughlin 612 ) 888 6555

POTENTIAL $50,000 to$80,000 PERYEAR

Are you bored with your job? Tired of working tor the other person? National Company based in Lex ington. KY looking tor qualified full and part time distributors In 4

county area Investment covered by

itoi ' ........ "

inventory Call 1 800 354 9594

TO BUY OR_ SELL a business Contact

Appraisals Financing SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed

Brokers, 401 W First Street 752 3575    .

UNIQUE BUSINESS OPPORTU NITY Local profitable lurnifure business for sale due to relocation

of owner Call 756 2816atter6p m

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman    "    Cai.......

North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces Call day or niqhf, 753 3503, Farmville

WHICHARD PIANO TUNING

Expert piano tuning and repair Call 752 1224

104 Condominiums For Sale

LEXINGTON SQUARE, 2 bedr<ms FHA 235 assumable (pan Phone 756 7935 atter 9 pm

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

C.L. Lupton. Co.

752 6116

PECIAL Executive Desks

Reg. Price $251.00

60 >; beaul walnut f Ideal lor or olf Special I

M7S

TAFF OFFIC EQUIPMEN-

569 S Evans St    75?





104 Condominiums For Saie

WINDY RIOGE CONDOMINIUMS Two bedroom and bath flat $51,000 Three grooms. 2'i baths, two story,    Four    bedrooms, 2'i

baths, family room, $72,500 Dutfus Realty Inc , fit 39S_

109 Houses For Sale

beautiful condominium for

rent or sale 3 bedrooms, almost 1500'. tree shaded Call 757 6331 before 5, 75-361g after 6

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_

BY OWNER 11'7% assumable loan. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal

living and dining room, den with fireplace, carpeted throughout Central air, gas heat, fenced

backyard, patio. I block from Aycock Junior High 756 8281 or 7SB 9090_

BY OWNER 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplaces, 2500 square feet, nice yard, Farmville $59,500 Call after

5p m ,753 3030___

BY OWNER Remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch near Eastern Ele mentary and parks Fireplace, large kitchen, den and dining room, privacy fenced back yard with pool and deck $59,999 99 758 1355 before 7 30 am after 9:15 pm anytime Sunday.

BY OWNER Assumable 9'7% loan 3 bedrooms. 1<7 baths, fireplace in den. 752 5250. No realtors please COLLEGE VIEW Nice Recently refurbished 3 bedrooms and 2 baths. 2 firmlaces. Wooded lot $50's Call Carl Darden Realty. 758 1983 or 758 2230_

DISCOVER THE BEAUTY ot the earth tone decor that enhances this five room brick home located on a corner lot Easy access to schools and shopping areas Call us to see this home that offers garage, wood deck and more. $53,90(7 Steve Evans 8. Associates, Inc., 355 2727 anytime

ELEGANT WILLIAMSBURG All

formal areas, family room with fireplace. 3 bedrooms. 3 baths, apartment for relative Quality throughout Approximately 3,000 square feet Large wooded lot $I20'S Call 756 9103 before 6 p m or 756 5596 after 6 No Realtors, please

ELMHURT BY transferred owner 3 bedroom, 1'7 bath brick ranch, with large country kitchen, living room with fireplace, separate din ing room, screened in porch, heat pump and gas furnace on U acre lot with detached double garage and fenced in backyard Near universi ty, assumable 8' 7% FHA mortgage Low $60 S 756 4987_

EXCITEMENT, ELEGANCE, and

individuality will be your in this new brick home featuring a large master bedroom with adjoining dressing area, large great room with fireplace, foyer, and seperate dining room. All accented with crown molding and chair rail This lovely energy efficient home, with thermopane windows is located in Cherry Oaks Low $70's We will

pay 4 points plus closing costs. The Evans Company 752 2814, Winnie Evans 752 4224 or Faye Bowen

756 5258

GRAYLEIGH New, under con struction, large corner lot. Now is the time to custom finish interior 4 bedrooms, 2' 7 baths, large play room over double garage Call for price and details W C Blount & Associates. 756 3(W0.___

IN AYDEN 3 bedroom, 2 bath, two story completely remodeled home Carpet, fireplace, large kitchen, living room, dining room, com pletely insulated Owner financing at a fixed 12% rate 10% down $39,000 746 6394 _____

LAKE GLENWOOD Bryant Circle 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home with fireplace Large lot ( 88 acresi, 1692 square feet living space, deck FHA assumption. $69,000 Echo Realty, Inc., 54 4148 or 524 5042.__

LOVELY THREEE BEDROOM hoAie in immaculate condition in well established neighborhood, formal living/dining, fireplace with gas logs, family room, fully carpeled, two baths Tastefully decorated with new paint and wallpaper Estate Realty Co., 752

5051, Billy Wilson 758 4476_____

NEW LISTING Club Pines A lour bedroom and three bath two story home Only a tew years old and on a nicely wooded corner lot Foyer, living room formal dining room, family room with fireplace, microwave, solar hot water, storage shed $105,000 Dutfus Real

Iv Inc , 756 5395__________________

NE"w LISTING Lynndcile A really choice Lynndale home Traditional two story with tour bedrooms and 2'7 baths. Foyer, living room, formal dining room, family room wi n fireplace, wood deck, garage Possible assumption $137,900. Duftus Realty Inc , 756 5395__

VILLAGE EAST location Plus! Near Eastern Elementary School, library, city recreation center, Jaycee Park, also near the Univer sity 2 bedrooms, I'7 baths, all kitchen appliances, rea^ to move in $41.900 W G Blount 8,

Associates, 756 3000_____

WESTHAVEN Comfortable ranch with family sire family room plus adjoining screened porch Formal areas, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and it's immaculate! $74,900 Call Ball & Lane, 752 0025 or Richard Lane, 752 8819    _

WHY NOT TAKE advantage ot the NC Housing money interesl rate of 1% to 10% on tr is new home in

Camelot Ready lor occupancy now 3 bedroom, featuring walk in closet in master bedroom, nice foyer adjoining seperafe dining room, large great room with fireplace Win pay 4 points plus closing costs The Evans Company, 752 2814, Winnie Evans 752 4224 or Faye Bowen 756 5258    ______

WINTERVILLE 2 bedrooms, freshly painted, new roof, hardwood floors, corner lot, excellent rental history $18.(XX) Call owner 756 7314, after 5 756 4980_

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool fable ancT fireplace Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 Vears old Located 3 miles from Greenville Priced in the $50 s 758 0144 or

752 7663.______

2709 JEFFERSON DRIVE 3 bedrooms, living room with fireplace $39,500 $8,000 down and assume 10% VA loan Open 9 7. Call Durham 688 7605 or 471 4627____

113

Land For Sale

115

Lots For Sale

919

Illy, 91 823 6653.

117 Resort Property For Sale

AURORA BEACH Riverfront cot tage with 2 lots Call 235 3534

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits re<|uired. no pets. Call 75^4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have an

C*a"

size to meet your storage need. Car Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday? 5 Call 756 9933.

WAREHOUSE AND office space for lease. 20.000 square feet available. Willsubdivlde 756 5097 or 756 9315.

121 Apartments For Rent

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance

All apartments on ground floor with porches

Frost tree refrigerators

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets

Contact J T or Tommy Williams 756 7115__

BEAUTIFUL CONDOMINIUM for

rent or sale. 3 bedrooms, almost 15(X)'. tree shaded. Call 757 6331 before 5, 756 3618 after 6_

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'j baths. Also I bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups. laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL. 752 1557_

CLOSE TO ECU Two bedroom. 1' j bath townhouse $315 per month Lease and deposit required. Ball & Lane. 752 0025_

BETHEL HIGHWAY, 4 acres Excellent road frontage $12,(XX) Speight Realty 756 3220, nights 7?8 7741

Oveftoa 756 1697 or 1

CYPRESSGARDENS

APARTMENTS

2803 E TENTH STREET

One bedroom available, I'z mile from University. Energy efficient, heat pump and air conditioning, washer dryer hookups, cable TV, frost free refrigerator Plenty of closet space. 1 year lease.

Interested?

Call Now for an appointment

758-6061 or 758-5960

REMCO EAST, INC

DUPLEX NEAR ECU 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $235 a month No pets

752 2040.______

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central beat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752 5100

EFFICIENCY 1 bedroom, maid service $70 week Call 756 5555, Heritage 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 up

756 5555 The Heritage Inn

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments. carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 7M 6869

GRIFTON AREA New centrally healed and air conditioned. I. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments 12 miles from Kinston, 17 miles from Greenville Handicapped units available Rent starts at $190 Adjusted leases available for stu dents Office hours 10 a m to 2 p m , Monday through Saturday Oltice 524 4239, home 4 4821

JOHNSTON STREET APART MENTS 1 bedroom unfurnished apartments available immediate Water and appliances furnished. No pets Call Judyaf 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 off lOth Street

Call 752-3519 ____

LARGE ONE BEDROOM within walking distance of ECU and downtown No pets Partial utilities included $210 month Days 756 9318 or night 756 2542

LARGE 2 BEDROOM duplex Good location 705 Hooker Road Stove, refrigerator, central heat and air, washer/dryer hook ups, carpeted Lease and deposit No pets. $275

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartments For Rent

LOVE TREES?

E xperience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer/dryer hook ups. cable TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    1    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd

756-5067

NEW DUPLEX near hospital Ready for immediate occupancy. $300 per month No pets Call 752 3152 (rom 9 to 5, 752 6715 after 5, ---- for John or Bryant

ask

NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE, 2

bedrooms, t mile from hospital-med school. Really nice $300. Deposit.

lease 825 4931_

NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex in Shenandoah Available August I. $300/ month. 756-9343 12 to 8 p. m

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTAAENTS

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

_ 756    4151_

ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus No pets. $215 a month. 756 3923_

ONE BEDROOM lurnished apartment, l block (rom university Heat, air and water furnished Short or long term lease No pets 758 3781 or 756 0889_

ONE BEDROOM, lurnished apartments or mobile homes (or rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815._

ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT

Carpeted, central air and heat, mooern appliances. $210. Call 758 3311,_

RENT FURNITURE: Livino. din ing, bedroom complete $79 00 per month Option to buy U REN CO. 756 3862

SPACIOUS TWO bedroom duplex carpet, heat pump, air condifion. fireplace, outside storage 756 3413

LARGE NICE 2 bedroom duplex Shenandoah Subdivision. $295. 756 5389    ________

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartmnts For Rent

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy PlaceTo Live CABLE TV

Office hours lOa m to5p m Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-^

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2. and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook upv cable TV,    club

  cable TV,

house playground. Near I

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex "

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TWIN OAKS townhomes. 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

TWOBEDRCXDAA APARTAAENTS

Near ECU Most utilities included $275 up Available immediately 758 0491 or 756 7809before9p.m

TWO BEDROOM apartment country $150 month CaM 756 9132

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, I'z bath townhouses Available now $295/month 9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

WHY PAY RENT?

When you can own your townhome or condominium! Four locations available for a low monthly pay ment, low down payment and no closing costs! Call Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 756 1498. Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029

MOORE & SAUTE R no South Evans 758-6050

121 Apartment For Rent

WALK TO UNIVERSITY 1

bedroom, utilities furnished, $220 per month 756-7417

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom, t'-j bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis

court

756-0987

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments.

Available immediately. 752-3311.

1 BEDROOM. 3 blocks from campus All appliances. $185 month. Available immediately, 757 1974

2 BEDROOM apartment at

Whitehollow Drive $250.00 per month 2 bedroom townhouse at Village East $30000 per month Both require lease and security deposit D

0811, 9

Friday

uffus Really, Inc , 756 a m 5 p.m., AAonday

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air. carpeted, appliances. $250 a month BrytonHifis. 758 3311._

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances 804 Willow Street. Apartment 4 $250. 758 3311    _

2 BEDROOM apartment Kitchen applianes turnished. totally electric, $325 month Call 756 7647

2 BEDROOM townhouse. I'l bath, central air, washer, dryer hookups, four miles from hospital Available July 1 Call days 756 5780. nights 752 0181    _

2 BEDRCXJM townhouse carpeted, central air and heat, modern appli anees, washer/dryer hookup. $295 108 Cedar Court, 7^3311

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Stan tonsburg Highway Available July Call 756 5780 weekdays 752 Oll nights_____

2 BEDR<X)MS, Battle Street $i

per month Call 758 2546___

5 ROOM APARTMENT AND

room apartment, trailer fs2 3839

also 2 bedroom

Want to sell livestock? Run a

Classified ad tor guick response

122 Business Rentals

FOR RENT 10 000 square tool building Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity Call Donnie smith at 946 5887____

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TERRIFIC RETAIL LOCATION

tor lease 3.000 square tool ot prime retail or office space on Arlington Boulevard only $3 60 per square foot For additional information

call Real Estate Brokers. 752 4348____

2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space tor lease In small strip shoppino center Contact Aldridge S Southerland Realty, 756 3500. nights Djjn Soyt^rJajnd 75^2^    ^.......

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ine Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thunday, June 1, 1983-J7

122 Business Rentals

FOR RENT Prime retail space. Arlington Bouleverd. 4500 s feat M.2S per square foot. 7S*9313or7g5097.

127 Houses For Rent

A 3 BEDROOM. I'z bath house in Colonial Helghfs. $320. Deposit and lease. Family only, no pets Call 756 7716 after 6_

HOUSES AND apartments in Greenville. Cell 746 3284or 524 3180.

2 STORY HOUSE tor rent 107 Columbia Avenue 3 bedrooms. I' > baths. $300 month. No pets. Call Deborah, 758 3191_

3 BEDROOM houses tor rent 410 Paris Avenue $300 00. Billmore Street $330 per month All require lease and security deposit. Duttus Realty. Inc., 756 0811_

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

SPECIAL RATES for students Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. $125 and up No pets, no children. 58 0745_

12X40, 2 bedrooms, washer dryer, air. In good park Call 756 0801 after 5pm.

2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent Ci

:all 756 4687

2 BEDROOM, turnished, washer, air. good location No pets, no children Call 758 4857

2 BEDROOMS Inside city limits $160 per month CaM 756 I90()

2 BEDROOMS Call 758 0779 or 752 1623    _

2 BEDROOM on private wooded lot 2 miles from Greenville No pels Security and lease $160 355 2996 after 7

Want to sail livestock? Run a Classitled ad for quick response

135 Ottice Space For Rent

FOR RENT 2500 square feel Suitable lor oflice space or com mercial 604 Arlington Boulevard

^snj_____

FOR RENT Ottice space at Caro

lina Kennels 752 9854    _____

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815

TERRIFIC OFFICE location for rent Located in the 2700 block of East 10th Street, one ot the most heavily travelled streets in Greenville, large and small offices at extremely reasonable rates For additional Information call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348    __    _

3101 SOUTH EVANS Street next to Fasltare on 264 By Pass 4 offices, carpet, reception r<x)m, heat, air condition Excellent location Av,ailable June I Call Van Fleming, 756 6235 or 752 2887_________________

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

^ GIGANTIC YARD SALE

Saturday, June 18 FOURSQUARE CHRISTIAN CENTER

Highway 11 South (4 miles onTight past Pitt Com. College)

OFFICE FURNITURE. LARGE DESKS, FURNITURE, CLOTHING, WORKS OF ART, FLOWER POTS AND > LOTS MORE!

Gates Will open promptly at 8 AM-Not Before    Q

RESPIRATORY THERAPY

Clinical Education Coordinator for a 2 year A,A,S. program. Must be registered by the N.B.R.C. with 4 years experience of which 2 were in Respiratory Therapy education. Applications accepted to July 5.

Apply to:

' Personnel Department PITT COMMUNITY COLLEGE

P.O. Drawer 7007    Greenville. N. C. 27834

919-756-3130

EEO/AA Employer    _

137 Resort Property For Rent

142 Roommate Wanted

ATLANTIC BEACH (bcean Ridgaon water front), nice. 5 bedroom cottage available weeks beginning July 10, August 2) and August if. Call 756 336

ROOAAMATE WANTED Country living Lots Ot room $100. plus ' j utilities 756 8)00 from 9 5. ask for Barbara, 746 3705 after 5

EMERALD ISLE Pebble Beach Dcean Front Condos. Sales Rentals 1 800 682 7810

144 Wanted To Buy

ON OCEAN FRONT large duplex. Emerald Isle Each side accom modates 14. New Game room. Near fishing pier Very reasonable Ask for Oaklsv Duolex. 354 2958.

WANTED 2 to 5 acres ot land suitable for house arwl garden within 10 miles from Greenville between Highway II South and NC 33 East Call Real Estate Brokers. 752 4348between9a m andeg.m.

4 BEDROOM turnished cottage on Albamarle Sound. Weekly or mon thiy CqlH25.7321.

138 Rooms For Rent

148 Wanted To Rent

MIDDLE AGED white male 3 meals a day. will also do laundry Call tor information, 752 6182

NEW FAMILY in town interested in 3 bedroom house, prefer Winterville school district 756 7493

WANTED TO RENT or buy private mobile home lot in the country Call' 752 6448

ROOMS FOR RENT near universi ty CaM 756 3533 355 2045 after 6 p m

142 Roommate Wanted

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FEMALE ROOAAMATE wanted for 3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge Pool, tennis courts and sauna. 756 9491

e' V,

i

CraM a fanUSOT*

Solid Pine And 0k Fuinllurt a Gifts 200 E Gitenvllle Blvd 756 7978

MATURE AAALE roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom house with 2 others. 752 1579 after 5

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains in the Classitled Ads

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

As Administrator of the

Estate of Marion W. Maxwell,

the undersigned will sell the household contents of the Estate on

Saturday, June 18,1983 from 8:00 A.M., to 11:00 A.M. -AND^

Will sell, at public auction, at 11:00 A.M. a 1976 Buick Skylark, with approximately 56,000 miles.

Both sales will beat 303 South Library Street Greenville, North Carolina.

FREDT. MATTOX Administrator 919/758-3430

CON_NER

ITS TIME YOU TOOK A CLOSER LOOKATACONNER HOME

At This Time We Would Like To Thank The People Off Greenville And The Surrounding Areas For The Increase In The Sales Off Conner Homes. We Apologize For The Limited Supply Off Homes On Our Location At This Time. Connor Homes Has Just Purchased A Third Manuffacturing Plant Located In Havelock, N.C. To Insure Increased Production Off Our Homes. New Homes Will Be Arriving Daily From Our Fac-

tones.    You All, Very Much

VA

No Money Down

13.5% APR

Jim Bisesi, Manager

(919) 756-0333

FHA

10% Down

12.75% APR

616 W. Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C.

MIDSIZE

PRICESURPRISE

54 ACRES of valuable land and timber for sale near Macclesfield in Edgecombe County Sealed bids | June 23, 11 (X) AM 13 acres cleared. 3.311 pounds tobacco. 230.(XX) board teet timber Call 823 8732 or 823

Introducing the new, mid-size Mercury Marquis. Luxury, ride, and comfort at a surprisingly low price.

BEAUTIFUL 3.2 ACRE wooded . building site. $14.500 . 8 miles East of Greenville 752 1915.

EVANSWDDD RESIIL_ .

lots from $9,000 $12,500 Call W G

Blount & Associates, 756 3000_

LYNNDALE. Queen Annes Road

Call 355 2220 after 6_

RIVER FRDNT LOT for sale 1 acre cleared lot on Pamlico River at Captain's Walk near Blount's Bay Call 946 0159 THE PINES in Ayden 130 x 180 I corner lot Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at

746 2166 tor full details_

WATERFRONT lots, located In Chocowinity on Crawford Creek

Call Fred Poore at 946 8916._

2 LARGE LOTS Cherry Oaks, corner of Lee Street and 5 R 1725. Two lots together over 1 acre. Call 756 6676 after 5 p m_

117 RmoiI Property For Sale

IMMACULATE TWO BEDROOM;

trailer and lot at Portslde only 30 minutes away Completely lurnished with covered deck and storage building ready to move in only $28.000 Estate Realty Co. 752 5058, Billy Wilson 758 4476 PAMLICO COUNTY near Oriental, Creek front lots available for cam pers or mobile homes. Prices start at $6500, offshore lots $2,000. Owner financing available. Call Oriental

7893

Manufacturera Suggeated Baae Retail Price

MERCURY MARQUIS

All-new aerodynamic styling

Mid-size room ffor ffive

Contoured seats

Luxury sound insulation

'8 3 MERCURY MARQUIS

PUNCO SHORES nice two bedroom turnished cottage on Pungo River with screened porch. Living room with fireplace and ceiling fan. Enjoy the rest of the summer In this river setting tor only $35,500. Estate Realty Co., 752 5058. Billy Wilson 758 4476.

2 NEW HOMES ON Pamlico River, water front lots with bulkhawts. 3 bedrooms, l'/i baths, largo kitchen and family room, larga clOMts. Built tor yaar round comfort, with heat pump, air condition and llreplace. Owner will finance 80% at good Interest rate tor 10 years, fcxcellent location. 2 miles below Bath, NC at Bayview. Vanct rmirai.

EAST

CAROLINA

TRUCKS

WE LEASE ICE MAKERS

Scotsman York    Morris

Manitowoc Arctic Temp Kold Drafft

100 lbs. Cube Ice

$56.16

36 months

$75.82

24 months

200 lbs. Cube Ice

$73.67

36 months

$101.42

24 months

400 lbs. Cube Ice

$90.09

36 months

$124.02

24 months

Sales - Service - Installation

Weat End Circle

LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC Grcanvlllc. N.C.

756-4267

304 Hooker Rd Greenville. N C

Greenville 756-2104 Wanchese 473-2218

KNOLLACRES

SUBDIVISION

i'4 mile past Sunshine Garden Center on Old Tar Road

LOTI

1 8 ACRES

S18.000

LOT 2

6.0 ACRES

SOLD

LOT 3

6 2 ACRES

S35.000

LOT 4

7.6 ACRES

S40.000

LOTS

5.0 ACRES

$30.000

LOT 6

6 0 ACRES

SOLD

LOT 7

6.0 ACRES

$35.000

LOT 8

5.0 ACRES

SOLO

Winterville water system, new paved state maintained road under construction. 1800 square loot minimum single family dwelling, restrictive covenants.

s

Contact CLIFTON 0GEARY

758-7540

Monday-Friday From 7:30 to 6:00

Lexington Square

Townhomes Phase II ^

Near The Greenville Athletic Club

Model Open Daily 12-4 P.M.

2 And 3 Bedroom Unite Offered

J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.





28-The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday. June tl. UC

Croaaword By Eugene Shtffer

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY. JUNE 17, IMS

ACROSS    46 Shipwreck

1 Refuge    refuse

4 Challenge    56 Sort

8 Recent Broad- 51 Dwell

way hit

12 Self (Fr.)

13 In the heart of

14 Soviet sea

15 Firewood

17 Two-wheeler

18 Obtained

19 Came toa verdict

21 Imprisoner 24 Dombeyand

25-Baba 26 Cashew 28 Exclude 32 Writes 34 Breach

36 Ballet wear

37 English county

39 Wiretap

41 Gang

42 Gratuity

44 Recent dress fad

52 October decorations

56 Addict

57 Not a-weather

58 Teachers org.

59 Prohibits

60 Remit

61 Piggery

Avg. solutioD time: 24 min.

DOWN 11 Winter toy

1 Inquire 16 Period

2 French ruler 2l Food fish

3 Bowling 21 Word often targets    bef(Me

4 Noted outlaw 20 Down name 22 Pub orders

5 French chum 23 Floor item

6 Peel 27 Typewriter

7 Sides    key

8 Presidential 29 Yokels advisers 30 On the

9 Dry    roof of

10 Confiscate 31 July gem

W 'I'YOUR DAILY__

Horoscope

from the Cerroll Righter Institute

33 Some dogs 35 Young seal 38 Greek letters 40 Complained 43 Manias partners

45 Large deer

46 Blooper

47 Mona-

48 Kiln

49 Beast of burden '

53 Soldiers 6-16 54 Take in Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 55 Utter

CRYPTOQUn*

6-16

GO DXOH PX ODZVP PX VOOK NTWL

PGOVZKNTWLH,

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - THE BIG MAMA BIRD READS MOTHi :U GOOSE.

TodaysCryptoqujpclue; PequalsT.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Today wiU be a day in which changes in attitude are not in your beat interest. Continue in the status quo. The evening is best used staying out of any ensuing controversies.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You are inclinced to be slipshod in your work now. Be more careful. Dont upbraid a co-worker who doesnt do what you want.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Keep working on your talent for desired results Control that tendency to pick up and let go. Be happy tonight.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Clear up your domestic situation. Dont have any guests in today. Make sure you pay some pressing bills.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Be particularly careful in making out reports and in communications with others. Drive very carefully today.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Seek out financial expertise where your monetary affairs are concerned. Study your property to see what repairs are needed.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) You are upset about not gaining personal goals. Friends cheer you up. Learn how to budget more carefully.

LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) Schedule your time wisely to accomplish a good deal in th^ outside world. Plan time to help one in dire straights.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) If you are too demanding in going after your wishes, others resent it. Steer clear of group affairs which result in arguments.

SAGI'TTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Others are apt to criticize unjustly today. Make sure your credit is good. Handle public work wisely.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) A new contact could suggest some new plan that is not right for you, so thank him and go about your own business.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Dont run away from your job in favor of new ventures. Be understanding with a co-worker. Use kindness at home.

PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar. 20) Take care in communicating with a loved one. Be sure to spell everything out. Be careful when signing contracts.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will ^want everything in precise order. Teach to allow for human error and be more understanding of fellow human beings. There is ability for correct analysis, so be sure to give a fine education. Stress religion.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel.' What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

Winners Announced

Winners of the Mental Health Association in Pitt County-sponsored poster contest for Greenville City and Pitt County schools students have been announced,

A first-place winner from each school system was chosen and a second- and third place winner were also announced. George White of

Belvoir School and Razi Zaionit of Elmhurst School were the first-place winners. April Brown of A.G Cox School was the the second-place winner; Kimberly Robinson of Falkland School, the third-place winner.

These posters have been on display at Carolina East Mall for the past two weeks. ^

'Jatt

FURNITURE COMPANYS

YDUXL^ rCOLF.

The Perfect Gift For Fathers Day

New Shipment...

Just Arrived... Over 150 Berkline Wallaway Recliners and

Rocker-Recliners to Choose From.

. Large Selection of Styles and Covers All Sale Priced Savings Up to ^200.00

Prices Start At

fand up

I'lijov golt. tctinis. hasdiall. all ilu- sports on tele    ,md the lap of Berkline Inxiirv. We have a wide

\ iSion in a Ix aiitifiil. relaxing new Berkline Wall    selection trom Berkline. originator ot close to the

.iway Ru liner. I he wav to enjoy I hese dog days ol    wall recliners with patented Fcather-Glide' opi-ra-

summi r is in the air tonditioned comfort ot home    tion, and no handles or levers.

90 Day Cash Plan Free Delivery Up To 100 Miles

FURNITURE CO.

535 Dickinson Avenue Downtown Greenville 752-5161 '85 Years 01 Continuous Srvice To Eastern North Carolina'

PiMly ol Freo Parking Nasi To Our Storo

GOREN BRIDGE

n CHARLES oom

AMD OMAR SHABir

01963 TriOuno Company Syndicata. Inc

Neither vulnerable. South deals.

NORTH

105 ^AQ83 0 J93

Q432

WEST

7643 9 J972

0 AK4

K7

SOUTH

AKJ982 9K OQ76

865 The bidding;

South West

1 Pt8B

2 Pass

EAST

Q

^ 10654 0 10852

AJ109

North East INT Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: King of 0.

U.S. internationalist Eddie Kantar of Los Angeles is one of the countrys great teachers. And you can benefit from a private lesson at a price that would be a crime to turn down. His new book. "Kantar for the Defense, Volume l"(Wilshire Books, 204 pp., paperback. $5. Available postpaid from Bridge World, 39 West 94th St., New York. N.Y. 10025) deserves to find a , place on your book shelf.

You are presented with 100 problems (101 jf vou

GET YOUR RUFF

count this one, which appears on the cover) as you would meet them at the table -you see your hand as defender and the dummy, and you are told what part ner and declarer nlav to each trick. By the time you have finished the book, your defense will have improved tenfold. To help you along, the key points of each problem are lucidly explained at the end of each hand.

Cover up the East and South hands and decide how you would defend. You lead the king of diamonds, part ner plays the two and declarer the six. At trick two you switch to the king of clubs, partner drops the jack' and declarer the five. How do you continue?

"Cash the ace of diamonds before exiting with your remaining club. Partner's play of the jack of clubs promises the ten, so you should envision a discard coming upon the ace of clubs.

On the third club you discard your remaining diamond. Partner returns a dia mond at trick six, which you ruff for the setting trick. You defend so beautifully."

Well, maybe not before you read the book. But certainly thereafter!

A New Crop By Punsters

MILWAUKEE (AP) - In case last years dogan -Cheese and Quackers -wasnt bad enough, Wisconsin State Fair officials have unveiled a new crop of puiK for 1983.

Julie Carlson, public relations director for the fair, told the State Fair Board on Tuesday that the 1982 slogan had won a national advertising award.

She then listed some of the ad slogans designed to attract people to the fairs Aug. 4-14 run this summer, including;

-TheDuck Stops Here; -Oinkle Sam Wants You;

-UdderlyFun; -Whinny Ya Coming.

ANCIENT JAWBONE MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) - The fossilized jawbone of a hippopotamus-like reptile which inhabited Australia over 220 million years ago has been discovered in rocks in southeastern Queensland.

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

She said another offering for 1983 would feature barnyard animals in Milwaukee Brewers baseball attire, with the slogan, Were the Farm Team.

The slogans have begun appearing on Milwaukee area billboards and will soon be seen in Green Bay and Madison, she said.

Puns have also invaded the daUy schedule for the fair. Some itries in a pun contest last year will be used to designate certain days, including;

-Ewe Aint Seen Mutton Yet;

-Hog Day Afternoon; -Cheepers by the Dozen;

-Poultry in Motion.

SHOP-EZE

West End Shopping Contsr Phons 756-0960

I'OODLANl

Friday Luncheon Specials

Fish

$249

Special Sarvad With 2 Frash Vagelablas & Rolls.

8 Ways to Make Dad's Day Special

with gift ideas from Garris Evans!

Prices good thru Wed., June 22

Nautilus Gable Mounted Powered Attic Ventilator

Model N343, Moves 1140 cu. ft. of air per minute. Easy do-it-yourself directions. Built-in automatic thermostat operates automatically. Specially designed blade for maximum air movement. Mount behind existing louver or install new louver in gable Reg. $44.99.

Sale

39

99

Nautilus Powered Attic Ventilator

Model No N346 Mounts on root or sidewall. Durable, low-profile dome. Removes super heated attic air for a cooler, more comfortable home at a rate ot 1600 cu. ft. per minute Mesh screen keeps out birds & insects. Reg. $75.59.

Sale

Black & Decker Electric Shrub & Hedge Trimmer

Model No. 8118.13" double-edged blades cut in either direction at 3000 strokes per minute. Double insulated, so no grounding necessary. Large wrap around handle for steady control. Safety plate keeps debris trom hitting face or hands. Reg. $41.00.

(2

Blacks Decker

Black & Decker Deluxe Lawn Edger

Model No. 8224. Heavy duty, sturdy, powerful tool designed to get the job done on the first pass. Big 8" blade cuts neat Vj" trench. 4'4" wheels. Double insulateddoes not need to be grounded. Reg. $95.99.

Sale

^85

88

Blacks Decker

Ames Round Point or Square Edge Shovel

American made shovels have Flame Toughened ash handles and rugged, well-balanced blades. Long 47" handle maKes lor more comfortable digging Rag. $10.30.

Your Choice

99

BtnctsOncer

Black & Decker Dust Buster^"

Model No. 9330 Powerful cordless vacuum Fingertip control switch. Recharges continuously when not in use so its always ready to use. Wall hang storage/charging unit. No hose or cord to tangle Removable, washable dust filter bag Rag. 33.N.

abeOnetnr

Black & Decker Scrub Brusher^*

Wat-Ory powerlul cordless scrubber is sele to use w/weter ind common cleaning agents. Higti impact plastic lor durability Nickel cadmium batteries racherga continuously when not in use IrKludes large brush lor big jobs and smaller brush tor hard-lo-get-to places like corners Unit mounts lo counter or wall Rag. M).M.

Ames Hedge Shear

Model No HS22 Teflon-S coaled notched blade for quick, clean cutting. Contoured ash handle tor comfortable use Reg. $S.99.

Sale

$J5<

Each

Sale

*19 s-38

Lumber [tLkiL

701W. Fourteenth St.

Greenville, N.C. Open Weekdays 8-5 Saturdays 8-Noon Telephone: 752-2106

ACE


Title
Daily Reflector, June 16, 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.) - 30483
Date
June 16, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
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NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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